HomeMy WebLinkAbout1978-05-03 - Orange Coast PilotI'
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Glavas Admits
Er.-or ht Naming
\ 'Crime Figu~e'
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DB Physieian
As Trial Nears
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Four Flee Fire I
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VOL 11, MO. 1D, 4 HcTIONS. 4t l'AO•S
~--MANSFIELD, OHIO FIRE BRINGS UNLIKEl Y HELP
Rev. R.A. Butler, left, Mayor R.A. Porter
Priest, 92, Saved
As Firemen Strike
MANSFIELD, Ohlo (AP) -A
92·1ear-old telired Catholic
priest waa rescued from bis
burning bome today by four
poUce officers after striking city
firefigb&el"I ref used to battle the
blue
It was the first major tire ln
tbe nortbenl Oblo city of 55,000
since firefl8bten struck Monday
demanding hl&ber wages.
Mayor Rlchard A. Porter, who
CIRNee R8811Dle
T O LSDO, Ohio (AP)
Toledo'• az,ooo public •chool •
pupil• went back to normal
dUHI N tacbers and non·
acadeaatc employees ended a
tbtff . .-at.like. The walkout
bj 1,• woriin ended wben t1'e two ua1onl lnvolved accepted
--~·
belped fight the fire, said be was
Starting the paperwork needed
to force firefighters back to
work or fire them under Ohio's
Ferguson Act, which forbid•
strikes by public employees.
Those Ignoring tbe law can be
fired.
The lire Involved a bdck
apart ment building where the
Rev. Michael A. McFadden
lived.
"We weren't sure anybody
Jived there until we saw a
Cleveland Plain Dealer on the
porch and a lighted doorbell,"
patrolman David Mut 11ld.
He and three ot.ber patrolmen
ran1 the bell, got no antwer, and
broke tbe door down.
Md'adden wu fOUJMI asleep In
a llrlt·rtoor bedroom.
Tbe patrolmen brou1bt the
priat and a few beJODJflnia -
<See Rl:8CUE, Pa•e A.U
Murders
Ha11nt
DoctOr
By PETER ARNETI'
Al'SfKlalC:lllh ...... I A grieving father in New
Jersey determined to re-
member. A popular physician a
continent away trying to forget.
Haunting them both. the
memory of a brutal night in
North Carolina eight years ago.
Those forces are behind Mon-
day's Supreme Court decision that Dr. Jeffrey MacDonald of
Huntington Beach must stand
trial for the 1970 murders of his
pregnant wife and two children,
overturning a Circuit Court dis-
missal of the case.
For Alfred Kassab. 56, of
Dayton, N.J ., the high court rul·
ing Js further vindication of an
unprecedented personal cam-
paign lo punish the man he
believes is responsible for the
stabbing murders of his step-
daughter, Collette, 24, and her
daughters, Kimberly, 5, and
Kristen, 2.
··tt has been tremendous personal pressure to h ave
someone running around loose
that you are convinced killed your
daughter and grandchildren. I
now believe the trial will go
a head," Kassab said in a
telephone interview.
For Dr. MacDonald, 34, who
h as insisted his family was
bludgeoned to death by a group
or peop le w ho b r oJte into
his home at Fort Bragg. N.C.,
the court ftnding means that "I
will have to go on bearing the in·
cred ible weight of accusation
yet tbere is no way I can ~
found 1uilty. This affair has
become the central overwhelm·
ing force ln my life."
Singlemindedly pursuing the
case bu been Kusab. a sales
executive for a New Jersey egg
company who at first supported
bis 1on·in-law's assertions of in-
(See TRIAL, Page AZ>
QTY IGNORED
CRY FOR HELP
Stephen O'Ryan. 27. was ac·
costed and stabbed on a Seattle
street and left to dJe. Wllneaes
to tbe crime l111<>red bll l)Ulht
•• he crawled for help.
The w hole nel1hborhood
watched, cars and buaea. pused
him by u be f ou1ht for life. He
baa now recovered from his
wound& and .eekl an answer to
"Wby did you leave flfel61Ue1''
Story Pase AlO. .
Birds llOmbing
SmdlmaJ Cover Crowda
SAN RAF~EL CAP> -Droppings from a prolific
colony of nesting swallows are causing problems for
crowds at Marin Civic Center.
. ."T~ey just bomb the place ... and people wait-~ng m ~e f~r shows are complaining about the mess
m their .hair and on their clothes: .. said W:iyne
Lalor, ~1rector of Exhibition Hall and Veteran's
Auditonum at the center.
The county P ublic Works Department recom -
mended that t~e swallows' nest be removed. But a
vote .by supervisors on the is~ue Tuesday:deadlocked
2·2 w1thone tnemberofthe board absent.
Escapees ~
Jump
2 Stories
Four apartment dwellers. in-
cluding an eight-year-old boy,
jumped from a second story win·"
dow to escape a predawn fi re in
Huntington Beach today.
Embers from· a barbecue
brazier used earlier in the eve-
n i n g i g n it e d com b u s t i b le·
material on a balcony patio at.
16761 Viewpoint Lane,, firemen
s aid. The fire spread to the roof Glav as Report
• a nd li\·ing room of the apartment.
causing an estimated $8,500 in·
damage. Error in Naming
Crime Figure Told
By JOANNE REYNOLDS °' ... IMlly ...... lt.lft
Newport Beach's B. James
Glavas, head or the s tate
Organized Crime Control
Commission, today said he could
not explain an apparent error in
identifying a Cypress engineer
as an organized crime figure.
The name Joseph Vincent
Agosto of 5048 Hanover Circle,
Cypress, was among the 92
names of reputed mobsters
released by Glavas and state
Attorney General Evelle
You nger during a press
conference Tuesday in Los
Angeles.
However, the wrong Joseph
Agosto, who lives at the Cypre5$
address, says hls middle name
is George, not Vincent and he's
an engineer for the Rockwell
International plant ln Downey.
Law enforcement authorities
not invol ved with th e
com mission say they undeiistand
t b•t Joaeph Vincent Agosto
intended to be listed actually
lives ln Laa Vegas.
Glavu, eontacted today, said
he would qot make further
comments beyo n d the
informallon carried In the
report.
Asked about lbe A1osto
ldentlflcaUon, Glaves, a former
Marcos Advieed
MANILA, Ph.Wpplnet CAP) -
Vtce President Walter F'. Mon·
dale told Phillpjine President
Ferdinand E. Mucot today that
alleJ.ed human rtlhta violations
by bla eovemment cou~wonen
retaUona between tbt United
States and ta ~el' colony.
Newport police chief, indicated
he thought Joseph Vincent
Agosto lived in Cerritos, not
Cypress.
Agosto was among the six
names of alleged crime figures
who live in Orange County.
None of the countlans
identiried were ·available for
·comment today, although
reputed crime figures living in
other parts of the state reacted
angrily.
According to the report,
Agosto has been the target of a
20-year effort on the part or the
federal govemoient to deport
him to his native Sicily because
of his organized crime
connections.
Other countians listed include
Eddie Zuber, with an address
listed at 3073 Yukon St.. Costa
(See CRIME, Page .\2)
Nazi Uniform
Ban Backed
SACRAMENTO (AP)
LeglslaUon to ban Nazi dem-
onstrali<>ns bas won approval
of the Senate Judiciary Com'mlt·
tee, despite a similar measure
being killed in an Assembly
commtuee.
SB 1'181 by 15en. Alan Robbins.
D-Van Nuys, was sent to the
Senate rtnance Committee on a
S· t vote Tuelday. It would pro-
hibit the we•rln1 of .-Nazi unltorm.
T h e other bill by As ·
aemblyman Tom Bane, D·Van Nuya, wu killed Monday In the
A11embty Criminal Justice
Committee.
Patncia Hamilton, 35, her son
Brian, 8. her brothe r. Ron
Harden. and a friend, Robert
Hagemeyer , woke up shortly:
arter 2 a.m. to find the path to
the front door blocked by the in-..
rerno .
Harden rushed the others into'
a bedroom and closed the door
The four persons then made the~
two-story jump to safety. Only+
minor scrapes and bruises wereJ
s uffered by the victims, said fire'
department Capt. Roger1
Hos mer. The blaze was ex·}
lin~uished within lOminutes. ~
• It was ·a classic example o~
the occupants not panicking due
to the situation." Hosmer add~
Most of the damage was COD·
fined to the one apartment, fi
officials said. ~
Coast
We athe r
Nrht and morning low c lo s with s unny but
hai afternoon Thursday.
Lows toni_ght in mid-SOs.
HiJhS Thursday 68 to 72.
INSIDE TODAY
·Pat NUo'fl'• love for her '
htuband tcn.t genume, many
1a11. But the pre1ident wcu •
bnltallJI Utdi/fnnt to her in
pubUc. ~ Page A9.
l•llex
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I DAIL v PllO r s W!C!M!d!X· May 3, 1978
Crucial Issue Seen • ID Waddill Trial
9y TOM BAaLEY
--Diile, ..........
Nine men and thne wornen
were loeked In th.etr Oranse
County Superlor Court jury
room for tM ninth day today ln a
continulna effort to reach a
verdict in the baby death trial of
Dr. William Baxter Waddlll of
Huntington Harbour.
And wblle the juron sipped
coffee and dlscuued which of
fave possible verdicts they
Solar{lge
should return LO end the 18-week
trtal. lawyert for both •ldn hud·
dJed with Judie James K.
Turner to dl1cm.s an apparently
crucial issue that neither side
would revel61 Tuetday ntaht.
Judie Turner sent the Jury
borne a halt hour earlier than
usual so he could discuss the is·
sue raised by defens e attorney
Malbour Wat.Ion.
W 1t1011~. detenae attorney Charles weedman and pro•·
SUn Festivals
Dot Country
By The Assodated Press
Led by early risers .,who turned
out for dawn serv ices.
Am ericans celebrated "Sun
Day" today, with fairs and other
festivities designed tQ abow the
potential of sotar energy.
President Carter planned a
speech at the Solar Energy
Jnstitute in Colorado and several
Cabinet departments joined in
programs in Washingtoo, D.C.
But there also was criticism of
the federal government for not
moving fast enoush ln the soJar
tie Id.
"We're here to celebrate the
dawning or the solar age and
bring the admln18lraUon klcktn1
and i.creaming into it," said U.S.
Rep. Richard L . oiunger·,
D·N. Y .• addressing a crowd at the
'IA!Ud' Bible
OK/or Kids
CHULA VISTA CAP> -
The Bible will s tay 1n
C hula Vhta public i;chools.
Trustees rejected by a
4·1 vote Tuesday night a
request to restrlct its use
to older students or re-
move a ll Bibles from
bookshelves.
A citizen, J . Michael
Stracz~nski, complained
that passages in the re·
ligious book are lewd.
TeenDrcnms
In A.tt,empt
To Save Girl
YOSEMITE NATIONAL
PARK <AP> -A teen-age
Southern California boy slipped
into the Merced River and BP·
parently drowned while trying to
rescue a girl from the turbulent
water. rangers said.
Searchers were unable to find
the body of Brad Menuer. J7, or
SI mi Valley, after the accident
Tuesday and planned to continue
the search today.
Ranger Herbie Sansum gave
this account:
Mentzer and other s tudents
from Simi Valley High School
were sitting on rocks along the
south bank of the river below
Vernal FaJls when Sandra
Bolich dropped her diary into
the water. She fell into the
stream while reaching for It.
Three boys, including
Mentzer. hurrted down the bank
to try to get the girl out of the
rushing wa.-r. Mentier ran
down a rock s1ab but was unable
to grab Miss Bot.Jch as she was
swept past him.
Then Mentzer slipped into the
stream. .
The tlrl was shoved Into a
quiet eddy where the other two
boys were able to reach her and
pull her to safety.
But Mentzer, cauaht in a white
water cascade, was swept
downstream past them.
ORANOEOOAST '
DAILY PILOT
top of Cadll1ac Mountain in
Maine. one of the spots where the
s un's rays first strike the United
States each day.
About 1,500 persons followed
Ottinger and U.S. Rep. James
Jefford.a, R·Vt., up the l,MO-foot
mountain near Bat Harbor.
Maine, this morning. Ottinger
and Jeffords said that the
federal government was draft
ging its feet on solar energy,
which they described aa renewa-
ble, cheap, sare and non ·
polluting.
The Maine hikers had cloudy
weather. But diplomats and
others who turn~d out for a
celebraUon that Be1an at 5:57
a .m. outside the U.N. bead·
quarters building in New York
had better luck -clear skies
and bright sun.
"Solar energy works," said
actor Robert Redford to a crowd
or about 1,500. "It won't pollute
our air and it won't foul our
rivers.••
Andrew Young, U.S . a m -
bassador to the United Nations.
compared the success of the
black civil rights movement in
the 1960s to solar demonstrations
oflhe 1970s.
"We will use the political and
economic power of our en·
thusiasm to incorporate the sun
in our city Jlfe and our urban
life." Young said.
"Sun Day" is sponsore~ by
Solar Action Inc., a nonprdfit
group based in Washington and
is being run at the local level by
organizations including con·
sumer activist.a, envLronmen·
tallsts. educators, businessmen,
politicians and labor leaders.
A bout 300 persons gathered at
sunrise al the Lincoln Memorial
in the nation's capital tor the
be~inning of a day or solar.
oriented activities that include
displays of solar-cooked foods.
Support for "Sun Day" also
came from Saudi Arabia. holder
or the world's largest oil re·
serves and the leading exporter
of oil to the United States. A full·
page paid advertisement by the
Saudi Embassy appearing in the
Washington Post, the New York
Times and th.e Loa Angeles
Times today said:
"We share America's in·
creased awareness of the poten·
tial of solar energy, not only for
our two nations, but for all the
people of the world "
May Snowfall
Covers Kanaas
With 6 ln£hes
ELKHART. Kan. CAP>
Snow blanketed porttons or
Kansas today. with up to 6
inches on the ground at Elkhart in
the southwest comer of the st.ate.
Dodge City had lts tlraL May
snowfall in63years.
"Jt is the first time we've bad
measurable snow In May as far
back as 1915, so it'a a pretty rare
occurrence," said Lee Stlnaon of
the NaUonal Weather Service
station al Dodge Clly. -.
Jack Walsh, who answered the
telephone for the Morton County
sheriff's office at Elkhart, aaid
there were S inches to 6 inches of
snow on the around throughout
the area and lt was stlll snowing
f 'irl:v bard thlA morning.
Walsh sald roads ln the
southwest corner of Kansas
were slushy but there were no
report.a of accidents.
Jn the-southern Rocktes,
meanwhile, the weather aervlce
reported up LO 17 lnche• ol anow.
Jn the Oklahoma P•nhandle
and far northweswrn Oklahoma,
mearlwbUe, the slate hlihway
pttrol reported •now rnade driv·
lnl haU.rdoul over many roads
and toppled Umbl or tome trees.
Three lncbet to 4 Inch•• had
fallen in Gu1mon by aunrise.
Seven lncha to I lncht1 of snow
wu rtported In Bol.ao Clty alnce
Tueada)f afternoon, wlth about a
f ncht1 1tJU on the arowtd an.r
aunrfae.
Th• NatJonAJ W••tMr Strvlc.
sald ttMt lut tnOWfall thla lato In
1prln1 in Oklahom• wu Ma712, 1~. wben 3 lncbet foll on Bo1JO
Clty.
ecutor Robert Chatterton all re·
fused outside the courtroom to
discu11 the nature of the con-
ference ln the judge's chambers.
They aareed, hl')wever, that
they d.td not believe the issue un·
der dlscuaaion would lead to a
mtltrlal.
"But it could affect the out·
come of the trial in a certain
way ... Weed&nan aaid. He
declined to elaborate on the
<'omment
Waddill, 42, is accused or
1tr1nglina a newborn baby girl
ln the Westminster Community
ffosp1ta1 nunery after his at.
tempt to abort the infant 12
hours earlier railed.
Jt ls alle•ed that Waddill
choked the cblld to death in the
belief that it would be little more
than a brain damaged human
vegetable if it survived.
Waddill confirmed late Tues·
d11y thlt he has offered a job to•
Wettmlnit l•r Community
Hospital AurH who repon.dly
was ftrfd t>ecauae 1he allowed a
television camera crew to tllm
W addtU at work in the hospital
nursery last S.turday.
Th• film waa acreened on
Channel 2 Tuesday night. ft de·
picted Waddill chatting with a
woman patient who later gave
birth to arl Infant in the
We1tmlnaler hospital nursery.
W addlll aald nurM Ann Poss
was tired because atM failed to
obt1ln th• approval of the
hospital 1dmlnl1tratlon before
allowln1 t.M camera crew into
the maternity wing.
''It'• really an atlaclc on me."
Waddill 1ald. "Unfortunately, a
very fine nurse has become an
innocent victim."
Mrs. POIS testified for the de·
rense ln WllddiU's trtal.
f'ro•PapAJ
TRIAL •••
~ nocence. But after he obtained a
"Strike
Front
Subsides transcript or the nine-week
military inquiry thal dis missed
the charaea aaairwt MacDonald,
then a captain In the army
medical corps, Kassab said he
, changed hl5 mind.
LucaUng what he claimed
were "serious discrepancies" ln
the hearing evidence, Kassab
said, "I went lo congressmen. to
the FBI. to the Justice Depart·
ment. I finally swore out a
criminal complaint before a
federal judge in North Carolina
ln 1974. They empaneled a grand
jury and appointed a special
prosecutor."
The 16-day-old Orange County
trash truck atrtke continued to-
day amid a calm that left at
least one disposal firm owner
uneuy.
"Everybody's so quiet today ..
somelhing's going to happen;·
said Dick Taormina, owner of
Anaheim Disposal.
"No rocks were thrown at my
trucks today," he said, notlnJr
that picketers from Teamslet's
Local 396 just tumed their backs
as newly rured non-union drivers
went on their rounds.
'DONT lHINK l CAN STANO' PUBLICITY
Dr. Jeffrey MacDonald of Huntington Beaoh
Kassab was also regularly
callin g press conferences to
publicize charges against Mac·
Donald. Among other evidence.
Kassab claimed that a pajama
top. which the doctor said he
wore during the gang attack and
later laid over the body of tiis
wife. actually had puncture
holes that matched the atab
"'We're meeting with the-
rederal mediator today, ••
Taormina said. "Maybe they
know something we don't."
_wounds In h1!Wlfe'"s chest.
"'"wi..,.._
The meeting with mediator
John Courtney was scheduled·
ff*r 11 a.m.
Drivers on S-.tUJday rejeded
what managers or the seven
struck nnna bad termed their
final ofter. Drtnra are see~ a
~ rrom '4.50 an hour to •.so over\ a three.year period, while
')nan•aement has offered $6.
MURDER VICTIMS AT CENTER OF CONTROVERSY
Meanwhile. MacDonald was
~tart'i n& life anew in Lone Beach aa director of emergency
medicine al St. Mary's medical
center. He abo became pTeti·
dent of the Long Beach Heart
AHociat1on and medical direc·
tor of the Long Beac h
paramedic program: The local
community rallied around when
he waa indicted on murder
counts ln 1975 and h~Jped raile
h .. St00.000 baU.
More than a million Oranae
County r esidents were left
without trash pickup &ervice for
two weeks. On Monday, non-
unton drivera be1an ma~lns the
rounds. but the combination of
inexperience and mound• of
piled up traah hu left col1ec-
Uona behind schedule.
Kt11ten, 2, Kimberly, 5, and Mother Collette
Filb..PageAJ
Cl{IME ••.
M ~s a . Cur_rently serving a
prison term m the federal prison
on Terminal Island, he was
convicted ln 1975 with rive others
in a nationwide rraud scheme
that bilked investors out of
nearly $1 million.
Dominic Brooklier. Anaheim,
is listed by the report as a poten·
tial candidate to become head of
organized crime Jn Southern
California. He has past convic·
lions for armed robbery. larceny
and interstate transportation of
f ortced documents.
He ls currently under indict-
ment for a variety of racketeer·
ing charges in<'luding the
murder of San Diego Mafia
leader. Frank "The Bomp"
Bom penslero.
ilalph-D'Angelo. Anaheim, is
reportedly an associate of New
York's Gallo ramlly and is con·
s\dered to be a contact ror East
Coast mob figures who come to
Califomi~.
Anthony Ferro. Anaheim, is
allegedly lnvolve<i In narcotics
activity and is r eputed lo be an
enforcer for cri-me figure.
Robert.Paduano or nearby Cer·
rilos, according to the report.
James Testa, Los Alamitos, is
also serving a sentence at
Term lnal Island for extorting
pay ments t-rom Los Angeles
bookmakers. His partners in the
extortion scheme Included Mafia
figures. also named in the re·
port. Sam Sciortino. Peter
Milano and Brookller.
The commission rePort noted
that despite the increased activi-
ty on the part of organlzed Crime
-It was estimated to be a S6.8
blJllon-a -year buslne$s In this
state -no one has emergM as
the leader In California.
"California does not yet have
so meone ~ltttng as its god·
father," commented Glavas dur·
lng Tuesday's press conference.
Younger, a candJdate for the
Republican gubernatorial
nomination, defended release of
the report in light or his past
comments that organized crime
is not a significant problem in
California.
He said the recent lnnux of
mobaten has made the problem
cornparable to that faced by
eastern states.
Younger also defended hls of·
flee, wblch has not filed a single
organlted crime prosecution
during his term of otflce, by say.
tn1 atate law enforcement needs
more "toola" such 11 wiretap·
ping authority and ~peration
of federal atenetea to fltht or·
&anlted crime in Califomta.
Coup Toll High
KABUL, Afghanistan CAP> -T.he death tolJ In the bloody coup
that. o~•rthnw the Mahan aov·
er11ment Jut w"k wu much
hl1h1r than prwvloualy rtported,
a\&tborltaUve soured aatd 1'u •
.da1. The)' e.t.lm•t.d UM number
of dead ln the thouaanda -aome
•aid ll ma~ havt bffn a1 hlah a.s
J0,000 -In SM mllila_r)' rebellion
•1aln1l President Mohammed
Daoud·• authori.tarlan r.atme.
5Motehnen
Charged
In Anaheim
1',ive Anaheim motel operators
or employes race charges of
keeping disorderly houses of
prostitution after their arrest
this week. Anaheim police· said
today.
The five are accused or know·
ingly renting rooms to pros·
tilutes, police said
Arrested were Walter David
Helm. 21, a clerk at the Caravan
Inn. 130 W. Katella Ave.: Dennis
Wayne Iverson. 24, a clerk al the
Razzmatazz Motel. 823 S. Beach
Blvd.: Robert Leroy Tolle. 42.
manager of the Siesta 6 Motel.
821 S. Manchester Ave.:
Also. Magan Bhai Patel. 40,
owner of the Hacienda Motel,
2176 S. Harbor Blvd .. and
Parsotam Rambhal Patel. 41.
owner of the Fronterht Molel.
933 S. Harbor.
Orticers said the arrests re·
suited from a two-week in·
vestigatlon by vice otricers and
stemmed rrom information re· .
ceived from prostitutes arrested earlier.
Stnce then MacDoanld has
been nghtlng the case on pro-
cedural grounds.
"My lawyer tells me that a
Jury trial will last at least six
months. cost up to half a million
dollars and mean searirtg
pub-liclty. I don't think l can
stand that," he said Jn a
telephone interview.
"The facts of the case haven't
changed since 1970 when an ex-
h au s ll v e military Inquiry
speci(lcalJy determined that the
charges against me were untrue
and recommended that· other
people be investigated." Mac·
Donald said. His lawyer.
Bernard Segal. said he expected
two more years at leaat or ap-
~llate hearings.
"A case like this begins to
have a life or Its own.
Prosecutors look at thia case
and figure they can use it to r1de
the paths to glory." Segal said.
Alfred Kanab said he would
keep pushing the case. "I have
maiot.i:ned publicly that f would
personally administer justtce ii
the courts felled to." he aald.
When asked if thl• amounted
to a vendetta, Kanab declared.
"Yea. It does. There ls no way
on earth I would let him get
away with it." But he added he
would accept any verdict of a
Jury.,
MacDonald said he takes such
threata aerloualy.
"KHaab ta 1eekln1 a aolullon
to an Incredible altuatlon.
From Page AJ
RESCUE •••
jackets on a hanger. a small rile
box and a port/olio of memen·
toes or hi. 30 years as priest Of a .
church irl nearby Shelby -out.
of the building:
"ll's very hard to start over.
I'm 92 you know," McFaddeB
said as he left the scene with the
friends.
Clayton Long, Mansfield safe·
ty director, Mayor Porter, and
the (ire department chaplain,
The Rev. R. L. Butler, were the
only persons other than police to
respond to the blaze.
A spokesman for the cily's 103
striking firemen said the fi rst
-m aJor--llre ln the ciL-y alnc: .. th0
start of the walkout had nol
altered their stand.
"The men are slHI determined
lo stay out until we get a con·
tract." he aatd. ''We went to
council last nJ1ht with an offer
and It was natty dented. The
monkey's on their back now."
The firefighters want a
Sl.000-a·year pay raiae In <t
three· year contract. Currently.
starting pay la $12,828. No new
talk• were scheduled.
Lynn Hort HART'S John Hort
SPORTING GOODS
538 CENTER ST.• COSTA MESA• 646-1919
Close Out
.. AbOut 200 Bike Tires
Mostly 20x2125
& 20x1.75 2°0 each
3n415.595 Value
BasebaH Shoes
Soccer Shoes
BasketbaU Shoes
10121111 Shoes
Track Shoes
Vollepatl Shoes
Tennis Sbon
W•m Up Sajts
Sweat Suits
Y-Heck Sweaters
c~ Pants
Tennis Dresses
Ladles' Tennis S1lrts
Ladies' TenRis S1rifts
Men's l Boys' Tennis Slllrts
Men's & Boys' Tennis Sbirts
Tennis
T ennls RlcUts
Wilson • Davis • Yenex
Prince · Bancraft • Dunlop
Racque~lll .._u
Bldmillten bcbts
Racket Strifllitl
laseball lltts Basebal Clps
llsaball lats Basiball Ulldlnllits
BdlU Sets DUntbeH Sits C.. Piiis
6.U>-1919
.·
Orange Coast
• EDI Tl ON
VOL. 71, NO. 123,' SECTIONS,'' PAGES ORANGE COUN TY: CALIFORNIA W6 DNESOAY, MAY 3~ 1978
T oday's Clo sing1
N.Y. Stoeks ·1
1
C TEN CE
_ J~rors Get New Data; Waddill Hopef
I By TOM BARLEY cessation of brain funcUon has draw any other conclusion ty District Attorney Robert torneys Malbour Wataon and struction on the lines that the d
oeu.OM1yl'41eutatt beendetermineci." now," Waddill said after the Chatterton. Charl es Weedman in the fenseexpects.
A new Instruction that Dr. Waddill and his two defense jury filed back to the jury room Chatterton said a provision in courtroom. But the consens us among: W.illla~ Baxter Waddill believes lawyers clearly believe that the formoredeUberatJons. the state's Health and Saletv Obviously delighted. the two lawyers listening to the proceed-'
wall lea(i the Jury to declare him jury may look on the new added "Certainly. the baby I'm ac· Code spelling oul what Judge lawyers immediately asked to ings today is that the new ini
not gullty of murder was read to jnstruction as meaning that the cused of choking to death was Turner read to the jury today see Judge Turner and s uc· struction is an invitation to a
an Orange County Superior baby Waddill is accused of dead in the very te1ms of this came to his attention when he cesstuJly petitioned him to read jury , which appears to be
Court jury today. strangling in the nursery at new instruction and so an act or was discussing another baby the new instruction containing deadlocked, to resolve the dilem!
JudgeJa.mes,K .. Tumerinter-We s.tminste r Communi~y m.urde,r could not be com· killi!lgcasewithanAnabeimde· the elements discovered by ma by voling not guilty on the
rupted the JUry s ntnth day of de· Hospital was already dead an mttted. ' tecllve. Chatterton to the jury. basis of thenewdirective.
liberations to advise the panel : terms of total brain disintegra· IronicalJy, what is seen as a Chatterton s aid he mentioned Chatterton commented today Waddill, 42. of Huntington '~Tb ere can be d e.a t h in lion. breakthrough for the defense the hitherto unmentioned point that he did not believe. the jury Harbour. is accused of stran·
circumstances where a total "I don't see how they can was put in their hands by Depu-while chaUing with defense at· would Rive 1any weil(hl to the in-· <See DOCTOR, Pag~ AZ>
·f ·· Ohio Horne Fire ·
Cops Save Prie~t
~ .
As Fireillen Strike
11 . .
MANtFIELD, Ohio <AP > -A
• ff7e111'·1>1'd rettr~d Catbolic
priest was rescued from his
burning home today by four
police officers after striking city
firefighters refused to battle the
blaze.
church in nearby Shelby -out
of the building.
"It's very hard to start over.
I'm 92 you know," McFadden
said as he left the scene with the
friends.
A spote1nnan for the cilY's 103
striking firemen said the fi rst
major fire in the city since the
start of the walkout had not
altered their stand
17
f
i
r
l t
I -
I ~
t I
I ,
I
DllllY .......... ., &M P8YM
VANITY PLATE FAN BABBITT PREPARES TO DO BUSINE!$S AT DMV
Clerk Lyla Schnabel Le•m• About Co ... MeN '• Ltter•ry Leanlnge
-'Auto Ego' ~ed
Mesa Buff S~kll Up on 'Vanity' Plates
By MICHAEL PASKEvtCB
Ott• o.lty f'llet SUft
Charles Babbitt of Costa Mesa admits to
his overbloated .. auto ego."
IN FACT, he plunked down $2,000 at the
local Department of Motor Vehicles <DMV >
to Jeed his habit· of coming up with novel
moving messages known in many circles as
.. vanity plates."
-
pie, when the program started In 1970, more
than 7 ,000 people requested plates with
"PEACE" on them.
A lottery system is used to plck out the
winner in case of duplicate requests. The ap·
plication lee, $25 for each set ol plat.es, is re·
funded to those who miss out.
The drawing will be held in late June. All
vanity plate requests must be filed at the
DMV by May 31.
ll was the first major fire in
the northern Ohio city of 55.000
since firefUJQ.lers struck Monday
d~ higher wages.
Mayor Richard A. Porter. who
helped fight the fire, said he was
starting the paperwork needed
to force firefighters back to
work or fire them under Ohio's
Fe rg uson Act. which forbids
strikes by public employees.
Those ignoring the law can be
fired .
The fire involved a brick
apartment building where the
Rev. Mich ael A McFadden
lived.
"We weren't sure anybody
lived there until we saw a
Cleveland Plain Dealer on the
porch and a lighted doorbell,"
patrolman David Mast said.
He and three other patrolmen
rang the bell, got no answer, and
broke the door down.
McFadden was found asleep in
a lirst-noor bedroom.
The patrolmen brought the
priest and a few belongings -
jackets on a hanger, a small file
box a nd a portfoUo of m emen-
toes of bis 30 years as priest of a
Clayton Long. Mansfield safe·
ty direeton Mayor Porter, and
the fi-re department chaplain,
The Rev. R. L. Butler, were lbe
only persons other than police to
respond to the blaze.
Gla1'as Report
·'The mf:n are still determined
to &lay out until we get a con ·
tract ." he said. "We went to
council last nighl with an offer
and it was n atty denied. The
monkey's on their back now ··
Error in Naming
CrJme Figure Told
By .JO.\NNE REYNOLDS
Of .. °""' ""'MMt Newport Beach's 8 . James
Glavas, head of the s tate
Organhed Crime Control
Comml.aaioo. today said be couJd
not explain an apparent error in
identifying a Cypress engineer
as an organized crime figure.
The name Joseph Vincent
Agosto ol 5'M8 Hanover Circle.
Cypress. was among the 92
n a m es of reputed mobste r s
r ele ased by Glavas and s tale
Attorney General Evelle
Y o u n g-e r du rl n g a p res s
conference Tuesday in Los
Angeles.
However, the wrong Joseph
Agosto. who lives at the Cypress
address, says his middle name
is Geor({e, not Vinceot and he ·s
an engineer for the Rockwell
lnternatiooal plant in O<¥vney.
The 43-year-old car bulf figures at least
20 of his 80 applications <three choices on
each ) might be rejected as "borderline ob-
scene."
But he's never bad an application reject-
ed yet, and like a-tot-of ottael' mOU>rists with
personalized license plates, Babbitt is exclted
about the whole new literary world that will open up July 1.
The seven-digit (or less l plates are
available for any vehicle excluding
motorcycles which are stuck with six letters
because of the smaller-sized plates. 5-vehicle Crash
Law enforcement authorities
not involve d w it h th e
commission say they understand
that J oseph Vincent Agos to
intended to be listed a5!lUl!llY
lives in Las Vegas.
Glavas. contacted today:sa1d
he would not make further
co mm ents beyon d th e
information carried in the
report. THAT'S THE date when the DMV ex-
pands its .. prestige plates" to seven charac-
ters (letters or numbers), giving folks with
na mes like Mahoney, Marquez or Babbitt a
chance to wear it on their bumpers.
·•OMV OFFICIALS are expecting more
than 25,000 seven-digit applications to join the
more than 400,000 six-digit plates that have
been issued s\nce 1970.
Known as the Environmental License
Plate (ELPl, the program will have kicked
in nea rly $18 million to th~ state by the end of
the 1978-79 fiscal year. F"unds have gone for
buying ecological preserves, bird sanctuaries
and roadside nature viewing spots. •
Huns 4 Persons
By JERRY CLAlJSEN
01 h o.11~ P'llet Steff
Babbitt already has taken advantage of
the s i x letter plates now available. A
Volks wagen freak, Babbitt's bugs now sport
plates like "POO POO," "OR BUST," "OL
BLUE" and ··OL RAGS," for his vintage ~1
convertible.
Babbitt, is preparln.g written appeals to
the state for some of bis "downright edgy"
requests.
A five.vehicle accident. in·
eluding two gravel trucks, in·
jured four s;>t:rsons and blocked
El Toro Road three miles north
of Trabuoo Road for most of this
morning.
Depending on how the state views bis
sense of humor. tnany or Babbitt's seven
digJt plates will go to friends and customers
as tax-deductible gifts.
BIS LATEST requests are top secret
because be fears stiff compeUtion. For exam·
HE ORIGINALLY planned to submit 40
requests at. a cost. of $1,000 but. said be was
"just welgblng the temptation to go down and
get forty D'JOre of those things. " ,
Temptation won out. Babbitt paid for
another 40 applications Tuesday at the DMV
office on 19th Street in Costa Mesa. according
to Mrs. Toni Gilbert, a DMV spokeswoman.
Firemen, paramedics and am·
bulance teams worked aiore
than an hour removing victims
from the mangled vehic les
which also included a s mall van
and two automobiles.
. .
Ca lifo rnia Highway
Patrolmen said the woman
driver of a southbound auto al·
tempted to pass a semi·dump
truck rig owned and operated by
David Merrigan, 29, of Covina
when she was confronted by a
string or three northbound
vehicles. Trash Talks D.eadlocked •
Noe-union Dri'Ven to Keep Permanent Jobs
Her car and a northbound van
collided. at about 8 a . m .
patrolmen said. setting orr two
more collisions.
A northbound trailet-hauling
truc k apparently swerved ,
catching the traile r of Mer-
rigan ' s southbound truck.
patrolmen said.
By JACKIE BYMAN
Of .. Oell] "'"' 5'at1 Negotiations between Orange
County dis posal firms and
striking Teamsters drivers
deadlocked today, and a
apokesman for management
said non·union drivers now be·
Ing hlred wlll be kept in their
Jobs permanently.
Raul Rangel, vice-president of
Jaycox Disposal, wblcb hauls
PUBU<J. IC.NORED
CRY FOR HELP
Stephen O'Ryan, n . WH 8C·
cost.ed and stabbed on a SeattJe
street and left to die. Wltnesses
• to the crtmt tsnom hls pU1bt
as be crawled for help.
The whole nel1bborhood
watch9d. tan f.nd buses paned
blm by as be toucht for Ifft. He
hat now Hcovered from hl1 woundl and eoeks an anawer lo
"WU ~ you leave me to dJe?" Storj Plee A tf ...
tras h in Costa Mesa, said a
notice is beina sent to an strik·
ing drivers Informing them that
unless they re-apply uncondi·
tionally. they will be out of a job.
He said all seven struck firms
are following the same policy.
At Jaycox, 81 of 167 positions are
already filled by new d.rlven.
10-year Parole
Wait Sought
SACRAMENTO (AP> -Ftrat·
degree m urderers would be
eU•lble for patole an~i: 1!) ye"rt
In prlaon·mst.ad of seven. under
a bill approved by the Seu&.e
Judlctary Committee.
Tiie meuun, SB 1986 by Sen.
Geor•• DeukmeJlao, R·Lon1 Beach, WN Mnt ~ the s.riate
Finance Comtnlttee Tpesday on
I 8.0 Yott. •
It W'Ould apply to casea of tint·
dearn m urder that ar1i not
p\m!lhable by deatb or Ute lm·
prlMnment -NltbOUt patok.
The firms began hiring new
drivers Monday, but had not in-
dicated whether or not they
would become permanent
employees.
Ransel said the deadlock
came during a 45-minute
negotlatlon session today.
Teamatens had nijected a new
management offeT Saturday.
·'We feel that our last and
tlnal otter Saturday was more
than fair," Rangel .said. ''I'm
not ashamed ot that ofler."
Merrigan's trailer and the
northbound sem\·rig turned
over, and another car, driven by
Ralph Caputo, 35, of 35391
Beach Area
lleopened He said managers are con·
cerited about furtber violence tn
a strUte marked by several fires
and attacks with pellet guna, but Llfe1\lards rn KuJ>Unaton
said. "We have to oontinue Beach arid Newport Beach today
. wotklnf..!' · • · · · · ~ •·· ·-reported all wa11 back to normal
The ltrike began at mldnl&t\t on the stretch of beach re-~pril 11 when a tbree·year con· opened to the public after a 43-
tract. ex.P6red. The new drtvtn day quarantine .
reaumecl coltecttn1 trash on Orange County Health Depart·
Monday ln most affected areN. ment offlclal• dosed the strand
Drl•en Saturday rejected •n runnlns from 52nd Street \n
otter ot $5.25 an hour, wtuch Newport Beach to Broolcburtt
woul d IO up to '8 an hour within \Str eet In Hunt1n1ton Beach
lhre.e ,_al"I. Tbey sou1bt an lm· March 12 allec' a 1ewer maln nap·
medlate ralle from tbe curnnt tured, sptUln1mUllon1or11Uon1
S..IO an hour to te.50, endlna at of sewaae mto the Santa Ana U.50 lfter llarM )'98ra. • R l"r, • I
Helena Circle, Mission Viejo,
r ammed into the northbound
truck, Caputo said.
The driver or the northbound
truck, owned by Blue Diamond.
was seriously injured and was
pinned in the cab or bis vehicle,
patrolmen said. He was iden-
tified as John Vestal, 48.
The woman driver or the
southbound pass ing car.
Elizabeth Tackett, 21, Silverado.
suffered minor facial injuries.
<See CRASH, Page A2>
.~ix Inehes
Of Snowfall
Hits Kansas
ELKHART. Kan. <APl -
Snow blank eted portions or
Kansas today. with up lo 6
inches on the ground at Elkhart in
the southwest comer of the stale.
Dodge City had Its first May
snowfall in63years.
"It Is the first time we've bad
measurable snow in May as far
back as 1915, so it's a pretty rare
occurrence." said Lee Stinson of
the National Weather Service
station al Dodge ~lty.
Jack Walsh, who answered the
telephone for the Morton County
sheriff's olflce at Elkhart, said
there were 5 Inches to 6 lncbes of
snow on the ground tbrouabout
the area and lt was stfll snowtn1
fairly hardthli. momlna.
Walsh tald roads In the
southweat corner of Kansas
were elus!\y but there were no ~Ports ol accldenu.
In the 9outhern Rockies,
meanwhile, the weather service reported~ to 11 lncbet of aaow.
Jn the Oklahoma PanhandJe
and far norih'"'tem Oklahoma, meanwhile, the 1tate tu1hway
patrol ~ mow made drlv· lna hazardous over many road.I
and towle<l Umbl of some tnet .
As ked a oout the Agos to
identification. Glavas. a former
Newport police chief, indicated
he thought Joseph Vincent
Agosto lived in Cerritos, not
Cypress.
Agosto was a mong the six
names of alleged crime figures
who live in grange Count v.
None o r the co untian s
identified were available fo r
comm ent t oday , although
reputed crime figures living in
other parts of the state reacted
angrily. "C".'
According to the re port.
Agosto has been the t arget or a
20-year effort on the part of thl'
federal government to deport
him to his native S~ily becausl'
o f his organized cri m e
connections.
Other counUans listed include
Eddie Zuber, with an address
listed at 3073 Yukon St., Costa
Me~a . Currently serving a
<See CRIME, Page A2>
Co ast
We a t h er
Night and morning low
c lo uds with s unny but
hazy afternoon Thursday.
Lows tonight in mid·SOs.
Highs Thursday 68 to 72.
INSIDE T ODA l'
Pat Nizon's love /or her
huaband UlOI Qtn&dne. many
say. But the pN!lidsnt was
brutatl11 tndilferent to her 111
public. 5" Page A9
l•tlex
» C».ll Y "'LOT .. Solar
\
Energf
Pushed
~ GOLDEN. Colo. CAP>
President Carter marked "Sun
Da_y " lh1I afternoon by ordering
a Cablnet·ltvel 1tudy to develop
a national solar 1trategy and by
J)ral1ln1 solar entr1Y a1 a pot.el\·
Ua• counterweight to rtalna oU prjces.
lr remarks prepared tor de·
livery at the Solar Enern
Pesearch Institute here .
however. Carter didn't promlae
any new funds for solar re-
sear<'h ·
But the president noted that
his proposed budaet for fiscal
1979 cont.alns a 84 'percent ln·
rrease ln money ror develop.
ment of solar pt:>wer over the
federal budget of two year• a•o.
On the first day of a three-day
swing through Colorado .
California . Oregon and
Washington. Carter announced
that the Agriculture Department
will lend $14 million lo the city or
Lam a r. Colo . for a project to
turn livestoclc excrement Into
methane gas.
Carter lost all four states to
Gerald R. Ford ln the 1976 elec-
tion, and his Western tour was
billed by the White House as an
effort to win public support for
adrrinistration programs.
"Nobody can embargo 1un-
lighl," the president told hll au·
dience at the research center. a
• federally financed project
operated for the Department or
Ener~y by the private. noo·
profit Midwest Research
Institute of Kansas City.
-"~o cartel controls the sWi:·
Carter said in an apparent ref·
erence to the Arab oil embargo
._ of 1973-74 "Its energy will not
run out. It will not pollute our
air or poison our waters. It is
free from stench and smbg. The
'S un's power needs only to be. col-
lected, stored and used.
~)
"The questldn is no longer
whether solar energy works," he
<tdded. "We know it works. The
only question is how lo cut costs
~o that solar power can be used
more widely and set a cap on
rising oil prices.''
Carter said his energy plan.
still staUed In Congress. would
increase use ot home solar
systems by offering more than
SSOO million ln tax credits -up
to 52,000 for each homeowner --
O\<er the next seven years.
The Cabinet-level review will
be headed by Energy Secretary
James R. Schlesinger, who ac·
companied Carter on the trip.
The panel will Issue a report by
Sept. l to help Carte r make
budget and legislative recorr·
mendations next rail
FroaPageAJ
DOCTOR ••.
gling to death a newborn infant
which survived his attempt 12
hours earlier to abort the 18-year·
old mother.
It ts alleged that Waddttt choked ·
the child to death ln the bellerthat
it would be little more titan a
braln·damagcd human vegetable
I flt lived
CM Downtown
Plan Reviewed
A review or Coste Mesa's
downtl7Wll redevelopment plan
will be held at tonight's regular
meeting of the Costa Mesa
Redevelopment Agency.
The review is set to evaluate
construction progress in the
downtown area and lo hear
public comment. ~
The meeting begttrs al 7:30
p. m at the Downtown Com·
munity Center, 594 Center St ..
Costa Mesa
Classes ReeU.me
TOLEDO. Ohio IAP.l
Toledo's 52.000 publlc school
pupils went back lo normal
classes as teachers and non·
academic employees ended a
three-week strike.
CMlANOI COAST c
DAI l'f PILOT
J
()elfy .......... _, ,.,.., a.-.i
,.,...ra,,eAJ
CRASH •••
4 Iler pauen&o.t. Jobn C&ndow.
IO. Or~. WU plnned In the
wreckage. He waa aertously in·
jured, patrolmen tald.
Van driver George Kahgat. 42.
or El Toro suffered back in·
juries. a patrolman said, and
was taken to Saddleback Com·
m umty Hospital.
Truck driver Merrigan was
nol injured. •
Merrigan said. "f looked In
the mlrror to see th1a woman
passing me. I looked forward
again and saw thii; whole line of
vehicles coming. I thought. 'Man
alive!' "
JUMBLED MASS OF TRUCKS AND CARS SPREADS ACROSS EL TORO ROAD FOLLOWING FIVE·VEHICLE COLLISION
Firemen (•tLeft) Comfort John Candow, 30, Pinned In Car Th•t Reportedly Tried To PH• Gravel Truck
The truck driver said he "felt
a tug'' and "my air buzzer came
on. Thia ls where I coasted to.•·
Caputo. sales manager for
Toyola of Corona. was uninjured
an \he series of accldenlS.
'Mobster' Funded Younger
person he says l am -and I'm 1
not -then I don 'l think he
would want It on hls record that
he took money from me.··
"All l know is that 1 was
following behind this truck and
saw hls lighlS--come on," Caputo
said. ''The truck came to a stop. I
hit my brakes and then hit his rea~
end. I have no idea what ltapoened
upfront.''
LOS ANGELES IAP ) -Labor
lawyer Sidl"ley R. Korshak may
be on state Attorney General
Evelle J . Younger's mobster
list. but that hasn't deterred
Younger from accepting 13.000
in campaign donations from
* * *
Korshak and seeking yet
another for his gubernatorial bad
this year.
"I threw it away after reading
it." Korshak said Tuesday or the
recent request for money. ··But
in view of the accusation~
* * * Fro•PageAJ
CRIME REPORT IN ERROR.
prison term ln the federal prison
on Terminal Island. he was
convicted in 1975 with five ~lhers
In a nationwide rraud scheme
.that bil.keif inv~alors_ ou.1 o!
nearly SI mHlion.
Domink Brooldier. Anaheim,
is listed by the report as a poten·
tial candidate to become head of
organized crime in Southern
California. He has pasl conv1c·
lions for armed robbery. larceny
and interst.aLe transportation or
forged documents.
He is currently under indict·
ment for a variety of racketeer·
in g c barges inc I udlng the
murder of San Diego Mafia
leader. Frank "The Bomp"
Bompensiero.
Ralph D'Angelo, Anaheim, 1s
reportedly an associate of New
York 's Gallo family and is con·
sldcred to be a contact for East
Coast mob figures who come to
California.
Anthony Ferro, Anaheim. 1s
allegedly involved in narcotics
activity and is reputed to be an
enforcer for crime figure,
Robert Paduano of nearby Cer·
rllOtJ. according to the report.
James Testa; b08 Alamitos. Is
also serving a sentence at
Terminal Is land for extortlnr.?
Jjayments from Los Angeles
bookmakers. Hi s partners in the
extortion scheme included Mafia
figures. also named in the re·
port. Sam Srj,orlino. J.>eter
Milano and Broolclier.
The commission report noted
that despite the Increased activi·
ty on the part or organized crime
-it was estimated to be a $6.8
billion-a-year business in this
state --no one has emerged as
I.he leader in California.
Younger: a "candidate ror the
Republican gubernatorial
nc.mlnallon. defended release of
the report In light of his past
comments that organized crtme
is not a significant probtem in
California.
He said the recent influx of
'Tlobsters has made the problem
comparable to that faced by
eastern states.
Younger also defended his of·
fice. which has not filed a single
organized crime prosecution
during his term or office. by say-
ing state law enforcement needs
more ·'tools" such as wiretap·
ping authorilr and cooperation
or federal agencies to fight or-
ganized crime in California.
He re 's the complete list of
Mesa Fish Fry
Seeking Talent
A ta lent search la planned lo
round up entertainment for
Costa Mesa's 33rd Annual Fish
Fry.June 2·4 at Lions P ark.
Auditions will be held at the
Orange County Fairgrounds al 4
p.m . and 7 p.m. on May 17. 18. 24
and 25. Entry forms are now
available at the Fairground's
administration bulldlna. . .
Lions Club officials will judge
the tryouts and winners will
compete for trophies al the Fish
Fry.
5 Motelmen
Charged
In Anaheim
Five Anaheim motel operators
or employees face charges of
keeping disorderly houses of
prostltuUon after their arrest
this week, Anaheim police said
today.
The five are accused or know-
ingly renting rooms to pros-
titutes, police said.
Arrested were Walter David
Helm. 21, a clerk at the Caravan
Inn, 130 W. Katella Ave.: Dennis
Wayne Iverson, 24, a clerk at the
Razzmatau Motel, lp3 S. Beach
Blvd.; Robert Leroy Tolle, 42,
manager ot the Siesta e Motel.
821 S. Manchester Ave.:
Also, Maean Bbal Patel, 40,
owner ol the Hacienda Motel,
2176 S. Harbor Blvd.. and
Paraotam Rambh•I Patel, 41 ,
owner ot the Fronterla MOlel,
933 S. llarbor,
Omc:en aald lht arre1t.t tt·
sulted from a two-week In
veatlaat.lon by vice omcera and
stemmed from Information ro-
celved from prostltu~• 1rreat4d
earlier.
Fnnde Renewed
B!BKILEY <AP> -The U&'llvei'ilt)'ot California b11 won
renewal ot two b)' ftdtral con· tract.a. but will fae. • revltw or
hlrlna pracUce1 which have
been aHe1ed to be btaaed
aaalnst womea. •
Si gers. dancers and novelty
pe ormers are being -sought.
Ent forms must be filed by
May . For more informatlon
call 75l·FAJR.
Parenu Fight
Plan to Clo8e
GmdeSclwol
A group of parents has flied Y
$100 million lawsuit against thu
MagnolJa School District, claim
ing the district's plan to shut
down Lo\\ Elementary School
June 15 Is "unlawful."
William Morton. a member o•
the school's PTA, said the dis
trlct's trustees, who voted Apr11
18 to close the 800-atudent school. failed to follow the
recommendaUona o' a citizen·~
advisor) grou.p
A May 22 hearing has been
scheduled by Orange Counn
Superior Court Judge Harmon
Scovtlle. He ordered the district
to show why a preliminary In
junction should not be issued to
bar the school's closlrrg;
Morton aald the advisory com
mlllee recommended the
cloaure or Schweluer and Dis·
ney schools -a plan be said the
board diaregarded because or
"peraonal blu."
At least two ol the board mem·
bers. Morton sald, have children attending Schweitzer and Disney
schools.
School Superintendent Spencer
Covert •aid closure or one of the
dlstrlct'• schools, because of decllnina enrollment, would
save at least Jl00.000 ln the
1978·79 sthool yelr.
Elderly to ~ee
Movie for Free
·· 1s11n& tn th• Stream,'' a
movie 1tarrtna Georse c. Sc:ott,
wUI tM 1bown free '° 1entor , cltlatn• at tbe Soulh Coaat
Theater. La1una Beach, May 19
at 2 p.m.
The tree tlckeu are •vaUabl•
at the Hwnu · Atta.ln Oepin·
m~ot, 516 Foreat Avenue,
L11una Beach. FurtbM In·
rormaUon ruay be obtained by
catlln1 Bob Ponerat"7·U.l .
• •
Younger has made against me. l
think he would want to go back
over his old campaign records
and return to me the money I
contributed to him in the past
··a~ause if I'm the kind of
* * *
• •
names u contained Ln the com-
mission report: ""'"°"' A«a<W. lndl ... -•11: ,,, ..... ,_ AO••on.1. S.n Jos.. Jotepfl Vincent AOQtlo,
S•l.,•tore Amerene, S•n l'rencltco. Pe~
quete Jolln Anlonelll, Sen Die~. Dentel -~IOC.Nr ~A .. 11_,...,
Dte90; Jo&ePll AnlN!ly Ati.11•. Ha<llWI ... :
Normen ArrlO, La~.
Henry Jotet>I\ .. 1 11e10. S... Pe41to; JoM
B•OllHO, $en "9dro; "9y Oenlel a.otl-. Sen
PeClto. Jo~ llonneM St .. Tvuon. Atlz .
~t.,et0<e Vinc.<lt eon-. Cefn~ll. Oomlnk Pl>tlllp lr-11., . ..,._lm • .J'renll P~ e..t·
'"''· Pelm Sprlno. v1ncenr Donllnk Caci. Pelm Sclt'lno&. -....au
C..oleno. llllnolt; S-1 Rey C.Otet>Ate. GI.,..
d•te , LOlltt Cftltot-. Lh A,.IH; JoMpll
.-.e.,ler corrllo. Lot Golot~ Ml<M•I HOMy
Cole II•, Simi Vellrt.
Jotet)ll D'it.oo-llM, Sen ~. ~rlt 8Mney
D•tlU , Aen<ho l• C.Otl•. A•IPll O'Angelo,
AnV.••m. A•ymonCI 0.AOH, LO• Ar199IH;
1u11e110 TOllY 0.KIKlolO, Sun V•ll•Y: Vt-Jam.t Oloirolemo. S.r•IOlll. L..oult Tom 0r.,..
Covin•. • C.Ort Eiellle4 E.ckaleln, Sen l"renctt<o. lClw.,CI
Fre11<11 lOtleln, Encino, AeymonCI Wltllem ,,.,.
rolo, Erle, Penll. fin leoerel llt'o1Kll"9 untodyl:
Anll'tony Ferro, AneMlm. J.ck l"IM , V•n Nu ..
lln letm1nal 1\lend Federet Prltonl, C.Orlo
F1ore1111no, Lo\ Angelo, Jetne\ f'rell•llnO. Mou
Brach llecll'ral protKll•e cutlOCly I.
Trt•oOo•• GHW"'"· WOOCll•nd Hiii\, Lv1ol
Geltu\O Burb .. nlt fin F•O•••I Correction••
Cent~. S.n Peclrol Jeck C.Ordon c;,..,,, s.n
lundro H<tr rv (;.ro\\, Lono 8eec rt
Wltt1em He1mowH1, LOnO h«rt~ Jeclt Dell
Hero l ono 8e•c1> (1n U 5 Pen1te11to••Y.
luv•nwor1h. K•~ I IC.ele l<•IU\UMI, EncinO.
C..ratd R•y Kl)Clll)n Sunt-. Arnold IAoNrd
Kommou. C••••~d . Sooney l(o"h•k. los
Al\OtlO • Jernn J LA11,., Sen Meleo· Ed•Md LolMOn, a ••• ,,, Hltll; H-1 .. JoM l tbe•••or•. s...
O•eoo. S.m Litner. Oo-y Jeck l0<lof11. Lo.
An99le•. Roli.nd 5'1T'Qn lOVden. Miit V•llrf
Mlcllete Gl<W-MMcrtoM. P•-· Afl9el0 AlllhOtly M•r•no. S•n JOH. Pllllllp Robert
Mutu\, Lo• .Ano-I•\ H....,ld Mettrer ..... ,,.,
Hiiis. Miiton ZvOer Mende, Lo• An9flft; A,,.
ll'tony Oomtnoc Me,,,,., Jemvt Un C.Otlfornl• tlele
Pro.Oii •• Ollnol. ,..., .. -MllOllO, Wttll .....
SMldon O.•ld Mlllff, Hottl't HOllf'll'OClll
Roberl Geof'oe P--. Ce"I~ (In l"edffel
Penll•nll••Y. S.n PeClrol; kennell't P•l.O•no.
W-l•nCI Hiiis. Roe.co Victor Pu~te. Hor11>
HollywoOCI; Rene J•met Plcc•rr•lo, Yue<•
Vetley . .Allreel Ponttcelll, Tl'IOuwnCI OM\ Un
led•••I prlM>rl, Ja.et)ll LOUIS Pier,., S...1•
Cl••• Dominic~ R~. ~Perk: Tl!of'n•s Lou••
Rlcclerdl, C:.noO• P••~; "'°'lclleel AnthOny
Rlnllello. ~ "••• Anll'tony Aom•M, o.n. Vtlle
S•m Ori.-S<lor11nO, Aencl'to MtrolQe; O..let
!'>•••fine. '""••lo" . .AltreCI JOHPI> Sic•, HotlywOOCI, Fr•nt. Retpll Slut, SVtlt-; JoH91>
SIU. sun Veller. ~ $1" 811ftitnk, AlllllO
SP•Ofluoto, Peclllu fin "•*••• CotreclioNI 111.illvllon, s.. "9Clf'OI, JOfln WllllMl'I .....,.,.,
(Of'On.ldo • &rlM JoMP'I Slt lllno, .-01 1"9 Hiii•:
loul• Slern, Lo.Ano-1-.
J•me1 JOMCJI\ Tote, Ult Al•mllot Un ,,..,_, .. Cornch-1 t11lllluU0•1. Tt•mtrwtl l}l-1. Lo<Ms
Tell Jr .. Lot AllQelft. Mic-Auchr TIIMl'I. s.n
l"••n<lt<O
Prenk -VelOll4t, 0.ktend; ~rtes Antl'IOny
Vert.,., tClyUwtto. UNlt Joh<> Verl,.., Palm Sor·
•"9\: 5-lvMoreVlleM,HotlllHoltywood.
VICIO• ...... Werber. LOS Angeles, Donelel
Jo .. Pfl Wiener. Otvl• Vltte. Mklletl ,..,.,_.
Lot A~•: -*-z-o-111. ~etm S.W~.; EowUCI All..O Zllllw, C.i. ....... llft ,_. "''-'· r.,...,.,... '"-"
Korshak is one of 92 persons
Vounger's Organized Crime
Control Commission identified
Tuesday as being connected with
the mob.
Younger's campaign officials
confirmed receiving a contrlbu·
lion of $1,000 from Korshak in
May 1971. And county records
revealed a $2,000 campaign
donation by Korshak to Younger
in 1970.
At Vounger's headquarters
T.auday...-a -'"ed4aC4ld -aide
blamed an office sllpup for
Korshak receiving the attome:
general's late.st campaign
solicitation.
"I know we wrote. 'Do Not
Mail.· over his name In our
master card me.·· the aide said.
Niguel Man
Gets Spot on
LAFCO Panel
Laguna Niguel re s ident
Robert Dwyer has been named
to the five-member Local Agen-
cy Formation Commission by
the other four members of lhe
com mission.
Dwyer will take the seat
formerly held by Stan Northrup
or San Clemente. who served 10 years on LAFC. the final six as
a pubUc member
Dwyer is a retired advertising
and sales executive and was a
director and vice president of
the South Coasl County Water
District and the Moulton Niguel
Water District.
He was a lso a director and manager of the Three Arch
Hay Services DislrU:l and the .
Three Arch Bay Kssociallon.
and director of the United South
Orange County Communities As·
sociation.
The commission. comprised or
two county-1Supervison. two
municipal representatives and a
public member. oversees the
formation of city govemment.s
and special districts.
Dwyer joins Supervisors
Thomas Riley and Philip L. An·
thony and Newport Beach Coun·
cilman Donald A. Mcinnis and
Tustin Councilman Donald S.
Saltarelli on the panel.
JarvU-Gann
Impact Topic ..
.OfC~Fomm
How would passage of the
Jarvls/Gann tax initiative affect
Costa Mesa, Orange County gov·
ernment and the Newport.Mesa
Unlfled School Di.strict?
Costa Mesa M&)'Or Ed
Mc Farland, school district
Superintendent John Nicoll and
"'Ol'anp -COanty adm1n1atr:utve
aide Paul Raver will outline the
potential impacts at a public
forum Monday at 7 :30 p.m. at
Rea Middle School. 601 Hamilton
St .. Costa Mesa.
A representative of the United
Organization of Taxpayers. a
group supporting the property
tax inlUalive, also will be on
hand to answer questions from
the audience
The meeting ls sponsored by
the Mesa West Homeowners As·
soclallon. It is open to the public
without charge.
Ra~ Suspect
Sought in SD
SAN DIEGO <AP> ·-At least
20 recent sex·related assaults in·
duding eight rapes are under in·
ves tlgalion in M•ssion and
Pacific beaches.
The victims say he is young,
while. about six feel tall and
athletically built. He often raps
on windows first after observing
women alone. knocks on doors
or leaps from hallways.
In many instances. the at·
tacker has worn a blue.and.
white bandana over his face and
a blue sweat 11uit with nothing
e lse.
Korea Aid Voted
WASHINGTON <AP) -In a
move designed to oflset-t~
withdrawal of U.S. combat units
from South Korea, a House com-
mittee approved Tuesday the
transfer of $800 million worth of
military equipment to Korean
forces. 'Ibe proposaJ was sent to
the House Ooor by a voice vote
of the International Relations
Committee
Tennis Dresses
Ladies' Tennis Shorts
Ladies' Tennis Shirts
Men's & Boys' Tennis Shor!
Men's & Boys' Tennis Sblrts
Tennis Sox
Tennis Rackets
Wilson • Davis -Yonex
Prince • Blncraft • Dunlop
Racquetball Rlcquets
Badmint10 Rackets
Racklt StrlnPtl
·.
Solar
Energy
Pushed
GOLDEN. CoJo. <API -P esTI!tdt ··carter marked "Sun
Day" lhil afternoon by ordering
• Cablnet·level atudy to develop a national solar atraten and by
'J)ral1ln1 BOiar en•rlY u a pc>Uln·
lia' counterweight to rl1ln1 oU
prlres. tr ~ark• prepared for de·
Jivery. at the Solar Energy
Peaeuch Institute here .
however. Carter didn't promiae
any new funds for solar re·
seart'h
But the prealdent noted that
his propc»ed bud&et for fiscal
1979 contains a 6' percent ln·
<'rease In money for develop-
ment of solar power over the
federal budget of two yeara ago.
On the first day of a three·day
.swing through Colorado.
Cal ifornia , Oregon and
Washington. Carter announced
that the Agriculture Department
wil I lend $14 million to the city of
Lamar. Colo . for a project to
turn livestoclc excrement Into
methane gas.
Carter lost all four states to
Gerald R. Ford ln the 1976 elec·
tion. and hls Western tour was
billed by the White House as an
efforl to win public support for
adrr inistration programs.
"Nobody can embargo aun·
light." the president told hll au·
dience at the research center. a
fe d e rally financed project
operated for the Department of
Energy by the private. non·
profit Midwes t Research
l nslllute or Kansas Cit)'.
--.":No cartel controii i.he sun:"
Carter said in an apparent ref·
erence to the Arab oil embargo
or 1973·74 "Its energy will not
run out. It will not pollute our
air or poison our waters. Jt is
free from stench and s mog. The
'iun 's power needs only to be col·
lected. stored and used.
·'The question is no longer
whether solar ener~y works." he
added. "We know 1t works. The
only question is how to ct.it costs
!>O that solar power ~an be used
more widely and set a cap on
rising oil prices."
.carter said his energy plan.
still stalled in Congress. would
in<'rease use or home solar
~ystems by offering more than
~00 million in tax credits -up
to $2,000 for each homeowner -
011er the next seven years.
The Cabinel·level review will
be headed by Energy Secretary
James R. Schlesinger, who ac·
companied Carter on the trip.
The panel will issue a report by
Sept. 1 to help Carte r make bud~et and legislative recort':
mendations next fall
Fro.PageAJ
DOCTOR •••
gltng to death a newborn truant
which survived his attempt 12
hours earlier to abort the 18·year.
old mother.
It is alleged t.&.tat W(lddlllchoked
the child to death \n the bel,lefthat it would be,..llUle mou .than a
brain·damaged human vegetable
iflt li11ed
CM Downtown
Plan Reviewed
A r eview of Costa Mesa·s
downtown redevelopment plan
will be held at tonight's regular
m eellng of the Costa Mesa
Redevelopment Agency.
The review is set to evaluate
construction progress in the
downtown area and to hear
public comment.
The meeting begins at 7:30
p. m a' the Downtown Com·
munity Center. 594 Center St ..
Costa Mesa
Classes Resume
TOLEDO. Ohio (A{>)
Toledo's 52,000 public school
puplls went back to normal
<'lasses as teachers and non.
academk employees ended a
three·Wet>k strike.
c
DAILY PILOT
OMltll't ... .._. .. ~a-"
f'...-1'-.AJ
€RASH •.• • Iler pauenaet. Jobn Condow.
IO. Or1n1•1 •11 pinned ln the
wreckage. He waa seriously in·
Ju red. patrolmen ta.Id.
Van driver George Kahgat. 42.
of El Toro suffered back in·
juries. a patrolman said. and
was taken to Saddltback Com·
mun1ty Hospital.
Truck driver Merrigan was
not injured.
Merrigan said. "l looked In
the mirror to aee thll woman
passing me. I looked forward
again and saw this whole Une of
vehicles coming. I thoutht. 'Man
alive!'" The truck driver said he "felt
u tug·• and "my air buner came
on . Thia ls where t coasted to ...
JUMBLED MASS OF TRUCKS AND CARS SPREADS ACROSS EL TORO ROAD FOLLOWING FIVE-VEHICLE COL'-ISION
Firemen (at left) Comfort John Candow~ 30, Pinned In Car That Reportedly Tried To PHI Gravel Truck
Caputo. sales manager for
Toyota of Corona. was uninjured
m the series of accidents.
'Mobster' Punded Younger
.. All I know ls that t was
following behind this truck and
saw his lights come on," Caputo
s aid. "The truck came to a st.op. I
hit my brakes and then hilbisrea~
t>nd. I have no idea what l\apoened
upfront.··
LOS ANGELES (AP> -Labor
lawyeF Sidney R. Korshak may
be on state Attorney General
Evelle J . Younger's mobster
list, but that has n't deterred
Younger from accepting $3,000
in campaign donations from
* * '*
Kors h ak and see king yet
another for his gubernatorial bid
this year.
"f threw it away arter reading
it, .. Korshak said Tuesday of the
recent request for money. "But
in view of the ac'Cusations
* * * Fro•PageAJ
CRIME REPORT IN ERROR.
prison term in the federal prison
on Terminal fsland. he was
convicted in 1975 with five ~lhers
in a nationwide fraud scheme
.1.h.aL.b.ilkesl inves tor.s .Dul oc.. near.ly $1 million.
Dominic Brooklier, Anaheim.
is list..ed by tbe report as a ~en·
U4H-dttdidete-tn bel:ome head or
.J>rganized crime In Southern
California. He has past convic·
lions ro~ armed robbery. larceny
and intenitate transportation or
forged documents.
He is currently unde r ind!cl·
ment for a variety of racketeer·
ing-c harges in<'luding the
mu;de r of San Diego Mafia
leader. Frank "The Bomp"
Bompensiero.
Ralph D'Angelo. Anaheim. is
reportedly an associate of New
York's Gallo family and is con·
sidcred to be a contact for East
Coast mob figures who come to
California.
Anthony Ferro, Anaheim. is
a llegedly involved in narcotics
activity and is reputed to be an
enforcer for crime figure.
Robert Paduano of nearby Cer
ritos. according to the report.
James Testa. Los Alamitos. ls
also serving a sentence al
Terminal Is land for extortln"
pa.ym ents from Los Angeles
bookmakers. His partners in the
extortion scheme included Mafia
figures. also named in the re·
P.Ort,. ~~i.otlfo.o .. .J?ete.r.
Milano and Brooklier.
The commission rePQJ't poted
that despite the increased activ1·
ty on the part of-organized crime
-it was estimated tolbe a $6.8
blllion·a·year' business jn this
state -· no one has emerged as
the leader In California.
Younger: a ·candidate for the
Rep u bll can gubernatori a I
nc:.mlnatlon. defended release of
the report In light or his pas\
comments that organized crime
is not a significant problem in
California.
He said the recent influx of
"Tlobsters has made the problem
comparable lo that raced by
eastern states.
Younger also defended his of·
flee. which has not fil ed a single
organized c r im e prosecution
during his term of office. by say·
Ing s tate law enforcement needs
more "'tools" such as wiretap-
ping authority a nd cooperation
of federal agencies to fight or·
ganlzed crime in California.
Herc·s the complete list of
Mesa Fish Fry
Seeking Talent
A ta lent search I& plaqned to
round up entertainment for
_Costa Mesa's 33rd Annufll ...fish
Fry June 2·4 al Lions Park.
Auditions will be held at the
Orange County Fairgrounds at 4
p.m. and 7 p.m . on May 17. 18. 24
and 25. Entry forms are now
available at the Fairground's
administration bulldinR.
Lions Club officials will judae
the tryouts and wlonera will
compete for trophies at t.M Fi5h
Fry.
5 Motelmen
Charged
In Anaheim
Five Anaheim motel operators
or e mpk>yees face charges or
keeping disorderly houses of
prostltutlon after their arrest
this week, Anaheim police said
today. ·
The five are accused or know·
ingly renting rooms to pros·
litules, police said.
Arrested were Walter David
Helm. 21, a clerk al tbe Caravan
Inn. 130 W. Katella Ave.; Dennis
Wayne Iverson. 24, a clerk at the
Raumatau Motel. 823 S. Be~h
Blvd.; Robert Leroy Tolle, (2,
manager of the Siesta 6 Motel .
821 S. Manchester' Ave.;
Also, Mr.an Bbai Patel. 40.
owner ot. • Hacienda Motel,
2176 S . arbor Blvd .. an<!
Parsotam Rambhai Patel, 41,
owner of the FTOnLerla M<>tel,
933 S. Harbor.
Officers .aid tht arn111ta tt·
tulted from a two.week tn·
veat11aUon by vtce officers and
atemmed from informatlon re-
ceived rrom proaututo• arrested
earlier.
Fnnde Renewed
BERKELEY ,iAP, -The Ulllveralty ot CaJJfOm!• baa won
renewal of two key federal ~n· traeu, but Will tace • r.vlew of
bJtlnt Pr•etfeff wltlch have
been alleaed to be blHed •a•tnat women.
Singers. daQcers and novelty
performers are being sought. Entry Jocms _.must. be. liled by
May 12. For more information
call 751·FAIR.
ParentJJ Fight
Plan ro Close
GmdeSclwol
A eroup of parents has filed a
SlOO million lawsuit against thu
Magnolia School District. claim
ing the district's plan to shul
down Lo\\ Elementary School
June 15 Is "unlawful."
William Morton. a member o•.
the school's PTA. said the dis
trlct's trustees, who voted April
18 to dose the 300·student school . failed to follow the
recommendations o' ,a cltizen'b
advisor) group
A ?t1 ay 22 hearing has been
scheduled by Orange Count}
Superior Court Judge Harmon
Scoville. He ordered the district
to show why a preliminary in
junction should not be Issued to
bar the school's closing.
Morton said the advisory com
m lllee re c ommended the
closure or Schweitzer and Dis·
ney sc.hools -a plan be said the
board disregarded because of
"per1onal blaa."
At least two of the board mem·
bers. Morton sllld, have children
attending Schweitzer and Disney
schools .
School Superintendent Spencer
Covert said closu~ or one of the
district'• schools. because of
decllninlt enrollment, would
!lave at least $100,000 in the
1978·79 achool year. j
Elderly to See
Movie for·'Free
"lalandi. in the Stream,'' a
rnovl• narrtna G.eorce c. Scott, wUI be abown rree to aenlor t'ltlaen~ at the South Coast
Theat«. La1una Beach, May 19
at 2p.m .
The free tlcktia are availab\tr
at th• llumaa Attain Depan.
m•nt, '1& For .. l Avenue,
Lacuna 8Hch. Farther in·
rormaLloo may be obtllned by umna Bob Porter at CtT-2441.
Younger has made against me. I
think he would want to go back
over his old campaign records
and return to me the money J
contributed to him In the past
person he says I am -and l 'm
not -then I don't thlnk he
would want It on his record that
he took money from me."
..
Jarvis-Gann
Impact Topic ·'Because if I'm the kind of
* * *
• •
names as contained in the com-
mission report:
Anlllofty Au aroo. tndi.,. w.111; V•lll 1-r-
Adra11n•. San Jou: Jo1et>ft Vlncanl AgMlo.
S•lv•IOr• Amar•n•. ~an 'r•n<luo. P•._ qua•• John Anton•lll, S•n Olato. Dental
-A ..... t!ftclrlol ...... '--• ..,.._ .... 01a110. J°'*' Anlllony Arla110. N,prlllll ... ;
Norm.., Amo, LM """'" · Han" Joi""' ••tlleao. S-o P••ro: JOM 8~11eio. s.., PNro. "av Ootnl .. ~lau. San
Padro, JOI~ Bonn.no ~ .. Tuoon. Alli • ~l\lalore lllnc.t11 8onnaflo. c.m..-..1. Oomlnlc
Phllllp •r-11..-. .,._Im. Fr•nll P-..1 ltut· <••rt. P•tm s.wll'IO'
v1non1 Domini< Caci. P•tm Sprlnot. ManNll
C•1lano. llUICll1, Samwl AO)' Co1.0rtte. Glar>-
dala. Louil c.n11;1i-. Loi Anoatat; JOMClfl Aavl•r C•rrllo. Loi Gelo': Mlc~tl H•nry
Col•ll•. Simi V•lltv Jo1""' O'Apllno. San ~; MMrl1 llMMY
0•1111, R•l'<l>O L• Co•••. Aalpfl O"Aftee•o. A,,.11•1"'· R•1mond 0.RoH, Lo. Ar>09lu;
lgnH IO Tony Due laclolo. Sun V•ll•Y: Vlncanl
J•m., Ol9iro1amo. S.ralOgjl. L.out1 Tom Dr-.iN.
Covin•
C•tl EHtolel E011tln. San fr•nc:lsco. Edw.,d
Fr1n<l1 EPtt .. n, E11elno. Reymono Wllll•m ,..,.
rtlO, Erl•. "9!111 Un '~·· prolacll~ CUllOCtVI:
Anlllony P'trro. Ano!Wlm; Jac:ll Flrw, V•n Nuyl
(In Term1n•I 1\1...0 Ftdtr•I Prl1on>. Corio
F1ort~l1no, ~ Aft9eltt, Jtmt' Frellonno. Mou 8~acll (1-••I 1><otaclhrtcu1lodyl
Theodor• C.a1wtrlh, WOOdland Hllh. Luo9I
C.tllu•o. 8urb•nlt. 11n Fed.,•I Correc11ona1
Cenle<. San ~01 J•O Go•dcl<> "'""· S.n
Leudro. Ha<ry (.rou. Lonq lk•cll
Wlll1am Ht1mow1U, L0"9 8Hcll; JaO Don Herd. LonQ 8r•cll ton U.S. Penlltnllary,
LHvtnwor111 1(.,,.. 1 ktlt Kah .. ttan. Encino.
C.••••d Rav KH90ft !Mfnland. Arnold Leo-d
IC •mmr•. C•rl\b.td Sidney Ko"lltlt.. LO\
An~lf\
J•mu J unu. s.n Meleo; Edwa<d u..i-.
Boerly Hlll1, HOdrlM John Llberelort. SM
Ott90. Sam Litner. 0.-v Jack Locluro. L°' AnQtlH. llCM&ano simon LO<id9n, Moll V•ll•Y
MICl'lele GlovenN Marc-P•-; N19e10 An111011y M•rtno. !tan Jose. PllllllP Roberl
Mt••er• Lo• Anoe••• Marold Mellie• llewrtv Holl•. Miiion Zucker Mtf>de. Lo• All09ffl; An-
ll>Ofly Oomlntc: ,.._, Jam .. 1 lln Collfoorlllt 110lr
Prl11011 •• Otlnol. ,.., .. JOM Miiano, Wt1UeM.
..sn.tdO<I Oovld Miiier. NOtlll HOllywoaO
Robert Geof9I P--. Cerri~ (In F-ral
Ptnlltnlltry, San PtdrOJ. Ktnntlll Ptl.OlftO,
W-l•ncl Hll"· Rocco VICI« P•11-1t. Nor1.ll
HOllywOOd RtM J lmtl P lccarrtlO. Yucc•
Vtllty. All...O Ponllct lll. Tllo1aand Otll1 lln
ltd•r•I prllO,.I. JO\epf\ LOU•I PlttH, Sanlt , .•..
Oomtnlclr Raffone,~ P•rk. TllomH LOllll
Rlccl••dl, C1n091 Pt••. Miehe•• Anll>Ony
Rlnlltllo, ~ Pe••· Antllony Rom-. Oen.
Ylllt .
S•m Ori-S<lorllnO, Rllll(llo Mirage; O..iel Str.illnt, AlherlO'I, Allred JOHPll Sic•.
Hollywood. Franll Aalpl\ sica, SUnland; .lolf/llfl
Siu, S..n ll•lley; Nundo Mc. 8~nk. Alllllo
Spoon11010. Potc•tc• lln FtO.r•• Cort~
1111tllullon, Sool "-dro>: John ~lllem ~.
Coron•clo• ~.,-Jowoti Sttlllno, ltol lllQ Hllt1:
Lou11s1 ...... ~""9e•ft
Jt"'t• JOMClf\ T"I•. Loi Altm1I01 lln F9deret
Corrtch-• 1ns1111111on, Te•Mlnat ltlandl. l.Oul1
Ttlf Jr., Loi AnQelH, Mic-Audy Them. s.n
Fran<IM:O
Frt nk JoM VtloCta, Otlt.la<ld, Chfrltl AntNlllY
Vettvt, fdYllwllCI. &.ou11 ~ Verlw . ftalm 5Pr·
•no•. Selv•tot•VttOI•. NorlhHollywOOd.
"''<lor P.t11I Werber, LOI "'""'": Ooneld JOMPll W'-"''· Olvl• Vl110. MICllHI z.tt.,_,
Loi Aneelft: j«ome Ztrowllr, ftetm Wi1191. £ow•rd All..O ltAlet", Goll• MeWI llfl "911t<OI
PrtlOt>. T tnnf NII IM-J.
Korshak is one or 92 persons
Younger's Organized C rime
Control Commission Identified
Tuesday as being coMected with
the mob.
Younger's campaign jofficials
confirmed receiving a contribu·
tlon of Sl.000 from Korshak in
May 1971. And county records
revealed a $2,000 campaign
donation by Korshak to Younger
in 1970.
At Younger's headquarters
'fu&&d&y, .a-red-faced aide
blamed an office slipup for
Korshak receiving the attorne:
ge.nef!81 's latest cat'b paign
solicitation.
"I know we wrote. ·oo Not
Mail.' over his name In our
master card file." the aide said.
Niguel Man
Gets Spot on
LAFCO Panel
Laguna Niguel r esident
Robert Dwyer hH been named
lo the five·member Local Agen·
cy Formation Commission by
the other four members of the
commission.
Dwyer will take the seat
formerly held by Stan Northrup
of San Clemente. who served 10
years on LAFC. the final six as
a public member.
Dwyer is a retired advertising
a nd sales executive and was a
director and vice president or
the Soulh Coast County Water
District and the Moulton Niguel
Water District
Of CM Forum
How would passage Of the
Jarvis/GBM tax Initiative affect
Costa Mesa, Orange County gov·
ernment and the Newport·Mesa
Unified School District?
Costa Meaa n-yor-E"'a
McFarland. school district
Superintendent John Nicoll and
-orange County ·admlnfsfratTye
aide Paul Raver wUI outline the
potential Impacts at a public
forum Monday: al 7:30 p.m. at
Rea Middle School, 601 Hamilton
St .. Costa Mesa.
A representatlve of the UnICed
Organization of Taxpayers. a
group supportlng the property
tax initiative, al$0 will be on
hand to answer questions from
the audience
The meeting ls sponsored by
the Mesa West Homeowners As·
socialion. tt is open to the public
without charge.
Rape Suspect
Sought in SD
SAN DIEGO <AP> ·-Al least
20 recent sex·related assaults In·
eluding eight rapes are under in·
vestigation in Mission a nd
Pacific beaches.
The victims say he is young.
white. about six feel tall and
athletically built. He olten raps
on windows first after observing
women alone. knocks on doors
or leaps from hallways.
In many instances. the at·
tacker has worn a blue.and·
while bandana over his face and
a blue sweat Ruit with nothing
else.
He was also a director and
manager of the Three Arch
Hay Services District and the
Three Arch Bay Association.
and director or the United South
Orange County Communities As·
sociation. K Aid V •ed The commission. comprised of Orea 0111
-two-eounty St1pervisors,-t.wo. ~ WASHlNGTON-CAP-J -=-In a
municipal representatives and a move designed to offset the
public member, oversees the withdrawal of U.S. combat units
formation of city governments from South Korea, a House com.
and special districts. mlttee approved Tuesday the
Dwyer Joins Supervisors transfer of $800 million worth of
Thomas Riley and Philip L. An· military equipment to Korean
thony and Newport Beach Coun· forces. 1be proposal was sent to
cilman Donald A. Mcinnis and the House noor by a voice vote
Tustin Councilman Donald S. of the International Relations
Saltarelli on the panel. Committee
Lynn Hort HART'S John Harl
SPORTING GOODS
538 CENTER ST. •COSTA MESA • 646-1919
Close Out
About 200 Bike Tires
Mostly 20x2125
& 2Dx 1.7 5 200 each 3•s ... •s.s•s Value
Baseball Shoes
Soccer Shoes
BasketbaH Shoes
JDUin1 Slloes
Track Shoes
Volleyball Shoes
Tennis Shoes
W•m Up Suits
Sweat Slits
Y -Nee' Sweaters Gym hnts
>
'I
Tennis Dresses
ladies• Tennis Sllorts
Ladies' Tennis Shirts
Men's & Boys' Tennis Shorts
Men's & Boys' Tennis Shirts
Tenn· x
Tennis Rackets
Wilson • Davis -Yan6x
Prince • Blncrlft • o.top
Racquetball bcquets
Badmintan Rackets
RICket Strtftlill
•
O"'"Y PILOT :J Wednnday. Max 3. 1978 .....
Murders •aunt Fatlier, llB Husband
;.,
-'DON'T THINK I CAN STAND' PUBLICITY
Dr. Jeffrey MacDonald of Huntington Beach
For Enerf1!1
~un -Day' Hailed
Across the Land
,· By '!'be Assocfaled Press black civil rights .movement In
r---Lt!1i-l>.y e.ar!y_risers who turned the 1960s to s'olar demonstrations
. out for dawn-seTvl.c~·-ut~OG.-·k--. -..c.. __
, . Americans celebrated "Sun "Sun Day" is sponsored by
Oay':..today. with fairs andDther Solar Action Inc, a nonprofit
. festivities desiened lo s how the group based lJr'Wasfiington Md
-'. potential of solar energy. is being run at the local level by
',, President Carter planned a organizations including con-
'.' speech et the Solar Ene rgy s ume r activists, environmen-
lnslitute in Colorado and several talists. educators, businessmen,
.'Ca binet departments joined in politicians and labor leaders.
, 'programs in Washington. D.C.
•. But there also was criticism or
· ' the federal government for not
, , moving fast enough in the solar
field.
' "We 're here to celebrate the
Ex-mayor
NamedOC dawning of the solar age and
bring the administration kicking
and screaming Into it," said \.J.S.
Rep . Richard L . Ottinger.
o -N. y .• addressing a crowd at the C1L -1·....,. ,..R
top or Cadillac Mountain in ltt,t • ••MAI
Maine. one of the spots where the
sun's rays first strike the United
Stales each day.
About 1.500 persons followed
Ottinger and U.S. Rep. James
Jeffords. R-Vt .. up the 1,530-foot
mountain near Bar Harbor. ·
Maine. this morning. Ottinger
and Jeffords said that the
federal government was drag-
ging its feel on solar energy.
which they described as renewa-
ble , cheap. safe and non -
polluting. ,
The Maine bikers had cloudy
. weather. But diplomats and
others who turned out for a
celebration that began at 5:57
· a .m . outside the U.N. head-
quarters building in N~w York
had better luck -clear skies
and bright sun. .
"Solar energy works." said
actor Robert Redford to a crowd
of a bout 1,500. "It won't pollute
our air and lt won't foui our
rivers." Andrew Young, U.S. am-
bassador to the United Nations,
com pared the success of the
San Juan Man
Faces Nest Law
Orange County sheriff's of-
ficers invoked an old and rarely
used city ordinance when they
issued a citation to Theron
N,.talis McLain. 66, of 26472
Paseo San Gabriel, San Juan
Capistrano. .
McLain was clled under the
provisions of city ordinance 276, a measure that allows officers to
book anyone who attempts to
destroy swallows' nests. .
Deputies said McLain 's al-
leged actions were reported to
them by a local resident wbo
said she saw him · destroyiDJ
swallows' nests ln a con·
dorolnium complex on Paseo
San Gabri.et.
BJ KATll'Y CLANCY °' .. ....., ........ Onn.p Co.inly 1upenlson
aerved notice Tuesday that they
may stop providlna ftei traini.na
for expanded fire department
J>•t101edlc aervtce ln cities.
The county •till would pa, fot
tralnlAI paramNJct to replace
those Who ra&in from cltJ or
county aervtce.
But lndavtdual fire dt'1art·
m.U would hev• Lo provide
tratnlnl eq>eaMf IOI" MrVltt U·
panslona as welt u bl·ann\lal
paramedic tettnlncaUooa.
Couni, ollida11 ettimate . lt
coll• '4 ,573 to tnln eacb paramedic and S362 for eaCb re-
certtftstkml
I• tbl ..... &be ~ ':fl'O':
. ~ &be tnUa1iai wblla dU. paid~~· AlarlM le ....... ~
Former Anaheim Mayor
William Thom was selected
chairman or the county's new
Fair Campaign Practices Com·
mission at the commission's
meeting Tuesday night.
Only a week earlier. Roy
K'naurt bad been handed
the chairman's gavel as the com-
mission created by t he Board or
lhe chairman's gavel as the cam-
paigns for county elected offices
met for t.he first time.
Bu\ Knauft bowed off the com-
mission Monday when doubt
about his eligibility lo serve was
raised because of his status as
an elected officeholder on a local
water board.
He was replaced on the com-
mission by Charles Stevens, a
former La Habra city coun·
cilman.
Selected by the county com-
mission lo serve a.a vice
chairman was Jerry Margolin.
Margolin's status as a com·
missioner was also in doubt last
week because ol his status as an
alternate member or the coun·
ty's Democratic Central Com-
mittee.
But Margolin said Tuesday
night he had sent a lette~ or res-i~nation to the committee to
clear the way for his service on
the new commission.
Named by ber fellow com-
missioners to serve as secretary
or the five-member commission
was Judy deArakal.
Tbose Ol'ganizatlonal matters
out or the way. the commission
moved to begin reviewing cam-
paign literature that had been
sent its way by candidates in the
June primary electi9n.
It was agreed that literature
prepared before Aprill, the date
'Oran ge County's politkal re·
form ordinance became effec·
tive. would not be subject to pro-
visions ol the ordinance.
• Included among those pro-
vlstons is a mandate t hat
campalp literature carry an ln-
dlcatloo tbat it has been ap·
proved by the candidate.
Case Touch es
GrieVing D ads
By PETER ARNETT ,.,. ...... c.r,..,.._1
A grieving father In New
Jersey determined to re-
member. A popular physician a
continent away trying to forget.
Haunting them both. the
memory of a brutal night in
North Carolina eight years ago.
Those forces are behind Moo
day's Supreme Court dec~ion that Dr. Jeffrey MacDonald of
Huntington Beach must stand
trial for the 1970 murders or his
pregnant wife and two children.
overturning a Circuit Court dis-
missal of the case.
For Alfred Kassab, 56, of
Dayton. N.J ., the high court rul-
ing is further vindication of an
unprecedented personal cam·
paign to punis h the man he
believes is responsible for the
stabbing murders or. bis step·
daughter. Collette. 24. and her
daughters. Kimberly, s. and
Kristen. 2.
two more years at least of ap·
pellate hearings.
"A case Uke this begins to
have a life of its own
Prosecutoni look at th1s case
and figure they can use it to ride
the paths to glory." Sega I said.
Alfred Kassab said he would
keep pushing the case. "I have
maintained publicly that I would
personally administer justice if
the cowts failed to.·· he said.
When, asked if this amounted
to a vendetta. Kassab declared.
"Yes. it does . Tlrere is no way
on earth I would let him get
away with it." But he added he
would ac~pt any verdict of a
jury.
MacDonald said he takes such
threats seriously.
"Kassab is seeking a solution
to an incredible situation. H~
has become fanatical about
this." the doctor said. "Thi~
nightmare goes on forev~r ··
Hinshaw Debt
.,. ...........
MURDER VICTIMS~ T CENTER OF CONTROVERSY
Kristen. 2, Kimberly, 5, a nd Mother Collette
Campaig n Funds
5 County lJ.opefuls
File Finance List
6y GARV GRANVILLE
CM Ille CMilf ~ ... M.ttt
Campaign finance repor~
filed with the Orange County
Registrar of Voters this week
show
The fifth candidate in the
race. former Garden Grove
mayor J . Tillman Williams
l oa ned himself th e .S597
necessary to file as a candidate.
Williams' statement does not
show any other contributions or
loans.
.. It has been tremendous personal pressure to have
someone running around loose
that you are convinced killed your
daughter and grandchildren. I D-.! J OC now. believe the trial will go r(U,(,f, to . tt-h~ •• JlAS,u.b •. .s aid in a '
-The county's most heavily
financed campaign 1s an the
second supervisorial d1stricl
whert~ five candidates have ac-
cumulated $320.0SS ror the June
ti primary election campaigns.
In the 36th State Senate Dis
tract race. the statement filed by
Schmitz today shows he has col-
lected $70,920. including $2,500
donations from both the Gun
(}..,;ii e n.-of-ea-t-i+o~-e~
California Medical Political Ac·
telephone interview. --~ ·-· -... ~ •· -
For Dr. MacDonald. 34. y.oho r -~e C'losed ---Repr-"11~.o ~~Juni.U is _
far outdistancing his rivals for
the Republican nomination in
the 36fh State-Senatt-Dtstritt-
when 1t comes lo campaign
financinJ!
has insisted Ttls famity-wa ~ -• --• _ .Ji9n CDm!! ttee. bludgeoned to death by a group
of people who broke into
his home at Fort Bragg, N.C ..
the court finding means that "I
wlll have to go on bearing the in-
credible weight of accusation,
yet there is no way I can be
found guilty. This affair has
become the central overwhelm-
ing force in my li re ...
Singlemindedly pursuing the
case bas been Kassab. a sales
executive for a New Jersey egg
company who at first supported
his son-in-Jaw's assertions of in·
no~ence: lfut after he obtained a
transcript of the nine-week
military inquiry that dismissed
the charges against MacDonald.
then a captain in the army
medical corps. Kassab said he
changed his mind.
Locating what he claimed
were "serious discrepancies" in
the hearing evidence. Kassab
said. "I w.ent to congressmen. to
the FBI. to the Justice Depart-
ment. I finally swore out a
criminal complaint before a
federal judge in North Carolina
in 197.f. They empaneled a grand
jury and appolnted a s~lal
pros~cut.Or." .
Kassab was also regularly
callinJ press conferences to
publicize charges against Mac-
Donald. Among other evidence.
Kassab claimed that a pajama
top. which t.be doctor said be
wore d~ the gang attack and
later laid over the body or his
wife, actualJy bad punclur~
boles that matched the stab
woundalnhisWife'scbest.
Meanwhlle, MacDonald was
starting life anew in Long Beach
as director of emergency
medicine at St. Mary's medical
center. He also became . presi-
dent of the Long Beach Heart
Association and medical direc·
tor of the Long Beach
paramedic pro~ram. The local
community tallied around when
he was indicted on murder
counts in 1975 and helped raise
his $100.000 bail.
Since then MacDoanld has
been fighting the case on pro·
cedural grounds.
"My lawyer tells me that a
jury trial will last at least aix
months. cost up to half a million
dollars and mean searing
publiclty. I don't think I can
stand that," he said in a
telephone interview.
.. The facts or the case haven't
changed since 1970 when an ex·
haustive military lnqulry
specifically determined that the
charges against me were untrue
and recommended that other
people be investigated.'· Mac·
Donald sa.ld. Hts lawyer,
Bernard Segal, said he expected
Without comment Tuesday.
Orange County Supervisors set-
tled a debt they claimed former
assessor Andrew Hinshaw owed
for illegally usin~ county.paid
e mployees in his 1972 con-
gressionaJ race.
Supervisors had riled suit m
1975 against Hinsl)aw. 35 as-
sessor's employees and their
bonding company to recoup
Sl2.806 in pay.
County auditors calculated
that was the amount of wages
given those workers by the coun
ty while they actually were
performing campaign functions.
Late r . the employees
themselves repaid $8,405 or the
total and a recalculation re·
duced the sum by another S720.
county officials said.
The remainin g SJ.681.
representing payments t o
workers no longer employed by
the county. was accepted from
the bonding firm by supervisor.:.
Tuesday. In tum, they dismissed
the s uit.
Hinshaw recently served six
months in jail stemming from
his conviction on bribery
charges and using his county
staff for campaign work-
In another action Tuesday.
supervisors ordered a $61,169
tax refund for the Tandy
. Corporation.
Thal settles a dispute that in-
volved alleged favorable treat·
ment to Tandy in the early
t970's .
Pastor, Wife
Get Jail Term
LOS ANGELES CAP > -
Prison sentences of one year and
one day apiece were meted out
to a minister and his wife. who
argued the Bible exempts Chris-
tians from the need to pay taxes.
The sentences were imposed
Tuesday on Ronald E . Boggs, 44,
and his 42-year-old wife. Ouida.
both members or the Ministry or
Christ Church in Glendale.
G em
T alk
By J.C. HUMPHRIES
Gemologist
DIAMO~D EXPLO RATION
benehth desert sands
-Republican Lee Watkins is
com ang close to matching GOP
rival Marian Bergeson in availa-
ble campaign dollars in the five-
t' and 1 dale race for the
Republican nominatton for the
74th Assembly District.
-Though unopposed in the
Democratic primary e lection
Assemblyman Dennis Mangers.
D-Huntington Beach, Is spending
as rapidly as the Republican
contenders battling for their
party's nomination.
-Faced wl&.h a cbalJenge from
five relatively unknown contend·
crs . Sheriff Brad Gates this
year has collected only SlOO to
finance his re·eleclion bid
PacinR the heavy spendinR in
the Second Supervisorial Dis-
trict is incumbent supervisor
Laurence Schmit
Schmit's campaign statement
showed that he has collected a~
of April 23, $170.757.
So far. Schmit ha~ spent
$98,604 on his campaign to head
off the challenge of four contend-
ers. •
And hi.$ st.alement shows that
he has $64,423 on hand to see him
through the campaign.
Schmit collected has Sl70,757
war chest over the past three
and one ha1' years .
But challenger Harriet
Wieder. a former Huntington
Beach city councilwoman. has
collected her $75,580 campaign
fund since nominations closed
March 10.
Included in that sum is $10.000
loaned Mrs. Wieder·~ campaign
by her husband. Irving Wieder.
Former s upervisor David
Baker who is trying to regain the
supervisor's seat he held for 12
years reported total campaign re-
ceipts of$39,846.
Of that, Baker loaned S22.500 to
his own campaign
A fourth candidate in the
Second District race. Sona a Son-
J U . showed on her campaign
statement that she borrowed
$30,000 at 10 percent interest
wi,lh real estate as security to
finance ber campaign.
Just as oil and other preciou:> com·
modlties are the subject of constant
exploration for oew supplies. so does
tbe Karch go on for precious diamonds. '
ThaTamount pu "S&m1li wen--
ahead or his chief rivals for the
Resfublican nomination.
Former Fountain ValJey city
councilman George Scott in·
dlcated on his statement that be
has raised $22,932 for his contest
with Schmitz and the other GOP
candidates.
In the same race, Republican
G 1 I Ferguson shows he hai.
amassed $23.240. $8.500 or it in
the form or pledges to finance
his try for the seat now occupied
by Senator Dennis Carpenter. R
Newport Beach.
Mrs . Be rgcson 's t'ampaign-
statement shows that she bas ac·
t'umulated $62,685 ror use in her
ca mpaign to gain the
Republican nomination in the
74tb Assembly District. ~
Her chief challenger for tJ)c
G 0 P nomination Lee W atk'ins
filed a statement today that
s hows he has accumulated
S60.629, most of it in the rorm of
loans to his campaign.
, fn lbe 73rd A&sembly D1s tnct,
Republican Nolan Frizzelle
s howed be has S'Ccumulated
S8.237 for bis campaign while
rival Chuck Gibson indicated on
his statement a total or $17.599
for use in his campaign.
Whoever wins the Republican
nomination in the 73rd will fa ce
incumbent Mangen; in the No-
vember geperal eleetion.
Mangers· statement showed he
had a balance on hand April 23 of
$14.131 lo finance has-re-election
bid
Ford Optimistic
LAS VEGAS, Nev. CA P I
Former President Gerald R .
Ford said Tuesday tfiat the re·
covery of his wife Betty from
alcohol and drug related prob·
lems would be considered in ha:.
decision whether to run for pre:.
ident in 1980. Here to address u
wine and liquor wholesalers
meeting, he said the family was
"optimistic about full recovery"'
for Mrs. ForcJ.
Geologbts for the famed DeBeers
diamond lllterests have ~vered what
they ~Uove Is the third richest diamOJtd
depo&it ln the world. This f'lnd ls ill
Africals southern Botswana. 'The trea•
sure is located beneath tlfc <ksert W'ds.
Sampling. whJch wUl be very expensive.
ts expected to last about four years. By
the time the fl11t diamond ls mJnctl. a hu~ fortune will have been pent by
De Beers.
reshaped rereNed revived ·
The aovemmcot 01 BouwanQ Ukes
the tdea Already. Botswan-a has liaOed ·
a(!J'Ctments wilh De8cer1 to operata two
other mines , and the Botswanlans are
lmpaUtnt for lhc third min. to be
"brought In!' OcBcers and Botswana .,. silll neaoU.ting ovtr terms of the .mntna apetnel\t. But. lt seems certain
that th.ls MW source will assure a supply
of qualtty diamonds for ye an to ~ome .
That's good nows for Botswantt andjor
the me C\f the wortd'
Jewelry of another era need not look out ot
place today Let our skilled artisans create a new
look for your fine gems Stop 1n soon and see us
for exclusive sketches end a cost estimate You
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OONVENfENT tE .. MS eankAmertetro-MastM Cha~e
30 YEARS IN THE SAME LOCATION PHONE 648~1
I
WedneldaY • .,_.y 3. 1971 NATION I WORLD
LefJanon Batile
. Jos t
.... ~~·~.~oasting
Q
wida~~ Tom ~~'~'
Troops. Placed
I • "·' .
Marpbine On Red Alert
Simply Don't Read
SIMPLE, EASY DIRECTIONS: No homeowner lives
more closely to the edge of disaster than tt\e Qo·lt·
Yoursel!er. He is plagued by his own base desire to fix the
raucel himself and save a buck.
BEIRUT. Lebanon <AP> -U.N. troops In south Lebanon were put
on red alert today following a series or ambush and mortar attacks
by Moslem extremists in which two French paratroopers. a
Senegalese soldier and a Palestinian were kllled, U.N. sources re·
All too often. this results In flooding of the new carpet.
Last night, I decided to install one of those bathroom
vanities between the bathtub and lhe wall. The area is 23
inches wide. The new vanity is 24 inches wide.
You do not move a bathtub to gain the needed inch.
Even a novice Do-lt-YourseUer knows this. You move the
wall instead.
THIS JOB WAS EASILY accomplished with a couple
of saws and a sledgehammer. Then came the bard part; to
install the sink and plumbing.
"Oh boy. you 're in trouble already." the son of our
household )nformed me as he unfolded directions for in·
stalling the faucet on the sink. "It says right here that all
you have to do is follow the Simple, Easy Directions."
I went into immediate shock. Every Do-lt·Yourselfer
knows that when they tell you it's going to be simple and
easy that it's really going to be impossible and result in
five skinned knuckles.
Do.IC· Yourself er Ponders Simple, ECJ$11 Direction&
"Don't read me the directions." I implored.
"Maybe we ought to play this plastic phonograph rec-
ord they sent along with the faucet," my wife suggested
with a smirk. "It's for people who can't understand lhe
written directions."
AGAINST MY PROTES1, the plastic record was
played. It's s upposed to start by declaring,
"CONGRATULATIONS! You've just purchased a won-
derful new Gusher Automatic Faucet ... "
But the record stuck. It just kept saying over and over,
"Con, Con, Con, Con ... "
"I've been conned again." 1 sighed.
Finally, all the plumbing was ready to be hooked up.
Of course, the new fittings didn't match the old connectors.
Everything had to be cul to fit. After much perspiration,
everything fit except the drain.
· "l 'LL JUST PUT this bucket under the drain so you
can use the sink in the morning," I told my wife brightly.
This morning she announced, "How do you suppose
water got all over my bathroom floor?''
I was gripped with fear and shame. My pipe connec-
tions must have sprung leaks during the night. I rushed to
the bathroom and dove under the new vanity ror a frantic
inspection.
U turned out the pipes were fine. It was the bucket that
had spnmg the leak.
Nothing is so sweet as defeat turned into victory.
LBJ, Kennedy Sex
Filled 'Grapevine'
cmcAGO CAP>-U was an "open secrel" lhal Lyndon B .
Johnson for years carried on affairs with Capitol HUI women but
he also "loved to hear gossip" of John F. KeMedy's sexual
escapades, says political influence peddler Bobby Baker.
Baker, writing in the June issue of Playboy magazine, gossips
about presidents Kennedy and Johnson, Sen. Estes Kefauver of
Tennessee, and sex, power. money and sports in Washington.
Baker said most of his stories came on hearsay from third
parties, the "Hill's active grapevine." Most of the recollections in·
volve persons who are now dead.
ported.
There w~re conJllcllng reports
on the number of U.N. troops in-
jured in the Incidents.
Capt. Jean ldenegeux. press
officer for Frenob troops. said 12
U.N. soldiers were wounded and
that most were French.
MENEGEVX SAID T H E
bodies or the three U.N soldiers
Gruff Ford
Cal"ls Job
'A. Trust'
DEARBORN, Mich. <AP>
Calling his job a "private and
public trust," Henry Ford 11
says stockholder allegations that
he blew Ford Motor Co. money
on personal luxuries· and took a
$7 50 .000 kickback are .pre-
posterous.
-. ..The gn&U boss of the country· s
No. 2 automaker and third
largest m a n uf ac turi n g en-
le1J2Jise told .a ntws.. ~rence _
Tuesday, "I'm not going to wait
for court processes to clear my
name . I ha-ve nothing to
bide ....
"FOR ME, FORD Motor Co.
has been far more than a place
or employment or a source or
earned income. It's been my
life. lt absorbs virtually all of
my time and attention In one
way or another. ll is a personal
and familv resnonsibility -a
private and public trust that I
have carried out as chief ex-
ecutive officer for nearly 33
-years. To suggest that I would
commit or condone any action
harmful to the company's rep-
utation or my own is pre·
posterous.••
Tbe swl was filed on behal! of
John Lang in a New York slate
court in Manhattan last week.
Lang waa described as trustee
for "a modest amount" of Ford
stock owned by the four children
or lawyer Thomas Bolan.
The allegation Ford termed
"the most offensive" was that
he accepted $750,000 in
kickbacks from Canteen Corp., a
Chicago caterer, in exchange for
an exclusive concession at Ford
facilities.
THE $50 MILLION suit also
charged that Ford threw "gross·
ly inflated" contracts to busi·
nesses owned by relatives, that
his salary and bonus last year of
$99.2,420 was "a gratuitous pay-
ment for which little if any
services' whatever were ren-
dered," that. the company paid
$80,340 a year for a luxurious
apartment in the Hotel Carlyle
in New York for Ford's personal
use and that Ford directors Il-
legally diverted company funds
to their own use.
Ford said Canteen Corp. bad
less than a quarter of Ford's
business.
4He said that a triena of 3S
years, Patrick Ciclcco. a consul-
tant for Canteen. bad asked him
about contracts. Ford said be re-
f erred Cicicro to the proper
Ford officials because ''l would
never gel into contracts. I 've
never signed a contract in my
life."
South Lashed by Storms
Texas Posts FWod Watch, Frost W amin8B
Albv'OW
AllNt.
S.lllm«IA
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.-IM Nti. r~ tfefll n !fl .,..,.,., ... ,, ,. "'K4y West. "•
•"l'Ney'1 ..,._, CalleO ,_•-wt
Aftd t!WflarttonM 0-..... t"9 Ovit
GN1t &tei.t as'"" as Oil..,.,,. Met ArkaMU.
were recov~red and that French
troops previously reported min·
inl were found wounded. The
wounded troops were nown by
hellcopter to clln'cs 'n Naqoun.
a Lebanese village, and Haifa,
Israel.
Na mes of the dead soldiers
were not released.
l'ietina Escapes
Lt. Jacques-Pierre Andre
Descamps. 25, one or the
wounded French troops. said in
a Haifa hospital that he was hurt
when the armored car he was ri~lng in was fired on and
cau·gbt fire . He suffered
shrapnel wounds In the face and
body bums. He sa'd the vehicle
was hit by rocket-propelled
grenades. In Paris. French Foreign
Minister Louis de Gulringaud
expressed reuet today that
French troops had been hurt and
blamed the Incident on "ir·
responsible elements who we
are told are uncontrolled." He
said nine French soldiers were
injured, five seriously.
Jodie Gaines. 18-year-old kidnap vtctim who escaped by
pounding on the iron bedframe to "'.hich she was
handcuffed for 10 hours until it broke . rushed into the
arms of her brother. Ben Gaines J r., Tuesday at the
family home in McKe nzie. Tenn. The FBI has arrested
two suspecW> aod is seeking a third. The $250.000 ransom
left in a ditch by her mother <background 1 was re-
eovered.
-. · Casino's Not Subtle -------. ' MGM Grand Gambl,es on lt,s Lure ·in Reno
RENO. Nev. <AP) -Step
aside, Las Vegas. Pardon us.
Monaco. Today the Biggest Lit-
tle City in the World becomes
the home of the biggest big
casino in the world -the
100,000-square-fool playground
in the new MGM Grand Hotel.
A casino the size of two foot-
ba 11 fields. holding -for sta~rs -2.000 slot machines
and 102 blackjack tables, sil8 at
the center of the MGM Gr and, a
26-story building filled with
Hollywood extravaganza decor.
Like the casino, nolblng ln the
$131 million hotel ls understated.
ITS EVENTUAL payroll of
3,500 employees will give it
more workers than the in·
dividual populations of five or
Nevada's 17 counties.
Its 1.015 rooms range from
three solarium suites with a
Roman bath and his-and·her
bathrooms at $250 a day to more
conventional $35 rooms. All are
decocated with art depictmg
MGM films.
Also within the hotel's walls
are an 1.800·seat showroom. a
2.000-seat jai alai fronton. two
theaters featuring MGM movies.
seven restaurants ranging from
gourm et to buffet, 19 bars, a
43-s hop arcade. five tennis
courts and a 50-lane bowling al-
ley.
DECORATOR DO NALD
Schmidt said the ornate chan·
deliers, the woodwork and the
bright colors were designed to
"achieve a European 'grand
hotel' look, a feeling of elegance,
luxury a nd sophistication ...
Sch m ldt admitted lt is a • bit
overdone but said "that's what
people want ."
Th e hotel. wh ich took two
years to build, marks a major
gamble by MGM offlcials on
Reno's ability to draw enough
big spenders to support their
hotel and the half. dozen other
hotel-casino projects scheduled
for opening later this year.
IF IT'S A QUESTION OF PROBLEM SKIN ...
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CALIFORNIA ~y. M11Y3. 1978 DAIL V PILOT A 5
I
Gays Win Victory
Panel B acks Job Discrimination Ban
Refinery
Pollution
•
SACRAMENTO <AP> -ln a
rare political victory for
homosexuals, a . s tate Senate
committee has approved a ban
on job diacriminalion baaed OIL.
sexual preference.
Slate Sen. John Briggs, R·
Fullerton. announced Monday
tha l be had collected enough
signatures to qualify the in·
iliallve for the November ballot.
The secretary of state's office
wlll decide later thls month
whether the measure has the
needed 312,404 valid signatures.
now, gay people wiU be given
the same rights."
THE BILL. SB Z053, by Sen.
Mllton Marks. R·San Francisco.
won the bare majority of votes
needed on the seven·member
committee. Several opponents
were1 absent when the vole was
taken . The bill next goes lo the
Senate Finance Committee.
Reported
LOS ANGELES <AP> -Slop· py equipment maintenance at
six Southern California oil re·
flnerlea ls filling the air w•th
about as much smog as would be
generated by nearly two mlllion
n e w cars. th e s tate Air
Resources Board chairman has
charged.
But the blll, approved 4·0 Tuesday by Ch e Senate In·
dustrlal Relations Committee, is
thought to have little c;hance of
final passage in this election
year. A similar bill died in an
Assembly committee last year.
AN D THE HOMOSEXUAL
community faces a potentially
more serious defeat later this
year in a state ballot lnJtiaUve
aimed at removing openly
homosexual teachers and gay·
rights advocates from public
schools.
~ AT TUESDAY'S HEARING,
homosexual activists. includlng
the state's most prominent gay
polltician, were takinif a more
optimistic long· range view.
"What is happening is lhe
eme rgence of gay political
power," said San Francisco
Supervisor Harvey Milk, an ad·
milted gay. "It's no longer a
taboo subject ....
"Some day, whether this year or next year or 10 years rrom
It would ban job discrimina-
tion based on sexual preference
for any company or agency with
al least five employees. Persons
with reeords of sexual conduct
involving minors would not be •
protected by the bill.
FOES FROM fundamentalist
religious groups said that ex·
emption wasn't enough.
·'This is something many
parents could not comfortably
live with. if their children's
school teachers ... were
Tom Quinn, in a speech to the
Ca lltornia Lung Assqciation,
claimed Tuesday that leaky
valves. nanges and seals were
found at all refineries inspected
by the ARB during a six·day
period ln February.
.lft Sales fi'la~d
LOS ANGELES CAP 1
I s rae l's Prime Mini ster
Menachem Begin has told com-
munity leaders that Israel "ob·
Bo d IOU Pl manifested to be homosexuals." ar S an said the Rev. W.B. Timberlake.
· head or a group called the Com· "'--f.Ze.-at~d ntiltee on Moral Concerns. '-'V"•• ~.... .:;.
"Public schools would suffer Detectives J ack Fis her . left. a nd Mike Stodelle of San
( ) STATE
T 'S 1•1' St t Rreatly · · · because whether Bernardino County Sheriff's Office. examine a cache of 0 p I 8 e ~t~~b";~h~r 0;ar~~~n~o~1dg~::! weapons round in the investigation or an a mbush s tay·
jects absolutely" to America's
proposed sale or jet fighters to
Egypt.
the ir chlldr1n to private ing in Rialto .. The guns are reportedly the prol?erty of
SACRAMENTO <AP> -In the latest skirmish in the cen· schools." David Philip Sheppard who is sought. for his -mvolve ·
Begin, speaking Tuesday af-
ternoon before flying to Chicago.
also said a Carter administra·
lion proposal to supply F · 15 jet
fighters to Saudi Arabia "would
turn It into confront.ation slate
with Israel."
tury·old battle of the Redwoods vs. the Freeways, an Assembly d f w ·11· S committee has kllled a northern California attempt to split t&ae BUT SUPPORTERS s a id mcnl in the mur e r O I ia m t a mps .
state ln two. nearly all child molesters are
Assemblyman Barry Keene, sponsor or the measure to heterosexuals, and contended
create' a new state of Alta California, sought the surgery there is no evidence that youths
becau~e he said slate government has grown too big, expensive a re. or can be. "converted" to
and unresponsive. homosexuality by teachers. And the Eureka Democrat said, he feared "the north·south An oppone nt, Sen . R ay
conflictS over waler and other natural r esources are only going J ohnson, R·Chico. said the bill
to escalate and get uglier in the coming years." w'oltta fnffinge <>n-Ute "rights of
businesses and on freedom of re-
THE VOTE TUESDAY in the Governmental Organization ligion.
Comm ittee was 4·2, one short of passa~. But Keene. who is run· "Let's say I have a business
ning for a North Coast state Senate seat, said he hoped his bill -and my customers have a right
even when dead -would prompt' discussion of northern to discriminate by not going in
California needs. my store. I would go broke," he His proposal would split the state at t!'e Tehachapi M<?un-said. >
tains, just north or Los Angeles. but he said he would consider "THERE ARE MANY Chris·~ other borders. "We Alta Californians don't mind sharing our natural re· tians in this country who do not
sources with our southland friends," he said. "But we do object a P P rove of hom os ex ·
-strong, loudly and constantly -to attempts at naked ripoffs uals .... Suppose I feel trus is or our resources." immoral. Don't I have a right to
choose which people work for
SOU111ERN CALIFORNIA 2ets much of its water from me'!" northern California, through the canals or the state Water Proj· Steve Badeau of Northern
ect . Other resources such as timber and farmland are largely California Human Rights Ad·
localed in the north. vocates. a gay-rights lobby,
Keene said the new Southern California state would still be replied that the same argument
the second most populous in the country and Alta California, was used for years against hir·
Calif omia to ,Bar
P1wiW 'fllrik ·caz~,-
SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -Calilornilns will be protected from
overzealous telephone solicitations under new guidelines adopt·
ed by the state Pubhc Utilities Commission. ·
The new rules bar the use of automatic dialing and &DIXlunc·
ing devices without prior consent of the called party or without
a human operator to get the called party's permission to play a
recording.
THE SO·CALLED ·'Junk .cau·~ -controls require users of
automatic dialing devices to notify the telephone company of
their plans to hook into telephone lines. including hours of use
a nd expected volume. •
Devices s ubject to the controls are those which are capable or
storing numbers to be called or generating random or sequen·
tial number selections and a re able to play prerecorded
messages.
l"fdr SW• I• Car -"
GLENDALE <AP I -While
Glendale police were contacting th~ Htttstde Strrangler Task
Force about an apparent double
hom tcide. t he Lqs Angeles
Police Department announced a
reduction in t he task force's
manpowet'. ·
Glendale investig-ators said
Tuesday that Roxanne
Barnwell. 29. of Glendale. and
•an unidentified man were found
dead in her car Monday night
not far from her home. Both had
been shot to death and two small caliber handguns were found in
the vehicle.
Fire Bit• CBS Set
which means upper California in Spanish, would be No. 8. ing blacks.
·•If your religion says rm a THE PUC SAID there is no evidence that automatic d.laling ATrEMPTS TO SPLh the state date back to 1859, when it s inner, it doesn't give you the devices ar e now operalinf! in California for solicitation without
LOS ANGELES CAP I
Separate fires destroyed a back
lot set at the CBS Studio Center
in Studio City and damaged a
number o(homes in the WindsOr
Hllls area. officials said. was the southerners who felt they were outvoted by the more rlgbt to discriminate against operatorcontrol,butsaiditexpededsuchdevicessoon.
POPUious north. he said. A bill was oassed then. but the U.S. me ," he said. Without the controls, the commission said Tuesday. the prac· A Fire Departm e nt
spokesman said nine companies
took about 15 minutes Tuesday •
night to knock down a blaze that
had enveloped the CBS set and
Congress reject the idea because of fears it was r elated to the Several witnesses said they tice would "infringe on the comfort and convenience of the ~uthem states' secessionist movement. had lost jobs, or lost chances for telephone subscriber guaranteed" by law.
Numerous similar bills have been Introduced since then. jobs, or feared to be honest on Use or a human operator before delivery of a taped message
One, in 1.965. was passed by the Senate but died in the Assembly. t he job, be ca use of their will safeguard against a phone being tied up when it might be
Assemblyman Leroy Greene. D-Sacramento, cont.ended that homosexuality. needed for an emergency. the PUC pointed out.
division would create "an endless number of probl,::,e:=ms.:...'_' -----------------------------------------------------
some trees nearby.
Rapist Gets 8 Years
SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -Calling rape a
"shocking outrage," a San Francisco Superior Court
judge has sentenced a convicted rapist to eight years
snprison.
r----•YA&.UAl&l COUPOH•---..
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Judge Francis McCarty slapped Charles
Edward Brown, 34, with the maxiofu.m sentence
after a jury found Brown guilty of raping an U1 27-
year-old cosmetologist In her apartment Dec. 2.
I Offlll IXPtUS MAY J I. 1971 ~2 'I! f ,,
I AUElTSOM-S SHOPPtMG CENTER •• If ., I• ' 1·. ~ '1 •
'" The woman, said McCarty, "was.a partieularJy
vulnerable victim. She was alone with no one to
help."
Af AOAMS ·~~f
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Now you can afford to put professional pizzazz in your
home. The Broadway and Martha Miller, 11oted interior
design expert, offer a two-day workshop in interior
decorating. The presentations include sessions on
furn iture, carpeting, and accessorizing for the look you've
always wanted Also helpful hints for "reconstructing" on
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01•no eoas1Dao1yP••o• Editorial Page .............................................................
I
Wednosd11y. May 3, 1978
Ro~rt N Weed/Publistler Thomes Keev1t Eclllor
Bart>ora Krelblch/Edltorlel Pe9e Ecsltor
Viaduct Plan No
Freeway Solution
Co~t u Mc!\ a cit~ oCCtc1ab at c waiting w1th fingers
\'l'o~-.cd fot ,1 dl'l't:o.ion from thl· Stale Transportatwn
l>cpartmcnt regarding the nmc altemot1ve routes for tht>
( 'o!.ta ~Icsa Frel'way <Route 551
The ··yt·s or no" is due h) May 15 and one of the·
alll'l'llati\'t'!\ a v1adu~c111~ acrosi\ the henrt of the
do\\ nto\\tl tirt·a ts a turkt·Y It·~ al-.o lht· d1t•apc::.t · <S:~ million> a nd the onlv
allcrnattH· that meets Go\ Brown's fittingly vague
·•t.:rhan Strall'g) Program" that apparently seeks to
Jffevent thl' dbplacement of any homes or businesses
should a freeway be approved.
W.hat we coultl be left with is a 20-fool-high eyesore
from 20th Strel't lo the city south H111its. The downtown
redevelopment <.il'l.:a would suffer and the viaduct would
<'Orne up short m reducing traffic congestion as compared
tu tlw "I 11llJl'l'l'\' a' " a lternall\'l'
G rnntc :lhc ~1aduct is onlv one of nine a ltc rnall\'CS
'111l'lucling "no project") ancl ·a major protest prior to
".\lay 15 could prove a \Vaslc of lime.
But <:ily officials havt• a lready made their
<.h::,pleasurl' known and will have full backing should the
~late. after a :m-year wait. lry to push such an w1welcome
6.olution on the <:1l ••
Nudity Voted Down
l'ublil-nudtl\' rnmains ~1 fol'bidden fruit in Costa
:\lcsa. The <:ity Pianning Commi~sion last week stuck fa.st
to <t rigid 1973 ordinance that n·st nets sueh frcl·doms to
t lw privacy of one':-own ho ml·
The 1d<•a ut a nude mo<.kl111g -.tudio 1111 t hl' ~l'l'CllHI
-..turv of tht• ,,Id Chamber of Commt·l l'l' IJllilcltni: on l!Jlh
SI rl''c·t did gl'tWrtttt• a few C'httt'kll·~
·.But tlw t·ommbsion wn~ co1'1 l'l'l m rl' il'ctmg lht·
proposal. t•vcn though the dl'ni<il app::ircntly wns based
more 01i a mQral j!:l{;lgment tl]an ao.vUu~ else.
~o O\'crridin~ proof was J1rcsented that the studio
'"ould constitulc a Jaw enfortcment problem allhough the
nature of the business is dubious
.\ more raltonal rl'ason for thl' n·,1ection t·ont•ef'n~ tlw
<tl1't'ady blighted tondilion of the street itself anrf it ~
111·ox1mity lo I he downtown n•dt•vl'lopment zom•
Thl' eity's image certainly \\ould not ha\ l' h('nl'fitcd
~htttterhug-. \\ 111 simply h<ivt• lo go elc;c•when· tilt' th(•
'l'I'\ ll'l'
Rush Hour-Jams ,
\nyonl· who works in Newport Center or in the offices
arnund Orangt• County A1rporl <:an tell you thnt gl'tting
111 .11ul frnm \\ork 1s becoming mor<' and more difficult.
\s IH.'\\ ol lH·cs arc• built. thc>n• arc cars added toJ.ht•
111on1111g .111d l'\em n~ ru~h hour-. un roads lhat aren 't l''\-
' pand111g .11 tlw '"me pact·~ ... the tr<1tf1e using thcni.
C>ll1C·1;ib lrnm lhl• c·ountv ~nd from thl' c:1ties of
1\1·\\ pol't lk•H:h. Irvine and Cosl;,i Mesa ~ay the s ituation
:-.hmtld 1111p1'1>vl' .-.umc )"hen lht· road networks m these
,1rca::. ~n· t'CJnlpleted. 'but lhey also acknowlcdl!e lbat
there i~ ah\~'~" ~oing to he a proble m caused hy rush·
hour traffu·
:\(any nf thl· husinesse=--c·a ml• here lo gel a way from I
t lw 1 rafflt· horrors involvctd getting in and oul of the Loi-.
,\nJ:!cles a1·cJ
Clear!~. -..11nw t·xtr:wrd111ar~· measures ;.in· going to
h1· needed to prevent the same problems from r~·curring
hl't'l'-Fnr t•'(<lmplt·. Newport Cc>ntt>r's two higge~t
t•mplo~t·r-.. J>ac·1f1<· :\lulual ln:-.urancc: \o. and Avco
Fmanl'ial St'l'\'ll'l':-.. ll~t:' stuggl'n·d working hour" for part
111 tlw1r work tor('1·
llusin('s:::.t•<; throughout the lforbor Art'a ought to take
:1 1·ut· I rom t hesl' two firms and t.•xplorc other traHic·
11•du<:1ng pie.in:-. such as van po~)s. <·ar pools and s huttle ~'-,terns :1" "1111 lwfon' 1 hl' 1 r!itnr forces an exodus of 1;11-.in<·~:-.
• Opinions expressed 1n the space above are those ot the Dally Pilot.
OthP.r views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
artists. Atiader comment is 1nv1ted Address The Daily Pilot. P .0.
Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321
Boyd/Depression
By L.:\1. HO\'()
\~ u es lion a 1 1 ~ t' :-. a :-. l 11
whl'lh<'r thut rmot1onal lo"
known ils the• depression 1s
t·ontagious lkftnilC'ly Thos1•
hhtes arc e;1t1·hing Studies al
thl' l"niH·rsit\ of llhno1s
h .1 n· proven l h&Jt. And
~tudies elsewherP. For
).!encration:-.. Om• downbeat
l'ilizen umong a do1.en light
hearted souls 1~\~ fairly
rapid manner cM! make
1•vrrybody thereabouts feel
'aguely uncas). Then. some
others. too. may drift towar~
melancholy. though most will
1ust make themselves scarce
Maybe it's extra-sensor)
perception. Or mayb€' JUSI
verception. Dut it happens
Despondent people tend ti'
c1uarantinethemselv(>s.
1'ea got it' hilt start 1n
F.uropr not :1mong the
English. as C'om monly
believed, but around 1610
with the Dutch. who pra1!'lerl
it, miAhtily ~ :1 h1x<1tlve.
Why Tuesday 1~ the day of
tht• week you're l('nst Jik~ly
0 .-..ar
Gloo1ny
Gus
Cleaning lodfc" gel $7
un hour Surely our
h1rd·worklna lra11hmcn
de ervc "" much!
M.S.
t 11 l>c killed hy a car is
.1nnlhC'r mystery.
tl-"How come New York
City IS called 'The Big AP·
pll.'".'"
I\. That goes back to the
IYJOs. Seasoned Citizens will
rt>eall '"fht• Rig Apple"
dance craze. A New York
nightclub was so 11am~. too-
Somebody in print -Walter
Winchell 'or Damon Runyon
probably. exactly who is un-
known -wrote. ''Many ap-
ples on the tree,>, but NYC's
\he place to be ·• Showbi~
folk spread it uround .
C'harles Gillett of lhe New
York Coftft'nt1on and Visitors
Bureau resurrected t h e
mcknamc . six years ago by
printing 1t. on municipal
publicity.
Tht> Rt>\. SurJan Das Gill
11F lndia really set up a chore
ror himself As a Christian
missionary, hl' devoted 15
vear s to converting people he
then thought were heathens.
and history records he did a
powerful job of it. But ul·
llmately, he bad a change of
heart., became converted
hi mself or Hinduism, a nd
i1pent the rest or his life try-
ing to switch back all those
he'd converted to Chri~·
tinnily.
W a• Z1 years a~o tbat the
science mlnd11 lnvent d a
naw clothin« matetlal which
was 70 percent feathers.
Whot prompted them to do so
wat the report that 30 m illion
ton" or chicken and' turlu:y
leathers wcro going to waste
every year. You don't s c
s uch material adverUatd •
~ow. tboulb. do you7 Wblll ----"'-....... ------~..J.-... =p~te ll?
Earl Wa teri.;
Candidate Tags Reveal Variety
While it may not be the ldcal
situation it is a fact that many
voters go to
the polli.
knowing
nothin).?
whatsoever
about the can
didates. Thit;
1s especially
true of those
running for
congressional
and legisla·
tive offices where the candjdatc!>
in a given district are nothing
more than names to the voter.
Intended as an aid to voters then
is the provision permitting each
candidate to Include an occupu·
tional description as background
information mdicating qualilica·
tions.
For the incumbents. or holders
of other offices running for new
poslis, the choice is an easy one
By showmg the voters they are
atready ln t hat or some other of
rice they hope to convince them
.they have demonstrated the
necessary quahtics for public
trust. But for many of the other
more than 600 seeking eltttion to
154 state offices, the opporturuty
to provide this evidence often
:;eem s to present problems.
• AT LEAST the list of candida~s
released by Secretary of State
March Fong Eu is interesting
from the standpoint or ingenuity.
ur the lack of it, of some can
d1dates in selectUlg vocational
d escriptions to mduce voter sup
p<>rt.
The majority folJow the
'
general practice or using com-
mon professional job descrip·
tions. The most widely used this
time is that of businessman or
woman, although some used
business executiv~ or other term
co n noting a business back
ground. There were more than
74 of these.
The next Jaraest group was
the 54 who listed themselves
various ly as teachers, pro-
fessors, school administrators
and educators. These were
followed by 49 lawyers some of
whom preferred the term at-
t.orney.
ALTUOUGH :.ome 20 cun
didates designated lhemsetves
\'!ogineers. quite a few left voters
10 doubt as to whether that meant
railroadengineerorwhat. Others
"'FUMNY I ff DOESN'T LOoK LIKE A DOVE!''
Mailbox \
however staled !>l>Cc1l 1ta lly the
type :.uch :.c:. electricul, C'iv1I,
economic und eng1n~erin~
phys1ci:st
Among the other J)rofessions :ire six CPA!>, three medical
doctors . two dentists, an op·
tometrist, u pharmacist. an
architect and a c hiropractor
who also does tree topping.
WllJLE FARME R S once
made up a preponderance of
legislative candidates only 11
designated themselves as such
1n this election. About a dozen
are running its reporteri..,
writers. editors and publisher..
:rnd th ref> arP banker'
From there on the designa·
lions really gel interesttng
although a dozen failed to pro·
v1de any information as to oc·
cupalion. Others ranged from
specific readilv 1dcntifiablt•
vocations such as barber,
laborer, policeman and fireman,
to vague descriptions such a:-
"healtb professional," "air
balancer." "taxpayers'
representati vc.' · .. people's
politician," and "µublic affairs
representative.·'
Housewife s~cms lo hav~
fuded into dlSUSC 10 f llVOr or
"homemaker" and ·•mother"
but onl' candidalt' lt!>l!. h1msel(
-"~ • · un.e.mp.Joy ed t-e a.ch.er.
hou:;eh usbanci. ·
OTH &R CURIOUS desjl_C·
rto'n!f ineluc:fe .... wt'irlcef.pncs . •• -
·•minister-philosopher," "tax re·
duction advocat<'," .. disabled
rights organizer". "service ad-
viser" and "concerned citizen "
Two or three candidates
thought showin~ themselves a~
members of the• party cenlrnl
~ommittee to be 1mpress1vl·
Some simp~v ltstl.'d unemployed
while one i:. running a:> a "rc·
11red ~oldier" and anolher as a
"disabled veteran · One l'an
didate for the Assembly could be
very popular with his fellow
members if he is elected. lie is a
''golfpro.··
Prop. 13: A Potential Taxpayer Ripoff
To the Editor:
I am writing aboul the polen
tial ripoff, the Jarvis.Gann lax
bill. Prop. 13.
I think the Janis-Gann bill
will be the greatest ripoff of the
taxpayers if it is voted in. -:Jarvis
:.aid in a TV pro~ram that then:
ts no guarantee that the apart
ment owners would be willing lo
reduce the rents bul "C think
they will."
WHY .should they reduce the
rent if they don't have to? The
big companies who .own the
apartments do not care (or the
renter. or course, Jarvis is an officer
in the Apartment House Owner
Association and naturally he
would fight for this bill. Jarvi:-.
can't.even meet anyone and tru
ly argue the bill at all. He just
has to be. very rude in..any dis·
cussion.
J am happy to hear ttJat the
L.A. Supervisors have decided to
voteagainsttheJarvis-Gann bill.
WILLIAM H. COOPER. ...
RfdeWe ko•e
To the Editor~
l was delighted tc:A-ead on the
editorial page or April 24 that we
will acquire the Dial-A-Ride
system in Costa Mesa starting m
September.
Of course w~ re:&lize the
system will cost money. but if
you have checked your properly
tax bill. you will see that tht'
transit. system is a ' small pit
ce compared to the approx
ately 80 percent or our taxes
ignated to the school system
NOW DON'T you think it 1s
about time we start thinking of
the older citizens? And may I
s ay to those folks who now driVl'
their cars and may resent the
very small cost it will be to them
taxwlse, that if they live long
enough they wlll gel old a nd
may reach the day when they
will have to turn in their driver's
license and be dependent on the
transit district.
The bus system is great, but
there are many places a person
cannot get to by bus and the
Dlal·i\·Ride will solve that pro-
blem. Also, m Rome are"'as a
person must walk about two
miles to reach a regular bus
~top. Mu1UP&x.1ha~ Jut. t.~9. -:.&o·~· Jng to and wal.kfng t>ack llomc.-
and you have n distance that
most older citizens cannpt walk.
I have-said this maby Um
bafore, but I mus\ 11ay tt. uaaln.
"The bus aystcrn Is one of tho
b \ thinas that every happened
to Orange County."
MRS. M. WEAVER
C .. 9N!ll ... Soard
lion lor their enlightened at
tttude and their recognition of
the need to extc•nd First Amend
menl ri~hl to s tud ent
JOurnalisL<>
A publicatmn <:ode t!> t·urrcntl~
hcfore the board which would
vrohibit censorship of student
<.·opy in Newport-Mesa school
publications unl<·s~. of course. 11
1:. restricted by law or the educ ...
t1on code <libel, obscenity. right
of privacy, disruption of school 1
It gives student editors the>
responsibility of editing content
and provides an appeal pro
cedure for disputed copy. lt also
gives a right of reply lo those
not on publication staffs.
IT IS A fair code. one that
spells out the principles of
freedom of the press under
w h ich publication staff!'
operate. Nothin~ in the codt-
goes beyond what is currently "
matter of law or common prac-
tice.
Jn its discu!>sion at. the April 25
meeting. the board heartiJy en-
dorsed the code and saw a need
to strengthen the appeal pro·
cedure. T·h e numerous
journalists from the various
high schools who attended and
spoke on .the issue went away
heartened by the board's ready
a.c.ceptance of lht'ir First
Amendment righ~
By approving tht> code the
board will be laying the founda·
lion for studef'\l s lo learn
responsibility and a worklng
definition of Freedom of the
Press.
LINDA D. MOOK.
Journalism Adviser.
Corona del Mar High School
Not E11tertdln•~nt
To the Edit.or:
.Regarding your editorial of
Apri l 25 in praise of the
.. ffolocaust". We did not watch
the program
How many of those 20 million
television viewers have reacl
·'The Diary of Anne Frank"'?
How many of their children have
read it or at tbe least had their
parents tell them of l\? How
ma oy of those 20 million chastise a·-chUd <or an ·adult)
wboteUsanethn1c"joke"?
Jl occu rs to me that your
riaht~usness (and theirs) may
bO 8UUied. Surely, lf one wer roncet'tled to lcnow the troth and
lO Hsure \hat it not. be forgolt eq,
other less aensationnl means are
at hand. But guilt is asguuacd
t!asll)'. comfortably -the p;.\
terns of Ufc ar undlaturbed.
about weak stomachs. J ·<im
uware of those horrori;;. I will
not watch it between station
breaks. Kierkegaard said.
"Tht!re is no temple robber. toil
1n~ in shackles or iron. so
vicious as those who pillai.te
among !>acred thtnAs . . . . " We
appear to have lost any sense of
outrage. and we arc pillaginJ?.
hy treating as enl<>rlainment. an
l' v e n t th at 1.., s a t' r e ct I o
humanity
BARBARA \AN HAVE"\
Conaputer Te~ld119
To the Editor:
Many of us are unhappy about
the way our \ax dollars are used
by Coastline Communit~
College. Coastlin~ offers a
highly visible.consumer product.
[.ess visible :Jre some other
university and college pro-
gram s_,, (gr t>xample. a class be
101 .. taught" this spring quarter
at UCI in the Department of
Social Sciences. Titled "lx1t
Maya," Course No. SO·L. the ln
s truct.or. a Mr. Colby. met with
hi~ class the nrsl meeting, gavt'
over 100 student~ o list of read·
ings for the quarter. and will
meet with them the last meet
ing. The weekly tests are com
puterlzed. Each student is al
lotted $18 worth of computer
lame. though it appears that this
may be an insufficient dollar
cost for the complete ~eries of
tests.
SO THE question is: If Mr.
Colby 1s being paid to teach a
<'lass <as one would have to as-
s ume) why is he not teaching it''
And why are students being re-
quired to use expensive com-
puter time? This is University
I eve I work? And this is what we
pay our tax dollars for? This is
not an isolated incident. Thcrl'
are many such examples at all
levels of education.
lf citizens were more aware nf
the wasteful use or funds. the~
would.no doubt tnke more action
at the voling booth and at. school
board meetings.
VlRGINlA HARRI~
Need r,..tet!tlo•
To tho Editor.
"Survival of th J\lnate" i!"
thc.i weak und tho old am at
•t1lck°e-d b ·ynun~ it lron..:
, ntmals' ..
It means w net..-d more stron&
"decoys••• depula lo pose as
elderly women wtil\ thelr purses
dan1Hng loOSO, to c•rt.ure and
hold these 1anp th• prey ()O
lbo eld.ub' atone. llold them and
punl!b t.bem, as ttMl law allowa.
lo pounC'e on thl•m like an
animal m the 1unJ,?lt!1
Let's get some strong men !>la·
l1oned at places whl'rt' the elder
Iv shop We havt• t11 protc<:t them
-. 111 ct• th t' y '"' n n n t v rot 1.: e 1
themselves
Wt• ha\'e hovs on :-.katehual ch. h11.'~l'les . :rn"il in ~roup~ th:1l
havt• lound a \\,1v ol J,!t•tting """
monl'~ last. lt•a\ mg .in ddt•t I\
woman "1th hrokl•n h11111· .... "'
. Taxe11 Jfli•1ut»d
To the Editor:
l have read many 11111nwn'> on
the Jarvis Prop 1:1. some m
favor and ~ome opposer!. 1 kncl
to be conservative <1n such mat
ters and Prop. 13 •~ a drastw
move and not a ronsr•n:ati ve ::.tp
proarh_ llowl•Vl'I'. I <.1 m 111 favor
of Prop t:J and <'IHl\'tnct•d th.i i
the drastic action 1~ the onl\' ~lution to the deplorahlc wast.l'
.md misuse of ta'< funch
For exampll'. a va(·ant in·
dustrial lot 1n Santa Ana on
which the Orange-County tax
was $333 .30 in 1976 w\S in
.,·rt.•:.ised to S772.80 Sn 1977. an in-
<•reasl' of 1:10 p<>r<'<-nt in nnc·
Vt'i.I .. I
T H •; ATROCIOl'!o\ m1su~e or
tax money which l'l',ult:. it\ un
reasonablf' lax 1n crrases can
only cause <>vc ntual rt'liellion hy
the taxpayl'r. What i:'ISl' can ht-
t·xpected of our c1 t1 r.cns wh<>n
they re<1d articles about ~overn·
mcnt financing t hr "sricnlifi<-
study of th<' homm1t•xua lity of
~ea ~ult~." such ;.1s appeared in
a recent issue of lht.' Daily Pilot.
und then the Nation:.11 Institute·
for Mental ll<'a llh ..:rant of
597.000 for 'th<' !<Ludy of a South
American brothel'.
Arc wr. as taxpayC'rs. sup
posed to laugh at St•nalor Prox·
m 1 re · s mo n th I ' · c; o Id<' n
fo'lt'('re .. :rn ard for thl' 11utstanrl
In,:? t':\ampl(> c>f v .. ,1'ltmi.: our tu'
monev" Mv 1 ~·;.11·111111 " to volt·
•)Ul uil 1n<'1~rnht•nts us we did in
the 1'('('t•nt llunt inJ.tton Beu.ch clty
t•lcC'l ion and \.Ok for :inythlng
that will rt.'tJttct• lnxcs
Candid:ites for oHicc mHke big
talk about ta'C rdorm but
nothing 1s don<.• <lhoul 1t One n .•·
cours" (or th(• toxpo~ «.>r 1s tn
vo1e YC!( on Prop. \3 <ind .,hut orr '
the monl'~ supply •ind rorct• a
rlruMti<' ~1ch11t1 111 ~m t>rnmt>nt
l''(Pl'nd\lur('s
l>O:°'I :\f A PSON
..
I
• I
NATIONAL wednelday. May 3, 1978 DAILY PILOT
Boy Scouts Rally to Aid CP Vietim
NEW \ORK <AP 1 Boy Scouti.
..ind former Boy Scouts rrom uound
the nation have bt!cn i.ending letter~
and their hard-won Eagle badgei.
to a cerebral palsy victim em
broiled 1n a battle to get an Eagle
Som~ 100 l~ller:. or i>U pport and llve
Eagle badges bad been received at
the Long Island home of Gregory
Wittine, after an Associated Press
story on h1s ptiiht.
America officials because Wittine
was 22 at the time past the cut-off
age of 18
An off1c1al at scout headquarters in
New Brunswick. N J . said the or· ganizallon received "quite a number
of calls, most entirely in favor of
Greg." und tha~ he hoped the issue
would be resolved this month at a na-
tional scout conference in Phoenix.
physically handicapped boys, like
those who are mentally retarded,
s hould be allowed to continue io
scoutmg past age 18. And he argues
that special consideration should be
given lo boys who cannot complete
On WGflO"
Singer Kri s
Kristofferson says
he has not licked
his drink prob·
lem. although he
h as been on
th e wagon 18
months. "I'm not
cured. but l 'm
m ore in control · ·
badge or his uwn
··Allow me to share my medal with
you," wrote a Florida man who
enclosed the badge he earned 16
years ago
"HE IS CERTAINLY more dei.erv
ing of the Eagle Scout award than I
or anyone r know." i.a1d a letter ac
companying a California youth':.
medal.
W1ttinc. 23, who b confined to a
wheelchair and communicates by
pointing to letters on a board, com·
pleted work toward the highest scout
rank last fall. His projects included a
10-milc hike, accomplished on his
hands a nd knees and in hi s
wheelch1.11r.
W illlne and his scoutmaster.
Manhattan attorney Richard Golden,
ho-pe to attend the Phoenix con·
ference although they have not been-
invited.
. Eagle requirements during their
teen-age years.
Wittine used his letter board to In·
dicate that he appreciated the sup·
port from other scouts but intended
to return the medals he has received.
''I don't deserve the medals from
these people," he said. "I want my
own. I want to help other han-
dicapped persons."
AL TllOUGll A LOCAL scout coun·
cil approved issuing the award. it
was denied by national Boy Scouts of GOLDEN BELIEVES THAT Al"Wl,.._e
With -·-----. Gibraltar'sJree ___ _ -----~ -
Telephone Transfer .
YOUR ,
IDLE BANK
CHECKING
'FUNDS EARN
HIGH DAILY
INTEREST
Phone any time
24 hours a day,
7 days a week.
No need to go to your bank. Once your
account is established, pick up the
phone to transfer money from your
baf\k checking account-Which earns
no interest-to your Gibraltar
Telephone Transfer savings account-
wh1ch earns 5 1/4 °'c. compounded daily
Funds also returned to your bank
by phone
Call toll-free anytime. day or night.
from any part of the State. This time-
saving, money-earning service is
free when you maintain a minimum
$1000 balance in your Telephone
Transfer account. Minimum transfer
amount $100.
For more informl!tton, or to establish
your Telephone Transfer Account.
Callloli.tree {800) 252-0194
or visit your nearest Gibraltar office.
....
MORE JIOIIRS~ -··----_.....--.. -~---. --------····---.. ---
At Gibraltar, we believe in Savers' Hours ... not Banker's Hours. That's why..everyjGibraltar office
-is open-e""'V'ery SatU rday. Arid some of our shopping center offices are open on Sundays.
OUR OFFICES
8EMAIN OPEN
LATER ON WEEKDAYS
AND OPEN EARLIER
ON SATURDAYS.
MON .. thrulHUR. FRIDAY SATURDAY
I
9:00 TO 5:30 9:00 TO &:DO 9:30 TO 4:00
THESE
7-l>AYS·A·WEEK
OFFICES OPEN
TDRAAHCE~el Amo Fashion Square. Open H11hts: Mon .. frr. 10 am-9 pm; Sat. 9·30-4
CARSON MALL: Next to Sea<s Optn M111tts: Mon.·fri. 10 am-9 PITI; Sal. 9·30-4
HUNTINCTON BEACH Huntington Center Opt" N11b1J: Mon -F11 10 am-9 pm: ~1 9 30-4.
SHERMAN OAKS: Fashion Squa1e. Opet N11lats: Mon .f11. 10 am-9 pm,· Sat 9·30-4
WOODLAND HILLS Opposite fallb1ook Square Mon.-Tnur 9 00 5 30, f r1.10 6 Sal 9 30 4
' SUNDAYS
11:00·10 4:00 SUNDAYS. Svndn SeMce •I W•lk u11/0r"'e up wu>dow• on11.
Make depos11s/w1thdrawels 11 •n1 G1brllltar ot11ce with your
't G1b11ttar passbook or savings card . ....
.
MORE FOR YOUR MONEY.
\\7E PAY YOU MORE
ON IN:lUREO SA\llNGS lliAN YOUR BANK
• DOUBLE YOUR MONEY IN LESS
THAN NINE YEARS. GUARANTEED.
CERTIFICATE ACCOUNTS :
Minimum $1,000. 6 years-up to 10 years.
With lnlereat compoun<Utd d111ly and left In
the •ecount, each $1,000 grows 10 $2 000 1n
leas than II years.
O/o
7. 79 010 annual yield on
M1ft1n1un' St t.>00 4 ~,.,,, 7 .50 o/o
6 98 0/o annualyleldon 6 75 ~0
• 1 M·t\,m ,m St 006 10"' ·th~ •
6 72 °/o annual yreld on 6 50 %
• M·n nu.-n:St 000. t;.>n..,,,,n,.., •
EXTRA BONUS ACCOUNT: curr11n1 •nnuoi •Atr
5 92 °/0 annual yield on 5 • 75 ° o
e Minomum S1 000 90 \ld'f'S
F\.fXIBLE PASSBOOK ACCOUNT: c:i.rrenl 1Mu1t ra1"
5.39°10 annu:lyletdon 5.25 ~~
M.11<r d.-p0 .. 1;. and w1lhd•awa1s
~1 ""YI""" .i"'1 r.irn day ,,, 10 dav o.il "''l?'f'&l. No 1!"'11111.,
FUNDS RECEIVED BY THE 10TH EARN FROM THE tST
WHEN HELO TO QUARTER'S ENO.
. ..... #
4 Santa Ana Fashion Square
834-0717
WE GIVE YOU MORE
f ri[( SEfi\llCES TIMN YOUR BANI<
FREE. IMPORTANT FINANCIAL
SERVICES FOR OUR SAVERS.
FREE safe deposit box
Safeguard your valuable rtem in 41\8 of ou• !.teel.
vault prolected boxes Minimum $1.000 balance
FREE social security direct deposit
Prevent theft. forgery. [am 1mmed1a1e int~rest on your
checks Minimum SS balance
FREE "senior 62" checking account
For customers 62 and over, thru ma1or sulew1de bank
Mintmllm $5 balance
FREE transmatlc savings account
Transfers funds automaltcally from bank checkinR accounl
lo your Gibraltar savtnR~ accoun t M1n1m11m SS balan"
FREE travelers checks
famous American bpress check) We pay lhe fee ~ Mrnrmum $1.000 balance.
REE · money orders
..,..,
om American Express A safe. sure way to send monef
rou&fl the mail M1n1mum SI .ODO balance
REE photocopy service ,
An important document or paper reproduced at no charge
Minimum $1,000 balance
FREE trust deed note colleclions
10 payments mailed to Gibraltar are deposited tn your
account to earn immediate interest. Minimum S 1.000 balanc!
f:REE checking accoun~ _
' Thru leading statewide bank No service fee / includes
free stock checks Minimum $2.000 balance.
FREE check·•·month plan
Clteck for spec1f1c lfTIOUnt marled each month. to whomevtr
iou dtsianate. M1nrmu~ ~.000 ~alanct l
' l
• CWl. Y PtLOT WedneMS.ey. M~ 3. l811 ORANGE COUNTY/OBITUARIES /AT YOUR SERVICE
QUEENIE 1'1ar1..e 1nstitute· PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE Deatlu
Elaewhere
MOSC'OW <AP~ Aram K.bachatllrla•, 74
rt;nowned Soviet com
poser whole best-known
piece was "Sabre Dance" from the music
for the ballet "Gayne,"
died Monday, the of·
ricial Soviet news agen-
cy Tass reported Tues·
.Tiii~~Frl o~TH~~ts ~h~~tjeo~~
0t .. o.11, f'l••Ua.tt that deci81Qn of the board," Diedrich
PICTITIOUS eUSINaU II,.,._
ICAMl ITATaMaNT IUl'llllO'l COU•T ~ TMI
Ti.. , .. _,_. --11 .... !NII STA.Tl ()I' CM.IP'OlllNIA f'Oll "°" 0\ TMI COUtlTY Of' OllANOI FOlllST MAllitt:T, fJO Fo<"I _ .... ,,...
AW., L9-llMcll CA fJUt N 0 T IC I 0 F Ht: A II IN 0 0 ~
'lollle•I ..... 1 H"'llm•ft 100 "llTITION "°" l'ltOMTI! Of' WILL
91.,.blrd Corlyoon Or , Lo.-IMe<ll, ANO '011 LIETTIEllS TUTAMlll
CA tt'SI TAllV ANO FOtl AUTl+OllllATION
T"'li-llllU l•<-Udbv•nu\,. TO ADMINISTI• UHOlll THl
dety. --
w ASHJNGTON CAP)
-Gretchen Hood, 91. a
Wash1ngton singer and
s ocialite who danced
with presidents and
kings and romanced
writer H.L. Mencken. ,
Officials or the Orange County said.
Marine Institute hoped to walk away
from Tuesday's supervisors lneeUng BUT SAMPSON, retlred county
with $38,480 to finance their opera· harbors, beaches and parks director.
Uons through June 1979. replied, "We are back with a request
Loatead, all they got was $1,230 to hoplne you will change your mind."
firl'lnce a fund-raising prospectus John App, president of the In·
and a maybe for additional money sUtute, said the county contribution
later on. • would help attract funds from
The institute was created by private industry. ·
supervisors. trustees of the county's Institute officials no!.ed the current
four community college districts and director Is being paid through a
the county Board of Education to de· federal Comprehensive Employment
velop a Jlljlrlne studies facility at and Training Act CCETA > grant
Dana Point Harbor. which will expire in the fall.
dlwl4kMll INOll'llllOINT AOMlllllSTIIATION
11*'1,. Hvtfll'WI\ 0' llTA1'HACT T"'I' •ta-.,.,. lli.41 with 1"9 E•late or HAllRV MACRE$,
CAIUfllY (I.,._ ol Or-Counly II<' 0.<HMd.
"""'" "· .. ,_, NOTICE IS HEllEllY GIVEN l ... 1 """'' JOSEPHINE H MACllES llU 119"'
PU011"'9d 0.0llOf CcMUI 0.lly Pll~. ,,., •• ,, • pollllon lot ""°°91e of Wiii
Alllfll lt,1'.JMY~.10, ltll Ut•71 •nd IOf luuen<.tt 01 Leti.n T~l•men·
PUBLIC NOTICE
torv end tor Aulll0f1.L11llon 10 AO
mlftlslar unotr IN 1~1 Ao.
mlftltlrollOfl of Etl•les Act, rtlt<eN;•
·----------lo wllO<ll It m•d• lor lurll\U
NOTIU TO Cll•Dll'Otlt
MIPIRtOll COURT OP TM•
ITATI Of' CAl.lfl'OllNIA f'Oll
TMI COUNTY OP OtlANOI .... ,., .....
lllole Of 81ATRICE OERTRUOE
ADAMS, De<..-d
NOTICE IS HERl!BY GIVEN IO Ille
cr9dtto" OI IN -... "°'""' d!KOOenl
tllol •II pertoM "°~'"' c1oi,.,. OOolftll "" Y id ~ we ...... red to Ille ,,..m, wllll 119 _,, -""''· In
portlculart, and ltlol IN ilrne oMI
ple<t ol llNl'lnQ Uw -llOO bffn M't lor M•Y U , • ., .... 10.00 • m., In llW
courlroom of o.ciort""nl Ho. 3 Of W!O
courl, •I TOO O vlc Otnlt< Ortv• W•t . lft tilt (Uy of Sonia ,.,_, COhtorn••·
0•1.0 April :rt, 197&. WIU.IAMI!. StJONN,
(.ounlyClef1<
eALOllCOSICl, KLOTI &COOl'E• ,
11t1 o ...... w .. i.• .._,.,..._,.,CA ....
died Tuesday. 1 ', • ~
1 -GLENDALE <AP> ""' ~' . Victor H. Winfrey, 60, a 5-3 • .. " , SUPERVISORS CHIPPED in
California banker for l ~·'d2... $400,000 from tidelands funds and the THEY ALSO SAID the county ::..:·~~:'.~~.!..."":..~
Department of Education and coll~e t11e ... uuwv "°"',.."· to "" 1111·
Toi: (IH I m-ta1
An ..... yhl .... :1"114...._
four decades, died or an ..... ·._ .... _. ______ ... _ .... ._...,.-.,-..,;..,;; ... -------• colleges agreed to contribute $50,000
apparent heart attack "What's wtth tbe dart &lasses? We're not to abow blz, each lo build the facility.
l'vblltl\M Or ..... (Ml( Ootllt Ptlot,
Moy 1.,, '· 1'71 districts already have supplied U · dertlOllOd •I IN office ot 0HALL tMl.7' slstance to the institute. ~ ·~5c.': .:::::•.,. ~~ , __________ .,._-_
Tuesday In hll home. He we're to biz biz... But until the institute ls built and
was a vice tbairman of--------------------operating, officials said, they have no Supervisor Thomas Riley said ~~':;:==~,..:.~
he bas .upn..rted the institute all OK-"'·-'"*' -.-.. ... o.
PUBUC NOTlCE
United CaUiomia Bank. means of generating money for atafr Y" flnlMtkOllell .. tlll•~· ,ICTITIOUS •usu•u along, but felt now was the wrone 0o1MINrdla•. me. NAME STATIEMl:•T n-tL .,ot•--salaries, telephone service, postage
.,.,.. ,. 1• ~ and office expense. Ume to be seeking IJlOre county 01AHEWOOO T11r 1011-1119 s-"°"' •re •n<1
I ,..,,..,.1an1erl•_."" 1>11\•~n •· do lars. • ..... °'.... CO•T ORAcPEllY & CARPE T
&.Ot'U .. llANK LMa%. ... .,. ,..._...of
S.ftl• ,.,,.., Co. ,...... ~ 9fl *Y '·
1'11 111 Mlt'<'I' o.oo.r• "9t111\tll, ....
Afte, Ce. S11fwl••f by 1111 wife
JOMJlfllN ""'91 ... tf dlfflllr .... "911 MorflO Of ....... ,,,,.., C.., ...... ,, ...
Loptl ef t--, (8., •mtty Apto Of
CMOlle. Ce., ,.,_,. R . ..._, of Hunl·
lftlllOll l•e(ll, Ce., Meroeret Ar-lo
Of An•IMlm, Ce., e ...... 1 ..._, of S.11-
• • Aft•, Co., lomHI l.•P•• of Rlvenl41o, c.. .. Carolliw Loper of AftOMllfl, Ca .. Judy LOP'l of An•llelm,
Ce ... ,.. Horme L.o1»1 of Mt<lhwd,
Ore9011, 11 oro11d<lllldreft, brotr..r
Rey,.. .. ..._, ot O<~, Ce., ond
•Iller A41della Ouerto of Huritl119ton
8'e<ll, C:.."Frlellm moy cell Oft'fll""
ti Pl"q llfotller' !.mllM' MOrtueq1
\21 Malft S4rMI, HunllftQCOll O..Cll,
CA. Mo" of O.rl•llen 8urlel will 1111
••-•led on Frlo.ty Moy ). 1911 et
IO JO A.M. ol St S.l"be"'' ColhOllC
Cl\W'(JI In s.tii. Ane, c.. lftter,,_I
•ill Ito •I Ill• Good Sllopll••d ;.e~!m· ~ere•_ BrOIM" ~~ i1o1orT11ory dlroc1cn ~. SAA.Tl
OIANI S.V.TI, 099 n , r"io.M Of
'i11n1J•on 8'-.c~. c:o. P•ILM!d •w•.r -"' , ...... y Mlly ,_ fmTn tho C.rl!.lll
.... ,. CIN\weleKOlll HcrlPIWI 8''-4
nolller •' RlcN<d So.Ml of To.Hott. raft<•, Eddie S••ll of Syd,...,.
\vllrlfll , Glorte NKOUJt of,,,...,,...,. ••
tenrl ... II of El TorQ, Ce , -ceda
\ttllvr of HUl'lllr>Qlon 8"<11, Co.. Alt-
re S.•11 of HuNl"910fl lle«ll, Ce.,
raft<•" A<ll-•r Of LAIN .. Otl, ,,
1roft4l<lllldr•n Fr1e,,d1 ..,.T 011 ny11m• ol P iere• Bro 11or1
mllM' _..._.,. 4%1 Mall\ Sl~ HWfl·
.. -a.ocll Mo16 of Ow"llC ... 8urlol
1111 b9 celeCWat.o on Solwdey Mey"
tll at t ·OO A NI. at SC. llonewnt.,,..
.OlllOllC ()lurcll, HUl'lllftQCon BN<ll.
• 111t0f'm11t1I wlll 1111 lft Ille Good
.Mt>Mrf Cemetery. Pierce Brothers
""""-' ""°"'*'Y dl-100. ~. MOLIHA
CICll.E DIANE MOLINA, retldtflt
•I LOfllNI 8Hc.h, Co. PHMd -•Y Oii
\prll to, 1911. l.OYl"IJ '*'91\IOf' of Mr
• Mr'-~ Moll,.., .isi.r ot Leill• , P•"'I _,,.., ell Of Loo--8'.cll,
o., orellOdouoM.,. Of Mt • ..t Mrs. £.
\ollM of Coil• ~ C.. MGM ol
llrllll8fl tkltiol win .. Ulollr~ on
r14•Y Moy S. mt .. 11:00 A.M. ot St.
t lhorlM of SI-c.tl'IQlk °'urcll
1tlll lN Rn. Mvtn F~ offk .. t·
"'· M<COrlTllCll Utll"O 8••<" IA0/1U9r'I' dlrklon. O'alUl!N
HESTUI HAWKS O'llRIEN, rnl•
.... of Coa .. Mou. c.. ~"" 19S7 ...... ._., Alrll a. 1'11. 5'1nt-S
.' o...Qllltr !Yllc' "· Uo .... .... ll•lo ..... ~ H. ........... ..
•r•eon, Jom•• II. O 'llrl•11 of
/nlll"9191. o.c;.. '.,....,_. ....... Ont•t~•a1. ,,...,_... WI"
• ot .......,. i..-c.m.t.,.,, 8uffol0,
-V.,. Mlimoo'lOI ~ff Wiii lie •Id M Mr/ 10, oot 1 Cll P.M. .. Tllo
~IMI OluKll of Ille CownMll, otl• Mow. Co. In lltu of l'-n <Oft·
rlbllllOM IO Ille Momorlol F""" -kt • O'Htly oppncl.Ced..
lllTTall J05aPH POWELL RITTER,
elovod ,..,_of Glotl• Wllll4ir Rll· ~ • ..,, of Nono AlllOf', 11rou.r ol
laud•lt. Riiier Hllldlll•. Senlcft
........ ., Moy •• 1'7t" Tlw ~of "° Rtceflll-i, Forni a.-, Ol4lft
'•I• l "' McOUllll!
AVIRV JASPER McOUIRE, f'ftl .... of (mto Moio, Ce. ,.~Mid.,,,.,
" Alllfll JO, 1978 OI Iha oOO of ... vrvl ""4 by ,.i,.., Rut>y Hultt.ro Of
oste Mow. C.O. 9"d brotller LArowi .on"" ot CollO Mfto, C.O. Gf'owslde
trYl'911 ond ifll""*"t Wiii .. held Oii
rMIOy "'°' S, 1t71 ot 11 :00 A.M. •t elrvllrW c..m.tffl' In 8owllno Gf'wn, ofttuUy. $Mith TUllllll Lomb Cotto
WM ....,....,.., In -.. of IOCOI or·
~ts ..... TILDtlN
llEMNETT C. TILOEN, nisldent of
.. .,..., Qty, Co.. •~ r..i-.1 of _ _, llMdl Ol'4 ~ N19""f,
ftlM .,,.., ,,..., 1. 1'71 In Sonia A-
urvlft• by •II• ~rll Tlldeft ot
i41V ... 0 ty • ..,., 8'11CO Tiiden of Son-
• "'"'· IOft Cll••••• Tiiden of tooflo nd Hiiis. •••t•r M••l11e .\<C..... of Seng Anll, oltO _,,h•M
'' t tfl•n4klllldr'" •ftd I QtHI•
r...edlll...,,_ ,,,.,._.., -~ tt
"" nw__, ,,,_.., ' "' .. " -.c1t1c vl-_,,_,., Por1l, "°°
•o<lfle VI-Or., N-pOf't So.ell.
.,..11., ci<tltf'I In ""' ot flowers, OMlleM b9 mode to trio ~Icon
t•art AnoclollOll. Peclflc VI•• Aort.,.,., dlrwcton.
McCObOCa
MOftOAlllS
Laguna Beach
494-IM15
Laguna Hills
768-0933
San Juan Capistrano
495-1776
IALTl-IU6HOH
fVMUALHOMt
Corona del Mar 673-IMSO
Costa Mesa 846-2424
llU.UOADWAY
MORTUAIT
11 O Broldwav
Costa Mesa
642-9150
SMITM-TVT'HlloUMI WIST~ CMAPIL
427 E 17th St.
Cotta Mesa • 646-4888
Santa Ana Chapel
516 N. Broadway Santa Ana• 647...C131
-
PAC~YllW MINOllAL , ...
C.,.,,_tery Mol'tultY
Chapel
3500 PIClfic \flew Dn14
Newport,
Callfornla
&44-2700 I
ottieer Noted Wr•s N.,..hr
DEAR PAT: I have a>Wild thing going on. I got
a parking ticket with my correct name, address
and license plate number. I've been accused of ii·
Jegal parking in Los Angeles on Oct. 31, 1977, and
I'm supposed to pay a $10 fine by May 5. Oct. 31
was a Monday, and I was not anywhere near Los
Angeles. I was working here in Costa Mesa. My
J..Qb is very ~ar m~ hon)e, so I even walk to work
ancf dido"""\ liave Ule car out of the gar.age all day.
Whal can I do to get this straightened out? __ _ __ _ _ .R.S..Cost.a..Mesa
A misread Ucense numb(r by the lua..l.Dg of •
ftcer probably 18 at fault, a.ad a DMV ~rds
claeck tracked you down. The Loe Angelff Trame
Coart advises you t-0 sedd a letter to tbe deputy
clerk explainlng that your car wu not ID Los
Angeles on Oct. 31. EncloM a eopy of tile nodee
yoa received and, 11 possible, plOOf h'om yoar
employer ~t you were at work on &M day ID
questloe. Abo describe yoar ur and the pnxlml&y
of yoar bome to yoar job. Mall &his Information to:
Deputy Oerk, Tra.tnc Balldlng, 1943 S. HJll St., Los
Angeles, CA 90007. The judge will review tbe case
and you will be contacted.
IAuan Make Mad Mcnaq Gretl'
DEAR PAT: Do you know how I could contact
a private investment group for women with a little
mad mooey.
L.L., Costa Mesa
Meeting taformatlon about t.be "Broad In·
veston" bu been given to yoa. Tb.la group, af.
filla&ed with the American Asaoclatlon of Unlvenl·
ty Women. welcomet any woman lntettAed la
learnlq aboa& IDvestmeata ud pooUn1 a 1mall
amoaa& of moae1 eacll month to pat 11111
lmowledp to Ille lest. A spokeswoman for tile ts-
1ear-old ....-. ..,. &Ha It bu doM '!u well or beUer lhu •me broilers."
Ooele'• Ballf& Pla,,ed Old
DEAR PAT: I've had no luck randlnll anyone
who can repair my Webcor clock radio. The radio
works, but the digital clock doesn't . Can you help
me out?
G.M., Corona del Mar
A Y8 did a lot of cbeckla1 too, bat eoaldn 't flnd
any repair abop tba& baa parta for Webcor clock
radios. Webeor bu gone oat of bmlDela, and tbe
pana RPPIY la Soadlera CaWor'Dia appears to be
deple&ecl. U readers can come ap with a repair
source, 111 forward abe lnformadoa.
Works 40 Years
OC Employee
Term Horwred
Irene Gunville, wbo took an unpaid job with
Orange County government 40 years ago "for the
experience," was honored by auperviaors Tuesday
as the county's longest-term employee.
Mrs. Gunvllle, now a supervisor in tbe county
recorder's office, was awarded lbe "golden
orange" trophy which commemorates ber years of
service.
THE TROPHY had been held by Recorder J.
Wylie Carlyle who recenUy retired after 41 years or county govemment work.
Mrs. Gunvllle joined the county recorder'"
starr in July 1938, working at ftr1t without pay to
gain clerical experience.
Later she worked 32 yea.rs in the county as·
sessors' . department before rejoining tb-e re·
corder's staff as a supervisor.
... RAVE enjoyed lt and I hope to atay awhile
longer," Mrs. Gunville told 1upervllon1.
A Santa Ana resident slnce 1934, Mra. Gunvllle
is a> graduate of both Santa Ana Hip School and
Santa Ana College.
Sentenced
LOS ANG~ <AP>
-Ao unemployed tow
truck operator wu aen-
teoced to nve years to
llfe in state prllon f Of'
UI~) um kldnaptq u4
ra&>e ol a woman wboM ear he toreed to a · bait
on tb• Harbor FreeWa1.
Superior Court lud1•
Bonnie Lee Kartln Im·
poaed the sentence on Alvin Boltoo. 21.
NEED A LAWYER?
Low &..eg.i Fff
•Divorce ..... nmtcy
• Crlmlnal
• Wtlls-Pf'Obate • I ncorporetf on • ACCldtntiolnJury
• lvlctlOn
• COlltctlont
840-2807
~Hft. ~TATION-t10
a..• ... ". )
IMPORMS
In the DAILY PILOT
As a result, institute directors were
seeldJll $2,900 to rmance operations
through the rest of this fiscal year
and $38,580 for 1978-79.
THE FUNDS WOULD provide of-
fice rent in Dana Point as well as a
$20,()()().a.year 'administrator and a
part-lime secretary.
Supervisor Ratpb Diedrich re·
minded institute vice president Ken
Sampson that the board earlier re-
lected a proposal to provide operat· mg money.
He suggested the request for M.AU.M~----~~.~,.~~a.:: N•wport
1978·79 be brought up again when ..... .......,omo ..... • """ o-.rs. inc .• • c.o1Norn1a
supervisors consider the next year's =...1111C11.CAtw0 ~!':.~~~........,,,.,..., .. c.o.i.
budget. ~ • ·•111•-1• "'" t11n111n• 11 «11c1U<•te1 by • ....... a-.. ~ .......
""911 ..... ar...., CoHI o ..... Piiot R&ll a.-n. Inc. SUPERVISOR PHILIP Anthony "'41f,tt,tt.»,MtwJ.me 1Q0.11 w1111oma.~
noted the county already has offered TP••• ~ ::.ro;;r.: w•I" 1~
the help of Its planners and ad· PUBUC NOTICE c-ty oeni .. ~ eou..ty o"
mlnlstrat.ors. ------------4 =~~a'..":&rt0 a MAUOMTON
Sampson said institute. officials ,~::.c;;.":c:~Dt::.!1 ~7:!:muu ... m
have been working with the county. sTATSWCM.INIHltAFOtl ~•1M10,CAniu1
but added someone ls needed to '"• ~~CMUMO• ,....u ,_ ..,._,. P~ltlled Or ... (OHi Doti., PllOI, coordinate efforts. e;, •• ,. Of lllCHARO o. AXTON Aprll "· M,Moy J. tO, "'' Oo<ee~. , Ult.Ta Dro ...... 1 Toll. MOT ICE •s .. u-.:ev 01veN to.,....,_ ________ _
~ u ... ltonoltflemove-*'-• "'°' .-1 .-Mwlt10<•e1mt .... ""' PUBLIC N011CE HAN FORD <AP> -"" wid---...,. ,...,.red to,. .. ----------
Ki n gs County 's 19 77 :::':ff::".,":. ':.ti:;"..:=.'°.:: •mM
Martian Talk Slated
Dr. John A. Ryan of Cal State Fullerton, one of
the principal investigators or the Martian at·
mosphere, .will .d.i&c.u.ss.. "Viltingm>,.Mars" May 11
al Orange Coast College.
g r o&& farm income 11t1M~ ... .,......._,.,.. P:c:!:::S
d ped 3 7 l '"° ftK....., ~ .. tlie -rop . percen or ~ .... oMot ., ~1,. 6 TM ...,_,,,. ,.,_ -..i1111
more than $1S mWion WAR.IE~ ... Wllltl .. c. .. ..,.. -~i..T.:LV., ... ,, ..... r,. .2~ • ---:-.-.s..~:~·11c 8lldl.oi.-..;_... --·-·--because. 01 wic wvugn~. 1, eM ,. .. ., ....._ .. ;,. _ ~ •• .,. <Mto Mow, c.ot1tw111.
The noon lecture will be presented in OCC's
Science Lecture Hall 1. Admiasion is free.
a resulting decrea.e ln ~ 111 •• ~ ~ 10 voitt1u ... s. sc-a. 1,.. Pono acres planted and lower ow .. ...-.. ..,~.w1t111ntour ...,.""-*-' 11ooe11, c..t11w111. k i ,,,...._. ...., ... tint ... lc.otlM .. ... The presentation is sponsored by OCC's
Division of Physical Sciences and Mathematics. m a r .. e t p r C e s , ... O.':.~n ,..,., Mo'"" J. S<llullz. '* Pen. authonties sal~. E. _... LAc£ OtNGMAH ~ ~ ew:tt.. c.oi....,,..
OCC Student Unit Elects
Five students have
been elected to the
Orange Coast College
Associated Students
board of trustees
They afi Prizilla
Aquino of Fountain
Valley, Heidi Griffith of
Westminster , Braarord
Hubler of Newpo rt
Beach and Lisa Putman
and Debra Romahn,
both or Costa Mesa .
420l·CAMP
IRt'IMITOWMC
IAcaou fllOM UC
MQM,WID..fllLIN
TUIS.-THUU. •·• SAT. IN
VISION EYE CARE FOR YOU• YOUR FAMILY
PltORSSIOHAL SBYICI Ir 9UALITY
LENSES: Glass and Platte. Photo
Sensitive 0< tinted. Single vls60n -
BIFocaJ-TriFocal
FRAMES: Hundreds of frames on
dilpley lndudng Deatgner Frame.
SUNGLASSES: PltnO and RX
CONTACT& Hird and Soft.
MO AlfllDlilftmff MIClll.UY
fUAllC.W.
833-2887
._.. ........... ,,,_aue,, ..... ,..._ .... ,,_n..,,,.
S...... •••• ,,_ I JLOO ,,.
........ c ........... ,,_ 6IM ,,.
_Why weiyld?
Call (114) 635·0320
•
1711.IMllNtt
CosfiMna
642.0112
l~of .... llleWIOol.. ~ Tl\ltblnlMs.tb~flYOlllll-...... _...__. .........
l'\.AIA & WMJIU v--. S. Stkllta
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I
NATIONAL Wednesday. May ~ 1f178 s DAILY PILOT A 9
'Biggest Pig' Brutally Turned Back on Pat
'She Gave So Much
But, Got So Littk'
Editor'• Nott: TM Jol~ utroct it odapled
from llw boolc "TM IAMIJI LOdil o/ SoJt Clemente: The
Sto'll o/ Pat Nmm," fc) 1911 by Lui., Daviq. Re,,nnt·
fd bJI ~ o/ Thomal Y. Cl"OIOeU C.. The full·
lngth boolc wUl be pubUaMd ~ CroweU m late sum~r
By LESTER DAVID
On March 16, 1974, upon her return from a six·
day trfp to South America.~t teamed that the president had de<:lded to celeb ate her birthday in
Nashville, Tenn., at the ope g of the new home
or the Grand Ole Opry. (Nlx was not a country·
western butt but the backing of the South was im·
portant to him In his fight against Impeachment.>
Instead of proceedin1 to Washington, her
plane was diverted to Nashville. Thal evening,
after a 5,000.mile trip from Brasilia, sick with the
nu and running a fever. she went to Opryland,
U.S.A., where an audience that included Ten-
nessee's two Republican senators. Howard Baker
Jr. and William Brock, was wailing.
THE ORCHESTRA TWANGED OUT a blue·
grass version or "Hall to the Chief" as the Nixons
cam• on to the sta1e and took seats in front of a
backdrop on which a large red barn was painted.
Pat wore a bright green dress for St. Patrick's
Day. of which this was the eve.
At the mike Roy Acuff suggested that the au·
d1ence sing "Happy Birthday" to Mrs. Nixon, and
would the president play the piano for them? He
w~uld and did. The audiencE' bellowed the song
•hd Pat. looking embarrassed, sal and waved.
When the song ended she ro!te and came
forward, her arms extended to hug her husband
He turned away from her. Her hands dropped to
her sides and she went back to her chair
NIXON HAD A YO·YO IN his hand. He at-
emp.1.ed to s,p&n.the..yo..~-lailed ll& told· AeuU ·
"I 'II stay here and try to team how to use the yo-yo
ttnd you go up and be president." For JO minutes
thE' pr~ident of the United SUtes stood -before
4.400 people, trying to make a yo-yo spin up and
down a strtng. Pat. flushed with fever. sat .and
w1ttched him.
Even some of Nixon's own aides were
shocked. For the president bad not said one word
to his wife all evening Jong.
Pat Nixon's young assistant press secretary,
_ . TPrry Ivey, watched a1hast. Several years later.
lookin1 back, she was stlU blazing: "He absolute-
ly. in front of thousands of people, turned his back
on her. totally ignored her. He turned his back! It
was simply incredible "
THE FEELING WAS SHARED BY Terry
Jvey's immediate boss, press secretary Helen Mc·
Cain Smith, who says today: "I shall nevtr rorgel
the expression on her race when he ignored her
outstretched arms It was one of the limes some or
us winced"
The trouble was that Uus was not an isolated
happerung. Nixon's public treatment of his wUe
during his presidenc) was so indifferent that close
observers. especially members of the women's
press corps, were outraged. =
Io the words or Myra MacPherso of The
Washington Post: "The press corps to look in
vain for some-sort or emotion to pass between Pat
Robert Pierpol.Dt, CBS
Wblte House correapoa.
dent: "For I.be 10 yean
preeedlng bl• realP•·
tlon, I felt strongly tba&
Nixon and bis ware were
trapped In a 11tuaUon
where the best 1be could
do was not to hart him.
Tbey &rted to play this
game of be In& tbe
p~rlect wife and
bu1band, bot U ume
tbroogb u &ransparent.
It looked 80 phony, 10
anreallstic.••
HUMILIATED BY NIXON
Patrfcia Ryan In 1937
PAT'S HAPPIER YEARS
In 1960, Battling Kennedy
and Dick Nixon; observers looked for anything In Jt.me 1970 a state diMer was held at the
that spoke or warmth." White House for Venezuelan President and Mrs.
One of Nixon's aides who conferred with him RaCael Caldera. At the end of the evening the Nix-
daily over an entire decade says: "In all that time ons stood at the North Portico, bidding goodbye to
Pat's name never came up in a conversation." their guests. Alter they had gone. and while some
NM LONG AFTER THE VO.VP incident the or the other guests were still dancing. Nixon and
Nixons attended a $1,000·a-plate fund·raising din· Pat went toward their private elevator leading to their upstairs quarters. ner in .Washington. She sat behind him. and never He had his hand on her arm and he seemed to
once did he.tum to loo~ at her. ~orse, he ~poke for be leaning attentively toward her as people
a Ion~ while on Latm Am~ncan rel.ation.ships. watched them depart. Then. as they moved down
stressing ,the need for close neighborly ties. . the hall out or sight of most or the remaining
The .f•:->l lady had JUSt ri?lumed from a trium· guests. the Nixon!> separated. moving apart as
phant VlS&l to Venezuela, the country where 16 though they had concluded a little game Writer
years before she and her husband had been ston~ _--Jutf1.H1 ll!Qru -w .. G tells the story concludes rt 11nd spat upottr oJt~Wh"erestre now had told her hos~.---· .. · • ' . ·· . · • ed that her husband had not been able to come but had thus: .. Untouching and in silence. each walk
sent "the closest thing to his heart. me." alone.
That evening in Washington. it did not look as
though she was. He never mentioned her name or
acknowledged her presence.
ONCE AT A DINNER AT mE Sheraton Park
Hotel for repreaentatives of African nations, he ar-
rived with Pat. made his customary "V" sign. de-
hvered a brief address, and walked out of the
ballroom.
"He left her standing there, rigbt In the middl~
or the huge room." says Kandy Stroud, at the time
Washington correspondent for Women's Wear Dai-
ly. "He didn't touch her or say goodbye, there was
no 'See you later,· no kiss. not even instructions or
where to sit or where to go. He just dropped her in
the middle or the floor in front or 2.000 people.
"If it had been my husband, l would have wept
or been Curious, or. both. Pat Just smiled as she
stood there and finally, after a long embarrassing
fe"' minutes, someone came up and got lier seated "
AN0111ER TIME WAS ALMOST funny. ll'bey
new to San Antonio in separate planes for a party at Treasury Secretary John B. Connally's ranch.
Nixon came down lhe ramp with Texas Sen. John
G Tower, who had nown down with him. Pat, who
bad landed first. began walking across the field to
greet her husband. Tower reached her first and
kissed her. Then Nixon came up and shook Mr
hand
NIXON'S FRIENDS POINT OUT that he was
a reserved, undemonstrative man, decorous
perhaps to a major fault 1n that he was unable to
unbend with the eyes or the wotld upon him. At
home. they say. he was considerate and tender.
that he never intended to ignore her. that the fami-
ly was warm. compact and affectionate.
Julie, indeed. always found him loving and
kind, even impulsive. as he would exclaim. "Let's
do something special tonight." or. on the spur of
the moment. lake them all out for a birthday or
anniversary celebration.
or course. Juhe was seem~ her father from a
daughter's.eye v1t>w. which 1s not ulways the same
as the view of a w1ft'
PAT. FOR EXAMPLE. WOULD never intrude
upon his work but Juhc would not hesitate. Late
one day in 1969 Nixon was working with William
Safire on a foreign policy spect'h when his pnvate
phone rang. f''or many minutes the prestdeAt
launched into an elaborate.d1scuss1on of this coun-
try's relations with its South Amencan neighbors.
Safi re. listening patiently. thought that Henry
Kissinger or Secretary of State Rogers was at the
other end. It was the 2l ·year-old Juhe.
The followinf? morning s he was scheduled for
an interview-discussion on Latm America and
wanted a briefing.
Still. there were Ju~I too many documented ln·
c1dents of Nixon's cold behavior toward bis wile to
pass off as shyness or foraeUulness. or even total
involvement with politics and the business of gov·
t>rnmenl. Nixon could be so wrapped up in his own
thoughts that he did not notice people around him.
But why so often. and to Pat. unless there wu a
rrason?
THE QUESTION IS VALID AND prompts
another : What was their true relationship as
husband and wife? On the basis or much evidence
I have arrived at two conclusions:
-First, that the warmth and affection which
existed between them In the early years or their
marriage cooled as tht> years passed.
-Second. that the coolness came from his
side. not hers.
"She loved him very much." says AP cor
respondent Helen Thomas. "That was genuine "
And all or Pal's close friends and staff aides to
wh"m 1 spoke echoed the statement. There were
many stories of her atllll.ade toward him from too
many people to believe otherwise.
But what about him?
HE WAS NOT UNLIKE 011IER authoritative
husbands who place their work and home lives in
separate compartments. As time passed and he
advanced in office, he communicated with her less
and less about hls work and his career.
Pat admitted he had not asked her opinion
about running for a se('ond term in 1912. He never
talked about affairs with her as President Johnson
would do with Lady Bird, Harry Truman with
Bess. as Jimmy Carter with Rofialynn.
One rormer staff assistant observed: "I can't
see Dick saying: 'An awful thing happened in Cam bod.ia today. Pat·.··
Once Pat was asked if her husband had tned
out any of his State of lhE' Union speeches on her.
Her reply. "He never tries anything out." Not un-
til the Watergate crisis did he "try aQytblng out"
on his family
"SHE GAVE SO MUCH AND got so little of
what was really meaningful to a woman, attention.
companionship, consideration." says Washington
joutnahst Kandy Stroud. "Sometimes he was so
brutally indifferent I wept for her.··
Wauhllla La Hay, former Scripps·Howard
White House correspondent. put it this way. "She
is a wonderful person whom most of us love deep-
ly. a person of incredible courage and dedication.
But s he was married to a man who didn't ap-
preciate her. and this can be devaslat.&ng to a woman.
"She's the one we worry about. The hell with
him . Let's understand something. This man was
lhe biggest male chauvinist pig of all time "
tNEXT: Su and the Nu;orul
* Book 'Buries Past'
NEW YORK <AP> -David Eisenhower says he
learned atanearl_y age that "youhavetotallethe bad
with the good in politics."
Eisenhower. 30, grandson of former President
Eisenhower, said his fatber·in·law. former Presi-
dent Nixon. was .. relaxed and fol"(t'ard·loolllng ..
after f'irushtng his memoirs. which be called "a way of burying the past."
Eisenhower appeared al a news conference
sponsored by Your Place magazine. which is
publishing ae,interv1ew with him
Royal Mid~ast .Vi-sit _ Set Regatta in Newport
Skippers Conipete
For Soling Crown
( '
Queen· Elizabeth, Prince Philip to Travel
Queen Elizabeth II and her hU5band Prlnee
·Ph1Up, .,...U pay a series of 11hort v1sits to eastern ·
Arabian countries and Iran next year, Buck·
ingham Palace.announced.
The palace said the tour w111 take place next
February and March but that details of the pro-
gram and dates for the itinerary have not becm
worked out.
The royal couple are to travel aboard the royal
yacht Britannia and visit the heads of state of
Iran, Saudi Arabia. Kuwall, Bahrain, Qatar. the
United Arab Emirates and Oman.
The queen has visited only one or the countries
before -lran in 1961. • Neighbors armed with dust.mops and brooms
are pitching in to help Paal and Janet Olson
spru('e up their Portland house for an overnight
visit Thursday by President Carter.
"We're very proud ( PEOPLE J and excited," Olson said.
The Olsons said their
~·y ear·old daughter.
--------Krl1ten. and 3·year-old
son, Ebrtn, were having
trouble -.mderstanding the excitement.
The president bas spent similar overnight
stays with lamilles ln Clint.on, Mass.; Yazoo City,
Miss.; Des Moines, Iowa: and Bangor, Maine • Entertainer Dell Amas says the property tax·
es on the oceanfront home be bought ln Del Mar in
1960 have increased from $400
annually to $6,000
The City Council turned
down his request to dlvid• Lbe
10,000·square·foot property In
two and rent or sell the other
hall. But he was allowed lO
build a room for bis 81·Ye&r-old
mother
Arnai, who was born lD
Cuba. said bis mother bH been
living alone since his father ~•uz
dJed three yean aio and .. we don't believe tn
sendln1 people to an old folks' home in my coun-try .. • PrtDeetl Gnce of Monaco and her dau1hter
Prtllceta Ca,._, made a brief vjail to Bost.on but 1.b~ntd pubUclt)'. aaylna they
wero merely Oft their way home
to Europe.
Tbey denJed that they were
1hoppln1 for a .-own lor
Caroline'• upcomln1 weddln1 to
FNDCb bulllMHman ''l*"'-, ....
"W~~,. Jmt ln town for the
day and on the way back to
Europe," aald the 47·S'tar-old ,..ca1CMOU• Pnace11 Orate • G•l4la Melr, lone survivor or lbe snajor
ploneen who founded llrael, turned fJO toda.y. and
ffeG llneUI wbo critlcbed bier after the 1973
Arab·IsraeU war now regard her With fondness.
Mrs. Meir headed the government of Israel
five years and 78 days, until June 1974, when she
was forced to r-esign amjd a
storm or public outrage over
her government's handling of
the Yom KJppur war in October
1973.
"I was among the
thousands who gathered outside
her office to demand her dis-
missal," says Arlk Schein, a
veteran of that war. "Four
years lat.er I realize that Golda
Mii• was a real pillar of strength for
lhP country."
Her goverruneni was criUcl.zed because lsr~el
was caught by surprise when Egypt and Syria at·
tacked • President Carter and members of Congress
should take the lead in the battle against lnflaUon
by accepting a 10 percent cut ln
pay, former Federal Reserve
Boa rd chairman Artbor Blll"DI
proposed.
Burns, 73, said In a seminar
at Long Beach that s uch
sacrifices would be just the
beginning or a "long overdue"
anli·inflation policy that should
include a relaxation of environ·
mental regulations, an easing of
regulatio.ns on the trucking and eu1un
nil industries and a massive reduction in the gov·
ernment's .. cost-ralaing practices."
Burns said top corporate executives also
should take a 10 percent "tlalary cut but be would
draw the line at asklng labor to do so. • Former Oklahoma Gov. David Ball plans to
live 1n Soulbern California after he la paroled from
an Arizona prison camp May 22,
a Tulsa newspaper reported.
' The Tul.ta World said that
Hall's father, .. Red .. Hall, said
his son set up an otnce In the
San Dleao · area and that bis
lamlly la Uvtns there already.
Hall was JaUed alter being
convlcl.ed or extortion, bribery
and conspiracy charaea. • O.VtDMAU. A ftre that swept throu1b
three stores In a San Die so lbopplng center. ln·
eluding a shoe 11hop owned by alx professional foot·
ball players. appears to be the 25lJt case of arson
there thil year, lnveallaatora ·~· Police round two erupt)' paoUne cans beneith
a palm lret ln a rettaurant plltklq lol Mljac:ent to
tb IUM of Sunday·· fire OD CfalterDOGt Mesa
Bout vlJ'd, omc1&1111td."'-~
The own rs are e.b n .. ard a m•mber of lhe
New Enaland Patriots football club: Doua
Wllkenon and Quarterback Du FoMI of lhf San
Die10 C'baratrs and IM leaoehrap, DeDldl Pa.rtte
and Garry Oanlloe. oae·U me Cbaraers team· mates.
SPEEDING AT 65
Boat Driver Nordskog
65th Birthday
Cekbration I
Seton Water
Bob Nordskog of Van Nuys,
veteran offshore power boat
racer, will tum~ Sunday.
This ls traditionally the time
most men retire from business
or their strenuous hobby ac·
tivities and start to enjoy the
placid pursuits or life.
NOT NORDSKOG. He will
celebrate bis 65th birthday by
driving his 39·foot wave
crashing boat Power Boat
Maeulne Sp.1eclal from San
Francisco to Marina del Rey on
a non·atop usauJt on the exist·
Ing speed record of 11.6 hours
set in 1966.
Nordskog has been setting and
breaktna speed records on land
and water aJI hl1 llfe. The love of
speed started In 1934 when he set
the Model·T speed record which
still stands.
819 lllOST RECENT ac
compU•hment wu on lht water
whtn ;,he Jet 1hr world dlp11el
speed n:ecords tn oae day at Ute
Parker NIM·Hour Enduro
Nordskog end hls team expect
to cross lb startln Unc off the
Golden Oate 8r1d1e al 7 a m
and hopt to arrive at Marina del
Rey abouUp.~--
Top sailing skippers from throughout tbe United States ana
Canada are arrivi ng in Newport Beach to compete in the North
American championship regatta for the Soling Class, one of the six
Olympic sailing classes.
Committeeman Bill Crispin or Newport Harbor Yacht Club said
between 35 and 40 crews are ex-
pet'tcd to be on the starting lme
for the first race Thursday.
The race schedule calls for
l'4-0 races Thursday. one Fnday,
l\\-o Saturday and one Sunday.
The championship is based on
the best five or six races.
SKIPPERS AND CREWS will
be greeted at a no-host cocktail
party at NHYC from 6 to 8 p.m.
today.
Arrivmg in Newport Tuesday
was Buddy Melges or Zenda,
Wis .. the 1972 Olympic cham·
pion in the class.
ALSO ON HAND is the Cana-
dla n sailing team headed by H~ns Fogh, the defending North
American champion In the class.
Fogh also placed third in the
world championship in Brazil
two months ago .
Singlehanded
Race Entered
By NB Sailor
One or the latest entries in the
Singlehanded Salling Society's
Transpacific race from San
Francisco to Hanalei Ba)'.
Hawaii, is a new Crealock·
designed 37-fool sloop, Taylor's
Landing, to be sailed by John
Carson. Newport Beach
Other late entries are Roger
Townsend's Samurai-25, SI Bon,
Oakland. and Jlm Gannon's new
Freya·desi81'1ed 39 footer. yet to
be named. The society announced that
• the starting date tor 'the larger
boats (over 39 feet l has beera
moved \Jp to June 19 from June
22.
Commodore Georae Signer-an·
nounced that vessel shafts would
bo Haled before the start and
that any boat arriving aat UM!
Club Med rlnlsh line with a
broken al would have to ex·
plain thf' reasons tor surtln& b
cn1lr\c
Biggest delegation is from San
Diego. headed by Robbie Haines
who was an altern,te in the
Olympics in 1976.
The 2Uoot Soling \S a three·
man sloop. Contrary to an
E>ar lier report it was not
replaced as an Olympic class by
the Star. The two.man Tempest
was the boat replaced by the
Star .
lmercolkgiat,e
Honors Won by
WastSaiwn
Bill Keller or Stanrord ran
away with the Paclfic Coast In-
tercollegiate Yacht Racing As·
soclatlon singlehanded cham-
pionship last Saturday and Sun·
day. posting eight firsts and a
seventh and eighth place In the
JO.race regatta sailed in Laser
dinghies at Avila Beach near
Morro Say
Second overall was Rick Kem,
UCI. and third was Kurt Miller,
Orange Coast College m a regal·
ta thal drew 15 entries from the
Southern and Northern divisions
o( PCIVRA.
In fourth place was Tom
Walsh, UC Santa Cru.i. and f1fth
was Phil Ramming of Newport
Beach ulUna for UCLA.
The top two finl1bers quallfted
for the North American cham·
plonshlp. Mlller will be an
alternate.
The regatta was sailed Jn 20-25
knot wln<b, which made It a test
of 1klll tor ak•ppen ln keeplng
their boats upright.
Bridges, Blasted
BELFAST Nort&em lretana
CAPl -lrtah Republican Anny
iUerrlUu blew up lhrff rallrold
bridges ln Northern Ireland ear·
11 \od_,, paral~lns the ltrlfe-
torn province's rail 1ysle1l',
mtllt1ry~adqart re~
,
j
NATIO~l.
Stabbing Victim searches fOr Answer
Why Cry for Help
Went Unheeded?
£dUor'1 Note: St~ O'RllQn, 2'f. wa1 accosted
and •tabbed on a St!attle .treet Dec. 16. 8Gdl11 tOOUN:kd •.
M era~ oaoay, oblerved but ~ bJ1 people in the
netghborllood.
O'Ruon, the ion of a Seattl• Poat-Intelligencer re·
parter. hot recooettd from hil wound and plant to enter
low 1chool. No OM hal bl»en arreated /or the crime
Here ii Ina atOr'JI
.J..-
By STEPHEN O'RYAN
SEATTLE CAP> -One afternoon I was
knocked dowq on a Seattle st"fft, stabbed in the
back and left for dead while both my attackers
walked away fhe wounds are almost healed, but I
want an answer from the people of this city.
Why did you leave me there to die?
I ~ad gotten off the bus that aftemoofi at Boren
and Yesler to visit a friend If it hadn't bet!n rain·
mg. I would have waited for the transfer. and
there wouldn't be this slx·lnch scar up the middle
of my stomach and a knife wound In my back. But
that's all hmdslght. I decided to walk, and two
blocks later landed on the pavement. gasping for
one deep breath · ·
I FIRST SAW TH EM WHEN they rounded the
corn~r in front of me One ot them had on a greasy
white raincoat, the other a shabby tweed. The one
In white had has head thrown back. shouting in
coherently. I figured he was high and moved over
to giv0 them plenty of room. It wasn't room
enough .
· Well now don't this look just like onP or
·em." shouted the one In the white raincoat
He was short. thin. wore his hair in a wedge
like atro. a-nd had that wild look in his· eyes. like a
horse gets when 'sccared.
"A HONKY, A HONKY, a honky I swear you
can't go nowhere but there ain't a hundred of'em
JUmpm outa the sidewalks, telUn' you when and
what to do. Look out for me boy. look out 1"
"Just let me by J said.
·'Let you by by. by 1 he laughed. nudgmg hts
partner as the two closed In. "Oh yes, sir. so
mighty powerful and strong. Ain't gonna let
nobody by by by not till they do some shuttin' up
,..,,.. did ....
lea.,e •e te
die? ••• lt'Jaff dtd
.,... lea·.,e •e
tlaere to di#?'
-~
"llow move''
He shoved me off
the sidewalk. and l
should have moved
Instead, I swung for his
stomach. turned on his
p a rt n e . a n d w a s
stopped short by an in· .
credible jolt of pain on
my left side There Wf!S
a knife In my back. I
staggered once before one of them kicked me In the
groiri. then I fell.
The wound was bad. I could feel that cold blade
all the way to my chest. Later the doctors told me It
tore open my left lung, b~t I guess I was lucky. It
almost pierced my heart.
"SHOULD'VE DONE WHAT YOU was told."
his partner said as he leaned over to take my
wallet.
When he pulled out the knife, 1 felt something
give deep inside
J looked across the street as they wall away
and saw a m1ddle·age man walking his d in the
rain. He mu.st have seen the whole thing tried to
shout. but the pain was so bad I coul 't even
catch my breath. All I managed was~ drawn-our
moan He didn't see me.
I moved my head and saw a woman $landing
at her window For several seconds I stared at her
face. then she moved away and th" window was
empty She didn't see me either
I MUST HA VE BLACKED OUT for a while.
When I woke up I was drenched with rain, and
olood was dripping on the sidewalk It wasn't until
then I understood what had happened.
J m dyang. The realization bewildered me.
People don't get slabbed to death in decent
neighborhoods, not an plain VJew and the middle of
tbe afternoon. Tlus isn't New York City.
The slight.est movement sent a wave or pain up
my left sade, but I knew if I stayed where I was it
would be the last day of my Uf~
Yesler Way was two blocks off and crowded
w raffle. Unable to stand. I rolled slowly to my
s1 ulled my legs up one at. a ume,~started crawling down the sidewalk. Every made
me sick to my stomach with the pain. 1 meant
anythmg less than dymg, I couldn't have done it.
MAYBE TREY THOUGHT J WAS drunk, but
that whole neagbborhood watched me as I strug.
gled in the ram. AU the doors were closed, but they
knew I was out there The appearance and dlsap·
pearance of a face In a window, the movement of
curtains, the studied sllence of every house I
passed-theyweretbere, bet111s careful.
By fhe tame 1 got lo Vester my arms and legs
were quivenng like those fJf an 'old m.an. I waved
at the first car. smearana my band with blood so
they could see l was wounded and I waited with
relief
1t didn't stop.
I waved at tb~ next car, and the next one, and
the next. Some ol them polnted or stared, a back·
seat fu.11 of kid.I laughed, but to most I wu invili·
ble
REAL ESTATE
CAREER NIGHT
1.ook U1 OWlf at a RE.Al.TV WORLD CerMr
Ncl'lt mMtlng.
Dllco¥lt' IN actwn~ with the OtganiDtlon
tN1 mn mP9 "A WORLD°' Dtf'FEAEHCE."
FAEE UCENSIHG Sc:tiOO,. to qualified pett0nt
~~·~ PR>9f:am9 Awofut!ONIY AEAl,ACOPE mane.ting tool•
Nin~ & TV 8dWnlslnO auppon
a..t NATIONAL rwf«tal l)lltem
'Ollf tot ,....,.4*k>n• '° teWn hoW to beCOme a · MltlmarNl-...~11. •
11m1: 7 p.m CW.; 'JhOra., Mey 4, 1978
'*'9; talM2 t..mberi Sl a ... t402 &1 roro
Cc::.-il 8"'"*' c.nter) -
.... ~
"Help ... I shouted. I've been stabbed. I need an ambulance." _
She didn't aruwer. but the look on her race told
e how disgusting ahe thought I was.
When she turned away l felt only one thing,
and it wasn't panic or fear or paln. ft was anger.
anger that people could turn their back on a
wounded man, anger at indifference, and at the
(act that nothing would ever change lt.
I SHOUTED AGAIN, BUT l knew sbe wouldn't
turn around. It was as lt I were shouting at all the
empty windows, the locked doors, the staring
faces. lt was as if 1 were shouting the last words of
my life. ""
"l am dying. Doesn't that make one damn bit
or difference to you?'" •
Later I found out it was_ an attendant at
Lloyd's Rocket service station who finally 11potted
~
me from across the street and caUed the am(
bulance. Welcome to the human race. -
For those who like to keep notes on the in~
cidence of black crime. note this. U it was a blac:le
who shoved that knife in, it was also a black matt,
who saved me. •
VOU MIGHT NOT THINK my story aJJ that.
horrifying. but you weren't out there-In the rail\(.
You don't know about the surgery and the scar i
left on my stomach. the nights I couldn't sleep.
because of the pain. and the pneumonia that r~.
suited from that collapsed left lung. And 1·m only
Case No. 77-422752, one of thousands.
I could cite you statistics on the increase of
violent crime. or quote authorities on bow to avoid
being victimized, but you've already beard that
Besides. that's not what troubles me.
Why dld you leave me there to die'!
• Spiral sllced tor easy serving
• Honey 'n Spice Glaze •Cooked 30 hours
OCCSets
Lectiue .
Man's impact on the
California coastline will
be the subject or a talk
May 13 in the Orange
Coast College
tl . . ft • Nationwide shipping service
H te {)/U9Ul0V • • • •Full service Delicatessen I\ ey •Old World Cheese Shop ~ •Sandwiches to go
auditoriu~
SURVIVOR OF STABBING WAS LEFT TO DIE
Stephen O'Ryen Showa Spot Where He Lay
Dr . Rim Ray. a
member of the state
Coastal Zone Com·
mission. will give the
talk. the last In the
"Man and the Sea" lee·
lure series at the Costa
~ Q~n1etvU!i!"!~,
I THOUGHT OF CRAWLING into the street
but traffic was too heavy. AU I could do was watch
numbly as cars passed, stuMed with dlsbellef. All
that craw~ just as well have never even mn~~---·
Mesa campus.
The talk will begin at
8 p .m . Admission Is
$1.50. Information ls
IM04,..,...• Derr ••• M9Y I 4tla. OIDIA MOW ••• YOUI
HOMEY IAllD HAM For M1 ...... ·1 hr INIMI-
11001.eo.uT..-, • ~.,....,.fittOM1•1Mt1t
. Other 1c:>eat10ns ...
A city bus pulled over a block away and an
elderly lady stepped out.
av a liable py calling ~.._ __ ..,.. _____ llllllJ_m& ____ .__.,..,_=-s'!''..._..-....
556·58M.
Anaheim. El Toro (Now Open). Orange. Palm~ UI Hltbre
I
___ .....____ -,-----
Now the friendly skies will give
you the besU run for your money to
Reno/ra.hoe. 42 flights a week from Los
Angeles. 6 nonstop jets every sll)gle day
to Reno International Airport-ga.~
to the Reno/rahoe area..
Fly for an unbeatable $31 on all
flights 'I'uesdaor and Wednesday. And on
:flights before 9 a.m. an.dafter 9 p .m all
through the week.
All other .flights are discoupted. to
~$41.
Make the most of JOU -with a money-aavlilg pac}"ige:
Harrah's "Turnaround Pllng!'
$12.96perperson.Anexciting~ \
~ve Arrive
6:20&.m. 7:27&.m.
7:16a..m 8:22a..m
10:46&.m 11:63&.m.
2:48p.m 3:63p,m.
6:30p.m. 7:38p.m.
1Ql6p.m. U:2lp.m.
in Reno. Two drinks many Harrah's bar.
Late cockta.il show with two drinks, full
brea.kfast,.round-trip transfers between
a.1rport and Harrah's. Air fare, hotel
accommodations, taxes and gratuities
nqt included. Program available Sunday
thru Thursday only.
In Reno/rahoe you can have the
convenience of a Dollar rental car. 100
free miles on a.xzy flat-rate renta.1, sta.rtr
1ng at $18.96 for a Firebird..Price does
not include taxes, 1nsura.nce watvers or
gasoline.
For information and reservations.
· call your Travel .Agent. Or call United at
537-7621.
Shuttle back to Los Angeles
I.eave Arrtve
8:60&.m. 10:03&.m.
12:45p.m. 1:58p.m
4:30p.m. 6:43p.m
8:10p.m. 9:21 p.m.
11:60p.m. 1.01 a..m.
. ' Ch,gUdeclghas JUU;U law-price shuttles to BeDo mryweei.
•
HEALTH w.dneeday. May 3, 1978 DAILY PILOT AJJ
r
• -;o / '
Blood Pressure Pills Damper Sex IJfe~
ACME
sMoW M~llk co.
19
CUTqUTS
FOR PHOTOS
By Da. STEINC&OBN
Dear Dr. Stelaerobn: Mr
husband nu dliCO~red he bu
hl1h blood pl"efture. He learned it
durtnc an examination for life in-
surance.
But be refl.lleS to go to our doc-
tor for treatment. He says be has
beard that taking anti·blgh blood
pressure pills -often causes im·
polence.
I'll be damed," he says, "if J'U
take anything that wlll interfere
wilb our sex relaUonsh.ip."
Is what he says true?. If so, I can
un~d why he has been so
stubborn. Besides, you can un-
MR.
cmEE..
liL\ SUPll
\:'.>' lOW
Pita
dentand why 1 'm especially in
terested, too. -Mrs. T.
" COM"MENT: ln some -patient.a
lt 'a true. the medlcJne may affect
potency, may cause premature
eJaculaUon -and in the woman.
attaining orgasm may be difficult.
It's all due to the effect· the
medication bas on the sympathetic
nervous sy1tem.
But reassure your husband that
such medication only affect.a a
s mall number or patients. See if
you can lftfluence blm to take
treatment for bis hypertension.
This Is essential.
Thankfully, we have a choice or
drugs. Even if he should have any
difficulty. changing to a dirterent
medicine wHI often solve the pro-
Dlerrt.""Tbt lm]>Ortant conalderaUon
is the live-saving one -early and
proper treatment of the high blood
pressure.
MEDICALE'ITES
For Mias 0.: Your mother is
right. It's not the potatoes and
bread taken ln moderate amounts
that are fattening. Jt'a the pats ot
butter on the potatoes, and the djp-
plng or the bread In gravy that pile
on the calories. • • • Dear DT. Stelncrobn: There's a
history of heart attacks and stroke
m our family. I recall that my
father had a very high cholestrol
reading before he had his heart al·
tack.
My question ls thJs : I'm only 2'.
married, and apparently healthy.
We have three chHdren and we
don't want any more . .i 've decided
to go on the pill. Would this be
harmful? I've heard that It may
produce high blood pressure. -
Mra.G.
COMMENTf ln some women IL
does raise blood pressure. I also
recall patients whose serum
cholesterol and triglyceride levels
became high after taking the pill
for a while.
,..._
If you are still insistent on tak ·
Ing the pill, I suggest that you
have a checkup by your doctor.
rather than ""ly on seU·treatment.
If he finds that your blood fats
are normal. I suppose you can
continue. Nevertheless. with your ...
famlly hJstory being what it is. I
suneat that you have rechecks 8
few times during the year. • * • or all the enemies of the .kome.
tension Is the greatest. saY§ Dr
Stelncrohn in his booklet . "How To r
Live With Leas Tension Al Home."
For a copy 'Write him at this paper
enclosing 50 cents and a stamped.
self-addressed envelope
,,_.GMn... .............. --'-"·· .. -· .,q,... .. i.o .................. ·-·
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. •.
• " • .
Boekeg Plagoffs
Sluggish Montreal
Still ~anages Win
MONTREAL <AP) -It should
have been e asier. In fact, it
should have been a ro~t. but the
Montreal Canadiens orllv managed to defeat the Toronto
Maple Leafs 5·3 Tuesday night
in the opening game of their Na-
tional Hockey League best-of·
seven semifinal playoff.
The Canadiens held a huge
36·15 edge in shots-on-goal in the
contest. but the Leafs-took ad·
vantage of mediocre goaJtendlng
by the Canadiens' Ken Drvden
tom ake it close
Dryden said he was not any
more nervous than usual and tbe
fad that be was playlna his ftrst
game in a week did not have
anything to do with bis effort.
"The rest doesn't really have
any impact on a goaltender." be
s aid. '1llere's nothing really to
say about it (the rest>.
··1 wasn't any more nervous.
I'm relatively nervous before
most playoff games.
·'There are certa in nights
when you feel you are no( seeing
the puck. Tonight I thought I
was seeing it. Obviously, I was
seeing it in the wrong places.''
It may have been the lack or
consjstent activlty at bis end of
the rink that accounts for
Dryden's troubles, but Toronto
goalie Mike Palmateer, who
• tept his team in the game with
sometimes brilliant netmind.ing,
said that should not be the case.
"It shouldn't be anything new
to Dryden. He's raced 15 shots
probably in SO games this year.
He never gels bombed too often.
"In the playoffs it shouldn't
matter how many shots you get.
You should be up for anything. 1
think in the Islanders series.
there were periods of four or
Keough Ge ts
Second Win
For Oakland
five minutes when I wasn't get-
ting any shots.
.. Then, all or a sudden. I'd get
a breakaway. I had to be ready
for it."
Bruhu E dge l'lflen
BOSTON CAP> -Veteran
wing Rick MlddJeton did it again
for the Boston Bruins, making
believers or the Philadelphia
Flyers that lightning can strike
twice.
Middleton, whose overtime
goal in the opener of the Na-
tional Hockey League's
semifinal playoffs a year ago
triggered a four-game sweep,
gave a repeat performance
Tuesday night at Boston
Garden, giving the Bruins a 1--0
lead lo the best-of-seven series.
Just 1:43 into s udden death.
Middleton lQOk a perfect pass
from Jean Ratelle in front of the
net and easily beat Philadelphia
goalie Bernie Parent with a
short flip, lining the Bruins to a
3-2 victory.
"Sure, I was thinking about
last year," Middleton said. "I
thought about it during the in· ·
t e rmission afte r the third
period. I was thinking about
what I'd do in various situations .
You have lo do that."
Howeve r . Middleton didn't
waste any time thinking once he
got the pass from Ratelle while
a lone in front or the net and
teammate Bob Schmauu tied up
Philadelphia defenseman Andre
Dupont to the left.
"Ratelle thre w the puck
across the crease to me and
there 1 was au alone with the
puck on my stick," Middleton
said. "I looked up and tried to
flip n into the upper comer. I
dido 't get it as high as I wanted,
but it was a hard enough shot
from close in."
Both teams, t he Bruins
especially, looked sluggish after
layoffs following their
quarterfinal victories.
LOS ANGELES (AP> -The
RaQls did some last-minute
J1)an,uverSN ln the openlnc doy
ol the. NatloGal Football League
draft, and ended UJ> with an •·un·
dlacovered" talent -Oklahoma
running back EM.s Peacock.
General manager Don
Klot1terman swapped the Rams'
first round pick, No. 23 in the
draft, and their fourth round
choice to Cleveland in order to
aet the Browm' 20th selection -
and Peacock.
Dick Steinberlf, the Rams'
director of college scouting, bad
rated Peacock, 6-2, 220-pouncb.
amona. the top 10 ptayers 1n the
draft, and 1u11est~ that the
Sooners runnlna back would
· have been selected sooner ll be
.• ..,, IJld U.. Dralt1
SeeP-•-4
bad been featured In any offense
other tban the wishbone at Oklahoma.
··Klostennan said be couldn't
believe Peacock bad been
passed U» Ln tbe early chol~.
so he did aome fast trldlng for him.
Other Ram. picks 1n the ftrst
half of the draft, which ends to-
day, were defensive tackle Stan
Johnson or Tennessee State, a
6-foot-4, 275-pounder: wide re·
ceiver Ron Smith or Sao Diego
State, 6·0, 190; kicker-punter
Frank Corral of UCLA; center
Leon White or Colorado. 6-3, 261.
and quarterback Mark Manges
of Maryland.
Describing Peacock's style,
Klosterman noted, "He com·
bines rare speed with size. We
ju&t couldn't pass up hls kind of
value in the draft."
Peacock, who reportedly bas
'.
*•J
been clocked ln 4.4 seconds for
40 yards, responded with en-
thusl asm to the news of hill
selection by the Rams.
••it's thrilling." be said by
telephone from Norman, Okla.
"The Rams are just the kind of
team I hoped to play for. I've
beeo on championship teams in
college. and I'll be joining a
championship team in Los
Angeles."
The Rams are also expected to
try Peacock. who averaged 6.2
yards per carry in college, at
ruonlne back punts and kickoffs.
Angels Battered Again; P.hoenix ·
No Match
Tanana Pitches· Tonight ForOranges
By DAVE CUNNINGHAM OIU.Delly~teea«ett
If the Angels. could start their
games in the second or third in·
ning , they might be a hot
baseball team right now.
·Bvt..&.he fif&t.lwo 4nning~ eount
as much as the other seven, and
probably more ii you're an oppo-
.nent-of tbe-Galifomia Ange-ts. •
For the second straight outing,
early pitching prieblems resulted
in a deficit that proved insur-
mountable. The Angels lost to
the Detroit Tigers, 10-2, Tuesday
night before 18,64) at Anaheim
Stadium.
Frank Tanana will try to
r~medy the situation tonight as be
oppos~s JimSlaton Cl·l> at 7:30to
concludetbetwo-gameseries.
Tanana is bidding to become
major leagfle baseball's first
six-game winner of 1978. His 5-0
r e cord and 2.45 ERA were
typical of the Angels' pitching
until the past two games.
On Sunday Chris Knapp was
roughed up for eight hits arid six
runs in the first two innings by
the Toronto Blue Jays, and
California eventually lost. 9·3.
Tuesday night Ken Brett was
greeted. by five hits, five runs
and a cascade of boos in the first
innin.c .
He settled down after that, complished only 15 times since
surrendering two hits and one 1939 by sluggers like Ted
run over the next three frames, Williams. Mickey Mantle and
but the damage had been done. Harmon Killebrew.
"The only ball they hit bard ln . :·1 j~ try to.~t the ball where
that first inning was the dou· at s patched. the 6-4, 200·
-blwH-Angels ~.:m·ag:cr-9-nE-· · ~· ~~1!,.w&e-a-1ti'!H'fe
Garcia said. "And that was from feeling seeing those balls dLSap.
a 194 hitter." pear over the roof. I can't really
<Garcia wa~ talkinr-about -putit-ln.towords..'.: .. --
Lance Parrish who rined a shot The Tigers have been wreck· ' ing pitchers all over the league,
A llfle& S late
AMO-.•KM~tll.-.17MI
AMr l Oelnlll •I C..11~ 7 .U p.m.
AM'( S a.wtarld 9t C..tltonll.t 1 lS p.m.
~' 6~e1Callfoml.t 7·ZSp.m.
up the alley in left-center to
drive in three runs.
But the real engineer of the at-
tack was 23-year-old Newport
B e a c h r es id e nt Ja s on
Thompson. He knocked in four
runs with a home run and two
singles.
Thompson hit 31 homers in
1917. his first full season in the
major leagues, and has five this
season. Some in the Tiger or·
ganh:ation expect him to develop
into a power hitter comparable
to Detroit greats Willie Horton,
Norm Cash and Al Kaline.
Last year Thompson belted
l wo homers over the roof at
Ti ier Stadium, a feat ac-
so they weren't playing any
favorites with the Angels. Their
lineup Tuesday included five
men hitting over .300 and one
<Aurelio Rodriguez> bitting over
.400.
Detroit's Milt Wilcox burled
only his second major league
complete game in three years. A
seve n-year veteran who has
shuffled between four different
clubs, Wilcox limited the Angels
to four hits.
The biggest of those was a
third-inning triple by Lyman
Bostock to drive ln Rick Miller.
Miller got two of California's
four hits.
"We gotta be c-areful not to get
too excited $out a couple of bad
games," Garcia says. "It's too
early in the season for that."
DaTltOIT
lAFl-ct
W.eqnet' H
Sl-dll
TltOm-lb
ICemt> II
Wo< ...... hftrt
PMf'llh< "°* 19vel 3lb Oill•rel 111
., ....
S I 1 0
• 1 1 1
• 1 1 0 s 2 l l
s 1 '0
3 ', 0
SI 2 l
4 0 I I
J '0 0
CAUPOIUllA ., ....
II. Mlltff rt 4 I 1,0
~kll :tb • 0 0 1
8oslO(ll ct • 0 I 1
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S.ytwdfl l 0 0 0
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H""'pCOf\C I 0 0 0 fot.,s l9 10 lJ t Totels JI 1 • 1 0e1ro11 500 n1 oot-M
C.lllomlo 002 000 000-1
E -11. Miii~. LeFlore. OP-c.111 ..... 1. 2. l08-0.lrojl 9, C..Hfoml• •. 2B-PKr1'11, A.
llodrlouu. l B-BOSICKk, P.trrls ... HR-J Tllom~ m. se-w..-.
,,. " • •1t.i ••so DETllOIT /
Wil<O• (W, t-11 • • , 1 1 ' CAUl'OIUUA
It. Breit ll , Ml • 10 I I l 0
0 , Miiier 3 I I I 1 o
Grllfln 2 2 1 I 2 O
HP8-W"9Mf', Wo<llenlust' (by Mlllerl. A.
J.tt.Uon. O\elk I~ WllC.Oal. T-2 ».A-11,MI,
Rosie Casals downed Phoenix·
Kristien Shaw. 7-5, in women's
singles Tuesday. booating the
Anaheim Oranges to a 31·13
World Team Tennis victory over
the Racquets.
··--Aftebei~';; \lwbl1:'S ~ .. w uf
Kathy Harter and Francoise
Durr topped Rayni Fox and
Shaw 6-0 in-the Anaheim-Con-c
venlion Center before 2,053.
Syd Ball and Dean Martin Jr.
s cored the only Phoenix victory
of the night. defeating Mark Cox
and Cliff Drysdale Ht
Drysdale, however. defeated
Martin 6-0 in singles play.
In mixed doubles. Casals and
Anand Amritraj defeated Ball
and Fox 6·1.
Meanwhile in New Orleans.
IUe Nastase was a winner in the
men's singles and mixed doubles
matches as tbe Los Angeles
Strings downed the New Orleans
Nets 30-21 in World Team Tennis ptar before 7 ,162.
Los Angeles won every match
except the women's doubles.
which Helen Crowley and Wendy
-Turnbull of New Orleans won
from Los Angeles' Chris Evert
and ~nn Kiyomura. 7·5.
Nastase beat Andrew Pattison
of New Orleans 6-3. In mixed
doubles, Nastase and Vijal'
Amritraj of Los Angeles defeat-
ed Pattt.son and Murty Riessen. •
7-6.
In mixed doubles. Amritraj
and Kiyomura of Los Angeles
defeated Riessen and Renee
Richards, 6-4.
LA~• ..... on.-u
Womoft -Ewert llAI Ml. T11t"IH.lll '"'· C..wle~T~l INOl dllf. E~·ICl.,...,..,..tM.
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IAldel FH·Sl>rlO..O.
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Dodg~rs Tumble
A ........
There's No Grudge,
But Buckner Stars
C HICAGO <AP> -Bill
Buckner insists he doesn't hit
with a grudge against his former
teammates. the Los Angeles
Dodgers. But you couldn't tell it
by the way he's been swinging
the bat against them the past
two seasons.
ner in the Nationa l Leagu~.
pitched the first six innings for
Los Angele5. yielding four runs
on eight hits. He wa s lifted for a
pinch batter in the seventh with
the Dodgers trailing 4·2.
ANGEL RON JACKSON IS HIT BY A OETAOtT PITCH.
"I try my best every lime I go
to bat. I'm not out to get a hit
Just because they're the
Dod~ers," Buckner said Tues·
"He (John) gave up a couple
of more runs than be normally
does/' s aid Los Angeles
manager Tom Lasorda. ''But we
very easily could have given
him more runs to work with."
OAKLAND-The Oakland
A 'a stretched their American
League West Dlvtsloo lead to
2YJ games Tuesday nigh\
with the pitching of Matt
Keough and Elias Sosa and
Is Seaver Washed Up? Dodgen_ Slate
UO-•KAIC ...._ 17'tl
Moy , L.os Mo•••u• Ollaoo ":U U"· ~ 4U.~MOllQoo ll:U•.m.
Mii'( SLm~.ttPI~ Sp.m.
day after punching two slqles
and driving ln two runs as the
Chicago Cubs defeated the
Dodgers 5-4 m 10 lnnlll&s.
The Dodgers loaded the bases
against Cubs starter Rick
Reuschel with no outs In the
third on si(lgles by .-obn, Davey
Lopes and Bill Russell. After
s triking out Reggie Smith,
Reuschel walked Ron Cey to
force in a run and give the
Dodgers a 2·1 lead.
.-,.
. ;· . .
the home nm Power of Gary
Alexander propelling tbe A's
to a 2· 1 victory over visiting
Toronto.
lteougb. the former Corona
del Mar lngb ace, upped b1s
record to 2--0, boldllla Toronto
to five bits before leavina ln
the aevllrth Inning.
ln Keough'a five starts tb1a
aeaao!.11 t.&e A's have won
them tul.
"It doesn't make any dU·
f ere nee to me 11 1 fllcb •
complete 1ame,' said
Keoulh. "We have aucb a
. 1tron1 bullpen that I'm not
worritd •bout coming out of.
the 1ame." Soll put out a nre ln the
MV4'Ul&.b b7 forcln~ a J>Opup
ud a double play, then re-
tired the aide ln the nnal two
IJlnlJlp wtlbout •hitch.
In m Ml Innings of work
Keoqb IU'Vck out two and
walDcl three bau.rs.
Sa.kt TOtoOto awia1er Ro1
Haruf .. ld: "Oaklacd Baa
maybe tbe bHt 1oun1 t~r~==-\~ pllc~lal 1Wf111thelequiL11
Drysdale Says Slrunp Is Onl,y Temporary
CINCINNATI <AP> -Former
Dodgen pitcher Don Drysdale,
now a broadcaster for ABC, said
be is confident Tom Seaver will
return to form despite no vic-
tories in six appearances for the
Clnclnnatt Reds.
"Ttte claasic plcture of Seaver
bas him down ao low and cominc
straight at the biller," Drysdale
said before Monday nl1ht'1
gable ln which the PbJIUet beat
Seaver 12-1.
"Some of us were watchln1
him last month, abd the aeneral
comment wu_th11t be didn't loot
llke Seaver, Pltc.blnl tbe way he
WU.
"ff e wasn•t drtvln1 at the bit-
ter, comlna out at blm. He
seemed more erect and hi•
fastball was opmtac atrataht up." •
J)ryldaM fe.ta IUN the lapte •
ls temponrJ.
"CertllnlY Tomm)I'• tot more
years ID blm. But lt.'1 also true
that the older you set. tJie mort
ll>riD.a tnlnlDi OU need. r.\t D
you need mlnimum six weeks.
.. I understand Seaver had
some back and leg problems that
interruptfd bia tralnioa. And, I'd
guess tb08e had a lot to do with
his slow atart. People talk a~t
the arm and legs as strong
J>Olnll ol a power pitcher. You
can't eliminate tbe lower back
either, particularly the way
Seaver. throws himself into the
pitch When he'• right.
''lt'1 bard to put yourself In
Tom's body. EventuaJJy, be and
the bllten will let U1 know when
he's no longer effective. lt'•
true, tbouah. that a power
pitcher can 10 ln a bu.rry. com·
pared to a cuUe.
"It'• tbe cliche of throwlns u
bard but lhe ball not C'
there as rut. Bulc1Uy. ••
a lot of truth In lbat ataltmea ••
tald Drytdal•, WboM aboukter
can OU.lat.,. 33.
''Tom bu tiMii l•W.-1 two
1trlkea on hit.ten, bue·banl,
Ute lbat, Tlila 1te &eta lt up
beN,"~Ald.~ -.
belt-to-lettA!r . high. "That's just
not bl.I pit.eh."
Drv&dale recalled that when
tbe Dod(era moved from Ebbetts
Fleld to the Los Anfeles
Coliseum, he was bothered by
the screen loomina over his
shoulder.
"It sot to me for awhile, but I
learHd to live with it. I had to.
So many tbin11 can affect a
pUcber mentally, aa Seaver
knows. You Ute to go in with a
plu1 attltude and not worry
about what bal>P4)ned last lime.
.. But you can't help lt.
'SometlmH you out-think
yourself. All of a aude.n you're a
1enlu1 Instead Of 1tlckln1 to
your 1ame plan. You think about
tbl.n1r. like rhythm and ~lease polo , wtltth amount to notblftl but a feel for pl~bln1. "There are..::• when you're
not *i; but nobody's • bout to you 907 donationl.
You mi t u w ll ao out there
and try to i9l Uie )lllltra oul, 0
l)ffldalliaJd.-•
"As a team, we probably play
Harder against L.A. because we
know we have to beat the good
clubs to be a contender," added
Buckner. "l think everybody
puts out more in that kind ol
situation."
Buckner came to the Cube laat
season ln a tr ade wbicb sent
Rick Monda,y to Los Angeles.
The 2&-year-old first ba~em.n
hit .310 and bad 10 rbl a1alast
hi• former teammates In 1971.
.., auess you can HY 1''11 Just
lucky." he said. ''That's lhe only
explanation I can give."
Ma_n~ Tr1Uo's double ln tbe
10th lDn1DI droVe lD th• wbmlnt
run off loler Mike Garman, 0.1,
the tblrd Loe Aqela pltctler.
"lt was a ltlgh fast ball," t.ad
Trlllo. "1 was }ust tryln• to pu.11
lt. I thoulht Lt mitbt fO out."
The ball caromed. off tbe left.
c nterftekl wall and drove ln
Rudy Keoll wbQ dnw a Wilk to
open the lanlna and adv.Deed to
second on a aacrtnce.
Tommy .John1m1ldlt1 • bkl to become tllie ftnt !'v.oaame wtn-
But the big right-bander set-
tled down and got Steve Gasvey
to foul out and Dusty Baker to
ground out to end the inning.
"You've got to figure that in
that sltuaUon we'll get more
runs," said Lasorda.
LOI &MaL.U attCAOO .. ,... .., ...
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U DAil Y PtlOT WednteelaY. May 3. \978
Sport.a in Brief
Bogus Tickets
Feared for Race I ..
A parimutuel llcket·printlng machJne haa been stolen from
Keeneland Race Track, ralsins concern about the possibtuty that
counterfeit tlcketa for t.he Kentucky Derby could be printed, the
Baltimore Eveotn1 Sun said today.
Quoting unJdenttned sou~. the paper said the m achine wu
taken last week from Keeneland, about 75 miles from Churchill
Downs where the Derby will be run Saturday.
The machine, owned by the American Totallsator Co. and
leased to tracks, issues win, place and show tickets. It can print
tickets in S2. SS, $10 and $50 denominations.
The paper said a source with knowledge or track security told
tt the stolen machine lacks only the letter code for Derby tickets
and the special paper on wblcb the tickets are printed.
• The code will not be dedded untll Friday. when Derby tickets
go on sale, the Evening Sun said. The code Is set in type and is dlf·
ficult '--but not impossible -to d1.1plicate, tbe paper quoted the
source as saying.
Tbe Dt>rby Is especially vuJnerable to counterfeiting because
tickets are sold a day In advance, a rarity for U.S. racinJ. allowing
thievP.stoseetheUcketcode. the paper quoted a source assaying.
l'o1a1t 11.et•rn• to /tllltDallkee
Robin Yount took batting practice with the Milwaukee
Brewers Tuesday, and manager George Bamberger said the
newly.returned shortstop could be ready for action as early as the
end or this week.
But neither Brewers general manaser Harry Dalton nor
Yount, who Is ln the option year of his contract and' had been con·
t'lidering leaving baseball lo take a 1hot at the pro golf tour, would
say if Yount's return to the club means he may be back next
season.
TRACK/BASEBALL I MISCELLANY
................ " ..........
EL TORO'S ART GOURDINI {THIRD FROM RIGHT) WINS HIS 100 HEAT. ~OSINO OUT SAN CLEMl!NT!'S PHIL IPl!NCIR.
CdM, El Toro Top Qualifiers
By HOWARDI.. HANDY CdM 's Sea Kings were paced El Toro's Chargers were
oe-Oe11'" ... 1te" b St Y A d G b h dl A There were few surprises in Y eve oung, n y erken paced y sprinter· ur er rt
the South Coast League track and Todd Kausen. Young won Gourdine. He posted marks of
heat races in the 220 and 440. 10.3 in the 100. 23.5 ln the 220 and and fle1d preliminary meet at posting a 51. l in the quarte rmile. 14.9 in the 120 high hurdles. all
Mission Viejo Hlgb School Tues· the best or the day. good for heat vietories. In addi· day afternoon and evening. Corona del Mar picked up 22 Gerk~n. b~zed l~ a SffOf!d lion. he alao Is ln fourth place ln
run in Friday's two-mile.
Latif.Ina Beach's Norm An·
deraon could be a double victor
In the sprints Friday evening.
He had the best tlme in trials in
both the 100 C\0.2 I and ~ 220
<22.9). qualifying places and El Toro's place l~h an a mat~ heat m the triple jump with a mark of
Chargers grabbed 21 with both 4:24 .0 behind El Toro s Shawn 42·6. San Clemente's Phil Spencer Before he took batting practice, Yount said
contract talks "might come up later," but
dect!!?erl !.O diseuss~~turtkw.----
Dalton termed any discussion or next
season. "sheer speculation," addlng. "There
aren't ~Y wntract talks right now We 'll' 'et
around to that later."
d...,. Flynn at 4 · 22 9 got under 40 seconds for the first
• ··-~CO( ~-a-~~ J.o uw;e.at .de.· ·-· · ltlrusen bad rufetiml! MS\ M Cosrlf"M~sa·8·bevy of dln.-nce~ ··~tn the "330 iow nCJt'dles wtti1 ~ie1~ngwftlhc~~ k~~~r:' M~=i~n 168·7 in topping a stellar field of runners was paced by a 4:20.9 a 39.9 effort. the fastest or the
Asked If coming back to the Brewers meant
he had dropped the idea of pro golf, Yount
replied that he had never said he was consider-
ing the golr tour.
"Rlght now. I'm just here to play baseball. .,., .. vouNT
and thars all I'm gonna do," he said. "I cam e back because I want
to pla) baseball. Right now. I just want to get ready to play."
NBA ...... ,,. llntmae r ......
The Philadelphia 76ers have their backs lO the wall tonight in a
pressure situation against vi.siting Wasblnaton. wblle Denver and
Milwaukee collide in the series decider In National Basketball As·
sociat1on action.
The Bullets from Balticnore have a one.game edge on the 76ers
and a victory tonight would give Baltimore a 2·0 lead in the ~t-of·
seven aeries which returns to. BalUmore for Games 3 and 4.
Attendance ls also a factor for Philadelphia.
Only 4,S68 showed for the opener with the
Bullets. Philadelphia coach Billy Cunningham
refused to alibi for his team's recent showing,
saying: "Let's be factual. We just didn't ex-
ecute. And the key was on the boards. We al·
lowed them second. third and fourth shots. And
since we didn't control ltle boards it killed our
fast break."
Meanwhile in Denver, Nuggets coach Lam
Brown says the announcement of David
Thompson's mulU-mtJUon dollar contract just
DAVID TMOMf'IO!' prior to the playoffs may have backfired.
"I would think It's backfired," aays Brown. "I don't think
he's played anywhere near the standards we've come to expect
f rom him But Quinn Buckner has had a lot to do with that.··
Buckner has guarded Thompson for the Milwaukee Bucks in
, these Western Conference semifmals
Griclder Dena'C tt'a .. to T•rn Pro
Most college football players dream of being drafted for a pro·
' fessional career. but when Terry LeCount was picked as a pro
Tuesday he was fighting to play another year for the University of
Florida
The San Francisco 49ers took LeCount in the fourth round of
the National Football League draft, listing him as a wide receiver.
But in Gainesville. Fla .. lawyer em DeCarlis was volunteering
free legal service in LeCount'a battle to retain bis college elltiblli·
ty DeCarlis said he had sent a telegram to NFL Commissioner
Pete Rozelle before the draft. saying that regardless or any draft.
choice, LeCount hoped to pfay collegiate ball next year.
• "Thla is a kid without fault who bas been ruled lnell1ible,"
DeCarlls said. "Our plans are to take court action to ~aln Terry's
eligibility for next ran "
LeCount. a quarterback on last year 's Gator team. bas been
r uled ineligible by the NCAA because he aiped an agreement with
a profeaional agent last December. LeCounl bad decided to tum
pro, lblnklng his collegiate playing days were over.
But in January the NCAA changed its rules and permitted
another year or ellgibtlity for players who did not play as
freshmen. LeCount could not play as a freshman because be was
academically ineli1lble.
He appealed to the NCAA to consider his agent contract void
The NCAA Rules Committee declined.
U.eldlere Ill Sperta. ••
FOOTBALL -The Gren Bay Packen of the National Football
League traded defensive tackle Dave hrelfo17 toPtttaburah In ex-
change for tbe Steelers' fifth round draft choice Tuesday.
, Pili.burgh used lbe eelection to take WllUe
Wiider, a nlDDinl back from the Uolvenit.Y of
Florida. . .tbe Su D1e10 Cllaqen traded their
(Jflh and sixth n>uOd picks lo tbe draft. to Detroit
veteran Unebacker Jim Laalovlc . . . the
t Oaklalld llalden went to Rose Bowl winner
Washington for their top draft plck Tuesday,
' select..., Huskies defensive end Dave Browala'
. . • pallas Cowboys owner CUat Marelllaoa
"iabeled as libelous and untrue Tuesday alle1a·
l ons in a Playboy magulne article by rormer
, Wbite Houae confidant 8obb1 1t4ker that tbe
Cowboys football franchise was arran1ed
·'throuab a S25,000 bribe to late Sea. E1tea Kefeauver,
• D·Tenn. .. NFL commllaioner Pete 8.oaelJe toot away Green Bit'•
1rourtb round draft choice Tuelday because tile Packen sta1ed ll·
legal workout.a lut February.
BAl&ETBALL -USF's Jamee HardJr and Wbdred Boynes
have renounced tbef r college careen and become elllible for the
·NBA •s collep draft June e. Jolnlna tbtm are Reule ..,.... of
· Unlvenlt.)' iJt Nevada·Lu Vecu. 'Pruit s.•n ·of Southem
UDtvel"llt1 and Jamee Bolle1 ol SctMoeeta~unty CommWllty
•Collet• lA New York. . .. ROolde A.MlleaJ na of the Denver N~getl bu been ftned an undllelOMd amount of money by the
NBA for throwtng a puncb at a Bucks' player ln the third same of
tjle sertes
r LA.OLYMPICS -'l'he city councU asked Mayor Tom Bra~
lo del~ maid.Di any apoolDtia.t. to to. An1eles' Olympic
Or1aDWn1 Commtttee uiaW the council deelclet on lt.t llrianclal
f e tn tM Games • . . In ..._.,, meanwhUeiiapproved a buct1et 14.800 ror Coliseum com~~ aa. and Bray P1e • to tnveJ to Greece next month to auad an Int.oaUonal Olfm·
(We CommlU.. m..una.
fourth with 15 but one of i:! discus thn;>w-:rs. Scott Hudson of effort for John Gerhardt in ~e day. Dave Hancock and :-1ik~
t sr--... -~ -1.. tW< ;n - -MMlei....VieJO •lao itlld-e -ensorr --m~-and Joe ¥oa~~:11 "11J-W'awof-Sarreemente ltJd""ll <me· 8 ronges even\O), ne o-mue best mark of 165-2 but had te set· the 880. Young also led his heat two finish in the triple Jump pre· ~~~~d~~d no qualifying races tle for second place In the pre· race in the mile in an effortless llmlnartes with Hancock leaping
· lims. 4:30.0. Gerhardt is scheduled to 44·6.
OCC I ' Game Baek
Bilctl Face Cerritos Next
With some belp from San
Diego Mesa. Orange Coast
College finds itself in a position
to challenge for the South Coast
Conference baseball cham·
plonship after once being left for
dead.
The Pirates. behind another
sterling performance by Bob
Smith. downed visiting Santa
Ana. 4·1, Tuesday while second
place Mesa was dealing first
place Cerritos a 4·2 setback.
Orange Coast ts now just a
hal,...game out or first with Mesa
a half game back. All that can
change Thursday when the
Pirates visit Cenitos on a day
Mesa la idle.
Smith extended his hittin
streak to 23 games by goin
three-for-three. He also stole
39th base and ls hitting a si
·.521 tn conference play.
Jamie Nelson drove tn t
runs to help Kevin Fitzhugh
note fl Ule pltcfllng clecfilon.
Fitzhugh struck out five and
walked two.
Eric Peyton tripled wtth one
out in the second inning and
scored on Nelson's sacrifice fly
SoCal Dealt
4-2 Setback
SAN DIEGO-Southern
Callfomla Colle1e of Cotta Mesa
scored a palr or runs tn tbe ftnt
tnntn1, then 1ave up four to the
boat USW ·team ln the first two
framea and dropped a 4·1 NAJA
Dlatrlct 3 Southern Division
baseball declllon Tuesday after·
ooonbeR.
Randy Greer opened with a
double, Rob Stonelake tripled
and Stan Tbomu 1tn1led to get
the two nma acrou for SoCal.
Four of the seven hits by the sec Vanauants came ln lbe ftnt
lnnina wflb Mike Scheetz gettJq
tbeother.
SoCal ts now 15-5 in conference
play wltb the title wrapped up.
Overall, tt is28-15.
Greer, (f
Stontt••. If
Tl'lomH, 11>
WllSOfl, Jb
Seiheeh, c
Hou••. rf
SoC.1 Goll• USIU
s.c.tl c..4Mte CJ I
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Dues Outlast
GWC Netters
while Smith led off ·the fourth
with a single. stole second and
scored on Nelson's single.
It was the same scheme in the
sixth.
Saddleback College could have
used some or those base hit.a.
The Gauchos had JUSt six
safeties anctdropped a 3-2 Mission
Conference game at Chaffey.
Held scoreless through five
frames, Saddleback talUed twice
in the sixth inning only to see
Chaffey score the winning run in
the bottom half of-the frame . Vic
Hasler scored one run and drove
in lbeotberfortheGauchos.
0r .... CMttm •rll• ,,_.,...,,cl 4 I Io • o 1 o 111e1-. c a o a a·
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Bolllld fer lltM
Bill Gompf. a three·time
mos t valuable player for
Laguna Beach High a nd a
first team All-CJF 2-A fool·
ball selection in 1977. has
s igned a national lette r of in·
tent to attend the University
of U tah. Gompf. a
hnebacker. quarterback and
tailback at Laguna Beach. is
bille d for linebacker duties
at Utah.
Estanci8's Camp
Ties Shot Mark
Mike Camp of Estancia High
seems to be bitting bJ.1 peak at
just the rtgbt Ume.
The eenlor wetabt man. who
set a school re«>rd in the sbol
put a week ago, tied the school
mark ln the dlacua throw with a
152..t effort tn T\letday'1 Century
. League track and field preUms
at El Moden•Hiab".
He beadl a llJt of 13 Eagle
qualtfien for. Friday's l~ague
finals at the same slte. Fleld
events begin at 5 with the first
race set for 6:30.
Camp also put the abot 51·1,
HEDRICK PICKED
Bf S4N DIEGO
Gavin Hedrick, a former
Newport Harbor High football
star, and a four.year puntine
1ta1' for Washtn1ton State
University, wu drafted today
by the San Diego Chargers on
the eighth round of the NaUonal
Football League dratt.
Hedrick'• only dutlea in four
seasons for the Cougan was aa a
punter and was consistently
avera1tn1 In the 40s with his
boornln1 punts.
hia fourth consecutive effort
over the 50-foot mark. His best is
52· ll. Better known for his
basketball taJent, Camp had 1977
bests or 49-0 and 127 ·O.
Mike Mccaa. the defending
Century League mile champ.
won his heat in 4; 33.3 and Is alao
scheduled to run the two·mlle
Frlday. There were no preUms
held in the eight-lap event.
Sophomore Mike Thompson
was a heat winner In the 440
whlle Kevin Petrina won his
heal in the 120 high hurdles and
a lso qualified ln the high Jumf.
Mater Del High fared wet ln
the Angelus League pretims at
St. Paul Hiah. Ttte Monarchs
were led by shot putter Vince
Brown. sprinter Mike Dotterer
and miler Mark Eddy.
Friday's Angelus finals begin
al 5 with field events and 6 for
runnin1 events.
~Le..-Tracll a.--ie...,.....,..
Vanity
ICI0-3. Olllof'll 10.4. •40-1. ~ ,.... . ..._,, o.-v2:•···
Ml19-1. MtCM •:».i.
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LJ-hflllto11•tlfl. ~V_,...,.11 ... s~-c.m..s1.1; ....._,.,.,.''-·
DT-CMno 1$24 . Sloan IJH,
* * * South Coast
Prelims
..... (Met ....... Tr ................. ......_
CM..._V .... ..._I
IOOIHH4 11-1. Goolrdl,.. CEfl 10.J ; I.~ CSCI 10.l. (14Mt I I-I. KetH CCdMI 10.4; 2.1_. (SCI 10.4, IHNC J>-1. OIG+ollaf'fll lUI 10.4, 1. OI•" COHl 10.J, IHHU,,.__1, AftdfflGI\ (L81 IO.t :
J.HOft••11er (ETI IO.J.
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Sjleftc,er !SCI 11J; t. ...... (£Tl n.s. IHHI Jl-1. y_,. IOllMI ZU; 2. Jolftet IMVI lU.
(HH141-1 ~CL8122t (HeMSl-1.lm-
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SLt. IHHl 11-1. Coo!c.er CETI SU; 2. ~Iii.ford
CCMI U .O. (-31-1.Bulh IMVIJl.S;J .Zeldlww
IUI U .4, IHeel0-4. YOUl\O CGdMI 51.1; 2 ........ --csc1u.s. MO CHHI 11-1 . .,.,.........., IOtfl t :OU: 2.
Ole• CGdMI 1"04.S. l . OMlfflfl IUI J·ou. CHMI J>-1 Fl'(flfl CETI 1 OU;1 ~ CCdMIJ:07.1
;"Ht ll-1 'l'OUf!O ICM! l ,Jl.I; t. Oill9fM CVI
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CCOMI 4•U 0. (HeM 21-1. YMM9 ICMI 4:JOA; t. • Douv••11 CCllM> •:a.u. tHeac »-t. ~ ICMI • 20.t ; J. Hllt!Miler ICdMI 4:Je.O. lHMI
0 -1. v...-r..-IMVI 4:33.t: 2. $41( .... lCMI
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9rowfl IETI 1U; 2. ~· CCOMI IU.). Sllllbllli ICOMllJ.l.(14Mt))-1.~IM CETI U.t;2.Wlt· ,...,.r IMVll• J
3)0 LH CHHl 11-1. Leltllff9 Cl>t4140.S, J. Ayer,
ICMI 40.1. (Hff421-I Molao ICM! .0.7; J. eo->
IETI 40.1. IHHIJl-1. Herple CL8140.7; J, Wlli111
CCdMI 41 I, (Heat "-1. 5PtncM I.Kl JU. 2
8r-n(ETl.O 1
HJ -Pe...-,IETIM.u,.....10tf1,McF.....,
IETI, ~ICHI. O.C..Ut IMVI .... w IUI, W•llll I I. HollM'S CE'.TI, s-la CQIMI,
Hugllei I l.Sm¥tfl (CHI.HO. U -1 . .._., IUUM; J. P_,.., IMVllM\11; J. H~oell ($()11"°"";•.W.•wrCETl~;S.Sen·
101 CQIMI to-11/J; ._ Fetweoaa (CodMI J'.O.a'I); 1
Lorwood CCHlto-t;l .0.111t IUl~;t.W-ISCt
1 .. N ;10.K .... IQllMl~t. TJ-1.W-lllSCl .... ;t .W .. ISCl 4N.J.
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IMVI 12-4. Edw-.ft tMV I. Crewford IETI. McGe-(L81. Olllftple CUI, Wer,.r (ET>. O-
rie ICdMI 114~W11Nr lo.II. MIKC>oMtd CUI.Aft.
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Or11!te" IU)4Hll'I; 10.Clerll CL81 .... ll...,.
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MCuleft Vlefo II, ClilM ~ IS, SM C.._..1J,
Uftlwr11ty 11,C...WW lleKll 10, o.n.tHlllat
Meridith
Pitehes Win
TULSA, Okla. -Ron Mertdlth,
a graduate of Golden West
College, pitched Oral Roberts
University to a 1~7 baseball vie·
tory over Oklahoma a State:
University here Tuesday after·
noon.
Merldlth went all the way to
post hls ninth wtn against one
defeat. He struck out alx and
walked an equaJ number. In two
years, hla record Is l&-2 at ORU.
Vtnce Bienek. a junior out-
fielder from Golden West, had a
pair of singles tn four trlps to the
plate and Bill Sprinaman.
former San Clemente Ht1h star .
had a double and home nm ln
three plate appearances. Hla
homer was hls stxth or the
season and the hlta 1lve him a
12-game hitting fttRak.
Suri, Timbers Clash
Utt Surf tt.a 1tt0nd ton a11tnat
four vlctortes.
Just what chanttt S.Well wUI
make \0 beet up lhe offenH he
in1 'n aveey pmt. Three ot the
rour vlctoriet were by 1.0 scores
and lhe othe1'. l ·l . Lolaea have
been 4· I and 2.0 •lvlna the Sm a
total or alx 1oalt tn aa many out·
ln«ia . 'llhe Surf will play In San
Ditao Saturday nl1ht before
retumlq to Aubetm Stadium
for two 1am• next wHk. Tues-day ntlht <T:JO> It wlll bt Tampa Bay ind rrtctar nlsbt wm be..-
International match with
SlutIPrt, o.-.nany, a J:uropeaa
Dlvlaloo l &fam.
t
BASEBALL/TRACK /VOLLEYBALL
C apistrano Valley won 11
laugher, Meter Del enJoyetl ,,
ahutoul while Estancia had one
home run bu' little e lse in prep
baseball actioa Tuesday.
Parlne a t2·hll attack in
Capistrano Valley's 17 .3 ro(Jt
ov~r ho_st, Serra n o Hig~. of
Wraghtwooo were Brad Parker
and Mike Dun1vin. Batting
c lean-up, Parke r blasted a
three-run homer m the fir&t in
ning while C 11nivln drove in
three run.s with a single.
The Couurs explod ed for
eight r:·ct!l!s ln lhe first lnnlllg and
once led L&-0. The game was
caned after f\ve frames.
Meter Det clinched a berth in
the C IF playoffs by blanking
Pius X 5-0 The win left the
Monarchs In second place an the
final Angelus Ll'ague standings
with a lg,-4· 1 Tecord.
St e/e Schaeper slugged a
three-run homer ror th e
Monarchs in the third inning
lhat was all pitche r Vic Mart in
needed Martin nllowt:>d Just
three singles while striking out
five
Dave Pisarski provided all of
Estancia's offense in a 9· 1 loss to
visiting Tustin when he hit a solo
homer ln the fourth inning Pnor
to his two-out blast. the Eagles
were staring at a no-hitter
The £11gl~3, a 'it; -fr, C.:ntun
League play, dose out th(,
season Fnday at home against
FoothlO.
Capistrano Valley wound up
its rirst v11rs1ly season ever with
an 11 9 mark But more 1m
porla ntly, the Cougars closed
out by defcatin~ a Serr:ino team
that was co-champwn of its
leacue at 7·1 and 1s heading for
the .Ill F sm all schools playoffs
"•wu11. h ~l•i. cl
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t l ' ' Oun1.t1n. c > 1 l o Cherin Oii
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--.w Del Ill
eo r "t>o
,L\ Non-wilting Rose
PPlc Rose. Cincinnali"s third baseman
\\ho '" closing in on the 3.000-hit mark in
his major leagues career. absorbs a rib·
bing trom the Philadelphia dugout (left l.
but he counters b~· showing his dexterity
(Center! and gestures for what else the
Phillies would like to see. Rose. who wus
id le Tuesday night. needs four more hits
to hit 3.000. The Red~ meet the Ph1lht•!->
again tonight.
Sailors Lead Qualifiers
-Sw.sei Spike Prelinu Stay True ID Fonn
Ry ERNIE CASTILLO
OI ... 0.lly l"tlet Sutt
T hi ngs went s o · we ll for
Newport Harbor and Fountain
Valley a t Tuesday's Sunset
League trat'k and fi eld prehms
that both head coaches claimed
every athlete who was supposed
lo qualify for Friday's finals at
HuntinJ?ton Beach High. did so.
With Chris Corum leading the
way by winning all three of his
heat ra<'es. Newport Harbor had
16 qualifiers for the finals. which
get under way at S.30 p.m. with
field events and 7 for the ru.nning
even l s~ Fountain Valley, which
finished behind the Sailors In the
dual meet standings, qualified 1.3.
Tht>re were as few sorprises
ai; Lherf' were ootstanding
marks The onfy tense moment
for the Sailors, who won eight
dual ffit"('ts and two major in·
v1LaLionals this year, came when
Wayne Kasparek fell in the 330
lo w hurdJes. He bounced up to
finish fourth to barely make the
finals
the mile. with half of the eight
qualifie rs But tbe Barons·
strength was also nullified In the
440. where they were blanked.
a nd thus must rely on som e
stunnin~ upsets if it has thoughts
of be ating Newport Friday
night.
Thl're were no preUms In the
field events. relays or the two-
m 1Jc
Corum , the dcrcnding 100
chamoion. bree ied..lo a 10.t heat
win although Fountain Valley's
Kevin Romine had the best time
at 10.0. Corum also ran the 440 in
50.0, winning by 20 yards. and
ranks behind Kasparek <22.3 and
22.Sl in the 220.
Edis on's Steve Davis and
F ountain Valley's Alan Duncan
went 14.6 and 14.9 in lhe 120 high
hurdles while the Bar ons'
Romine and Troy Blevins went
38.6 and 38 7 in the 330 tow
hurdles
FV~s Brian Appell was the on·
ly miler under 4.25
JUltlo.t VAltSITY "llAL'
HJ-I Prill"*' IFVI S-10, 1. s.<llel• INHI
5 10; l 8rew\19f' IFVI W
LJ-1 MOylft CEI I .... 1 V°"""' CHSl lt-1. l
C-lolalll• CFVI IM
T J-1 s~ CHBI 41~·11: 1 er-u•r <FV•
-">. l OOgtn IEI Jt-o.,..
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t ·U •; l Smythe IEI t S2 S
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HJ-I et.-r (H81 ..0, l Crlll1no tMI S 10, l hylor IHBI H
LJ-1 Gacl011 INHI 20 l.,.., l. NltllOI• !El lt-t~. l BreOI.., IHBI 19-7
fJ-1 Nichol\ (fl 0-ll•IJ; 1 G•dOI• CNHI 41 I">. l IC•y (NHI 41·1
SP-I C..ren IH81 Sl-1 1 ,....._,. CEI • S l . Se•ri IF V 1111 •
Swim Tryouts Set
For Dana Hills High
Tryouts for the Laguna Niguel
aquatics team at D'ana Hills
High School for boys and girls
age 5· 18 are scheduled Saturday
from 9 a.m. until noon.
WedMlday May 3, 1978 01\IL y PILOT B:J
Anteater Alling ·
Scott Questionabl,e
For Sunday's Race
By ERNIE CASTILLO 01tM0e41y ...... , ....
The same illness that forced
Steve Scou to withdraw Crom
last weeke nd's Drake Relays
will keep the UC Irvine miler
Crom making an assault on the
United Stat.es four-lap record Sun-
day.
Scott, who ran the firth best
time by an American (3:53.9> a
month ago at UCI 's Meet or
Champions, h~d predicted a
personal best for this Sunday's
UCLA Invil.aUonal.
But he came down with what
he called "a combination flu.
cold" last week, ra n a tem-
perature of 102. and was n 't able
to work out for nearly a week.
Though he says he should be
able to run Sunday. a lifetime
best seems out or the question.
·' f realty will have to S'ee how J
reel Sunday. I just can't say
right now," Scott told the Daily
Pilot Tuesday. "tr I'm reeling
healthy and strong by Sunday.
my race strategy will be lo lake
it oul at a decent pece and force
the third lap. I won't let It go
through in less than 2:02 (at the 880).
"I won't be able to do the race
plan l had hoped to do before I
got sick which was to take It out
real quick. So a record is out of
the quest.ion right now. I don't
see how I could go after it the
way I've been reeling this last
week.
··eut If workouts are going
real bad and il looks like It'll be a
real bummer ror me, I won't
r un."
Though he has recorded his
liretime best. 1l hasn't exactly
been a banner season for Scott.
He trained through the indoor
campaign, poinUng ror a dream
race at San Diego. But many of
the world's top mile rs. mcludmg
record holder J ohn Walker.
didn't show up and Scott finished
second in 3:57.l behind Eamonn
Coghlann <3:56.0>.
In the Meet of Champions, his
only out.door mile appearance.
another banner field railed to
materialize. UndaWlted, he still
managed 1he 17th fastest time
ever recorded in the world. Had
he been pushed, claims UCI
coach Len Miller . the U.S. rec·
ordof 3:51.1 might have fallen.
1sed a record run. He woun.A up
mg hardly able Lo walk.
Since he was pointing lot-~ •
meet. Scott figures he hasn't l"5t
too much serious training tim-.
Jn fact. he figures to be at fult
l!lrength when the PCAA cham.
pionshlps roll around next week
"I like"to be positive," he said
"Let's just say l missed a week
or training and leave it at that .,
State Meet
Lures Area
JC Swimmers
LOS ANGEL~Andy MiU.r
leads a Golden West College con
tingent, with Or ange Coast and
S3ddleback also among the field
in the '"late junk>r college swim
ch amp onships at East Los
Angete& College. ·
Action begins Thursday with a
9 a .m . sl.art. followed by com·
petition on Friday and Saturday
Miller 1s in the 200 individual
medley (1:57.7>. 400 indo
(I :43.41 and 200·yard breast
(2 : 10.3l, while 'Buzi Harper and
P f't er Zumbe rge lead Sad
dlc•b:.i ck and OCC.
lfarper's events are the 400 in·
do (4 20 Oland 200 back (2:01.0>.
while Zumberge is the Southern
California JC champ in thret>·
meter diving and the runneru11
-in one-meter diving.
Area entrants .
$AOOLE,ACIC
Tllut\d•y SCIO ,,..._Jell WllSOfl c•.SO 11, 200
1~00 BUii Heri»r 11 01 01, Freel RI~ et·o:J 01
Friday AOO 1nd0-8ull H•rper U 20.01, Fr9<1
RICIQP 14 2U). 100 Uy Dew MllOSCll ISU I.
lhrn m•lPt dlVlnQ Pal Flood, 800 lrtt <elay-
J•ll Wll\On. Freel RIOQe CralQ Fren\an -Buu
n•r11t• 11 IS II . S4tu•Oo I •SO lrtt J•ll Wll\Of'I (11 IS 01. 200
11•0 8uu H••-11 O• O•
GOl.OEltWEIT
lllur\dav: SOO ''"-Jim Pull U ·SO.J1. Jri/l:on GolOftlla "SO ... JOO lflde>-.AndY Miiier Cl.SJ.71,
Jim ICttlt (2 00 11 . ~ trtt-Oav' St .. Ut.61
J t ll OtMOll 121 11 . 0,,.·-ler 01v1nq-G,.Q
Pr1 ... .00 ITWOl1y rtl•v IJ.l'I"
Frid•• 400 lndo-AI Flml••d 14 10.SI; 100 '•et Andy Miiier (I :O 'I. 100 be<ll-Merly
Wllllf tS..01, Jim Keefe .~.21. Al Flml•id (5'.01
TllrH mPtllf' ch•"O~ PYl<t. Jtff Kr~
IOOlrff nl•y 111111. ~lurdey 1.650 lr-Johrl Oolonlle 117 ·00.01
Jim Pull Cl1 C».41, 100 tree-Jell OeMoll <Aa.•1
100 b•<'-A1 Flm11ld u·ot 81, Jim teHlt
II CM II; 200 brMtl-Aftdv Mlli.r 12:10.JI; JOO
11v -Jell 8owen U ·Ol.•I. •00 Ir•• n ••v-u "o 1 OtlAltGa COAST
TllUl'\dty 200 •nCIO -Erin !>-(l·ot.1111 jO
l rt<J -Merl! ~ 111 CW.I. , ..... ., dlvlft9-f"!Mer
ZumbH~. AOO medl•Y rtl•y-U .... OSI ~r>do 100 11v -Maril CIOu CSl-•>. Huot>
WtflOl•r' t~ II; 100 b•<ll-Joe OuM (~.ISi l
,...,., dl••no-Peter Zum111tH91· IOO trw n
l•v • 11 11 UI
JOllU, cl
Rice,""'
Hood. lb
sc-..er.< Marlln,p
-..... ... m.M
l I I 0 Oolltrtr II
I 0 0 0 Lum•rd• rt
• 0 0 0 Sluerl lD
) I I l (;of\Ultt rl
l t 2 o Aiello. 10
1010 Toltl\
l I 0 0
0000
) ' 0 0 l 0 I 0
l ' 1 0 ,. ~.]
Otherwise. the Sailors enjoyed
d fie ld day. qua lifyin g four
athlete& in the low hurdles. thfff
ii" the high hurdles and 440 and a
pair in the 100, 220 and 880.
Newport's weakness was in the
mill'. wtierc it was blanked.
* * ............. ""41_
VMIHy~
*
10.-(rec.a 11 I. ~ (Fl 10.0 2. ~tr
IHI IO I. l OuflcMt l"I 10 J. 4 ~ IHI
10 J. J. DI-IHI 10.J. Crea 21 I."°'""' CHI
10 I. 1 Gltletl\ lf<I 10.1, l. Pen« <WI 10J, 4.
An alternate date or fu rther
information can be obtained by
c alling Alice Dre welow
t-496-83451 or Julie Heathe r-
ington <495-~l.
The withdrawal at Drake only
added to the frustration. The
Midwest event had never pro·
duced a mile under rour minutes
and Scott drew national atten·
lion when meet promoters prom-
~lurdev 200 !WO-Joe Dunn u ·01.AJI: JOO ~Hl-Urrv Sl\11..-f1·119JI: 400 frff ,,.
10-u U.jfl.
Volleyball Title ·
Ta.Be Decickd
PRICE OUR __ su•ma-
I
Pr"' X
.... 1••0..
S.Cer•~•--
r " • 0000000~)7
00l100 ·~•1 Fountain Valley dominated
Prep Tennis Summaries
Vt rtlty
ltewf•Ot~ ltoV,I l1V,1 Hit. a..ch
Sl"tlet C.r•c•• (Nl dltf JOfln\lon ..a def Foddt'r'to t..O aet ~ H . de! SMrman ..o. OeMoll
'"' •0111, _, .. 3. • 1 •·> l\orn011 CN I Iott 2 • ., 0 6 )-6, I •.HOU end IN I w<WI I> J '2, •.O H
l>eullles
Piroum•.tn-OtWl•de (NI 1o•l lo OMn&rd 9oo11.,
• • J •• o.1 Hul!man P&sco " I • • KOllNI
oc .. ,,.,. (NI '"°" ._1 H ,' I, 6 2
.Jwtlw v enlt y
Ne°'"" ~111\.'ll ltVtlHll!lltlfltl•ll
"""" L•IOll 11 drf W111U ._l 10\t to Oowt• S I -to
H•rre 2-.. ~I lo M<C..rl,.y 2 •,Woolen CHI won
1 S. •1. 1 .. , I•. t..Conoe CHI ..,.,.,• I lo\I 76
won •·•, •otl 1 ... 1*0#1on CHI wori .. 4. !oft '"· won 1 ·&. 1051 o-6.
Oou4lles
He1nl1nt-YM IHI 10~1 10 Henono Nune ~ ....
lo\! 10 .,.,., .. .,., Codberv o ... 4-6; Elmor•Smllh
!HJ IO\I 0 .. , U , '11111 2 ... M . ,.,_..,..
lt--1 Utl (ti H.,llfott.,.
$11191 ..
C•rroll IHI losl lo Tulley 1·•· o.t Browri ..0.
Otl Cre"f<he9 .. 2. IO't I-Werfi.14, 1 .. , Slel .....
IHI IOSI H>, 61, _, W , ._I, Con"OllO IHI !OW
1 6 •·6. 3 ... won .. ,. ~II IHI IO\I '"· -•·O. lo\t H. 0...
DM-
J...,._E1.-e IHI IOSI .. R ..... 11.a...ro .... °"
0.1 Ptrr Y·Mlller 1 S • .-3. Mc C..be·Oel.a"' IHI
lo\I A • 1 ... lost I 6 1 •
llltly '"'' 10. no-lrlt(e I I I K ....... Cit I n .J; J Glti.M
!fl 13 l . 3 lllety CMI U.1; Crec.111 8...,1~ IFI n 1: 1 S<hne1.,., IMI 1J_., Cr<Ke JI I Corum INI U.J. 2 PMW (W).U.1, J..He<rl'°" ~
0 0-lrt<e II 1 Mc F•rlln IWI S2 •. 1 ElllOI CH I
S2 4. J Olftord IHI SU, Crea " I Veft<llk IHI
SO 7 1 SnvdtJ< (W I SU; l . Loye IMI U.1; I-
ll I Corum INI SO.O; 1 Kir'tel• (EIS3 I.
MO Crece I) Vencllk CNI 1"01.0; 1 1(111eil CEI
CE I 1 02.4. l . 0..fl'rnpl• CWI 1 .0. I, 4. WOlldlO<k (H I 2·os.>; Cree. ti I. (;;fiord CHI J.00.4; 2. Slffk
!NI J•OO S, J. Smythe CEI 2.02,I, • RMnMY CWI
1 011 Mlle-lrK• 111. Un-CEI •:Jt.O. 2. flt-
(f I ' 1t 1. ) Dull (HI 4 lU; '· SINOC (Fl
' U ,l , lrKe ll I. AP!»ll CFI 4.14.l; 1. 0.Her~
(Ml ' 26 '· 3. 81.CNer IFI •:17 •; • V•rl)el IWI • 11 1
llOHH-lrace II t Dunten !Fl 1' t . 2. LY0"5
lE I IS ' J W•d CNI IS '· • s.ooman IHI IS.•;
Cr.ce 11 I Oe•i~ IEI U 6. 1 De""°" CHI IS.O. l .
Wllll•m10fl (WI IS•: 4. Cutrey (Fl U.S.
Hellrl<ll !NI IS I
l>Ot.H-Ir•<• 11 I Romine IFI Jl.6, 1 Slly~
IWI tt ~. 3 We<O CNI 40 ~;' K•-rO CNI 43.0
lre<e ll I 81ntM IFI ll 7; 2. Hetf<l<ll IHI .CU;
l 0 ... •SOfl CNI AO•.• W•llllnl IWI AO 9
AUTO
LEASING
THE WAY
'IT
Baseball Standings
AUTO BE!
1978
AMMl•BSAJlY
COUGAR
LIASIME
AS LOW AS
s 12946
Mo + Tax & I.Ac:
Cep COit M6tiO T otel of
mo pymta 14880. 58
ANldual $31183. 36 mos
OAC
AMERICAN l.EAG.lJE
East Division
Detroit
New Yori.
BolllOn
Clevela nd
Baltimore
Milwaukee
Toronto
W L Pct. GB
14 ~ .737
12 9 .571 3
12 10 .!l415 31 2
9 11 .450 51-"l
9 12 .429 6
9 12 .429 6 s 14 .364 n:i
West Dlvlllon
Oakland
Kansas City
Angels
Texas
Ch1ca~o
Minnesota
Seattle
17 s .773
14 7 .667 2~
14 8 .631 3
9 10 .474 61,;
7 12 .368 812
8 16 .333 10
8 19 .296 11~
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Dtvlsloa
W L Pct. GB
Philadelphia 11 7 .611
Montreal 11 8 .579 112
Chicago 12 9 .571 112
Pittsburgh 10 10 .500 2
St. Louis to 12 .455 3
New York 10 14 .417 4
West Division
Dodgen
Cincinnati
San Francisco
Houston
San Diego
Allan tu
13 8 .619
1.3 9 .591 1·2
11 11 .500 21111
10 12 .4S5 3112
8 13 .381 5
8 14 .364 51-'l
T...-y·1s.c. ..
St. Uuls t, 5efl k-.lKO o
Oll<•90S,U.A11Qeln• llOllWUno>I Hovi•• Moftll'NI • ....-• col4 ... tNr
'Jell Ole90 2, Pit._., I
Alle,.te J, Ntw Von.•
Oftly e-ncllffuleel ,...,..a.-..
l•• A""4• 19'ev M l Cit Oii< ... IBvrTlt H I
Hovtl.., CJ. N..Vo 141 Cit MenlfMI C0r"'"'"'1
..01,11
kfl 01..-fFrelll ... fl 0-11 et P llttMtll
19'9411-2·0.,,
-V-llC_,,_ I JI el At141'1t• l~y
°'"·fl ""ltMetfNe C~ISt-Ml Cit dflclMlll NOftf\.i! M l,.,
t•fl ,,.,,tleco <Berr I II •I St lo111t 19'ftl'lltKMfl 2.21,,, 'nlwtllllr• ._.
s.ifl l'rMCttco el St. I.Mitt
Lff AftlilMIM Ok..-
f'lt• Vorti el AU111le. 11
Oflly ....... tc"'4111'"
-/
L!ASING •••
ALL MAKES
ALL MODELS
MIW
OR
USED
San Clemente Hi~h's volleyball team. ranked
rinit in Orange County but just second in the South
Coast League. will need some help from Mission
Viejo lo gain a share of the circuit championship.
The Tritons. 11·2 after defeating host Dana
Hills ln rour games Tuesday. trail defending CIF
cham pion Laguna Beach by one match with one
remaining.
Laguna's Artists. who are trying to make up
for the loss of All-CIF hiller J amie Plummer. lost
lo San Clemente last week and needed four games
Lo down Costa Mesa Tuesday. Plummer is out with
a broken ankle and Laguna Beach will need a
supre me eff()rt Friday to defeat Mission Viejo.
The D1ablos. who host El Toro tonight. will
have plenty of incentive since a pair of victories
can lock up a berth In the CIF playoffs.
The status of the Orange County League is also
up in the air after Estancia and La Quinta won
Tuesd ay to leave both tied for the circuit lead at
its conclusion. A decision on whether to have a
playoff, flip a coin or leave tMngs as they are Is
expected to be made this week. * * .. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
IO\ITW COAi T LIAIMI I
V•ntty
Saft Cl-It clef Dene Hill\ 1~10
IM,IMS,IH.
UnlvertltY oet CotOfl• Gel M•r
10-IS. 1 .. 1'. IJ.IS. IS-10
Lqv11• 11Mc11 Clef Cos•• Me~ u,1. 1H,1·U,1H.
lwllw V_,,ty
S<lft Cl.,,.,,.e clef Otfte Hiiis U· U .
16-14.
Co<Ofl• del Mer def UfllWWllly U•t ,
IS·4. L•oune llN<hOtf coat. MeM u .. 1,
IS·U
SUMMIT l l AOUI YerNCy
Hllllll"91on IM<ll Otf Wr~ IS.I.
IH.ls-10.
Newport H.,llff .. , l'olH'ttll"
V•llty ls-tl. 1~14. IS-IO
J..._..Yanlty
HUftllnl!Ofl IMtl\Otf MArlN IS.It,
10-u. u .11.
N••POrl Harl>Of .,., ,, • ., ..... "
V•ller IS.S. lk. O•AMOI C:OUltTY U AOUI
¥wllty
Esi.Mta Cltf ew... vie. 1w. 1s.1.
IS-• •
Le OllllM 9tf lf'Vlllt Hltf\ IJ tO. IH, lf.11. ~"--" E1lat1clt Wt OcH fl Vie• IS•.
10-IJ IJ-4 U Qulflta .. , ln.IM H..,. IM,
IS.II ..,.,.,., .......
IOVnt COAST &AAOUI
................
H1111ll,..i0fl~
,,_lllfl V•llty
CCllMll
M.tl'IN w..tml......,
W L el " . II J I • • • I I fv. • , s • • • l • ''-0 II 11
"'9f'l--W11t1111 ..... UWI 111
P.ro Soccer .......................... ......... 1f111141,,,. ~ .....
.Why should you invest
in theM"'S"Mirior finish?
Without a coaling of any ku'ICI lhe Ming Mirror F1n1sh p101ects ywr
car"s paml against weather sall, gn1 and j;ollu1an1s which break
down the tincsn and dull ttie shine The unique Ming p<ocess
smooches out 1rregu1ant1es in the paint surtaoe wtiere ltlese
contammants usually COiiect. so washtng IS quick and easy Plus you
wtll nevet have to wa• or polish your car again•
The Mtng Mtrror F1msti relards 01odat1on 10 extend pa1nl Ille wtlld'l
protects the lnves1men1 you ve made in your car And 11 yoo deode ro
trade or sell. you·u find lhe value of your car 1s sign1hcanlly increased
by the Ming M11Tor F1mstl. Ming provides you With a 3 year written
guarantee which is fully transferable. adding even grealer dollat
vt!ue. Corne to your Ming Auto Beauty Center because you delefve
the most beaublul car 1n !he world FREE MING
Mine Auto .. .,tr Center TEST TCH
ofCoat•Mffa ---
''IO l'OIMlorou Ave.
C.1t• Mol8, CA. 9212t
7t4•714-M04
t
JOI
-
,
DM.V ... 01 \ ~.May),1'1t
~Bow NFL Teams Drafted
,
Girls' Athletic Results
Tet1•b
UQ.A 171 (J) UClrvlM . ~
Morse IUCll def 810uf>t 1·•· 1 ...
Te-y IUCLAI Ott. $1~t0fl M.
7-S; 0..V•ll IUCLAI dtf. CM'°" ... r . .... Olllleff IVClAI def ... ,.,'°"
1 ... M . Wtfon llJCl..AI def. SIN"
.. 1 ... 1. a.II CUCLAI dltf c;._,
"·'"° .......
Mon.P9t...-IUCll def hll-~ton .. , ... J. M . PeM.,.. 8IOllftt
tUCLAI Ott. S-C•l-C-IOfl ... 1 •.. ,,
.. 2. O..Vall-Gor-CUCLAI ....._JWo. ..... ,.s1-.. 1 ... 1
Seort ..... Clllltenli• ~
Al 1.n ~ uc...-a... ~ .... ONlt UI (II~ Wes&
~ VOfl lul.zo# 101 Otf NHI .. J. M, .-..,ron COi clef CMhll , ... H . I S.
J . Meyen IOI def INY' I S. U, 1 S,
"-
M<Oof!tll 101 d9f JUflO .. ,, .... , .. , , °'"" IGI def M.,.nw. w. Sierra IOI def,,,,,_ .. t. W .
N .. I l'llf'cJI ....... SI S-a e.ro.r ••
CS.I• atld p1-..10 toe W'•l.t .... . ..........
VM'lllY '--'~ EdllOll t, WKtml~t ... 7
H11111l1191on ha<ll u. Founl•ln
Vall•t l
N-P«I .._IS, "'-"net
S....CINM~ Co<"one Otf M8re, Et loro I
MltMOfl Vlelo•. C.la M.wJ ,.,,,,,,., v ....ity •
Corone def Ma<'• El TCl'O I
MIHIOft Vle10•, CllSla ~)
~u..V6nlty
E \I~•• .. s...te,.,,. Vall.., 0 ..,.,,, Yenlt't
E "en<la t. s.Ma Ma van.-,. o
Glazier Shines
In Girls ' Trac%
Cheryl Glazier blazed to a 14.4 winning effort
In the no low hurdles, won her beat race in the 220
and had the second best long jump mark in leading
the El Toro Chargers girls track team to 18 quali-
fying berths for Friday's South Coast League
finals at Mlss\on Viejo H.igh in prelim artion Tues d ay. ·
Glazier's mark in the hurdles is her best this
~ear and is 1/ 10th of· a second off the league
~ecord ·
Nancy Jessen or Dana H.ills broke the league
record with a 2.20 2 mark in the 880 while Sheryl
Romahn or Costa Mesa won her heat in the mile in
~·20.9. 8/JOt.hs of a second off her own league
record.
PauJa Riggs hurled the shot 35-2 ror a Mission
Viejo s chool record with teammates Debbie
Atchison and Jody Brencic in the next two places
ln the wt-ight event.. •
• ~s·tanciavs Darla tfur\bart set ·3 schOOi recora
of 26.6 in lhe 220 1R the Century League pre-
liminary meet al El Modena.
.. * * * * * ....-c-..u..-oim Traa ... ll-l'ntl-
100 IHI 11 -1 McK-11 ICllMI
12 1. t -•IMVI 1U IHeatJl-1. C,.pe IOHI 120; 2. 8oa9 tETI II.It
CHHI )1-1 KAll!llut~ IOHI 121: a. w.1111e1rn cLal n.a. IHaat •1-1.
Steoten\ IOMI II•· J. Pendleton
IMVl 11.t
UO IHHt II -1. Myrpfly tLal
»..J..+ • .....,. wv1 u .. : l. K,,,.. IOHI 21.7. (HNI JI-I Fwuell 1£T)
aJ •. 4; J IUlllor'ol IL81 21 S '""' ll-1, Ol.Nler CETl!t.7, 2 ~en
(MV) V.J, l. kullll ........ COHI J7.._
.... (HHI II I ,.11Uell lf:ll
t.00.4; 2 ......... (CAMI l;OIA; J
TeVlMlll ICMI 1:01.7. IHNI 11-1.
Helll .. 11 CCdMI 1·12.2. t Kr-
IMVI 1;03.1 IMNI ))-1 .__..
(~VI 1•011; L 8'-Clel l :OU; l. .._. IETI t·~S
tH (Heel 11-1 JUHll (OHi
2.JllD.2, a. ~ CCMI 2:tU. l.
LM9 IETI 2:21A 1-11-1 •-Wr99y ICM) J•JU, J. ltleUy IUI
J.».1 CHNI JI -1 Alw.,.., Cc,dMI
2:n .•; 2 . ..., IUI 2 JU; J. "-t (OdMI J:J:U
Miia (HaM 1)-1 Flatler ICMI
S.11 >. I .'-9 t(dMI S:Jl.7, J
KOSlftala IDHI S J4A IHH4 ti-I
SI-CUI S:tt.t. 2 JftMll COHI S:U.1 tHNI JI-I ~ CCMI , ~:20.•. t . ..__j IC.dM1 s·11.s. a.
OlllM (MVIS·:U 1
• 110 LH IHHI 11-1 ........ IOIMI
1 .. 7. t . Gelllll tMVI 0 .I, I. lillloM'8
CMVt 17.J: 4. OolclrNr> IETI U .J
CMHU>-l.04ad« 11'.TI IUI 2. SUltt
(l.81 IU., l tc:raltn tMVl 17,2; 4 GwrttlnelET117.S.
HJ-I. Prelley ll81, H•lll9an
IOIMI, ·~ ICdM). Walll.r IU). Wurlr (GdMI 4-4; OI,,_ (MV),
Gooclley IUI •2; ~-IMVI, Oooclmen IETI 4-4.
LJ-r. Pendl.,°" IMVI 17.J; 1.
Gla1ler IETI 1 .. I01,<,; 3. Hall ... 11
CCdM) l ... •11); 4. Go4.trcl1M IETI
1Wllo; S. Opeflfllll1 IOHI ,..2\lo; •·
Bea9 U!TI IM; 1 Ful'bN IETI
U ·OV.. e. Wun.r IGdMI 1•10; t . M<O.-IL.Ill I._.; 10 Ti.n-
ICdMI I+&.
~P-1. Alws (Miii IS-2 (I<,_,.
Cordi; 2. Aldllmn (MVI 31..V.; 3.
8f'en<I< IMVl SZ.""1; 4. ~
IETI lMV.; S.. 0!111.,,, IETI ?t-1~;
.. N119911t It.al ~; 1. ~I
GTI 11~; L -.flll (NV) 27-7~;
t . Corccw._ Ct.al ».11~. ID. ....
rett<ETl._.\o\.
Tot.el .... ~. El T-11, Ml•
llOll Vie .. ll. C:0.-Oel MM 1',
Delle Hllll -~ BH<ll t, ~,...,. _ Ulllwe"'"' s.
SettlHdl
r " • UOl0-5)11
100 IOll-11 12 , v......, .t411MN .. Ctl~
Pelld .. y, d , l-040; c--. ct.
2.o.4-0; 811"9U, -,.1-0; 0ont08ft, u . l-0+0; M<Gellum, rl. 2+1-0,
Nl1b•l, <, 2·0-0-0;· SlmQlOll. lb,
2-o.M; • H-. If. J.o.4-0. ha"°', <. J.0.0.0; 8e91e1 p, 1...a; Total•.
1~1.0.
r " • E'l-1• 000 000 o-4 t 7
Footlllll a MIO a-f 10 •
trvlM Nltlt (>I IJ I c:..e Velley
C•PO Valley-Po\I. " 4 0-1-0;
WllllMt, If ..0-0-0; ~m. P
2·1·J·O; w1111am1011. ~ 1·1 0-0;
O'H119911. lb :M>-0-0; F~. JI> :M>-0-0; RondHu, 1tl ).0-J•O: A911llar. rf
l ·0·0-0: Trotla, cl 1·0-0-0 To1al• 2•J·~.
1rv1ne-Our1iff. 21> J.C).(1-0; Ovcl-
ma11, tt 1.\-IH>; &owe14. 11> 1.0-0.0:
Wkller, n »2·1: ~. c ..-.0-0;
Ovewn. Cl 2·M-0; Oelfy •• S-M·I;
La .. , rt 2>0-M; Rotierls., p J4.0.0.
Toi.11 t .. 3+), ""'9..,, .......
r C.00 v • lley 000 002 0-2
lrVIM 100 101 11-.1 ,_..,Vanity
l"IM n11 t1I c:..e V•lef s.,. •• , ..
--~ ......... .......... ft:Mtewe 0-...,. .. _
" . s 0
•· 1
100 mHI_,, reley-II (S<ltltle,
knoa, H..,,ui Sc~l.1 02.I
400 ftff relay-1 IS<llll•IO.r.
Hamill, Waltlt.. o.wn.r.1. 3 U 1
,_,.,...., OMng-1 G4floe' Sll .. leh
Goldell w.tl). 216 points.
VarNty f.•'-11Ml Cal .............
100 m_,,...,r.iay-1 EOIMlll 1 °' S.. JOO tr .. -1 TrOUI IEI 2 IJ.J, 1
KotlKllO IEI J. IU, l. 09...,_.
CEIJ ZOO ...
JOO J)lOg-L ~ l ..... ~· .l.... Mac ~lnili IEI a•.f: a. Aten« iw1 1:31.S.
SO frH-1. Leyra! 11!1 2•.2; 2 5111eld• IEI 1'.S; l. 114.tdrlt (I!) 21.0.
Olvl119-1. Gllbtt1 tWI 177.tS; t.
8re1111•n IEI 1•1.101 J C11rt••OP11e~ CE> ue.10.
100 lly-1. u.,,ac cu 1:ae.o: 2 .
0.venport CEI 1·10.1; l. Ma<Ke,.~I• (($) 1: ,,_ ..
100 t.ff-1. ~. (El 1:02.0· 2. 8r1clt IE) 1:04.0; S. Lucero iEI 1:04.1,
500 fr-1 TrGlll CEI s.~7; 1. LllHI <El •:10 1; , Prcwosl (El
•:20.2
100 Mell -t Grew IEI 1:11.l; 2.
Ooller IWI l. 1:1)4; ·1 tc:otlft<ftMI IEI l :IS..•
100 llrMl1-1. 9udrlt (El 1. ILt; t. Welner <El l:U.4; l. ~ CU 1:U .t .
400 tree ,.....,_1 UIMll 4' 11 A. lie. ..... v....., Ci') 111> ...... 9Mcll
MO ~ n1e,,-1. lltn. v.i1ey
t .01.0. ...
JG0"9e-t. ~ .... IHI 2:U .. ; t,
Gll"t 11'1 2:22..0, J. S .... le CFI
2·11 •. 200 lftde-1. TIIMit C"I t :SOA; 1.
Aldrlcll (Fl J:a!.t ; 1. Panl1 IHI 2.'2.3.
SO frH-1, Wat1h IHI 2'.0, 2.
AeYMktt IF> 21.4; l. 1(1~ 11"1 11.2.
Olvl119-t. l"r•ltll (F) IU.7: 2.
Taylor CHI l :OLa; 1. W•t.rion 11"1 1:0..U.
100 fly-t . .,_ IHI 1:0..1: 2.
Aldrlcll 11"1 l:ot.7; 3 Pllf\IS (HI
1111.s.
100 frM-1. Sllef'P IHI St.Ir t. l(l119slelld (l"I 1104.J; J. Allejlen IHI 1;0..1. SOO ,,...___, Of .... Ill') •:07,4; I.
Well!> CHI •:SU; I. Bnllmann CHI 1:1'.1,
100 beell'-1, Wiii ... (H) 1;",Sr I.
WeMr C .. l 1:14.t ; a. llooetl IHI
·Baseball $tandlngs
, ..... ., L&-.ul .... .. ...... ... ......... • a 1 ,,.,. • t t ~ ... "-" . , .
IMMY Nltlt • ' • .......... . .. ..... ,,. t II 9
~ .... .......... ._,,...,,
..._. ... ~t ft"" • ""*"" .. ......,.. 9-1"91't.4.u.111
AflMl4(WllAMUI tPIM) W L T H
Servi• • u ' 0 -Metet' 0.1 10 • I '"' &t. Pall! t • 0 4 91--~ry 1 I IS .. Pkll X J II 1 10
Ii ..... """" I ,, ' "--.,..., •• ear..
Senllt•lt.etlNltM*O
Malet' °" ... "" x I ...... .,.,., ~ ... ,...,. .
llU I).
100 breest-t. Tllau-s IFI 1·tt.I; 1.
Menctel-IF) 1:1t;I; ~ Me11Q1jft1
(HI 1.20 4 •
•OO Ire• reley-1. Hu11t111g1on ha<l\4.0U ..
PUBUC NOTJCE
c~
NOT'ICll TO CltEot'fOltS
SU PE lt!Gll CIOUltT Oil TitE STAR OllCAUl"OttNIA ll04t
TM a coutfTY 01" CHIAllOE .........
f:Slele Of BEULA 8. CARTER.
Oe<ea-.
NOTICE IS HEREaY GIVEN'° IN
crecH•n Of IN .-o... ----!Mt ... ...,... "9¥11111 ,, .. _ agaift'1
ttw wkl ~ er. ,.quired to 11 ..
llWm, wfltl ftll _,, ~llen. 111
IN off Ice ol Ille clen< Of tlle -en· 111141111 court. or to pr-a..m, wltll
Ille -.enary -Mn, 10 Ille .,...
~•lblllw ottlc• OI TH<>M.U
I,.. LOltO, ns:21 P-De V~le.
Suite l IJ, laOllN Hllll. Cal lfornla
ms.i. wt>ldl Is IN plete Of llusl!IHS Of
-uno.ni..i In ... l'lattef'I pertaln-
1119 (O Ille ellata of Mid OKederll.
wllhlll f-monlll• afte' Ille llnl Mtlcatlllft Of lflll notice.
Oeted "°'" 4, ,.,.. WAnoN L DEAVER
EIM\Mf' of tM Wiii of
Ille 4lllOW NINd OkeOeflt
THOMA IL LOltO
ml1P•-•V~Wtttll U911M H .... CA tlUI 0Mlll1· ... A.....,..,.__._
~1"'9d Or ... Oleit Oel'Y Piiot
Allfll 12. "· .. Mey a. lt11
PUBLIC NO'l'ICE
PUBLIC Nen'ICE PIJllUC NOTICE
GIRLS' SPORTS I BASEBALL
PVBLIC NOTICt: PUBLIC NO'l'ICE
PUBUC NOTICE
PUBLIC N011CE
NOTICIE TO atEDtTOttS su~E••Oll couwr °'" TME ST ATW Oil CALl~tA POtt
THE ClOUN'TY Oil o..utoa
.... "'"271
btate of GESS EDITH NICOU..S
Ot.NE Y. o.c-.d.
NOTICE. IS HEAE8Y GIVEN lo -cr9dl~Ofh.....,._,,~,
,,.., •ti _._ ...,,,"9 cr .. rm ....,.µ
llW Wld ~are ~rad to Ill•
111em, wl"' ltle ~ -.ctlfft., lft
IN oHIU Of 1tW c..,_ of ll!e atlo>tt lf\U~INjA.«~.-J..._
Ill• nuen.,y vouclleu, lo Ille llftde••i9Md •f Pini Off!« lloa II>
PalOS v..-s &e.ates. CA. WIWcll ls t11e
place of 11111-.U of -Ullditt'S9Wd In
all ..... , .... QerUlnlflO lo --· Of Hid cM<4denl, witllln IOUf' "'°""" allu ll>e first pu1>Ucetlon Of 1111'
ll041ce.
Dalect Acwll 1'. 1'11.
WUll-. NIC.OlfS Ot,,..,
E llKUlor of -Wlffof .. ellc>w ,._,.....,.
UCIL O. TC>f'TNSS
Ut•VteT .... ~COffke ... ...-v.,........_c.t.,.
T .. :~I A"-YNrS-
Pwt>llUIM Or ..... CoeA o.lly PllOI
May :a. 10, 11.~"" l~lt
PUllUC NancE
Q9MtCS I CROSSWORD
"And I say If that bug bit someone a
thousand times bigger than him, he must
have had a GOOD reason !"
FUNKYWINKERBEAN
CASEY
MOON MULLINS
MISS PEACH
C ~JRizY ABJOT
A\'v OLD A6~
~ELL'(.
...
by Tom Batiuk
by Ferd and Tom Johnson
r------~......, ; .. f" ': -... . . , "
JUDGE ·PARKER
If ~MA HAS 5EEN HER.
I 6UESS JM~ WE HE'LL TEU ~ER WHAT YOU
OETI'f.R STAltt 6ACK TO SAID A&OtJT GIVING MY
TOWN, JULI.AA! J TOLO FATHER AARCOTICS!
HEit I'D eE MOME ev SIX! ai_.,-
by Wm. F. Brown and Mel Casson
.I ' ------W~Y W'O~RY .
w~Mr 1F' '!'bu
DON'I Uv£
r~Ar t.ONG ?
!'-:::.---
by Mell
ve~Y 51MPL.E:: A GUY MAS BE~N "CLONet>• IF YOU ~1CI!
ME'S tbaf ONI U~~ CELI. 1'MAN
ANOTM£~ GUY WMO &.()Ok";
JU~T L.tKS HIM.
DOOLEY'S WORLD
by Harold Le Doux
THAT'S WHY I TOLD YOU TO KEEP
FILLING THE DOCTOR'S ~RIP
TtONS EVEN THOU~ THE OLD MAN
REf'U$f0 TO LET YOU GIVE KIM THE
NARCOTICS tN1ECTIOH5!
Wedneedly. May 3. 1978 OAIL V P1LOT !.¥
PEANUtS ·by Charles M. Schul
• ·~
'------------------------------.~; '"' by Roger Bradfield
TODAY'S-CRDSSWDID PUZZLI
ACROSS ~ Not so hol
t Transposes 51 Asian l'l\lm-UNITED Feature Syndicate •
lnto type mal Tuesday's Puule Solved ·.;
5 Unprmcl-5' Give surety
pied ones to
9 Piped up 58 Hockey alar
14 Eight: Ger· Bobby -
man 60 Sudanese
15 Medley river
16 Provide with 61 Alcoholism
food 63 - -even 17 Ending for keel
church ~ CO!'etmlnO'
H rr n tt S PE w s i ~~ o R At 'G'I I VE
iP I NL N D
'S 11L A
IA I} FIA
T cllf E R LQ L ll. ·-R-au A n PAIR UIR 5
II -.111 D
18 Stlppl.ln11ng 65 Sudden pain -
20 Fiber spasm
source &6 Oeaerve: In-·,
21 Electric lormal
unit. Abbr. 67 Flal·IOpped
IV1! S•D ' p R
~ GIAI' IE tu-IC l I
' t ~Li I .!/ 1 { s H C ! :BJ p C: E' D~ .r3
n Selects for hills steam 33 veed
olllCil 68 Game ani-10 Measure by 40 Valuable
23 Auto mals steps thmg
2S E•tenslve 99 Killed vio-1 t 01 the ear 41 Coat scuttle
27 Texican's lently 12 Arhst 46 Abound
· neighbo< DOWN Rockwell-48 Some teen-29 Strange 1 Long narra-13 Energy agers
30 A lot: tnlor-lives units ~ Proceeds
mat 2 Haute -: rapidly
34 Buddy EQuine 19 Be ahnad so Use alcohol
36 Can. penin· moves 24 Appr6acl'I· 52 Cheer up
sula 3 Survey in-es: Archaic 53 Take up 38 Time "' Iida atrument 26 Amor. again
4 Trail , dramatist S4 He raised
39 Astronauts•
trip· 4 words
~Commends
for bravery
'3 Mr. Welles
«Color
'5 Stalk
46 lnlant
47 Hall. Comb.
form
5 Musleal pas-28 Erode Cain
uge 30 Constella-55 Math.Quant·
6 ·0u1 on • 11on 11y
-·: 31 Indigenous 56 Goddess ot
Vulnerable 32 lee mass hope
7 Lacking 33 86 disposed 57 Annaj)Ol1s·
proper rela· 34 Cpls' under-Ab!Y
hon ftngs 59 From --to
I Satutate 35 C,me down riches '
t Burn with 37 Bend over 62 Imitate
: ...
(
J
.
'
• < , , ....
I , .,
'
.)
·~
" -
..
....
' ..
• 8(l L"'ll Y Pu.OT Business •
S&Ls Threaten Sllit Over Automatic Transfer
8)' JOHN CUNNIFF
u ... -....... -NEW YORK -The Federal
Reserve Board, say the naUon'a
savmga and loan associations.
has us urped the powers or
Congress, endangered the boom·
1ng housing market and violated
the laws of the land.
"We'U sue, no question about
il," said a savings and loan
spokesman of the Fed, wbJch
this week voled to permit
automatic transfer from savlngs
accounts to checking accounts.
"OtJ& LAWYERS have been
m eetiqg since yesterday," said
a spolcesman for the U.S.
League of Savings Associations. ''They're deciding where to file,
when to file, the wording."
Has the Fed, that august,
austere, proper body that de·
Sundesert
Financing
Restricted
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -San
Diego Gas & Electric Co. has
been told that further costs as·
soclated with Its plans for a $2.3
billion Sundesert nuclear power
plant couJd be recouped through
rates only if the controversial
plant eventually comes on line.
The state Public Utilities Com-
missipn, by a 3·1 vote Tuesday,
said the financing of Sundesert
would put excessive demands on
Tatepayers before it is complet·
ed and working
BECAUSE OF THIS. tbe PUC
told San Diego Gps that any
further costs or risks, except
those that might be associated
with terminating the project,
must be borne by shareholders,
not ratepayers.
terrnlnes lbe nation's monetary
policy, actually violated the
Jaw ? Ct.In the Fed. powerful
enough to challenge the presi·
dent. be forced to retract ?
And why the fuss over what
appelirs to be little more than
another convenience for d e·
posltors tn commercial banks?
THE FIRST question ls tor the
courts to decide, but the people
at the Savings and Loan League
say the language of "12 U.S.
Code Sect. 371 A" is clear. They
read it:
·'No member bank Cof the
Federal Reserve system) shall,
directly or indirectly, by any de·
vice what.soever. pay any in·
terest on any deposit which is
payable on demand."
But the Fed decision, say the
savings and loans. would coo·
travene the law and usurp the
powers o! ConJtress by permlt-
ting anyone to keep his money in
a savings account, draw In·
tereat, and write checks as well.
TH lS. THEY INSJST. would be destructive coo!petltloo by
the already powerful com·
mercial banks. in that it would
threaten to attract money from
the savings and loans. It might
also endanger houlln.g markets.
Home mortagages, the as·
sociations rem!nd us, are sup-
ported largely by the thrift in·
dustry, made up or savings and
loan associations and mutual
savings banks. U thrifts dQo't
have the money to lend, Uaey
warn. housing might tumble.
It doesn't matter to the as-
sociations that the commercial
Pound to One U.S. Dollar
.531
.541
~-;:Ji;.]
World
Dollar
CANADA •
Dollar to One U.S. Oollar
fr1t1es tt OH
U.S. Dollar
SWITZHLAllD
Francs to One
U.S. Dttlar
Values
Yen to One U.S. Dollar I
l.Jst
Month 221 .0 ••r 1 224.9
W. GHllAMY
Marks to Ont
U.S. Dollar
banks already hove encouraged
regulatodl to permit the thrifts
to do the same thing -offer in·
teresl-bearlna chticking ac·
counts.
THE ASSOCIATIONS don't
want them, and they don't want
the commercial banks nosing in·
to their territory either. They
rear It's part of a plot to make
all financial institutions look
alike.
If the commercial banks sue·
ceed in forcing such accounts
(now permitted in New England
only ) on the associations. it is
argued, they will then seek a
quid pro quo.
And that, the associations say.
would involve their prized dif·
ferential.
THE DIFFEBENTIAL as
£ar Rules Due
much u any one thing separat~
the thrills from commercial
banka. It ia a one.quarter of 1
percent lnterest advantage the
thrift.a are perm1t.ted to offer on
savinga atCO\Ult.s. It ls prized.
Remove that differential. they
say. and the thrifts. committed by law to financing the home
mort1a1e market, would be una·
ble to compete for money with
lbe various attractions or the
powerful commercial banks.
The thrifts enjoy their
speotall.zed function. and they
don 'l appreciate the Invitation
into direct competition with
their larger, powerfuJ neighbors.
And they have no intention of ac·
cepllng.
ON MONDAY, THE very day
lbe F~ acted. Sluart Davis. pres·
NEWS ANALYSI.~
!dent or the U.S. League. ad
dressed the American Bankers
AssoclaUon and told them flatly
that his memben were content
with their specialty.
··The savings and loan busl·
ness In the future wtll contlnue
lO be a apedall.zed financial In·
stltution, with the specialty be·
ing the extension oC residential
mortgaae credit." be said.
They fear that distinction. that
specialiiation, ia threatened by
the action of the Federal
Reserve Board. and lhey intend
to bring the courts and Congress
lnto the battle.
Theft to Be Thwarted?
WASHINGTON (AP> -The
Transportation Department,
leveling its sights primarily on
joyriding thieves, bas an·
nounced plans to require
automobile manufacturers to in· stall anti-theft eqoipment begin·
Ding with 1981 models.
The devices idclude proteeted
Ignition wtres to prevent a car
from being started without a
key, hood lalches that can be re-
leased only from inside the car
an'd rounded door-lock
mechanisms that prevent a door
Crom being opened by poking a
coat hanger through a win<Sow
crack.
MANY NEWER MODEL
automobiles already include one
or more or the protective
systems that would be required
by the proposal, announced by
the department's National
Joan Claybrook, the agency's
administrator. said the proposed
rule is aimed mostly at thwart·
ing youpg thieves who steal
vehicles for transportatioa or for
their parts.
··Tbe joyrider thief is involved
in al least a third or the actual
number of vehicles stolen. but
accounts for a veey large ma·
jority of stolen vehicles that are
later involved in accidents," she
said. Ms. Claybrook sald ap-
proxlmately one mlWoo vehicles
were stolen ln the United States
in 1976, and that the cost to
society is about $2.9 billion a year.
TR E PROPOSED changes
would require the foUowing:
-The hood latch must be re-
le 1 sable only from the
passenger compartment.
-Installation of door locll but· tons that cannot be opened by
external devices such as a coat
hang~r. -
-Door locking mechanisms
inside the panel must be
sbiekled to pttveot tampering.
-Tbe' igniUob SJSlem must
llave a capacity to become lh·
operable U the Ignition lock is
removed.
-lgniUoo wil'eS must be pro-
tected to reduce hot-wiring
starts. -The Ignition key alarm
must be equipped to continue
wbenewr the engine is turned
off, the ignition key is left in lbe
igniUoa and the door is opened.
The utility was told that lhl},
$83 million it has already put lri!
to the project will be considered
in its next general rate Increase.
So far. the utility's rates have
rerlected no expense for the
plant.
last
Month
lay 1
., Hi'gbway Traffic Safety Ad ·
ministratioo<>n Tuesday.
-The ignition key must be
different from the door and
trunk keys.
The agency said comments on
the proposal will be accepted
through July 31. People sbou.ld
write to lbe Dock~ Section, Na·
Uonal Highway Traffic Safety
Administration, 400 Seventh St ..
Washington. D.C .• 20580.
San Diego Gas directors were
to meet at 2 p.m. today to con-
sider the PUC action. Dollar's Performance
ALTHOUGH OTHER utilities
could continue efforts to build
Sundesert, it appears likely that
unless conditions change unex-
pectedly, San Diego Gas would
have to withdraw from tbe pro-
ject
The value of the U.S. dollar ls compared with currencies or
Britain, France, Switzerland. Canada, Japan and West
Germany during the period between April 3 and May 1
Canada's dollar fell in relation to U.S. currency during the
month. but the other countries represented. notably
Switzerland, showed gains.
Coast Employees Promoted
Sandy Beckman has joined Jeanne Lehnert &
Alisoclates, a Newport Beach advertising and
public relations firm, as an account executive.
She is former coordinator for the lm annual
membership drive of the Newport Harbor Area
Chamber of Commerce. • Tom Graeven of Huntington Beach. who bas
been with R.M.A. Arcbl&eetaral Groqp, Costa
Mesa, since 1975 and bas been deputy director of
the firm from 1977, bas been appointed v,ice presl·
dent
He has more than ts years' experience ln the
architectural and engineering field and bas
' participated in a number of projects both tn
Calirornia and the Eastern United States • .Joaepll A. Tbomu bas been elected vice rresl·
dent and general counsel of Paclllc Mu.tu We
Insurance Co.
He joined Pacific Mutual in 1960 after two
years of private law practice, became associate
general counsel in 1970 and was elected second
vice president ln 1975. • .Jack Nlcbobon. Fountain Valley, bas been
named national sales manager for Cblttook
Mobllod&e Co.. Newport Beach. He ls a former
Before joining the company two years ago be
!\pent 20 ~el".~ Jn the .auto~e and •~ttational
vehicle indll!tri~ including sales and marketing
positions at ~ral Motors and American Motors Corp.
• Chooc Vo-Ta. Westmlnster, bas been appolnt·
ed to tbe new position of credit analyst with 8uk
of Amertca•a Irvine Industrial branch ln Newport
Beach.
He will serve u chief credit analyst, assist
loan officers and ln prePartng loan packages and
monitor the branch•s loan activity.
* Brace TorbeU. El Toro, bu Joined SmJtb Tool, Irvine, a division or Smith International, lnc .. as
director of rmance. His duties include supervision
of financial functions, lncludinl accounUng, credll·
collection end data proceuln.g.
Belore joining the company. be wu vice presi-
dent of finance at Gruner-Williams, another
division or Smith lnternaliooal, Inc. He bas also
served as vice president of finance at Sentry
Manufacturing Co. and as an audit senior at
Arthur Andersen & Co.
~~fi}~~~:~ional manager in the Southern California, Israel
He will have operating responsibility ror the
national sales field force. market planning aod
•tr•a•in.in•g•fo•r•m•o•to•rh•o•m•e•dl•v•lsi•ons•. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii• Plan Foundation
•Hll Rll A HOIEOllll LOAP.
Why pay 1 O to 15 points to a brokat?
Eliminate the middle man -
DEAL DIRECTLY WITH LENDER
•Savemoney
• Fast eppi cw9I
• Fundtng '**1y In Oflly 1"2 weekl
• Bonow men· fOllW to ~of .fetr ma1cM valu.
•Up to 1oyu-a to repey ~---"-_.., ......... .. .......... ,............,,
CALL TOOAY FOR OU~ RATES
~:~1:ui=AL (714) 752·LOAN
N9Wl)Oft BllCh. CA mlO
LOS ANGELES <AP> -California and Israel
have agreed ln principle to establish a prlvJte
foundatlon for research into solar energy, accord·
ing to Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr.
"Prime Minister Menachem Begin ls v@ry
supportive of a Californla·lsraeli solar project,"
Brown told reponers Tuesday.
"WE'RE GOING TO ESTABLISH a private
foundaUoo ln California that will raise funds and
get matching funds from the state of Israel to
pioneer 10lar research."
Brown made the remarks after he and mem·
bers of bis office &Dd campalsn 1tatf1 met with
Begin, who wu in L09 An1eles as part of a week-
long tour to celebrate Israel 'a 30th annlvenary.
The governor said the foundation would help
research lnto such fields u aotar qrlculture and
solar power 1eneraUoo.
"1 see this as a vory excltlnt Idea," Brown
said. "California and Israel share not only
technok>&Y, but allo a veey aim.liar cUm1te."
Amcord Wants Stock
Amcord Inc., Newport Beacb, has lnvU.ed ten·
dera of aoo.ooo sho.-a or Ill eommon atock at •15. 75
c11h. net Pt!' sbafle: Tb• ctoalns prtee ol the stock
on the composlt. tape on A9tll 3' wu alt.SO •
The i.nn1 and condJUOOI ol tbt otter bave been milled to holders of commoo &tock. Tb•
1h1ru belnJ 10uaht rep~t approxlm•telJ 1
percent ol Amcord'• out.atandlnl commoa 1l0dc.
The orrs "11J explre at 2 p.m. PDT May l7 unleu
e:icteoded by Amcont. Tlle atotk t. lilted on tho New Yon and Pactnc tock excbUlfe.s.
I
Over The Counter
MASDUstt.p
MUTUAL FUNDS
Vp•••dBe.,...
I
..
OCKS I BUSINESS
Wedne8day,8
Clo ing Pric ~ NYSE. COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
'Nedneeday, May 3. 1978 VN DAILY PILOT 87
Suggestions Ease
Difficult Task
By SYl,VIA PORTER ~ntlf,._Oel_
Mllllons of Americana who havt trh .. -d other ways to
ease the physical and mental lirnltaUons or ·an aged loved
ono havo nnalty faced the task of findlnt·i. nursinti home.
How ahould the search be conducted?
Study .the kind& of nursing care avultahle Mnd condi·
llon11 under which Medicaid and Medicare wlll pay coi1ts
SOME HOMES SPECIALIZE In personal care. others
focus on health ond nursln1 care, still others cater !o resi·
d\!nla with a wide range of needs . .
Medicaid puys for an lntermediate care fttclUty that
caters to U\011e who need heelth care service. some nursing
aupervlslon and assistance in eatin&. dressing. walking
ond other essentials. There is no reimburs"ment from
Medicare for In
termedlate care.
Medicaid also pays Money's
Worth
-ror care In u skilled
nursing faclUty where
round -the -clock
services are available.
A phyalclon must UP·
prove thia type or care it an applicant ls to be ellglble for
thts phase of the Medicaid program. .
Medicare will assist In paying up to 100 days in ;.i
skilled nursing facility aller a patient has spent al least
th re~ daya In a hospital .and a physician has recommended
admission with ultlm11le Medicare approval.
M EOJCAJD MA V PICK UP CHARGES artcr 100 duy:!>
• for those eligible for both prograrn5. . . .
When neither Medicare or Medicaid 1s involved. the
government sets standards for services. safety and sanita·
tion. States must obey federal guidelines for inspection and
certification of homes receiving reimbursement under
either program. Other nursing homes come under state in·
spection and approval standards.
If a patient Is eligible ror Medicaid. seek a home
certified for intermediate care of a skilled nursing racilily
tr a patient is eligible for M~~lcare. look for a ~o~e
certified us a iskllled nursing fac1hty. Many are certified 1n
both catege>riel' and are eligible for payments under
Medicaid and Medicare.
-IN SllOP PING FOR A nuramg home. examine the
facility's licenses and certificatet to see if they are cur·
rent. Avoid any home that isn't licensed. Also. avoid any
home where the administrators fail to produce a current
license on request
-Check whether the home is appmved by the Joint
Commission on Accreditation of Hospatals. a non·
governmental group that inspects hospitals and nursing
homes. The certlricallon ls a good Indication or quality.
although not necessar11y a certain one.
-Make a list or local homes. getting names from lhe
hl•alth department. medical society. senior citizens or-
ganizations. soeial service groups. Soci•I Security office.
clergymen. physicians. hospitals. nuralng home associa·
tions and welfare office.
-MAKE PRELIMINARY CALLS to the homes. ask·
ing about participation in Medicare. Medicaid and state in·
spections. Check details on charges not covered by basic
rates and status of coverage If an admission ls projected
under Medicaid or Medicare.
Profit Taking Hits
Bllll3 Chip Stocks
NEW YORK (AP> -The stock market pulled back
from lta recent rally today. to brlna a broad 1038 In active
tradlngforthe1econdconseculive1e11lon.
1'he Dow Jones averaae of 30 lnduatrtal 11tockl slipped
11.35 potnta lo 828.83. It fell 4.10 point• Tueed•Y a fter
reachln1 it1h11he1tclose ln flvemon~ Mond•)' .
• fitorlu '" Tlar ~po1llglt1
Naw YOIU( ,,.,.,
NIW 'l'OlllK CAPI .,. ... SIOO """I -'l>O•Ol llNI J7i , llthtOl.I• Illy 41
ffl
"" ."° ' . •4 ,
f\tl't ·-~;· •• , •OcJ . .. . .. . •. I I wo non rt°. , . . . . . .. . , :r, '1o'C:S:r. : .'.'.'. : ".' . . t:J . . 1•~t o CIO.. .. l . U , J , ~
WHAT AMalt 010
Haw YOllll( (Ajlll
•
.. DAIL V PILO T Wednesday May 3. 1971 Television
.. i cee..we l fNING
Bl~OHll
~ bellty "'1t engine tf\IQ
~ Ille petlfl'*llc9 In
en -gency of tNlf own
• OUNIMOKa
M•tt nu • 1ong, 11ercs r~
bed! lo Dodge with • prle-
OMf wlloM Geno pllllUM
them dOVgecfly
• TI41 MAOV BUt0t..
P...re eltet..ohOOI job In
the bill• lhop becomee •
penlOl\lll dlaMtet
I AOAM-12
B.ECTNC COM~AH't'
HllTOffY CW MEXICO
··o.n.i. Of Ae\lolutlon Of
1910" ltl A8CNIWS UoG MOYIE * * * "Tiie Lut SunNI" (Perl 2) t1H11 Roc;ll
HudlOfl, l<lrtr Dougie&. A
_., .. puraued by "" ..
men during a Meaico-lo-
TellU cettle drtve C1hr )
• BEWITCHED
Oenln'I molnet th1nka IM
11u aupeme1ural powera On Ber ltla~k
l=:!av
Vlolln"t tu.c: Stern I*':
form• and di.cu-~
ceu end comml1ment1.
Or Colin Micit on ~Ying
energy; • 85-year-old
reteln1 pereonal freedom
through many ce.rMtS.
Gladys Knight is one o'f the pop music
stars who'll compete m the Rork ·n·
Roll Sports Classic. a . t\,o-hour ::-.pt.•c·wl
tonight at 9 on NBC. Channel 4.
Cl!) OIMEN8IOH8 IN
CUlTUAE8
"Ocwet'nlln<:4t"
([) AM~ 2NIOHT
Gun1: ,1h1 St. JOM
I MERV GRIFFIN
7:00 N8C NEWS
UAMCLUB
A8CNEWS 0 BOWUNOfOA
DOU.AAS .:D ILOVELUCY
"The faalllon She>w" Lucy
contrlbutM to • luhtOn
lllOW wllll the wt-Of
motion ptc:tur• 11ar1
4!) AOAM-12 fD MACHEIL / LEHRER
RE POAT
ltl) CREATIVE
STTTCHERY
Tiie ButllOn knot, Chinese
knot, core! knot end knoll-
ed buttonl'lole are demon·
stretlld
([) JOKER'S WILD
7;30 8 IETWEEH TliE WAAS
··The GrN1 Oepresalon"
Tiie Oepresalon shatten u s. Mtt-eont~ and
parely2• foreign policy. In
Europe It gillft rlse to die·
1a1orlhipa and tile tall of
Ille League of Nations.• 8 SHANANA
G.-1· Chubby Chectler.
I NEWLYWED GAME
MATCHGAMEP.M.
JOKER'S WI.LO
• THE 8AADY BUNCH
.. The Un-Underground
MCMe" Greg inVOlllft tile
Channel l.I•• Ing•
II KNXl 1CBS) Los Angetes D l<NBC (NBC) Los Angeles e l<TLA (Ind I Los Angele s D KABC· TV (ABC) Los Angeles
([) KFMB (CBSI San Diego G KHJ-TV (Ind.) Los Angeles
([I KCST (ABC) San Diego
G) KTTV (Ind) Los Angeles
ti) KCOP·TV (Ind) Los Angeles
fJD KCET·TV CPBS) Los Angeles 6:> KOCE· TV (PBS) Huntington BeacM
whOle tam1ti In • rnovi.-
malclng 1><o)eclt tor echoot.
CD AMEAICA 2NIOHT
GuMI: JIM St. Jolln. fJll 21 TONIOKT al> STARIOARO
"UVeJIYe"
([) 1121,000 QUESTION tlDJ F~ILY fEUO
a:oo e ([) IPtDER-MAH
An tnlernetlOnel beauty
p1geaot conte111nt.
dlughter of Ille MW pr-
• dent of 1 Latin AmerlClln
country recently treed
trom 1er.rone1 dlcurtonhlc>.
11 le ldn8'>1*1 end held f Of
pollllcal renaom D AOUE.AGIRl.8
"The Blntl Of The Pitta"
The Pittsburgh Pitta 1'9min-
,_ on tlleif beginning• u
a teem In order to payclMI
tllemMIYM tor 1 big gatne
,._ D MOVIE
I ... 'h''Flr•I To Flgllt"
( t96f) Chad E-•tt. Merl·
lyn Devin. A Med9' Of Hon-
or winner /IU PfObleml on
Ille battlefield but men-
egee 10 lud hi• men to
• vlct~ 1:2 hra I a u EJOHTIS
ENOUGH
'"Lost Weellend'" Contu-
alOn reign• in Ille Bradford
houaehold wherl Tom and
Abby go 1way for Ille
weekend D NA8L 800CEfl
Cellfomla SUt1 w. Porflencl
TlmOerl
• CAAOL IUANETT
ANDFNIHOS
Guellt: Antnony Newley,
01c11 M1t1ln
• MOVIE
• • "Up Perlacope"
(1959) JamH Garner,
Edmond O'Brien. A Naval
offloer 11 ordered to carry
out e dangetOUI mlUion'
during World Ww ti. C2
h.r•.)
• NOVA
"Roed To Hepplnesa'" The
lit• end tlmM of ~
FOfd, wtlOM '"MOlOf Cera
For Tiie Greet Multltudel"
made tlle ~ dreM1
• reeltty. GD INX 8SDEA8ECKE
MeMOAIAl FE8TIVAL
"Tom Saunder'• I Bob
Hlrtch All Stera'"
8:30 D JOE AND VAL.EM
"Vllerie'a Wild Oat" Joe
and Vel9'le'1 t>uddlng ron<enoe Is jeoperdl2ed
when Velerie'I former OOV-
lriend becomea Mt boa
at tile depat1men1 11ore.
., CA088-WfTS
G!) OVER EASY
VloUnllt IUlc Stem per-•onn• and ~ IUC·
cett and commitments;
Or Colin Micit on uvlng
energy, • 65-year-old
reteln• personeJ freedom
through many~. t:OO. (I) C88 MOVlt
"Meneatert Ar• Looeel"
CPreml«e) Tom Skerrltl,
Sieve FOffell. Two huoe
tlgeB terrortze 1 amllt
Amcwlcan rietlonll torM1
community. D AOa< 'N' AOU
SPORTS ClASSC
Krlaty Mc Nlcllol, Ed
Mc:MahOn end Alex KlfTU
host • variety of lthletlc
-II In wllic:h ITIOf9 tl'lan
40 auperalera of pop music
wllt compete. Gledya
Knight and tile Plpt: Shll
Sha Na; Anne Murrsy; Iha
Bay City Rollen; Merilyn
MCCoo end Biiiy OrM Jr.:
Ille Commodor•: Lynn
Anderaon, EaRh, Wind and
Fire: the J1ck1on1,
Aeroemitll: Rod St-an
and 10~1rom
1111 Oallu Cowboya are
fNl\Ked,
8 9 CHARUE'S
AHOEL8
"Angel On The Run" The
angeta get more than they
bargained for when they
are hlfed to track clown a
pllitenderlng tt'Ucil driver
wflO la unknowtngty llaul-
lng • fortune In stolen
g91111.
TUBE TOP
KTLA It H 00 .. First to Fight ..
Chad Everett. late of Medical Center.
plays <J Medal of l lonor winne r in this
1967 'war mO\ it:
C BS 8 9 OO " "Maneaters Are
Loose ... A pa ir ut' g1anl tigers lerrorile a
s m a ll town in this ne w TV movie with
Ste ve Forrest . I tcnry Mor~an a nd Diana
Muldaur tsee photo be low J.
NBC f9 9·00 Rock ·n· Roll Sports
Classic . A plethora of pop music stars is
a ssembled in this new athletic competi·
hon . including Gladys Knight a nd the
Pips. Sha Na Na. and Bay City Rollers.
ID MERV ORffltil 8D GREAT
PERFORMAMC€S
"T l'1al OI The Molle" The
nrat blacil cadet to gradu·
••• trom W•t Poont 11 per-
aecuted by hll fellow Offi·
C9tl GD COU8T£AU,
OOYSUY
"Calypso'• Saetc11 Fo•
Allantla" Pnttlpe Couat-.i
111empl1 lo un.revel the
mystery of Atlanlla 1n the
811\emu. wnlte Cao111n
Jacquet Couat-.i IOCUMS
on Crete, and 111 outtytno
•and, 011. In Ille Agean SNBart 1 ol 2l
10:00 I . NEWS
STARSl<V&
~UTCH
"Par1ner1" Stareky
attempta 10 cure Hutch's
1mn1111 tollowlng a
..,.1ou1 ec:cklenl
4!) LET'S MAKE A DEAL G COU8T£AU
ODYSSEY
"Calypso'• Search For
Atlantis" Ceot.aln Coua-
teau ••PIOrH Crete I
nothem COU1 end Ille llOI·
cenlc lllaNI of Sentorlnt
whlcfl -• t>otll deetroylld thouund• of yeara aoo
(P111 2of 2)
10:30G)4!) N€W8 fm MICHAEL JACKSON
Marvin Holen, P.-dent of
11'4 Loe Angelee Rapid
Tran111 District, dllCUMee
the lnCrNM In RTO rider·
11\tp •
11:001DD([)0 NEWS
LOYe. AMERICAN
STYLE
"LOYe Ar\d The Under·
11and1ng·· Dodo'• hueband
it footing around "Love
And The Pregnancy'' lra'a
wile It expecting lhe1r llr1t
I 111581 Ven JohnaOn. Vera
Milea. A llght.... play-
'llWlght al1empta to con-
vince police of • --plot lie ~d. C2 llra.1 .:DTHEOOOCOUPl.E
Felix" 1 and Otcet' s bowl-
1119 teem battle egalnat an •
oppoelng teM'I In • gatne
wtlJCh matll• Ille llrat tome
1n five yeers • thal they
mignt be the winners
• MOHTY PYTHON'S
fL YING QACUS
fll) DCK CAVETT
Oue•ta: Rutll Cuter
Staptelon. th• leading
1dvoute of FuH Goapet.
end Ooteon Rader. author
ot "Mlrecte .. G MACNEIL I LEHRER
REPORT
11:30 8 Cl) HAWAII FIV5-0
Lewla AW/IY Flier (Hume
Cronyn) taunts Mc:Garretl
with Clues and plant to
tric;k him if>IO actually help.
ing him steal tour minion
dotlet9 (Rl D TONIGHT
Host· Johnny Carson
Gueste &118'1 Sut~van. Or
Paul Ehrlich Buddy Hack·
•It
.LOVE.A~ STYLE •
"Low And The Bufglar"' A
pennllell ..,.iter malt• an
'ettempt et bwgtaty. "LOYe
Ar\d The Meny·Mamed
0oup4e·· MOiiie ldoia r .......
"'8l1Y llCtwtl during en
In*-• tmJ POLICE STOffY
"()OyMey 01 Death" While
police officers continue
theif -Ch IOt the IUPe'·
rnartiet tlllevea. eYldence
llntllng them to • -* of
other CtimM '' d~fld
(Part 2 (If 2) ' .:D THATOIAL
baby /, Q MOVIE
• •''°' "'Twenty-Three
Paces To Baker Str .. I'
'"The M ailman Cometh""
4!) OETSMART
"VIYa Smart'" Smart and
99 I-e Hnng aQUlld
TON IGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS·
~ they 1ry lo rntore 1 Gelln A wellthy vOUfl4J'
~ pr~I ol a_~~~w~·""'~~~·~goori..7JT-i:;;'~~A~IMr~~a~w~1-t-~~---1 n coun ry Nat o , •o ,., e PTIOH£0 A8C tied tmwe. conu.,M..CS to
NEWS dealll In a~l•8 la< col· 1
MORNING 1abor1ttn0 With tlle Hwa \!.h" I ,: 12:00 9 TWILIGHT ZOHE UJ MOVIE
A man IW!d• lllmlMllf Ill • e "Mlsllon To Moroo-,
alOM "'a email town co"' c 1959) L•• 8..-ker, Jult
• MOVIE Redltlg. An oil man ltl-11· • •''°' "One Minute To get• the murder of 1 man
Zero" C 1962) Ann Blylfl. • end lhl dlteppffrMOe o(
Robert Mttcflum Tiie llO'Y mlcrolllm etlowing the
of 1 har.d·bltlen inllntry IOC:allon of oil OepOetta. It
cotonet end • clvlllan worlt· h.r., 30 min ) ~
., at the Iron• In KorN 2:15 e MOVll!
wt'9ll thl enemy attacks 11 **''°'"'From Tiie Eer1h l'Qi
dtpicted. C:2 ht1 l The Moon"' I 1958) J0MCJtt
I HONEYMOONERS Cotten. Oebr'I Paget • ~LI LEHREA 2:251 NEWS
12:30 8 MOVll! 2:80 MOVIE
• • • "'Wliltl lnlO Helt.. • * "'TN Ghoet Of frllllk-
1 t957l C111pa Rattertv. •l'•l•ln" ( 1114il Lon
Francotae Chrl11()9he l,n ~ Jr .. Ewlyn ANcera.
Auatralian off~ and"NI 3;JO • MOVI€
'*1Y -ceptunid by •• .. M(lln. ~ ol,
uvagee ~ tfleY go to rerror" (1981 1 Jun
New Guinea to onveeugat• cut1melct, Ryutaro an oil dllCO-V (I llr • 55
min)
., MOVIE
**~ "Tiie Fan" (1949)
Jeanne Crain. George
Sanders 8.iMtv:ng lier
hlMband i. unlllthfllt. a
woman lllmc.t convn111 an
incl1acre1lon th11 would
reeutt In the dMtruc:tlon of
her marriage. I 1 hr • 30
nttll I
12:37 8 ([) KOJAK
'"A Need To Know" Kojlla
Is lnturleted wtMlrl a chlld
rnoteeter. • rnembef ol 1111
dlg40metlc c:ommuolty. ••
Qf•nled dle>lomltlC immu-
nity Ind Ml tree lltet Hnal•
ly betnQ wr .. led (RI 8 (II ABC MYSTERY
MOVIE
• • ··Murder M otel ..
( 19751 Aot>yn Millan Alter
• -·· hanoe .. ....,, Miiie etternotlng 10 reciort
a ~aud that l'IM 0091 n,.
compeny • huge eum of
rnGnl\'. lf'9 ttacea hla
1tep1 to the "Muro.
Motel.-where .,,. ,. aoon
~ed u the neat ~tndecs Ylc1lm Of en Inter·
netlonll band ot coneolr•·
ten.CAI
1::00. TQMOMOW
Gu.I: Elia Aubin. • llofYer
wllOM detel'M Of • teen·
aged murderer wu baeed
on the p1yc1101og1c11
wnoac1 of TV VIOience. wttl
e11ecu .. !Iii P'OOOMCI May
I 0 boycott OI leleVlll<ln
11 ISPV
'"Thia Guy Smith"' 1:A51 NEWS 2:00 8tl) NEWS
MOVIE
•• "BIKlc Sun"' Ct9671
MICl\ele Meraer. O.noel
3:561 NEWS 4:00 MOVI(
• • ..The Bo•• 1'nd The
~ Deelh" I 1&e31 St-Ktltlk.
I M911fred l<1UQ. (2 twL) • Cll MOVIE
• • .. ''<c:lde Comman·
dOe'" (19M) "ldo Rey,
Hugll Fangar-Smitll
4: 15 8 ST!V£ EDWAAD8
Tlaur•dopl'• ,
Da11tl•r no.,ir•1
AFTERNOON
U:30 G» * * * ·~ "The Thin Mat1.. ( 19341 w11111m
Powell, Mvrn-Loy Ntc:ll
and Nore Cll.,.... ~
deeply mvoMICI lt1 a rMW·
d9f caM. 12 htl .. 20 min.I
f2':00 0 • • ··0angeroua
Charier" t 1982) Chttl •
Wsfoeld. Sally Fr-. The
co--. °' • ftlhlng
Cfllrter boet dawn • .... ,
vage • a-ted luxury .
vlCM end run vp eg8ln9I ~
gang ol lnternatlonel
tieroon amugglllra. C 1 hr,.
30mtn I
1:00 9 • • * ··s.re11 T -
Portr11t OI A r...,_Jilgil
AICOllOClc'' lt9J51 L~ Slaw. Verne Bloom. 4
year.old gtrl who... t
culty copng With • ,_ U••
Wlfh her rnotl\er afld .... I
r1111er. 11ar11 to drt~
llCfetly. ( 1 hr .. ~,_,,, 4~
3:30 D • *'h "Gidget Grows• •
Up" ( 111691 Keten V~,
tone. Robert Cummlngew;
White lhe"s WOl'll1ng et 1Ji•
UN , Gldget'e boyfnen.I~
lelllft ror lhe AJr Force. Q •
llr , 30 nwn I
ABC Still on ·Top • TV Ratings'.!:
Bold That Tiger
St~ve Forrest stars in .. Manealers Are
Loose." a TV m ovie about menacing tigers .
airing t~night at 9 on CBS. Channe l 2.
Devil Pops Up
For 'Joker' Host
NEW YORK <AP I -With hair or the top 10
shows. ABC returned to its accustomed top spot an
the prime time television ratmgs last week. at"cord·
ing to the latest A. C. Nielsen figures.
But Tuesday's figures indicated that an NBC
show with former President Gerald Ford discussing
roreign policy was the last of 65 shows rated by
Nielsen for the week ending April 30. The network
paid him a reported $1 million for an unspecified
number of programs.
THE FIRST THREE PROGRAMS were
"Three's Company." "Vegas" and "Laverne &
Shirley," all on ABC. which plans to make "Vegas"
into a series about a detective. With "Holocaust" now history and no show
higher than 15th, NBC plummeted to a third-place
average in the national ratings of 14.8. CBS was a
close second, with a 17.5, toABC's 17.9.
These represent 13 million households for 4 BC.
12. 7 for CBS and 10.8 for NBC.
In addition to the Ford interview. NBC listed
three other shows at the bottom of the ratings : No.
61 "Space Force:· No. 62 "Man From Atlantis" and
No. 64 "Hanna-Barbera Happy Hour." ABC's "The
H~rdy Boys·• was No. 63.
* * *
Mary's Back;
Kojak Leaves
NEW YORK <AP> -Mary Tyler Moore is
back. Tony Randall and Bob Newhart are gone.
That's the new look of CBS, as announced in the
network's new fall television schedule.
The network said it was replacing 6'h hours of
programs, shuffling another two hours of existing
shows. retaining Thursday's schedule and dropping
s uch fare as "Baby I'm Back," "Celebrity
Challenge of the Sexes'' and "Captain Nemo."
"KOJAK," WHICH DROPPED far into the rat-
ings after its early. popular years, is also departing,
along with the Friday night movie, "Spiderman"
LOS ANGELES paved street in tennis and ''Shields and Yarnell."
.4A'P> -Jack Barry will sneakers. "Dallas" and "The Incredible Hulk," both of
be on crutches for at Barry said he would which tested well lhJs year, remain.
least 10 shows as host of resume jogging after his Among the so·called new abows is one that
"The Joker's Wild" now hip r eturns to normal. won't quit. Ar. a pilot on NBC a while back, "Peo-
being taped for airina but only wearing jog-ple" bombed. In a CBS pastJcbe of gossip and
later this ae.ason ging shoes and on dirt oewafeatures, a similar abow called "Who's Who"
Barry was ordered by r oads or a running also bombed. And now Phylll.a Georae will be bead
his physician to use track. host o~ "People" Mondays al8p.m.
crutches lo alleviate a ...::..=.:.::.:..---------.-..:.--;.._---.;.._-----~----:
painful conditJon in his
left hip. He injured his
hip while Jogatng on a
Dylan a Hit
In London
IN ORDER. THE TOP IO SHOWSwere·
"Three 's Company ... a 28 7 rating, or 20.9
m1lhon homes:· "'Vegas ... 26. or 18.9 million;
"Lavem t' & Shirley," ABC. 25 6. or 18 6 million .
"Allee." CBS. 24.8. or 18. l million : "Happy Days:·
ABC. 23.9. or 17.4 m1lhon . "All in the Family ...
CBS. 23.8. or J7.3 m1lhon. "One Day at a Time. ·
23 7. or 17.3 million .
"Charlie's Angels," 23.3. or 16.9 milbon ; Na·
tiortat'Colleg1ate Ctreerleadtng-Champtonsb.ip:~o.-
.,
or 16 65 million. and "Dallas." CBS, Zl.8. or 15--·
million ... . . ..
THE "-IEXT 10 SHOWS WERE "Starsky and:
Hutrh ... ABC. "l ncr~d1ble Hul k," CBS. lied witll'
··Love Boat. .. '\BC. "60 Minute:.." CBS : • '
"Qutnt'y." NBC. "Lou Grant." CBS· "Siege:•,
the CBS Wednesday night movie: "Projec~
U . .F.O ... NBC ; "Go West Young Girl," ABC'~
Thursday mght mov1e. a nd "Joe and Valeri~·~
N~ -
' ' ENTERTAINMENT/ INTERMISSION Wldnleday, ~ :s. 1rna *
argot Fonteyn to ~id LA Farewell?
'
Tbe com vlalt of Britain's Royal Ballet to
Shrtne A torlum in Loi .U,eln tw arouaed ID~ lntereat and lt 1eem1. Judlln1 from al ~. that Oran1e County wtn be well preHDted a\ the 18 performances.
: MOit ballet fan1, underttandably, want (0
• teb a aUmpae of a1ele11 Dame Mar1ot Fonteyn
who may be dancln1 for the Jut
lime in the United States.
American audiences tend to
immediately aaaoclate Fonteyn
with the mercurial Rudolf
Nureyev and it's true that the
pair ror1ed a yartnerahip that will be talked o for many years
to come.
BUT FONTEYN, WHO
: P<*TSYN was dancing s~r6ty for the
d Sadlers Wells Ballet while RucRJtf was ln the
... rsery, has had many gifted partners over the
r:ars. many of whom were little Inferior to
~ ureyev
TOM BARLEY
Music Box
London observers of the Royal advise this writer that her part.nershlp with Wayne Etfllnl ld
the ~agerly awaited "Hamlet And Oohella • la one
or the m~t maeniflcent thlnp in balfet today.
GUt.ed choreographer Frederick Aabton aaed
the music of Frana Llazt for th1a ballet wbJch drew
rave reviews when lt was flrst perronned lQ Lon·
don last May 30. The Shrine perrormadce will be
its American premiere.
SPACE DOES NOT PE&llUT u1 to run
tbroush the caaUnCfor tbe 18 performances start·
Int May 33 but we should remind readen of the da~s on which Dame Maraot ~be seen.
She will dance on May 218, May 71 <maUnee
rMovi.e Colony' Oppose~ .. ...
:t· CENTRAL CITY. Colo. <AP) -Vern Terpen· _, "THE DUCHESS and the Dlrtwater ~a
Cirig ~ho runs~ leather goods store in this old gold weste~ featuring Goldie Hawn and Geor1e Se1al.
aliinmg town htgh In the Rocky Mountains Just isn't was filmed ln Central City tn 19'75 and Terpening ~nterested i':' t~e town being used in another said the dirt used to cover the town's}>aved street.I ~es~~rn mov1.e right no.w. -settled ln.hlastore. ,
•· I guess 1f I wanted to live in a movie colony, Terpening has hi-red Denver attomey Sbelle:,> •
!I'd move to Hollywood," Terpening said alter be ~on to atudy the situation bul Don wouldn't com·
and evenlnc> and on May 28. Sbe.' wlU paftn'r
David Wall in "Lei Sylphld'8" and B11Un1 ln
"Hamlet and Ophella."
Those of us who have watched thls aractoua
lady of ballet enthrall us ovvr the yean with a
technlq_ue that wlll never be dafllcated ·wm · be
an1dou1 to offer her the tri~· lbt ao ric:bly de·
serves. ·
5ff you at the Shrine.
, 11()1'1
JOE DON BAICE" "'..,.HE P.ACIC"
5*""9 HOPE Al.EJtANOEA.\MWS
Ul-111tnnglUCtiMOB StML AG AAMST~
Wttten too tllt Scretf\ Ind 0..ectfd 1!Y ROBERT ClOCJSE
:•nd two other merchant.a opposed the filming of ment. ,f7he~~Goo.~a We~ernwithaSamurlfiavo~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ .,
•• ; TERPENING AND THE OTHER merchants WINN ER OF :t,e~!i~:!?c tie-ups cau1ed by the fl\pllng w~uld hurt 7 ACADEMY ..
:: E.M.I. Films and producer Frank Marshall had
:coped to mm lhe movie between May 1s and June~ AWA ROS • ut have delayed the project, saying tbey couldn't :ff led supporting actors and actresses in time , lncludlng .,.
THEATRES-ORANGE COUNTY
IUll'S ''MITAMOIPHOSIS" lPGt $0. COAST PUZA OAn.v-•,..,, .. ,.,.. .
Cull.. IATllUM -t:tM :INM.._.:11 l41' ""'" .,, .. ,_ 1411"
MAO'S ~A---'9MTr.-. sa. COAST PLAZA~· ftDAY NIGHT '. EVER" (R)
Crill-., y , N&Y_...NMll ~~ MOPAS.. l.U,...._li)f.lt.I.,_.,.....,.. .......
Beet Orfgln8' Score
Beat Fllm Editing
Beat Costume Dealgn
I • • •
' /. • I•
NEW~2~T
-•lflll'H,1 ·~· 11l<VllN
~
' Mon-Frt 7:30, 10:00
8atJ8un
12:00
2:30, 1:00, I
7:30, tO:OO
"FM" CPG) okii:v..+.10 . SATlfMJM-f...,..10
"THE FURY" <RI DAllYl:IOIAYraufil-4.26410
"EVIL"
"BOYS IN COMPANY C" (A)
"THE LAST DETAIL"
"THE ~8T WALTZ"
"PHANTOM OF PARADISE"
"SATURDAY MGHT FEVER" "LIFEGUARD ..
"HOUSE CAL.Ls"
"ANNte-HALL" (PO)
"THE FURY"
"EVIL"(R)
"THEFUAY" "EVIL" (A)
AU.. DfUV•·tNS ONH 6iNP.M.~T
cM .. U...., ti.,,_ Uft ... I e K ..... ~11.i
Cm22hot81~ards. 15 7 cops, 990 till llflCI.
. ,J,GJO "~fan•""' ...... kids from pttll1s to the Beetla?
NOWAY!
·-"YOU'll --.....,._ .. •-THI IOn IN c:.adMT ClllS '*'~'--''"'. "" ..... , ....... ,,
''MA QYNIH'' ?lttMT,.,.....,tia,&.•
"AHHIA&.t ARI
HAUTil'UL PIOPLI" ...... ,,..,...,., .... Mdt
""°"" ..,,. ~ '"' 10T1 .. cawww c.., "" swum..-.., _ ......
ILUI :uatlt
MlllfTaf•
. .
I
-
I
•J•OM. Y PILOT-
'FM' an Album Looking for a Movie •
a, RON PENNINGTON ,... .... ,..... .....
UDlvenaJ'a "FM" is euentlally _a poup of
characters and a SOUDdlrack album ln'fsearcb of a
movie.
Director John A. Alonzo and bis excellent cast
create some effective moments and the
soundtrack incorporates an exciting variety or
contemporary music -plus "concert" ap·
peatances by Linda Ronstadt and Jimmy Buffett
-but none of this adda up to much. Ezra Sacks' script doesn't seem to have been
developed much beyond the idea stage It is about
a group of people who work in 'ODe ol Los Angeles'
top rock FM radio statJona, and, while there is a
thin story line, there la llWe development either in
terms of characters or plot. It basically lacks an
.mgoing sense of purpose and the result is too on.en
tedious
MICHAEL BRANDON STABS AS the station
nana1er who bas brought it to its top.rated spot
ind who must deal with the personalities of his
Jl.sc Jockeys and the efforts of management to
·•ring in IDOl'f advertl.sing revenue, re&ardless of
·vbether or not these commercials are suited to'lhe
· taUon'a format and market.
MERICA'S No. 1 COMEDY HIT!
I MEL~
1 HIGH ANXIE I Y
~ Wllll KAHN· Ct.ORIS LOOI ·HARVEY KfRIAI . .. ....... Pl1TII • cat -lml (Pl'!.)
IE llllSfU·Pl*"• .... E BS ""'
With Academy Award Winner ••AnfM H811" •t
Edw8rda Newport •nd •
~ Huntington Clnem8• mf8f£1 ·, 1 ••WIW' m:wra ............ .._
.-~ .. -.. -........... -~
In this case. new sales manacer Tom Tarpey
ls trytna to &et Anny recrultlnl 1pota from James Keach. who-p)ay&--a pseudo·hlp, pot·alftokin~
lieutenant Norman Lloyd ls the owner of the ata·
lion who finally intervenes after Brandon and h1a
crew take over the premises in protest.
The deejays inelude Eileen Brennan u the sul·
try-voiced Mother. Alex Karras as the country·
innuenced Doc Holiday, Cleavon Little as the
suave Prince of o.,tness and Martin Mull aa the
spacy Erle Swan.
,.HESB OL\BACl'E&S ARE all very aood
and provide what iftt~t there ls to the film. But
none ol them are developed to any extent because
the script preaenu them in what amounta to no
more tbaD {ncldente that lack a unltytng force.
Still some of the individual scenes are very '
good and Mull is especially strong and funny u
the insecure, egotistical Swan, who finally flips out
over the air. Brennan is also impressive aa
Mother, who keeps threattming to quit because abe
wanta ''reality" in her life and not just "five boun
of ego-trt~ in this toy 1bop. •• but the full poteo.
Ual of tbli character ls never realized.
The same bold• true for Karri!•· who la
replaced by paasle Yates beca~ bla ratlnp are
allpplng.
..._ oec~...-
1.NORMAN JEWISON FW
'Sl'N:V DJ
MllrtJn Mull
SYLVESTER STAtLONE
ROD STEIGER· PETER BOYLE
~'F. l.S~T. ..
MELINDA DILLON• DAVID HUFFMAN
KEVIN CONWAY ... ITONY LQ BIANCO!
......... a...sbf ,......,....,. • .!'!l!!r.._ ... -NORMAN JEWISON • PATR1CK PALMER,~ E~Jl:HJ"W)
Sc:lllrc*lri.JOE ESZTERHA.S.,, SYLVESTER STALLONE a.m"" """'LASZLO KOVfC#Sw.. Mll*brBlll CONTI
~ .... GENECOR~ ~ Tt!!!'cl!!
After her divorce,
rk• got to know
some pretty
lnt~restlng
people •.•
·~ludlng herself.._
..
·-·
· ENTERTAINMENT I MOVIE REVIEW
_ ___.8th SMASH WEEK~----.
.. AN ENGROSSING THRILLER."
-Rtchafd Schiekel Tme ~
IRISTOl CINEMAS Costa Mesa QNEDOME Orange 540 74144 634·2553
STADIUM DRM·IN Orange o:p.ano
It began as a dream ...
and became
an adventure
of a lifetime.
t
I
~
INSIDE : •Featuring ..•
•Cluti C.lendar
•Ann Landers
•Slim Gourmet
Derby 1Hnle
' The mint julep is not just a drink; it's
traditional and nostalgic. Here's how
to make it for this Saturda_y.
In Kentucky, this ttrst week of
May is a period of unending
celebration and hospitality,
capped by the world famous Ken-
tucky Derbr on Saturday. Tradi-
tion ls an important part of the
festivities. including that Derby
Day delight, the mint julep.
Known for its refreshing flavor
the mint julep was an established
favorite by the lime of the first
Kentucky Derby in 1875.
To savor the full flavor or the
Kentucky Derby. it is necessary to
l'1s l e "the zenith of man 's
pleasure," as the mint julep bas
been called by one of a muJtitude
or admirers.
At Churchlll Downs last year
B<l.000 mint juJeps were served '
solid testimony to the fact that
Kentucky's visitors today are just
as t!lristy for refined refreshment
as were the early Kentuckians.
Vendors of the Harn• M. Stevens
Company, concessionaire for the
fam ous Kentucky track, used 150
bus hels of fresh mint, 100,000
pounds of s haved ice. and 1,875
gallons of ~entucky Tavern. the
only bourbon used in the officiaJ
mint juleps served at the Downs.
It _is not only at the track,
h.owever. that mint juleps are
sipped on Derby Day. A tradi·
tional Derby Breakfast menu in·
eludes a round of juleps along with
the country ham and biscuits. And
a t hundreds of D erby parties
---
..
•
across the nation, peopie ga.thFr to
watch the race on television and
enjoy other Derby traditions.
In 1826, ••every man, woman,
child, slave and Indian," in thls
new cowitry consumed spirits at
the rate of 10 gallons annually,
while fresh. free wild mlrlt grew
everywhere. Not surprisingly,
forms of mint julep usina ~lfferent
types of spirits -everythfna from
Madeira to brandy -began to ap·
pear in the South almost as fast as
people could drink them.
After the Civil War, however,
home-produce<t whiskey was lbe
most readily available. Ken·
tucky 's corn mixed with good
Scots dis tilling expertise, pl\JS a
few native refinements, yielded a
mellow bourbon whisky which.
when blended with mint, seemed
the perfect marriage.
The bourbon julep was recorded
in the first bar guide, published ln
1862: "How to Mix Drinks; or the
Bon-Vivant's Companion." The
Reveren<i Andrew Reed, an
English traveller who first encoun-tere~ ~e julep at a Kentucky
tavern 10 1834, indicatea in his
writings that ·us popularity
a lready was overwhelming, its
mystique full-blown.
Actually, the ingredients · are
simple, the proportions a matter
of personal taste. As any. Ken·
tuckiaq can teJI you, a mint julep
4Sff DERBY, Page CZ>
. f ~est Buys
' . Early May will probably be plagued with
s hortages and price fluctuations. On the bright
side, the summer crops should start trickling in
during the month.
VEGETABLES
. The confusion surrounding production of
iceberg lettuce and other leaf lettuces continues
in the produce in~ustry. The constant rain of the
winter monlb s. while ea si ng the
droufi,'ht-i)lagued growers. attempting to plant.
Con:-.cquently, many growing districts were un·
able lo achieve the yields of a normal year. Let·
tucc that was due to mature-in ~nt weeks has
bet•n pelted by rain causing-ftift,her damage.
The situation will continue well into June.
Consumers may. see a temporary easing in
the next week, )>ut again. t}le lower prices and
in fl ux of product is only temporary.
Prices will conUnue to be three times
hi gher than normal simply due to iack of sup-
plies. Normal shipping figures for the week of
.\priJ show an average of 450,000 cartons of let·
t11ce s hipped in the past three years. This year
t he figure totaled 91,000 cartons. . .
•
' ,
W1d1199dlly, "-Y 3, 1978 CwLY PILOT
. .
1/ . .. , "-'~.---
-Eoud
.. , .
·. \ 1 •
---
Way of Life
menu included
fn.Jt, low-fat
cheese, flatbread,
rrock eggs,
raw vegetables
salad, sun-
f"Choke, low-fat,
dressings, herb
tea and low-
fat yogurt.
f
I Tomato prices continue to be high. This is
due to a combination of production gaps and poor
weather. Quality is fair to good. Thµ situation
may ease in about lOdays.
Green beans and squash are both high
becaus_e of poor ~rowing conditions. Bean S'-'Jr-
plies are tight Supplies of squash are better.
Hell pepper and cucumber prices are down.
Local supplies are arriving whicl\ helps to ease
the earlier s hortage. Quality is good.
The 21 O(! __ Food P.-ogram
Asparagus supplies are a little tight, but
this shouJd not cause prices to increase. Im-
perial Valley has completed production, now
most asparagus is coming from Central
California. Growers there received some rain
damage resulting in decreased production.
Ql•alily remains good .
White rose potatoes are arriving and look·
ing better with each shipment. Prices are down
a nd volume is good. Celery, which is already
J'<IO'". may take a turn for. the worse. This time
of tt>e year it goes through a natural seeding
process. The result is poor quality. Prices
should hQ}d steady. Cauliflower should improve
~• a new crop is ready ror harvesting. Prices
wl11 level off. Broccoli qualitL,J:ontinues to be
poor with little change insight;
FRUIT
Strawberries continue lo improve in quality
as the weather gets mild,r. Prices are reasona-
ble and volume Is good. ~lTies coming out of
Orange Cowity are looking etpeclalJy nice since
the rain has eased orf.
Cantaloupe quality is very good, but prices
are high. Watermelon is also very htch. but the
quality la excellent.
With Del Monte coming into the banana
IJ\arket, prices are coming down. Quality re·
malns gOod. Mahgocs are 1till pleoU!ul, but
high. This situation should ease up ii\ about two
weeks.
Orange prices are up a bit. Quality remains
good. Apple prices are also up over last week.
Supplles are starting to dll'Qtnlsh.
The H~ss variety or aVt>c~ Js a.nivlnt In
steady suppll~s. Prices should remain the s~me.
~ ~ .. . ,.
t:_
Nathan Pritikin is f)attling the American diet qf 40 to 50 percent tat.
By JUDITH OLSON
Ol Ille Deity l"tlet Si.If
Can a fatty diet be linked to breast cancer?
New research findings djscussed by Nathan
Pritikirt. founder of the controversial Longevity
Research Institute in Santa Barbara, indicate
that there may be a direct ~laUohship between
how much fat a woman consumes and how like·
ly she is to get cancer or the breast.
Pritlkin, speaking at a Way of Life seminar
at use. said the excrement of bacteria in the
lower intestine, which feed on fat,· may be th~
cause or the cancer.
•'Only certain kinds or bacteria win live on
a high fat diet," be said. "These bacteria take
the blle, use It for food and excrete a
carcinogenic material."
This substance is absorbed back into the
body with the same errect as estrogen, which
slim ulates the &ex organs.
Overslimulatlon of the sex orgaDS with
estrogen has been shown to be conducive to
cancer, Pritlkln added.
TIDS RESEARCH, if proven eorrect, would
have a tremendoua impact on the U. S., since
women in this country 'face a death rate 10
times as high from breast cancer as that of
other countries.
Research on Eskimo women and their diets
has revealed the same correlation. Prilikin
uld, since they also have b,lgh·lat diets and a
very high incidence ot breast cancer.
ln a~ditlao to bnut cancer, a bllh fat diet
ls a causltlv.Uactor in heart dile~. dlabetoa
and other d1l4eneratlve dtseaaesi Prltlldn said.
"Evertc)ne over 20 In th s country has
artery cl015Qre (from too much fat>I'' )\e said.
"Youthl think they're safe and older people
think tt .. too late. But you 're both wrong.
"Everyon• here •ilo ls ln a pre-diabetic or PN·e~ CC)ftditlon, '' hct ~-
TBS CA\JSIJ OP lt all ·~ the typical Amertcan di« o( 40-50 percent fat. Pritlkin ts
convinced tltat the level needs to be dn>pped to
· 10 percent or below, with the relt ol th• ·diet
fODll.Unc o1 10 perc:ta\ protein and eo pen:nt
comP.ltx c~=at.. 'Meat M 'liMd u a condllnellt." hi
aald. Heb ... )i\tJflc\a!n on the dJ.U OI Uie
eountrlea w\ere tbere 1 llttl• or no • ~
~etting F i t
It's muq,h easier to go home after work and
collapse in front of the TV with a glass of wine
or a martini than lo exercise, but the results of
inactivity arc predictable:
You'll end up bcin~ a "middle aged mess."
Dr. Fred W. Kasch. author of "Adult Fit·
ness" and a professor at San Diego State
University, said that human beings "cannot af.
"f-ord not t.o do physical activity."
The attitude has not always been so he ~aid. ''I spent 11 years at a medical campus' try.
mg to teach something about physical fitness.
"In those days, especially. in the 30s, we
believed that after 35, physical activity would
damage the hear t."
Kasch, one of the principal speakers at a
· Way of UJe Seminar conducted at USC by the
Way or Lire program, founded by Newport
Beach resident Jacqueline Kazarian, has been
working in the physical fitness area for many
years.
1'WHEN HE STARTED, physical fitness
was almost a dirty word in physical educa·
tion," according to Dr. Walter Clark, director of
science and nutrition for Hunt.Wesson Foods,
wbo Introduced him.
Now, it Is known that a lack or physical ac·
tivlty enhances degenerative disease.
Exercise "has to be placed In somewhat of
an artificial sense because or our industrial
society, which Is killing us," Kasch said.
He emphasized that young people should be
taught to exercise because ••the first one-third ot Hre ls preparation for the next two-thirds."
. Without. exercise, the body "loses it.s re·
serve1;• he aald, ''and wo don't know they're
beln1 loll.''
People are in their prime between 18 and 20, Kasc~noled, andarter that, without an exercise
pro1r•m, it's "downhill" the rest of lbe way.
He empha1lzed that It'• never too late to
betin, bchvcver. because "we can make ch81lge1
f&le FITNESS, Pa e CZ)
Are Tops
Leftovers are the true test of a cook's
creativity. When served inventively the result la
often a gourmet creation.
Combine leftover cooked ham and spinach
with ricotta cheese for an easy and VWY eletant turnover filling. It's helpful to use a Tood proc·
essor or blender to chop ham and aplnacb to
the right consistency. Add fiavor enhancer to
the filling to help keep the navon at their peak
since the basic ingredient. will be reheated
when the turno·vers are baked.
Yoµ can easily adapt the recipe to what you
have on hand; cottage cheese can be aubltlluted
for the ricotta. Or use half a lO-Ounce pacU,e of
frozen chopped s~acb if you don't haveftOlted
fresh spinach. TbeflakJpaatrylaaanaptorolloui
from frozen patty abells that have been complet•
ly ihawed. ·
..
••• Derhy
<From Pile CU • must have lresh mlnt. cracked or
shaved lee, sugar. water and good
Kentucky bourbon. and there is
plentiful advice not to stint on ibe
laller. lt is the method of prepar·
ing the drink around which most or-the mystique has grown. Al.
R. B . Harwell wrote In his 197S book
about the drink. "The JUiep is part
ceremony, tradition and regional
nostalgia, part flavor. taste. and
aroma: and only by definition Ii·
quor . simple syrup. mint and Ice."
The receptacle. the stirring in·
-strument, the quality or water and
bourbon, the method of crushing.
bruising, or muddling the mtnt.
!be gentility of the hands prepar·
mg it. are among the subjects of
lengthy advice to those who would
create a perfect mint julep. For
instance. Irvin S. Cobb. Kentucky
writer and character of note.
called for crushing the mint with a
FOOD
wooden pestle .
Then there was Henry Wat.
terson. for 50 years editor of the
Louisville Courier.Journal. wbo sang the praises of the mint julep
in print. But legend has him say.
"Pluc k the mint eenlly from Its
bed. just as the dew or evening Is
a bout to rorm on it. SeJecl the
c hoices sprigs only. but do not
rinse them. Prepare the simple
syrup and measure out a half·
tumbler or whiskey -then throw
away the rest of the slulf and
drink the whiskey straiJ:ht ! · ·
Our own recipe is neither as ex·
travagant nor as complicated:
Pour 2Ma oz. Kentucky Bourbon,
2 teaspoons waler . 1 teaspoon
powdered sugar. • sprigs of mint
into a frosted julep cup or highball
g las s a nd muddle. Fill with
shaved ice and stir very genttr.
Decorate with mint sprigs. Sip
through shQrt straws. The turnovers are deliclous just u they are.
but for a tpeelaJ touch. spoon a rlcb CMddar
cheese sauce over them before aervlnt.
SPINACH •NHAM TUBNOVERS
J cup groWld cooked ham
~ cup chopped cooked api.Daeb
"' cup ricotta cheese 2 tablespoons grated Parmesan cheese
'-t tQSpoon flavor enhancer
~ teaspoon onion powder
1 package ( 10 ounces> frozen patty
shell.I, thawed
Cheese Sauce
Preheat oven to 400"F. In a large bowl mix
together ham, spinach, ricotta cheese,
Parmesan cheese, flavor enhancer and onion
powfter. Set aside. On llgbUy floured aurf&ce
roll each patty shell into a circle ~about &-inch
diameter>. Place about ~ cup filling in the
center of each circle. Fold dough in half and
seal edges securely. Place on baking sheet and
bake for about' 10 mlnutes. Serve with Cbefl)Se
Sauce.
.-·Metric
~ystem
Decried
Makes: 6 turnovers.:
OIEESESAUCE
3 tablespoons butter or marprine
3 tablespoona nour •
1 1~ cups milk
1 cup shreddedCbeddarcbeese
112 teasP.900 salt
•111 teaspoon ground black pepper
In a medium saucepan, melt butter and stir
in flour. Cook over low be.at. about 3 minutes.
Add .lllllk. ~tirring constantly. When sauce
comes to a simmer, stir in cheese, aalt and pep-
per. Stiruntilcheesemeltaandaaucei.umoo&.b.
Makes: 2 cups sauce
••• Diet
(From Page CU
granola.
"It's a simple diet, the same t.bat native
populations always eat," Pritlldn assetted.
He eats the same kinds of rood himself and
was motivated to do research ln nutrltlon when
his own cholesterol count went up to 300 about 20
years ago.
An engineer by trade, be began studying
nutrition as a hobby and now devotes one-third
of his time to it.
Pritikin sold his most d.lfflcult struggle was
giving up ice cream. It took him a year and a
half lo make the decision to forego hls pint a
day and only then did his cbolesterol level drop
to 160. He says it's not too late to chaqe one·s
health level as late as 72. One of bl.a oldest pa·
tients, now 89, came to the lnstttute at 12 with
massive heart problems. After a year she was
a,tl le to stop using her drugs and she now runs a
mile a day and has won eight gold medal* lD tbe
Senior Olympics.
Pritildn also claims suceesa with pttln1
diabetics off their insulin, especially lD adult·
onset disease. "A change in dlet can lnfluence
most adult diabetics," be said.
One of his patients recently quit using his
insulin after 20 years. "Many people feel
diabetes must be hereditary but the onl)' tb1ng ls
diet.·· be believes.
M ulllple sclerosis patients, In the early
stages, also have been helped by the 2100 diet,
he added.
Prilikin said he disagrees with the opinion
that cholesterol levels can be reduced by ex·
ercise but be advocates exerciae alon1 with bis
diet. He does not recommend fa.stlni because be
thinks It does more barm than good. " Pritlldn also stressed that people should not
rely on physicals because many coronary pro·
blems can be serlous yet go undetected. "The only hope is prevention," he said.
·'It's never too late to change your lifestyle. The
time to start is today."
••• Fitness
(From P1pCI>
with people in their 60I and 7~."
ONCE A P&OGBAll of physical act.MtJ ls
begun it is "one of the 1reai.t motivators to
health,'" Kasch Hid. Smokers wbo bealn run-
ning, for example, often quit amoldq "because
they realize that amoklnt wipes out the benefit.
of running. Kasch recommends walking, runntna,
swimming, cycling, skiing, danclns and skip·
Pini rope as good rorma or exerdse. to be done five to lix days a week. "Wt'll give you Sunday
off to rest,'' be joked.
Tbe form ol exerclle lbould be nrled. if
posalble1 _for PITCbologlcal belMflta and ln·
creased uureat,' Kasch auueated.
Joatna aan brlng m.. JJC"Qblems, bt Aid,
but people who want tile beniflta of Joalni
wit.bout the d1D1en can walk f aat or walk-up-
hill.
Kaach WU ukecl bow a penoa c:u ~-rld of Dab. "If I kDfw the answer to that 1 d be a
mUUoaalre."' bt kidded. "We do DOt know bow
to aPGl reduce. "All you can do la get rtd ol the
total amount of fat lhlt'a on the body. Fat de-
posits are 1enetJcalb' aet."
The Way of Uro procram, whlcll al)ODIOl"ed
Ute day·loaa MIDIMr at USC, idVQC1tel a total
beatt.b coocept t.neludlna •Dlritual bapplMll. pbyatealbidhad aood nutrition.
Jin. Jtuar1an la I homemaker •"° J1H &ladled llalrttlOD. leetured and Hn'td u nutti· tloaa)=•• !!:_~~ tealDI at Calllornla ...,. ...,. .. ~ ... we.
" LONDON <AP> -Tbe
Labor 1overnment ia
having second thoughts
about forcing Britons lo l~ild!"'-:
abandon their yard's,
gallons and pounds in
favor or meters, liters
and kilograms by the.
early 1980s.
TOMA Im SWl!f ,.. JUICY
MAY&
LOWER
PRlCESt
U:S. NO. I RUSSEn ·'It is clearly lmpossl·
ble to proceed against a
backgroU11d of bosUll·
ty," I~ John Fraser, m~nister m charge of the
government-ordered
switch from Imperial to
metric welehts and
FRESH LOCAL
ITALIAM
ORA•IES NTAllES
lo c~o
, measures.
"Realatance a1alnat L
the 1 rec:ent metrication I
ord•ti bas led u.s to ~ s 5:s100 IAG
69c
view whether we can a-------~~~~ ...un claim universal sup-
port."
Fruer made bis tf.
marks lD an open letter
recently sent to more !!:i1ni~r~~~:~0: &'I 1ioU1£S" PR\ClS metricaUon. So far, the BAR M Ml ~ 'ft ~I com~laory aspect of USDA CHOICE the changeover baa 10111.111!..1ESS
roused lre in the BrlUsh ......, SEV~ •0111.1E
presa, in Parllament 1' A VI!.. ~ " ~~~·:.·:·~·=: A 1''11i BEEF RIASt
tlepeopleinBrltalnwbo HAMS r.·· 12• aro tired of beln1 . LL · 11· U. pushed around by
bureaucrats,.. said An·
tbony Beaumont Dark,
&~r= ~:~~ :u,= FAclM11SC1AUFOIMc•11A• ~9~c
cilT he 4'0 year0 old ~ ... ... U.
stockbroker announced 1--------------------------liiiiiij;;.,....,;;;.;..._
recenUy that any project FOSTER FARMS FRESH . MIU.SHIRE FARMS estimates submitted to
him ualng only the HE• =· ~etrtc 1ystem 'Nill be ,_urned for lndulkla of
lmperlal units. He ad· 11 ' KEYS SA SAIE vocatet the \'oluntary
u.se of both IYltema "ln tandem•• ao u to lessen
Tbel'e bave been no ~E
recent public 091.nlon IM
polls on tbe shift, but let.--~ WISCONSIN LI
YOUMG·M· TENDER
BEEF LIVER
-····~
FRYING CHICKEN
MEATY
I REAS TS
LEGS&
THIGHS
1~!
confusion. -,,~ 159
ters to newspapen seem .r • • to be nmning strong~1--------------------------_., _________________________ _......, ___________________ ...., ____ _.
againstlt. OSCAaMAYEI ~C?L, s129 lilMIUUl s109 A~~to~n~ -••
of London the other day BOLOGNA .:. ... WIENERS -questioned whether the
government ever bad
wide support tor
metrication. ARMOUR 21/2 01.
.. Can Kr. JobnFruer
housewives who prefer •DIM cc:a~~~:.u:-~·o~~= ·----,--EAS
grams and ·ceoumeten •IAMT
to ounces and lncbesf"
r' o-z.
CAM
wrote Pblllp Jooes.
Former Prime
Mlnlster Hanl&d Wilson
ID lMS reluc:tantly com·
mltted Britain to dwlae to the metric system. ID
1989, be set up tbe
MetrlcaUoa Board to
ease the traaaltlon un·
der preaaure from ID·
dustrtaUIU wbo claimed
Brttaba WU out of the
metric atep.
Tbere waa no com·
pullloa In tbe BrlUab
cban1eover untll tile
preJent government of
Prime M1ntlter James
Callagbao. Wlllon •• IUC•
ceuor, pushed throuab
ParUameat the Welpta
and Meuuru Ae& of
1918. Tblt provtded for
tbe ~ out ot the
Imperial a~m. IOmt
of wboM anlta bav• bMa
uaed since Enaland wu
a part of the Roman
Empire. •
DIET RITE OR
R.C.
In the United States,
Prealdeat Gerald R.
Ford lill*I the Metric
CoaY,nlon Act 1n 19'71 aetuni u .9. n1Uonal
policy for lncrtaaed lri!ilnW'!!!~---!'~-"~-.;;;.~~--..... ------~.-....---vo lu ntary uae of the
111tem. There hu been
gt) •ctWh llDee t.ben. Ca•A lnttltuted a .
metric ebanaeover In
1915 wltb the uae of lrUomtMrl ud C.lalua ............ _.
or eenttandit •
DRIED
~~.c::s NOODLES
MRS. FILBERTS
GOLDEN STICK
JAR
I U.
14G
.. ,,
'
l
I
FOOD
pe~lal
D if!t•
By June RoJh
7 ,
.... -..
LiqtJid Diet
Nutrients
There are medical problems which require
a change ln food preparation f« the patient who
can't tolerate solid foods but can-eat something.
These regimes are usually recommended for
short periods of time, or else supplemented with
vitamins.
or the two kinds or liquid diets that doctors
prescribe, the clear liquid diet is the most ex·
treme. It is used to limit the amount of un·
digested food matter in the gastrointestinal
tract. It consists of many s mall ser vings
throughout the day of clear broths, strained
juices, tea, black coffee, and carbonated
bever ages. Sometimes fruit·flavored gelatin
and ices are permitted, as both will liquify at
body temperature.
When a patient can manage to eat some
strained foods and digest milk products, a full
Uqald diet is ordered. This permits some pureed
vegetables -such as asparagus, stringless
green beans, wax beans, celery, carrots,
potatoes, spinach, and tomatoes -be stirred
. into cream soups. Also lender cuts or meat, fish,
a nd poultry that are cooked and finely
homegenlzed before stirring into an allowable
1ctear Qr creamed soup. Cooked, str ained cereals
are advisable at. lf;psl once a dllY . Protei11 may
be added in the fQrm of eggs whipped into egg.
nogs or sort custards Soups are restricted to
clear broth and strained cream soups. Desserts
cen inelude gela&ina, custards, junket.lruit ices,
plain sb~t. 1u1d plalrrtce cream. Be sure that
none of the desserts have seeds, nuts, or pieces
of fruit added.
Plain bard sugar candy may be offered to
the paU..ent, and all permissable foods may be
seasonea with sail, sugar, and mild herbs.
With careful menu planning, you can get a
good balance of nutrients into a full liquid diet.
Remember to serve in small portions at least
s ix times a day. These recipes should prove to
be he lpful when the doctor prescnbes a liquid
diet for your patient.
BiScuit
Toppers
Hearty appetlt.es demand a maindish that's
taste-appealing as well as satisfying, like Ranch
Sty le Casserole wlth Tater Biscuits.
Tater Biscuit Toppers are a blscuit·lover's
delight and the perfect addition to any
casserole. ln this recipe, mashed potato flakes
replace part of the flour, creating a biscuit that is
unusually light and flaky. A few more potato
fl'akes, llghUy browned in a bit of butter, add a
most'att?ctive touch to these golden biscuits.
Although you m ay •wish to use Tater Biscu~~ to perk up your own favorite stew or
malndish, Ranch Style Casserole can add varie-
ty lo/our menu. Ground beef and peas are com·
bine in a robust, barbecue-flavored sauce
easily made from an envelope of brown gravy
mix, catchup, and vinegar.
TATER BISCUIT TOPPERS
t cup flour
t ~cups mashed potato flakes
1 tablespoon baking powder
1-'.r teaspoon salt
l/4 cup plus 1 tablespoon butler or
margarine, softened at room temperature
1'2 cup milk
Combine flour, 1 cup of the potato flakes,
baking powder, and salt ln large mixillg bowl
Add IA cup butter, cut in wi~ pastry blender or
2 knives unUI particles are size of ,small peas.
Add milk and stir until well blended. Knead on
floured surface 20 times. Roll ·out to ~·inch
thickness. Cut into rounds. Arrange on top of
Ranch Style Casserole. Melt remaining 1 table·
s poon butler; stir in remaining 14 cup potato
fl akes. Sprinkle over biscuits.
• RANCllSTYLE CA~EROLE
1 pound ground beef
1 ""2 cups water
'1 envelope (~·OZ.) brown gravy mix
2 tablespoons catchup
.. ~ l !_.ablespoon ..vinegar _
·~ teaspoon onion salt, if desired
1 package < 10-oz. > frozen peas
ilrown ground beef In large skillet, stirring
to crumble; pour off excess fat. Add water, con-
tents of gravy mix envelope, catchup, vinegar,
onion salt, and peas. Simmer S minutes, stirring
occasionally. Spoon into l ~-quart casserole.
Top with Tater Biscuits Bake in 400 degree
oven 25 to 30 minutes until biscuits are golden
brown. 4 to 6 servings.
..
.
Wednuday, May 3. 1978 O~L Y PILOT C3
t ater Biscuits are tops for cpsseroles.
!
"' EGGNOG
1 egg
, 1 teaspoon sugar
1 cup milk
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
Brealc the egg into an electric blender. Add
sugar and blenQ. Add milk and vanilla extract.
Blend well. Makes-1 serving.
'Oriental Chicken Is Fascinating.
,
STRAINED CEREAL
1 cup water
"'• teaspoon salt
2 tablespoons farina. cream of wheat, or
oatmeal
12 CUJ) milk
1 teaspoon butle r
~ teupoon sugar
Combine water and salt in the top of a dou·
ble boiler; brio1 to a boil. At the same time. br-
ing some water to a boil in the bottom section of
the double boller. Stir cereal into the boiling
salted water and place top of double boiler over
simmering water in lower pan. Cook and at.lr
until cereal ls of .a thin consistency, about 8
minutes. Press cereal through a strainer. or
process on high in an electric blender. Add
milk. butter, and sugar; reheat i£ nece.ssary.
Makes 1 serving.
CREAMED VEGETABLE SOUP
1-: cup canned or cooked vegetables
1 2 cup vegetable cooking liqwd
2 cups milk
2 tablespoons butter
2 tablespoons flour
1A il!aspoon salt
, Puree cooked vegeta bles and vegetable
cooking liquid together in an electric blender or
food mill. Set aside. Heat milk in a saucepan. In
another saucepan. melt butter and stir in flour;
stir constantly until mixture is smooth and bub·
bling. Gradually stir bot milk into the thickened
mixture, stirring constantly until smooth. Add
suit and pureed vegetables. Makes 3 servings.
Nc•d
•l•etrleaf
repairst
For CW9lfied Ad ACTION . Call
A Dally Not A._._ilOI"
642-1671
Oriental foods have a certain fascination
and mystique with many people. However,
her e's a recipe /or Chlnese·Style Chicken that
has all the flavor fascination, with none of the
mys terious preparation techniques. Best of all, J
it can be prepared in minutes while a pol of rice
cooks. .
Bite·size chunks of chicken are cooked
quickly in 011, while bright green Chinese pea
pods <or regular green peas if you prefer> are
added the last few minutes. To enhance this de·
ligbtful chicken dis h, prepare a smooth.
flavorful aauce which is easily made from an
envelope of French's Gravy Mix for Chicken.
Salted cashews may be added as a garnish,
fos:. a dish you'll be proud to serve. even to
guests.
Another Oriental recipe to tempt your
palate is Shanghai Meatballs. Jt begins with
ground beef and is seasoned appropriately with
ginger and onion. Chopped water chestnuts
added to the meatballs give them a surprisingly
pleasant cnmcb. ln this case. an envelope or
Brown Gravy Mix will produce an easily pre·
pared. beefy sauce to complement the meal·
balls.
Either dish may be served with a plate or
relishes, a compote of mandarin oranges with
pineapple chunks, crispy almond cookies, and of
course, a pot or tea.
CIUNESE·STVLE CIOCKEN
4 chicken breast halves, boned and
skinned
2 tablespoons oiJ
I envelope Cl-it-oz.) gravy mix for chicken
1 cup water
2 t.easpoons soy sauce
1 can (4-oz.) sliced mushrooms, drained
I medium·size onion, thinly sliced
1 package (6-oz. > frozen Chinese pea pods
or 11..\ cups frozen green peas
1/4 cup slated cashew nuts, if desired
Cut chicken into bite.size pieces. Heat oil in
m edium·size skillet; add chicken and cooks lo
10 minutes or just until pieces are cooked
through. Add contents or gravy mix envelope
and water; cook, stirring until gravy thickens.
Add soy sauce, mushrooms. onion, and pea
pods. Simmer, stirring occasionally, S minutes.
If desired, sprinkle chicken mixture with nuts
before serving. Serve with hot bOlled rice 4
servings.
SHANGHAI MEATBALLS
I egg, beaten
1 tablespoon minced green onion
1 teaspoon ginger
34 teaspoon salt
~~ teaspoon garlic powder
CLIP FRESH HORIZONS BREAD
FORIOC ... -------.-------------..
1 can cs-oz.> water chest.nuts, prained and
chopped
powder, and water chestnuts; mix togethe r
lightly with ground beef and shape into small
meatballs. Brown meatballs in hot oil ; pour off
excess fat. Add contenL., or gravy mix envelope
and water. simmer. starring, until gravy mi x
Lure thickens. Add sweet pickle. Serve with hot
boiled· rice garnished with additional sliced
green onion, if desired 4 ~ervings
f
1 pound ground beef
l tablespoon oil
l e.nvelope ( o/•·OZ. > brown gravy mix
I cup water
,.., cup diagona lly shced sweet pickles
Combine egg, onion •. ginger, &all , garlic
Choose yqur favorite Kelloggs
Mini-Wheats cereal and save 10¢
Decisions,
r Frosted Mint-Wheats are nicely sweet
·Decisions,~
(But then there's Brown Sugar-Cinnamon . . J -.-
n
.,
•
'
I 0AA. Y PfLOT
1_ .. ~npla~ ;.raters
1' When plan.nine· a com-\. • n a c k a o r h o r s ~ teupoon salt
· Phy dlnner menu you d'oeuvre1. Scrub potatoes, dry
· ~t foodJ everyone and prick with a fork.
: lites: And what could b4t MASSED POTATOES Bake ln ~ dep-eea F.
mor. of a 1u.re ibot, ESPAGNOL oven, !O to 60 minutes,
more t.enatile, or euler ' potatoes " untU aoft. Cut potatoes
to dreu up, t'h,n ·the ~ cup plain yogurt ln ball. Scoop out Potato
potato? After all, the ~ tablespoooa butter and place in mhdns
\ plain potato bu lnaplred or marearine bowl. Add 'ogurt and
Potatoes
Ida are
great for
company
dinners.
FOOD
SOD)• of the world's v. cup chopped butter; beat until
finest chefs to invent the · pltted ripe olives 1mootb. Stir ln remain·
moat eletanf' and endur-2 ta bl es po on a lna ln8J"8dlebta. Yield:
m1cluaicdlahet. ._c_bopped~,.......:;.pl~ml~ento---~·---·-·_erv~ln~ ... -· ________ ...:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;:;;;;:;:;;;;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;;;~;;.;..;.;.;....;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;::::~::::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;..;;;;;;;;;;;;;..;..;.;........ ______________ ___ t Potatoes Anna Is a -,_._..._._ timeleaa vegetable dish,
said to have been creat·
ed by a lovesick chef ln
honor of a beautiful lady
named Anna. A new •
veralon·, Potatoes Ida,
paya bo.}Dage to the
state of Idaho. -·
POTATOF.S mA
3 poiands potatoee,
J)Uled, 1llcecl ~-inch
tblck --. 1 cup thinly allced
oolon Salt • J>epper. .
~ cap· butter or ·
margarine, melted,
dh1ded
Paprika
Generousl1 butter the bottom and sides of a
· 10-lncb skillet with oven
proof handle. Une the ·
bottom of the skUlet ·~
wttb overlapping slices . .
of potato 1D concentric circles. Layer 3 or 4
onion sllct'Jll among are
potatoes. Season with
salt and pepper; dot
with 2 tablespoons but·
ter. R~peat procedure
maklne 3 more layers.
Cover skillet. Bake -in
425 degrees F. oven, 50
minutes. Uncover; bake •
10 minutes longer. l'o
serve, loosen pctatoes
around edges and bot·
tom with s·patula; invert
skillet onto heated serv-
ing platter. Sprinkle
with paprika. YIELD: 8
,. to JD-servings.
BOISE CRISPS
4 potatoes
1;, cup butter or
margarine, melted
Seasoned salt Sc rub potatoes, dry
and prick with a fork..
Bake in 42S degrees F.
oven, SO to 60 minutes.
until soil. Cut potatoes
in ttalf. Scoop out and
use for ma s hed
potatoes. Cut skins in
-4 CV.·incb strips. Brosb
with butter and SJ>rlnkle
with seasonecf salt.
Place skins on cookie
s heet. Bake in 350
degrees F. oven, 10 to 15
minutes or until. skins
a re crisp. Serve as
! I
r
Ttina-·
Veggie
Combo
For a long time.
canned tuna was re·
letated to san4-icbes or
salads. U it was aerved ·
in a bot di.ab, it was in-
varta bly the Tuna Noo-
dle C~e. But with
growing awareness of
,bealthful eating pat-
terns, tuna .has now
come ido its own as a
.lo•·ln·calories, low· cholesterol,, maln·disb rooc1: with tbe\.complete
protem nutrition~ con·
slderably more "ix··
pensive beef and other
meat products.
TVMABltOOCOU
CAS8EllOLB . '
4eggs
1 cup buttermllt
2 cans j81h or 'I
oaaces eacbJ tuna ln ve1etable oU • --
· ~ teapoon salt
1 pound (2 cops>
small C\ll"d creamed cot-
tal• cheese
2 packages < 10 oaace1 each) froaeo
ebopped broccoli, 1
tbawed and well drained ' v. cup ebopped onion -1 medi11m tomato. tblDlJ aliced or v. eqp
1llced eberrf tiomatoa
~ cap (t ouncea)
sbredded Jlouarella
cbMM -Beat ei1w;nct but-termilk ID e bow~
Add tunfl, aalt, cot-
la(• ch ... •, broccoli ~ ODkm. Turn Into :a'. ftll . .,...t .. lach ple
I platel « qu1cbe d1iMI.
or fnto oae lJd·lncb
ballna diah. Bake 11a aao d.,.... OV9ll 101 as
mlaute.. Top Witb..Uced
tomatoe• and Xonuella cheese and ~o•tl•a• to bake 10 mlnatu loocer. unUl ..... YlSLD:. to lO.-V· J
~. t ·"
YMALWAYS
. SAftWI .. STA'lm .....
ClllTI ... ... na.-._.,MCll ..... _ . ....., .... ... ~-
.LB.
11111' lllAT• RIB 911F
ROAST WlllllB
SMAU S.D 11.lt LB.• STA~ MOS. $"ii!~··~
9MOIOD
HAM HOCKS
.... CHUCK
ROAST
FOOD
Wine 'n' Chicken
C o o k l n g c a n be i.. cup auaar
creative. And no food al· l tableapoon corn·
Iowa the cook's lmaaina· atarcb
lion aucb free retcn as 'h t e a • p o o n
f
chicken. powdered ein&er
"Stir-Fried Sweet and 2 tablespoon a
Sour Chicken'' la a vinegar l gourmet rect~ with an 2 tablespoons soy f Oriental touch bul il 's sauce
all·Amerl~an In pre· 'h teaapoon salt
paratioo ease. Only the ~_teaspoon pepper
cbopplnc ol ingredients HeaT oll on wok or
Ukea time and a busy large fry pan ; add
boatesa can do this chlckenandsUr-tryover
ahead ol time, storing blgb beat for 5 minutes.
the chicken and Add onions, celery,
veaelablee separately. green pepper and water
chestnuts; stir-fry for 2
minutes. Add pea poda,
pineapple chunka wltb
syrup and brolb ; atlr·fry
2 more minutes. Mix
together sugar. corn·
starch , singer .
vineaar, aoy sauce, salt
and pepper; pour over
chicken and vegetables
in wok. Reduce heat aod
simmer until lhickened,
about 2 minutes. Do not
overcook! Serve over
hot rice or Chinese
noodles. Makes 4 serv·
inga.
w.dlltedily, Mey 3, 1978 * DAIL v ptLOT C3
Wine
roasted
ch/eked with
rice stuffing.
WINE BOA STE D -----------------=~~~~~~ T, urn ·an ordin;ln' tneal
1 teaspoon sail ~ :1/
v. teupooo pepper • t F h c • • ~~;r{~::::i .. ~:::::: 1n o renc ws1ne.
rice, uncooked
1 pound chicken
gizzards, ground
1 cup diced onion
'h cup diced celery
1 tablespoon
chopped chives
1 teaspoon salt
'h teaspoon pepper
2 cupe chicken broth
2 tablespoons white
wine v. teaspoon
rosemary
1/4 teaspoon
turmeric
Sprinkle inside cavity
.. of chicken with 1 teas-
poon salt and 11• teas-
poon pepper; place in
shallow baking dish.
Heat ~ cup rendered fat
in large fry pan on
medium high tern
perature; add rice and
brown, stirring constant·
ly. To browned rice add
ground chicken gizzards,
onions and celery. Saute
until g izzards turn
brown.
Add chives, 1 teaspoon
salt, 1h teaspoon pepper
and chicken broth to
rire and gizzards, bring
lo a boil ; reduce beat,
cover. simmer for 20
minutes. Lightly stuff
chicken with rice stul
ring and truss witb
skewers. <If necessary,
put remaini.og stuffing
in heavy foil and place
in baking pan.)
Melt remainder of
chicken fat: add wine,
rosemary and turmeric
and baste generously
the whole stuffed blrd. Bate, uncovered, at
400°F. for 10 minutes.
Reduce heat to "4>°F.
and bake, 1 bour, cov-
ered, basting every 15
minutes
STIB·FRIED SWEET
AND SOUJl CIDCKEN
2 cups uncooked l·
inch pieces broiler-fryer
cblcten
oil
2 tablespoons salad
1/1 cup sliced spring
onions, tops included
% cup diagonally
sliced celery
l 'h cups of sliced
green pepper
I can (8th-ounces)
water chestnuts, sliced
1 package <&-ounce)
frozen snow pea pods
1 can (H~-ounces)
pineapple chunks
'h cup chicken broth
"Go••••·•·" Reclpu,
newldeea,
menu• •nd
local food •d•
. Wedneld•ya.
In the
DAILY PILOT
. ,..,..-:;.:-;:;••\ ·. ~ ·~!--'.r·--'-::-•·~• ··.~ .. ~? '"""" .............. _.. '\_\. ·j -a.." ~
•• ~ .... ·ht .. ~· •• ... •..• ~ j-....... ' "'\'. ~~.-:-:.·-· ".,-.. ;,r .: ''.' ··.·. " ~2ii71/.-:.:. ~"t.~ I·•'• •• .,., ·,·~fl I ' ~I i......... ., " ~~ ...., ......... ~ ·-· . . . , ..... • "'!::;...~ ·:: ··' ~,\-('f. '(i:!}, .
·:..:..:.·"" l • ' ~-'rY:;J' ... --..---.... ~ _, ____ .. '. ,,,
Come in now for your
free copy of our
exclusive Cordon Bleu
recipe of the week.
fBuild • fl.I ..,, a4 12
f h\d thf'm only•• ou• mrnt rounff'f t
For almost 100 years. the prestigious Cordon Bleu Cooking School in
Paris. France has served as the training ground for some of the world's
greatest chefs. Its outstanding reputation has made It synonymous with the
finest in French cooking techniques. It was here that 100 lbs. of our
Bonded Beef was put to the test. And the overwhelmingly favorable
re.action of the Cordon Bleu staff prompted them to develop a dozen
different recipes just for us. Lucky's Bonded Beef was now deemed
worthy of be;ng proclaimed the beef that meets the standards of the
Cordon Bleu.
fortun ate enough to ~eceive ·a new one absoutely free each week. 1ust by
stopping off at our meat counter and picking one up. There's no purchase
required.
One. two, three you're a gpunnett
This week our recipe is POT AU FEU A LA FRANCAISE. (pronounced
Pot of er). Like all the Cordon Bleu redpes we offer. it's easy to
prepare. You 'JI need either a boneless tip or a cross rib roast. plus lots of
vegetables like carrots, turnips. leeks. celery. onions and garlic. Collect the
complete set of twelve Cordon Bleu recipes and enjoy a dozen wa ys of
serving your family the beef that mee~ the s tandards of the Cordon Bl~u .
Look for the gold label on packages of our Bo nded Beef. It's your
guarantee of complete satisfaction or your money back. From delicious
Cordon Bleu recipes to great everyday low prices o n a wide variety of
foods. at Lucky. that's what discount Is all about.
From them ... to us ... to you.
Since the policy of the Cordon Bleu has always been to carefully protect
their cooking secrets, we felt extremely honored and privil eged that they
would share their exclusive recipes wttp our customers. And now you're
Fresh Bonded Beef
CAOSS
RIO ROMT 14 8
llONttf ~!> OONOl 0 Ill It CHUC~ ID
OlADECUT
CHUCK STEAK 88 00N0£00rfl lll e
RID EYE FILET
IJ1"(1•
OONEl.BS TIP STEAK
GP.OUHO OEEF PATTIES
•h 2.78
.• 2.08
~~~,-,~:t •Al J•t&Au 3.29
I
(
Meatltems
SLIC£0 OEEF LIVEP. _,... ·• .88
• COP.tllSH GAME HENS
(.l\Alll • 700/ f\'IO'o •llOI•~ ,. 1.39
JIMMY O£AH SAUSAGE i "9 Cl()r\llti '1"'11..., ,..,
CUP.£81 HAM HALF ~ llO'ot,I.,, , .. •tOvJl I• 2. 78
HOJ'Mil. SUCID DAC.<;>~ "Co 1 . 79
LA.DY LEE sua:D OACOH .1wic..a•-..lo•·,,a •Oft •LO "6 1.38
FAAMEP..IOHH OACOH 1 49 ~<10 ••• "'<t '
LOIN POM CHOPS
""'°'""C.00. POP.K lOIH P.OAST
>'"40ottW' "'' •VII "" PORK SPAAW~S
(()UNlh)lfll ""'"°"""' (,.-.
POP.K LOIN CHOPS
-..cl"' •• 1. 78
.• 1.98
•. 1.36
T-DONE
STEAK
OONOIO DHI 10lt<
TOP SIRLOIN
STEAK
OON£L£~~00NO!O ll! ff
lOtM lO
238
7 ·DONE CHUCK STEAK
tl()oQOIWI' •O 1.18
LAP.GE END P.10 ROAST llt)ltllll)~ll .• 1.68
!f~~~ .~D P.10 STEAK .n 1 • 7 8
Canned & Packaged
LLAOYLEE
DEVEP.AGES 2 5 !~flAllOr\~ l'l~OlPO~l
I JI~ Oil e
J:LIBDYS
TOMATO JUICE ~9
<10 Ol (.AM e"' I Hl·C ~IHKMIXES 1 29 ·~·~ '910/ C:•" • A OEl.MONTEP£AP.H~~~ .S5
L HUNTS POTATO~.'°'<• ... 27 L HAP.VEST DAYTOP.TIUAS ''°""' 6"'1.t4 ,,,, .. " .39
LADY LEE PAN COATING 98 •JO/ C•~ •
A~~TAGGREEH O~~ t•" _24
P PINEAPPLE JUICE
0 '"°''" ..oCI < •"-.59
P POP.K 6 DEANS
o""""'
Canned&Packaged
!POTATO
~!~~y ~9
_ '140! lOAI ....
I' K£P.H'SF1.UITNEOAR • 6 .t YAM••l t'O/ (Atii .25
I' ORTEGA CHILI SAL.SA "9 h \1\11" IOI (Allt .V
iormGOTACOSH~ "'4 .49
P VI.ASIC PICKLE SP£A~S 0 JVAl'ffllO '}Av/,,._,_ .69
P GATOMDE DRINK 47 0 >1UI 8' •
P Hl·HO CMCKERS 69 0 ............. ,,. ,(I/""'.
I' RICE A II.OHi 6 ~tWlf~ 'VAAlfl4\ l) ,()/ t'IOI .49
I' PLANTER'S PEANUH
0 \.lA"''·· 1•0I t•' 1 .69
I' MACAP.OHI C, CHmE 0 l<OIDI~""""'-· I ,Uf Cl(J• .25
P ROSAMA GEAHS
0 MIMU ''"°' o~ ,4 7
Dairy & Frozen
£LADY LEE
ICECREAM 99 ~AN~'t GAi (IN e
Delicate5sen
;:
OSCAR MA YER
VARIETYPAK 149 ~I(( 0 •3 VAl\J! 11( ~'
"0 1 Pl<G
P OSCAP. MA YEP, OOl.OGHA o ... ('" '""~'~' ·101 """ 1.09
L ~~~.~~ >70/ IAA .97
P Plll.SOURY ROLLS
6 ou•11••••"' ao1 ""<> .49 b HORMEL WP.AN~~~ 1 .59
b ~~REUA 'il.~~E'"'' 1. 79
! ~~0P.filSt.ICE00~l 1.09
Health & Beauty Aids
r HEAD SHAMPOO
0 "4"40., 0 °"""" 1 ... 9 Clkc.1111" 10()/ 11'1 ...
A P.M.ONFUX (~~ .... (QIOI'°"'" t)O/ ... 1.39 A FLEX CREME P.INSE 29 111'11\<.>toOIC. 0-1• tlOC1'< •i(;I 0'• 1. b NIVEA LOTION •out 011 • 99 b TYLEHOL• TADlm 2 19 Ol""'""'""tt(,IH ..... 0 )U) ,
Household & Pet
I' DOWNY SOfT[HEP. 0 IAIJl<C ' 'MO/ O'· 2.49 b FAOAL TISSUE
'.:,~6!! __. .. fl ~.... 10(l(I OQt .39
l Hl·OP.I PAPER TO~ .. llQ •• 39 L UQUIO OfTERGEHT
1•lW1ft-U()ll" ,55 L PUMilA DOG CHOW
Ml\l()t< •010 OA~ 2,53
. liquor
GAUO P.£0 ROSE~~.~ 011 2. 99
p JOHNNY W AlKEP. SCOTCH
0 1U0 .. 011 .......,., t J\ol• II• 17 .49
LUCKYDMNOY
• 1•,.1n 01• 9 ,:).3
''° ........ ~""•' .• .... _ .. , .•• , o., ... -~·
Produce
FRESH
5TP.A Wl:RRIE5 .59 !PINI 3.), OUAAI
LOOSE
CARROTS
lllW C, I fU '>H lll .17
VALENCIA
OP.ANG ES
f t.Al 01 IUI(( lO .19 -------
OUlK TURNIPS
GRAPEFRUIT
fHO<Jl'.,,...ft ~•COM~11A
DISHGARODI Pl.ANT
0 J()tUO Ol •UllH.ll•A~O
.o .29
t• .18
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~APPY
CINCO DE
MAYO!·
... what discoJ111t is all about;
I ltAJtAM) ..
ht IO. ITATI COUSU l&.VO.
PUW!ln'Olf Pl MO. IUCUO Aft.
•IUMA'AM ... , U 'AUtA AYINU•
.. ".. .. \."' .. ~ .. -.... • • ., t • ,.,, ~ • I _. • ., •' ••• • ,# ·"'-'• ~ I • ., i'-.•
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• .._.. ... 9'IOVI
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vl•~• ... "'V" ~ ,....,._-'"' " Vo.., '"""," ¥wt y. 1010
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DAILY t A.Ill. ·~ ... Wll,..INITD AVDf\11 •wtlTWNtTIJI • ......,,.,.
t111t 9"!MOOA'-" 1"'9f'f , tf'I•, r •••" --""" Ofll
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I'
<9 DAILY Pll.01 Wednesday, May 3, 1978 FOOD
Fireplace Corn Popping: Let Flames Die DoWn
POPCORN POPPER
-·•vour ~nl column
oo DO· fat popcorn ·
m akiAg Interested me.
Where could one
purcbase the popcorn
baaket to wbleb you re·
ferred! A gourmet
shop? Would It be suJta·
ble over dJrect. heat: a
barbecue or range.top
burner!" -Marcia G ••
Nortbrldge.
A : The wire basket is
ror use over direct flame
--in the fireplace or
perhaps a campfire. ll
wouldn't be swtable for
the uses you mention.
Most likely place to find
one is in a Shop t hat
specializes in fireplace
equipment. Or, read on
.. After reading about
fire place popcorn pop·
pers, I bought one at
Sears. It (the popcorn>
burnt black. What am I
d oing wrong ?" -
Sh aron O .. Woodland
Hills.
A Fireplace popper!>
are tricky lo use and do
take some practice. You
must keep the basket
above the flame. not in
it. and the basket must
be kept·in constant mo
lion Cgood exercise > Let
the flames die down a
bit ; don't try to pop corn
an a roaring inferno
WINE CALORI ES -
"One thing I rind dif·
fic ult to abstain from Is
wine. I am especially
fond of Catawba. Please
advise what kind or wine
is lowest In calories." -
Mrs. J .E. 8., Old Towo,
Fla .
A . There art> lllen.1lly
thous ands .of kinds or
wine. so hcn"s a general
rule. the sweeter the
wi ne and the higher the a l cohol conte nt ..
the more calories
C atawba t!> de ·
finitely a sweet !high·
calorie) wine: about 125
c alories per 3-ouncc
serving 114 per cent
alcohol l Try to develop
a taste for lhl' crackly
ctry. ltght 'proof wine.,
like dry Ch-abhs. as lo"'
as 59 l·alories i I I per
1·cnl alcohol >
SA i.AD BAR
COM PLAINT -"J join
you in your appreciation
or salad bars. but have
one complaint: persons
who are assembling
their salads ... talk
over the display. and
spray It with saliva. In
your position as a re·
porter, you might induce
restaurants to place a
sheet of glass over the
salad." Helen s .. Moun-
tainside, N.J.
i\. There are such de
'ices for salad bars.
"'1th a sheet of clear
plastic, aptly named a
"Sneez<'·Guard." availa
b le in com m e r cial
resturant supply houses
FETA C ll EESt:
CALORIES -"I'm a
vegetarian but use some
of your tecipes. l\s I
count calories it's good
to see a calorie count
per portion. I have had
trouble finding the count
ror feta cheese ..... -
Doris. E., Philadelphia,
Pa.
A. Feta is becoming so
popular that we get
several letters every
month about It. Feta
cheese. at 40 percent (at,
is 76 ca\ories per ounce.
That's &bwer than Swiss
or Cheddar (105 and 110
per ounce>.
SOIDUM ALERT -Re= March .. Reader
Recipe" winner, (Low·
Ca lo rie Low ·Salt
Sauce). "You have done
a o injustice \o -real
hypertensives who must
eliminate salt from the
diet. All cheese enept
those labeled salt-free
coata ln salt . All pre ·
pared must ards. h ot
11epper saaces contain
harmful salt. Prepared
horse r1dJ8h II laaded
wltb salt. Margarine,
too. Tbe same effeds,
sans salt. caa be ob·
ta ln e d w l U1 d ry
must ard. eayenae or
black pepper dry horse
r adllb. aalt.fne baUer.
Al you m•Y ,_.., I •tn
• .. acute bypeneulve -
3" on r 140 -tefore ar ·
rested with d iet and
medlc1tlo11 ... -F . C.
McC., Greenvtue. S.C.
A. Thank you for the
war n inas and
alternative recommen·
dation1. This i1n 't a
therapeutic diet column,
10 n wasn't our intention
to recommend lh• r•·
cipe for patients on
alrlcl 1alt-fre diets. We
picked It as a wiTln~r
becauae we lhouaM lt
would b • welcomed
By Barbara Gibbons
therapeutic diet
diabetic, ~um or fat·
restrict.eel, cholesterol·
controlled -should
never use any recipe
that incl\Jdes any ingre·
dient not on your doc·
tor's Ii.at of permitted
foods. •••
1.
dishes in fancy foreign do them under th e
dress ... all non· broiler. The low-fat
fattening. Be sure to use yog uart baste is an
fat-trimmed ground authentlc t.ouch.
beef, not ordlnary ham-INDIAN MINCED
burger (more than dou· BEEF KEBOBS
ble the calories.> 1 powld fat-trimmed
In istead of burge r iv beer round, ground 2
o v e r t h e c o a l s • tablespoons lemon juice
American-style , in· 1 tablespoon instant·
parseley (or 4 teaspoons
dried>
'• .teaspoon coarse-
ground pepper '·'2 teaspoon ground
cinnamon v. teaspoon ground
clove
1~ tesapoon chili
powder
meatballs and thread 1111
skewers. Brush lightly
with yogurt, if desired.
by the average Your l e tter brings
diet conscious reade r up a warning that
who simply wants to we'd like to reamrm :
c ut down on s a l l a nyone on any "special"
as a pre ca u ll o n . medically-prescribed
Hamburgers again?
Even hamburger fans
get tired of the same old
thing in t})e same old
way. Today we've got a
trio of ground beef
augurate your cookout blending noar
season with spicy lonion,chopped
ground b eef kebobs 3 cloves garlic .
threaded on skewers. Ir minced <o r one·h alf
you're not ready for al teaspoon instant>
fresco dining quite yet, •.4 cup chopped fresh
Optional: one-half cup
plain low·fatyogurt
Combine all ingre-
dients except yogurt
and toss lightly to blend
well. Shape into eight
Broil or barbec ue.
brushing frequently with
yog urt , until well ·
browned. about 7 to u
minutes. Turn to brown
evenly. CServe with rice
i,immered 1n fat
skimmed beet broth. 11
desired.) Makes four
se rvings, about 195
ca l ories each with
yogurt and without. it.
180 calories each.
~
Ralphs •• ~for N•mber _One Club savings
and
,. 1111102
IDllLE r.DIFON IDB.Er.DIFON ltt H almple .. th.._ . .,,,...nt Ont of the
Rtlphl Double Coupons In thit Id along
with any ,,.,.nctllflf'I "cenll off'
coupon and get doubtl the umoa when '°" ~ 11\e a.n. Limit I coupone per
e\lltomer. Not to include ·reteillf" °' '*"" CO\IPC>N Of exceed the v1lue ol lhe
item. 0"9r eflec:tive Mey 4 through May
10, 1971.
~·u f:'f'I H ,, C 'V(<.t'' 11 oriq W tnot ; , •,. rr.Jnulcl~IU-•' \
t• '' 11 •l 11.t~ WI Or-wO• l'l: t1' r• ~I~
•t I a I I C' lff., .. I t f'.'fl"O '"'fl ,,, ~ t I
llm11 OM Covpon '•' Menulec:1ur.f'e l:011pon
end llmtl 6 DO\lbl• Coupont Per c ... tom•r
Co.ipon fllec:llte lllet 4 thni Mer 10. 1t7e
• • , ft,..,, ,t .. -.... • .. •a t11',..
t I f' It f ~ f, 0
•• l't .I ..
r---9.-eiii·~
l DOUBLE COIW-ON
I •'•'••'-I '' v[ .. tn 'if J• j -. • ,., 1 n • "" •"V1df'41,o• .. • 11111
' .. ,, 1 • • • .,,
I
I Umll One Coi.pon , .. M111ufec:IU•ef . Coupon
: end • lotel ol la Double Coupon• p., Club M-be•
Co-l119CI••• Mey 4 tlvu 111., 10, lt71 I '""' .. MCID"" ... Otik"..._........,...._. • .,.~o..c. .... c,,.. I
, ___________________________ _,
r-.-aiii9Meiii'i
DOOBLE COIFON l
• • • .. t 1~ t: vtlf.... 4 , • .. ' I "' m4n; I! I ...
1•r .... o ,, 1 ·' "'' ,, ,, , ,, • ~ ,,, , I ~ ..
I "'' t .,, '•'"
I j ' I •• "C ~· , I
I ltmtl One C-p., Menulectu111'• CO\llMl'I
I end 1 rou l d 12 OCK/ble Co.ipona '•' Club 111-ber I I I C011pon fll..:to•• Mey 4 t11tv Mey tO. 1t7' I l ' '""c....,.w-.oN\.v.._..,._,..._..._..,. .. ~o ... e-..c•'_)
~-------:..:--.::_----------------
Pr1• ~~nf fht> (•.)(J~ ato"Q wtlO t)l1y Ont" tn.Jllufa<.tu' f'f \
.,111• u•t 1t.4" '' d qt"t duu~ l''t ~\ t~of IGi
in , ,,..,. r ~"''-,. ... t..iero ""'' • ''
LHTlll OM Coupon Per Menufec:lvrtt't Coupon. e...S Limit I Double Coupont ,., CllllOmer
CO\lflOft lllec1lw• MIY 4 ~., MIJ 1'. 1'71
~mmmmrmmmmmmmmHTimn
't'"' ~I (O\IO'lftAIO"~""~l"'~,'l""''•i'!vr..Clu•fl#'
• ., ,. t.• .. tt o l')f"r CU-..04 1•• 11.Pi •.,,
., j. '4"" ..... It I ....... I'" II' ~
Limtl OM c_ , ..... nu1ec:1 ... ..-e c-....s Limit e Dout>M COVflOl'I ,., Cwtf-.
C~Jllec:flwe Mer 4 llltv Iller 10, 1trt
r-NUMBiil+Hi-Ciii"~
DOOBLECOIFllt l "• , -·t , "i r-.~·t ,i.. ••1 -aru1J' ,. I
• • •• "" .·'" f· ,, ••• 011 •• , A
, 1 '~ • ' f•Pf 1., t fl I • ••• 0 •r-(
, I 1 11• '1
l tmll 0,.. c °"90" Pw M ll>Ul«hH.,., CCIUPO" I
1...:1 e lolll ot 12 Oout>te Coupone p., Chlb .. .-f
Coupon Ellec:titt Mey 4 tlv11 Mer tO, lt7t f I ,..,,.._,...,o"u ___ " ___ c ... c .. • I , ___________________________ _,
BALPBSSUPBBD'SDIOllOICI
BULl:BllF SALB I
I V\D•/'
t••.1
WhOlt~I
BeefChld
II-Slffkt 01 11--.1·•-Slellltor
~ e--.Ct.ic:k
Slellll-or
11-lllu-_. .. .,., ,,.,.....
clir'I on INck·
-.tltd .... °' cut
Wllolt9"f
Rib
SllndW1g ll1ll llo.tl
lftd S.7 lllb l ..... L H.,,.,.,., wiM •llY
~onlhick·
--t&Holcvt
5-7 Toti llOUIMI 11"b .,..i Top llCMld
A-1..._.,.,wlll
w.-y~on ... _ ........ .,.
cvL
S·7 lollom llOUllO
Sleeh and lottom
llovnd A-t. Number
wlll •ll<J cleptlldiftg on~MCl.tu
ol c:"'
Discover the savi!.1115 when you ::Z
USDA Choice Beef tn bulk this w at Ralphs.
Relphl wiH cut end lrim your MllCtion
(25-40 lb, erg. wt I to order and bulk wrtp It too. Wholtllldl
USDA Beef .98 Here's why you save. ... ~CMD~( Ctuck -• no lftdl'fidual wrapping of mMt In tl'ep 1nd clHr film 111Mn1 "' Iese m1terl• COit and more u vl1191 for you,
11 $•25 tit. 1119. WI,)
• no lndlvldu1I tctllng or libeling muns lett labor COii, 10 11a you tnJoy IM tnlnp, 'u~ Whale .., • bu~lng In bultc means '"' hlndllng in the 1tor9, ao •• p111
,CMOI'( Rib ... the uvlng1 on to you. .. • no lndl¥klull ~ af mHt tor hulng. = ........ ) Vltlt ow bulk beef dtlpllry In the
11a mNI c:... and c~ the ..mg..
,USDA $la't Bulle Beel sale Items .Ubfect to weghll availabi.
mic£ Loin .... Coupon la11lng1 for ..
p,..,.,., ~"'coupon elOn<J w1in any ()lie mil>CJf3Clu<~ s
(Ml~ utl C'l<IW'I lO"<l q« ~ I ... U .. lqS N04 tc.
ti '•'t:f' ()( ''~ (°"°°"'\ ('f €'• j,"t.'(I fhtl -~ I
Ltml4 OM Coupon Per lllltftullJCfuflf'e Coupon
111d llmll I Double Coupon• ,., C1t•f-
COllPO'I llttcllwe llllJ 4 IN11 Mer 10, 1t7t
tft·{!Uit11i(JOfl<1iU'\011<\ I'-. •ll'l1f • .C.'1t•••"'
,, •• .i•t 'II .. IH• '''Ill t •.
r-NUMm+M~"'
i DWBLECOIFllt
I y,,,.spnt 1f\IS. CCNpor! ._.,,,,~ "''" &l"ft are m.,, 1 te''"'~·
f ~"t\ l If l'lvlJOf'\ II' 0 Ql'I dO ,[;" !ht.t !.ct~ihQ\ ,.. JI '
t .. 1.;.1uaf' rr •a If'• or ,, •• ,. rr.h.1Clt.>" o• e~cetfct '"'
11 ,. I •r,. ,ff•"'
: llmt1 OM Co.opor1 Pw hnullc:lll-" Coupo<i
•"4 e IOI.II ol 12 Double COYPOftl per CJull M-.. -
I Coupon £11ec:tlv1 Mer 4 OW11 May 10. 1t71 I I 1 ... c-•....,<'N1.• ___ ,. ___ c ... c.'..)
~---------------------------
Pantry Fillers
~ .... ~ Comet Cleanser
~P-V.,...ele Puritan Oil
~ P~kand Beans
~ l:ii,rk: sottener
~.50011'~ Drive Detergent
Super Deli
~--· ....... ~ Dubuque Plumpers
r) loll·Hub
t\!J Imperial Margarine
~ GllifeO ~Sliced Salami
Jin 69 bU. I
1toi 83 bll •
$301. 89 cen I
Uot 94 1111 •
11• Uoe.
bOa
:::: . 79
1101. 101
"""'
fib. 69 pl! ••
l or. 75 ......
r---,~•-,·---. I .... .21 + .02 ...-. Coupon 1451 I
I loldm -139 I
I ~ .. "' ·:::· I lftHUI 1fV' II ... WllllO" I Limit 0... 11'1m .... OM c...., .._, CllllGlnlr. I c...,.. llfec:ll¥e .. .., 4.111., 10. 1111
L -~UPON .I ----------
Pricll tnlctiv9May4tru May10. 1978 ............ ,.... .................
................... 1?111tt.
'-rg=:..-.:.:••nce .
: ....... ._..., ...... 1 -•-=> -. .., 1+ f'!mTI -....... u,_, J -
• : ,...... : -.:~F. ~ .............. " .....
0
6 additional
coupons for
Humber One
Club members.
Hewe )'OU joined Ralphs
Humber One Club yet •..
It's easy to join. Stop by
~_neam1'lcdpM~ __
details.
Supel' Produce
l
~s;eetcorn 2 ior a29
~ NtwCtopTerHY-.17 Onions "'' lb
~ Pot8biSn•• Wh•lt Aou ,,., .19 lb
~P-;;d"Pe• per .39 lb.
Golden Premium Meats
~ •1tatof S1Hon·Wllll1lupply1. .. u 299 Chinook Salmon ~~.:C:": per
Ill
iOA eeef.,lllC11f ,, .. 189 ~MOit( Beef Brisket lb
~c;~&eet -.79 lb
USOAl INICllUCll ,,., 129 ~c"~1c1 7-Bone Roast lb
USO~ '"' Clluck·lonelftt 209 (m1c1 Cube Steak · ,,.,
lb
r---,~•,··--. I s ... 1 00 + M Tu wllll C°'4*1 1451 I
Sllow• ,_ o.cor-c--.
I f~ ciisket retuler 10 0 I
I Deep Fryer ri': ... C!! I I Llmtl O... Ii-.... ONCotttpOn,., c....,,.,. I
Coupon £""1M M1Y 4·Mt1110. \111
L C OUPON I
__________ ..
•C .. ltf1"111 .. 0-.~._,..._
I lfOfnbe,. One au,, Members
22• ,.-········~·-········"\ ............. .wy ................ ,.
.... "' ..... ...a. •
(1WS .... ..,.wtl ... .........
'usD~J Whole Top ,CJO!tl ROllld 1'' A'So • _$_ :· U ACholce
Bulcllll •
111 PUn:hase wfthcoupon
.... Ufllll OM lleM 011t Celll*I,., C..i-• c-..11 .-tt.. M•r • tllf11 "''' 10, ma. \ii , .. ,c;._v., .. 011u .. ,,.... ...... ,... ....... "'9"'.._...°"'ci..c.,, ~ ••••••••••Co.ON·•••••••••
~
3'I t 11111 St~ CISTA U
PWI It fAWICIA, lMlllA ll.l$
............... -........ ~ __ .. -....... .. ----tfll'.ft,..., .. ,, ....... ..... tlllto!c .... -.. ........ ,~ __ ... _
15411 t; mtQlm, WHlllllSfH
$101( 1111$: ••• w, ... , ~
l
\
..
' .
NO OBLIGATION-llOTlllNG~ PURCHASE! OFFICIAL RULES ON BACK OF . WCTOR CARD!
All C0l1EC'IOI cum ARE IClll. Health & Beau~y A.ids ••• Plu.s More!
· · Here Are Juat A Few of Ou Bingo f/.2 Wiruaer1l
lllllS 11.-SZ ODDS CHAIT EFFECTllE APlll 11. 1171
ODOI ODOS OODS N ill TOTAL 1 13 21 WAL.Ul N IZO tlCUT ncms TICIITI
SZ.000 18 1,150,800 134.115 .r.-
11.000 i· 111 174,033 13.317 .....
1100 540 se.m 4,487 2.244
110 2,7115 11.802 U2 446
15 15,430 5,801 446 223
11 112.240 113 14 7
TOTALS 191,124 '185 13 7
These odds are In effect until one month after start. Up.
dated odds will be posted trt all paftic11)8t1ng stores and any
newspaper ads.
Promotion available at Saleway Stores located in
Cahforn1a covnt1es ot: Los Angeles, Ventura. San
Bernardino, J:l1vers1de, San Luis Obispo. Inyo,
Orange. Santa Barbara, Kern and Mono ( 166) and 1n
Clark County, Nevada (13).
Beginning April 19 and scheduled to end July 18.
1978 or when all tickets are distributed. Promotion
termlnatton will be announced.
Beef Chuck
NICK STATHIS RAMONA CABRAL
High land Maywood
. '2,000 •1000
BINGO WINNER BINGO WINNER
AT ALL ORANGE COUHn S~AY STOHS
'3°0 General Admission Tickets
SJOO only each to
CALIFORNIA SURF
Prot.u1o..a1 Soccer r ...
vs
STUTTGART
May 12-Anahehn Stodi11111
SA VE 12°0 PER TICKET!
rEAK or ROAST
CRAG MONT BEVERAGES
:!~~:4g s100 c
FRESH' FRYERS '
U.S.O.A.
Grade A Fryers.
The sweetest,
Most Tender
Chicken In
Town!
c
.o.:s. 0::111 .
~Downy Softener:.;~c~:-s249
~Pinto Beans TownHouse 4-lb. $149 e::;;;;;:;' (Dried Val'tety) Pkg • .
i~'f-)Cake Mixes~~Z.~i:~:1~&e~
#·f~Cheerios Cerea1.~.,~9c
~-Par liquid 4' 79c 'e-='>Pork & Beans 3o-oz.49c ~Oish Oetergent ..aL M r TownHoose ........ Can
Bottle Shop Buys!• Wine Department!
Effective In Uceftsed Safeways. Prices Effective In Lloensed Safeways.
GlnorVodka JableWines
Winner's $
1
99 La Mesa $199 HIGHWAY eo-Proot ~&~>sangria ~
CLING PEACHES E~> 1.75-ltter 3-t11er
Whole Body _--=i-.., lb.
... ~ Fan11er John
~~-PORK CHOPS
39
Boneless Stllaks R:., '141 USDA Choice Beef Chuck.' .. 111.
Smolr-A-Roma Ham • 11 Fully Cooked 1 Boneless (Water Added) .. .lb.
Beef Chuck A~a~~t $ 29
USDA Choice Beef ........ lb. 1
~~~~-~ ... 1-.r-':: •1•
Ctnmk BolognaR~.~· •108
or Sdtaml, Safeway ....... It.
Rainbow Trout s111 lda._o, Frozen-Defrosted lb.
~!Yk~~~~~~~~~~ ... ~:· .,,.
With Albs Attached
l.k*S.11age 1aoz.49c
Farmer John Pork .. ··-Pllf.
Cinco de Mayo Mexican Foods!
~~~M~n~~ ......... 111? !!P.~ Slt93·:;•1°0
Ral"ldom Weights Red or Green Chills
l:-.~dllldlsm3 '1 ~ Vlctartl 686 Laa P1l"'aa............ For ~alsa ......... 1141.lln la"'
Grten ·~lillTlqUlol · 990 1-S>TIDDlllaorRed. A50 ~M•t-Kea .. 11 'A-GZ. llD La Victoria. ••.• -.741.~
-'Clllll•a --190 1-+••111C11111· a• Lu P•lmaa ...... CM Ortega WhOle7--.... la ....
Yelow'e~ir.g--:;;ji-'----· -~~-•11•-Wllllef'--..Jblls · -·--S4!HS-tdeal Dessert.3 9 c 80-Proof •.. -1.15 Llllr Almaden Mountain ... -~ •• 1.5-ltl9r,. '1--
~...._2t:-E+)2~~~.!~•a•• ~~·~Y ................ 75h~.5395
~ TequDa s51s Cabernet seoo BWE BONNET ~Two Fingers. 80--Proof~ • Sauvlgnon Inglenook ........ 7'IO ml.
MARGARINE
GRIDf-UAA"
LARGE EGGS
~~ego
100'lt WHOLE
WHEAT BREAD . ~w;::.::490
I~>~
. IAIDEUMP
ENCHILADAS
~::~:=,,90
~ ~
Dried Prunes
/ J:'~e 79c , ..........
a. . • .,,j
H•allml Plneapples •. 79°
Crllp Ca 1 Dis 2-11r.,... :mo
Red Potabmu.s.No. 1 ... 2ljP
Grapeftalt ~~It? ... 190 • AVOCADOS
CaUfomfa Grown
s
Sa..t,way . suggests Frozen
VeQetables as the best way
to offset the temporary high ~oat of ~eah vegetables.
Take advantage of these
excellent vllue1. , •Peas & Carrots~...._,,
•P.m 1-i> • Balilln Corn ~ eMlxedV_....._
• • 10IO ••r•to. Dr,. '""POft h.ch • w No. Coeet tt1""11y, \.llfUM ••eot. •., e. c..-.. ...... 8eft ae••
• • 211 I . 17th St,. Co.te ..... . • Adel'MI et M .. notle, ~ ... • 1'411 C._, Dr. at W1IM1t, lrwlfte
•
,
CJI OM.VPllOT ~.May3,1'71
SandWich· Stars·
Mr. William Tell
U )'OU are one or the
51.2 percent of
American households
c:onslstlng of no more
lb~ two people, the ac-
companYio• recipe for
Sandwich William Tell
js for you. It almost
seems too easy to be
good: it uses readlly
avaiPable inexpensive
i ngredients and it
boiled ham
2 large slices Swiss
cheese
Peel, core and slice
apples In ~ inch rings.
Melt butter In 4l frying
pan, add onion and ap-
ple rings and c:ook until
apples are just tender.
Liehtly grease the bot-
tom of the serving dish.
P l ace bread in the
center of the dish, cover
bread with ham slices,
put apple rings and
oolon on top and cover
with cheese allces. Bake in a ~ degree F. oven
for about 8 minutes unW
cheese melts and la bub-
b 1 y. Garnish with
chopped chives it availa-
ble. Serve with cold ap-
ple juice.
Wiiiiam
Tell \
sandwich
can be
assembled
In 1 o minutes.
FOOC
t
'
doesn't t ake special .------------------~===::::=========~------...... -----
cooking skills. What's
more, it's so flexible
that if three or more
persons show up fOl'
lunch it doesn't take a
lot of arithmetic to in-
crease the number of
servings. But most im-
portant of all, it tastes
good. All the ingredients
have empathy for one
another.
Coming to us straight
from Switzerland
Sandwich WUliam Tell
consists of a slice of
bread topped with thin
s lices of boiled ham.
Sauteed apple rings go
·on top of the ham and a
blanket of Swiss cbeese
covers all. A few minutes ~re serving
the sandwich goes into a
broiler and comes out
bubbling and hot with a
•'flamekissed'' ap -
pearance.
First step in the pre-paration is to peel, core
;lnd slice apples into ~
inch rings. Melt the but-
ter in a frypa.a'8Dd saute
the apple rings on each
Bide until tbey'retender,
not soft. Grease a
broiler proof dish light-
1 y, then assemble the
:.andwich -it actually
I akes about 10 minutes
to finish the sandwich.
:FOR ONE SERVING
0 venproor serving
dish
1 tart apple
l tablespoon butter
1 tablespoon minced
onion
1 thick slice of firm
hread <white, whole
wheat, or rye)
-·
2 slices ba ked or
Paying
Them
To Lose
S PRING GROVE, Ill.
'AP ) --D c fl a tin E:
waisthnes al Intermatic,
In c. on cc ·brou g ht
employees S3 a pound.
Inflation being what it
1s, t he company is now
'>frering workers $4 a
pound.
•·Participation is up 50
percent this lime," says
l·ompany president Jim
Miller, who thought up
I he "Weightstakes" pro·
~ram two years ago to
try to get his employees
to 'trim down. He shelled
out $3,000 to successful
weil{ht·losers the first
).!O·round. _.
This lime , Inlermatic.
" m a nufa cture r o·r
timers and heaters.
'' outd have to pay out
S23,000 if all the pa rtici-
nants reacb their goals.
"Our heaviest entry is
a man weig hing 388
pounds -204 pounds
overweight. A key punch
operator weighing in at
:1 o 2 p o u n d s i s t h e
heaviest female entry
:md i s 144 pounds ove r·
weight." said the 165-
pound Miller.
•1Tbe employees asked
me to start the P.togram
again and 2Q.l signed up
out of a work force or 900
in three plants. They
:iigned up to lose 5,708
pounds."
Each employee lists a
target weight. For in-
s tance. Elmer
Meierdirt, 50, a paint
s prayer, weighs 237
pounds and set his 1oal
at 215. If he loses the 22
pounds, Miller pays him
$88.
U Meierdirk fails to
make his target weisbt,
he will get onty $1 per
pound lost. Be also will
get $1 per pound for any
toss beYQDd 22 pounds.
Miller said that only
employees 15 pounds or
more overwelght -baaed on Jnaurance
tablet -are eligible.
In the eom_eany11 llr1t
diet derby, 1~.7 emptoyetW volwuevea, mat oDJ,J 41 made Uielr
~!l Wt!lbt-____ -·Iii ............ ____ .
UP TD
• 1-AD~lr.TISID -· 2.-saJsV~'n •••• 3.T •• TB :.~=DICE ••••
I GUARAlllEll I I AARAllTEEI I I H!!!"'Ell I
I IAC• Of tllDI l1tllS IS _...,. 10 • I I mu-'" WY " ....,, Win a I I :::! : W:.":a': ---:::.:.=.r"':' = :U '-: I
IUDllt AY&&.UU rot s.ui • IAOI _, I I '41.UAllTtlO .a. ,_ 1111'4 s.t1111ACTIOll I I ---• .-,. aaa.1 ..-.n fllU ,.. an »'I I :::i~.i:~.::.=~'~': -DUU Of-6CTWtl. • 10ll Ul _," ____ •
I lllM. w1 Wiil Olltl toe '"9 ~Of I •. llOI t.UlllH • ....., ..SUI Will MNCf I I 11111' __ _.,tt•-n-Miat.,..c.w• I
• ~"L"U ...... -A'til&MU. ... ,_ nua 1111• Tiil SolMf -oe " . PtJCU --"'* mm Al ---•• -•••a& • lllCNIC; 1111 SAlll SA-S. I l..cMOI = ._.,. OI 1111•9 1-,_, &DWU, -~ -flUIWt _, _, -1.vt ... nm I fllnn.G tw" l'tlOIAll • .... .,... I I I I ., .. _,, '9Cll,. _. --• -ra1 toe tWU a. I RWAJ ""~.-.-H Mrs. Mf...,a.•c.tlll. ·--------···-------···------------· PRICES EfflOIYE WlD., MAY 3 Tll!U •..:=:==--
TUES., MAY 9, 1971. lllMl•M" CIAUU. =--"""'~""""""-.... -
r:lllll'1fnlmt·"--J1!jli'--il'l1---.. filt' SAIMllCll I HUI• llAHAllS I =~yt: <OOICllS I l ~v't CEREAL I
I 1oc •:::: 79c : I 10< ·::.~ 65c I
I --IMC._ .. ___ "'I ......... lt OI ...... ".-: ... -"". I ·-·· ·--. llH I --. ... , '· "'" I -'-·--.. iut ·-NU..Mlt. "'"
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1• RlD·X COUPON •• ,,,,. RlD·X COUPON •• ua•n IASKn I # .. SUGAR TWIN I
SMMl8 • GlllCll'f I SHAI I
I ... v't PEAlllT 1m11 I I m v't SllSllTITI I 1 ~c '=95c : 1 ~2< ~.39c I I ._ .. "a ........ _ .. _,._,, I I ·-·• ...... ,,_"'IS..IUlt.ltlt
-
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<llOCOLAH CllP I
St• . COOKIE MIX I ·~vt
I 36< ·::.~ 79~ , : 1 .._ .. ,ur.-.. -.--,.1 --.lliUt ____ t,ttJL ,_,. "*"" --· .,.,_, - -' .. , t , ltl&. r:11111•• llD·XCOUPON •• r:11111•• RED·X COUPON •• ~ 1 oc OFF I Jilt' sr~L I ·~vi ·=·· I ;\It MOUTHWASH : I 1oc 1111nos ., I soc '::~· 97c 1
• ___ ,. ___ .. _,,, I __ ,. ... "L "·~----··· ""°"'-. .. n-.-.uft, .. 11, • ._. .... ,IUH--. ... n .ttll. __. ~dPI'• RID·l COUPON • --••• HD·X COUPON _..
YllleW I SAYE UP 10
Ill ... I SJ: I 4 ~v't 2 •J19c 10s ... .,.. !19 I e ·--t-14 ..... ___ .. ._,, Wllll lll!a. a;__..._ .. ,.,..!!!L<: .. 1.\i."'1·--· . • 51P"A
-•••• •ID-l ~uUrvt1 ••
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.. Fresh Ocean s2·19 PERCH •
Fnt.b lilleta from the Pacific
Fillet of Cod ••• •21t
True Cod-lor true flavor-F?..h!
Butterfish fl11TS •• •1 1t
Freeh! ••• for a dlfrenmt wte tleat
FIRST OF THE SEASON ••• and well ' worth waiting
for! Serve it b~, for a IJ)eclal
treat ••• or chooee 1tMb Cot
broiling or the be.rbeeue!
Wiil£ GI llllf -4 tt I k. '
Firm and mild-for oven or skillet.
Perch w ..... 111\
Cleaned and ready for the pan
Catfish Fillets •• s21t
Freah·w&ter variety .•.. euy to prepare
SMOKED SJ HAUBUT 1!
They'll welcome th• emokey
goodnMS
Squid .... , · ••••• 79~
Cut in a.mall piece. and deep-by
Lobster ,acn: 141!
Frozen 1ourmet treat! 1~·1~ lb. aiu
Frog Legs •••••• 131~
Latte aize ••• 4 to 6 per pound
:S~-s1•!
Skinned and hMdl•, tor value
I Ceater Cut Stub ................. 131\ I It
..
Fresh Oysters • s1 i•
Eutem-8 oz jar cmr• ... Ut>
Stuffed Clams • 4 .SI
Matlaw'a. • .net weight 2 oz each
Crab Meat~· • sa•t
Snow c:nbs, •• 100% leg meat!
LARGE s4M SHRIMP •
Shell on; • .freah water product
Fresh Clams =v···· 79!
Ruahed here from new England ••• make a chowder . . . (UT1UIBU .•• t.• ._,
Halibut Steak .~ .... s2•!.
Center cut from f11m, flavorful Northern Halibut! They'll be fine broiled or barbecued.
Crab Legs AllSKAN •••••••• s21!
Meaty, to offer more value! Enjoy the better way to aatiafaction
l1w York Sirip ...
Butcher Shop S ervice \
1l7l Damn Inns =---~l2t.
Loin eat of C.S.DA. Beef. •• naturally qed and trimmed far value! Dining at it'• best!
, -Ground Beef=: s1 •t
Lean! 0oea' not eiceed 22% fat ·
New York SJM STEAK •
Loin Cut. of U.S.D.A. Choice beef
_. . '" --------'
Sliced Bacon ••• s11t
E_l Rancho"• thicker "ranch style"'
Loin Cut U.S.D.A. Choice beef
Shopper Stoppers
Wesson Oil 24oz •••••••• 79t
Frying fiah? • - . you'll like the way WH10D does it for yooJ! Fry with .. Weuon·ality"
Tomatoes N0.2%CAN ••••• l9c
Garden goodn .. in the can ••• and you find eo many u... tor tomatoeal Springfield
Peaches GLORITTA ••••••••••• 59c
Th08e lovable flavorful Elberta Freettome in Halves ar Slices! No 2~ can for value!
Aurora = ............... _43c
Your choice of white or auorted colon in the two roll pack! Keep a 1pare on hand
Tomato Sauce • 13c
Sprincfleld, (or value! 8 oz can
Tomatoes l1IMI • • 35c
Hunt.'1...tock the pantry! H \.\ oz
Rice Mixes ••••• 45c Hawaiian Punch 55c
M .J B-all ftavon in 6 os packap Red, Grape, S.rry, Low Sq arl 46 en
Margarine • • • • • • 55°
Blue Bcmnet flavor and economy! 1 lb
Noodles ...... 49c
Criap and crunchy Chun King-5 oz
Dressing :'ca . . • 49c
Italian Cit 1000 Jaland-8 oz 1iH
Mushrooms • • • • 49°
Green Giant 8Uctd or Wbole-2~ en
Teri Towels •••• 59c
Allorted colon or ~ated-roll
Ivory Liquid ••••. s1°•
Diab dtWp.Dt-32 en (2to eff)
Chili Salsa • • • • • 39c
1Mty flavor In on.a Greeol 7 oa
Tooth Paste ••• 99c ·
Cftl& Mla&, ~1 OI l1le .,
= 93c
Savt on tbt & pound i,.,
...
Your choice of Cordon Bleu etyle atuffinr or with Dreeaingl Goodnea they11 love! Net wt 12 oz each
Genuine Milk-Fed Veal
Featured every day at El Rancho!
~
SPARE s139 RIBS lllSI •
LM.n and meaty! ••• Ea.Item pork
Frozen Food
.-ENCHILADAS. ,........ 49c letf, a...
ClicUlt .. • 1Va •
Egg Rolls-· ••• &9c
Shrimp, Chicken, Meat & Shrimp-6 oz
Celeste Pizza •• 1111
Sauaar• (%J II) or DeLu:re (U~ •) ~
Macaroni •CESl ••• ssc
Morton'• family 1ize 20 oz pkg
Limeade .,. • • • • • 2sc
Minute Maid ~ oz (12 w ••• Cl')
Vegetables ITllEllY. 79°
For Soup (21 el) or Stew (U 11)
Bratwurst auao·s s1st
Pork, milk.fed veal and MUOning
Turkey m4lllJll ••• 49~
Rich dark meat from El Rancho bfrda
El Rancho'• Or. A-w/rib care, (ibleta
Delicatessen
Bologna :V: ............ 79t
The undwich favorite ••• chooee Bee! or Meat ••• sliced-8 ounce package
~!!!!!,.. ~!!~u~1~ :!! SI ~!!!¥!~.~~ .. J:,:~. !il 79
Cream Cheese • 59c Ricotta .. om. • • • • 99c
Ktaf't'a Pbiladelphia-8 ~ pkg Precious cheeee ca -••• Sle)
Sauce :=-.• ..... 59e Canned Ham sus • s9 59
Fisherman'• Wharf •.. 8 oz bottle Your choice -Armour or Dubuque
Liquor Dep 't.
Wh • k SAVE $1.00 ON $7M 1s ey OUR Blfll) ••••••••••
El ~nchoe' own label ... now reduced 1.00-but atill 86 proof! J.76 liter
7 Crown •••••• '11 91 Inglenook uvm ••• s3 29
Seagram'1·ea:e 1.801 1.76 liter Burrundy, Chablla, Roee-1.5 liter
Ballant1ne's ••• s14•• Liebfraumilch •• s399
Saw 1.00 on great Scot<:hl 1.75 litre Langenbach .•. for lovers! Liter
Gallo Wines •••• '3'' Boord's Gin •••• s391
French Colombard,Cbenlfl Blanc 1.5 ltr Many martini• in the 1.75 liter bottle!
Super Fresh produce
Cantaloupe llfi .•... 29!
Thick meatedl Mellow flavor for a breaklut treet ••• with Ice cream for de88ert !
Grapefruit •••••• 5•11 Fresh LeRIOlls •• 3l1l
lArp eo.eh.Ua Valley Ruby Red
U.S. llo. l
htata:s 19!
New crop! All purpoee potatoet
Heavy with tart tano Julee
Summer 39c SQUASH -•
Ouden treahl .... fineet quality
Open da"1 9 to 9 ••• ~ 10 to 7 ••• No talu to dl!Ol«rs
ARCADIA PASADENA <;O llTH PA'.~ADt NA HUNTINGTON Bf/\CH Nf WPORT UEACH fA~TOl lH-F IRVINE LAGUNA HILLS
\ ,.,, .. , ,.,,,, H ,,n ' ,, .,, w .,tnr,. '• t\1 ' I • Tll ' '""ti, ,, '~f4,n W.trf"f•I .H1(t A 11,~ 11,~ .. r • ' ''"'''-"I'"'' t11 ... I "• l' I····"""" ll• ll'11'1Jt'f•.1ty Htd M ' tu•hnr• l lh-11 Mounnn p., ... ,, .. ,.,.,.
J 1 f1 1• • .,_ 1, ,., • f 1f 'l1..t"''',., 1,,. ~ • ,.,1 1 1• H .. at•11 q,, M ,,11 • t .. tlu• •"••1•111 .. 111, t , 11.1.,u"" 1 "I' 1. ,,, f'.1ilr•. \, 1 .-,. ( t rd1• M1,.,1, n f ,ptiwJly Pl&1n
a.. -................. $181
Calron !•brio toftlfter-plta ot 36 •httte '
PAITY mlDS ............. $1.29
You're flff from can wh.b C11t FrMI 30 ct.
ClL01£ Ml SlllAY .•••••• st.a • arw ... : ......... sto 111Y• --....... 39-
Thi °" Look a. .. : ... ~ OUftCe
' •
Pure:. ••• Um. "-ts ... 22 os.(Uit 1111 The Scrub 'n' Sponp that worb eo -111
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.. • •
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•
Cle OM. v "'"'°' ,
UVW: 1be Lagun1 Beach Branch wlU
meel at 9:30 a .sn. Thursday, Ma)' 4, ln lbe
Net1hborbood Coairecatiooal Church. La1una
Beach. to useu lbe rolt ol the group in the
com mu:nlty.
DANA POINT WOMEN'S CLUB: Aerobic
danclnc will be presented dw'lq the Thursday.
Miut 4, luncheon meeting at noon in lbe Dana
Point Community Clubhouse.
LAGUNA ,BEACH BPW: lnslallation or of-
ficen ls planned for 8:30 p.m. Thursday. May 4,
in the Crown House restaurant, Laguna Beach.
Evan Owens and Jeffrey Walling, students at
UCI. will present excerpts from "Man of La
Mancha."
MARIPOSA WOMEN'S CENTER: Com·
munity Responses to Alcoholism will be the
May theme. Programs will begin Thursday,
May 4, when Rosalie Steller Brown, program
coordinator for New Directions, is lhe speaker.
Other pl'ograms will take place May 11. 18,
and 25. Topics will be Alcoholism In lbe Com-
munity; Who Really Cares; Alcoholism: The
FamilyDisease,andMakinga 'Deuce' Lucky.
Information is avaUable from the center,
547·64~
WOMEN'S AUXILIARY: RoWld tables are
scheduled at the 40lb annual meeting of lbe aux·
illary to the California Dental Association May
8 at the lnn at the Park, Anaheim. A luncheon and
fashiooshowwillcoocludelheday.
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA DENTAL
HYGIENISTS ASSOCIATION: The 35th annual
scientifk session ls scheduled Friday, May S, at
the Inn at the Park, Anaheim.
Recognition will be given to Mrs. Anna
Kahn. a hygienist for 56 years.
MOTHERS OF TWINS: 'An art auction is
scheduled for Friday, May 5, at 7:30 p.m. \n the
Fountain Valley Community Center. Inform&·
lion is available from Mrs Bob Crouch,
839-0243.
INSURANCE WOMEN: New officers will
be installed during a dinner at 7 p.m . Friday,
May S,, in the Camelot restaurant, Santa Ana.
Mrs. ThehrlaOstreim· will be seated as presi·
dent.
CHURCH WOMEN UNITED: Friday, May 5, is fellowship day. It will begin at 9:30 a.m.
Friday. May 5, in St. Michael and All Angela
Episcopal Church, Corona del Mar. Reserva-
tions are available from Mrs. John Dawson.
644-4968
RAY OF HOPE: Three events are
scheduled to raise funds ror the Ray of Hope ac·
ti vi ties center for the handicapped in Tustin.
A black-tie dinner dance will take place
Saturday, May 6, a square and round dance on
Sunday, May 7, and an old-fashioned tent meet-
ing on Sunday evening. May 7.
"" Ticket. informalioo is available from Mrs.
Betty Hill, 832.()990, or Gene Selig, SS9-6582.
~ <... TEMPLE SHARON: A Mon'te Carlo night is
· ~cheduled at the Newport Sheraton Hotel for
Saturday, May 6. Included will be dips, chips.
prizes and dessert. Tickets are available at the
templeoffice,646-SSS2.
TRLUJOPl'ION LEAGUE FOR JUSTICE:
A meeting ror adoptees. bir:tbparents and adop-
tive parents interested in search will t.ake place ~l 7 p.m. Saturday, May 6, in Miles Playhouse,
7th and Wilshire. Santa Monica. Further informa-
tion is avaUable at •213) 592·2511.
MENT..tL HEALTH AS.50CIATJON: The
problem or PCP will be exanlined during a
worlrshot>&! ~ a.m. Wednesday, May 10, ln
the community room of lbe Orange County
Librar) Administration Building, 431 City Drive
South. Orange.
Reservations may be made with the MHA
at 547-7559 -OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH NtJRSES: Tbe
Orange County association will celebrate its
silver anniversary during a banquet Wednes':.
day. May 10, at the Saddleback Inn, Santa Ana,
beginning at 6:15 p.m. Guest speaker Joy
Mason Johnson, M.D .• will speak oo Stayine
Young and U>oking Out for Number One.
Reservations are available from Lela
Woodhouse, 525-1891.
SAN CLEMENTE AJlEA REPUBLICAN
WOMEN: Gary Arnold' from the United
Organization ol Taxpayers will speak during a
10 a .en. meeting Wednesday, May 10, in the
Community Center.
His topic will be the Jarvis-Gann Property
Tax Relief lnillaUve. The public is invited.
ABWA: Pacific delSol Chart.er Chapter will
preJSent four scholanbips duOnfl a dinner meet·
tng Wedneaday • .May 10, ln tbe Edgewater Hyatt
From left, La Vera Bums, Kay Torell, and
June Reyes plan a progressive wine-
tasting party.
WOMEN'S ARCHITECTURAL LEAGUE:
Judging in the 18th high school architectural de-
sign and drawing competition will take place at
noon Saturday, May 6.
More lban 144 students are competing by
drawing a recreaUonal center wilb regulations
regarding the building site, roning restrictions
and environmental requirements. '
Prizes will be given during a reception at
Willar~Antenned.iate School, Santa Ana, May 7
UtJW: The Westminster-Fountain Valley
Branch will lo.stall officers during a. 9:30 a.m.
brunch Saturday. May 6, at the Mesa VerdE ~
Country Club.
The slale includes Carol Hobock. Jud:>·
Schreiber, Mary Ann McConabey, Patricia
Moore and Kathy Cooper.
Reservations are available from Mrs. Ardis
Bums, 8783 Rogue River, Fountain Valley.
STANFORD CLUB: The Orange County
group will host its lhlrd mixed doubles tennis
tournament Sunday, May 7, beginning at 3 p.m.
al the Marriott Hotel. A buffet dinner will
follow.
Interested alumni may call Mike Brewer,
586-4980, or Paul Egeler, 836-51.81.
VSF ALtJMNI: Orange County Chapter or
the University of San Francisco Alumni As·
soclaUoo will have its flflb annual brunch Sun-
day, May 7, at lbe Five Crowns restaurant:
Corona del Mar, beginning wilb cocktails at 11
a.m. Special guests will be Falber Charles W.
Dullea, S. J ., clulncellor, and .Michael J . Romo.
director of alumni relations.
Reservations are available from Betty
Francisco, 768-7628.
CBlll.STIAN WOMEN'S CLUB: Saddleback
Communities will host a luncheon Monday.May
8, at noori in El Adobe restaurant. Speaker will
be Cindy Eady. television and radio performer.
Reservations are available by calling 493-6493.
MONDAY MORNING CLUB: A luau and in-
stallatioo are planned for Monday, May 8, at
11 :30 a.m. in the Holiday Inn. Laguna Hills. The
Laguna Beach group will be entertained by lbe
Malahinis.
New pfficers are Doris Otto, Betty Carey,
Martha Roberts, Minnie Carey, Rena Anderson,
Audra Carter, Elbel Blair and Gwen BuUer.
LECfURE: The YWCA ot Central Orange
County wtll present a lecture workshop series
on Tuesday mornings from 9:30 to 11:30 a .m.
beglnnlng May 9 on the myth of mid-lite crises.
Leader will be Kalbleen Case, a marriage,
family and child counselor. ..
Reservatioos are available from the Y at
633-4950. Fee la $25.
SAN IUA.N CAPISTRANO WOMAN'S
CLUB: A luncheon and fasbfoo sbow are
planned for Tuesday, May 9, in El Patio
restauranL Theme is A Family Affair. Tickets
may be obtained from Irene Wlllard, 496-5914.
BETA SIGMA PHI: Gamma Alpha Xi
Chapter wW seat new officers during a dinner
meetlng at the Kettle, Anaheim, Tuesday, May 9.
New officers are lbe Mmes. William Asbgy,
Mlcuel Ferraro. Beverly Johnson and lbe Misses
Winnie Dahl, Janice Lutsker and Jan Shafer.
...
Wne
Time
The Spygla,ss Hill
Philharmonic Commit-
tee will sponsor a pro-
gressive lnternatlonal
W lne·Tasling Parly
from 7 to 10 p.m. Sun-
day, May 7. Homes of-
fering courees are those
of Mr. and Mrs. Tom
Blandi, Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Burlingham, and
Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Keyes.
Mrs. John Torell is
benefit chairman. Her
committee members
are: Mrs. John Schmitz,
Mrs. Lloyd Lokka, Mrs.
Edward Robinson, Mrs.
Leonard Rasmussen.
Mrs. John Forte, Mrs.
Donald Hillard, Mrs.
Stephen Piper, Mrs .
George Lane, Mrs. Clin-
ton Eastman, Mrs
Robert Stayner, Mrs
Douglas Edlund, and
Mrs. Marcus Metzler.
I
Art .
Auction ~'
SL Cecilia Church
Area 3 Irvine wtU pr
sent an Art ExhlbitiOft
and Auction on Friday.
May 5, 1978 al th e
Parish Hall , 1301
Syca more Avenue .
Tustin.
ChafllPtgne and Hors
d 'oeuvres will be served
during the exhibition beclnnlnl at 7 :30 p.m. The auci.lon follows at
8:30 p.m.
Nearly 200 original
water colors, oil paint-'
ings, signed and nunt
bered Hthogra'pbs and
etchings have be&n
selected. All works are
authenticated and
custom framed.
Works by Picasso,
Chagall, Dali. Calder
and other artists will be
featured.
There will be a $2.50
donation per person 6t
the door. The price is $10 per
person. For information
or reservations , call
Mrs . John Forte ,
6-«·2538.
Mrs. Gerald Pilkington. left, and Mrs.
Edward Bolton, prepare for art auction.
For information con-
tact Mrs. Gerald Pn-
kington. •
PLYMOUTH WOMEN'S FELLOWSWP: A
spring luncheon and boutique are scheduled at
11 a.m. Wednesday, May 10, in the Shark Island
Yacht Club. Speaker will be Mrs. Emily Barnes
of Riverside.
RIVIE~ CLUB: Officers will be mstaUed
. during a luncheon Wednesday, May 10, in the
Balboa Bay Club. Entertainment will be pro-
vided by Allan Rogers Stoneman,
Wedding and engagement announcements nm on
Sunday in the D<nlll Pilot. FOf"rM are available at all DaUtl Pilot o/flceg or by calling tlw Features Depart-
ment. 642-4321.
To .avoact dt$0ppomtment. prospectn.ie bndeJ are
remrndl?d to have their weddmg stoma. unth a black·
and-wmte gwssy o/ tht> bnde or o/ the couple. to the
FeotureR Department one week before the wedding.
Engagement announcements, wath black-and·
white glossy of the future bnde or the couple, must be
rec~ by the Features Department au week! be/ore
the wedding dote.
LECTURE SERIES: Focus on Women :'
Creativity and Careers is the title or a four-part'
series to lXf presented from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m.'
Wednesdays, beginning May 10, at Mesa Verde
Elementary School. Costa Mesa,
The toplcs include studio techniques _,
shading, colar and design; clothing and em-
bellishment on today's fashion and the wedding dress industry today. ·
lnfonnaljon is available from Coastline
Commwlitl' College, 963-0811
,
Club CaJendor ruru each W~ ill tM DmlJ1
Pilot and COfltoiru notacea oJ women's mid~ cbalJ ~ dftd rwnt1 for tM Jollototltg tottlc -Thwa-
doy through Wednelday. Snd ftOticft to Club Calen-
dar, Doily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Muo., CA 92QS.
Be sure to ancLude JIOUr name and pPloM numba
Notices muat be in our hond8 ttf>o web in odoonce.
To ~st o pu:ture, write or call the Features
Deportment, 642-4321. Pictures ore limited to fad-
rahen open to the public.
•
---
StartBeing
The\\bman~
Want to Bel
ON SALE NOW
Mother's Little
Make 19 7 8 Vo11f turning Po•fll' Call or come 1n today tor a
compt1men1ary 111a1vs1s and
program dlSCllSSIOO
PFRSOHAl OEVflOPMFN'
& MOOfll~G SCHOOLS
ORANOE
3 Town f, Country
(714) 547-8228
La-Z-Boy®
in new, lady-like styles
with the velvet touch
for Mother's Day
Trnel
everywhere ...
Sundays _"_•_n_ In the
DAILY PILOT
House, Long Beach. Social hour begins at 6 p.m. -;;::=;,;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;::;;;,;;;;;,;;;;====:jic:;:;::;:;:=======::;;;;;: Jane Bulb Bell of Westminster will receive .,. S200~Ew1Su FEDERAT10N couNc1L: A fRANCI~-· ORr R., series of events honoring Israel on ber 30tb
birthday are.cbeduled ln May.
A Holocaust IJMftnorial will take place at
7:30 p .m. 'lbursday, May 4, in the Jewlsb COm·
munity Center, 2601 Grand Avenue, Long f'1ne statonery• f"\f'Vf"V"V'.:l del mar Beach. featuring a film and slide preaeotatJon \J\JI \JI' la by pbotograpber Roman Vlshnlac along with ..,.. .. ._ _______________ ._ ________ ,, ...
poetry, music and prose. _ "
On May 8 and 7 a Sbu}.Jn and Walk Festival
is ~ from 6:30 p.m. Saturday to 8:30 p.m.
Sunday at Temple Beth Tlkvab, Fullerton. All·~l llv6 entertainment. danctna, llac· in.I. rap IP"O'lPI. International food and am~ trial are p•noec\
Enterta1Dmeol by the renowned Tel Aviv
Dance Group and Troup and enaembl~ Ianell
sin~ltan llanan Yovel, Sbul Kal ltalir add
Moe RaleYI, braell cuisine and a torch
licbtlllg cwemoay wt11 hlPUCht the evenma
Tburada)'. May 11. du.rlftl a gala ln the Tltan
Theater. Fullerton, bectnnlne at 1 :30 p.m.
11cketa are &Yallable from the council, 1Jt.JJN4.
..
I
............................. ~ ......... · .. · .. ~ .. t.~ .. a ... f:, .. u .. 1 •• ·.l.1.a.9. .. • .. • .. • ............... Wedl .......... ~ •• ~ .. ~.1.97.a ............. o.~.LY·P··~.T.c.' .. •
. j
[ Boroseope
1111.JltSDA Y. MAY 4
By SYDNi'V OMAlllt
)
AIUES <March 21 -April lil: Past commit·
1JDent1, Investments command attenUon. Cycle
.ta such that you gel reward, gain understanding
of special relationship, discover weak and
1trong point.a. Lease or rental problem resolved
Cancer, Capricorn figure prominently.
1 TAUllVS <April 20-May 20): Finish assign-
ment -spread inrluence. get finger on pulse of
public. Someone counsels you and is on target.
tkoow il and be receptive. Backstage activity in·
• .Yolves you and your future Aries, Libra fi1ure
.An scenario.
! GElllNI <May 21·June 20): By standin1
your ground, you attract valuable ames. Know
it and act accordingly. Friendships, creative en·
ldeavors, affairs of heart command spoUlght.
Leo, Aquarius persons figure ln scenario -so does number 1.
1 CANCER !June 21-July 22): You pull
·yourself to more elevated position. There is
room at top and you prove it. Aquarius, Leo and
llOOlher Cancer figure in scenario. Teach and
learn. Be receptive lo "lessons'' offered by
older person.
LEO ~June 23-Aug. 22): Humor, adaplabili·
ty, versaUlily come into play. Give full rein to
Intellectual cwioait.y. Ask questions and know
that answers are obtainable. Publish, dis·
tribute, display, open wide lines of communlca-
Uon. Gemini, Saaittartus fl1ure in scenario.
VIRGO <Aus. 23-Sept. 22): Cheek income
polentill. Expenses related to art object.a, lux·
ury items come ln for scrutiny. Your Juctament
is on target. Whal might seem to start a tirade
will finish as accolade -ror you. Stick w!th
number 4.
LIBRA <Sept. 23-0ct 22>· Make some con-
cessions. be flexible, make move but not a final
commitment Member of opposite sex very
much ln picture. Gemini, Virgo, Sagittarius
could flamre prominently. Accent on break:in1
!"""from tradJl\on, realizing decision due where
I marriage concerned.
SCOllPIO <Oct 23-Nov. 21): Accent on ac·
commodation. diplomacy. making creative con-~~salons, f•mily adjustments. Maintain
1 moderate pace. avoid extremes. One who
,J whispen rumors, claims to reveal secrets ac· t \uatly ls know·nojhlng whose influence is
1
destructive. KnOw it and be aware, alert.
SAGFl'TARWS <Nov. 22·Dec. 21): Detlne
terms, check sourtes, be positive concerning
quotations. Excitement of•diacovery featured -
so. t.oo, are romance. variety creativity, deal-
j ings with young persons. speculative ventures.
Stick with number 1
CAPIUCORN <Dec 22-Jan. 19>: Get down
L to business. Be aware of costs, Ume and motJon,
legal rtghta and permiaslon.s. Member of op-
posite sell much tn p1cture Build on solid struc·
lure. Be pos. lUve concerning basic material.
Your bargain.Ing posltioo is sfron&. Know it and
act as ll aware of it.
1-,,tf AQtJAaltTS \Jan. 20-Feb. 18>: You get ! stgnal enabliJ11 you to finish transaction. Aries,
Ubra figuno promlnentl) In matters of apecula·
tlon, stick with number 9. You IJ'UP melllina or \ I~ ··universal appeal." You riae above petty ac·
lions Relative pays sincere compliment.
l " PISCES <Feb. 19-Marcb 20). You£in • en lighlenment concerning valua ea.
~ poasesaM>na, fmaoclal potential. Make new tf tacts. stress onginallty. You 1et chance to earn ~ more by puttlng forth orlgklal Ideas, concepts. ~ Permit C'l"eaUvit) to shine 1 If M.Q 4 Is ,.... blrtWay you are candid,
considered unorthodox, were separated
physically or psychologically from one or both
parents at an early age You are stubborn,
sensual. Aquarius, .Leo, Scorpio pei:sons play
important roles in your life. October could be
pivotal month for you ln 1978, a year which sees
you golog through emotional crisis and emer1·
lng the better and aLronaer for lt
1 Tantalizing
I Cu!!!!~i~~totosprtna
l put you ln a llghlbearted party mood? Well,
I• don't wall to be invited Just 11ve one.
Everybody knows that to 1et a party oft the .fP'OCIDd it t.lkel luscious looldna. great tutln1 food. And our seafood and spuds bot bon
d'oeu\'l'lll are jult that -small wonden de·
•laned to tantalise and make your aueats
manel °""your illjenulty.
CLAMSIDAHO
24 fresh clams
Rock sail C or coarse grain salt>
1 envelope (3'4 ounces) dehydrated ln·
stantmasbedpotatoes
2 stripe bacon
2 tablespoons flnety chopped onion
2 tablespoons horteradii6
l tablespoon chopped panley v. teaspoon liquid bot pepper sauce
Open clams; remove from sbellJ; drain.
Reserve halves of sbella. FUl bottom of shallow bakioa pan with rock ult; preheat in COO"F.
oven While salt ii beatlnl, prepare mubed
potatoes llCCOl'dinl to PKbae dlreetlou. Fry
buon until well browned; chop ft.nely. Add
bacoe, omoa. boneradlab, parsley and bot pep-
per .. _. to prepared potatoes: m1a well. Ar·
ranse tlam sbeUI on bot rock Hit. Place a clam
1 lo eaeb lbell Spoon a mound cl potato mixture
• on Jot> of ucb clam. Oarnllb each lbell wttb a
fre*b panley IP'il. if dealnd. YIELD; Map.
( peU,,en
. · GOLDEN POl'ATO &OOND9 ~ 1 pactaae <14 ouncee> frozen CoUaa• J'ry I
Potatoel
\ nakel ea C'1 o.mcee1 wblte tuna, dra1oed an4
~ C'IP m.,onn.al.M
2 &Mllepoom DUOD m\lltard
l t.M•= batier or llW'larhM ~cclove~amoo
1 tablespoon •bile vtnecar
1 tablespoon chopl*S penley
~ te.pooo dried leaf thyme
~ teupooa. c.,en.n•
a.tclar chMM. ahndded
B-.t eotlqt Mii on batinl lbeet ICCOrd• lDI to ,.a.,. directiool. ID amall bowlLcom-
blne &ma, m~ and mUltard. Mm but·
t.er lD 11Ull aldllet; c~ omon and 1arllc unUt
1oldtn Add vlneiar. p1nley, thyme and
eayeane; blend well. Add onion mlztUl'e to
baa, ml• ...U. Spoon a amUI moimd of tma on ft::.= ~er~W:::t=.. C:;
about 1 uilnut.. YIELD. Abot.f. aocanapea.
Machine Hel~ Stroke Victims
B1 ROB,EllTLOCKE
LOS ANGELES (AP>
-Seven years a10.
Chnlotte Stern could
speak five languaaes
Today she can hardly speak at au.
Two strokes robbed
Mrs. Stem: 68. of her
power of speech. They
tangled th e link s
between her brain and
her tongue. Like several
hundred thousands
·stroke victims each
year, she seemed con ·
demoed to a llfe of·
silence.
But now, for a few
days each weelt, Mrs.
Stern has a new votce -
a m echanical-sounding
monotone that comes
trom a cartload of com·
puter gadgetry as·
sem bled at the UCLA
Neuropsychiatri c
Institute.
"lt was terribl y
frustrating. The words
are all there, but they
· won't come out," says
the robot voice. ·
The words are Mrs.
Stern's.
With her riaht index
rinser abe bunts-and·
pecks on a typewriter·
Uke keyboard.
"It makes me a whole
person agaln," she types
and the words appear on
a .s m all t e I e-v is i on
screen. Then they go in·
t o a mini-computer.
which converts them in·
Charlotte Stem at voice machine.
lo electrical impulses.
Mrs. Stern's finger
finds another button and
the impulses travel to a
voice synthesizer which
converts them i nto
sounds. An instant later.
lbe voice worka:
"It makes me a whole person again."
Mrs. Stem tilts her
bead . index finger
poised, as her mind
searches for word•
Then her fmger travels
s hakil y ove r the
keyboard, searching for
the keys that give voice
to her thoughts.
She goes s lowly at
first, then in a rush to
get the word s out.
Spaces are someUmes
forgotten and the words
run together: "My mind
works raster than my
band.a."
The machine says the
words ln a fiat but UD·
derstandable monotone.
without a blnl of the ef·
f Ort they contain.
"It 'a like learning a
new language," said
Mrs . Stem, a one·Ume
painter whose left side
1n now partially
paralyzed. "lf 1 take my
time. I can say
any'thing."
With the voice
machine hooked into a
telephone. she is back in
contact with friends and
relatives in other cities.
With her gadgetry piled
ln a shopping cart and
using batteries. she can
visit the supermarket.
"A stroke can be a
double disaster," said
Dr. Kenneth M. Colby.
w.bo developed th e
one of-a·kind device.
"It's terrible in itself.
and then you can't teU
anybody about it."
Colby said the pieces
of the voice machine. all
commercially available.
are worth about $10,000.
It's much too bulky and
expensive for practical
use.
So Colby. a professor
or psychiatry aud com·
puter science, ls work·
Ing with two graduate
students to boil every·
thing down to a single
unit smaller than a loaf ot bread. He said a pro·
lotype. still using availa·
ble components, should
be finiabe~ later this
year.
Tbe next step would
involve customized com·
ponents for an lnex·
pensive umt the size of a
pocket calculator . U
mass-produced. Colby
says a truly portable
voice might someda)' be
available for a few bun·
dred dollars.
"Now all we've got to
do Is come up w ith
$300,000" to finance de·
velopment. he said. The
sinllle existing unil and the smaller prototJpe are
being developed wlth
donated parts and bits
a nd pieces of UCLA ·s
buqel,beaaid.
Giving a machine an
e ssentially unlimited
vocabulary, be aal~ re·
quires a program with
"a thousand rules or
English. That allows it
to generate a million
words."
The rules tell the
machine when . for ex-
ample. an "a" should be
pronounced as in "Pain''
or "Man"or"Speak. ··
"Speak.·•
"Tbe problem 1s not to make it eound bum an, ..
Colby said. "Most peo·
pte are used lo robot-like
voices. The problem la
to make lt undentanda·
ble. Right now It'• about
96 perceot intelllaible."
Colby said his ul-
timate goal Is an In·
telllgent voice machine
-one that not only pro
nounces words but sees
through spelllng errors
and helps stroke victims
find the correct word.
A stroke victim might
have a clear mental im
age of a chair. He knows
what it looks like and
what it's used for. But
the word itself eludes
him.
Under Colby's con·
cept, the voice machine
would ask. possibly
through a n earphone
for hints that describe
the elusive word. It
ml1bt uk what letters it
starts and ends with,
what lt'a used with or
what It ICMlds like. With
s uch lnlormation , the
macbioe 'Would offer
four 01' ftve possibilities
fN>m which the patient
could cboole.
Colby said he's confi·
dent a miniature device
can be developed, loaded
wltb the bl&bly complex
program and brought
economically within
range of "S00.000
Ame r icana each her who have speech proD·
lema.··
Should She Be Told About Past?
DEAR AN N
LANDERS: Sometimes
minding your own busi·
ness ls the wrong thing
lo do. 1 th.ink this ls such
a time and am writing to
see if you agree.
Here's the situation. I
have a friend who is
single. He is !7 years old
and lives at home with
bis widowed mother. His
mother is an "old-time
Catholic" and a very
fine person. She does not
try to nm bis life nor has
she ever poked her nose
into his private affairs.
A bout ten years ago
my friend fathered a
son. He vtalta the boy
orten, aupporta him and
is a very actlve, 1enerous
father, considering the
circumstances. The
child lives with his
mother who i s a
divorcee and therefore
cannot marry my friend
ln the Catholic church.
<I don't really think the)
want lo get married
anyway.> The boy's
mother and my rrtend
s pend a lot or tlme
together and have a
warm relaUooahlp.
My friend bas never
told b18 mother that the
child ls her 1randson..
The boy's father feels
that ln order to protect
her from hi! "sin" be
must continue to shield
her. He will not let the
boy's mother tell either.
Everyone ln the family
knows but the· boy's
grandmother .
"Grandma" is 1etllng
old. Even though she ls
In good health she wilt
probably die without
ever having known
about her grandson. The
child, on the <>Uier hand,
ls being deprived of the
privilege of knowing hla
wonderful grandmother.
What, If anytblna.
sllould I do? -
WATCHING FROM
'MIESIDELINES
DEAR WATCHING :
Sl•ce the prlncipala
•ave dloeen to Jwaclle
&be 1Uaatloa ID tbla
••••er, you have no
rtcfat to bderfere. Tim ls
llOt you affair, ucl DO
OH ii .um.1 for your
achlee. So MY08,
Toota.
DEAR ANN
LAflDERS: Our rive·
week-old baby seems to
be croa-eyed. He looks
that way when he gets
tired or when he juat
wallet up from a nap
When t mentioned thia '° mr husband be told me WH lmulnlnt
tblDp. When I brou1hL ll to tbe attention of my
mother-In-law ahe said,
A•• L••den
"All my children were
that way. Leave the
baby alone. Don't start
with doctors. The baby
will outgrow It.''
My mother put lo her
two· cents' worth. Sbe
said, ''Those rattles
abov e the bed are
what's causing it. Take
. " them down." So I did -. Vnlveralty. He aaya
b u t the p r o b l e m muy lnfu&a appeu to
persists. be temporarily cress·
Please, Ann, 1 know eyed beeaae lbey cu·
you aren't a doctor but no& Iona. TM CODdlUoll
you know the best ones. asaall1 dlaappean by
Will you get an opinion the age ol ax 1DOGl111. r o r m e ? Dangll•& rattles •lld
C H A R L E V 0 I X • mobile art a.Love &lie t.
MICHIGAN MAMA fant'1 t.ead does aol 18·
DEAR MAMA: OM of crease die ~y.
tbe bu& b Dr. Jay If tbe problem toll·
Arena. Profe11or of tlaDes after die a1e of
Pedlatrlu al D•lle oee year, Dr. Areal..,.
itS hi9h time!.
Soaringneelsl
Our walk-sexy sandals
match your high IPiJftl.
left draped leather on wood.
Right, a bfatdtc$ lltftg
and 1 knotted 1tr1p
on woocMook bottome
Ftom our new h1Qt111n l\ttlt -
18.99 & 19.99
-
GUALICllAPT• 8HOI 8TOR88
MA8TEAOHAAGf•~8A
1na. &Ital a apeet1Uat t.e ....,
eoanlled.
CONFIDENTIAL TO
Rat Fink ad Proud of It
But Where Do I Go trom
Here?: I don't know. but
you'll probably IO there
alone. You've ao.t two
1ood frtenda for 1ure -
and maybe four. If you
don 'l learn to keep your
big bazoo closed aft.er
this experience. you're a
bopeleu cue, Bus~r
..
M8Hl~SLANO •ANAHEIM SHOPfllflf?.?NTER • IU!NA 'Af'K C1!NT!A TA MfSA. 80UTH CX>AaT ~ • HUNTIMGTON CENTER ~---THI CtTY SHOPPING ClNTl'R •LAGUNA HIU8 M~L • IRl!A MALL
·ORANGE MAU ------~--
3
..
••
ft
•It rn
16' ..
64 or -
•r
{,
'~ n
a
>r
11-
•k
I -
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I.
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w
WednwS8y, Msy 3. 1978 NATIONAL
Oeean Odyssey Generated on Paddle Power
• •
MIAMI (AP> -ney capehed
three times, Just mi11ed a
wateraPOUt and crtnied while an l8·foot abarlt rammed them.
Other than that, foul'. adven-
turen say their 2,100-mile ocean
odyaaey in slender kayaks waa
Just fine.
"AU you need la a helluva lot
of determination," aaid Beatrice
Dowd. wbo with her buaband
I
and two companiou paddled
their 17-foot, 6-inch kayaks on an
eight-month journe y from
Venezuela to Florida.
"BESIDES, IT WAS a ni~
way to see the Caribbean," she
said. · The travelers began the ttip in
two kayaks Aus. 11 at Cristobal
de Colon. Venewela. They ar-
rived in Mlaml last weekend. .
The Dowda paddled one of the
three.foot wide shells. In the
other were Britons Ken Beard of
Burton-on·Trent and Stephen
Benson of Sussex. Benson
became W wtth a blood infection
off Haiti and was replaced by
Richard G~ of Oxfordshire,
England.
Dowd, 33, is a native of
Auckland. Wew Zealand. Mrs.
Dowd ls originally from Mon-
treal. They say they travel so
much they have no permanent
residence.
WITH ONLY THEIR paddles
for power, the two couples found
that despite seas up to lS feet,
they could baDdle larae swells ln
the open sea with little trouble.
;Choose more tha11
• I
Any low-tar cigarette will give you a low-tar number.
But theres something else that you should consider: We
call it "filter feedback:'
As you smoke,. tar.builds up on the
tip of your cigarette filter. Thats "filter
feedback:' Ordinacy flush-tipped filters put that tar build ...
up flat against your lips.
And thats Where low-tar Par1iament h.as the a~
vantage. Parliament's filter is recessed to keep tar buildup
from teuching your lips. So theres no .''filter feedback~'
All you get is that smooth Parliament taste.
. I
It was closer to shore that they
found trouble, when waves
became "steeper," said Dowd.
The biggest problems. he said,
were three open-sea crossings of
more than 30 hours apiece. One
long crossing was too much for
everybody. and the exhausted
party bitched a ride into the
nearest port aboard an ocean
tug.
Even the sharks did not pose
fnUCh of a problem. except for
one.
"We'd seen dozens or sharks
-they'd au just run away."
said Dowd. relaxing ~l a M1am1
hotel. "But this one came at us,
as different from the others as a
sparrow is from a hawk."
He said if appeared to be a white
shark.
r.
s
•• • •
't
It n
I • M
Ir
·-..
d • ,,
l • • I , • ,,
j . ...
II e
~
I •
,,
I. y
c
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\ .
.... --, ........... _
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ft •
We hGYe a dozen ~iful Mustmgs, Fastbacks,
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4 cyl.. 4 speed trans:. air conditioning. mag
wheels, custom striping, radio, heater. Lle.
l54512Y Stk. J1682AT.
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176 PLYMOUTH
,AUOW HATCHIAC« G.T.
4 cyl.. 5 speed transmission. sport package,
AM/FM rad io, heater, rallye wheels • .,,l ie.
#477POU Stk. #966A ....... .._ . .
•75 vw
RAlllT2 DR.
4 cyl.,. automaic transmission, tinted glass,
radial tires, heater. Low Miles! Uc. to38NIA
Stk. 1'971A.
174 FORD
PINTO RUMAIOUT
4 cyl., 4 ·speed, AM radio with 8 track, vinvi
roof, tinted glass. wheel covers. radial tires.
ltc. f465MDE. Slk. #3209.
5 1893
@11
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0"'1 lko/~ by ~·ord .\IOll)r 01.
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MOT10I ~ at•DtTOttS SVNatOlt COUllT Of' T)t& STAT11 OP CAU'°'"'4A Nit
TM& CIDUWTT OP CMlAM08 .. ......,
Esi.to of WIU.IAM l'REOEIUCk
•EESEMYER. ~ NOTICE IS HERe•Y GIVEN .. ttw
cAdlton f1I lllt-......,.. dlClMlflt
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Ulld9'1191*f "' ... ,.,..,, f*t,MftlftQ ._ tM est.le Of MAI~ wltlllft
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H1•H .... S-. ........ ••••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• ....................... 81m1.a 1002 GtMN 1002
® ...... ;;;; ..... ·:·:=:A£~·~
or a.Har Ailodat.. beUa .... 11 lD l&Qeee•· Have need fOf' l aoocS a~· ble a~pe. Jat lt1ted
EOUAi MOU8IHO tlve aa.leepenoo. ye.terday to aell today at
OPPO .. TUNITY a.,Mcc.r. only SU0,000. CALL
, .......... Moller. lllOMtwportllYd 5-2Jll80.
All~estateactverUsed eo.t...._541·7729 C::SELECT
in this oewapaper ts sub· T'PRoPERTIES
jed lo the Federal Fair ---------• ---------•
Housing Act· of 19681•-------•l ·-~===L::~-1 which makes it Ule1al to COIY &COMFY
advertlae "any pre· l>flU1htful 2 bdrm .• 2
fereoce. UmltaUon, or batba, cloff to ocean,
discrimination baaed on near park • channel:
r.ee. coklr'. rel1llon. MX, ••>' aecep lo Pacific or utioaal orl&ln. or an amt Hwy. Only $139,500
tnt•Uoa to make any -lndudiftlland!
such preference, limlta ..... .., .._ "-or diaerimlnaUoft. •• '"• -r -. . . .,.
•671-7060•
--.1r::!lrI1iiiiiiiiil
\II I I·,
ti 1 ' or Rr.1e~
mlfllllt
llOOUll f DOWN. o 1~~~~~~ COIT. MJ dlr In o.c. 1-H•rrr l Call your
I. DOING ·~·'' ~~ 1IJ1 ~IC'TITIOUt a . NAMI? ..,.. .... ... , .. , ............. . .................. ..... ,.. .•.. ... ,..11•111, ....... .................... .................. .............. ,,..
OAIL.Y ,IL.OT •Ill ........ .......... . hr ·121.10, Ou
...... 111 ....... ... ..... ,. o, ..... ci.-94 ................... ................. ",., ......... ,.. .......... , .. , , ............... . w ..... ..,, .... .
cll"k • ""-MllY ""°'· '·°' ...... c..e.--. .... ................ ....... -........ .....
...... .z.; ... ... ...._. __
wateraaa 1petiall1t. ---
PAii HOMI -N.AMI Popular 3 bedroom home with Jar11
family room aad muaive vaulted
celllnp. Much wood + cJua. Hup
pine treem. View trom private yard •
On one ~ Univll'lity Park'• molt
popular ttneta. siae,seo.
H-
UCTION
Cozy 3 bdrm. h e. located only ~
blk. from one r Newport's i>~st
beaches. Plans i t9ded for 3 b4rm .
addition. List waiting 1ummer
renters avail le. With price
reduction to S139, • this ls one of the
best beach buys'
Dou.Al MllilDllD
The lowest priced home in must sell thls 3 Bdrm ho
freew-ys. shops. churches.
Call to Me! 146-4141. .........
Thls bargain ls priced at
a dult occupied 2 Bdrm
appllancee. mlrrora. bookc
C•SIWl61.
• .. -....a . ...
26.13 W.Cout Hwy.
N•pcxt 8llCh
r o~~r;T F
OLS ON
••••••••••••••••••••••• IOOJ
LAOSIDI UVIMG
Waterfront. wood and g lass. 3
bedroom that shows like a model
home. That contemporary reel !
Family room. redwood decking. air
conditioning and a localion close to
the community pool. tenais court and
jacuzzi. In eltclusiye Lake Forest
Shores at $124,900 . /" IJ~IOO~ t'f()Mt:i
REAL TO"S", 675.0000
2443 East Com ~lghway, Corona del Mil"
RC> 1n Mesa Verl1e. at 546 5990
LJM)A ISLE LUXUllY
The most prestigious address in
Newport Beach. 113 Feet on big bay!
Commanding water view from this
beautifully designed 6900' home.
Superior construction without regard
to cost. 2 Years to build! Pier & slip'
Cor lge boat. 4 Bedrm suites + maid's
qtrs. 1 baths. family rm. billiard rm.
elevator, s auna. unique pool &
jacuzzi. $775,000 Lease.hold or
Sl,315,000 Fee. Seller will finance. w-.n M. TAYLoa co .. llALTOll Jiii ., .. , ! .......
M .. IW..,,'fim.,....ITw CIMI &. M.L 644-49 I 0
'?..'.?f THE REAL b~J ESTJ\T ERS
----' THE REAL
ESTATERS
"NEVER"
om ot u.e ontinary? Loe
cabin family room:
IArle olfke or artist's atudlo! Separate
warbbop! Over 2000 aq
ft I Jitust see to believe! HUrTJ. can 145-GD
FDnESTE
OLSON ··--'-
•• llDlll ILlllS ca.
OV£R 50 YEAAS OF SERv1ee
OMI OP A llMD
Owner Has Draetlcally Reduced
The Price Of This "Bluffs"
Townhcue '8000. Your OJ>portunlty
To Purchase A Lovely Home
W /Spacious Bdrms, 3Ba, + Family-
, Room. Patio Overlooks Pool &
R1mada. 1149,500. Owner Will
CQl\1lder Leue/OptlOQ.
~I
I
W11d11eeday. May !: 1119 .. DAIL y P1LOT D3 ....................... ....................... ;,
H1wnFerW. For~ ~ ....... '::'_~••••••• •• .~!.~.~••••••• c..adefM• IOlZ C.....delM• 1022 ti4onHForS• ~~!.~~•••••••• ~~.~~•••••••• ;;;;;:.;•••••••u•iHJ •••••••••••••••·••;Hi........ 1002 G;;_,... IOOZ •••••••••••• .. ••••••••• ••u••••••••••••••••••• ;;;;;.;;;:;.••on•~;;•4 O...Poillt 1026 ........ 1044
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
400 I Topside Lmte New 3 81'. 3ba . ex«uhve Ocean view twnhae 3 Spaclou 2:>11 l t.q It A customized 5 bdrm. single story hm. Sunken 11v rm . Bedrm. 1750 sq ft townbme.Prtme gmbell
Lingo
with lovely court§ard entry and a 3 w/cathedral ceslln&s. '97.900. Owner 979-7000. loQL 4 br. 2.,... b11. lam ~ &pl, lge ram rm. forrNl -.65119 rm. fortn. din rm. hK car garage PLU panoram ic ocean dulina dream kitchen . ......,_ •.o 1040 mst.r 1uit.e features st.as•
REALTORS
675-5511
OPEN HOUSE
WED· THURS-Al 1 ·5
4101 SUltlttY DRIVE. CAMIO
HIGHLANDS, CORONA DEL MAI.
Gorgeous oc~ •l•w-0.St •alue ht tM
area; thr•• b•droom ho1H: b•autlful
gordlM---f'OOfft for pool
AIAlEmtt
OCIAHVIEW-5TEP$ TO SAND ..
PURE AIR
COLE OF NEWPORT REALTORS :.......;J~-·-2515 E. Coast Hwy .. Corona def M.-lk.Ullg, ff""-9 -IMttllMJ abound ~ tin 11•w c-ery .__ la
675-5511
1002 Gtltffal IOOJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
MESA VYDl
Attractive 4 bdrm .• 2 ba. home jn
immac. condition. $99,000
UDO ISLE
Newly remodeled 3 bdrm .• family, 21h
baths; 1-story home with attractive
So. patio. Price reduced to $238,000.
IAYFttONT · Several ftne bayfront homes
with pier & s~ps
IACI( IAY
Fi~e 4 bdrm .. 21r.i bath family home on
quiet cul de s ac. Oversized pool.
playhouse, extra storage. $189,500
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
.J·l 1 tl :~~·tk ur·~·· N B 67'.J olbl
GtMrol I 002 GeMNI I 002
·····•••·············•· ··········••·••·••••··• NEWPORT
COUNTRY UYIMG
3 BR, 2 BA. seller very
anxious & want.s an orfer.
on Uus ranch style house
Ul the country No down
VA. low down FHA. Of·
fcred at SS6.000.
540.3666
~BG HTS
IUHITS
$48,000 DOWN
Eight units bei.ng lot.ally
refurbished to be de
hvet"fll in lllce·oew condi· uon. Ftill pn~ 1239,900.
$411,000 Down payment
Owner wiU trade BEST
111110,, -. Maa:ottt M_..., nr..
bedroam. to.. ~. Hirn flraplacn. ...
not to ftllfftfon a ttrHlft 1Hawdtrfl•9
througll the ll•l11g or•a. C• bt '""
anytf11M. $350,000 .
OU> CORONA DB. MAR
Thia wdl ...W-..cl two IMdrOOM llw
ph11 CJll"f ....... bthMJ ..... by .... ori .....
owner. Pricl. of oWIMnlllp 9 o•• COM9 H• It! $ p.t;ffO..--
'
LAGUNA llEACH CHARMER ·
Two Mdrow. w bath, ••to Hach.
" MHiCGR fireploc•. Oc* ftoort -feftctd
yard. P•rf•ct hoM• for Clftyo11• who
appredahs Logma chcnL °"'Y SI 10,000.
EMERALD IAY
Sp•ctocuil• •i•w hOtM of tt... qyallty,
oYeriooldng flMrald lay. Ptrlect famhy
hofl\• for thoM dfflrflMJ thl• C)l'eat pri• .. •
co....-ty. Hen dwti rOOM. .. ,.. ... INdy P'•• stor0CJ9. Four b9droom, two bath.
$495,000.
644-7020
2123 SAM JOA9UIH HIU.S ROAD
NEWPORT llEACH
Wf telc-i11 UNIT BUY lN ARl::A Gftffal
Please caU 962· 7788. , I 002 G.Mrol . 1002
REAL EST ATE ~ K€Y ·v P.€ALTOP..s• -------!.:----........ VLZALWW.LPV.JJWLL
-~~ 911~"'1~
-=:..f A CONV£N1£NT ~NC ANO
-<:! SCWIHC GUIO£ FOii THE
GALO.. THE CO
I 7490
tx,Ae.B~
Ht'h en,oy lht 11ut outdoors more 1n lh•s s11tk1nc 1acke11
11n1t lrom Ille collar down all
1n one piece 1ndud1n1 ~
He'll hilt s111ish. ribbed yoke.
teature contmt Use medium
trt11hl 2 ply. synll\ttlC Sj)Or1 ylfn Pit 1490· "zes 3&.44 incl
$1.50 IOI uch pattern Add l~ eKh patte1n tor hnt elm
1111N1I and h1ndhna. S.d tt: Allu.,..
Younc soft. s•1no -th1s
Selmed To-Shm pru~m 1s
lasluon s Pfettttst shipe tor ~
and Summtf' Trim it at the IOP
••th rttll rKll or lace
P11nted Pattein 91 l9 Mt~
..............................................
NEWPORT
HBGHTS
Older Newport Hetghts
home w ;unlimited poten·
tial. Huie corner lot.
IASTSIDI CONDO
Beautiful sln•le story
CGOdo-3 Bdrm• .. family
room, atone flreplace.
private patio. two tennis cootts, 2 party rooms,
pool It 1pa-& more!
Don't mJas it, call toda)'!
$50,500.~
$56,900
Sharp, spacious (mly re·
1.kienee w /cheerful frplc
& xtra large room sizeg
thruout. Xlnt location.
~-----=----• Beautl.!ul grounds cre1tte puk like setting around
this immaculate
townbome. Bett~r take a
look! 646-TTU.
PRIVACY OH A CORHEI
ODeft W eel I ·5 PM.
%90 l Catalpa 111 lo'*""
Watelfro•t
Ho• ..
2633 W.Cout Hwy.
Newport 8ei1Ch
631-1400
1002
Needlecraft Qept. 105
Delly PllOt ... 1". OMO... Sta llew
fA 9l'f t•U, Pn.t i..;;t; ..._ n,. '""'°' ,.....,, VAlUE Ptthed 1978 HWU
S.1es8. 10. 12,.u 16.18. 20 ·~~~~~~~!!!!!!!!~~~~~!!!!!:!~~ S.1e 12 (buSI 34) lair.ts 2 318 -
CIWl cttAIOI CtloOSe * 22S deStant. 3 ti.. 1Mtd1. All
creftJ. Knit. ~llet. Stnd 75'
,..~ ....... ue
111ds 60 uich f1boc
SfttT $1.51 .............
AIN}5fflfm,.etnfw .................
s.M ti: I
IUllAll llAITI• '-""' ~.· °'-" lue
,..., ••• ,.,, Qlltl ...... 1.25 ,.. ... '*" Qllltl.. US Pattern Dept. 4'2
c.MI • S.--.... 'lM Dally Piiot c..w ....... .Sl.00 MtJ,., Qlltl .. . . $1.0t ~~.-... ........ ' $1M HZ .... lMll St.. ... l.\
s.. a •• ... ,. . 11.n ., t•n. """' llMK. • ""' *' ...... · lM =DP. SIZf _. snu AMrt.dllle.a .... 1.0I ..
.... (lidll ...... lM l~ 111& YOUNG. sw.t'f = =. ":i.• t: Oii I budpt1 $ew MW 'flt ...._.-., w ·· $t • drtM&. tops. a111-. ""'' ~ ._... .. . $1:. tll 1n MlW SPRINCUUM =1.14 •1• M(lt PAntRN c.AlAl.OC H11 ... • tttfn coueon_ Sefld 7u
12 •n ...... ~ r:t:..J.:~w"'-H ..... •• •• ... 15f t r........ ... ...... wn .... ~ 1-. ....... c:.Mtw • 11.-r , ......... ""' us . ._ """' .. .. .................. nf
and green rolling hills view. Reduced Lge y~. Submit all or •••••••• !'!............ g:a~rJ>l ~-= 64
to $247.500 FEE. _.,.. 9Ml.f00. Principals ... 900 DO_.... ........ m or oo1y.642-5548Aft. 5 -'"" _..1
Call644-721 I._. ...... _...;...... ______ --! Lu1tury Townbou11e 3 ---------
15' x l5' POOL!! BR. 2 ba. den Tenn1S. ___ TW_O_l•N--•
fJn NILfl
~\.lll.l y 0.
11':iSU( IA IE S
MBA vaDI bch. Owr. 644·lO!M THI TBAAC:l ;: a 'b=:1 ~ f:1u1(. llATTHIS IF And they're both pnced
st.an . Great for en YOU CAN! rlltht! Your choice of "
tata1n.1n1 & fmly enjoy· Only ~.000 & the beacb C.mbrid.&e in 1& suiwr
ment. Your guests now rmoutes away from thi8 2 location. It has J BK.
GtMNI I 002 C.... M9M I 024 from the lge uv rm & rni. bdrm condo. This can •t formal dinlna and t>&tllll(
•••••••••••••-•••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ly rm tbru sliding class lastsocaJI now' 546·0022 apace In the k1tc~en I Itel eaffUllY doors out.aide mto a btn [ 'F Priced al 186.000 · or d NEWPORT IY OWNER patio, pool & garden~l.El;w1tl1Qf Dove r on the maJo• 2 stcy. 6br. l"b•. Lri area Phone today _,,_ greenbelt. All opportwu
Newport Hei&hts to be fam rm • Uv rm. near MS-IM91 Real Eatate ty to b\,.y a 3 BR at ro<'k
exact! Secluded Oora fi scbl• & shop'g Xlnt bottom It needs soml' rauna entryway. Large _ ... _.. S&S Resale Specialists. n.c, but the a:duni pncl'
living room boat.a an 18th "'-'"1'1· -'•500· S49..soo7 3.4 or 5 bdrm models ta onJy 191.900
Century handcarved Mesa Verde 3 BR. 2 ba. avail. some ,w/pool:i.
fireplace. mauJve. " FR. 2 frple 's. 3082 ---------• 968-4602 aorgeous !Formaldln.1~1 Samoa. Qui c k sal.-WOllCOH Peruunet00Propert1es
room. Slepdown family m .900. Ownr. ~7998. AMTil"W•ECARS7 H.a.CH HOUSE
red hill ~"~ ·
55 2-7500 room bosta wet bar & 64&3706 ~ -wall to wall glass!---------Dblegaragepluscov·d& 48r,3Ba.lge aundeck.l l .. --------
p r Iv ate tr o p 1 ca I ••me •STSIDE• • fenced carport ort alley yr new in rapidily de· --------backyard hosts magnifi· 5" Expanded cu1tom1ied velopmg beach area. _.. 1....-.-1 • ..&...I
cent blue free-rorm pool ! ••2 O.._. LOT•• Kenny Koll bit home $125.000. 616 20th St ~un: Y
Immaculate landscap-""' w/added din rm Fresh 536-1718 Marvelous
I J 1189 "00 • A $89 500 palnt inside & out. Lvly 4 -------ng. ust ,., . • ' • bdrm home +523 sq f'l 2Br t··-.. ·e. 1..., mi to bch. 3 Bdrm • fam rm , Edin must t.o see today-call -. BR n~ ww"" od l V II 11
752-1100 rn.ot Wllt. 2 I ..... bonus nn. Low mamt re· pool. Crpl. gar. patio. burg M e tn 1 . .
oPrNmv•il\llJl•'01'4 ""' w/larae ~kitchen. aryrd&sepvea.garden trees & qwet. $62.900 Univ. Park Complete•> [ I Smaller l B'R...»11lt. are.a. Plush new cpts B r 0 k e r redonelOSide. Wllh no ex w~1tilH\f ~£1:F:~r:£:~ ~~i. Phone today .1-7S4-·1239-·/893--·27·&4-. --·1 ~~::~~,~~:;:
w/full price orfer Call $19,950 new drapes & Lev~lor:.
....._ P•1t1 .. a I 007 ........ , ............. .
3 BR. 2 hll·· ~ bl.k. to bay.
Now U19.500'
Marshall RJty 675-4600
,, 1 ... , ..
Newly remode led 5
Bdrm. 2 bath. 2005 E.
Ocean Blvd. $185.000
~ilf:.' olfice for more de· LA L\UEST A . Real Estate ,. ..s. 0.•111 R. E. That's not a mispnnt. 3
642·'161 Bdrm. 2 Ba Monterey U. CWc:Utt S.., plan Wllh family room
TWO ... It couldn't hurt to call Owners leavmg country.
• • Chuck Nub about a re· lmmaculas,e• Priced lo •DUPLEXES• wa.rdioa career m real &eU~weekend' estate. Free tr aining 1£ •EASTSIDE• you qualify. ~101
Agt /<Mner.673"3620 Very clean &quiet. 2 BR ---------
Wtita on connectang over· MESA VaDl--V A 1------------------Triplex. 3·2· l BR: nr. sized Jot. Best location. 95011
elemscbool. 1235.000 clo1e to everything. . 579, ·· Huntington Se ac 11 H flONT Marsha.LI RJty 675-4600 Quality construction T~agers or mot.her lll· Balboa model. Close to
• w1manyimprov~ents law s retreat w1sithng Seac11rr t e nni s ls OCEANFRONT OPEN SUN t'4PM rm" bdrm plus s harp 3 gollclub. 1/4 m1 to beach.
6th Street. 38r. 2 baths 360&36416t.b PLACE bdrm home. Thu t.inique 4br. 2 frplcs. s piral
CllTYARD
A super sharp C<>rnell
w1th centra I a 1 r . ('JC
tensive pat.Jo and cover
and neat eartbtooe de
cor A BEAUTIFUL
home ror only $122.SOO.
2·Story Ask J80M Ph OWNER/AGENT residence offers pnvacy statrcue. Nu earth tone
( 2 1 3 > 7 9 s . o 6 3 4 0 r __ D_EVIN __ R_. E_._642_·6368_. __ 1 and a rm for a every crpta. d.rpa. window cov·
(7l4)S73-508S member of the rmly1 ering & paint Agt. MINI-ESTATE Move fut on th.Ls one. 531H064 or 847-3514. ast
•LOVE A VIEW•
OCEANVJEW
l-BR 2'rll Ba. 2200 sq.Cl.
Ocean & llill view Beaut
upgrds. pror lndscpd.
1109.900
VIEW + fJOOL
3 BR 2 Ba. 1800 sq.ft RV
parking . pvt pool
w/glass enclosure for
view of ocean. Call to
VlCW
VIEW REALTY
49&-TIZ2 770-0SM
C..... .. Mw 1022 •••••••••••••••••••••••
•PRICED R£DUCED•
2 sty, remodeled, upgrd
exec home. 3 BR 2 Ba.
den. • deck w /view t.o.-Ndl Catalina in old
Cdil. $206,950. Brkr.
7»-1288
CHARMING 3br. 2ba
+guest house. Frpl. 2
patb, R·2 kit. Pnn only.
Sl.S?.000. Owner. 640-1030.
OCEAN VU.OWHH
2 fantastic buys. Harbor
Vu, 3 b r. rrpl. must see
644·2641. 644·8122 1114
Whii-e Sails. Open 1·5.
Sat/SUn.
Reduced to $195,000.
Owner w /con.sider con·
tnld. of sale, second TD.
you name It! Owner
must sell imma c 3 BR 2
Ba home w /view o r
ocean It pvt beach ac
cess; 518 DeAma. agt.
IJ1S.Z3U
SPYGLASS HIU
3 Br. ramlly room, 2
frplc1, on corner lot ona. model stttet.
C:tl 640.51 12
"' ~ •• , ·•111 1 u.·~n.f"J.-
' t , • 1 1 ,, 1~ I l t ..;tr t ' ·~•t 11-.
461 SSlltA DR.
Corona Highlands.
private beaches. 4
Bdrm.I. 2 baths. fenced
yard. fixer. Price re·
duced to S14 9. 000.
Agt/Owner 673-3620
IYOWM&21R
So. side. 159-0458
COIOMA oa MAR
.... VU HILLS Oc~ view QitaUna to
Patoa Verdel w /pool, lr1
3 bdr 2YI ba. App\. only.
840-$307
ELL l\lle Items with a
Dally Pilot Clusllled Ad.
642·5818.
MISA VBDE Phone oow ! 545-9'9l. for Susan
~f;n:~7iri;:~1~0.~: (~l\zji!!§l$1ijj -~-or_SaJ_e_J _B_R_2-,,-.-.Ba-.-d-b1
gar. a II bltns. fplc .
grounds & pool area. Has Real Estate Califomta Class1c. As · 4 bdrms + den w /2 sume VA Loan at 8t,1a~
rrplcs V~ry lge comer By Owner . H alecrest w / $I 0 . 0 o o d 0 w n .
lot w/v1ew or park bme 3br 1"'2 ba. xtra lg l ()wnr/Agt 846-2667 Phone today for appt to k>t, $74.900 ~5683 for ___ ;;...._ ____ _
see. 545-9491 appt. _..;...;._ ______ _
IYOWMB
4 Br. 2 ba. formal duung.
---------• brick frplc. comer lol,2 car gar 900 Dogwood
$67,300
3 Br home on beautiful
tree-lmed street. Close to
bea c h . C all DEL
LARSON
So. Cllf R..tty
C4lll 546-5605
Lease Opt. $1500 allows
you 3 Br 2 Ba, home lge
comer lot. close t.o S.
C.oastP1aza.148-17S7
Pool. teno.ls. Jacuw
3 Bdrm. 2YI Ba -
transferred owner muat
sell! Realistically priced
at m.~esa than :?
yrs old.
Barrett Realty
642·5200
MESA VERDE
$19,500
3 BR 2 88. family rm.
nicely d«orat.ed, won't
last. C.a II :
JIUllllCAllf"I CNN HOutl lllAUY
171130ta"9'1. -
$78.500. Phone 151-0774
eves.
"~ed" E1s1de cust .
2000 sq ft, 3Br. fam rm. J
c ar gar. R 2 . Agt
846-7171
ASSUM.ULE LOAM
Huge <2000 sq ft. HomeJ
W /custom faauJy rm, 2
fplc's and oversized
yard. Only SS69 mo
lklYer may assume ex·
istlng VA 8~% loan
$71,llOOfUll pri~
714-7100
Bring
Your Bikini
Delightful pool home
with gr eenhou ge' 3
bedrooms. ram1ly room.
dining. fireplace. 2
patios. $94,900. BKR.
54G-1120.
645·9161 'l'AABl!I I
IYOWMEI ·~ ... ~~:~~~~o3 q~au+;~f;· "#I .. Ctlfot .._ ..
~~11~w:a~2= T VD PllMI LOCATIOH '
Total price $84.900 Mesa Verde Cul·de·sac 751·6633 st.ttet. 3Br. 28a, ram rm.
walk 4 blks to grades 1-8
3br, l~ba. atooe frplc. ex· 912.500.
penlive crpts. corne REESE REAL TORS
bay wndw, cmr lot. poo 161·1473
size yrd. fruit trees, R. V storage, LO' gate. G OPEN HOUSE 4 BR 2 Ba,
loca. 598 Sturaeon Dr fplc. new opts th.ruout 546-1325 BBQ pit. zoning tor ---------1 horles. Incl corral, tack
By ownr. redtt, nu kitch
SlOOO'a.be&ow mrkt 3 BR
1 ba. hUfle lot. '67 .900
6'5-81Zl or bus.; 53H8 I 2
38Rl&POOL
room. Sunday 9·5PM or
phone for appt 557·3161
all 6PM wkdays 20291
Orchid. Santa An11
Hellbta
GHAT INYUT.
J Year old fourple1t in
super rental location. RANCH REAi.TT close to beach. Owner's
unit u separate wllb 3 551-2000 bdrms . 2 baths & 2--------
frplcs . other umts are 3. TUtrnl ltOCll
2. l·bdrms. 1225.000 taOADMOoa
SAcaJACE
Beach House. 3 BR. 2 ba.
formal din rm 2 lots.
4 BR. diruo.g area & fam1
ly room. Comptetely up
graded. Jmmac. cond
Cover e d redw ood
atnum. Mallbu Lights.. &
mucb more. Re a)t y
sharp at $1.32,000. '
VAU.IY 640.ttoO
Ownr. 644-IOIM S~ TO LUE
S ILOCICS IM WOODUIDGE
FROM I ll! ... CH EQjoy this gracious· 1 ~ bdrm borne Localed
Thul duplex is LARGE: near beach" lake, clost•
Two 3 bed.room. 2 bath t.o schools & park. HU111'
units with fireplaces. fmly ron w/frplc. frml
PRIDE O f 0 W N · din. Super upgraded
ER S HIP AREA ror 758-"°l
sia>.ooo ~~11920 (r~=-·1"'\"!f ... !tt•4•1•a!Wl1•4•1 ..
A fi)UAIL Real Estate
~PLACE
-10,..n .. P.M.1 •VA $1751<•
'
04.., I work With Orange Co
.. Vets only Hom es tu
••••••••••••••••••••••• 1175.000. For tnfo call:
IDITAGE Piii
3 bedroom townhome
with central air and all
t.he other upgrades that a
model would have Ex
cellent location for easy
access to the park. ten-
nis, scbool and shopping.
Here ia your chance ror
only Sl 10.000
Vet Agt. 54Hl800
IESTOF
WOOOIRIDGE
DCB.LINT PRICE
Washington Model. I
bdrm · big fmly rm. sun
dee le orf m:.tr bdrm
Professioru1lly landsc~rl
w/bnck pauo & flrennl(
8tf1t.ownhome.159· 1501
HO OUAUFYIMG ~U9S7-0630
UMIVMSITY PIK
VIII . I , m o d1(1 ~d
Fordham twnhse, 1900 :.Q
ll end urut. 4 br. 2"7 ba
3br2ba, Ira covered p1t10 IAMCPt RIAi.TY Open House. Sal/Sun
in Mesa del Mar Siil.~ 5"·2000 4332 Sen1n Way Uy
FOi SALi IY OWHR
Movinl out of 1~te. n
to aeU C.M. prop, two
BR homes. 1 E-1lde. 1 W ·
aide. ...800 " $79.900.
646-el3
~-3470 Owner $105.000. ss:,0404
---------BY OWNER, 3 BR. 2 ba, 1_or_97_5-t980 __ w_r_k_dy_s_. __ MISA V•DE Frplc. xlnt loc. pnced
Lovely 3Bdrm. 2 bath right at S72.000. M2-8B?O •w•oo-D•B•RJ•OO-E-CO-N•DO•
home. Rudy t.o move·in WOODBRJOOE By owner Btfl ! story end
condition. SH.900 for New 2 story 4 BR I Ba. unit, 28r. 112/Ba. cov
qulct1aJe. 2400 sq.ft .. den, rplc. lge ered p11 tio locluot,
S~\t~lA-~£~s·
Tltot lnl1i9ulng Word Gom• witlt o Clt11dle
POOL. POOL ti.ct yard. Must sell. Pvt lakes. p0ols puks &
3.ltd.rm, 2 bath, fam rm. P\y. zta.475-4390 scllls. 161,9()0..0r 0Jre1
new root. oew deckina. W_,.,.brid• Arborlake "7.llOOIOffer 551-4380
-----..... .., QA'f L IOUAM-----
•:-:.~ _: :: ....... ._ ...,. .. _.
R A Y R E T
I r r I I
ID91\1 xtru. A ·l rood.I· """" •• • t I on • t m m e d 1 a t f lake or mt.n view from f!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~
pcm.alocl • 900 every wtndow. 2 br + .. S. CST PLAu d.u, uparaded hrdwd noon • carpeUna. A1C. 4Bdrm. 2 bath, 2 alory on w a l I c o v • r I n ll s
cpAet. ~...._c ttreet ln t e a r t h t o n e 1 • • nee H l&hborbood la~aciped, lo malnt ..
Completely returblthcd \Md bf'k P11Uol. $13$,000 \ncludlfti carpets, alot. By Owner s,g.m? appllan~. Sale price ....... ___ . _____ ,
a.too. Home ar land. 4br. owner
LMUIONT ~d11ale btlow milt
$149,• ~abteft 28l' + den A.It upgrades
m.571M,owner lair Mcc..lt $1<17~000 Ulla wMll only.
1110Me.,...ltw4, W• 1114,*· Ac:cep\ 30 :.."°:". C:.... ...... M·77Z9 day m&crow only. Wood· ~~~~~=~ bnqe. rz Sonoparrow. A. llOUl.ht·•fter s Bdrm . -65WIZa lln&le stOI")' tnd u.ntt on MIW -llANCl--fO-S-.J-3_8_:R-. Si-n-• •rtenbell nur ~t ,
Us.,... Ws Rev, 12lh ,.roen 6: Jacuu:I, t..Ma and biile
'' ..... # 000 t.raib. 112.500 Sbadnn.JbethA:poolon lake Vu. ll,l, . 28 C41'4+7Jt 1 eo.J.IO Euiat&t pnvate _N_ue_~o_._MT_·'-°"'----FOR DITAJLS
t'W•oc lol wfth RV -1 ho ............ p..Aa.1 ~n...-•t ••"· caU tor • _,.. • w ,,_,, ..,,.. ""'"' " Thar• *iaa' u.. .IU'122l DAILY PILOT CIMTURY 21 SERVICE OIUCTORY
Wtttdff....,, \a all about·· /Jxi."11' "' •• r.r, 1 : ,
,y, 'Lh II\•:'>
.. DAA.YPILOT * .._."For S. Ollltir-1........ OHiefoAe•&t• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....... ,_.. M--..'°'W. ...._..'° Wt ... ..,.,..._. 106' ...... Hema ._,,.,,.rty ZOOO Othet-Anltst• Ho.MtU.-..elted ......_Ullfwlia.d '.:t= .. ·;as·r· .. ·,·o·~·.:r;=:.:~···!··,·0.,1·1· ········~····,·o·:.·,· ....................... ,_,s. i 100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••• ~ •••• ~• -..---.._...... __. • ••••o•••••............ lUSllMUMITS .._,,......., ZOOO c::.e.MeM l2Z4 1eec1a JJ6t
....................... ' ············~···· •••·•·················· l•-•w_e_TC_u..•a___ FANTASTICAL :f.:.2 ~R ~~°'~~~· .... ~;;;;;; ........ ;·~;:;·;:;,::~~· .... .:;;.;;;.;;;;;;· ...
blrJ.OO
INTaTAIMH'S ~
-, ...... 110 ...... .., ........
Sod«1• 11• MtM. Solw or.-llMIN ,.oa
wfttt ... t-r'lt....,.... ..._ 1Mkl11•
patio ..t we. Na 4 be•ae• J INlllt t.o .. 1, .._... wftlt .......... SI Jf ,000
OANA
POINT
493·8812
495-1720
SOUTJt LAGUf'A
499.W(
LAGUNA
BEACH
'9'1·3331
ip•c10111 4 Bd a Ba CHA.RM e t.acbfd . 1•ra1H. Mu1t 1., f>rom "7S KJch It peu Clt .. T LAii Jac\w.l in maater aww Nuau,v iiroomrd 3 Bdrm, eee at lh1a price Pte .. e " OK 6'1'4912 Bkr
2 flr•placu iead•d 2 !Mith with lo~•lY yard Estate Sale call for more lnfo llA.L IST .An 3 Br home ooly '71.Slmo
_. wtndoWa •II Mw ~!~ka•b:~'tii~:h~:111y lleauti!U1Md02Br.2Ba. 540-3666 ·~11icome N:'~~~P::.~:.~~r~ ~.ca:;~.~~.~~ ~i-~.k!!!~ noon. l ts2,$00. To tee call romer lot ln 4• park. :t\plrtmeots open bum ce1lln11s w/Lalle Arrowhead at-
.... ..,._ --540-11.Sl Pane rent Ollly $H2.00. -<:ommerclal Choose your carpet "'50 moeph Truly a chance of
Tbis excellent bome Call 6 let "' locate the & 14 ~o . We 1 t b I u r r a Wetinw. Call now. ju.:it c .,11. m of 11111\11 ..
11..HtN 111\Nll\,._,ll
~JI U'JuU
.,.~HERITAGE
. • kLAUOHS
available for lmmed OC· Newport.co.ta Mesa lq· Villa1e. Victoria • Ca llst«i
cupano. Enjoy the _;;;;;======~ ve9tment t.bat fits your nyoo 631·2080 •••United Broilers
tineat all year round 1 UHfTSC.M. Requlremeats. ·~ ft.....t-..-I.•. JohnC.Ny,646--7414 1mo1 tree weather in ... 71tJ ... 37 __ .__. Orante CountJ, awhn· BeautifuJ brand oew 4·1 • ~ • S2051tidapet.aok gar NO FEE! Houses, condos~
OWNER AMXJOUS BJdfs "D" model mlq, Jaaml, IOciaJ ac· br, loft, f/p. 3'-2 br, 1~ ba G.H. Robert.on Realtor •tori:' area lg, more du p I e u 1 . a e n ta I
lnSbral,lbal. Roobeam~or·~!tq~ •.aoo.a~~r.!' .. '· UYitlelploft. townh~~· Ha ll bltbuna. 1270 ldalgeyd + t Pav1Uon,67S-4912 Bkr.
•
1 UUil .,. ~eat&M-..-. Cllfui•rectflc Cf]M, w.,.. WTY. Y ,_._ __ • ......._ 2200 12Jt!S 2t>rkldaoknice •~r-.....__11• motor home aep•rate __ .....;;:.. ______ , now. Tom Lee. Rltr . ._..._._ S32S3br2balddamore __ __....
worll1bop for the MoblleHomeRealty Ma-la. ••••••••••••••••••••••• l0008moreavailnow: Wehavel000'1 ofhouaes.
c:native man. Wlll oot 2708Harbor~208 O...Cl&M.lfTI All areaa. all prica. dplu. apts now. all
last at ll&i,500. Call Dl!llll UllDU' 140-5'37 •2Tri._.• ffimdnl&OOBeach Open1 days 9to6 areu.aUprices.Saveoo M&G54or~M56 Ullll fnftl l~~~~~~~~~I Near Lake \lark. Min. t.o 2'1,000 sq. ft. lot near KJds. petawelcome' ree.
Wear ooe or watch ~e at'x&O' Be~.~ Br, bch.1-48R,3 ba;1-3BR, P acifi ca Hoapilal, S Cw-r'te.I• 64Mt00 A#J UDO ISLE. 2900 SQ. ft. rrcx;n a plieuan~ ~1de 2 ba. fam rm. A/C, "The 21.'i ba; 1·3 BR. 2 ba. s Pomta Shop. Cntr & Civic ~ ,. ... 1-------~
Own. financing·• br, 3 pMX>. ADdthatsJusltbe Meadows" Irvi ne garases. frplca. S189.000 Cent.er.Sl35.000.. Bl~fs, pan. view, l1e. 3
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I 119. dbl aru. hi Uv rm. twinkle from lhia Dover art' 8 <>woe · each. 1709-l7JJ Alabama. David Bourke RJtr Townhae. panoramic vu. 3 Br. fam. rm .. 2~ ba, Ofc Ht·up. Mod kit. Sbol"M jewel. An out· S*AdultP · Y r Hunt. Bch. S31·1'711 546-9950 lge bdrms, 2i..,ba . rrpl. pool.BSOAJl . .....ut
PaUo. Priv Bcb. Serv. l&DdlDJ builder's bome. s1-. Owner. Ao....t.of r__.. 1ar dr opener, all bit.Ina. Oceanfront l br older ...... 1044 ............. 1012 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Por. Lra lot. SZS0,000. IArge, lonly & lux· SiJvfft'feSt M' x eo•, l~ ..._ ~1 2150 Patio • balcony, ~2.) ..._ __ Yrly -
67S412lit uricMll 1281 000 Shown 3 Bdrms 2 ba ft'OjAJ ff mo. 64.2-M48 aft s •.......:. · -· NOW YOU CAN AP'· li2.900, view condo, 2 br, • byapPt. • . S!t..~ •• s star adult IMVISTMIMT ....................... TSLM1mt M2·1603
FORD. 4 BR. 2 Ba ln 2~be.alr, ,,...,~. Prtnon-COUMTIY pet part. M2-1$d alls Coaunerciaf build.lo• in IOACalllAMCH E/1ide 3 BR. 2 ba. r~lc. W.Clifr.charmmg3 BR~
beautilW lTYloe. Walk to _ty;...._o.m.r-__ ._Nl-_'7_615 ___ 1 LIVING IOH witb 2 pm. OCUll area wit.b secure RemodeJed randa home gar, pvt yd & pool. Kids l1'°J ba, pallo, no pets.
part & school, on cut de Bdrm.. 2~ bath-lam rm leue from Oovemment with open beam ceili.Dg1 OK. s:i2.5 mo. 644-~. 9125/mo. N-Zllt sac, 1reat cond. Only sme41TY • molher·in·law unit ln l·BR • elm, nicely fwn.. AlencY for ule. lqutty 6: vtns ln all dlrectiom. 175-tOOO, Wendy ~::':~ 10 ... Lrg.liv-:,~b~c~frplc,J ~~ulne t.o laJ"Ke ~o:'t~":!:.9;"':,; =~:it l50c~iooo1 ,~d~ .. dw! ~~· fs:;J :riio~ ~=~~8~~,!"a ~hrd~ ~i \~~·u~ ln::'
_,.....--Br. expandable. a ba, 20271 BaJVtew ....._......... .. .. •n•w· paymen . a or e· complete pnvacy. Tbe •-I S31S Mt s S o" n Sun l . a . •••••••-•••••••••••••• laundrv rm. fam-rm, , .. "'1~17 tails ,_,_ · f "' poo 8· · • 213/6611116 ' -.-~ .Dbl wide 3 br tum. w. · remaw.wg acreage is or 832.5262 1 ___ ------SW91• YllW CUo, UI• kitchen. Lot 71 1--------1 Newport. lncla: Washer M A Y 0 C K )'OU to do wtt.b u you BlfuJ 4er aea pool va-
Beautiful eomrtry mtiac ~ 169' P~ ~Jcpd. "dryer. $11,500. Must J8(,"Gft~£V;E pleue.Callnow! 2. BR bou1e. pool and cant. sm1m~. Gant 1J with npanai•e view of e new, evs, tr-Cl•••• 1076 aeU. llartoa Realty, t~ KACH 973-4626 Jacuzzi.~. poolHrTinc. 549-2117t. the ocean: veryJutet at 4'11>-0088owner. -.--~ .. , ... a.a~ ... ut...L&.-• • .__ 6424758 ,_ .. _ n ••••••••••••••••••••••• --"_,_ •• ..., ~-~ . private. ~ •·op SUPER BUYi Price re· FIX •-5 •VE .._ ,.__ • ......._ I •oo -, 11131 E 17th St tC SA ' -M V rd 4 b l!'.utbluff 3 BR. Fam Rm, potentJal yet ext~mely ·duced t.o M .900 on this rvn-1rnuE UYI.... -"" _...,.. ---• . .. ....,ase esa e e r dbl pr, remod kit. riew.
comfortable as IS . 2 48r, 2batb home. """"''" na $89,500 ....................... ForS.lyOwMr FOM'l'AM.AjlyOwMr W/pool. Pool ar garden· S72S m o . Avl now Bdrm. plus large den ......... ..-...,.... This Dover Shores 4 IUILDBS ............. ~ 3 B 2 ........ Cond l 'r\ Ina serv. incl. moo. mo. '75'Mllll5
$121,!iOO. ,,,..,,._ ..__ bedroom custom home II View of ocean & bllls. __.., ~" r. s..,,, o. S46-98i50Ageot. 1----------
0-Y.O B)' qwner 4 BR home. built around a sunny Great fucer with a 3 BR. Choke Iott & acreace. 6 Unit apt w/rec room. ba. Less than l yr old. For lse 3 or 4 BR hie. • --e 2 Bdrm., 2 bath 00• must see, m .ooo. 25012 . brtck patio. It offers 1~ BA, large din inc· MADY t.o cbooee from In unlts ar• all rented. Nft C\Jt. clrpe. DfW. cen-tfwl"""'* .._. 1240 Eutbluff, <NB> Magrufi-
-.-.5 • 1 .. ,_,_ et family room w /dbl. beaut. are as. all S2,400mo.lncome4·3Br. tral air/beat. S3S.OOO. ••••••••••••••••••••••• -•· .. -w,compl'"'telyr• ly ~ block to Main Nueva Vlsta,831-1.IU •ortna UUUJll, 1ourm • E es (714)S48 7641 Tom .. ..,... nc " "' Beach. Bright It clean. kitchen, hu1e maste r fireplmce. +secluded w/t.enm. BKR. 21,AJBa studios, 2 · 2Br. v · New·e legant·2 bedroom modeled, decorated. •.soo. CUSTOM! suit.e, a car 1araae 6 den. iludy or 4th BR. (714)m•5etl l.Ba. 1'7091 Elm St., H.B. OUveablD CEnciDilas) <l560> or 2 bedroom + lndscpd. Nu crpts.
N_.. ... 5 a11r.+•yy much more. Tbi• lm· Prteedt.oaeU. OR522-0539 s:ns.ooo. 848·2'55 days. c\11\0m oa z.a acres, 2300 den (1515>. Cedar & •in· w~ t1r appliances vwu" ~ Nev MW J BR OD large macolate hom• 11 of· BERTHA HENRY ~ CRIS S3&4meves/wlcnds sq ft. 3 car pr. Sl70,000. dow bome. ' Blocks t.o Coaetotch.116~ * 49~057 * lot.Locatedatendofcut.-feredat12'1t.008.andyou REALTORS nn.A SAMCl.IMIMTI By owner. Read1 for beacb. Private !·car cntr. STH mo. Cal1
dHac:-Cer. Ule. superb own the land! Sbown by m Del Mar 49'2-4121 One d the few neelleftt __ _ moft t:n. Call i·5'l~Ult farar. Folly main· m.n•c1a,. Moa-P'tt. llagnifi ceot Beach,
(\Oelt.al • ocean views. ar, apt w /beaut. pool.
Qwet area near beach 6
.)hopping. Only 119.500.
9YI percent financin1
available. Opa Hie daily. ......
r~ .. r~ac~U~Soo appolntmelltOllly. J Br, 2 ba Mira Costa c::t :!:·~S:e ~ crl ...... ~rordetaila peta. ~=~ 11c0..,.2Br.28a
(47) 'l'wD.bH, nr Camino de Co.lsSanDietoCo. Fan-s--rkUno 1 BR units ..... ('710-.all Twabome. btfl coif Estrella 6 K·lllart. tuU ri '3500 pe r-• manevtew pytprace
w.GOI c P ce r witb secluded garden -····--••••••-•• Circlt111111 1750 -mo •• lf0·1126: acre.~;:-~;. peUo, PLUS separate .._. ~ • hd 1115 I& pr pool reins, man
IUY A lrT OF OR~-..,.,. l1lllt apt. ZOned C.l tor ·-.. •••=••••••••••••• ..a.._.. n-....... ' S i----------C•fur •History --eddedpota.lal. ...... IMdl ~ 41 ;::.~~·gt~ Br + fa m ll)' rm.
,/ '-'-. '--l. , •• ' f ,•. /,
'" 1 ' J, j' I Traditional 2 BR San C 1dal _ •• -............... canalfroat. ~. A.tao 2
•IYIHA Clemente Casa. This 38 ,...,...., 1600 'nftlX 975 2 BR tetm·fllnl 190 1275 Ip 2br kid ok gar. br +den mi50 Yrly. W~
COUMTDOWH yearoldSpaniabbomela ---··-·••••••••• $129,500 caalroa Ac:ms Dr. ,·213> lOOO's DJore avail. Fee. to. beKb. ~· lenD1$
'· • I 1 , 1 ~ l ~ ~ 1 ~ '~
6 _ LOTS. Laguna Beach, l*MCH Ill.Al.TY in beautJfuJ cood. ft truly SMAU. MOTB. Super location near •2S0l. ~Agt. from bo&h. Manna Real· C.ATALIMAVllW renecta tbe charm It beacb&DelMarsbops.2 . i...;.ty_.ec.aso ___ -___ _ greatocea.nview.$30,000 Outstand.lq 3 bedroom, 151·2000 hospitality of So. C.lir. L(m&Beach. lloatrooma Larae 1 BR unit& PLUS Mlwportleedt Jiff SJ25buce3brkidsok. Lge Pl b lb Jb Ibo
iunroom home with ---------1 livin Sl05000 reatedweetly. studio -••••••••••••••••••• pool. must see Fee. IJB r, a w at 5 · BDRM .• Chris Abel itassed·ln porch. The 1Y OWIB •tE.ACH «· • · Sl75,000 siRTu.A HENRY Otanh1litt lklasee avail 16-4100AJt. ~ ~~ beach.
designed home. $37S,OOO beat mat.erlaJ is ln thil ia Just 300 •t.epa away .AHCHOIAGE 18ft'SOM&•OWH REALTORS now t.o June 1S, Sl.SO" Lovel.Y 3 br Landmark11---'-----
4 BDRM .. Nigue l well built Mooarcb Bay 3Br,2Ba, frplc. 2 car gar IMYHTMEMTS llALTOIS IJJ-9711 21SDelMu 412-4121 1200 wk, or by mo. Coodo. u-aoec1. Close TOOWMIRS T ho S340 ooo ia • Carmel-like settlnJ -.2510 r ..
Shores custom home. errace me. • ooapvtst.inLldoSands --===='=7=1==4t =4'='-==7=7=1=1 PRIMEOOM'LCORNER l'ORSALllYC>Witla to beach. 962-44$4 ; Maoy collep studenu.
SDl,000 Sl.38.SOO 645-1262 -Cotta Mesa, C-2 w/1400 Tri-plex near beach on 842-0163or lm2·85. winier ,,_.., starUng
WAUCTOllACH aqftboUdtn1.PrieeJu.st 42ndSt'N-$180000 ...... Uwfw llld -....1.iu • ~JBR September. Our rental 3 BDRM "u..ba Niguel · _....____.t.o~""'OOO'C lJ · -~· • · -·--•••••••••••-• .. ,~ pa111 • °' dept. needs all U..Unp. · ........ · 311ooarcbBayPlau Belleottqenr.tbepa. n"'-=..,. .......... _.;a Creal rental. Call'" .. ..202 t'Uldesac.Walktoparl CaU •if,_ llave a starterbome.'9l.SOO LapnaN!gueJ Jmmac. cond. Stf>ne _,_rra,........ 646-9284 OD wlidya an .. I ~ •ucbooll.2cargar."25 ob&efn
2 _ R-2 LOTS ia heart of 4'6-7U2 lll-Gll6 frpk. Nost.alglcarea. R·3 642-llJO 6PM!Wtnda. ..••;;;-;,;;;~ .... mo.-.ca YaeaDeypr
Dana Point. s•2.soo ---------· lot .. Nr. sbop'g " below ..... ll!:V C.M ......_ -....a..otn~-1a 00 T SS OUT ON tt 11r W ~,11, IL ·'·:r STEPS To TENNIS mkt. price. 831·37SO; UUI"~ • uJUllS•-RCUWI N' Ml Each Mlt1&o.Ylefo 1067 ~zm By ownr, xJnt coad. Ille GetF•tRes1illa 11llS Sharp 3 BR 2 BA, ••••••••••••••••••••••• COURT. BAY •. a BR 2 WallsireetReaJ Estate -.. 1"Aooo11:.-5777 Sample: tplc. W/cpU, fncd yard, • '¥ • ~f' '"''r"' h ., . ~. B
'•.1.,. :• J· R·Z LOT. cloa~ lo 2BRCA.SADELSOL BA elm. jacum, set In ......., . ......,, _.. . Sl702brbouse0ran1e canv area. MZS. 9D-"58'7t.========
down t 0 w n Laguna f\JU aolf coune view Doral prden. S.. ..._ --.ola"S SALi Sl'7S lbr hie llidl/peta act. no fee. BAY PaONT 2br a.. Yr ~.ooo '89.900. $240,000. C4lll: C .. kl WWW I 071 .ALL:MIW ~~=~CE GORGEOUS 4 br 2 ba, *:Sec bids. Call Enib'n FantasUccul-de-sac ....................... Co•dt•ill 1•1/Tew. Dqplex.SC-~ IS7-Gl22 new paint " carpet . ._Gl_:Ma ______ _
FLORAllOD!!L. ~ ...._._. .... 1700 Dapaa-SC-$1.51,000 farepl.att, covered pauo. 2 BR, oce&n/mtn
BLASI' OFF m tbl.5 11164
ooeaftfront l!ll60 mobile
home. GS.000 :11:;;'~·~ 1U11tCMn * * * * * * * ;;;;:_-:_*_.~;;;,·;:• 2blocbtobeacb,riew ........... 1206 buee corner lot w/fruit v111, ar park. bay , 'al llADRJD. Walk t.o ~ " '"CHAIMIM9 &....-V n. ·-·--.... -....... b'ee8, near partl • sbop. Faahlon Isl.. s. Hwy.
lake S129 aoo 1'7U .c-..... old San Juan Capistrano. :!:1 C'ydp. c:fee f~ ~.Pvi!° LovetJ a Br. 2 Ba. frpl. DD P101-S4tO mo. Avail. quiet. w t D. fplc. kith R · • 645-9161 A ff ordable up · ---.. c:rpta,nopeta..t&ZSyrly. aow.8C7~.-~ fum.IM1t515.m.n 3B .x.tntClOlld.165.900 st..airs/dowutaira con· or poola, a auDa 6 ~
VALUYllALTY ILUffS dominiwn.3Bdrma., l~ clubble, ar tennis ets. 21cJU.DP·Sll,OOOac:b · ~ b.HugKie_! _!>._"· MNear TbeBlutfs
518-456 ~~.window aot~• bcb. lt'7S2 witbSmpLao,CCappr ...._, ' dt 1207 .-c ua ua. ore. 4br, 21.'ibll, fam rm. pvt This Bobor~ley ~tir~+= ~: covenap, bullt·lna, two <lee!ru!lreClr. BJOwuer C.omtructioolllvestmeot _ ................... Smfee . ....OOAgt. patio, frplc. SS7S per mo
ftl....l-. LI-·--3 bdrm Cordova, prof. at.riam, priced rilbt. car praJe • IHlUo. By '90,900.531-'1313/ICMIU. m.-. a.-,~,Cl'IJU,drps,dbl 2Brw/pr.1215.Newcpta 644-le>;l»5050ext22
VIUS nVYMr landscaped, tap1rades. ~or-..al.4' owner. Mon. thru Thurs. lllcw Praparty 2000 t Ullh + ..... pr. «'1 nice. 1&25, No 6 tile ..... water pd. 2710 3 Bdrm + den 0 N ::ot~:E':J. ~-~ ~~We wUI deal. SIJ.OOODWM ~y~ &!!_ ~·::f8~ ....................... Oaly1blocbtobeacblD pela.l-aa.Jm ~:J-.;ire. Call WATER. Sp9dous w~
in prtme NORTH . END _...... HA.BBOR VIEW eveoiDIS, call < 71.C > TWO ll'Ml eoacttOoa. Try 15'1' C.1a1 .. ..._. 3222 · · v I e w S 12 o o / m o
tedicmdl.Agmla, Jal a I BR 3 BA Condo, air AssmnebUofia,50,000at -.-• e Clown • .Aakinl .. ,500 ................ •-•••n SUPER SHARP 2 BR l Waterfront Homes
<few bib FROll BEACH cond •• crpla, drapes, $1050 mo. abr. lmmac •DUPLEXES• ~Brobr. .....8111Nll Ba, w/D/W, cpt.s:;·;..~focd~;:;i-131-·1_400 _____ _
le VILLAGE. Archaic pool, sll ato17. -750. bome.NoQUdf)'ingnec. MUDISTDIU9Hr 1114327 WebawlOOO'aol~. yard, only $.W. 0.-l Houle util paid
z-1tor1 arcbltecture, 7JA/830-5Cm <>waerwtlf &aoce. Vac. •EASTSIDEe Co•--~ dplu, apts now. atl •11.nofee. ll.50 mo. No kitchen'. ~~VID~TH~ MowrlJlilln.79-0MS PYt. Jacuzzi, tundeet a ;;::an~== •·Pie~ in Hunt_!!~~ C'."'allprteea.S.•eoa.,...... 3244 19-18.Nope&a.
SEA ............ 1069 3br, 2ba, Yiew, H.V.H. covered peUo sUITOUDCI med Jot. Best locatlon, Buc:b loeat.d In._._. '45o4t00 .,,, -.. -......... s.a 1276
· ·-·--••••-•••••• 1187 ,500. 2244 Port f.h1a 4 BR, architect• cloae to ever7tblnr. ·~tottu ..!."9w ·1,¥e>6 SPY lt84TA.LS --·-··--••••• n .• -• BDRll FLOOR OUtiae........, ~ream bome. latlde t ti men .. o 1•-a GLASS HILLS vtew ......... c2 . --·•--••-T.rra C4Ua ti.le, cedar Quallt)' C0'11 rue Oil beaeb. Pria.d to tell. lllrl'ua a-1150-a.,. SBR,2Ba ........... t50() Jlloec!monr ''SMdce1tJe"
PLAN, SERVICED BY 2 ._ •~-llW' ......... =.. ~ cmtom 11...... w/JDU1lmJINfementa. Call Rn*# S/51-332'7 --.. -1•v 3BR.! Ba ........... $550 4 BR. 2 a., aw bome BA'lll& Parlortnellv. SMal.THISIA • CUl&.omtrplc::k"e OPENSVN.1-d'M • v•~ 4BR.2~ba ......... $S1S P\aUoeeaava.cov'dpet ..
rm. bu RED BRICK l>lllMxwrtheoeean,4 pqeoatofHome a.>6•la.bPLACE OIAMfl.I JBBltdm.Cll&rdedgate 5BR.2~ba ....... 8580 Wmo.AvaJl.IUDel.lst
FlllEPl.ACE •OPENS bdrm qpper, I l>drllla 11 .... m._. c:-·elou.a ar OWM&il/AGENT ftl....,_ comm Pool a WD.o1a offer purcbue opt TO GLASSED-IN lower. h laHJ:l of ~-"8.500. II DBVINR..E.MMa C~1 t ~ Gardeoel' IDckt: W.1313 da11, 49U990
SOLARJ Ull STYLED Nwpuil Be8dt. llllny, •l'M'ft yQar'I to apertece by 3 0 B e • u t l r g I I , Call 6"-41132 evea. wbda. DINING Rll. Room1 eaU f.or appl. to tee! u.IN _,__ ••EASTSID~• ~ ~. l
kilcbeD wtih ..mce rm. 1111.ooe. Get rudJ for 3 ea 2" ~t. Dover -.z..u., llAl.n Pride ot owmnldp. um. 2 a. .. dea. flPl. lllce Wu' I h1 HI
.UM'blcl aammer renlala 11 -,___rue.. Call ••2 ON LOT•• bedroom, one aad patio. Cloae to ever· -................. ..
MO-USJ Om. 171-1111. at 2102, 4''-"77 -7314010 ••$8f,SOO•• balf batb taDits with ytklac. Older couple I dtr1..._1! 'nle2Ddlewlbdrm.lsre-II&. eaca.d ,.,.,. . .l•l prel., ao..-.. -.ZS. Al\. WebnelOOO'sotbotlles. ~~rJJw·~DiAt~.~ IKiCAMYOM ftolll uni&. 2 Ba 1 •. IOW' "9n new. CODdo ~/'9'7-3311 dplxa, •Pl• DOW, all
G,_1 _ _._,_ OD 3 114_ .. ___..__. ·~ row" W/larle aanny tkcbeD. converaioa poteoUal. _ ......... _. 'OY JC arus, all prtc:.. Save on ua DCU ... .... _...,... uu1n Smaller 1 BR unit, WW nc1Mm191 An ex· r~• --our e · fee wmnalli-necfwlndoWll.1~~~~~~~~~l IOlf coune view of ..... _. de b d cl·-... · _.. .. n. •• u Pia ecfamllybome 48Ror3 · AIJ..LOOKINOTOTJttl· pond•, fair•a11 6 Bnatmal bome by the ::_~re:.~~ ~~ ce lrdea.. 2~ ea.'Sbutten, _.-_MtO __ o ____ A#l-=-
SEA 6 VILLAO.I: creeu. Exquisite 1ea, 21try, 4br. Ideal low. OWDa' w/NPIUJnb 75J.lf20 cheer tbruout. Pool 111E TERRACE, beaut b lbe.fDcdyard"aice
BaDW. 1"lds cba.rmln1 A.ufUlta Plan. 2 bdrm. 6 lam. bume. CalHor appt. w/full ]IJ'ice offer. Call • wlfloltlna cover for all UllCJ'8ded CambrtdJe 3 ,. a :::...""'::.!: .... ~ :=..'":.::: ::.:: ~ :~: 11
-............ ,.......... A qUAIL '-~~~ ~~Owtlrl•al. : ...... A ..
$12',IOOMPrke nwdlQa b1DI from the uv&bly appotnted. Not· f11 SALE tAUt • .,..I.I. ~ PLACE 8-nte fDcd Yard fof' WALNUT SQUARE coay CH I '' 1
SBBTODAYrr dodt of tlda 5 BR, 2 •lY !'9 .... ~~y !~.-... en:'n: 64WJ• -10,.TIWP.M.t blldmlni. OI' tricyci.. t br, -a ba twnll.<le. .. tia 1d 3400 OONETOMOR.ROWll bume. Price reduced to ftWW-a PU BY ..-.n WOllOerfuJ netchbOn. 2 Pool Ideal ~ pl N ...................... .
MISllOMllALTY "'8.CIOO. hlng" at SUt,000. "°' UllftUI Bay or Ocean MIWc..r.t4oft.D bib t.o Balboa bland. peta:Sll0.9'$.~ • o f\arA. 2 BR 2'-' Ba, Irvine YALLIY ••ttOO app't . lo vlew call Walk to U. beech from Tate )'Olll' ptcll. 1 Bdrm ._., A.nabeim Ave. All 2 Pool/pdmr terv lncld al a.do. 2 car pr. paUo, -~:;ze';/F8 84045ll>aamt. ~1 :\~R.Yle• duplea + bub unit. Br,2be. '250,000Prlooa· 900mo. leue."4-161.S lMJlw + fam rm. 2~ba. IPOOl.DDptl&a. '7l+t7Me61 ------~.--1 llSTIUY w/o~:aa vl~w. '8;'!,': Sl 2 I• 5 O o. A It. ly, Btr5ST.QZ83,m-se:Jl DUPLEX. 2-3 BR, avaU. ~;try• touwabopt' Can' b tr JAtth~~bome JDlocatkm,aliieaprtce, bouu until aotd . MUGift7).Tm. 7900 aq ft omce buUdln1 0peo ~deck, Jff. Av~rL~.~« .._. hh1• J4ZS
___, ID'* 2 bdrm •• a blltlt Owner!t*r. ~SIOIC.M. WeA.mimter, I mo. old •• ,...,. 17 SD-SGOeva -···-·•••••••••••••
IAYYllW w~~·:~~:::· "lf~~ 2broal100aq.ft.R·21ot. 2 ~~~-~Y· Da.tJU a Br, 2~ Ba, W~-SMC!C!Ddo 2 DIOmo.2Br812Bai!°tbe le .... ft Ill w/plam It ~r~lt1 overlooldDJ
JllUeOU'G CJD. dty. ($
cmt&. Top Of 1'be World
.-.1eman1 O . ICT·_.,
LC 2 br I be mollGt ..,_. Boom to buUd.. •.aoo. 10-..-•.... 1--ft'Cllt om. ll.S llari1okt. ...--ba i • ocean at ff soon ~=.::.~.~°!'. MUICHISOM catrlMlltlh =Bourke, Rltr. OLDTOWMCcM msmo.~ A1C. tDcl2uDlt.~':ti ~~·pvt
bclt-pojt. bOat 1Hp. BOWlll _ ... -........... . . TRl·PL&XAU!Bdrma Nlwlarle3bc',2ba,frplc, Jane.•mo.ICS-4344 .., +
_, 1'1J.'19ml'1J.1Nl ••• 1046 ,,., ·fffl ............ t:--.,72000 ' 2 C8r ~DO pd.a, •• -··· ...., .. ~ COST ... u••• .. 'raro.t.aUuall 1675. 111 Larllapur. ar Onaee Tree CGldo ~b 'th • H25 ............ IOI! IMLISTAftlALIS .___ .,._.. I 110 ,iia ~"" ..._. l40-1840 Pool II telllUI. Lake aet· .... ••••••••••••••••••• .............. -••.. .....,, ........... • • .: .. ~·2·~-.""?:~tbt fi.--·mc··Al.... Tlft.D ·-.... M.lrt UQJ. Avall DOW. $ISO. OCEAN VIEW-Su hll/part·Ume. a.are ___ ttor> AU unlta with new &714) 711-6061 a BR. 2 bll., bft.tm, DJ'. m.. Cllmm&a. a R¥ end urul
...,MllSSIYI •110 .. ,..,MXtdeal. noar ,.._ lat u • ot • ~ draP89 • pehlt. • lholia.Hopm.sas •mo. •oodWeta ar ,....._, J ea. 2~ a..
Ganim bDme ba ~ Ulll&ed'"*-' Ml-7414 ,..._ P• a;-Eocloaed .. ,.aua . ......_ lltla V .. area, 3 Bil. S bl., lfe. Bltaa, 2 8a compl rw facll. neftdl. Walltto•:::r:" com .,. I....... IOODW.aitlfwJ.M.8. onlJ, • •PP ,_..... llw Prleed to ..... Call fa.mt.a'?-· U ·BR.aba ...... ~~1:C-a.n. lab. aalUDJ • PoOIS. tu. "75 mo. no. 17,
w/prt••t• paUoa off -.... ,.--..... lfR .. .._ .--. Dael ,., •• Pltnc OllJ1. --~· Ml"12$ owmrlql • ..., room. ReadJ to 8£AtmP'l1LllONACO ~-., =••dbl wtde lo. l>11: 11s.s2sa, EH•: C....MIM 3224 tf kilia,._ hhi• .,.......... !::~: :M: !r 8::J1 t.:,_~.:-J.lt:.a'A :'la =-:i1::1~~!li .._ ..... ~_::· .... ::::·1n··· ~.'=!' ..... ?~~ c;;:::::-·"···;;24 ·&...-...... ...,0 pk.Ua&oo.d,r... ._.._.. Dll'tl,swtmmlU Jat\IJSI ...... .,...... SBr.luma,MW.,llR'I: /· 3 bdrm J ba new ...i..--~II 4tMJj~ P.D Mt-1440. .,..... la social utl•ltiu AD I Bii. tneoaa. G.OIO ouL ~ard, COY'd home. No ~. aa."5'1u ................. •-••• 4'M494 IJt.IOlt 3 bl' + 2 br. Raltl lllm· ••lore. All fo:r under mo. Owner wnt ftelp patio. or5»-1W7 DUPLIX a--•-;~~m .24.ooo. Park rent Co1t1 Mtta R·I lot, hnce.$LN,t00.MM1M Nlctabdlba_, J'ltt_pl, ---------SIOWISIUP ar.t 1odtlae. ~ blll:. t.o lllA mo. SLOS-SlfO. IO'•ll6'. UNraded a bdr ....... ~ fenced patio Ma·'7oi3 Oteu ..._ I a ... den, a su.uo. a bedroom octant a Bdrm. 6 a M+l*A TY Cll ..... recfflc bouH. Wiw carpet, · c' t..U». a bib to -.cb, MaJdMrVlee,pool
bdrm. Hitt. Double 641-1110 MoWS.Homelleatty PllD91bll. hrdwd flrl, II ........ &DOnqe 11 •UDdeckt.frplc, pn1e. D71Nwpiort1N.C.M'. c:.::.•· Fornltbfd • 2'1a.Harbor,8te20I ~·f,.,oo.t';~~c::,: PMS 18rbomew11mallyard. ~ aauna attt NMfllor~
for •u.mm« ,.... 110,000DOWM 140.5U7 1ar. Owner. •is.ooo. atveD for pf'Ofnaloaal atov~:so_°r'thi~l.<a,no 1_......._. -u SUSCAMTAI ~ llA.CM llarW View, J BR. 2 bal CourttlJ to broteu. Jli"OPlf'tJ mHeauunt ..,.................. -~ ~ 1 Mrm
Cl .. a. $1'71 lllO~ l 'I "71 VllllM, U>e clau of ssz.-. ltadt for 60+ units Ntwpon Hau ctyplta, 2 -••••••••• .. •••••••• Ck>Hd t IQO . llA&.TY 671-1'41 flalau, •o eredl ·~'· 1~mHba 24d0 Q u Ari p LA cg BR.ta., fat yard, pr. a.. Tina aw No. Of PCB. AduJla, na:·.,.ia. • 1~fo
...a.cl P.P. 711.fm '!:l': e1.-!.-1 ·;.!.~ OAllAOI 8AJ..a .. lD JlANAO&M~ OORP. '350.l'Jl..llCl5 mo to mo. Ldftt1. br. j NtwpGl't ll•d.: --t •--· U..0.0,J>Uctbda.fup. <TU)fSl.-. ba In pvt commul&J ..,.-war =~!. rm.e. nlWlllk.Toplan1ClllJ' a... deM i ea ..... £. :1~n:J:..:!~ .• 1'nldl ,_.,. o1c1 tt16f '°' 11,!,aaa&m -;;-..;;a W Hill dtawl•I urct. pllo11. ftld wbet ,....;,wut lo •• Joe9Uue. 11'1 1S1L ·~ ~·· aoodles wltb a a .AtllMI....,. -• ...,.!cidaft D&UrPUOla.tneda. • .... n .....,,. awlftedld.1o.1171
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V...._ ._.. 4250 ....._ Aewtal 4450 Money to Loan 5025 WUdnesday, May!, 1978 UAILY PILOT D5
II-..&...--•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
...... • ... ,_ , .. d .,.,....h u.hrL Apwtmnh -Coodo tor rent lo Mam "'°' •••• • .. &.Fo.ct ••••••••••• s •• 1.0.0. fa L•:v-.... ~ H •• ·.•r .w •• o.".'.•.d •••••• ' •• •.ocr •• ....................... ...................... Wci"c;.ii;~L .. li4(; moth Bdrm & Jolt. Approx. 40011q. ft. c .2: 130 nu1c K C·ASH n -.......... -c:....... J124 C:C....W... 3114 ..... ":'! ..... •••••••••• f'rple, sauna, pool. $17 :i.; 117~ f~ $HO/inn T Found : While male Spitz •••••••••••••••••••••••A t M W t d ·-•••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• i UR a BA, nr Beach Blvd J)f'rday. 6111-8187 eves. Y e · 1 type do". Malu re & Jot. W..e.d. 7075 P · anager an e. •
• l l Co H lsl & 2nd Trust Deed (nendly. Nr Uemco, S.A •••••• •••••••• ••• • ••••• ~\GureG coupled. 20 ~~5 1115 l Br mobile homo MIWe..seol n er i:nm Olp .• ._..to ~ 4100 750 Sq. ft. C·Z on Newpe>rt loans arranied COt' any Call ~3730 ~ · 1n ., nee m ... Q~
Maw.re adlt. oat¥. No ltlr.2be.Townbou.M.Up. lplc,gar,pvlyard A!1!5 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Blvd I.ea1 e . Ca ll reason. Credit no pro-· Mature young woman ~lull.Nlce2bdrmapt +
Pita. Qw,et., -.eve. 1111 traded. LS• patio . only, 00 pela. 847·~1 _645--SS __ 12 ______ .... blem. Borrow on \he ln· Found · Male Doxie Mix wa.otsctuldcarePos.dai SOOmill.9168-8633
Nwpt Bl.Ml-&373 CbJLd ... o ot. 646·950 evs/wlmds *1~ SB.ICTIY!• creased value of your Bl.le Mature dog. 17th & Jy or by lhe hr. 2 Yrs e~-·---------
,6 1, C'V9, Mf..42llZ days. Galo a reliable Ware.house or Workshop home. Call today for fas\, Grand SA 835-325B eves per. 111 Sww. ctuldren 1 Assembler H .. 11i111.1111. •-tt••._. l14 9UIET ADULT roommate. Cent. CM., up lo 3000 courteoua ln.lormation. • · home. XJnt driver. Refs E.l(penence In PC boards ... -. .... •••-••••••••• 1..arl• 3 Br townhouse apt, 2 BR t'l. Ba, encl Jar. Pvt MS-7464. sq.I\.~ sq.rt 64.2·4758 f'oun ma Samoyed vie 497-37$4. & w I rt n g , s o m l' STUDIO 2 ba, frpk, pa.Uc>, 1araae. patio, new cpts/drps. Nr •SHA.REA HOME• t & Banning. mechanical. Excellent --~...... Quiet complex. Adult.a. bcb. $325. 960-12'79 UDO area, x_lnt locatlOD, DJt. ,~· ·ax CO 962·5038 P r a c . N u r s e I benefits & oppe>rtunilieii
'" DO pets. S3"15. 6'S-D1 or Ctllf .Wiii pnvatepark1ng ~ • Housekeeper, 5 days wk, Wage open. E.0 .£. Call Fu1J lcTV 675-5949 3 BR Coodo. pool, near 1 1...i-.E.. t 714-675-3431 flr•lt~••ltCW.-. Found Toy Terrier, fem? F/Umc. LI\'~ in. Don't 557.9051. Ask for Ray '·--... u•·u..... Adams •. Brookbursl WT-, "...... Licensed Home Lo•n dri c II K ~-wA.I....... • Sbareabomeo pt t. Vlt' Staler/Newman . ve. a ay (213) Gilman. MILETOOCEA.N 2 Br, l ~ba townhouse, $395 mo. Fred. 962·SS19; r a men MdlatrfalRtwtal 45 Brokers servin& So. 847·2830 437-8758 •---------
._..... iR...IA.-.... ..._..-&....1 .... Lio. yard, t"'lc, encl. 54M810, ext 287 ~t-01.Aro ThruMJTID 00 C8lil. for l7 yrg. Call our ~ ---..-, .,.. ..-r... -·· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ea t r r Ice • -t,..._, ___ p d Su n.-. .,..ndabl Lad t do 727 Yorktown Blvd ear, laundry rm. $3'1S. r ....... b r 1 ~ q« ~ c.JG""H" n re 11 u · "'""' '-'lW~ ug og n .,,.,~ e Y o Beach Blvd at Yorktown TSL Mgmt &U·1603 ...-. ite 3 br, 2 a w I rp c. cu~ ~ni;,;q IUILD TO SUIT 714-837·3744 vie Clay & St Andrews, H ousework . 0 w n ASSEMBLERS ---------$880. mo. 7911 Holt. 5 000 20 000 S ft -------• NB. RA!ward. c .. ·6106 lranspe>rt4tion. 548·0595
536-0411 14 3 Br, 3 Ba townhouse. 83S-021lpaa:er9373Ait. 832·4134SlncH971 Place~tiaAve.c.:: · 1---------.rs> ~=%,':=~~~~
SMALLBEACHHCYl'EL Nr. Fairview & Baker. lblockfrom ocean, lge3 House to shore in Dana WE.51.EYTAYLOR CO. wuna YOU Reward, lost. movie mm HllpW..ted 7 100 Long&ShortTerm
ROOMS $32.SO W~k $3.50. No pets. 54S-l882 br, 2 ba $450 mo. 208 19th Pt. 2 Br. Sl~. Call Keith REAL TORS 644-4910 nnLn ~,JENTS, Aft 5Pm; •u•••••••••••••••••••• Assignments
ApUl!iO/mo.53&-7056 INSTANT IN St. m-0211 pager 9373 btwn1J.Sal496-5137 2200 sq ft bldg, 21 c ea rt, NEED CASH, AccounUnc 3Shilt.sAvajlable.
l.agllllaleoda 3741 Central loc. 2 Br, 1~ Ba A#).. Houaemat.eswanted. three phase Power, 1 yr REWARD ACCOUMTIMC'iCLK Muslhaveown lransp
apl Fncd patio, ear. ~/30 meddo "M lse "'"'"' Whitti"er Ave c~•cT Two toy .Poodles, Jost, Varieli ol du'·'"". "·s1•t Ca1Today 556-1520 ••••••••••••••••••••••• _,,,;_ ~ NEW2&3BR,adultapts, ... • 1~.., area. · """" · "'""''~ brown & apricot, vie ....... ""' " Fr-TopPay VacP"Y LAGUNA BEACH llTR. ~· pool, patios, lplc. Full Bob,842-2801. A·l. 714-642-6507 UMIOM in ED payroll prepara-~· · '"
n.ru -</ .. •-~id PCH & Superior. NB. lionftcoUectionrepe>rts. VictorT....,OI J ...,,,_..,... w .. • LlP· ... a 2 Br, 2 Ba, most ut.ils. pd. aecurity. $365 & up. 1702 Pttrer female 28-35 Sea ~ 4550 HOMf LOAMS _Sa_l_AM_._67_3-"'933 _____ 1 Payroll exper. pref'd, ~Ices
servpool. color" TV, bealed Mo. to mo. P>O. Adults P1orida at Adams. Terr Apts '$167 So + .... ~................ Union Home Loana ar· • IV:'"'f' Yell ed ed but will •·a'"" appUcanl Div Wal' Ar "'dde •·Co (TI4) 4N-m4, 1185 only. 622-Hamiltoo. 2 .Bdrms _,. 3 Bd util. Uooa 493-5380 ,_ft __ f bo LAA>~: ow, r ~Y ...... u ~ no. "' N.CoutHwy. se«n4 • _,. rm.s. ____ , _____ 1 New storage, garages,, range --or me or Parakeet, vie. Clover St, bas some acctng exper. 2082$. E. Bristol
----------t----------t $325. Several apta avail. Femormaleroommalelo close to beach, 151 Com· propertyownersol$l.OOO &achard, FV. Reward. Skills req'd include lite StelO Newport Beach
sn.JDIO w/garage; util. 2 Br, util. pd. Children ot. 842-6801. abare 3 Bdrm house, mercial Way off Nwpt to SUl0.000 or more. And 962·5624 lypin& & 10 key. Apply <Comer of Bristol &
pd. $275 mo. ~t. & lasL Ne> pets. Mgr Apt t. 1960 CdM Blvd, CM. RV & boat un1l through Union Ho me National Sr.items Corp, Campus behind 497·1236afl.6pm W.U.ce,64>7111 UftraAHroc:tl•e .Pool,jac.$l6S/mo. avail. All util paid. Loans yo u get Lost: Fem. Shellie (toy 4361Birch St,N.B.(Near carl'a Jr)
NE w-two 3 BR ~l42B 548--3878· after5S48-8l1G Homeowner Terms. Collie) 4 /28. Vic Spr· OC Airport) Equal 0p. F.Qual Oppe>rtunity.
Beaut.studloaptbywttk. P2BR,stove&relrig, town hom e11. Pool, Resprem2S+toshrnew ' which are generally in&dale/Heil. Reward. portwulyEmployer EmployerM./l"
Downtown Laguna, wait "id1t.s. no pet.I. 313 17th jacuzzi, sauna, pP· 3 Br 2 Ba CdM apt. " much better than finance 846-3268after5PM 1·--------·1111--------tobeach. C.IJ 4M-3494. Pl., #L, 642-2464 grades. Great locaboo. bi3-l775 _ Retlfah Wcmhd 4600 company t.erma.
H rt •---a. 3769 $525-$575. See daUy at .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Choose The y.,,.. •wpor-1Brw/stove,refri£Close AJgonqu.in/Hell. A&ent, Rmmttoabare3BR,lba, rd s tereo ABC music tt.tfit
Lost: Gold Cartier ~atch1---------1t1lllill ______ _
vie. Gelson's market..
Reward. 644-5909. S/1. ••-••••••••••••••••••• to bUles, st.oces. 84&131L • hse, ~Ide C.M. $210, lrg ~mployee seeking rm· · ~
Adults, no pets. yd, frpk, + uUJ. &U-8959 ma tea w /inexpensive blldcJtt. STBtS TO HACH
2 BR, 2 ba, yrly. $310
IAYAtOMT
2 BR condd, yearly,
S6SOmonth
PAUUDO
2 BR. 2 ba, yrl.Y. $625
MEWPOaT caEST
2 BR, 2 baths • $475
associated
llR OKEMS · IHll , TORS
l (JJ'> ~ ~olbc:.o t • '••l
548-6511 NICE2 BR apt, patio, gar, . _ • furn "home" Uv'g situa-2 br 1~ b carpeted bit-lndry rm, nr Warner & Beaut. older Nwpt.IHgts. lion in NB/CM/HB are3 • 8• • Beach. $260. 673-2252 h s e . M e I o w ... d t 631 ~"10 I n s . $ 2 7 5 . Ca 11 neighborhood big yrd .eny, svc ep """'
213/620-4830, 7:30-llAM studio. $l45 ~o. ~9634 betFriwn. ooon·9pm Mon/·
LARGE 3 BR 2-,, Ba, 2 -n.. leach MR.'" after 5PM.
t .. ,_ ~o All new 2 bdrm, 2 bath ln 1---------IJune IO-Sept 10, Npt Bch 8 y, nr sc...... .... mo. RB at ........ Hamilton St. 2 BR' Mrs. Riley 556-3400 or -area, + s. 548-7401 $350mo.8to5.546-41.24. 6-'CICJIS 875-638leves
..... 4150
STUNNING 2 BR 2 Ba,....._ 3844 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...-S _.... garde~ ~\o ;~i!ui s~c ....................... Si.ogle 1araee. storage on-,,_,,,:f. I
area. · · · Orangetree Lakes, 1 BR & ly. $35 mo. 1~16 Wallace, •••••••••••••••••••••••
28r, Gocxl E. Side loca-lqft, air cood, reCrig, ten· CM, 645-5126, 63'7·5895
ML Y .AMOtlTIUD
PARTLY .AMORTIZB>
IHTIUST OMLY
Found: Pug. Vic: Irvine
Ave, N B . Identify .
548-6548
Lolt: beige l.Jlaso Apso,
friendly, ans. lo Sully.
rtpcrywm .. pa.. itt ac• $50 Rew. 631-0308
corclaKe with state Lmt:Miniature lri·color law. Beagle. Vic: Mesa del
·lf ror any reuoo we can·
not arrange a loan for
you there will be no cost
or obligation.
Mar. Reward. 567-9556
Lost; Rhod. Rldgeback,
male, liver nose. Vic:
Scotsman Cove .area.
S48·9692
Lost; Male white dog. lion, JIO pets, now avail nls, pool, jacuni & ex-$35 alDgle storage 1ar. 5005 UNION $235mo.631·3273 ercise rm. S325 mo. Saf'e & secure. 724
--------.. 1 Br, gu & water pd. 833-0618or8J3..7518 _:J~a~mes~.~c:;.M~. 6~7~3-:!77~87~. -1·~~~~~~~-HOME
Bay fl'OQt apt w/oeeao vu Adults . no pets, no ~leadl 3141 TV /Cl IEPAJl ·
Vic: HarbQt " Geisler.
Reward. 557·1357. aft Spm. .
ACCOUHTAHTS
OVERLOAD
arers top pay, a vari ety ot interesting assign-
ments, serves the enUre
Oranae County area and
needs experienced.
Accaa tfM9Clerb
loo1i1&11,.n Ir
kwiwt'-tftenowt
at all levels. Call today
and let us tell you how to
become a bwi~, well paid
Accountants Overload
prol~ionaJ.
547-763 1
l<riS No. Main, Suite 1016
Santa Ana
Not a public acctng firm
Loo, boat slip. $3()00 mo. ~ ~. ~ ••-••••••••••••••••••• OHie» • ......, 4400 EL TORO AREA ~ I '0\ ANS Lost: Burmese cat in vie.
646-45l7a!l5 2Br, l~ba.610JoannSt. zc:-=ex,i!:!'v~·~· ....................... ESTABUSHED 7 YRS ti:)~ fJ-\ of lOtb St So. Lag. acc.TlllG '
OCEANFRONT delWte 3 Adults. no kids. Small stor~s. b~. SJSO. 32S THE EfFICIS.T CHARTER 54M623 &-1953
Assembly
TRAINEE
ASSEMBLERS
& PACKERS
NEEDED
lMMEDJATELY!!
, TOPPAY!!!
All shifts, day, swing &
graverard Includes '
wknds. Long & shorJ
term 'ass1gnmenta. Holi-
day & vacation pay
Ho!f.italitation plan
"u.~
(Across From
Orange Co. Airiiort>
'Equal Oppe>r Employer ~2UJ~~~a;:·:~la. ~.548-7638 MyrtJeSt.$-4685 ALTERNATIVE ~~~'ae;!~~'= PerlOllClh 5350 SIJPEIYISOI
----------tLce2 br,lba,patio,encl. OCEAHROMT Mo. to mo. rent incl:---------&Toro 77~103 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Immediate opportunitY1---------
Lge 2 br duplex apt gar. Nr. OCC. No pets. ZBrincutiJ. &l&-0505 R ec el> t. s e r v . , CAIDS & Glm tt..tldl 1 41•2225 Sphihlal ...... lot q~ed indiv1dual •-------•
furnl.sbed. Acrou from $290. 75t.J996. peraooalized phone cov-Prime location, xlnt ·--------11\ 181.SSo. El Camino Real ~ new challenges ASSIST.MAHAC'iEll
ocean. Newly decorated, 2 Br, l'h Ba townhouse. Mewporfa..dt 3869 erage, conf. rm, mail facility.Selllorlesstb&n ---------• San Clemente.Full,ylic. &nd responsibility with Sales&: admlD.islraUon
cpts, paint. Yrly. $4SO. garage p atio pool •••••••••-•••••••••••• serv.,undergroundprkg essetvalue. .flll...IEED Forappt.492-7296 dynamic ~rowlh· Fullllmeonly.Applyin
_OT_s-_s&t_9_o_r_MS-_33B_L __ -t jacuzzi.' Adul..; only'. PARICMEWPORT &more lo Newport. CHARTER 549-8623 " oriaated corporate Ac· person to: Mable Austin •
..,,5 ,H,,2010 B W E EXECUTIVE ./MO ..... EY RELAXING MASSAGE counting Department. Draper's, Laguna HUis -· ._.. · achelors, 1 or 2 SUITE,"~n5470 n BobJam--Lic Masseur This position involves n....a~--•·T h .....,.. ""0 Store, 23621 Moulton _..........,.,. own ouset CIGARETTESUPPLY OUtcalll>-9,Gt-5111 workin1 lo compa ny
From $299.SO 2 a~. of cs, pvt ent. approx DtSTIJIUTOtlSHIP • store receivables plus ,.._Par_tw_a•y•P•Ja•i•a···---
Spectacular spa, total 8x33'. $350/mo. 1827 ClfDITMO MASSAGE supeniaionof2Account·'" .
recreation pro cram, Westcllff NB63t-0900 PART OR fULLTIME PIOILEM tng Clerks. Min 1 year Asst Manager for book
__ ..:........; _____ -! llOCial proc:ram. 7 pools, 8 • Immediate openings In RGURE MODB.S experience lo ~ccountlng store wanted. Previous
126%1 Flower Street. 85 Tburin, only 2 left. tenniscow1a.At.Fuhion N ElllMT! Orange CoWJty and/or lalcl lrlrdTDao-ESCORTS utU1lin& a computerized exper helpful. Must be
Garden Grove. Large Brand nu 2 Br, 2 Ba. No Island. J aQlbotee & San We've got spring fever at =i:!,~ ':U:et:i~ 7SZ..5tol OUTCALL OHL y system aa well as suc· w i 11 i n g t 0 t a t e
one bedroom apartments pets. Xlnt loca. ~2058 Joaquin Hills 1\oad. Lido Marina Vlllage. Amln&ed by cessful completion or resp on s lb l lit y &
dme to aboppiJlg. LaWl· or~ 17141644-1900 While it lasl.lwe'reocrer· outlets are aecured by 1 _...:C::a=lllf:::..:~:..:=-=...:Lo=--=--l----'-3_1_·31_1_1 ___ 1 beginning a ccountlna: hardworking. Call bet"'1 dry facillties. No i.nafreetentonbeaut.of· company. 1-courses. Requirements lO" 3; 893-6855, Walden
children:. no peta. CaJI IBR, adults, nopeta, encl UOOBAYFRONT fice space overlooking NOSELLING OOYOUNEEDCASH? *SANDY'S* lnclude supervaaory ex-Bookstore. ~e at636-7343. gar. $230. 2035 Flallertoo. Redec 1 Br. ~. 2 Br, the Bay. Space from 290 You may become d is· 1st • 2 n d & 3rd Outcall Massage perience, good com· ---------
•
.. •Mft. ... EW* M2-5BM den, 2 ba, frplc $945. to 900 14. ft. locJ. crpts, lridbtrt.or~r nl aUont~Y homeowner loans ar· 9?3-4329 municationa akills, and 1---------____ ,...,,. A&entMS-50'4 drpa. A/C, s day avert ........ c gare ~; ranged laat. Borrow---------10 key by touch. Our ATl'ENTION!!!
Cherry Creek Adult 2 Br 1 Ba, cottage t ype, •Lido .... ,._ .. _ jani&.orial eerv. Ir all util Marlboro, Camels. SlOOO • $100,000 ·flexible •SHERILEE• salary and benefits II Oil OYER Apta. 1 & 2 BR, fplc'f, we encl pr. pvt patio, W /D -~ ~ pd. Take advantage of Salems, Kools. Kent. •-~credit DO nm. ,,._,.,ed Masseuse .. is C lb ...._ .:.-.... __ _
have lakes a aona rm. 2038 C Meyer Pl. Breathtaking views -.... f • ( Pall Mall, etc. You may _.._ .-·-'-'Cnu• pac .. age one o e ..-_,..... ~s • ' K"d OK N t 1 kl N rt our.,.. .... en.r... ree &...-t job blem. m-ooobllaa· BomeC.lls-By appt. final offeJ"'ed".by any Workinnewoffice )aaw:i & pool. Locai.cl 1 s • 0 P• • · over 00 0& ewpo rent offer. We'll pro· """""" your presen • tioa. ~ company. Please call
at.2701 S. Fairview. J ust 981)-6458 Back :J:: ~ ~ ?0 • beblYcometoouraemes s&art put time and ex-STERLING FIN. SVCS. •---------• Mary Ann Banning , Openmginec.ta.Meaa s. ol Warner, N. of S.D. Meu Verde, 2 Bdrm, 2 :;7Cooc1o~°a:,.:; by awnmer. Call oc atop pand to full time later if 7141'855-J.SJ.t)(bk:r) FOXY LADY 714~U. ext 243 for Man o~ woman. Work Fwy.~J.B91.Nopeta. beth, frpl. mc pr. $105. &ood life at Newport. by 8D7 wedtdaJ hwtn r!! ~J.reba. Tveo .~~u.rya ~M aoappoiDt.ment. ,w/y~--..1-. £nioya-8:30&S:30. #-au...... IHV BUS I.OARS: Sl0,000 or -..... ~ ..., 13742 Newland Street, Vl'M911,eves. 2450' of spacious airy UdoMariaaViUage rew hours spare Ume more A1lo lat·2Dd mtp. 711·3561 ble & teresting wort
Ga rden Grov e. 2 Bdnns large rooms· comfort-2 ~/3 ba + 3C7SVia0porto (da)'9 or eves) and cub Sl0,000·$10,000,000 F dlr w/rapld advancement. ~~i:~ =~ patios. sZeoMonth • =-~ apac!.~~ (atNwSJtBeacb Blvd> ~~~.~: ..... S'l697 Scottm.'"34 P~:~~ <U«>~ve ~~~i;t:.~c:'na~
neighboThood. Private A&t.644-5046675-9991 mo lae. 955·0424 day, ('7l~ PLANll .......... $3750 llt, Wlr lrd refemlL Abortloa. adop-Newport8eachCA92660 barrier tr 18 or over
patio view from lovely 1Br,1 ba, E.alde, $220. D-1908eves. •KYSUITIS • PLAHlll .......... -90 T.D.LOAHS tion&t~. EquaJOpportun.ity Mus t have pleasin ~
kitc hen; enc losed Adults, no pets. '52-4201 e. • ..-..::JL S unnln 2 ANAHEIM For more information ARRANGED APCARE 54'7·2563 EmployerM/F personality. Call betwn g ar a g ea : po o I ; or640-1Z78 ~· m..u.-r-. t I send name, addreq and ___ .......... _ -1.1 9:30am &2:30pm.
S320/mooth. Call Clyde br, 2 ba. Frplc. Gorgeous From 150 Sq Ft phone number to: _._......, '"'0 "9 UteA & VICKI
(Manager. Aparlmen 2BR,newpaint,newfix· bayview.MatureaduJt.s. BankoC America Build· METROPOLITAN 6lJ.39101tir Olkll..._aanr ACCOUNTANT 645-6514
f30)89M01.3. tures, pvt paUo. Nopeta. No pets. $47S. mo. log. 10 atorlea or TOBACCOCOMPANY .,_. ... ,,_offf! Forexpandlngcompany.1•--------
$295. ?95 Shalimar. Avail 640-0349 Anaheim's finest office Cigarette Division 123 Responsible for all ac-. --------4 now.64&-t:MS San a.111111119 3876 space. Euy Fwy access, P .O. Boxrn MwyW..W SOlO Seninl~~angeCo. COUDLlng thru financial AtrroMOTIVE en.Stal 1 lg airy BR. nr bcb. $225. ••••••••-••••••••••••• ~2.!!cere~-~audrltedln. gPri .. Amell Rosemead, CA. 91770 .. _ ..... ;-.-.......... ~ statement.a. Payroll & re-p ARTS
h I r ~ •• wo;a DANCE OF FUN lated taxes, light tYlffng. COUNTB PEISOH No chl.ldren. no pets. 731 Bae e or apt un urn. location & competitive NeedloanoneppreciaUng · Requires 2 yrs. account· Terrace Apts Sha.limar,MS-2007 Walk to beacb. $220. 332 r ates from 60c sq ft. EXERCISE SALON inHatmeot, could be Beaut. nude girls dance iog at college leve l. Ro~ Royce & BMW ex
New 4·Plex bldga, 2 ~ 0-PoW 3126 !:~0 ~16~Pt G . H11JTY whlle offer t.sts. abatt.enn.Ma-34!MSally ~::S ==-[o1Mmt:'~ Salar')'PstartJn1d g attl SSOO ~~f~~· Call
8runits.pvtcommun1ty, ....................... or Fordetall.s,call774-4671 Beach location, steady a..t11111, Trwt 3AM Moo-6at. l2Pll to mo. a vaca ons, ROT CARVEi
covered prkc, pvt patios, Da.oa Pohit-super ocean 1tf lw• Fwllilhed 250-500 sq. IL deluxe of-cmtomers, bl prolls!Nm Dtidi 50 35 &PM Sun. 625 N. Euclid, ;:'~alat~':'ia~~e~~ ROW ROYCE
pool" rec rm. ~at . '1ew.New1SS011q.ft.2br, arURfwal1h1d ltOO lice. W. 19th St. C.M. CHARTER ... _. _ _. ........ Anab.~5383 Estate Inc .• Laguna &IMW near bus. aboppmg I 2~ba$4S0.6"-5742 _. ...................... from $150. mo. Tom, LOWEST FREES~ONW/AD Beacb. ........... 3 denrable area of S.A. ~ THEEXCITING ._...,..,
l<rZl w. Central Ave. 1"'2 10r2bdrm,allnewapts, ~2200 TRAVB.AGEMCY •SUXl"S• Automotive
mi No. of So. Coas driis, garages. ~$325. PALMMESAA'1S. RAl.SBVICE FitANCHISE llllu wtlahs OutcalUluaage TRANSR&BUILDER ~~~~· 64'·2714 ~ ::;.:w: depoa req'd. MINUT~:~NPT DEWXIOMCES 'lbe eew way to o.rn 8 lstT.D.'s.-.O IOAM·ZAM 731-4462 ~la..rou:~i = r:,::·saf~':;0~
Badl, 162 BR. PenaDal tdepboae/ ,.. truel aiencf. True I W T.D. I.Mn. p ALM Ir CARD Resist.er Today to work +med. . IW"4•.._. 3140 from$Z20.6up. cepUoDh~ secretary, Netwlk.Start)'OUl'own. PmatTamulocel9G oovariouuccou.nling& TRANSJl,RMAN lciltocrPi lit1lll• 3807 ....................... Adulta,NoPeta coorerenc. room, coffee E xp. not required. wtlerMfCJ,Co. READINGS bookteeplo& auien· Wageto$275wltlyrorful
-••••••••••••••••••••• SHARP, beacb, 2 & 3 BR, 1561 Ken Dr. • boepitallt:r senic:es. Complete suppe>rt & loog 642-21 71 545-0611 Special~ price wttb this meats. Work close lo ly uper producer. Aam BAYFRONT frpl, dishwasher, (SBlkaEaatofNewport Excellellt location. near term service provid~. ad.HaaPsycbicpowerof your home. Fieure co, ,Capistrano Bch.
3 BR; 2 ba. refrig, garage,paUoa,960-2358. ~!"!1 freeways, Call Mr. Charles Ret!ndeouplebumooey wlsdom.'Wbat you hear CleTks to Sr. Accoun· •1211
chhwsr, gaa bbq. frplc, _.......... IAKIRC&na n~ tolmd.llt&'-ndTD'a willamauiyoo!Shewill tants needed thruout1-A-uto--di--lns-tall __ _
gar' sandy bcb. $725. IJVE NearTbe Beadll •-4000 (nC)9'714Un sbop, located ln Aacent, 1.a'l-3744 tell )'OW' Past, Present. & Onm&oe Co. ra o er, ex-c .. dll Sal • -PUlure & advise you on .RobertHalf'a perienced only, Apply Lease.173-'75:1l Be tifuJAdaltApta _ ................... Prime 00 alrpcnt area 2 pron bldg. 5 day opera· Private party will pay Love. Marriage & Busi-Aocount.empe U.S.A. Stereo, 3721 S.
PvtTwnhMw/beamclgs, G:!&waterPaid. Roonnr/titcbenette l'Y\..ofcs w/recepi aiU. tlcm, 'l::J0.3. But direct more ror your 2nd T.D. ness. AvaiL for private SOOS.Main,Stesot Briatol,SA.556-0&20 petio•dect,3Br2~Ba. 2l.661.Brookbunt,HB '50=~up. i!Sc'sqA.fiN5U fromOMSr.586-IMl.9 Fa.starvc.642-35'73 lfOUPll· No.Tower,UoionBank AutoRentalTralnee
$550. 646-1220 f6U6H Offtce SPace avall for F1orist Collllt City F1ower 221 W. WbtttferBJTd. 1DTbeCityolOran1e Oppty for intelligent. •-....1 lBR -w "·to Ama.A8"nftutnColta made) bealth or bealut sbopfoualeForlnfon• ••a•irn••/ LaHabra 213/&n-92"12 11•/83$-Cl03 friendly, neatappearlng &Anvo,Y •........, a"' 2Br, children welcome, no _. __ _, n-bol' ,,..___ ~1980 Ptfl 11 .. 1/ o g ma over 18 bay or beach. 216 i . pets ata.rt.tniat $265mo. ~~%15 • _.. care f'!!ellrionaJ· u.or. Led&,... Ederly ambulator)' lady Y un °
Balboa Blvd, 496-5'80, -.am MANY with tt::C:' 1l'x15. $250 mo. Fuhioo .. ,, I .. -.................... aeeda nice room + ACC:OUMTIMG ~~:':. e5r.r~ t n~ i~~ en.zm ptw lsW. Swimmint laland.114-7»l740 °""'hitltr 5011 a..t&'-d 5 300 IDID1mum ca.re & attn-Newpor.t Beach in· lockman duUet. advan-C..... .. Mw 312Z ~ f ... ft .. pool, Jaeunl, a,Qd rec. AIRPORTOVP'ICES ._ ........................... ••••"•••••• tion.6'ra-256lor6'15-MM luraDCe 11enc7 needs cenient avail. lo au~ _................... N~fi2bcirm,Hl'Y room. Dall1 &: weekly 1 & 2 room suites. an I.Git or l'oand a r.:1 CaU Htdil\lfon Harbor man penan wtth aceoantlng, rental counterman. Good --------llf adult a ... • ,_ 1.., p•-~ nt.ltalti.ne,..,.$$&• IS'\'iaee. Noleaaereq'd. _._ _ _..... Antm1l Aas stance wants to meet reflned UPl't to tnlnt'lar comd· drlvin1 required.
from rz1o +m ~lt, t:; week. From$14 mo.208'lS. E. -..A•---• Lequ951f-!2'73tnofee. ladyto40fouincere re-~:U.o~:ri!.o:ei!t'!cs 831-2480or49S-6330
... ~ Dia, wa*falls, poodt! MS •t0 Bmtol, Suite 200• N.B. toCIAMI u:sr 8m1 Tent t latklasblp. Please write dUlies. Must be neat, Auto Tran.am RU man. '" I ""--., __ Di-o -.. Rm .,·--..a-. Lh (T14)9M010. Large ptctoreaqa e :a.... ......... er/bype to P.O. Box 2065. SoaJ .___._.__ ..:_ ... b 1 E ,,,, >t~r~~-r •vu• .-... -• ,.. • .,.,, ~ .. v ~ .. &n parcel.ollandoowbeint fem...,.. ww.te w nm Beach.CA.90'740 ~.,.... ave Flt, own too-. 1per ~ ~ "" "~-drive North on Beach to prtv, pool. temJts. Besp OC AlllPORT MO. I MASTER.PLANNED by Jpe>U, red rollar, Vic. Iota ol tmtiaUTe. Call Sue prd'd. 548-22118. GARDENAPTS McFadden tbeD West on mate.refSG..a.M LOCATIOM aWORLDFAJIOUSptan lltb&Anabelm. CM. Aft FOR'l11ATSPECIAL ..:M:.:cL=.eod=::::..::•.:..:lt:.:4.:.H.:::..:100:.____.:,_ ______ _
CORONAD!:LllAR ~=·d<~4~~.;_wtnd Bedroom, pYt home, Approx. 6500 sq ft. can archlMctUral firm for a 4 /28 , call collect TOUCHOFQ.ASS ~ AY~
2 Br Tow'obOU.N, trptc. QJsta Men. Sbr IMltb, 'll4tV7S-4W.. ~J: delllopmentc!:• zis.~. *MODRS* AdmlnAulstaa1 $1JK+ BEA
Pooi,i.m.la.Someoceao MIAlllACH HU mo. P•t eftty, dos,~ =ture-~: .. Goldot •-~CeDU,!• *ESCORTS* ·~--$700+K SAL ESSPf:JRSOPULN . o 1cc .. aun1 v1e*I. Ctou &cmccana ~ .. ,,_....., 4450 ••~•do•' fruit and i:iU:J.~.ca. "7&-· fr:.C~ 112 :~
to F..adan bland • fine BRANl> !'£W8 • Spa~~ 8Mh ~ beach, ocean, ....... -............. v e 1e tab i e I arm•. baclc. Ell~ fro~ 1Tbe714dt~JOOMI 11 ~. S«J~ to~~ Jv~U:S.:T; ·
baeb.AlsolBr.644-21&11 dtiuua.4 r.All~. compll\lnl,pytCIU7W, 4Dau'X!OFC"S Tremendous apprecla· Great..ahaaalnlue. ~ JrvtnePerwanelA1ency SeU Avon. You doll'l ~~~~~~~~!I ~~· J1:: ~~ SZZ.'255-5:llMSll Coot. rm., seat 25, an lion potenUal $100,000 Liberal reward. Call i?U) GH130 • E l'l'Lb CoRa llna need uperlence because
Olann'Sl br 1 be trpl ..... _ .... Blvd--"' ......... -~_. .a·••c"-.a pan&d,sm..._lnn-~~WDW J~ERYESTETRWlllSil _ _.twl\i.ftp. /C5erfkesB/A-VJSA
360
~ZM .142-1470 Avon practlcaUy sells ••--...:. ~hti. !tr'. amarn • ---..._-, . nr . ---ar. 1 or 2 yr. leaae. IAJtt w n a p II • ~~!!lm!!!~~!!!!!!~~l ltaell· Eanlinp •re •"· pauu, .... __ ,.. fin rm. tc 6 rtfril. }' t K t bQy melt 1'/ln one 1r. Lad: Black A tan fetmle 1111 • ~ .... "
abopa.'450."5-tea. ~ ~R~~~ MO.m.ao ;l*U'TI Jb:td:.. aroa. en POil DOUBLE the s.u.. Fri Dlte, Oak St,=:_-~·=;: Ambltk8C4QpioWanted =:~~at1i.®c':n~.fd:i
2 BR. 2 ba .. blHns; atop 2~ Ba, fonnal d1.ll rm+ I ;• 4200 714-581-9383 PURCHASE PRICE. 1AI lkh.Hu fleaeollar. cl II Wed J'rt to maoqe a amall bu.sl· orZenitb'7·lMe
aarace; trpL *"21. bbfat rm fplc bltna ... -..... ••• .. ••••• 'nds offer II ONLY,._• ~ S.Watd. .... ~ .. ~ch • ,• .,._ p /Ume. Will not in·---------2 BR 2 .,_ bit 1ni new W/D hkup: p Uo' dbl i: Ccrona del Mar on Coal QUICK SALE. AraroGP" ._._ ... _._ '°""" '°"'" tert .. •I 1QUI' pracnt a'°I> ·,...~. F,.p1: ~'. tacb iar.~~-GLAllOIOUS llwy,· 1100 aq.fi. Good portwa~ Prtnclpal1 FOUND: F , Ool de1l lhnoJt JOOr roll. QW. job. Kaat be wtlllnl to Bab,.ltter wanted for ~f71.1510 iar. ' IBdrm.tBalnPrOIOon• pa.rkJD.1. xlnt tro.nlap. p1eue 4tO(Sefler) .~~YlcBaclc ~ lea.m.11t.Half.4MZ-l6M. amoold,mct.,a a wk.
,,._._...._ 3124 ~2Mlbdrm ...... ,1 .. ~~ torJ PciGl wltb fcnvw $1200mo.,.... N..s imeltor/ l'b: 'I· , Pl\11lealfito. Euro-....... ..__ reUabl•. Pnferably rra~
-Ul1t... .., OM.CD._.... v1•w D t f!OOO. .._~c.'041 ! Found·~• Wilt. t """'an ibatr if.a .. rata ·--r , home.MS-'1S30atUPM . ••••• .. •••"••••••••••• mo ... , .. lo• Le•Ue, w • ecora or ""' # • d -• ., n -• .. er .. enn•I a11 t
1 .. WAMCHAAPTS IMe-B "" ~ ~ tllr'Dlabed. Pool, jtcuw1 ~ salon. GOod re-moa old •an ard·11 computer moqltored. ;s.i.i'moe."4.Mst' IAIYsrTna
-...... t.emla.-/Wk. 'l't>""1tte10Qrrneaa-tuma.64046T5 Shepbe~ Vlc: Bonlta Your bome, J.adAa cmly. WkdJI a·IS·J·t.S I'll• La.:J:n 1 ,2111 bedroom Dlfm poolside stn II• .,. belore&.he -Cyn Rd, Sat He. AA MMIMl5 • • · bi , l!IJ'OI apU. Dd•hr, 2br.!:h:blim ~ ~teL.em IOll epm•f6S.3Z78 . 14 ,.,..... hmm, Jeth Plaet, . 2 bltna.~&V pabbQ. , , • O!CTH!!B'EACll rudlo1pu.Wc., --••••••••••••••• • S.CWC... 00 I vv adlJ ar-chllct. 609111. ,._a. N.'m Sook Hr. Mll.eo,.u. • Bdrm lloma wltb pbooo 1_.. MaWT.D.. J'ound: 2 l•m clop, 1-••••·---••••" baveaa.-.ketoofforor wtlimdalsaft$.~
PL__,, mo.mo.~ ....,acy.taOllllwk l>•llJPllot -• Qenn.Sbtp,11mJbltck. Tbe..,,_1sSolution · &oOdatolitll,ol~an•d Wpm.
• Jilake J•tt •••= •ATD.noHT"OlU:s a...&llttd, ... ~ LOANSAVAILABLS • Vlc: ltlb t. Newport DMll,.c::!_oe-~_!!l..!....D~ll)' P.1t.ot
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B6JAIP'Unr9Sen. Wo11ld 1th to worll Foundation•. rotaloina t ... hrWBtctric Yard, clean-upe, trtm· Want a REALLY CLl!.:AN LANDSCAPING YOUNG MAN. 5 yn expr Skyli1ht• brl1hten up
ftlpCftARQIU:lO w/carpenter baoalna walla, blocka, palloa. Uc327U8 MS-an4 ml.a&. FUU maQit. Free HOUSE! Call Gin1ham Reuooableprices. in wallcovering. Free room1. Over 2SO in·
llal:slllala.S.A doon or otber fhllab 558-Gtl.Uc'd. FAt.CallPedro.646-~t Girl.fne•t~sm ~ est.a 645-8$76Andy. ataUed. Calif. Sltyli&bts. a.aaa 157-0l• W'Clfk. WW work for min. EL£CTRJC1AN·Prtced '-.. 11t.--...1---.......... --.-~-1 -----• .. ·-.. --------1 CUSTO,.. PAINTING o.na Pnt. fl6J-Ol.51 • • wa1• ao I can learn. Cement work of aJI kinda. rlahl·free eatlmate on u ILlf __..._. ••~ eaninc done by r •••'I ... -•· ••••• Have exper ln buildln CUtt1.n1. blocltworlt. Free largeoramaUJobl ....................... reliable couple. Refs ....................... 2:5 yn esp, int/ext. qual -....
••••••-•••••••••••••• ~..._..inn-•-' Dt.556-07S7 u----' 673""'"" HANDYMAN. Homes &r 540-1793 Brickwork. Small jobs. work &r materials ·-......... L ....... h ~u.ciu ~ Richard 96().3361 • ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'l8ave ~·Drtvwwa,_, work. aftS; 6'7S.77S8 Formtna pourina &r apts. Conscientious 1be Mop~, that's our Newport, Costa Mesa 4c . CERAMICTILll;. e~1al· raratoa fot repairs . ..,_,_ .. ,_ 'Set Custom Electric. lJ'd .. Craft.aman.CalJM5-0302 na-. . leanlna la our lrvloe.675-317Seves. ~ ... 1coat . Ll NB CM . ............... your own comm. rel, &r maint IVS. ---------ua"' Reason. pr1ce Int/ext. ty: Entriestnoors. 26 yrs SM~~· c.,.tS.wtc. rorm1. Save money. lbMst Ir reliable. Free HANDYMAN: Carpentry, game.C.11546-2393 '~•""9 bowie painting. Freent. exp. Sml upairs ~------~:...·--1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 845-3257 est. 979-8542 electrical. plumbm1 Ir •••-•••••••••••••••••• S31-8'7MI. Jack. 962·1883 lrt:;llllq Ca-t Ma.o will lay yours flra. 847·2787. 557~ F1wooal,'!· ,.~aUrpe~: ... _bdOatha. PETERS PAINTfNG ---------........ ••••••••••••••• ·...-1 R l •. ,.__,,___.. 1tlcMg ,.. "'• ..-Oii, wm ws. Expr 'd Reaa Ra•ea ....._,Jatpalr New &r remodel: tubs. or m ne. epa rs • "'°""..,°"' ,.,,....,, ~ pri ....... forvacan•re · • · ••••••••••••••••••••••• showers draioboa-'-. •-Bab lttl ho lean.in • G •••••••••u•••••••••••• _..-. . ·~ • . F Est C II G '""' "' .... !!' n1. my me, c I too .. uar work ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~RN FENCE CO •••••••••••u•••••••••• aMSencee. ~ . a ene Nut pat.ch.es., textures entries. 6'J3.6(m ~~·.:;..~oor !t.~~~· Free :;~(&.dt.3:~. Wood&Cbalnllnk · Haul. at;i:ader dum: TboMGuy1974.-10 All P 0 FUIEST. ltJ.14lt ~or54IHS4l UcllMS-151 536·1837 trll:, ~ , tree wr . Immaculate Cleaning Co. .R FESSIONAL " ..,111 Tfft5erYlce h'r1aS.vlce Shampoo• steam clean. Li n.eed&Bondeci r.__a__ demoliuoosetc.831·1257 For thole who de.er PalnlJng. lnt.er/E&ter. N1' a I ...................... .
-·-•••••••••••••••• Color ........ teners: wht ce • .,.._.. • ..._...__ ve Reaa.workguar642-0386 ••••••••••••••••••••••• R 1 t 1 1 ... ...., ••••• ••••• ••••• .....,.,_,, 758--0377 HOM""<!AVERS Pl .. emova s, r mm ng1 OMV Problems? cpts 10 min bleach. Clean llEMOOaJMG • • ...... H di - . . .,.., · um..-PNnlna. Free est. Uc 'd.
Le\ ou.r DMV experts liv, din rm. baU $15. Avg CUatom Room Adds Formica Count.er Tops in· .. ~.:!~~ ............ Roeemarie'a Houseclean· ~~Ext.r/lnlr. Ex· lnl" Heat.an&. Fret: est. lmurecf. 642·2824 =· ~l f~ !:: ~ ~· :U:~0;J,~~ ~~:C:i!C:O~ ~~~~~~i~:: ~!!;!~: ;e~~:p:!~: ~~·1~~~ r1c'd964-100g:; reas. ::ce~l. 'M7crob~~ Treein Service .• Tree prun·
IUJtaUoll.~ Cptrepair.15yrsexpr. ~to Ho &U .la· • ....... r.,.,..,est.87S.3118 It repair. J . Waugh. Fine Ester Painl.lng by 979-806Sor847--0383 g. remova. topping. ---------• Do work myself. Refs t;n mes .01 Youna So Amer lady WlU · . L1 c. Ins. 646 · 4871 : CW;t la 531-0lOl. Quality DOtQuantJty Gadl I !I 80-0601 c lean your house. R. Sibor. St. lie .. ms. Try loa""9 497-4131
••••-•-•••••••••••••• Wm.a. Andersan-Bldr ••••••••••••••••••••••• Hooe:at. efficawat ck re aw. 836-SSM:M hn ••••••--•••••••••••••• ---------
Ca r pent e r . F re e We Care Carpet Cleaners. Free Eat. 631-0361 LANDSCAPING /CLEAN· Hr&g aon. 64CM929 p .. y CMr Castle ROOFS installed factory
-.lmates, Any aiie.iobs. &eam cln or shJlmpoo. General Bwldlne. Con· . UPS ....................... w $peclalizing in residen· dlreet. estab 3S yrs. Call Wllldow Cllt••g Tony,146-111116 Alloupbolatery.Allw~k tractor seets additional Maint.enance,tmmedlate OCCStudent. l Too truck. ho man• ex Per . HarokiGu.nnsct-2961 ••••••••••••••••••••••• suar. 'l'ruck mount wut. .d ti 1 J aervtCIJl&. 6f.2·9907 "l'r.•h ·~ t . R o u a e c I e a n I n g . lla1 homes, int. fl ext. lad. carpenter comm'l Fr eat t ~e~t en a pro ecta-··~ • "ee nm, 00 Rererencea 642·2SS6 Please check our re· 15-aOOfFOIUSS Wif\dows cleaned, re· ,._ No job too small' ~3718 • reaa. ra es. Joint ventures. Call VERY LOW PRJCES 8'2·Sl03.m.68 anytime. . fet"eaces. Lie • 320881 Comp.abin&Je•bot asonable. bus inesses.
lalln.$11-IOl2or&M-SO:Jl· 960·4lBO art. &PM Or On Oardeninl Main· Guar., insrd, free est. Freeest.Call894.(M21 bomesltapts.847-446t c..1 &... 531M1974 t.enanceGeorte 549·2015 tt-C..SerYlc.e Bach.,homes.apts,wttha Ted.136-'nm Olstom remodellng 1s46 MiJ ....................... PERSONAL TOUCH.1---------•REPAlJl a. REROOF. AJI Reeldent.ial <avg '20-30>.
ynlDaru, resld/co~m. It•••••·~~~~·••••••~ Pro(. JapaneseLandscap. AVOIDYACATIOM Rela.549-8372or~ Prof painting &prep. Ext. t Y p es .• h 'n g I e s. Comm~rcial. Rentals.
iotr/ ext. Unique It UD· ,..,.._ t ri 11 ••••••••••••••••••••••• iDI It &ardenlna. ¥alnl. a1--.-Idol. Low rates. Refs. rockshakea-comPo·tar. 1st quality. 631-0211. ~ual work welcome. ~~Js.:fl. a oc-SUp Coven, Draperies, incl. mowing, trimming, Mature:"'~. resp. I ••c .. ilag 536--C780.S36-4383 Freee«.S41·~
alumboComt.ll62-83l4 bed spreads. up~latery =t!;.~~-Free person will look aner ·-• .. ••••• .. •••••••••• JJ'S PAINTING Great ---------~c~"'s!: ~~~l~!
European Gourmet Chef cuabions ~ p1llowa. yourbomeJunetattoJu· Landscaping. n-ee trim· wortatgreatprices. CadillacatoGo-Carta year. 11 you have a 11-e fastest dra• lo the
West. • . a Daily Pilot
Claulfied Ad. 642·.5678.
roralloccaslonalnyour CUato?'fabncs,freeest. GARDENING ly lat. Cal l Jobn ming. Clean-up. 8 yrs SS7·l041 Rol~;,~J::::ket campert.llat'sooC.getting
me. Andre. 548·7384 Jerry a Int. Decorators SERVICE (213 )697·0225 evea, exp Free Eat Noboru •---------WithaCl"••"'•-'Ad used, sell It now with a
d,ya wekome,1162-4185 548-8375 (714)SSIM917work ~or897 2862 . Find wbal yoµ want ln --'4"''" Claaa.' .. -'Ad. ---------i--------------------------------·-----1 DallyPUotChissiCieds. caJINow!&U-S678 u1.,..
~!~:.~ ..... ?!!~ ~~~ ..... ?!.~ ~~~*::! ..... ?!!! .... ,!!'!':!! ..... !!!! HltpWcMd 7100 HlfpWcMd 7100 HllpW..ted 7100 IWpW..ted 7fOOHllpW-'tcl 7100 n-.-~~ ................................................................................................................. . Babysitter needed Prr ~aeeper, Aect.s re·IClerical Cooll-BroUerExp. 1aL mybome.S.E.HBaru. ce1vable, CRJ, ~apo· CAR!BSIN Cleancut,energetic, Qeliveryman, early Driver,C I Tractor& GeneraJOffi lfoulecJea.ners, Tues-Fri.
1:30 lo 5:30 Moo-Fr'i,• 2 Beach area. Jl\lll time, A .... "' .... CE fltimeNBloc.548·7948 morning, Lt.A. Times. 40' t.raileT', experienced ce liDfl OfC .1·3PM. Call Janic.e·s cbJdm-.7071. start $600 mo. Send. re-. ,_,, < 4AM-6AM. M.50 pr mo. bolllebo&d goods. Al leaat TRAIMEI RauedY Ann' ~1900 ----------1 sume to P.O. Bo• 138, California'• oldeal & 673-2:515or64&-1U3 1 yr witb references & htteres\ing pos. in our s. CapoBuc.b~ larlest thrift & loan co COOK r..::a driving record. credit#pt. Variety of R.eallyfun,va""1jobin Ho&lleCounseUors IAIYSITTB bas front ofc clerical Delivery for early AM &dist. 847-7278 duties. Reefs lYPID°I skill top interior dee.Ti.rm ln Married cpl only. No
Uve-m s days ror 2 yr Book.keeper, full charp openings for sharp indivs For private country club, aewirpeper in Npt, C.M.1---------1 ol50+_wpm, number ap. N.8. ~ place to c bi Id reo, Ii ve .1 n . dd.Ha~eo&.berhelp. Ex· thrutrial~forad· wbo enjoy mee.ling Ii ruJJUmew/xlnlbenefiu. Mustbereliable.$150mo ESCROWOfCIL Utudebdpful.A.pply,Na· 1FOril. Weil poomed, at· Supervise 6 teenage
per'd,oVT2l.675-0286 . ~rtlaln• & public rela· aervtng the public. Prior ~ust be knowledgeable +.~ For heavy ti1act desk. tima.ISystemsCorp,4361 tract personality & orls.Sal +exp.540-47$4. ---------1 uona farm. Needed im· related exper. helprul. mall aspects or food pre-Deli • work Married Good bellefila. Manage-Battb St.. N.B. <Near oc mature attitude req'd. ---------
BabyslUer, mature, relia-med. Call m.5001. ask but trainee positions paratJoo.496-5767 very · • ment potential. Salary Airport> Equal Op· U&.etyping6bkkJmg. Housebeper, for few hrs
ble. Own trans .• my forBem.lce. avail. We orter com· C k b over2S,p/t,useowncar. open. lrvlne Savings & portunityEmployer NEVERAFEE aday,foreklerlylady&t
home, J>t·Ume days. Nr . petitive salaries, group oo 5 • uspersona, cboo6e own hours. We Loan CaU J . Andrewa, ---------Call Coutal Penoonel son. Must have car Beach & Warner. Days; Bo,. &11.tla to work after insur, profit sharing, re· hostess. Apply~ person. pay ga.a. No selling, good 7S2-2J600. Agency.2790Harbor,Cll MS-ISSl
162.7711 ext 519/Pat. school .from 3-7:JOPM, tirement & xlnl adv op-JaUy Roger. Jrvtne. 1727 earnings. Call 826·9770 54MOSS ---------~vea· IC'7.e&a Mon-Fri. Must be neat por E. Dyer Rd, SA. Before before12. Female Packagers, Merit General Office Housekeeper, live-in, S
• appearing. Earn S60 wk · Inquire Al. llorafter3PM. Dent.al Asst, ortho, cbr, raises. Call'S48-512S. l.S37 RECoaDSCLBIC G.Ofc $150 days, own rm~· & TV
Babylttte.r needed start· +bonus. can Ted Wynn, Morris Plan673·3700 COOKS. bftaltfaat lunch NB. 4~ dys. Ortho exp ck Monrovia Ave, N .8. Varied position working Fee Pai~. Marvelous Engllsb speaking. 185 .inc June Slh ln my Npt S40-s:!lllafter3PM. R w/scbedullng & colltt· pos. for ambrt.iou.a ~rs perwlt.~. 8 c h h m . 7 : 3 0 a m . & dinner. Ma Barker's, .D.A. req. 64%*216216 Fiberglass mold repair & tion rts T 40 ---. ...~ 12:~. Own transp & McJM,.,.._ 212E.17thSt,CM finaling peraoo needed repo · ype + r~emng u...,y co. YP-llousekeeper, ruu time.
r.-......o i boat f M l be wpm. Some aecounUng t.ng. Call Kay, 833-2700. live-in or out. 3 children. reUf*l'd.. 75&-9'50.. u..uu w/numben for ac-Clerical "'-·-·-Uo, .. , 11 ..... our ad or mgr. us exper or t~•-1-.. uld ••--F J ..... De--'· •-
8 k . counting position ~ •• ~--DIMTALASSIST exper.Steadywork,good ·-wo n-. ee o..... ... .... • 8. 9 ck 11, H.B. area. a ery Saleagarla . 6'2-6830. • .. Cl.Ell underbousecou.osellors, OrtbochrsideF/f&Prr co. benefits. Apply In be helpful. Apply, Na· Dennis Peraonnel Days· 995-2246 Eves
Mature pref'd. Full & S4CM754 RDA pref'd. Call person. 8·3. Moo-Fri. UooalSystemsCorp,4381 Servtce of Irvine, 2082 963-cSSS Ask ior Mr. e~~mSbope. A~~~Eat,,!_~e ~.~mil eom, ~ny •SR. Cl.Ell CaSbltl &1-'-ter 642-5887. Skipjack Boats Inc. 1763 'Eff:pboS:i>N.:·~~elarOOCp· llicbdlloo. _Smith_· ______ _ uaae • ...... . ~t n.,.,.... ns .. er service .....-Placenua Ave, CM. r~or
Hwy, Corona del llar. penoo. Salary open. Ex· a.ERICA! lf'SJ Help W..ted Dental Ass't·Do you want port.unity Emp oyer uao c Fee Paid Housekeeper, Child care
per only need apply. 228 * fW • Delaney's Salty Sam a career ln ortho using Fiberalass m!g co. needs T,._/lec.ept. A.b&etodrive. June/July.
&nlttng Fee Paid Ave La.gBcb. Varied jobs with & Reltaurant. Age min 18 all your RDA sltllla? (ft employee. Exp'd Startofrrigbtinexcatlllg Llve-ln. Responsible T .... to$62S ' without exper. ln good yn;.Mustbeabletowork 64G-Ol21 w/fbrgls. $3.75 hr. Over Genera.IOffice front desk pos. Call Jin· Rers. Near beach
Pleaaing peraonallty Busboy wanted, exper ofcsurrouodlnp.Calllo-betwn tOam & 9pm in· Zt. Forappt.53&-6760HB IDUC•--..-ny. 833-2700. AJ.ao Pee 675-5465
m.ta tbe public daily in pref'd, Apply in person day!!, , c I u d . wk n d a . Ca 11 Dental Recept. Desk only. AU e&.-"" .,., 1V'l"'9 w....-• Jot.. Dennis fr Deruus •------i.....---career pos. Call •WUla, betwn 3:Sl>m, Moa thru MO F&S 675-3145. Good benefits. H.B. ...,_ SECaETAaY Personnel Service or Housekeeper. ex-per. Own -m.2100. Alao Fee Jobs Wed ; Vactor Huao lnn, llQ.5032,846-3540 Beginner 1pot for bright Interestiq poa. wbicb in· lnine 2mlllicbelsoo car. Penno. oo.l.y. Local
Dl!llnil•DemU.sPenoo: 361CliffDr,LagBch.No ~Q~ office • DATAINTIY _._ •• uSIST. penca. P1eaa.ant work· cludelaecntarialduties • · rers. lhiture. relial> .• -nelServiceollrvtne,2082 pboneca.Jla. 1 d Acea tllMaa.rti .,...,.,__ inc conds. OpPor ror forthedirectoroleduca· GIRLYRJOAY good cook for disabled
lticbeAlaa Ccdwteria...._ 0 over oa P\ill time posltioo open Orthodontic ebrside. tra.Jping & adv. 37~ hr lion " typing for Recept.~mio of 50 lady. 768-7926
• .....,.. SS7ft061 as a video display F/time.H.B.9&2·3'05. war\wk.$C7Spermoto t.edmicalwrittts. Varie· rsmall mrgrpalaalesnt.' Houseplant technician. --------•IP/time work. llin 3 hrs. -,_, __ , operator 'or a start. Call $49-4700, ext ty old· .. •-o:...•5 aood ,_,, I f 11 n--a.. .... t h c t -u'-hSt NB u;iu.umu ,, Dental Asst Chr ad, ....-. ·-.. F/f xJtn benef'rt.s. HB. e1tper, _wan~ or u --..nc .. ua ave car. osa "'-uu" • Ba11c /Four mini · f/Ume. Good benefits. 219. typlngatJ.llaol60+wpm. E.O.E.7l4-89t·S3Sl time interio r plant T ..... PJtW-Mesa. Newport Beach & Equ.a.l()ppoc Employer computer. Some ex· c 11 9 Apply, Natiooal Systems ---------•ma int. route. Call
.Brmcbclcseetsbonda· C4f'oo&A 1 dNel Mar areas. perieoceladesarable bt.ll !!.;,~a 8 3·50321 FtMAMCE Ca,>.4361BittbSt.N.B. 4if1LRIDAY Ba.rbara '6'7-0150!H
b6e. p/time telltt w/new u::fa!d s:=~~~~ will train Individual ~itlt ---~---·------• Large Resid'l/Comm'I <NearOC Airport) Equal Matutt Person, subcoo· ' ·
accow:l1s upe.r. prer'd. Food Service Dept., 1857 demonstrated typing ac· Dellld Ortt.o Asst Builders/Developer re· ()pportunjty tmployer. tractor ore. lJ1e bk.kpng. llftllf'r llflVrr-
Call Lee Porterfield, Pl ti A C .... curacy and speed. Work quires IDdlvid'1aJ to bead Pay r 0 11 , l y P 1 n g, nuu.x ftltW (714)1Ua.d01. a cfln a ve, .... in pl .......... t eovi--ment 842-ms finaoce div. Slroo" COb· ..-C---------Eam-... -mooeywrkng ,,_,. 5156-3273.. --.. ....... .. EN'L Ofc pref lumber mathemallcally ac· ....,. .. . wmt'ERN FEDERAL wltb aoo~ company Dental aut. Do you relate tact.a to develop commit· • · . . cur at~. g 0 od 0 n pt time (9am-2 or 4 to 9
SAVINGS c•aw•.rHH•• benefits Including 2 II 'tb I ., mentaforprojectloans& exper. AIR It 1Dv0tCJDg. ro---pm> Frm our ofc. Town Couo --_.-we w 1 peop e . equity ~ptlaJ. Track re-Must be lood typjat. St telepbooe. """JalrUction p U!$ " try FuU•part-Ume weebvacaUboa.tterone Gnatbological practice COl'df&relsam"•t.Wri•--5Q.540-8M0.N.B. exper preC'd. Non leaaaot teJephooe pro· Orange, Calif ll&Over year, company paid needs uperienced teatn -""' smoker. Call betwn 8-lO, moUon ror KNAC radio "f:10pp Emplyrm/f Metro Car Wash ~ lmurance, credit member. Please phone ~a0co BoDev~~~:. .. lnc. •--------1 $4()-7454. Gold RushboS2.65 to $4. hr
2950H.arbor Bl, CM ... ._.,etc. Apply at 631-2'92 ror coofickntial . • & -· --.11111a "OllAI. guar + ous Apply .,. •y ·--ES ORANGE COAST tntemew. ,_uw.. __ 9211153_____ a Grandmother's Helper 1324$ Harbor •H. G.G eanttn1 C=thr-Hosteu ft-.. _ ... """ DAILYPILOT needed. llon t.bru Frl,1_530-__ u_oo _____ _
CI u cW Teler For &today Brunch at IJ l-0542 330 w. Bay St., CM Dental assistant chair PfTTa IJBEIS 9:4· lrviDe area. Call al\ Industrial Eaper'd,f~... 1"9HUCllPRRY All office• lnduatrial betweeothebounof aide, X-ray lie, C.M. &SIAMSTllSS UrsentlYNeeded!!! 4·~ ILUIJIAMJOIS ~---lnNewportBeJcb stills needed. Interest· l :OOAlf·5:00PM S.-3000 Full time only. Apply in Warehoule GUYS I f'llt'
6 Monarch Bay Plaza 8'1 UM. Apply in person ing, temporary asalsn· C.ll for __ D_e4_rt_•_ •• -•• --penoa to Mauger. Ma· StockSbi.w..~~a·vino ll""4l .,,.., ""4/w-•
Sout.h Laguna. 496-1273 00 &In. Aak for Gayle. ___... w-"'•-o •or you. A,ppointmeotpleue --ble Au1ttn, D.ra-r'• ---~-,,, ·-...._tAB & T I 114 McFadden Pl <at the ~ -.... 1' ., ...... 21. •..a 277 ()pentn,p lD orthodontic ..-lluat have ...-_ ck relJ•· NLa ' 1h1 HI Equa Oppor. Employer N-N & Work .when you want. -.-• u ,ft...._,_ ro..--.... t.iuna Hills Store.!.. 23121 .,._..., Of'BaMGS -----•_.,.... __ >._. ______ , Pald vacs. You doo'l Equal<>PPortwi.ily ~~:M; ;~:: lloaltonPa.rkway.t'la.u !:m~:= Pleasant tele wrt frm a..._, HILD CARE Reap pa)',wepayyou. Employer nee. F /Ume, good day & vacation pay. our Clfflce No up. nee,
C1 ~..... ps900 lo care tor11 yr ....._.._~ benefita 151""'2. MOMT84D Hoapttaltntlon plan imt be eothus. KNAC
e-.. ::J old boy. All leboola, a to 6 Or CGI Ow ~ -...-r ..-u .......... avail. r'8dio Gold Ruab Promo-
• <NCI 1 pm. lloa th.tu Fri. Nr. lr...cll Office The JoUY Rocer c. ii Dedal RYlimist. Laguna -tioo wr:t 9 All to 2 or 4.9 lwlepi tetai. need.a Wm Kettler Scbl, HD. takina appllcaUoos for a NJ.iud Ofc. l"' da)'ll per Must bave Ford $2..61>$4 per b.r gua.r. phn but exper·d comm') 980-tolllaft7pm. Mwptldl IJJ.>1441 '-dclataent.ryoperator. weet.-...io ExperieMe bonuses Apply u 245 -..aecy,App'1at •----------llinimwn of l yr exper. WUTaDtySpeclallst HarbortHO G S»ll.00 SAM11A901..-Child 1ltter, 2 :30-1 :30 --CUll---TYPl--ST--• ontbemM374lor3742is DISHWAStaS WdhFordExperteoce ..
SISE. i.t St, 'l\altiQ wtd.Ys. 2 chlldren-S .ti 8 required. Pe.rmanent full p /time. Weekend work. Service Writer HAIR DR~E.R 8:D-5.D ,.,., CdM. STS·73SS, Some secretarial & time day sbiA. Pay will Bayview Manor It Coov. With Ford Experieace WANTED Zqaal()ppor.Emp1oyer 7St5'10 ceneral office exper, be based on experience Hosp,6G-3505. LotaolWork 54 741 c.cmtactPatOrKaren -=:?.:=::...::.!:!:::..:..:=!:.::!.::.::..1~--------f.rool olOce appea.rance. level. Apply in person = All Company Bendlta <Across From H>-3306 _....id, flt days. Top office, girl lo Good comp&Q)I' beoeflU. 8AM·5Pll, Mon-Fri al HWASHER, kltclwn Paid Vacat.lonltHoliday OruJA'eCo. Airp>rt) 119irtililt'1rl.C.M aulst. No experience .M1Mr113 l70GGllleU.eAve Irvine he , part-time, ruu. Call«SeeToayEvan Equal()pporEmpJoyer Hair atyU.t, exper. ror 'IM-Wl neceuary. Will train. ' time, Salary com· Ml.salon Viejo cblld~n·a
ASSB'•as
PACICACHRS
MM.LAio.BS soe.oaas 1MSNCToas
Day-Week-Monlh or lcn&er, it ·a your dectaion
1st 6 2nd sbifta avail. Paid vautions. You
don't pay. we pay )'OU'
CALL OR COME IN TODAY!
IEL~ Calll.orappt.962-9373 CLllJ(TYPIST Data"T~a meosurate w /exper. aaJoo. lmmed. clleatel. But8ldm' wanted, exper Newport financial firm C M>-3820 4HMaAL For info: '19el s eRv1cl!&
qite. Apply in peraon, N-.~ifiW aeeking versatile lndJv OPEIATOtt ---------• ll)'OUareanlnteWgent ................... 1401 DoveSlreet
be&n Wc>m Moo thna _,..... for marlcetinl le sales S te 3Mod15lula.ll 00.8'IOOMB well groomed individual ~·~ St.elMO NewportBch. :r'~i::::i~~"o ~ ===~~~: ileedam:.~~ :cu:~:~·S.A. ~~°,!!,r.j!!:~;~ ~~~:r:~e:.s.C:t:!~~~~~~~a:D-~~~144~1~~~~~~ pbane~ COPYCOMilt>L ==~~~P~i 7Pllo.c.!' .. ·~oeed•d . Hrs DJUVERS-lluat be over Ila • IDOi. <Aua·Nov A Jan· week.645..mlor6'7$-5'49 tnneedol80llMIOIMl15bra
JlllllialPDlitkJaopeelnell Cl.mTYPtST .. 1 .,. •-·""'-'""· 21 w/cleao dri..c .... rec Ii 111ve you read today a A»t>. We are interested pcareforelderlylady. wk. Opeoing1 for 2.
If.& &m. Ooed • Da1J.y Pllot ha.a an ::!fits~ 1ea}1° :.'4~ SAMTIA.O IAMIC ltnowJedae of ~e le aa.tned Ada? If not. in~ to ya.a. Must be avaUable some '50-S200 pe.r wit. Call for !
0
• • .:~-:.~ao"':::: lm~ate o_peDlnl to uUorSlllrtey. 53SE.1.ltSt.:ruau.n LA Co. lree••'ll· Call ~':an:'/:-~~ bat 3:' pubu:e.:~v::J,...:.wtmda==:::·:.:ae-:.=..:1:.:.11::1:...._ ___ 1_a_ppt. __ 875-0230 _____ _
n a. ~ 5·Sll C*I' aaaatned Advertb-112-5200!!.0 .E. 54'7·14.13f«appt. · pnvate company. You 'al• we BtMf•ts. wm traln, iQsDept.foracopyCOD-CodllalW....... ........w---..... 1bould enjoy beln1 IE.PEI .. --uw dert" l'JplsL DutJea Sdool Help W..t.cl 7100 ._.... --7100 r..xper Insurance Girl include typloa ("5wpm .,.__ _ .. n.ta Procastni ....................... •••o•••••••........... w/cbildJoen and have an Need peraoo to lea.rn Friday for busy Costa electrl~>;-tllfn1, copy r...rn :fi to_.., per••· PIOJICTCOMTIOL O'ltplncper'ICJll&lit,y. ablpplo1 • rec. Alao, Meuolfice.IS:M>427
control It 1ener•I Low lion. Placement ADt••STIATOI ........ MKesMrY aome maintenance ck lmunnce
clerical. Some pbone ~ m-ttM. We an Met.lna an •I· ForinfonnaUoa f:, may cleanup. Prlnlln• plant. Need penon openenced
ba.ndllna up. helpfw. ~ female, live-srwlvt lndMcluat who DRIVERS & MECHANICS cal.I Bee.ta Ann or rba.ra S3Toatart. 54CM1027 In commerelal caaualty Adftltis~ uperfnce In w /elderlJ lady, Ute wUI art u a C!O!Dt&allanUs P. -.UOO FUOerton. __. K to ftU poalt.loo In Newport
de•ttable but not boil....,.... Room 6 admtDlatraUve cont.rot o-.IOffice ~waotcu entucky Beacb qency Mir for
MC lllU)'. OpponwaJty board:Safuy open. point. f« all t.nton..Uon Mw•rr;• Ctr Ofcs ... _. ~ ... ck~ ds•Y ~· Miia MJtcbeU. Mc·lS3G. for ad•.aactment to -.am •'l•tem• denlopment -UM .,,. • ._, • ..._t
teltpboDtJ_dvertllln1 Pl'QSed.a.Otberdutialn· 4PPlJCATIONS BEJUl' J'111£N Girl riday. Stoek ~.i.a,uo..Seacb. IMVIMTOIY ..... ...,_. lblcellenl CJUl)e admtnilt.ratloa of na M ti.-okera&• flrtn a.s, Ute,_......_ ...... ....._.... ____ , COMmw _,_v ..__...u_ F-,,...........___ ••~ _, ... ,... typln1. attractive. mPIJAL R-. ------· -~·----.. -a~ .. ._._.. .,.tem art}CQl.a pOwUI. Purcbaalftl It ~·1 Of. Im~~: ~= =~4o2J3. ~ts~~~ IXPBllMCIRlqUIUD Callllari~.~-~:,:~~~
ICMltl.dt.Z11 famlllar w /ICL A s-tenc:e tn au phaw of CLASS I Ol 11 ORIYaS •••ALOflllCI EXPERIENCE don• customers. Good ~COAST ~:· Seni=ee buteaNau tbt1 Ille cytde otJ a de• LIC .... SI R~UIRID FOR EledNDle1 ~ lD c.•. --m-...... ~. 2 math knowleds• nee. DAILYPh.01'. ...,..._. · • · ve opmen pro ect re· ...,. ~ Miika penan w/i.a'I ofc ..-• ..,... -· no-. ~I eo wpm+. Call tional 811 •Oil q u l r • d . Pro h ct DRIV8S • Ute b"lr:.POa .xper. lft aper. Cobol le. btwn 9 AM • 3 PM ln· • W .11ay SL Blrdl&t. NA <N.ar OC leaderahlp experlenot • loch'* A.IP •Nit. Ex· Compuy pa.id fl1Jisee. t.ervlew. 788-4751 eo..111.. AJrport>~ual OS>-~ble. Salary CC'· Send re·•--------gq.i~ -.-Jo.. ...,. per'd, rell.ab&e. mature ... -.... to ~ c.i-an· ••..-w OI JILL S _ ___,, , Great Western Reclamation ~delirabl• ValOt -.. w ~-r We offer • co.m· -..... ..;....... clal Serv cee, lTO -· .. -•-<R .. _ 1 SCA Services Of Orange County -. --..._ ,._._ ..... .,,._ _.. -·--preucn.a ve career do· 0 &WWport ~ UT.,-.. WW Tram~ But ~ ~ pro-Laguna Beach lspotal .-, N.B. _.,.__.. flit•l"""me ~Hd •xe•llenl Ho1theOl1pose1 MOWISTHITIMI Hotel -S()LDERiNo"' .
AJ Ain't~ i::::~ for job Mitken lo cbeck DISI( Q.81 WOOD PRZ·FINISH Dept. U1t DaUf Piiot llelp Al1rb ID penon. Swf I& H&ATSTAMP
PAClfllC ...nuAL Wmad d...ukaUon. If Stud Hotel, USS So. ~~i:f Y
TOONe.,...tCle..,.Of' ~~-~ = Hwy, La111na J\IU~Bt...m.
Ncwpalt Buch, CA ortertnc your senlna •-:--------Inc.ta M ... -.am ~ db an ad bi the JOb fblleeleenen° De4lded.
0ppor Emplo'JW Waatect ~. PtioDe 11atuN. Top ... Ca.raee. ~~ r• db Delb' IG-llJI IQ..lm ~ ...-WantAde.
It YoarPl'uC..-
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_ ~~~ •. ••• ?L~~ ~-~~·::!. •• .. ?!.~~ ~ ~.~·~ ..... ?!.~~ .;.Wed.:.:.:;.;.need=.::•Y:.:.·.;.:.M;,:1:.:..y~3;_. 1..;9;.;.7.:.8_~ .. -----....;D:...A_IL;;..V_Pl;...L_O_T_ .... D_..._7 ._j..,, t • noo~w-... •7!.~ ~~~ .... .!!!4! Rir'"ir...l ......... IST 0 -·-ur·"'t SALES ~~~:.•:.~ ••••• ?!.~~~~.~~ ..... !!.~~ ~~~.-.. !!~~ ·-··••••••••••••••• •• .. -••••••••••• • -5'.om;;f'" 1 "'" .......,_ ... SA.LES SMVICE
J 'Len! fil Urne e\'H l'he JoUy Roacr Inc ·~ llOADWAY I Tow Truck Dnvers ex·
O\'tt ••' · T 'Man.aprTra.lnet P'IDJ JIME lookloc fo r o f1t1me •-Hiit Counter 11rl. NHt & ~----Aon··s 'd Ton P•Y Annty ~· c.v arn ll.W te SI 4,400 M perm. recept. Must be Has 1~ie opHlng DO YOU rLA Y person• b le· N ° a c It ~ .. ~w Towinc. loOo l~ne --------.... Manno 1uppUer uek1 ptrsonable. atlr:u.11\•e & tor . THI OllQ.AM? Trophy Encravlng Co TO SI 000 Ave, NB6'2·12S2
~O 9PM-lAM. 4i d.&v tor reap pat. Call tor &ood typ1na skalls. -Truck Dnver wanted,
JANITOAJAL OFFICE enlbusl .. hc career in· EVENINGS exper'd. Position calli; C()()t( If ... ......__., 1..~ a t'1l4>64&-:tHl ffl
nla!Ma, m1a1t be 1a. boo em. 833.2700 Dennia &r ActuJ:ta with out.st.Anding, $675 to l600 to start. App-•Experience Req'd corHr for yo• ot SA1.IS SEC'Y.-4j Bottem Dum1>1. must be dal>le•de~ndable,call Den1al1 Personnel attractive penonalitles ly, 17042 Gallelle Ave, =~~:!i~t='~~~ Or9011 Exclta•9e. !~"J:~e'&~.i~~ . exper.in4x4tnma.Over Steves:n.7723 Suvice of Jrvtne, 2082 ~Qjoy worlrioa wath lrvtne. App'ti Pe--..... 11,. "'·m s...ni. -11 m ltOW _ ZS caU~'H --------~ M ... 6•--v • ........,.. v-.u.o -...-.,.. has openlna tor exp'd h •·1 ao"ncv '""""'-•· .. Start al $3.50 per Mon thru "'·tor by appl --ir ..... &... w.... ~-. mary 1C11. e "'" 11. Dri L F ••c:11. n.... °'" .... _ .-. .. ...,,... tTVT saJes sec'y. Duties In· 'W'V Trsa Yer -,. -.-:" -P"" ...... hr Phone 642~1 1250 San Di Fr N Ce D '" The Jolly Roau Inc. 15 MANAGMfa1:1AIL between 3:()()..S:OOP M · RIC.-r. to SIOO eao eeway fie NOlla. ,rnloH clU(Je order desk & gen. 170 ewport nter r & T .....
t.akjq •Rillcallona fbr' i. HoMy WH Hcnt ~for Slaar'Oft Profess. of cs await PR 1"-u"~ ~!,'~~~;l~yer sdes • .,... ....... W otcdresponsi1biliUes.
1
At· SuiteJ!~i '::o..~ lkb Mon Um1 Fri 8.5. Dan ·s leaddat.ientryoperaler. seeks store managers Equal Opportunity conscious lndiv. Call ~ ._ w• ..... JM. Cal tra · start ng sa ary, 'IV, 1.se6 Newport Blvd.
Mlnlmam ot 1 yr exper. capable of ass um in a Employer Barb 833-2700. Dennis & Mra. Jttt. C 7 I 4 J ~t.~?._bene:,illll incld'g d Co8ta Mesa. Ofl\b&IBM374tor3'742ls complete unit opera· Dennis Pers onnel 51,._7302. _ ..... UUI. ease sen Secty Recept, PT. ~Permanent full Uonal responsJbllity in Party rental store nee<ts Service of rrvme, 2~2 RESTAURANT ~~d:~~":~·:es~~~~ 1:~5:~ Mon·Fri tor am TYPIST-Cards. lmme<l tJme day shift. Pay will Orange Co. area. Good young lady to work Tues M1cllelson. ArcbJtect Engineering opening. f /time. Co.
be 'based on experience pay. Vacs. Hosp insur. thru Sat moms clcanina HELP SALE.S·Fun.ume &A.sso.,4500Campus Dr. ofc. Typing 50WPM, benefits. Sal + bonus. letel. ApplY in person Pension & Proli.t Sharing party rental equip. App-RICEPT /TYPIST ALLTIME Ste 344, Npt lkh. 92660. $3.SO hr .. N.8 . nr oc Apply, Pennysaver, 1660 '8AM-5PM, Mon-Fri al Plans. Call Craig Martin ly, 2025 Newport Blvd, Retail sales co. has im-We currently have 10 541).6444 Airport 752-7614 Placentia Ave, Costa 170.uGWetteAve, lrvlne betwn J..5pm for appt. CM _,..., 1 . 1 openings for individuals TbeStoreforTlMEX Mesa.
""""' operuna or a gir with some fasl food ex· Sales&Servlce Sales·Weekend help. Only S.C'yllti.&.----------LEASING 873-90()(). who can ans phones , perience, however. this Immediate opeo10g Ap willing to work need app t ---r 'I'YP&st. your home, 2·3 hrs
Secretarial ...... w/resp .. Manager Couple for sml f''"'YIOLL.-1 m:a111 o-eet1 c~"?.mersf& lY,PC is not required. These plyinper&on . . ly. 14 or older. Male & Ttimeax. eJxmp!redle.nco~nf~!~ ~·!~_7\. .. Citll Mr Ive!>, ,,,_ bll b k . ._ --at east uuwpm. l you re I II a d l l ~l So Ma D S A f C II 548-8467 ,..... • ............ ,"\. =· ~aft'fotr ~tpepn:: ~ A°n~:awri~ 'lbe JoUy Roger, Inc., a interested, please call ~ema':ity day ';!~.~L~':se · 1 · · · ~~4112 :or appt. or Weber Nameplate, Sdanta 1---. I!t~-----fast growing restaurant Kathyat558·2813. H d 1 Ana . 556·6222 ys , IST 64 5 ·5'000 • ext 5 2 0 P.O. Box 892, Hunt Bcb chaln, tµu anopeninc for ours an aa ary are SALES San Francisco lam1Jy ~leves. No SH. h '1, loc Fash 8=30mn·5pm. 921648 an exper'd payroll clerk RECSt'TIOHIST open. Apply in person 1 ~le u-~-t
to -o,P"l"a2pe-ondept Monday-Friday, _.... ~ needs govehm~.N sums· Sec'y. lmmedopenina in lsland.l!OOP'orapptcalJ Legal Secy. Exper pro-MANAGER needed, must ba .. nd'li"o ... g appr'o'"x. le"" Late bkkpng. F /time. ~rn. If you weren'llooking for mer m.ont s bin k. . N.8 . stock brokerage 640-1700. bate ad.min. Tempo 1·2 be very responsible&ex· .>\1\.1 Some eves. Busy Jewelry a n ew career you Coolung, IJle ouse pg. firm exper nee an atock•---------~ w/possible longer per'd salesperson, for employees . Com-retailstore.Benefals.So. -DELTACO,INC wouldn'tbereadt~gthis Ou&d~age~&6.Must brokerage business. TYrtST
raneeoppty. Good steno Burl furn & crafts puterbed payroll exper. Coast Plaza. Call for 1720SupenorAve ad. and if we weren't bavedrivers.lic:-M~ture Must~ selfstarter, no RECEPTIONIST skills & willinaness to galleriea, contact Mrs. a m u s l • w 1 t h appt. 5'9.-1424. Costa Mesa. CA looking for someone lo do woman pref d. Ref s lo S/H req 'd. Call Sandy work on other matters. Han.son 415·497-3411 or restaurant payroll ex· a job, Uus ad wouJd not M. Pratt, P.O. Box 554, 640-l460
Small law ore, Airport <213)767·1S28forappt. per.adefiniteplus.Xlnt RECEPTIONIST F.qualOppEmplyrM/F be here. If you are a Balboa92661 •---------1Arcbitectural office re·
N t 8 b. 833 9982 worlung conds & benefit Sportin1 gds. Mfg, typ-career minded adult & Sec'y /RecepUonist qua res accurate typist, 65 area wp c • M"anlcurist w/tollowing pkg w/oppor for adv. Sal iog, telephone, filing, want the oppty to earn SEAMSTRESS/Fffter Irvine advertising acen· wpm min. Must be neat,
LEGAL for exclusive CdM Bouti-commensurate w /exper. gen . of c. duties . Restaurant three to rave hundred Exp r • d. P /t i me . cy. shorthand 80, typing reliable and pleuanl. SEC'Y/RECEPT. que. 759-0323 Apply in person belwn 7:31M:~.540-6142 dollars a week. call toll Women's Quality Bouti 65, good phone voice.
Busy F .V. law firm -'------.----• Sam & Spm or send re· BOB'S free (l) 8001327 .9696 que, Fashion Island. Prefer sharp, young in· Wm.L.PereiraAssoc needs exp'd Calaf. legal Manutacturang.gene~al sume to: 17042 Gillette RECEPTIONIST •tto.. Of n. anytime (for recorded 759-1201 divldual looking for MacArthur at Ford Rd
sec 'y /recept. Work factory work for sporting Ave, Irvine. Immed. opening. N.B. message) ---------growth Potential. Call Newport Beach
w/mln. superv. Start goods Clrm. 7:30.4:00PM, law firm seeks exper'd . ligloyl Seamstresses wanted, ex-Carol, JPM·
5
:lSPM. (714 )644·0620
5/15. 962·2418 540-6l42. recepl. to handle busy Immediate openings in SALESMAN per, must have own 5.57-0MZ E.O.E. -M/F
M · H d E PBX phones. Good typing our family restaurants al Retail/wholesale marine machines, able t? sewl-=:~=~-----1===-----:--UVE IN -a rane ar war Answering serv ice ablllty,paldparklng.Ap. nearby locations. We re· hardware ~e needs decorative s titc h. tr--'yTechnfcf• TYPISf.exper,genfrom -salesperson, knowlt:dge operatorfull&Ptr.Call 1 · 6 o """2831 ~ tape otc 3 dya/wk to help care for elderly of boats, marine eqwp & 835-a.'561 P Y in pe rson : 1 quire no previous exper. sales people. wledge ,,.,.,. Lite typing & otc.dutles Thur~·Fri-Sai. S.A. n;
mother. No cook Ing. retail sales nee. Must be Newport Ctr Dr, Ste 1220• Join our friendly learn. ol boat.a & exper pref'd. Seamstresses. Ex per pre· fo~ 2 man laboratory. N w Pt F w y . M r s .
Much free lime. Pvt able lo work wknds. PIX Aftswtr S..... NB644·9311. Come see us today betwn Nat'l cow/good benefits, C'd on sngl & dbl needle. Will train tor metallo· Hoskins 558-8333
room. Salary open. 67~ Graveyard shift avail. RECEPTfONIST 2-4p'! __ LT-'----insur, vacation. Sotne Benefits.546-93ll graphic laboratory ' ·
Bluffs NB. &40-4038 I Op m. 6 am, p /Um e . -,,__. wknd work. Beach toe. duties. Sal nego. Photo-UTIUTY Person nights.
' MATURE WOMAN Prefer exper, but will Meett.hepubllc,litetyp. CasWen Call B . ,Morrison, Seamstress needed for graphy background XJntpay&benefits.• Loans p/Ume to welcome train. Call for appl. ing, gen oftc. Full time. 73llF.dingerHuntBch 9-lla.m,645-1711. marine upholstery co. helpful. Sandidge 'S57-4700ext2448 INDEPENDENT newcomers & contact 83J..92S2 E 0 E Oll1Tu11,~116 EqwilOppEmplyrm/f Mustbaveexperinworlt-Met a 11 u r g i ca I . . . LO•u J4.GEUT merchants. Flexil>le hrs. · · · · RECORDS..&. .-111 ing w /naugahyde & Laboratory, 2003 Quail Waiters, wanressea & ~ _, Need car, lite •\yping. PBX Operator, telephone \;L....," ---------• Sales vinyl. Steady work, good St, N.B. (Near OC capt.alns
Experienced loan agent 547-~. amWJ!rin' service. Over Some l.)'Ping required Retail s•..a11 OPPORTUNITIES company benefits. Apply Airport) 549-094.9 Nee~1ng per~ons ex·
neededtogenerateloans 25, w/train. Days, eves, $3.00/hi whlle training. Exper'd for hardware 1....n~••EST•TE in persoo, 8·3, Mon·Fri. peraenced in .food intbeCosta Mesa, Foun-MEDICAL/Assistant &graveyard.835-J56l Call Mrs. Stewart. &/or paint. Laguna -~ ~ Jack Cole co .. l763 SERVICE SfATION.AT-service. Peopleon ented. lain Valley & Newport Some front/back expr. 873-0460. Placentia Ave CM TENOANT. Full lime. good benefits. Call for
area. Real Estate lie. re· lrvine.552·7511 p BX -Beach Lumber Co, Let us demonstrate bow ' Primarily for service awt. 644-5404. Big Ca· q 'd . Cont a ct Ne i I • • Recreation-Private day 494-653BorS4G-8267. you can gain a share of Secn!tary island. Expr' not nee. nycn Country Club. Bosman. (213) 860-6677 or Meclcal Ass't Part time shifta. Work on camp director. Newport ~ \.• the more than 800 mil!Jon NEWPORT Ca.TEI Must be wtlling to learn.
(714)638-C&>l. C.P. o!Clce needs ex-~Y switchboard. Day Beach.644-5404 "-' \."'I dollars that will be Friendlyofc.Litefigure No students. See Mr. Waitress wanted,
Los Angeles perienced medical assis· shift only. No SUndays. IEJAJL SALES earned in Calif. Real work. Good benefits. To Botts, 2490 Fairv1.ew at Onginal Pizz~. $3 hr + FederalSavmgs tant.646-3903 E.0.E~3333 R...talYwdH..... Fmhioel.a.d &tateml978. S700 Fair CM taps. Apply ut person,
F,qualOppEmplyrm/r MessengerSantaAnaolc. PBX Receptionist. :!':°J0~e!J>P~~~~ Penonnet needed part· MlcbeleKuhn 54G-5001 ' . 2121 Balboa Blvd. N.B.
LVH 3·11 2S hr guaran~ + ~x-Pleasant N.B. o!fc seeks port to learn exciting time at the new Hickory COMPLETE Snelling&Snellingal ~~ ~e~~~~;c1 ;~~ betwnJ..Spm. .
Medi ca lions. f u II or penses. CaU David Smatb reliable indtv1dual. Hrs field & chance to ad· Farms of Ohio store in lNDEP~DENCE Newport Beach Agency Day/night sh1Cts avail. Waitresses, no expenence
p/tlme. Mesa Verde 549-8871 ~ 6:~am·12Doon.Cal1San· vance. Apply Crissman FashionJsland.Jdealfor NOPRJORTRAININC 4340CampusDrive Fullorp/t,Apply990E. necessary,allshlfts.Mr.
Conv Hosp. 661 Center St, Metal & woodworking dy640-1460 Rentals lnc, 1954 Placen-people who can work OR EXPER CstHwy, NB &!s~~~.~~fi. 3050 E.
CM 548-SSSS si.-. in Irvine req's help tia C.M. mornings or afternoons. NECESSARY Service Station Allen-• ,..,,, PDP 11 Experience not necess. SF.cRETARY w/full time job potential. • I.E. SALESPERSON Will train. Apply in UNLIMITED INCOME danl, exper'd. Day & WAREHOUSEMAN MACHINISTS
Machine Tool Builder
needs general
machinists ror w jde
variety of cl<>5e tolerance
work in clean shop. Short
runs on engine lathes.
vertacle & horizontal
mills.
Call 9711-7765 Uc. Are you interested in person after 12 noon dal· POTENTJAL MARKETING Eves. FuU & p/tlme. AP· $ M,......EY NOW$ 2
yrs exper RSTS, RMS.d learning about syndica· ly. {No Phone Calli) Total state examination ply, Shell Station, 17th & Need person to learn """ 11-basic. Company pal tion & exchanges? Curtis ~ ( nJ tt6() lrvine, NB. sh!pplng & rec. Alao. Get names on petitions. fringes. Salary open. Investments ha~ open-~(ll>~ ~ lie train.In& eeo Y ... • SECRETARY some maintenance & Full/part time. 536'.-7711 Send resume to Hospital 1.,._ ln HB r , Service .Sta. Attendants cleanup. Printing plant. Financial Services, 170 .._ 0 c •Or sue· GUARANTEED . . . (4) P/time now to full S3T tart 540-8027
cessful salesperson who f§~"1~F~IJll/flfi' PLACEMENT A ~.versified, exc1t.1ng lime ln Summer. Will os · · _ MOTEi.MAiDS . Newport Center Dr., Ste would like lo expand ~\JIJ!J\9u> position CU!T8nUy e~15t.s train Apply 2590 Window Washing Assist Full time, Tides Motel. _#2'0_..;.•_N_.B_. _____ their knowledge into in· P.R.E.S.S. at Der W1eoencbn1tz.el N ' Bl CM ' ed f NB Apply ln person, 49'·249'. & b f incli 'd 1 'lb ewport . need or . . area.
PETITIONERS vestments exc anges. 17fodtloRl"-d R.E.SCHOOL ;;,:ltypi;,gua,sbo~~xd Service Sta••.~ n altendant CallevesMS-740.S. _ Motel MAIDS -Ex · Full/part-lime.Good Up to 803 comm paid Newportleoch JUMainS&.Sea!Bch,Ca ""' r..-...cOMJ•"" perience noc. nettSSary. pay daily. 536-7711 while learning. Earning Equal Opportunity Call {213) 596-9"2 Now and dicta phone sltill.s. As FIT. Apply Chevron• Women lnlerest.ed in sup r · 727 y kl J¥)tetltial to $10,000 lint EmpJoyerMaJe/Female FordeWls. a Secretary~ the D!rec-1251 N. Cst Hwy, Lag plementiog family in · nqwre . or own Pizza Place ln COM needs roo not uncommon. Call ~~~~~~~~~I tor of Marketing, D~rec· Bcb. come t.hru interesting pt· Apply At
Paul Dosier
Associatn. ltte..
3050Redhill Ave
Costa Mesa, 92626
1714) $56-7075
Blvd, Huntington Beach male, 18 or over, P tr & 962-2456, ask for Vince •L' r,,:. -tor o( Public Relationa, . time wortc in expanding
orcall53&-0f11 Cull time. Call Andy for confidential in· ~·"'~·~:;:;;;;;;;;;;~~·!!Sales person for jewelry and Promoti.ona Serv.Sla.At~.F/Um~. business. Call for appt,
MCYI'OR ROUTE l-3PM. 67J..ll21 lerview Retail ~....._.. st«e, exp oot nee, ruu or Coordinator you will be Exper'd, lite mech I .._5168 The Daily Pilot hasJ ~ p /t, salary com· involved in a variety of lmowledae. Apply 25901---------PLATFORM SEC'Y R.E. Sale mensurate w /exp. Will situations some requir· Newport Bl, C. M. WOOD CIAFl'SMAN ~::h.~ ~~~ COM~'itlAL •AYAILULENOW & EJp Casllier lraln.~·3402 inl public contact. (\Sewing Operaton over· EXPBJBilCB>
Equal Oppor Employer
ternoona. Sat & Sun T 2 positions ln exciting & marketingbackgroundIS ,_ .. inft1 eedl • Good 1\aUCompanyBeoefila Proo'esslve lndependent expanding Century 21 Of. Attractive exper'd for SALESPBSOM essential and good phone a..:a.·S .,e n e. y OPBf mornings. Must have de-bank is opening new flee! Call for appoln•-high fashion store. Ex· Reta.ii Marine Hardware m&Merisms a must. We pay. ~·3472. Dept. 3· SAUR pendable car.·~. cash "---d l M Ui ,... 1 L_ lnC-taMeaa &46-2123 depositr~.Gooddrivlna ""'"""" e ar 0 ace. rilent~•dbronr: per'donlyappy. store, near marina, otrer excellent oenelils. SHJP'rlll • _
record Call 642·4321 CurrenUy interviewing +Why we ant better! APROPOS seeks f/t sales person. Please. call Mary Ann EIPaJa.CB> !Woodworkers, needed for u•CHl ... ISTS Leave name & phone lnlbeLoogBeachfaclll. +Wbywearetrowing! 29Fasbionlsland,NB Exp pref'd, nat'I co. Banning at {714) ~bolstery company.
-" ty for immediate open· +Getyourlicenaefastl Call644-26S2 w/full benefits. Some 7.S2·65U,Ext243orapply st•IT$750MO arine u ........ '. co. n"'· 2 Mill machinists, N IC Your call will' be re· in"•. Persons with ex· un.~ tr · belle 1 ---------1 k d It c II T pe • A .,...,. ""
turned -+ .. ...,.we ain r . w n wor · a om m rson. QuickPayRaiaea persons in woodshop. machinists, Lathe perieoce preferred. +How to earn big Retail Sales, full time, Walker 714 .. 19J..44SS ·for FUJJCompanyBenefits Musthavesomeexperin
operators . M 1 11 Newport Center United Salary commeni;urate money! busy Office supply store. interv. (Dana Pntarea) dtr
1
_....;1n:.;_N_e_w..:.po_rt.:..,64_6_·2_l23 __
1
all woodworking equip. operators. Good benefits Methodist Church Pr• with exp er I enc e . Be glad YOU called! Mission Viejo/Laguna Wienerschnltwl ,. Steady work. Good co.
& overtime. Bouse Mfg School Is now accepUng Complete benefit pro-!m·l~ Jlilb area. Sales exper Sales Full & P /Ume. Days
4440
Von Karman Ave SOLDEllER/ benefits. Apply in person
Co., 4000 Campus Dr, . applications for qualified gram. Direct telephone Century 21 Surf Realty pre('d. SJG-7111 4'weekends. Newport Beach CA92660 .ASSEMILElt 8-3, Mon-Fri; Jack Cole
NB.55
7
-
9090
pre·school teachers & Inquiries to Lynn ___ Cal_l_ss_7_.-:i. ____ , F.quaJOppEmplyrM/F Min 2 yrs soldering & Co .. 1763 Pla<.'enlla Ave, substitutes for Fall 1978. Courtney, S:30-lO:OOam, ---------R ta•1 s I 01 · 'd CM MACHINIST 644-0740belwn9am-8pm. J:30-5:30pm,213/5974444 LE.SALE~ e I a es SALES-PETST E winng .exper. reqh .. ,, __ . _____ _
TOOL ROOM American City Bank ~RT ..... ITY Exper ln birds & Llah. Some dnll press, mec 'k b ·
/ "'""'""' "'" Attractive, exper, sales F/Ume.835-03!1. ---------assembly exper. helpful. Would you li ~a usm~s TOP PAY Mine LVN /C.... E.0.E. M f'/H Work in a comfortably woman for high volume Cole In1trument Corp, ol your own .. You don t Set·up & short run mill. IM Shift. Xlnt benefits. I•--------decorated office in a pre-Cashion st.ore. SALES *SecretJrieS* 5.56-31.00 E 0 E need an office to start. lathe, punch press. Cd Bayview Conv. Hosp, ODUCTION stigeareawhere there is KRAZIEKATZ ed ( • · · · Begin at home. Cull or
oppor . to ex Pan d :!Cl6S1burin, CM 642·3505. PR constant buylng and sell· sResai!' f:': :rn6r ... 2~ $15,000 SUMMSl WORK part/time. Ideal for
w/growing co. 5 Oay/40 TYPESETTER ing. Unique Homes in FASHIONS _, -GenOfc/Bkprs/Recept FORs---..Ts husband & wife team.
hr wk. Co pd tife/hosp HUISSlYMEH Meu Verde has a new 9931Hamilton, HB. Co's largest lighting fit: Employers Pay All Fees -.en Perbr'';ip;;;;ribed1-~l>l6-4S33--------ins. Cole J nstrument f\ill·Ume, mature male w/experience(part-lime manager, a new •'70/JO" 96J.n71 ture showrooms. Must.,.. Liz Reinders Agency ,,.,
Corp. {710 556-3100. over n. 6 Days incl days) commission schedule, ..... OR L-.. able to work Sats. Some 4020 Birch St, Ste 104 activity, full & p/t. Must 0 E W " I b llM "" """ decorating backgrounc N rt Beach 83.1-8190 be 18 +. Ca 11 ( 1 U) E. . . Sat/Sun. or .. w l several new listit)gs and b ·u .• ewpo o .. ., o•c..ior8'7l·Z:SOO. ~ ---------1 plants, trees ~ delivery. SB.ECTRIC II a new leue. We are look· Speet Spanish, to work pref'd, ul wa accep. Call for appt/estab '64 ~"'" .. •••••••••••~•••••• • Maid, live-in, lovely N.B. "d $3Hr · -' t "fi · s creative ability m Exper. pre. · up. LI kin Ing for sales people, ex-m l"easan Oi ice 1D an· . in 290 Switchboard Oprs, will •~ 8005 home w/pnvate room. 5 Laguna Hills Nursery, Exce entWor g .,....enced or new! How ta Ana. Call Margaret Woodlilbl C,546-1. ·--------tr . A ly
250
E.
17
th_.....,....
days, wlmds orf. Eng. Conditions ,.... · f lfUn "l .. " am. PP ••••••••••••••••••••••• speaking preferred. Inc.EIToro.830-S653 . ApplyinPerM>O about you? Call Sandy orappt . ........,..., Secretary St .. CM,Ste1i (upstairs) AMERICANOAK
Housekeeping, cooking. NUISISAIDES ORAMGECOAST OrlowsklorJamWoodat SALAD Person nights. SALESWEKNOW EXEC.SECRETARY 64S-81B7 L.argestSelection
need own trans. Non· & Oll.DBUES DAILY PILOT 54&-5e90. xlnt pay & benefits. 1be Jolly Roger, Inc. bas Ta.ITYPE orR. in Orange County
srnkr.644-0.S95 Xlnt benellta. Bayview J30W. Bay SL. SS7-4700ext2448 YOU WANT an opening for an ex· Exper'd Telex Ot>r StewartRothAnUques
Conv. Hoep, 2.055 Thurin Costa Mesa Restaurant A JOB I per'd sec'y to report to ..,..._.._. 1 ti •-do u 750 E. Dyer Rd. S.A. Maids; top wages paid. CM.~·3S05. Ask for Paul Ward Now taking applications • the V. Pres in charge of Di:"trib~u1:,n 'hitr:!'cfi~ _C_at_N_WJ>l....__Fw_Y_>_7_51_-8922 __ Apply : The Inn at -....;..._______ li'AuaJOpportunity for hostess, cashier, SALES W•A.lsokllow 'the Building Design •~ .,. filino Hrs
96
,,. _______ _
Laguna, 211 No. Coast NUISESAIDES ~Employer bookkeeper&busperaon. Interested ln p/lhne or Y•UMr..,a. i, Division. Outstanding s h :,,.;:~ lat.e··artem~n'·'?AntJqueMusicBoxes!
HWY .. L.aguna Beach. 7-3. E~r'd & trainees. I~~~~~~-~~~~ Apply in person. Coast .. y-• n.-Tro Talk & typing skills are req 'd activity. Salary open re "'ot Ma·chln-l M rd Con H 1: Inn. 1401 s. Coast Hwv, ~call employment? Im· • _.._ for this position. Xlnt
0
"" .,.. Ma.Id wanted, Full time or esa e e v. osp, 1---------Laguna Beach. # mediate openings for day We~ ..... ldtd' working conds & benefit expert (710 495-198 . Clockaf
pt-Ume. Seaclit! Motel, ll6lCenterSt,C.M. Real &JtateLoana -=------..,.._ .. -orevenlngacbedulesat .· ~~~ pkg which includes Mrs.Kraft/Mrs. Kujawa HU'OESELECTJON
1661 So. Coast Hwy, Lag OFFICE CLEIK MOltTGAGILOAM RESrAURANT llOADWAY SMlgl-nr various f':up insurance • TOOLMAICIA Amtricm
Bdt,494-4892 Full Ume. Knowledge •f OPPORTUNITY l.ogllMl,Hlls lookahcnproncl benetlts profit&haring. Exper'd. Fully paid l••IMlfl•• ..
Maitre'd, private country 10 key, lite \>"ping. Lite A major lite lnsuraoce J •cK IN to a.. a ,,..t ~':':Fr~ ~~~: benefits. Apply, betwn Open Wed. t.bru Sat club. For appt. call bkkpingbe.lpful.646-3231 co. headquartered In A Applylnpersoo ....__..__ 8am-3pm, Braxton 1802Kitterm1,Jrv. ~ Newport Beach 11 seek-THE IOX 10.m-DOOD Moo-Sat. ......,..... .._.. Ave, Irvine. Manuf., 1733 MonroVi• (714) 754·1777
......... 4 1M--OFFJCEHELP __. ing an individual to &..al..lftf-CMll OrBJAppointment ................... , Ave,UnitZColtllMeaa •
.....__., ..,..., Exp'd to run pro...., .. y hatber their career ln ·-r SaftDie1oFrwyat & ... wrt••to Secretary to the ad-
Rellable perton to management ofc. a day mortaan loan CW.inc. cl'U-ElToroRoad So.c.lf.to..... mini.strator of a major HtlpW.t.ct 710( HelpW..e.cl 7100
.... _ .... but.or -n er wk 10 key boot-·w ..... in. lo ~' Siii. 1:0--1 Opnnr Emp•~·~T .. d J ............................................. .
manap ..... u-1 .. ., • • • e are -.. a an ...-..-. ...,. w1 u-., haYe fm apt complex. -ust ea •----------------.. suWDt businea. Oppor eeplo1. Non·amoker. closing apeclaliJt w/BA PBSOMMEL ,,_, wtth t.enaota. Patience a.
to start your own bus Start $4/hr. Call 1'1·2ynexper.loescrow T 1 AfMtfOOCI tact required. Good
spare Ume without ln-aJl,Y\lme. 2131'192·1l48 title worlt or similar lmtnediate openln1s for Sal es fa I· PJ • 0 r ............ .._ salary & benefits. To ar·
vestment " build a omce Fee Paid work in Joan dosing. Counter Pe~I on all women• specialty ahop. WHAT MORE ranee interview call
aecun future. at-SOOS 1 _..... T-'---There ia cloee contact •bl.ft.a, (U}) and part Ume. Wiii traiJl. 631-9938 or C .u..a YOU SA y 7 6'4-lSOO .._.,.... nmnww -/ m ...... v adm'"'1•tra ft...-•h.ltt starting waae '7»991!51 _. ....;._ __ • _____ _ .--------llJ Sunahlfte atUtudo will .. co __. ..... · AnV CALL \ t.lon 4 O\ltsjde counsel in Sl.75/ hour; 1wtn1-shll\ Sales • Great opportunity
.11.anaa-'I'raJ.Dea open career doors in worttn1 towarda 1olu· •tar .l lo I w a I e for advancement with 13J.a095 ~~•l!'W'•IY U"o EM career Job ln IUn co. C.IJ t1~ robl th t * l 95 I bo d m-•-....__c.. ~"""'"' I Marion 833·2700. Alio ,::: ~-!'. ·-·~·-o1 a • ' u r ; • 0 • fine ready-,o·wear ..----~ .. w X1nt opport. for efffcient obi DtGnla Is Deo ..... , _._ ,_...,a.-lfa.,..Yard·shtll sbuil111 atores. EJtper aalea 6 TIMloUFI Mctelary. Top RJlla, l:....i..I st.... ~PJ_..:__., c-rvl-_: tbeloan tranaact.JonaJtllt a wa1e $3/bour. Applld· cashier poatUona, full Is U-. le .__ .fut pact R.tl:. ofc, N.B. ,._ ••• ... -~-.;.a...,.. ..... "" key role m thb poe on. cant.I mut t be 18 aq pt·time avail. Apply .u.e It-Xlnt opport. ror ebarp A.reSeektn(C.,eer lrviue,ntalllcbmon. c.omo..uottenaliberaJ ~~leuo apply jn Gcoe'a, So. Coast Plan, f'.quaJOppEG\plyrm/f pl.CIULUa,83S-2900. ltlndtd P-le For· Op l I benefttacpackage, tuition ,_....,... ,... ....... _.... __ ,,, 115' portwa t.y or you.nJ _...._ ... "meclJcaJ, dent1J • -"41111-.......,,_ =~ .. ~dmo ~.:,'::',f~::J:': =. .. Sood'"'""" 1201-.. HolpW.W 1100 .... w-.r 71008::.:iZ'!i~!:: as ptu.:.cl'etila oo 2nd Is atriPIJine machine. Must to: Al At:rvtw. Penonnel c.t.<MeM ••••••,··~··•• .. •-••••• •••••••••••• .. •••• .... • eou.ate recelvab ac-
3rd at\IJ\I. If interested, be mecba.nlcally Inclined Dej)t. co u o t 1 Pay• b 1 t • ~ontact our nearut &: wflUn1 to work. Call · ,ACIAC MUTUAL 3111. 1'1ltl Knowledge of Burroc.wha
markelCM'IOto 'lSt-1533. 700Newport.CUDr C0tt.W... SALES-MANl\OEMENT machine helpful but not
U442LaJQpaonO.Grv ~8 .. ch,C.863 H LOOK ~. 'W•wllltraln. Mon t.l\tu ~l 9arl'llfpm OIDllL Y Equal Oppor Employtr ~ T E Call 541.3417 btlwMo
fotlntonnatlonlSlw>rlfi for 5n •Sun. NJ for~~~~~~~~ ~.:~=u;?'7 ,1 Famous for U1 finest In high r111blon me.n•• •12All.Coltallesa. (714)637-4840 caw. i.o.p. Expn-'d ,,,...________ Euro~Atl clOll\Jn" & spmotawonr b l~ln1 SECRETARY, tmllUin • ·~Eq~al~~~~~lrm~~plo~Yt~r~I rd. App3. lo peraon, -RIAi.TO. ror 2 Aulstant Mana1~u. P'atblon ~I« MD'• omce ; =:'~,. UOC', MO Vic-or Jlealtor A11ocf1te. Uttlt h .a.,.11 '/.cl back1round nccess. &llar7 + comm! tlon + ea tnine. 4~dQJ • IC, ·· ..., Hal'? ' ·.,,, ~ _ l:Ha,.. DMd C« l aood ac· Claullled,.. ~ ruur, prom sharin&. aa.1m.
P A R T • T ) M 'E tlv.~ -.man '"peoplo to people.~ CaJJ tor appt. t~m<epm Mon thru SIL 1~· SICUTAIY ~PYoUM.::.•oe Oell•et1ISalH, ... ., ,,!'!!,,we ~-. ,---.;a. ... c.alll •U.h bl.I fl. THE Lon11 rff ·~soo, J:Jft;iUM,,...._ -Hf'ICNB ~J"HOptfQll s.tpm. M•t bve owa .... ,.. ~ 1 llde.tahlpaodbl&reaull.i! ' un ~ ~ ..... _
fftlMDAlLYPILOT traup. Nut •P"41'! ,_c:....-... 7729 To S>l•cw yaur cla I0-1 ~~·Salary
LlHILPWANTIJ>AD8., 1'Ullral&Sll-Gl11; --~" 1 ~1t~IU·~·-~ • -• 'ClpeO.." 0 1~
I -. -"
: ••
ffiEPHONE SALES
SEARS ROEBUCK & CO. Has immediate openi.Jlts tor:
TelephoM Sales Repre,..laliHs
Full or part-time, Excellent
company benefits. Paid vacation, · •
holidays, employee discounts.
Enter a challenging world ·of
telephone sales.
~Vl1tf'tn0tt
Sean. aoefMlclr & Co. s.t. Aao c ...... Senlc.
400W. w.,.erA••·
---~--... ·--
1~, ·-
••
.. /
-OAi1L 'f '"-Of W~y ..._, s. 1178 Jc a.a. t 1 070 Mhat•10. lotO ...... ,._.... 9040 ........................ ....................... ....................... . . pori9cl
'SCP llt .... ,_ • • I OIO w.a.lllt....l"W'Eft 4wt..1Mftt· '955 T...-f 560 ~.°.~·.'.~•••••••••••••• ........... , ... ___ --i-··-·····---·········-·--An I..., HEYH ....................... ••••••••••••••••••••••• 9707
fllGBT DA MAG ll&WAJlD ELF.CTR1C l'L'EX·A· TOP CASH DOLLAR •SIUPJAC:X 2••* C05TAMIS4 '77 Toyolu 5-:!pd Ion~~••••••••••••••••••-•-HOl'l'OINT SA.LL 'hi> toJ Poodles, lolt, BED Sloxle twlo, dbl PAID FOR YOUR DWIJCATOR Twin%2SRP,Faat,Great AMC-JIB' PUw/abeU.Loadedw/x VI~.__..,. mwi.r. i.rowo It apricot. •1c 11111un:ua, eiednc toe• ~~OBJ~~ATC00upD. WO. Model 70tomplet.e-~ora~~~Ydec:i:~· #I ~D--'--lras , nu cond . Call l.97S Audi lOOLS. 2-<lr. n11 S.UA.n.a. m.a11 PCJJ 4r 8upertor. NB. troll, DeW condJ.tioe. Lall nn• ""'1""'• • ly .rebuilt, uaed 1 time. r · · .....,.. 9'1'9-7510an 5 radials, AM·FM stereo. ----------1 Sat.A1t.8'r.Ml33 $498. Abo cus&o&n heavy SJLVJ:R SP!RVlCE, Includes chemical " 638-l7l2,7SD-OUIO Ill~-creamydl,brWllint.lm-
........ eltc.d.Qv.6 -.-striped spread tr 2 FINE P'URN fr AN· paper.caJll-737-6449 14• Glaapar. O/B motor SAVEi SAVEi SAVE! '70 Ford i,;. Too. Xlol mac cood Priced below old.au Sprlnaer Span lei bolsters. 1100 value. nQU.ES.MS-2IOO •SHP, trailer, extraai Here's Juat one cl 'lbe cood. 1 owner. Ac· Bluebook.~ ~ •.-~~-..;001lal0r~. Ll11ver Combined price $ZU. JADE. Unusual color. S'i50.53&-l.30l maqylUIOQlwhy! ceasoriea. $1800 Ph W
-· - o er 511..eo« ft'Dlll Im NEW a78 JEEP 6'7S-4623 IM 9712 GEEJednc.Mlf at~ . Brecelet fJ penda.ot w/I ............ LJ' ~ •-••••••••••••••••• ... oven. JD" wMte. ~tAt. • Movtnc t' IO!a. buutllu.l die ...... Set in &okl. Bosten Whaler, P CHEROKEE '75 DATSUN LONG BED Ynold.Xlnt~. aoo. Yodmb.i.reTem", mala. rQQQ.$.i95.2~dln. callbelorelOamOl'af\5 I~ Johnaon, full covers, (J8A1TNN07Sl46) w/or without ovrhd Call~llftS:S>PM 4 JDo's old. Lovable sM ea or IJC.IJ>l'. l col pm.844-4905 NNnta~ SL500:67U'190,67a-OISS $7895 cmpr, both loaded, .x.lnt ~....-.&sdryer, ;'~~e!~e. si5 o ~·,~:"izoo sJ5~.:Jor ._,,,, 1 r 1071 ~-:=:.= li'L)'man ftsbin\special, lncludeaV8,auto.traru1., cood58l·6873
...,..... cco'• rte: for bGlh. -' ' ' ...... ••••••••••••••••• IN that TREE l8 gal tl&Dk w /SS P Mere• H.D. suspension 4' cool-
..,.... '4 .,,., ~ .. y I045 Jo boW'S. Vanson trlr. DU t · g •· 6'75-'19115 ....,.._ • FOR SALE ANTlQUE Lathe, B new 19•'"" The last time I played lop & battery 100• mg, pwr. s eenn ... v-9 570
•••••-•••••••••-••••• FURN 2 Dlnlo& room ... ,500 • .Milling B new _., I ~two blrdies ho .., ' _,_ more! ••••••••••••••••••••••• -~=·ed ri• ... "orsl; anc r. xtras . ..-100/UU', --w-1111--,-.-0--,,_--.. --. ..... otber/Oau1hler Cats sets 1 Dioette set 1 8'1.t.z28" $1500. (213) """"'"• ,. .. .., ..-71•14 .... ,,...,.. ft&p -· · '""Ford van Eco..,.line --•r-..,.. .... tingIN• .. -tTREE. .. -• m. Similar dis.counts on ..,. • .., • nda td bocne Wbll.e st-.· Dropleaf table 1 Dreaser 961-3434 ...... every Jeep ia a tock. $700/beat of/er. Dbt moMla. completely \allkminkclr.54~15M wtr mirror stldlnJ &lau , .,__._~ D.-.. rin loafs. .... / u .. ne. sel-... '-•~ _ .. ~·e 646·2060 ~retialabecl. l yeu doors Call alter 4 PK Radial drill, 4 German ~~ .•-ma e a. hrt 9050 • ._ mx111 "'.......,.,..
guarantee. Your cbolce 1 Free Kitt.ena. Adorable 526-4924 1980, '3000. Lathe 1eared ,DllVl!!_~;Aaft 5pu ••••••••••••••••••• .. •• from. Our discounts '74 Chevrolet custom Van
$180. f'reeDetiYery. male & fema.Je &reY or hd, 22x'8". Hvy dty i---~--------iawter 60• Plush yacht. made 1.111 #1 in Calllornia Cragers, Gold velvet in·
Gnml(JpalogSa1e u.er.~ NewlyupholCJif.wlu&.e3pc German $3000. (Zl.3) Stia,grayBoyabike,Hever Reas. Hourly, dally, at: t.eriorS'~.64.2-3379
1'11roe.bthel.5th. """' II Sc ... -oodl curved sect.Mmal. '600. 961.3434 ~-w a•-.. , c-1.1 o-~-~.'~ ,Mex.ico.67S.2172 COSTA MESA. •---·-----So. Coast Applianctes ... , ee ama uu • e, Pb 979-1008 .._,... """ .,..,. DU\l\a ---., cn4)S!l-31116&orS37·ZS4Z Sweet, needs l oving ---------•Printing equipment for UO'l.t)Pb&etr3608 loah.W 9060 AMC-JEEP :=========I bome.644..f727,644-6500. Custm made 8' burnt sale 2524BarborBlvd. • . orange couch. xJnt cond. rTBC CA..~ Irvine Coast Country Club ....................... COSTA MESA
DUER. pa. wbt, H c:atico,ltonoiseshl&l $400 will take offer P\ATIMAIC& membership. $700. FUJI-YAMAHA 5 ... f-IO"l n a . n oo. u 4. U If. bllt1'rbt ldttem, 7 wk.a 67J..42:io · 644472, 640-8260 DEALBS .., •
6fS«J33 l834203, MM840 lG-1.5 Enlarges and re-
Safa, excelJ. cood. DineUe duces copy, see lt run· Sears free7.er, 22.3 cu fl. 4 Yacbt.Brokeraee
GEllFm&aATORS :s mall o u tdoor dog set. Call Cor appt. oiJ'l&.714737~After6 yrs okt, Wte new $200. l..istingsWanted!
SJl.a2'T1 w/houae, needs good 962-647& PM Sears belt maasacer, '• s..thwestera
W74 Dodge Po;wer Wagon,
S.pa11eoger cab, u4, *5000, otfer. 493-4344 home.~ HP, like new, uted 3 Yec:llt s.. Used Git.oo Frost Cree Reclniltgehair .a.c••H• IMO times $SO. Sears Refrig. 2SLSNewportBlvd. '71 lntunational Trva1, Refric. 2 dooc. Xlnt cond. 111.t yr old grey Dut.ch rab-$30 .. 499-2984 ·-•••••••••••••••••••• good copcl, 150 lb freeur , Newport Beach ~T. MS cu in, $2500. p /S,
White..$1.IO.Pb67S-2S57 b1t&hutcb. --------W' •NJED compartment $50/bsl (7l4)6n-IZ1l auto,A/C.831-aot.
97t-28511after6pm •UDOVAH• A ofr. Baker 's rack, lt '7 Land Cruiser lo i GE Ai!' eondttiCIMt' <win· ---------TOP CASH DOLLAR green w/glass shelves, Col43diefeJ. race/cruise, 6 ' m · dowmounted),$185. AKC bllc Lab. 4 yrs old, &STOltAGECO. PAID FOR YOUR 2-t"wide$20.16'1.e849 9 bags of sails, loaded Xlnlcood.AM-FM,8trk.
642-1&10. neutered. good w/ltid.s. *11•noN* J EWELRY, WATCH.ES, w/equip PPS56-tl.33 ~.673-3208 Ref-medaize.like Ndagd.bome.540-7131 """ ART OBJECI'S, GOLD, Walton Line Design Belt ' Trsb 9560
95t0 •••••••••••••••••••••••
WEWIUIUY
YOUIDATSUH
PAJDfORORNOT
TOPDOUAA
FORTOPCAaS
BARWICK DA TSUH
"" t 11 I j .111 • I) 'I '. 111
8 Jl-137S 493.3375
WE BUY
ClEAHCAIS
&TIUCKS • ._ Faaltwe 1050 OFUNCLAlldED SILVER SERVICE, Vibrator Exerciser 21-Vktory llloop w/salls, ..................... .. new,xJnteori~,SlOO. ••••••••••••••••••••••• STORAGE FINE FURN." AN· $50/betofr.6'15-0981 trlr,$2500.Pvtpty.(714) . lt77CHEYY
__ 960-_521i_,_Y8_·_~ I BUY TIQUES.Ms.;m) Uaivendty Mbletic Club 79Z-22lBaft 6pm. aCAMIMO CONllRL
,NeveruadU.6cuft.G.E. ** n!* & 5.~i~:::: LU(iGAGETAGS Membeniblp tor sale, 77Catalina25, VHF,fmot CLASSIC. In .exce11ent CHEVROLET FF refrl1. new almond Good used Fu ure . f b ines card aave $100. M.r. Gilmore, meter, w/or w/out U'lr. condition witb AK /FM,
d r $300.536"'162 ~!8s°~~~o~.w1JI 2200ALTON ::: ca'!i re! each 547·91Sl dys; 132-«Ml89 8»2540aft5PM · ci:uiH.COll1rol, pwr. el~-2m&HarborBlvd.
1978BMW's
HERE NOW!
COMPUTE
IODYSHOP
NOWOPIN
UCB.LINT
SIUCTIONOF
IMWUS41.ES
We may have your next
cm-In our ioventorJ. Ca 11 us today!
1 31-2040 495-4949
OltAMGE COUMTY•s
OIJ)EST
&
Sales·Service-Leuing
Roy c...,er,lnc.
Roi.ls ftoyce BMW
1.S40 Jamboree
Newport Beacb 640..~
CREVIER G d L d K nmor• AVE ... IRVINE ... l W ew. tric windows, autotpalic, COSTAMESA oo a 7 e ... .MAST&S AUCTIDM ..... P oa one spare. e '75 23' C~pper sailboat. pwr. steerine " brakes,
washer 4't IU d ryer, 6, .. 1686&lll-9625 PARTIAL LIST return permanently .MUSTSEl!;! Sel(conld,poptop,trlr, r.actory air cond. & 546-1200 &•sr &lllOADWAY
$lZ5. "6--4829 H.ousebold f'urn. & Ap· sealed attractive t;ac. A: • mt r " x tr as. II r. onto interior ck.age 1---------• SAHTA """ licydet 1020 c~ PAID . pliances. Color &: B&W stra p, meet.inf airline ~e mattress, bo pr-Schrader. (915) ~7181 Pri.;;,. Kutt~ · · WEPAYTOPDOlJ..AR 835.3171 I
·--•-••••••••••••• Far ad used furn. anu-T. v. · s. Stereos le J.D.· ~uire~~FPre-~frame ONLY $50. or (915) 581~. $5450 FIRM FOFO~J?GPNU, 00SE~~~~ '"..-_QUts&clrTV's957-6133 Speakers.Bedrm .. Din-vent.,... Ir ~1 or a eves. · . .oi:.& on •19'1!5 & ,_,......,5 ing Dinette & Living Rm personalized tag enclose · Islander 27, lnbd. elec Call (714)492-3447. or CLASSlCS
New & used, buy, sell, Mo• ing; Solid birch Furn. New&: used sofu wallpaper, fabric or 5~00~yard. g bead,~ ,leering, new ""'lac•u. ... "' lfyourcarlsextraclean
Tl1J UUIMAJ"( OlllVING ~f:
•USEDIMW1•
'71:m24 spd (75314)
'72 2002Tij 46P. <10iGDO
'73 2CXl2 4spd 368KBV
~~ '4?!'1•A, air, AM/FM
lrllde. Cycle It Co. :M88 droplear table w/4 & Love Seats.Hide-A· "Day G.lo" paper le we -. VHF,apionaker,SP,fuJ. ' -""' see1.11fo-sl.
'Newport Blvd, C.M. cbail-s. Vinyl hideabed. Beds. v ~ 0 u um s. will back • trim your 64.2-4706. ly found, inclda well, CONQUISTA. Auto., IAUSllUICIC
flCZ,m.o Bi.rcb end lbl. :kpc cor-Bicycles.Honda Mini tags. Or try two cards Frigidairerefrig FF Dbl located S. Bay moor'1:o4', pwr. ateerin f, air, 2925H.atborBlvd.
"--1040 ner sectional couch. Bike.Rugs. Upright back to back. l 1 . .k 'w· 'etc $13.000. 714-4>7$-7867 aft 6 AM/FM stereo I.ape, c.cistalllesa 979-2500 ~ Chair 644~0857 aft p 1·ano.Water skas, PRICES; • see "0 'uine • A•.: exeeptwlmds. Ser.405727. 1-----::,.:------........ -••-••••••••• • $2uor3/~ Bookcaae, g tar, ra...., $5995 U Gokleo Retriever pup-~n etc •... PLUS AT .l •tstap$1.60ea. m.2938 14' Manta Sloop, B.V., WEB Y
(588LPO).
'75 S30i Auto. (9J.6MTV) •
'75 2002 4spd,SR, l.371fUK
77 320l 4sp . .stereo(0998> . ...,.,.. Field• •bow .,._ ..,... s .. ~1t St reo P.M ... Office Furn., Fi.le w P trlr TA s.o B USED C •RS pu!S. JUJoA.o .. ..... .. co...... wen. e Cabinets, Chairs etc. 6/9 lAlp$1.50ea. ~-·-. .• • . . . .. ?7CHEV 1h TOM A pet. Shots. wormed, with speakers $10. 2 gold ALSO Many Barrels &t 10ormore$1.40ea. W..twd 1011 good cond, best oUer. PICKUP. VB. 4 wheel CALLGARTII
raisedwf11,C.Xhltd.isp . King and Queen chain Boxes & Contents. SalesTaxlncluded •••••••••••••••-•••••• Eves;SS2-0l40 drive, AM /FM, P /S, UsedC.rMgr
'77J20lASIR177RSK ao..d 0. s .. .,,
<2ll)42S-l!i61. SSOlorUoth.GoUUchulch TERMS: Cash/C.shiers tJOCARD? Would like to buy, re-Hobie 14, have to &ee to P /B, 4spd., custom like new missing drawer Dr own or aend 540-5630 York.shire terrier pt.1ps . $SO. 2 end tbls $15. Ck.a. aw your asonablyprlcedtwnbed, believe $900. Also 1ike wbeela k tires. (Ser.
177 ~I. metallic, sunroof,
AM /FM cass., ale. xlnt
cond. P.P. 846--88S8 even-
ings.
Champ bloodlines, tiny, p dded 4tool ~ 63l-Ol.85 E.C. "Ed'" JB4t(IMS name, address, phone & nite tbl desk chr, sm ·new Hobie 12 Mono bull J.626l50).
shots. 3 lb stud sendce. a · AUCT10NEER we'll make one canl per aora, e~d tbl; to furn aioo. 6'5-7470or642-4144. $6599 IOllXSOX & SOX ~5649. Contemporary Oak rum, 213/789-4688 tlg. Add25Ceacb. room. Call 645-7857 evs ---------•
I.iv rm&: dining set, like Send check or mooey or-beforelOpm. Pvtpty. Sacrifice, 21· F'/G aloop,
• LINCOLN·MERCURY
2626 HARBOR BLVD '77 320i, sunroof, 4-spd,
DOG TRAlNlNG. new. 642.1955 morns Natural rattan sectlooal der,!OL:OT-'~IN'-'-t ... kd ~4. !.8Jh7336• m:::;..xtras, Pvtclas1e1&boardin,g sofa, green&. yellow n ..-"""'' --K;UI ~-
.Jolv1 Martin ~ Elegant Bdrm set 6 pcs plaid cushions, matchlog P.O. Box 1.580 IMtr-llh IOIJ loah. Sli /
Gro"' Chnr°'~t
1112 11 t.ocll ll•d.
Hu,.tilMJI°" ... ao:;h
COSTA MESA car cover, AM/FM cass. Mint. $9200. 968-3542
an~ique white carved tables $260. 645-2205 Costa Mesa, Ca. 926216 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Docks ,. 9070 En~ndl· Bu~L.£~'.: .. M2ale, wood, banging Imps, ~· ,_,. Ll SoundMasterDrumSet •••••••••••••••••••••••'631nt.ern'l PU.Sbortbox~ Bri e ........... ........_. YJ'S. 97>0476 u.:aigners ....,,~overs v. Blue sparkle. very good whtspokewbla lrgknob-
847·6087 549-3331 WEIUY
US1D CARS! ' 971 5
S300.momincs.614·l98:J GaiegtS. 1055 mrBcklmt$400/ofrSo~a cood,bestofr.963-6517 Slip.want.edfor27'Motor bies, 4-cyl eng. Ofr. Comp. baby nursery ••••••••••••••••••••••• tble SIS. Le Ant. chair Sailer, Nwpt Harbor 9'19--01.83or75'-4l4S
We're the new ClM!vrolet ••••••••••••••••••••• ••
dealership in the Irvine 76 Capri Hatchback, 4·
Auto Center. We need spd, A/C, super clean. carbed. ~troUer, walker Misc yard sale. 61.9 Hunt· · $3()0. Bdrm lum $50-$400. GUITAR area. reward. 759-1477
high chair rotdlng xlnt ingtoo, H.B. Fri. Kay S, Anbquea $20 up Hdbrd & For Sale $25. Good for Slip w&DUd for 38• power
your used car! $3500. 6#-8499
S1 6U'! DAY cond. 493-7425 9am·Spm spread $22S. Sleeper sofa beginners Call 540-2279 b H ti t
$125. Sat & Sun 9.5 332 afters PK oat, u o o i o o That's you pay for WANTED : Good used Hones 1060 EveoiD& Canyon Rd. Harbor. 842-7560
'77 CHEY HOY A
Auto .. P /S, P /B. radio,
beat.er, vinyl top. (Lie. 18SRXT).
JOE
MACPHERSON
CHEVROLET
'72 Capri 2000, 4-sp, snrr,
new tires, SlS9S.
837-6417. a JO day ad in the bdrm rum. reasonably ....................... CdM Office Fa ... • & loah. s,.ed & DAILY PILOT priced by pvt party. also .......... IOIS Sid 9010
student desk w /chr, sm AGllA ClusiCled Ada are the •-••••••••-••••• ••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
$3799 21 Auto C.ent.er Dn \'C
IRVINE
'720 ····················--·· -SERVICE ~~~ so!a. Please Mare clabber bloodline. amwer to a succesafu.1 2 matching ste~lcase 13• WHALER 25 HP ?SFORDC4mrift" DIRECTORY c · Registered 7 years old. praporya.rdsale!lt's deslt_s w/coord1nated JOHNSON' OUT-21.000ml. 4 spd., radio,
768-7222 •DRJVEA* * LITI'LE... *
SAVE A LOT
OOJTNOW! aassifiedAd.s,yourone-Make offer. 737.1449 abett.erwaytot.ellmore cba1rs, 1 exec , 1 BOARD .... -· heat.er.(Lic.1CJ.86:1l). Alllos,I ,aled
L .. •5678 ' --• I , _ _. l _ _.. .. tvn1·ng • ~-$2199 . •• •• • ff6MO. ••••••••••••••••••••••• _,_ stop shopping center. aftttSPM. _.,,.e secre ...... a "''"' J,, 6'71-S409 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~.li~M~~a1I ~.~~~~es ~ud 9701
1 price over $1400. AU 4 tax & license. Def. •••••••• .. •••••••••••••
pieces $600 •• By all or Tr-part._ $89.M. A.P.R. $18.0 on ?4 SUIARU WGN Tell Mom
SHOP&COMPARE
You Love _ffer
This Mother's Day send Mom a greeting all rhc world can share on
Sunday, May 14th.
Express your love in a Daily Pilot Mother's Day Gtteting.
Jc's easy. Wrice your message to fit nc of our three convenient sizes
and_bring ic co any Daily Pilot office nor to noon May 12th. Or, you may
mail a c.Uppi.ng of the border with ur message and payment to Daily Pilor,
3 30 W . &y Sr., Box 1560, COsta. Mesa, Ca. 92626.
~-·-·-~ $10
BARWICK DATSUN
part. Perfect. for sniall ••••••••••••••••••••••• approved credit. office. 979-01118 c +•rs.,,_/ 4 cyl., 4 spd., radlo, Refut 9120 beater. (Lic.14210CD).
"-a&°'9-1090 ••••••••••••••••••••••• $1299 •• $49.16MO.
~.tfl fu,lfl( ,Jµl,,(fJllO
831· ll7S 493-3375
••··~··•••••••••••••••• Truck & Camper : fi1 Ford 24mo. S400 down Includes
Wurlitzer Organ, model ~ Ton Ranee.r w/lOW tax & Ii censc. Def.
4140'650. cab-Over camper. Sips 6. Sl.579.84. A.P.R. $18.25 oo
644-0857 afU:30pm Fully self-c:cint'd. Muy '74 LW, sound proofing, approved credit.
Sp arting GocMk 1094 xtras. $2200. &47•9821 Paris Valley shell. Boot. '77 TOYOTA 'U
••••••••••••••••••••••• Motorimdlllres 9140 Sli50.837-42SS W/CAM,PER SHELL.
Pool Table 4'1.tx9 Bms~k ••••••••••••••••••••••• •75 Chevy LUV Mikado L o w m i 1 e a • '"'~.L&.11~...,...,.~~U
Frm, Exe. Cond. dis· 1974 Moped. Almost like p U Xlnt cood.. Xtra.s (Uc.1F40540).
assembled, full eq\lip. new. $22Slbest offer. Call si&.50 4f111S31 • $42tt SI 47 /.OtMO. ~~~~~~~~ ;g_u~t ofr by May 5 evs,64.S-a034. . • • 36mo.$SOOdownincludes '76280Z2+2,38,000mi's, ----------i·--' In d 1'17 El Camino, full pwr, tax &: license . Def. •-t d ~ Tr Peuieot, x t con • xJnt oood. 39 000 mi. Net _.,.... .... A p R $18 0 o Xm coo • ~· Trampo.llneforaale, ~ack 40MPH. SOMPO, xlnt . $ot 7s0 752.6317 _,Jool,uo • • • • n 581-1746
yard su.e. Reu. pnced. tra.oa. Call 8'7-210.3 all :!!!e831-i..as. approvedcredit. 8 280''7, 2+2. 2700 orio Info714-lllr1·7163 Gpm. --·-------'LI ..
---------1----------..68 n....•-PU Jt h mi., warr., arr, mags, TY,h6t. ~:es/ ..,...,un •nu c c • FM. metallic blue.
NR. Steno tOtl . 9 I 50 =: =P& c~~~~ 1-968-8654 ___ ev_s ____ _
••••••••••••••••••:;••• -••••••••••••••••••••• cus stereo w /booster, '72 510 4·dr. Needs work. Hitachi color T.V. 17 lyr '74 750 Yamaha Rebuilt nms good. $1.200/))a&. ofr. 00 re
new. SWJ under wan:an· engine Runs great $900. 64.2-7878 aft 5:30 Alfa~ 9705 fl 10 e~S-368Z
ty. $250. Call before 3.00. 964-ZWB ••••••••••••••••••••••• l---------
845-3551. . '72 Honda 750 CC Full '71 Datsun ~Mech. 1974 Spyder, Ivory /Bllt, Datsun. '75 280Z. Silver
Brand new -Sanaw re· dress Id mileage ex-sound, needs work. orig owner, sharp. PP. w/blJc inl. ~./G, AM·P'M.
ceiver, Phlµjll8 turn ta-cellent cond. $ISO. $700.evs417-4.23& 714-768-Q.49 louvH window. Xlnl
ble, techn1cs cassette 848·9308 '70 lnt'I Travelall. V8, PS. TV cond 536-T19l eves
deck. Quadurafle x PB, AC. auto, AM /FM 8 ALFA G ·72 n ~ 1200 4 spd -~ .... -. W1'll ••U .... 000. 76 <>-.z .... ,· nMzso ... "".Can k d I t k Registered '76, 20,000 mi, a sun • . • • ....,..~.. ..... .-.,.. ..,. .o ,,,.,..,v tr , ua gas an s, A/C, chrome wire whls. A/C, AM ·FM stereo. Bought for $1250. Call beseenatlvansForelgn $900/Bestofr.493-8888or sunroof. European radJals.Xlntcond.$U50.
before3:00.IWS-3SSI. CarRpr.6'5-1982 495-1420 Cams, new Ferrari red M.S-84S __ 1 _____ _
Admiral Color TV, $100 or '75 Yamaha 400 Eoduro. P'lnt. Unique, beautilul •71 Datsun 240Z. Lo miles.
best offer, wood grain ta Lilt• new $700 or o(r. NOTICE &: rast. $00()() this wee.k. xt.ra clean, modified, s
ble model. 615-8306 768-a:IM how Daily Pilot Class-673-2720 spd. $5000. S48·a228 e...1-~ ilied ads display their lcMlts A...._. ............ -meuagea with leglbillt.y Audi 9707 '70 Datsun 510, auton\atic '¢ 1.t Rent/Stolege 160 and Impact? Our ada, we ....................... $650. '68 Datsun 510, 4
.... ..: ................ ••••••••••••••••••••••• are proud to say really '71 lOOLS, 4 spd, air,· FM, apd. SS50. Both xlnt lo!Jlfs..Mmtlte Rent a lt71 Eaecutive get results. P hone mint. $1350. 754-3757, t.ransportation.Seeat990
... , 1 • 9030 Mo0torto!°o~ee•~-M1Unlemrb. _6G-S671 ___ .______ 673-4683eves. E. Coast Hwy atSltell. ....................... m ~TI OU UVU• 5a1. nied•al'!der. can any o1 Alllio Serfk.e, P.ts Mio Srtlu, ,_.. Jillilo s. •• r.m WAMTTO these numbers &4cceuortes 9400 &Acastori• t400 &Acce11orie1' 9400
Rosa wb itelln e r e · 19M777 -••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• corde:r-'400 ft.; awtm lad· 1•7•7177 s, two .up, ataioleaa •
antique; one pair of t2Mlll
eqlne 1110cbronlzera. ---------Ollll>4Jeat481-2709. '73 Dodie 21'. compl -----------1 equtp .. d. lo ml'•, aewb' 4 bp Evi.ftrude. O.B., new decor'd, SU,500, 641.aQ.1
I.all "If, used leas thu 1 .,......... T,.... t 170 boar ..... S895
.... ,._. 9040 m 81' hrin 1970
---•••••••••••••••• Good condltloa. J:xtTaa -boet, U' Lapatnke include HI)' llft hltch ClaMle: Gny I/B.·Xlnt. tSAaS.OOPboae14MCJM
_;.-_...::.ttrade __ 7-.oaso ___ ~1 "12 tent vlr, foldllla tnie. 1--------•1 elp• 4. Cood tllape. ... lbl\olt. Mi-7856
SPRIMG
SPECTACULAR
Cht yw •• oof .._,.,. maur
15a30 llad& !riM_ Skypwf S 17900 ....... JJJMO" ......,
CHAST .AIM·SH4DOW ,
..., .. sj.Jdo
s9900 .... .._.
SA.LI IMOS S•a 4af, M-r 6.
OISCOUNf Wllff THIS AD
• I
/
f
Alttot, UHd Mtol, Uaed ._.,, U1.cl * DAILY PtlOT 08
• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Allllll. ... artM ....._ .. ,.,.... ..._,l .. 1rW C.•.... ttJI.... . tt40....., 9t40Mlot,UMd UM4 ...._u.M ....................... ··········~··········· ..........................................................................•................. ·············································· ...................... . llllf 97 ... ..,.. f7H t77J 7• T·'JW. a\ll01 P!r, elr. -. I '72 RancMro OT ma 6 ~ ttSO a•m... ttll ' tt'5
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lloa, ll•k• offer. IOY AM/nl.IJ&andard lrana. T/Wtoda D ·-o~-..a--. ...... MIWIST AK;' .... ndio l OWMf ftNblnl. lo nal. loeded. ftt.Jmtw.•dndi. ·JR{ Xlntcood l~ Call • .... nw-.111 ~ ua~ UNCOLN·llERCUllY • • llhnew.-.5C7'6812·
...._. ... 11 Flat Ut CAaVll ( e¥eeMHWr5.SaUllda¥. ,, V.t, 4 spd • .,, f\aJJ ~-tral ltbr iaterlor. DealenblpluowOPEN Alkin11U'llMS-18l9 875-9018"9 •
.-eoewr<.AMIFll ltOUS·ltOYC PWT. white w/uddle lD· \'\ !s:a~e..'1.,:0.lsJ:/' IAYN.ADllOI "l'2 Delta •a Dr. alr, '11A.treS.J.St.MmWan.
''"" CHI .. owae . ::--==· -::r~?=~~~: tar.D,OOOm1'1.M0-3UI ~ LINCOLN·llERCURV heater P IS P /B radio lllillt co.t.. a1ll&. ... m1 llWl'cl OVtr'Maa. ....., M5-l-.&elt48 Co! 1 ftJJ oO 'S8.Xlnttnnap. car, new lf.18Aul00enterDr. »M actual IDlles aJOO PP.-...S
•belto&.M0-69 """"'"OS"""OA'f$ ........ ••H••••••••• *..-bC'lkel fr Uttt, All/Fii SDP'wy·LakeForestexit •IC-50QIP.P. ·-w -u--.,,_.,. ...... •uan ........ ~. stereo. Call after s. tRVINE .... ._ _._._... ...
is Plat UI. IDOC>cl caod.i· '71 Sllv• Sbadow. Im· ....._ UIM '71XRln7. P\llb equlooop•d.:? 1.. ........... -..... ,._.. Ml-tll4. $900. IJ0.7000 • Cut.lusblt ~dr., Super ..-,lt...; PIS. P/B. air
._ llllltMll. Sacrifie9. mac. cond. Orev/wht. .. ••••••••••••••••• .. •• ~ :....•.!o...1$· . ,.,., __ c-...._. econo. re .. ey . •*°· a.toff•.151-MCI. P.P .,_... 25,ooo ml. ••o.ooo. AMC 9901 _ .. , ... _ U.... 9941 PIS.-totrer.552.(94 --
... ~. ,.,,,!,. ct.a= 1o l ~seleo .. -, ~1571 ev1 .. ••••••••••••••••••••• ~ ff31 •••H•••••••••••••••H• 'fn M~r:;.; ... iM--ar 299 ,... "17 '70 IA •-Sport 311> _cu •• ..... ..., -. m ~· .......,.. '1S Plato Runabout. • cyl • ... _ 1-• , __ ._ Co -J ......._ • New lboclb. tlrel. paint a : . T ' M A T A D 0 R ...... ••••••••••••••••• 4 d A II • F M ~ -· a.w......... D· valve job. map. 11_..t -••• .. ••••••• .. •••• XJnt ~o•d. Sacrthct-Tll-llil 17 Sliver Shadow, left Broulbarn. Clean. meeb. me c.on..t, auto, A/C. te • P / • tt XI t tlnental. xlnt coad .• d rl v • t 0 a ppr e c . '1S ~ Ruubout. lluat ll%50.1Sl .. ~~'!-':"-....----I band drive, ele1ant. parfet'f,, 31,000 orit ml. todayClftl1$1085. !_~,.:~::U/~ke'!t: '*'*>.tape deck. leath &amftc.950.631·0!5ea 1111/makeoffer. "74 ..... 9727 TU-1llM809: Ml-0075 '2,200. tT:l.-0200 day1. . UH.2$7 . ..__ int .• air, clualc coupe. 71f.l7G. .... --··········•··· T.,... 9761 ~·v•/wkndl. rer.19-ITG. '900/bstotfer. M6-2711 -······-.. ·-···· ~ ~ •71 -·-••••••••••• .. •• .. • '16 Colt, atlck, rll cw. &o i. Falcon h&ura 6-cyl Mn t-&. ft47 t ..,•ti "" PIJ• • 9961 lt7' CMh y _.._......,., lKS Rambler Claaalc mJ. Xlnt cond. SSUO~ a• .... PIS. -or' trade' -~-;ca ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••-••••••••• .. ••••• H~o•·c ·---you r. Orta -..r 83.,.,. ._ ... ,..._.. -. -· ....................... .,._.._. ... _ --v..1tA1at1Aca ~ ~ an -w · •· o ...... · •""" ,.., .• ~ ...... u for motorc1cle. P .P. Wllustani 8 . V-8. JtlDt llM PIJ. _ .. ~. SB.L YOUI m . Oood local trans. ISl-1171 1171 Maverick. Ol,000 mt, condition. eT.000. ml. w.,. 'M· PIS. P/B, ~tk • .,_•llb tan MAM~ TOYOTA. twTS. Call before noon. Pord "40 amotrau, nck brakes, 8 .. ..,. pp-.. .. _.. •• o tl ea t Interior 6 oaty Sl.733 -. ""' L __, ... v.......... ,..,, . r , rans. _.._ -•-•----Toca1111,.,._! anydar.ta-1826 ....................... 'Tl LTD CouDtry Sq f:1 -.AA5:Jtl«47. Cooler. a•r tboeka. -A--Qllll;W'-'-'vy •
UNIVERSITY SEE US! ·1s Gremlin. 6 c,.1. A/T. SACAIFICI I Wqoa. •pm. A.Ir. dlsc: llaverick·Mlt etGd va. ·:,:~ et;r•:· ~ tnillr bltdl. ca a.dJo <lllPJQ). • MMOUIS TOYOTA new Unis & brues. Gd Beaut lr u l • n LTD brb, P 18. radii. Gd cood. aUIO tram ~ steer 1 · IDcl. Oood Cond. 11.-. Y a..... MlSsJONVIEJO cood. 1 owner 631-0397 Brouaham. Aqua 6 $1111/blt ofr. "2·7574 .......... bucketHat.s: tine.541-118 1118.0naae,S.A. t:~i;llEj ..... C... • •MC 13 l·ZUO 491-12 Io ew. white. Perl cond. Lo 1'11-25IO oew t:lrel. ort1owner.1•· •• a. auto. A/C. P /S. •ptymouth Valiant "12 • .,.... . -....-&. 9910 mileage. $3000/flrm. '11 Galaxle, PJS, P/B, • 2 docw • bNwa. •II P /B, rblt en1. Mech. door. SIB. Pvt pan,.
m>HarbprBlvd. '1S CeUca, GT. S spd. Air --831-3540 __,,u.. ~all 2-dr vtn mUea. mao . ....-0. IC)Od. PP. SUQO. ~7317. -. ,_. "-._.__ d I ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,___,., -• • ..... _ .....,.._ ""9ta-540-96'0 con ., ster eo, c e an. . . Movtnt must aell 75 Ford top. Hl llea1e. Xlnt Vv 9950 ..,.. ---------•11'1ZV ... Jipd."'*eng $3750. 1•7613 75 Bwck Skylark, air, . . ciond•'MZ·l.a:M _ _., --------"75 ~. exeeU. cood . ..a-_..,,. -Cal• "1l fblda too Sdn, lo m1, 13018. Pinto Square waaoa. alt' . •••• .. •••••••H••H•••• .. MUitan& Convert.. VI. '1.000 ml. llonainU UI ....., na .......... .,.
All/Fll,magwb.ls. '76 SR.5. xlnt eond, 20,000 ~9648atler5PM. cond, auto lra!la, power 'GFordG~Bttseata "12 Moateao Wp. •.OOO Uo, air, needl repaJr. 11 131·'501 ur 11. _M_ml_. ____ _
• 8"7·7161 · mi. FM 8 tl'k stereo, n .. • k RI i 1 steer. brake. Vt en1lne. Xlnt trana.-Gd cond. mUO.ntcond.Pbooe Sl250 or bHt orter. ui.ssTO. Iv m11 . WAN!'AcnON! .a-9730 many xlras646-9702 '70 uwc d v era, c 1ean, $Zl600belltoffer. Wtcm. 9&S0./bstolrG8-S026 ~1IOlaft5pm. m.a.orc..e.121 llarU,yn O..UedAdl6CN67S ...._.... good con , new t res. ·
-••••••••••••••••• 'T7 Corolla wen. auto. air AIC. $1250. S3l>l925 A.tot. Mew Allfos. Mew tlOO Allfot, Mew 9100 ...... Mew 9 Alltol. Mew 9IOO ~Mew 9100
'71JqEtype.2+2,Vl2, AM/FM , $100. over •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •UCO. air. $5200. Best ofr. wholesale. 546-7131. '811 Riviera. Xlnl cond.
551..a Air, cluslc. $1800/bllt.
--------'75CoroUaDeluxe. Lomi, ~.MH829 ·------• la CiMe 9735 orig owoer. All/FM•---------
•••••-•••••••••••••••• stereo. immac $2995. 1974 Buick LaSabre. 2 dr.
1'71 convert. Xlat cond. 962-0031. rully eqwp'd. Lo mi, Nu~WA 12,100. 548-19'1'1, uk for --~ '76 CeUca Liftback. auto, Phil
• .,. __ 0 ... _ ---4( :.11~·,b~M~re~. ~!ie:!~:··c-,-.-,-~-.---9-9_1_1
.... -uau ........ 5~ or aM\.......,. ••••••••••••••••••••••• parts, does run, call,_-_-_•o----.---
•·S!I. ~ or best or YollswGfJ1&1 9770
fer. •••••••••••••••••••••••
9738 ........................
Mllce•11eta 9740 •••••••••••••••••••••••
"13 Zl>D. 1Uck, 1c·e blue.
clean. Muat ~ell ' Sti.'iOO
01·3121.
'76 450SEL. take over
leue or pure ha&t!.
21Jl..436-8947.
'Ill 280SE 4d.r 5dedan. PIS.
4-tpd. air. AM·FM. Ex
ceptlonally <'lean. Call
aft 6PM. ~9899 ---72.250C Mercedes,
xlnt cond .• &50
673-3748
·5 2IOSE, sunroof. air,
new enc .. tires. Very
clean. 673-2790
VOU(SWAGIHS
WE IUY 1i SEU..!
........ Selectloll
.,, YOLKS $799 I
(297ADA> •
•
168 voucs $599
<055DIL>
'69 YOLKS $999
(414DHP>
S56 per month
Borrow $1018.36; O.A.C .•
A.PR la 22.5 percent.
pay back·S13'4.00 in 24
months
FREITV
wilh Olla ad at Ume or
purcbase-burTY !
WEST GERMAN
IMPORTS
1985Harbor Blvd.,C.M.
714/645-6120
VOLKSWA&EN s .... ~ice
new
What's Yow Trade'
$1.GperO.,
'lb1f1 Utile to pay
•
OVER 100
CADILLACS
TO CHOOSE ROM
AT A.LL TIMES
Nabers
Cadillac
::!hOO H.11~111 Bl\ld.
C.mt.1 Ml''·' S..lO-•J I 00
C.d "16 Sevtlle. RR grill,
tape, cne. loaded. PP. aso. SS7·9750evs
·1111 Cad 4-dr DeVUle, all
power. top condition.
ll50.13CM419
'73 Monte Carlo Landau,
lmmac. FUlly equlp'd. 1
OWN'. IZSOO/olr. 837-1531,
752-5121
MEW '78 FORD FIESTA
J DOOi .. ATCHIACI
Fully factory 9QUIOPed 1nclucllng 1 81..lter enotne NI oackage 5er •GCFBUL22152 Snc. 1~1s. · vy Outy
53899
MEW '71 FORD MUSTANG II
J DOOl2+2
V-6 engine. CIUlsomabC:. WWI l'lrs. ll'ont Ollc btlkes tinted
glau . Pit! SIOQtng Ser IMI03Z140221 Siii. 12et0
SUGGESTED llTAIL .•••••.•••.• 15554.12
SALES PllCE •••••••••••••••••• S4t54.12
DISCOUlll ••• · ••• '60t
MEW 71 FOID LTD II
2 DOOi IROUIHAN
.. P.ACTOIT Aa COtllfTIOl•ll
Corneril1Q ~ tin nertno .me.1. aoeed control. e way power INl. oetua bumoer grouo. AM/FM Stet90 rlOIO.
automlllc lr8nsmml0n. pow9I" steenoo & bn'les. llntld otass s.r. 1llA30S 175-412 Slk t8678
SUGGESTED Rlf AlL •.••.....••••• 11477
SALES PRICE •••••••••••......••• S7477 msc•11 ..... s1•
NEW •71 FOID PINTO PONY
2DOOID8AM
Fully lactorv eQU1PQed 1ncludlng • cYllndtf engine 4 toetd
trenll!\ISSIOI\ Set 1~10Y151079Stk. 121n
53299 ·
MEW •71 FOID THUNDHlllD
2 DOOi HAIDTOP
-.. ~iiiJ..,
CalforU1tof
Eqllip1111"t
Ser t8Jll7H182389Stk 12721
MIW '78 fOID FAllLAHE
'DOOi 51'A'10N WA9<*
V-8 engtne. IUfc>ml(IC trat!Sl'lllllOn. ""9W ,,,.._ oov.er lfffrlng
PQWet front OllC ~-AM-FM "9reo rlCllo tinted gllll Ser 181<94F~l5 Slk 12747
SU(iGISTED llT AIL •••..••.•.•• 16170.32
SALES PllCI •.••..•.••........ 16270.32
NIW ?I f:OID FAllMONT
4 DOOi SIMM "
53699
llSCml •••••• SJOI.
MIW '71 FOID LTD
.. DOOll flUM9 HAl9n»
Cllfwu.tof , ........
Ser 18Jll3St71248 Slk. •2709
s5199
HEW 171 FORD LTD WAGOM
----,, .a.:-;,_ •
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PAC1'0IY
All COtelTIOIMll
lu091ge rack. bume>e< glllrOI. AM rlOIO llnltO gllSI. LH
~· COl'llrol ffrlfrOf, full wtlMf COllttl. Ylnyl llde f!IOll:llf!OI Ser •8J748172678 &II •2645
SUGMSTIO IETAIL ................ S7JIO
SALIS NICI ••......•••.•••••••• 16210
-·· ••• ••• ~--••••• •1100
BA•
FllAllClll
UPTO
5 YEARS
IOPAY ,
ONAPPIOYID
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BRAND NEW 1978 CHRYSLER CORDOBA
SPECIAL
VALUES
ON FINE
USED CA:;R~S c:iiill
MONACO WA.GOt4
V-8. automatic. air cond1tion1ng,
power steenng, POwer brakes. radio, heater. whitewall tires, luggage rack.
(815TMFJ.
54595
'71 FORD
PIMTOCOUPE
4 cy linder. automatic. air
conditioning, r adio. heater.
(490ELU).
Spli t back seat. power
steering. power bral(es.
automatic transmission. V-8
engine, tinted windshield,
radial tires . Ser .
llSS22H8R186198.
ASKUSAaour
OUR 12,000 MILE
OR 12MONTH
SEJVICE POU ..
ON·u C .Y SED~ARS
-.VOLAU SIOA.M YBmllA COUPE
V·B. automatic: air cond1tion1ng, 6 cylinder, automatic. AM radio,
power steenng, POwer brakes. A heater. whitewall tires. (206KHZ ).
radio, heater. whitewall tires. 11tn
roof. (164SHO).
54395 52295
'76 PLYMOUTH -174 PLYMOUTH
DUS1'11l COUPE
6 cylinder. 3 speed, whitewall tires.
(139JSG).
-~.
Fabulous Sav·
Every Iran •ngs Now on
Chrysler a d New . I 978
Atlas Cltrys~d Plymovtlt in H~ge lnvenfoer, Plymouflt's
Don't .. ~. ry •••
V "''SS T1t· acaf. •s •on r· FOR
FLEET SALE
OR
LEASE
INFORMATION.
Special Sale! • 111 e
fUltY W A.GON
V-8. automahc, air conditioning,
power steering, power brakes, radio,
heater. whllewa11 tires. luggage rack.
(601SAA).
54695 ,
'72 DODGE
MONACO DrZJ HARDTOP
\1'·8, automatic, power steering,
power brakes. power windows.
power seats. AM/FM stereo radio
with cassette. heater, whitewall tires.
vinyl roof, cruise control. (026GAW).
$
CALL
IRY AN HESKETH
546-1934
Reclln1ng bucket
seats. 4 speed
transmisS1on. wsw
radial tires, AM
radio. Ser.
#7L24K82101085 •
ATLAS
CHRYSLER/
PLYMOUTH
SERVICE HOURS:
Moaday thru Friday
7:00 a.111. to 6:00 p.m.
Saturday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m..
•75
CHEVROLET
LUY PICKUP
" cylinder. 4' sPeed. power brakes,
heater, moon roof. mags. (64.108Y).
.52695
'77 CHRYSLER
U IAlOM COUPI
V-8. automatic, air conditioning,
power steering, power brakes, power
windows. AM/FM stereo radio.
heater. whitewall tires. vinyl roof,
cruise control. (673T JF).
$
INSIDE:
.Rams -Get a
LO~ ANGELES <AP) -The
Rama did aome last·mlnute
maneuvering In the opening day
of the NaUooal Football League
draft, and ended up with J'"un·
dllcoveried" talent -Oklahom•
runnlns back Elvis Peacock. ..
General manager ,Don
Klosterman swapped the Ram&'
first round pick. No. 23 in the
draft. and their fourth round
choice to Cleveland lo order to
get the Browns· 20lb selection -
and Peacock.
Dick Steinberg, the Rams'
director of college scouting, bad
rated Peacock, 6-2. 220-pounds.
amona the top 10 playen in the
draft. and supested that the
Soonen running back would
have been selected sooner lf be
a ..., IHd ftletJ 8,..lt1
SeeP-11-4
had been featured in any offense
other than the wishbone at
Oklahoma.
Klosterman said be ~ldn't believe Peacock ha been
passed up in the early Ices.
so be did some fast trading for
him.
Other Ra.nis picks in the fint
ball or the draft, which ends to-
day. were defensive tackle St.an
Johnson of Tennessee State, a
6·foot-4, 275-pounder; wide re-
ceiver Ron Smith of San Diego
State, 6·0, 190: kicker.punter
Frank Corral of UCLA; center
Leon White of Colorado, 6-3, 261,
and quarterback Mark Manges
or Maryland.
Describing Peacock's style,
Klosterman noted, "He com-
bines rare speed with size. We
just couldn't pass up his kind of
value in the draft."
Peacock, who reportedly has
1
!
I )
•.• J
been docked in 4.4 seconds for
40 yards, responded with en·
thuai.-sm to the news of his
selection by the Rams.
"It's thrilling," be said by
telephone from Norman, Okla.
"The Ra.ms are just the kind of
team I hoped to play for. I've
been on cbamplonsttip teams in
college, and I 'II be joining a
cb1mpionship team in Los
Angeles."
The Rams are also expected to
try Peacock. who averaged 6.2
yards per carry in college, at
running back punts and kickoffs.
Angels Battered Again; ·Phoenix
. No Match
Tanana Pitches Tonight ForOranges
Al"..._.
TORONTO SCORES PAST MONTREAL'S KEN DRYDEN.
Bf1ekeg Playoffs
Sluggish Montreal
Still Manages Win
MONTREAL CAP> -It should
have been easier. Jn fact, it
should have been a rout, but the
Montreal Canadiens onlv
managed to defeat the Toronto
Maple Leafs 5-3 Tuesday night
in the opening game or their Na·
tional Hockey League best-Of·
seven semilinaJ playoff
The Canadiens held a huge
36·15 edge in sbots-On·goal in the
contest, but the Leafs took ad·
vantage of mediocre goaltending
by the Canadiens· Ken Drvden
to make it close
Dryden said he was not any
more nervous than usual and the
fact that he was playing hia first
game in a week did not have
anything to do with his effort.
"The rest doesn't really have any impact on a goaltender," he
said. "There's nothing really to
~ay about it (the rest).
"I wasn't any more nervous.
t 'm relatively nervous before
most playoff games. •
·'There are certain n ights
when you feel you are not seeing
the puck. Tonight I thought I
was seeing it. Obviously, I was
seeing ilin the wrong places."
ll may have been the lack or
consistent activity al his end of
the rink that accounts for
Dryden's troubles, but Toronto
goalie Mike Palmateer, who
.:ept his team in the game with
sometimes brilliant netminding,
s aid that should not be the case.
•·1t shouldn't be anything new
to Dryden. He's faced 15 shots
probably in SO games this year.
He never gets bombed too often.
"In the playoffs it shouldn't
matter how many shots you get.
You should be up for anything. I
think in the Islanders series.
there were periods of four or
Keough Gets
Second Win
For Oakland
five minutes when J wasn't get.
tin~ any shots.
"Then, all of a sudden, I'd get
a breakaway. I had to be ready
for it."
Bndlu Edge F lyers
BOSTON (AP) -Veteran
wing Rick Middleton did it again
for the Boston Bruins, ma.king
believers of the Philadelphia
Flyers that lightning can strike
twice.
Middleton, whose overtime
goal in the opener of the Na·
lional Hockey League's
semifinal playoffs a year ago
triggered a four-game sweep,
gave a repeat performance
Tuesday night at Boston
Garden, giving the Bruins a 1·-0
lead in t.he besl·Of·seven series.
Just 1 :43 into sudden death,
Middleton took a perfect pass
from Jean Ratelle in front or the
net and easily beat Philadelphia
goalie Bernie Parent with a
short flip, lifting the Bruins to a
3·2 victory.
"Sure. I was thinking about
last year," Middleton said. "I
thought about it durlng the in·
termission after the third
period. I was thinking about
what I'd do in various situations .
You have to do that."
However. Middleton didn't
waste any time thinking once be
got the pass from Ratelle while
alone in front of the net and
teammate Bob Schmautz lied up
Philadelphia defenseman Andre
Dupont to the left.
•·Rate lie threw the puck
across the crease lo me and
there I was all alone with the
puck on my stick," Middleton
said. "I looked up and tried to
flip it into the upper comer. I
didn't get it as high as I wanted,
but it was a hard enough shot
from close in."
Both teams, the Bruins
especially, looked sluggish after
layoffs following their
quarterfinal victories.
By DAVE CUNNINGHAM
Of tlle Deltr l"llM Staff
If the Angels could start their
. games in the second or third in·
ning , they might be a hot
baseball team right now.
But the first two innings count
as much as the other seven. and probably more If you're an oppo.
nent of the Calllornia Angels.
For·the second straight outing,
early pitching problems resulted
in a deficit that proved insur·
mountable. The Angels lost to
the Detroit Tigers, 10·2, Tuesday
night before 18.641 at Anaheim
Stadium. Frank Tanana will try to
r~medy the situation tonight as he
opposes Jim Slaton <1·1' at 7:30to
concludethetwo-gameseries.
Tanana is bidding to become
major league baseball's first
six·game winner of 1978. His 5-0
record and 2.45 ERA were
typical of the Angels' pitching
until the past two games.
On Sunday Chris Knapp was
roughed up for eight hits and six
runs in the first two innings by
the Toronto Blue Jays, and
California eventually lost, 9·3.
Tuesday night Ken Breu was
greeted by five bits, five runs
and a cascade of boos in the first
inning.
He settled down after that.
surrendering two hits and one
run over the next three frames,
but tbe damage had been done.
"The only ball they bit hard in
that first inning was the dou-
ble," Angels manager Dave
Garcia said. ··AQd that was from
a 194 bitter."
Garcia was talking lbout
Lance Parrish, who rifled a shot
A ..,,ek Slate
All 0-911.JltMl"C ..... Ottl
Mil'I J O.lroftet C.lllornle 7 :2S p.m.
AU'/ SCl-4•icS.tC:.lltoml• 1.llp.m.
AU'/ • Cleveland M Qlll!omle 7 2S p.m.
up the alfey in left·ce~ter lo
drive in three runs.
But thereat engineer of the at·
tack was 23·year·old Newpqrt
Beach resident J ason
Thompson. He knock·ed in four
runs with a home run and two
singles.
Thompson hit 31 homers in
1977. his first full season ln the
major leagues. and has five this
season. Some in the Tiger or·
ganizatlon expect him to develop
into a power hitter comparable
to Detroit greats Willie Horton.
Norm Cash and Al Katine.
Last year Thompsbn belted
two homers over the roof at
Ti~er Stadium, a feat ac·
.........
ANGEL RON JACKSON IS HIT BY A DETROIT PITCH.
OAKLAND-The Oakland
A's stretched their American
Leaaue West Division lead to 2~ games Tuesday night
wilb the pitching of Matt
Keough and Elias Sosa and
the home run j)Ower of Gary
Alexander propelling the A's
to a 2· 1 victory over vi.siting
Tor;'Onto.
Is Seaver Washed Up?
Keough. the former Corona
del Mar High ace, upped bis
record to 2-0. boldinl Toronto
to five bits before leavioa in
the sevenlb inning.
In 'Keougb's five 1tarts this
season, the A's bavti won
them all.
"It doelO't make any dlf·
ference to me if I filch a
complete 1ame, • aald
Keough. "We have aucb a
strong bullpen that 1 'm not
worried about coming out ot.
tbe 1ame."
Sota -out a nre ln the Hventh by I Ol"Clnl a pop up and a double play, then re-
tlted the side In the final two
lnnlnp w1tbout a bitch.
Jn six full in.nln1s of work
JCeouab ~Jc out two and
walked three batttra.
Saki 1WoDto muqer Roy
HarttOeld; "Oakland baa
maybe the bHt 1oun1 J>ttclllaa lld In tho Jeaaue.' •
Drysdal.e Says Slump Is Otdy Temporary
CINCINNATI (AP> :._ Former
Dodgen pitcher Don Drysdale,
now a broadcaster for ABC, said
be is confident Tom ~aver will
return to form despite no vie·
tortes in six a,ppearances for the
Cincinnati Reds.
"The classic picture of Seaver
has him down so low and coming
straight at the blt&er," Drysdale
said befol'e Monday nt1bt11
aame In wtUch the Phillies beat
Seaver'lJ.l.
"Some or ue were watchlne
hlm last m~1 and tbe ceneral
comment wu U1at be dldn 't loot
like Seaver, pltcbln1 UM WQ he
was.
"He wasn't drivfni at the hit·
ter, co01Jng oul al him. Ile
seemed more erect and his
faatball was comlhc 1trallht
up.''
Dryidile .. la IU.N the laPM a. tempor'8tf.
"Certilalr Tommy•1 pt mon
1Hrt ID hhll. But at• alllo true
that U.. older 10U ••· t.he more IPriftl t..ralDlq OU need. Al 38
you need minimum six weeks.
"I undentancLSeaver had some back and lef"problems that
interrupted his training. And, I'd
guess those had a lot to do with
his slow start. People talk about
the arm and lees as strong
polnta of a power pitcher. You
can't eliminate the lower back
either, particular&y the way
Seaver lhrowt himself into the
pitch when M's ri&bt.
"It 'a bard to put yoursell In
Tom's body, Eventually, be and
the hlttera wUI let u1 know when
he's no longer effective. It's
true, though, th at a power
pltcher can go in a hurry, com·
pared to a cutle.
"ll '1 the cllche ot throwtna as
hard but the ball not geWnJ
there .. rut. Baakally. there'•
a lot or truth tn th1t 1taternent,"
aald Drysdale, wi.ote shoulder
&ave out al apal.
"Tom has been 1elU111 •two.
1trlkt1 on hltttrl, ban1-Mn1,
lille that, Thea h• 1•&1 lt up llere," °'71dale ptd, mot1onlna
/ . ...
belt·lo·letter high. "That's just
not hia pitch.•'
Drvsdale recalled that when
the Dodgers moved from Ebbett.a
Field to t.he Los An1eles
Coliseum, be was bothered by
the screen looming over his
shoulder. •
"It got to me for awhile, butt
learned to live wll.b lt. l had to.
So maoy thiqs can affect a
pitcher mentally, as Seaver
know1. You Uke to go In with a
plu1 attitude and not worry
about wba1 happened last time.
·•But you can't help It.
sometlmu you out-think
younelf. All of a sudeen you're a
ttnlu1 instead of sticking to
your 1ame plan. You think about
thln11 llke rhythm and release
point, whlcb amount to not.hln1
but a reel for plt ih.ln&.
''Tbere are days when you're
not fee~ pod but nobodY't
about to live you any donatiOna.
You mlpt •• well ID out then a n.d t ry to aet Uw hlllera out, ..
Dryadale sald. ---
com plished only 15 times since
1939 by sluggers like Ted
Williams. Mickey Mantle and
Harmon Killebrew .
"I just try to hit the ball where
it's pitched," the 6·4, 200·
pounder says. ''It was a strange
feeling seeing those balls disap-
pear over the roof. 1 can't really
put it into words.··
The Tigers have been wr~k·
ing pitchers all over the league,
so they weren't playing any
favorites with the Angels. Their
lineup Tuesday included five
men hilting over .300 and one
<Aurelio Rodriguez> bitting over
.400.
Detroit's Mill Wilcox hurled
only his second major league
complete game in three yean. A
seven.year veteran who has
shuffled between four different
clubs. Wilcox limited the Angels
to four hits.
The biggest of those was a
third-inning triple by Lyman
Bostock to drive in Rick Miller.
Miller g_ot two of California's
four hits.
"We gotta be careful not to get
too ex~iled about a couple of bad
games." Garcia says. "It's too
early in the season for that. ..
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Rosie Casals downed Phoenix'
Kristien Shaw, 7-5, in women's
singles Tuesday, boosting the
Anaheim Oranges to a 31·13
World Team Tennis victory over
the Racquets.
Anaheim's doubles team of
Kathy Harter and Francoise
Durr topped Rayni Fox and
Shaw 6-0 in the Anaheim Con·
venlion Cent.er before 2,053.
Syd Ball and Dean Martin Jr.
scored the only Phoenix victory
of the night, def~ting Mark Cox
and Cliff Drysdale 7 ·6 .
Drysdale, however, defeated
Martin 6-0 in singles play.
In mixed doubles. Casals and
Anand Amritraj defeated Ball
and Fox 6-1.
Meanwh.lle in New Orleans,
llie Nastase was a winner in the
men's singles and mixed doubles
matcnes as the Los Angeles
Strings downed the New Orleans
Nets 30-21 in World Team Tennis
play before 7, 162.
Los Angeles won every match
except the women's doubles.
which Helen Crowley and Wendy
Turnbull of New Orleans won
from Los Angeles' Chris Evert
and Ann Kiyomura. 7·5.
Nastase beat Andrew Pattison
of New Orleans 6-3. In mix.ed
doubles, Nas tase and Vijay.
Amrilraj of Los Angeles defeat-
ed Palllson and Murty Riessen,
1·6.
In mixed doubles Amritraj
and Kiyomura or ~ Angeles
defeated Riessen and Renee Richards, 6-4.
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~ersTumble
There's No Cnulge,
But Buckner Stars
C HICAGO CAP> -Bill
Buckner insists he doesn't hit
with a grudge against his former
teammates, the Los Angeles
Dodgers. But you couldn't tell it
by the way he's been swinging
the bat against them the past
two seasons.
"I try my best every lime I go
to bat. I'm not out lo get a hit
just because they're the
Dodl(ers," Buckner said Tues·
lloilgen S late
All 0... M ICAaC R ... 17991 ,,..., .au.~.tOlkeoo 11 zse.m.
Mty 4LOS~et~ ll:ZSem.
,,.,,., S 1..0SAIWtlftet PlttJt1111'911 s p.m.
day after punching two singles
and driving In two runs as the
Chicago Cubs1defeated the
Dodgers 5-4 in 10 innings.
ner in the N aliona l League.
pitched the first six innings for
Los Angeles, yielding four runs
on eight hits. He was lifted for a
pinch batter in the seventh with
the Dodgers trailing 4·2.
"He <John> gave up a couple
of more runs than he normally
does." said Los Angeles
manager Tom Lasorda. "But we
very easily could have given
him more runs to work with."
The Dodgers loaded the bases
against Cubs s tarter Rick
Reuschel with no outs in the
third on singles by John. Davey
Lopes and Bill Russell. After
striking out Reggie Smith,
Reuschel walked Ron Cey to
force in a run and give the
Dodgers a 2-1 lead.
But the big rlght·hander set·
tied down and got Steve Garvey
to fou l out and Dusty Baker to
ground out to end the inning.
"You've got to figure that in
that situation we'll get more
runs," said Lasorda.
"As a team, we.. probably play
harder against L.A. because we
know we have to beat the good
clubs to be a contender," added
Buckner. "I think everybody
puts out more In that kind of
situation." Buckner came to the Cube last Lota.JtM~: .. .,. CMICAOO ., .....
sea1on in a trade which sent ~·· 211 • o , o
Rlck MondllY to Los AD1eles. =~~.-:. ! : : :
The 28-year·old first basemMD er,,• • ' ' '
hit .370 and had 10 rbi against =:;it" ; : : :
hlt former teammates In 197'7. _,...,, « , ' ' o
·ti guess you can say 1 'm Just ~=~ 1111 ~ : : :
lucky." he said. "That's the only °"'M ~ ~ ~:
explanation t can give." :t,•"" 1 o o o
Manny TrUlo's double in the ...__,.. n ~;
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10th lnnlna drove In the wlnn.ina ~~ 11 o o o o run orr loser Mike Garman, 0.1, Tot.it 11 ... T04•1• Ms 1t s
the third Las Angele. pitcher. "" .. ...,.._ 011 eoo • ~ "fl was a bi"h taat ball," said Otk... 011 , .. oeo 1-s a OM oul wlltft ~ t'wll te-TrlltO. "l waJ Just tryln1 to pull l -Lo11e• o•-Lo• .,... .. "' 1, Olk ... i. lt J thouchl it ml1ht 80 OUt," LOl-LH All .. ltt I. Clllu .. i, ta-Qr,
The ball caromed orr the let\· ~~~i "=.!9_..,,_, HR~
Centerfield W81l and drove In LOS ANO«.LaS IP M • H N IO
Rudy MeoU who drew a walk to """' • • • a ' , ~ft the lnninl and aclvanctd to =:,:.1L.t0 .~ t 0 1 ' •
second on a aacrUice. .lfe ~ , • • JJ' •
1
Tommy Jobn, mu.in, a bid $0 • :;.., ~2, ''° • : : : ~ · become the flrat fiv•pme win· r .... u......_-. ,
r
DAit. V P1LOT WfdneecMy, May 3. 1'78
Sport. in Brief
Bogus Tickets
Feared for Race
A parimutuel Ucket-prinlina machine has bffn stolen from
Keeneland Race Track, raising concern about the po11lbility that.
counterfeit tickets for the Kentucky Derby could be printed. the
Baltimore Evening Sun said today. • .
. Quoting unidentltied sources, the paper said the machine was
l.4lken tut week from Keeneland. about 75 miles from Churchill
Downs where the Derby wlll be run Saturday.
The machlne. owned br the American Totalisat.or Co. and
leased to tracks, Issues wln, place and show tickets. It ean print
tickets in $2, '5, $10 and S50 denominations.
The paper said a source with knowledge of track security told
1t the stolen machine lacks only the letter code for Derby tlcket.s
and the special P.aper on which the tickets are printed.
The code wtll not be decided until Friday, when Derby tickets
go on sale. the Evening Sun said. The code is set in type and is dlf·
ficult -but not impossible -to duplicate, the paper quoted the
source as saying.
The Derby is especially vulnerable to counterfeitlng because
uckets are sold a day ln advance, a rarity for U.S. racin1. allowing
thievPstoseethetlcket code.j.hepaperquoted a source usaying.
l'o.-• lie•""'• to Mfltn1~e
Robin Yount took batting practice with the Milwaukee
'Qrewers Tuesday, and manager George Bamberger sald the
hewly-murned shortstop could be ready for action as early as the
end of this week.
But neither Brewers pneral manager Harry Dalton nor
Yount, who is in the option year of his contract and had been con·
siderlng leaving baseball to t.ake a shot at the pro golf tour, would
say if Yount's return to the club means he may be back next
season.
Before he took batting practice, Yount said
contract talks "might come up later," but
declined to discuss the matter further.
Dalton termed any discussion of next
season. "sheer speculation," adding. "There
aren't any contract talks right now We'll gel
around to that later."
Asked if coming back to the Brewers meant
he had dropped the Idea ol pro golf. Yount
replied that he had never said he was coosider·
ing the golf tour.
"Right now. I'm just here to play baseball. '"* .. YOUNT
and that·s a11 l'm gonna do," he said. "I eame back ~ause I want
to pla~ baseball. Right now. I just want to get ready to play."
NBA P1G.-ll• llea•a1e r ...... ,
The Philadelphia 76ers have their backs to lbe wall tonight in a
pressure situation against visiting Washington, while Denver and
Milwaukee collide in the series decider in National Basketball As·
sociahon action.
The Bullets from Baltimore have a one-game edge on the 76ers
and a victory tonight would give Baltimore a 2-0 lead in tbe best·Of·
seven series which returns to Baltimore for Games 3 and 4.
Attendance is also a factor for Philadelphia. Only 4,568 showed for the opener with the
Bullet&. Philadelphia eoach Billy Cunnin1bam
refused to alibi for bis team's recent showing,
saying: "Let's be factual. We just didn't ex·
ecute. And the key was on the boards. We al·
lowed them second, third and fourth shots. And
since we didn't oontrol the boards it killed our
fast break."
Meanwhile In Denver. Nuggets coach Larry
Brown s ays the announcement of David
Thompson's multi-million dollar contract just
OAvto TMOMrsott prior to the playoffs may have backfired.
"I would think it's backfired." says Brown. "I don 'l think
he's played anywhere near the standards we've come to expect
from him But Quinn Buckner bas bad a lot to do with that."
Buckner has guarded Thompson for tht> Milwaukee Bucks in
these Western Conference semifinals
· Gridder Deena't lt'•at '• 1'11r11 Pro
Most college football players dream of being drafted ror a pro-
fessional career, but when Terry LeCount was picked as a pro
. Tuesday he was fighting to play another year for the University of
Florida
The San Francisco 49ers look LeCount in the fourth round of
the National Football League draft, listing him as a wide receiver.
But in Gainesville, Fla., lawyer Bill DeCarlis was volunteering
free legal service in LeCount's battle to retain his colleee ellglblli·
ty DeCarlis said he had sent a telegram to NFL Commissioner Pete Rozelle before the draft saying that regardless of any draft
choice, LeCount hoped to play collegiate ball next year.
•"This is a kld without fault who bas been ruled lneliglble."
DeCarlis said. "Our CSlans are tO lake court action to 1ain Terry's
ehgibility for next rail "
LeCount, a quarterback on last year's Gator team, has been
ruled ineligible by the NCAA ~alJSe he signed an agreement wltb
a professional agent last .December. LeCount bad deetded to tum
pro, thinking bis collegiate playing days were over.
\ But in January the NCAA changed lts rules and permitted
another year of ellgiblUty for players who did not play as
freshmen. LeCount could not play as a freshman because be was
academically ineli,ible.
He appealed to the NCAA to consider his agelit contract void
The NCAA Rules Committee declined.
Elrl!ldlere 111 Sport .... •
FOOl'BA.LL -The Greea Bay Packers of the N aUonal Football
League traded defensive tackle Dave Pllrelfory to Pittsburgh ln ex·
change for the Steelers' fifth round draft choice Tuesday.
Pittsburgh used tbe ~lecUoo to take Wtwe
Wiider, a running back from the Univenttar-of
Florida ... tbe Saa D1e10 Claarlen t?aded their
fifth and sixth round picks in the draft to Detroit
veteran linebacker Jlm Lulovlc . . . t.be
Oaklud ltaklen went to Rose Bowl winner
W asbington tor their top draft pl ck Tuesday,
selecting Huskies derenstve end Dave Browala1
• , . . Dallas Cowboys owner CUii& Muc.a...
labeled as Ubeloua and untrue Tuesday allega·
lions in a Playboy magulne article by former
White Houle conlldant Bobby Baker that the
Cowboys football franchise waJ arran1ed ....,. ~aua
'lhrouab a s2s,ooo bribe t~ late Sea. Estes Kefeauver.
D·Ten~ .. NFL commiuiooer Pete ltoeelle took away Green Bay's
fourth rouod dratl cbolce Tuesday because tbe Pickert sta1ed u.
legal workouts lut February.
BASKETBALL -USE''a Jaaet Ha.rcb and WbafJ'M Bo1HI
have renounced their colleee careen and become tll(lble for the
NBA •a COlle8e draft JUAe 9. Jbirtlfta them are •eute 'l"MU of
Unlvenlty Of Nevada-Las Vegas, Ynlllr S.Jllden of Southem
· Univeratiy and lamet H.U., of ~~ty Community
CoUeae ln New York ...• Rookie "8dllley ru of tbe Denver
Nut&etl bu been fined an undiaclOMd amount of money by the
1-fBA for tbrow1na a punch at a Buca' player In the tblrd 1amt or )hesertee ,,
~ LA OL YMPIC8 -The clty council asked lilayor Tom Bradley ~o del.IQ' making any appolnlmtnll to Loa Anaelea' Olympic
l>r1anWD1 Committee unUl the council deeldel on ttl ftnaadal ·~le ln lbe Games ••• Ira llelMr: meanwbUe, •P.PfOved a bucket
I $4,IOO for ColJseum cosiamillk>nera K.....U. BaM and Brar ~ye
• • to travel ft> O~ neu month to attend an Jntemallonal Obm·
c Collltnittee meeUaa.
TRACK /SASEBALt: I MISCEtLANY
................... .....-......
EL TORO'S ART GOURDINE (THIRD FROM RIGHT) WINS HIS 100 HEAT. NOSING OUT SAN CLEMENTE'S PHIL SPENCER.
CdM, El Toro TOp Qualifiers
By HOWARD L. HANDY
OttMDeltyPl•Meff
There were few surprises in
the South Coast League track
and field preUmlnary meet at
Mission Viejo High School Tues-
day aft4!moon and evening.
Corona del Mar pjcked up 22
qualifying places and El Toro's
Chargers grabbed 21 with both
accorded a chance to unseat de·
rending circuit kingpin Mission
V1e10 with 18. Costa Mesa is
fourth .with 15 but one or its
strongest events. the two-mile
run, had no qualifying races
Tuesday.
CdM 's Sea Kings were paced
by Steve Young, Andy Gerken
and Todd Kausen. Young won
heat races in the 220 and 440,
posting a 51.1 ln the'quartermile.
the best or the day.
Gerken breezed to a second
place finish in a mile heat in
4:24.0 behind El Toro's Shawn
Flynn at 4:22.9.
Kausen had a lifetime best of
168·7 in topping a stellar field of
discus throwers. Scott Hudson of
Mission Viejo also had a season
best mark of 16S·2 bul had to set·
tie for second place ln the pre·
lims.
El Toro's Chargers were
paced by sprinter·hurdler Art
Gourdine. He posted rylarks of
' 10.3 in lbe 100. 23.5 ln the 220 and
14.9 lb the 120 high hurdles. all
good for heal victories. In addi·
tion. he also is in fourth place In
the triple jump with a mark or
42-6.
Costa Mesa's bevy or distance
runners was paced by a 4 · 20.9
effort for John Gerhardt in the
mile and J-Oe Young 's 1 :58 8 in
the 880. Young also led his heat
race in the mile m an effort&ess
4:30.0. Gerhardt is scheduled to
OCC I Game Baek
BUctJ Face· Cerritos Next
With some help from San
Diego Mesa. Orange Coast
College finds itself in a position
to challenge for the South Coast
Conference baseball cham-
pionship after once being left for
dead.
The Pirates. behind another
sterling pertorman~e by Bob
Smith, downed visiting Santa
Ana. 4·1, Tuesday while second
place Mesa was dealing first
place Cerritos a 4·2 setback.
Orange Coast ls now Just a
half game out of first wllh Mesa
a half game back. All tba\ can
change Thursday when the
Pirates visit Cerritos on a day
Mesa is ldle.
Smlth extended bis bitting
streak to 23 games by going
three-for-three. He also stole bis
39th base and is hitting a siullng
.521 ln conference play.
Jamie Nelson drove in three
runs to help Kevin Fitzhugh
notch the pitching decision.
Fitzhugh struck out five and
walked two.
Erle Peyton tripled with one
out in the second lnntng and
scored on Nelson's sacrifice fly
SoCal Dealt
4-2 Setback
SAN DIEGO-Soutr.ern
Caltfomla College of Costa Mesa
scored a pair of runs ln the flrsl
inning, then gave up four to the
host USlU team in the lint two
frames and dropped a 4· l NA.IA
Dlstrlct 3 Southern Di vision
baseball decision Tuesday after·
noon here.
Randy Greer opened with a
double, Rob Stonelake tripled
and Stan Tbomaa singled to eet
the two nms across for SoCal.
Four of the seven hits by the
SCC Vanguards came ln the first
inning with Mlke Scheetz getting
the other.
Sc>.Cal is now 15·5 in conrerence
play ~Ith the title wrapped up.
Overa)tl-lt is 28-15.
Gtffr,Cf s.-........
Tl\OMH,llt
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-SoCelColltg1
USIU
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l 0 0 0 Total• 32 2 1 1
SC-..........
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110 '°° 00•-4 11 0
' Dues Outlast
GWC Netters
while Smith led off ·the fourth
with a single. stole second and
scored on Nelson's single.
It was the same scheme in the
sixth.
us~~d~~~:c~~~~: cb:s1: ~~~~
The Gauchos had just six
safeties and dropped a 3·2 Mission
Conference game at Chaffey.
Held scoreless through five
frames, Saddleback tallied twice
in the sixth inning only to see
Chaffey score the winning run ln
the bottom half of the frame. Vic
Hasler scored one run and drove
in the other for the Gau<!bos.
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Brown. rl
HH\er,211
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Bo...t ler I/tu
Bill Gompf. a three-tame
mos t valuable player for
Laguna Beach High and a
first team All·CIF 2·A foot·
ball selection in 1977, has
signed a national Jetter of an·
tent to attend the University
o f Utah. Gompf. a
linebacker. quarterback and
tailback at Laguna Beach. is
bllled for linebacker duties
at Utah.
Estancia's Camp
Ties Shot Mark
Mike Camp ol Estanela High
seems to be hitting his peak at
just the right time.
The senior weight man. who
set a school re<.'Ord ln the shot
pul a week ago. tied the school
mark in lbe discus throw wit.h a
1S2-6 effort in Tuesday's Century
League track and field prellms
at El Modena Higb.
He heads a list of 13 Eacle
qualifiers for Friday's league
finals at the same site. Field
event.I be&ln at 5 with the first
race set ror 6:30.
Camp also put the shot 51·1.
HEDRICK PICKED
'
BY S4N DIEGO
Ga vln Hedrick. a former
Newport Harbor High football
star, and a four-year punting
star for Washlnaton State
Unlverslty. wu drafted today
by the San DiegQ Chargers on
the elghth round of the National
Football League dran.
Hedrtck's only duties in rour
seasons ror the Cougan was u a
punter and was con11lstently
averalinte ln the 4()1 with his
boomtna punt.I.
his fourth conse<>utive effort
over the 50-foot mark. His best is
52· l l . Better known for his
basketbaJJ talent, Camp had 1977
bests of 49--0 and 1Z7-0.
Mike McCaa, the defending
Century League mile champ.
won his heat in 4 :33.3 and is also
scheduled to run the two-mile
Friday. There were no prelims
held in the eight-lap event.
Sophomore Mike Thompson
was a heat winner In the 440
while ~e Petrina won his
heal in 120 high hurdles and
also qu ified Ln the blgh Jumr. Mater Dei High fared wel in
the Angelus t..eague prelims at
St. Paul High. The Monarchs
were led by shot putter Vince
Brown, spJ'lnter Mike Dotterer
and miler Mark Eddy.
Friday's Angelus finals begin
al 5 with field events and 6 for
running events.
c:.wy ....... ,, ...
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ltV-fl'MfU 12-0. SP-CM'f!P!M. a-H1·4~.
OJ .....c..tlll UH. SIOln I~.
run ln Friday's two-mile.
Laguna Beach's Norm An·
derson could be a double victor
ln the sprints Fnday evening.
He had the best lime in trials In
both the 100 00.2) and th& 220
(22.9).
San Clement,e's Phil Spencer
got under 40 seconds for the first
time in the 330 low hurdles with
a 39.9 effort. the fastest or the
day. Dave Hancock and Mike
Wade of San Clemente led a one·
two finish in the triple jump pre·
liminaries with Hancock leaping
44-6.
* * * South Coast
Prelims
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Meridith
Pitches Win
TULSA, Okla.-Ron Meridith,
a graduate or Golden West
College, pitched Oral Roberts
University to a 10. 7 baseball vie·
tory over Oklahoma a Stale
University here Tuesday after·
noon.
Meridith went all the way to
post hls ninth win agalnat one
defeat. He struck out six and
walked an equal number. In two
years, his record ls 19-'2 at ORU.
Vince Bienek, a junior out-
fielder from Golden West. had a
pair of singles ln four trips to the
plate and Bill Springman.
former San Clemente High star.
had a double and home run In
three plate appearances. His
homer was his sixth of the
season and the bits give him a
12-game hitting streak. Oran1e Cout Colleu ·~
Plratea advanced fo the
sem lflnalt of the Southern
CalUonala dual meet Junior col·
le1e tennll cbamplonsblpe Tuel·
day with a 5-4 decision over vii·
lUn1 Golden West
The Dues took a 4·2 lead ln
Smf, Timbers Clash
sln11H,1~ two doubles klllM PORTLANl>--Aner dropping
left tt w ruck Rabb and Jon to third plffe In the atandlnaa
Swedlund, who captured a three· following Sunday•• loss to Van·
set match to cllnc& the victory. couver. c:oacb John Sewell in·
OCC'a ntxt Ulf will be witb LA dtcated he would make several
Pierce wltb • iii. and date •Ull ebana .. tn the lineup for
to be detennlned. tonl1ht'1 ••me aaalnat the ..... ... ,,, mor ... c... Portland Ttmbert here ln North
,...,,., cocci .. ':... ... , .... , tit. LYMft American Soccer C..aJu• action. IOWCl .. T-4 H. W. •t; •o.MW eoa:1 Tb c •• J .a-1 ted ...-1~ftd in ., v....-.... ..,, ... : Hem. COCCI .. --e gw-. UOD1ea ..,. ""'
•1. "'· t-11:,.. tocc> • u.... t-4, w; o. the seuon opener at Allahtbn ....... <.-0• .... w.w. 7... StadlUftl. 1-0, the nnt of UlrM ._ "1""" ..... t~ ,._,,,.,........, 1hut0iill for the S.Wellmen. BUt t::.: t.~: ki:.=.~-:.,2.&"=--.....,.V-•,n .. c.,ouV< r tumJl(I ttie tablu
uta1 .. v .... w. u.' . a z.o trtumPb ind bariidiit
the Surf lts second loss against
tour vlctoriee.
J u1t what changes ~well wlll
make to beef up the offense he
eiin'Te• .... C a. ........ .
cUdn 't meal.
"We have to cet our attack 10-
ln1 and do more 1corln1. ••
Se••llNYt. ~· 8Udw hlMt U,,Uble scor·
ln1 In every 1ame. Three of the
four victories were by 1·0 scores
and the other, 2·1 . Losaes have
*n 4·1aod2-01lving the Surf a
total of she to•ls tn as many out·
lngs.
The Surf wlll play In San
Dte10 Saturdey nt1ht before
r.tumlnt to Anaheim Stadium
for two IAIMI next week. Tues·
day nltht <1:30) It will be Tampa -
Bay and Friday nlcbt·wm be an
inttrnatlon1l match with
Stuttaart, Qeriilany. a Europea.n
Dlvllk>Dltf*m. •
t
-
J • • •• •' •
I •• t i •• ,,
4 •
l
~STOCKS I BUSINESS w.c:t"89dey. May 3. 19711 s OAJLYPILOT 87
Nursing Homes
Suggestions Ease
Difficult Task
By SYLVIA PORTEil
ll'lrtteff•C..-
MUUonJ or Americans who have trted other ways to
·.ease the phy11lc&I and mental hmitaUons or an aaed loved
•ne have finally laced the task or finding a mmung home.
How should the search be conducted?
Study, the klnds or nuralng care avallable ana cond1·
tl•ll• under which Medicaid and Medicare will pay cost:,
SOME HOMES SPECIALIZE in per5onaJ care. othero;
rocu& on health and nurslqg care. still others cater lo rest·
dents with 4l wide range of'need~.
Medicaid pays ror an mtermed1att-care facility thut
caters to those who need health care service. some nursing
:tupervi.slon and aS&latance in eatma. dresaing. walking
qQd other e86enllals. There 1s no reimbursement rrom
-Medicare ror in ·
Uttmediale care.
Money's
Worth
Medic(l.id also puys
for core in u !!killed
ru~r~ll\8 rac11JLy where
r"<>·u-n d . th t' • c Io ck sctr'!i~ are available.
~ nh..Y~•~lan muat ap-
pro.ve this type of care If an appUcant is to be eli&lble ror
thi.s,PhilSe,or the Medicaid program.
Medicare will assist In paying up to 100 days in a
s killed nuri;mg facility arter a patient has spent at least
three,diJ,.YS in a hospital and a physician has recommended
adm1ss1on w1Ul ulhmate Medic-are approval.
MEDICAID MAY PICK UP CHARGES after 100 days
(c.. •r I hose eligible for both programs .._
When neither Modicart' or Med1ca1d •l' involved; the
go" e1inment .set." i;tandards ror services. safety and san1ta
lion . SLJttes,must.obey federal guidelines for Inspection and
c.-erti\ ·1calton of ·homes receiving re1mbursemesit under
either program. ~lber nursing homes come under state 1n
specli<\., and ~P.proval standards.
If a patient is ~liglble' ror Medicaid. seek a home
certified' (pr inte11mediale care or a skilled nurstns facility.
If a .,at,\mt .is elUlible for Medicare, look for a home
certiried a : a ~llled nursing racllity. Many are certified in
both cate~'>f"ie:; ~nd are ellglble for payments under
Medicaid am1 r,1ed1cpre.
-IN SR6 'PPIOIG -F4>R A nursing home. eumine the
facility's liceru es flrui _<;.ert1flca\es to s~ if they are cur·
rent. Avoid any home that isn't licensed. Also avoid any
home wberl' the admtnis\rators Ceil to ptoduce a current
license on rcquesl. -Check whetl 1er the home ts approved by the J oint
Comm1ss1on on ,\ ccred1l1tllon or Hospitals. 111 non
J.(ovt'rnmental grouv that 1nspeets ltospltals and nurs ing
homes The cert1f1ca\'IOO 1:0. a good indication or qualit).
although not neccssari~'y a cert~n one
-Make J hst of '°'~al hames. ,getting namet> from the
health department. mo.<U~l S®l~Ly. senior citizens or·
ganizations. social servllW aroUJ>S. -SOCial Secunty office.
dergymen. phys1c1ans. r.osp1tals. nursm~ home ass<><;la·
lions and welfartt office.
-MA.KE PRELIMINAI\ V CALLS to the homes, ask·
1ng about partic1patioa in Mem·~e. ¥..ed.ic.ald and state in-
::.pect10~. ~k det&Jls on dr•W'&eS not <:0vered by basic
rates and status of coverage if an ~ ls projected
under Medicaid or Medicare
-lnqwre about specific m&<licw eaf'('. hospital as-
sociation. physman availability. ~a.J r.eoord book·
keeping. therapy. r1re safety and tl(}('jdel)t pr~entlon
facilities. Do not choose a home that h.its not beeo inspect·
ed and cle3red for fire safety in the P.'9' year
Nert: The hrtallgtbk·a
Joy A. ltosselU has been appointed an escn'>W Officer at Bank of Amerka •a Brookburst-Adams branch ln Hunt·
inJllOn Beach. She joined Bo!A as an ex~Ulive secretary In
1970 and m05t rttenUy serving at the bank's Qran,ge Coun·
ty·Los Angeles Coast regional headquarters in Or~e.
>Calvta R. Aaweller. San Juan Capistrano. has been
named truat officer for City NaU.al Buk's trust de~rt·
m ent facility located In the Taj Mahal building in Laguna
Hills.
His responsibilities include estate planning for
families, administration of estates and pen.saon and profit
sharing plans tor private lndustry. BeCore joining the
bank. he. was a trust advisor ror Security Pacific National
Bank's tnast department in Beverly Hills. a position he as-
sumed in 1974 after relirlng from the Navy • Ted Plate. Fountain Valley. has been promotoed to
branch manager at the Orange branch or Qwip Sys&.ems. a
division of Exxon Enterprises. Inc.
He is former marketing manager at the branch.
Qwip is a machine that sends words and pictures over
the t elephone • Gerhard Moos has been appointed vice president and
manager of Crocker Baak's office at Beach Boulevard
and Edinger Street m Huntington Beach.
He is responsible for supervising the office and de-
ve loping business in the community. He is former
maoager or the bank's Buena Park office . • Sandra 0. Elweu. San Clemente. has been named
general loan officer al the Mi ssion Viejo Bank of America.
She Is former escrow officer at the San Juan
Capistrano branch. With the b&nk since 1961. she began at
San Clemente as a teller and was advanced to assistant
operations officer in 1969. She served In 11 similar capacity
at Capistrano Palisades and Laguna Hills before th•
escrow assignment • Michael R. Grt.,ler, Mission Viejo. has been named
m tmager of the San Clemente office of Santa Barbara
Savlags and l.oao Association.
He joined the association in January !176 as manaaer or the Valley Plaza office ln BakersClefd. Before that he
was In commercial banking and the·savln&s and loan busi-
oe.u in Bo6ton a.ad Framln&h.am. Mau . • MatynJ<' <Tt.a > Sbalfer has been named manaaer or
the South Laguna ofltce or 8ae&a Barbara Sulnp and
Loan Allroclatto.. Sho su~eed.s Marc•.r•t Pike. who has
been na!Md manager or the office lo Palo Alto.
Befort Jolnlna the compeny. ahe was • branch
manager with another savlng1 and loan assoclallon In
Tu1t1n. Her profetslonaJ experience lncludea 14 years ln
commttttal bankln1 and th s11vlngs and loan Wldustry .
• ,,D. Walker, F'oun\aln Valley. has been named vice
preslde.nt. for frnance and component aale1 •l TeledyN
8prape ~....,.,. He ts form .r controller and compo.
nent sales men•rer
• wuuam c. ··~r lillulon Vl~jo. ha• ~n 1ppolnted ma:nallal director of UM .._. hrtl Visitor It Convttltlam
Burtata.
PuleY. who repl&ffd &kk Lawra1ttt, was most re.
ceotl.r aaocJaled wlth Tt'n~ SlaUotj, Ille .. • Newport
Bfuh trntf •~1. u a a Mtal manaatn1 Pl."!J'er
"
~ . .. .: .
• • I
'
.. . • ~ ·.
. '.
.. DAU. V Pfl OT Wednetlday May 3. t971 Tele1'ision
\\tl•\l"I>" rNIHO W !£ONE
• blllly .,. ~ tNC*
ln¥0N98 tM .,.,.,,... In
1111 MlllgllllCY of their-
• CM.MMOKI
... t1 hM a tono. llatd ride
ti-* to Oodrge wltll • prta-
oner WflOM geng ~
ltltl'l'ldoggedly
• Tl4E 8RADV IUNCH
P9lef'1 eflw'4Chool IOb In
"" bllJ• lfloe> ~ • l*wonal ctlaattw I ADAM-12
EllCTIIC COMPANY
tllTORY CW MEXICO
"Ganeail Of~ 01
1810" 9 AICNEWS t::ao8 MOVE
••• "The Lall SunMt"
(Part 2) (1881) Rocle
Hudlon. KWk Douglal. A
woman 11 puraued by th,..
men during a Meidco-to-
T eJl.88 cattle dlNe. ( 1 ht.)
• l!WITCHEO
Dan1n'a motllel' thlnU ltl8
hM eupematinl ~ On B er Mark
I AOOKIU
OVEAENr'f
VloUnll1 tuac Stern per-
fOfma 111\d ~ IUC·
-81\d ~manta; Dr Colin Midi on aavlng
anargy; • 85-year-old
r•lllne peraonal freadom
through many C¥_..
Gladys Knight is one of the pop musir
s tars who'll compete m·th~ Rork ·n·
Roll Sports Classir. a two-hour spt'rial
tonight at 9 on NBC. Ch11nnel 4.
Qli) OIMEN8K>N8 IN
CUlTUAE8
''Govwnanoe··
(I) AMERICA 2NIOHT
GuMt: Jill St. Jolln
I MERV GRIFFIN
7:00 NBC HEWS
UAASCUJ8
A8CNEWS
IOWUHGFOR
OOUAA8
• 11.0VEUJCV
"Tiie Fuhion 'SllOW" Lvcy
contrlbut• to a lalhlon
allow with the w;.,. of
motion plclure 1tara
I J..OAM.12
MACNEIL l LEHRER
REPORT
G!) CREA TtVE
STITCHERY n .. Bu"lon knot. Chlnete
knot. eo<at lenot and knoll·
eo bullonhole are demon·
ttrateo.
(I) JOKE.A'S WILD
7:30 8 IETWEEH THE WA"9
"The Great Oepreuiofl"
The Oep<'9NIOn "'811 .... u s aelf-con11denoe and
paratyne tor'CMgn policy; In
Eutope It g'-,_ to die·
ta~ and !NI fall of
the LMgue ot Natlona.
Q 8HANANA
IGllM~::m~·
MATCH GAME P.t.t.
JOl<EA'S WILD
THE BIW>V BUNCH
.. Th• Un-Underground
MoYie" Greg l11votves the
I
C'Jaannel Ll•f Ing•
G KNXl tCBS) Los Angeles D KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles 8 ICTLA (Ind ) Los Angeles D KABC·TV IABC> Los Angeles
Cl) KFMB (CBS) San Diego
D KHJ-TV (Ind) Los Angetes
!ID) KCSl (ABC) San Diego
Qt KTTV (Ind.) Los Angeles m KCOP·TV (lnd.),Los Angeles e KCET· TV (PBS) Los Angeles Cl> KOCE·TV IPBS) Hunhnglon Beach
wno1e family In e ~
malling project for IChool.
(I) AMERICA 2NtOHT
Gueat Jlft S1. John. f.li)21T~
a'i) STAMOARO
"LlwJlw" Cll s 12a.ooo OUESTIOH 0 FAMILY Fa.JO
t:OO • (I) 8PtOER.uAN
An lntwnatlonel beauty
page1n1 con1e111n1.
daugllter oC .fhe ,_ P<•
dent ol a Latin ArMrlcan
country recently fr..cl
from terrortst dlctatorltllp.
11 kidnapped and held for
pollllcat ran90m. D ROU.EROIRLS
"The Bwt'h Of The Pitta"
The Pltllt>u<gh Pitt~ remln·
I-on their beginning• u
• IMm In order to peyche
themMI-tor • big game 0 MOVIE
• • ·~"Flrat To Fight"
(1987) CMd Ewrett. Mari-
lyn DeYin. A Medal Of Hon·
or winn. h•• problem• on
lhe bllllltlfleid but men-aa-to !Mid his men 10
YICI~ (2 hra I D ag EIOHTIS
EHOUOH
"Loel Weeilend" Confu·
lion nllgn9 In the Bradf oyl
hOUMhOld when Tom and
Aoby go away tor the
----• NAil IOCCEA
Caltornt• Sutf VI Porllllnd
Tlmb41rt
·<WIOL ~ ANO rNENOI
au.t· Anthony Newley.
Otclc Martin
• MOVIE
• • "Up Pe111cop1"
( 19581 Jamtt Gtrner.
Edmond O'Brien. A Ntvll
olfloef la ordered to catrV
out • denge<OU• mlulon
duflng WOf'lcl Wat II. (2
hra.)
• NOVA
"Rold To Hlppl-" The
Ill• Ind lllMI of Henry
Ford, wtlOM "Motor Cars
For The Gfeel ~ ..
made !NI ArMfican «-n
a rMlity.
• llX IEIOEA8ECKE
MeM<>flAL FESTIVAL
"Tom Saunder'• I Bob'
Hitacll All Start"
UO Q JOE ANO VALERIE
"Vllltrie'• Wild Oat" Joe
and Valtl'le'a buddlno
romance It )eOpardlzed
wtMfl llalerie'I fOtmer DO)'·
friend ~ '-boas
et the dtpanmenl store.
I CROSS-WIT8
OVU. EASY
lllollnial tuac Stem I*·
torma and d*'-auc-
-end c:ommltmtntr. Dr Cotln Midi on ~
energy: 1 85-year-old
rttalnt per.onal freedom
thfougtl many c.r-•·
t:OO • Cll 088 M0\111!
"MlllHI.... Are Looaet"
(Pr~e) Tom Skerrlll.
St-Forr•t. Two huge
tlgerl terrorize • small
American natlorlal toreet
eotnl'IUlity D ..ac:K 'N' AOU
POlna~
l(rt11y McNJchol. Ed
McMthj)n and Alea KlnM
hOll • variety ot athletic
twntt In wtllCh men. U\ao
40 iuperatwa ot POO muaic
will compet~ladya
l(nlghl and tlle J>ipa; She
Sha Na; Anne Murray: the
Bay City Rottert: Mwllyn
McCoo aod Biiiy Davit Jr.:
Iha Commodor•: Lynn
And«lon; Earth, Wind and
Fire, the Jack1on1:
Aeroemlth: Rod St-lrl
and tO~lrom
"" oa11.. Cowboys .,.
fMluted
8 9 CHA.ALIE'S
AHGEL8
"Angel On The Ron" The
angela gel more thin they
batgalntd IOI' wllen they
are hlrtcl to track down •
pl)llanderlng truck drtwr
Who ii unlcnowlngly haul·
Ing a lottune In llOlen
gema.
TUBE TOPPERS
KTLA 0 8 00 .. First to Fight ..
Chad E\.e rell. latl' of t\.fod1ral Ctntt:r.
plays a Medal ot l lonor winner m this
1967 war movu.'
CBS EJ 9 00 "Manealers Are
Loose ... A pair of giant tigers t~rrorile a
small town in this new TV movie with
Steve Forrest. Henry MorJ?an and Diana
Muldaur <see photo below 1
NBC 19 9 ·00 -Rock ·n · RoH Sports
Classic. A plethora or pop music stars is
assembled in this new athletic compel•·
lion including Gladys Knight and the
Pips. Sha Na Na. a nd Bay City Rollers
I M£RV ORlfflN
GREAT
PERFOAMAHCES
"Trial 0t The Mo.I<•" T~
11111 black cadet fo gradu-
ete from Weat Point 11 per.
MCUted by hit fellow Olli•
cert
ti!) COUSTEAU
OOY88EY
"Celypao·1 Search For
Atlantil" Phlllpe Cousteau
•llemc>ta to unravel the
mytlety oC Atlenlll 1n the
e.n.mu. wtllte Caotain
J~ Coott-.i focu-
on Cfete. end 111 01Jllylng
taland, Ole. 1n the Ageen SM.a •rt 1 of 21 10:001 NEWS STARSKV &
HUTCH
"Partners" Steraky
· 111empt1 to cure Hutctf •
amne••• following a
S«iout aoctdent
., LET"8 MAKE A O£AL
G!) COUSTEAU
OOV88EV
·ca1ypao·1 Suren For
Allantlt" C~n Cous-
teeu explor• Crete's
nothefn cout and tl\e...M()I,..
cenlc ltlend ot Sentortnl.
wllk:h -• bOlh dellroyed
thOuaand• of yeers ago
(Plrl 2 of 2)
.20:30 m (I) NEWS EID MICHAEL JACKSON
Mlll'Vln Holen. P1~enl Of
Iha LOI Angelel RIC)id
Tran11t Olstnct. dt~
the lllCI'-In RTD rode<·
lhlP -
11:00 I a a Cl> o N(W8 LOVE. AMERICAN
STYLE
"Love And The Under·
1tanc1~· Dodo's huSband
la foollnQ wound 'Love
And The Pr90nancy" Ir• I
wile 11 upacUng their llrtl
b•by Cl MOVIE *•'A "Twenty. Three
PICel To Beker Street"
119581 Van JoMton. Vert
Mltee. A llghtleea play.
• • • wright •llempll 10 con-
vince pollce of 1 murder
plot he ovemeard.'(2 hra.1 G» THE 000 COUPLE
Fetlx'a and Otcat't bowt-
1119 IMm bllttle against an
oppoe1119 tMl'll In • game
wtllch matk• the llrtt time
"' 1111'1 year• that they
might be the wtnnen
• MONTY PYTHON'S
Fl VINO CIRCUS ID OQ<CAVETT
GUHll Ruth Carter
Stapleton. the leadlng
advocate of FuM Goapel.
and Dolton Reder. authOr
o4 "Miracle" m MA.CHEil I LEHRER
REPORT
t 1:30 8 (I) HA.WAN FfV!.()
1.awi1 Avery Flier (Hume
Cronynl taunt• McGau-'t
with dueia Ind pl-10
lrtclt htm lt>IO actually help.
'"9 him •teal tour mfllion
cloltart (A) 0 TONIGHT
Holl Johnny Carson
Guest1 Soeen SolllVen. Or
Paul EMICb.-!Wddy ~
ell
9 LOVE. AMERICAN
STYLE
"Love And The Burglar" A
pennl ... 1 wttlW rnak• an
attempt at butglary "Love
And The Many-Married
Couple" MoYle ldOla rweal
INllY ..cnrta c:tumQ an
Mll~ Q 9 POUCE 8TOAV OdYM8Y Of Daeth'' While
potlce ottlows eontlnUe
their -Cll for Ille tuper•
m.ntet lhlevel. evidflnce
llnkinQ them to a _... ot •
other crtme111 dllCOYW"CS
1Plrl 2 ol 2t G» THATGIRL
"The Mllll~n Cometh"
Cl) OET SMART
"llt111 S!'Nrt" Smart •nd
89 f-• tiring IQUad
TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS .
wtMln lhey 1ry to rell0t• a
d1tlll(>Md prffldel>t of "
l0tetgn COUl\lf')'
• CAPTIONED ABC NEWS
MORNING
12:00 8 lWIUOHT ZOHI
A man tlncl• lllmMllf alt
alone 111 II tlMll town .MO'M
• •·~ "One Minute To
Zero" (19621 AM 81)'111.
Robtr1 Mltcllurn. The tte>rf
of a hard•bltten Infantry
colonel and a cMKan work·
., 11 the front WI Korea
wNrl the enemy tltacka ..
dee*:led (2 hrt I
1=:..
RIJIORT
12:30 8 MOVIE
• • • 'Walle tn10 Hell •
( 19671 Ch1p1 Refferty.
Francolte Chn11ooi-. An
Austrlllen offlcjat arid Illa
ptny are captured by
MVagel wllen they go 10
New Gutr>ee 10 lnveaugere
en Oii dltcc>Yery 1 t nr • 56
min I
• MOVIE ••·~ "The Fan" (1~9)
Je•nnt Crain. George
Sender• e.ti.vlng lier
hulOend 11 unte1tllful. a
woman eimoet C001fnltl en
tnchecretton lhll would
~ "' the dMtructlOn o4
her matrlege. ( I tw , 30
min)
12:37 G Cll KOJAK
"A Heed To Know" 1(01a1C
•• 1nlur1aled Wh4ll'l a cntld
mOielter. • membef of 111e
diolomatlc conlnlunlly. ••
granted dll)IOrnatlC: lmmo-
11ity ef>d Mt ,, .. al1er nnar.
tt_ being arr•ted (Al • 9 ABC MYsnRY
MOYIE
• • 'Murder Motet ..
C 18751 Robyn Mtllell Al1er
• woman 1 ftence " t1as11 While •ltemoltng 10 report
.. lreud that' hee-c:oeJ ... -
c;ornpany • huge aum of
ll\Ol'l8¥. the tr-hll
11411» to Iha "Murdef
Motel," where lhe·i. aoon
reglatered 11 thlt next
Intended lllctHn ot an-lnter-
natlOnal bend ot COlllOll•·
ton..(AI
1:00 D TOMOMOW
~ Ellil Rubin. a lawyer
--deMfwe of • -aged muroerer •as bued
on the p1ychotog1ca1
omoect ot TV vtolence. Wiii
dtlWIS lltl proc>oMd May
10 boycott Of leievlelon Cl ISP\'
"Thia Guy Smith" ~=1= NEWS MOVtE
• • "Sleet< Sun ' I 19671
Mocl*e Mera.. Otr>tfll
.. .
Geiin A -:lllhy YOUOQ
W()tl'I; ,_ 9" S 10 4ftiell II\
MaJcll ot 1.·, 0<011 er -o
lltMI thftt". CO<•O...nnell to
death '" •1>-111<1 '°' COi-; llbolattng Wtlll U>e NUI&.
12 IVI I
• MOVI&
• • "MINIOn To M0too-
co" ( t8S8) lAJI Bet1ler. Juli
~Ing An Oil men ~I·
getH tile murder of • man
and th41 d~anoe Of
mlerolllm 1how1no tl\I,
location of o11 Oec>olltt.
hf .• 30 min)
2:tae M<ME ~ ••~"From The Earth
The Moon" (1968) ~
Colten. Oebt'I P1lget 2:211 NEWI t:ao MOVIE • • "The Ghoet Of ,,,.,..
en11t1n" C 18•2) Lon
~II~ Jr . Evelyn AAklfl, 1
S:30. MOVIE '•
It • "MaN11. Montttt QI
f error" I t 8&61 J1111.
"uflmakl. Ryut1<Cl
5!1161 NeWS
4:00 MOVIE ' • 1t • "The loll• And TIJ!t
Oeach'' (tM3) ~ IOIUC.
Manfred Krug. (2 tlra.)
G MOYIE
•• '" "Suicide COl'nmM-
doe" (18881 ~ldo Ray.
Hugh Feng8'·Smltll.
4:158 STEVEEDWAAD8 .. ,
1'ltur •da11•• ·~~
Da11th1w Mo"l~i
. AFTERNOON
11:30 •••• ,.., ''The Thin
Min.. ( 183•> Wiiiiam
P__... Myrna Loy. Met.
end Nora Ctlw ... get
Oellply lfWotYed in a mur·
Cler cu. C2 tin.. :20 min.) ,
12:00 D • • "C>angaraus • Chart.,.. ( 1t821 Chrla
Wwtltlld~ F,....-: Ttta
co-ownera of • ftalllrio'
cnener boat claim• ... ;
vtg41 t ~lid lulWI}'•
vldlt and run up -.galnlt a
g1ng of 1111ernallo'1'1l
hwokl tmugglera. ( 1 hr ..
30mln I a:OO O ••• "8arlt!T -~
Ponralt Of A T_...~
Alcotlolic' '1815) ~
Si.tr. Varna BIOOm 4
,,_ old 9ot1 wno nu cunv copong wtth a ,_
""'" '* mother arid te1ner. ...,,, to .;;!
IOICT'ltly. (I fir . 30 mtn.I • tf.
3:30 D • *~"Gidget Grow(~
UP" ( 19691 Karen Ila •
1111e. RoWt Cumml
White lhe'a worktng at I.
lJ N • Gldget't .
IMvn tor 111e Ail Force. 6 hr. 30 mtn.) ..:i
ABC Still o n Top • in
.. . •• •,
TV Ra ting~
# •
Hold Tlaat Tig er
Ste\'e Forrest stars in "Maneaters Are
Loose ... a TV movie about menacing tigers.
airing tonight at 9 on CRS. Channel 2.
NEW YORK CAP> -With half of the top 10
shows. ABC returned to its accustomed top spot in
the prime time television ratings last week. at'cord-
ing to the latest.A. C. Nielsen figures.
But Tuesday's figures indicated that an NBC
show with former President Gerald Ford discussing
foreign policy was the last of 65 shows rated by
Nielsen for the week ending April 30. The network
paid him a reported Sl million for an unspecified
number of programs.
THE FIRST THR EE PROGRAMS were
"Three's Company."' "Vegas" and "Laverne &
Shirley," alt on ABC. which plans to make ·~Vegas"
into a series about a detective. With "Holocaust " now history and no show
higher than 15th. NBC plummeted to a third-place
average in the national ratings of 14.8. CBS was a
close second. with a 17.~tQABC's 17.9.
These represent 13 m illion households for ABC.
12. 7 for CBS and 10.8 for NBC. ...
In addition to the Ford Interview, NBC listed
three other shows at the bottom of the ratings: No.
61 "Space Force:· No. 62 "Man From Atlantis" and
No. 64 ··Hanna-Barbera Happy Hour." ABC's "The
Hardy Boys" was.No. 63.
* * *
Ma ry's Back ;
Kojak Leaves
NEW YORK <AP> -Mary Tyl«:r Moore is
back. Tony Randall and Bob Newhart are gone.
Thal 's the new look· of CBS, as announced in the
network's new fall television schedule. --------------------The network said It was replacing 61h hours of
proeu ms, shuffling another two· hours ol existing
shows, retaining Thutsday's schedule and dropping
such rare as "Baby I 'm Back,'' "Celebrity
Challenge or the Sexes" and "Captain Nemo." D evil Pops Up
,F o r 'Joker ' H o st
L 0 S A N G E LE S paved street in tennis
1AP) -J ack Barry wlll sneakers.
be on crutches for at Ba rry said he would
least 10 shows as host of resume joggiq after his
"The J oker's Wild" now hip returns lo normal.
being taped ror airing but only wearing jog-
later this iieason ging shoes and on dirt
Barry was ordered by r oad s or a r uno in 1
••Ko.JAK." WBJCH DROPPED fa r Into the rat·
in gs after Its early, popular years. is also departing,
along with the Friday night movie. "Spiderman''
and "Shields and Yarnell."
"Dallas" and "The Incredible Hulk." both of
which tested well this year, remain.
Among t.he so·called new shows Is one that
won't quit. As a pilot on NBC a while back, ''Peo-
ple" bombed. In a CBS putlche or goaslp and
newafeatures, a simila r show called "Who's Wbo"
alJo bombed. And now Phyllis George will be head
host of ''People" Mondays at 8p.m . his physician to use track.
t>rutches to alleviate a ...;..-----------------------""""".-=-~=--:-""."
P•inful condiUon in his
left blp. He injured hls
hip while joutng on a
Dylan a Hit
In London
LONDON CAP> -Bob
D)lan'1 ftrst Loudon •P-
pearuce In 12 years It
1ueb an atanetion that a~ are forbiddlnt mall orden for Uclteu and Hm1Une box.office
purclt... to four per ..... Six -~---na at Barta
Coat ...... June 11. and
bos olftctll •n luilday.
Prlcff ~from about
•toi...-SlJ.SO,
IN OllDER, THE T-OP IO'SitOWS were ·
"Three's Company." a 28 7 rating. or 20 9
million homes: "V~gas ... 26. or 18 9 mtllion:
.. Laverne & Shirley." A RC. 25 6, or 18 6 m1 Ilion:
"Altce." CBS. 24.8. or 18.l mtllton. "Happy Days ...
• ABC . 23 9. or 17.4 m1Jhon . ''All in the Family."
CBS. 23.8. or li.3 million. "One Day at a time. ·
23 7. or 17 3 million.
"Charlie's Angels ... 23.3. or 16.9 m1lbon; Na-
tional Colleg1at~Cheerteadlng Champ1onsh1p. 22.6.
or 16 65 million. a"d "Dallas." CBS. 21.8. or ·
million. • THE ~EXT 10 SHOWS WERE "Starsky a
Hut<'h ... ABC. "Incredible Hulk." CBS. tied w
"LoH Boat." '\BC. "60 Minute~ ... CBS. -~.'
"Quincy," NBC . "Lou Grant," CBS "Sieg~~~
the.• CBS Wednesday night movie ; .. Proj~·
U.F 0 .. l'llBC: "Go West Young Girl ... AB
Thursday mght movie. and "Joe and Valeri&
NBC •
...
..
ENTERTAINM.ENT I INTERMISSION W1dMtd9Y. ~ s. tf178 * -DAIL V PILOT 88
:rttargot Fonteyn to Bid LA. Fare-Well?
:. • The comlna visit of Briwn'1 Royal Ballet to and evening> and on May 28. She will partner
•Shrine A.tltorium In Los Anceles b11 aroused David Wall in "Les Sylphid~" and Ea1Una tn
Eelldoul haterest and lt seems, Jud1ln1 from TOM BAA LEY "Hamlet and Ophelia.·· l ... ~. that Oran1e Count.y will be well Those of us who have watched this 1ractous
• p~ted at the 16 performancft. lady ot balJet enthrall us over the years with a
: M Music Box technique that will never be duplicated will be •' °'t ballet fan1, understandably. want to anxious to offer her the tribute·ahe so richly de· t~teh a 1lim1M of a1elesa Dame Maraot Fonteyn serves ·
who may be dancing for the last 5ff you at the Shrine time ln the United St.ates. London observers of the Royal advise this
American audiences tend t.o writer that her partnership with Wayne Eafling ln
immediately uaociate Fonteyn the eagerly awaited "Hamlet And ()pbella' ls one
wlth the mercurial Rudolf or the most maenlficent things In ballet today.
Nureyev and it'• true that the Gifted choreographer Frederick Ashton used
palr forged a partnership that the music o! Fram Liszt for this ballet which drew
will be talked of for many years rave revleW1l when it was first performed in Lon· ~ to come. don last May 30. The Shrine performance wUl be
Its American premiere. i B UT FONTEYN, WHO r f'ONTayN W88 dancing Superbly for the
p ld SacUel'S Wells Ballet while Rudolf was ln the
'ursery. bas had many gifted partners over the Fars. many of whom were little inrerlor to reyev _ .
SPACE DOES NOT PERMIT ua to run
through the casting for the 16 performances start·
Ing May 23 but we should remind readers of th~
dates on which Dame Margot can be seen.
She will dance on May 26. May Z7 <matinee
r i:'Movie r Colony' Opposed
! CENTRAL CITY, Colo. lAP> -Vern Terpen·
Jing who runs a leather goods store In this old gold
\lp>ining town high in the Rocky Mountains just Isn't
,nterested in the town being used ln another
,:Western movie right now.
;' "I guess if I wanted to live in a movie colony,
~4'd move to Hollywood," Terpening said after he
; ~nd two other merchants opposed the filming or
t(:The Last Gun." a Western with a Samuri flavor.
\ .
( TERPENING AND THE OTHER merchants ~~elt>traffic Ue·ups caused by the filming would hurt
\1b~siness
)l • E M.I. Films and producer Frank Marshall had
)toped t.o film the movie between May 15 and June 15
\ have-dela~~ayin1 they cottldn 't
\3elect supporting act.ors and actresses in Ume \
m•·s A-.,A_..__._,_ so. COAST PWl "SATURDAY NIGHT FEWR" (R) ""' .... I ™ ·1 N&,.....,..,...... 1:-~ _,,AS.. IAT~t»NI , ... ,....._,
"THE DUCHESS and the Dirt water Fox," a
Western featuring Goldie Hawn and George Seeal.
was filmed In Central City in 1975 and Terpening
said the dirt used to cover the town's paved streets
settled ln bis store. ..
Terpening has hired Denver attorney ShelleJ
Don to study the situation but Don wouldn't com·
ment.
WINNER OF
-·-1-~Si?&~~~ lnc:ludlng
Beat OJtglnal Score
Beat Fiim Editing
Best Coatu,!M 0.algn
r ' ' /•/ :. '• •
NEW1:~9JiT . ' .
If a.JI elle< roclicll()n
JO{ DON BAKER on fM£ PACK"
S1amnq HOPE AlE XANDE A Wll!S
Co s1a"'ng RICHARD B SHULL R G ARMSTRONG
W111e11 IO< !tie SCTl!ef' "'° Ot•eoc:teo by POSE RT Cl OtJSE
TE~S t>FIHE"
~-,,._,:»tC>lt
IAJ......-2.flCM •• 1 ... tO"tt
"HOUSE CAUS·· CPO) "A TOUCH OF CLASS" MOH/f'AJ.-.oo
IAT/IUM-4.'00-716 MON.IF~l65AT~21XM .._llO
"FM" (PG )
OAILV .... 10
SATISUN-2..,.._10
"SATURDAY NIGHT FEVER" (R)
SAf*-1211-340-t«>-a »10 JO
"BOVS IN COMPANY C" (R)
' , '."l'HE LAST DET1JL" •
"THE LAST WALTZ"
"'PHANTOM OF PARADISE"
"SATURDAY NIGHT FEVER"
"LIFEGUARD"
"HOUSE CALLS"
"ANNIE HALL" CPO)
"THE FURY"
"EVIL" (R)
"THEFURr
"EVIL" (R)
AU. Oll'IVE·INS OPEN 6:JOP.N..-.Hn.Y
CtlllG Untlef' u ,,,.. Unlet• • Kiddle ~'J'tfOUftCI
"'Coming Home' Is ao good, auch
an Important ftlml ••• "
Gene Sh•llt~BC·TV
" 'METAMORPfJOSES' at once the complete opposite and logical
succedor to 'Fantasia '."
,,.~·:
-
c ... 22 hotel t1oora, A.a su•rds.
157 cops, 390 banbdes •nd, 3.oc>O .. ,..... .... l&M(lt theM kkl•
trom.pttlns to the ... .._7
~-
NOWAY!
Slr\1£111 sP!ElBEQG P!lESENIS
A IK)SE & ~VI V PtocJuellO'>
i WIWNA HO. D t'OUl1 HAKY
S1a11nQ NAl'C AllfN· 80i!8" CXXXX>· MARC McCl1'lE
SUSAN ICEflO'll f\EWMN'4 · l'"*'llESA :.Al.DANA v.fla .X) sP9lfJER
1M1tten ~~Pl lEMtCll'r_.& 808GAU
Odlcledbv~ lfMEOQS• AsSOCt0'8Pioduc{V 808GAtE
PrOOJCeCI bV l>MAAA ~VE V & Al.EX QOSE
Uecu!MJ l'locM:ef STEVEN SP(lflR(, IPO'--~ .l\UNl\lf~PIC'l"'1f 1~()11· •--..'!!o-.. •
f(Juti;r .. N ~
Vlll 1l1
1 11 \ t I~ ..
, .... ~ HI ,1.: ( •
, • ,1 '"•
"'fOll'U ...,,. ~
THI IOYI *"W-ANY C11>
swum oeM111t
I
r.
I I
I
'FM' an Album Looking for a Movie
By RON PENNINGTON n. ................
UoJversal'a "FM" is esaenUaUy a group of
characters and a soundtrack album 10 search or a
movie.
Director John A. Alonzo and bls excellent cast
create some effective moments and the
soundtrack incorporates an exciting variety ol
contemporary music -plus "concert" ap·
pearances by Linda RQDBtadt and Jimmy Buffett
-but none or this adds up to much.
Ezra Sacks' script doesn't seem to have been
developed much beyond the idea stage It is about
a group of people who work In one of Los Angeles'
top rock FM radio stations, and, while there is a
thin story line, there is little development either in
terms of characters or plot. ll basically lacks an
ongoing sense or purpose and the result is too often
tedious
MICHAEL BRANDON STA&S AS the station
rnanager who baa brought it to its top-rated spot
.ind who muist deal with the personalities or his
,Jisc jockeys and the efforts of management to
>ring in more advertisin& revenue, regardless of
vhether or not these commercials are suited to the
.talion 'a format and market
MERICA'S No . 1 COMEDY HIT!
Jn Uus case. new sales manager Tom Tarpey
is trying to 1et Army recruiting apot.s from James
Keach, who plays a pseudo-hip, Pot-slftokin&
lieutenant. Normao Lloyd ls tbe owner or tbe sta·
lion who finally intervenes after Brandon and bia
crew take over the premises In protest.
The deejays Include Eileen Brennan as the aul·
try-voiced Mother, Alex Karras as the country·
infiuenced Doc Holiday, Cleavon Little as tbe
suave Prince of Darkness and Martin Mun as the
spacy Eric Swan.
THESE CHARACTERS ARE all very good
and provide what Interest there ls to the mm. But
none or them are developed to any extent because
the script presents them in what amounts lo no
more than incidents that lack a unilying force.
Still some or the individual scenes are very
good and Mull is especially strong and funny as
the insecure, egotistical Swan. who finally ntps out
over the air. Brennan is also impressive as
Mother, who keeps threatening to quit because she
wants "reality" in her life and not just "five hours
of ego-trippin& In this toy shop," but the full poten·
tial of this character ls never realized.
The same holds true for Karras, who ls
replaced by Cassie Yates because bis ratings are
slipping.
GBECOMIAH~
>.NORMAN JEWISON Am
SYLVESTER STALLONE
Sl'N:f DJ
Martin Mull
ROD STEIGER· PETER BOYLE
MELIND~1J6~~J~~D HUFFMAN
KEVIN CONWAY ... !TONY LO BIANCO!
Plldadnllwlc:lldtir ~,......, ~--.• _ NORMAN JEWISON • PATRICK PALMER ·JOE E::il I tHHAS
~11rJOE ESZTERHAS..i SYLVESJER STALLONE Dllctard....,.,• LASZLO KOVA~u.~.1M1ct1JBILL CONTI
e.aMPlalaarGENE CORMAN ~101Qfr T!l!!!!..11!!!
~SEA
GYPSIES
After her divorce.
k• got to know
some pretty
Interesting
people •••
Inducting herself.
ENTERTAINMENT I MOVIE REVIEW
,.
_ _..8th SMASH WEEK . ..___
''AN ENGROSSING THRILLER."
BRISTOL CINEMAS Cosio Meso CIHiDOME Orange
540·14144 634·2553
STADIUM DRfVf.IN Orange
~~710
It began asa dream ...
and became
an adventure
of a lifetime.
'
l
FOOD DAILY PtlOT CS
Wine 'n' Chicken
' C o o k 1 n c c a n b e v. cup •ucar eTeatJve. And no food al· 1 tablespoon Corn·
V.a Lhe coot 'a lma&ina· atarch
Ion auch free reign aa ~ t e a a p o o D
•hlcken. -powdered cmser .. Stir· ~eel Sweet and 2 t ab le s po o n s
\ ·1our Cti'i~lten " as a vineear
ic>urmet recipt: with an 2 tablespoons aoy
Oriental touch but it's sauce
all·American in pre· ~ t.eupoon salt
paration ease. Only the "4 teaapoon pepper ~hopplnc of ingredienta Heal ottOn wok or
takes Ume and a busy laree fry pan; add
hostess can do this chicken and stir·fry over
abead ol time, storing blch heal for S minutes.
the cbtcken and Add onions, celery,
veaetables separately. areen pepper and water
cbestnuta; aUr~fry for 2
minutes. Add pea pods,
pineapple cbunu wlt.b
syrap and broth; stJr.fry
2 more mlnutea. Mix
together •~tar, corn·
starch, 1ln1•r,
vln•1ar, IOY uuce, aalt
and pepper; pour over
chicken and veaetables
in wok. Reduce heat and
simmer unUI thlcbned,
about 2 minutes. Do not
overcook! Serve over
hot rice or Chinese
noodles. Makes 4 serv·
lngs.
Wi NE ROA STE D .-----------------
Wine
roasted
ch/eked with
rice stuffing.
=~~s!f'.~~ T, urn an.·: ordin~n' nieal
1 teaapoon aalt .. ~ Y '4teupoonpe~ • t F h C . . dr~cd~nc~-·~~\:ir:,~ .. 1.R o· renC UISIDe.
1 cup Ions 1ratn
rice, uncooked
1 pound c hicken
gizzards, ground
1 cup diced onion
i,.; cup diced celery
1 tablespoon
chopped chives
1 teupoon salt
~ teaspoon pepper
2 cups chicken broth
2 tablespoons •bite
wine
~ teaspoon
rosemary
v. te as poon
turmeric
Sprinkle lmide cavity
of chicken with 1 tea.a·
poon salt and "'• teas-... ...... ~ ........... .
.~--..,OOR-tK!J>Per; place in
shallow .baking dish.
Heat 'i4 cup rendered rat
in large fry pan on
medium high tem
perature; add rice and
brown. stirring constant·
ly. To browned rice add
ground chicken gizzards,
onions and celery. Saute
until gizzards turn
-
...... .... ...-•• •* .••.• .,. ...... _,
' • .-. •flll• , ••• t.-' •• • ... \t , ..... _,_,, I •• _...,.., -...-; .......... . __ ... ,. ..... ... . . ~·=A.~~ ... ·!
.~ ·=--.----\....
Come in now for your
free copy of our
exclusive Cordon Bleu
recipe of the week.
1 brown.
I Add chives, 1 teaspoon
salt, '1'J teaspoon pepper
. and chlckep broth to
rtce and lluarda. brtQI
to. a W ; reduce Miit,
cefer. lllallltr for JO
ml•ut•. u.ittJ1 atilff
cblcken with rice •tu!·
ting and truaa wltb
akewen. <II ...-8.1'7.
put remaining 1tuffin1
in heavy foll and place
ID bating pan.)
f
Melt remainder of
chicken fat; add wt.De, rosemary and tmmeric
and baste generously
the whole stuffed blrd.
I
I
I
~ I
f
l
Bake, uncovered, at
400"F. tor 10 minutes. Reduce beat to 3WF.
and bake, 1 hour, COY·
ered, bastlna every 15
minutes
STIR·FB.IED SWEET
AND 80U1l aDCKEN
2 cups uncooked 1·
tncb pieces bftller~ryer
chicken
oil
2 tablespoons aaled
i,.; cup sliced •Prlnl
onions, tops included
% cup diagonally
sliced ~ery
1 Y.z cups of sliced
green pepper
1 can (SY.a-ounces)
water cbestnuta, sliced
1 package (6-ounce)
frozen aaow pea pods
1 can (8'4~unces)
plDeapple chunka
~ cup chicken broth
"•••·····" R ..... ._
new Iden,
menueand
' loc.I food,..
Wtd••d• ......
DAILY PILOT
t8ulld a Ml•~ of I Z
p~ ..... ------r-r I
Cook with t'he Beef
that meets the --r-"
standards of the Cordon Bleu .....
For almost 100 years. the prestigious Cordon Bleu Cooking School in
Paris. Franoe has served as the training wound for some of the world's
gtUtest chefs. Its outstanding reputatton has made It synonymous with the
ftnest In French cooking techniques. It was here that 100 lbs. dour
Bonded Beef was put to the test. And the overwhelmingly favorable
reaction of the Cadon Bleu staff prompted them to develop a dozen
different recipes just for us. Lucky·s Bonded Beef was now deemed
worthy of betng proclaimed the beef that meets the standards of the
Cordon Bleu.
fortunate enciugh to reo?fve a new one absoutely free each week. J~ by
stopping off at our meat cpunter and picking one up. There's no purchase
required. ,
One, two, three JIOU're a gourmet!
Thts week our recipe is POT AU FEU A LA FRANCAISE. (pronounced
Potofer). Like all the Cordon Bleu recipes we offer. it's easy to
prepare. You'IJ need either a boneless tip or a cross rib roast. plus lots of
vegetables like carrots. turnips. leeks. celery, onions and garlic. Collect the
complete set of twelve Cordon Bleu recipes and enjoy a dozen ways of
serving your family the beef that meets the standards of the Cordon Bleu.
Look for the gold label on packages of our Bonded Beef. Ifs your
guarantee of complete sattsfactJon or your money back. f{om delidous
Cordon Bleu recipes to great everyday low prices on a wide variety of
foods. et Lucky •. that's whet discount ls all about.
From them ••• to u• ••• to you.
Since the policy of 1he Cordon Bleu has always been to carefuUy protect
thetr cooking secrets. we felt extremely honored and privileged that they
would share their exclusive recipes with our customers. And now you're
Fresh Bonded Beef
CROSS
RIO ROAST 14 8 ()()fj(lf~ OONDlD OU1 CHUCK Lil
OLAOECUT
CHUCK STEAK 88
!ION0£01lHI lll e
"ID(YEnLET
°""IO(IA
DOMDnS TIP STEAK
llOIOO • 11 OOUC>
GP.OUHD DEEF PAmES
.• 2.78
.• 2.06
~,!~·~---•A' '•• ~ 3.29
Meat Items
SUCEO DUF UVEP. _, .. .•• 88
COMISH GAME HtHS
C.AAOI A '°°' moto 111()n" IA 1.39
JIMMYDfAH,S...USAGt 1 "9 ~ •1w tO .'fJ
CUM&• HAM HMI "°"""' ..,...,,~ '"' •<~l' ... 2. 78
HORMEJ,.sual>DAC~""' i.79
LAOYUE sucm DACC>tf
,tM11&.AaUOt•,1••-•llllr(j 1.38
FANID JOHN DACOtf
•OUO '<t"'4 1.49
LOIH PORK CHOPS .• 1.98
POAA LOIN ROAST ,....°""°" ...... ~ ... .. 1.38
POP.K SPAA£P.IDS
(O\INlll•)lf\I .... ,"°""°" 0.. .a
POP.K LOIH CHO~
•MWI 1t 1.78
T·OONE
STEAK
TOP SIP.LOIN
STEAK
00H£LOS~OlDOW
lOIN lll
238
7·DONECHUCKST£AK
l()CllO•tl 1t 1, 16
LAP.GE ENO P.ID 11.0AST
llOHOIDllt • .a f ,66
LARGE ENO AID STEAK .. -.. •·• .• 1.78
Canned & Packaged
!LADY LEE
~~~()(~,25 11in Gil e
l: LIOOY'S
TOMATO JUICE ~9
4b0l CAN e 4'fi
Canned& Packaged
!POTATO
~~~v ~9 _ 24 01 LOAf e 4'fi
P KEPJf'S FRUIT NECTAR 6 •-N\ •>OI <.Ar. ,25
P OP.TtGA CHILI SAL.SA "9 6 (1NtN IOI (l.'9 .tJ
lORTEGOTACOSH~ -•49
p VI.ASIC PICl<L£ SP£AP.S
b J•••••11tO ~•OI .t.~ .69 I GATOMD£ DRINK JtOI ... .47
P Hl·HO CMO<EM 69 A ~ ..... ""'~·
P NCEAP.OHI
6 "'' ... .,\ ) .. 1111•4\ 6't0/ -.49
P PLANTER'S PEANUTS 6 le.A.•''"' ,.Ol lA" 1.89
P MACAP.Otfl 6 CHU'SE 6 (,()oOlr.t# .. -~ I ,U/ _,,. ,25
P ROWUTA 0£AHS b NllWlll llJOI CA" .~7
Dairy & Frozen
Delicatessen
b OSCAR MA YER
VARIETYPAK 149 sucro 1.:> vAA11111 ~' '101~
Liquor
GAU.OP.EOP.OSE~!.., 2.99
p JOHNHY'WALKEP.SCOTOi
6 "'01At!11 _, 1 l\11~ Dir 17 ,49
LUCKY OMNDY
t ,~.,-.,. 9.~
•o..n-~" ,..~ -· •• ,., o., •• --
Produce
FRESH
STRA WOEP.P.IES 5 9
1~1 J.3, OUAAI e
LOOSE
CAP.ROTS
'11\M (, 11\l~ LO .17
VALENCIA
ORANGES nu or MCI l& .19
DULK TURNIPS
(_(,, ......
GMPUP.UIT
1110()11-" lll<•(()lo(HhtA
DISHGARD£H PlAHT
• llOl•ro •AC11-w•--o
.•. 29
, •• 18
, .. 3.98
~APPY
CINCO DE
MAYOi
... what discount is an about.
. -
.... ( • +e ., • .... ' •· "'• • " ~ • .. • • • •O I #e •.J••" ,, • • •• ~
••• • '• ~·.O t • "' t\.,,•
'"" -UllA&.I ITWT -
\ • I
J • #
. ' .. . .
g DAILY PILOl Wednesctay, May 3, 1978 FOOD
Fireplace Corn .Poppi:Dg: Ii.et Flames Die QoWn ·
POPCORN POPPER -uy.., lfte•t eolama
•• ao·ht popcon·
mald•I lntereste4 sne.
Wllere could eae
parcbaae tile popcora
basket to wtdcJa you re-
fer red? A gourmet
shop? Would It be 1uUa·
ble over direct beat: a
barbecue or range.top
burner!" -Mar~la G.,
Nortbrldg~.
A : The wire basket is
for use over direct flame
-in the fireplace or
~rhaps a campfire. It
wouldn't be suitable for
the uses you mention.
Most likely place to find
one is in a shop that
specializes in fireplace
equipment. Or, read on
"Aft4:r reading about
fireplace popcorn pop.
pers, I bought one at
Sears. It (tbe popcorn)
burnt black. What am I
doing wrong?" -
Sharon D., Woodland
Hills.
A. Fireplace ,poppers
are tricky to use and do
take some practice. You
must keep the basket
above the name, not in
it, and the basket must
be kepl·in constant mo-
tion (good exercise.) Let
the flames die down a
bit ; don't try to pop corn
in a roaring inferno.
WINE CALORIES -
"One thing I find dif·
ficult to abstain from is
wine. I am especially
fond of Catawba. Please·
advise wlaiTlilncJ orwlne
is lowest in calories." -
Mrs. J.E. 8., Old Town,
Fla.
A. There a re literally
thousands of kinds of
wine, so here's a general
rule: the sweeter the
wine and the higher the
alcohol content ..
the more .calories .
Catawba i s de -
finitely a sweet (high·
calorie> wine; about 125
ca lories per 3-ounce
serving (14 percent
alcohol). Try lo develop
a taste for the crackly-
d ry, light proof wines
like dry Chablis, as low
as 59 calories ( 11 per-
cent alcohol)
SALAD BAR
COM PLAINT -"I join
you in your appreciation
of salad bars. but have
one complaint: persons
who are assembling
their salads ... talk
over the display, and
spray It with saliva. In
your position as a re·
porter. you might Induce
restaurants to place a
sheet of glass over the
salad." Helen S., Moun·
tainside, N.J.
Sii•
Gou....et
By Barbera Glbbon9
by the average Your letter brln1s
diet conscious reader up a warning that
who simply wants to we'd like to reaffirm:
cut down on s a It anyone on any "special ..
a.a a precaution. medjcally·prescrlbed
P·~ lh•S CO\IP()n ilOng ,,..,n 1ny OM ml"<JlllC!li•f''
crni< oH coupon ano get OOVDlt "" ~· ngs l'fOI IO •te;•uoe •toa-lf• 0t l1H coupons o< e•ctto int vai..e 01
Llnlit011e e__... ,., 111~1 c~
Md Limit• D~Olll*M hr C....,..., c...-......... ., ....... ., 10, 1t71
... ,...,..., •• \ CO..liO" a'O"q ...i• .,_, ~ .,,.....,«IY'f' S
t• •• , t_l. c.~ t'IO"' \1"0 Qt"' OOvblf • .,,. ll•ng\ "O .-:,
• .f'I• ., .. I • • • f't' (O ... O(lf') o· ... ,ffO Jre ... ~ ot
r----90•~·~
i DOUBlE COIFON
I Pr('Cjl!MI th·~ coupot'I alo~··"' ·1"Y onfl tnanuf&Cfu••' \ ' J c 1•hl\ 011 c:oui;<>n al"la (lf'l •J.Juo f' 11'\f' 1•v.,,os Nn• to I .rcfoOP fPla .,., 'o• hrt Ct.iutJ A, 0 ' ,.,.cpiieo m~
I "'" ;; ot 1ne ••tm
I Lllnlt ON C-Per M-ltcl\trtf'I COUPOft
tnd 1 tole! ti 12 Double COOlll9M ... , Ci\111 .........
t Coupon El!ecll•• Mer 4 11\tu "'"' 10, 1171 I , ... c_v•o1t1.•---·--o..c:'""c:'"' I ~------------------~---------'
ther~peutlc diet -
diabeUc, IOdlwn or fat-
reslrlcted, cholesterol·
controlled -ahol.tld
never use any recipe
that Includes any !Ure·
dient not on yoW' doc-
tor's liat of permltted
foods. .,,. ..
Hamburaers eeain?
Even hasnbur1er fans
get tired ot the same old
thing jn the same old
wa)J. 'today we've cot a
trio of ground beef
dishes in fancy foreign
dreu ..• all non·
fattenin1. Be sure to use
fat·trlmmed ground
beef, not ordinary ham·
burger (more tban dou·
ble Ulie calories.>
1 Instead of burgers
over the coals.
American.style, ln-
au1urate your coolcout
season with spicy
ground beef kebobs
threaded on alee-... If
you're net ready ,W Jl
fresco dining qulW )'el,
P1twn11n.s couoon il'Of'O ... in any one m.nulactU<e< s
cents oll tovpen Ind 9f1 OOVDle Ille Y.,"11$ NOi 10
"'CluOe rfla•ler 0t lr14! COUl)Onf 01 UCfed 11\t Vll\ie of
1ne ~em
Lllnll ON Coupon Plf lilellufectiww't c..-_, LltNI • OOV11!!t c._... P• C-.,_.
COlll*I !tltctiwe 111., 4 t1v11Ill.,10, 1t1t
fl701/102
IDllLE OOIAJN
P•tWf'l I~ (O\IOOt' iltoi>o ,..,. at') Ol't' "'alU«lv'l!I I CP'I~ OI' (0..~ ll'O ?"' 00..00. !'If \aV "OS "'°1 le. · '"''°' ·-.~ "-" 0' ., .. <~$"0' ff"HO tftl "~ ot
do them under the
broiler. The low.fat
yoguart baste is a'n
authentic touch. •
JNDIAN MINCED
BEEFKEBOBS
1 pound fat-trimmed
beef round, ground ·2
tablespoons lemon Juice
1 tablespoon inatant·
blending flour
1 onion, ~hopped
3 c loves garlic,
minced (or one·half
teaspoon instant)
V.. cup chopped fresh
parseley <or 4 teaspoons
dried) v.. .teaspoon coarse·
ground pepper
•h t~aspoon grt>und
cinnamon
V.. teaspoon ground
clove v.. teaapoon chili
powder
Optional: Ol)e·balf cup
plain low-fat Yogurt
Combine all ingre·
dlents except yogurt
and toss li~htly' to•blend
well. Shape into eight
DOUBLE OOIRJN
• .. ~-·~ fl•A'-l1lfllClll1flC.Jf~W'1f\""" Of"f' ,,..,,.v ...
t 1; ·I-. t ,1f 'fflt.fUU'' •ff'U g.."I 00uO&t° lhf' ""'l1Q'i ~ K•
't l,11.. •01.1·'-I fl//I , ...... C..C¥JU'""' \)I •'•l\f('(t tftf• '°'"'"' t I . . ·~:h OM C4Ml1M41 ,., llltfWl.ctwtf'a e...-.
1M L""'1 t DOllll!t COICIOM Per C111 ....... Ceupod!IK1tre .. ., 4 tllN ... , 10, 117' . ..
meatballs and thread on
skew~rs. Brush Ughtly
with yogurt, if desired.
Broil or barbecue,
brushing frequently with
yogurt, ~ntil well·
browned, about 7 to 9
minates. Turn to brown
evenly. (Serve with rice
simme red in fat·
skimmed beef broth, i(
desired.) Makes four
servings, about 19S
calories each with
yogurt and without it,•
180 calories each.
• .. t i;-
~.-
6 ad~~fi~~i
r ----------9· _____________ ,
• ' ,. 10)1104 '
: llUMBIR '?NI~ i.
! DOUBLEr.IUON li.
I ' P1n~n1 ln•s tovuoo 110~q w•I" ""'' 11ne ~n11•.leltu11>-~ : t uni~ 011 couoon 100 Qel aouD•P In~ u-...n9s Not 10 1 I ,. , 11Cf' ,,.,. ,., 1lf hf'f' COUOOh' O• f'•C~fd '"'• I
1 lftllV~ f til'lf' 1Pm
Lim11 OM CouPon Per llltnvlaclul'er'I Ceut*I t
I 9nc1•101111 o1 12 Double j:OUPtftl '" Chll> ......... I I CoupO<> ltt.ctlwe May 4 tllru M•J 111. 111• I
I '""'c:-•-olflr---~~°'"ICj.,.Cn, I ~---------------------------..;.,
I •• I • I 1' P•ttMI lh•5 GOO"°'! •'P"V w.1h 111, 004 manul "'" t' 1 I c~nlS oil covp0n fVlO 9'1 aout>lt l'>e Y••"9S Nol 10
'
•n<:luoe •ec•••• or "'" ~ °' eauecs ll'e ·•·~~ o• It e ,,...,
: L!Mlt ON C ....... Ptif MeNl«twtf't ~
. '
'Club niemDers.
-..cl t 10W ol 12 Ooullle C~ per Clll9 llllMtber.
I ~ 111«11n M•r 4 """ 1118)' 10, ttft • I , .. c-f•9J'l' ___ ....,,. __ c•c:" L
· H'oue you Joined Ralphs
JtflUftber one au yet... • It's easy to join. Stop by your nearby Ralplts for
details.
~-----------------------~----'· . . '
Pantry Fillers Sulle' Produce
I
A. There are \uch de-
vices for salad bars,
with a sheet or cle ar
plastic, aptly named a
"Sneeze-Guard," ~vaila
b I e in commercial
resturant supply houses. ~c~~·~ 21& '69 _... .. ~i;eetcorn 21or.29 ~
FETA CHEESE
CALORIES -"I'm a
vegetarian'but use some
of your recipes. As I
count calories It's good
to see a calorie count
per portion. I have had
trouble finding the count
for feta cheese ... " -
Doris E., PhJladeJpbia, Pa.
A. Feta ls becoming so
popular that we get
several letters every
month about It. Feta
cheese, at 40 percent fat,
1s 76 calories per ounce.
That's lower than Swiss
or Cheddar (105 and 110
per ounce).
SOIDUM ALERT -
Re: March "Reader
Recipe" winner, (Low·
Ca l orie Low ·S alt
Sauce). "You have done
an Injustice to <fe•I
hypertensives who must
eliminate salt from the
diet. All cheese except
those labeled salt·free
contain salt. All pt_e·
pared mustards, bot
pepper saacea eontaln
barmfal salt. Prepared
horse radish b loaded
with salt. Marcarlne,
too. The aame effects,
aan1 salt, caa be Ob·
talned wltll dry
ma1tard, ~•Y~••e or
black pepper, dry bone
radl1b, 1aJt.free buttef.
As you may ••e.u, I am
an acace hypelUDuve -
300 over l*-Mfore ar·
reated wltb die& and
medication." -F. C.
McC., Greeavllle, S.C.
A. Thank you for the
warnings and
alternative recommen·
dallona. Thia isn't •
therapeutic diet column,
so 1t wasn't our lilteoUon
to recommend the. r •
cipe for 1uttltt& ~
alrict aalt-free dletl. We
picked lt 11 a wlnner
because we thou1llt lt,
would be welconuct
~I . "
lllade Si.au or ,._ .. 7_9_
51Nka or ,_ .......
11--.e Chucle
Stellb or
A-Humber
will • ..., dePMI· dOflO on ltllek·
NU i<ld Mff of
cut.
---. ... ~ , ... '
.... •
j,
...... -....... ,._ ............ _ ...
r-A,_v.,......
l!l.J Puritan Oil
~ PC:..k and Beans ..
!;?] F'abrk: Softener
Super Deli
[""JI'"" ...... l\!J Dubuque Plumpera
~ Solt-2Tllll
l\!J Imperial Margmine
~Sliced Salami
-,.~ 83 bit ••
s:;: .• 89
lleL 94 1111 ••
:::. I 79
'::: 1''
;:.89
:.:: • 75
Prlcll 111 c'M Miit 4twu~10-1t7t
.......... to .... ,.. ..... '
.. """"" ....... " ... 1h .... ,.
hrye.r~ .......... . Al ..... . ............ •te.a ..... y1
~o~io.;"v .. Pef .17 lb.
~ Potabiin1ewh11•Ro .. .19 ....
Ml
~ ''etfl'"" .39 Pod Pe•. .... lb.
Golden Premium Meals
~ fntolS•-·Whllelllpplflt1• 29'· Chinook Salmon ~"! ....
lb.
~l....,l1tC11t • Beef Brisket ,., • 1''
~ Af'Y 5tH Peckf9e Ground Biif .~ ':. .79
'usoA '"'chue-.,., 121 'm1c1 7-Bone R~ ..
USDA leefCINdl·I_... 2" 'm1t1 Cube Steak · "" lb.
r---,~MI'·-.--.. I s..,. 1.CIO + .Ol'Tu Wiii CtlC*I IAM I
Show•P-OeclfMor C--.
I WMh c-lftd ' 1000 I Fry Basket ,.,., IO . I Deep Fryer r.~ .. l! I I L11t110M11_..,.o,,.e~...,c....,.. I
CO\lpOll 1"9clift M'J 4-Mty 10. 1t71 L COUPON .I ---------
.....
-
\
l
5
'" 11
1S
rd
01.'
ut
'llS
~l'
)n
·cl-
in
~ 8 in
l o
go
U'ld
it.s
}~g
blic
be
tme
ts
JON
J
l
BuntlnietoD Beach
Fountai.D. Valley
EDITION
Afternoon 11
N.Y. Stoeks
I ~
VOL. 71, NO. 123, .. SECTIONS, 44 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
~
WEDNffDAY, MAY 3, 1978 TEN ce '
!Five • County Hopefuls Raise $320,055:
Baker who Is trying lo regain t~~i
supervisor's seat he held for l2l
years reported total campaign re-i
ceiptsofSS9,846.
By GA&Y GRANVILLE
OI .. o.lty ...... S"8ff
Campaign finance reports
flied with the Orange County
Registrar or Voters this week
show:
-The county's most heavily
financed camgalgn is in the
second supervisoriai district
where (ive candidates have ac-
cumulated $320.055 for the June
8 primary election campaigns.
I 4Escape
•
t HB_Fire
! By Leap
t Four apartment dwellers, in-1 eluding ar eight-year-old ~y.
jumped from a second story win-• t dow to escape a predawn fire in r Huntington Beach today.
• Embers from a barbecue
I brazier used earlier in the eve·
n1ng ignited combus tible
material on a balcony patio at
J6761 Viewpoint Lane. firemen
-' ~ said. The fire spread to the roof
l and living room ofthe apartment.
J' causing an estimated $8:500 In
" damage.
( Patncia Hamilton. 35. her son
'
'
J Brian, 8. her brother, Ron
Harden. and a friend. Robert I Hagemeyer, woke up shortly
after 2 a.m. to find the path to
the front door blocked by the in·
ferno.
Rarden rushed the others into
a bedroom and closed the door. · 'the four persons then made~lhe
t two-story jump to safety. Only
minor scrapes and yuises were
suffered by the victims, said fire
department Capt. Roger
'
Hos mer. The blaze was ex·
tinguished within JO minutes.
"It was a classic example or
, the occupants not panicking due
to lbe situation." Hosmer added.
Most of the damage wu con·
fined to the one apartment, fire
officials said.
Six Inches
l Of Snowfall
' I
t
I
j
t
Hits Kansas
ELKHART, Kan. IAP> -
Snow ·blanketed portions of
Kansas today, with up to 6
inches on the ground at Elkhart in
the southwest corner or the state.
Dodge City had its first May
soowr all in 63 years.
"It is the first time we've had
measurable snow in May as far
back as 1915. so it's a pretty rare
occ~rrence.'' s aid Lee Stinson of
the N allonal 1\'eather Service
gtalion al Dodge City.
.Jae-. Walsh, who answered the
telephone for the Morton County
sheriff's office al Elkhart, said
I.here were 5 inches to 6 inches of
snow on the ground throughout
the area and it was sUll snowing
tatrl,v hard thl14 morning.
Walsh said roads in the
southwest corner or Kansas
were slushy but there were DO
repqrts of accidents.
In the sout hern Rockies,
meanwhile, the weather service
reported up to 17 inches of snow.
In tl)e Oklahoma Panhandle
and far northwestern Oklahoma,
meanwhile, the stale highway
patrol reported snow made driv-
ing hazardous over many roads
and toppled limbs of some trees.
-RepubUcao Jobn Scbmlta is
far outdistancing his rivals for
the Republican nomlnaUon in
the 36th State Senate District
when it comes to campaign
financing.
-aepubllcan Lee WatJdn.s is
coming close to matching GOP
rival Marian Bergeson in availa-
ble campaign dollars in the five-
candidate race for the
Republican nomination for the
74th Assembly District.
-Tboagb unopposed in the
Democratic primary election
Assemblyman Dennis Mangers.
D·Huntington Beach, is spending
as rapidly as the Republican
co'ntenders battling for their
party's nomlnaUon.
-Faced wit.It a cbaJJeace rrom
five relatively uriknown contend·
ers. Sherltr Brad Gates this
year has collected only llOO to
finance hl&~tttlon bid.
Pacing the heavy spending in
'DON'T THINK I CAN STAND' PUBLICITY
Or. Jeffrey MacDonald of Huntington Beach
the Second Supervisorial Dis· Schmit collected his $170,757
trict is incumbent supervisor war chest over the past three
Laurence Schmit. and one half years.
Schmit's campaign statement But challenger Harriet
showed that he has collected as Wieder. a former Huntington
of April 23, $170.757. Beach city councilwoman. has
So far, Schmit has spent collected her S7S.580 campaign
$98,604 on his campaign to head fund since nominations closed
off the chaUeoge of four contend· March 10.
ers. Included in that sum is $10.000
And his statement shows that loaned Mrs. Wieder's campaign
he has $64,423 on hand to see him by her husbantf, Irving Wieder.
through the campajgn. Former supervis or David . ~--:..f
Ohio Horne Fire ··,~~;.
Of that, Baker loaned $22,500 to
his own campaign.
A fourth candidate in the
Second District race, Sonia Son-
JU , showed on her campaign
statement that she borrowed
S30.000 at 10 percent interest
with real estate as security to
<~e ELECTION, Page AZ>
Cops Saye Priest
As Firelllen Strike:
MANSFIELD. OhiQ <AP > -A
92 -year-old retired Catholic
priest was rescued from his
burning home today by four
police officers arter striking city
firefighters refused to battle the
blaze.
J
l
' ll
Murders Haunt Dad,
Huntington Husband
It was the firs~ma· r fire in the northern Ohio · y or 55.000
since firefighters uck Monday
demanding highe wages.
Mayor Richard A. Porter. who
helped (lght the fare, said he was
starting the paperwork needed
to force firefighters back to
work or fire them under Ohio's Feq~uson Act, whiCb forbids
strikes ~>-' public employees.
Those igti)ring the law can be
By PETER ARNETf
u s.-cwie C#n••······ A g.rieving father in New
Jersey de t ermined lo re,
member. A popular physician a
continent away trying to forget.
Haunting them both, the
memory of a brutal night in
North Carolina eight yean ago.
Those forces are behind Mon-
day's Supreme Court dec1alon
that Dr. Jellrey MacDonald of
Huntington Beach must stand
trial for the 1970 murders or his
pregnant wife and two children.
overturning a Circuit Court dis-
missal of the case.
For Alfred Kassab. 56 , of
Dayton. N.J .. the high court rul-
ing is further vindication of an
unprecedented personal cam·
paign to punish t he man he
believes is responsible for the
stabbing murders of his step·
daughter, Collette, 24, and her
daughters, Kimberly, 5, and
Kristen, 2.
"It has been tremendous personal pre~sure to hav~
someone running around loose
that you are convinced killed your
daughter and grandchildren. t
now believe the trial will go
ahead,•' Kassab said in a
telephone interview.
For Dr. MacDonald, 34, who
has insisted his family was"
bludgeoned to death by a group
or people who broke into
his home at Fort Bragg, N.C ..
the court fmding means that "I
will have lo go oo ·bearing the in-.
credible weight of accusation,
yet there is no way I can be
found guilty. This affair has
become the central overwhelm-
ing force in my life.·•
Singlemindedly pursuing the
case has been Kassab, a sales
executive for a New Jersey e1g
company who-at first supported
his son·in·law's assertions of in•
nocence. But after he obtained a
' transcript or the nine.week military Inquiry that dismissed
the charges against MacDonald,
then a captain In the army
medical corps, Kassab said he
changed his mind.
Kassab was also regularly
calling press conferences to
publiciie charges against Mac-
Donald., Among otber evidence. Kassab claimed that a pajama
top, which the doctoP ~aid he
wore during the gang attack and
later laid over the body or his
wife, actually had puncture
holes that mat~hed the stab
woundalnhiswife acbest.
Meanwhile, MacDonald was
slartinl'life anew in Long Beach
as director or emergency
medicine at St. Mary's medical
center. He also became presi-
dent of the Long Beach Heart
Association and medical direc·
tor of the Long Beach
paramedic program. The local
community rallied around when
he was indicted on murder
counts in 1975 and helped raise
his Sl00,000 bail.
Since then MacDoanld has
been fighting the case on pro-.,
ceduralgrounds. ,
"My lawyer tells me that a
jury trial will last at least six
months, cost up to half a million
dollars and mean searing
publicity. I don't think I can
s tand that." he said in a
telephone interview.
"The facts or the case haven't
changed since 1970 when an ex-
h au s tl ve military i nquiry
specifically determined that the
charges against me were untrue
and recommended tliat other
people be investigated," Mac·
Dona Id said. His lawyer.
Bernard Segal, said he expected
two more years at least of ap-
pellate hearings.
•·A case Uke this begins to
have a life of its own.
Prosecutors look at this case
a nd r,1ure they can use it to ride
the path&to glol'y," Segal said.
. Allred Kassab said be would
keep pushing the case ... I have
maintained publicly that I would
personally administer justice if
the courta failed to," he said.
When uked l£ this amounted
to a vendetta, Kassab declared,
"Yes, it does. There ls no way
on earth J would let him get
away with it." But he added he
would accept any verdict or a j ury.
fired.
. The fire involved a brick
-apartment building .where the
Rev . Michael A. McFadden
lived.
"We weren't sure anybody
lived there until we saw a
Cleveland Plain Dealer on lhe
porch and a lighted doorbell,"
patrolman David Mast said.
He and three ot.ber patrolmen
rang the beU. got no answer. and
broke the door down.
McFadden was found asleep in
a first-noor bedroom.
The patrolmen brought the
priest and a few belon.cin~s -
jackets on a hanger, a small file
box and a slortfolio of memen·
toes of his 30 years as priest of a
church in nearby Shelby -out
or the building.
"It's very hard to start over.
I'm 92 you know," McFadden
sale! as he left the scene with the friei1ds~
Clayt.On Long. Mansfield safe-
ty director, Mayor Porter. and
the fi re department chaplain,
The Rev. R. L. Butler, were the
only persons other than police to
respond to the blaze. ..
A spokesman for the city's 103
striking firemen said the first
major fire in the city since the
start or the walkout "fi'?ltt not
altered their stand.
"The men are still determined
to stay out until we get a con·
tract.·· be said. "We went to
council last night with an offer
and it was flatly denied. The
monkey's on their back now."
The firefighters want a
Sl.000-a·year pay raise in a
three-year contract. Currently.
starting pay is $12,626. No new
talks were scheduled.
Huntington
Trash Being
Picked Up
(r .
a
IS·
1··
"(•
m
it y
~1·
1-;
!fl'
all
·of
1e."
j on
IO<>l
,., ........... RlS
MANSFIELD, OHIO FIRE BRINGS UNLIKELY HELP
ReY. -ff.A . 8 Uthtf, left, Mayor A.A. Porter
Strike Front Calm
As Pickups Go On Jnt\·
11ge
JSC'S
The 16-day-old Orange County
trash truck strike continued to-
day amid a calm that left al
least one disposal firm owner
uneasy. '
"Everybody's so quiet today,
something's going to happen,"
said Dick Taormina, owner of
Anaheim Disposal.
"No rocks were thrown at my
trucks today," he said. noting
that picketers from Teamsters
Local 396 just.turned their backs
as newly hired non-union drivers
went on their rounds.
~ton
management has offered $6 c:an
More than a million Orange ois~·
County residents were left this
without trash pickup service for
two weeks. Ott Monday. non-;;uE
union drivers began making the
rounds, but the combination of •
inexperience and mounds of
~~~ ~~i~dasS:h!t~~e.left collec-10ard
Co ast
!ame
. but
wus
!aUSC
rt in
1>ard-
l .
Three mches lo 4 inches had
fallen in Guymon by sunrise.
~ven inches to 8 Inches of snow
was rf?ported in Boise City since
Tuesd'ay afternoon, with about 3
inches still on the ground after
sunrise.
The National Weather ~rvlce
Hid the last 1nowfall lhil lat.e in
spring in Oklahoma was May 12.
1953, when 3 inches fell on Boise
City
Locating what he claimed
were "serious discrepancies" in
the hearing evidence. Kassab
said, "I went to congressmen, to
the FBI, to tbe Justice Depart·
ment. I finally swore oul a
criminal complaint before a
federal judge in North Carolina
in 1974. They empaneled a grand
jury and appointed a special
prosecutor.•·
MacDonald said he takes such
threatl seriously.
.. Kuaab is seeking a solution
to an incredible situation. He
haa become fanatlcal about
this," the doctor said. ..Thls
nightmare goes on forever."
Trash cdllecUon resumed in
the downtown Huntington Beach
area Tuesday for tbe first lime
since the start of the 16-day-old
Or-ange County trash workers
strike, officials said today.
And trub pickups are expect-
"We're meeting with the
federal mediator today."
Taormina said. "Maybe they
know something we don't."
The meeting with mediator
John Courtney was scheduled
for 11 a.m.
Weathe r
Night and morning low
clouds with sunny but
hazy afternoon Thursday.
Lows tonight In mid·SOs.
Highs ThW'l!lday 68 to 72.
las in
as a
~n in J
arr IGNORED
CRY FOR. HEU
~ to resume on a limlted basis
in Huntington Beach and Foun-
tain Valley about one day behind
the normal 1chedule this week.
\For example, Huntln1ton
Beach residents who usually
have their trash collected on
Wednesclay can expect to have It
picked up Thursday, Rainbow
Disposal otftclal1 said.
Non·unJon a nd manaaemant
employ* ot Rainbow Disposal
are belns Wied to collect the
trash, ottlclall Hid.
Drivers on Saturday rejected
what managers of tbe seven
struck firms had termed their
final offer. Drivers are seeklnl a
raise from $4.50 an hour to $8.50
over a three-year period, while
Jangle Gym Taken
From Pre-school
Hunllnston Beach pollco today
are beatina the '"'8hes In search
of a Junale p-m playaround ap. ~-n111nturtaken1rom • 'Pl"l'·RbOOt.
KANSAS CITY. Mo. lAP> -A Lupe Legaett, spokeswom•n
group ol about IO lndilJllll set up for th• Gerhard Kohn Pre·
camp at Lake Jaeomo ht tutem School, 8012 Ellil Ave .. Uated a
1acklon COUnty ovemlaht, wr •150 Jou ln the theft report med
pa11ln1 lbrou1b Kanna Clty. with aothorltlea.
INSIDE TODA 'l"
Pot Nf:tcn't low for her
hiubond ta1a omume, many
1ay. But the ~lident waa brutotl~ fndif /Ftnf tb her tn
public. Sn Page A9.
l•tlex
..
Cl!
.. .1%
1: • ....
All
= ....
M ..
to
ygo
~and tree ts hrd.
laking
~ublic o be
Some
ie it is
, t-JDQN
\
l
I
' [
i
'
•
HJf
port
Glavas Admits
Makin'g Error
By JOANNE REYNOLDS °' _ _...,,..........,
Newport Beach's B. J ames
Glavaa, head of tbe state
Organized Crime Control
Commissioo. today said he could
not explain an apparent error in
identifying a Cypress engineer
as an organized crime fi gure.
The name Joseph Vincent
Agosto of 5CM8 Hanover Circle,
Cypress, was among tbe 92
names or reputed mobsters
released by Glavas and state
Alto rney General Evelle
Younge r during a press
conference Tuesday in Los
Angeles.
However. the wrong Joseph
Agosto, who lives at the Cypress
address, says his middle name
is George, not Vincent a.nd he's
an engineer for the Rockwell
International plant in Downey.
Law enforcement authorities
n ot in vo lv ed with the
commission say they understand
that J oseph Vincent Agosto
intended to be listed actually
lives in Las Vegas.
Glavas. contacted today, said
he would not make further
co mm e nts b eyo nd the
inform ation carried in the
report.
As ked about the Agosto
identification. Glavas. a former
Newport police chief. indicated
b e thought J oseph Vincent
Agosto lived in Cerritos, not
Cypr ess.
Agosto was among the six
names of alleged crime figu.res
who live in Orange County.
None of the counti•ns
identified were available for
comment today. although
reputed crime figures living in
other parts of the stale reacted
angrily.
According lo the report,
Agosto has been the target of a
20·year effort on the part of the
federal government t.o deport
him to his native Sicily because
o f his organized crime
connections.
Other countians listed include
Eddie Zuber, with an address
listed al 3073 Yukon St., Cost.a
Mesa. Currently serving a
prison tf'nn in the federal prison
on T erminal Is land. " was
convicted in 1975 with five others
in a nationwide fraud scheme
that bilked investors out of
nearly Sl miWoo.
Dominic Brook.lier, Anaheim.
is listed by the report as a pot.en·
tial candidate to become bead of
organized crime in Southern
Califorrua. He has past convlc·
lions for armed robbery. larceny
and interstate transportation of
forged documents.
He is CUM"ently under indict·
ment for a variety of racketeer·
ing charges including the
murder of San Diego Mafia
leader. Frank "The Bomp"
Bompensiero.
nomination. defended release or
the report In light or hls past
comments that organized crime is not a ajgnificant problem in
California.
Re said the recent influx of
mobsten bas made the problem
comparable to that faced by
eastern states.
Younger also defended his or.
(ice, which has not flied a single
organizett crime pro.secution
during his term of office, by say.
ing state law enforcement needs
more "t.ooLs" such as wiretap·
ping authority and cooperation
or federal agencies lo fight Or·
ganized crime in California.
Here's the complete list 01
names as contained in the com·
mission report:
Antllony Accanlo, IMl.., Wen,; Vito Ft.,,k
Adreon•. Sa<I JoN; JoMPl't Vlnc•nl Aoo"o.
S••v•tore Amarene, San Francisco; P••· quele John Antanelll. San Oleoo; Dentel
Jamu APCIH. E.n<lno; .-L-'• Aeu!IMM. San Oleoo. JoHPh AntNlftv Atlefte, llort1w1oee; Norman Amo, U.. MoeleS..
Henry ~ 8•9lluo, S.. ....._; Joltll
lle9llazo, San Potdro. Ray e>..llel Beetle.,, San
Pedro; JoHPh Bonnano Sr .• Tunon. Arlr .•
S.lvatore VlnQrlt BoftnMo, C.mflllletl; Dominic
Phlttlp e-u•. MeMlmi "-....,, &uc:· <lerl. Pal"'~
Vln<Mlf o..Nfti< Gee l. ...... ""1t191; ~II c..11-. lllNI•:,.,.,,.... ... .,. ~. Cilen-
0.le; LoWs GMtlellofte. &.. ,.,.._., JoM9h
Xavier CetrllP. Los Gatos; Michael Htno
Co•e•I•. Simi va1i.v
JouPf\ o·A90luno, San DM9o: ~Is ~,..,.
O•lllz, R•nchO l• Co•I•, R•IPll o ·4n9910
An•lleom. A•ymond OeAow, Los Angelo,
19nuio Tony OH<tsclolo, Sun ll•llev. VI~
J•mes D•o•rot•mo. S.••'-· Louls Tom O<~. Co•1ne.
CMI Effltlel EcUlelfl, S.n ttantlsco, Edloartl
Fr.ncls ~l<llfl. Encino, Rey,._ Wtlllem Fer·
rlto, Erie,,....,,. Cln tedwal pr~lw cus.....,I;
Anthony ~ro. A,..,..m: JaO Fine, v.., Nuyi
tin Termol\91 l•land F't0.!•1 Prison!, CArlo
Flottntlflo. U.. Ange'"'~' Fr•U..W.. Mo-. a..c.~c~• ~,.,.ad.,.,,.
Tl•-• Geswlrtll. W _ _,, MlllS; Lwiel
GelfUM>, 8-Ch• F-ral Gorre<ll-1
Cent•. S.. ""*•I: J«• ~ GrlNft. ,,... Le_,,ro; -ry "'-u..e IHctl.
wmi.m HaifMw!U. lAftt eeaci.: Jao Don
Hffd, LOf>9 9eac:ll Cln U.S. Pe11.1tentliry,
Leawenwortl\ K-1; K ... !(.Mustian, Encino.
Gerald Ray Kl'90t'e, Sunland; Arno+d l.eo-d Klmme1, C.rl11Md: $10ney Korshall. Lo.
A119tlft.
J.-S J LAN.ti, San--· ~ t..v!MOn, 9eYWIY Hill•. H-lan JoM 1.1119rat .. e. S... Ole9o. S-.. U-. 0..-..,: Jell Lockef'o. I.AK Aft9ele; AotlMd 50,_, ~. ¥111 Val,_.,,
Ml<-0-MarcMM, '"-~: At'9flO AnlhOny -••no. San JoH. Phllllp R-t
Masters. LA Angele$; Harold Melll: ... a.wr1y
Hills; Mittan ZUCllef' Mende, Loi A .... lei. ,.,._
,_., Domh•k -..... ~I ctn Callfornl• stat• ~hon at Olinol; .-.. .. Jolwl Mli-, Wesll .... ;
Site-o.¥ld Miiier, -·h Hollywood,
Rotle<1 ~ ,.._, C-rllOI lift Feo.tll
Peftll!Mliary, San ..... o); Ke-ltl Palacllne. 'Yllnod....., "'61S; "9«o Vietor P-ta, Horth
Hollywood;. A-J-Pl<~arr•lo, Yuc:u Velle'f; Alf..., ...... l<Mll, ,.,_...,. Oeai lift ·-HI awtwel; JoMllft Louis Plea., SMt•
Cl¥a.
Dominic• R..._,~ ~; l°'*'-l..Olll•
lllcclardi, ~ Perl!; WchHI Anll'IOny
llluttallO, c..e. ...... / MtMfty "-· Dino vllle.
S.... on-1''-"lfto. RMcM Mlraet; o.ni.1
Serafin•, Alllert-: Alfred .toH•ll Siu , Holl ...... ;.,,_~ Sic.a, Sulll-; ""-"
~a. S-Valley; H...ilo Sk, lklr'tNf*; Atllllo 5"9n-. P«lllca Cift "-at Correct ..... 11_,IWtlon. Sen ll!'MrOI; Jlilon Wltliefft ~.
C.0.-; Fr-~ Ste!Uno. "°"1119 HIN•, '--hSt-LM~
J-..._ T-, Laa Aleml• Clfl .,._.,
Cort"KllOMI lnttlW\kll\ TtrMIMI 111-1; l..olM
Tell Jr., Loi~; Mktwet lllllly Them, Sen
Franc Mo.
Fr-JolWI Wiatt' 0..1.-d: OWtrtff Anl'-'f ~. 1.,i""111d; L-'-Jofln Vertw. Palm S.W· ~ ........ v11A11e. H«1ftHottywood. Victor Paul w..taer, l.o6 ...,..._; DoNld
JoM9ft Wleftff. Olwla Vim: MkMel i.nar-.
Lot Aliee1os; ,,.,_ browltz. Palf'll Scw'lftli: ~-d Altrecl z-r. ea.. Mae '"' .,_ ..
l'Tt-. '"""""* l~I.
* * *
rre.1r.,,.AJ
EJECTION •.
fillace ber campaign.
Tb• fifth candidate in the r•ee, former Garden Grove mayor :I. Tillman Willia.ma.
loaned ll!m•elf Ute UtT necaary to me u a caocBd•. ,
Wllllams' statement does not
show any other contributions or
loans.
In the S8lh Stale Senate Dis-
trict race. the statement filed by
Schmitz today shows he has col·
lected $10,920. lncludine $2,500
donatloo.s from both the Gun
Owners or C alifornia and
California Medical Political Ac·
lion Committee.
That amount put Schmitz well
ahead of his chief rivals for the
Republican nomination.
Former Fountain Valley city
councilman George Scott in·
dlcated oo his statement that he
has raised $22,932 for his contest
with Schmitz and the other GOP
candidates.
In the same race, Republican
Gil Ferguson s hows he has
amassed 523,240, $8,500 or it in
the form of pledges to finance
his try for the seat now occupied
by Senator Dennis Carpenter , R·
Newport Beach.
Mrs. Bergeson's campaign
statement shows that sbe tras ac·
cumulated $62,685 for use in her
ca mpai g n to gain the
Republican nomination in the
74th Assembly District.
Her chief challenger for the
GOP nomination Lee Watkins
filed a statement today that
sho ws he has accumulated
$60,629. most or it in the form of
loans to his campaign.
ln the 73rd Assembly District ,
Republican Nolan Fri22elle
showed be haa accumulated
$8.237 for his campaign while
rival Chuck Gibson indicated on
his statement a totaf of $17,589
for use in hia campaign.
Whoever wins the Republican
nomination in the 73rd will race
incumbent Mangers in the No-
vem bergeneral elec:tion.
Mangers' statement showed be
had a balance on hand April 23 or
Sl4,131 to finance bis re~lection
bid.
5 Motelmen
Charged
In Anaheim.
Five ADabelni motel operator5
or employees face charges of
keeping disorderly houses of
prostitution after their arrest
this week, Anabeilll police said
today.
The five are accused of know·
ingly renting rooms to pros.
titutes, PQl,ice said.
Arrested were Walter David
Helm. 21, a clerk at the Caravan
Inn. 130 W. Ka tell a Ave. ; DeJlllis
Wayne Iverson. 24, a clerk at the
Razzmatazz Motel, 823 S. Beach
Blvd.; Robert Leroy Tolle. 42.
manager of the Siesta 6 Motel.
821 S. Manchester Ave.:
Also, Magan Bbai Patel. 40.
owner of the Hacienda Motel.
2176 S. Harbor Blvd .. <1nd
Parsotam Rambbal Patel. 41, •
owner or the Fronterla Motel.
Ralph D'Angelo, Anaheim, ls
reportedly an associate of New
York's Gallo family and is con·
sidered t.o be a contact for East
Coast mob figures who come t.o
California.
Crime Figure
Sa,.. Younger
On Fund Wt
~ 933 S. Harbor.
Anthony Ferro, Anaheim, is
allegediy lnvolved in narcotics
activity and ls reputed to be an
e nforce r for crime figure,
Robert Paduano or nearby Cer·
ritos. according to the report.
James Testa, Los Alamitos, ls
also serving a sentence at
Terminal llland for extorting
payments from Los Angeles
bookm~rs. His partners in the
extortion scb~me included Mafia
figures. also named in the re-
po rt. Sam Sciortino, Pet er
Milano and Brooklier.
The commission report noted
tha t despite the increased activi·
Ly on the part ol organized crime
-it was estimated to be a $6.8
billion.a.year business in this
state -no one has emerged as
the leader in California.
"California does not yet have
someone sitting as its god·
lather," commented Glavas dur·
ing Tuesday's press conference.
You.qer, a candidate for the
Republican gubernatorial
.. , ..
DAILY PILOT
1 LOS ANGELES <AP> -Labor
lawyer Sidney R. Korshak may
be on state Attorney General
Evelle J . Younger's mobster
l~t. but that hasn 'l deterred
Younger from accepting $3,000
In campaign donations from
Kors hak and seeking yet
another for b1a gubernat.ortal bid
this year.
.. , threw it away after reading
it," Korshak said Tuesday of the
recent request for money "But
in vie w of the a ccus ations
Younger has made ~ainsl me. I
think he would want to go back
over his old campaign records
and return to me lhe money I
contributed to him in the past
"Because if I'm the kind or
person be says I am -and I'm
not -then I don't think he
would want it on bis record that
he took money from me."
Korshak la one of 92 .persons
Younger's Organized Crime
Control Commission identified
Tuesday as beine coMected with
the mob.
Younger-'• campaign officials
conrtrmed receivin& a contribu·
Uon of Sl,000 from Korshak in
May 1971. And county records
revealed a $2,000 campaign
donation by Konhak to Younger
in 1170.
BB Thief Gets
Stiish of Cash
Huntington ~ach police today
are inveall•aUn, the tbeft or
Sl.100 in cash fNm lta bldinl
place In a cloeet at a downt.o1"1 area bullwe ftnn.
Brandy OoCl~f · security of· Ocer fOT UM 0 . p;qar Company,
41J 12th. St.. to&d 1nvestJaatora.
the ttub d cub •u kept lo a
pillo•caae on &he floor ot the
dOMt.
5be tald h appears th mon.y
WH problafil1 ltoleft IOCDeUme ~ ... ,..,. .• " ...
Offieen said the arrests re·
s uited from a two.week in·
vestigat.ion by vice officers and
stemmed from information re·
ceived from prostitutes arrested earlii r.
School Slates
Celebration
Harbour View School will host
a Cinco de Mayo celebration
Saturday. the day after Cinco de
Ma yo, from 10 a .m . to 3 p.m. on
campus at 4343 Pickwick Circle,
near Himtingt.on Harbour.
Highlights include a 10:30 a .m.
soccer kicking contest led by Joe
Hq warth of the California
Sunshine and an 11:30 a .m. foot.
ball passinl contest led by Los
Angeles Rams linebacker Isiah
Robertson, of Fountain Valley.
The featJval wlll feature a
carnival, clowns, refreshments
and a white elephant sale, with
a ll proceeds benefiting the
school 's new library.
Taint«/, Pot
FellA Girl
RED BANK. N.J. <AP) -A
15·yea.r--0ld Koomoutb County
1lrt may bave contracted a
serious blood dllease from a
martJuan. ctaaret.t.e taln&ed with
paraquat, a MUlcan hetblclde,
her doctor 1&1•· Euaeoe Cbealock. a
hematolo•l•t at lllvervtew ffoaplt.al here, laid nae.day that
Pbann-Cbem Co. of Palo Alto,
Calif .. conftnned that tbe INt
batch or marijuana tbe 1trt
smoked had been apnyed wltb the herbicide.
·'IL ls. a posalbilit.v -. and I
want t.o ltNP only a ~blli~
-ril'ht now," he wd .. ·u lnle
it'• lhe fll'lt HM •ad we'll aeid
a Sot more pfOcl before we cau ••1 an~ wtUI mecftcal cer· tAMKJ ...
Teacher
Layoffs
Snagged
A mlUor hitch has surfaced in
plans for the Huntington Beach
City <elementary) School Dis·
trict to lay off seven teachers
next September because of
declining enrollment predictions.
• A atate heartng otricer has
ruled that. the dlstrict djdn 'l
follow proper procedure when 1l
sent out notices March 15 to
seven teachers who fac:e possi·
ble termination.
Adminialralive Law Judge
Mjlford Maron ruled that notices
should also bave gone to nine
other teachers who are
c lassified as lone-te rm sub·
stitu&es by the district.
The substitutes have less
s enio.rily than the seven
teachers who have received
notices of possible layoCfs and
who a re classified as proba·
tionary teaehen because they
have taught three or Jess years
in the district.
Dr. Pat. Clark. assistant
supeliintendent for personnel
services, said that the problem
exists because of a difference in
interpretation 1n the teachers'
rontract. ·
The district bas held that the
substitute teachers -do not yet
classify as probationary
teachers and did not need to re·
ceive the notices.
Ht\wever. the hearing off~er
agreed with the teachers' posi·
lion at a grievance session that
the long.term substitutes are e n·
tilled to full benefits and eouid
have been elven notice.
Tbe district can either reject
or follow 4.he bearing officer's
opinion which Is nol binding.
Trustee Roy How said today
that the board will decide May 8
on whet.her or not to go ahead
with layoff plans .
State Education law requires
that teachers who a re lo be
terminated must receive final
notices May 15
How said that the board has
an alternative to disregard the
hearing officer's findings and
terminate the seven teachers
and disregard the opinion thal
the s ubstitute teachers should
also have received notice.
He admits that the courts may
decide the controversy in that
event.
"We have compassion in the
matter a,id m~be it may be
that we won•t have to lay oft
anybody because of other retire·
ments and teachers." be said.
"On the other hand, we don't
want a surplus of teachers if our
enrollment declines as expect·
ed." he added.
Beach Area
Reopened
Lifeguards in Hunting ton
Beach and Newport Beach today
reported all was back to normal
on the stretch of beach re·
opened to the public after a 4~·
day quarantine.
Orange CoWlty Health Depart·
m ent officials closed the strand
running from 52nd Street in
Newport Beach Lo Brookhurst
Street In Huntington Beach
March 12 after a sewer main rup.
lured. spilling millions of gallons
or sewage lnto the s.Dt.a Ana
River.
'Lewd' Bible
OKforKUls
CH ULA VISTA <APJ -
The Bible will stay in
C hula Vista p ub lic
schools.
Trustees rejected b~ a
4·1 vote Tuesday night a
request to restrict its use
to older students or re·
move a ll Bibles fro m
bookshelves.
A citizen. J . Michael
Strac2yuk1. complained
that passages in the re·
ligious book are lewd.
Ex-mayor
NamedOC
Chainnan
Former Ana heim Mayor
William Thom was selected
chairman of the county's new
Fair Campaign Practices Com·
mission at the commission's
meeting Tuesday night.
Only a week earlier. Roy
Knauft had been handed
thechai.nnao'11avel as the com·
mission c;reated by the Board of
the chainnan's gavel as the com·
paigns for county e lected offices
met for the first time.
But Knautt bowed off the com·
mission Monday when doubt
about his eligibility to serve was
raised because or his status us
an elected officeholder on a local
water boanf. •
He was replaced on the com·
mission by Charles Stevens. a
former La Habra city coun·
cilman.
Selected by the county com·
mission lo serve as vice
chairman was Jerry Margolin.
MargoUn 's status as a com·
missioner was also in doubt last
week because of his status as an
alternate member or the coun·
ly's Democratic Central Com·
m1ttee
But Margolin said Tuesclay
night he had sent a letter of res·
i~nation to the committee to
c lear the way for his service on
the new commission.
Named by he r fellow com·
missioners to serve as secretary
or the five·member commission
was Judy de Arakal.
Those organizational mauers
out of the way, the commission
moved to begm reviewing cam·
paign lit.eraturt-that had been
sent its way by canC-idates in the
June pnmary electiot.
It was agreed that hterature
prepared before April 1, the date
Orange County's political re·
form ord.inance became errec·
live. would not be subject to pro·
visions of the ordinance.
Included among those pro·
visions is a ma nd ate that
campaign hlerature carry an in·
d1cat1on that it has been ap·
proved by the candidate.
Coop Toll High
KABUL. Afghanistan CAP I -
The death toll in the bloody coup
that overthrew the Afghan gov.
e rnment last week was much
higher than previously reported,
a uthoritative sources said Tues·
day. They estimated the number
of dead in the thousands -some
said it may have been as high as
10.000 -in the military rebellion
against President Mohammed
Daoud's authoritarian regime.
, .
Waddill
Jurors
Continue
By TOM BARLEY
Ol tM o.lty Pltot ''-"
Nine men and three women
were locked In their Orange
County Supe rior Court Jury
room for the ninth day today in a
continuing effort to reach a
verdict ln the baby death tnaJ of
Dr. WiUiam Baxter Waddill of
Huntington Harbour.
And while the jurors sipped
coffee and discussed which or
five possible verdicts thev
should retum t.o end the 16·w~k
trta l, lawyers lor both sides bud·
die d with Judge James K
Turner to discUSi an apparently
crucial issue that neither sidt
would reveal Tuesday night.
Judge Turner sent the jury
home a half hour earlier than
usual so he could discuss the ii.·
sue raised by defense attorney
Malbour Watson.
Wa tson. de fense attorney
Charles Weedman and pros·
ecutor Robert Chatterton all re·
fused outside the courtroom lo
discuss the nature of the con·
ference in the judge's chambers.
They agreed, h'>wever. that
lbey did not believe the issue un·
der discussion would lead to a
mistrial.
"But 1l could affect ttle out
come of the trial in a certain
way.'· Weedm an said. II<'
declined to c·laborate on tht'
comment.
WadAill, 42. is ace.used ot
strangling a newborn baby girl
in the Weslnunster Community
Hospital nursery after his at·
tempt to abort Wie infant 12
hours earlier failed.
It is alleged that Waddill
choked the child to death in the
belief that it would be little more
than a brain damaged human
vegetable if it survived.
Waddill confirmed late Tues·
day that he has orrered a job to a
West minster Communit y
Hospital nurse who reportedly
was fired because she allowed a
television camera cr~w to film
Waddill at work in the hospital
nursery last Saturday.
The film was screened on
Channel 2 Tuesday night. It de·
ptcted Waddill chatting with " '
woman patient who later gavt
birth to a n infa nt in thl'
Westminster hospital nursery.
Waddill said nurse Ann Pos•
was fired because she railed to
obtain the approval of the
hospital administration berort
allowing the camera crew intc.
the maternity wing.
CUiro de Mayo
Observance Set
The fun, food and festivities of
Mexkan Independence Day will
be fea tured Fnday in a Cinco de
Mayo celebration at Huntington
Beach 'i Park Vi ew School.
Co ·chairmen Cindy Thornl
a nd Janet Brown say the
carnival, operf to the public. Wlll
feature a new concession at
whic h cust omers may toss
softballs a nd dunk haple::.i.
volunteers into a tub.
Proceeds of the Parent·
Teacher Organ1zation·sponsored
festival will be used to benefit
stude nt programs at the campus
a t 16666 Tuns tall Lane. Ad·
mission is free.
Lynn Hort HART'S John Hort
SPORTING GOODS
538 CENTER ST.• COSTA MESA• 646-1919
Clase Out
Abolit 200 Bike Tires
Mostly 20x2125
& 2811.75 2°0 -"
39s4ts.5ts Valle
Basellad Sims
Soccer Shoes
Basketball Shoes
Jouin1 Shoes
Track SllllS v .....
Tlllli Slllli
... "SlllS SWut Slits
,,.....-...&---.=.Ytfla Swatlrl c,. Parts
•
Tennis Brems
lalles' Tennis 5'lrts
I.allies' T elllis Sllirts
Men's r. Boys' T enniS $bftS
Men's & Bays' T etllris SMrts
Tennis Sox
Tennis lacUts
Wilson -OaVis • Yonex
Prince • Bancroft • Dunlop
Racq•tMllaa,.ts
Bad&nidDo Raets
Rxbt Sb•tlk'I
Baseblll lltts Baseblll Caps
llSebaH lats laSial U. sllirts
538 jCenter Mt>-1919 : I
'
I
..
l
' ' l !
j
l
.. , .. Robert N . W,,ed/pUbllsher ihomas Keev11/l!dltor
orangeeo..i0ai1vPUOi Editorial Pm1,e .........................................................................
Blunt Approach
To City Problems
.John A. Thomas has arrived on the scene in a big
way after his election to the Huntington Beacb City Coun-cil l ast month. ·
Thomas says that he entered public Ufe ••not to make
money or win popularity" but to make gove rnment
responsible and ope n to the people.
Thomas dis played hls direct upproach to solving city
problems last week whe n he took exception to the hiring
vf _. serreatry for a coveted position from part-time
ranks .
Thom as gathered key administration l eaders
together and told the m the way things were going to be -·
that the secr etary would be selected from a permanent
Jist of employees a nd not from temporary personnel.
~o one could quarrel with bis reasoning and it car·
ried the day.
Thomas' approach was a breath of fresh air to many
unhappy with government. He has been warmly ap·
p lauded for taking the bu1l by the horns.
But Thomas would do well to remember that city gov-
ernment is not a one-person show. There are s ix other
council people with equal voices.
Thomas certainly wasn't the first councilman to tell
officials what he wants -although he may be the first to
rlo it ope nly.
And there arc no doubts that his intentions are good.
:\lost would agree. however. that more diplomacy
t·ould have been used.
Delay Costs Full&
Hunting to n, lll'ach t.:nwn High School District
trustees have turned clown a plan to apply for S745.000 in
:-.tale funds OV('r the next four years.
The application was denied with a 2 to 2 vote. The
$745,000 could h ave been used for a variety of school im-
provement programs at Huntington .Beach High School.
For the pas t s even months Huntington Beach Hig h
School admini~t.rators and teachers have been haggling
over the p1·on!-.1ons of the stale law. Assembly Bill 65,
that made the funds a\'ailable .
In November. teachers voted o\•e rwhelm ingly agains t
thcAB65fund application.
But recently. the teach ers re versed their s t a nd
and dl'cidcd to back the application for the funds. .
This rl'\'('n.;.d cam e after months of discussion
hNween t('achcrs a nd udminis trators. It turned out to be
a waste of time since the school board denied the ap
phcationanyway.
First of a ll , why did 1t tukc teachers and admins tralors
!'u long lo r each agreem e nt on the application'? The de lay
(·uuscd the school board to make a quick decis ion on the:
last-minute application .
. \ncl. thl' s chool board 1s minus one' member bcc·ausl'
of <I t'N•IJ.tn alion. l f the tcuchers had com e to agreement
\\ilh admims tralors <• month ago. the full :-.chool bnar<I
<·oulcl ha\('\ ol<.'cl .
I l ..,t•cm:-. a !-ihumc lhat lht' high school h as lus t its
dutnt l' lur the fund s. With close monitoring. the moncv
'·ould h<t\l' ht•<•n put to good use· ·
Recognition lleseryed·'·
They come from a ll walks o f life a!ld they s h a re that
<·ommon denominator that sets certain men and women.
hoys and girls apart in persona! stature .
They are unselfish ; gi\'ing what they can s pare of
time. talt·nl or wealth -a nd often-limes mo re than thev
t·an s parc lo those less fortunate tha n ljlemse l ves. ·
Tht•\· -a totnl of 21 of them. volunteers who make
lhl·11· C'O.mmun1ty a hcltC'r. happier place for others and
''''<•n hrii.:hten the lin•s of unfortunates 10.000 miles awav
cot scinw n•ccnt rc<:ognit1on. •
Tlw I l11ntington RN1ch Rotary Club cited nominees
.tl'll\t' 1n a ,·~1ri<'t .'· o f org;.inization s. o r self·chosen
sl)litar~· <•fforts lo l·;1s l' otht•rs· pain. poverty. lone liness or
dl•pnvation
l lonon.·1.•s rang ~·d 11111 rom their teens to one lad~
i i. a l"l''ilclC'nl ol :i ho ti home for tht· t·lderl\' who
le1 sh1ons C'lothini.: tor K ·:in orphans. lrul)· gildin~ h<>r
goldc•n )'t••ir ...
Rotan;m ... <11 l' t o Ill' l'ommended for s ponsoring this
rt•cogmt1on of tho"l' ''ho seldom seC'k an~·thin g but the
prrs onal ..,a11 -,f.1 t t111n ol dnmg thl· nohles t work of a ll in
this \\Otl<I
• Opinions expressed 1n the space above are those of the Oatly Pilot
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
artists. Reader comment is invited Address The Daily Piiot. P O.
Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (71 4) 642·4321
Boyd/Depression
ByL.M. 80\'0
Question nrises a s ln
whether that emotional low
known as the depression is
l'O ntagiou.s. Definitely. Those
blues a rc calchin~. Studies at
thl.' University of Illinois
ha ve prov.e n that. And
.studies elsewhere F or
j?ene ralions. One downbeat
citizen among a dozen h ghl·
hearted souls 1n a fairly
rapid ·m a nner <'a n m a ke
t•verybody lherenbouts feel
,·aguely uneasy. Then. some
others, too, may drift toward
melancholy. though most will
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
Now thol Burke School
In HunUngl.on Beach
hae found time and
· money to palnt the little
sign lo front, perhaps it
will 1et •J"OUl>d to point·
Inf over tho 4irty worct.•
on tk walls ln the kitt•
deraarten arH. S.1:.
JUSt make themselves scarce.
Maybe it's extra·sensory
perception. Or maybe just
perception. l)ut it happens
Despondent people tend tr
quarantine themselves. ,
Two out of three husband!\
:ind wiveg knew each other at
least two years before they
married.
Was 27 years ago that the
science minds invented a
new clothing material which
was 70 percent featherR.
What prompted them lo do so
was the report that 30 million
lOns of chicken and turkey
feathers were going to waste
every year. You don't see
s uch material advertised
now. though. de> you? What
happened to it?
Benjantin Franltlln was
inotbtt of those numeroU4
wise soult ..Jb() have satd 1
tu.Lness bas been ~apoo•lb&e tor most tnventlons. Ha
readily admltted, tor In· stance, that he'd iJlventect
btfoealJluaee becaute he 'WU
too laey lo pt up and look tor a
second pair· of spectacle
when he needed them.
Gnns tU up tOC> much
land, cootend1 an Ore1on--
man, He bu applied tor a
pat~nt on a vertJcal casket
with .\.upporta t.o bold lb•
bod,y -u>rl&hL
-·
Earl Waters
CIJldidate ·Tags Reveal Variety
While it may not be the ideal
situation it is a tact that many
voters go to
the polh
knowing
nothing
whatsoever
about the can-
didates. This
is especially
true of those
running for
congressional
a nd l egisla-
tive offices where the candidates
in a given district are nothing
more than names to the voter.
Intended as an aid t.o voters then
ls the provision permitting eacb
candidate to include an occupa-
tional descJ'.ipUon as background
information indicating qualifica-
tions.
For the incumbents, or holders or other ortices running for new
posts, the choice is an easy one.
By showing the voters they are
already in that or some other of-
fice they hope to convince them
.they have demonstrated the
necessary qualities for public
trust. But for many or the other
more than 600 seeking electlon to
154 s tate omces, the opportunity
to provide, this evidence o!t.en
see ms to pres~nl problems.
AT LEAST the list of candidates
released by Secretary of Stale
March Fong Eu is interesting
from the standpoint or ingenuity.
or the lack of it, ol some can-
didates in selecting vocational
descriptions to induce voter sup·
port.
The majority follow the
general ptacUce of using com·
mon professional job descrip-
tions. The most widely used this
time is that of businessman or
woman, although some used
business executive or other term
c onnoting a busJneas back-
ground.. There were more than
"14 of these.
The next largest group was
the 54 who llsted_themselves
variously as teachers, pro·
fessors, school administrators
and educators. These were
followed by 49 lawyers some or
whom preferred the term al·
torney.
ALTHOUGH some 20 can-
didates designated themselves
engineers, quite a few left voters
in doubt as to whether that meant
railroadengineerorwhat. Others
however stated spe<'ifically the
t ype such as electrical. civil.
economic :.ind engineerint
physicist.
Among the other profe'ssions uc-s ix CPAs •• three medical
doctors, two dentists, an op·
tometrist, a pharmacist. an
architect and a chiropractor
who also does tree topping.
W81LE FARMERS once
made up a preponderance of
Jegislative candidates only l I
designated themselves as such
'in this election. About a dozen
are running as reporters.
writers, editors and publisher$
and three are bankers.
From there on the designa·
tions really get interesting
although a dozen failed to pro-
vide any information as to oc-
cupation. Others ranged from
s pecific readil.v identifiable
vocations s uch as barber.
laborer, policeman and fireman.
to va~ue descriptions such as
··health professional,", "air
balancer," "taxpay ers ·
rep r esent a ti v e." "peop·tc ·s
politician.·· and .. public affair~
rcpre!icntat1ve ·
-Housewi fe seems lo hav<>
faded into dis use m favor of
··homemaker" and ''mother"
but one candidate lists himself
a s "une mployed t eache r·
housl•husbanct ..
OTHER CU RIOUS designa·
lions include "worker-priest. '
''minister-philosopher." ·:tax re -
duction advocate.·· "disabled
rights organizer•·. "service ad·
viscr" and .. concerned citizen "
'' 'FU~NY1 lT DOESN'T LOOK LIKE A DOVE!11
Two or three candidates
thought showing themselves as
members of the party central
committee' to be impressive.
Somc• simply hsled unemployed
while one 1s running as a "re-
tired soldier" a nd another as a
··disabled vctcrun."' One can
d1date for lhe Assembly could be
vt!ry popular with his fellow
members 1f hC' 1s elected. Ill' 1s a
··~olf pro."'
Mailbox
Prop. 13: A Potential Taxpayer RipOff
To the Editor:
I am wr1ltng about the poten·
Ual ripoff, the Jarvis·Gann tax
bill, Prop. 13.
I think the Jarvis-Gann bill
will be the grc:atest ripoff of the
taxpayers if 1t is voted in. Jarvis
said in a TV program that there
is no guarantee that the apart-
ment owners would be willing to
redtice the rents but -~-r· th1n.k
they will."
WHY s hould they reduce the
rent if they don't have to? The
big COflPanies who own the
apartments do not care for the
renter.
Of course, Jarvis is an officer
in the Apart~t \House Owner
Association m\d. naturally he
would fight for this bill. Jarvis
can't even meet anyone and tru-
ly argue the bill at all. He just
has to be. very rude in any dis-
cussion.
I am happy to hear that the
L.A. Supervisors have decided lo
v(lle against tl)e J arvis·G ann bill
WlLLIAM H. COOPER
N~d Protf~~• Ion
To the Editor:
"Survival of the Jungle" is
the weak and the old are at
tac k e d by y o un ~ s lron ~
a nimals!
It m eans we need more strong
"decoys" or deputies to pose as
elderly women witti their· purses
dangling loose, to capture and
hold these gangs that prey on
the elderly alone. Hold them and
punish them, as the law allows
THE ELDERLY can't shop or
buy groceries in broad daylight
without some culprit laying for
them in the baekgro\Uld. ready
to pounce on them like an
animal in the jungle!
Let's gel some strong men sla·
tloned at places where the elder·
ly s hop. We have to protect them
since they cannot protect
themselves.
We have boys on skateboard."!,
bicycles. and ln groups that
have found a way of getting easy
money fast. leaving an elderly
woman wit.If broken bones, or
worn?
EMMA HYMAN
runllu.ed
:ro tho Editor:
I h~ve rtad many opinlons on
the Jarvi• Prop. 13, some in
favor and some oppoaed. I tend
to ~ conservatJve on such mat·
ten and PJop. 13 ii a drasUc
move and not a cor\servaUv •.P-
proach..Jlowever, l asn In i.vo.e
of Prop. 13 and convinced that
th~ dra1Uc action is the only
aolotlon to the deplorable.wutc
and miluu ol tax funda.
For example, a vacant in·
dutt.r al lot lo Santa Ana on
wblc~ UM Oran o County lu.
•
was S333.30 fn '19'76 was 1n
creased lo 5772.80 an 1977. an in·
crease of l30 percent in one
year'
THE ATROCIOUS misuse of
lax money which results. in un·
reasonable tax incre ases can
onl y cause eventual rebellion by
the taxpayer . What else can be
expected or our Citizens when
they read articles about govern-
ment financing the "scientific
study of the homosexuality or
sea gulls,·· such ai; appeared an
a recent issue of the Daily Pilot.
and then the National lns litull'
for Mental Health grant ol
S97 ,000 for the study of a South
American brothel!
Are we. as l11xpayers. ~up
posed lO laugh at Senator Prox·
mire 's monthly "Golcl e n
Fleece" award for the outsland·
ing example or wasting our tax
money·• My reaction as to vote
out all incumbents as we did in
the recent 1 lunlington Reach city
election and \Ole for anything
t hat wall reduce taxc~
Candidates for office make h1g
talk about lax reform hut
nothing Ill done about 1t One n·
course for lh(• taxpayer 1s to
vote yes on Prop. 13 and shut off
the money suppl~· ancl force a
drastic reduct ion in go\'ernment
expenditures.
DON MAPSON
·°'at Entertaln•ent
To the Editor:
Regarding your editorial of
April 25 in praise o f the
"Holocaust": We did not watch
the program.
How many of those 20 milhon
television vi ewers h11ve read
"The Diary of Anne Frank"?
How many of their children have
read it or at the least had their
parents tell them of it? How
many of those 20 million
chastise a child Cor an adult 1
whotells anclhnlc "joke""'
Jt occurs to me thot your
righteousness (and theirs> may
be s ullied. Suroly, if one were
(Oncemed to know the truth and
to assure that it not be for1otten.
other less seosJtional meaoa are
at hand . .But guilt ls assuaged
e1&ily. comfortably -the pat-
tern• of life are undlsturbe<I.
I AM sickened by the appeltte
ot tbo Amorlcan public fol"
pusive fo11ons in moraUty. t
eouJd not mote have 1Vatched
the "Holocaust'' than I could
tolerate OM word of pfejutflce
spoken ln my pre1encc.
So pleas• do' not talk to me
about weak 1lomach1. l am
...... of u.. hon-orL J will
pot watch Jt b tween station broa1<1. Kicrke1aard said.
..There le no ~mpl~·robber. t.0U-
ln1 In ahacklea or Iron. 10
vicloul 1 thoH who 11na1e
a.moo• aac:red thlnt• /.. • '' We
appear to b.av l<>1t. any •ens. of
outrage. and "c arc: pa llagm~.
by treating as cnterla1nmcnt, an
event tha t 1s .'i acrcd <to
huma nity.
BARBARA VAN Iii\ VEN
A pplaau& Coun~if
To the Editor:
Referring to your April 26 lead
-edltol'lcrt, "'Planners' Firin~ ;1
Bil Too Hasty.·· in "h 1c·h you
tended lo disagrt'C' with lh1.• new
lluntinglon Brach Cil~ Council
majority decb1on lo r~organ11.c
11.s .PJannin~ Commi5s1on. and
the timing of that dl•c1 s1on in
purticular
The new Counci l majority ap
parenlly was elected by c1l11.cn~
wanting a c:haogc in dcn:lop
ment direction. Thus it can be
argued that the new Council ma
JOrity had Lallie choice but Lo call
for s uch reorganizat10n as an
open ackno" led~emer11 of lht·
mandate it had rect'ived
IN MY opm1on. lht' Council
majority should be applauded
not chided. Wh1lt' lhl• onJ,!01n~
business of thl· PlannanJ.! Com
mission has been del<i vcd. th(:
delay clearly 1:-0 lhe result or .•
boycott by ccrla111 mcmbl·r..,
who. by their o" n reat't1on:-.
serve to stre ngthen lhc Council
majorit)''s d1·c-1 sion lo a<.•t
swiftly
It would be t'vc•n more regr~t
rut were the infantile antits or
these few d isgrunllcd com
missioners to cast a disparagm~
light on the remainder of lhl'
µanel who\ with no guarantee of
their individual reappointments.
continue to exhibit the pubhc·
spiritedness which encouraged
a nd motivated them m1tially to
become commissioners.
S. W. SCllUMAC HF:R
Co•puter Teacltln9
To ll\e Editor·
Many of us are unhappy about
the way our tax dollars are u-;cd
pUll'rlll'rl Eal·h .... tut.J ent is ;.ii·
lollc·il Sl8 '' orth of <«>m put er
ltmt•. though ll appt•ar ... that t>m.
mu.\ hl' an ln~11ffi1·1l·nt dollar
t•ost f1w I h<• t•nmplt'lt• ..,t•r1es of
tl.'Sl:-
SO THE qul·~l1on ii.: If :\tr.
Colhy IS being paid to ll'ach <.1
dt1~i; <<is one would ju1ve l0.9:->·
'\Um<.• l wh~· 1s h<' not lt·urhinl? it··
/\ncl \\ h.\ "' e students he1n g n ·-
quircd lo llS(' l'\l><>ns i\t• t om
pul1•r llm(•" 1'h1~ 1s L'nin•rs1t~
lt•\'t•I work '' /\ml this 1s whal 1q·
µay our ta\ cinlhirs for·• This '"
not an 1snlall'd 1nc·irlc·nt Tlwn·
a1·t-munv such e\amples at ull
le•' l'ls 11( 1•du<'<1t111n
If l·1t1 ~1·ns "1•1'1• mo n • aw<tn.' of
lh<' wa..,tdul use: ul funds. the'
'' oulcl no doubt lake more achr;n
.it th1· 1 011~ booth ancl at school
hourd m1•t•ling'
\.IRCl"'\11\ llARRJS
I i-H o u: ComP?
T o I hl' 1-:1111111
llo\\ 1·11m1· lh1· Co.1:-.l ('om
rnun11 1 <'nlif<'I?<' ru n andulRI'
I h1•m "l'h l'' \\I I h ltt ;111tl ne\\
tahll'" .tn<.l l'ha1r-. for JmOnJ.!
nthns 11n 011 p.11nt d .1s..,··
llo\I t·11m1· 1 h(• Orangl' County
Tr;1n:-.1l 1)1 ... 1 l"ll'I ('JO 1ndulgl'
• lhl•m-.t•l\t•s with hu).!l' buses
wh1C'h Urt' 90 pl'rt:t•nl t·mply·!
flow t'<lffil' tht· lluntinglon
Tkach Police lkp<rrl m1•nt can
1ncl 1t li.:1· it sl•lf "1th a noisv
hl•lit•nptt·r which d1•prJ\'l'S this
I a xp:I\ l'I' of IH.'r ~lc-t·p ·•
.I EANNE SPRAGUF.
.ShatelJoard Nert&
To the Editor.
There s hould he a skateboard
park in Newp<>rl Beach ll came
up on('c an thl1 Caty louncil, but
they turned tt down That wtts
not the: smartest idea beCaUSl'
th" flistc~t grow1n~ s port in
Ne" port Bl.'Jt'h l.., "kalcboard·
Jnt(
by Coastlin e Commu111l ) TIU:Rt:ARt:alotof areasin
Coll eg e. Coastline offers a the cit) thnt t·ould be used as a
highly vis\ble consuml!r product ~ka t l·h11;.1nt park. Children Jn
Less visible ure soml' other New po 1 1 lh· a ch want to
universit y und t.'olle((e pro· sk11tobo11 rd so much that they go
grams, for example. a class be ,.-to 1Ct•wc:r!i which <•rt' unsafe and
ing "taught" this ispring quarter hulld ramps up Into the streets
at UCJ In the Department or JUlil to have fun and 11kuteboard.
Social Sctcnces. Titlecf "lxil A luw wi.s just pas1H:d maklh~
Maya," Course No. 50·1.. the In· skatcboardin,; Ulcgal in public:
slructor. a Mr. Colby, met with ~trN!l!i. Something has to be
his class the Ont mcetin@. gave done i.boul thhi prC)llfem Some
over JOO. students a llat. or Nad· pltlce htt~ to be hullt where \i 1~
ing1 tor lhe quart.er. and wm leRal to ridt: ukatcboard.
meet wllh t.Mm the last metl TONY CONDON in.. Th~ wccldy tcs\S aro com·
QUotea
.. There was dltflculty in
March, but now there ls a 1rt t
Improvement." -;-h.ruU Prune
Mialater Mn.adlnl h1I• on
hJs d.laca111lom "1th Prulcknl
Cartor and othUU.S. ofriclals.
• Wt(frt Jrom rcodf'8 ore ~-T,._ rtgltt to toftdttttt Ifft~ tct fit
rpace or fllmrnote libtl ii rntri'Ded.
IAttn• of 300 wordt "' llU au k
gion prc/•r~ct. All ~,.,,mud fn. da ~.,,.. ond maalmQ oddras
bid llOYMI mGJI boa toUMdd Gii t-. ' = " tllfticint NMOfl "GpPm 'A&. • '11 wtU not be pubhllald. •
'
, .
.,
'1
I
..
f
CALJFORNIA ~<by. May 3. 1978 _
Gays Win Victory
PtuWl Backs Job Discrimination Ban
SACRAMENTO <AP> -ln a
rare political victory for
homosexuals, n state Senate
committee has approved a ban
on job discrUN.nation based on
sexual prefer-.ee.
Bu t the '4)lll. approved 4-0
Tuesdar_ tJ}' t.be Senate In-
dustrial ~ations CommiUee, is
thought to. h ave little ch ance of
final pasaaee io ta.is election
year. A stmllar bill died in an
Assembly committee last year.
AND TBE HOMOSEXUAL
commwdty faoes a potentially
more serious defeat later this
year In a st.ate ballot initiative
aiIQ ed al ~moving openly
hotnosexual teachers a nd gay-
rigbts ad vocates from public
schools.
State Sen. John Briggs, R ·
Fu lJerton, a nnounced Monday
t hat he had collected enough
signatures to qualify the in··
itlative for the November ballot.
The secretary of s tate's office
will decide later this month
whether the measure has the
needed 312,404 valid signatures.
AT TUESDAY'S H EARING,
homosexual activists, including
the state's most prominent gay
politician, were taking a more
optimistic long-range view,
"What is happening ls the
e merge nce or g ay political
power," said San Francisco
Supervisor Harvey Milk. an ad-
mitted gay. "It's no longer a
taboo subject ....
"Some day, whether this year
or next year or 10 years from
now, gay people will be given
the same rights."
THE BILL, SB 2053, by Sen.
Milton Marks, R·San Francisco.
won the bare majority or votes
needed on the seven·m ember
committee. Several opponents
were absent when lhe vote was
taken. The bill next goes to the
Senate Finance Committee.
It would ban job discrimina·
lion based on sexual p~ference
for any company or agency with
at least five employees. Persons
with records or sexual conduct
involving minors would not be
protected by the bill.
FOES F ROM fundamentalist
religious groups said that ex·
emption wasn't enough.
"This Is something many
parents could not comfortably
live with. if their ~hildren's
• sc hool teachers ... we r e Bo d Kill Pia manifested to be homosexuals." ar S n said the Rev. W.B. Timberlake,
head of a group called the Com·
m ittee on Moral Concerns.
"Public schools would s uffer ~ 'S lit' St t greatly . . . because whether .I. 10 p a e it's right or wrong. a great
number of parents would take
their c hildren to privatl' SACRAMENTO <AP> -In the latest skirmish in the <:en· schools." tury·okl battle or the Redwoods vs. the Freeways, an Auembly
com mittee has killed a northern California attempt to split the BUT SUPPO RTER S said
state in two. nearly all child molesters are
Asemblyman Barry Keene. sponsor of the measure to hete rosexuals. and contended
create a new state of Alla California. sought the surgery there is no evidence that youths
because he said state government has grown too big, expensive arc. or can be, "converted" to
and unresponsive. homosexualltS' by t eache rs.
Aod, the Eureka Democrat said, he feared "the north·soulh An opponent. Sen. Ra y
conflicts over water and other natural resources are only going Johnson. R-Chico. said the bill
to escalate and get uglier in the coming years." would infringe on the nghts of
businesses and on freedom of re· THE VOTE TUESDAY in the Governmental Organization hgion.
Confiscated
Detectives J ack Fisher. l('ft. and Mike Stodelle of San
Hcrnardmo County Sheriff's Offic<.'. ~xamim.• a cache of
weapons found in the in\'estigallon of an a mbush slay
ing in Rialto. The guns are reportedly thl.' p_ro~ert y of
Oetvid Philip Sheppard "ho is s ought for hts involve·
mcnt in tht! murdl.'r of Wilham St<.imp!->.
California to Bar
Plwne 'Junk Call,s' Committee was 4·2, one short of passage. But Keene. who is run· "Let's say I have a business
ning for a North Coast state SenJlte seat . said he hoped his bill -and my cuslomers have a right SAN FRANCISCO <API _Californians will be protected from even when dead -would prompt discussion of northern to discriminate by not going in
California needs. my store. 1 would go broke ... he overzealous telephone solicitations under new guidelines adopt·
HI l Id I. h t t t th T h h · M ed by the slate Public Utilities Commission. s proposa wou spit t es a e a e e ac apt oun-said. The new rules bar the use or automatic dialing and announc·
tains, just north or Los Angeles, but he said he would consider "THE RE ARE MANY Chris· in" devices without prior consent or the called party or without other borders. ,.,
''We Alta Californians don't mind sharing our natural re-tians in this country who do not a human operator to gel the called party's permiss ion to play a
sources with our southland friends," he said. •'But we do object a P P r o v e o f h o m o s e x · recordini;:.
-strong, loudly and constantly -to attempts at naked ripoffs uals .... Suppose I feel this is
of our resources." immoral. Don't l have a right to TH E SO-CALLED "junk call" controls require users of
choose which people work for automatic dialmg devices to notify the telephone company of
SOU111ERN CALIFORNIA ~els much of its water from me ?" their plans to hook into telephone Imes. including hours of use
northern California, through the canals of the state Water Proj· Steve Badeau of Northern and expected volume .
ect. Other ret.ources such as timber and farmland are largely California Human Rights Ad· Devices subject to the controls are those which are capable of
localed in lbe north. vocates, a gay.rights lobby· storing numbers to be called or generating random or sequen·
Keene said the new Southern California state would still be replied that the same argument t1a l number ~elections and are able to play prerecorded
the secorid most populous in the country and Alta California, was used for years against hir· messages
which means upper California in Spanish, would be No. 8. ing blacks.
"If your religion says I'm a THE PUC SAID there is no evidence that automatic dialing A'tT E MPTS TO SPLIT the stale date back to 1859, when it sinner it doesn't give you the devices arc now operatmJ.! in California Cor solicitation without
was tbe southerners who felt they were outvoted by the more right 'to discriminate against operator control. but said it expected such devices soon.
oooulous north. be said. A bill was oassed then. but the U.S. me ," he said. Wit hout the controls. the commission said Tuesday, the prac·
CoDgress reject the idea because of fears it was related to the Several witnesses said they lice would "infringe on the comfort and convenience of the
::,OW.hem stat.es' secessionist mqvemeot. had lost jobs, or lost chances for telephone s ubscriber guaranteed'' by law.
Numerous similar bills have been introduced since then. jobs . or feared to be honest on Use of a huma n operator before delivery of a taped message
One, in 1.965, was passed by the Senate bul died ln the Assembly. the job, bee a use of l he1 r will safeguard against a phone being tied up when it might bt
DAIL v PILOT A 5
Refinery
Pollution
Reported
( __ ST._:4_TE_)
jects absolutely" to America ·s
proposed sale or jet fighters to
Egyp\. .
· Begin. speaking Tuesday af·
temoon before flying to Chicago.
also said a Carter administra-
tion proposal to supply F ·lS jct
fighters to Saudi Arabia "wouJd
turn it into confrontation statt.·
with Israel ...
Pmr Sia!• 111 Car
· GLENDALE CAPI -While
Glendale 'POiice were contacting
the Hillside Str angler Task
Force about an apparent double
homicide. the Los Angeles
Police Department announced a
reduction in the task force's
manpower.
Glendale investigators said
Tuesday that Roxanne
Barnwell. 29. or Glendale. and
an unidentified man were
dead in her car M n ht.
not far from her ho e. Both ad
been shot to death a two small
caliber handguns were found in
the vetucle.
Fire Ilks CBS Set
LOS AN<:ELES <API
Separate fires destroyed a back
lot set at the CBS Studio Center
an Studio. City and damaged .,
number of homes in the Windsor Hills area, officials said.
A Fire Departm ent
spokesman said nine companies
took about 15 minutes Tuesday -
night to knock down a blaze that
had enveloped the CBS set and Assemblyman Leroy Greene, D-Sacramento, conteoded that hom osexuality. needed for an emergency, the PUC pointed out.
division would create "an endless number of probl~em~s:.... ·_· ------------------------------------------------------
som e trees nearby.
Rapist Gets 8 Years
. SAN .FRANCISCO <AP> --Catting rape er
"shocking outrage." a San Francisco Superior Court
judge has sentenced a convicted rapist to eight years
mprison.
r----•YA.L.UAILI COUPOH•-- -..
l -~-~12~ __ 1-~==·-----------------~
I REG. 1.791 I
Judge Fr ancis McCarty slapped Charles
Edward Brown, 34. with the maximum sentence
aft~r a jury found Brown guilty of raping 'ln ill 27·
year-old cosmetologist In her apartment Dec. 2.
The woman, said McCarty, "was a particularly
vulnerable victim. She was alone with no one to
help."
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always wanted A1so helpful hints for "reconstructing" on
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EDITION ..
VOL. 71, NO. 123, 4 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, MAY 3, 1978
, Jurors Get New Data; Waddill Hopef
•
By TOM BARLEY
Ol tM Delly ...... SUtf
A new instruction that Dr.
William Baxter Waddill believes
will lead the jury w declare him
not guilty of murder was read to
an Orange County Superior
Court jury today.
Judge James K. Turner inter-
ruJ1ted the jury's ninth day or de-
liberati()OS to advise the panel:
"There can b e death in
<'ircumstances where a total I I El Toro . . I Crash
I Hurts 4
I
1
' i
17.j
i f. I
I • I ,-
By JERRY CLAUSEN
Ol Ille.,..,., ...... ""' A five-vehicle accident, in
eluding two gravel trucks, in-
JUred four persons and blocked
El Toro Road three miles north
of Trabuco Road for most or this
morning.
Firemen, paramedics and am·
bulance teams worked more
than an hour removing victims
from the mangled vehicles
which also included a small van
and two auwmobiles.
California Highway
Patrolmen said the woman
driver or a southbound auto at-
tempted to pass a semi-dump
truck rig owned and operated by
Duvid Merrigan. 29, of Covina
when she was confronted by a
s tring or three northbound
vehicles.
Her car and a northbound van
collided, at about 8 a.m.
patrolmen said, setting off two
more collisions.
A northbound trailer-hauling
truck apparently s werved,
catching the trailer of Mer-
rigan 's southbound truck,
patrolmen said.
Merrigan's trailer and the
northbound semi-rig turned
over, and another car, driven by
Ralph Caputo, 35, of 35391
Helena Circle, Mission Viejo.
rammed into the northbound
truck, Caputo said.
The driver of the northbound
' truck. owned by Blue Diamond, t was serio~'i)Y injured and was
t pinned in the cab of bis vehicle,
patrolmen said. H'1 was iden-~ ... lifted as John Vestal. 48.
~
The woman driver of the
so uthbound passing car,
Elizabeth Tackett, 21, Silverado,
suffered mmor facial injuries.
Her passenger. John Candow,
30. Orange. was pinned in the
wreckage. He was seriously in·
jured. patrolmen said. .,..
_ \lan driver George Kaftgat, 42,
of El Toro suffered back in-
juries, a patrolman said, and
was taken lo Saddleback Com-
munity Hospital.
Truck driver Merrigan was
not injured.
Merrigan said, "I looked in
the mirror lo see this woman
passing me. I looked forward
again and saw this whole line of
vehicles coming. I thought, 'Man
alive!' "
The truck driver said he "felt
a tug" and ·•my air buzzer came
on. This is where I coasted to."
caputo, sales manager for
Toyota of Corona, was uninjured
in the series or accidents.
cessation or brain function has draw any other conclusion been determined." now.'' Waddlll said after the
Waddill and his two defense jury filed back w the jury room
lawyers clearly believe that the for more deliberations.
Jury may look on the new added "Certainly, the baby I'm ac·
instruction as meaning that the cused or choking w death was
baby Waddill is accused of dead in the very terms of this
strangling in the nursery at new instruction and so an act of
Wes tmins te r Community murder could not be com·
Hospital was already dead in milted."
terms or wtal brain disintegra-lronlcally, what is seen as a
lion. breakthrough for~ the defense
_·_· 1_d_o_n_'t_s_e_e_h_o_w __ lh_e_.y_c_a_n __ w_a_s__..p_u_t _in_their hands by Depu-
ty District Attorney Robert
Chatterton.
Chatterton said a provision in
the state's Health and Safetv
Code spelllng out what Judge
Turner read w the jury today
came w his attention when he
was discussing another baby
killing case with an Anaheim de-
tective.
Chatterton said he mentioned
the hitherto unmentioned point
while chatting with defense al·
tor'neys Malbour Watson and
Charles Weedm an in the
courtroom.
Obviously delighted. the two
lawyers immediately asked to
see Judge Turner and s uc-
cessfully petitioned him to read
the new instruction containing
the elements discovered by
Chatterton to the jury.
Chatterton commented today
that he did not believe the jury
would giv~ any weight lo the in-
O.lty ............. ..., '-rf a.-
struction on the lines that the de-
rense expects.
But the consensus among
lawyers listening to the proceed-
ings today is that the new in-
struction is an invitattbn to a
jury, which appears to be
deadlocked, to rde>lve the <lilem-
m a by voting not guilty on the
basis oft.he new directive.
Waddill. 42, of Huntington
Harbour, is 'accused ot stran-
<See DOCl'OR, Page AZ>
Housing
AtUCI
Mtilled
Lower pnced housing for 700
families among the general
public .would be built on thf'
campus or UC Irvine, ir an
Irvine Co. plan recommended by
campus administrators is ap-
proved by· UC regents meetin~
May 19 in San Francisco.
But while the plan has been
JUMBLED MASS OF TRUCKS ANO CARS SPREADS ACROSS EL TORO ROAD FOLLOWING FIVE·VEHICLl!""COLLISION
Firemen (atLeft) Comfort John Candow. 30, Pinned In Car That Reportedly Tried To Pass Gravel..,.ruck
• forwarded to UC headquarter.
at Berkeley. it leaves open add1
lional matters or acrea~e and
numbers or other apartments or
houses ror UCI faculty and StU·
dent housin~.
UCI Vice Chancellor L E. Cox
s aid those details are being dis-
cussed with the Irvine Co.
Errors
• Delay
Letters
WASHINGTON <AP) -Two
or every 100 letters dropped in
the nation's mailboxes ~re de-
layed beeause they're routed to
the wrong post officeT an in·
ternal Poslal Service study says.
Assistant Postmaster General
Pele Dorsey related the survey's
findings w the service's govern-
ing board Tuesday when he said
the routing errors arise from
mechanical and human mis-
takes as welJ as improper ZIP
codes.
''Oh, yes," Dorsey replied
when a board member asked
him if there were fewer routing
errors before machines replaced
human bands at the sorting ta-
ble.
As an example, he said, "A
letter from New _-Yp_tk. City ~
Wesbttigtd!I m1glif wind up in
Cleveland. You then have to
se nd it from Cleveland to
Washington. It will be at least
one day late."
He said routing errors are a
main ractor in service's inability
to live up w delivery standards.
"Mail used w be sorted twice,
and that. gave you two chances
to catch errors. Now, you only
have one shot at lt," be ex-
plained. With machines, a device
brings one letter to a position in
front or a postal worker. The
worker has one second to punch
the five digits of the ZIP code in·
to a keyboard on the machine.
The numbers punched tell the
macblne where in that city or to
which other city the letter
should go. The device then
shoots the letter into the ap-
propriate mailbag.
,
In Irvine Area
Flood Protection
For Center OK'd
I
F1ood protection plans at the
proposed Irvine Center regional
s hopping center won the en-
dorsement of Orange County
supervisors Tuesday.
Officials or the county En-
vironmental Management Agen-
cy <EMA> were asked to
negotiate ~ agreement between
the county and the Irvine Com-
pany covering design. financing
and maintenance of flood
measures needed to protect the
triaiigwar-shaped parcel.
The firm plans to build the
center in an area bounded by the
Santa Ana, San Diego and
Laguna Freeways.
---· __ .... .--.. --
EMA Director George
Osborne sald the county m ay
have to build a small floodwater
·retarding basin to protect part
of the area as development OC·
curs.
But the Irvine Company would
be askectt to provide land and
easements needed and to pay for
other racilitles unless separately
approved by supervisors.
The county would maintain
any permanent nooa control de-
vices, a report to supervisors
said.
San Diego Creek and two can-
yon wash areas traverse the
parcel, there id.
6 litc~s of Snow
Blankets Kansas
ELKHART, Kan. <AP> -
Snow blanketed portions of
Kansas today, with up to 6
inches on the ground at Elkhart In
the southwest comer or the state.
Dodge City had its first May
snowfallin63years.
"It is the first time we've had
measurable snow in May as rar
back as 1915, so It's a pretty rare
occurrence," said Lee Stinson of
the National Weather Service
station at Dodge City.
were slushy but there were no
reports or accidents.
In the southern Rockies,
meanwhile, the weather service
reported up to 17 inches or snow.
In the Oklahoma Panhandle
and far northwestern Oklahoma,
meanwhile, the state highway
patrol reported snow made driv·
ing hazardous over many roads
and toppled Hmbs of some trees.
Three inches to 4 inches had
fallen in Guymon by sunrise.
Seven inches to 8 inches of soow
was reported In Boise City since
Tuesday afternoon, with about 3
inches still on the ground after
sunrise.
Priest, 92,
Rescued in
Fire Strike
MANSFIELD, Ohio <AP> -A
92-year-old retired Catholic
priest was rescued from bis
burning home today by rour
police officers after striking city
firefighters refused to battle the
blaze.
Jt was the first major fire in
the northern Ohio city or SS,000
since (irefighters struck Monday
demanding higher wages.
Mayor Richard A. Porter, who
helped fight the rare, said he was
starting the paperwork needed
to force firefighters back to
work or fire them under Ohio's
Ferguson Act, which forbids
strikes by public employees.
1."hose ignoring the law can be
fired.
The fire involved a brick
apartment building where the
Rev. Michae l A. McFa<tden
lived.
"We weren't sure anybody
li ved there until we saw a
Cleveland Plain Dealer on the
porch and a lighted doorbell,"
patrolman David Mast said.
He and three other patrolmen
rang the bell, got no answer, and
broke the door down.
McFadden was found asleep in
a first-floor bedroom.
The patrolmen brought the
priest and a few belongings -
'ackets on a hanger, a small file
box and a portfolio of memen-
toes or his 30 years as priest of a
church in nearby Shelby -out
or the building.
"It's very hard to start over.
I'm 92 you know," McFadden
said as he left the scene with the
friends.
The Irvlne Co. has until June
26 to secure approval, for the
public housing on campus. ac·
cording to terms or an agref'
ment settling a 21~-year·old
• lawsuit against the company. The lawsuit was brought by
the Orange County Fair Housing
Council against the company
and the city of Irvine. It claimed
an industrial complex approved
by the city which the Irvine Co.
plans w build failed to provide
housing opportunities for pro-
spective employees. UCI was
not a part of the suit.
The preferred alternative of
the settlement was to build 700
lower income units on UCI land
that had been set aside for cam-
pus housing. An additional 700
units would be built for universi-
ty housing.
If that was not agreeable to
the university, however, the
company agreed to provicle sites
on its own land for 725 lower
priced homes.
4Dodgers-
Plan Clinic
In Irvine
Four members of the Los
Angeles Dodgers will visit Irvine
on May 13 to conduct an instruc-
tional clinic and sign auto-
graphs.
The free clinic will be held
from noon to 2 p.m . at Harvard
Community Athletic Park, 14701
Harvard Ave.
Appearing will be manager
Tom Laso rd a. centerfielder
Rick Monday, catcher Johnny
Oates and pitcher BurtHoown.
Youngsters between 9 and 14
years old are invited to attend
the discussion and demonstra·
tioo"5 or baseball skills and
strategy.
The clinic is sponsored by the
Dodgers, Pepsi-Cola and the
cities of Irvine and Los Angeles.
For additional information.
call 754-3639.
i •
t
I
••All I know is that I was
rol'owing behind this truck and
saw his lights come on," Caputo
said . • "lbe truck came w a swp, I
hit my brakes and then bit bis rear
end. I have no idea wbatbappened
upfront."
Coast
If the clerk punches a wrong
number the letter end4tap1n the
wrong l<>Ution. Sometimes the
machine will make a mistake by
itself. <See MAIL. Page A.Z)
Irvine Pwza
Thief Takes
T)'peUJri~rs
Jack Walsh, wbo answered the
telephone for the Morton County
sheriff's office at Elkhart, said
there were s inches to 6 inches or
snow on the IJ'OUDd throughout
the area and it was still snowing
fairly hard I.bi~ morning.
Walsh said roads in the
southwest corner or Kansas
The National Weather Service
said the last snowfall this late in
spring in Oklahoma was May 12.
1953, when 3 inches fell on Boise
City.
Clayton Long, Mansfield safe-
ty directot, Mayor Porter, and
the fire department chaplain,
The Rev. R. L. Butler. were the
only persons other than pollce to
respond to the blue.
A spokesman for the city's 103
striking firemen said the first
(~e RESCUE, Page A2)
Talks Swted
On 'Corridor' 'l)
Weather
Night and morning low
clouds with sunny but
' baay afternoon Tbunday.
' Lows tonight In mld·SOs. i Highs Thursday 68 to 72.
' INSIDE TOD.4 ~
Pat Nazon'1 love /or hM
huaband um Otmd:M. mcin11
1ay. Bui tM prtftdnt wa.t
brut~ &tdi/f.md lo hn ha
P"bUc. Sn Pa,,e .U.
President to Miss Out
A burglar equipped with a ti~
iron pried and shattered the
doors or slx Douglas Plaza olftc:e
1u1tes in Irv~ Tuesday, and
sto l e six IBM Selectric
typewriters. Police sald be took
But He Almost Pkmned Irvine Solar VU.it
By PHILIP ROSMARIN Of ... ~ ...........
Tbe Irvine Unified School Dis·
trlct lnvllation1 for the 10:30
a.m . Thursday oedicatlon of the
El CamJno Real School solar nothing else. Police believe the burglaries• energy proj~t. which uses solar
vere accom~litbed withln about collector panels to hut and cool school bulldln&'· re&e: an hour, a ew houn before tbe "The public Is invited. ll will
omcu were ICbeduJed to open. be cablecast over Channel 3. The
Buine.ues vlctlmlzed were Prealdem of lhe United States
ldentlfled •• Oodber1 AUoctates,,,,.. will not be there ... <Related story Ftna.nclil Servl(ea; David OUa PaaeASJ
lnc.. a realtor; 0 .A. Vernco A Joaef An eccentnclty?
Bullder/Dev•loper: ElJer o, Accord.lna to Ktren C.am. Plu"''>'-"1ware~ and the faw piont, t tchool at•~rtct public ln· firm• of Cox. Cull• and formation off1cer Prealdtnt
Nlcholaon and McDonald, Carier blmaell at~ tlme fiaO
Pulaakl and Harlan. conaldered appeanoa in lrvtn• ..,. .
tor the dedication ol tbe project.
one of 32 across the country
chosen for the first year of his
Solar Energy Commercial
Demonstration Proaram.
Carter will be ln Los Anseles
Thursday to give a speech, and,
Mis Campion said, according
to hl• aide•. thouaht abo1't awins·
mg l>Y lrv1nelortheded1callon.
So encouraged by the aides
about the posl1b1licy wa the c:Us-
tract that tM orttlnaJ dedtcatlon
dale, April 18, WU postponed to
accommodate Caner. Four days btlor• the orl1inal·
l1 planoed da\e. Mill Campione
aaJd. 1he recelved a tt!lepbon~
call from tbe Department of
>
Energy. "Would you consider
postponing your dedlcatlon until
May 4?" she aald a voice
whispered to her. '"lbere is a
posslblllt.y the President of the
United States could be in atteo·
dance."
Faster than you can say.
"V es. Sir," district offlclala
oareed to tho postponement, and
complied wtth the Ener~y man'•
atrlct admonlUon: "Don t l~ thl•
get out."
The diltrict clldn1t let ft set
O\At. The April 18 dedlcajlon WU ~atpon~ with vaiue apok>li
et>Out the IWl not realty beln&
quite n,ht for.it then. . ( sot.A.a. AJ)
A public meeting to discuss
the merits and prospective rout-
1 n g or the San Joaquin
Transportation Corridor is
scheduled at 7 :30 p.m. Thursday
at University High School, 4771
Camp\P Drive, in Itvine.
Resfdents in the Newport
Beach and Irvine areas are en-
couraged w attend. The bearing
Is being conducted by county
planning staff and members of
Gruen Associates Inc .• consul-
tants on the route location study
Traffic ~narled
THOUSAND OAKS <AP>
Mornlna rush-hour traffic was
hampered toda,y by an auto·
truck crash which killed both O<'·
cupantl ol the car and apllled
ia•ollne on the roadway.
C.lllomla Kl&hway Patrol or.
flctr1 reported U.S. 101 waa
partially cloHd less lhaa two
mile• from the Los Ao1elei.
County Un~.
'
t
DAil y Pil.01
4Eseape
HBFire
By Leap
Four apartment dwellers. In·
cludang an eight·year·olcl boy,
jumped from a second story win·
dow to escape a predawn fire In
Huntington Beach today.
Embers from a barbec\!e
brazfer used earlier ln the eve·
ning ignited combustible
material on a balcony patio at
18781 Viewpoint Lane, firemen
said. The fire spread to the roof
and living room of the apartment.
causing an estimated 18.500 In
damaaae.
Patricia Hamilton, lS. her son
Brl an, 8, her brother, Ron
Harden. and a rrtend, Robert
Hagemeyer, woke up shortly
after 2 a.m. to find the path to
the front door blO<'ked by the in·
ferno
Harden ru.shed the others into
a bedroom and closed the door.
The four persons then IPade the
two;story Jump to safety. Only
minor scrapes and bruises were
sufrered by the victims, said fire
department Capt. Roger
Hos mer. The blaze was ex·
tinguishedwilhln IOminutea.
"It was a classic example or
the occupants not panicking due
to the situation," Hosmer added.
Most of the damage was con·
fined to the one apartment. fire
officials said.
OC Strike
Front
Subsides
The 16-day·old Orange Coµnty
trash truck strike continued to·
day Hmid a calm that left at
least one dispasal rlrm owner
uneasy.
"Everybody's so quiet today,
somethlng's going to happen,"
said Dick Taormina. owner or
Anaheim Disposal.
"No rocks were thrown at my
trucks today," he said, noting
that picketers from Teamsters
Loral 398 Just turned their barks
as newly hired non-union drivers
went on their rounds.
"We're meeting with lht>
fcd e rHI mediator loduy,"
Taormina said. "Maybe they
know somclhlna we don l . • •
The m~llng with mediator
John Courtney was scheduled
for 11 a.m.
Drivers on Saturday rejected
what managers of the seven
struck firms had termed their
final offer. Drivers are seekina a
ruise from $4.SO an hour to 18.SO
over a lhrec·year period, while
m11nagement has offered S6.
More lhan a millfon Orange
-·. -Cou..nly .re.aid.en.LI _wee. .Je!L
without lr311h pickup service for
two weeks On Monday, non-
union drivers began making the
rounds. but the combination of
inexpcrtenc4t and mounda of
piled up trash haR left collec·
lions behind schedule
f 'ro• Page AJ
DOCTOR •••
gllna to dealh a newbom infant
which survtved hi• attempt 12
houra earlier to abort the l8·year-
otd mother
It is alleged that Waddill choked
the ch lid to death In the belier that
lt would be little more than a
brain·damaged human vegeuble
iflt lived
Korea Aid Voted
WASHJNGTON (AP> -In a
move designed to offset the
withdrawal or U.S. combat units
from South Korea. a Hou•• com·
m1ltee upproved Tueada) the
transfer or S800 million worth of
military equipment to Korean
rorcea. The proposal waa sent to
the House noor by a voice vote
of the International Rehlllona
Committee
DAllY PILOT
SOLAR ••.
~.!'~ '1.atnct officials walled for eonurmallon from the boys al Ute White House wbo schedule
Ca rter•a a_ppot ntm ent.•. lf•a1nJhll•, Miu Campione and
olb•r dlatrld publlc relatora
teased local news men that
som•body bl&. an lmportaaot 1ov·
ernmeot official, miaht be com-
ing
"Il'is big," they said. "Really
bi ."
'·oon'l tell me." one ~f them
cracked. "Jimmy Carters com-
ing to roast some solar peanuts.''
But it was district officials
Uul it was district officials
who began to reel the heat when
the confirmation dldn 'l come.
Frantic contacts with con·
greasmen and several Presiden-
tial aides later . they learned the
worst: Carter wasn't coming.
Thus the invitation: Please
come. The President won't be
there.
F,....Page A J
MAIL ••.
The machines enabled the
Postal Service to eliminate Jobe.
"I don't think the public Is
ready to handle a mllUon people
on our payrolls," Poatmaater
General William F. Bolger said.
The Postal Service, which has
about 650.000 employees, would
require hundreds or thousands
more workers if mall was sorted
by hand, he added.
Bolger said he doesn't w.snl to
give up on mechanized mall
sorting. A new optlcai character
reader that may replace some of
the existing machines likely will
reduce the' number or
mechanical errors, he said.
Dorsey said citizens can
blame themaelves for about 15
percent of the mistakes becau.se
they uae incorrect ZIP codes.
The survey was done in 30 ma·
JOr cities or regional racilltles.
Dorsey said there would be an
expanded study In October.
The study took place in:
Atlanta, Baltimore, Boston,
BuCCalo. Chicago North
Suburban. Cincinnati. Dallas.
Denver. Detroit. Hartford .
Houston, Indianapolis. Los
Angeles. Memphis, Milwaukee.
Newark. New Orleans. New
York, Northern Virginiu .
Philadelphia, Phoenix, Pitts
burgh, PorUand . O r e ..
Providence. Richmond. St
Louis. San Fr~ncisco. Sealllc.
Sprinerield. Mass.: and Tampu
..
Crime R e port
Glavas Admits
Making Error
Pgranaid Enerflfl
U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations. Andrew Young.
tries a pyramid on for size in New York early Wednes-
day during Sun Day festivities. The pyramid is suppo~ed
to be conducive to attracting positive feelings to the
pt'ts~n under it. Sun Day. ce.lebrated nationwide today. 1s being observed through Thursday in New York City.
Top Court Ponders
Suit Over Dracula
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of ... o.11.-~ .........
Newport Beach's B. James
Glavas. head of the stale
Organized Crime Control
Commlaslon. today .said he could
not explain an apparent error in
identifyin& a Cypress engineer
as an organized crime figure.
The name Joseph Vincent
Agosto or 5048 Hanover Circle.
Cypress. was among the 92
names or reputed mobsters
released by Glavas and state
Attorney General Evelle
Younger during a press
conference Tuesday in Los
Angeles.
However. the wrong Joseph
Agosto. who lives al the Cyprel>s
address. says his middle name
is G eor1te. not Vincent and he's
an engineer for the Rockwell
International plant In Downey.
Law enforcement authorities
not involved with th e
commission say they understand ,
that Joseph Vlncept Agosto
intended to be listed actually
lives In Las Vegas.
Glavas. contacted today, sai~
he would not make further
c o m m e n t.s b e y o n d t h e
information carrled In the
report.
Asked about the Agosto
ldentlflcaUon. Glavas. a former
Newport police chler. lndJcated
he thoueht Joseph Vincent
Agosto llved in Cerritos. not
Cypress.
Agosto was among the six
names or alleged crime figures
SAN FRANCISCO <AP 1 _The who live in Orange County. Wllsontold{he!l1ghcourtinoral None or the count1ans
California Supreme Court is de-arguments Tuesday that the Identified were available for
He is currently under indict
ment for a variety or racketeer-
1 n g charges 1ncludln1 the
murder or San Diego Mafia
leader, Frank "The Bomp"
Bompenaloro.
Ralph D'Angelo. Anaheim. is
reportedly an associate of New
York's GaJlo fumlly and is con.
sldered to be a contact for East
Coast mob fiaures who come to
California.
Anthony Ferro. Anaheim. is
a llegedly Involved In narcotics
activity and Is reputed to be an
enforcer for crime rtgure,
Robert Paduano of nearby Cer
rltos. accordJna to the report.
James Testa. Los Alamitos. is
also serving a sentence at
Term lnal Island for extorting
ptiyments from Los Angeles
bookmakers. His partners in the
extortion scheme included Mafia
figures. also named in the re
port. Sam Sciortino. Peter
Milano and Brooklier.
The commission report noted
that despite the Increased activi
ly on the part or organized crime
it was estimated to be a S6 8
bi llion·a-year business In this
:-lute -no one has emerged &
the leader in Callforhia.
* * * 'Mobster'
Donated
To Younger
liberating the rate or Dracula -case goes beyond Lugosi and In· comment today . a !though
or at least thlhgs that look Like \'Ol ves the portrayal by any ac· reputed crime Cigurei. livin~ in LOS ANGELES <AP,> -Labor
the bloody vampire tor or a character 1n the publJc h f tb t d I S'dn R K h The case Involves Bela domain. 01 er parts o es ate reacte awyer 1 ey . ors ak may
Lugosi 's heirs and University He argued that Luaosi's name angrily. be on state Attorney General · Bo " According to the report. Evelle J . Younger's mobster Pictures lh want the right to never was used in the licensing Agosto has been the target of a list. but that hasn't deterred "draw blood" from sales of nov of Dracula items for sale.
City l·tems usi·ng the ,,ampi·r,.'s "U I d I 20·ycar effort on the part of the Younger from accepting $3,000 .. mversu ma e a argc con· r d 1 l t d I d 1 r likeness tribution lo the Came or the de· e era governmen o eport n campaign onat ons rom
The horror movl·e a"tor's d h rr him to his native Sicily because Korshak and seeking yet .. cease t rough its e orts in r h l d I h r hl be 1 1 bid widow, llopc. and son. Bela making and distributing the 1931 o I ~ organ ze er m e anot er or s gu rnator a
George Lugosi. filed SUit in 1966 p h 0 l 0 p I u y ... w i Ii; 0 n s a Id . coonnhcrllons. . I thl8 year.
af(ainst Umver!ia l tu decide who "Uni vt•rsal puid Lugosi rully ror Eddt. erzcount1an~ isled incdlude "I threw it away arter reading
should benefit rrom non.film use hl!'I services .. 1c uber. w1lh an ad ress It." Korshak said Tuesday of the
of Lugosi's portrayal or the in-listed tit 3073 Yukon St.. COtita recent reQuest .for money. "But
fomousCount Mes a . Currently servinf( a in view of the accusations
While not the 1irc -ttnd·de<1th Youth Ordered prison term in the federal prison Younger has made against me. 1
ctramu that characterized the on Terminal Island. he wa~ think he would want to go bacl<
film nend's work, the slakes In conv1~ed in 197~ with rtve ?lhers over his old campaign records
the cast• are high. The issue it To Tr1·a1 m· 1n a nationwide fraud scheme and return to me the money I
raises could involve many other • 1 that bilked Investors out or contributed to him In the past
actors and studios. attorneys nearly SI million. 5 Motelmen
Charged uy ,-., S Dominic Brook! •. Anaheim. .. Because If I'm the kind of
The l.otttos1 ramily contended • OrO la vino is listed by the report as a poten-person he says I am -and I'm
, it shoufd get the mone y J-,., tialcaodidatelobecomeheadof not -then I don't think he
Universal pocketed from llcens-PASADENA <AP> _ An 18. organized crime in Southern would want it on bis record that In Anaheim
Five Anaheim motel operators
or employees race charges or
keeping disorderly houses of
-IH'&&"i ht\101'" -after-their· •M'eS't
this week, Anaheim police said today.
The five are accused of know·
lngly renting rooms to pros-
titutes. po~cesald.
Arrested were Walter David
Helm. 21. a clerk at the Caravan
Inn, 130W. KatellaAve.: DennJs
Wayne Iverson, 24, a clerk at the
Raumatau Mot.el . 823 S. Beach
Rlvd.; Robert Leroy Tolle. 42.
manager of the Siesta 8 Motel,
821 S. Mancheater Ave.:
Also, Maean Bhal Patel, 40.
owner of the Hacienda Motel,
2176 S . Harbor Blvd .. and
Parsotam Rambhal Patel. -41.
owner or the Fronlorta Motel.
933 S. Harbor.
OCflcers said the arrests re·
11ulted from a two.week In
vesllgatlon by vice officers and
stemmed rrom information re·
celved from prostitutes arrested
earlier.
Rape Suspect
Sought in SD
SAN DIEOO <AP> -Al least
20 recent sex·related assault• ln-
cludlng eight rapes are under In·
veat11at1on in Mluion and
Pactllc beaches.
The victims say he is young,
while, about six feet tall and
athletically built. lie often raps
on windows first after observing
women alone. khocka on doors
or leaps from hallways.
In many Instances. the at-
tacker has worn a blue.and·
white bandana over hla rac• and
a blue sweat suit. wtth nothlna
else.
Tustin Driver
Hurt in Irvine
A TUltln man, tdenttfted 11
ludy 8yotte, lt, wu In 1tablt
condltlon today at Tuitln Com· muntty ltol)ltaJ after 1 ttatn~
accident early thla momlJla ln
lrvi.Dt.
rtrtMIJl Hld B1ott•'• car
am aabed lnto a telephone pole on 1rvlne Boulevard. eaat of Jtlfre.y
Roact. at 12:• a.m . Byott• waa treated for bead
and••• lnJuna.
1ng novelty manufacturers for year·old South Pasadena youth California_ He has past convic· he took money from me.··
the right to use photographs of has been ordered to stand trial m lions for armed robbery. larceny Korshak is one of 92 persons
Lugosi us Draculu on such scary Superior Court for the murder or and interstate transportation or Younger's Organized Crime
goodies aa T·shirts. masks. coi.-an El Toro woman. whose body for({ed documents Control Commission identified
tum es and swizzle sticks. was round in Angeles National Tuesday as being connected with
It started in 1931 w~en Lugosi Forest four days after she dlsap· the mob. ..ruw:L1~ T.c.a.DS¥Lvarua ut-on..._ --oett~.----- - -------------Younger's ·campaig~ offl~ial;--
Universal back lot as the central Pasadena Municipal t:ourt School Carnival confirmed receiving a contribu-
figure in the movie "Dracula." Judge Giibert C. Alston set u lion of Sl,000 from Korshak in
The suit says Lugosi's con· May 17 arrai,nmcnt date ror Set l D-!-F _._ M 1971 A d tract wlth Universal was limited B r i a n w i 111 s. f o 11 ow Ing 0 IUlll!te UDUB ay · n cqunty records
to his performance In the movie Tuesduy's closed·door !re· revealed a S2,000 campaign A carnival to nise funds ror donation by Ko-hak to Yo and production of ads for the hminary hearing requeste by •"' unger
I new school equipment Is In 1970 rt m . the defense. He is held in lieu of scheduled from 10 a .m. to 6 p.m .
It maintains that by market· S250.000 bond. Saturday al Greentree School. At Younger's headquarters
ing Lugosi's creation or Dracul a. Willis is charged with murder 4200 Manzanita St.. lfvlne. Tuesday. a red·faced aide
Universal has been making und kidnap 10 the d eC1th or Tickets to participate in In· blamed an orflce slipup for
money that rightfully belongs to Rachel Sparling. 36. a mother of dlvldual events. such 88 games. Korshak receiving the attorne:
the actor's heirs. four who disappeared March 14. k ,.. general's latest campaign But Universal said the con· 1977 after visiting her Pasadena a ca e walA, 8 magic show· and solicitation tract made no restriction on psychiatrist. for cotton candy and popcom.
Lugosi's portrayal of Dracula, Alkers round her body four are 15 cents each. The camlval "f know we wrote. 'Do Not
and even 11 it had. Lueosi's days later She had been shot Is sponsored by the school Mall.' over his name In our
rights died with him in 1956. twice in the head. parent·teacher group. mastercardfile,"lhealdesaid.
Los Angeles Superior Court ---------------------------------------Judge Bernard Jercerson ruled
for the fa mily and awarded
them $53,023, plus 119,970 in-
tcrcat. A state Court of Appeal
reversed the decision and the
heirs appealed.
Universal attorney Robert
Fro. Page A l
RESCUE ...
major fire In the city since the
Kturt or the walkout had not
1:1ltertd their stand.
''The men are 11tlll determined
to stay out until we get a con·
tract," he sald. "We went to
council last night with an offer
and It was tlally denied. The
monkey's on their back now."
The firefighters want a
$1 .000·a -yeur pay raise in a
three-year contract. Currently,
starting pay is $12,626. No new
talk• were scheduled
Yomh HitJJ
Bus Driver
DENVER (APl -A
youth on a city bu1 struck a WOll\•D driver on the
head wlth a tape player
and his fists, a fter she
11ked him repeatedly to
tur n down the volume on
tho player, poll~ Hid.
She Hid none ot the mon than llt .,,., .. n1en
did 1nytblnt to help, and
t.h~you\h ran away.
The dri"9r, Pe111 Suun
Wathen, IS, WAI lrtated at
St. Joaeph ffo.plt1I tot
cula on her fee• 1ad
forehead f0Uowtn1 th• at.
tick.
I •
Lynn Hort HART'S Joh n Hort
SPORTING GOODS
538 CENTER ST.• COSTA MESA• 646-1919
Clase OUt
About 200 Bike Tirn
Mostly 20x2125
& 20x1.75 200 each
31s4n -5es Value
Baseball Shoes
Soccer Shoes
Bask1tb1ll Shoes
Jou1n1 Shoes
Track Shoes
Yolleyblll Sll08s
Tennis Sllaes
Wn Up Suits
weat Suits
/ Y.fflck Sweaters
Gym Pints
Open 9. to 6 • CIOied SunGay
Tennis Dresses
Ladies' T ennls s.ts
Ladies' Tennis Sllirts
Men's & Boys' Tennis Shorts
Men's & Boys' Tennl$ Sblrts
Te
Tennis RICUts
Wilson • Davis • Yonex
Prince • Bancreft • Dunlop
Racquetball Rxquets
Badmlnt1n beats
Racket StrinP11
• t l t
!
i
I
f
~
ft
,
l
. I
I
f
I. ,
~
~ .
,
t
~
l
'
Afternoon
I
N.Y. Stoeks Laguna/South ~oast
VOL 71, NO. 123, 4 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, MAY 3, 1978
' New Evidence in Lag_una Arson Pro
By STEVE MITCHELL
Of .. 0.ly ...... SYtt
Evidence of arson was dis·
covered Tuesday In a house un·
der construction less than two
blocks from the scene of a
S750.000 fire last Thursday that
gutted three homes and
damaged a fourth
Workers found charred insula·
tion and wood outside a home
under construction at llSl Sum-
mil Way Tuesday morning while
wo rking on the ocean·view
home.
"There's no doubt. it was an
attempted arson," Police Lt. Al
Olson said this morning.
The fire was started under a
ledge or the three story struc·
ture, but names were confined
to a very small area, fire in·
vestigators said.
The home is owned by con-
tractors John Mcinnes and T J . Thompson, who told fire In·
vesligators they discovered the
damage Tuesday morning.
Fred Strayhorn, a deputy
state fire marshal. said the tire
could have ·been started the
same morning as the blaze on
La Mirada Street.
The contractors said they
began work last Thursday mom·
ing and discovered two dozen
paper·wrapped caramel candies
strewn around the lnside of the
Sllmmit Way house.
"We didn't think anything ~fit
at the time," Mcinnes said.
But fire officials s aid the
mystery candy could have been
a ploy lo cause fire investigators
to believe the blaze was set by
children.
A third fire. which police
believe was set intentionally,
* * *
was discovered hours before last
week's La Mirada blaze at 900
Santa Ana St.
Fireme n found burnin g
newspapers set against portions
of a house being built at the San·
ta Ana Street address, but
da mage was limited to about
$SO.
Police said today they cannot
connect aUJ.three Jlres, nor can
they confinnr the big fire on La
* ;~·l·: *
Mirada was .arson
"We know there were two a
tempts at arson, and the <Sum
mil Way) fire might have bee
set the same night as the othe~
one. But we can't confirm arson in the La Mirada blaze," Olson
said. "Tbat one is still under in·
vestlgation."
But when Strayhorn asked the
builder what happened to the
<See ARSON, Page AZ>
* * *
CoUncilOKs
Fire Road Plan
uaguna Beach councilmen
Tuesday night paved the way for
a mlle·long fire access road con·
necting two hills ide com·
munities in the Art Colony.
The unanimous action came
after nearly two hours of dis·
cussion before a council cham·
bers packed with residents from
Arch Beach Heights, Top of the
World and other neighborhood
residents. ·
In six separate votes on the is·
sue Tueliday, councilmen ap·
proved:
\Ian Slams Into Pole
Deborah Lynn Todd. 17. of 1594 Skyline
Drive, Laguna Beach was unhurt Tuesday
afternoon after she lost control of her van
while heading south on Coast Highway
near Emerald Bay. The vehicle careened
mto the northbound lanes, struek a curb
and plowed upside down into a power
pole. breaking it in two places. Firemen
a nd police maneuvered around live eler·
trical wires. directing traffic while Edison
Co. officials worked to replace the pole.
Miss Todd. accompanied only by her dog.
said she does not know what caused the
vehicle to go out of control.
Campaign
Finances
Disclosed
Funeral Held
For LB Girl
Kille d.by _Car_
Services were held today in
Lagun a Beach for Cecilia
Molina, a 20-year·old dental as·
s1stant who was killed Sunday in
a Los An~eles auto accident.
Miss Molina, a 1976 graduate
of Laguna Beach High School,
worked for Dr. Norman Browne,
at his dental offices. She at·
tended University High School in
Irvine during her freshman and
sophomore years, then Laguna
Beach High when her family
moved to Arch Beach Heights.
She crewed on her father's 37
foot Is lander during last month's
Ensenada race, a nd joined her
family for a three month sailing
trip to Hawaii after graduating
from dental assistant's school in
Anaheim last year.
Services were held al St.
Catherine of Siena Catholic
Church In Laguna Beach.
Miss Molina is survived by
parents Mr. and Mrs. George
Molina, 765 Balboa Ave .•
brothers Leslie and Paul Molina,
and grandpa~ts Ezequiel and
Inna Molina of Costa Mesa .
Indiana March On
KANSAS CITY, Mo. <AP) -A
rroup of about 60 Indians sel up
camp at Lake Jacomo ln eastern
Jackson County ovemjgbt, after
passing through Kansas Cil3'
Co ast
Weaahe r
Nl1ht and mominl low
clouds wltb aunn)' but
buy afternoon Thursday.
Lows tonight in mid,·509.
Highs Thursday 68 to 72.
INSIDE TODAY
By GARY GR~NVILLE
OI .. O.lly PIMt"'"
Campaign finance reports
Cited with the Oranse County
Registrar of Voters this week
s how : •
-Tbe county's most heavily
financed campaign is in the
.. second s upervisorial district
where five candidates have ac·
cumulated $320.055 for the June
6 primary election campaigns.
· -Republican John Scbmlt1 is
far outdistancing his rivals for
the Republican nomination in
the 36th State Senate District
whe n it comes to campaign
fina ncing.
-Republican Lee Watkins is
coming close to matching GOP
rival Marian Bergeson in availa·
ble campaign dollars in the five·
ca ndidate ra ce for th e
Republican nomination for the
74lh Assembly District.
-T hough unopposed in the
Democratic primary e lection
Assemblyman Dennis Mangers,
D·Huntington Beach, is spending
as rapidly as the Republican
contenders battling for their
party's nomination.
-Faced with a challenge from
five relatively unknown contend·
ers. Sheriff Brad Gates this
year has collected only SlOO to
fin ance his re-election bid.
Pacing the heavy spending in
<See ELECl'ION. Page AZ>
5Motelmen
Charged
In Anaheim
SC Arrests ;Expose
Auto 'Theft Ring'
Five Anaheim motel operators
or employees. face charJes or
keeping disorderly houses of
prostitution after their arrest
this week, Anaheim pollce sald
today.
The Clve are accused of know·
tngly renUne rooms to pros·
A car theft ring, which police
said bas operated from Long
Beach to San Dieeo. was ex· posed ln San Clemente tbas
week, when city pollce arrested
two persona on suspicion of
grand theft and <:onsplracy.
Kent Edward Andrews. 35.
and bis wlfe, Rancta. 31, Conner·
ly or San Clemente and now liv·
1 lii crar ... monr. WmJ arre1tld
Sunday. Police sftd a prleat
from tbe San Oleao area Id n·
tllled Mn. Andrews from a
photoaraph aa the woman who
ao~ bJm a car. whJcb be later discovered bad been ttoJerr.
The foUJ'.monlh lnvesttcauon
of lb• tutpeaed car. theft. opera·
lion Involved l b• California
H11hway P~trol and Colt.a Men
•
Ututea, PQllce said. . police, as well as the San Arrested were Wa lter David
Clem ente Police Depanment. Reim, 21, a clerk al the Caravan
Addltlonal arrests are expected, Inn, 130 W. Katella Ave.: Dennis
police said. Wayne Jversoa, 24. a clerk at the
The Andrews were allegedly Raz1matau Motel. 123 s. Buch
lnvolve4 in the thefts of at least Blvd.: Robert Leroy Tolle, 42,
elaht 1965 and 1966 F.ord manaaer or the Siesta 6 Motel,
Muatano. which are now con-821 s. Manchester Ave.! aldtred "cluslca" and sell for
12,000 to $4,000, said ~~· Crala Also. Ma1an Bhal Patel, 40, eclner or lhe an -cremente "OWner of the Haclenda Motel,
police. 2178 S. Harbor Sl\fd ., and
Members or the atleaed car Paraotam Rambhai Patel, 41,
lheft rlna apparently swltc'hed owner ol tho Fronterta Motel.
license plates. 933 S. Harbor.
The meet who bouaht on ot Otflcera aaltl the arrt1t.a re·
tbe alleaedly stolen MUJt&n11 11.11,ed from _..o.week In·
discovered lt was stolen when he -vnll•alloft by Vile ofttcert and ehec~td wWi hil ..._uc-eom· st.etnmed from \nlqrmation re·
pany, prior IO attempUn1 to l'8;.i. mved fl'Orn prottl\utes Vtelt41d
sell tt, pOUce said. eerlJer.
-Certification of the EIR .
-Adopted an alignment for
th~ rt1:e access road recom ·
mended by the Planning Com·
mission which cros ses the
Moulton Meadows a rea.
-Appropriation of $100,000
from the ·city's open s pace ac·
quisition fund lo finance the fire
road.
-Approved filing or an ap.
plication with the state Coastal
Commission.
-Authorized the staff lo pre·
pare plans. specifi cations and
bids for the proJect.
-Approved hiring a third
flrefighter for the Top of the
World fire station at the comple·
lion of the fire road.
Councilmen received s upport.
for the controversial fire access
road from representa~ives of
m o r e than a h a lf d oze n
neighb<frhood associations who
spoke Tuesday ni ght.
Linda Ristrow, chairman of
the Coalition of Neighborhood
Associations, said a resolution
<See FIRE. Page AZ>
Birds Bombing
Suxdkm» Cover Crowth
SAN RAF~EL <AP> -Droppings from a prolific
colony of nesting swallows are causing. problems for
crowds at Marin Civic Center. .. :·~ey just bomb the place ... and people wail· ~ng m !me ft?r shows are complaining about the mess
m their .h~Jr and on their clothes." said Wayne
Lalor , director of Exhibition Hall a nd Veteran's
Auditorium at the center.
The county Public Works Department recom·
mended that the swallows' nest be removed. But a
vote by supervisors on the issue Tuesday deadlocked
2·2 with one member ofthe board absent.
Council to eigh
Pier-bowl Agency
By ANNE COOPER OI Ult o.lly ...... Slaff
The fate of the San Clemente
Project Area Committee, ap.
pointed by the City Council act·
ing as the Pier-Bowl Redevelop-
ment Agency. may hang in the
balance al tonight's city council
meeting.
The meeting is scheduled to
begin at 7:30 p.m . in council
chambers al city hall. 100 Ave.
Presidio.
Last week six of the nine proj·
ect area committee members
voted 4·2 to appeal fo r outside
legal opinion on whether the
committee exists as a legal en·
lily.
Until last week, the commit·
lee, which was to act in an ad·
visory capacity on the city's
pler·bowl redevelopme nt, had
not m et since June.
At their June Z1 meeting-, five
com mlttee members took a
"straw" vote on three re·
development plans presented by .
pier.bowl consultants. Keisker·
John son , San Clemente
architects.
Two committee members sup·
ported passive redevelopment of
the pier·bowl area, two others
supported restricted d evelop·
ment, and the fifth s upported in·
tense commercial development.
The City Council received the
committee's report on its vote
and voted 4·1. with Willia m
Walke r opposed. to explore
whether a compromise or the
second and third alternatives -
limited commercial develop.
ment -would a ttract d e·
velopers.
Once the City Council had
charted Its path, members or the
Project Area Committee say
they assumed their job was
over. This assumption was rein·
forced in November, when then
Mayor Donna Wilkinson present·
ed committee members with
<See AGENCY, Page A%>
Rock Concert Set
Country rock music ensemble
"Daniel Amos" will perform at
a free concert Friday at the
Calvary Chapel of Dana Point.
33732 Big Sur St. The concert
will b e gin at 7 :30 p .m .
Additional Information is
available by calling 493·2006.
Fad Word?
Coun£ilman BalJa at Name
It was the human element In
the name that bothered La1una
Beach Councilman Wayne
Ba1Un.
The woe Tuesday nllht wu a
request to cbanp the name of
the ctty'1 ffe man Affairs
1>e1>al'tmenl to the "Kecreation
and Human Services Depart·
ment."
Actln• City Manacer George
Fowler nki t.he n.w name would
Incorporate the reoreaUonal
aspecta of lbe department,
clal m lnf the old name Oa1)' COO·
fUJtd commwait, memlMn.
But BacUn wa1a 't too P,lelled
wtth the a.rm "human" la either
\ ~
title.
"The tenn 'Human' Is a Cad·
dish el(J>l"eMlon that came up an
the '70s," he said, adding he'd
rather aee the word ••Sotial''
replace It.
That prompted Mayor Jack
'lf'clJowen Co tum to Battin and
smile. "I hat~ to tease you,
Wayne, but I think the term
•soelal' cornea from the '80s."
Ba1lln aot his way1 howevu, ao when YoU call City tfalrto ask
about a lennb class, ast ror the
RecreaUoo and Soclal Services
Department.
The operator wlll put you right
throuJb. -
,4..1 DAU. Y PtLOT L 1SC Wit 1 .U.S. "71
...
Glavas Admits Error in __ e .Report
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
OI .. o.i,,. f'llM Sl<ttt
Newport Beach's 8 James
Glavas, head ot the state
Organized Ctime Contro l
Commission, today Hid he e<>u.ld
not explain an apparent error In
identifying a Cypress e111ineer
as an organli.ed crime figure.
Tbe name Joseph Vincent
Agosto of 5048 Hanover Circle,
Cypress, was among the 92
names of reputed mobsters
released by Glavas and state
Attorney General Evelle
Younger during a press
conference Tuesday In Los
Angeles.
However. the wrong Joseph
Agosto. who lives at the Cypress
ciddress, says his middle name
is Georf'?e. not Vincent and he's
* * *
'Mobster'
Donated
To Younger
'° LOS ANGELES (AP> -Labor
lawyer Sidney R. Korshak may
be on stale Attorney General
Evelle-J. Younger's mobster
list. but that hasn't deterred
Younger from accepting $3,000
in campaign donations from
Korshak and seeking yet
cinother for his gubernatorial bid
this year.
"I threw it away after reading
it," Korshak said Tuesday o( lhe
recent request for money. "But
in view or lhe accusations
Younger has made against me. I
think he would want to go back
over his old campaign records
and return to me the money I
contributed to him in the past
"Because if I'm the kind of
person he says I am -and I'm
not -then t don't think he
would want it on h.is record that
he took money from me."
Korshak is one of 92 persons
Younger's Organized Crime
Control Commission Identified
Tuesday as being connected with
the mob.
Younger's campaign officialJ
confirmed receiving a contribu-
tion of $1,000 from Korshak in
May 1971. And county records
revealed a $2 .000 campaign
donation by Korshak lo Younger
in 1970.
Al Younger's headquarters
Tuesday. a red-raced aide
blamed an office slipup for
Korshak receiving the attorney
~eneral 's latei.t campaign
solicitation.
"I know we wrote, 'Do Not
Mai I.· over his name in our
mastercard file," the aide said
F ,....Page AJ
AGENCY •••
plaques or appreciation for their
service to the city.
However. state redevelopment
agency law requires that project
area committees not be dis·
banded for three years.
When Howard Mushett -an
opponent of the City Council's
redevelopm ent plan -was
elected to the City Council In
March. he asked that matters
before the Redevelopment Agen-
cy be referred to the Project
Area Committee.
Members of the committee al·
tending last week's meeting
said they didn't know whether
the meeting was legal. They said
they also want lo know whether
redevelopment agency actions
taken since the committee's last
meeting in June have been legal.
Committee Chairman Thomru1
Youngerman said Tuesday he
has drafted a letter to City Clerk
Max Berg asking that an al·
torney other than the elly at·
torney be contacted to In·
vesUgate the sltualJon.
~NOi COAST LIK
DAILY PILOT
an enslnffr for the .Rock"U
lnterutlooal plant In Downey.
Law t!nforcemenl authorities
not involved with the
commission say they understand
tbat Joseph Vincent Agosto
Intended to be listed actually
lives in Las Vegas.
GJavas. contacted today. said
he would not ma-ke further
comments beyond th e
information carried In the
report.
As ked about the Agosto
Identification, Glavas. a. former
Newport police chief. indicated
he thought Joseph Vincent
Agosto lived in Cerritos. not
Cypress.
Agosto was among the six
names or alleged crime figures
who live in Orange Countv.
Nooe or the counllans
ldenlUled were available for
comment today. although
reputed crime figures living in
other parts or the state reacted
angrily.
According to the report.
Agosto has been the target of a
20·year effort on the part-.o! the
federal government to deport
him to his native Sicily because
or his organized crime
connections.
Other countians listed include
Eddie Zuber, with an address
listed at 3073 Yukon St.. Costa
Mesa. Currently serving a
prison term in the federal prison
on Terminal Island, he was
convicted In 1975 with five ~thers
in a nationwide fraud scheme
that bilked investors out of
ne1 rly ft mlWon.
Dominic BrooJdier, Anaheim.
Is listed by the report as a poten-
tla I candidate to become head or
organized crime in Southern
Callfornia. He has past convic·
tions for armed robbery. larceny
and interstate transportation of
forged documents.
He is currently under in<Jlcl·
ment for a variety of racketeer·
ing charges in cluding the
murder of San Diego Mafia
leader. Frank "The Bomp"
Bompensiero.
Ralph D1Angelo, Anaheim. is
reportedly an associate or New
York's Gallo family and is con-
sidered to be a contact for East
Coast mob figures who come 1.0
California.
Anthony Ferro. Anaheim. is
allegedly involved In narcotics
activity and ls reputed to be an
enfo rcer for crime figure.
Robert Paduano of nearby Cer·
ritos. according to the repert
James Testa. Los Alamitos. is
also serving a sentence at
Terminal Island for extorting
payments from Los Angeles
bookmakers_ His partnen in the
extortion scheme included Mafia
figures. also named in the re·
port. Sam Sciortino, Peter
Milano and BrookHer.
The commission report noted
that despite the increased actlvi·
ty on the part of organized crime
-it was estimated to be a $6.8
billion-a-year business In this
state -no one has emerged as
ihe leader in California.
"California does not yet have
som~ont slttlnlf as its god-
father." commented Glavas dur.
Ing Tuesday's press conference.
Younger. a candidate for the
Republican gubernatorial
n<.mination. defended release of
the report ln Ught of bis past
comments that organized crime
is not a significant problem in
California..
He said the recenl Influx of
mobsters has made the problem
comparable to thal faced by
eastern states.
Younger also defended his of·
flee . which has not filed a single
organized crime prosecution
during his term of office. by say-
ing state Jaw enforcement needs
more "tools" such as wiretap.
ping authority and cooperation
o( rederal agencies to light CK·
gan1zed crime ln Calirornia.
F,....Pa.-AJ
FIRE-ACCESS ROAD. • •
approved by her group endorses
the fire road concept, but
warned there are ~eral ''key"
words-&D that resolution.
She said unanimous approval
came only with the assurance
that the road will be for. "limited
access" by emergency vehicles.
She also said the homeowner
groups insist the fire access
road be gated al both ends to
keep dirt bike riders and others
off the roadway
future councils from providing
access lo future development
along the rtdgeline.
Plannin g director Doug
Schmitz said the project could
be completed within four months
lo a year. depending on proJress
of the various permit and con·
st ruction phases.
* * * Fro• Pa,,e A l
ARSON ••.
two dozen cbewles. Mcinnes replied, "We ate them."
MARCO EORSTER CHESS PLAYERS RANK FOURTH IN NATION
(From Left) Dean Danlel, 13; Jim Allen, 14; Tony Carra•co, 14
A Top'o( the World eommWllty
poll, taken immediately after a
fire last week that burned t.hree
homes and damaged a rourth,
shows community support for
the fire road.
The survey, signed by 359 resi·
dents of that community.
showed 95 percent support for
the fire road. a spokeswoman
for that group told couneHmen.
Strayhorn groaned and said,
"You ate the evidence? There
might have been latent prints on
the candy wrappers."
Champs New Heroes· Mayor Jack McDowell asked
City Attorney George Logan to
outline his opinion or several
questions that have been raised
concerning the fire road. Logan
said:
"Hell. how did we know it was
evidence." Mcinnes growled.
San Juan Chess Team Brings New Popularity County, SC
Approve
Fire Pact
Uy ANNE COOPER the motivation. and these luds
01t11toe1tv "''•"'Wff are highly motivated.
"I'd say the chess team cur ··it's like football -you give a
rently has about the same status football player a little publicity,
around Marco Forster as the and he's an outstanding player ...
football or basketball teams." said Mayes. "The other students
chess coach Marvin Mayes said think our chess champions are
this week. pretty neat. ..
His San Juan Capistrano team Chess started out at Marco
placed fourth last weekend in Forster in a small way, Mayes
national competition. said. lie was working with a
"When you compete m Min· special education student. who
neapolis one day and see the said he liked to play chess.
competition written up the next Mayes found he could improve
day in all the local California lhe boy's motivation to complete
papers. that can really make his classroom assignments. if
you feel pretty good." said Mayes offered to play a game of
Mayes. che!is with him when the work
To unwind from the weekend's was done.
fierce competition. the Marco ~ "We started playing quite reg.
Forster Junior High School ularly. and the boy was not a
chess champions are practicing bad player." said Mayes. "One
their moves. gearing up for an day I walked into a class of
Orange County championship Multiply Gifted Minor students
playoff on Thursday. and challenged them to play my
"We're only a . half, or a student. He beat all but one o(
quarter. or an eighth as good as them "
we're going to be someday," As · Mayes' student's repula·
said team captain Jim Allen. 14 lion spread. a loeal resident and
"We're going to be International chess enthusiast suggested he
grand masters." ought to form a chess club. He
The game. which has swept did. and that year the club team
Marco Forster in the past two won third place In national
years. has students rushing to junior high school chess cham-
the library at every opportunily pions hip competition.
lo vie for chess boards. It has Unlike some schools in the
also made heroes or chess team country, Marco Forster doesn't
members. offer chess as an elective
"Chess has orrered the kids course. Students interested in
another way to succeed," said the game stand In line to play on
coach Marviq Mayes. "Almost the school's 15 chess boards at
anyone can play chess who has lunch and snack breaks.
F ro•Page A l
ELECTION FUNDS. • •
the Second Supervisorlal D1s-
lrict is incumbent supervisor
Laurence Schmit.
Schmit's campaign statement
showed that he has collected as.
or April 23, $170,757 .
So far. Schmit has spent
$98,604 on his campaign to head
off the challenge of four contend·
ers.
And h.is stateme shows that
he has $64,423 on han
through the campaign.
Scbriiit collected bis Sl70,7 7
war chest over the past three
and one hall years.
But challenger Harr iet
Wieder, a former Huntington
Beach city councilwoman, has
collected her $75,580 campaign
fund since nominations closed
March 10.
l.aguna Club
To Host Art
Audio~ Sa/,e
The Exchange Club of Laguna
Beach is host.ins an art exhibl·
lion and art auction Saturday at
the Laiuna Beath Boy• Club.
OU paintlnp and wa~rt0lors
by local and tnt.cmaUonal artists wm " on the auction block
beslnnlnc at 8 p.m. at th• Boys
Club on Laguna Canyon Road.
Artlsta •~h u Conni• King,
Norman Rockwell, CbaaaU .
Dali, Calder, LeAoy Neiman
Ind John Kelty ,.111 be on dla·
play ~I •l 7 p.m . dul'fna
a wtne tudnc _and ~view.
A4liil.&ii0n 1ili • per perao11 and pmceedl INaa I.be auction 10 toward~ Club proJecta.
Included in that sum is $10.000
loaned Mrs. Wleder's campaign
by her husband, Irving Wieder.
Former s upervisor David
Baker who is trying to regain the
supervisor's seat he held for 12
years reported total campaign re-
ceipts of$39.846.
Of that, Baker loaned $22,500 to
his own campaign.
A fourth candidate in the
Second District race, Sonia Son·
ju. s howed on her campaign
statem ent that she borrowed
$30.000 at 10 percent interest
with real estate as security to
finance her campaign.
The fifth candidate in the
race. former Garden Grove
mayor J . Tillman Williams.
loan ed himself the $597
necessary to me as a candidate.
Wllllams' statement does not
show any other contributions or
toans.
In the 36th State Senate Dis·
trlct race, the statement filed b(.
SchmlU today shows he has co .
lected f70,9:20, including $2,500
donaLloM from both the Gun
Owners of California and
C1UtomJa Medical Political Ac·
lion Committee.
That amount put Schmtti well
ahead of t\l• chlef rivals ror the
Republican nomlnatfon.
Former Fountain Valley city
councilman Geor1e Scott in·
dlcalOd on b1I atatement tbal he
has ralMd $22,932 for his contnl
with Schmlti and the other GOP
candidates.
In the same race, RepubUcan
GU Fer1uaon 1how1 be bas
amH eel *23,240, •.soo of It in
tlM Corm ol pa.els• t.o finance hi• try (or the Mat now O(Cupled
by Senator Dennb Carpenl.er, R·
Newport Bl&ach. • . .
however. said Mayes.
"There's been some carry.
over to acade m ic subJects
among our committed chess
players." he said "Chess is a
game which requires a player to
think a number of moves ahead.
When students learn that kind of
analysis, lhey can apply it in
ciny situation.··
··1 like the strategy in chess ...
said team player Dean Daniel.
··Football is strate~y. too. but In
chess you really have to lhmk
chess is all brains ...
-The city has the right to
restrict roadways to emergency
use only. without opening it to
the public.
-The city could probably
stop Orange County from con·
demning the road and expanding
it for general traffic use.
Landowners with properties
fronting on the access road
would not have the right to use
the road because. he said. rt
does not qualify as a street.
-Logan !Wild, however. that
the current council cannot binrt
A joint agreement covering
emergency fire assistance
bet ween Orange County crews
and San Clemente firemen was
approved Tuesday by county
supervisors.
Teen-ager Succumbs
In Resqie Attempt
The agreement provides for
the city to rt-spond to alarms in
unincorporated areas adjacent
to S::m Clemente and the county
firemen to assist when needed
on fire calls in northern San
Clemente.
The assistance responses
would be made without chargt'
and only in cases where more
than one engine company 1s
needed.
Supervisors earlier approved
si milar agreements with of·
ficials in Huntington Beach. Seal
Beach, Garden Grove. Orange.
Stanton and Brea.
YOSEMITE NATIONA-L
PARK <AP> -A tee'n·age
Southern California boy slipped
into the Merced River and ap-
parently drowned while trying to
rescue a girl from the turbulent
water. rangers said.
Searchers were unable to find
the body of Brad Mentier. 17. or
Simi Valley, after the accident
Tuesday and planned to continue
the search today.
Ranger Herbie Sansum gave
this account:
Mentzer and other students
from Simi Valley High School
were sitting on rocks along the
south bank of the ri•er below
Vernal Falls when Sandra
Bolich dropped her diary into
the water. She fell Into the
stream while reaching for it.
Th r ee b oys, including
Mentzer. hurried down the bank
to try to get the girl out or the
rushing water. Mentzer ran
down a rock slab but was unable
to grab Miss Bolich as she was
swept past him.
Then Mentzer slipped Into the
stream.
The girl was shoved into a
quiet eddy where the other two
boys were able to reach her and
pull her to safety.
But Mentzer. caught ln a white
water cascade, was swept
downstream past them.
Kore a Aid Voted
WASHINGTON CAP'1 -Jn a
move designed to offset the
withdrawal of US. combat unit~
from South Korea. a House com-
mittee approved Tuesday the
trans fer of S800 million worth or
military equipment to Korean
forces. The proposal was sent to
the House floor by a voice vote
or the International Relations
Committee
Lynn Hort HART'S John Hort ·
SPORTING GOODS
538 CENTER ST.• COSTA ME SA • 646-1919
Close Out
About 200 Bike Tires
Mostly 20x2125
l 2011.75 200 each
3es-4as.5ts Value
Baseball Shies
Soccer Shoes
Bnlletball Shoes
Jotlinl Sfloes
Track Shoes
Volleyball Shoes
T annis Shoes
Tennis Dresses
Ladies' T Innis Sbarts
Ladies' Tennis Shirts
Men's & Boys' Tennis Sborts
Men's & Boys" Tenra Shirts
Tennis 1
T emris bcbts
Wilson ·Davis · Y•x
Prince • BaACflft • Dldlp
lacqmtball bcqmts
BadmMtll llcbts
Racket StJtlPll
Baseball Mitts BlsiUll Caps
laseUll lits Basiliall UldlrslWts
....
. '
8 L/ C
Orange Coast Oa1ty Pilot Edita~., 111ta~.111111 ........................................... Ro.~.'.·~N .• W.e·e<J·/P·u·b·ll~.~.' ... T.ho·m·a·~-K~ ... Yl.l/.Ed.tl.Of • • ~ 1 ~.~ Wfdnetday. May3, 1978 S.rbara l<relblch/Edltorlal P4'Qe Editor
Fire Emphasizes
Heights Problems
Ttto $750,000 fir~ that dci-;tl·O)'Cd three homes in the
Arch Beach llt.•1ghts community and damaged a fourth
last week points up the urgent fleed for u capital improve-
ment plan !o.r. tbe.hillLop.£ilOlJill111i>'-
A planning commission report dealing Wfth problems
._in..Arch Beach I lei~hts was forwarded to the City Council
in September ol 1976
That report dealt with unique situutions to the com-
munity such as lack of police and fire protection, lack of
l'a1·king. parks. and terrible trafric circulation problems .
'l'hc 16-page report has resulted in only one action by
the city. Oiw·\Ht.V streets were approved for the residen-
tial ncighborhc)()(I to t.·a~c traffic congestion and safety
problems , ~
But perhaps the biggest problem in the neighborhood
is the proximit>' of homes -some less than six feet
apart. ·
Combinmg adjacent \'acant Jots owned by the same
person for construction of one unit would alleviate that
problem by allowing a larger sideyard setbac~ between
buildings.
Had that been done in the La Mirada Street blaze.
I wo homes could have perhaps avoided damage.
...
Ahstenlion No Answer
San Clemente Planning Commissioner James Chase
:-.hould either resign or divest himself of interests which
keep him from voting on commission busines~.
Freshman City Council· members Howard '.\lushett
and Myrtis Wagner ha\'e criticized architect Chase wilh
conflict of interest 6und in their three months in office
have called repeatedly for his resignation. ,
We ha\'C no argument with a California Fair Political
Practices Commission ruling that no one in the building
trades should be prohibited from serving on the Planning
Commission solely on the basis of his profession. Mus hett
made a 'a lid pomt last week. ho" ever. when h e said that
Chase's effccli\'eness as a planning commiss ioner has
been impaired by his conflict of interest abstentions.
Among the tour items on which Chase abstained were
the J .770-acre Forster Ranch development and the 380·
acre industrial park proposed at the junction of the
F orster. Ree\'es an«;l V1sbeck Ranches both of major
Jmport to San Clemente.
Chase's frequent abstentions ha\'e had the effect of
l11rnting pubhc representation 10 four commissioners. On
::-.uch important cit~· matters. lhc; publk clcscr\'cs u I ull
C'nmmission
New Freeway Fight?
11 proba bl~ c·oml'~ as nu :.urµnse lo a nyo1w who 1~ a
:-.lurlenl of human nature that there c.ire some people II\· "
mg on 1 ht• Oran)'..(l' Coast ''ho tlon 't think construction of
th<• proposed San .Joaquin l hlls Transportation Corridor
J:. sut.'h a hot idea
In fact. clcptndm.L? on ho\\ dOSl' lhl•ir homes or husi
-ncsses an• lo lht.· proposed roulc. there arc ~ome (><'Opie
"ho a re do\\ m·ll{hl opposed to the project. They point out
th.it the torridnt· is goin~ to ha\'<' the capacity of an eight·
lam• free.•" ay ;.ind that m eans they are going lo be faced
\vi th nobc> and air po llution problems they don't have
no\\
On thl' other h and. proponents of the project ar<'
pl'imarily people who already hun• ma.1or roadways
,mcl the allendanl lraffie-caused noise and air pollution
:.rnd who .ire anxious to Sl'e another ma 1or north-south
rottll' built to relieve lhl• congestion thcy 'n• stuck with.
It "ounds 1ust likl• the good old days \\hen there was u
pl,111 tor something rallc·d the P acific Coa~t Freewa\'. A
l•H ol peopll' \\;tnll'd that roudway huilt. too. a~ long as it
":Jsn 't bui It in I heir httC'k~·ard. It wi II be interesting lo ~ee
11 th1" n1rndnr prnp11...,;d Olf.•c•ts the samt• fate as the
c·oasl :.ii I n 1<.>p1.'·
• Opinions expressed 1n the space aboYe are those ol the Daily Pilot.
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
artists Reader comment ts invited Address The Daily Pilot, P.O.
Box 1560, Costa MSa. CA 92626 Phone (714) 642-~321,
\
Boyd/Depression
By L .1\1. UO\"O
,,
Question a ri s es a..., t o
whether that emotional low
known a:-the depress ion is
contagiou..., Definitely. Those
hlues are t·:ilching. Studies al
the Univcr5ity of Illinois
have proven thul And
s tudies elsewhere For
generations. One downbeat
,citizen among a dozen light-
hearted souls 10 a fairly
rapid m anner can make
everybody thereabouts feel
vaguely uneasy. Then. some
others, too, may drift toward
melancholy, though most will
just make themselves scarce.
Maybe lt 's extra-sensor.>
perception. Or maybe just
perception. But it happens
Oes~ndent people tend tc
quarantine tbem$e.lv~s.
The Rev. Surjan Das Gill
of India rully set up a chore
for himself. Aa a Cbrl11Uan
01iuloaary, he devoted 1S ycan to ~verttna people be
then thdbgftt we.re .heathens,
and history records he did a
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
powerful JOb of 1t. But UI·
LimatE'ly, he had a change Of
heart . became converted
himself of Hinduism, and
spent the rest or his life try-
ing to switch back all those
he'd converted lo Chris -
tianity.
Tea got its big start m
Europe no\ among the
English . as c-ommon ly
btlieved, bul around 1610
with the Dutc~who pralsed
1t mightily as 'xaUve.
I
Why Tuesday I the day of
the week you're least likely
to be killed by a car iS'
another mystery.
Was 27 years ago that the
science mihds invented a
new clolhin& material which
was 70 percent feathers.
What prompted them to do so
was the report that 30 mllUon
tons of chicken and turkey
feathers were going to waste
every year. You dOJl'l see
s uch mot.erlal advertised oow, though, do you? What
happened to it!
Benjamin Franklin was
another or lboR numel'Qu.a
wiH souls ·who have aaid
Jadnen bu been rtsJ)On.Sible
for Jnost :alnvontlona. He readUy aaillltted. tor In·
1tan c•. tb1t be'd Invented
blloeil """'became he w1a too lH)' to Cet up ap(t look for a
aecond pair· of spect acles
Whtft he needed tb&n.
Orave11 tUe up aoo much
la11d. contend• an Ore1on
min. He bM applied for a
pal~nt on • vertlcal ca1ket.
wllb aue~ lo hold the
bodJ llJl1IM.
Earl Waters
Candidate Tags Reveal Variety
While 1t may not be the ideal
situation it is a facL that many
voters go to
the polls
lc.nowtng
nothin g
whatsoever
about the can-
didates. Tnis
is especially
true of~ ~for
congressional
and legisla-
tive omces where the candidates
in a given district are nothing
more than names to the voter.
lntencJQ.d as an aid to voten then
is the l)ro""6ion permitting each
candid~e to include an occupa-
tional descrJption as backeround
lnformaUon indicating qualifica-
tions.
For the incumbents, or holders
or other offices running ror new
posts, the choice is an easy one.
By showing the voters they are
alreadyin that or some other-of-
fice they hope to convince them
.they have demonstrated the
necessary qualities for public
trust. But for many of the other
more than 600 seeking election to
154 stale offices, the opportunity
to provide this evidence often
seems to present problems
AT LEA.ST the list of candidates
released by Secretary of State
~aroh Fong Eu is interesting
from the standpoint of ingenuity,
or the lack of lt, of some can·
didates in selectina v9cat.ional
descrlption.s to induce voter sup-
port.
The majority follow the
general practice of using com-
mon prof ealional job descrip·
lions. The most. widely used t.his
lime ls that of businessman or
woman, .alt.h~u&A~o~e used
business executive or other t.erm
connoting a business back-
groun d. There were more than
74 or these.
The next largest group was
the 54 who listed themselves
variously as teachers, pro
fessors. school administrators
and educators. These were
followed by 49 lawyers some of
whosn preferred the term at-
torney.
ALTHOUGH some 20 can·
didates designated themselves
engineers, quite a few left voters
in doubt as to whether that meant
railroad engineer or what. Others
however s tated specif1cally the
type such as electrical, civil,
economic and engineering
physicist
Among~the other professions
are six \,;PAs, three medical
doctors. two dentists, an op-
tometrist, a pharmacist, an
architect and a chiropractor
who also does tree topping.
WHILE FA RM E RS once
made ~P a preponderance of
legislative candidates only 1 I
designated themselves as such
'in lhi$ election. About a dozen
are running as reporters.
writers, editors and publishers
and three are bankers
From there o~ the designa·
lions really gel interesting
a lthough a dozen failed to pro-
vide any information as to OC·
cupalion. Others ranged from
specific readily identiriablt•
vocations such as barber,
laborer, policeman andJ'ireman .
to vague descriptions such as ··h~a lth professional." "air
balancer," "tax vayers'
representati vc. · "people's
pojitician," and "putilic .affairs
representative "
Housewife llCeJTIS to have
faded into disuse In ravor or
"homemaker" and "'mother"
but one candidate lisls himself
.as ··unemployed teac her
househusband." · '
OTHER CURIOUS des igna-
tions include "worker-priest."
•·m inister-philo'fopher." "lax re
duction advocate.·· "disabled
rights organi2er". "service ad-
viser" and "concerned citizen."
\\ 'FU~NY I IT DOESN'T Loa< LIKE A DOVE! 11
Two or three candidates
thought showing themselves as
members of the party central
committee to be imatessivc
Some simply listed unemployed
while one is running as a "re-
tired soldier" and another as a
.. disabled veteran .. One can
didate for the Assembly could be
very popular with his fellow
members 1r he IS elet•lt•d I le IC, .1
"~olf pro.
Mailbox
Prop. 13: A Potential Taxpayer Ripoff
To ihe Editor:
I am writing about the poten-
tial ripoff. the Jarvis-Gann tax
bill. Ptop. 13.
I think the Jarvis-Gann bill
will be the greatest tipoff or the
laxpayers if il is voted in. Jarvis
said in a TV 12rogram that there
is no guarantee that the apart-
ment owners would be willing to
reduc~ the rents but "I think
they will."
WHY should they reduce the
rent if they don't have to? The
big companies who own the
apartments do not care for the
renter.
Of course. Jarvis is an offlcer
in the Apartment House Owner
Association and. naturally he
would fight for this bill. Jarvi~
can't even meet anyone and tru-
ly argue the bill at all. He just
has to be. very rude in any dis-
cussion.
I am happy to hear that the
L.A. Supervisors have decided to
vClle against the Jarvis-Gann blll.
WILLIAM H. COOPER
Need Protec?t Ion
To the Editor·
"Survival or the Jungle" 1s
the weak and the old arc at-
tacked by yo ung strong
animals!
It means we need more strong
"decoys" or deputies to pose as
elderly women with their purses
dangling loose, to capture and
hold these gangs that prey on
the elderly alone. Hold them and
punish them. as the law allows .
THE ELDERLY can't shop or
buy groceries in broad daylight
without some culprit laying for
them in the background. ready
to pounce on t hem like an
a nimal in the jungle!
Let 'a get some strong mea sta-
lJoned at places where the elder-
ly shop. We hove to protect them
sloce they cannot protect
themselves.
We have boys on skateboards,
bicycle&, and lo groups that
have found a way or getting easy
money last, leavina an elderly
woman with broken bones, or
worse!
EMMA HYMAN
was $333,30 in 1976 was in
creased to $772.80 In 1977. an In·
c rease of 130 percent in onl'
year'
THE ATROCIOUS misuse of
tax money which results ln un-
reasonable tax increasts can
onl~ cause eventual rebellion by
the taxpayer. Wtiat else can be
expected or our citizens when
they read articles about ,govern·
ment financing the "scientific
lltudy of the homosexuality or
sea gu,lls." such as appeared in
a recent issue-of the Daily Pilot.
and then the National Institute
for Mental Health grant of
S97.000 for the study of a South
American brothel'
Are we, as taxpayers. sup-
posed to laugh at Senator Prox·
mi re 's month IL• 'Golden
Fleece" award for 1he outstand ·
ing example of wasting our tax
money? My reaction is to vote
out all incumbents as we did in
the recent lluntington Beach city
election and vole for anything
that will reduce taxes.
Candidates for office make big
talk about tax reform but
nothing is done about it. One re
course for the taxpayer is to
vote yes on Prop. 13 and shut off
the money supply and force a
drastic reduction in ~overnment
expenditures.
DON MAPSON
'"•t E11t~al11amat
To the Editor:
Regarding your editorial of
April 25 in praise of the
''Holocaust'': We did not watch
the program.
How many of those 20 rnllUon
television viewers have read
"The Diary ol Anne Frank"?
How many of their children have
read it or at the least bad their
parents tell them of it? Uow
man y of t hose 20 mllllon
chastise a child <or •n adult>
whotell.sancthnic ''joke"?
It occurs to me that your
rtehteoasness (and theil'1> m ay
be aullied. Surely, if one were
concerned to know the tru\h and
to assure thttt It noL be forrotten.
other less sensational means are
al haPd. But fUllt 1$ u.uapd
edUy, comf0ttabl>1 -the pat-
t.ms or life are undisturbed.
I All sickened by the appetite 'l'IUtn ,,...,..., of the Amertcan public for
To the F.ditor: pualve reuons in moralitJ", t
I bave l"ead mmy oplnlona on f(>uld ~ more havo w1tcbld
lhe Jarvis Proe>. 13, some In tlae "Ho~uat'' than I could
favor and aom opposed. 1 tend tohtnte one word ot prejudice
to ba conaervaltvt on lucb m•l· 1pokeft ID cny,presence.
W'S and Prop. 13 la a dr11t.lc So plea1e do not talic to mo
move aiid not a conaenatlve ap. about week stomactta. l em
· pro,ch. However, J am In favor , awa~ of thoso horron. I wtn
of Ytop. l3 and convlnced that ·. \"lot watch ll botwee• •t•tlon the drasUc ac\Jon la the onl.J break1. Klerkeaaard uld.
solution lo lbe deplorabl wastt "There it no ttrnprc·robber, toll·
and mlsuae ol tax funda. ln1 in ahaclllea or· iroo 10 For eum pht, 'a vacant in· viclou11 H lho•• who pUlage
dualrl1I lot fn Santa Anlll on 1mon1 ucred lhlnj1 • . :• Wo
•blch lhe Oraqo Count)" ... 11pte1r to ba¥t I09l &DJ HnM ol
•
..
outrage, and we are pillagmg. Thal 1s J ht!, c·orcfull) nurtur1·cl
by treating as entertainment. an l\o one musl an~wer question ...
event that 1<; sacred to,abouthisorh<'rpriv<1ll'sl'xual1
humanity ' ty ... Ga}~· rt'l't.•ntly haH• tw<.•n
BARBARA VAN HAVEN rtaunting their 1·ond1twn. ;,mcl
• a5kinl!' cumm11n1t.\ approval.
Bold Action
To the Editor
The new C)ty Council of
Laguna Beach should be-.com
mended for its bolrl and lofty ac
lion in qukkly resolnng tht•
lit1gat1on of Sycumore llills ror
the 1mmL·n~e benelll of the
citi1ens and lhl' town's Green
belt
It 1s a hold action in that lhC'
sum of $6,750.000 is awesome for
a town of our s1Le. and thl'
money has yet to be raised
However. the money should bl'
easily forthcoming since the
Greenbelt has reco~nition in all
the GeneraJ PJans that are pre
requisite for county. state. anc1
federal grants
IT IS ALSO A lofty action ThC'
new cotDtcil moved quickly to
put Itself above a ny partisan
feelings enJtendered by the elec
lion and dealt with the issue 1n
free and reasonable fashion
T hey have my rerson:il ap·
preciatlon.
4'he action should have far
r-eachingeffects. It can be a unify
ing stiengtf\ a nd move the town
away from the polC\J'izatlon that
has too long plagued us. And tt.
moves Laguna Beach immediate
ly into a forward poslOon for
~peedy and valid implementation
of the Greenbelt. •
JAMES W. DILLEY
Ga,, 'Rlglat•'
To the Editor:
An article in the Daily Pilot or
April 26 entitled "St. Paul Nixes
Gay Rights" points up a number
of serious problems and serious-
ly decisive deceptions connected
with the so-called ''gay rights
movement." The real issues
cannot be clearly seen tr the
dlalogue is carried on in the kind ot terms reported in thl1 ac-
count. "Gays" are to blame for
the deliberate 11emantlc obru8CO·
Uon.
flrat. the •·ga~1" <the word
8hould always b In quotes 1
usurped tho very word "gay"
a nd reduced Its relativel(. nobl
meantns to ''homosaKua . " The world. '1(aa tl•ell a lesson In thb
stratecy by the Stalbllats and
Nasia of recent hl•lorlcal fame.
Setond, the "1•)'11" talk about
be!Dj derilect ·~humaft ria,bts."
"There wH dlrflculty In
March1 but now there i1 a gNal
improvement." -ln1tu Pdaae
MJ11l1&tr eaultea ••aLia on
hll dllcutaJon.t" with Pnlldent
Carter alMI ·CJlMr U.8. omclati. •
Thcv should not. an<I will not.
get ·that &Jlprov;il. Jn the public
arf'na. with. if they tan m<1na gt•
it. proper regard for scxuahl\.
they are ~ettini: the same righh
as others
IT IS n ,t:.\R th.11 "hJL thl·
· g:iys .. :ictuall~ "••nl 1-. J CCC'I•
l:JnCt.' or their IWmOSl'XU:Jlit:v as
a .. , iable :illerm111\(' hfl'Slvlt1 •
That ii-hke .. asking th,11· tlw
m ;i n 1 c . <I l' JH. es ..., 1 \' c• a n <I t h "
5Ch1Lophrl•ni(· hfr· ... 1~ It· ... he \H'
cepted :ic, ··v1ahlt• · .1 1411r<1 1h:1t
must continue to mean th.it
which 1s vital. ltre-sustainin~
and lif<' procluc1 ni:: Acluall:,.
homosexuJltty 1:-. lhl· ult1ma1t-
perversion. because it 1s auio
erotic. sterile·. anrl c·on.,ummatc·
ly selfish. Then· 1s dtscnmin:.t
lion betWl'<'n lh•· :-an!• :ind the In
sane in anv "onl'I ' then• shoulct
ht.' d1sC'nmma1101i between tht'
s <' :-. u <ti l y or il• n t t• d an rl d I:-.
ortl'llle<.I
~· o r ll \\' h 1 It• . r ct• e n t I \ •
p:-\chiatr1t· professionals we.rt·
prt'ssun•d into declass ifying
homol)e:<u:iltt\ "" ,1 mental di'>
order. Earl~· 0
lh1s ~c<ir a poll or
members of the Ameri can
Psychiatk Assoc1at1on showed a
69 percent vote sn favor of the
view that '"homosexuality 1-.
usualh' a pathological adaptu-
tion. as opposed to a normal
variation." The poll was con
ducted Jly the Journal Medical
Aspects of Human Sexuality, but
was not t:i\'en front-pai:e
publicity.
The ttuth '8. as demonstratecf
over aod over again sn recent
times in this country. that
homosexuals do Ml want the _
voices or whole rom m unities
heard in thi!'! matter Instead
they exert th<'1r la vendtr
levera~e against legislators
playing pow<-r Jtames. hopinc to
booth.•.1ot themsel\'es into accep.
tabilily any way lhex can.
Homoscxual11 do not need
"rights" °" ll<'Cf'JQhfllty as llv·
ina "alternatlvt' lifestyle~."
They are ISt('k, psycho!<!exually.
They n~t'<l sympath,Nll.' therapy.
And, lhl' news-reporting media
ne d to recover o sense of the
meonlngs or w<l1'ds, and ot the
•rt of rcportllu: In persl)1!ctlve.
GEORGE W. KENT
A sociatc Profcs!ror, UCI
• l.Atffrs Jrom ~~ tolkolM. n.. right to ccmdtn•~ ldtf'I'• to fU
IJXX• or tUm1nott 11~1 b rcttf'Md.
lAft,,., of 300 t.e.>Ordl or Z.aa IAU bf
crit1t1n ptf/frfftCf. All lettna 11'1&&# fn·
ctudt lfgnoJun aftd moUing addrtsr
but"nomt1 mCJI ,,_ wUMtld °"rt-
qw.C If Dff',cfnt rrolOft tlCIJ'PWft'.
Potf r, UJfiU "°' ,,. pu~.
CALIFORNIA
Gays Win Victory
P(Jl112l Backs Job Discrimination Ban
SACRAMENTO <AP> -In a
rare political victory tor
homose>wals, a state Senate
com mit\tt bas 8')provm a ban--
on job discrlm lnatlon based on
sexual preference.
811~ the bill, approved 4·0 Tue •.sda~ by tbe Sen a t e In·
<t.tsst.rlal Relations Commlttee. is
-{bo41gbt to have Uttle chance of
fiual passaae in this elecUon
year. A slmllar bill died in an
Assembly committee last year.
AND TH E HOMOSEXUAL
comm\Jnity faces a potentially
more ser ious defeat later this
year In a state ballot lnttlatlve
aimed at removing openly
homosexual teachers and gay.
rights advocates from public
schools.
State Sen. John Briggs, R·
F ullerton, announced Monday
that he bad colleded enough
sJcftl..U!m to quill!)' t.ha ln·
itiative for the November ballot.
The secretary of state's office
wlll decide later this DJonth
whether tbe measure has the
needed 31!"404 valid signatures.
AT TUESDAY'S HEARING,
homosexual activist.a, including
the state's m05t prominent gay
politician, were taking a more
optimistic long·range view.
.. What Is happening Is the
.emergence or gay polltlcal
power," said San Francisco
Supervisor Harvey Milk, an ad·
mltted gay. "It's no longer a
taboo subjed . . ..
"Some day. whether this year
or next year or 10 years from
. .
now. gay people will be given
the same rights."
THE BILL, SB Z053, by Sen.
Milton Mark1T. R·SarrFrandsco.
won the bare majority of votes
needed on the sev,n-member
commlttee. Several opponents
were absent when the vote was
taken. The bill next goes to the
Senate Finance Commlttee.
It would ban job discrimina·
lion based on sexual preference
for any company or agency with
at least five employees. Persons
with records of sexual conduct
involving minors would not be
pro\ected by the bill.
FOES FROM fundamentalist
religious groups sald that ex·
emptlon wasn't enough.
"This is something many
parents· could not comfortably
live with, if their children's
school teachers . . . wer e
manifested t.o be homosexuals."
said the Rev. W.B. Timberlake,
head or a group called the Com·
millee on Moral Concerns .
"Public schools would suffer ~0 'Spli.t' State ~really ... because whether .J. 1 it's right or wrong, a great
number of parents would take
SACRAMENTO CAP> -In the latest akinnlsh in the cen· ~~h~s.~·h i l dren lo private
tury·old battle of the Redwoods vs. the Freeways, -.n Assembly
comm1uee has killed a northern California attempt to aplit tbe B UT SUP PORTERS said
state in two. . nearly all child molesters are
Assemblyman Barry Keene. SPonsor of the measure to heterosexuals. and contended
create a new state of Alta California, sought the surgery there is no evidence that youths
because he said state government has grown too big. expensive are. or can be. "converted" to
and unresponsive. homosexuality by teachers.
And, the Eureka'Democrat said. he feared "the north·south An opponent, Sen, Ray
conmcts over water and other natural resources are only going Johnson, R-Chico. said ttie biU
to escalate and get uglier in the coming years." would infringe on the rights of
businesses and on freedom of re· THE VOTE TUESDAY in the Governmental Organization ligion.
CommiUee was 4·2, one short of passage. But Keene. who is run· "Let's say J have a business
Wildl...mp. May 3, 1978
Confiscated ..... ,.......
Detectives Jack Fisher. left. and Mike Stodellc of San
Bernardino County Sheriff's Office. examine a cache of
weapons found in the investigation of an ambush s lay·
ing in Rialto . The guns arc reporj.edly the P.roJ?erty of
O{!vid Philip Sheppard ~vho 1s sought for has mvolvl'·
menl in the murder of Wallwm Stamps.
Calif omia to .Bar
Plwne 'Junk Call,s'
ning foe a North Coast state Senate seat. said he hoped bis bill -and my customers have a right
even when dead -would prompt discussion of northern to discriminate by not going in SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -Californians wiU be ~rotected from
California needs. my store. I would go broke ... he overzealous telephone solicitations under new gwdelines adopt·
His proposal would split the stale at the Tehach~· MOUi\· said. ed by the state Public Utilities Commission. •~1 • t rth r L A 1 b t b s 'd be oul nsider The new rules bar the use of automatic dialing and announc· ~~~· ~d:~. 0 os nge es, u e ai w "TR ERE AR E MANY Chris· ing devices Wlthoul prior con!ient of ufe calhld party ·or without
"We Alta Californians don't mind sharing our na~I re· llans in this country who dQ not <.i human operator to gel the called party's permission to play a
sources with our southland friends," he said. "But we do object a PP rove 0 f h 0 m 0 sex · recording.
strong, loudly and constantly -to attempts at naked ripoifs u,.malms 0· ral. ~g.r.sha~!e:trilhisg~t ~~ --.. TllE' ""'CALLED "Junk call" controls require users of or our resourcc1." / ""'" choose which people work for automatic dialing devices to notify the telephone company or
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA lr!els much of its water from me?" their plans to hook into telephone lines. including hours of use
northern California, through the canals of the state Water Proj· Steve Badeau or Northern and expected volume.
ect. Other resources such as limber and farmland are largely California Human Rights Ad· Devices subject to the controls are those which are capable or
located in the north. vocates. a gay-rights lobby. storing numbers to be called or generating random or sequen·
Keene said the new Southern California state would still be replied that the same argument tial number selections and are able to play prerecorded
the second most populous in the country and Alta California, was used for years against.~ir· messages.
which means upper California in Spanish, would be No. 8. Ing blacks.
"If your religion says I'm a T H E PUC SAID there is no evidence that automatic dialing A1TEMPTS TO SPLIT the stale date back to 1859. when it sinner, it doesn't give you the devices are now operatln~ in California for solicitation without
was ~ southerners who felt they were outvoted by the more right to discriminate against operator control. but said It expected such devices soon.
POPUious north. he said. A bill was.oassed then. but the U.S. me," he said. Without the controls. the commission said Tuesday. the prac·
4' Congress reject the idea becauseJ>f fears it was related to the Several witnesses said they lice would "mfringe on the comfort and convenience of the ~uthern states' secessionist movement. had lost jobs. or lost chances for telephone subscriber guaranteed" by law.
Numerous similar bills have been introduced since then. jobs, or feared to be honest C?D Use or a human operator before delivery of a taped message
One. in 1965, was passed by the Senate but died in the Assembly. the job, be ca use or the1 r wtll safeguard again.st a phone being tied up when It might be
; ...
DAILY PtlOT AS
Refinery
Pollution
Repo.rted
LOS ANGELES <AP> -Slop·
RY equipment malnten.lll~.t_ at
six Southern California oil re·
fineries l5 fllllng the air with
about as much smoe aa would be
generated by nearly two milUon
new cars. the state Au
Resources Board chairman has
charged.
Tom QuiM. In a s~h to the
Californill• Lung Association.
claimed Tuesday that leaky
valves. flanges and seals were
found at all refinenes inspected
by the ARB during a six-day
period In February.
In Sfll.n F..,,.d
LOS ANGEL ES CAP>
Israel 's Prime Minister
Menachem Begin has told com·
munlty leaders that Is rael "ob-
( STATE )
jects absolutely" to America's
proposed sale of jet fiehters to
Egypt.
Begin. speakinJ Tuesday ar.
temoon before nym& to Chicago.
also said a Carter administra·
lion proposal to supply F·lS jet
fighters to Saudi Arabia "would
turn it lnto confrontation state
with Israel." ·
Pmr Slef• fa Car
GLENDALE <APl -Whil~
Glendale police were contacting
the Hiiiside Stran gler Task
F4rce about an apparent doublt'
ho m lcide, the Los A ngeles
Police Department aMOWlced a
reduction in the task for ce's
manpower.
Glendale Investigators said
Tuesday that Roxanne
Barnwell. 29. of Glendale. and
an untdenUfied m an were found
dead in her car Monday night.
not far from her home. Both had
been s hot to death and two small
caliber handguns were round in
the 'lehicle.
Fire BUa CBS Sea
LOS ANGELES <AP>
Separate fires destroyed a back
lot set at the CBS St udio Center
in Studio City and damaged a
number of homes in the Windsor
Hills area, officials said.
A F i re Depa r t m ent
spokesman said nlne companiel>
took about 15 m inutes Tuesday •
night to knock down a blaze that
had enveloped the CBS set and Assemblyman Leroy Gr~ne. D·Sacramento, contended that homosexuality. needed for an emergency. the PUC pointed out.
division would create '..'an endless number or probl=em~s;_.'_' ------------------------------------------------------
some trees nearby.
Rapist Gets 8 Years
s:(N° FRANCISCO <AP> ~ Calling rape a
"shocking outrage." a San Francisco Superior Court
judge has sentenced a convicted rapist to eight years
in prison.
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I ~~-~NING SPECIAL ,I
Judge Francis McCarty slapped Charles
Edward Brown, 34, with the. maximum sentence
after a jury found Brown guilty of raping an ill 27·
year·old c<>smetologist in her apartment Dec. 2.
The woman. said McCarty. "was a particularly
vulnerable victim. She was alone with no one to
help.··
Offlll IXPIUS MAY l I. I '71 LMMt 2
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NATIONAL w.dnelday. May 3. 197a' Lise DAit. y PILOT A 9
'Biggest Pig' Brutally Ttirned Back on Pat
'She Gave So Much
Bui Got So Littl,e'
EdUOT'a Note: The Joli.owing e.rtroct it adapted -lrom ~ ~ "TM-1.oMl~ oj...san ClA!menl(; Ihe
Story of Pot NU:on," fcJ 1978 by Leiter David. Reprint·
ed bu pmnWion of Thomcu Y. Crowell Co. The full·
length book wiU be pvb&Jled by Crowell in lale rummer
By LESTER DAVID
On March 16, 1974, upon her return from a six·
day trip lo South America. Pat learned that the
president had decided to celebrate her birthday in
Nashville, Tenn .. at the opening of the new home
or the Grand Ole Opry. <Nixon was not a country.
western bufr but the backing of the South was im·
portant to him in his fight against impeachment.>
Instead or proceeding to Washington, her
plane was diverted to Nashville. That evening,
after a 5,000-mile trip from Brasilia, sick with the
nu and running a fever, she went to Opryland,
U.S.A .. where an audience that included Ten·
nessee's two Republican senators. Howard Baker
Jr. and William Brock, was waiting.
THE ORCHESTRA TWANGED OUT a blue-
grass version of "Hail to the Chief" as the Nixons
came on to the st.age and took seats in front of a
backdrop on which a large red barn was painted.
Pat wore a bright greep dr~s for St Patrick's
Day. of which this was ttie eve.
At the mike Roy Acuff suggested that the au
dieoce sing "Happy Birthday" to Mrs. Nixon. and
would the president play the piano for them? He
would and did. The audience bell.owe<l the song
and Pat. looking embarrassed. sat a'nawaved. '1'-
When lhe song ended she rose and came
forward. her arms extended to hug her husband.
-He turned away from her. Her hands dropped to
-hers~ 4r1tt-mie wem:·battto1leniuni'.------
NIXON HAD A YO· YO IN his hi!nd. He at
tempted to spin the yo-yo but faifed. He told Acuff:
"'I 'II stay here and try to learn how to use the yo-yo
and you go up and be president." For 10 minutes
the president or the United It-ates stood before
4.400 people. trying to make a yo.yo spln up and
down a string. Pat. flushed with fever, sat and
watched him. '
Even some of Nixon's own aides were
shocked. For the president bad not said one word
to his wire au evening long.
Pal Nixon's young assistant press secretary,
Terry Ivey, watched aghast. Several years later,
looking back. she was still blazing: "He absolute·
ly. in front of thousands of people, turned his back
on her, totally ignored her. He turned his back! It
was simply incredible."
I THE FEELING WAS SHARED BY Terr)'
fvey's immediate boss. press secretary Helen Mc·
Cain Smith, who says today: ··1 shall never forget
the expression on her race when he ignored her
outstretched arms. It was one of the times some of
us winced."
The trouble was that this was not an isolated
happening, ~ixon's public treatment of his wife
during his presidency was so indifferent that close
observers, es~ially members of the women's
7' press corps, were outraged.
In the words of Myra MacPherson of The
Washington Post: "The press corps used to look in 1 vain for some sort of emotion to pass between Pat
<firofnn llouse
RESTAURANT
496-5773 • 499-2626
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(714) 496-3303
HUMILIATED BY NIXON
Patricia Ryan In 1937
RoMrt Pierpoint. CBS
Wblte House corre1poo·
C1ill~Ttbe1t-yean
preceding Ills resigna-
tion, I felt stroagly that
Nixon and b1s wife were
trapped In a sllaatloa
where tbe best ahe coald
do was not &o b'1rt blm.
They tried &o play lllll
game of being the
perJect wife aad
husband, but It came
tbroagh as transparent.
It looked so pbooy, so
aoreallstlc."
PAT'S HAPPIER YEARS
In 1960, Battling Kennedy
Still. there were JUSt too many document~ in·
cidents of N1xon·s cold behavior toward his wire to
pass off as shyness or foraetfulness. or even total
involvement With politics and the business Of £0V·
ernment. Nixon could be so wrapped up in his own
thoughts that he did not notice people around htm.
But why so often, and to Pat, unless there was a
reason?
THE QUESTION IS VALID AND prompts
another: Whal was their true relationship as
husband and wife? On the basis of much evidence
I have arrived at two conclusions:
-First. that the warmth and affection which
existed between them in the early years of their
marna(ite cooled as the years passed.
-Second. that the coolness came rrom his
side. not hers.
"She loved him very m~h." says AP cor·
respondent Helen Thomas. "That was genuine.··
And all of Pat's close friends and starr aides to
whum l spoke echoed the statement. There were
many stories or her attitude toward him from too
many people to believe otherwise.
But what about him?
HE WAS NOT UNLIKE OTHER authoritative
husbands who place their work and home lives in
separate compartments. As time passed and be
advanced in office. he commWlicated with her \ess
and less about his work and his career. and Dick Nixon : observers looked for anything In Jtme 1970 a state diMer was held at the Pat admitted he had not asked her opinion
that SPoke or warmth." White House Cor Venezuelan President and Mrs. about running ror a second term in 1972. He never
One of Nixon's aides who conferred with him Rafael Caldera. Al the end of the evening the Nix· talked about affairs with her as President Johnson
daily over an entire decade says: "Jn all that lime ons stood at the North Portico. bidding goodbye lo would do with Lady Bird, Harry Truman with
Pat's name never came up in a conversation." their guests. After they had gone. and while some Bess. as Jimmy carter with Rosalynn.
NOT LONG AFTER THE YO.YO incident the of the other guests were still dancing, Nixon and One former staff assistant observed : "I can't
Nixons attended a Sl.OOO·a·plat& fund·raislng din· Pat went toward their private elevator leading to see Dick saying: ·An awful thing happened in
ner in Washington. She sat behind him, and never their upStairs quarters. Cambodia today, Par:·
once did he turn to look at her. Worse. he spoke for He had his hand on her arm and he seemed lo Once Pat was asked if her husband had tried
a long while on Latin American relationships. be leaning attentively toward her a s people out any or his State or the Union speeches on her.
stressing the' need for close neighborly ties. watched them deJ>arl. Then. as they moved ~o.wn Her reply . "He never tries anything out." Not un-
Th r t I d had just returned from atrium· the hall out or sight or most or the remaamng lll lhe Watergate crisis did he 'try anything out"
h t e -~[;' t a .Jeneiuela the. CO.""''..., .JWhere 16 guests. -~e N1xons separated .. moving apart. as on his family. , P ~n vi 0 • ~ • --t:tfo1t8h m~y iratt"t'mtdtrded ir-tittl'e-g-cl'l'tre7""WTiter-· .. -~ ....L ·---· - -years before she and her husband had been stoned Judith Viorst who tells the story concludes it and spat upon. and where she now bad told her hosts . .. • • . · that her husband had not been able to come but bad thus· .. Untouchmg and in silence. each walked
sent "the closestthing lo bis heart, me." alone.
That evening in Washington. it did not look as
though she was. He never mentioned her name or
acknowledged her presence.
ONCE AT A DlNNER AT mE Sheraton Park
Hotel for representatives of Alrica.n nations. hear-
rived with Pat. made his customary "V" sign, de-
Ii vered a brier address, and walked out or the
ballroom.
'"He left her standing there, right in the middle
of the huge room." says Kandy Stroud. at lhe lime
Washington cor resPondent for Women's Wear Dai·
ly. "He didn't touch her or say goodbye, there was
no 'See you later: no kiss, not even lnstr1..1clions of
where to sit or where to go. He just dropped her in
the middle or the noor in front or 2.000 people.
"'If it had been my husband. I would have wept
or been furious, or both. Pat just smiled as she
stood there and finally, after a long embarrassing
few minutes, someone ·came up and got her
seated."
AN0111ER TIME WAS ALMOST funny. They
new to San Antonio ln separate planes for a party
at Treasury Secretary John B. ConnaUy's ranch.
Nixon came down lhe ramp with Texas Sel\. John
G. Tower, who had fiown down with blm. Pat, who
had landed first, began walking acrosa the field to
greet her husband. Tower reached her first and
kissed her. Then Nixon came up and shook her
baud
NIXON'S FRIENDS POINT OUT that he was
a reserved. undemonstrative man. decorous
perhaps lo a major rault in that he was unable to
unbend with the eyes of the world upon him. At
home. t.bey say. he was considerate and tender,
that he never Intended lo ignore her. that the fami·
ly was warm. compact and affectionate.
JuLie. indttd. always found him loving and
kind. even impulsive. as he would exclaim: "Let's
do something special tonight," or. on the spur of
the moment. take them all out for a birthday or
anniversary celebration.
or course. Julie was seeing her father from a
daughter's-eye view, which is not always the same
as the view of a wife.
PAT, FOR EXAMPLE, WOULb never intrude
UPon his work but Julie would not hesitate. Late
one day in 1969 Nixon was working with William
Safi re on a foreign Policy speech when his private
phone rang. for many minutes the president
launched Into an elaborate discussion or this coun-
trfs relations with its South American neighbors.
$afire. lis(enlng patiently, thought that Henry
Kissinger or Secretary or State Rogers was at the
other end. It was the 21-year-old Julie.
The rollowing morning she was scheduled for
an interview-discussion on Latin America and
wanted a briefing.
''SHE GAVE SO MUCH AND got so little of
what was really meaningful to a woman. attention.
comparuonsh1p. consideration.'' says Washington
journalist Kandy Stroud. "Sometimes be was so
brutally indifferent l wept for her."
Waubdla La Hay. former Scripps·Howard
White House corresPondf'nt, put il this way · "She
is a wonderful person whom most of us love deep·
ly. a person of incredible courage and dedication.
But she was married to a man who didn't ap·
preciate her. and this can be devastating to a
woman.
"She's the one we worry about. The hell with
him. Let's understand something. This man was
the biggest male chauvinist pig of all tame "
INEXT: Sez and the Nwmtl
* * * Book 'Buries Past'
NEW YORK <AP> -David Eisenhower says he
learned al an early agelhat "youhavetotakethe bad
with the good in politici.."
Eisenhower, 30, grandson of former President
Eisenhower. said his father·in·law, former Presi·
dent Nixon. was "relaxed and forward-looking"
after finishing his memoll'S, wh.lch he called ••a way
of burying the pasl. • •
Eisenhower appeared at a news conference
sponsored by Your Place magazine, which is
pu blisblng an interview with him.
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W.Onitaday, ~ 3. 1171 NATION~~
f Stabbing Vietim Searehes for Answer] ~-
Why Cry for Help
Went Unheeded?
Editor'• Note: Stephen O'Ryan, 27, iooa accosted
and •tabbed on o S.:OWe 1treet Dec. 16. Badly wounded,
he cnu.oU!d OUJOfl, oburved but ignored by people in the
l'lllg1fbafMOd.
O'RJICln. the ion of a Seattle Po1t·lntelligencer re·
porter. haa recouned from hu wound Cl7td plans to mt er
law fShool. No one ho• twen orttated for the qame
Here u his atot'JI
By STEPHEN O'RY AN
SEATILE <AP> -One afternoon I was
knocked down on a Seattle sl'reet. stabbed in the
back and left ror dead while both my attackers
walked away fhe wounds are almost healed, but I
want a n answer from the people of this city.
Why did you leave me there to die?
I .,ad gotten off the bus that afternoon at Boren
and Vester to visit a friend If it hadn't been ra10·
mg, I would have waited for the transfer. and
there wouldn 't j)e this six-inch scar up the middle
of m y swmach and a knife wound ln my back. But
that's all hindsight. I decided to wallc, and two
blocks later landed on the pavement, gasping for
one deep bre~th
I FIRST SAW THEM WHEN they rounded the
corner In front or me One or them had on a greasy
while raincoat. the other a shabby tweed. The one
in white had his head thrown back. shouting ln
coherently. I figured he was high and moved over
to giv Q them plenty of room. lt wasn't room
enough
· Well now don 't this look just like onP of
·em.·· shouted the one in the white raincoat
He was short, thin. wore his hair in a wedge
like afro. and had tbat wild look in his eyes. like a
horse gets when 's scared.
• ---'·~ ~~. r\-ll&NG'i"'?"a-horrky--f"~tn:li'('-yuir·
can't go nowhere but there ain't a hundred or'eco
JUmpm outa lhe sidewalks, tellin' you when and
what to do. Look out for me~y. look out, ..
"Just let me by J sa1a.
"Let you by by. by' he laughed, nudging his
partner as the two closed In. "Oh yes, sir. so
mighty l><)werful and strong. Ain't gonna let
nobody by by by not till they do some shuttin' up
• .,... did ,, ••
leai'e 111e to
die? ••• 1t'Jafl dfd
you leai'e •e
flaere to die'!" -
~ow move''
He shoved me off
the 11idewalk. and I
should have moved
Instead.. J swung for his
s tomach. turned on his
partne . and was
s topped short by an in·
credible joll of pain on
my left side There was
a knife in my back. I
sta~gered once before one of them kicked me in the
groin. then I fell.
The wound was bad. I could feel that cold blade au the way w my chest. Later the doctors told me it
tore open my left lung. but I guess I was lucky. It
almost pierced my heart.
"SHOULD'VE DONE WHAT YOU was told ...
his partner said as he leaned •Over to take my
wallet.
When he pulled out the knife. I felt something
gjve deep inside
I looked across the street as they walked away
and saw a m1ddle·age man walking his dog in the
rain. He must have seen the whole thing I tried to
shout. but the pain was so bad I couldn't even
catch my breath. All I managed was a drawn.out
moan He didn't see me.
I moved my head and saw a woman standing
at her w1ndow For several seconds I stared at her
race. then she moved away and th,, window was
empty She didn't· see me either
I MUST RAVE BLACKED O\JT for a while.
Wtlen I woke up I was drenched wilti rain, and
olood was dripping on the sidewalk It wasn't until
then I understood what had happened.
J m dymg. The realtzation bewildered me.
People don't get s labbed to death in decent
neighborhoods. not m plain view and the mid<ile of
lbe afternoon. Ttus isn't New York City.
The slightest movement sent a wave or pain up
my left side, but 1 k.new If I stayed where I was it
would be the last day or my life ·
Yesler Way was two blocks orr and crowded
with traffic. Unable to stand. I rolled slowly to my
side. pulled my legs up one at a tune, then started
crawling down the k1dewalk. Every move made
me s ick to m y stomach with the pain. If it meant
anything less than dying. I couldn't have done it.
MAYBE THEY THOUGlfl' J WAS drunk, but
that whole neighborhood watched me as I strug.
gled in the ram. All the doors were closed, but they
knew J was out there The appearance and disap-
pearance or a race In a window. the movement of
curtains. the studied silence of every house I
p41ssed -they were there, beina careful
By the time I got to Yesler my arms and legs
were qUlvenng like those or an old man. I waved
at the first car. smearing my hand with blood so
they could see I was wounded and I waited with
relief
It didn't stop.
I waved at the next car, and the-next one, and
the next. Some or them pointed or stared. a back·
seat full of kids laughed, but w most I was lnvlsi·
ble
REALEST~TE
CAREER NIGHT
U>Ok ua over at a REAL TY WORLD C.rtef'
Nght mtedng.
DieCClliler the adVantaQes with tne org1n1zatlon
hit C8r1 rrwke "A WOALO OF DtFFEREHCE."
FREE UCEN81NG SOiOOL to qualified peraont
EJCt9nlMt TRAINING programs
RM>lutlonafy REALRCOPE marketing tooit
~ & lV adWl1ltino support
a..t NATlONAL referral system
.... .,..,....
"Help:· I shouted. I've been stabbed. 1 need
an ambulance... ....
She dJdn't ,answer, but the look on her race told e how dJsgustlng she thought I was.
When she turned away I fell only one thing.
and It wasn't panic or fear or pain. It was anger.
anger that people could turn their back on a
wounded man, anger at lndlfference. and at the
fact that nothing wo~ld ever change It.
I SHOUTED AGAIN BUT 1 kn~\\'..She wouJWLt_
Curn around. It was as ii r were shouting at all the
empty windows. the locked doors, the staring
races. It was as ii I were shouting the last words or
my Ure.
"I am dying. Doesn't that make one damn bit
of difference to you?"'
Later I found out it was an attendant at
Lloyd's Rocket service station who finally spotted
me from across the street and called the am.
bulance. Welcome to the human race.
For those who like lo keep notes on the an
c1dence or black crime. note this. If it was a black
who s hoved that knife in. it was also a black man
who saved me.
VOU MIGHT NOT TRINK my story all that
hor{lfylng. but you weren't out there In the rain
You don't know about the surgery and the scar 1t
lelt on_my .stomach. the..ni&Ms..J couldn.l. ..sleep
because or the pain. and the pneumonia that rt'·
suited from that collapSed left lung. And 1 'm only
Case No. TI""22752, one ol thousands.
I could cite you statlsli~ on the increase or
violent crime, or quote authorities on how to avoid
being victimized. but you've already heard that
Besides. that's not what troubles me.
Why did you leave me there to die"
• Spiral sllced '°'easy serving'
OCCSets
Lectiue
Man's impact oo the
California coastline will
be the subject of a talk
May 13 in the Orange
Coast Co ll ege
auditorium.
•Honey ·n Spice Glaze •Cooked ~ hotJrs
ti • . fl • Nationwide shipping service H 1le Olugwa~... • Full service 0e11catessen ~qey . 01d world Cheese shop -5'1 •Sandwiches 10 go.
SURVIVOR OF STABBING WAS LEFT TO DIE
Stephen O'Ryen Shows Spot Where He Lay
Dr . Rim Ray. a
member of the state
Coastal Zone Com· ,,
mission. will give the
talk, the last in the
"Man and the Sea" lee·
lure sertes at the Costa
Mesa campus.
~ g!1 JA~~"!~!,lS
I THOUGHT OF CRAWLING into the street
but traffic was too heavy. All I could do was watch
numbly as cars passed, stunned with disbelief. All
that crawling I might just as well have never even
moved
The talk will begin at
8 p . m . Admission is
$1.50. Information 1s
available by calling
556·5880.
A c1ly 1>us pulled over a block away and an
elderly lady ~tepped out.
-~·----..;; -~ ~-<L•
B
Now the friendly skies will give
you the best run for your money to
Reno/Ta.hoe. 42 flights a week from Los
.Angeles. 8 nonstop jets every single d8¥
to Reno International Airport-gateway
to the Reno/Tahoe area.
Fly for a.n unbeatable $31 on all
flights Tuesday and Wednesday. And on
flights before 9 a.m and a.ft.er 9 p.m aJ.l
through the week.
All other flights are d1scounted to
just $41.
Make the most af·your •
with a money-saviDg paclrlge:
Harrah's "Tuma.round Fling~'
$12.96 per person. An exciting evening
leave
6:20a.m.
7:16a.m.
10:45a.m
2:46p.m.
6:30p.m.
10:16p.m.
Arrive
7:27a.m.
8:22a.m.
11:83&.m.
3:83p.m.
'1:38p.m.
11:21 p.m.
'1 Day ••• May 14tll. OIDB HOW ••• YOU
HOMEY IAKID HAM For ~IW;·1 D-r.,.......
3700 l. COAST tfWY • (..._ ....... • PHOMI '7J.tttt
Other loca tlOn.s •
Anaheim. El Toro (Now Open). Orange. Palm Spnngs. U Habra
in Reno. Two drinks many Harrah's bar.
Late cocktail show with two drinks, full
breakfast, round·trip transfers between
airport a.rid Harrah's. Air fare, hotel
aooommodations, taxes and gratuities
not included Program available Sunday
thru Thursday only
In Reno/Tahoe you ca.n have the
convenience of a Dollar rental car. 100
free miles on any flat-rate rental, start-
ing at $18.95 for a Firebird. Price does
not include taxes, insurance waivers or
gasoline.
For information a.nd reservations,
call your Travel .Agent. Or call United at
537-7621.
Shuttle back to Los Angeles
leave
8 :50a.m
l2:45p.m
4:30p.m.
8 :10p.m.
11:60p.m.
Arrive
10:03a.m.
1:58p.m.
6:43p.m.
9:2lp.m.
1.01 a..m.
-Call for reNM1tk>n1 to learn how to become a
full tltTe rMI ~ prof9ulonel.
·• I
Tl,,.: 1 p.m Date: Thurt .. May 4, 1978
Plaet: 2342 Limbert SL Ste. #402 El Toro Cc.nadl Butfneta c.rtter) ..
Orange Coast
· • EDITION
T oday's Closing
N.Y. Stoeks
VOL. 71 , NO. 123, 4 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES ORANGe COUNTY, CALI FORNI A WEDN ESDAY, MAY 3, 1978 N TEN CENT
. J~1rtWS .'Get-New · :Pata; Waddill ,i:Qpef
I By TOM BARLEY cessation or brain function has draw any other conclusson ly District Attorney Robert lorneys Malbour Watson and structioo on the lines that tbe de--
Of.._ o.11y .. u.utatt been determined." now:· WaCldill said after the Chatterton. C h a r 1 es Wee dman in l he fense expects.
• A new instruction that Dr Waddill and his two defense Jury filed back to the jury room Chatte~n said a provision In courtr~m. . But the consensus among
I William Baxter Waddill believes lawyers clearly believe that the for more deliberations. the state s Health and Safety Obv1o~ly delighted. the two lawyers listening to the proceed-
will lead the jury to declare him jury may look on the new added "Certainly. the baby r·m ac· Code ~pelhng out w~at Judge lawyers immediately asked to ings today is that the new in·
not guilty of murder was rea~ to instruction as meaning that the cused of choking to death wa.s Turner rea,d to tht: JUry today see Judge .Turne r . and s uc· struction is an Invitation to a 1
an Orange County Superior baby Waddill is accused or dead in the very terms of this came to hss attention when he cessfully eetttiont;<f ham to f1!ad jury. which appears to be •
l Court jury today. . strangling in the nursery at new instruction and so Jln act of '4'.a~ discussi.ng another. baby the new snstru~on containing deadloclted. to resolve the dllem· I Judge James K. Turner mter-w est minster Comm unity murder could not be com· killing case Wlth an Anaheim de-the e le ments discovered by ma by voting not auitly on the
f'.QPled .the jury's n_inth day of de· Hospital was already dead in milled.•• teclive. . . Chatterton to the Jury. basis of the new directive. •
!s,beraUons to advise the pan~l : terms of total brain disintegra· Ironically, what is seen as a Cha.tterton said he. mentioned Chatterton com~ented t~ay Waddill, 42, or Huntingtod
There can be death in tion. breakthrough for the defense the. hitherto unm.enlloned point that he ~Id not beheve the JUry Harbour, is accused or stran-
circumstances where a total ·'I don't see bow they can was put in their hands by Depu· while chatting wsth defense at· would •uve any wel~ht to the in· <See DOCTOR, Page AU
J
r
J l
I
j
I
11 I
....., ............ '-....,.
VANITY PLATE FAN BABBITT PREPARES TO DO BUSINESS AT OMV
Clerk Lyla Schnabel Leama About Costl Meaa'a Literary Leanlnp
'Auto Ego'· Fed
Mesa Buff Stocks Up on 'Y mUty' Plates
By MICHAEL PASKEVJCH
Of U. DINIJ l"llel SWf
Charles Babbitt of Costa Mesa admits to
his overbloated "auto ego."
ple, when the program star\ed in 1970. more
than 7,000 people requested plates with
"PEACE" on them.
, IN FACT, be plunked down $2,000 at the
local Department of Motor Vehicles <DMV)
to feed his habit of coming up with novel
moving messages known in many circles as
"vanity plates.••
A lottery system ls used to pick out the
winner in case of duplicate requests. The ap·
plication fee, S2S for each set of plates, is re-
funded to those. who miss out. I I
I -
The drawing will be held in late June. All
vanity plate reque$ts must be filed at the
OMV by.May 31. The 43-year-old car buff figures at least
20 or his 80 applications <three choices on
each ) might be rejected' as "~rderline ob·
scene."
,But he's never had an application reject·
ed yet, and like a Jot of other motorists with
personalized license plates, Babbitt is excited
about the whole new literary world that will
open up July l .
The seven-digit <or less) plates are
avpilable for any vehicle excluding
motorcycles which are stuck with six letters
because or the s maller-sized plates.
OMV OFFICIALS are expecting more
than 25,000 seven-digit applications to joln the
more than 400,000 six·digit plates that have
been issued since 1970. THAT'S 111E date when the DMV ex·
pands its "prestige plates" to seven charac·
ters Cletters or numbers). giving folks with
names like Mahoney. Marquez or Babbitt a
chance to wear it on their bumpers.
Known as the Environmental License
Plate <ELP>. the program will have kicked
in nearly $18 million to the state by the end of
the 1978-79 fiscal year. Funds have gone for
buying ecological preserves, bird sanctuaries
and roadside nature viewing spots. Babbitt already has taken advantage of
the six letter pla tes now available. A
Volkswagen freak. Babbitt's bugs now sport
plates like "POO POO." "OR BUST." "OL
BLUE" and "OL RAGS," for bis vintage 1951
convertible.
Babbitt, Is preparing written appeals to
the state for some or his "downright edgy"
requests.
Depending on how the state views his
sense of humor, many of Babbitt's seven
digit plates will go to friends and customers
as tax-deductible gilts
~ HE ORJGINAU Y planned to submit ,0
requests at a cost of $1,000 but &aid he was
"just weighing the temptation to g~own and
get forty more of those things."
Temptation won out. Babbitt paid for
another 40 applications Tuesday at the DMV
office on 19th Street in Costa Mesa, according
to Mrs. Toni Gilbert, a DMV spokeswoman.
HIS LATEST requests are top secret
becauae he fears stlft competition. For exam·
Machines Delay Mail
Postal Service Study Shows · Wrong Routing
WASHINGTON <AP) -Two <>' every 100 letters dropped in the nation's mailboxes are de.
'ayed because they're routed to
lb~ wrong post office, an in·
t.emal Postal Service study says
Assistant Postmaster General
Pete Dorsey related the survey'•
findings to the service's govern.
lrt& board Tuesday when be aaid
the routlng errors arise from
:mecbankat and human mis·
(talc.es as welt as improper ZIP .
~-PUBU--C-IG_N_O_RE._'D_
f CRY FOR HELP
J Stephen O'Ryan, 27. WU ac·
cotted and stabbed on a Seattle
1&.rMt and left to die. Wil.aelHt f to the crime ignored bl• pli&ht u ho crawaed for help.
The wh ole nelthborhood
watched, cara and buses. P••sed
Jtlm by M be fou&ht tor We. He
b11 now recovered from his
.roundl lftd seeks an e,oawer to
"Wb.1d6d1GU le•ve me to die?" :JJ1M1 l• Alo. _
codes.
"Oh. yes," Dorsey replied
when a board member asked
him i( there were fewer routing
errors before machines replaced
human hands at the sorting ta·
ble.
As an example, he said, "A
letter from New York City to
Washington mltht wind up ln
Clenland. You then have to
send lt from Clevel and to
Waahtngton. It will be at leut
one d ay late."
He said roulln1 erron are a
main factor in eervlce's loabilily
to Uve up to delivery 1tanclardl.
·•MaJI used to bt torted twtce,
and that gue you two chances
to catch erron. Now, you only
have one •hot at tt," be ex·
plained.
With machlnH, a device
brlnaa one letter to a poslUon ln
froot of a poctal worker. The
worker bu one aecond to punch
the fi ve dlatta of th• ZJP code ln-
tO a ke)'boerd on th tnachine.
ne aumben punched t.U tbe
maehlne Where ln that clly or to
wbtcb olber cit)' ttae leU r
1bould 10. Tbe dtvlu then
•booti the letter 1Dto lh• aP.
proprlate mailbag.
It the clerk punches a wrong
number the letter ends up in the
wrong locaUori. Sometimes the
machine wlll make a mistake by
it.self.
The machines• enabled the
Postal Service to eliminate jobs.
"I don't think the public ls
ready to handle a mllllon people
on our payrolls," Postmaster
General William F. Bolger said.
The Postal Service, which bu
about 650,000 employeea, would
require htmdreds of thousands
more workers if mall was sorted
by hand, he added.
Bbl•er 1ald be doesn 't w;mt to
1ive up on rnechanliod malt
1<>rtlni. A new optical character
reader that may replace some ol
lhe ulllinl machJnet llkely will
r •d uce l he· number or
-meehanlcal errors, he 1ald.
Doney utd ctUsen1 can
blatne tbem1elve1 tor about 15
percent o( the mlataJcea becaute
tbty ~Incorrect ZIP codes.
The 1urvey was done in 30 ma·
Jor c1u.t or rectooa1 tactlltl•.
l>or.aey 9-ld t.Mn -.Ould be an eapandec1 ltudy lnoa.Gbtr.
Ohio Horne Fire
Cops Save Priest
l I
As Firem_en Strike;
MANSFIELD, Ohio <AP> -A
92-year·old r etired Catholic
priest was rescued from his
burning home today by four
police officers after striking city
firefighters refused to battle the
bl111e.
I\ was the fi rst major fire in
the northern Ohio city of 55,000
since firefighters struck Monday
demanding higher wages.
church in nearby Shelby -out of the building.
"It 's very hard to start over.
I'm 92 you know." McFadden
said as he left the scene with the friends.
Clayton Long. Mansfield safe.
ty director. Mayor Porter, and
the fire department chaplain,
The Rev. R. L~ Butler. were the
only persons other than police to
respond to the blaze.
Glav as Report
A spokesman for lbe city's 103
striking fi(.emen said the first
major lire in the city since the
start of the walkout had not
a ltered their stand.
•'The men are still determined
to slay out until we get a con-
tract.·· he said. "We went to
council last night with an offer
and it was flatly denied. The
monkey's on their back now." Mayor Richard A. Porter. who
helped fight the fare. said he was
starting the paperwork needed
to force firefighters back to
work or fire them under Ohio's
Ferguson Act. which forbids
strikes by public employees.
Those ignoring the law can be
fired.
The fire involved a brick
apartment building where the
Rev . Mi chael A. McFadden
lived.
"We weren't sure anybody
lived there until we saw a
Cleveland Plain Dealer on the
porch and a lighted doorbell,"
patrolman David Mast said.
Error in Naming
Crime Figure Told
He and three other patrolmen
rang the bell, got no answer, and
broke the door down.
McFadden was found asleep in
a first-floor bedroom.
The patrolmen brought the
~ pr~st and a few belongings -
· jackets on a hanger. a small file
box and a portfolio of memen·
toes of his 30 years as priest of a
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of -Detly ...... kMf
Newport Beach's B. James
Glaves. head or tbe state
Organiaed Crime Contr ol
Commission, today said he could
not explain an apparent error in
identifying a Cypress engineer
as an organized crime figu_re.
The name Joseph Vincent
Agosto of 5048 Hanover Circle,
Cypress, was among the 92
names of t~puted mobsters
5-vehicle Crash
Burts 4 Persons
By n ;RRY CLAUSEN
Of U. DMly l'IMCMaH A five-vehicle accident, In·
eluding two gravel trucks, in·
jured four persons and blocked
El Toro Road three miles north
of Trabuco Road for most of Olis
morning.
Firemen, paramedics and am·
bulance tea ms worked more
than an hour removing victims
from the mangled vehicles
which also included a small van
and two automobiles.
California Highway
Patrolmen said the woman
driver or a southbound auto at·
tempted to pass a semi-dump
truck rig owned and operated by
David Merriean. 29, of Covina
when she was confronted by a
string of three northbound
vehicles.
Her car and a nerthbound van
collided. at about 8 a .m .
patrolmen said~ setting ort two
more collisions.
A northbound trailer-hauling
truck apparently swerved,
catching the traile r or Mer·
rigan 's southbound truck.
patrolmen said.
Me rrlgan's trailer and the
northbound semi·rig turned
over, and another car, driven by
Ralph Caputo, 35, of 35391 ·
Beach Area
Reopened
Llfe~uarda In Hunt1n1ton
Beach and Newport Beach today
reported alt wu back to normal
on the stretch of beach re·
opened to the public alter a e
day quarant.toe.
Orange Cowltf Health De-part·
men' ottlclall cl0ted the 1trand
runalns trom 52nd Street ln
Newport Buch to Brookhunt
StrHt ln Hunttncton Beacb
March 12 after a Mwer matn n&P·
tured: spUtm; rnllUona of ••Ilona
of aewace lllto the Santa Ana River:--
Helena Circle, Mission Viejo,
rammed into the northbound
truck, Caputo said.
The driver or the northbound
truck. owned by Blue Diamond,
was seriously injured and was
pinned in the cab or his' vehicle,
patrolmen said. He was iden·
tified as John Vestal, 48.
The woman drive r or the
so uthbound passing car.
Elizabeth Tackett. 21, Silverado,
suffered-minor facial injuries.
(See CRASH, Page A2>
Six Inches
Of Snowfall
Hits Kansas
ELKHART. Kan. <AP)
Snow blanketed portions or
Kansas today, with up to 6 •
inches on the ground al Elkhart in
the southwest comer of the state.
Dodge City had its first May
snow tall in63 years.
.. It is the first time we've had
measurable snow in May as far
back IS t91S, SO it'"S 8 pretty rare
occurrence." said Lee Stinson of
the National Weather Service
station at Dodfe City.
Jack Walsh, who answered the
telephone for the Morton County
shertrr1 oi:nce at Elkhart. said
there were 5 inches to 6 lncbes.of
1now on the around throuaboClt
tbe area and It was 1tlll 1nowtnc
fairly hard t.hiit mornlnf. w al ah aald roads ln the
southwest corner of Kansas
were sl&llby but there were no
reporu ol acckleata.
In the southern Rockies,
meanwhUe. tbe weather &erftce
reported up to 17 lncbH of anow.
In the 'Oklahoma Panhandle
and far nort.bwettem Oklahoma,
mtanwhile, the 1tale blp•Q
patrol reported 1now made ctriv· \Pl ha1ard0bl over many rNda
and toppled Umbl ol eom• \Nl9.
released by Glavas and state
Attorney General Evelle
Younge r during a press
confe rence Tuesday in Los
Angeles.
However, the wrong Joseph
Agosto, who lives at the Cypress
address. says his middle name
is Geo~e. not Vincent and he's
an engineer for the Rockwell
International plant in Downey.
Law enforcement authorities
not involved with th e
commission say they understand
tha t Joseph Vinc.ent Agosto
intended to be listed actually
lives in Las Vegas.
G lavas. contacted today, said
he would not make further
co m men t s b eyon d th e
information carried in the
report.
Asked about the Agos to
identification, Glavas, a former
Newport police chief, indicated
he thought Joseph Vincent
Agosto lived in Cerritos, not
Cypress.
Agosto was among the s ix
names or alleged crime figures 6
who live in Orange County.
1
.
None of the co unllans
identified were available for
comm ent today, a lt bough
reputed crime figures living in
other parts of the state reacted
angrily. ,
According to the r e port.
Agosto has been the target or a
20-year effort on the part or the
federal government to deport
him to his native Sicily because
or his orga n ized c r ime
connections.
Other countians listed include
Eddie Zuber, with an address
listed at 3073 Yukon St., Costa
Mesa. CurrenUy serving a
<See CRIME, Page A2>
Coas t
We ather
Night and morning low
clouds wllh sunny but
haiy an~moon Thursday.
Lows '1onlght in mid·SO!'.
Highs Tbuisday 68 to 72
.12 DA.ll.Y.,_LOf N
Garbage
Pickups
Peaceful
The 16·dUy ·old Orange County
trash truck strike continued to-
do y amid a calm U}at left at
least one dJsposal J{rm-owrter-
uneasy:---
"Everybody's so quiet today,
something's going to happen ...
said Dick Taormina. owner or
Anaheim Disposal.
''No rocks were thrown at my
trucks today," he said, noting
that picketers from Teamsters
Local 396 just turned their backs
us newly hired non·union drivers
went on their rounds. .
.. We're meeting with the
fe deral mediator today,"
Taormina said. "Maybe they
know something we don 'l. ..
o.ltf Pit• ...... .,~ a-•
JUMBLED MASS OF TRUCKS AND CARS SPREADS ACROSS EL TORO ROAD FOLLOWING FIVE-VEHICLE COLLISION
Firemen (atleft) Comfort John Candow, 30, Pinned In Car That Reportedly Tried To Pau Gravel Truck
The m~ting with mediator
John Courtney was scheduled
for 11 a.m
Drivers on Saturday rejected
what managers of the seven
.struck firms had termed their
final offer Drivers are seeking a
nose from S4.50 an hour to $8.50
over a three-year period, while
management has offered $6.
More than a million Orange
County residents were left
without trash pickup service for
two weeks On Monday. non ·
union drivers began making the
rounds. but the combination or
int:x pcrience and mounds of
piled up trash has left collec·
lions behind scMdule
Parems Fight
Plan to Close
Grade School
A group of parents has filed a
$100 million lawsuit against the
Magnolia School Di strict, claim·
ing the distrkt's plan to shut
down Low Elementary School
June 1~ 1~ "unlawful "
W1lh<im Morton. a member of
tht· :.chool'l' PTA, said the d1i.
tri<'t 's trustee~. who voted April
lt! to close the 300-studc.n.t school. foiled lo follow t1f'e
recommendations or a citizen's
ad\ isory group.
A May 22 hearinu has tx>cn
scheduled by Orange County
Superior Court Judge Harmon
Scoville. He ordered the district
to s how why a preliminary in·
Junction should not be issued to
bar the school's closin~.
-Mnrton said the advisory com·
mittc:e recommended the
closure of Schweitzer and Dis-
ney schools a plan he said tht·
board disregarded because of
"personal bias."
At least two of the boC1rd mem·
bers, Morton said. have children
11ttending Schweitzer and Disney
!-thools
School Superintendent Spencer
Covert said closure of one of the
d1i.trict's l>Chools. because of
dc•cltn1ng enrollment. would
save at lenst $100 ,000 in the
1978-79 school year.
Rape SU.8pect
Sought in· SD
SAN DIEGO <AP> -Al least
20 recent sex-related assaults in-
cluding eight rapes are under ln-
vesll gatlon in Mission and
Pacific beaches.
Th~ victims say he Is young.
white. about six feet tall and
athletically built. He often raps
on windows nrst alter observing
women alone, knocks on doors
'or leaps from hallways.
Jn many instances. the a\.
tacker has worn a blue·and-
wh1lc bandana over his face and
a blue sweat suit, with nothing
else
Funds Renewed
BERKELEY <AP> -The
University of California has won
renewal of two key federal con-
tracts, but will face a review of
hiring practices which have
been a lleged to be biased
against women.
DAILY PILOT
·~ ...... ..... \letf>I _ --
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e .. ,.,..
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o..tMlf.'---..~..,""*lilot ....... Utert
T• ... •4114}.._, acu•u.w. ...... MM171
'Mobster' Funded Younger
LOS ANGELES <AP> -Labor lawyer Sidney R. Korshak may
be on state Attorney General
Evelle J Younger's mobster
lis t. but that hasn't deterred
Younger from accepting $3,000
in campaign donations from
* * *
Korshak and seeking yet
another for his gubernatorial bid
this year.
"l threw it away after reading
it." Korshak said Tuesday or the
recent request for money. "But
1n view of the accusations
* * * Fro•P~AJ
CRIME REPORT IN ERROR.
prison term in the federal pnson
on Terminal Island. ·he was
convicted in 1975 with five -;;lhers
in a nationwide fraud scheme
that bilked investors out of
nearly SI million.
Dominic Brooklier, Anaheim,
is listed by lhe report as a poten·
tial candidate to become head of
organized crime in Southern
California. Ile has past conv1c-
lions for armed robbery, la rccny
and interstate transportation or
forged documents.
lie is currently under iR<tict·
mcnl for a variety of rackE.'leer·
ing charges including the
murder of San Diego Mafia
lt•ader. Frank "The Bomp"
Bo m pensiero
RaJph D'Angelo, Anaht!1m. 1s
reportt!d.ly an associate of New
York's Gallo family and is con·
s idcrcd to be a contact for East
Coust mob figures "bo come to
California
Anthony Ferro, Anaheim. 1s
allegedly involved In narcotics
activity and is reputed to be an
enforcer for crime figun"
Robert Paduano or nearby Ccr·
ritos. according to the report.
James Testa. Los Alamitos. is
also serving a sentence at
Terminal Island for extortin~
payments from Los Angeles
bookmakers. His partners in the
l'xtortion scheme included Mafia
figures. also named in the re·
port. Sam Sciortino. Peter
Milano and Brook lier.
The commission report noted
that despite the increased activ1
ty on ~ part of organized crimt>
-1t was estimated to be a $6.8
bi Ilion-a-year business in this
i1tate -no one has emerged as
ihe leader in CaWornia.
Younger: a "candidate for the
Republican gubern atorial
nc.minalion. def~nded release or
the report in light or his past
comments that organized cnme
is not a significant problum m California.
lie said the recent influx of
mobsters has made the problem
com parable to that faced by
eastern slates.
Younger also defended his of
fice, whkh has not filed a single
organized aime prosecution
during his term of offkc. by say
ing state law enforcem ent needs
more "tools" such as wiretap·
ping authority and cooperation
of federal agencies to fight or·
ganized crime in California.
Herc's the complete last of
Plan for Campos
Housing Backed
Lower priced housing for 700
families among the general
public would be built on the
cam pus of UC Irvine, if an
Irvine Co. plan recommended by
campus administrators is ap-
proved by UC regents meeting
May 19 in San Francisco.
But while the plan has been
forwarded to UC headquarters
al Berkeley. 1t leaves open addi-
tional matters or acreage and
numbers of otoor apartments or
houses for UCI faculty and stu·
dent housing.
UCI Vice Chancellor L.E. Cox
said those details are being dis
cussed with the Irvine Co
The Irvine Co. has until June
26 to secure approval for the
public housing on campus, ac-
cording to terms or an agrec-
m en t settling a 2'~·year-old
In Irvine Area
lawsuit against the company.
The lawsuit was brought by
the Orange County Fair Housing
Council against the company
and the city or Irvine. It claimed
an Industrial complex approved
by the city which the Irvine Co
plans to build failed to provide
housing opportunities for pro-
spective employees. UCI was
not a part of the suit.
The preferred alternative of
the settlement was to build 700
lower income units on UCI land
that had been set aside for cam.
pus housing. An additional 700
units would be built for universl· ly housing. rr that was not agreeable to
the university, however. the
company agreed to provide sites
on its own land for 72S lower
priced homes.
Flood Protection
For Center OK'd
Flood protection plans at the
proposed Irvine Center regional
shopping center won the en·
dorsement of Orange County
supervisors Tuesday.
Offlclab or the county En·
vlronmental Management Agen·
cy CEMA> were asked to
negotiate an aireement between
the ~ounty and the Irvine Com·
pany toverlng design, financing
and malnt.enance of flood
mea.ures needed to protect the
trtangular·abaped parcel.
The firm plans to build lhe
center ln an area bounded by t.he
Santa Ana , San D le10 and
La1una Fretwaya.
EMA Director Oeorae
Otborne 1ald the county may
have to build a small nooctwater reurdtns buln to protect part
of tbe area at. development OC· cun.
But the lrvlot Company would
be uked to provide laad and
e1Hmem. need.,e and to pay for
other fedliU• unlen ttparately approved bf 1upervt.eon.
Tbo COUftt1 would mamtaln
ID)' ~nnanenl f10od C!Vall'OJ d•
vices. a report to supervisors
said.
San Diego Creek and two can·
yon wash areas traverse lhe
parcel. the r~portsaid.
Youth Hits
Bua Driver
DENVER <AP> -A youth on a city bt11 struck
a woman driver on the
bead wtth a tape player
and bia flatt, after sbe 11ked him repeatedly to
tum clown tbe vohame on
t.he player, pol~ 18Jd.
She -satd nowfe of the mor• than 20 pauenpl'I
dld anyth.lnc to help, and th• youth rap away.
Tht drtver, Peal>' Suaan Wathen,~. w~ treated at
St, Joaeph Hoapllal tor
cuts on her l•c• a n d
forehead toUowina tho al·
t.atk.
•
Younger has made against me, I
think he would want to go back
over his old campaign records
and return to me the money I
contributed to him 1n the past
"Because if I'm the kind of
* * *
•••
names as contained in the com
mission report:
Anlhol\Y A~ ,.,.,,.., Well• Y•IO .. , ...
AOr•Qn•. ~ Jou. JoH91\ 1111><,nl ACJCl'IO
S•lvetore Am•r•n•. S•n l're n<1sco Pu
q uel• John Antonew, S•n 01e90 . Oent•I
J•mel •Piii•. Encino; .-.n Lo\Ht AQ<lttente. s.n
01100 ' JoHC»h Antlloflv Arl•no, NOrthrlCIQlt.
NorM•n Arno. LM Anottn
H•n•v ~eo" 8•olleio. S.11 "94,o. "'°"" B~liuo. \an P90r'o R•r 0...lel BeollelO. s.n
P•oro, JoHPf\ BottNno Sr • T..cr.ot\, Arlt •
S.tvetor• Vincent eorw-. C."'00.tt. Doml"'C
Pholllp 8roottll•, ~I"'; Fr•n• Pe;,1 But· c l•rt. Pelm Spr1nvs.
ll•M•nl Oomlnk C.I, Pelm St>t'l"9S: M.trr.l\el•
C••••no •. "'"'°''· s.r-r Rey c.r.or. ... ~ O.le LOUi\ C.)llQI-. LOl A"9* .. l , ~
icevier C.,rlto, Lo\ Gelot. M1<r..e1 ... .,,.
Coi.•t•. Si'"4 vettev. .IOHPI\ O"AQOallno, S..n 0'-9o. Morrh a..r,,..,
041111, R•ncl'IO L• Coste. Relph 0 Aft99IO.
""•h••"' Aeymofld O.Aos.. Lo• ........ .
•on•1•0 l-0.KIWIOlo s.... Veller. "'""..,,_
.J•me• O•otrot-. W•IQ9il. Louts Tom 0r.-..
Covu"•
(•rl Eze-lel ECk"••n Sen Fr•n< IKo, EOW••O
Frencl\ EP\teln. Encino, Aeymono W1lll•"' "••· .. 10, Erie. ,.,,..., lln ,_, .. , prOIKllY9 <litlOCPtl
Al\tllony ,,._,,, Anet>ef"' JA<' Flnt. V•n Huy\
Ion h r m fn.tl '"-"'0 FeO.r•t Prhont, C.rto ~1or~n11no. LO\ A,_10. J•""'• Fr•toenno, Mo"
ButP\ 11..0.rat pro1c..11vecuu00y1
T llcaoore '"'"""'" WOOdl•nO Hiii\ Lu101 Getfu\O Burb•nk h n FPdoet •I Cort~<t•on••
C•l\ltr. S..... ~01 J<•n c.o.-. G•Hf> S.n Lunoro HM•Y G<o\\ l ono &tech
WlllteM HAorno-111 Lono e.ech. J•O Oon
HuO LO"O Beach ''" US ~en1teMlarv. LHvMwMll\, l(a11< I Kate Kelutllotn. Encino.
C..ralo R•y Kttoor• Sun•-. Arno10 IA<>'*O
K1mmt\. C•r h-b•O S1on .. , KOr\ft••. LO'\
.At\~lf'\
Jemo J l.eN• S.1' Meleo EOw•ro L••on...,,
Beverly Hiii\, Heelrlen John Lil>eretore. S.t1 Oo~o S.m Ll\ne• ~Y. Jee• L0<1ttro, LO\ An~lo. Rori.no ~mon Louoen. Mill Velltv
MIChtlt ~-llii\efCllP\• Pe.-rw AftOtlO
.t.nthony M.trlno S." Jou Pllllllp RoMrt
Mut••s L.M At>otlo H"'°"' M4!1Utr e.,..r1y Holh. Miiton luc"'r MeT>Oe 1..9• ,,.,.,~. An
thOny OOtnlnlc MelWWI. Jemu1 fin C..lltort1I• "•It Pri"°" •• Ollnol: ,..,., JoM ,,...,....,, wesu.,. •.
!>lltlOOn O•v•O Mill,.., Nonh HOllyw-
Rl>ffrl ~ P.OU.no C.,,lto. "" ,,_, ..
Ptnlle"ll..,y, S... PtOrol, Ke,..,.111 Peled•no,
WOOdl•l>d Hiiis. Ro<t O Vltlo<' Put-.••. Nor1"
Hollywood, R•ne Jemu Plcc•rreto, YIKU
Volley, All.-.d PonllOllL Tllouuno O•ht tin
ltO•••I proM>nl. JOHllll Lou11 Pl•u•. Sent•
Cl•••
0om1n10 ~fo<w. c.enooe Pe.-; T,,_.. 1..ou11
RIC< ... o •. c.~ Perk. MICh•el AnlhOny
Rlult•llo, CM>OOe P•O. Anthony ~. o.n. ville
S•M ()fl-Sc tortlno. Renc:ho Mlreoe: o.ni.1 s .. a11nt. Athwrlon. Altr•O Jouon Siu
Ho11.-. Frenl< Re•Pll S.te, S....1-, Jowt)n
S>ee, S<>n Vell4-(. """"° !.Oc, 8uf'benll. AlllllO So-onuolo. Pec:llk• lln FtO.r•I Cor~tion.1 Institution, 5en Pedrol. Jofln Wllllem ~i.tore.
Coron.do; Fr-~ Stelllno. Aolll"9 Hlllt,
Louis Sttfn, l.osA"OfJle•
J•mH JOMSlfl Teti•. LO• Alemlloo. C11t ,.._,.,
Corrtctl-• lrt1tltut-. TtfmlNI 111...SI. t..ou.•
Tell Jr , LOI NloelK . ""'<.l\ffl AIOCIV n..tft, Mn
frenc1Ko.
F'enlt "°"" Velo41•. O.ltlend, Cher~s AnthOflv
Verl"9, IOyttwHd, LOull JoNI Vtrtv•. Petm $pr·
1nq1, ~lvetoteVUete, Horth Holl~.
Victor Peul were.,, Lot •noe•••. ~•o
Jo .. Of\ wi.nu. O!u•• Vi11e; Mlmeel z.tt.,._,
LO• AnQelft, .Jerome ZMowiU, PelM 5'><119. EOwerd Allred Zutier. Cotte Met• !In FICMrel
Prl$0fl, Tef'mlNI ltlendl.
person he says I am -and l'm
not -then I don't think he
would want it on his record lhat
he look money from me."
Korshak 1s one of 92 persons
Younger's Organized Crime
Control Commission identified
Tuesday as being connected with
the mob. •
Younger's campaign officials
confirmed receiving a contribu·
lion of Sl.000 from Korshak Ill
May 1971 . And county records
revealed a $2,000 campaign
donation by Korshak to Younger
m 1970
At Younger's headquarters
Tuesday . a r ed -fuctd a 1dt-
blamed an office s lipup for
Korshak receiving the attorne;
general's latest campaign
solicitation.
"I know we wrote. ·oo Not ~ail .' over his name tn our
master card file." th~ aide said
Niguel Man
Gets Sp«>t on
LAFCO Panel
Laguna Niguel resident
Robert Dwyer has been named
to the five-member Local Agen
cy Formation Commission by
the other four members of the
commission
Dwyer will take the seat
formerly held by Stan Northrup
of San Clemente. who served 10
years on LAl'°'C. the final six as
a public member
Dwyer is a retired advertising
and sales executive and was a
director and vice president or
the South Coast County Water
District and thl' Moulton Niguel
Water District
He was also a director and
manager of the Three Arch
Bay Services District and the
Three Arch Bay Association.
and director of the United South
Orange County Communities As·
soc1at1on.
The commission. comprised or
two county supervisors. two
municipal representatives and a
public membe r. oversees the
formatJon of city governments
and special districts
Dwyer joins Supervisors
Thomas Riley and Philip L. An·
lhony and Newport Beach Coun-
cilman Donald A Mcinnis and
Tustin Councilman Donald S.
Saltarelli on the panel.
Close OUt
About 200 Bib Tires
Mostly 2Dx2125
..
l 2Dx1.75 200 each
3•54•s~5n Value
Basebatl Shoes
.Soccer Shoes
Basketblfl Sboes
Joifinl SllDes ,,.. Shoes
• V.,_Sllees
T lllllls Siiis
f',....f!ageAJ
CRASH ...
~
Her pusenaer. John Candow.
3Q. Orange. was pinned In lht'
wreckage. He was seriously m
JUred . patrolmen said
Van driver George Kahgat. 42.
of El Toro suffered back 1n
juries . .a patrolman satd . and
was taken to Saddleback Com-
munity Hospital
Truck driver Merrigan wa:.
not injured.
Merrigan said. .., looked 1n
the mirror to see thas woman
passing me. I looked forward
again and saw this whole line of
vehicle~ c.'Omin~. I thought. ·Man
alive'· "
The truck driver said he "felt
a tug" and "my air buner came
on. This ls where I coasted to ...
Caputo. sales manager ror
Toyota of Corona. was uninJured
1n the series of accidents.
"All l know is that I wus
following behind this truck and
saw his lights come on ... Caputo
said "The truck cam~ to a stop. I
hit my brakes and then hit his rear
end I have~ idea wh:.il tt appened
up front ..
Fl"01llP~AI
DOCTOR ••.
gling to death a newborn infant
which survived his attempt 12
hours earlier to abort the 18·year·
old mother.
It Is alleged that Waddill choked
the child lo death m the belief that
tl would be hltlt-morf" U1an J
brem-damaged human vegetable
1fithved
5 Motelmen
Charged
In Anaheim
Ftvf' Anaheim motel opetato~
or employees face charges of
l<eeping disorderly houses of
prostitution after their arre~•
this week. Anaheim poltcc ~u1d
today
The five are accused of know
1ngly rent1n ii rooms to proi.
t 1tutes. polJct-~aid
Arrested wer<' Wc.tllN Da\'1d
lf elm . 21. a clerk at tht· Cara\'an
Inn . 130 W Katclla A\ e Ocnnii.
Wayne lverson. 24. ct c·h·rk at the
Razzmatazz Motel. 823 S Beach
Blvd : Robert Leroy Tolle. 42.
mana~er or tht-S1ei.ta 6 Motel.
821 S. Mancheslt'r Ave .
Also. Ma~an Bha1 Patel. 40.
OWnl'r or lhe Hacienda Motl'I.
2176 S . Hubot· Bhd . and
Parsotam Rambha~tel. 41.
owntr of the Frontena Motel.
933 S Harbor
Officers said the a rrest." n·
i.ulted from a two Wl't'k in
vesllgat1on by vice officers and
slt'mmed from 1nformat1on rP ·
Ct'tved from prostitutes ctrrestcd
earlier.
Korea Aid Voted
WASHINGTON IAPt -In :t
move designed to offsc·t ttw
withdrawal of t.: S. combat unit:.
from South Korea. a Hou~t> com
m1ttee approved Tuesdciy th1·
transfer or S800 m1lhon worth of
military eqwpment to Korean
forces. 1be proposal was sent 10
the House noor b> a voice volt•
of the International Rt'lcit1ons
Committee.
Ed• • I .. Aobeft N . WH<1/Publ1st>er Thomas 1<.eev11 Editor
Oranoe Coast Oa1ly Pilot ttona ..-ag.e ________ W·td·nesd-·•Y •.• M.•.vs ••• 1.97·8·--------·Ba·rba·r·•·K·rw·l·b·IC·h·/·E·di.tor-i•.'.P·Age-·E·d·lto·r--
Council Faces
Pay Precedent
~ewport Beu ch 's new City CounC'il will face a series
of difl'acult issues in tht• cominl! months ranging from the
{'tty bud~ct to th<• rc\'lston of the general plan.
One of the most difficult problems it will encounter
"""'\...,..\'-11-r ,,,b_e~lnepay policy C a-nge oeing sought 0y the Cl y S
fireml!n :\kmbcrs of the Fire Fighters Association arE>
askmg L'Otmc1lmen to do for them as the preceding coun·
c1l did for the policemen eind-Oeclare that firemen will rt>·
<·t.>ivE:· a total pay and hcnefit package that ranks in the
top three or all the fire fighting agencies m the county.
II s a predictablt.· n•qucst in light of the policy ~natl·
,.d 101· policemen. It 1s <.1lso li kely that the rity"s other
puhlit· :-.<.lfel~ t•mplo:.·ccs group. the lifegu(jrds, will feel
J usl 1l 1e<.l tn St.>l•king an identical policy us well.
The problem arises from the ract that the police pay
)"'la<·~ "as enacted by lh~ old council. Only two of the
pcopl{' who voted rn favor of that policy Coun<:llmen
Ray Williams and Don ~fcfnnis -remain on the council.
.\tayor Ryckoff opposed il on the grounds that it .would
~a ve the city little power in the annual salary negotiat ion
process. The four other council members are newly
dectcd.
T he dilemma is a good example of the problems that
t·an result when councilmen establish financial policies
that will have to be faced by different councils with
possibly different vi<.'W'\ and circumstances.
·Rush Hour Jams
i\ll)'Olll' \\ho works in :'\l•\\ pllrl Ct·nlt•r 01· in lht· ol fll'l''
:1round Orange County Airport l'an l<'ll you lhul gt>tlmg
tn and from work is becoming more and mon• difficult.
:\s m.•w offices art.' huilt. lht•rc are t·ars added to the
11111rnin~ and cvcmn~ n1sh hours on roads that urcn'l ex·
p:inding m thl• sanw pacl' "'~the traffic using them.
Officials from tht· county <tml from the cities or
!'\cwport Beath, Irvine and Costa Ml'sa say the situation
should improve some when the road networks in thcSl'
;.t reas arc completed, but they also acknowledge that
there is always going to be ~L problem caused by rush·
hour traffic.
l\fany of the businesses came here to get ~1way from
tlw t raffle horrors involved gt•tting in :rnd out of the Los
/\ngcles area.
Clearly. ~ome extraorclinar:.· measures arc ~oing to
lit· needed to prevent the :-.amc problems from recurring
here. rtJI' t.•xumpll', :'\(•wnort Cenkr's l\\O h1ggest
1.•mployl·rs Pa('ifa· :\lutual ln-.uranc1· Cn. and :\vc·c>
F111<rnc·1al Sc·n H'l'S. ust• st.1ggl'l'<'cl \\01 kn1g hmU':-for p.irl
111 l hl'll' \\01'" lot'C'l'.
Bus1m''>Sl'S lhrou ~hout lhl· llarbor Art.-a ought to t:1"e
.1 t'tlt' I rnm tht.•:-.t· two I inn" .. ind t.•\plorl' <>lht•r tral I H
n.·dudn~ plant. t-.UC'h J.., van pooh.. <·ar pools and s hutt It.·
:-.,v .... tcm!' ;1:-. wdl h(•ton• tlw tralfte for<:t!S Jn cxodu!:> of·
f 111-;in(•-.-.
New Freeway Fight?
It prnbahl~ com1:s as no surprise to anyone who is a
:...ttrcf<:nl ol human natun· that there arc some people In .
mg on th1: Orange Coast Who don't think construction or
lht• J>ropost•d San .Joaquin Hills Trans portc.ation Corridor
1-. !-IUC'h ci hot idea.
In fatt. depending on how do~c lht·11· homt.'s or bu-.i
tlt''>!)l'!' arc to lht.' proposed route. there are some 1>eople
"ho art.' downris:!hl opposed 10 the project. They point out
I hat tht' corridor is l!Oing lo have the capacity of an eight ~
1<1ne frl't.•way and that means they arc going to be faced
"1th noise <Jncl a ir pollution problems they don't have
l\11\\ •
On the other hand. proponents of the project arc
primJnl~ people who ah·t·ady have ma.1or roadways
<1tld lhC' atl<•ndant lraffic-causC'd noise and air pollution · ·
<• 11cl \\ho .ire anxious to !-.et' anolh{·r major no1ih-south
mull· built to n•lit•n· lh(• tonl!C">tion thl'~··n· stuck with.
It sounds wsl I 1 h.t• I ~w good old da~ s wh(•n thert· was a
p);11\ lor -.umcthmg l .. llh•cl tlw P.1t•il'H: C'oa'>l Freeway. ,\
lot of Jll'OPll• \\ ~111t1·tl t li<it 111~1d\\ a.\ hudt . too, Lis long a~ 1l
\\asn'l h111ll m lhl·ll hal'h.\,1rd ll \\ill l>v 1nt1·n''>linn to see • too I 11 lhl!-1 <·orndo1· propn-.:d tnl't'h lhl' ...,,inw fate ~ts thl•
(•nasl al I rl'l'\\ .1 \
• Opinions expressed 1n the space above are those of the Daily Pilot.
Other views expressed on this page· are those of thetr authors and
artists. Reader comment 1s 1nv1ted. Address The Daily Pirot. P.O.
Box. 1560, Costa Mesa CA 92626 Phone (714) 642-4321.
Boyd/Depression
By l..~I. UOYIJ
(iu~sl1on <:1riscs <1s lo
\\ hetber thcat.. emolioncal low
known as the depression 1s
t'ontagious. Definitely. Thos<.·
blues arc catctring. Studies al
I h,r University of J llinois
have.' proven thnt. And
-.tudies e lsewhere. For
generations. One downbeat.
citizen among a dozen light
hearted sottls in a fairly
rapid manner can makt'
t.•,·erybody thereabouts fe('I
\aRuely uneasy. Then. somt•
others. too, may drift toward
melanchOly, though most will
just make themselves scarce
Maybe it's extra-se f)sor~
perception. Or. maybe just
perception. But 1t happen~.
Dear
Gloomy
Gu ~
Jt'" Um the DaUy Pllol
editors dropped the rolt'
of ov.-r-amxioui parent.6
and •lopped "tauUon-
1ns.. lbe new Nt>wport
Beach City Council
aaaln1t boinft too ~nJ
Yironmeotltlll.
J.N.B.
•
Despondent people lend t1·
'1Uarantine themselves.
Te<t gol its big slarl in
Europe nol amon~ thl'
English, as com monly
helievcd, but around 1610
with the Dutch. who praised •
il mightily as a laxative.
Why Tuesday is the day of
the week you're Jeast Jikely
to be killed by a car 1s
another mystery.
Was 27 years ago that th~
science minds invented a
new clothing material which
was 70 percent feathers.
What prompted them to do liQ
was the report that 30 million
tons of chicken and turkey
feathers were going to waste
every year. You don't see
s uc h material advertised
now. though, do you? What
happened to At?
Henjamio FronfcJin WUR
another or tho&c numcrouit
wlse souls who bave Hld •
laiio<?SS ha!l bccO;etponslble
for moat fnventlonll. He
1" adlly admitted, for In·
stance, that he'd lnvent~d
bifocal elassesbecau.9ehowu
too lazy to 1et up and look for ft
~econd pair· or spectacles
wht!n hen~od them.
Grav take up too much
land, contend.I an Ore1on
man. lfe bu apt>Ued for a
patent o~ a vertical casket
with s=~ta lo hold tbo bodJ U.P
Earl W aters
Candidate Tags Reveal V: ariety
While 1t m ay not bt> the ideal
situatioo it is a fact that many
voters go to
the polls
1\no~tng
nothing
whatsoever
about the can·
didales. This
1s especially
true of tbos~
running for
l'ongressional
und legisla·
live offices where the candidate-;
1n a given district are nothin~
mbre than names to the voter
For the incumbents, or holders
of other offices running lbr new
posts, tbe choice is an easy on~.
By sbowmg the voters the are_
-a lready in fbat or some other of·
f1ce they hope to convince them
.I bey have demonstrated the
necessary qualities for public
trust. But for many of the other
more than 600 seeking election to
154 state omces, th~ opportunity
to provide thls evidence oft~n
:.eems to present problems.
Intended as an aid to voters then
is the prov\sion permitting each
candidate to include an occupa·
tional description as background
information indicating qualifica-
tions.
AT LEAST the list of t>undidales
released by Secretary of Stat"'
March Fong .Eu 1s interestmg
from the standpoint of ingenuity.
or the Jack of Jt, of .some can-
didates in selecting vocational
descriptions to induce voter sup-
J>Ort.
Tbe major ity follow the
general practice or osing com·
mon professional job descrip..
tioos. The lX)OSt widely used this
time is that of businessman or woman~ allboug some usea
business executive or other term
connoting a business back·
ground. There were OWN than
74 of these.
The next largest group was
the 54 who Jlsted themselves
variously as teachers. pro·
fessors. school administrators
and .educators. These were
followed by 49 lawyers some of
whom preferred the term al·
torney.' '
ALTllOUGll some 20 can-
didates designated themselves
engineers. quite a few left voters
in doubt as to "hether that meant
rcailroad engineer or what. Others
~--"
" FUMNY, ff DOESN'T J...()OK LIKE A DOVE!''
Mailbox
howt:\lf.'r .,lated spec1flcally the
type s ut>h as electrtcal, c1viJ .
econ omic and engineeraog
.JW:r'..fil~l. -------~ Among the other professions
are six CPAs, three medical
doctors. two dentists, an op·
t ometl'ist, a pharmacist, an
arc:bitect and a chir~praclor
who also does tree topping.
WHILE FAR MERS once
made up a pre ponderance of
legislative candidates only 11
designatett themselves as such
jn th.is election. About a dozen
are running as reporter~.
writers, editors and publisher:-.
and three are bankers.
From there on the designa-
tions really get interesting
although a dozen failed to pro-
vide ·a ny jnformation as to oc-
cupation. Others ranged from
specific readih• identifiable
vocations s ucb as barber,
laborer, policeman and fireman.
to vague descriptions such as
..health professional." ••air
b a la nee c." "tax payers•
r e presentative." .. people ·s
politician;• and ''public affairs
represeotaUve.··
Housewife seems to have·
faded into disuse 1n favor or
"homemaker" and "mother"
but one eandldafo lists himself
as "unemployed teachcr-
hou~ehusband. ·'
OTHER CURIOUS designa·
lions rnclode .. worke·r-priest,"
.. minister-philosopher ," "tax re·
duction advocate;• .. disabled
rights organizer", "service ad·
viser'' and "concerned citizen.••
Two or three candidates
thought showing themselves as
members of the party central
eomm1ttee lo be impressive.
Some simply listed unemployed
while one is running as a "re·
tired soldier" and another as a
"disabled veterca11 ." Ont> can-
didate for the Assembly could be
very popular w1lh his fellow
memben. if he 1~ clcl'll•cf. lk ''a
"golfpro. ·
Prop. 13: A Potential Taxpayer Ripoff
To the Editor:
t am writing about the poten-
tial ripoff. the Jarvis-Gann tax b~ll, Prop. 13.
I think the Jarvis-Gann bill
will be the ~realest ripoff or the
taxpayers if it is voled in. Jarvis
said in a TV program thal there
1s no guarantee that the apart-
ment owners woulc.1 be wilhng to
reduce the rents but ··1 think
they will.''
WHY should they r educe the
rent if they don't have to'! The
big companies who own thl'
apartments do not care for the
renter.
Of course. J arvis 1s an rifftl·er
1n the Apartment House Owner
Association a nd naturallv he
would fight for this bill. Jan·1l\
can 't even meet anyone and tru·
ly argue the bill at all. Ht:> just.
has to be. very rude in any dis·
cuss ion.
l am happy to he~r that the
L.A. Supervisors have decided to
volt> against theJ arv1s-Gann bill
WILLlAM H. COOPER
Co•puter Teach i ng
To the Editor:
Many of us are unhappy aboul
the way our tax dollars are used
by Coastline Communit y
College. Coastline offers a
highly visible consumer product.
Less visible are some otht•r
un1vers1ty and college pro-
grams. for example, a class be·
mg ''taught" this spring quarter
at UCl in the Departmcnl of
Social Sciences. Tilled "lxil
M~ya," Course No. 50·L, the in·
structor, a Mr. Colby, m et with,
his class the first ·meeting, gavr
over 100 students a list of read-
ings for the quarter, and will
meet with them the last meet-
ing. The weekly tests are eom·
puterized. Each student is al·
Jotted $18 worth of computer
time, though it appears that this
may be an insufficient dollur
co~t for Ulo complete series ()[
tests.
SO THE question is: JC Mr.
Colb}t is being paid to teach a
class (as one would have to as-
s ume) why ls he 11ot tench\ng 1t 1
And why are sLUdents belne r~
quired to use expensive com-
puter U1ne? This ls University
level work? And this is what w&
pay our tax dollars for? 'l'his is
not an isolated. incident. There
ure many euch. examples at. all
levels o( educetion.
If cltliem were rnorc aware or
th wasteful use ot funds. they
would no doubt take more acUon
at tho voUng booth and at •chool
board rnefl111is.
VlROJNlA JJA!UUS ·
C'•••e11u ... rfll
To tho Edit.or: ·
1 would like t.o commcAd tho
Newport-Mesa Hoard of Educa-
tion for their enlightened at-
titude and their recognillon of
thl' need to ttxtend Finst Amend·
mcnt ri g ht lo st udent
.1ournalists.
A publication code is currently
before the board which would
prohibit censorship of student
copy in Newport-Mesa school
publications unless, of course. it
is restricted by law or the educa-
tion code <libel, obscenity, right or privacy, disruption of school).
lt give!\_ student edi\ers the
responsibllity or editing content
and provides an appeal pro-
cedun· for disputed copy. It also
.'!IVes a right of reply to those
noton publlcahon staffs.
IT IS A fair code. one that
s pells out the principles of
freedom of the press under
which p ubl1cat1on staffs
operate. Nothing m the eode
goes beyond what 1s currently a
matter of law ol" common prac-
tice.
Jn its discussion at the April 25
meeting. the t>oard heartily en-
dorsed the code and saw a need
to strengthen the appeal pro-
c· e du re. Thl' numerou s
JOUrnalists from the various
hi gh schools who attended and
spoke on the issue went away
heartened by the board's read~
ae<.·eptance of lhc•1r Firs t..
Amendment rights.
By approving the code tlw
board Wlll be laying the founda-
tion for stude nts to learn
responi;ibihty and a working
definit10Q... of Freedom of the
Press.
LlNDA D. MOOK,
Journalism Adviser.
Corona dcl Mar High School
Na t Entertai••ent
To the Editor:
Regarding your edltorilll Qf
April 25 in prai!'le of t he-
''Holocaust": We did not watch
the program.
How many or those 20 mUlfon
televlsion viewers have read
"'The Diary of AMe Frank'''>
How many of tbeir children have
J'ead it oc-at U\e lea t had lbelr
parents tell tbtm ot it? How
many of tboso 20 million chutlse a · child (or no adult.>
wbotC!llsanethmc•'jo.ke"?
It occurs to mo. that )'Ollr
.rt8)lteousness (and theirs) may
be aumect. Surely. 1t on6 were
eottcemed td lmow tho truth and
to ssure that it not be foraott.en.
other leu ten1allonal means are
at hand. But tullt ia &Sl\µlCK
eaaily. comfortably -the pat,;
terns or ure are undisturbed.
I AM sickened by th appcUto
of t.bo Amorlcan J>Ubllc tor
paulve Jeuons in. moralit,y. l
could not mot'O have watc:hecl t.ho .iKolocaust" than I coo.Id
tolerate one Word ol ~ud&at
spoken in my presence.
So please do not talk to me
about weak s tomachs. l am
aware of those horrors. 1 will
not watch it between station breaks. Kie rkegaard said,
"'There is no temple-robber. toil -
ing in shackles or iroo. so
vicious as those who pillage
among sacred things ...... We
a ppear lo have lost any sense of
outrage, and we are pillaging,
by treating as entertainment, an
(•ve nt that i s sacred t o
humanity.
BARBARA VAN HAVEN
.~ot,•Minorit y·
To the Edit.or:
As the operator of a flower
shop that serves the entire
Newport-Costa Mesa area. I am,
or course, interested in the
f(rowlh of our community. As a
resident of Corona del Mar. I am
also concerned with tbe quality
o( life in our city.
Reading your editorial of April
26. "NarrowinJt View Would
Harm City," I could not help but
be incensed by the comments
therein. You !ilale that the new
Newport Beach City Council led
by Mayor RyckofC and staffed by
the newly elected (your words 1
.. environmentalists," may not
act in the best interests of thl'
"ity. This is your opinion and I
respect that.
I a lso recall just prior to the
election the Daily Pilot came out
and endorsed Lucille Kuehn,
wJlo though dlf eated ran oppos.
ing one of those environmen·
talists, Councilman Hummel.
Although l JJupported Mr. Hum.
mel. I can understand that the
Pilot Celt Mrs. Kuehn was a can·
didate more iocJined lo your ob·
jectives.
MY ANGER stems from rcrer.
ring to those of us who s upported
Hart. Hummel and Strauss as a
"vocal minority." It seems to
me that the residents of Newport
Beach rar outnumber the de·
velopets and buslness people. We are stlH a city or
homeowners. I de> not tblftk you
could produce s tatistics that
would lndlcato that our po1>11Ja.
tion ls not mojorit,,J homeowners
o"d renters.
Further. iL ltl not just the resj:
d1:nta who ~ ~ about
our terrible tn(flo situation. r
refer you le> the front paao story
in ~ same "'3ue of the Dally
Pll.Ot. enlltlt<f "Center to St.la· aer.H 'J'his artJct dealt with
some or tbe c:ompantu in
.Newport Center, led b)' Pac•nc
Mutual. who are lnYDlved'91n an
evtr·upa.ndtnc-prognm to
at•Her th9 worldnr; t\ours oC
t belr employees to •llevlat.o
90me Gt 1.b8 tetrtble tnmc COil· .....
Does il not makl' M~llst• thal if
the traffil' m Newport Beach 1s
so bad it 1s about time'""·' had a
<:tty council made up of responsi-
ble c1ti~eru; "ho m-;1sl that we d1J
something about this problem
before we do any more building·:
All of us, residenLc; and busmc:11s
alike. realize that :-.omcthin~
must be done about the traffi<'.
And all or us together are nol a
•·minority."
DEHRA B. ALLEN
S kateboard Nee d •
To the Editor·
There should h<.• <• :-.kakbn:ml
park m Newport BN<'h. Jt c<.1m1·
up once m the Cit:'-Counl'il, but
they t.urnl'd rt down. That wus
not the smartest idea becauM·
the fastest growing sport in
Newport Beal·h 1-; :-.katcboard·
ing.
THER~ AR£ a lul or areas in
the cily that could ht· used as a
skateboard park. Children in
Newport Beac·h want \•>
skateboard so mut>h that they _go
to sewers which arc unsafe and
build ramps up into the streets
JUSl to have fun and skateboard.
A law was JUSt passed makini?
skateboarclrng 1llt•J.!al m publ1e
streets. Somclhrng has to hr
done about this prohl~m. Som1·
place has to be built wh1.•re it.. 1s
legal toridt.-.. skalt'hoard
TONY CONDO;>.;
Banc-It Patrol
To the Editor:
I arn 12 and in the seventh
grade. I Jive in Newport Beach
JO Harbor View Homes
I have a complaint concerninJ!
the Jrvine Ranch. Every day I
look over our wall and C see cars
driving und just silting out
there. just doing nothmg. 1 think
the Irvine Company should
patrol almost every day to keep
people out or there
CNJUS CllANCELI.10R.
·a111,e llolll.e
To the Editor: I woUJd like to ~ptaln about
not having a bike route on East
Const IDghway. because when I
want to go somewhere l have to
b'avel anotb i: road and with nil
t he traffic jt. ts very dangerous
pccially wb n pU.'llng parkw
curs. ' KELLY PYLE
CALIFORNIA
Gays Win Yictory
Panel Backs Job Discrimination Ban
SACRAMENTO CAP> -ln a State Sen. John Briggs, R·
rare pol It lea I victory for Fullerton. announced Monday
homosexuals, a state Senate that he had collected enough
committee has approved a ban signatures to ~::~11~· ~o~n_l!l' o~b'.,Jdl~11~~ri:1.lm1lllllln1J.1alJli.Q1001L1hU1a1&sede4..-0on11--#it~ta~l.1.1! v~e::i~o~r ~tbe~N , . ...._ __ sexua pre erence. The secretary of state's office
wlll decide later this month But the bill, approved 4-0 whether the measure has the
Tuesday by the Senate In· needed 312,404 valid signatures. dustr1al RelaUons Committee, is
thought to bave little chance of AT TUESDAY'S HEARING,
final passage In this election homosexual activists. Including
year. A similar bill died In an the state's most prominent gay
Assembly committee Jast year. politician, were ta.kin~ a more
optimistic long-range view. AND THE HOMOSEXUAL "What is happening is the
community faces a potentially emergence of gay political
more serious defeat later this power," said San Francisco
year in a state ballot initiative Supervisor Harvey Milk, an ad-a i med al removing openly milted gay. "It's no longer a
homosexual teachers and gay-taboo subject ....
rights advocates from public "Some day, whether this year
schools. or next year or 10 years from
Board Kills Plan
now, gay people wlll be given
the same rights."
THE BILL, SB !OS:I, by Sen.
Milton Marks, R-San Francisco,
-worrttJe tnmnrra!ol'ttrM o ~
needed on the seven-member
committee. Several opponents
were absent when the vote was
taken. The blll next goes to the
Senate Finance Committee.
It would ban job discrimlna·
lion based on sexual preference
for any company or agency with
at least five employees. Persons
with rerords of sexual conduct
involving minors would not be
protected by the bill.
FOES FROM fundamentalist
religious groups said that ex·
emption wasn't enough.
·'This is something many
parents could not comfortably
live with, if their children's
sch ool teachers ... were
manifested to be homosexuals."
said the Rev. W.8. Timberlake.
head of a group called the Com-
mittee on Moral Concerns.
"Public schools would suffer T 'S t•t' St t greatly ... bec'ause whether 0 P I a e it ·s right or wrong. a great
num ber of parents would take
their c hildren to private SACRAMENTO CAP> -In the latest skirmish in the cen-schools... >
tury-old battle of the Redwoods vs. the Freeways, an Assembly
committee has killed a northern California attempt to split the B UT SUPPORTE RS said
state in two. nearly all child molesters are Assemblyman Barry Keene, sponsor of the measure to heterosexuals. and contended
create a new state of Alta California, sought the surgery there Is no evidence that youths
because he said state government bas grown too big, expensive arc. or can be, "converted" to
and unrespoMive. • homosexuality by teachers. And theEu~kaDemocrat said,hefeared "thenorth·south An opponent, Sen. Ray
conflicts' over water and other natural resources are only going Johnson. R·Chico. said the bill
to escalate and gel uglier in the coming years.·· would infringe on the rights of
businesses and on ·freedom of re-THE VOTE TUESDAY in the Governmental Organization Jigion.
Confiseated ..............
Detectives Jack Fisher. left. and Mike Stodelle of San
Bernardino County Sheriff's Office. examine a cache of
weapons found in the investigation of an ambush slay-
ing in Rialto. The ~uns are ~eportedly the ~ror?erty of
David Philip Sheppard who 1s sought for hts involve·
ment in the murder or William Stamps.
..
California to Bar
OAJL y PILOT A$
Refinery
Pollution
Reported'
LOS ANGELES <AP> -Slop·
py equ~ent maintenance al stx-Soa . m Calltomta 011 re·
finer ies Is filling the air with
about as much smog as would be '
generated by nearly two million
new cars. the state Air
Resources Board chairman has
charged.
Tom Quinn, in a speech lo the
California Lung Association,
c laimed Tuesday that leaky
valves. flanges and seals were
found al all refineries inspected
by the ARB during a six-day
period in February.
lei Sala Fla,,ed
LOS ANGELES CAP>
I srael's Prime Minister
Menachem Begin has told com·
munity leaders that Israel "ob·
[..___ST._:4_TE_).
jects absolutely" to America's
proposed aale or jet fighters to Egypt.
Begin. speaking Tuesday ar.
temoron before flying to Chicago.
also said a Carter admlnistra.
Uon proposal lo supply F ·ts jet
fighters lo Saudi Arabia "would
turn lt into confrontation state
with Jtrael."
Pair Siena l• Car
Committee was 4-2, one short or passage. But Keene. who is run· "Let's say I have a business
mng for a North Coast s tate Senate seat, said he hoped his bill -and my customers have a right SAN FRANClSCO <AP>_ CaW:ornians will be p-•~ted from even when dead -would prompt discussion of northern to discriminate by not going in '""""
California needs. my store. I would go broke, .. he overzeaJous telephone solicitations under new guidelines adopt·
. Phone 'Junk Call,s'
GLENDALE <AP> -While
Glendale police were contacting
t he Hillside Strangler Task
F°"8 about an apparent double
homicide, the Los Angeles
Police Department a nrlounced a
reduction in the task force's
manpower.
H. 1 ld lit th t te l the Tehachapi Moun 'd ed by the state Public Utilities Commission. IS proposa wou sp e s a 3
. · • sai · The new rules bar the use of automatic dialing and announc· tains, just north of Los Angeles, but he said he would consider "THERE ARE MANY Chris· . . (th IJed l h
Glendale investigators said
Tuesday t h at R oxanne
Barnwell, 29. or Glendale, and
an unidentified man were found
dead in her car Monday night.
not far from her home. Both had
been shot lo death and two smaJI
caliber ltandguns were found in
the vehicle.
other borders. mg devices without prior consent o e ca party or w t out "We Alta Californians don't mind sharing our natural re-tians In this country who do not a human operator to get the called party's permission to play a
sources with our southland friends," he said. "But we do object ~;Ii .r .0• v.Sup~seh 1° f~r tshfs xi~ recording.
-f strong, loudJy .~d constantly -to attempts al naked ripoffs immoral. Don't I have a right to THE Ql\·CALLED "junk call" controls require users or 0 our resources. choose which people work for r'd. l' d · t tif th t I h f automatic 1a mg ev1ces o no y e e ep one company o SOlITHERN CA LIFORNIA i?ets much of Its water from me?" their plans to hook into telephone lines. including hours of use northern California, through the canals of the state Water Proj· Steve Badeau of North~ and expected volume.
eel. Other resources such as timber and farmland are largely California Human Rights Ad· Devices subject to the controls are those which are capable or Fl~ BU• CBS Sei
localed in the north. voe ates .. a gay-rights lobby· storing numbers to be called or generating random or sequen·
Keene said the new Southern California state would still be replied that the same argument tial number selections and are able to play prerecorded LOS A NG ELES (A P> the second most populous in the country and Alta California. was used for years against hir· messages. Separate fires destroyed a back
which means upper California in Spanish, would be No. 8. ing blacks. lot set at the CBS Studio Center
"Ir your religion says I'm a T HE PUC SAI D there is no evidence that automatic dialing in Studio City and damaged a A1TEMPTS TO SPLIT the state date back to 1859, when it sinner. it doesn't give you the devices are now operatin~ in California for solicitation without num ber of homes in the Windsor
was the southerners who felt they were outvoted by the more right to discriminate against operator control. but s aid it expected such devices soon. Hills area, officials said.
oooulous north. he said. A blll was oassed then. but the U.S. me," he said. ' Without the controls, the commission said Tuesday. the prac A F 1 re De Part men t
Congress reject the idea because of fears it was related to the Several witnesses said they lice would "infringe on the comfort and convenience of the spokesman said nine companies ~uthern states' secessionist movement. had lost jobs. or lost chances for telephone subscriber guaranteed" by law. took about IS minutes Tuesday -
Numerous similar bills have been introduced since then. jobs, or feared to be honest <?n Use or a human operator before delivery or a taped message night to knock down a blaze that
One. in 1965, was passed by the Senate but died in the Assembly. the job, bee a use of their will safeguard against a phone being tied up when it might be had enveloped the CBS set and . Assemblyman Leroy Greene, D..Sacramento, contended that homosexuality. needed for an emergency, the PUC pointed out. some trees nearby.
division would create "an endless number of probl,:,em::::s:... "-----------------------------------------------------
Rapist Gets 8 Years
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Calling rape a
"shocking outrage," a San Francisco Superior Court
Judge has sentenced a convicted rapist to eight years
in prison.
r----•Y.UU.UUCOUPON•---...
I WN~~ $129 ·-------(---------~ 1 FISH DINNER I
... REG. I .7tf I
Judge Francis McCarty slapped Charles
Edward Brown, 34~ with the maximum sentence
after a jury found ~~lly of raping an ill 27-
year-old cosmetologist in her apartment Dec. 2.
The woman, said McCarty, "was a particularly
vulnerable vicUm. She was alone with no one to help.··
I ~~~~~.~.~!Al I
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furn it ure, carPeting, and accessorizing for the look you've
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By GABY GRANVILLE
Ot .. OMly,....IWI
Campaign finance reports
I filed with the Orange County
Registrar of Voters this week
show:
-The c:oanty'1 moat heavily
financed campaign is in the ~ second supervisorial district
, where five candidates have ac-
1
cumulated $320,055 for the June
6 primary election campaigns.
El Toro t
I
iCrash
~
~Hruts4
I
By JERRY CLAUSEN
Of U. Delly f'llet Staff A five-vehicle accident, in·
eluding two ·gravel trucks. in-
jured four persons and blocked
El Toro Road three miles north
or Trabuco Road for most of this
morning.
i Firemen, paramedics and am-
bu I ance teams worked more
than an hour removing victims l from the mangled vehicles ~ which also included a small van
and two automobiles.
California Highway
Patrolmen said the woman
driver of a southbound auto at-
tempted to pass a semi-dump
truck rig owned and operated by
David Merrigan, 29, or Covina
when she was confronted by a
• string of three northbound
( vehicles.
Her car and a northbound van
collided, at about 8 a .m .
,
patrolmen said, setting off two
more collisions.
A northbound trailer-hauling
truck apparently s werved,
catching the trailer of Mer·
rigan 's southbound truck,
• patrolmen said. Me rrigan's trailer and the
northbound semi-rig turned
over, and another car, driven by
I• Ra'lph Caputo, 35, of 35391
17 truck, Caputo said.
t
Helena CirCle, Mission Viejo,
rammed Into the northbound
The driver of the northbound
truck, owned by Blue Diamond,
was seriously injured and was t pinned In the cab of bis vehicle,
patrolmen said. He was iden-
1 tified as John Vestal , 48.
l
l
'
The woman driver of the
southbound passing car,
Elizabeth Tackett, 21, Silveradc>,
suffered minor facial injuries.
Her passenger, John Candow.
30, Orange, was pinned in the
wreckage. He was seriously in·
jured, patrolmen said.
Van driver George Kahgat, 42,
of El Toro suffered back in-
juries. a patrolman said, and
was taken to Saddleback Com
<See CRASH, Page AZ>
Oil Painting
'lme/Sought
An intnider whose method of
entry has not yet been de-
termined by Orange County
1beriff's officers took an original
oil painting valued at $1,000
from an El Toro home.
Deputies said the theft was re-
ported by realtor Augustin
Jose~b Vila, 47, who was away
from bis home at 25.292 Crocker
La'ne, when the theft occurred.
Tbe palnti.ng depicts a charging
black &ull and is by
··cassarella."
Co as&
Weather
Nl1ht and momins low
clouds with suny but
hast afternoon Tbunday.
Lowa tonight in mld-SOs.
Highs Thunday ea to 72.
-Repabllcan .Jobe Sd1mlta is
far outdistancing bis rivala for
the Republican nomination in
the 36th State Senate District
when it comes to campaign
financing.
-RepubUcan Lee Wa&klu is
comlng close to matching GOP
rival Marian Bergeson iit availa-
ble campaign dollars in the five-
candidate race for the
Republican nomination for the
74th Assembly District.
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
-Tlloa&ll uoppoaed in the
Democratic primary election
Assemblyman Dennis Mangers,
D-Huntington Beach, ls spendin1
as rapidly as the Republican
contenders battUna for their
party's nomination.
-Faced .U. a cllaUease from
five relatively unknown contend-
ers, Sheriff Brad Gates this
year bu oollected only $100 to
flnaMe his re-election bid.
Pacing the heavy spending bi
the Second Supervisorial Dis-
trict Is Incumbent supervisor
Laurence Schmit.
Schmil's campaien statement
showed that he has collected as
of April 23, '170,757.
So far, Schmit bas spent
$98,604 on his campaign to head
off the challenge ot four contend-
ers.
And bis statement shows that
he has '64.423 on hand to see him
through the campaign.
WEDNESDAY, MAV 3, 1978
Schmit collected hlJ $170,757
war chest over th~ put th;ft
and one half yeanr. ,,,.,
But challenger Harriet
Wieder, a former '11untlngton
Beach city councilwoman, bu
collected her $'15,580 campalp
fund since nominations clo&ed
March 10.
Included in that sum ts $10,000
loaned Mrs. Wieder'• campaip
by her husband, Irving Wieder.
Former supervisor Davld
Delly ............ .,. Jerry a-.
JUMBLED MASS OF TRUCKS ANO CARS SPREADS ACROSS EL TORO ROAD FOLLOWING FIVE-VEHICLE COLLISION
Firemen (At Left) Comfort John Cendow, 30, Pinned In Car That Reportedly Tried To Pass Gravel Truck
Deliveries Delayed
Machines, Humans Misdirect Mail
WASHINGTON <AP> -Two
of every 100 letters dropped in
the nation's mailboxes are de-
layed because they're routed to
the wrong post office, an in-
ternal Postal Service study says.
Assistant Postmaster General
Pele Dorsey relat.ed the survey's
findings to the service's govern-
ing board Tuesday when he said
the routing errors arise from
mechanical and human mis-
takes as wen as improper ZIP
codes.
"Oh, yes," Dorsey r eplied
when a board member asked
him if there were fewer routing
errors before machines replaced
human bands at the sorting ta-
ble.
As an example, he said, "A
letter from New York City to
Wasblngton might wind up in
Cleveland. You then have to
send It from Cleveland to
Washington. It will be at least
one day late."
He said routing errors are a
main factor in service's inability
to live up to delivery standards. "MaU used to be sorted twice,
and that gave you two chances.
to catch errors. Now, you only
have one shot at it," he ex-
plained.
With machines, a device
brings one letter to a position in
front of a postal worker. The
worker has one s~nd to punch
the five digits of the ZIP code in-
to a keyboard on the machine.
The numbers punched tell the
machine where in that city or to
which other city the letter
should go. The device then
s hoot.a the letter into the ap-
propriate mailba&. If the clerk punches a wrong
number the letter ends up in the
wrong location. Sometimes the
machine will make a mistake by
itself.
The , machines enabled the
Postal Service to eliminate Jobs.
"I don't think the public is
ready to handle a millioc people
on our payrolls," .Postmaster
General William F. Bolger said.
The Postal Service, which has
<See MAIL, Page A2>
Campaign Practices ,
Thom New Panel Head
Former Anaheim Mayor
William Thom was selected
chairman of the county's new
Fair Campaign Practices Com-
miaalon at the commission's
meetina Tuesday nleht. Only a week earlier, Roy
Knauft had been h anded-
thechairman's ~avel as the com-
mission created by the Board of
the chairman's gavel as the com-
paigns for county elected offices
met for the first time.
But Knauf\ bowed off the com-
mission Monday when doubt
about b1a elllibility to serve was
raised because of bis status as
an elected officeholder on a local
water board.
He was replaced on the com-
mission by Charles Stevens, a
former La Habra city coun-
cilman.
Selected by the county com·
miss ion to serve as vice
chairman was Jerry Margolin.
Disputed Hinshaw
OC Debt Repaid
Margolin's status as a com-
missioner was also in doubt last
week because of his status as an
alternate member of the coun-
ty 's Democratic Central Com-
m lttee.
But Margolin said Tuesday
night be had sent a letter of res-
i~n a tlon to the committee to
clear the way for his service on
the new commission.
Without comment Tuesday,
Orange County Supervisors set·
tied a debt they claimed former
assessor Andrew Hinshaw owed
for illegally using county-paid
employees In bis 1972 con-
gressional race.
Supervisors bad filed suit in
1975 against Hinshaw, 35 U !,.
1e116r'' employee• and their
bonding company to recoup
S12.80f in pay.
County auditors calculated
that wu the amount of waaes
given those workers by the COWl·
ty while they actually were
performin1 ca.mpatp functions.
Later, tbe employees
tbemaelvea repaid Sl,405 of the
total and a recalculation re·
duced the sum by another fJIO,
county officlala said.
Th• nmetnln1 ti.tu,
repreaentin1 paymenll to
worken no lon&er employed by
the coanty. .., accepted from
the bond1n& tlnD by 1uperv1Mr1
Tuesday. rn t • they di1ml1Hd
tbe 1ult.
Hlaabaw r9e.nu, served lb
months. tn Jan atemmln1 from
bl• convtcUon on bribery
cbareea and uslng bis county
staff for campaign work. ,. In another action Tuesday,
supervisors ordered a $61,169
tax refund for the Tandy
Corporation.
Thal settles a dispute that tn-
volve'cl alleged favorable treat-
ment to Tandy in the early
l970's.
Named by her fellow com-
missioners to serve as secretary
of the five-member commission
was Judy de Arakal.
Those organizaUonal matters
out of the way. the commission
moved to begin reviewing cam-
paign literature that bad been
sent Its way by candidates in the
June primary election.
It was agreed that literature
prepared before April 1, the date
(See PANEL, Pa1e AZ>
Birds Bom•mg
Suul,/ma1 Cover Crouxla
SAN RAFAEL <AP> -Droppings from a prolific colony of nesting swallows are causing problems for
crowds at Marin Ci vie Center.
"They Just bomb the place ... and people wait·
Jng ln line (or shows are complalnlna about the mess
in their hair and on their clothes," laid Wayne
Lalor, director of Exhibition Hall lll'ld Veteran's AUdltortum at the center.
The county PubUc Works Department recom-
mended that the swallowr neAl be removed. But a
vote by IUP9t;'\'.,. on the lttue Tuesday deadlocked
2·2 with one member of the board absent.
..
OC Strike
Front
Subsides
The 16-day-old .Orange County
trash tnick strike continued to-
day amid a calm that left al
least one disposal firm owner
uneasy.
"Everybody's so quiet toda.y,
something's going to happen,"
said Dick Taormina, owner of
Anaheim Disposal.
"No rocks were thrown at my
trucks today," he said , noting
that picketers from Teamsters
Local 396 juS't lumed their backs
as newly hired non·union drivers
went on their rounds. ·
"We're meeCing \¥Hh the
fed e ral mediator today,''
Taormina said. "Maybe they
know something we don't.''
The meeting with mediator
John Courtney was scheduled
for 11 a.m.
Drivers on Saturday rejected
what managers or the seven
struck firms had termed their
final offer. Drivers are seeking a
raise from $4.50 an hour to $8.50
over a three-year period, while
management has offered $6.
More than a million Orange
County r esidents were left
without trash pickup service for
two weeks. On Monday, non-
union drivers began making the
rounds, but the combination of
inexperience and mounds of
piled ofip trash bas left collec·
lions behind schedule.
Youth Ordered
To Trial in
Toro Slaying
PASADENA <APl -An 18-
year-old South Pasadena youth
has been ordered to stand trial in
Superior Court ror the murder of
an El Toro woman, whose body
was found In Apgeles National
Forest four days after she disap-
oeared.
Pasadena Municipal Court
Judge Gilbert C. Alston set a
Mar 17 arralynment date for
Brtan Wills. tollowing
Tuesday's closed·dOor pre-
llmlnary hearing requested by
the derense. He ts held in lieu of
~1000bond.
Willis ts charged with murder
and kidnap In the death of
Rachel Sparling, 36, a mother of
four who disappeared March 14,
1917 after via1Uq ber Pasadena
psychiatrist.
Hikers found her body four
days later. She had been abol
twice In the bead.
Willi• ~ l'f at the time of tbe
murder. When the quaUoo ~ a
roulln• fitness hearlns aro1e
tut year to determine whether
he would be tried aa 1n adult.
tbe defente demanded a cloMd·
door bearln1 . P11aden•
Juvenlle Court Comml11loner Ricardo Thl'Tll muaed to illue
the 111 order •
" '
Afaeraooa
N. Y. Stoel\s
TEN CENTS
a er who ls tryine to reaaln the
supervisor's seat be held for 12
years reported tot•l campaign re-
celpu oU39,846.
Of that, Bater loaned $22,SOO to
biaowncampalan ..
A f~urth candidate In the
Second District race, Sonia Son-
ju, showed on her campaign
•l•tement that she borrowed
$30,000 at 10 percent interest
with real estate as security to
<See ELECTION, Page .\%)
t
Snow 1
Blankets
Kansas
ELKHART. Kan. <AP> -
Snow blanketed portions or Kansas today, with up to 6
inches on the ground at Elkhart in
the southwest comer of tJte state.
Dodge City had its first May
s,.fallin63years.
"It is the first time we've had
measurable snow in May as far
back as 1915, so It's a pretly ra~
occurrence," said Lee Stlnson of
the National Weather Service
station at Dodge City.
Jack Walsh, who answered the
telephone for the Morton Cowity
sheriff's office at Elkhart, said
there were 5 inches to 6 inches of
snow on the ground throughout
the area and it was still.snowing
fairly hard thii; morning .
Walsh said roads in the
southwest corner or Kansas
were slushy but there were no
reports of accidents.
In the southern Rockies.
meanwhile, the weather service
reported up to 17 Inches of snow.
In the Oklahoma Panhandle
and far northwestern Oklahoma.
meanwhile. the state highway
patrol reported snow made driv-•
Ing hazardous over many roads
and toppled limbs of some trees.
Three Inches to 4 inches had
rallen in Guymon by sunrise
Seven inches to 8 inches of snow
was reported in Boise City since
Tuesday afternoon. with about 3
inches still on the ground after
sunrise.
The National Weather Service
said the last snowfall this late in
spring in Oklahoma was May 12.
1953. when 3 inches fell on Boise
City.
'Sun Day'
Observances
Staged in U.S.
By Tbe Auoclated Presa
Led by early risers who turned
out for dawn se rvices.
Ame ricans celebrated "Sun
Day" today, with fairs and other
festivities designed to show the
potential or solar energy. ~ President Carter planned a
speech at the Solar Energy
Institute in Col6rado and several
Cabinet departments joined In
programs in Washington, D.C.
But there also was criticism or
the federal government for not
moving fast enough in the solar
field.
"We're here to celebrate the
dawni111 of the solar aee and
bring the admlnistraUon kicking
and screaming into It," said U.S.
Rep. Richard L . Ottinger,
D-N. Y .• addressing a crowd at the
top of Cadillac Mountain in
Maine, one of the spotl where the
sun's rays first strike the United
States eacbda.y.
About 1,SOO persona followed
Ottlqer and U.S. Rep. James
Jertords, R·Vt.', up the 1,530-foot
mountain near Bar Harbor,
Maine, this mornine. Ottinger
and Jeffords said that the
federal government was drag-
elng its feet on aolar energy.
which they described u renewa-
ble, cheap. safe and non-
pqllutins. The Maine hikers had cloudy
weather. But diplomats and
others who turned out for a
celebraUon that be1an at 5:57
a .m . ouulde the U.N. head·
quarters buildint ln New York
had better luck -clear skies
and brtlbt sun.
"Solar enerp works," sald
actor "Robert Redford to a crowd
of about 1,500. "It won't pollute
our alr and It W01t1t foul our
rivers."
Andrew Youns. U .S. am·
bt111clor to tM United Natlol\a,
compared the aucce11 of the
black dvU 1Ubu movement in t.be lMOI to IOlar demonstrations
olthe l'70I.
~. Sal'e Priest
Firemen Refuse
To Fight Blaze
MANSFlELD. Ohio <AP> ._A
92·year-old r e tired CaJ.hollc.
JJl'Test was rescued from his
bur.gins home today by four
police officers after strlkln1 city
firefighters refused to battle the
blaze.
It waa the first major Ore in
the northern Ohio city of 55.000
since fire!l1hters struck Monday d~ anding Jligher wages.
Mayor Richard A. Porter. who
helped fight the fare. said he was
starting the paperwork needed
to force firefighters back to
work or fire them under Ohio's
Ferguson Act. which forbids
s trikes by public employees.
Those ignoring the law can be
fired.
start or the wa lkout had not altered their ... st.,.a....,nd..._ __
''The men are still determined
to stay out until we get a con·
tract." be aald. "We went to
council last night with an offer
and it was flatly de nied . The
monkey's on their back now."
The firefighters want a
$1 ,000·a·year pay raise in a
three-year contract. CurrenUy,
starting pay Is $12,626. No new
talks were scheduled.
F,....r,,.AJ
MAIL •••
JUMBLED MASS OF A GRAVEL TRUCK AND TWO TAAIL!RS . BLOCKS EL TORO ROAD NORTH OF. ;.'~;;;~~,.,a..-•
Sand Fitted Traller (At Left) WH Snagged and Overturned By Northbound Rig Which Trapped tta Drtver AD
The fire invo lved a brick
apartment building where the
Rev. Michael A. McFadden
lived.
about 6:50.000 employees. would
require hundreds of thousands
more workers if mall was sorted
by hand. he added.
fi'ro•PageAI
ELECTION ..
finance her campaign.
The ftrlh candidate in the
r ace. forme r Garden Grove
mayor J . Tillman Williams
loan e d him se lf the usi
necessary to rile as a candidate.
Williams' statement does not
show ~Y· other contrlbutlona or
loans.
In the 36th State Senate Dis·
trict race. the stat ement riled by
Schmitz today s hows he has col·
leC'ted $70,920, tncludlng $2,SOO
donations from both the Gun
Owners of California and
Cahfomia Medical Politlcal Ac·
t1on Committee.
That amount put Schmitz well
ahead or his chief rivals for the
Republican nom ination.
fi'ormer Fountain Valley city
councilman George Scott in-
dicated on his s tatement that he
has raised S22,932 for his contest
with Schmitz and the other GOP
candidates.
Jn the same race, RepubUcan
Gil Ferguson s hows he bas
amassed $23,240. $8,500 of it in
the form of pledges to finance
his try for the seat now occupied
by Senator Dennis Carpenter , R-
Newport Beach.
Mrs. Bergeson 's campaign
statement shows that she has ac·
rumulated $62.685 for use In her
·campaign to gain th e
Re publkan nomination in the
74th Assembly District. ·
Her ch.Jet challenger for the
GOP nomination Lee Watkins
IUed a statement today that
shows he has ac c umulate d
$60.629, most of it in the form or
loans to hJs campaign.
• • In the 73rd Assembly District.
Republican Nolan Frizzelle
showed he has accumulated ~.237 for his campaign while
rival Chuck Gibson indicated on
his statement a total or $17 599
-
for use in hls campaign. '
Whoever wins the Republican
!'lominalion In the 73rd will face
incumbent Mangers in the No-
vember general election.
Mangers' statement showed he
had a bal~ce on hand Aprll 23 or
S!4.131 to finance his re-elect ion bid.
Slate Picked
By Sorority
Nancy Yam has been elected
president of the Saddleback
Valley Council of Beta Sigma Phi.
Other new officers of the soror~ty for 1978-79 are: Vice
Presade nt, He le ne Re iner·
Recording Secretary, Mary Jo
Cum m1n1 : Corresponding
Secretary, Marie Forsman, and Treasure~. Amblka Nathan.
Installation is to take place at
the May 17 meetln1 'in Great
Westem S.vlngs, 24100 El Toro
Road, Lquna Hills ..
DAI LY PILOT
Glal'as Report
Error in Naming
----crime Figure Told
By JOANNE REYNOLDS °' .... ., ..........
N l' ewport Beacb a 8 . James
Glavas, head of th e state
Organized C rime Control
Commission, today said he could
not explain an apparent error ln
identifying JI Cypress engineer
as an organized crime figure.
The na me J oseph Vincent
Agosto of 5048 Hanover Circle.
Cypress. was llmong the 92
names of reputed mobsters
released by Glavas and state
Attorn ey Ge ne r al Evellc
Yo un ger during a press
conference Tuesday In Los
Angeles.
However. the wrong J oseph
Agosto, who lives at the Cypress
address, says his middle name
ls G eor~e. not Vincent and he's
a n engineer for the Rockwell
International plant In Downey.
Law enforcement authorities
n ot in vol ved wi th the
com miss ion say they understand ~hat Joseph Vincent Agosto
mtended to be listed actually
lives in Las Vegas.
Glavas, conta<'led today, said
he would not make further
comments beyond t h e
information carried in the
report.
. A s.ked a bout t h e Agosto
adenhflcation, Glavas, a former
Newport police chief, indicated
he thought J oseph Vincent
Agos to lived in,J;erritos. not Cypress.
Agosto was among the six
names of alleged crime figures
who live in Orange County.
None of the countians
identified were available for
comment today , although
reputed crime figures living in
other parts of the state reacted angrily.
According to t he r eport,
Agosto has been the target of a
20 year effort on the part of the
federal government to deport
him to his native Sicily because
of h is o rgan i z ed c r ime
connections.
Other cou.oUans listed include
Eddie Zuber, wllh an address
listed al 3073 Yukon St.. Costa
Mesa. Currently serving a
prison term In the federal prison
on Terminal Island, he was
convicted ln 1975 with five ~lhers
in a nationwide fraud scheme
that bilked Investors out of
nearly SI million.
Dominic Brooklier. Anaheim.
as listed by the report as a polen·
lial candidate to become head of
organized crime in Southern
California. He has past convic-
llons for armed robbery. larceny
and interstate transportation of
forged documents.
He ts currently under indict-
m ent for a variety or racketeer·
In g c h a r ges inctuding the
murder of San Di ego Ma fia
lead e r, Frank "The Bomp"
Born penslero.
Ralph D'Angelo, Anaheim, is
reportedly an associate of New
York's Gallo family and is con·
sldered to be a contact for East
Coast mob figures who come to
California .
Anthony Ferro, Anaheim . is
a llegedly involved in narcotics
activity and is reputed to be an
enfor cer for crim e figure,
Robert Paduano of nearby Cer·
rltos, according to the report.
James Testa, Los Alamitos. is
also serving a sentence at
Term Ina I Island for extorting
payments from Los Angeles
bookmakers. His partners in the
extortion scheme included Mafia
figures, also na med In the re·
port, Sam Sciortino, P e t er
Milano and Brooklier.
The commission report noted
t hat despite the Increased aclivi·
ty on the part or organized crime
. i.t was estimated to be a $6.8
ba ll1on·a·year business in this
state -no one has emerged as
the leader In California.
"California does not yet have
someone silting as its god·
father ," commented Glavas dur-
ing Tuesday's press confere nce.
Waddill Hopeful
Death Clarification
Explained to Jury
By TOM BARLEY
Of ... °"'''~· ........ A new instruction that Dr.
William Baxter Waddlll believes
will lead the jury to declare hJm
not 1uilly of munier was read to
an Oonge County Supe rior
Court Jury today.
Judie James K. Turner Inter· rupted the jlU")''s ninth day of de·
liberations to advise the panel:
·'Tb ere can b e death in
circumstances where a total
cessation of brain function has
been determined.•'
Waddill and bis two defense
.lawyen clearly believe that the
Jury may look on the new added
Instruction u meanln1 that the
baby Waddill ls accused ol
stran1Uos ln the nuraery at
Westminster Community
Hoapltal wu already dead ln
terms of total brain dlslnt.o1ra·
tlon. ,
.. , don't see how they can
draw any other conclusion
now ," Waddlll Hid after the
Jury f.Ued ~ck to the Jury room ror moc:.dellberaUons.
"Certainly, t.be baby I'm a~
c:usect of dM>klna to death was ._,d lD t.bt very terms or t.b.ll n•• lnltlucUon And 10 an act or m\lrdor could not bo com·
•IUed." , ' lronte&Uy. Wblt \a MM U a br~k~~u1!f.:for Utt dt(0~4 ... __ tMir b.aD<b l>l DePU· b J.'>J•I let AUorne1 Ro~rt Chatterton.
Chattenori 1iJcf a provlllon in
lbe 1tate'1 Health and Salet,y
' Code spellmg out what Judge
Turner read to the jury today
cam e to hls attention when he
w,a s dlscusslna another baby
killing cue with an Anaheim de·
tective.
Chatterton aald he mentioned
the hitherto unmentioned point
while chatting with defense at·
torneys Malbour Watson and
Charles Weedman In the
courtroom. Obvlo~ly deU1hted, qie two
lawyers lmmedJately asked to
see Judie Turner and suc-
cessfully petitioned him to rud
the new lnstrucUon cont.tnlna
the elements Cflscovered by
Chattenon to tbe Jury.
Chauenon commented today
tbat he dtd not believe the jury
would itve any wel1ht to ttM ln.·
struct.ion on the llnea that the de·
fen1e expects.
But the conaen1u1 = lawyen Uatenlns to the p •
inas today la that the new In·
11trucUon la an invitation to a
Jurr, which appears to bt
deadloc:ktd, to retolve th• dlltm·
ma by votin1 not 1ullty on tbt
basis of thentwdlrecUve .
W addllll 42. of Huntln1ton
Harbour. s1Laccuud of •tran·
1Un1 to deam a newborn Infant
which 1urvived his attempt lJ
houn earUer to abort the 18-)'ear-
old motbtt.
It t. allnedth•t wid~lc"°ktd
the elllld to cltathlD tM tleltlf U..t
It would be liWe IDO... Uta a brabl.Q~ bvmn ve1~
l!itllved. •
F,....P~AJ
CRASH •••
muntty Hospital.
Truck driver Merrl1an was
not Injured.
Merrlaan said. "l looked In
the mirror to see thls woman
passin1 me. I looked forward
aaaln and saw this whole line or
vehicles comln1. 1 thought, 'Man
alive!' "
The truck driver said he "felt
a tug" and "my afr buzzer came
on. This ls where I coasted to.'·
C~puto. sales manager for
Toyota of Corona. was uninjured
in the series of accidents.
· ··All I know is that I was
following behind this truck and
saw ha s lights come on ... Caputo
said. "The truck came to a stop. I
bat my brakes and then hit his rear
end. I have no idea what happened
up front. ..
Youth Hits
Bus Driver
DENVER <AP I -A
youth on a citr bus struck
a woman driver on the
head with a tape player
and his rists. afte r she
asked him repeatedly to
turn down the volume on
the player. police said.
She said none of the
more than 20 passengers
did anything lo help, and
the youth ran away. '
The driver. Pe1gy Susan
Wathen, 35. was treated at
St Joseph flospltal for
cuts on her face a nd
forehead following the al·
tack.
Korea Aid Voted
WASHINGTON IA PI -In a
m ove designed to orrset the
withdrawal of U.S. combat units
from South Korea, a Hous~ com·
mittee approved Tuesday the
transfer of $800 million worth of
military equipment to Korean
forces. The proposal was sent to
the House floor by a voice vote
of the International Relations
Committee.
"We weren't sure anybody
lived there until we saw a
Cleveland Plain ~aler on the
porch and a llgh doorbell."
patf()lman David aat said.
lfe and three other patrolmen
rang the bell, got no answer, and
broke the door down. .
McFadden was round asleep ln
a first·fioor bedroom.
The patrolmen brought the
priest and a few belonJCimis -
Jackets on a hanger, a small file
box and a portfolio of memen·
toes of his 30 years as priest of a
church in nearby Shelby ~out
of the building.
. "It's very hard to start over.
I'm 92 you know," McFadden
said as he left the scene w1tb the
friends.
Clayton Long, Mansfield safe-
ty director. Mayor Porter. and
the fire department chaplain.
The Rev. R. L. Butler. were the
only persons other than police to
respond to the blaze.
A spokesman for the city's 103
striking firemen s aid the fi rst
major fire In the city since the
5Motelmen
Charged
In Anaheim
Five Anaheim motel operators
or employees face charges of
keeping disorderly houses of
prostitution after their arrest
this week, Allaheim police ~aid today.
The five are accused of know·
ingly renting rooms to pros·
titutes. police s,_id.
Arrested wet'e Walter David
Helm. 21. a clerk at the Caravan
Inn. 130 W. Katella Ave.; Dennis
Wayne Iverson. 24, a clerk at the
Razzmatazz Motel, 823 S. Beach
Blvd.; Robert Leroy Tolle, 42,
manager of the Siesta 6 Motel
821 S. Manchester Ave.: ·
Also, Magan Bhai Patel, 40,
owner of the Hacienda Motel,
2176 S . Harbor Blvd., and
Parsotam Rambhal Patel. 41,
owner of the Fronleria Motel.
933 S. Harbor.
Officers said the arrests re·
s uite d from a two·week in-
vestigation by vice officers and
stemmed from information re·
celved from prostitutes arresled
earlier.
-Bolger said he doeftn 'l want to
givt' up on m echa nized mail
sorting. A new optical cha racter
reader that may replace some or
the existing 'machines likely will
r e d u1c e t h e n u m b e r o f
mechanical errors, he said.
Dorsey s aid citizen s can
blame themselves for about 15
percent of the mistakes because
they use incorrect ZIP codes.
The survey was done in 30 ma ·
jor cities or regional .facilities.
Dorsey said there would be an
expanded study in October.
The study took place in.
Atlanta, Baltimore, Boston.
Buffalo, Ch icago North
Suburban , Cincinna~·, Dallas.
De nve r . Detroit . rllo rd.
Hous ton, lndia na pol s. Los
Angeles, Me mphis. Mi aukee.
Ne wark. New Orlea s, New
York . No_rthern Virginia.
Philadelphia, Phoenix, Pitts·
burgtt. P o rtJ.and. Ore.-:
Providen ce, Richmond, St
Louts. San Francisco, Seattle
Springfield, Mass.; and Ta mpa.'
Fro111P~AI
PANEL ••.
Orange County's political re-
form ordinance became effec-
ti.v~. would not be subJect to pro·
v1s1ons of the ordinance.
Inc luded among those pro·
visions is a mandate that
campaign literature carry an in·
dlcation that It has been ap·
proved by the candidate.
Viejo Plans
Card Party
A .card party, sponsored by the
Capis trano Valley High School
Pa rent-Tea c h er·Student
Organitatlon, is planned in Mis·
slon Viejo on Thursday to raise
funds for school library books
A $2.50 dona tion includes
dessert and coffee at the Miner's
Lady restaurant. 27001 E. La
P az Road in Mission Viejo
Guests a re asked to bring their
own card! for card games of
their choirP
Additional i nforma ton il>
available by calling 831·1918.
Lynn Hort HART'S John Hort
SPORTING GOODS
538 CENTER ST.• COSTA MESA• 646-1919
Clase OUt
Aboit 200 Bib nres
Mostly 20X2125
& 20x1.75 2°0 each
3ts4ts.51s Valle
Baseban Shoes
Soccer Shies
BIUetlllfl Shoes
Jo1fln1 Sboos
Track Shies
Volleyball Siies
Tennis SMes
.Tennis Dresses
Lacles'Tennis Sllorts
l.acies' T emis Slllrts
Me11's & Bays' Tltlllis Shorts
Men's & BIJS' Tenm SMrtS
Tenn·
Tennis ldlts
Wilsen • Davis· Yonex
Prince • Bn1 oft · Dunlop
RacquetUll -ts
Badmlnten licUts
· Met Strtftllnl
~fltts llllllllC.
llseW Ills lmlUll UM1rstirts
)
)
Dllltr .... ,....., w. ....,_
VANITY PLATE FAN BABBITT PREPARES TO DO BUSINESS AT OMV
Clerk Lyle Schnabel Leama About Coatll Men'• Literary Leanl119a
'Auto Ego' Fed
Mesa Buff Stoc~ Up on Vanity Plates
By MICH"EL PASKEVJCH Of ,,_ OAOy ~I ... SUff
Charles Babbitt of Costa Mesa admits to
his bverbloated "auto ego
IN FACT, he plunked down $2,000 at the
local Department of Motor Vehicles <DMV l
to feed his habit of coming up with . novel
moving messages known ln many circles as
"vanity plates."
The 43-year-old car burr figures at least
20 o( his 80 applications Cthree choices on
each) might be rejected as "borderline ob-
scene."
But he's never had an application reject·
ed yet, and like a lot of other motorists with
personalized license plates, Babbitt is excited
about the whole new literary world that will
open up July 1.
THAT'S THE date when the OMV ex-
pands its "prestige plates" to seven charac·
ters Cletters or numbers), giving folks with
name~ like Mahoney, Marquez or Babbitt a
chance to wear it on their bumpers ..
Babbitt already has taken advantage of
the six letter plates now available. A
Volkswagen freak, Babbitt's bugs now sport
plates like "POO POO." "OR BUST," "OL
BLUE" and "OL RAGS," for his vintage 1951
convertible.
Depending on how the slate views bis
sense of humor, many of Babbitt's seven
digit plates will go to friends and c~tomers
as tax-dedu<'tible gifts
HIS LATEST requests are top secret
because he fears stiff competlUon. For exam·
Z70 Studems
WellBrjefed;
pie, when the program started in 1970, rvore
than 7 .000 people requested plates with
"PEACE" on them.
A Jottery system ls used to. plck out the
winner in case ot duplicate requests. The ap-
plication fee, $25 for each set of plates, is re·
funded to those who miss out.
The drawing will be held in late June. AU
vanity plate requests mu.st be filed at the
OMV by May 31.
The seven-digit (or less) plates are
available for any ve hicle e xcluding
motorcycles which are stuck with six letters
because of the smaller-sized plates.
D MV OFFICIALS are expecting more
than 25,000 seven-digit applications to join the
more than 400,000 six-digit plates that have
been issued since 1970.
Known as the Environmental Lit:ense
Plate <ELP>. the program will have kicked
in nearly Sl8 million to the state by the end of
the 1978-79 fiscal year. Funds have gone for
buying ecological preserves, bird sanctuaries
and roadside nature viewing spots.
Babbitt, is prepar ing written appeals to
the state for some ot his "downright edgy"
requests.
HE ORIGIN ALL y, planned to submit 40
requests at a cost or Sl,000 but said he was
"J11st weighing the temptation to go down and
get forty more ot those tb1ngs."
Temptation won out. Babbitt paid for
another 40 applications Tuesday al the OMV
office on 19th Street in CosLa Mesa, according
to Mrs. Toni Gilbert, a OMV spokeswoman.
· Test Retaken
Plan for CampuS
Housing Backed
·A bout 270 Spurgeon In
te rmediale School students were
a little loo well prepared when
the)' toolc the California Achieve·
menl Test last month.
Four teachers distributed the
actual test lo the seventh and eighth graders at the Santa Ana
school in advance. thinking they
were handing out sample ques-
tions. Aeling S upe r i nte nd e nt
Howard Hamson said Tuesday
that the teachers were instruct·
ed to develop sample questions
from the lest -but they mistook
the test itself for a sample.
Harrison said the faulty scores
• have been invalidated and the
children have taken different
tests
'Tm conftdent this was not
done in an effort to increase test
·. scores." Harrison said of the.
Lower priced housing for 700
families among the aeneral
public would be built on the campus of UC Irvine, If an
Jrvine Co. plan recommended by
cam pus administrators is ap·
proved by UC regents meeting
May 19 in San Francisco.
But while the plan has been
forwarded to UC headquarters
at Berkeley, it leaves open addi·
tional matters of acreage ~d
numbers or Qlher apartments or
houses for UCI faculty and stu·
dent housing.
UCI Vice Chancellor L. E. Cox
said those details are beiog dis·
cussed with the Irvine Co.
: mixup. ·.;...;...::;......~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The Irvine Co. has until June
26 lo secure approval for the
public housing on . campus, ac-
cording to terms ot an n'?ree·
menl settlin& a 2'h·Yettr·old
lawsuit against the company. ·
T he lawsuit was brought by
the Orange County Fatr Housing
Council against the company
and the city of Irvine. It claimed
an Industrial complex approved
by the city which the Irvine Co.
plans to build failed to provide housing opportunities for pro-
spective employees. UCI was
not a part of the suit.
The preferred alternative of
the s ettlement was to build 700
lower income units on UCI land
that had been set aside for cam·
pus housing. An additional 700
units would be built for universi· ty housing.
If that was not agreeable to
the univ~si.ty. however, the
company agreed to provide sites
on its own land tor 725 lower
priced homes.
·Bandit Hits
Restaurant
A bold young bandit wearing
mirrored su nglasses and a
green, hooded parka jacket
quietly robbed a Fountain
Valle1 ~taunmt 'lite Monday
artef giving one waitress a
glimpse ~'8 revolver.
Patrolman Steve Isaacs said
the gunman, about 21 to 23, en·
tered Sambo'a, 16205 Brookhunl
St.. and remained quite calm
during the holdup committed lo
the mldat of a number of
cu$lomera.
\
Wha/,e'• Game
' Htlfl'8 rJ!rainer
LOS ANGELES <AP> -A
pla)'.(Ul kJller whale held a
Martneland animal tr-alner UD· CS.rw~\er for Mneral mtnutee
befart lt w11 lurfld away and the
traln4!r mcued, offlcla& eald.
A county Fire Department 1pokeaman aafd JJJl Stratton, 27,
was ln good condltlon Tueaday
nl1bt In Torrance Memor ial
Ho.pit.al.
A 1~okuman for Ue
orean ·aldt amuaement part aa~
Mill StraUoft WH NManJftlfa
routlne with I.ht wtlU. when lhe
anlraal ._.. -~ with WI aaae. . •
fJ
•
Wadneeday, Mey 3. 1978 s DAILY PILOT A:J
Negotiation Due
6C to Stop Free
Medic ~1-ainin_g?_
By KATHY CLANCY Of' .. .....,. ..........
Orange Cou'nty supervlsors
served notice Tuesday that they
may stop providing tree tralnini
for e"panded fire department
paramedic service In cities.
The county sUll would pay ror
trainiq paramedics to replace
those who resign from city or
county service.
The county's existing training
contract with UCI Medical
Center expires July 1.
As part of the bid. institutions
will be asked to break 'out separately costs for training and
recertification or paramedics
and nurses involved in the pro·
gram.
Co unty Health Officer Mort.on
SanJuanMan
Nelson told supervisors he would
prefer having one institution
responsible for all aspects of the
program.
But supervisors said the
breakdown In bidding will
permit them to see ii money
mi1ht be saved by otfering com·
ponents to difCerenl organiza·
lions.
liberals
But individual rtre depart·
ments would have to provide
training expenses for service ex·
pensions as well as bi-annual
paramedic recertiricaUons.
County officials estimate It
costs S4 ,573 to train each
paramedic and '362 for each re·
certification.
Faces Nest Law Rap Brown
In the past. the county pro-
vided the training while cities
paid paramedics' salaries while
they were studying.
Mike Williams, county direc·
tor of emergency medical
services, said he woul d
negotiate details of the proposed
financing plan with city officials
and return to supervisors for ap·
PiOval.
In a report to supervisors.
Williams said the proposed shirt
in paramedic financing mjghl be
consistent with s upervisors'
• orlglnal policy or "getting the
program going."
The proposal would force city
and county fire agencies to re·
assess the need for additional
paramedic units in light of the
new costs. Williams said.
There are now 35 paramedic
units approved including 10
operated by county government
in unincorporated areas.
Supe rvisors Tuesday also
agreed to seek bids ror
paramedic training and re ·
certification from all interested
county hospitals and colleges.
Parents Fight
Plan to Close
Grade School
A group of parents has filed a
$100 million lawsuit against the
Magnolia School District, claim-
ing the district's plan to shut
down Low Element,ry School
June 15 is "unJawful."
William Morton, a member of
the school's PTA. said the dis·
trict's trustees, who voted April
18 to close the 300-s tudent s~oot. failed to follow the
recommendations or a citizen's
advisory group.
A May 22 hear ing has been
scheduled by Orange County
Superior Court Judge Har mon
Scoville. He ordered the district
to .show why a preliminary ln·
junction should not be issued lo
bar the schoQl's closing.
Morton said the advisory com-
mittee recommended the
closure of Schweitzer and Dis·
ney schools -a plan he said the
board disregarded because of
"personal bias ...
At least two of the board mem·
bers. Morton said, have children
attending Schweitzer and Disney
schools.
School Superintendent Spencer
Covert said closure or one of the
dis trict's schools, because of
declining enrollment. would
save at least $100,000 in the
1978-79 school year.
G em
Talk
• Bt1 J. a, HUMPHRIES
Ctmologt1t
DIAMOND EXPLORATION
beneath desert sands
Orange County sheriff's of·
ficers invoked an old and rarely
used city ordinance when they
Issued a citation to Theron
Nealis McLain. 66. of 26472
Paseo San Gabriel, San Juan
Capistrano.
McLain was cited under the
provisions or city ordinance 276.
a measure that allows officers to
bo9k anyone who attempts to dritroy swallows' nests .
Deputies said McLain's al·
leged actions were reported 'to
them by a local resident who said she saw him destroyinJ
s wallows' nests in a con-
dominium complex on Paseo
San Gabriel.
~iguel ~an
Gets Spot on
LAFCO Panel
Laguna Niguel r es id e nt
Robert Dwyer has been named
to the five·member Local Agen-
cy Formation Commission by
the other four members of the
commission.
Dwyer will take the seat
formerly held by Stan Northrup
or San Clemente. who served 10
years on LAFC. the final six as
a public member . Dwyer i.s a retired advertising
and sales executive and was a
director and vice president of
the South Coast County Waler
District and the Moulton Niguel
Water District.
He was also a director and
manager of tbe Three Arch
Hay Services District and the
Three Arch Bay Association,
and director of the United South
Orange County Communities As·
sociation.
The commission. comprised of
two county supervisors, two
municipal representatives and a
public member. oversees the
formation of city governments
and special districts.
Dwyer joins Supervisors
Thomas Riley and Philip L. An·
thony and Newport Beach Coun-
cilman Donald A. Mclnnis and
Tustin Councilman Donald S.
Saltarelli on the panel.
Drug Ring Busted
SIMI <AP > -Twelve persons
were arrested and eight homes
were raided as authorities
claimed lo have smashed a ring
supplying drugs to Simi area
s chool students . A police
spokesman said Monday one or
those arrested was a Juvenile
whose home yielded four guns
and $2,000 in cash.
Just u oil and other precious com·
modlUes arc the subject of constant
exploration for new supplies. so does
the tearch ao on for predous diamonds.
On Tactics
SACRAMENTO (AP) ·-Gov.
Edmund Brown J r .. full of ambi·
lion to be president, is trampling
on many causes important to
liberals, according to a scathing
report released by a liberal
Southern California group.
Shirley Wechsler. executive
director of the Americans for
Democratic Action's Southern
California chapter, said Tuesday
the chapter'S' report compared
Brown rhetoric and action and
found .ueat disparity.
Ms. Wechsler. ln a telephone
lnter:vlew from her Los Angeles
office, said: ·•we expected so
much of him. He gave us the im-
pression he would be an activist.
liberal governor" like his father.
former Gov Edmund G. "Pat"
Brown.
"He 's not Uberal, conservative
or moderate. He's a powe r
politician," she added.
Gray Davis, Brown's cam-
paign manager, said, "We have
a fundamental philosophical
qua rrel with the spokespersons
of the Southern California
cl'lapter of ADA. We don't want
to raise taxes. The ADA thinks
we should."
M s. Wec hs ler said the
10,000·m e mber Southern
California chapter would not en-
dorse the Democratic governor
in the June primary and its en-
dorse ment in the November •
race may depend on who wins
the Republican primary.
"The governor's actions in the
areas of civil liberties, social
services and minority op-
portunities are equated with the
policies of rig ht -wi n g
Republicans by spokeseersons
for the American Civil Liberties
Union, the Southern Christian
Leaders hip Conference and
·respected journalis ts." the
group said m a statement ac·
companying the 10-page report.
The report Includes quotes
from liberal environmental and
social groups, ADA assessments
of Brown's positions and quotes
from some media commentary.
Brown i s descr ib e d in
numerous unflattering ways in
the report.
Al one point, he is "a com-
bination Don Juan and
Machiavelli" and at another he
is a politician whose "commit·
ment to progressive government
has weakened as his presidential
ambitions have grown.··
It also says: "Progressive
Dem ocrats must determine
whether they want their votes to
provide the ·mandate' on which
Brown w111 base his presidential
campaign."
Geologtall for the f~d OeBetrs
diamond lntc~sts haye discovered what
they bcllew b the third richest diamond
dcl>OSit ICI the world. This find Is in
Africa's southern Botswana. The troa-
su.re ts located boneath the ~esert sanda.
Sa.mplillg, wh,lch will be· very expensive,
is expected to last about fout yean. By
the time the first diamond Is n\ined, a
huge fortune wW have been spent by
resroped r~ reviVed
OeBicl'I. • Tho aovcmment of Botswana libs
th• Idea. Ahead)', Bouwana hu lfaned ·
aardments With DcBeets to operate two
other mints. ud the Bouwanlans art
Impatient (or the third mlnt to be
.. bfouRfU tn.'' Df&.era and Botswana
ll'O sun neaotlatlna. over tcrnu of tho
fNnin& apmentrBut, It'""" certllfn
that UU.. new source w'lll auure a supply
of quality diamonds (or ycan to coma.
That11 pd otWI ror Botswana a.nd for w mt of \hi world!
Jewelry of anorher era need not look out ot
place today let our skilled artisans creare a new
look for your fine gems. Stop in soon and see us
for exclusive sketches and a cost estimate. You
will be pleasanlly surprised.
.,
•
OMLY"OT ~.MayS,1'79
~ ..... ~ Tom~~'i,'
Marpbine
Simply Don't Read
SIMPLE, EASY DIRErnONS: No homeowner lives
more closely to the edge of disaster than the Do-ll-
Yourseller. He is plagued by his own base desire to flx the
faucet him&elf and save a buck.
All too often, this result5 in flooding of the new carpet.
Last night, I decided to install one of those bathroom
vanities between the bathtub and the wall. The area ls 23
inches wide. The new vanity is 2A inches wide.
You do not move a bathtub to gain the needed lncb.
Even a novice Do-It· Yourseller knows this. You move the
wall instead. .
THIS JOB WAS EASILY accomplished with a couple
of saws and a sledgehammer. Then came the hard part: to
install the aink and plumbing.
"Oh boy, you're In trouble already," the son or our
household informed me as he unfolded directions for in·
stalling the faucet on the sink. "It says right here that all
you have to do is follow the Simple, Easy Directions."
I went into immediate shock. Every Do·lt-Youraeller
knows that when they tell you it's going to be simple and
easy that it's really going to be impossible and result in
five skinned knuckles.
C»lt·Yourselfer Ponders Simple, Eruy Direction&
"Don't read me the directions," I implored.
"Maybe we ought to play this plastic phonograph rec·
ord they sent along with the faucet," my wife suggested
with a smirk. "It's for people who can't understand Ute
written directions."
AGAINST Ml: PROTEST, t.he plastic record waa
played. H 's supposed to atarl by declaring,
"CONGRATULATIONS! You've just purchased a won-
derful new Gusher Automatic Faucet. .. "
But the record stuck. ll just kept saying over and over,
"Con. Con, Con, Con ... "
"I've been conned again," I sighed.
FinaUy, all the plumbing was ready to be booked up. or course, the new nttings didn't match the old connectors.
Everything had to be cut to fit. After much perspiration,
everything fit except the drain.
"l'LL JUST P UT this bucket under the drain so you
can use the sink in the morning," I told my wife brigbUy.
This morning she announced, "How do you suppose
water got all over my bathroom floor?"
I was gripped with fear and shame. My pipe connec-
tions must have sprung leaks during the night. r rushed to
the bathroom and dove under the new vanity for a frantic
inspection.
It turned out the pipes were fine. It was the bucket that
had sprung the leak.
Nothing is so sweet as defeat turned into victory.
LBJ, Kennedy Sex
Filled 'Grapevine'
CHlCAGO CAP)-ll was an "open secret" that Lyndon B.
Johnson for years carried on affairs with Capitol Hill women bu~
he also "loved to hear gossip" of John F. Kennedy's tezldl
escapades, says political influence peddler Bobby Baker.
Baker, writing in the June Issue of Playboy magazine, gossips
about presldent.s Kennedy and Johnson. Sen. Estes Kefauver of
Tennessee, and sex, power, mooey and sports in Washington.
Baker said most of his stories came on hearsay from thlrd
parties, the "Hill's active 1rapevine." Most of the re<:ollections In·
volve persons who are now dead.
NATION I WORLD
~taonBattle
Troops Placed
On Red Alert
BEIRUT, Lebanon <AP> -U.N. troor. ln IOUt.b Lebanon were put on red aJert today following a series o ambush and mortar attack.a
by Moslem extremists in which two Fr~b p_aratroopen, a
Seneplese soldier and a ?atemlilin were ldH.clr-U.l\l.-&r1ltlt'll!ft-n-
ported.
There w"re conrucung reports pn the number of U.N. troopi in·
Jured ln the lncidenta.
Capt. Jean Meneaeux, preu
officer for French troopt, said 12
U. N. aoldiera were wounded and
that moat were French.
M ENEGEVX SAID THE
bodies of the three U.N soldien
Gruff Ford
Cal/A Job
'A Trust'
DEARBORN, Mich. <AP>
Calllna his job a "private and
public trust," Henry Ford U
says stockholder alle&ations that
he blew Ford Motor Co. money
on personal luxuries and took a
$750,000 kickback are pre·
posteroua.
Tbe aruff boss of the oowitry'a
Ne. 2 awtoaaker aa.t tltird
laraeat aanwfactwri•g eD ·
t•prtte toW a new• oont«eote Tuesday, "I'm not 1o\ng t.e wait
for court proceaaes to clear my
name. 1 have nothing to
hide ....
"FOR ME, FORD Motor Co.
bas been far more than .a place
or employment or a source of
earned income. It's been my
life. It absorbs virtually all of
my time and attention in one
way or another. It is a personal
and familv reaoonslbility -a
private and pUl)llc trust that I
have carried out as chief ex-
ecutive officer for nearly 33
years. To suggest that I would
commit or condone any action
harmful to tbe company's re,.
utallen or my ewa ts ,re·
posterot11."
The suit was filed on behalf of
John Lang in a New York state
court In Manhattan last week.
Lang was described as trustee
for "a modest amount" of Ford
stock owned by the four cblldten
of lawyer Thomas Bolan.
The allegation Forti termed
"the most offensive" was that
be accepted S7SO, 000 in
kickbacks frem Canteen Corp., a
Chicago caterer, in exchange for
an exclusive concession at Ford
facilities.
THE $50 MILLION suit also
cnarged that Ford threw "gross.
ly inflated" contract.a to busi·
nesses owned by relatives, that
hi• salary and bonus last year of
$992,420 wu "a gratuitous pay-
ment for which, little if any
services whatever were ren·
dered," that the company paid
$80,340 a year for a luxurious
apartment ln tbe Hotel Carlyle
in New York for Ford's personal
use and that Ford directors ii·
legally diverted company funds
to their own iae .
Ford said Canteen Corp. bad
less than a quarter of Ford's
business.
He said that a friend of 35
years, Patrick Cicicco, a consu.J.
tant for Canteen, bad asked blm
about contracts. Ford said be re-
f erred Cicicco to the proper
Ford officlala because "I would
never get into contracta. I've
never signed a contract in my
life."
were recovered and that French
troops prevloualy reparted mlsa-
ing were found wounded. The
wounded troops were nown by
hellcopt.er to clinic• in Naqoura.
a Lebanese villace. and HaJfa,
Israel.
Na mes of the dead aoldiera
were not releued.
Lt. Jacques-Pierre Andre
Descamp1, 25, one or the
wounded French troops, said in
a Haifa hospital that be was burt
when the armored car be waa ridin1 ln waa fired on and
caught fire . He suffered
shrapnel wounds In the face and
body burns. He.said the vehicle
was hit by rocket-propelled
grenades.
In Paris. French Foreign
Minister Louis de Guiringaud
expressed regret today that
French troops had been hurt and
blamed the incident on "ir·
responsible elements who we
are told are Wlcontrolled. ·• He
said nine French soldiers were
injured, five seriously.
~tfm Escapes
Jodie Gaines. 18-year-old kidnap victim who escaped by
pounding on the iron bedframe to which she was
handcuffed for 10 hours until it broke. rushed into the
arms of her brothq. Ben Gaines Jr .. Tuesday at the
family home in McKenzie, Tenn. The FBI has arrested
two suspects and is seeking a third. The $250 .000 ransom
left in a ditch by her mother <background» wa~ re·
covered.
....
: .. Caihlo's ·.Not Subtle
(•. .. • ' f • • .~ •
" MGM Grand Gambles on Ii. Lure in Reno
RENO, Nev. <AP> -Step
aside, Las Vegas. Pardon us,
Monaco. Today the Biggest Lit-
tle City ln the World becomes
the home or the biggest big
casino in the world -the
100,000.square-foot playground
in the new MGM Grand Hotel.
A casino the size of two foot·
ball fields, holding -for
starters -2,000 slot machines
and 102 blackjack tables, sits al
the center of the MGM Grand. a
26 -atory building filled with
Hollywood extravagania 4ecer.
Like the ca.sin•. nethina in t.be
$131 million hotel ii un4eratate4.
ITS EVENTUAL payroll of
3.500 employees will atve it
more workers than the in·
dlvidual populations of five of
Nevada's 17 counties.
Its 1.015 rooms range from
three solarium s uites with a
Roman bath and his-and-her
bathrooms at S2SO a day to more
conventional $35 rooms. All are
decorated with art depicting
MGM films.
Also wilhi'\ the hotel's walls
are an 1,800-seat showroom. a
2,000-seat jai alal fronton. two
theaters featuring MGM movies,
seven restaurants ranging from
gourrnet to buffet, 19 bars, a
43 -shop arcade. five tennis
courts and a SO-lane bowling al· ley.
DECORATOR DONALD ',
Schmidt said the ornate chan·
deliers, the woodwork and the
bright colors were designed to
"achieve a European ·grand
hotel' look, a feelihg or elegance.
luxury and sophistication ...
Schmidt admitted it is a bit
overdone but said "that's what
people want."
The hotel. which look two
years to build , marks a major
gamble by MGM officials on
Jlteno's ability lo draw enough
big spenders lo support their
hotel and the half dozen other
hotel-casino projects scheduled
for opening later this year.
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•
CALL FOR INFORMATION
TODA YI
Anaheim
778-8780
Fountain Valley
194-7542
Ml11lon .::Ao-El Toro ·7 78
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Editorial Page .......................................................................
Robert N. Weed/Publlshet'
Orange Coast DaUy Pilot Wedneeday, May 3. 1978 Barbara Krtlblch/Edltwlat P~ EdltM
Controversy Has
Gone Far Enough
Political tunnoll and a flurry or accusations continue
to rack the Saddleback Valley Unlfied School District in
the wake o( Supt. Richard Wette•s auspension.
The latest round of rumors charge board President
George Henry with engaging in cronyism to the benefit ol
a group or lop·level district administrators and school
principals. .
Indeed, the existing situatio" in the school district
strikes some amazing similarities to controversy that
ripped through the district during a 1975 fight to remove
then-Supt. William Zogg.
The board majority at that time was charged by
Henry with engaging in cronyism.
Controversy involving trustees, administrators and
teachers has become a byword in the. Saddle back district.
Stories of questionable conduct and conf)ict of
interest surround almost every member of the district
staff and each trustee.
But where do the... sc.hool kids figure .in this
controversy? ls anyone th1nkmg of their welfare?
It's time the board realized its role as a
policy-makintt body governing the school district.
., And it's time district administrators realized their
responsibility for running the district without engaging in
political intrigue or empire building.
The purpose of the school district is to educate
children of the community ·-not to build a strong base
for monetary or political advancement.
We. ihope board members and administrators soon
will settle differences among themselves and get back to
the district's objective --educating children.
New Free way Fight?-
lt probabiy coin~ as 'Ylo surprise to anyone who is a
:-.tut.lent .9f •!¥) nlO,ure,; that 'there are $Qme people. Jiv. • iDi on thi Or~ ~o¥t who don't thinll construction 'Of .~ .liw>bs~ JoaLt~ Hills Transportation Corridor is such a hot idea.
In fact, depending on how close their homes or busi-
nesses are to the proposed route. there are some people
who are downright opposed lo the project. They point out
that the corridor is going to have the capacity of an eight·
lane freeway and that means they are going to be faced
with nohse and air pollution problems they don 't have
now.
1 On the other hand, proponents of the project are
primarily people who already have major roadways
and the attendant traffic-caused noise and air pollution · ·
and who are anxious to see another major north-south
route built to relieve the congestion they're stuck with.
It sounds just like the good old days when there was a
plan for somet)'lin~ called the Pacific Coast Freeway. A
lot of people wanted that roadway bµilt, too, as long as it
wasn't built in their backyard. It will be interesting to see
if this corridor proposal meets the same fate as the
coastal freeway.
·Rush Hour Jams
Anyone wbo work's in Newport Center or in lhe offices
around Orange County Airport can tell you that getting
to and from work is becoming more and more difficult.
As new offices are built, thece are cars added to the
morning and evening rush hours on roads that aren't ex-
panding at th~same pace as the traffic using them.
Officials from the county and froll'\ the cities of
Newport Beach, In·ine and Costa Mesa say the situation
should improve some when the road networks in these
areas are completed. but they also acknowledge that
there is always goin~ to be a problem caused by rush-
hour traffic.
Many of the businesses came here to get away from
the traffic horrors involved getting in and out of the Los
Angeles area.
Clearly, soihe extraordinary measures are '°ing to
b.c needed to prevent the same pro6Jems from recurring
here. For example. Newport Center's two biggest
employers. Pacific Mutual Insurance Co. and Avco
Financial Services. use staggered working hours for part
of their work force.
Businesses throughout the Harbor Area ought to take
a cue from these two firms and explore other traffic·
reducing plans such as van pools. car pools and shuttle
systems as well hcf orc the traffic forces an exodus of
business. • Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Dally Piiot.
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
artists. Reader comment is invited. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O.
Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321 .
Boyd/Depression
By L.M. BOYD
Question arises as to
whether that emotional low
known as the d~preaslon 13
contagious. Definitely. Those
blues are catching. Studlea at
the University ol Illinois
have proven t hat. Aod
studies elsewh4;re. For
generations, One downbeat
citizen among a dozen light·
hearted souls ln a falrly
rapid manoer can make
everybody ther.,bouts feel
vaguely W1easy. Then, •ome
others, too, may drill toward
melanchoJy, thou1h m01t wUJ
just make lhemselvea scarce.
Maybe it'a ext.ra-aeoaory
perception. Ot i,naybe just
perceptloo. BuL It. happens.
Despondent people und to
quuanUnetbelnfflvet.
Dear
Gloom~
GUs ..
Cleaaiq ladl• 1•t. '7
a n h our. Surely our
bard~ t.rubmeo dMervt .. muchl
M:S.
Tea got ils big start in
Europe not among the
E nglish, as commonly
be.U&ved, but around 1610
wllb the Dutch, who praised
It mighUly as a laxative.
Why Tuesday is the day of
the week you're least likely
to be killed by a car is
another mystery. -Was 27 years ago that the
science minds invented a
new clothing material which
was 70 percent feathers.
What prompted them to do '°
was the Teport that 30 million
tons of chicken and turkey
feathers were ic>ln1 to waste
every year. You don't see
such matuial advertised
now, lho.._,h, do you? What
happened t.o lt!
Benjamin Fr•ntclln WH
an.other of thOM numerous wise souls who have uld
i.1ln ... w beec rupon•lble
for moat ia H ntloH. He
H ldl\f adnil.ltteCU J or ln· •lance, \bat b•'d fnvenMd blfocalllat•...,._.bewas
too laQ'toptQS>and loOt for a
Mcond pall'· of a,.clacles
•ben beneedecltMm. ·
Earl Waters
'\
C~ndjdate Tags Reveal Variety .
While it may not be the ideal
aJtuaUon it is a fact that many
voters co to
the polls
knowing
nothing
whatsoever
•bout the can·
didates. Tfos
is especially •
'rue of those
running for
congressional
and le1isla-
tive oUices where the candidates
in a given district are nothing
more than names to the voter.
Intended as an aid to voters then
is the provision permitting each
candjdate to include an occupa·
tional deseription as backgrowtd
information indicating qualifica-
tions.
"
For the incumbents, or holders
of other offices running for new
posts. the choice L9 an easy one.
By showing the voters they are
already in that or some other oC-
fice they hope to convince them
.they have demonstrated the
neceasary qualities for public
trust. But for many of the other
more than 600 seeking election to
154 state offices, the opportunity
fo provide this evidence often
seems to present problems.
AT LEAST the list or candidates
released by Secretary of State
March Fong Eu is interesting
from the standpoint or ingenuity,
or the lack ol it_. or some can-
Qida tes in selecting vocational
descriptions to induce voter sup.
wrt.
The majori\y follow the
geneul practice of using com-
mon professional job descrip-
tions. Tbe most widely used this
time is that of businessman or
woman, although some uaed
business executive or other term
connoting a busioeBS back-
ground. There were more than
74 of these.
The next largest group was
the 54 who listed themselves
variously as teachers, pro-
fessors, school administrators
and educators. These were
followed by "9 lawyers some of
whom preferred the term at-
torney.
ALTHOUGH some 20 can·
didates designated themselves
engineers, quite a few left voters
in doubt as to whether that meant
railroad engineer or what. Others
however stated specifically the
ty"e such as electrical, civil.
economic and engineering physicist.
Among the other erofessions
are six CPAs, three medical
doctors, two dentists, an op-
tometrist, a pharmacist. an
architect and a chiropractor
wbe>-aboc!oes tree t~pping.
WHILE FARMEllS once
made up a preponderance or
legislative candidates only 11
designated themselves as such
lo this election. About a dozen
are running as reporters,
writers, editors and publishers
and three are bankers.
From there on the designa-
tions really get interesting
although a dozen failed to pro-;
vs de any information as to OC· f
cupation. Others ranged from~
specific readily identifiable'
vocations such as barber.'
laborer, policeman and fireman.
to vague descriptions spch as
"health professiQnal," "air •
balancer." ''taxpayers'
representative." "people's
politician," and "public affairs
representatJve."
'Housewife seems to have
faded into disuse in favor or
"homemaker" and "mother"
but one candidate lists himself
as ••unemployed teacher-
househwsband."
• w•'d•' • ... ., .... 1• ., ' r~ .. ' ~ .. , • ... • • ~ •.
• OTHE•~u.J d-.signa
,.._ • '· ,.. •'' ' •• , ; ., • • • t. • ,. ..._, ~ Mw~ker-priest," ~ .1 1 • .,,.. • .,,, r ~ c. ·• ·~ts-..11hilllsdplleit,'~'tlax re-
duction advocate," "disabled
rights organizer", "service ad·
viser" and "concerned citizen."
Two or three candidates
thought showing themselves as
members of the-party central
committee to be impressive.
Some simply listed \lnemployed
while one is running as a "re-
tired soldier" and another as a
"disabled veteran." One can-
didate for the Assembly could be
very popular with his fellow
members if he is elected. He is a •'RJWNY; IT DOESN'T LOOK LlKE A DOVE.!" "go1rpro."
Mailbox
Prop. 13: A. Potential 'fa~ayer Ripoff__
To the Editor:
I am writing about the poten· tlal ripoff, the Jarvis-Gann tax bill, Prop. 13.
I think the Jarv1s-Ga nn bill
will be the greatest ripoff of th&
taxpayers if it is voted in. Jarvis
said in a TV program that there'
is no guarantee that the apart·
ment owner~ouJd be willing lo
reduce the •ts but "I think they will."
WltV . should t~ recluce. the
rent if they don't have to? The
big companies wtio own the
apartments do not care for the
renter. or course, Jarvis is an officer
ln the Apartment House Owner
Association and naturatly he
would fight for this bill. Jarvis
can't even meet anyone and tru-
ly argue the bill at all. He just
has to be. very rude in any dis-
cussion.
I am happy to hear that the
L.A. S..pervisors have decided to
vote again.stthe Jarvis-Gann bilJ .
WILLIAM H. COOPER
'-Need ProCedfo11
To the Editor:
"Survival of the Jungle" is -
the weak and the old are at·
tackect' by young strong
animals!
It means we need more strong
.. decoys" or deputies to pose as
elderly women with their purses
dangling loose, to capture and
hold these gangs that prey on
the elderly alone. Hold them and
punish them, as the Jaw allows.
THE ELDERLY can't shop or
buy groceries in broad daylight
without some culprit haying for
them lo the background, ready
.to pounce on them like an
animal In the jungle!
Let's get some strong men sta-
tioned at places where the elder-
ly shop. We have to protect lhem
since they cannot protect
thomsel ves.
We have boys on skateboards.
bicycles. and In aroups that
have found a way of 1etUng easy
money fast. leaving an elderly
woman with broken bones, or
worae!
EMMA HYMAN
-
To the Editor:
was $333.30 in 1976 was in-
treased to $772.llO in 1977, an in·
crease of 130 percent in one
year!
TRE ATROCIOUS misuse of
tax money which results in un-
reasonable tax increases can
only cause eventual rebellion by
the taxpayer. What else can be
expected of our citizens when
they read articles about goveri:t·
ment financing the "scientific
study of the homosexuallty. of
sea gulls," such as appeared in
a recent issue of the Daily Pilot,
and then the National Institute
for Mental Health grant of
$91,000 for the study of a South
American brothel!
Are we, as taxpayers, sup-
posed to laugh at Senator Prox·
Jn ire's monthly ''Golden
fi'leece" award for the outstand·
ing example of wasting our tax
money? My reaction is to vote
out all incumbents as we did in
the recent Huntington Beach city
election and vote for anything tbat w1U reduce taxes.
Candidates for office make big
lalk about lax reform but
nothing is done about it. One re·
course for the taxpayer is to
vote yes on Prop. 13 and shut off
the money supply and force a
drastic reduction in government
expenditures,
DON MAPSON
Co•puter TellC!ltbt fl
To the E<lJtor:
-Many of us are unhappy about
the way our tax dollars are used by Coastline Community
College. Coastline offers a
highly visible consumer product.
Less visible are some other
university and college pro-
grams, for example. a class be·
lng "taught'' this sprin& quarter
at UCI in the Department. or
Social Sciences. Titled "Ixll
Maya,•• Course No. 50-L, tbe In-
structor, a Mr. Colby, met with
his clau the first meeting, gave
over 100 students a Hat of read·
lnes for the qdarter, and wlll
meet with them the last meet-
ing. The weekly teat. ar• com·
puterlifd. Each student 11 al·
lotted Sts worth of computer
lime, thouah I\ appears that this
ma)' be an ln1ufficlent dollar
cost for the complete aeries of ~'4.
I h•v• r Ml many opiniou• 80 THE qufllllon Is: IC'Mc.
the l arvll Prop. 13, some r• Colb1 .. "9ift• paid to ttaeh a favor and some oppo•ed. l tend c1au ~one would have to ••.
to t>e conservative on such tn•t· um•) "y 1' he not teachlni It?
tera ind Prop. 13 11 a drutlc And why an atuant.a beln1 re•
move and not a conaervaUYe ap. quired to ua ~Pfft•lve com·
proach. However, 1 am In favor .J)uter time? Thi• II Unlvtnlty
of Prop. 1a and convinced that •level -oft? An4 thl1 la wtiat we
the draaUc action la the oitlY. ~>' our tax dollara ror? Tbla ii aoluUon to tbe ·~161-able waace bot an laolated Incident. There
and mlluae ot turund1. ~""""" mny such exampl• at au ror uample, a vacant In· levfla ol lducaUoa.
• duatrlal aot-'-!D Santa An oo Jf titbml were more aware of
wbJcb UMt vrat'P Coua~ Ula wucetuJ ... ot tuad.I, ~
•
wouJd no doubt take more action
at the voijng booth and at school
board meetings.
VIRGINIA HARRIS
Not E•tertaiN•ettt
To the Editor :
Regarding your editorial or
April 25 in praise of the
"Holocaust": We did not watch
the program.
How many or those 20 million
television viewers have read
"The Diary of Anne Frank"?
How many of their children have
read it or at the least had their
parents tell them of it? How
many of those 20 million
chastise a child Cor an adult)
who tells an ethnic "joke"?
It occurs to me that your
righteousness (and theirs) may
be sullied. Surely, if one were
concerned to know the truth and
to assure that it not be forgotten,
other less sensational meani are
at hand. But guilt is assuaged
easily·, comfortably -fhe pat·
terns of life are undisturbed.
I AM Sickened by the appetite
of the American public for
passive lessons in morality. I
could not more have waled the "Jlo).ocaust .. than J c uld tol~r•te one word of pre· dice
spoken ill my presence.
So J>lease do not talk to me
about weak stomachs. I am
aware~of those horrors. I will
not watch it.· betw~en station breaks. Kierkegaard s aid,
"There is no temple-robber, toil·
ing In shackles f¥t_ •• tron, so
vicious as those who pillage
among sacred thlngs .... " We
appear to have lost any sense of
outrage, and we are pillaging,
by treating as entertainment, an
event that is sacred .to
humanity.
BARBARA VAN HAVEN
Ga11 ' ... t.'
To the tditor;
An article In the Dally Pilot ot
Aprtl 26 entitled "Sl. Paul Nhces
Gay Rights" polnU up a number
of serious problems and serious·
ly decisive deceptlo;tonpected wllh the so-called ay ripts
movement." The r l isaues
cannot be clearly •Mn if the
dialogue ls tarried on in th• kind of terms reported in Ulla ac·
count. "Gays" a11e t~ Name tor
tl\o deliberate umanU. ~·
UQn. -. •• l'lrtt. the •• ,_,,., <di• Wtd
ahoutd alwayt be ln quotes>
usur~ thee= :·aa11
' I nd ritMIM• ._. boblt
meanlq ;~ mol.:c:f. •• The
world WH pven a ltNOn ln th.ls
atratea by the' ~•tt and
Nails ot rettnt hlttOti~•• rame
Second. tM "llYt" talk ~ bt1~ denied "human .. riitita." ~·t ••• u •• ~,, iMlrt.nlL
N.o one' nullt .,.. ... •UiiltklM
about his or her private sexuaJi.
ly. "Gays" recently have been
fl aunting their condition, and
asking community approval. .
They should not, and wiH not,
get lhat approval. Jn the public
a rena, with, if they can manage
it, proper regard for sexuality,
they are getting the same riehts
as others. · .
IT IS CLEAR that what the
"gays" actually wa nt is accep-
tance of their homosexuality as
a "viable alternative lifestyle.''
That is like asking that the
mani c -depress ive~ and the
schizophrenic lifestyles be ac-
cepted as "viable," a word that
must continue to mean that.
which is vital, life-sustaining
and life.producing. Actually,
homosexuality is the ultimate
perversion. because il is auto-
erotic. sterile. and consummate-
ly selfish There 1s discrimina-
tion between the sane and the in-
S«l\e in any society : there should
be discrimination between the
sex ually oriented and dis-
oriented.
For a while. recently,
psychiatric professionals were
pressured into declassifying
homosexuality as a mental dis-
order. Early this year a poll of
members of the America"
Psychiatic Association showed a
69 percent vote in favor or the
view that "homosexuality is
usually a pathological adapta·
lion. as opposed to a normal
variation." The poll was con-
ducted by lhe joun\al Medical
Aspects of Human Sexuality, but
was not given front-page
putJUcity.
The truth is, as demonstrated
over and over again in r~cent
times in tbls country, that
homosexuals do not want the
voices or whole communities
heard in this matter. Instead
they exert lt~eir lavender
levet11e against le1i1lators
playing power games, bopina to
bootleg themselves into •ccep.
tab11ily any w1&y they cat1t
Homosexuals do not need
"rights'' or acceptabllitY"a llv·
iDI "alternative Ufest'JI•."
They are sick. psychosexu•.
They need sympathetic tberaR}'.
And the news·reportlnc medta need to recover a sense ot the
m.,nlngs of words, and of the
art of teportlng ln perspeetive.
GEORG& W. KENT
Aaociale Prolcuor, lJCt
CAl:l~ORNI~
Gays Win Victory
Panel Bacb Job Discrimination Ban
SACRAMENTO (AP> -In a
rare political victory fo r
homosexuals, a slate Sena\e
committee haa approved a ban
on job dlscr\mlnatldn based on
sexual preference.
But the billi. approved •·O
Tues day by ~ne ~enal• In·
dustrial Re\aUons Committee, is
thought to have little chance of
final passage in this election
year. A slmllar t>lll died lb an
Assemb))r commlltee last year.
AND THE ROMOS~XUAL
community faeff a potenUalty
more seri<>QS defeat lattr this year in a state bal1ot tnltlative
aimed at removing openly
homosexual teachers and gay·
rights advocates Crom public
schools.
State Sen. Johp Brlns. ft.
Fulletton. annoul\ced Monday
that be had collected en(ftJgh at1nalur4es to qualify the in-
lttattve fM the November baltot.
Th' secretary oT state's office
wlH d4!clde later this month
whetber the measure bas the
needed 312,404 valid signatures.
AT TUESDAY'S h£ARING,
homosexual activists, incJudlng th~ state'$ most prominent cay
-politlcim. were taking a more
optimistic long-range view.
"Wl'lat Is happening is the
emergence of gay pollllcal
power." s aid San Francisco
Supervisor Harvey Milk, an ad·
mitted gay. "It's no longer a
taboo subject ...•
''Some day. 1'.ihetm this ye.ar
or next Y'!ar ot t(I ~~ars f'r'Om
now, ray J>fOple will be given
the same righu."
Tftt BDtL. si !053, b~ Sen.
Mllton Ma~s. R·San Francisco, wl>n the bare m-.)ority of vot~
needed on the seven·member
cort'\mlttee. Several opponents
were absent when the vote was
taken. The bill next goes to the
Senate Finance Committee.
ft would ban Job discrtmlna·
lion based oq sexual preference
for any company or agency with
at least nve employees. Persons
with records or sexual conduct
involving minm would not be
protected by lbe bill.
FOES FllOM fundamentalist
rellglous groups said that e'X·
emption wasn't eoougb.
''This is something many
parenu could not comfortably
live with. if their children's
school teachers . . . were
Re/i1tery ..
Pollution •
Reported
LOS ANG~LES <AP> -Slop·
J>Y equipn\ent mah1teMl\t..e .... t six S<>uthem CaUfomla dft ff· fineries is filling tbe atr \1th
about as much smog •s woulct ti?
generated by nearly two million
new ca r ~ •• the. \latt Alt .
Resources Board chairman has
charged.
Tom Qu.lrut ln a s~ech tt1 ~ Calllornia Lung Assoclatiori.
claimed Tuesday that 'hk.Y v8'~es. fbbga Mid seats were
found at all.J"eflne{ies \n11~
by \he A!\8 during a slx-day
pertOd In February.
.Jet S-'n F~tf
l)~P~1 ·~f'ijir~~~s Mei~ t;t e-; MA~ 'e~11ias told.~· munity leaden that brae\ "'ob-
Bo d K •11 Pl manifested to be homosexuals." ar . I s an said the Rev. W.B. Timberlake.
__ head or a group called the Com· 1"--f~-cated mittee on Moral Cor'leems. ~-.a
"Public schools would suffer Detectives J ack Fisher. left. and Mik'e Stodelle of Sao
) (
To 'Spl1.t' Sta' te ~reatly ... because whether . c.. r Jttta ·~@19" ~ AttMfa's t 's right or wrong, a great Bernardino County Sheriff's Office. examine a cacue o proposed sale of Jet fighters to
b f t Id t k weapons found in the investigation. of an ambush s lay-E~)'pt pum er o paren s wou a e dl h rt of eai.n, s~ak~· nfi Tu-tt' ay ~f· their C"lldren to pr1·vate i'ng t'n R'1alto. The guns a re reporte y t e prope " a "" SACm\M~O <AP> -In the latest skirmish In the cen· schools .. '!'' David Philip She ppard who is sought for his inv~lve-ternoon be ore y ng to 1ca o.
tury-old battle of the RedWoods vs. the Freeways, an Assembly h d f w ·ii· St also said a Carter administra-commlttee has killed a northern California attempt to split UHi IVT SUPPORTERS said m e nt in l e mur er 0 1 tam amps. t,lol\propqs11J t.o supplY F 15 Jet
state in two. nelrly all child molesters are fi«Klers \6 Saudl Artb1a ,;Wt>Uld
Assemblyman Barry Keene, sponsor of the measure to heterosexuals, and contended tum It into conlrontation state
create a new state of<.::.. California, sought tblt surgery tllere is no evidenee tbat youtbs wttll Israel" .,
'*a,_ P•191l tt& .. pv~, # bM ~ tio -· ...... 've •-. tt .. ~·-~·· • c l •'f. • B
•... -......... • ... a ... ....,...... a • o ....... h ·~ ar .................. 111.r....tt11••0._..t ... '-....... '"-_,.= A.a ••••l•at, •••· .,i' Sf • ·~ Ml GLSNDAIJI tAP~ -g C9~ f/lff/t wat4l' a•.__. ..... ,....... If'•.... Jfflu•, •atct, uW tM .. GtHcfMe ""8e ..,.. f'Hi1
to escalate and iet uglier ln the coming years." would lnfrlnge on the rights of lmk c l~' the Hll11lde Strant\lor t.at
businesses and on freedom O( re. Pho 'Ji a Force about an apparent double TRE VOTE TtJESDAt in the Governmental Organization llglon. Jte homiclde, the Los An.&,eles
Committee was 4·2, one short of passage. But Keene, who is run-"Let's say l have a bus~ Pollce DtPart~ent announc~ a
ning for a North Coast state Senate seat, said be hoped his bill -and my customers hive a iltght SAN FRANCISCO <AP > _Californians will beJroteeted ft'om re4iuctfon-in the task rorce's even when dea<t -would prompt discussion of northern to discriminate by not goln., in maQ'f,owl!r. • California needs. my store. I would go broke,~ he overzealous telephone solicitations undtt new g dt:llnes adopt· 0 lendt.le lnvesti&ators said
His proposal would split the state at the Tehachapi Moun. said. edT';;e ~=~~f~b~c~;i~~e~f:~~::~ndialing and announc· Ta es day that ll ox an n e
tains. just north of Los Angeles, but he said be would consider "THERE •RE MANY Chris· f Lh )led 1 h t Barnwell. 29. of Glendale. and other borders. " l ing devices without prior consent o e ca party or wt ou an unidentified man were round
"We Aha Callfom\ans don't mind sharing our natural re· tians In this country who do ftO a human operator lo get the called party's permission to play a dead inij hear Monday night.
sources with our southland friends," he said. "But we do o_bject ~a'li _r _0_v.Sup~se h 1° f~er ~f, t , l't!cording. ffi f~r ~m ethomt. Both bad
-strong, loudly 8Jld constantly -to attempts at naked ri-pofts imfl'loral. Don't 1 have 8 right to THE S(}.CALLED ''juftk call" controls ~uitt users or Q ~h 8lli and t~o small
of out resources.·· choose which people work for automatic dialing devices to nolify the tettpbone company of ft i~cfe un5 Ole~ round ln
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA iets much of its water from met"" their plans to hook into telephone lines, including hours of use t 't ·
northern California, through the canals of the state Water Proj· Steve Badeau ot Northern and expected volume. ·
eel. Other resources such as timber and farmland are largely Callfornia Human Rights Ad· Devices subject to the controls are tho.se which are capable of Fire Bits CllS S~t
located in the north. vocates, a gay-rights lobby. storing numbers to be called or generalin• random or sequen· ~. . • •
Keene said the new s6utbern California state would stiU be replied that the same argument ti al number selections and are able to 1>tay prerecotaed L~ Af'l0B!.E8 «A P f '
the second most populous in the country and Alta California, was used for years against hir· messages. Separate nres destroyed a bftk
wliicb means upper California ln Spanish, would be No. 8. ing blacks. lot set at Lhe CBS Studio Center
''Ir your religion says I'm a THE PUC SA.ID there is no evidence that automatic dialing in Studio City and damaged a
A1TEMPTS TO SPLIT the state dale back to 1859, when tt sinner. it doesn't give you the devices are now operatlni in California for solicitation without number o( homes In the Windsor
was the southerners who felt they were outvoted by the more ... ght to d'strlm\nate against o"'erator control. but said It ex....,.ted such devices soon. Hit ls •t:ea• bflictals satd. J>Or>ulous north. he said. A bill was oassed then. birt the U.S. ~e," he said. . t'Wilhout the controls, the co;~lssion said Tuesday, the ptac· ~ FI re Depart M ~" t
Congress reject the Idea because of fears it was related to the Several witnesses said they lice would ''infringe on the comfort aod convenience of the spokesman said nine companies ~uthern states· secessionist movement. . had lost jobs, or lost chances for telephone subscriber guaranteed" by law. took about 15 fnlrtutes TUesday •
Numerous similar bills have been introduced since then. jobs or feared to be honest on Use of 8 human operator before delivery of a taped message night to knock down a bhtte tbat
One, in 1965. was passed by the senate but died ln the Assembly. the ' job, because of their will safeguard against a pihone being tied up when tt might be had enveloped the CBS m artd
Assemblyman Leroy Greene, D,Sacrament6t_..contetttled that homosexuality. needed for an emergency, the PUC pointed out. some trees near'by.
division would create "an en~n~-or p~m.~em~s·:..."---------------------------------------------------.... ~ .. -.. r-----VALUAIU C:OUP'Ot4•---.. ~-~,~~sL~• ~~~sin 1~--------------~~
SAN FRANClsC.O MP> -Calling rape a I FISH DINNER I
"shocking outrage," aSltn Franclsco Su~riorCourt I · ltG. t.7tl ~~s=~~'*eda con~rapisttoeightyears I GRAND OPENING SPECIAL I
Judge Francis M cCa'rty s~.d. Charles I Offfa UPtlU MAT ll, 1'71Um12 I
Edward Brown, 34, with the maximufn "'it•oftnce I
after a jury found Brown juilty of raping an ft1!1 •• l ALIEITS~~J~.~~ CEHTER
year·old cosmetologist in her apart~l'lt Dec. 2. I , . rt.t. 1714, t'2·UJ4 I The woman, said McCarty, "was a particularly ""-ONM1'AYU-.11AA,.. I
vulnerable victim. She was alone with no one to L "·-.. ~~::;:..•'·
help.'' . . . ------..-...... ___ ..
HOOVER WEEK AT CROWN
HOOVER'S FAMOUS
POWER DRIVEi
• It's Self Ptopelled
• AditJsts to Carpet AUtOinatlcaRy
• 3 filtered Air s;ar.m
• large Oliposabl• BaD
• AH StMI Agitator
• Edgea.antng S•V-'60
MOW 14999 .... 209:99
wtf\ lttde:lanenta
·w· eknbwyod'd
rather do it
yourielf: lnterlbt
Decorating.
Now you can afford to put profes&ional pitzazz if\ yout
home. The Bwadway and Martha M11l':J:, nt>tt?d trat~br
design experf;'offer a two-day workshop in~ .. ..._ ..
decorating. The presentatio'ns include sessions en
furniture, carpeting, and accessorizing for the look you\-e
always wanted Also helpful hints for "reconstructtn/ on
a budget and imaginative ideas for small spa~ A
"how to" for anybody with a plac.e to go hofM fA •t
night $37 .50 for wotkshop (includes lunches ahd work·
shop material). All workshops from 900 AM to aoo
PM Call today for reservations at th~ follo\.\1lng st~s~
r
The Broadway NewP-<>rJ
Tuesdays, May 9 ana 16
(?~4} 644-12~ +
. .
Tbe Broadway _
'·-. l