HomeMy WebLinkAbout1978-05-18 - Orange Coast Pilot\ .l
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THURSDAY AFTERNOON, MAY 18, 1978
·to Zaire
High Surf, Bip 'lides
to 56 NB Rescues ~ '
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~ 1t, MO. UI. 4 UCTlOMI, a ...... -~---..... --------------·:
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Los
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geles Awarded 01
· Bigla Surf, Riptides
f Drive·in Mesa Bar? i .
! 56 .Rescued
17 .
By NB Guards ·
While 100 lifeguards from 11
· foreign counlries met Just a few J m~l away, a doun Newport • cb Ufeguards were kept on
• the un rescuing swimmers ~ from Wednesday's big surf.
"It was really a rough day,"
• commented Hfeguard Lt. Logan
~ Lockabey who said the skeleton
' crew pulled 56 people out of the t eight:root surf. ~ Lockabey s aid more than
t l0,000 people s howed up at ~ Newport's strands to escape the
.. heat inland on a day when the t city's complement of guards
• was reduced to those that work
i.-full time
~ The summer staff consists of
high school and college students
[ who have not come on duty, he explained.
• Lockabey said things got so
hectic that Lifegua rd Chief
.Kendall Jacobson was pulled out
:_ of his desk job and pressed into
field work.
Meanwhile, top lifeguards
from all over the globe have
been meeting this week al the '! Newport Sheraton Hotel for the
convention sponsored by the
World Life Saving Association.
"We contemplated trying to
1 get the guys at the world
congress to come and help but
their agenda was pretty light,"
he added.
Lockabey s aid the busy
1uards did get some assistance
from local surfers who were
responsible for a half-dozen ~ rescues. ·
; One occurred at Orange Street
··at about 2 p.m. when West ~Newport resident Patrick
} ColUns used bis surf board in
l' rescuing a swimmer who had . ,
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Coast
Weather
Fair throu1h Friday
with continued warm
days. Hilhs rangin1 from
mid to \q>per 708 at the
be.cbes and 80s lnland. .
INSIDE TODA~
Old "°" #cnolO that twmo ca" N haardoul to ~our lwoUll1 Tlw...,,,,.. thal lurk
In G ttn*Ol q CW lktalled
011P~A1.
•••• Cl Cl ~ M Atl C4 9M Q a cw .. ...
gotten into a surl-generated rip tide.
"There were several incidents
like that," Lock a bey said
"Unfortunately, we didn't get
the names of the other surfers who helped out."
Lockabey said the big surf,
riptides and in-shore holes have
led to three near-drowning cases since Tuesday.
In two of the cases, both
r e ported Tue s day, the
swimmers were pulled from the
water unconscious and were
revived by lifeguards and
paramedics.
John Gonzales, 15, of San
Bernardino was hospitalized
overnight at Hoag Memorial
Hospital before being released
<See SURF. Page AZ)
Paratroopers
laimch Zaire
Rescue Plans
BRU~ELS. ·Belgium CAP> -
Belgian paratroopers took off
for Zaire today. vanguard of a
joint Western airborne mission
to rescue more than 2,500
Europeans and 14 Americans
trapped behind rebel lines in
embattled Shaba province.
Belgian air force transports
c arrying an undet~rmtned
number or paratroops in combat
gear left Brussels' mUitary
airport to begin the 5,0QO.fnlle journey.
Two companies or French
Foreign Legion paratroopers,
meanwhile, took off from
Corsica for an undisclosed de~tination, reliable sources
thlre said. French radio
reported they, too, were beaded
for Africa.
Belgium's premier, Leo
Tindemans. told hla nation lime
was running short for the
evacuation of the civilians: most
or them Belgians, straoaed in
the area of the copper-mining
town of Kolweli.
"Fighting is taklng place In
the streets of kolwezi, and
whites are the main t•rsets," he told reporters here.
Chat and Jan Lynn of Costa Mesa were
playing darts at a local pub Wednesday
night when they were nearly struck by
their own car. Police said a car driven by
Encarnacion Barhean, 85, smashed lnto
....., .......................
the rear of the Lynn auto ln the parking
lot outside the Bull and Bush, 877 w. 19th
St.. pushing it through the wall. No one
was hurt. police sald. but they booked
Barhean on suspicion or drunken drtvlng.
Diplomatic sources in London
said the operation bad been
mounted with the approval of
President Carter and the leaders
of France and Brttain, as well as
Beltium. ..
The Unlted States wm not AUS'l1N Texu CAP> -The boy as John Chrt1U~n. wbo WU
supply troops or planet for the 13·year'.id ICJO of former WhJte taken lnto custody and brouabt
ml.11lon but may provJde laaer Houe Ph!M eecret.,.y G~ to the pollc~ atatlon (or 101tstlcal support o1 some ~1 Cbrlltlan lbot bi.a Juruor _blP queatlonlna.
said a State Department oftlcw 1eboot: 1n11tjh tucher t.o..clM&k Cleorp C2¥'i1Uan, who MJ'Wd
who alted not to be crenurted: IJt tb• daluoom today. polK!e u preu eoeretary for Prq'dent
There bad tMM!!ll l"ePC>l'tl earilec aa.ld. Lyndon Johnaon and recently
that U.S:iliDel J!l!Cbt trUQOrt Lt. PriCI lluwell chJef ol batadled public r.Aatlool for Gov.
Belalan or Otbii' P1ratroopen to pUbUc 9ffam for. lbe Auat1D Do Ip h Br II eoe • • I 01In1 (iet IAJaf!, Pqe AJ) polle. depeitnMQ•; ldenUfted the Democratic prtmaey campa1p. -L--~ ............... ~...:_~:_.._.,_c.~~--~~~ ,
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arrived at the police staUon,
vialblylbaken.
Th• s lain teacher was
Identified as W\lbur Rod
Ore)'Mn,-a.
About 30 children from the
c1H1 wen brou1ht lo police
headquarters to 1 t •e
Information about what they
~ TEAOIEa, hp At> ... -
'
L4Aimrded
'MOlympics
Th e Inte rnational
Olympic Committee toda.v
provisionally awarded the
1984 Olympic Games to
Lo s Angeles and the
Winter Games or 1984 to
SaraJevo, Yugoslavia.
The IOC made its ruling conditional, saying that
Los Angeles must agree to
a contract within the
framework or the lOC
rules by July 31.
For additional details,
see Sports, Page Bl. ~
44Captiued
Aliens Freed;
Number Cited
SAN DIEGO <AP> -"The jails and courts would be
overwhelmed if we tried to hold
them all for trial."
The U.S. Border Patrol s ays
that's why <t4 illegal aliens
discovered hidden in a produce
truck at San Onofre were taken
back across the Mexican border
Wednesday and no charges were
filed against their driver.
Albert Franco, deputy chief
patrol agent for the Chula Vista
sector, said '<the numbers are so
ov e rwhelming" of a liens
apprehended that only those
wanted on specific charges are
detained. "Yes, it does seem
inc redible," said James C.
He inecke , who heads the
patrol's antismuggling unit.
"We have 1,000 to 1,500 illegal
a liens a day -maybe 500
smuggle.rs, too -and we cannot
prosecute every one. We 'd fill the
jaiJs and Jam the courts so they
couJdn'toperate."
The d e ci s i6 n a g a in s t
prosecuting the River County
driver caught with his human
load Tues day night wa s
disappointing to J .G. Wood.
watch commander at the Border
Patrol's San Onofre check station .
Wood commente d th a t
"sometimes, it does seem ·we
can't win."
It is seldom that a driver
carries cash and dltricult to
prove a payoff, said Wood in an
Interview. adding "it's an
organized system with the
money befq paid on delivery
and, sometimes, the workers
comlnf in "8Y off after they gel a Job.·
<See ALIBNS, Pa1e A2 >
Vote to Resume
SANTO DOMINGO .
Dominican RepubUc <APl -
President Joaquin Ba;guer's
1overnment ~s vote untina
In the presJdeotJal el« n wiO
resume as soon as the ountry
vote ls in. Amid rumo"' of a
power struffle amona four
mUltary factions, Bataguer·s
chief opponent, left-of-center An·
tonlo Ou.tman, ctatmed victory
and asked President Caner for http.
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DAI\. Y Pf\.OT 6
By JACKIE llYllAl't
• Ol ... Deltr ........... Tempers nared today during a
Newport Beach forum on the
eontroversial Jarvis-Gann tax
initiative when one panelist
charged that the format of the
discuaaion wu unfair.
Newport-Mesa school trustee
Donald Smallwood met with boos from some of the audience
when he protested the procedure
of having a pro-Jarvis
representative speak, then be
questioned by a panel composed
of both opponents and
,.,~s.m.
An unidentified mother
takes her little daughter for
a swim in the big Pacific
near the Huntington Beach
Pie r . The toddler was pne or
seve ral youngsters getting
their first look at the "big
bathtub."
Fire Season
Here; O/ficialtl
Cite Hazarda
By 11le Alsoda&ed Prus
Fire officials are considering
a 75-acre brush fire southeut of
Lake Elsinore as nature's
warning that the fire seuon bas
begun in Soutbem CaJifonlla.
The blaze, the second in recent
days in the Lake Elsinore area,
broke out in billy terrain
Wednesday but posed no danger
to residents or homes, officials
said.
.. It appears the fire season bas
hit us with a bang," said a Lake
Elsinore fireman, echoing the
fears or-county and local
officials that a cosUy fire season
is looming because abundanl
rainfall Jias resulted in a heavy
growth ol underbrush.
Meanwhile, f"u-emen reportect
control over a blase 45 miles
north of Bakersfield tbal
destroyed six frame houses and
damaged four others on the
grounds of the Sierra Vista
Farm labor Camp in Ridgegrove.
Tulare County officials
estimated damages at $30,000
and said they were investigating
the cause of the fire. AulhoriUes urged campers to
be cautious when li1hting
matches in recreational areas.
They said dry Santa Ana winds
have increased fire hazards in
these areas.
DAILY PILOT
~.M!ytl.tlTI
supporters of the propoeltlon.
The Jarvis-Gann initiative. Proposition 13, on the June 6
ballot, would limit property
laxes to 1 percent of cash value
and require a two-th.lrds vote of
the LegialaLure to levy new
taxes. Smallwood, an attorney, said
he didn't believe the fof'mat
perm it.t.ed those opposed to the
proposition to adequately
express their views.
Speaking for the initiative was
Roland Vincent. a Los Angeles
investment counselor who is
directing the campaign in
support of Prop . 13 In
conjunction with one of its
authors. Howard Jarvis. "What we are seeing In
California right now is an
economic and social
revolution," Vincent told an
audience of several hundred
people at the forum sponsored
by the Newport Harbor-Costa
Mesa Board of Realtors at the
Marriott Hotel in Newport
Beach.
"Howard Jarvis is fond of
saying , 'We gave them
<legislators> an unlimited
budget and they exceeded it',"
Vincent said. In one of his questions,
Smallwood challenged Vincent
to comment on the assertion that
property taxes, which are paid
to local government, would be
cut, while the state Legislature's
revenues would not.
"You're taking local control.
the most responsive control, and
shifting that control all the way
to Sacramento," Smallwood
said.
Responded Vmcent, "We don't
have the local control that
everyone is so fond of talking
about."
He also said. "We can't afford
our present school system. It's
like a Rolls Royce. The biggest
threat to our homes are schools.
We're tal.klng about stopping the
government from confiscating
our property."
&,.a,mpanion
SuesAcwr
LOS ANGELE.5 <AP> -Actor
Nick Nolte bas been sued for $5
million by a former girlfriend
who aeeks relier under the
landmark "Marvin deetsion" in· volving property sbarlng between
unmarried partners.
In her civil suit filed Wednesday
by attorney Marvin Mitchel.soil ln
Superior Court here, Karen
Louise Eklund, 26, of Santa
Monica claimed she and Nolte. 34, agreed to combine their earnings
and sbare all money and property
acquired during the five-year
.. partnership."
The auit said Miss Eklund and
Nolte lived together from June
19'72 unW last October when she
said Nolte forced her ofC the sub-
urban Agoura ranch.
1BEFT SHIF'IS
TO NEW MODEL
KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia
<AP> -Mokbtar Abmad bought a new car after bis first one was
stolen a month ago.
Today the police told him the
stolen car had been found. When
he left bis office to go to police
headquarters, be found bls new
car bad been stolen.
Arriving at police
headquarten, be reclaimed the
first car and reported the theft
of the second
NeeR.ie
Paul Newman, whole movle
roles have ranaed from a
cowboy to hockey player,
bas a new rote a1 a
repreaontaUve to the Unlted
NaUona session on disarma·
ment. President Carter
made appointment Wednes·
day. r ,
Out of the Drink
FroaPageAJ
ZAIRE •••
the Central African natlon.
Source3 in London said the
final decision was ex~led to be
made by Presldenl Carter and
the otber national leaden. Abollt l,800 U.S. paratrQc>pen rematned on ale{t at Fort Brags, N.C .• bu a nnior
defense otticlal in Washington
1ald It wu "very unllkelY" any
American troops would 6e used
tn ao lnttrnatlonal rescue
Ol)erat1on.
lleportl reacbln• Kin1hasa
said the r~bel• In Sheba
provlnct. source of moat of Zaire's COflNJr uporta. were
break!Oll& of tk ltotwed area which y oceupl.ct last week and wer moving toward the government ·s alr base at
Kamina.130 mllei to the north.
However. other reports said
the Ins urgent fore-es were
headed west toward Angolu.
where they have been living in
exile. The government news agency
AZAP s aid paratroopers
dropped into the area this week
recaptured the Kolwezi airport
Wednesday alter three hours of
heavy fighlin8.
A Nationa l Airlines 727 jetliner. partially
s ubmerged in E se ambia Bay at
Pensacola. Fla.. is visible in the ~fore
ground as a ba rge be aring a recovery
crane sets up to lift the plane out of the
water. The pla ne crashed in the bay
earlier this month. killing three people-.
Foreign corresportdents have
not been allowed into the area,
and none of the various reports
o n the fi ghting could be
confirmed. Nor was there any
information on government or
rebel casualties. The Morri s on·Knuds en
c onstruction firm of Boise.
Idaho. which is building an
electric transmission line lo
Kolwezi, staged an evacuation
Wednesday and t ook 77
employees and members of their
families to safety by truck and
helicopter.
Teen Enters Plea
In El Toro Murder
PASADENA (AP> -A Van Nuys teen-ager pleaded innocent
Wednesday to charges of kid·
napping, robbing and murdering
an El Toro housewife last year.
Brian WUU.s. who entered the
plea at his 80-aignment before
Superior Court Judge Kenneth
A. White, was ordered to return
to court next Wednesday for a
pretrial bearing. He was held ln
lieu of $50,000 bail.
Willis ls charged in the slaying
of 34-year-old Rachel Sparling
of El Toro, who disappeared
after a visit to her psychiatrist's
office on March 15, 1977. Her
body was found four days later
F,...PageAJ ·
SURF •••
on Wednesday. Natalla Figueroa, 18, of Santa Ana was
not hospitalized.
Lockabey said another
near-drowning occurred
Wednesday night at Corona del
Mar main beach when a
Placentia man got caught In
rough water whJle trying to
retrieve a ball.
In that case, Lockabey said
the victim, Merlin Allred, 35,
later told lifeguards he asked a
surfer for belp and was refused.
Allred said be ftnally got out
of the water by himself, but lifeguards and medics were
called at 9 p.rn. to give him lint
aid.
He was reported ln fair
condltion at Hoag Memorial
Hospital.
Lockabey said guards
anticipate more of the same
through Friday while the
temperatures remain up and the
surf ls big.
He said auard coverage will
be/rovidecf primarily by Jeeps an patrol boats. "We alt in the
trouble spots and then can move
to places where we're called,"
he said.
Huge crowds are expected to
bit all of the coast this weekend,
but by then he said more of the
seasonal guard force will have
been mo6Wzed and the surf
should be down, be said.
F,.._ P.,,e AJ
TEACHER. •
saw. .
Maxwell said Grayson was
shot three Umes -beneath the
right arm, ln the right arm and
in the right slde of the bead with
a semi-automatic .22·callber
rifle.
Maxwell said he understood
the boy arrived after bis
, nrst·period English class had
begun. P•renta described the
class as a s*1al one for gifted
and talented youngsters.
·'The teacher was sitUn1 on a stool, cOnducUng class. He <the
boy> ju.1t walked in the door and
pointed the rtne at bim:i The·
teacher didn't take it real
serioualy. He said sometblng.
and \be boy Jual abot him,"
Max well said.
Maxwell said be understood
the youtb, an honor roll student,
was upeet oveT an incident the
prevlolB day when a substitute
teacher was p!'eSeftt.
"The boy was leading a
dlscuaalon and didn't tel a very aood retj)OftSe, •• Maxwell Hid.
Jean ·Olaoa, mother of a pupJl
in the class, described Gra)'IOn
u "hbuloua. He .baa done
tremendous. t.lainp.
••TbeM kkb .,.. enertetlc far
out creative nilndl, ·• she Hid. Ora~ bad been teachlnl onl1 a year. sald Charlea
Saneom .
in the Angeles National Forest
above La Canada. She had been
shot twice in the head.
The murder weapon was found
in Mrs. Sparling's car. which
was abandoned alter a hit-and·
run traffic accident in Granada
Hills.
Willis, a runa~ay fl'Gm a Van
Nuys placement home. was ar·
rested the day Mrs. Sparling.
the wile of an Orange County
businessman and the mother of
four children. vanished.
r---.
Sony Trinltrm Color TV
with remote control . 21"·
19"· 17" " lS" dialon&I.
And • au In stock·
KV·IOOO Sony Trioltron.
Sony'• neweet AC·OC.
rue anywhere portable. a
Inch dla1onal.
F,.._P~AJ
ALIENS ••.
It is possible that $8.800
believed paid by the 44 men and
women at the usual $200 apiece
to be taken to Los Angeles is being held by somebody in
Tijuana and that the aliens are
trying now to gel their money
back. Wood said.
Body Identified
DAVENPORT <AP> -The
Santa Cruz County Sheriff's of:
fl ee says a body found near here
last month was that of Gregory
John Roth. 32. of San Francisco.
The Stale Department in
Washington said there was no
interference with the evacuation
from the company compound
eight miles out.side of Kolwezi.
The A men cans were trucked 60
miles to Musonoi and then flown
to Kananga, 400 miles from the
fighting. Morrison-Knudsen said two
employees. Willlam Starkey of
Boise, and Lonnie W. Glen of
Yerrington, Nev .• and Glen's
wife and child missed the evacuation. Also remaining
were eight missionaries. a
tourist and a copper company
employee.
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17
Opange Coast
EDI T ION
Tod ay·s Closin g
N.Y .. St ocks
..
THURSDAY, M AY 18, 1978
\
I
C TEN CENT~
,
Candidate Watkins Puis Pi:Mt Behind
REVIEWS HIS FINANCES
Candldl9te Lff Watkin•
By GA.RY GRANVILLE
Ot•omtf ............
Lee Watkins reviewed his
checkered financial past
Wednesday and said lt has no
bearing on his campaign for the
Republican nomination in the
74th Assembly District.
Watkins ls campaignjng on a
slogan that promises "a busi·
ness like approach to the
management of aovernment."
However. pliblic records
show :
-The 37·year·old candidate
Usted assets of $10,300, including
a Porsche automobile valued at
Press Aide's Son
Teacher Slain
·By Youth, 13
AUSTIN, Texas <AP> -The
13-year-old son of former White
House press secretary George
Christian shot his junior high
school English tE-acher to death
in the classroom today. police
21a1d.
Lt. Fred Maxwell chief of
public affairs for the Austin
police department. identified the
boy as John Christian. who was
taken into custody and brought
to the police s tation for
questioning. .
George Christian, who served as press secretary Cor Prestdent
Lyndon Johnson and recenUy
handled public relations for GOv.
Doi lb Brhof>e 's lo~in1 Dem alltk primary cam,.ign.
arrived at the police station.
visibly abaken. ·
The slain teacher was
td,n ttfled as Wilbur Rod GTa)'SCO, 29.
A bout 30 children from the clau were brought to police
headquarters to give
information about what they
/saw.
Max well said Gtayson was
shot three times -beneath the
right arm, in the right arm and
in the right side of the head with
a semi-automalic .22-caliber rifle.
Maxwell said he understood
the boy arrived a fter his
first-period English class had
begun. Parents described the
class as a special one for gifted
-and talented youngsters.
·'The teacher was silting on a
stool-. conducting class. He (the
boy> just walked In the door and
pointed -the riTie at him. ·The
leacher didn't take lt real
seriously. He said something.
and the boy Just shot hint,"
Maxwell said.
Maxwell said he undentood
the youth. an bonol' roll stllden~
was upset over an ldttdent the
previous day when a substitute
teacher was present.
"The boy was leading a
discussion and didn't gel a very
good response." Maxwell said.
~ewport Beaeh
Tempen; Flare Up
In Jarvis Forum
By J ACKIE H YMAN
Of ... o.llY~SIMI
Tempers Oared today during a
Newport Beach forum on the
controversial Jarvis-Gann tax
initiative when one panelist
charged that the formal of the.
discussion was unfair.
Newport·Mesa school trustee
Donald Smallwood met with
boos from some or the audienoe ,
"'hen he protested the procedure
of having a pro-Jarvis
representative speak. then be
questioned by a panel composed
of both opponents and
supporters of the proposition.
The Jarvis-Gann iniliative.
ProposiUon 13, on the June 6
ballot, would limit properly
taxes to 1 percent of cash value
and require a two-thirds vote of
the Legislature to levy new
taxes.
Smallwood, an attorney. said
he didn't believe the format
permitted those opposed lo the
proposition to adequately
express their views.
Speaking for the initiative was
Roland Vincent, a Los Angeles
investment counselor who is
directing the campaign in
suppo rt o f Prop. 13 in
conjunction with one of its
authors, Howard J arvis.
"What we are seeing in
Cal ifornia right now is an
<See FORUM, Page A2>
$9,500 on which be owed $9.000.
and 159,800 in u._f>iltties when he
fUed a voluntary petitipn in
baakrup&.cy in Decembft', 1976.,
-Walldnl WU cllaq~in a
civil suit ftJed in Orange County
Superior Court in 1976 with col·
lecting money owed to a
partnership and dlvertine it to
"his own use and control."
-Leu &ban nine months after
his bankruptcy case closed in
federal court. Watkins lent his
campaign committee $26,646.
Watkins blam e d his
bankruptcy on a Jan. 12. 1976,
fire inside bis insurance office in
It Was Bullseye
Anaheim.
AccordiAC.to Anaheim Fin In·
vestfiator )/orman_ Mor1an.
cause of the fire wu arson. }.
blaze wu ignited atte someone
doused records pulled from Cile
cabinets and stacked on the floor
with a namma~le ltquld.
"We did a lot of investigJl,ing.
but there were no arrests."
Morgan said.
Watkins acknowledged in his
bankruptcy papers that in the
ensuing six months he received
$21,000 to cover his fire loss.
But-. he said Thursday, the fire
loss eventualty forced him into
voluntary bankruptcy.
"( thought I bad an umbreUa
policy lhal covered the Joss of
valuable records. But when I
read the fine print. I didn't,"
Watkins. a licensed insurance
agent. said. He said bis'bankruptcy case is
an issue raised by rival GOP
candidate Marion Bergeson and
her supporters.
"They've called every
newspaper from San Diego on
up to try to make this a cam·
paign issue and -f see it as a
personal attack ... Watkins said.
<See WATIQNs:Pa1e AU
Chet and Jan Lynn of Costa Mesa were
P!aying darts at a local pub Wednesday
mght when they were nearly struck by
their own car. Police said a car driven by
Encarnacion Barhean. 3.5. smashed into
the rear of the Lynn auto in the parking
lot outside the Bull and Bush. 877 W. 19th
St.. pushing it through the ~all. No one
was hurt. police said. but they boolted
B~rhean on sus picion of drunken driving.
Mauled Youth Meets Rescuer·
By JERRY CLAUSEN °' .. °"'" ............ Ni n e ·Year·old Drago
Atansovskl Jr. looked up from
his bandages and becl Jinen this
morning . smiled and
acknowledged the btg white·
haired man who walked into
Mission Community Hospital
room UIO.
"He's the m•n who helped
me." Drago lflnned.
rt was the first meeting
between 71 -year·old, ftalian-
bom Ray Papetti and the boy
since the man saved Drago from
the jaws of two powerful dogs
Monday,
Drafo· who lives at 24232 Twig
St.. E Toro, and a friend were
playing in a field behlnd a shop·
plng cetlter wt\en two do1s
emeried from a Jumbl4Kl pile of
crate. and nati,
One ot dM to-eound pit bulls attac~ .,.._..ht hid Thurs·
day f~ hi• ~tal bed, "When
t tried to 8« away from him. the
other one au.aektd;
• • t pulled their ears and tried
to rip their mouth• apart.•: Dn10 rec:aUed.
• Dr190'1 trtend nm for: belp. ~~-......,,Papettt, Hl12 Ctiamplaln
RC>M. , .... .,. Hilla. wn drtnna
by the shopping center at El
Toro Road and R.ockfield
Boule•ard on his way to work in
the Saddleback Community
Hospital thrift s hop. He has
helped tbere since his man·
datory retirement from µ Costa
Mesa aerospace firm sit: years
ago.
... 'The ooe boy hollered at me."
said Papetti. ..Somelhlng about
someone being bitten by a doc·"
Papetti rushed his six·foot·
two. 210.pound frame out the
door of his car a.ad hurried lnto
the tletd.
"The boy's atm was gashed
open, blood was all over the
ground U 1QOked like some
animal thtni out of Wild
Kinadom pn television. Those
do1s were dragglna the kid all
over the lot.•'
Papetti ~ 't know where he
1ot the strencth -"I've bad
four operations In the last year"
-but be ripped a board from a
crate and tunaed forward, curs·
ina In En&JJ,sh ahd lt.allan.
"I'd be lylna If ( told YOU ( t111n't sea.red:"· bt said .• rBut I
aueas t'd do It aialn. Nobody
wbO's a man I &olnl to He a
CS.. MAULS~, Paae AJ>
I
BLASTS SMEAR TACTICS
Candtdate Bergeson
Bergeson
Blasts
Mailer
By J OANNE REYNOLDS
Of .. OellY """ sun Marian Bergeson. J;tepublican
candidate for the i4J.h Assembly
District. blasted one of her GOP
opponents today for a campaign
brochure he '1la1led to district
voters.
Mrs. Bergeson. 6f Newport
8"ach. denounced the :;;chure sent by candidate Ho ace L
Watkins. who is runni g under
the name of Lee Watkins, a~ "a
blatant and cynical political
smear."
Watkins . however, defended
the mailer as "an act:urate in·
terpretation of Marian's voting
record while a Newport-Mesa
Unified School District trustee »
.... He admitted the research
work for the mailer was done by
political consultants Arnold
Ford and Bil! Butcher or
someone employed by the
Butcher-Forde political consult·
ingteam.
"f stand behind it. I've told
Butcher and Forde they will be
fired on the spot if they ever do
anything such as this without
consulting me. And yes. in this
instance, I was consulted and
approved the mailer."
Mrs. Bergfson noted that the
consultants "have been cited by
lhe Fair Political Practices
Commission for unethical tac·
tics used when they managed
the Jjm Slemons campaign in
1976."
Slemons, who beat out Mrs
Bergeson for the GOP nomimi·
lion in 1976. was defeated by
Democrat Ron Cordova after
Mrs . Bergeson e ntered tht.<
general election campaign as a
write-in candidate.
She polled a record 35.000
votes in her last-minute cam-
paign.
The 37-year-old Watkin ~
charged that Mrs. Bergeson and
her supporters have turned the
ca rn paign from issu es to
personalities and criticized the
Bergeson camp for allegedly
contacting newspapers with
tales of his financial problems.
It is not the first time that
Watkins found himself opposed
to Mrs. Bergeson. In 1976. ht:
was the co·campaign finance
chairman for Slemons.
In a press release issued today
Mrs. Bergeson said she is of·
fended by the use of "Ms."
throughout the Watkins mailer
and to the statement that she is
retired. <See BROCHURE, P age A21
Coas t
We athe r
F oir through FridRy
with contif\ued warm
days. Highs ranging from
mid to upper 70s at th~
beaches and 80s inland
INSIDE TODA 't'
DU1 you lmow that liv111g
can be haum1oua to your
health:' The danger~ lhat lurk
in a IJlpfcol da~ are detatle:d
on Page A1.
latlex
-
..
Jl2 C».llV ,_.LOT C
• F,.._P~AJ
WATKINS CAMPAIGN~ • •
MAULED.-•• ~1 c ryln& tor help and bleeding
to d••th and not do wbat ' did ..• "Wbn JOU'r• .. ,,.d OUl,
you're wiped out and what 1"¥e
tried to do la to gel lhin1s
straightened out and work my w11y back to the top."
Watkins has repaid some of
the debts discharged b)' the
bankruptcy court, includln1 a
P•Yment ol $1,000 to a legal firm
that represented him in a personal iJ:Uury sult.
He also aald be bas "cnade ar·
rao1ementa" to. settle •a $1,500
account at the lhlboa Bay Club
in Newport Beach
However, be aaid, Security
Pacific Bank official& have re·
fused to "negotiate" a $20,000
debt that was erased in the
bankruptcy case.
"I've done the best I can to do
the right thing and when YoU've
done that, you've done just
about everything you can do,"
Walkins said to describe his ef-
fort to make amends to bis
bankr~y creditors.
W atkim · creditors were paid
nothing in the bankruptcy pro-
ceedings. His $800 in assets
beyond the value of the Porsche
were personal belongings ex·
empt from creditor claims.
The civil suit filed in Oranie
County Superior Court sbowe.d
the plaintiffs a s Franklin
Brandl, former Fountain Valley
City Councilman George Scott
and Donald L. DeNoon.
Scott himself is a candidate in
the June 6 primary. He is seek-
ing the Republican nominatloo
in the 36lh State Senate race.
The complaint alleged that
Watkins was not sharing Income
paid to the partnership then do-
1 n g.,l> us in e s s as Watkins
lnsllfance Agency. The original
l'Jrtnership agreement showed
that Watkins' contribution to the
partnershjp was to be use of bis
agency license. . .
I n t urn . the r e m a in tn g
partners were to contribute their
insurance expertise.
But when those partners
belie ved the money the
partners hip earned was not
flowing into the business. they
sought a temporary restraining
order that would prevent
Walk ins from "ass igning,
trans ferring, disposing of any
assets of the partnership 1tnd
managing or interfering with the
management of· the
partnership."
The plaintiffs also asked that a
permanent receiver be appoint-
ed ·'to liquidate and wind up the
business partnership.'·
Walkins said he had no re<:·
ollection of tbe lawsuit and
complained that he had un-
derwritten the partnership ex-
-penses until operations be«:ame
profitable and then was forced
* * * F,.._PageAI
BROCHURE
Her campaign committee
chairman, Richard Spooner.
said he has lodged a protest with
the coWlty Republican Central
Committee saying "the pretense
of documentation contained in
the mailer is no more accurate
than the alia s which Mr.
Watkins has adopted for this
campaign."
Points contested by Mrs.
Bergeson and Spooner include the
brochure's allegation that she
does not support the J arvis-G&mn
tax initiative.
Mrs. Bergeson also defended
her record on the Board of
Trustet!S of the Newport-Mesa
Unified School 01strict, saying
she maintained a strong con·
servative position.
References to her approval of
a district policy allowing con-
troversial speakers on campuses
clid not include the fact that
these speakers were to be used
h' provide balanced viewpoints
m <'ivies classes. not for indoc·
lrin:itiotl pUJ1)0Ses, she said.
She alst• noted that a $1,100
trip to Flond11 that ttle Watkins
broct•nre sate:' waci paid for by
the district, actnatly ccst the d1c;
trict less than $100.
Mrs. Bergeson made that trio
as president of the California
School Boards Association which
paid the balance. she said.
DAILY PILOT
_.. .. _ ,.,._,.._,.,,..,_
, ..... c.wr Vt<• io.tt!Otftl_Qe_ll ___ ,,_._ ,.,...,
~-........ "'-' .. '"""'
o.-tH" .._ -~ .... """'""'Me_ ...... , ...
CostaMeHOMoa Moll"'":,:;:::! :•6 s.;."';'i"° .,,,.
~ ...... ~El'"'"' """"""""'"ti!'""'" ........... _.Vello1 U l l.Alllt1-
°' .... ~'T1lepllo111 f71419Q.CU1
CleaatftM Advenlelnt ~
c
out Oftbe partnership. • •-n.y used 011 .,ency -.d
mt uu:1aey for 1.b moalbl and
ti.le fatted mt out," Watklm
said.
As best he could recall, he re·
ceived $1.fJOO or $1700 for his one-
fifth share in the partnership.
Brandt. however, recalled that
Watkins was pa.id "somewhere
in the nei&hborhood of $8,000"
for hia interest.
Brandt said the civil suit wu
settled out of court with the buy·
out of Watkins .
"No, the parting of the ways
was not what you could describe
as amicable," Bran<it said.
As for the loans to his cam-
paign committee, Watkins said
the figure of $26,646 is mislead· ing. • .
The candidate s aid the figure
represents a series of loans that
wer.e made and repaid in part
and is the cumulative total.
"Actually. I think my net loan
contribution is right at $9,000."
Watkins said.
He also said those who have
lent his campaign money are
aware of his financial dif-
ficulties.
"I've tried to be open and
honest with everyone. And I've
not tried to hide anything from
anyone," he said
Wat.kins acknowledied today
that be will amend a recent
campaign disclosure statement
to show what wu Hated original-
ly as a $4,999 loan from Warren
Lipps of Newport Beach as a
loan from GWC Services, Inc ..
also ot Newport Beach.
Watkins was an Assembly
candidate in the 72nd District in
1974 when he faJed as a candidate
H. Lee Watkins.
Records sbOw be spent $3,971
of 110.000 he put into the cam-
pAfln before withdrawing in
time tor bis·name not to appear
on the ballot. Watkins said his withdrawal
was in deference to a rival can-
didate, Marlin McKeever.
"A number of-people. tnch-'Ci·
Ing <State Sen.> Dennis
Carpenter, said McKeever
would stand a better chance or
winning if ~got the nomination.
So, I bowed ouL"
Wat.kins denied that money
flowing into bis campaign is
coming from State Sen. John
Briggs. ,
·'My philosophy is very close
to Briggs. but be bas been in·
volved in campaigns of hla own
aud ls. .not givi.D1 me any help,"
Watkins said.
The GOP candidate was for a
six month period a part-time
aide to Assemblyman Ron
Cordova, D-EJ Toro, the man
abandoa.ing the 14th seat to nm
.for the State Senate in the 36th
Senate District.
56 Rescued
By Newport
lifeguards
Bag View Sa9onara /
Bay View School fourth graders Kara
Hudson and R~ky Diltz get in spirit of
Japanese play they will perform Friday
with other students in Mrs. Dorothy
Miemi's class. Play will be one of the
final cultural events at the Santa Ana
Heights elementary school. which is set to
close at the end of this school year.
Wire Rescue Launched
KINSHASA, Zaire <AP f -
Belglan pa~t.roops new to Zaire
to@y ~ mount .a joint Western
rescue 1111sslon tor 2,000 of their
cQuntryrnep, hundreds of other
Europeans and 14 Americans
isolated and tbttat.ened by the
rebel invaaion of Sbaba
Pl'C>vince.
Plane after plane packed with
elite airborne troops took off
from Brussels' military airport
on the S,000..mlle journey to this
Central African nation, a former
Belgian colony. The fll1bt by the
U.S.-rnade C-130 transports was
expected to take at least 10
hours.
An estimated l.750 paratroops
and other Belgian military
personnel bad been alerted to
take part In the intercontinental
operation.
It was reported unofficiall>' in
Corsica that fhrie planes-~llTY·
ing 2SO French Forelp Legion
paratroopers had taken olt from
that Mediterranean island bcMmd
for Afriea .
In Washington, a State
Department official who asked
not to be identifted said the Unit·
• e d States would not supply
troops or planes for the mission
but might provide some lesser
l<>&istical support. About 1,500
U .$. Anny airborne soldiers re-
mained on alert at Fort Bragg,
N.C .. however.
The British also ... ere involved
in the planning for the rescue ef-
fort. but it was not known what
~le they rhlght play.
The Bel&ian troops were re-
ported beaded for Kinshasa and
then on to the government-held
air base at Kamina. 130 miles
north of Kolwezi, a copper-
minlna town at the heart of the
rebel-beld area of southern
Zaire.
There were confused reports
about the mllltary situation
around. Kolwed. Tbt! pro-West
Zaire government clalmed lts
forces had recaptured the town's
airport Wednesday. The rebels
said they still held Kolft&i and
the area around it for nine miles
in all directions.
ln a statement is sued an
Brussels. the rebel Congolese
National Liberation Front said
its forces bad bad no contact
wlth government troops since
Tuesday and that the only action
was .. terrorist bombin1s" by
government wari>lanes. The two sides have blamed
each other ror the civilian
deaths. The MObutu government
said the rebels seizeJ scores of
white hostages, and Belg\an of·
fici als said whites had beco~the
"main target" in the fiihting~/
Papetti held Yonnt Drago up
with one bii band and swung the
board with the other. "'They
were too fast for me." he said of
the buUdop. "I coulda 't 1et in a
good lick.' .
SttU warctm. ott the attack.
Papetti balf carrlM and balff9
draHed tbe youth to bll car. "I
knew ol a plaee VJbere the oollce
1top for ~uta." be •~d. "I
went to -Mlp ... He found lt.
Dra•o ~Uy WU 11&1hed to the hotpltat, where be It re·
covvtn1 followtq boun In an
operatln1 room to ritr a severed artery ln bis rt t Uni
and numerous bitea on face
and back. He Is in 1atlltactory
condlUon. •
Renectlna bacl( on ftte incf ·
dent this mominJ, Papetti aaid,
"I'm t1ad l wu then. It amw.t
makes you religioul. •·
He aaid he went to church
yesterday morning tor the fint
Ume In more than 18 months. He
bellev• God took a band in the
event.a.
"If I had been 20 ye.rs
younger.'' b~ added, ··1 could
have swuna thole dop ~
my head.
·'They made me retire •hen I
was 6:5. 1 felt t was at my peak.
Now. wtth this, l feel like I'm
s till a useful member of
society."
The boy be saved tbinks Mr.
Papetti Is a .very useful member
or society. "I thought t was
dead, "'the young patient said.
F,.._P~Al
FORUM ••.
e c onomic and so c ial
revolution." Vincent told an
audience or several hundred
people at the forum spo~red
by the Newport Harbor-Costa
Mesa Board of Realtors at the
Marriott Hotel an Newport
Beach.
"Howard Jarvis ls ond of
s aying . 'We gave them
< legas lators > an u i mlted
. budget and they exc ed it',"
Vincent said.
While 100 lifeguards from 11
foreign countries met just a few
miles away, a dozen Newport
Beach lifeguards were kept on
the run rescuing swimmers
'rom Wednesday's big surf.
"It was really a rough day,"
commented lifeguard Lt. Logan
,Lockabey who said the skeleton
crew pulled :i6 people out of the
eight-foot surf.
Yormger Leadit,
Dam Edges in
IAt.estSurvey
··-The 1979 Model Line is comJng soon. Mur
SPE~IALS on 1978 Model Line
Mere andlse now! Come in soon as
Lockabey Sflid more than
40,000 people showed up at
Newport's strands to escape the
beat inland on a day when the
city's complement of guards
was reduced to those that work
full time.
The summer staff consists of
high school and college students
wbo have not come on duty, he
explained.
Lockabey said things got so
hectic that Lifeguard Chief
Kendall Jacobson was pulled out
of his desk job and pressed into
netd work.
M eel"while top lifeguards
frolJ' a\I <'~er tt-e r•obe have
been m~tmc thi~ wecl-at the
Newport Sberator. HotP.' for tt-e
convention sponsored h' tl-r
World Lile Saving Association.
"We contemplated trying to
get the auys at the world
congress to come and help but
their aaenda was pretty Uaht,"
be added.
Lockabey s aid the busy
guards did set some assistance
frqm local surfers who were
retponslble for a half·doaen
rescues.
One occurred at Oran11e Street
at about 2 p .m . when Weal
Newport resident Patrick
Coutna used his surf board in
re!culng a swhl'lmer who had
1otten lnto a surt·1enerated rip
Ude.
·'There were several lncldenta
like that, .. Lockabey aald.
"Unfortunately, we didn't set
the names ~1 the other aurfen who helped om."
SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -
Evelle Younger and Ed Davis
have put a little dis tance
between the mselves and other
contenders for the Republican
gubernatorial nomination, ac-
cording to the latest Mervin
Field California Poll.
A survey of 462 Republican
vowrs taken between May 1 and
May 8 showed Younger pre·
ferred by 27 percent or those
questioned, while Davis picked
up support from 25 percent.
Ken Maddy had l9 percent,
Pete Wilson 12 percent and John
Briggs, whb withdrew from the
race Tuesday, one percent, with
16 percent listed as Wldecided.
T~e poll showed Younger, the
~t.-te ~ :ittorney general. im· P""""'" h1~ standlna for the first time in more thKI' ~ year. The
last pOll, In late Maret· ont.1 early
April. eave Youn1er 23 percent.
followed by Davia with 22 pe;-.
cent. Maddy 18, Wilson 12 and
Briggs 2. with 23 percent un-
decided.
A poll taken , in March 197'7
1ave Youncer 42 percent. but bis
support dwtnd.led to the low ol 23
percent a moalhago.
The p0ll also plotted what
would happen should any ol the
candidates drop out of the race .
or have bit •'-'PPOCt weakened,
finding that Youn1er would
benerll molt.
Jr Wilson were to drop out. the
lineup would be Youn1er 81 per.
cent. Davi~ 26 percent, Maddy 21
percent, BrtaP two percent and
undecided IO~et\t.
Wltboul Maddy, Youncer
would have SI percent, Davia 29 .l.--Ja Win percent, Wl11ob 15 ptrc•nt, ~0 Brl11• two percent and un-
C Rl CA G 0 (AP > Don deelded21pe.rcent.
Baylor'• 1fand-1lam homer led Wltbout Davll. Youn1er would
tb• ah.mlplng Cllltomla All~la have ~ Meddy 13 per·
to-. e • ~*'Y '** thl• aft.tr..__.-....._..DAI_._.~ Briap ... _ C .. ' ........ tw~ -c-. .-...i-a....a.a.123 noon O~r WK: wC .. O 'f'frnle .., ..-·-_._,
Sos~ perC!en1o
niliij
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BILLY CARTER POSES WITH ARAPAHOE, COLO., ORADUATINO CLASS OF NINE
'If I'd Had Eight <>there In My ClaH, I'd Have BMn In Top 10'
Nine Grads Dear Billy
Fee Waived for Col,oroJo Co~n£ement
ARAPAHOE, Colo. (AP) -On the cac·
tUS·sludded plains or eastern Colorado,
celebrities are rew and far between. So folks
were abuzz al the filling station and Con·
nle's Cut 'n' Curl when Billy Carter came to
town to speak lo Arapahoe High School's nine
graduating seniors.
They cleaned up the town~ Ced him a
potlutk ~upper and gathered tt crowd of 2,000
for standing ovations before and after the
Wednesday nb?ht speech, made Crom atop
bay bales covered with boards.
None of the 65 townsfolk could remember
the last time a "name" came to town.
Over al the Shamrock Gas Station, where
locals shop for gas, fertilizer, bubble gum
and ice cream, Bob Roberts thought a long
time but couldn't remember "anyone near
famo.us" during his 28 years in town.
Not everyone look to Arapahoe's moment
or fame. At the gas station, town character
"Smiley" told a reporter and photographer
"where lo put their camera" when they
asked for a photo, said Robinson.
THE MEMBERS OF THE Class of '78
shared the makeshift stage. Four of the
seven boys will go on to college and three
plan to stay on their families' farms and
ranches. Both girls in the class are married.
SOME STUDENTS, LIKE SENIOR PhH
Lewis, said they thought "a regular, quiet Jit.
lle graduation" might have been nicer -and
less trouble.
Carter, a gas station owner who makes
more money than the president by hyping
down·bome homilies and his love for beer,
seemed an unlikely role·model for young peo.
pie.
In bis first commencement address, pre-
pared by bis agent, Carter noted that if he'd
had just eight others in his high school class,
he would have graduated in the top 10.
Carter stumbled a bit in malting the
speech, then put down his notes aod said,
"This is the proudest moment of my life."
"It was sort of a joke that backfired,"
said Rusty Haller, the class secretary who
sent the invitation, never think.lni Carter
w<>utd answer. FEW PEOPLE EVER stop in
Arapahoe. They don't even s low down. The
speed limit remains 55 mph on U.S. 40
through the half mile of town
But Carter cited his small town back·
ground in agreeing to come to Arapahoe and
waiving bis usual speech.making fee .
.. HBMan
:In Betting
-f Ring Guilty
Ii'. • A Utmti.ngton Beach man ac·
· cused on arrest or operating a · gambling ring that brought in a\
least $15.000 a week was found
guilty Wednesday of multiple
. bookmaking charges.
Orange County Superior Court
· Judge Robert P. Kneeland set
. June 23 as the date be wm sen·
. tence Irving Joseph Richards,
: 47. of 21831 Seaside Lane, lo
what could be a long term in state prison.
:, It was noted during his trial
:.. that Richards has a long record .! of bookmaking and fraud ac·
'\ tivities and is currently serving
:: a nine·montb prison term im·
: posed in Los Angeles Federal
· Court for violating bis probation.
·' Two or three men arrested l~ with Richards ln Huntington
. Beach last October filed guilty
pleas rather than race trial.
Paul Arthur Quinn, 48, and
John W. "J ackie" Monaghan,
·• 45. both or Boston, we re sen· tenced to 60 days in county jail
and placed on three years proba·
~: lion
· Herbert Frederick "Herbie"
Klug. 42. also of Boston, Is
scheduled to appear Friday on
.· identical bookmaking charges
He is expected lo file a plea.
Brandished Sword
•
Teen 'Son of God'
·-Killed by Palice
VANCOUVER. Wash. <AP) -
A teen·ager brandishing a 30-
i o ch sword and proclaiming
himself the "Son or God" was
shot and killed in downtown
Vancouver today .
Patrolmen said Gregory L .
Bevers, 18, was shot twice in the
Reburial Set
For Chaplin
LAUSANNE, Switzerland
<AP) -Charlie Chaplin's body
will be reburied in the spot
where lt was dug up by grave
robbers 2lh months ago. But a
protective vault will be bum
around it lo prevent a re<:ur·
rence of the bizarre theft,
authorities said today.
The 300-pound oak coffin hold-
ing the remains or the famed
film comedian was found
Wednesday buried in a cornfield
10 miles from the village
cemetery of Corsier·sur·Vevey
where Chaplin was buried Dec.
27.
••
stomach alter he attacked them
with the swocd raised above bis
head. He died at Vancouver
Memorial Hospital 90 minutes
after the 1:15 a.m. shooting.
Officers Danne Johnson, 30,
and Larry Heckman, 27, saJd
they found the ~outh standing
next to a broken display window
at Main Street Loan Co. in the
downtown business distrlcL He
was holding the sword in bis
hand.
Jn his belt, police said, be car·
ried another sword of similar
length, along with a 16·inch dag.
ger and a nine·lnch bayonet.
Policemen said they tried lo
talk the suspect into surrender·
Ing, but he proclaimed himself
the "Son or God" and moved
toward their patrol car. He
chopped off the beacon unit from
atop the car and the radar unit
on the rear or the vehicle.
Police said the youth then
walked away, but when they
tried again lo get him to sur·
render. he turned and charged
al the pair. who were standing
near the car.
: Patty Hearst Wooed
Heckman said he tried unsuc·
cessfully to knock the sword
from the youth's hand. Both
patrolmen said they were struck
by the sword, and the shots were
fired in the ensuing struggle.
Tbe officers were treated for
cuts and bruises at a hospital. '• ~ji By Bank President? State Delays
Medics' Probe
Of Waddill
. NEW YORK (AP) -While
• she was out of Jail, Patricia
·. Hearst got dinner invitations
': from the man whose bank she
: helped rob, New York Post col·
:; umnlst James A. Wechsler ·, wrote today. ~ Wechsler, the ost's editorial
·: page editoc-. sai the information
: came ln a lephone call
: Wednesday f m Miss Hearst's
uncle, Willia Randolph Hearst
·. Jr.
Wechsle did not elaborate.
quoting Hearst only as saytq:
• "You know, oae ot the latest :: thine• that happened wblle sbe
·: was out la that the president of
.• the bank they robbed started In·
:'· vttinf her to bit home for din·
ner.' ~ WecbaJer said Hearst called to
:} thank the Post for nmnina a let· , ter support.tna hia niece and 1-.y. t. Ing she waa a vlctlm of the
. court.a.
.• "l..1~wanted you to know a
kind word la appreciated, ..
•· Wecti.ler quot.d Heant u •-.Y· ' tn1 In his account of tho COO·
verHUCO.
Miu ffearlt WU ret'U'DOd.. to
• Olli --to c:oftlplete'l>er Kiti!Pl"llll for bot robb117 after ~~~i!fl -., ........... •
been fnieon ball after serving 14
months of a seven·year sentence
and must serve another 14
months before becoming eligible
for parole.
She bas maintained that her
kidnappers coerced her into Lawyers for the state attorney
participatioointhestickup. f(eneral'll office have abandoned
Asked if he thought she was plans to hold a hearing this
being punis~ed for who she is. month into charges filed by the
Hearst said: "Well. if she ... Board of Medical Quality As·
weren't a rich girl, compare the surance against Dr. William
average sentence for a crime Baxter Waddill of Huntington
committed under those condi· Harbour.
Uona of terroriam." They said they wUI aw,alit the
At another point he aaJd : "I outcome of Dr. Waddlll's seconct
stlll can't forget that Attorney murder trtal In Orange Cowlty
General Wllliam Saxbe calling Superior Court before qttlng a
her a commoa criminal. Sbe date for the state inquify that
was aa normal a kid u there wlll follow, whatever the verdict
ever wu. She never stole a mar· in the criminal aetlon mtpt ht.
ble. Dr. Waddlll, 42, la accused ot
"Thla waa our first terrorist strangling a newborn baby to
case ot Ulil kind. But for the death in the WestmJnst.r Com·
1race '! God she could be a munity ffoe:nuraery shortly
cinder. alter be re that the sa.Une
Aa for her partlclpaUon ln the abortion be performed on the is.
robbery, Heant aald a friend year-old mother 12 hours earlter
deacl'tbed to bim a eonceatnUan had becm unsuccee.fw.
camp 1urv1wor ''talldn1 about. Th~L'!7 in bl• first trial
what people do when self· deadl at 7·5 lA tavor_~f_ ¥·
pretenatiaD •at l&ake Md be quiUal. J.S..H.Wm'tll Knllttt Did, 'ldaG"tdaretellyot.i""* 1 wUI decldeJtm.2tf"W..WUato
did t~ kve my .. lf(e,;at betdedaailtumchttDMttllilb1.al
•\al•li'llllli'I-' • cla&e~!!!l!~ME~
•
DAILY Ptl.OT A3
High Noise Area
CoUnty Approves
El Toro Project
By KATHY CLANCY
Of .. o.lly ...........
round that the process used for
making that determination was
valid. A Laguna HUJa firm won
permission Wednesday to bulld homes Inside a residential buUd· Dr. Jerome Lucas of the state in~ ban woe around El Toro Office of Noise Control sakl be
posed to Ute noise don't give a
damn where the line is,·· Lucas
continued. "They are either
satisfied or dissatisfied."
Lucas said even if homes
could be Insulated against sound
on the Inside, people also live Marine Corps Air Station. wasn't quesUoning the exact
But before Orange County l~ation of the Une. He said the ~;>;~~ 'fGtV.:~r'ttt • ~ne-can~wy~F~3d~!!:;.
Laguna VWqe Inc. be the first • ·climate, exactness-Of flight paths
to build (73 coodominiums > in an and other factors.
.. .ow. Q1.dooa.. ----• . .. Over enough Ume there is
enough irritation ... it is a stress
factor," he continued. "It ls a
cummulaUve effed." area once coo.sldered loo noisy "'People on the ground ex· for houses they required that:
-Permanent signs be posted,~------------------------... .... aroupd the tract warning ot a
"high noise area" and depicting
a Jet aircraft.
-Homebuyers give aviation
easements above their dwellings
and waive their right to later sue
for noise damages.
-The devel0s>er obtain sign_ed
statements from condominium
buyers stating they are aware of
the El Toro jet flight path near
their homes.
Supervisors also received a
"good Caith" agreement from
the developer that the 73 units
would be priced in the $56,900 lo
$72,000 rl\}lge for so.called
moderate-il:l:ome families.
The board's decision followed
two hours o( testimony from
those arguing on both sides of
the noise question. J
They are expected to debate
similar issues in two weeks
when another Laguna Village
development, lb.is one for 327
homes is before them.
The developments are located
near Santa Vittoria and Lake
Forest drives.
County health officer Morton
Nelson advised s upervisors
Wed.oesday against ·permitting
development in that area aod
said if building does occur, the
JM>ise warnings are a must.
"My opinion is there should
not be residential use ln that
area." he said. "What I am say ..
ing is that an ·individual who
goes into that area should know
the ramification' of living there."
A noise consult.ant hired by the
developer found that that 11.6-
acre area in question really falls
outside the average 65 decibel
line set for the residential build·
ing ban.
And a county hired consult.ant
.Jarvis Baeked
Hayakawa Pl,edgea Support
WASJUNGTON <AP> -Saying "government
does not know how to cut," U.S. Sen. S.I. Hayakawa
today announced his support for the Jarvis·G ann
property tax initiative.
• ·1 am voting for Proposition 13 in the belief that
the shock treatment of Jarvls·Gann is what
government needs to bring about fiscal common
sense." the state's Republican junior senator said.
••The shock will be felt not just in California. but all
over the nation.••
··The Jarvis.Ga nn Initiative is a great
over·simplification of a complex problem.··
Hayakawa said.
But be said he was. "frustrated by the fact that
tax cuts, no matter how wisely designed, simply do
not make their way through the Legislature ...
California's other senator. Alan Cranston, has
said he opposes Prop. 13.
Victim Identified
Orange County Sheriff's of.
ficers have identified the body of
a young woman found on a COO·
struction site in the Orange area
as that of Wendy Sue Klerer, 14.
of Fullerton.
Investigators said that what
they described as a brutal beat·
ing led to her death. An autopgy
conducted by the coroner Wed·
nesday confirmed thatfind.i.U. Officers said they have no
leads at. this point to the Identity
of the girl's ld.ller.
Her parents, Dr. Joseph 8Dd
Mrs . Lenore Klerer, told in·
vesllgators they last saw their
daughter Sunday when she left
home lo attend a meeting in
Fullerton.
Officers believe she was
beaten in some other location or
in the killer's car and then
driven to Orange and dumped.
Construction workers found her
nude body.
Coroner's officers said there
was no indication of ~exual as· sault.
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PROFESSfONAL
INTERIOR DESf0Ni.A6 2211 MAalOR ll VO.
COtTA MISA 6~M27S
~~-"=---""'-~~~~~~~l~~--~~
A·• DAILY PILOl Thurlde;. Mey 11 IVO
Just '·,.~. Coasting
,..,.
,~~,
with~ Tom '\~vt'f'''·'
Marphine
County Pot Boiling
RICKY TICKY POLITIX: You get the notion the~e
days that somehow. Oranae County has been selected as
the prime battleground in the fight over Proposition 13, the
so-called Jarvis· Gann property tax initiative.
Podiums and political platforms in our re&k>n have
become pock-marked Crom the verbal blasts as proponents
and opponents wage the War or 13. And the heavyweights
in the batlleJunce been much In evidence ln our realon. . In event you've bien out of touch,
recaU that Proposition 13, Ir passed by
the voters June 6. would chop back
property taxes about 57 percent.
The revenue loss to schools and city and
county governments would amount to
about $7 bilhon each year. That's billion.
AS FOR THE PRO and con.
Howard Jarvis has been busily present
along our coastline , pumping for ,
passage or 1.3. GOV. HOWN
J arvis appeared on local TV. Huntington Beach's
Channel 50. locking horns with Orange County Superior
Court Judge Bruce Sumner or Laguna. He has appeared
before all kinds or groups here that seem to. ranae all the
way from the Girls Scouts to the ~iJlionaire's Club.
BUT NOW COMES Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. The
governor has clearly taken to the stump in an errort to de-
feat Prop. 13, which he has characterized as a blueprint
for chuos
Brown selected the California Peace Orficers Associa·
tion convention m NewPort Beach Monday to unleash one
of his i.trongest verbal volleys aaainst the initiative.
He said passage of 13 would cut back vital services and
t'ventuit lly result in an unfair distribution of the property tax burden. ·
The governor warned, "Jn five years, more than half
of the people will be paying more under ProposltJon 13
than they would under Proposition 8."
Propos1t1on 8 is a rival bill also oo the June ballot that
would provide a less drastic property tax cut and Is backed
by Brown He calls ProPosition 8 a "cut, squeeze and trim bill. ..
Jarvis counters by pointing his finger al the state
treasury surplus and alleging, colorfully, "There is enough
money in Sacramento to rt oat California on $100 bills."
BROWN SAYS IT isn't so, He told a group of rirefigbt·
1ng officials in Sacramento Wednesday that the state's
surplus, wh.ich is estimated between $3 and S4 bUUon. cannot
cushion the $7 billion yearly loss under the Jarvis plan. The
governor notes the state's annual surplus is only St bllUon.
And the governor was back in our region campaigning
today
Brown also bas his back up on taxes. He is pledged not
to raise taxes and he re peated that pledge lo the
firefighters yesterday. regardless of what happens to
Proposition 13. The governor complains vi1orously that the
voters simply refuse l.o believe that passa1e ol number 13
will cause drastic reductions in public safety services. Bu\
he believes it.
So the War of 13 rages on. And much of the smoke seems
to be rilling the airofourcoastal reaton.
M o's Pandas ·Ma!q;
Oct ober Baby Due?
TOKYO (AP> -Lan Lan and Kang Kang, the Uneno Zoo's two
giant pa11das, mated today for the second time.
The ani mats. gifts from the late Premier Chou En·lai to mark the
opening of Ch.inese·Japanese diplomatic relatioos in 1972, mated a
year ago for lhe first time but railedtoproduceo£bpring.
Lan Lan, theremale, is91h yepnoldandwelghs23Spounds. Kang
Kang is712andt1ps thescalesat2S7. Resultsareexpect~inOctober.
··Lan Lan became wanton, showing a mad desire for Kang Kang,
and we removed the wire screen between their cages at 7 a.m.,"
senior keeper Shiro Nakagawa said.
·'Love began blooming and they mated in about 2S minutes. They
then were separated but Lan Lan still was lusting for Kang Kang in
less than half an hour. We sent Kang Kang back to Lan Lan'scagefor
the second coupling. It was as perfect as the first mating which took
place smoothly ...
Technicolor and black and white cameras and tape r~rders
caught every movement and sound or the botlr·long mating session. It
also was observed by several curators, animal keepers and
biologists, Nakagawa said
MOSCOW <AP > -Soviet dissi·
dent Yuri Orlov was sentenced
today to a 12-year term 0£ hard
labor and exile. and the moat
prom lnenl Russian dissenter,
Nobel Peace Prize winner An·
drei D. Sakharov. was arrested
with h.ls wtre and held (or five
hours after they struck police of·
ficers outside the courthouse.
Sakharov's mother-in-law said
the couple was released arter
their detention.
A MOSCOW court gave
Orlov the maximum sentence -
seven years lo labor camp and
ftve years' internal exile, mean·
ing banishment from Moscow -
on a charge or anti-Soviet agit~
tlon and propaganda, allecattons
based on documents he wrote
and distributed to Western cor-
respondents and embassies.
Orlov, held incommunicado
since hls acrest 15 months ago,
was then bustled into a van as
about 100 supporters outside
chanted, "Yura! Yura! ". the
familiar form or his name in
Russian.
Police turned on the sirens or
their vehicles to try to drown out
the crowd. As the van drove off.
Orlov raised his hand to
acknowledge the cheers o( sup·
port.
SAKHAROV, 56 -year-old
leader of the Soviet dissident
movement. had appeared out-
side the court bullding and de·
manded that police allow him
and his wile, Yelena, l.o enter.
They bad been barred from the
court during the first three days
of the trial.
The tall,, _balding Sakharov
shouted: "Let me iri! Under So·
vtet law all citizens are allowed in
when lhesentence is read.••
The police appeared to be try·
m egal Alie n
Pupils D e nie d
Texas Lesso ns
AUSTIN, Texas (AP> -The
Texas Supreme Court has ruled
that alien children who are in
the United States illegally have
no right to a free public educ&·
lion.
The court said Wednesday it
found "no reversible error" in a
decision by the 3rd Court of Civil
Appeals here.
THE RULING upheld a sec·
lion or the Texas Education
Code making tuition-free educa-
tion available only to citizens
Reds J ail Nobe l Winner
ing to calm the sltuaUon. But
there wu a acutne. witnesses
said Mn. Sakborov slapped a
poUceman ID the face. and her
husband bit a policeman who
was tf)'lnc to restrain him.
THE POLICE THEN
seized Sakharov by hl1 anm,
bundled him and b1J wlfe lDto a
green bus and drove away with
them.
I
"N~bel Prize for .Orlov!"
Sakharov 1bouted n the bu.a
drove away. .
It WU the MCOnd time the
Sakharova were involved in an
incident outside a Soviet
courthouse. Two yeart aco they
s truck pollcemetr al a
courthouse lo Omak, ln Slbeda,
when they were barrecH~in the
trial of Muatafa DJemllev, a
.
' ' 22 J'oln Bayh Bid . . . .. ·A •. '·
"' -
NATION I WORLD
Tatar natlonaliat wbo waa sen·
tenced to 2~ years ta a labor
camp.
..
More ERA Tiriie Asked
WASHINGTON <AP l -
Senate backers or the Equal
Rights Amendment. having
waited "until the last possible
moment," are seeking support
for a seven-year extension 0£ its
ratification period, which ex-
pires next year.
"I am not afraid to give the
people of th.ta country more time
to study the ERA. l.o separate
the wheat from the cbaf£ on a lot
of the false issues and outright
lies that have been perpetrat·
ed. . . . '' said Sen. Birch Bayb.
THE INDIANA Democrat.
who is chairman of the Senate
Judiciary subcommittee on the
Constitution. led the fight that
culminated in congressional ap-
proval or the amendment in
1972.
Twenty-two senators joined
Bayh tn sponsoring tbe ex·
tension resolution on Wednes·
day.
The ERA would provide the
constitutional foundation ror
prohibiting discrimination
because of a person's sex. Ap-
proval of the amendment by 38
states is needed for ratification.
Thirty.five states have ratified it
to date, although Tennessee,
Idaho and Nebraska have at·
tempted tore&cind their votes.
•KENTUCKY'S
leg islatlH"e a lso voted to
r escind its approval or the
amendment, but the move was
vetoed by Lt. Gov. Thelma
Stovall while Gov. Julian Carroll
was out of town.
The Just.Ice Department said
last year that there was legal
precedent for a state rescinding
its approval of a constitutional
amendment, but that resolving
the dispute is ultimately up to
Cong ress. The seven .year
ratification period expires
March 22, 1979.
Bayb described the seven-year
limit as arbitrary and added,
"No one in Congress at that time
could foresee that parllamen·
tary tactics by a recalcitrant
few would prevent the ERA
from even reaching th~loor for
a vote in s ome state
legislatures."
An identical resolution has
already been introduced in the
House and a House Judiciary
subcommittee on civil and con·
stitutional rights bas begun
hearings on the question.
and to aliens who are legally in Half ..,au B~this country. n ~ u>....:;
U.S. District Judge William Wayne Justice of Tyler also has Country Bill White, 44 . a s inger from ord. His temporary home is six feet long.
the issue before him, and the Tallahassee. Fla .• has only 109 days left in three feet wide and 31r..? feet high. Photog·
U.S. Justice Department has his p lywood box 6112 feet underground. He rapher lowered a camera through a 71h r.in·
a rgued the provision violates the was buried in New Bedford, Mass .• on Jan. ch opening and operated it by remote con·
equal protection clause of the 29 in an attempt to set a world 's rec· trol for lhis photo. Constitution. ~~~~~~~__;_~~~~~~~;..__;,,.;;..;;..~~~~~~~.;_~~~~~~~~~~~~
Lawyers for Carlos Hernande&
and IO other Houston children
said youngsters have no control
over where they live but are sub-
ject to adult declsions.
ONE OF THE children, they
said, lives wllh a sister and her
children. The sister's children
go to public school in Houston
"but these children, living in the
same home, cannot," they said.
The appeals court said provid-
ing free education to aliens
would burden taxpayers or
diminish the quality of education
for citizens. It cited testimony
that educating the 5,000 tuegal
alien ch.ildren in Houston would
cost as much as $8.35 million a
year.
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CALIFORNIA ~.May t8. 1978 DAIL y PILOT AS
Patrol Accelero1,edA10ng Border ,
SAN DIEGO <AP> -For the
first time. armed U.S. patrols
are movlnir In force Into a
no-man'• land of banditry, knil·
ints and gunfire along the Mex-
ican border.
The decision was announced
by Donald M. Cameron. the
Border Patrol's new chief in its
busiest and bloodiest sector.
stretching northward for 342
miles and 40 miles east from the
Pacific Ocean.
l n reversing pa~t policy,
Cameron said "we have the
manpower to do it." His force
has grown by 100 agents to 270.
IT WAS TOO D,\NGEROUS
before in ~ thick bushes and
shrouded canyons of "the worst
assignment in the Border
Patrol," Cameron told a news
conference Wednesday.
A band of 10 police undercover
officers dressed as Mexican
aliens to invite attack has been
assigned as volunteers along the
border by San Diego police for
the past 19 months.
Chuck Loveland. right, carries the mail and carries on a
family <(UStom begun by his grandfather, Charles Love-
land, left, in 1933. Most people in Coarsegold remember
Chuck's father, Bob, delivering the mail, and all re-
member having no one but a Loveland as a carrier.
San Diego Police Chief
William Kolender said four of
his patrolmen were wounded by
bandits. But be claimed they ar-
rested more than 350 peJ10DS,
both Americans and Mexicans.
for investigation of robbery or
rape.
TBEBE WERE 128 robberies
Son Suspect in Triple
Hillsborough Sl&:yings
HILl.SBOROUGH <AP> -Police
are n~ly cooviDCed the son of a pro.
minent San Francisco probate
lawyer shot bis parents and then
killed himself in a double murder
and suicide.
Detective Sgt. Thomas Toti said be
was ''95 percent sure.•• wblle Police
Chief WUllam Key said the cue was
bein1 treated as a triple murder unW
a final determination is made.
Found dead in tile family's
fashlonable home Wednesday were
George F. Clinton, 60,· bit. wife,
Margaret, 59, and their son, George
B. CUnton. 26.
No 'l'IUI •Ille l'etoetl
SACRAMENTO <AP> -Gov. Ed·
m und Brown Jr. says U voted ap.
prove Proposition 13,J:ae wUl cut gov-
ernment services and Jay oft
-ttmployees rather than raise ~
laxes. .
James Cagney
Suffers Spasm
LOS ANGELES <AP> -Academy
Award-wii\!nng actor James Cagney
collapsed in a surburban restaurant
Wednesday while having dinner with
bis wife and four friends.
The 78-vear-old actor. who won an
Oscar for bis role in the 1942
musical. "Yankee Doodle Dandy,"
,recovered by the time Fire Depart-
ment paramedics arrived and re-
fused medical treatnient, fire depart-
ment offictials said.
Movie producer A.C. Lyles. who
was one of the dinner party, slid
Cagney suffered a '"muscle spasm."
"'He's feeling fine now. I just went
up to his bedroom and he's resting
well in his own bed,·· Lyles said.
( SF.4TE )
81'own told a aroup of fire district eb~ef1 Wettpeeday ... rm not going to
ra11e state 4a!!S· ( ran on a etedge
not k> rmee St* taxes, and I m not
1oing to do it."
Karliae f;' .. 1'ffted
CAVP PENDtE1'0N <AP> -A
10-member court-martial board bas
convicted MariqeCpl. David L. Martin
ot 1strugUng his 2$-year~ld iwfte Ui
their base quarters at Camp
l>endletoo..
Tint verdict was returned Wednes-
day against Martin, 24. accused in
the Feb. 7 slafin¥ ~ his wife, Leslie.
-··~eel NATI<»l:AL CITY <AP> -Fire of-
ficials were trying to determine what
sparked a fire, described as the
worst in the clty•s history. that sent
names shooting 6-0 feet skyward.
gutted eight stores in a shopping
center and did at least $800.000
damage.
C'ity Manager Harry Gill said the
three-alarm blaze-et South Bay Plaza
Shopping center Wednesday night
was the worst in this city's history.
J8 Cops f'aee Qaarga
O~ <AP> -Ten Oakland
police officers are being notified that
they face disciplinary action -rang-
inl from repri"rnands to dismissals -
on charges they vandalized Hells
Angels' property during a fight last
month at the motorcycle gang's
clubhouse, police sources say. ..
reported by illegal aliens in the
area last year and 38 already
this year. Kolender said his men
acted as heroes risking their
lives in darkness to protect un·
armed a nd fright e n ed
foreigners.
An agreement by which two of
'the Spanish speaking San Diego
officers will help the Border
Patrol unats was worked out
with U.S. Attorney Michael
Walsh.
The Ku Klux Klan said it sent
two-man p a trols in cars
throughout rural San Diego
County in search or aliens but
have been warned by Walsh as
well as Kolender and Cameron
to quit. •
IF THE WHITE-supremacy
group Interferes with regular
law enforcement. Kolender sald
"they will f11ce justice -we will
not allow them to be a vigilante
group."
In an interview. Dick Jones.
assistant chief Border Patrol
agent. said "from now on. we'll
be right down next to the
border." But unlike the San
Diego police group. tbe border
patrolmen will be In uniform.
"The men will be on foot and
in cars as well as in normal
helicopter surveillance. doing
regular assignments,.. Jones
said.
A RECORD 45,036 aliens were
~i'vrehended last month In the
Chula Vista sector, a rlgure
representing a steady climb of
entry attempts and arrests since
the 5.~ picked up in AprU 1971.
The patrol's ehula Vista sec·
tor covers San Diego. Ventura.
Santa Barbara and San Luis
Obispo counties a.nd portions or
Riverside and Orange counties.
THAT AREA HAS always
been most popular with Latin
a liens trying to steal Into the 1 United states. many with their 1 only money but afraid to venture
onto roeda because they lack of· ficial papers.
Cameron said his offic~rs
ha ve quietly been along the
border on a 24-hour basis for
several days. In October. he
said . another 79 agents will ar·
rive.
Oxnard Considered
An LNG' Site Again?
SANTA BARBARA <AP> -A federal lecal opinion insists
federal law pre·empts California's Liquefied Natural Gas
Terminal Act or 1977 and. therefore. Oxnard should be cons idered
a possible site for the state's flrst LNG terminal.
Oxnard bas been eliminated from consideration bec:ause it
railed to meet the criterion of remoteness llst.ed In the state law.
THE FEDERAL DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY'S opla·
ion. printed Wednesday by the Santa Barbara News Press, was
filed with the administrative llw judge who is considering Western
LNG Terminal Associates' a~cation to substitute Point Concep·
lion as the site for the LNG terminal.
"No weight should be given to the California LNG Act," said
the Energy Department ·s ~·page me"rno, sagnea DY Allen w. An-
derson Jr. and Brlan J . Heisler, staff attorneys for the Federal
Energy Regulatory Commission.
It\ true. \\e'll be opening on May 22.
Stop by. You1l find a nice comfortable office staffed
with pleasant, well-trained loqal people-the kind
of people it's nice to have taking care of your money
b~ess. And that means aD your money business.
We1l have all sorts of insured savings plans for you.
Each one set up to fit specific peeds. Let us know
what you're looking for and we'll be happy to help you
decide what's beSt for you.
What's more, we'll have m~ all the free services
you've come to expect from a savings and loan ••• and
then some. Granted, we're part of a large fam.ilv. But
there's more to us thal\just size. We truly care about
our savers.
So come in and say hello when9ver you're nearby.
We look forward to welcoming you into the Glendale
Federal family. .
Glendale Federal Savings. Where the.
second hal( of life can be the better half.
r
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Ae 1£' .. 14-.. ~ I .. RobeftN.Weed/Pu.bHsher Thomes KftYll /Editor
Orange Coast Daily Pilot Jl!I.. a,v·r•ft _.:-!!fJ.1e••••••••Th•u•rMta••v.•M•••Y•'a •.• 19•1•e••••••••••e.•r•bl•r•••K•re•1t>•''•"'•1•E•d•lt•or•1.•1•P•"'••~•d•1tor•••
State Tax Board
Was Out of
Senior citizens get lots or mall from the gover enl
-notices about. Social Security. Medicare, tax aw
changes, retirement rights. housing rlghts -all sorts of
communications. uslWlJJy couched in traditionally baffling
bureaucratic phrases.
These documents that arrive in the mailbox can have
considerable si~nificance for an older person trying to
get aJong on a fixed Lncome, to hang onto a home, pay the
rent or settle a doctor biJl.
Last week 460,000 of Callf omia 's senior citizens were
unnecessarily jolted by a communication from the state
Franchise Tax Board.
Jt was a notice. required by law. advising them of a
cttange in the filing period to claim tax beneCits to which
they are entitled on the basis of their age and income.
The opening of the period for filing claims would be
delayed for one month, they were informed.
Reason for the delay was logical enough. Two
propositions on the June 6 ballot. Props. 8 and 13. could
involve some changes in the computation of property tax.
Neither would deprive the seniors of their right to tax
benefits. but one. Prop. 8. could broaden the eligibility to
include some additional senior citizens on higher income
levels. This would involve the preparation of new tax
benefit. eligibility tables.
The notice from the Franchise Tax Board didn't
begin to explain this. Worse, its wording gave the very
clear impression that benefit! would not be .. iJt effect"
unless Prop. 8 is approved and Prop. 13 rejected June 6.
This is not true.
It is hard to ·believe that the wording was not a
deliberate attempt to rally opposition to Prop. 13. If not
deliberate, it was so inexcusably stupid and short-sighted
that those responsible should be promptly removed from
positions involving communication with the public.
There wiU be 13 propo!itions 011 the June 6 ballot. The •-
Daily Pilot will ojf er commtnt and r.,ecommendalions on all the
propos1twn.ci between now·and el«tion day
•• *
YES on Props. 4 and 5
PROP. 4 on the June 6 ballot would correct a section
of the state constitution that has the effect of depriving
some residents of a vote on matters pertaining to their
school or college districts. The constitution authorizes
city charters to specify the manner in which members of
boards of education are elected or appointed. their
qualifications. compensation and manner of removal.
But the constitution also restricts voting on city
charter amendments to persons living within the city
li mi~. This deprives residents of some school districts
that extend beyond the city boundaries of a voice in
school affairs. Prop. 4 would extend the right to vote on
city charter amendments affecting school or college
districts to all residents of the district, regardless of
boundaries.
The Daily Pilot recommends a YES vote on Prop. 4. "' ...
PROP. s offers an opportunity to correct a much
more serious deficiency in the state constitution. At
present there is nothing Ln the constitution to prohibit an
administra tive age ncy fro m d ecl a ring a law
unconstitutional and therefore failing to enforce it
Unfoi1unately many agencies have taken advantage
of this loophole to end·fWl the state Legislature if they
disagree with a duly enacted statute. Prop. S provides
that no administrative agency has the rieht to declare a
law unconstitutional or to refuse to enforce a law on that
basis unless the determination has been made by an
appellate court.
The question of constitutionality is one that should be
exclusively reserved for the j\ldlcial branch of
government and certainly not left up to the opinion or
whim of agency officials. Laws passed by the Legislature
must be obeyed by all unless they are overturned ln
prope r court procedures.
The Doily Pilot recommtndl a YES vote on Prop. S.
But NO on Prop. 9
PROP. 9 is yet another in a series of attempts to
extract a bit more money for the state by raising various
interest rates. They've consistently been defeated by the
voters. and this one should be too. ll would authorize the
Legislature to adjust interest rates on outstanding state
court judgment awards up to a maximum of 10 percent
per annum. The rate no~ .is constitutionally fixed at 7
percent. This is fair enough and there's no valid reason to
let the Legislature begin tampering with interest rates.
A NO vote on Prop. 9 18 rtt0mmended.
• Opinions expressed In the space above are those of the 0111y Piiot.
Other views expressed on this page ant those of their author. and
artists Reader comment Is Invited Address The Dally Piiot. P.O.
Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92826 Phone (71') 842-4321.
ByLM.BOYD
Did you bear aboul lbe lale
Howard Hughes' germ·proot
car ? A light blue 1964
Chrysler. ll had a $15,000 rir·
filtration system In be
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
If G.H. <Gus, May 11)
wanla to celebrtl&e the
"1peclai date" of 518178
a1atn be can hop over
to London or 1ome
other place where
numerical datH are
wrauen day/month/
year and celebrate
the Of\b of .JUDI. P.S.D. CM_,..,.._ ___ _..
flllllfll .,., ,..~. .. .... ~r--t... ,., ... mn:..~ .........
trunk. And the windows,
brake and pa pedala were
fitted with hermetic Hals. I
Oftte knew another rich man
who feared fenns, obeeuive·
ly. At his board meetings, he
made bis members !Ut at a
distance of about 20 ft!et,-and
ll 1nybody aneeud, he'd 11k
said party to leave. Curious,
isn't lt? M lhouab the need
to fear were lnbom, and bav-
lq c~uered au elae, they'd tumed to aerma.
ClJent aaka .tbe record
namblr ol «*at.bl ln an auto ~t. ,,.., WoUfd be 20. ln 1-. tt wu. On a canromla cleHrt bltlnpy. A car eof·
Uded Wtti a'l-bus. No more
than two people have ever
bffa kWed In-a motQttycle
accld.at, the rweord abowt.
Credtt Claf'4J B6otb Lbce
with this obMrvatton about
tbe womal\ who lllH bJ
btnelt. She bu to do four
tbtnts: ''Drtll lib• ftrl, act like a t.df, thJ:Dls like a IMll,
and Weft l1ka a bol"ll.''
Jack Anderson
Medicaid Rip-offs . Rampant
WASHINGTON -There
seems to be no end lo Uue
Medicaid-Medicare mess. We
have reported. in one tawdry
story after another. ho~ doctors
and dentists have ripped off
federal funds Intended for the
health care or the poor and
elderly.
Here are a rew new Medicaid
scandals we have investigated:
-The ad·
mlnislrator of a St . Louis
hospital
dipped into
M e d icare
funds to pro·
c ure a belly
dancer to
live n up a
staff meeting.
He also
furnished himself with a Lincoln
Continental and a S415·a ·month
apartment.
-A New York dentist found a
unique way to bilk the tax·
payers. The Medicaid law re·
quired proof that dental care
was needed. So he began drilling
cavities In the perfectly healthy
teeth or his patlenta. Then he
used x .rays of the cavities he
h ad created to jusUfy the fillings
he put In.
-A CALIFORNIA doctor
stole Medicaid vouchers from
his patients and used them to re·
pay a loan from another
Medicaid doctor. Then the
second doctor used the vouchers
to legitimize phony bills to the
government.
-A New York pediatrician
gave his neighbor's dog an an·
liblotlc and then charged It to
Medicaid.
-Kentucky officials dis·
covered the cryptic notation
"Fill ~ bill MA 50" posted in
one pharmacy. lnveatlgators de·
termlned it was an instruction to
fill 25 prescriptlont and blll
Medicaid for 50.
-A NURSING home ad·
mlnlstrator In New Jersey billed
M e d I ca Id ro r v e'l e rl nary
charges. boarding expenses and
airline travel for his pets.
Another N e w J ersey ad·
mlnlstrator charged the electric.
gas and sewer bills from his
private residence to the tax-
payers.
-One enterprtein& nuralna
home owner charged· the tax·
payers for the wedding cake.
bridal gown and flowers be
bought for his daughter's wed·
ding. He also passed on the bills
for stable expenses to care for
his horses.
The ~ase oC the beUy dancer.
who ente~ doctors al the
North St. t.ouis G eneral
Hospital. is worth examining In
more d etail. The Medicare
bureaucrat£. ever generous with
the taxpayer's money, advance
runds to hospitals baaed on ex·
pected future occupancy. For
nearly live month• in 1977.
North St. Louis General re-
ceived $79, 000 every two weeks
from Medicare on blind ralth
alone.
IT TURNED out, as one in·
sider disclosed to us, that the
hospital's books "were in lousy
s hape." Tbe doctors and ad·
mlnistrators. meanwhile, were
nvlng It up. Not only was a belt~
dancer brought In ror diversion.
but St. Louis doctors w.me wined
and dined to entice them to
patronize the hospital.
The high living came to an
abrupt end at the beginning of
this year. The hospital, about Sl
millio n ln debt, declared
bankruptcy. Medicare Is now
fifth on the list or creditors wall·
ing to be repaid. One source pre-
dicted ther e'll be nottalng left for
the tnpayers. Yet the advance
Medicare payments could have
been stopped, saving at least
Sl58.000 that was simply lost. Ir
the bureaucrats had bothered l.o
request an audit.
HOSPITAL administrator
David Babnew. who provided
himself with the Lincoln Con·
tinenlal and $415-a-month apart·
ment on top of a ~.ooo annual
salary. explained to our reporter
Josh Levin that the luxurious ac-
commodations were "part or my
contract.'' But he admitted lhat
"In retrospect. they do seem a
bit extravagant." He said the
belly dancer provided "the best
meeting we ever had."
0iu& fAQf CLAIMiOBEA cous1N wrnrrnE REAL, LOWDOWN ON CARTER!''
Footnote: Our reporter Bill
Halamandaris has come up with
the following items charged to
Medicaid: two Cadillacs used by
a nursing home administrator:
stone and gravel delivered to the
home or a head nurse for her
driveway: a complete stereo
and intercom for a private res-
idence: landscaping, carpeting.
drapery and bathroom fixtures
for the homes or medical of.
fi clals . and the repair or a boat
house and swimming pool. as
well as the Installation or a
greenhouse at another private
home.
Nicholas von Hoffman
Property Tax Taxes t he Wrong Pro perty
Is the idea of a property lax
all that bad or have people
pounced down on it because in a
world of expensive and lousy
government services. it's the
easiest tax lo get by the neck
and strangle?
The June 6 California ba llot on
Prop. 13, which would cut back
and limit pro-
perty taxes ln
our largest
state. ha s
been getting
volumes or
national
publicity.
Most of it ta cl tly ac -
cept.a the Idea
tba~ property
t1xes are an unfair burden on
working people. The only quar-
rel wilb Prop. 13 seems to be
that of California's Gov. Jerry
Brown, .-bo believes the cut-
backs its passage would bring in
government services would be
intolerably large.
He himself favors a modified
Prop. 13 which will also be on
the ballot with the result thal no
one having access to a podium is
arguing the case for a property
lax as a major revenue pro-
duce r.
EVEN LIBERALS attack lhe
property tax because they think
lt's regressive; that is, It. takes
Art Hoppe
too much from those least able
to afford it and nol enough from
those who can. But that's not so.
The property tax is only levied
against people rich enough lo
own property. Thal lets out the
poor and. just as important.
younger people jusl starting out
to make money and accumulate
i;avings.
The income tax is strongly
weighted against earners and
for people who already have
made their pile. 'I'he income tax
doesn 'l touch lht: pUe. which is
often owned by non·producing
socially useless possessors of in·
herited wealth: at the same time
the most socially valuable peo-
ple. high wage earners. are
often socked al rates whi ch
border on confiscation.
ONE OF THE problems with
the property tax la that it isn't
applied to intangible property
which means lhal the 1 percent
of the population which owns 70
percent or the nation's corporate
stock sits on this vast hoard of
wealth without paying a dime's
worth of taxes on It.
J oseph Nocera. in an excellent
piece In thi s month's
Washington Monthly <"Surprise:
The Property Tax C.:OuJd be Good
for You">, reminds us that. "ln
1968, the Securities abd· Ex·
change Commi.ssjon rtaure<t in·
tangible property came to S3.9
trillion. which. if taxed at two
percent. could bring in $80
billion ln tax revenues."
Thal 's the kind of property tax
which could permit large reduc·
Hons on the taxes levied against
small homes. One of the reasons
the m lddle income homeowner
is being hurt so badly by proper·
ty taxes Is that his or her proper·
ty is getting taxed when a lot of
other people's property isn't.
NOT ONLY do stocks. which
are truly property because they
are truly ownership shares. skip
by without being taxed, bul so do
the billions in "non-profit" in·
stilulions like schools and
churches. Boston. with half or
more of its land owned by tax·
e xempt institutions. Is a
notorious example.
Richly endowed institutions
which pay their adminbtrators
very_ handsome salaries can cer-
ta!Jily afford to pay taxes for the
services they use. Evea without
a property tax exemption, these
lmtl\utlOM would be left with
many other tu breaks, too
many. consid\!rlng to what
extent t heir services are
rea·erved primarily ror the
benefit and Ule or the well·to-do.
POOR charitable lnatituUom
serving poor peopJe could retain
all or part of their present lax
exemption. Many local junsdac·
l ions already h ave s uch
mechanisms In effect for lower·
income retirees. Those with In·
comes falling below a certain
fi gure are forgiven a portion of
lheir property tax. The circuit
breaker. as this device is called.
makes the property tax yel
more equitable.
Wha l makes it Inequitable
isn't lhe tax itself but the way It
is administered. Tax assess·
ments may rival zoning as a
source or corruption in countJess
communities. Big downtown
businesses frequently enjoy
freeloading at the expense of
hard-working h ome-owning
families. If the same energy
could be devoted to seeing that
the property tax is fairly ad·
ministered as is being s pent on
seeing at repealed, it could be
made to work.
FOR PEOPLE wno haven't
found a way to get efficient and
frugal government, cutttn1 the
water off may seem Uke the only
practical approach. But cutting
government income Is not the
same as making government
more efficient.
The revenues 'ost b y
measures like Prop. 13 will be
recouped by increasing the tax·
es on lbe very people wbo were
supposed to be helped.
'
There's Just One Way t o ·Assure La sting P eace
C.•
• arm both sides over there to the
teeth ln order to insure a Just
and luting peace."
"That makes sense.'' ( said.
"The stronger each side Is, the
more reluctant the other tide
becomes to start a fight."
r .
"Of coune not.•• agreed Mr.
Crannlab. "That's why we aot to
1end our brave American boys
to fiy the llraeli planes. too.
Jimm)' war\ta ralr sides and
nothloll eould be fairer than
that." •• .. We (an\ aend"Ammcana to
n,ht tor both tldla. • l protested.
•'ROW SOT" be -.cl. "U we
can 1end weapoaa to both aides,
we sun can send 10ldltl'I to both
aides. Wit.bout tbole dirty Com·
mies, It would be a rnl clean
ftpt, no klck.tal. no blllnt, no
1ou1lu. Our peerall would
love lt. llemember tbe l~ ..,.
leatned lA VtNall\ ~ n.vet ftaht
ecrawny little Iota t-lilrbo 40n't
fi•ht Uk• "'clo ... .,·n•t'I w.." &~ed.
"And nobad1 fllbtl more like
we do than we do." he 11ld eo-
thu1tntlealb'. "Wb•t'• ~
we'd wtnl Tb1nJr bow that WO\lld
lilt our spirits. We haven't won a
war la 32 years.·•
"Maybe ao.'' I aatd.
"Boy, wbat a popular war, botb over here and over theft.
And. ~t. there's no reaaon we
couldn't provide tbe same
ae"lce to our other allies we've
been anntnc to the teeth to keep
the peace -IDd.la and Pakistan,
Greece and Turkey ••• •·
uaoLDnt"Icrted. "Wecan't
10 traipsing all over the world
rilbUng other =e·• wan for Ulein. For ooe , ft cou.ldD 't
afford Jt."
"You're rlcht," 1altl Kr.
Cranald1 ... AD tboM ahlolu.:"
thole Iona •'WIY Unee, aD t e Am.mean bof'i'DOt bet.a able to
1et bome oe a week-end pus
That '1 wia1 1 WI sl!tf1nl · • •" "Ob, 110 I" I crtecC
·•over berel" warbled 11r.
Crannlch. "Over here • • • 0
. .
•
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,t
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·-
NATIONAL
'Living !s Hazardous'
Da ngers Lurking in Typical Da y Detailed
By Che Aaoeiated Preu
Warning: Livine can be
hazardous to your health.
Oraoilseems. I!youbelieve
everythlnayou read an~ hear.
it ls baril to ima1inie bow
anyonesurvtves.
Consider just a rew of tFte
dangers lurking in a typical
day. <Related.story PageC3J
WAKE VP WITH a cup of
coffee. But too much caffeine
ia bad ror you. It causes birth
defect.a ln animals, says the
Center for Scleoce in the
Public Interest. And who can
afford coffee anyway?
Take a vitamin. Careful.
More than 4,000 cases of
vitamin poisoning are report-
ed every year, according to
the National Clearinghouse
for Poison Control Centers of
the Food and Drug Ad-
ministration.
Bacon and eggs Cor
break fut? Do not take safety
ror granted. The government
want.a to sharply reduce the
amount of $Odium nitrite used
to cure ba~n because nitrite
can combine with other sub-
sl a nces to form cancer-
caustngagents.
"B ACO N ," SAYS
Michael Jacobson, of the
Cente r for Science in the
PubUc Interest, ''is nothing
but UWe strips of fat laced
with nitrosamines. The fat
prom otes heart disease,
America's No 1 health pro-
blem. Tile nitrosamines pro-
mote cancer, the No 2 health
Pl'Oblem." '-....._ .. Just eus. thelc--Wail Egg
yolka coa«1ln cholesterol and
high levels d cholesterol are
bad foryourbearl
A QUICK CIGAR ETTE
b e fore showering?
Remember the cancer warn-
ings!
OK, there is nothing wrong
with cleanliness, is there?
Only sometimes. The FDA
wants warning labels on bub-
ble baths because, it says , ,
some who use them get rashes
and itching.
Be careful stepping into the
tub. Twenty-one million
Americana are Injured In
home accident.a every yeer,
says the Consumer Product
Safety Commission. And if the
water is too bot, you may
waste energy.
BACK IN THE bedroom to
dress. Stop before you spray.
Aerosol products containing
chlorofluorocarbons may be
damaging the earth's at·
mosphere and tbe govern·
ment bas taken steps to ban
them.
Perhaps you are female. On
lbe pllL Read the required
warning label that tells you ex~
ceas doses or estrogen can
cause cancer.
Ofr to work. Careful or that
automobile. Does it pollute? Is
your seat belt fastened? Drive
carefully. The National safety
Council says 72.3 percent of all
fatal accidents happen within
25 miles of home.
SAFE ATTRE office. Safe?
Nearly a mllllon Americans
may be expoged to cancer·
causing subst ances where •
they work, according to the
National Institute of Occupa·
tional Safety and Health. An
additional 20 million workers
face possible dangers from
everytbi.ng from asbestos to
noise and other pollutants.
Between 1,500 and 2,000
chemicals are known or sus-
pected as cancer-causing
agents.
Nervous? Try chewing
gum. Not with sugar; that can
cause cavities. Lunch time. Skip the three
martinis. President Cuter
doea not •PPJ'OVe. Anyway,
lots ol alcohol, over a long
time.._,can damage the liver,
brain and heart, says the Na-
tiODal Ceateroa Drug Abuse.
FAST·FOOD, 'JUEN. Wait
a minute. Just this week, it
was suggested that certain
plethods of cooklna ham·
burger may -just MAY.
mind you -be dangerous.
Four Canadian doctors say
some people may be allergic
to one i n g r edien t in
McDonald's sauce, although
McDonald's says there ls no
evidence the Ingredient is
•'eit her dangerous or
harmful."
Perhaps a salad. Perhaps.
Residues of a pesticide,
DBOP, sometimes found on
carrots, radishes, cabbage
and cucumbers are "an un·
reasonable risk," claims lbe
E nvironmental Protection
Agency.
THIS IS ONE way lo reduce.
Another, the liquid protein
... diet, may be dangerous, FDA
says. It is checking. Watch
arllCically s weetened soft
drinks. Large doses of sac-
charin cause bladder cancer
in male rats.
A stroll in the sun should
t a ke your mind orr your
stomach. Careful! Ultraviolet
radiation from the sun is the
main cause of skin cancer.
There is no refuge at the
beauty parlor. Preliminary
data show that two chemic~ls
in permanent hair dyes "are
pos iti ve cancer-causing
agents In rats and mice, •.o says
the N ationaJ Cancer Institute.
You might as well 10 home.
MORE THAN HALF our
time is spent there, says the
HQusehold Pollutants Gulde
published by the Center for
Science in the Public Interest.
Some of the dangers: aerosol
s prays, c leaners, insect
killers and repellents, palllts
a nd solvents, inks, spot re-
movers and on and on.
Need a tranquilizer? Or at
least an aspirin? Each ye1r,
some aoo,ooo Americans are.
bQSpitallzed with severe drug
reacUoos.
Time ror dinner. Ute the
microwave oven. Unlril lt has
been found to be leaking ex-
cessive radiation,
GlveuplDdac>to bed.
AS YOU DRIFT off, ponder
one more statistic. It may
cheer you!
In 1900, when-we knew of
none of these dangers, the
average life expectancy in the
United St.ates was 47.3 years,
according to the Cen sus
Bureau. Today, it 15 more than
70yean.
,
This set has everything you need
to start playing backgammon.
Whether you're a beginner or an old pro at
this popular game. this is the set for you.
Its slim contemporary styling is expertly
crafted of rugged vinyl, its contrasting
• stripes are in handsome black and tan
You'll enjoy taking it to the ~each or a
picnic. It's a perfect companion to while
away hours when traveling, too. Who know?
You may just meet a fellow enthusiast.
Ours alone by Reiss In Stationery
19.99
Reg. $35
---
DAILY PILOi
-r I •
•
St••.W.
Former U .S .
diplomat A veriU
J.rarriman and •
hi s w i fe will
represent Presi·
dent Carter at
the funeral or
former
Australian
Prime Minister
Robert Menzies
on Friday.
. •
Thursday. May 18 1978
'It' Ont Out'
Former
Congressman
Wilbur D Mills.
68. says he did
no t l eave
pohtacs because
of drinking. "I
was absolutely
tired and worn
o ut . I quit
politics because
I was llred of
doin~ wh at l was doing.··
• •
DAIL v ft!LOT A 7
,........-as ~ -Unbeatable gifts! seen on
Realistic® hi-f i Values national
TV---
Ask for the same stereo hi-fi receiver that Peter Nero
owns. for grads. newlyweds or yourself! He's impres-
sed by the precision engineering and live perfor·
mance sound; says the STA-78 is "right on the
money". We built it with FM muttng, switchable de -
emphasis for Oolb~ FM. plus other ~alityfeatures.
Get sound "pros" prefer ... get the Realistic STA· 78.
now cut 42% at The Sha~ I
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95
STA-78
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'
w.a..•m ...... c... ...
~TOM llACh ..... _ ... .... .... .._ ... ..
LM4IMA 11.ACH ... " ............
LMaMA .... MUICrow,_~
N9lleON ""° " .................
Molt"'"" alto ave1t• 11
ftadlO~
0ea11r1 L* tor 1t11a
1191' If! VOW D U\.811t ~----~ PRICES ~y VAAY AT IHOMDuAL S'fOlif.S
'Q11een.~ Dies
She Weighed 826 LIM • •• ~AMPA. na. fAP> -Baby Francea vo,ea, at
• pounds tt.9 ·~ of lite Fa& Ladies, ' wu lald to reat iO a ah.roud 1Pade with 11,_., yards of
rrtlty pink Jace in • doub ... wlde pine box.
"Baby Francea." u abe was known for 2$
years on the camlval circuit, where she was billed
aa tbe world'• fattest woman. died May 6 of the nu
at apS7.
FOa REil BURIAL, THE family ordered a
iant metal casket from Pennaylvanla. But It never arrived, and substituted a pine box that a
cousin nailed together.
Lined wtth plush white satin, the makeshift
casket was covered with pink velvet and trimmed
with silver bandies for the 16 pallbearers. ,,,,
The pallbearers were never used. The family
decided on a graveside service, fearing the
handles might pull out of the wood.
BABY l"RANCES WAS BUJpED 75 feet from
the grave of her daughter. Darlene, who weighed
402 pounds at the time of her death a few-years ago
at the age of 20 .
Her cousin. the Rev. C.S. Hope, said in his
eulogy that "her heart was as big as she was." .~ .........
'BABY FRANCES' DEAD AT 57
1ter He•rt W•• aa B1g As She WH'
NATIONAL I LOCAL
TydS, Jenkins Tops
Clemente Horwrs Netters
Chuck Tyus of Laguna Niguel
and Art Jenkins of San Clemente
won the m en's "A ," <topl
divlaloo in finals of the San
Clemente doubles tennis tourna·
ment, sponsored by the city
r~reation program.
"We had a ere al turnout for
the tournament. both In terms or
players and those who just want·
ed to watch ... said Steve Judd.
recreation co·ordinator. "We
have alw11ys said that program~
which get a good response will
be repeated. The tennis touma·
ment looks like a 'must' Cor 04(Xl
year."
Other winners in the city's
firs t doubles tournament in·
eluded:
-BRIAN BASS and Sean
Hunter. both of San Clemente.
runners up In the men's "A"
division. -Terry Graham and Del
Weist. both or San Clemente.
winners in the men ·s "8 "
Publication
llil8 LB Men
dlv1sion. with Jay Olsen and
Harold Tanner. als o of San
Clemente. runners up
-Fred DeSota and Bob
Mullar. or Mission Vl8JO. Wln·
ners 1n the men's ·•c" dlv1s1on.
with Lff Kieasling and 8111
Cope. of San Juan Capistrano.
runners up,
81 .. 100 Loot Gone
In Toro Burglary
Property valued by the victim
at Sl.110 was t.Qen from an El
-'l'"'Oro home b)' buralare whose
method of entry ta unknown to
Orange C«mty •beriff'a om~,.
DepUlia •aid the theft of a
televi.aion set, 11 radio, a
calculator. a typewriter and
ca.ah wu reported by teacher
Jeannette G. Hall. 29. of 22021
Lakeland Drive. She was at
work at the time.
-DEE B&UMMETT itnd
Moni Megery. ot San Clemente. winners in the women·.i "& ·
dlvisioq. wttb Gretchen Gleason
and Joyce Taylor. a!ao of San
Clemente runners up. (There
was no Women 's "A" chvlsion in
the tournament.,
-Dianne Wilken and Gloria
P a tt e r son . of s .. n Juan Capistrano., winne rs in U1t.
women's "C .. d1vis1on. with
Gloria Powell and Carol Carlson.
of San Clemente. runners up.
-A.RT JENKINS of San
Clemente, and Toni Oehler. of
Laguna Nlauel. wtnne.rs in the
mixed "A·B" dlvtsioq. with Dick
and Sylvia Foreman. of San
Clemente, runnen up.
-Ernie Schermer and Frap
Ru sk. of Mission Vlejo. winner.>
in the mixed "C·D .. division.
with 81U and Carol Koski. or San
Clemente. rwmers up.
he Guinness Book of World Records once
cal d her "the closest approach yet to the
spb cal woman" and said she bad lived longer
than any other penon over 800 pounds. TIJe record
book says the fattest woman ever recorded
weighed about 880 oounds. .. , ,Atty. Gen. Surpri8ed Two Laguna Beach
men have been selected
for inclusion in the 1978
edition of Outstanding
Young M~ of America.
DIAMONDS • GE/ffSTO'IWES
Jewels by. 1osephs Is searching tor diamonds and
gemalones from pnvate tndivtduals and estales. Careful
examination and evaluation by our experts. KiglleSt
pnc89 paid. Call 540-9066 10-9 daily, Saturday 1o.6.
Sunday closed Ask tor Betty Grace Of Frank VandefWall
l
BABY FllANCES WAS IUST over 5 feet tall,
had a 73-lnch waist, and 64-incb calves. Her arms
were 31 inches around. Her btps, whieb she called
her "merry.go-round," measured 7 feet, 4~ inches
around.
She was born weiablng 6 pounds, 2 ounces, the
smallest or five children. But she caught whopping
cough and diphtheria before her first birthday, and
that caused malfunction ofber pituitary gland.
In the first griide she weighed J90 pounds.
At age 14, on a strict diet ol lettuce and water, she gained five pounds a week.
DUUNG A ONE·DAY FASI' with.ca doctor
present for the 24 hours, she gained two pounds. 11
After high school graduation, she was offered
a spot in a carn.lvaJ midway fat show in 1953. She
weighed S80 oodnds at the time.
Once, when Baby Frances was sick, she was
taken to a hospital on the roof of an automobile
because she wouldn't fit in the ambulance. She
. was granted a divorce outside a courthouse
1 because she had trouble getting in the door. When
1 she traveled by airplane. she bad to be lifted into
' the plane on a hydraulic lift.
' SHE WOULD CHUCKLE AS she recalled the
l iPc1dents.
1 Once she put on a bathing suit and went into a
I hotel pool.
1 "They had to drain the pool to get ber out,"
' her daughter said. ''She laughed and laughed
1 :ibout that."
She leaves her third husband, Frits, three of
· her s\x children and nine granddllldren. Two
children died at early ages of maladies not re1at-
' ing to weight. Her surviving children are normal
, weight.
1i~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--a
• !
i
> % t'
SLACISI e
JICKEISI i
VESTSI i
p!
4"
The F•lous An1els figtrt Fit Now ~ I REDUCED TO CLEAR
T•urs.
Friday sa1urc..y
ONLY
> %
11SLACKS11 • •
.... Nici ........ :. ·20 ..... 11· ·I
IK. PllCI .•..•..••• ' 19 •••• S 16• .
.... l'llCl ••••.....• 1 18 ••• .'15". i
"JACKETS"
116. PllCI • . . . ·'50 s2 5 M ·i
.... NICI ••..•.•••• '45 •.•• s2s• !
"VESTS" I I .... fllll;I... . • .. .. • • .. • • .. .,.. i
.~·EltR.A SPECIAL 11
•T911AS .. ,.
CASUAL
S~CISR-.120
Martin Stanley
SALT LAKE CITY (AP> -Utah Attorney
General Robert B. Hansen haa. been 1uapended
from the State B'U' for fat.lure U> ~bis '12$ an·
nual membenhip dues, says ~lationbecutive Direc\()r Dean W. Sheffield. ' • ,
Hansen said he knew ~ of the bar'S ac·
tion and that be had sel\\'I\ c~ tor ~ to cover
Roberts, Jr., 265 LeBega ~~~~~~~~~ St., and Dennis Roger'"". McCluq. 2683 Victoria C•ll 642-5678. iewels by ioseph
the cost ot a license. ·
Drive, were honored by Put• few words
the publication. 10 work for o&A.
Now UnlUld gtves you e.n aJ1-w1debod;y tleet to Chicago a.nd New York.
tvecy ~. tJVery rught, every nonatop flight to Chloaeo and New York 18 a W\deoocy DClO or 747
Now t.nore'e o~l~\?08 w~ to fly the trien.dzy ek.lee to both
ChJ,oago and NfW: YorK, tn all·w1debocy oomfo1'1i.
Yfe bWlt t.he l&rgeet a.1rl1ne 1n the tree world. Around you. For
lnform.&tton and reservations, oall your Tr.vet Agent. Or oall United
at 837-7621. Partners tn Travel wtth Western Intem&t.ton&I Hotels n. .t.maricMm ....,.,_ Ou4. Don't 1Mft )W wt\boa.t tt:-
trse Jt. for your UnJted Airlines ttokete, fiil•iiiiiiiiiiii•il hotsls, mea.11 and rental oars. or Ju,&t abOUt M.Yt.h1nB elae you noed on yQUt trtp. lf you.
don't have an Amer1Can BxPtees Ce.rel, oall
(800) &28-8000 fOr p.n applioatton.
•
' t
... Leave
7:46 a.m. (747)
10·20 a.m. (DCHO)
l :lOp.m. (IXHO)
~16 p.m. (IXHO)
12:16a.m. (747t
-. .
South Coast Plaza• 3333 Bnsrt>I. Costa Mesa• 5.o.9066
Arctve
1:30p.m.
4.16 p.m.
7·00p m.
966p.m.
6.66a.m.
t
S:30 a. m < 0010>
8.46am.(DC-10l
12:00noon (747)
3:00p.m (DC·lO)
1(>.00 p.m (747)'
. .
4 36p m. (N)
6·00p m. (J)
816 p.m . (J)
10.66 p.m. (N)
656e..m. (J)
. . '
I
'I
LOCAL/ OBfTUARIES
•'TbiJ tS matt than aphjda. I think It has aomethlna lo do
witb the econocny."
CCC to Feature
i KellyLange
Kelly Lange. anchorwoman for KNBC News.
and Toni St. James, consultant for the California
State Employment Development Department, will
be the featured speakers when Coastline Com-
munity College presents a Non-Traditional
Careers Fair from 8 a.m. to 3:30 p.m . Saturday at
the South Coast Plaza Hotel in Costa Mesa.
Topics to be covered include: "The Hidden
Job Market. .. ·'Women in Management and Ad·
ministration." "Non· Traditional Careers for
'Men," and "New Areas in Public Service Op·
' port unities."
There is no charge for the workshop but there
is a $10 fee for an optional luncheon. The event is
open to the public
Further information may be obtained by call·
ing Coastline Community College at 963--0811, ext.
256.
For the Record
MISSION COMMUNITY
HOSl'ITAL
""" 1, lf1f Mr. •n<I Mrs MICllHI !>Jtw<•Yk. Ml•·
slol\ v 1e10. boy ""'It S, 1f71 Mr end Mrs Ml(IWel ~dlQen, !>.,.
Juel' Oplstr-. oirl .,, .. ,, "" Mr. end Mn. S.tlncler Gu4•11. Mis ,...,., Viejo, boy
""'" It, "" Mr. •n<I Mi's.. HeMlll Jolw<IMHI, Mis· \Jon Vie Jo. boy
Mr. •nd Mrs.. ROOmrl Teylor. El TMO Qlrl '
"-'1 I IS, 1'7'
Mr. •nd Mn. •-11\d Cells. Minion Viejo. girl
• Mr. •n<I Mn. Mlclle~I Gr"n-
S.n J..e,. C'Ac>lstr-boy •
Mr. encl Mt1 Slev.n He11n1ngsen Minion Viejo. boy •
ll!r •. •nd Mri. Jolvl Hou<len, s.n J...,,. C.1>11treno, girl
a...111•.1•11
Mr. •nd """ Wllllem OrU1. Moulon \11ejo. boy
..... 11. "" Mr. end Mrs Rocherd Anunoen.
trvtr.e. Qlrl
Mr end Mts Me<ArthUr "°"'•"· Sen Juan C.O.str-. 9111
Mr and Mr\ Ro09r Wtlllleur. Mis
SIOll V le jo, boy
... 1., "" Mr. •nd Mrs AnlhOftV Cntenr. Mis soon Vlelo. ooy
Mr and Mrs. Mkl\Hl Jones, MIMlon VleJo, boy .. ,,,,,,,.
Mr. end Mrs David Farr MIHkln
VltlO, boy
Mr •nd M .... MICbMI Grall!, MINHlft
lllt10 boy
Mr and MIS OWISloPl\4tr 'iOiJll Ins.
Minion lllelO, 91rl
"""" Jt, 1'71 Mr end Mr\ Fr-ftek KlnQdon.
Laguna Hiii•. bOy
Mr and Mrs. James Llnda~I
Toro, girl
Mr and Mr~. R-t MlsNca, Sen
Clemente,bov
Mr end Mrs. a.nJitmon Smith, El Toro, girl
Mr. end Mrs. Richard Stewart,
Legune Niguel, gl,,
Mr •r>d Mrs. OllYld Weever. MIHkln
lllelo. olrt
"'"' :n. 1'71 Mr. •nd Mrs. Het1MI """"·Minion Viejo, bo11
Mr. afld Mo. ~MC• WelVmann MINlon Viejo, 9111 '
Mr. Ind Mn. RIC.Nrd Wlllte, San
Jue.. Olplstr-. boy
Mr Ind ,,,,,,... Jof¥t W•llls, Mlulon vi.10. glrl -.ntn.ma
Mr. end Mn. Robert Pnlltt, Ml-
lloeJo. t 1r1 -.n1n,me Mr end Mo. Scott E<llner, San
c1-,.t•.9lr1 Mr •nd Mr5. Steplle<1 Rldln~r. LagunaN..,..,gu1 ""1tts,1'71 Mr end Mn. Da\rld Read. uaun. N19uel.91r1
Mr. end MIL )OM Vr~rn, El Toro. boy •II», lf7t
Mr •ncl Mrs. R-&ewridge, Sen J U41n C•P•Str-, glrl
•H %7, 1f1t
Mr eno Mrs. SleWt'I Cr•'11. Mission Viejo, boll
Mr. •ftel Mi's. I<_.,, E~. Ml6-
slon Vlelo. boy
Allnl •• "" Mr. -Mn. Tilomas Flournoy 111 El Toro bov •
Mr. eri4 Mrs. MICllHI Herper, Mh·
slon Vie lo, oov
Mr and Mrs Patrock VounQ. Et Toro. glrl
Beotia Notire•
McCl.UltO !,urvove~ by 2 daUQfltef"S, Stlarr1 H.
LAUltENCE McLO.UltG. t10n1 lfl CQ<'y ol CMte Mesa, end Shella H.
Leav.n...,,,11. K-on s..ptembfr WldOe ot Huntll>Qlon B«ec11. son. l<•vln
1', ltlJ -pesMd -•Y on Mav 17 Lew ot Tu"•· ()tr.le., 1 brotharJ,
1t71. R•sldenl of Newport lla«tl ...d Patrick Herl of o.nwr and TtlOmes
Coron• Clel Mar, C• tor 11 veers Herl of Sen ~'*'· l sisters, Marte
beto ... mewing lo Hemet where ,.. 8rovstr., and Celllerlne Schlemen, bolh lllfff tor the peit 4 ,,..,. SYrvlWd b'I of Denver R_., wlll I» held Thurs-
"'' wife 8etll, -brOI~ Ted. of cMly May II, 1 lO PM 84111 8rO.Oway
L••ned. l<anws. -slst~ Jeanie Chepel •ncl Mass of Ille Christian McClur~ of Kensa• City, Mlnourl 8url•I Fr~y Ma~O AM et St.
Funer•I arranotrnenu are pen<11119 at Joechlm CetllOlk t11Urc11 with Father Sumpton Fun.rel Home 1,. Fort Tom G•,,_, offlclellt\g. tntemMftl at
L.Nveowoiltl. I<-Good Shepherd Ctmeter•. 8•11
MA IT 8roadwey Monvary di rtCIOf'I.
t.OUIS W HART, r.-ildMI of Coste MIU.EU Mn•. PHHCI •w•y Mey , •• 1'71 BERNARD RAY MILLERS, resl·
dent ot Huntlllflon e.acll, peswel -,----------~•way Mey 1S, 1'7t, S.....1"9d by wife . 8erb••• of Hitntlngton Beecl>.
llUllOADWAY
MOln'UAIY
110 Broadway
Costa Mesa
642·9150
SMfTM.tvn&L.uMI
WISTCUllf CHAPIL
427 E. 17th St. Coeta..._. • &4M888
Sant• Ana 0iape1
618 N. Broadway
8MtaAna • &47-4131
flllKFAMflY
CO&.OttlA&. NMHAl
HOMI
7901 Bolsa Ave
Westminster
893--3525
PAC9'1C ¥llW
..-.OllA&.PAll
c.meterv Mortuary
Chapel
3600 P1cmc Vin DrM
Newi>Oft Callfomta
644-2100
..._COIMICIC
WOllTVAllll Laouna Beach
494-941&
L90un1 Hiiis
788-0033
San Juan C.p11tr1no
49&-1778
IALTl-.. C*
fllllCALMONI
Corona det Mar 873-94!0 eo.taM ... 6'&-24M •
brolllen , Harr11 Miiian of South Get•
and D~ld A. MIJl~s Of Downey,
deutfl•• 1<•""-L09M1 of K-.... Kelley Miiian OI Huntlnvton S.a<h, sons Duene Miiiers of HuntlngtOft
Buch. Claude C.sta1no. USMC. Mark Cestalng ot We'lttlntton, >
fl'll'lektllldren. F-r•I ankfl wlll
be S.t11rday Ma, 20. I PM at Oowne11 Zlelek Femlly MortMf'V Qla1191. Vla-lte Uon Tllur-y May 11, 1 to t PM.
oo.,n.,, Zr•••k Fa,.,.1111 Mortuerv dtrec: tors.
Ehewhere ·
LONDON CAP) -
Lord Selwyn·IJo~ 73,
British foreign secretary
during the Brillsh-
French·l&raell invasion
of the Suez Canal in
1956, dJed Wednesday at
his home in Oxfordshire.
ROME CAP) -Gof·
fredo Alesaandrbal, 73,
who directed a series of
Italian ft1m blta during tbe 1930s and '40s in-
cfudtn1 ''La Segretaria Prtvata0 (The Private
Secretary>, died Tues-
day.
GLENDALE' (AP>
Stuntwoman Doro&lay
Cobara Beep, 13, died
Monday. Uocltr the
narli• DotUe Obbur11;
Mrs. Heep performed
horseback stunts ln
Hollywood westerns for
Gary Coope,. and Joel
McCr•L
Thur9day, May 18, 1978 DAILY PILOT .4•
SC Park. Expansion Seeil
Director Says Resitkms Want Facilities
8y ANNE COOPER
Of IM De.II., l"llet Sl.Mf
Park development will
continue lo accelerate in San
Clemente, with developers' fees
available for construction and
recreation-oriented residents
demanding improved facilities.
This was the assessment made
this week by the city's retiring
par.ks and recreation dlrector.
Arhe Waterman.
"THE WHOLE area ls in·
volved in an upsurge of parks
and rooreatlon activity." said
Waterman. 62, whose retirement
becomes effective Jan. 1.
Waterman said he thinks San
Clemente res idents exhibit
higher expectations of the parks
and recreation department
because they have more lime for
recreation than before.
The city currently has one
park under constrJctaon.
another abou~ to be developed
and others figured lnto plans ror
major back co untr y
development. These new parks
will be in addition to six existing
city parks and a generous park.
beach and golf course legacy
from San Clemente's founder.
Ole Hanson.
ONE OF THE prope rties
donated by Hanson to the
citizens of San Clemente was the
beach club and swimming pool,
located at 106 W. Ave. Pico.
overlooking the city's North
Beach. '
A recent suggestion by a city
consultant that the beach club
s wimming pool be converted to
another use raised vigorous
objections from the community.
A petition protesting the
consultant's propos)ll. signed by
t ,!14 voters , may have
mrtuenced the City Council m
April lo scrap the conversion
idea.
"WE ARE DEALING with a
concerted. very well oreanlzed
lobby for parks and recreattonal
services," said ClLy 1'anager
Gerald Weeks. "Tbeie is simply
a greater demand."
Weeks said the trend in the
city is away from s maller.
"pocket" parks to larger.
1'11lllti·use parks. A case in point,
he said. is San Gorgonio Park.
planned in the Shoreclifrs area,
just seaward of the San Diego
Freeway.
The new park. co061sting of 20
acres. will tnclude baseball
diamonds. soccer fields.
climbing apparatus. play areas.
handball courts and picnic
areas. including facilities for
group picnics.
RECREATION PROGRAMS
are also in strong demand in Sao
Clemente. which had no or-
ganized city recreation until
winter. 1976.
At tlle ••lrmce to Udo ••
MewpOrtleada
' b1\;·
Gant Summer Shirts
1n plOtds, chocks.
solids ond oicford cloth
GANT
Open Sunday 11.4
3423 '(la L ido
Via Lido Plazl -f57&-0321
.. spring Suit Sale
Toke yw pick from our fine
selection of pin-stripes, ploids
or solid colors.
M Slas.$210 $1 b9 "
AM SlbS-$175 s I 49
MINS nous 3467 VIA UOO. NEWPORT BEACH
Enrollment in city recte~
classes is currently runntbe
a bout l ,000. wilb mod~st
registTBtion fees supportine tbe program.
·'The recreation pl'{>gram hp.
grown rapidly with · tbe strong
community voice we hJve here
ln San Clemente for Jnore and
more activities," ,said
Waterman. "I 'tp tooking
forward to enjoyln,g some· of
these things myself, now that'l11
be retlred.." .
WATERMAN 8AJ& bls reth-e.
ment has been carelqlly planned
for some time and did not come
at this time because of any city
staff related problem.
"I've always said I'd work tor
tbe city 20 years." ht said. "and
that's what I'll hJlVe done."
Slide Kills Girl _
TOKYO CAP> -A landslide
s wallowed up a central
Japanese mounta.ln village lo·
day. killing a 14-year.old girl.
police said. Nine persons were
listed as missing.
Reunite tor Tour ...........
Peter. Paul and Mary, popular singing
group or the 60s. will join for a tour or 17
U.S . cities and to make two record
albums this summer. The trio have gone
separate ways the last seven years.
Tellahow
.10 plant It
or how
to fix lt
Saturd•r•
In the
DAILY PILOT
Tuned to the tempo
of Mewport •••
Saturday, May 20
9:0fM:30
P•t=ii. ExlllMtecl ly Local Artists
I• Via Udo Plaza Patio
~orfq
'-.. ~ For the art lover if l~ ~ WTth discerning taste~l-.;t'
~ Via Lido Plaza
3439 Via LtdO. N.B. 673-5430
The ~· in Investment paintings. Art effects from
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Open Dally
. AJ• OM.YPLOT ~.-11.•178 • ORANGE COUNTY
UCI Prof
HonQredfor
Work Study
<;aunty Urged to Collect Bills
A UC lniDe Pt'Oltaar who h:
made• looa·tenD stvdJ ot why and bow pe!ople work bu been
elected a Fellow of th e
AmerlcaJS AsaoclaUon for the
Advancement ot Science.
Dr. Robert Dubin of Newport
Beach. professor of admlnllltra·
Uon and aocloloey in the UCI
graduate school of admlnistra·
Uon, was cited for his conUibu·
lions t.o lndustrial sociology and
for bis research on ad·
mlnlstraUve processes. He ls
among 195 aclentlsta ID all fields
elected u fellows tb1t year.
TR£ AMOCIAftON, founded
ln 1848. la lbe largest general
scle nllflc organtzallon
reprnenlinl all fields of
science. Election to It ls ac·
corded scholars who have pro·
duced a body of work on behalf
or the advancement of science
that is scientifically dist·
inguished or socially highly
significant.
Dubin, a member or the UCI
faculty since 1969, has made a
25-year study of the nature of
work and the motivation for
working in the United States,
Great Britain and Germany. He
has concluded that less than ooe-
fourth of American industrial
workers llave a central life in·
terest in their work; Jess than
half of ertcan executives and
managers find their jobs to be a
fulfilling life interest.
·'The vast majority of people
who work are simply interested
in making a living -the nature
of their jobs is secondary,"
Dubin said
ELECTED AS FELLOW
RObert Dubin
By GAil\' GMHVILLE °' _ _..,... ....
A team temporarUy ».salgned
by county covemment to collect
unpaid medical bUta a"l UCI
Medical Center should become a
permanent flxluro, according to
the Orange County G!'and Jury.
The bill collecting team was
assigned to the medical center
when the UCI School o( Medicine
t-0ok over lts ownersllip and
operation from county govern·
ment July 1, 1976.
AT THAT TIME, there were
$52.7 million worth of unpaid pa·
tient bills outstanding. al. the
medical center.
The county's sale agreement
with the unJverslty called for the
county to collect ttie unpaid ac·
counts.
OC Switches Finns
For Bond Analysis
Orange County Supervisors have switched financial consulting
firms. but not financial consultants.
Last month, supervisors hired White, Weld and Co. Inc., of Los
Angeles, in an effort to ralae the county's AA bond raUng and Im·
prove its borrowing power.
But the firm was acqulred"),y
Merrill Lynch Pierce Fenner
and Smith Inc. and the seven
financial consultants who were
to assist the county moved to
Paine, Webber, Jackson, Curtis, me.
COUNTY TAX Collector·
Treasurer Robert Citron said
the Paine Webber firm would of.
fer the help of the same seven
lndlviduals and perform the con·
suiting work for the same $19,500
fee.
For that sum, the firm is to
draw up a p1'06pectus designed to convince Moody's Investors'
Service of the county's sound
credit status in the hope or rais·
Ing its boodratingtoAAA.
The consultant also ls to sub-
m It data to the U.S. comptroller
of the currency to make the
county eligible for loans from
national banks.
quent bills. When th<lee effort.>
fall. the county collection team
steps in. '
Grand Jury: Keep Up Efforts
For U.CI Medical Center Acconllnc to the 1r1nd jury.
the county col*ton often go
over around already plowed by
significant and costly turnover the ulli~ tearn. County government continues
to bear the responslblUty for col·
lecling the medical bUla of pa·
llenta treated on tt.a behalf at the
medical center.
of collector personnel. -
CONSEQUENTLY, THE
grand Jury said, the county
_,hould plan on making the col·
Jection team, a 33-member unit,
a permanent riittUl'e at UCI
Medical Center.
Giving the collect.ors perma·
nent status will help r elieve
what the jury described as a
That turnover is partially the
result of some employees flnd-
ing permanent jobs, the grand
jury noted.
THE JURY'S REPORT ~so
mentioned a duplication of col·
lection effort ornmpaid -bills ac·
cumulated since the university
takeover of the medical center.
Under terms or t.be sale agree-
ment. the university makes the ,
rtrst eflbrt al collecting delin·
BY THE 'IOIB the county col·
lectora set their hands on tbe un·
paid accouribl, the paUe.n\ may
have been dlllcharged ror seven
to nine months, the grand jury
noted.
fts report, baaed on an audit
by Arthur Youn1 & Co .. suggests
there may be more efficiency in
eliminating the university col·
lectlon effort and having th~
county assume responsibility
from lhe outset.
llllilb
1•111111
MAY IPICIAL 01' THI MONTH
A delicious three-egg OO'l81ette made with Spires· special bleno of Spanish
Sauces (not too hot) and seMld with hashed b<w/n potatoes. choice ot
toast. btJtter and jam. Sl!RVl!D 24 HOURS St.51
& &
Pemnw R .. taurant•
IAVINE
MacArthur Blvd. at SD. Fwy.
COSTA MESA
3125 Harbor Blvd. Last Chanee
Aid Applications Due
THE COMPTROLLER'S --:;::===============================:::--permlsslon ls required for loans
from national banks because of
The Federal Disaster Assistance Administration
is providing a final opportunity for Orange County
disa ster victims to file claims for storm damage as-
sistance through the Small Business Administration
and Housing and Urban Development.
It is Friday from 9 a .m. to 6 p.m. in the county's
Office of Emergency Services, Room B-103. al 625
North Ross Street, Santa Ana.
This final visit will provide Orange County resi-
dents with a last chance to file for assistance due to
the severe Febnt~ry storm, officially declared a dis·
aster to enable Victims to qualify for low interest
SBA and HUD loans.
More information is available from Bert Turner.
program coordinator for the county's OES. at
834·2323
Panel to Examine
Portrayal of Jews
Michael Medved. co-author of "What Ever Happened to the
Class of '65? ,'' will join a panel of scholars and media represen·
tatives at UC Irvine Saturday to examine how the American media
p6rtrays Jews.
A panel talk will begin at 7:30 p.m. featuring Herb Brin, editor
of a Jewish newspaper; Rhonda Kachuck, an English professor at
LaVeme College, and Alan Zeltzer, director of tbt! media depart·
ment at CaJ State Fullerton.
The program, which will also include a talk oo the TV mini·
series. "Holocaust," wlll be followed at 8:30 p.m. by Medved 's lec-
ture. The program, sponsored by the UCI Jewish Student Union·
Hillel, costs $2. Reservations may be made by calling 752-8275.
changes in federal regulations
prompted by New York City's
financial woes.
Citron said the AAA rating
could save the county $150,000 in
interest when it borrows an
estimated $30 million later this
year.
The flDlds are borrowed an·
nually in varying amounts to
finance county services through
a so-called dry period before
property tax paymentJI arrive.
Buses Carry
1.6 Million
Orange County Transit Dis·
trict buses carried 1.6 million
passenger fares during April, a
7.3 percent increase over April
1977, directors were told.
But OCTD General Manager
James Reichert said the mon·
thly total was 2.3 percent less
than during March.
Reichert attributed the decline
to fewer weekdays in April. not·
ing weekday ridership is
routinely higher than that on
weekends.
OCTD Information operators
handled 58,434 phone calls about
bus service during April,
Reichert said, lJ.6 percent fewer
than during March. ·
>·
NewportBeachCity1~t\Sf.estival 18
Saturday and Sunday, May 20 and 21.
'
MAKE A DEPOSIT of any amount and you're automatically entitled
to Travelers Checks, money orders. document duplication. trust deed
and note collection. many other services you're probably paying
out cash for now.
SAVE $1,000 and you're also entitled to a safe deposit box. no
charge, plus membership in the Informed Buyers Bureau and a sub-
scription to the Quarterly Magazine with book and music reviews.
articles on travel, entertainment. health, gardening. interesting per-
sonalities.
SAVE $2,000 and add a checking account at a cooperating com-
mercial bank.
WHAT YOU SAVE EACH MONTH on all these services can be
earning additional interest for you: higher interest than commercial
banks pay. and it is compounded every day. Isn't it worth a minute
of your time to start your Los Angeles Federal Savings Account?
Annual
Yield
8.06%
7.79%
6.98%
6 72o/o
5.92%
5.39%
INVESTMENT CERTIF1CATE8 Current
$1000 OR MORE Annual Rate
6to fOyears 73/•%
4years 7'h%
CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSIT
$1000 OR MORE
30 months 63/• o/o
12 months 6Y2 %
3 rt10nths 53/• %
PASSBOOK 8AV1NGS ACCOUNTS
ANY AMOUNT
Day iJ'l to day out
All INTEREST COMPOUNDED DAILY
5V•%
Funds prematurely wuhdrawn from Cert1l1care Accounts earn
interest at lhe Passbook rate, as provided by Federal reguta ·
tion. f()( the full term ot Investment. less ninety days
LOS ANGELES FEDERAL ·
.. SAVlNGS
-·
Newport Beach
320t Newport Blvd. -ecroaa from Clty Hall • 675-•500
ONN Moft. ._.,.TIM-.. t AIM PM1,,L t AM "'1
• Head OfflCe Lot A~ Federal Sev1ng1 and Loan Auoc1111on
One Wi11h1 re Los Angel•• 9001 7 • Other ofhcet throughout lhe ., ..
·BOATING
\l
LEADS PARADE
Dr. George Ff9Chbeck
Safe Boat
Week Set
June 1-7
N at1onal Safe Boating
Week will be observed
June l-7. a full month
, ahead of prevtous years.
• And. as usual, Balboa
: Power Squadron. a unit
• of the United States
: Power Squadrons, will ~ head up the observance
• locally with a colorful
: boat parade to em·
: phaslie tbe importance
• of boating safety at the
• beginning of a new
• season.
• THE PARADE will be
· June 4 with Or. Ge<>rge
•Fischbeck , the
•humorous television
• weatherman, as grand
• marshal. BPS la asklng
all boating organizations
· in lbe community to join
in the parade.
The city fathers are
' also joining in the ob-
serv ance, highlighted by
a p roclamation bl Mayor Paul Ryckof ,
selling aside June 1-7 as
National Safe Boating
Week and asking the en-
li r e community to
participate and show
their appreciation to
' BPS for its dedicated
work in boating educa-
tion and the promotion
of safe boating.
Tahiti Race Set
Field Down to Foiu Yachts
Four yachts are scheduled to set
aall Jwie 10 i.n the Los Angeles to
Tablll ra ce. the 3,600-mile
Transpacillc crossJng sponsored by
the Transpacific Yacht Club.
older wtth Ii maximum of 20 years.
THE TA.lllft RACE will be the
first international yacht race to use
the new provisional rule.
. Although the biennial race has
never drawn a great number ot en-
tries, this is the lowesl list in a
number of )'ears.
l' ACtrl'S COMMITTED to the race
are Jacob Wood 's 6l ·foot s loop
Sorcery, California Yacht Club;
Willard Bell 's SO ·foot sloop
Westward, Los Angeles Yacht Club;
Bob Gosnell 's 49·foot sloop Tula,
Walkiki Yacht Club, a nd Neil
Kelley 'a 36-foot sloop Celebration,
Long Beach Yacht Club.
The race ls known as the longest
regularly scheduled yacht race in the world. It Is held every two years on
the opposite year from th• Honolulu
race.
The Tahiti race was first sailed
from San Francisco in 1925. Twenty.
eight years elapsed before the second
race, sailed from Honolulu. It
became a regularly scheduled race
in 1968.
TPYC officials have announced
that lhe race wit) be sailed under the
new provisional International Off-
shore Rule handicap system which
incorporates an old-age time al-
lowance. The allowance provides a
one half or one percent per year
credit for vessels four years old or
TH E RECOllD ,_:LAPSED time
crosslng for the ra~e ls held by the
yacht Ticonderoga set in 1964 when it
was sailed by the late Bob<fohnson or
Portland. The record is 17 days,
seven hours. 58 minutes.
Sorcery won the race in 1974 with
an elapsed time 12~ houra short or
Big Ti's record.
Cottontail Vying
In Bermuda Race
John Arens of the Balboa Yacht Club ls ahip.
plng his 37-foot sloop Cottontail to the East Coast
to participate in a series or races climaxed by the
Newport, R.I. to Bermuda race starting June 16.
Cottontail is a CF-37 (C\lstom Fiberglass>
sloop formerly owned by Dennis Choate and has
been successfully campaigned in numerous off.
shore races in Southern California.
RACES IN WHICH Arens plans to campaign
Cottontail on the East Coast include Newport Race
Week. the Block Island race, the DuPont Series
and certain or Uie Onion Patch series races pre-
ceding the Bermuda race.·
First race or the Onion Patch Seties will be the
Astor Trophy race from Oyster Bay on Western
Long Island Sound to Newport, R.I. vta Buzzards
Tower and Block Island, June 19, The race ls 17S
miles.
T he second and third races are day races out
of Newport.
THE 635-MILE BERMUDA race is a rugged
thrash across the Gulf Stream which Is considered
a maJortestofyachts and crews.
Crewing for Arens at various stages of the
eastern campaign will be Doug Weber, Robin
Sodaro. Bill Lawhorn, Dick Blatterman, Dick Dial·
terman Jr .. Ron Doughtery, Dick Foxx and
C. Reynard Storey, all orthe Balboa Yacht Club.
Texas Gets
Hobie Cat
TitkRaces
The Hobie Cat-16 world championship re-
gatta will be held Oct.
21-29 at South Padre
Is land, Tex., marking
the first time a Hobie Cat world champion.ship
has been held ln the COO·
tinental United States.
The Hobie Class As-
sociation has announced
a policy of holding tbe
Roble-16 and Hoble·14
world cbamptonshlp re. gattas on a lte rna t e
years.
Dates for the national
championship regattas
have also been set for
the H obie -16s a n d
Hobie-l4s. The 16s will
sail their nationals Sept.
ll· 16 at Bear Lake,
Utah, and the I.Cs w1Jl
seek the national title al
Virginia Beach, Va.,
Oct. 2-7.
, A max i mum of 96
~T Out • skippers will qualify for 1 ~~ewport nuuer each of ~ U.S. naUonal l!!!Jl!) · c h a m p l o n s b l p s .
Ellgibillty ia based on
Thurtday. May 18. 1878 CAIL y Ptl.OT A J I
1) I estimc1te my home's value at
2) Multiply line 1times80%
3) Equals
4) Balance I still owe
5) Maximum amount I might be
eligible to borrow (subtract 4 from 3)
6) Amount I'd like to borrow
With a Homeowners Equity Loan fro m The Bank of California. you
may qualify to borrow from $3.000 to $30.000 to use for your children's
education. travel, other worthwhile investments-almost any purpose
you can name.
Calculate your borrO\Virig powQr. adjust that amount to your needs
and budget-and then stop by or call us for de tails. You worked for your
home, no w let it work for you .
THE BANK OF CALIFORNIA
Newport Beach Office, 1401 Dovt> Street. Newport Beach 92663, < 7141833-3511
••t?l,.._Ol~'I A --•O•C
"DR. GEORGE," as
he is affectionately
known on 1V's Channel
7 Eyewitness News, was
chosen because of his
expertise on weathe r
and meteorology which
Is vltaJ to safe boatina.
according to Lt Walter
-Br iggs, chairman of the
safe boating parade
Clubs Score Hiuh ~e.::ii:::J 0Jrri:::~ ~1
1978regattaseason.Th6 .. ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~
The lmua Outrigger Club of Newport Beach
out-muscled 16 other canoe teams Saturday, plac·
ing lwot.eamaone-two ln the Jl.&.mUeCaMery race
sponsored by the Kallfornia Outrigger Auociation
<KOA>.
Hoble-16 world cham·
Pueblo Saved
LOS ANGELES <AP> -City officials have put
off for al least st x
month& the proposed de-
molition of an electrical
substation 1n El Pueblo
de Los Angeles State
Historic Park.
T he race started at the Wedie orr the Newport
entrance and took the rowers to the Newport Pier
and back through the harbor entrance finishing at
the Cannery Restaurant. A Marina del Rey team
was third.
The race was classed as an "iron man" event
with each canoe manned by six men who did not
change during the race.
pionship will also have a
maximum of 96 entries
representin g t be top
skippers from 22 coun·
tries.
A YCM Oe6ty Pttot oen.,_
~· o.c.c. °'* .. " dlldel ceftl., toteo.e .......
,· CAUPOIUllA'S EDCICATIONAL
)
~ SHOPPING CEl'fl'Ea
ON THE SCENE DAILY:
•MORE THAN 50 ARTISTS DISPLAYING
ALL FORMS OF ART FOR SALE.
•ARTS AND CRAFTS
DEMONSTRATIONS
FRI., SAT., SUN., MAY 19, 20, 21, 10:00 AM·&:OO PM
SATURDAY ONLY:
•1:00 PM -FREE DANCE Pl:RFOR-
MANCES BY THE STEPPING STONE
DANCE STUDIO, FEATURING
•JAZi •DISCO
•PRE-SCHOOL STUDENTS
•SEACLIFF MERCHANTS SIDEWALK
SALE! J
I •
•
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DAILY PILOT
JI OM. y Pel.OT
Maddy, Davis Clash
Over Marijuana Use
SACRAMENTO <AP> -As· sem blyman Ken Maddy. a Republican
candidate tor governor. bas admitted
he tried marijuana twice -an action
that one foe said "shows a sort of
callousdiaregardforthelaw."
VnHOm's
Criais
Discuaaed
The problems facing preto~nt wom~ who
drink 1WJll be outlined at a semlnar·al Soutt\
Coast Co.tftiqnity
Hospital Wednesday.
Called "The Fetal A leohol Syndrome: Crisis for an . Unborn,"
tbe program wW cover
Ed Davis, the former Los Angeles
police chief who ls also seeking the
GOP gubernatorial nomination, made
that assessment of Maddy's action in
an interview with reporters in Palo
Alto. • how alcohQI damages
MADDY u n b o r n b.a b i e s • sympto~ of. ise fetal AT ANEWSconference, Maddy said
he told a reporter from Los Angeles
radip statloo KISS th al he bad sampled
the illegal s~tance.
"But I have never coininitted a alcohol sYJldrOQte and
felony," Davia said. "In a fatherly hoW"111uch ls lOP much tr
way. I'msorry to hear he was a mart· yoo"are pregnanL .
juana use~~-but tf>at eould explain The setninar begins at
some of wnat he caJted "the am· 7:30 p.m .• -{n tl!e South ··it dido 't do anything for me. I don't
think lt should be decrimlnallled. I ·
don't tblnklt'sgoodforyou, "he said. bivalenceweseeinthlsyounemart."• LJ1 e u na bospt ta I's
, • audJtorium. For re.
He tn~ tl ts years ago in the Army
and agam four years ago. he said. "for
tht' curiosity of it."
MADDY COUNTERED that hls ex· servatloos, call 49$-1311 p'erience with marijuana bu not af. ext. 560.
reeled bi4 position on decriminaliza-
tion or other crime issue. --------
DA VIS TOLD REPORTERS he bad
violated the law by sampling "home .. I believe it is not beneficial and
brew when I was a kid." should not be legalized," he said.
Sex Course
Enrollment Soars
LA JOLLA !AP> -UC San Diego is starting to
talk about sex because "a lot or kids" go to college
without knowing much about it, says the chan·
Ct!JIOr.
A new course titled Human Sexuality has ~1gned up 150 students, twice the number expected.
I "IT'S THE TYPE OF' thing that they should be
s;etting in high school but don't ," said Chancellor
,William D. McEJroy l
He describes it as regrettable that "there are J
a lot of kids who get here and don't understand the who!~ biological and psychological function of .._
sex. ~
: THE COURSE TAUGHT BY Dr. Lola Ross, a
,sociology professor , deals with aspects of sex
ranging from homosexuality to sex on campus and
ipornography.
Even in college, said Dr. Ross in an interview,
"venereal. disease among the young remains very
much a problem. even though our high school stu·
dents are being told how to avoid such a disease "
Coast Y Offers
Sununer Camps
The South Coast YMCA will operate 33 sum·
mer camps this year, ran1ing from day camps to
week-long excursions lo Bluff Lake near Big Bear.
. The Y day camp is open to youngsters 6 to 12
years or age. and wtll feature days at the beach
and amusement parks.
One-week camp periods bave been scheduled
beginning June 19 and ruru\ing throughout the
summer. Older YMCA youths will be traveling to
Canada, the Sierra Nevada range and Yellowstone
Park. .
For more information on the YMCA summer
programs, phone 831·9622, or visit the Y at 26076
Getty Drive in Laguna Niguel.
F oothall Opener
To Draw Sooners
Oklahoma University football fans are being
sought for a train trip to Palo Alto in September
where the Sooners open their football season
against Stanford.
The Am\rak train will leave San Diego at 7
a.m . on Sept. 8 to get the rans to Palo Alto in time
ror the game on the ·9th. Tbe train will return on
tbe 10th.
Fare is S68 per person roundtrip and game
tickets are S8.
For further information contact Bob Loughridge, 833-3231.
Hair Problem Grou.
SINGAPORE CAP> -No end is in sight to the
Singapore government's seven-year-old campaign
against long hair on males as a manifestation of
·'western hippie drug culture."
Home Minister Chua Sian Chin told
Parliament that last year Uiree civil servants were
fired, 20 young men were fined, 325 others were
warned and 620 males were not allowed to land in
Singapore because their hair came dotm to their
eyebrows, covered their ean or reached to their shoulders.
By Bil Keane
"I con lick ony bowl in this kitGhen."
•
-
f -·
Call 642-5678.
Put • few words to work for ou.
. .. .. ,,__ ..... --.. · ......
CALIFORNIA I LOCAL
3rd Annual
Indoor Aircraft Show
Ifs the World's Largest
Anaheim Convention Center
See H.tlcopters. Gyrocopters.iliong Glld9n.
Rodng Airplanes. Hom. Oullts. Hor Air
Dolloons. f'rff M~s and more.
Like Gory 0.mcf('s Elvis~ Impression ond
rwo great magic shows dally. Also. o precision
porochut• jump dolly ot noon.
Uc.nred ond student pilots register ro
win on S85.000R~ICommonder114.
Plus lots of Othtf frH prtzes lndudlng
a ride In the fomQus Pe.Sf Mustang "Ml.ss
America:' No purcholit ts neees.scwy.
Ir's happening this WHMnd. Flidoy ond
Sansrday. Moon to 10:00 P.M. ond Sunday. N.ooo
to 6:00 PM.Adults -~50.
JunlOfS (6-12) -51.00. under 6 -""· Thot s the
Anaheim Convention Centec Don't miss it.
DISCOUNT TICKETS AVAl\ADLE
AT ALPHA DETAMAMm
................. ,
WALi PAPER RIOTI
, • ALL PRE·PASTED &
PRE· TRIMMED TOO!
• 1ST QUAUlY PRINTS,
._.~'U SOUDS 6 STRIPES!
.. -. ~
• RER.ECTS NATURAL
LIGHT AND BEAUTYI
• MAKES ROOMS SEEM
LARGER, BRIGHTERI
• EASY TO INSTALL
....... ,,,, .......
DA1Zlll8 MOSAIC TILE
• A GALLERY OF FANCY 1~
DESIGNS AND COLORS I &9c • HIGH·GWE ANISHl
COllP'IMILf ITDI SU.._ APPROX. SQ.
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• '"E KIND THE PROS USE-SPREADS .EASY! ' • OIE COAT COVERAGE!
• WON'T FADE, YEU.OWI
• WY •TER CLEANUP!
.
Santa Ana
3'l'l w ... 11th
50-7781
. .
99
'
\
•
AUCTION OF ORIENTAL RUGS .....
Empire Room
The Newporter Inn
I I 07 Jca16orff Road
Newport leach
644-1700
SUNDAY MAY 21st
Preview: I 0:00 a.na. to 2:00 p.m.
,.. .. ., Auoffon: 2:00 p.m. v1SA
Chefp Penon•I Check•
Over 250 pieces of fine genuine oriental rugs for
auction. All sizes. from many countries, including
Persia, Chio~ e akistan and India. (Also many runners~
Fe ...... Alll• ............... ~ "" ........
hw......_Ceffwten9'.
51>1'1114 Fll1'4
for Pizza
In_.,. Bg~n Spring is fOf loven of oll ogei.And its o perf.c t.VIU l\hl. 11me 10 enjoy sheer~ in piuo ot o lord Byron Pizzo Pub.
Where soft ligh11, a WOf'm welcome ond comfonoble <IJIZZA (PllB okoves moke o perfec:t.pluo taste even better: r-. Come enjoy one now -at Q pnc• "'°' n wonn anyone I heort.
24181 U.gunc1 Htlli Mall
(Outside Entr.nce Betwe1:n Bottum'$
183 Westminster Mill
(Ouuide entr1nce between SHrs 1nd
Robinson's-Opposite U.A. Cinemas! ' and Broadway'sl
l19un11 H1lh
586-0540
·. -··· KmtES AS
18 .. JBK-710 49.99
221,\" BK-710 59.99
LOW AS
4999
Westm1n1ter
898·&569 p
Amtrice'a f9110rite outdoof cookef. Por01l1in
flm.tl Inside and OYt. etumlnum lepand ash
c:atet..
51.alcr S..iwgs 0. w ......
1191aColon!
Thia Char~
&rbeque lets you
cook different foods
at dlffettnl temperature
It has a s141nle~ steel
cooldng grid more
than two fttt wide
.snd ITlOfe than a loot
dHp-461 square
Inches. h has every
feature you could
want In a bilrbeque
Yet It's priced 10
aeU! C<>ITllt In
and !le.,,,
THIS
SATURDAY!
I I a.m.·3 pem.
#3200 Twilllwwr
w/24"PostmdlOM
21ft
~~
Save Over 25%
Compare
,.._SPICIAU ~~
_...1 .... 1...... with anything 99" that cooks outdoors
... or In.
•
"
"Got a problem" Then wntt to Pal. Dvnn Pat will
C1lf red tape. gtttmg the QnfWeTS and achon you ntftl
to 10lve mequa.ties in government and bu$intss. Mall
your qiust&OM to Pat Dlml'I, Al Your Sennct. Orange
Coaat D<uly Pilot. P.O. Boz 1560. Costa Mtsa. CA
9%626 As many letters cu pos11~e Will be answered.
but phoned inquines or letters not including the
reader's full nom~. addreaa and business hours' phone
numberCOMOt ~ ccmndtted Thu column appears da•·
111 e:rctpl Saturday•.·'
Prlefllla.q aat .. FaU Sltert
DEAR PAT: Can you find out how many preg.
nancy disability insurance claims were filed in
1977?
There was a lot of talJt that the figure would be
astr onomical when this new benefit progra m went
into effed last year.
C.J., Costa Mesa
Altlliaqh more tbu 1oe.• er &bese elaJms
were apeeted dartq Ute ftnt. )'ear Of tM pro-gram, pnllmJaary ettlmates IDclleate tbat Oll1y 41,fft elalm1 were IUed fa 1117 for aormal
presaa.Dlfy.
Since Jan. I, am, women worllen Wftb dls-
abWtie. ariatag from normal prepaneles, eaa
claim betle.ftts for up a.o three ween before Ille
estimated delivery date aocl for a mnhHm of
three weeks lmmedla&ely after delivery.
Thur9dav. May 18 t97U
Tlalrd Te,..
M inonlv Leader
H<1W<ird Baker
s J 1 d 1 n
H u n t :; \' 1 I I c· .
Tenn he will
run for ... third
term and ht· left
the door opt•n
for u pres 1den
t ial bid 10 lWO
years . He said
howe ver hC' i s
not "laying the
groundwork··
for a pres1den
tial run
DAILY PILOT AJ3
OC Group
Sets Sale
A rummaKl' ~dll'
ft'uturing antiques and
art objects will be hl'ld
Saturday and Sunday.
~pon~orcd b y thv
Lacuna Beach CoalJuon
for Hum an Rights.
The sate will be held
at the corner of South
Coas t Highway and
Bluebird Canyon ftom !J
a.m. toSp.m. both day!>
days.
Proceeds go to sup·
port the coahtton '~
human nghts projectl>.
• ESTATE JEWELRY • CHINA • RUGS • SILVER
• FINE PORCELAINS • BRONZES • FURNITURE • OILS, Etc.
116 Million Dollars Worth
Fri., Sat. & Sun.
May 19, 20 & 21
8:00 pm
. Inspection
Fri., Sat. & s ....
2·5"". 7-1""
Don't miss this important sale!
Fine crystal, china sets. European furniture. bronze•. rugs, oils and
many other Items
Lots of diamond solitaires and clusters. Fine men's and ladies watches
rings, earrings. bracelets. necklaces. etc .• set with diamonds, emeralds.
rubies. sapphires. Several important large emeralds and sapphir8'.
TE RMS: 89"kAme111:•ra Maue1Cherge
Petton•• ~heck · Celh ·Some extended 1erms C•" t>e .,,.,.gtd
p,~rfy moV«J tor cormm1•~ of •<Ii• ro
nevvport galleries, ltd.
2452 West Coast Highway. Newport Beach. CA
(714~ 646-2200
CONSIGNMENTS ACCEPTED 'TIL 5 P.M. FRIDAY
A• t Lev•n• Auc11one11T
IN THE NEW
PLAZA NEWPORT CENTER
I 000 HO. BRISTOL ST.
NEWPORT l!ACH
(7141 955-1330
SWISS C<l4 ''°"'full wl>llt.•• -n111 1o•u
tltvOf YOU oon f U_,I '"' pac.-~
• ........
REG. $4.19 LB.
·ssWatEh Wi1n As~\\\ ot one of our Rian1
C tbe ~ell 'tbe customer co,,11 OIJJe in and p eas ee-· . nf:
8wttaerland s -wtss C\,,_b\ 1Ntn~·
closest Jo the e"ad "'
Come in aad enjoy all the clleese samples you
caa at on U.e premises AISOWTil Y nEE!
rcather I Backyard chefs, experts of the tine •rt • Day
Gld of outdoor cooking and any male{IOllmtet
· ~ who hN • t.vorlte bar-b-que IKllHI-. Here's your chancel
Submit your •w•rd winning reclp•,
Q ftt a f I# to anyHarborView
.. ~ C.erchant PRIOR to FRIDAY, MAY 31st
0°0 ENTRY BLANKS
•:•00° AVAILABLE IN ALL STORES ••
Six winning recipes judged by a panel of
/ food lover s, will be notified, on Saturday
June 2 to enter into the "Ba~ard Chef's
Cook·Off Flnala". outdoors at the Harbor View
Center on saturda", June 17. Each entry must provide
the food. In turn each contestant will be given a Weber BK
710 Serles Bar4 b-que for competing In the event. The Winner
wm receive a $100.00 gift certificate.
Our st.,ict contest rules dictate that assistance
may only come from your most sudportlng wives, children,
ln·laws, cousins, nelghbon, fr iends and acquaintances of
the backyard ba'r.t>-qve Q\efs. <l.Jnles\ you can convJnce our
officials to make an exception· of your entry> .
HARBOR VIEW CENTER
1810 San Miguel Drive · Newport Be ach
~
; I
I
r.
' ..
••
AJ., OAl.V PllOT 1'bunldll)I. Miit 11. 1119
Ma ... £hla•te
Widow Said
'Very Ill'
From AP Dls1>11kba
Madame Cblaag Kal·•bek, widow ot the llrst
prestdeot of Taiwan. Is very ill and living a
secluded Ufe on a sprawling estate in the Long
Island community of Lattingtown.
Reouests to interview Madame Chiang. whose
stepson Chiang Cbln&·kuo, will be inaugurated as
Taiwan's second preisldent on Saturday, were turned down.
"Ma4ame is not seeing anyone now," said
James Shen, a spokesman for the Nationalist
Chinese regime on Taiwan. "She 1s recuJ>tU'aling
and receivinJlt medical attention."
Madame Chiang's presence has been a closely
guarded secret.
• A rumlture store manager and his son were
arrested in Los Angeles following an 11-month in·
vestlgaUon of a Palm Springs bank robbery that
netted $300,000 in jewels belonging to comedian
Red Skeltoo's late wife,
( J the FBI said.
PEOPLE The jewelry collec· lion belonging to Geor gia
... _ ----------Skeltoo had been on dis·
Bank or America
June 30.
play at the Palm Springs
branc-h for prospective buyers
Two armed men posing as buyers handcuffed
and gagged a bank employee and stole the collec·
tion. an FBI spokesman said .
• When your dad is the celebrated "first
brother" and you r wedding guests include Preai·
dent Carter, it's tough t.o have a
private little down·home
ceremony. But J ana Carter's
giving it a good old Southern
try.
"rt 's not the president's
wedding; it's my wedding and t
don't want publicity." Miss
Carter said in an interview a
few days before the wedding
which is scheduled for Sunday
ti{ -~
~r,f .,
.... I
...
night at her father's rural house .1A"A CARTER
in Americus. Ga.
Miss Carter, 18, is the first of BUly Carter's six
children to be married.
The prospective bridegroom, 19-year·old
Johnny Theus of nearby Ellaville, agrees with hls
bride·to-be.
.. We don 't want to comment on anything."
.. I
Three million dollars"'has been given to the
Juilliard school to advance the development ot
young American conductors,
the school announced.
Recipients wiU take part in
two 3·hour rehearsals with an
orchestra each week. Famed
conductors Sir Georg Seltl and
Eugene Ormaody, will
participate. ·
The donor, Lila Acheson
Wallace, started Readers
Digest with her husband. She is
0ttMAMDY on the Juilliard board.
• A family feud among heirs to the estate of
opera star Maria Callas has been settled by an
agreement to auction the diva's
valuables and share the profits,
Callas family friends in Athens
disclosed.
The contestants -the
soprano's ex-husband Giovanni
Battista Menegbini on the one
hand and her mQ(.her and sister
on the other -agreed to an
auction June 24 at the George V
Hotel in Paris, the friends said.
Informants said most of the CALLAS
items In the singer's Paris apartment would go on
the block, including her personal piano, a coUec
lion of valuable Italian and French Renaissance
paintings, furniture, clothing and even kitchen
equipment.
• For the first lime since 1967 a majority of
Americans feel crime Is not increasing, pollster
Lou Harris told Congress.
He said polling results show that "it is fair to
conclude that the public reels less anxious, certain·
ly more at ease, less worried
about safety on the streets in
this country than it has felt in
over a decade."
And he said residents or
~mall towns, not the large
cities. report the largest in·
crease in crime.
Harris said also that if the
trends shown by his poJUng con.
tlnue, "it would not be Jong
MA1tR11 before small towns in the South
and in the West were the places where people are
most apprehensive about crime." • Sen. $.I. \layakawa disclosed that he personal·
ly controlled assets between $515,000 and $1.2S
million -with most or it in real estate -and that
he and his wtle have a net worth between $1
million and $2.S million. ·
The California senator said bis wtfe had assets
or between $970,000 and $2,025,000, with most of lt
in stocks.
He listed another $100,000 to ~.000 in a trust
fund set up ror one dependent son and ad·
ministered by his wife.
The combined assets of the family, which total
between $1,585,000 and $3,490,000, show Hayakawa
lo be among the rtchest or the dozen or so senators
who have dlSclosed financial statements.
• It'• a simple rule thal Linda ao.staclt ltn't
likely to forget to00: wbft'I you're.younc, beautlfuJ,
wealthy and talented, don'l give
out your addrtu to a national
ma1azlne.
Ml.al Ronstadt, whose aul·
try. steamy blend or country
and rock music hu made hcl'
one of the mott popular alngers
of the day, ls 11vtns up her
$350,000 beach house on the cliff• of Mallbu Colony becaUH or an on1lau9bt or curlou1
•l•htaeen, says btr publiclst, '"""~"°" Pall.I WURnDIL
The uninvlled. vislton l>epD hound..lAc Miu ~stadl le'\--traJ •eek• aao wben ua ftlalaliDe
printed twtr eddren In an article llnkina beT roman~ wtt.b CaUfc>nUt <Jov, M•• &. a .... ,,.
Honors
Awarded
AtOCC
Four Orange Coaat
College students have
been awarded perms·
nenl memberships and
10 temporary third
semester memberships
ln Alpha Gamma Sigma,
an honorary scholarship
organizaU(!n.
Permanent status Is
awarded to those who
have completed three
semesters of a t least
12.5 units each with
grade point averages ot
at least 3.2S.
Permanent members
are: aerbere C.Oper ol Newport
8t•<ll, Le\lle G. Ottkt ol
Hew1*t ~ Lftlle G 0r-. ..
Hllftllf'Vton e..ctl, ~ L M<ll
"'""' tf ~ AM •fld Jon!U A S<'-Ulle .. W...lmlntltt.
The 10 students a lso
honored were:
Jo.Me 8 , IC .-roll of H1lflllr'1910I' •••<II, Ptwl A. M••llonofll 01
F°""telfl Vtllff. Prl<N<CI DouQI'°' •fld CtelQ /l Y•IK OI Htwpofl
8t•<l'1, •fld St~fl I. Clwlpm•ft,
O.w l . Co/lllK, M¥Y J Hren<:ltlr,
K•rtfl & ~ • .-Vie< M Smith ...0 Kim &. Tl\on'llOl'I. ell of C»tlt Mtte.
-. -----------
PUBUC NOTICE
,ICTITIOUI aUSINESS
.. .\Me lTATIEMIENT
The tollo.iflQ -'°" Is CIOiflQ llusl· ,_,.s·
MRS CLEAN, l10I Tell WeY. Cos•• Mew. c.llton\I• tt•2' Ju<Jy C.rol ~lerWI\, JIOI Tett
WtY, Co\i.Mnoe, C.llfoml••2'2'
Tl•" bull-I• tonetuelecl Cly *" 11>-
dMOl>tl. Jlldy C..rol "91.,Mn
PUBUC NOTICE
PUBUC NOTICE
Tllis ... l_I .... 11141<1 with IM
Covfllv Clen Iii Ofenoe coun1v °" ·~1121. 1971 ""JJM 1-------------PUBl.JC NOTICE Pllbll\Nd 0rM>91 c.otfl Delly Pilot,
A~ll 27 tfld May 4, II, II, 1978 l6U.7' ·---.. -.-CT-l_Tl_OU_s_a_u_s_tN_IE_S_S ___ ,
NAME STATEMENT
Th• lollOWlnQ'1'trSOfls ere doing
-------------lbuSlflHS•S: "ICTITIOUS aUllNEU SOHOOIST, 811 S. Tustlr'I A-.
PUBLIC NOTICE
NAM« ST A TEMaNT Or-. C..llloml• 92*
The l'Ol'-<tQ P9f1iOfl I\ OOlflQ IMKI·
MH •~;
STEVE'S DETAILING, 1UO·A P-. A .... Cos .. Mltsol, CA '2621
St..,,,.., J Marc-. 1211 South
Selle,~ Me, CA '21°'
TIM s t11al'-ls " cOftdu<MCI by en lfl·
Cll"IOU.1 s...i.~
Tllh stet-Wei flied with "" C-ly (I-of Ofeng1 COUflly Ofl Mey
•• lt7t.
PUBUC NOTICE
l'ICTlnous IM.lllNES.$
MAMIE STATIEMINT
n,. toUQW!flQ -ton '' OOlflQ 1>1111.
lltHoH:
J.O. MAIL 80X REP.AIR. mo
~t<t Ltl't. Unit 0, Coste Mew. CA .,.,.
Josepll O.C.rlo, 101• &.lle•rlt Otlw, eoti. Mt,,. CA '2•2'
Tiii\ 111111,..s Is c~t" bY •fl II\· dlvlduel.
Joseph O.C.rlo
This SIM-I wes flied with tlle
County Cl.,.., of Of .,,ge County Ofl Mey 2,1m . .......
Pllt>lltllld ~ C:out Delly Piiot,
MeY 4, 11, 11, ~. 1'11
t"4·11
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICaOf'
NOfMlllU'ONllalUTY
.l•mH R. Oewtol'I, l11•2 Peclflc
Coest HIQllw•v, Legune Bt•<h.
C.11~• '2641 Glen A Almqu11t, 112} E . 11111
Slt'fft, !Mini•,,,,,,., C.•Hloml•
Tiil\ l>uSlnHS Is <c>ftdu<t"' by •
llmlteclPMt~P.
J-R O.wwn Tiits ,, • ...,._. wes flled with the
COUfllY c1 .. 11 of o ... nge C-ty Ofl
"6><11 n. 1m
·-----------~
PUBl.JC NOTICE
Hotlct ts '*°"" Ql"9n !Ml t,,. .,.._ •-------------1 O.nl.-0 wlH fta( bll ~tile tor .,., o.ots or lltOllll~ <.Otllt•leCI try
M>YoM ~ tt.. m-,Mll, on or •lllft"
tNl.S.te. 0.ltd .,.., IOlll <Srr .. May, 1'71
Vlo6el I:. Sutnmen
J(QJ4t11$trwl ........., a .. <.h, CA tM3
PU041llWCI Orenga (Out 0.llY Piiot,
MeY 11, 11, 11, 1'11 '" .. "
PUBUC NOTICE
PUBUCNarlCE
111a1nous au1u1ns NAMa STATIMINT
T ht lot IOWl"O -'°" IS CIOillO ti.fU. MUH'
CAllFOffNIA ..c>ME SECURITY
SYSTEMS, lat Porl OlllrtH. HewPorl a .. c11. CA '2MO
Jeft'IH Aleh O'Ooolnell. 11Jt Port
Olef'IH • ..._t .. t<ll, CA f'1MO
Tltll .,.,_,Is tondUc'MO Cly M\ 111
cllvlckael.
J-A. 0'°""'911 Tfllt tl .. _I Ifft llMld wlllt IM
COUlllY OMI Of Ol'MQlt ONMyon _,,., l------------1, 1"9.
•
PUBUC NOTICE
..
t
PUBUC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE tNYITINO al OS
Nollu I\ Mreby 01 ... r1 lh•I 1"8
8c»NI of T nal-of the C:O.ll Olm·
mvn11y Colleot Oht•ltt of Or•noe
C.OW.ty, C.lfornia, wlll ·~••we'"'"" Oldl WP lo II 00. m . FtlO.y, J-1.
1t1t, •I thp Pllt~~l'O 0tot Of WtCI
Khool dlStrl<t !GUI"" •I lll'O AcMm\ Avtflue, Cott. #Nw, C..lllo<!\1<1, et
Wftlclt llmt MllCI biCh wtll bll INtll 1< I y __ ....,fffdlor
YIOEO C A SSE TTE
OUPLICATION EOUtf'MENT,
CNfitllN (iDmrrtl.Wty Colleot
All bkh -IO bll Ill ec<-• wtth ui. IMl11AllCll'" end COndllloM allCI
Stle<lll<•ltoM ..... --°" Ill• lftCI mo bll --111 ti. Offkt of ,,,.
Pwc11 .. lftQ Aotftt ot ttlO ~llOOI ... ··"· leclt ~ ll'IU\t ~t wlllt Ith CllO • ,....,._., <tte<•, <MtKled ~II,
ot bldclef'• llOlld ~ ,..,,.... ....
~ of , .. OMltt CDmf'lluftitr °" ....
Olatrltl toerCI Of ""''"' Ill •11
,
I
PUBLIC NOTICE
PEOPLE
PUBLIC NOTICE
~'~----~~--~~ "1CTtnous IMltf"na MAMll ITAT•MaNT ~ ... '°'-'"9 .. .._, .,. dltft9 111n1 ... u ..
l•I PLAZA NEWPOIH TltAVEL..
IC.I TllAVEI. THINGS, !GOO lnQO! ~lfffl, HOflll, H...,,on 8eKll, CA n..o
Rlrh••CI w Rllty, ,,, Vtu.
SW•tt, Nt-1 llMOI, CA "1W
C•rol A Alleot, )11 VI~ So.n•, ..... por I IMcll, CA nM0
Gurl\Ofl W 8•1111011, 1U• ~nct<••ll• Ori ... ~ Ott MM, CA m.J
Oorot"" 0 811"'°"' IU. s.nck-lltOrl .. ,CorO!WoelMM.CAtl"-'
Thi\ t>v•l,..U I' <-lecl llr e 09,,., ...... ~p.
Rl<NrCI W. Alt.y
C..rOI A IUlt•
G<onlt.Ofl W 8flnt°"
OorOCl\y G 8'1Mon
Th•l $1•1-1 W<K lllecl wlt11 ftle
Cour11y ClefW OI OrM>gt Col#llyonM.ty
-------------1. me
•
.......
Put1H•'*' 0.-~ C:O..c 0.lty PllOI,
M•• •.II, 19,U, 14,.
PUBLIC NQTICE
S@\lc(}~-&~~s·
That lnf1i9uin9 Word Game willi a Clt11dle
........ QA'fL ~ . ............ "" ... ..,.., ~ -d• be-.... "' '°"" '°"' .... -· I OUTSlH I ......, ..... , -, -I -,.-,__. I I urn J i f·
I' le 11 Z IH ol f 1 ...,. .• t11e~M1n1a-:... '? tlon they thould IA on • 'TV ..._...._.-.....__._..._,_ " QUI.I ~rwn; ''WNI do~
I
G 0 p E ff$ 1 •rto .. enwMl!ha-..
I I I I I' • ~ .... dl1dle .-w
......... _ ...... ______ -.,·_, " llflll!O ... It,. -. -"' ...., ........ -.,w....
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'
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'
i
~ LOCAL/NATIONAL ~.May 18, 11"8 USC DAllY ... LOT AJS
Su1·vey Shows Wat er Fluorides Safe
BOSTON (AP> -A federal
•tudy ol 4e clUes has coochaded
that nuorid.aUnc w ate:r to pre-
. vent tooth ~al hu no adverse
• ~ect on people s health.
The study by the Center for . Disease Control ln Atlanta wu
undertaken to lnvesU1ate claims
that OuorldaUon ls linked to
hJ1her cancer rat.ea.
""TRUE IS NO evidence to
.. su•aeat that fluoridaUon does any harm." Dr. J . Davld
Erickson, wbo conducted the
study. said ln an interview.
A report on the federal. find·
101• was pubU.bed ln \oday's
New Epalaod Journal or
MedlclM.
Erlck..lon compared the cause ot death ot na.ooo people over
three yeara In 46 Am•rlcan / cities -24 or them with
fluoridated water and 22
without.
A.FTEa T.\K.ING into •ccount
dlfferences ln race, age, sex,
educaUon and population denal-
ty between the two groups or
clttea, he found that there was
virtually no difference tn the
death rates. There were 1,124
deaths per 100.000 pe1'0n yean in
the Ouorldated clues and 1,137 tn
~e noa·fluoridated cllies.
The death rate from cancer
was 195 In the cltles wlth
fluoride and 197 in the citles
without.
"We don't know ot any ad·
verae health effects at the on
one part per millton JeveJ"-tbe
concentrallon of nuorlde t~plcal
Jy put ln water to prevent
cavities, Erickson said.
OTHER STUDIES have shown
that chi ldren who drink
Hamm Wins SC
• ~ By ANNE COOPER Of .. Deity ..,. ,..,.
The top spender among the
• three winners of the March San ·~ Clemente City Council election
· was Roy Hamm, whose cam-
paign committee spent $3,n6,
: amounting to $1.62 for each of
the 2.112 votes Hamm polled 'in
• bis Winnln8 campatan.
· Reports filed recently with
' San Clemente City Clerk lllax
Berg show that top vote wiMer
in the March election, Howard
M uahett, paid 56 cents for each
of 2.561 votes, with hls campaign
committee reporting expen
ditures of $1,4Z7.
* * * Losers Tops
In Spendi,ng
~-In San Juan ...
The losers rolled up the big-
gest campalp bill.a In San Juan
Capistrano's March municipal
· electibn.s, city records show.
The Voice of the Electorate
CVOTE> Committee. a coalition
· of farmers, developers, land·
owners and businessmen who
s upported repeal of the city's
controversial agricultural pres-
ervation J)«'Ogram. pumped
$4.Z71 into its losin" effort.
THA.T•s sz.zt each for the
1,941 votes supp<>rting Proposi·
lion 8 in the electJon.
The lion's s hare of those
-fund&, S2,800, went to pay gov-
ernmental relations consultant
David Recupero for campaign
consulting semces.
I
And two candidates who
placed fourth and fifth in voling
abo outspent their riva ls who
finished in the top three
Retired businesswoman and
•community activist Marilyn
Williams spent $2,561, including
$77S of her own money, in a los·
ing effort
TBA.T'S SLIGHTLY under
$1.40 each for the 1,IMS votes
Mrs. Williams garnered in the
March 7 elect.Ion. Incumbent Councilman John
Sweeney spent $2,194 in bis Mb
place etrort toward re-election.
Sao Juan Civic Association, a
group that 1upported three can·
didatea and oppClffd lwo ballot
meat\Lt'ff, pumped $3,737 into
production of brochures that
wer-9 malled to city n!eklents
THE A..880CIATION beaded
by formel' Councilman Douglas
Nath supported wlnalnt can-
d ld ates Gary Hausdorfer,
PbllUp Schwartse and James
Thorpe. The clv\c group's statement
shows $747 spent to support each or the three candidates tb.rouib
advertisements and brochures.
And two ol those winning can·
didates also carried lar1e cam·
patin bl1b
Records 1how Schwarhe
shelled out $1 929 In b11 w1nnlng
effort and Rausdorfer spent
$1 ,'91. Bau1dorfer rtnl1bed
second ln balloUnc while
Sch• art.ze wound UJ) In third
pl au.
BUT TROaPE, tbe top
vo&.e11tter'. ll)ent the least of all
thl'ff wtDnen. Kil c&!llpaign bW
was $85C.
Tbe only other bll spender
was tbe Town Hall Assoclalloh
whlcb abelled out $1,2:11 ln op.
poalUon to two propoelUone oo
the March baJlot.
Other candidate• and their
campaip bllll were:
-Rtdnd coaob Al Arps .....
-Trafnc ea1lnHr Jimmy
!Aneo, homemaker Susan CUni·
mln11. .,ineer Erwan Drake
and bualnela tu repre.elltativt
Charla Ward all apewsl leu lhan
$200.
AND TBS CONCS&NSD au... -~ve O<>vem-ment. jillleb •PIPt more lb.Iii •.ooo ~Ill • couneilmenlc dll-tltdlll1 .....-. Oft UM blUot.
c1Wa1.,.. • .am. in MDDert.ol tM IQ .... dlll'inl'tlMl'·)(INb --~ .. :-~\-
Muahett, as Lowest Spentkr,
Emerged With Biggest Vote
AMONG atlJSllETl"S expen-
ditures waa listed a $105 dooa-
tton_ to tbe South Coast Area
Boya Club in San Clemente -
the balance ot unused campaJgn
funcb. Second place winner tn the
March race was Myrtis Wainer.
who accepted no campai1n
donatlom. but sepal $1, 726 of her
own mooey. or 80 centa for each
of her 2,lSl votes.
The only candidate to spend
more on hls campaign than
Hamm wu Allan Wulfedt, who
polled 1.282 voles to finish
seventh in a field of 13 can·
dldates. Wulfeck's campaign
committee reported receipts of
SS.toe and expenditures of '4,008
-or $3.12 per vote.
OTHER CITY Council can·
didates reported the following
Speeial Atteation •
Five women, representing .each branch of the military.
were among a 2l·member cordon Wednesday when a
coed honor guard debuted. Navy E-2 Catherine Behnke.
Reedley. Calif.. grins broadly as she meets President·
Catter. Zambian President Kenneth D. Kaunda and Mrs.
Carter.
Inmate Sues Over
Jail Body Search
FRESNO (AP> -An inmate at Tebacbapi Corre<:tlonal Institution
ln Kern County contends his constitutional rights have been violated
by deteiled body aearcbes for contraband.
In a lawsuit filed In U.S. Dtatrict Court here, Jack E.W. Coble ob-
jects to lnapection.s of body cavities for weapons and drugs. The suit
calls sucb searches "unpleasant,
em barrasslng and humiliating."
COBLE'S SUIT contends that
prison rules governing "body
searches•• should be re'WrlUen so
they are not conducted routinely
wit.bout probable cause. The suit
contends simple disrobing
should be sufficient, and the
searcbee should be conducted in
«JO PemBeton
Hunt PemUIB
To Be Issued
Permits to hunt s mall game
o n t h e s pr aw I lJ'I g Cam p
Pendleton base will be IM)ld to eoo aen1cemen and clvlUalts in
June.
Tbree hundred clvlllan and 300
permit.a for rnWta~ fiilJON"el
1taUoned at bJlea · o than
Pendleton or tlll~J · 11 be
iaaued lD a public drawm1 June
9.
AppJlcatlon1 muat be 1ub·
mlttfd on a double, 1tlt·.
addtelied Po•t card, 1lvln1· nam1, mllltary addreu or
clvtUan addreaa and aoclal
1ecurtty number.
The cardt 1bould be malled
tot Natural lle10Urc11 Offlce. ~arln• C-BHe. Camp Peoclltllan ead reeet v.cl no later U..5p.m: May St.
Th~ llOlllled bY return card
may Obtain t.htlr l*Ullt by pt•
HntJn1 a valld 1tat• hutttlna uc .. • and pe.yt.na the reqUJrfd as fa Poririore lnformation, ci1J nl-5202.
places that will not embarrass
prisoners.
He contends searches are con·
ducted ln Ml vlew of other ln·
mates and male and female cor·
recllon officers, "lnviun, lewd
and 11uuesUve remarks and ex·
pres\llons or •ltaresslon from
both inmates and qtflcen."
TR£ SUIT CONTENl>B the
current method . or c~cttna
• 1earchel ••p&uq• the tnmate to a levea ot deep d:earadatloa. sub-· mlsalon anc:t helpJessnea•• which,
trl11era "hostlllty and reAnl·
ment toward the correctional of.
ncera and the prtaon a~mlnlatra· Uon." ·
Phillip Guthrie, a11istant
director of the si.te Department
of Cottectlona, aald 1ucb
searches are necessary for
securlty becauae hand·made
knlve11 often ar• bidden In
prlso era' bOcly cavities.
~'e Stadente
Planning Car W uh
Lacuna Beach H11h Sebool
aenlora will be wublil1 can ln
the district parltln1 lot SatW'da,y
from t :ao 1.m. to 3:30 J);m.
The St chart• 1et1 you a clean oar lnalde aiJd out. Proeeeda
from tbe car wub 10 toward
Mntor dau proJecta.
Ce•nper Deetroyed
SAN 01~00 <AP> -A
butane.fed flre that burned up a
140(000. motor taome. parked
bes d• a 1,000·l•llon pNJpa.ne
IH lank lbrea~ed to a,nJte I
flolouust Wednesday nlthl.
poUceaay.
nuoridated water have about 6S
percent fewer cavitlH.
Two crltlcs or tluorldatlon.
John YlamouyioMl.J and Dean
Burk. compared death rates in
20 cities last year. They con-
cluded that the cban~e or dying
of cancer was "sltnlflcantly
higher" Jn noondated cities.
Yiamouyiannis and Burk re-
leased their s tudy linking
nuorldaUon and cancer at a con-
gressional hearing. Ylamouytan.
nis ta science director of lhe
CalUornla-based National
Health Federation. Burk is a
Race
total campaign expenditures:
-TOC\Y DiGiovannl, Sl.621
-Albert Popik. S646
-Carlo Bocci. S532
-Jack Brown, S527
-Charles Fox. $509
-Charles Mitchell, $344
Candidates David Dodson and
Robert Rusin each reported
spending less than $200. Boyd
Ames, who dropped out of the
conteat before the elecUon. spent
$399.
Businessmen and realtors
donated most heavlly to the
campaign of Hamm, who is
manager or the San Clemente
Seara store and a former presi·
dent of the San Clemente
Chamber of Commerce.
AMONG BUSINESSMEN who
donated to Hamm 's campaign
were John Beld of Hunter
Design Company lo Laguna
Beach, $150; Naomi Elnsel,
owner of the Algodon Motel tn
San Clemente. $100: Gale Howe,
owner of Anchor Travel ln San
Clemente, $100: Eugene Pyle,
owner of Bob's Coffee Shop In
San Clemente, $100; WllUam
Kendall, owner of K ·& M Build·
ing Maintenanc e In San
Clemente, $100 : Cecil and Cyn-
thia Homan. of H & M Excav&t·
ing in San Juan Capistrano.
$100 ; Jame s Mead or
Professional Business Brokm
In San Clemente. $100; Ray
Campbell of Ray Campbell En-
terprises in San Clemente, $200.
San Clemente realton to COO•
tribute to Hamm's campaign
were Chris Rose of Katella Real·
ty, $100; Cecilia Durkin of Del
Mar Realty, 1100; E.W. Lyoa of
Georae Conrad Realty, $100;
E .L. and Mary Rllley ot E.L.
Risley Realty, S200; H.B. Marlts
of Century 21; and Melford
Portwood of Pacific Shore Real·
ty, $100.
ROlJ8EWIVE8 WHO con·
trlbuted to the Hamm campaign
were Evelyn Thompson of
Tuatin, $50; Darlene Tanner of
San Clemente, $100; Velcle~
Woods of San Clemente, $50; and
Diana Hendlln of San Clemente,
$100.
Other contributors to
Hamm's campaign were ln·
veator C.P. CaUln of Fremont,
$100; financial advisor Vance
Simonds of San Clemente, $100;
the San Clemente IM, $100; re-
tired San Clemente resident
George Gearn, $100; public rela-
U on s officer for Douglass
Paclflc Corp. Lea Holdgrafer,
$200: Douglaas Pacltlc Corp. ex·
ecutlve John C· Douglas, $98;
chef Euatacbe Mltsopoulos of
Bob'a Coffee Shop in Sa"ti
Clemente, $100; Orange County
Sberlff'a Officer Robert Jensen
of Orange, 1100; Su Clemente
attorney and Chamber of Com-
merce president Bernard Allen,
$100 and factory representative
Robert Hayden of San Clemente.
$100.
Hamm a1lo reported S382 in
campaign donaUons of SSO each.
MORE TRAN half or
Mushett'a contributors were re-
tired San Clemente residents
Ivan Fifer, SSO: Mr. and Mn.
Lew ls Miller; $60: Elmer
Becker. SSO: Kenneth Mosler.
$50; and ,JOMph Einaele, $100.
Other conttrlbutors to
Mu1bett'1 campaltn included
San Clemente resident Wayne
Nlmmo, owner ot a Fouateln v.u,y carpet buslneta. S50; San
Clemente reaf estate appraiser
Hert,irt Upp. $100; and Interior
decoratar lone Bannlog of the
Pete-r 81nnln1 Furniture
Gallery In San Clemente. $50.
LoanFuml
Eatablillhed
A rtvolvtq 1tudent loan
fund of sa.ooo hu been
eatabUahed at Oran1e Coaat Coll•ie In Co1ta
E .. a b)' a donation from
e Soroptlm1at Club of the
ewport Harbor ANa.
The fund 11 delltned for
female OCC etudenta who
ar1 head.I of houebold,
have a famUy flDanclally
dependent on them or are
tot11ly independent.
There ls no lnltrest on
the loan but an appUcant
must Indicate what
spectrtc tralnln& ts
necessary lo enter the
labor market.
former researcher for the Na-
tional Cancer lnatltutti.
ERICKSON SAID, however.
the two researchers fa lied to
take into consideration a variety
of other factors. such as dif ·
rerences in age of people who
live in the two groups of cities.
that could account for the dif.
ferences.
Erickson wrote that his study
"shows that lhe marked dlf·
f erences ln crude mortallty ex·
perience in the cities wllh
fluoridated and non-fluoridated
CoolC•tOIR
water supphes were not caused
by fluoridation."
His study compared death
rate:; between 1969and L971.
Clllel t~ willl "-ldilH ••t .. -S..
l'rM\Cl"O· 0.-; W-4"9IOll: J.C:\-llte
Fl• .. Mi.ml; Oll(."9; 1N11--i.; IA;ftvlli..'
l'lt •• O•ltlmore; Ml--••: M. P-........... ; St lOult; 8uffelo. N.V.; lllod>ttl~. If.¥ ,
Cl4'Vtlelld. TOiedo, Ciiio; Qlll•-Cit•: Tllfv. Oii•• .. .,.. .... -"'•: Ptttabwtft: e• ..... '••·: HOf'fol~. Y•.; Alc:twtlefld, V•.: MdMllw .... .
t111n 1tudltd ..,.,"°"' ttuo<ld<lted ..,., -· 81r"'I~. 41• : Ptloeftia, TUCIOOI, A•lt.; L*'O
ht1t1t; Lft ~; 0.1.ncl; *•-o: Sen
Olt90; $# JoM, T•'""· Fl•.; H-l11lu, WklllU, Ka.; H9w ~. a..loft; IC-0 ·
ty, Mo .. .IHwy Cltr. N J • ......,., •. N J : one ....
...... ColwrrlM, Ohio, Portt....i. <Wt., Auttln , ... , •ftel Sen Antofllo. ,, .. ,
Thls back street at Georgetown University is no doubt
the legendary resting place for hundreds of tired old
coolers. What happens is students bring rented iceboxes
to this assembly point at the end or the school year. tJ1en
the refrigerators are carted off for storage until the next semester.
4 Nevada Casinos
May Get Go-ahead
CARSON CITY, Nev. <AP> -Licenstns for three Reno casinos
and one Lake Tahoe club scheduled to open tbls spring and summer
have been recommended for approval by the Nevada Gaming Con·
trot Board.
The applicants include operators of the Part Tahoe hotel·castno at
Stateline. and the Sabara·Reoo,
Circus Circus and Comstock
hotel·caainos, all ln Reno.
THE NEVADA. GAMING
Commission. meeting in !As
Ve1as next week. will have final
say on the applications. AP·
proval 1.s expected.
The Park Tahoe. on whJch
coeatruction ceased for more
than two years, Is scheduled to
open July 2.
Under terms of the licensing
plan recommended Wednesday
by the Control Board. \he gam·
bllng at the Park Tahoe will be
operated by a Del Webb Corp.
subsidiary known as Sylvan
Corporation, which wlll aet 30
percent of tbe fll"OllS operattna
profits. .
RANCHER AND developer W. Brooka Park
and other memben of hit family
own the IH& club located in the
StateU.ne caaino core area.
The Sahara·Reno. part of the Del Webb Corporatton. la
scheduled to open July l tn
Reno.
The Cittus Clrcua hotel·culno
ls 1llo scheduled to open In July. Th~ club will be operated by
Wllllam Beonett and William
PennlqtOn. Landlorda at the
11te are Nevada Maru and
Ne•ada Greena. limited part."era~lp• controlled by brother1 John and WllUam
Mlt<er and otber nMmbel"I <JI their tamil.y.
.
Scholanblp Goes
To Viejo Student
Ml11lon Viejo HlJh School
•tnlor Kathy PrytJod• ts the re· clplent of the Saddleback Com·
mlttct' Or1An1e County
PhJlharmonlt Society's first an-
nual scholal'!\hlp award
Kathy was selected tor the
SlOO reward on the basis of her
outstanding musical and
sc:holasUc ablhlics.
THE COMSTOCK, scheduled to open in Reno
by May 26, is operated by Fiesta
Inc. and Comstock Land &
Devek>pme\t Co.. The biggest
shareholder in Fiesta is Jack
Dou1lass with nearly Z7 percent.
Main shan!holders ln Comstock
Land & Development are Wayne
Donnels, Robert Shields and
Robert Chasell, each with just
over Z7 percent.
Viejo Photo
Show Planned
Approximately 150 photo-
graphs are to be displayed itt
Minion Viejo Cultural and
Herlta1e Association'" P.hotog-
raphy contest and exhibit from
10 a.01. to 5 p.ln. Saturday and
SUnday In Miiiion Vtejo.
The ewnt la IC!heduled at the
former Roaer's Oarden site.
24741 ChJilanta.
The btack and whlte and color
photo ectrt• range tn c0ntent
from "S>eOl>le and landscape to
1eneral photoaraplty and 1t
nulnber ol printa deplctln1 com·
munlty Ille ln Mt11lon Viejo.
Israel Film
Showing Set ~
The doaument~ tum. •"The
Promlled Land: Who Owns the
Occupltd LMnd,•" will b~
1crnned Friday at Martner·~
Church In Newport Beach In an
1vtnt tree to tht public.
Tht movie wu fUmt'd tri
l1rael by Mutual Broadcasting
correspondtnt Forrest Boyd.
Robert A 1111Jl~r of Beth Sar
Sh:i lom International. an or
gan1iaUon of Chrlsllans and·
J~w,. will be on hand to dlsc~s
the film.
The Clim will be shown at 1 30
p.m. In tbC! church at 1000 81Soc'I
Ave.
AJ• OM. y N.OT
·t ~i
WASHINGTON (AP> -An at-
tempt. will be made ln June to
e:atf'Dd the orbital Ufe of 5. year-old Skylab ,apace staUon so
the world's largest man-made
satellite won't come cra.sblng to
earth next year.
If a ground controlled
maneuver planned by tbe Na-
tional Aeronautics and Space
Administration ls successful, the
Skylab could at.ay aloft an extra
year. This would give a team of
space shutUe astronauts time to
fiy up and attach a small rocket
to the SS.ton vehJcle in late 19'19.
The r oclctt eould be
uaed to boost the AtaUon into a
bather orbit. tiheoe it would atay tot hundreds of years. Or it
could be used to guide the sta·
lion to an atmospheric re-entry
and breakup over a remote ocean area.
IF LEFI' ALONE, howe\rer. the
space station lauchedin l9'13isex·
pected to fall from orbit between
early 1979and!980. ,11
The space administration 1s
concerned about an uncontrolled
re-entry during which tbe vehi·
c le possibly could s hower
fl
populated areas with lar1e
chunk$ of debris. . ~
EXPlJR~ SAY CHANCES of
such debris causing death or
damage are remote because the
station is orbiting over water 75
percent of the time. 8~ govern-
ment scientists want lo lessen
t.he cbanee of something going
wrong.
Jn f!reparalion for next month s attempt to extend the
life of the satellite. ground con-
trollers in March began slowly
reviving the sleeping gianl. The space station has been
NATIONAL
largely dafmant since the last or
three three-man·~tronaut crews
left it in orbit In J97-4 .. Its
Justing the satelllle'• position in •
space.
•systems gradually wen checked
a nd batteries c harged over
several weeks. using &un power
gathered by the station's solar
panels.
TH ESE CHECKS SHOWED
the Skylab in excellent condi·
lion. and Robert A Frosch. ad·
miniatrator of the space ad·
ministration, baa given the flO-
a h ead for the controlled
maneuver in early or mid-June.
The maneuver will involve .ad·
If f\l eoes well. radlo 11ipals
will turn on Skylab's small
steertng rockets to send the sta-
tion anto a slow eod·over.end
tumble. This procedure will be
aimed al reducing the a\·
mospheric drM& tuagin& the
space station toward the earth.
Skylab is fiying In a sort ot
standing·up position relative to
the earth. 1'be cyUnder·•~oed
s•lellite h1 in a s lowly .
descending orbit that's brinlinS
it as close as 230 miles to eart.b.
... ..
t , you mean business. you wont
~m~ flne detailing and quality
crattsmansnp in the shoes
you wear. nordstrom tokes
you seriously and offers a
range of styles and prtces as
weU. here. some FLORSHEIM
exampes, all wtth antique
firish leather uppers. leather
soleJ. a .reno; a side-Zipped
boot flly leather Rned: gold.
brandy. bk:Jck; sizes 9-12. 13.
14o: S..12. 13. 14b; 8-12. 13, lAc;
6-12. 13, l4d: 8-12.13. 14e; 8-12,
13eee; 56. 95. b. reno slip-on;
with moc piping; center
gor13; tuly leather inect gold,
brandy, block; sizes 9-12. 13.
l4cr 8-12. 13. 14b; 8-12. 13. l4c;
6-12. 13, 14d: 8-12. 13. 14e; 8-12.
13eee: 5195. c. troy. front
' overlay; center gore; d rtng
OfTO t lent b'owr\ bk:JcX sizes
9-12. 13. 14a 8-12. 13.'14b; 6-12.
13. 14c; 6-12. 13. 14ct 6-12. 13e;
7-12. 13eee: 38. 95.
d. worwick; boot wtth instep
strap; dc).J:)le leather sole:
UV leather llnect brown
bbCk; siZes 9-12. l3a 9-l213b;
8-12. l3c; 6-12. 13ct 7-12e; 7~ 11.
12eee: 51.95. •• blent wtth
smooth leather upper;
leather quarter lnrG gold,
bia 'dy. bloci<; sizes ~12. 13.
14aa 8-12. 13. l4a 7-12, 13. 14b;
6-t1 13. 1Ac; 5-12.-13. l4d; S..12.
13« 6-12. 13eee; 36.95.
men~s shOes on one.
-~
..
. . ,.
. . .~
I I
.. -..
·' INSIDE: •Comics
Thu,_y, May 18, 1978 ... ONLY PILOT ••
~ LA Gets Olyillpics • . ·~ ·With.
• t
• •
,.
ATHENS. Greece <AP> -The
International Olympic Commit·
tee today provisionally awarded
the 1984 Olympic Games to Los
Angeles.
The IOC ma~e its ruling condi·
tional, aaying that Los Angeles
must agree to a contract within
the fr~eww& or the JOC rules
by July31.
an Athens Hotel and said that 75
members of the IOC had voted
unanimously.
the Winter Games in 1972. The
vote was 39 for Sarajevo and 36
for Sapporo.
Sapporo led on the first ballot
with 33 votes against Sarajevo's
31. The third candidate city.
Goteborg. Sweden, received only
10 votes and was eliminated. A
second ballot followed between
the two leaders with Sarajevo
Montre.i. Munich. Mexico City
and New YQJ'k City are all re·
ported lntertSted in taking over
the Games.
lncluded in Lot5 Angela" bid
for the Games ls a plan to ju~
the city against rananclal JCJP.
Sl.S billion. But that Included
bills for a grandiose new
stadium. a new metro line and
other eipenaive facilities. Los
Angeles plans none of those things.
I ly have declined lo~pt the,:
toc·s submltted contract. argu·
Ing that th~ city would forreJt Its
economic aovere.lgnty.
But Robert Kane president of'
the USOC, laugb;d off sugges"
lions that If tbe IOC vote went.
against Los Angeles, he would
ask New Ym to 1tep in
U such a ·contract ls not
agreed to, the provisional award
of the Games will be withdrawn.
He a lso r ead a sta tement
drawn up by the 26 intemalional
federations which control the
Olympics urgine the IOC to as·
sure that the Games charter is
fully observed before it grants
the Olympics to Los Angeles or
to a ny other city. ,...winning.
'1 have no doubt we cal.fletl a
company that will do it," M"~
Tom Bradley aald aft•r hts
dealegation had discussed the
revolutionary Insurance plaa •
with the IOC.
There were no rival can·
didates, but there were a lot of
doubts amons the 80 IOC mem·
hers who were partlcipatl1t1 in
the voting. Insurance for the
OlymplC$ is something they had
not been asked to approve In lbe
pa$L
"One bid has caused enough·
trouble,'' Kane cald. ''l don't in·
tend to 1et JnvoJved in another.
And anyone efse who wants lo do
so must need their head ex·
amioed."
.
\ I
t
'
i
I I
I
f•
Lord Kiltanln, president of the
IOC. made the announcement at
Sarajevo, Yugoslavia won the
1984 Wanter Games by a mere
three votes from Sapooro. Che J apanese city which hosted
.~ .......
DENVER'S BOBBY JONES GRABS A REBOUND.
Sonics in Finals
Webster Roars .•.
And Denver Bows
SEA'ITLE CAP> -For the story on how the West was won,
let's gel a word from Paul Silas:
''Marvin Webs ter was just
• ready to play tonight. That says it
in a nutshen."
"This is the highlight or my
life." said Sam Schulman,
Sonics owner and president. who
watched from outside as his club
won its 20lh straight game at
home. including eight in the
playoffs. Silas somehow made himself
· heard in the noisy Seattle lock~r
room after the SuperSonics had
polished off th~ D~n! Nuggets .~. 123· 108 Wednesday ht lo win
the National Besketba I Assocta-
ti on 's Western Confe rence
championship.
WEBSTER, THE 7·1 center
, who came to SeatUe with Silas
from Denver an an oCfseason
trade that sent guard Bobby
· Wilkeri;on to the Nuggets, ruled
• the middle at both ends of Lbe
court, scorang 18 points and
grabbing 13 rebounds.
• ..
1.
"When Marvin 's ready to
play. no one is golng to do
anythlng on him," said Silas.
who matched Webster's rebound
total.
The triumph b e fore a
Coliseum sellout crowd of 14,098
gave the Sonics a 4·2 edge in the
best-of.seven semifinal series
with the Nugge"5 and sent them
int<> the NBA championship
series for the first time In their
ll·year history.
SEA'ITLE PLAYS host to the
Washington Bullets, the East~m
Conlereoce champions, in Game
1 of the best-of-seven NBA title
series Sunday.
By DAVE CUNNINGHAM oe•o.lfr.,.... ....
ll 's a Utt.le like Clark Keat lak·
lna off his puses and becomina
Superman.
Robert 4'.~el ot Golden West
CoUe1e bu to wear a (lberltlesa
lnsert ln ht1 shoe to relteve
t.oalon on htJ knee, but when be
take• lt out and puts on track aoea. be. becoal• one ot tae
tlnest junioY C'lfllqe d~e
runners in ~rn ca.urornla. •
"Thi s is the mos t ex ·
traordinary. special year for
an y s ports team e v er,''·
Schulman continued . "Way
down deep I have felt this is our
year
Webster said the key was that
s~allle played "with intensity
the whole game . Tonight our
strong point was our rebounding
and our defense. We controUed
the boards. and there's no ques·
lion about that.
"I TIDNK IT was meant lo be.
l think Seattle beating Denver
was meant to be."
The Nuggets fell victim to
Seattle's fast break early and
ne-ver were a'ble to climb out of
the )lole. They trailed 62·54 at
halftime and closed to within six
points twice early in the third
period, the last lime at 66·60 on a
pair or Dan lssel baskets.
OllNV .. t CMll -"-10, It~ 1', 1-1 a, ~PlOfl 11 Wllkw'°" 11, Sim...,' C.Mft
S, Hlllm•" ?, IAGafCll t, Sn'!itlt 10, 1!1111 2. TOl•ll 41 2~U IOI.
aaATTLll UUI -J, JOl!Moll t, SlkrN 14,
~It~ 1e. 0. JoflMoll It, Wll{l.tml 14, 8,_ 2*)
SllH 4 W.iMr 4, 5-ls t. Hatetl t. Toe.la.
v~na. ·
'*-' h n • Jt-Mf ' Sfflll• 3' u lt »-1'3
P:ouled °"' -None. Tol•I foutt -°""""' .. S.elUo ». A -14,0'I
I
wear the inter\ when l~ not
runnln1 to ...Ueve ~ tienalon."
On ~turday Abgel wlll take
out the fiber&Jaas and run the
800 and 1,$00 metera ln the
Southern Callf<>rnta community
colle1• uaclc and field cham·
plonablps at Mt. Sao Antonio
Colle•e in Wa111dnutf. -'•-t L-Hefi .1 10 avo,~ n t.-.. 1.~ and •tends ·a ehan~ to
11D11b lits\ or 1.conenn-n.e
• •1 8,\ VB TBB J' AITE 1
qualtfyln1 llme tfn th• 1,500 ~!i~·~'Af't!!:8 to be ~
ta 1oln1 to pn?tty lJght."
Killanln did not say what the
IOC 's next step would be if Los
Angeles failed to meet the .re-
quired conditions by July 31. But
Ryan Off;
Angel Skid
Continues
CHICAGO <AP> -Bill
Nahorodny says Nolan Ryan's
fast ba ll is the swiftest he's ever
seen. but Ryan. the CaUfomla
Angels' ace righl·hander. says
the Chicago rookie has yet to see
his best. "That's the fastest l 've ever
seen a human being throw a
ball.·· Nahorodny said Wednes·
day night after he tagged Ryan
for a two-run homer which
helped the White Sox to a 9-6 vic·
tory over the Angels. California
has lost five or its last six.
"You know as well as I do that
home runs are an accident."
Allfle& Slat~
All 0..-• ltMl"C a.-. O ltl
T<>Oay C.lllor..te •I Chlceoo
FrlOO C.lllon>le •I Mllw•ukee
S.turdo C.lllo•IM• •I M iiwaukee
II 10•.m. s lSp.m,
S l Sp.m,
said Nahorodny. "The ball hit
the bal the raght way and il
went."
Ryan. 2·3. who went the dis·
lance despite givi ng up 10 hits
and walking seven. said the
pitch Nahorodny hit didn't have
any zip on it. In fact. he said. hi s
velocity was off all night.
"It was a fast ball -If that's
what you want to call it," Ryan
sa id of the pitch Jllahorodny
nailed during a five-run uprising
in the eighth inning. "I felt aU
right. I thought I had fairly good
stuff. but I didn't have good
velocity."
"He (Ryan ) wasn 't at his
best ... said California Manager
Dave Garcia. "But going into
the eighth he had only given up
five hits and we were in the
game." ·
Nahorodny's shot. his third of
the year. followed a run-scoring
single by Eric Soderholm. Jorge
Orta lat.er capped the rally with
his fifth homer. a two·run s hot
into the rightfield s tands.
"I threw Orta a curve and he
guessed right." said Ryan.
Steve Stone. 2·2. scattered
seven hits over eight iMi.Jlgs to
earn the victory. He needed re·
lief help from Jim Willoughby in
the ninth when the Angels erupt·
ed for fi ve runs.
"I didn't have exceptional
stuff. but you've got to be happy
when you win," said Stone. "I'd
like lo get in the groove and not
walk as many as I did tonight.
That should come with more
work."
Na horodny. the C hicago
See ANGEl.li, Page B2
INJURED GRIDDER
GKIS $600,000
PHILADELPHIA <APl -A
Common Pleas Court jury has
awarded a $600,000 settlement to
a former high school f09tball
player who blamed his in,,uries
from a 1970 pme on lbe com·
pany that. made his helmet. 1
Joseph Stella, 24, bad 1ued the
Wilson Sporting Goods Co. Inc.,
beca"8e hls helmet •lle1f/dly did
not provide adequate pro~tJon
for the side Of his head. ·
Francis £. Marshall, attorney
for the sporting goods compapy.
said the amount of the award
would not be appealed.
<Stella, who played fullback.
bad ..,alked off the field and col·
• lapsed later on the sidelines, the
suit ch~ged", and bad to undergo
brain surgery.
•• ID
' Jn any event, Angel stands the
best chance of any Oran1e Cout
area athlete to take home •
medal.
Il may-be the la.at time he nms
for a year.
"I'm going to take next year
otf and give my knee a chance to
heal," Angel saye. "After that,
I'd like to f'Un. ror Lona BMeh
State. I'll 1UJl hU• two ,yean ot
eU(IIbtlilY e n -
Montreal. the host city Cor the
1976 Games, sufrered a debt or Los Angeles lawyers previous-
•
Deighto~Su
UCI's lnvin to Retiri
By HOWARD L. RANDY °' .. Dell'/~,... Some men are destined for greatness
when tbey are born and if the legions of
friends and former players under Al Irwin as
coach, administrator. life guard and just plain good guy are any criteria for success. he
bas reached the pinnacle during his 36 years as
an educator. .
Al Irwin, 60. has announced his retire·
menl from UC Irvine in June and plans to
hang out the "gone fi sh in'" sign quite often
after that date.
"It isn't that 1 am disenchanted with the
university, coaching or the associations I
have made here." he says. "It's simply that l
feel after 36 years l owe it to my wife to
spend more ti~e with her.
"I HAVE LOOKED AROUND at other
people my age and some younger that didn 'l
make~t this far and I want to have some time
to enjoy fishing and camping.
"I have looked al my retirement and
what investments I have made and I reel that
financially l can make It.
"I am leaving with no regrets on any
level -at Newport Harbor High, Orange
Coast College or here at the university. All of
them have been very good to me."
Irwin was born in Newport Beach as was
his mother and he loves the area. He played
football. basketball and swiun for Newport
Harbor High, then transrerred to College of
the Pacific In Stockton to play football for one
or the greatest of all coaches -Amos Aloauo
Stagg.
AL·IRWlN
IN 1138 HE PLA YEO a1ainat Notre
Dame at South Bend with most or the players
going both way• with few subsUtutions.
blockmg back. He weighed 212 in those days
but ls a triln 184 now and says he should lose to pound$.
"We went lnto the fourth quarter or our
game with Notre Dame leading, 7~." Irwin
recalls. "We lost 25-7 because they had more
manpower. We .only had 21 players for that
game and we were tiJ'ed ...
"Mr. Stagg and I corresponded almost
monthly durine the time I was in the Navy ...
Al rec~lls. "He once sent me the old ongina~
plays he designed and used between 1937 41 .
He was tbe greatest."
The next year COP defeated the
University of California. 6--0. Irwin was a
!"•Jard until hts senior year when be moved to
THERE AIJE 'fllOSE who feel he has
<See IRWIN, Page BZ>
Sub Hiu ~i-d Pinch Homsr I
Lacy Living (Jp to Role
LOS Af'-JGELES <AP> -Lee
Lacy has been given the
nickname "Hendo" by bis
manager, Tom Lasorda, and the
Los Angeles Dodgers ' utility
man is living up to his role in
dramatic fashion.
Seven Umes he has appeared
as a pincb·hitter this year and
on five of those occasions be has
reached bale -tlle last U\fee of·
ficial lal·bals vJa a home run, a
major league record.
Wednesday n ight, in the
Dodgers' 10.1 blasting of Pitts·
burgh. Lacy delivered bis
third consecutive pincb·blt home
run. and afterwards, be said. ''J.t. 's about Ume for me to ac·
c0m~UQ..somethin1 in baseball.
"I'm just trying to make the
best of It," Lacy said of hls role
as a plncb-httter. ~·u belng 'Hon· · do• 11 what they want. then
that's what l'll do.",
La())' bit his lint pinch homer
May 2. •t Chicago, connected
tgaln 11.,Y 6 at. Pittsburgh tn his
next pioch·bi,l appearance and
then, an. Vl•lking as a pinch·
hitter'May 7, homered asaln as
a pincla-liltter ln Uie ei&Jlth In·
Dini Wedneada)' nilbt. Dave~ and Ron Cey also
homered. and Tommy John
bu.rled bls sixth victory tn seven
dedsion1 as tbe Dodaen com·
• • cieU~nce U.t made him a hlehlY·
1ou1bt .,... etar three years
.. o.
At Hetlnston Beach Htah.
Anael e~ varatly cross com-
try MVP hOnort tour 1trallhl yean u4 took M«lnd ln the Clr
mile nw u. Hnior.
He ·~ • f'llt scbolarahtp to the Onwenlty ot Indiana and
tumed la some 1oocS Umea Che
waa conslltentty under ;J:51 lb
the l ,!500) but a•ve it up after
I
pleted a thre~·garbe series
sweep or the Pirates. '
Idle today. Uie Dodgers be.gin
a three.game series with the
streaking San Francisco Giahts
Ftiday night at l>odeer StaJilum.
Pitts burgh tontlnue!t its tortg
road trip Friday night In Mon·
tr~I against the Expps.
The 1'8t time John f•ced the
Pl.rates, on May 1 in Ptttsb~;
the Dues stole eight bases on
him. Determio~ not to let the same thing h,appen Wednesday
ol~ht. John and Los Angeles
pitching coach Red Adams de·
visea a m ethod to keep the
speedy Pirates from running.
"1 warmed,)! by throwing to
first base.· said J ohn, who
threw lo first 12 times in the first
inning alone. "l would have
thrown over there SO times if l
needed lo.
"Those eight steals were em·
Dedget-Slate
AllO-•KAK .... (1tel
Tlldey idle f rlHy S.l\~MCllCO•U.os"'91es 7:Up,m.
S.llH'de'f $all ~tN:lsc.o ••Loi Mgetot ''" p.m.
barrasslng." continued John.
"Everytb.ing was written about
them made me sound like some
, klnd of dummy. Tonight l wasn't
gotng 1o let that happen again.
The best thing is to keep them
off the bases."
John did Just that after giving
op a run in the first inning.
However, be picked National
League stolen base king Frank
Taveras off first In the first. pre-
vepting an even bJ.gger inning.
Lopes bit a t'fO-Mln homer ln
the third and the Doc:taers erupt.
ed for five runs ln the fourth
aiaiDst loeer Jim Rooker, 2·2,
and reliever Jim Bibby.
Cey homered ~itb Reggie
Smith aboard la the seventh and
then LacJ bit his record shot in
th• eia.hth off Will McEnanev .
HfiMiuMM L.0$.A .... LU . ....... ., ...
T-•• It 1 0 "°""1't JI 11 ..._.d 110• &.ecyn "" ,..,..,,. ,.,. ....... 1tt0 ,-
........... JOOt T.MtlftlMJM 1000
M( ..... p 0000 ft.lfl\ltllrf SI 10
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D ESPlrt'E A MJDSEAiON ooo aeuoo . II' It "••A IO ....,ll..HI H 4 • • 4 I
bout wltb tho nu and th• ••••.• v ftlftMtT Ilk troublesome l!ntt. w · .. L ~ ~n e ovu .. yeu..ago. Aetelliu-k..alalo• ln the w..U..r ouL
matnttlned the level or ••· &ee&l18TLU~P• .. 8t , .,
..., _.,.,,
, .... , •• -I
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Jlflll c-. ... ,, • • ' ' , 1 .~~-..~ t-•. ·-.... -..
-!-------------~---------
(
•
'·
ltl DAILY PILOT
SHAWN GILL
Huntington Beach
Thur.dly May II, I 171
VIC MARTIN
Mater Del
MARK OAPELLO
Marina
Area Stars Honored
Alt.Orange County Team Picked
Eight. Orange Coast area athletes are
among the selections of the 1978 AU-Orange
County baseball team as chosen by the Dally
Pilot with three ptcklns off ftnrt team berths.
Huntington Beach Hlgb'a Shawn Gill, Mark
Dapello of Marina High and Mater Del ace
Vic Martin were honored with first team
selections.
Valley outfielder Kevin Romine on the
second team and third team choices Mike
Empting <Fountain Valley>. Bob Meacham <Mate r Dei), Jim Thomas <Huntington
Beach> and Pete Changala CEI Toro>
Player of the year ls Mike Witt of Sernte
High, tbe spectacular right-hander with an
11·0 record. Coach of the year laurels go to Sonora
High's Tim Terrell, whose Hawks shut out
Fullerton twice in Orange League action to
tie for tbe league championship.
Gill was tabbed for first team laurels
following b1s efforts In leading the Oilers to a
portion of the Sunset League champlOUbip
and a berth 1D the second round ot the Cl F
playoffs. Dapello, an all-league selection as a
sophomore outllelder and an All-CIF first
team pick at destgnated hitter as a Junior.
batted .415 and played second base for the
M arlna Vl.ldnp.
Martin faablooed a 7·1 pitching record In
addition to belttng the ball at a .443 clip, In -
cluding a pair or doubles, three triples and
two homers. He struck out 45 in 48 Innings of
work prior to the playoffs.
Others "amering honors include Fountain
F,....PageBJ
Al~CM!lty
l'lrstTMm
,~, Sr
.. 0 Sr
Jll1 Sr
JIO Sr.
*Sr . ... Sr.
.:.N Sr.
.412 5'.
.QI Jr.
A13 Sr.
"' •l Sr
10-! Sr. IN Jr. .. Sr.
424 Jr ., s.-.
.. Sr .m Sr.
... Sr
M1 Sr 410 Sr
1 1 Sr
UC IRVINE'S IRWIN TO RETIRE. • •
been equally as successful iD
his own way.
During World War II be
served with the Navy and was
swimming coach at Great Lakes
Naval Tralnlng Station for two
years before moving to Union
College in Schenectady, NY as
head swimming coach and an
assistant in football.
He also served as a ntght deck
officer on the battleship Lex·
ington on active duty.
When he was released from
the service, he returned to
Pacific as an assistant foot.ball
coach under Stagg for spring
practice. He spent one year at
Antioch High School in the San
Francisco Bay area but yearned
to return to his native Newport
Beach.
HE SPENT TWO YEARS at
Valencia High then moved to
Newport Harbor Hlgh from
1948-1956; Orange Coast C-Ollege
from 1956-1965; and UC Irvine
when it opened in 1965 to the pre·
sent.
His proudest moments rn
coachiq? "Opening day in 1948, my tint
as a bead football coach,
Newport played St. Anthony's
and they were heavy favorites
with John Olszewski, Bill Mais
and John Peterson in the lineup.
They beat us by scoring in the
last two seconds, 13-7, then went
ontowintheCIFchampionship."
He also recalls the 19'9 seuon
when his team went 8-1 for the
year. MOl5t of the players atilt
live in the area ~d recall those
days vividly.
HE WAS HEAD FO<n'BALL
coach one year at Orange Coast.
then illness forced retirement
from football coaching and he
turned to aquatic sports. In 1996
his OCC swimmlng team was
18-1 for the year. losing only to
USC when the Trojans won the
nnal freestyle relay.
At UCI, he was the pioneer
aquaUcs coach and ln 1969 his
team brought the first NCAA
championahip trophy home in
swimming. As an administrator.
he la equally proud of the school's
Division I water polo triumph in
1970. ··From a natiooal standpoint.
this one gave us a big thrust an
our program," he says.
His work with the city of
Newport Beach and the
lifeguard.group has been equally
outstanding and he has been re
cognized by the national and
world surf lifesaving associa-
tions with certificates of ap-
preciation.
BUT B.IGlfl' NOW, he is look·
ing forward to fishing on the
Smith River outside Crescent
City in Northern California, a
f amlly recreation spot for the past
20 years, and tourlne in Baja
California.
But the big thing for Irwin.
and his wife Lois, is the fact he
is taking the time now to enjoy
retirement and do some things
he hasn't been able to do in the
past.
His will be a void that will be
bard to replace al UC Irvine.
'78
ZEPHYR
LIASEFOI
Baseball Standings
sag••
Mo. +Tax & Lie
$89.99 mo. + tax a license & eec for ae moca.
CaP cost $42&4. Tot.i of
monthly payment. 13271.
R .. lduel ~21~. 38 moe.
OAC. Stk. tro.6
AUTO LIASlMG
TMIWAYIT
AUJOlll
AMERICAN LEAGUE
DJ&Dlvll6oe
Detroit
Boston
New York
Clevelancl
Milwaukee
BaltJmore
Toronto
W L PcL GB
21 9 .700
23 12 .657 112
19 13 .:S94 3
18 16 .500 6 ur is .4SS 1"4l
13 19 .406 9
13 19 .406 9
Wel&DlvlalOlt
Oakland 22 12 .647
ADgela 19 14 .S76 2"4l
KanauCity 18 14 .583 3
Texas 1e 15 .51e 4"
Minnesota 12 23 .3'8 10"'
Chicago lO 20 .313 10
Seattle ~ 25 .3M 111,ia
... llhl''• ... Tor9fttell...._, • .,ralft
a _....S,....,Yonl•. "'"""""" O.tlotlt .. Ml ....... J
OlleaQOt, CAlllfOnlMl6
Teus4.0lllt*"* OnlyfllllNltd-.iell • . ,...,.._.._
C.llfOnll•l~)~Ca.rto.HI O.trolt C"'9rnl t-\)et • ..,...., ( ........
Ml
MnJV. '°"*" .. '~ 1Mtooi.11,11 T--ca.tyMl•Wti-.C~» ,..~,,ft
Ml ..... CZaMM)• a.-.. City('--"'
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to.llftatDltl'lllt,it Qlk.lleMta.i.nd,ft c:.tll'9mlHIMll .....
'l-
'\ . ~ ..
NA'nONAL LEAGUE
East Dlvlaloa
W L Pct. GB
Philadelfhia 11 14 .548
Montrea 18 15 .545
Chicago 16 17 .485 2
Pittsburgh 14 19 .424 4
New York lS 21 .417 4~
St. Louis 14 22 .389 5~
Welt Dlvlaloa
San Fr~iseo 22 12 .647
Doc11ers 21 14 .600 1 ~
Cincinnati 20 15 .5'11 2~
Houston 18 16 .500 5
San Diego 16 18 .471 6
Atlanta 13 19 .408 8 .......,, •• lc'Mw
1M1 Oleeo S, M. Lo\119 t
· Sen f'r.-cleco '· OMeeeo S
Atl..,I• 2-1, New Vol'k. '"· hi 9tme. 10 In lll"Ot
MontrHI s. On<l-14. " IMlnot Houiton l , PtllleotlCIN• t
Lot l'<nQel9l 10, ~ltt'~ I ,_ •.• o.m.
Cl11tiM•ll (Norm&n UI •• MoftttHI ("OOtf'•
•·)I. n
All•nte CHannt t-01 el N ... Y0tk llatllry .. 0.
n PttollldelCll'll• COW'lll..,_ I JI et HOUlllOft CJ
Nl~kro 1-41. n
Ontyo-~ ,,...,. ... _
St LOiii\ e4 O>IC-00
Pllls~rQll •I MOMrNI, n Plllledelpl!ie at.,.._ y91'll, II ~ Olevoet Cll'<l~1 ll All.nla e4 HoiMoll, II ,.,, ,,,_1_., i.o.Anoe•~ "
LEASING •••
f'r991 Pflfle 8 J
ANGELS •••
catcher. said Stone had "ex·
c•ellenl <..'<>mmand of his pitches.
but his arm dropped at the end
when he 1ot a little tired "
St.one hit Don Baylor with a
pitch to open the California ninth
and yielded a single to Lyman
BASEBALL / MISCELLANY
In Preakness
Six to Challenge
Affirmed Saturday
I
Bostock and a walk to Bobby From AP Dls,Pakbes
Grich to load the bases wllh BALTIMORE -Affirmed wlll try t.o add a victory In the
none out. Carney Lansford Preakness to his triumph in the Kentucky Derby when be runs
followed with a two-run single to 3 f a Inst six other 3·year-olds Saturday at
send St.one t.o the showers. p mlico.
"He was aoing so well that l Among hl.s opponents will be Calumet
was shocked when they scored Farm's Alydar and Hickory Tree Stable's
so quickly In UJe ninth," said Believe Jt who were second and third, retpet-
Chlcago Manaaer Bob Lemon. uvely, ln the Derby.
1 k. e Hampton g re et e d Also entered today for the 13/18 mile test
Willoughby with a two-run triple were Abquith Stables' Track Reward, Miami
off the left-centerfield wall. Lakes Ranch's Noon Time Spender.
Willoughby retired the next two Raymond F. Procopio'a kldigo Star and
-bltA)r.!, -!>~•,~·Yi9l~ I! ~---,.--Nat.';;-~:!~ ... --___ ·-=-••
scoring single lo Ron Fairly tr all seven start. the 103rd Preakness
before getting Tony Solalta to Oy will be worth $188,700, with Sl.86.~ to tbe winner.
out to end the game. Track Reward Is trained by Albert Ban-tta. the son of Laz
The victory snapped a four· Barrera who trains Harbor View Farm's Affirmed.
game losing streak for the WhJte
Sox.
The Angels met the White Sox in
Chicago this afternoon then begin
a three-game series in Mllwaukee
Friday night.
CAlll"OltNIA
.. rllM A Miiier rl 5 0 t 0
Cl\al~ U 5 0 I 0 Felrly lb S 1 2 1
SolelleOll S 0 1 0
kylor II 2 1 0 1 eouoo ct •110 Grid\ 21> 7 1 I 0 l..emlord lb , 1 , 2
Hvnltlf\rty c 2 O O O
lendrNull pt1 1 o o o Hemptonc 1 1 1 2
CHICAGO
Garr If
1( ... 1~• Ort. 21>
Blomller9cll'I
L.JclfWllOft 111
L.emoro d MollMrrf
SodettlCll m 311
NellO<dnf<
.. ," ..
• 2 1 I l I 2 t
• ' l l •I 0 0 • 0 1 0
4 000 3220
, ' 1 1 JI t.
Tole!\ ,. • • • Tolela 31 '10 • C.lllornle 000 001 OOS....
011ca90 110 901 ISll-4
I! -Ryen. OP -GelllarM I. CMc-I. L0e -
C.lltonue 1, Oii'-1, 28 -0..llt, Grlal, L. ~. 38-0en, HaMOIM. HR -~y cu. Ori. m. s -K .. .,.,, SI' -.. .,..,..
Sodorllolm
Ryan ll, 2·)1
CALll'OltNIA
'~ " It •••• '°
I 10 ' • I • CHICAGO St-IW. 2·21 I 1 S S • 1
W tlOllQhl>'f 1 l t 1 0 1
HBP -Baylcw c~ S.-1 T -2:21 A -n,.,.
F,....Page8J
RUSTLER •..
there," Angel explains. ''It was
either hot and humid, or snow
and ice. We had to train on an
indoor track and that's what
hurt m y knee."
Beca~ of the persistent pain,
Angel hasn't been able to train
as much as he thinks a distance
runner should.
"I haven't run over 30 miles a
week. Some of the guys I run
against do as much as 80 miles a
week," Angel says. ''I tried
rumaing more but the knee was
too tender. It just wasn't worth It. .•
EVEN WITH the reduced
workouts and fiberglass imert in
his street shoe, Angel has risen
to the top in his field.
Is it possible that reduced
workouts are actually better,
leaving a runner more rested?
"No. 1f I could run more I'd
have more endurance and be a
little stronger," Angel answers.
"I think I'm capable of a lot
faster times. I just run as faat as
I can.··
LM ....._IS, 1Nt11t U Women -~ ISi def. E...n .. >; ~-I·
Kly0mur• CL.Ai de! ~..._.. .. 1.
Men -c;or,,_ ISi def. NH&.ta 7 .. ; 0---
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women -Wldt (GGI clef. aerur .. ,l W-
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Mind -ICt\IOlf'MCM!lleft <OGI Clef. lfww.
8t llt.-1
A -4,"7.Al$911 Freillelk o
OCC Talk Mulls
'Spom Psyching'
Dr. Thomas Tutko, one of the
country's leading sports
paychologiata, will speak Friday
mor ning (10 o'clock> ln the
Orange Coast College
auditorium.
Tutko'a topic wm be: .. Sports
Psyching -How to Play Your
Beat Game Allot the Time."
Admission Is free_
Tutko la professor of cUnlcal
psychology at San Jose State
and co-founder of the lnatltute
for study of athletic motivation .
He ls the author of alx boob, in·
eluding WinnlnJl la Everyt.bing
and Other American Myths ..
...
••••• Pkella .......
SAVANNAH. Ga. -Mon than 1,000 extra f&Dl proba.bty wlll
show up Just to watch Jlm Bouton try another pltch1DJ com"8ck
Friday niaht. accordlns to Savannah Braves General Manager
Dave Fenclrlck.
Alt.endance at the Southern Le11ue aame should double"'
because Bouton, sports author and former major leaaue pitcher,
wUl start for the Braves, Fendrick eatlmat.ed Wednesday.
"I antlclpate between 2,000 ucl 3,000. If we draw 3,000, I'd aay
1.500 come because of Boutoa," Fendrick said.
Bouton, a 3&-year-old knuckleballer, will work a1alnat
NaabvWe after betng atgned Tuelday by Atlanta Brav• owner
Ted Turner. wbo also owns the farm club at Savannah.
------Q19C.Me0-te------....,
Bobby llondl, after learnlq be had been traded from
the Chicago White Sox to the Tex-. Ranaen: "I wu hop-
ing to stay. I just paid two moatba r-.t on my apartment
and my furniture ls on the way. I don't even know where
Texas is ln the atandinp."
v.-aertetaen .. ..,. lflfl•
lNDIANAPOLIS -Tbe Ill..-and brome badgea needed for
entry to the 1araae ud Pit area at the lndlanapoUa Motor
Speedwrt::;e loQI been the objeet ol collectors.
Full e colfectloaa are worth up to Sl,000. Now. tt seems,
the bada9 are attrac:Unc the lDtenst of counterfeiters. •'Some.of tbem are very aood," aald an admlrin1 Speedway of.
fictal, dlsplaying some ot the counterfeit badces coa.fi.acated so far
during practice thla month for t.be .May 28 Indy 500. "The things
that usually give them away are t.be poor paint Jobs. and the fact a
bunch of them will all have the same number.··
This year guards are not only cbecklng to mate sure the
badgeholden are in the proper area -bronze in the 1ara1e only.
silver good anywhere -they are IORginl badge numbers and
ch~klng their authenticity.
"If.people have counterfeited bad1es. it seems the whole group
will come In at the same-time. It's fairly euy to pick tbem out.··
the official uplal.Ded. "The ones we've cau&bt this year have been
about the best we've ever seen. The best ones have been made
Crom molds, some in dentists' offices."
O.etdlere hi Sper••· ••
BASEBALL -The New York Yankees announced tbe siplng
Wedneaday ot second baseman Due Garda. son of Angel skipper
Dave Garcia, and he'll report to Oneonta of the New York-Penn
--....... .,-:--League. Garela balled .325 for Grossmont
College this spring. . . The Milwaukee Brewers
have reacquired Dave May from the Texas
Rangers. May, a .252 Ufetlme batter, was
originally traded to the AUanta Braves for Hank
Aaron .•. Gene Teeace, who signed a six-year
contract for $1.8 million with San Diego in late
1976, is upset he is not playing on a regular
basis for the Padres and aaya: "A trade ls the
only solution.". _ .The Oakland A's have asked
waivers on infielder Marty Perez ... The Atlan-
ta Braves have reactivated outfielder Gary
DAW MAY llatdaewa. .. The Nlagna Falls Pintea have
withdrawn from the Class A New York-Penn League due to lack of
funds.
HORSE RACING -Steve Caatlletl, who is scheduled to ride
Kentucky Derby winner Affirmed ln Saturday's Preakness.
escaped wtth only a minor wrist injury Wedneaday when be was
thrown by his mount after the fourth race at Aqueduct • • . Jockey
Ron TmcoUe was reported in good condition in a hospital in
Alberta, Canada, after falling from hls bone durinC tbe seventh
race at Northland& Park Tuesday n.l@t. Turcotte suffered two
broken ribs when his mount, Kid Soq11e, snapped hls left front leg
on the clubhouse turn and trampled tbe faUen jockey. 1be 5-year·
old horse was destroyed ... Gal.Uvuw and 0.Teetl captured the
split divWoos of the South Bay Handicap before a crowd of 22,91\
at Ho~lywood Park.
OTHER SPORTS -Oklahoma S&at.e is being eyed again by
the NCAA for possible recruiting violations, tb1s just four months
after being slapped with a two-year probation -.. The wlfe of
world heavyweljbt boxing champion Leoa 8plMs say1 abe and
three companions were harrassed with racial slurs by two white
Michigan state police troopers who ltOPPed their car . - . 8'lab is
scheduled to appear before the St. Louis Clreult Court Grand Jury
today to tell his side of an incident that led to drug charges a1ainst
him . . _ The Peach Bowl is in jeopardy of folding. The NCAA has
mandated that 40 percent of the tickets (lt,149> must be sold In the
Atlanta area or lose its certification ... West German soccer star
Bend Franke. sUffered a broken rtgbt leg in practice . . . Corrado
Banuaul and llarojd 8olomoa were upset Wednesday on tbe
second day of an lnternatloaal teruUs tourney in Florence, Italy.
Glaul Odeppo beat Baralfttd, M, M: Bein PnJMx stopped
Solomoa.. M, S.2 . __ Pomona's Bkbrd ludoval ldvaneed to the
light flyweight semJflnals at the World Amateur boxinl cbam·
plonablpa ln Bel1rade . . . The eatran1ed wtfe of Harlem
Globetrotter star Meadowlark Lemoa bu pleaded 1ullty to one
count of simple assault stemming from an April 25 atabblnc attack
on her husband.
Sperf•-lladlo, T~
RADIO: Tonight-Hone Rac1ng-Hollywood Park Feature
Race, s o'clock, KIEV C870 >; Soccer-Loi Angeles Aztecs at Tulaa.
7:SO p.m., KIIS Cll!iO>.
TV: Tonight-Hockey-Montreal at Boston. s o'clock. Channel
22: Satter-Games from Germany, 9o'clock. Channel 22 <tape1
Bruins, Montreal Battle
From AP Dtspatc.HI made dosena of 1uperlattve
•loPI Tmeda)' nleht &1alnat &he
Canadleal, but ooe mlata.ke on
hi'\' Ta• ... •
O.••tlefD••S
BOSTON -The belea1uered
Boston Snrlna, down 2-0 1D tb.elr
National Hockey Leaaue cbam·
plonshlp series with tho Mon·
treal can.ctJens, return to the
cosy coofinea of the Boston
Gardens toniabt for the t.b1.rd
aame wttb hopes of tumio1 the Ude. Ouy i.n.ur·a 1hot al 13:«» of
The Bruins ate unbeaten in overthn• nv• Montreat a 8·2
five playoff games tb111euon at v'ctoryand'ltl2·01ead. uai Boston Gardena, but " Ch"vert takes • •imple OUl·
Boston Is to pull out -victory, look tor a mll'I wtth ao com·
lt'U h•v• to 1et ~e 1corin1 pllc..ted a Job. "I look at ll this
front-"6-fonwatda.. -w91;• IQ'l ..1he vet.~ran Botton
Boalco roall• Gerey Cheewn netmlnditr, "I've never saved
-
. OD~ that'a IOQe in."
"Cbeeven plays wilb a superb
know9edge of the same that
mott 80IJJes don't have,'' says
Boaton center Pete McNab.
.. He's alway1 out·lhlnklAM and
out·IU-.ainl hiJ oppooent.a."
But Chtevera out·aueued
hlmaelf on the lut abot, and he'e.
1Ull ·~~about It.
"Thert 1 no -.tl1f action when
you don't win," he sa11. "Even lt yo&& play well, 1t doesn't mean
you fMl =lf we win. that mea.QJ 1 well.. 11 w&.lole,
that meant waa louly."
..
• TRACK I BASEBALL
CIF FINALISTS -Newport Harbor High 's
foursome or Chris Corum. Wayne
Kaspar ek, Steve Dawson and Frank
Venclik have a s hol at the crown in
the 4-A mile r elay at Saturday's Cl F
track and fie ld cha mpions hips at Arcadia
DM!y,. ..........
High. Besides running on both relays,
Corum runs the 440. Kasparek is in the 330
low hurdles and Venclik competes in the
880. Dawson. coming off a n injury, is also
on both relay teams.
No Time for Bitterw··North
LOS ANGELES <AP> -A
smiling Bill North says he holds
no bitterness toward Oakland
A's owner Charles 0 Finley.
But he Is glad to be a member of
the Los Angeles Dodgers and he
will do what he can to help the
defe nding National League
champions win .
reaction to the trade. "I heard
something was in the works, but
I was surprised.
been on the bench much of the
season.
"I understood where he could
do that: it was his prerogative
as lhe owner." said North. "I
don't think it was best for me or
for the team, but that's baseball.
North, traded to Los Angeles
for outfielder Glenn Burke Tues· day night, arrived at Dodger
Stadium about an hour before
Los Angeles faced Pittsburgh
Wednesday night. Because Rick
Monday was sidelined with a
pulled thigh muscle, North was
the Dodger's starting center
fielder.
''The A's were playing real
well but I think this as a better
place for me," continued the
30-year-old North, who came lo
the A's after they won their first
World Series title in 1972 and
was the starting center fielder
on their 1973 and 1974 cham-
pionship learns. "I don't have
ume for any bitterness. Life is for
living."
"I think the A's are a good
young ballclub that's done
whal's•been asked of them so far
this year," added North . ••J
think they have a good nucleus.••
North acknowledged a respect
for Finley.
"It's nice to be here." North
said with a laugh when asked his
North was the rinal member of
the A 's championship teams on
the current roster before the
trade. Like many of his former
teammates, he was playing oul
his option, and because of lhat,
on orders from Finley, he had
"He's brought in some good.
young players ," he said. "I
don't know ir it was done inad-
vertently or by design, but he's
done it before. Except for the
power factor. the A's resemble
the team or the late 1960s ...
In SoCal Finals
JC Spikers Compete
W ALNUT-Si'x a thle tes from
Golden West College and one from
Saddleback try their luck in the
Southern California Community College track and field championship
Saturday at ML San Antonio College.
Distance runner Robert Angel and
pole vaulter Steve Rakhshani lead
the Golden Wesl contingent. both
coming in on the heels of outstanding
performances at the prelims last
Saturday. ' Angel won his heat or the l ,SOO
meters in 3:55.4, the fastest clocking or the day, and also captured his 800
meters heat in 1: 53.0. Meanwhile, Rakbshani was leading
ail qualifiers in the pole vault with a
leap of lf>.l. setting a season and
personal best and also a Rus ller
record
Vic Rakhshani qua lified for the
finals ln the shot put and discus. He
was second best in the shot (52-9) and
seventh in the d iscus at 148--3.
Freshman sprinter Perry Johnson
will represent Golden West in the 100
and 200 meter sprints. He clocked
10.4 in the 100 for second place and
won his heat in the 200 in 21.4
Golden West will have two in the
javelin rinals-Mike Poller and Don
Stanford. Potter got off a lifetime
best of 201-2 for sixth place, while
Stanford was ninth in 194-3. Saddleback's 9ualifier is Bill
Tokar. who took atXth in his heat of
the 1,500 with a 3:59.9 clockiuR.
ln lhe girls' <livision, Orange Coast
qualified five athletes in nine events
while Golden Wesl put four of its
athletes in the finals.
Orange Coast has Joy Merimon in
the 100 (12.0), 200 (25.2) and long
jump Cl7-ll): Bonnie Dasse in the
shot put (39-41/:!). discus throw (140-4 >
and javelin (128-9); Joellen Sbeelar
m the 100 hurdles (15.7) and Signe
Carlson in the 400 hurdles (1 :06.0).
OCC also qualified its 400 relay
team.
Golden West will be represented by
Oliva Leon (javelin. 134·0), Pam
Banks Chigh jump, 5-1), Kathy Keys
(400, 57.1 > and Diane Stuart <long
jump. 15·8>.
Men's field events begin at 3 p.m.
and lhe running starts at 4. Women's
events also start at 4.
CAPRI
SERVICE SPECIAL!
'We Caa Do It'
Cocky Tar Quartet
Aims at CIF Gold
DAIL 'f PILOT 83
Rustlers
Honored
Three players from Golden
West College were selected to
the AU·Southem California Con·
ference finl team In a poll by
the tircult 's baseball coaches
thl1 week. By EllNIE CASTILLO
Of .. Dllltr .........
For an encore to a reeord·breaklng seuon, Chris Corum. The honored RustJen are in-
Frank Vencllk, Steve Dawson and Wayne Kasparek are sbootin1 fielder Doug Mansolino <.2631.
for the one goal that has el~ed them ln their four yean of outfielder John Moses <.324 1 and
partnership-sold medals al the CJF track flnab. des ignated hitter Rick Clark
Specifically, the Newport Harbor Hilh quartet. which won C.316).
eight dual meets, two major lnvitaUonab and f second straight Mike Goulet of Rio Hondo
Sunset League crown this campaign, ls aiming fOr the 4·A mile re-College was named player of the
lay crown at Saturday's CIF championships at Arcadia High. year. GouJet led the conrereoce
Though they are seeded just fourth ln the event, tbe Sailors go u rs t • t ~am er 1 w 1th 8 • 3 7 s
into the meet with the same supreme confidence they exhibited all average year. .
--~"I'm _111ntwe.sg d9. It," exudes Corum, who bu sparked con· ••nn-
troversy with some aneoavenu<illat""fieilaviot-U\u-U.-.=wm.;·~.K.w-··-.._~~.·-~· 9.·So. ~-that leads m•nv to believe be is cocky not P--.ruc• '· ~ .... ~ • P~lm Prlcle, LA Kwllor Fr .. • confident. "We've never all nm at our best P-O.w ~· "'°"°'* So. .. together," be says. •-we can win it ll we nm 19-111eoeui.t. R1oHc1MO So. .Jn
to our full potential." ::::~~~ 5::.r ~ :: ::':
Corum is the first to admit be choked "''-co.it 1NN01wio. Go1G1o1 w"t So. .~
som ewhat at last week•s prellms when ~...:;!~~ :: ::
Newport ran a season best 3:20.3 ln finlshing OF-JOM~~w.st So. .n4
second to Pasadena <3:20.0) in Its heat. Run· ~~~==~=~¥on•u :: J~ Ding anchor. Corum took the baton ln the o.,-6t .... ""''"""· Riol40nd0 So. .-
lead but tightened In the st.retch drive and e:::::,:~.::..__, ~ ·~~
was passed by Pasadena sprint ace Ivan ~ ,_
<tl!tveland near the tape. . 909 MAtuY P-O.UC• ~~-.st So .. , "I can beat him," insists Corum, who had a sub-par 50.S leg P-Mar• Oierrk •. LA~ Fr. ~·
that negatedflneefforta by Veodik <48.7 ) and Kasparek (d.3>. ~8~=~~ F~· J;! With Centennial and Muir running 3:18.l and 3:18.4 ln IDOtber •nf-llleOgle.~ Fr. .l•S
heat, Newport will have to nm under 3: 18 to win It. That's under ::::.::, ~"~ ="" So. .~
49.S a lap with a lot or the beat on leadoff man Dawson, who ran •nf-.ctors.i..,uo1., :: :~:~ 51.S in tbe prellms. c_.,,.., .......,., Gol4llft w... Fr. ·'°"
D h , .J~aly OF~amt ...... C\'PntU F<. .JOI awaoo says es com.,""'"" reeovered from the hamstring oF~•mFonytll.CV-Fr. .l4' pull that curtailed his running the past month and kept him from OF-Stan LrA. u o o, So. .Jl!I
qualifying in his s pecialty. the 120 high hurdles. The stockiest and ~~~t:= ::. :: least famous of the group, he has been cl06e friends with Venclik u11-Joeei'•H•U10.sn.~ So. .J1.
since kindergarten.
Vencllk stands out from the group for two reasons. He ls the
only one with straight hair and the only quiet one. He alao bas the
only chance at winning an ln<lividuaJ event, the 880.
Known for a strong kick. VencUk appeared ln trouble ln the
prelims when he was close to last at the mid way point. He made
his patented move around the last curve to wln uncontested in a
lime of 1 :56.0 that makes him the No. z seed.
"The leaders came in at 54," be recalls ... I came In at 56 but it
was a liWe scary before everybody started foldJDg. I don't like to
lead. I used to when I was younger but I'd Ue up at the end.''
Kasparek, a close friend of Conam's since the fourth grade.
won his heal in the 330 low hurdles in a time or 39.09 that doesn't
figure to win in the finals. But. be quickly points out, it was one of
bis best races in a while, especially after be finiahed a distant third
in the Sunset League.finals.
•'I'm in lane eight so I'm just going to run my own race," be
says. ··1 don't expect to win but I can place."
All four run on Newport's 440 relay team. which bas twice run
42.8 under adverse conditions. 'Ibey went 43.13 in the prelims, the
slowest of the nine qualifiers.
Reg. 596° BRAKE INSPECTION ... s300
N WIMell --Clledl L.illlMJ. FWd. Moster C,... Adfest
OFFB GOOD THIU MAY 31st
8 25,000 Inaugural 'Cap Friday
...... Ow CANI Sped6ts--lee ....... & ..., Stn ...
OPEH DAILY: 7:30 o.a to5:30 p.a
Orange County's oldest Lincoln-Mercury Dealership
cJ'OHNSON a SON
*
LINCOL N MFRCllR'r
COUGAH CAPKI
2616 HAUOl ILVD. COSTA MISA 140-HJO
'3.5 MILLION
IN PURSE MONEY
•
Post Tl111e 7:45 ..
BY POPULAR DEMAND!
TWO 2 EX ACT A S NIGHTLY RACING MONDAY
THRU SATURDAY
,
• Seniors 60 & Over
admitted for '1
Monday thru Thursday
• Katella east of 605 Frwy.
J
(213)431-1361 or (714)995-1234
f
I
1
I I
• ... DAil V PILOT Th~ M.,11.t'78
Solaita Low Bridged
Ton' Sola 1 t:.i of l ht> California Angels ~I 1d·e~ under a throw by White Sox
shor tstop Don Kessinger. Solaita was
forced al setond and Kcssmger's throw lo
Aft-
first made it a double play. The Angels
fell to the While Sox. 9·6. See story. Page
B-1.
Playoff
Picture
Sharpens
Only o n e Orange
Coast area baseball
team re mains ln the Cl F
4 -A playorts as the
quarterfinals loom Fri·
day with Mater Del
High 's Monar chs hold-
ing steady after a pa ir of
playoff victories.
.Tbe Mon ~rc h s of
coach Bobby I c k es
tan gle with Arcadia
High 's Apaches Friday
a fternoon at Santa Ana
College· with lhe-firet
pitch slated for 3:30.
On the mound 1£ his
arm is still holding up
will be Vic Martin, the
Monarchs' slick right·
hander who handcuffed
Covina with a no-hitter
T uesday.
Arcadia is the Pacific
League champion,
seeded in the ehmlna-
tion s and has outscored
two playoff foes, 15·3.
In other playoff ac-
tivities, three-time CIF
4-A t ennis champion
Corona del Mar is on the
road a t Villa Park High
for a quarterfinals tiff,
while Ne wport Harbor,
S unset League cham-
pion, travels to San
Clemente. Both are ten·
tatively s le1ted for 2
o'clock starts.
Volleyball semifinals
action finds defending
C IF 4 -A c hampion
GIRLS ' SPORTS 1 MISCELLANY
PUBUC NOTICE
f'ICTITIOUS 8USINIU NAMIE ST"Tl'.MINT ,,,. tollowlnt --"O•"MI buJI
ne~•' r•AOE SHOWS UNLIMI TEO, •11• Ar•l\4' Ortle, H...,C11191on llaKll CA'2M• Juell A W11119"',, 41~ AreM C:tr-<I• MunU•on -11. CA.,._.. Tiii\ 11\nllltU IS ConQu(l.0 by .n In· OIYIO..fl
Judi A. Wtllla<n• Tiiis ... ,_, WU 111..S wltll ,,..
C.Ou,,ly Clt<ll OI 0.al'IOt Couftlv Oft M<ly
1. ""· ,..-s Publlttoed ClrMtQe C.0.\1 O.lly PllOt,
M.ay 4, 11. II. U. ltll
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J T -$11. Genf<al P•rt-•3)( C:.mpu• Ortve Sulle I.JO N .. tpo•I !MoKll, C.lltornl• ~ r111• busl"'u t\ conouc1.o DY • 11m11eo 0.tr1ner"11P OIH1e<M. i.•noer
~a!Pe'1-flll• 'l•lemenl ••• fll..S wtlll Ille C.Ouflly Cltrli ol OrM!Ot to11n1y on Ao<ll 11. ltTt
PUBLIC NOTICE \ WITTU & HAi.f'OU .,------------1 ~~~1:~~:-1 C-ler Of., l'ICTITIOUI 8UllNHS New.,ert -..Cit, CA tJ... l'ffJJfJ
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-~~----------f'ICTITICMJS aUSINClSS HAMii STATl,,.NT T nt follow1119 II'''°"' •re 001n11 bu\tM•I ~ NEWf'ORT AC,.OE¥Y 01' 9ALLiT, 4lil ~r11,,..i•. S...w G. N•wllOf'I -..ell, C.Cttorlll• tt..a 90f\nlt Wllco•. •MO Port CM!ow. Ntw-t e-:11, C..lllOtNe ~ JOIUI -..1, l101 Calle I.A Qul"I•, s." c•-•~ee111om1a-.n Thlt -INU Is .. lllg C-.CMd br • Gan•r•I f'en-t111p
80-W. Wllco• Tlllt \let-1 llled wlltt llw Count~ Cl.,k 01 Or.,. County on AP<ll n. .. ,8 WOOLHY.ANOllLO &THATCHI"
"" S.11 J-"i """ .. ~ .. .... ~.'-<II. CA. ....
""'"' Publ>ll!ed CWMl9t CNfl 0111~ 1'1101, April 11 .tnd #My ~. II. 18. 1'1t
16»-11 -----------NAM& STATI MINT Putlll'two Or-Coasl D•1lv PllOI.
TM lollOwlnt perton Is dol"9 busl· April n •nd #My•. 11, 18. 1918 PUBUC NOTICE MU~~:SA TOOi. & CUTTER GRIN· -16-1-1-"-1·------------:>ING, 111 w. "'"· J·2. Colla Me~. CA PUBLIC NOTICE .... ..,JI 9U27 SUl"l.IOlt C::OUU Of' TMI Rl<ll••d O•vld ..t11u10 .. I ____________ _,,. nATIOf'CAUllOaNIA~ ..
Escap.cle Cl., "'.._.. 8HCll, CA f'ICTCTIOUS •USINHS TNIE COUNTY o• o•A"GIE
91.U NAMIE5TATIMINT .... ~ .. T~~---....1::-~ ;.>.,..;.,.";_.;;;;,._-;--ft.--~....--.oT't'ee·o~ N•••t•• 01< CIMClv•I bu>oneu ., f'ETITI°" tlolt P*)eA'I• 01' WIU. O•ve-tOft NEWPORT BEACH MAR INE. ANO l'O• &..-n.•s TISTAMU• This ,, .. _I WH llted W•lll 1114! 1137 Bosll». WON .,., M•r. C:A TA•Y A"O llO• AUTMOllllATIOll CounlyCl«kOIOr .... CounlyonM<ly mJS TO ADMUUSTIEA UMOI• TNI
1, 1'71. Mlltloel l..olyM #Ml~'-1161 Ltl· INOIEl"IN09NT AOMf"ISTllATIOfll f'tnaS lie H•rbor Or . Huntlnqton lleach, CA 01' ISTATaSACT Publ>Slled Or ... Coa•I 0.llY Piiot, '7..a Est•le of RI04ARD A. l1E8E May 4, 11, II, u. 1'71 M•rt-LY"" f'olu, 1161 L•lll• 0.c••-1 .... 11 H•rbOr O•. Hvnhr>Qton lle<Kll. C> NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN ltwll ------------lt2..a ANITA JEANNE ZIEBE llH filed
PUBLIC NOTICE Tiii\ t>vslneu I\ <-<ltd l>y • Mrelrt • tietn-for ~le ol w111 oene••• 11.t'1~•P •1111 1or 1-. Of Len.n T .. ,_,. ------------1 MllCl>tl L M<ll-• lary .,,Cl 10' AultoorlHtiol> lo Ad ... ano Tiii\ \l•l-1 .... 111..S wllll IM ml"'"" -... IAllep•-cot AO· SUl"•••O. cou•T Of' TME C.Ounh c:...-OI OrM>91 Cou"'Y Of\ M•Y mlnlstr•tlon OI E•IM• Act. refet'e<Ke STATEOPCALl~•HIAl'Olt 1 1'11 to w111~11 ••made tor lurlf••r THE COUNTY MO•ANGIE '~ partlcul•rs, Mid 111111 the llme •no .... Mf1'6 P~lt5hed 0--C.0.\1 0.llY Piiot, place of ,,..,Ing IN._ fotM i.e.. •et N 0 T t C: I 0, MI A• I HG 0 f' M•Y 4. 11, 11 25, 1'71 tor June •· 1m, .t IO·OO • m .. 1n Ille f'IETITION l'Ott f'ltOSATIE M WILL • 11}1·1· courtrOOfft ol o.cian-"' Ole), l of S••O A"D f'Oll LETTE•S TUTAMEN· ------------coUf't, •I 700 Ovtc Ca<ti.r Drive Wul, TAllY PUBUC NOTICE '".,.. C:•IY ol S.nla #11<;, ~lllornl•. UC•le Of OOAOTHY J. GAYNOlt, • Oaled M<iy 12, 1978
O.ceued. ------------WILLIAM •. St .IOMN, NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN , ... , •flln Counly ci.r• PAUL O. McCLARY, JR. h<t\ llled SUl"IEltlOA coui.T Of' THI L01E8 ANOL.OE8 !Mreln a petition 1or Prot>at. of Wiii STATIEOl"CALll'OaHIAPOi. ($1.,fenlK.lt9iftl
•nd tor lu.-nce ol 1.Altiers Tnl•men· TMIE COU~~~AANGE OM WllaMre ....... Sle. I ..
,.,., , reflf'-.e lo ""11ctt I• -f()( I.As 1....-1 •• CA •11 lurlltef P¥11<111.,S •nd !NI tt>e llme N 0 T IC I 0 f' H Cl Ai. ING 0, Att.nMY ter: ,...~
nd I ot tw I tlw fot .. ETIT tOff f'OR l"i.OeATE 0' WILL :..n ~~~_,_:::;..et;·::;: •. :.~ ANO PO• LEn.as THTAMIN· Publl_ CW.,. Coast 0..ty PllOI, in,.,. coun,_., of O.PMlment Mo. J TARY May •e. •t.1$. me olWklcourt,at1000•kC...terOrlve ESl•I• Of MASUl(O Al(IYAMA,. ~~~,:;,.,II~, IM City ol Sant• An•. ~~~~E IS HEREBY C1VEN 111•1
DOied May 12, 1971. SUMI A. AISO ANO JOE S AKIYAMA WIWAM I . St JONN, ..... tiled hlf'et" •petition f()( Pr-I~ County CM!rll of Wiii -tor I~• of L•ll•rs f'AUL 0 . ~RY, J•. TeSl•mHllMY reft<en<.e lo """''" " U•I Wetklffl 0!1ft WW 111 m.de lo< ...,,_ PM1kula<l, and l,,.I
....._. IMCa CA•tit.M t11e ,...,.. -pt•• oc 11 .. r1no ,,,. wme
PUBLIC NOTICE .,..,
NOTIU TO C1tEOtTOttS SUf'Ei.10. COUltT Of' TME
ST ATI Of' CAUFCMHtt.& POii 'fHE COUNTY Of' °""'9011
! ~:Without Fanfare, Siegel
Laguna Beach on the
road with a 7:30 tiff a t
Dos Pueblos CGoleta >
High.
-~· LAl<e..-•I EdOfwOOO Cl JOI Sery1te M (MnwlllO DI Mal« Ool rt ~-•I S...ta An.I C:Olleot U 101
ltl ,.,.. l"W • ha$ been wt tor J-•. 1971, at 10 oo
P\ll>llSlted cw-. C.0.•I D•llY Pilol, •. m. In ... c~-OI ~P.t'""'"' May II 19 u 1918 No. l of Wld ~-.t 100 C:lvoc 0,.,,..
' ' ' lt~ll West. 1 .. ,,,. Clly ot S•nl• Arte.
PUBLIC NOTICE
rwo u,,.I ltrll<lllre •••I.._ tor re-mo••I -~flon_ Aqllablllty of structure !or '-al ..a Atoutlon Is
tor 60 COf!MNh,,.. C.liWICI¥ ... '" I rom IU O.y of Putllie Nolke. lnle<MleCI P•rll•s sllould co"l•<t Sluo••· V•ndt....-0tve1-.i1. 742 M.1n St • Hunllneton BH<ll. C..1ttom1a 92~
GtllfWftl .. O•leod Mr, IS. "71 WIUJAMl.SUONN,
c-oty~ •.• 091Ell1'NToM
1Mt Cl"TU•Y l"Ai.K EAU
In Ill• M•lltr Of llM E'1•1t ol CHESTER AATHUi. TaAV IS,
Otc.e•Md Hollo ts ~ ~ to cl"edltor\ Mvl119 clelml ~ IN ..W Ol<e--t to 1~ said <IOlms !ft Ole olflU ot
IN clerll of tt. ~ _, ., 10
~ ~-h Ullder's ....... Ill IN olflc.a al JAOt A. SMHW 11181 l, Al· torJMy •t U., 1D S. Pel-AWtouc.
Wiii n1tr. c.tllor'lll• tOM!l. tlffllal lltt«
otflc• •• ......... tlu!ll~of .. ...,.
de<Sltned lrt .. , wwttan ~l"O to H id •U•I•. 5«11 Claims with 1114! nae.en•,.., llOUCMf'S """t be 111..S °' prese,,ted M •tor'es.!CI wllhln tour monlfls _. ... ti. llnl CIUl>lic.llon ol
1llls noUCle.
tal'L.OOtt
Simply Mows 'em
SI. Frar><ls M Qlalley (31 D )-Aa. ..... 11 UpliWtd •I VIII• P•rll Cll Own L• Oulnl• n F\lllerlon •I Fullt'10ft JC: Ill Troy •I LAI Mlr..S. (ll S.v•n"••I Lynwood (31
LOS ANOIUIS, CA. .-J AIWMYW:.......-n -lllled O'anve CO.SI O•ttY Pilot. May II. 19, U . "18
Much ha~ been said and written about the
g reat potential of 15·year·old Tracy Austin as a
future tennis grc;1t and the Rolling Hills player has
Ii Vl'd up lo <111 past notices lo gain widespread
fame for her s uccesses.
Bu t what about the young lady who ranks ahead
or her nationally ID the 16-and·under age bracket and
is the No. l sc<'ded player 08-and-under> in the
Seven teen Mage1zine tournament of champions al
Mission VieJo's Marguerite Recreation Center this
week') .
Linda Siegel defeated Austin las t summer m
the 16 age group Junior nationals and according to
her rivals and manv pros. has
the most potential of all the 208
girls competing at M V -ID·
eluding Austin
S HE IS ONE of the few
players in t he country who
doei,n 'l fear playing Tracy.
.. It doesn't make any dif·
ference to me who I play." Lin·
da says. "I don't have any dif·
fcrent feelin g when I play L1N0As11on
Trac)' than anyone else. But I'm sure glad she's
~gun to grow.
.. Now maybe they'll stop worrying about Big
Linda beating poor Little Tracy." .
Al 5·8 with a slim figure, Siegel has good su:e
for a t ennis playe r . She possesses a strong
foreh and and has good speed on the court.
She has a lso switched to the two-handed
backhand used by Chris Evert. Austin and a
number of other outstanding players and if her
dedication to practice hus been smcere, she should
win the 18-and ·underdivision title this week.
UNUKE AUSTIN, however. s he has other in·
terests including water skiing at Lake Tahoe dur-
ing the flnaJ month of the s ummer rather than de·
voling the entire vacation period to tennis.
Whether this will be a help or a hindrance in
her bid to break into the r anks of the professional
circuit of the futur e remains to be seen . Her
natural ability and c ompetitive desire have made
he r a top juniol' star.
How does she feel about playing at Mi~sion
Viejo?
.. Any tournam ent is important. especially a
national one like this."
While s he com petes in tournaments during the
summ er months and on special occa sions, s he
doesn 't face the professional group and h asn't
been to Wimbledon or Forest Hills.
••1 HAVEN'T BEEN able to m iss that much
school to play in a lot of tournaments," the high
school junior says.
"Hopefully I will be able to play al Forest
Hills this summer but I will have to qualify first."
How does she go about qualifying?
"1 really don't know," she says. "But I am go-
ing to check on it."
The fanfare may be missing and the little girl
image isn't there but remember the name Ll.1da
Siegel when the women's pro circuit comes to town
several years from now. ByHOWARDL. HANDY
* * *
Women's Athletics Austin
For Coastal Area
V.nlfy MtW ... ..n ... 1•111. s. .. CHmef\le ,., c.-
V•ll•Y 11Vt 100 medley re4•y-MlUIOn VMttO I S..I 200 frft-I. ~lor IMl I M.•. J M4tyer (Ml
1 00.l, l . G<'ll!bel (Ml 2 006.
100 IM-1. H«*er CMI 2 II l. 2 "°'"' CMI 2·U.O; l . O'Gol'men ISi J 1t '· SO lrff-1. 81k11 CCI 2•.1. 2. Wttltr (SI 2•.•. J. NO•llH CMI Jt.S. 0M"9-1 Kotllmler CCI ,,._.s; 2 Hull'"'"' IMI no score; l . ~-CMI no Ko,... 100 lly-1. H«*er CMI 1 00 s. 2 Armttrono CMI 1:001;3.Gron (SI l:Ol.1. 100 lr-1 ..._... CM) ss.s. 2. Lovejoy (Ml
S7.I ; ). GrlMlel IMl I :OO.O. SOD tree-I. Porter (M) }:2t,); 2. a-(Ml S:32.0; l . McGMTy (SI &·lU. 100 N<ll-1. 811<» CCI 1 :04.4; 2. RodlOf>l..o IMI 1 •0U; J. MorllJ CMI 1: 1'-J. 100 Went I. "°<l!Ql>lero CMI 1 10 •. , ~ CCI t:U.1; J, Zeranbot <Ml t:lU, .oo ,,_ ,.,..,-Mission v .. 10 J . 54.•
Jwll« V•nlly Ml .. ._ YM1e <"'I m 1 s.11 e .. -w
100 meo1.., rei.oy MIJJlon Vie lo 1 °' 61; 100 fftt -1 G.tl•ln CMI I OJ I 100 IM-1 Rtl,,10.l' IMI I 11 2. SO lr .. -1 ler•ml;>Y IMI lt S, SO
OCVBC Wins
lnEI Paso
EL PASO -The Orange
. County Volleyball Association
• girls team advanced to the 16
: team double -loss eUmlnations in
the U.S. Volleyball Association
national champioruihips at the
University of Tcxa!I here by win-
ning its pool with four lllralgbL
victories.
Wednesday the OCV BC squad
defeated Southwest MissoMrl
Stale, 15-13, 15-2, then won over
• the Houaton Volleyball Club.
11·15, lS-4, 1$-10.
.. _ Marie Lundie. Cheryl
Johnston and Kori Pulaakt stood
out ror OCVBC ln Wednesd•Y'•
matc hes. The te.m could play
three games today if it continues
to wln. 11te fint wu -..inst
Staten laland. NY thls monuna.
tly-1. JnSl<e <Ml ».I; so ~ll-1, tom CMI
J2.I; SO -t-1. HKker CMl l6.2, 100 l1M r• ••y-Mlsslon vi.IO 1·n.2.
SoltlHIU
Hill VII..., Qr. Ctl 161 LI'-Cllt. Huntlnoton Volley OWlstlan-Wltte, ?b J.M.O, H•"'llMon, p 4-t-2.0; llurllnollMl'I. <I ).2-2-$. 8artlett, u •.0-0.0; L. Plltm#I, II •·l·M; E ll•tll. 3b ..0-1-t; Hart, II> ..0-2.0; S. PllllNll, Jb 4-0-1-0; O'Htll, rt 241-0; J 8•sll, rt l·M-0,. lot•ll: 35+1,.7.
Liberty Cllrlsllen -Lo<lltrllle. p J·l·O·O;
Moctglln, u ..0-H; a.r11er.11 ... 1-1-1; Francl•1 ~b J·2·1·0; lloQef't, 3b 2·M-O; Ore.,.r, c 2·1-o-<1, Lo0•n. 21> 240-4; ~,.:~cf t-0.M: M•r11n, <I 1-CMM; ~ cl ; l.utMy, rl 2.0-0.0. Tot•ll: 24+.S-l.
, " . ' 201 014 0-t u J
000 410 I-a j 10
Vanl1¥
S... Clenletlle (41 lltl OaM Hlll t S•rt Cle~""· '" l-1.Q 0, o.rttmore. lb, 4~; l)rll>e, P. J.2-1-0, NaPC>i t , i 144.
Jolt"'°"· ct, ~I; King, II, U.0-0. I ~"IA'Jb, J4H. C.Cn, 21>, I ~. Oavlcno,, lb 1..-0.0 Femelldel, Ill, 144-0, S ~m•r•l'I•. rl H>·l.0 TOIOlt -..s-1. oon• Mlli,-leOIOl, cl. 1·2 l.f; hrostrom 111 .._0-10, M<K-. p, 4-l-l.O. M•ryllew, :Ml. 4-60~ Matyl'ltw, <.. 2-M.O; Fe-r, t•, i.2.o-4. (olv111 II l·l·t 21 MUI~. A. ).M·2; Wlrrterh•lttf, rf
1·1·1·1; N-.,rt, t•M: Tote": ,._lo.N 1e--,1-....
r II • JOt OIO .-.. S • 011 to7 •-It. l '
in 100 --
Pushed,
But Wins
Tracy Austin. the top-seeded
player in tbe 2 l ·and·under
division or the Seventeen
Magazine girls tennis touma-
m e n t at Mission Vlejo's
Marguerite Recreation Center
won her first match Wednesday
but had to struggle more than ln
any match a year ago.
A u s tin defeated Phyllis
"8ckwelt, 6-3. 6-4 in a second
round. match, her first or the
tournament. A year ago, Austin
lost only five games in 60 to win
the 16-and·unde r championship
in this tournament.
Action continu es today
through Saturday with the
matches free to the public ln·
cludinJ( Saturday's finals.
Only one seeded player in the
top eight has fallen from each of
the four age divisions during the
first two days of the tournament.
Barbara Polter defaulted in
the fi rst round of the 18 division
alter being Sffdod fourth. Sixth seeded players ln the 14 and 16
age brackets and the seventh tn
the 21 lost Wedftesday.
Ttlll __ Cl'tl_l
s.c.IMI ...... , .. ~ llt\tt<arl11 _. Olpertfllt, H •2: ._..,. Oii .. lteowlll .. ,, •t: Kot• fff Slllltll .. ,, .. I; 'Miile C1t1 ()lalerltr .. ,, .. t: Hffl' dtf Mmoftl ..0 ... , ._,, M, .. ,, ~1 oel Q>ollet .. i ... ,. .....,,.111 ... tt.Vritoftt<t, ..a , ........ ,
~eefMell..O.M;~•fTMJllOft..0,
... , J~ .. L.Of" .. , ... t. hf'tll'I ... "'*" H, .. I I °""dtf lkldlliNIUM H , W ; ~lllJ !Mt lo H•rrlftllOll 1"-H ; ICtll ... Maol«• .. , • M.WtlU .. .-..H. .. I ........ ...... .., ~ .. , .... , WM•.., ...... .. , ... , ,.... .... ......, .......... ; ,,....,...., ..
M 1111frt1 ,_., c.tt• et H.uMln .... ~ At .. •1 .. , OMtMflf '-'· •1. ~fltl4 ~ '--"la~., .. ;~ttllMlclllfO•I H . ., ... :t. Alltttft ... 9lecll:wtll ..... ~Id .. '"'.., .... ..,, ... """"'-... y_, .. ,. •e) Miii a l La*r .. l_t U l'WllNt ltt ~ , ... "'· 1'011tW_.O..-. .. I, ... , OW.., ioM•lll,_. ,.. ,..,"' .. i,wttma•~ ...........
2·AIH41Nll S.n M•rlM •' Yuulp.a Ill C.O•<lltlla Valley •I Nortlwl..,., Ill NOQ•les •I Eacel"or Ill Norw•lti •I T""'l)I~ C:lly 131 l·AB_..11 Alemany •I Pno Rol>IH Ill !>•nl• YNI •I S.nl• Cl.tr a 13)
St. Genevieve o Notre O•m• (Riv.I Yue<• V•lley •I 8l-.l1'910fl UI SINllScllMls._11 Av•lon •S Huperl• •I Vlclor V•lley JC Cll RlverMde 0v1s11 ... on w~ •• ~· 8aclflSI UI Lull'IOrM IOriW19"I rt Mom<l•lr Pf'ep el Enc.lno Coll Fleld UI Mar_t .. ws llllo -Prep •I
Arcadl• CoolnfY ~-CJI -~" S•nl• a.rtaw• et Morlll Torrenu u...,.. a.di• Dos Pueblo• .. T-i. c-•MWetVlll•Pertl IU S.nta 8«llara Ill Mlr.tnle RolllnQ Hiiis ~Sunny Hiii•
New-1 _..,. .t S... ~
Pro Soccer
"•rt" ~UASeccer ~ PttlledelpN• I, Seetll• 0 COii
T•m~ .. y4,s.i>Ol~I New El'IOl....i 3. Chi~ 2 Fort L•udM«Mllel, WMlll1'91on1 Color•dO 1. R«Msler O COii Ml~ l. Ven<ouwr 1 O.lroll I, °"41ts 0 OOl!lafld I, MemclhlS 0 COi i PorUMld 2. Cosmo' I IOI I
Am«kaft So<ct• I.A ..... Cleveland 2. So. ~llforn•• 1
KlP ENGEN .
PUl>llSlled CW41119e Coast Dally PllOI
May I, 9, 10, II. 12. IS, 16, 11. II, 19, 1q11 ,., .. ,.
PUBLIC NOTICE
SUf'IE•IOlt cou•T 01' THE STATIE Of' CAUf'OaNIA FOA THE COUNTY 0' oaANGf ......... .-o•O•• TO SHOW CAUSI. f'Oi. CHANGE OF HAMI
PUBLIC NOTICE
,ICTITIOUS 8USINCISS HAME STATEMENT
fl!• loll-1"0 per\On\ ff• 001n11
buSonflS •s. APPLE GROUP t, 1611 Whllr0.ti, C:osl• Mew, CA .,,,. W•ller w StrauO. 1611 Whtie O.ti SlrHt, tosi. WW. CA "16,. Giies A Ooylf', 110 OO•tOM W•Y. AnMte•m. CA '2D
Detect Aprll f, !tit
8tft<ly W.lnsi.tn ElleCCutor of the Wiii o!Uid~ IACK A. SMfT'4 Cll'l1 I AtMtMy .. L.lw 7U4S.ftalMwA-. ""lttler, CMl ..... ....Z Plll>hllled CWangot (.oft! Deity PllOI, April 21 <1no May t , 11. Ill. 1978
1611 11 WHEREAS. , .. petition of O•vld Edwin GrOM arid N•ll Ellfft Gross lies
Ileen tlled ""'Ill Ille cter-ol llllS cou'1 for •n ormr c'-91"11 Otetr n•,,,.• trom Oavlo Edwin Grou.,.., N•n El· len Gross to O.v1d EdWtn Gum 4lllO N•n Ellen G<'am
Rl<n•ro O Slr•ub. U1 Kerper --------------Strut. Pl\11.clflpllt•, Penn•Yl•.tn1•. ltll I PUBLIC NOTICE
L•wr~ R Oo.,i.. tl14' Utdee~ -------------
IT IS HEREBY OROEREO llliJI •II
P«Wtt• 1,,tttt1.led In w.o ""'"er -o· pear before lhl• coun .. 1 11 oo am June 21. 1'71, '" Ille cou<lroom ot
Oe"rttnenl 3. Sartl• Ana, CA to '"°• c-wlly 1111• ..,.lc.tlon lor <Nn9e
of niWl'le \Nlllld nof lie 91'anted IT IS FURTHER OROERED ttwt •
(6py 01 llltS .,,.,., 10 StlOW <~ tie
pul>ll~ OftCe a Wftll lor lour •UC· cnsln weetr.1 proor to Ille CS.y ot w.o
A,,..nue. To<rar>ee,CA ~ Peler M Cr••O. 261l? C:.rmen11a L.-. MlsstOfl VM!jO, CA'167S Jacti Ct Robins°"· JICMI An"°"
Road, W•lmlro(lton, ~-•r•. 1"10 Tloi' l>vSU>t\\ 1\ <Oft<hKled by •
~·lpar!IWf\ll•P
WallefW Sl•-TlllS \lM-1 -~ llled wtlll Ille Counh Oen. OI Or-County Of\ May 10. 1111.
f'MU1t PubloSIWCI Or-Coasl o.lly Pllet, May Ill. U , J.-I, 8, 1918 ,,..,,119 '"Delly Pllol, • n..ne»oer 01 its...18 O•"•,.I clrcul•tlon or1,,le<1 1n Ille ------------County ol 0.M'91 D•t..s ~Y 14, 1m. Bruce W Sunlner
J ..age OI tlte Superlcr Cour1 Publl•lw<I Orenoe Coast D••IY Pilot Mey II, 2S, June I, 8. 1978
PUBLIC NOTICE
f'ICTITIOUS aUSINIU NAME STATEMINT
TM 10110••"9 per"°"' •r• do•no 1>us1neu .s. SE TAC. 1001 0o .. Slrtoel, He-I
~ ,..,..,
l'ICTITIDUS 8USINESS
NAMIE STATClMllNT
'"• 1114-r>Q ~ .. dot"fl bu• .. MS~•\ C.AAY CO M PTON~ CO CRE ATE."" Wulcllll o .......
Newport BNO!. CA. 117..0
c;.orl' W -PS. 60I Udo PaR
Ori••. P1tntlllluW •E. Hewiion 8Nch CA.t?..o fllh !>vs~ '' conducled l>'t .,, .n d<•IOuat
C.-gp w l't!elps Tll•I Ult-I WH liltd •1111 tllt County Cl..,.. of Or-County o• April H . 1'71 oi.ov1tt tsci.ow coi.P 111 s ... 111 Ill-• A11-1m. CA. t21H F1<row He.111~
------------1 Baacro, CJ> nwo 163•·18 Sy$ttms Ert91Mer•no te<11no109y ·-·----------·
Pubilthed 0r""9t Coftl O<tlly Piiot Aprtl21.-May4, II. II. ltll
PUBLIC NOTICE ASSo<l•IH CorPO<•tlon, .. C.hfOff\1• ------=-:-=.,.-----__, coroorattpn. 1001 Do•• Strtl!I , PUBUC NOTICE a 141M Ne•port 8Hcll, CA 97660 NOTICI TO ataOITOIH Trol\ 1111$1,...U "CondU<IC<I by .. tor f'ICTfT10U$ 8USINESS SUf'llllCMl COUi.T Of< TME por.ihon NAMI STA TIMI.NT STATI Of" CAUflO•NIA f'Oa Sy$lem\ Ert0fneerlft9 TllO folloonr19 Ptf\On •• 00<"9 bust· TME COUNTY 01' OltANGIE rec~ A•-••lf'S "9U as .
No. A-,,...J WPO<M-CLIFTON f'OUR·PLEXES, IDOi In ll'!t 111\alltr of ll'Mt ESl•te ol Rol>ertW IClmH,S«rtlary G1rtleld Awnue. Hunll"910fl a.~11. ARTHUR B.McOUERM.OeceHed. Th•• Slal-nl -~ fllllCI ••Ill Ille C..lllornla'l:lfl• NOTIC£ IS HERE8Y GIVEN to C.Ounh Oen ol Or.not County on M•y "'°lllo H. McN<lmft, ltsl S.m•r <t•dH~ ~ <l .. ms -•Ml ti.. 8, 1'11 Ori.,•. Cost•~. c..111or1Ma "1•211 wld Cle<edeflt lo Ille said cl•lrm •n tl'Mt ""121 trots ""'1nen Is conoucled D• • office ol llw <lt!rlt ol uw .tor.,..10 Put>11Slled Or-Cout D••'Y Piiot. llmHed~slllp
c.our1 .,, lo pr-I tllem to ""' u.... ,,,., 11. 18. u. June 1. 1'71 Ptttllp H Mc Na .....
dltnlVNd Ill tM office ot JAMES O 11n.111 '"'' ,,_._, .,.,, 111~ w1111 lllt GaEGORY, 16bS VENTURA BLVD . -·-----------Cov"IY Ct ... ol Or..,oe C:oun1y on ENCINO, CA. qlG. 718-&338, ""''" PUBLIC N""""CE Aprll 11 ... ,. llllter ott•~• l.J in. pl~ of 1>vs1ness of Y • • .,..,,,,
Ille unoersi(lned In •II rNt\ers P"rl•11>--------------PUl>llslled Or-CO.st o.11v P1101. lr>Q lo wld fttllle ~ Cl .. ms wltll ~ NOTICE TO c:a10tTOi.s "P<•• ,, .,.., llMy. II II. 1•111 necesury ~s must lie !tied or SUf'E•t<HI COUltT Of' THE
~Mn-..r •• •toAWid wlllt"' '°"' STATIEOt'CAUl'OttNIA FOlt 1621·1t
lftOr!tlls efW. Ille ""I pUl>llutlon of THE COUNTY Ot' OltANGE INS flOllCe. No. A.ffJI! PUBLIC NOTICE
Daleo~ U, ,.,. Esiau• ol JOHN E KOSTER ••• HELEM WHITNEY JOHN KOSTER, DKHi.c! #~ .... Cew1ofc.M-..,•. E11e<Wlaof tlle •lll of NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN 10 tl>e Or-~
••Id_, < rectltors OI 1111! -namtd de<eclt<ll °' c-t .IAMIS D. GAIEGOAY ,,,., all ~ ll.lvl"Q Cl .. m& 119••n•I ~al :Id y t6UJVIMTU•Aa&.VD.,at•t llw Mid dK_,,t "'~ reQUlt'ed lo lilt lttUCl'eWll Val..., f'Mflwey INCtNO, CA. t14a lhem, wllll ~ N<H\M'y VOUCl'tet'I, on L ............. CA fWI Tel: u111 na.uae ,,.. o111u of .,,, <~• o1 ~ ·-.... s~s PUl>lltNd CWiW191 Coall O.llY Pllol, titted <ovrl. o< lo praw<tt "'-m. wltl'! CeM...-.: 1-l!Uy II, ?l,June l,l, lq79 Ille necus.ory •OU<lle"• lo Ille Uf\ PlelnUll: HAROLD RANOAi.L •llO 1'~11 O."lgned at Ille olll<.~ ol Oa\'ld Slerl· AICH,.RO DAVIS _____________ 1 tng T1no1er, L•w C:orpor•llo,,, ~ O.lend.,,t. Rot!ERTWVQ(OFF
PVBLIC NOTICE Newport C...ler Ori .. , Newport, CA, NOTICEl Yau uw ..,.. -.i. Tiie Eng T Wltlcro il Ille !Ma<• of ~MU of , .. '"""'.' ................. -e n ona ------------UrtderMQ!Wd In all m•tters ""'''"'"II yewr ~ .. llNnl ..... yw,...,.. r...,. •MtU lo Ille estelt of .. Id -9111. wllllln wltllltl JI up. R•M -,....,._ ..... "OTICI TOCaEDITO•s lour montM otter Ille""' 11W1•<•1lon .. 1 __
loo T ..... A-tsm ol lllit nolt<f' AYISOI U.... 111 ..... -.-....
P e SUf'••1a. COU•T 0, TME Oatto April 1a . ..,, II TrlWMI _.. _..., ~· U•
.
iTATIEMCALIPO•NIA,l'Oa KENNETH I( 1(0SlER sl1tAM1-le•--lH ........ THIE COUNTY 01' oi.AHGE E HCuf()( ol llof> Wiii ol ...... , ......... "9• •• ~ '" Ille Maller ol Ille ESlale 01 llMl.OO,,..Mm4td0f't-nt cieft.,.slt!M· Laguna Beach High ·s ROBERT c. COMSTOCK. Oeceneo 0Av1s sni.uHo TIHOLIE• 1 ro THE OEFENOAHT· A ml
Kip Engen. an All-CIF Nollce lS l'ltffl>yQl ..... IOCredllor• LAWCOi.l"OttATIOft tomp••lm ... 1l>f'l!flllled by ~~·n IM•lnQ delms ~lmt Clw Miki OK• M N"""'1 Cltftw 0!1"" 11111i9a1nst vou. cS.t loot"'7!e•1 first team Se)CCtiOn 8S a dtnl lo Ille Wld <l .. ms In tile olliee Of kl .. tit " 11 YoU wl!.11 to ctel-1111\ lewwtt
J·unlor when he led tbe tlw clerk of,,_ --.1e1 court°' to Newll'Of'tlMOl,CAt1... 'IOU musl. willlln .)0 de~ •fie• th"
h C I F prewttl llltnO to lflt ""*™Qned •I Ille A,.,.,.., •••ltewtw wrnmon• ts sef'Wd on tou. Irle wtuo Artis t s l 0 t e olllt• ol CON RAO T 8JOANL1 E. Publl-Or-'°''' O..ly Pilot !Ills court • Wrotten pl .. dono '" v 0 11 ey b a1 1 ch a m . JOHNSON, BJOltNLIE ANO MER· M•y •. "· 11, n. ltl1! IUS-1t respon\t IO Ille <OfYIPl••"I llr
Pionship, has been ltlTT. SUITE 1001, s.us WILSHIRE ------------1 Ju1ll<e c-t. -mull Ille wllll ll'le llLVO., LOS ANGELES. CA. ~. couff • wrtnen plMCll"9 or<-.., named the South Coast wt11<11 1.11., ollk'• ",,. 111oc:• o1 bu••· PUBLIC NOTICE or•• p....,1119 10 11e .,,tered in 111. , _ • I ( th ""' ol ll'te lllldlrNINd In Ml rn.11 .. 1 doe.llell. un-'°" dll IO,.,_ o.1av11 l.A:ague s P ayer o e .,.,,.,,,,no 10 Mid n1.e1e. s..c11 c~ms a.u •111 .,. ,,.,.,.., -HOP1tu11on o1 !fie
year. w1t11 11oe _._.. vouc11er1 m.;s1 tie SUl"t•IDlll COUaT 0, TNI IM••nllfl, .,., tf'ls court_., ent.,.
Coach or the year is flltd ff -'eel es~ •• ,,.... STATI °' CAUflOltNIA l'O• ludtmenc "fll'll'61 \'0lf ror ""relief. '°"' """'"'-aofll< lite flr-.t puo!IUI-THI COUNTY Of' O•ANGI'. rnand'ld It\ .. <Oftll)IMM. "'11.Cll <Oll•O Mike Puritz. who guided o1111" net>ce. ..._......., ,., .. 111n _,...~ .. weoes. 1011111 University High Into the 0.ttd ,,...yt.1'71 .. o fl<• o~ It IA i. tNG 0' OI m_, orjlf_.tv•ol'-t r•tielt• PATRICIA M. COMSTOCK l"nlTI ... f'Oa NOeATIE 01' WIU o..esttd In ... cOMPC .. nl. thick Of the potent Sou.th hKUlor of IM Wiii ANO ~O• unaa1 THTAMIN · I> 11 .,... .._ ti -tfle -· ..
Coa•t .. --gue wars and Ol MlddlKtdtnt. TA• y AMO AllTMO•llATIOM TO .... •H.,.., ltl .... .......,, ,... ..... 0 ~ .IOMH90M.aJOllNLllE,&Mlai.1TT AOMINltTl'.A U .. Dt a T"I .. M ..,......, .. fNt ,_ _...,. came out or It w ith a A•-~ 1•o•H1N01WT AOM1Nt1THT10tt ,.....,..,ttllll't.-"'' .... "-CI F playoCfs berth. ,.,. w11M1,.. .,.,.,, 1111to 1•1. o" HTATHACT o.1ee1 DK ie. "" ""''Allf" ... CA.,... E, .. '' 11• e ! r r Y cos fl v J-B . .-e ... it.oeo •'Int Team Tel: uu1 taM1t1 & BA 1t NE' r .... • e E r TY e o o . .-u1mK11er. Oepuw
M k d Cs UOl I,._.... BARNETT OK-. C$EALI ar An crson an Publlllltlf O'M>91 Coast o.tlly f'llot NOTICE 1$ HlaltY GIVl!N IMI WILLIAM ... 110n1Ei.
Clemente>. Kip Engen Mev•.11,11,zs,1911 oEHE HENRY MRHtn ,. .. 111ec1 ... u1rHt,s.twt•
L B h P I 1111 ,. Mr•ln • pelltlOn .., ProOel• OI Wiii '-" 0 .... CA llt1tl < aeuna enc >. au a11e1 '°' 11-•"' Let•n ''"-Tet· ,,,.,;,....,. Kubas <Unive r sity>. PtJBUC NOTICE "'' 10 tl'te ""ttt'-..,.. eu111or•t• .,,,, •• ,. '<•n1P1•1111 .. 1,,<1uet
La r r v M e a r ( Sa n !Ion to e0flllnl11et "" Mlot• ""°"'II• cron comD1.in1. "Dletntlfl" l11<luaot
, ------------ll\Oltlend«ll Adl'n!Nttr•tlort OI lhwtH t f " Clemen~). Jamie Plum· "cnnouuuse""' Ac1,.,__.10 "'°' '' -.., :r:.;:~c~i:r.:::"~~ ~=~ :~ mer <La1una B .. ach > NAMalTATIMIMT 1ur111er ""k"'•"...., ""'"" li"19 ""*' '"' ""'•' aooe1 ,,..1<u11ne '" • , Tiit lo4'4Mlfte w-It OOlf'l9 busl· af'ICI P••O tf -Int .._ Mll\e llM ""°'' ltMllllM .. MUM!'. A wr•tCtf\ Randy Smith CLaauna ,...,.._, """ set .., 111\ay JO, '"'· •1 io·oo r>1.,111,.., 111Ctudfflta11•n-r.e11tm11 Beach> w•n••N COHSOUOATao 0111 e.m. "' 111e --of o.tiertfMlll •w.•lc., "'-'"'"'11w '°""reou•tweb• --...._ .. T & ILICT•tC. 114 ¥'· lttll Sl,_1, HO .l of...0~.1tPOOCJ11K"'"9f 1._ CAii*""' ·-el Cil\lrl Your ~vuu eam CIMto Mete, CA. .a ~in w .. 1.'" .,. cu, ti s-. ""4, .,1 .... N1 --mu.t • 111.., 111 ""
M k e M JMllttA/~lllllCll. 10010Glll>Wt. C:.1110rft14 "' ,._. ... t e rawley ( IS · ""'"""'·CA.-.i oei.-IN.,,.1918 (ffft••111"""'1111no1 ... -""~ slon Vic.Jot Peter JI an Tllo ~· 1ueM11ct• 111 .,, in-w1wAM•. 11.IOMN, ..,., e<.•• ....,.., wu ._..Of'•«" • • ch~t. Qufltra.rt ,..1n11tl'•at11mt•-°"*"'".,nt11 bor1 <Costa M 88 >. 'tf'l'ltlAl-•91111tll Wll.LIAMV.totMIOT ~ r•DP9 ..... llW •n •llDrlltY '"' •oct Miii Co d l 11me""Mfl .. -••-"*'...--,, er c rona e T"1• ... ......,.. .,.. llltod •••..,. ..... .._Dr .. ,...• "'•'*"-Y" .. '°""nf'"'°"11w Mar >, Sam Pedro r:;~C'°"-llfOt-.ONMy•IN• ~,·:~ct~•... metllod" wv'<' ~or ... ""°' .. -
f\Jnlvors1ty 1, Roser ......,, ~...,...,,. ,_....._ ce11.u101•"110M•s .o
P t I r • I It ,.,..,.,_ Orafllt GM•l 0.llY l'llll, ,_,..,.. Ortlltt CMit Oouy 1"11111 ~11\ftN 0-.,.,.. ~t o.. . ., l"tlOI 0 f tr f v &'.1 \lefl 'Y ), IMY Cl, 11.JS,_,-.,_ I ft7' AU\' 11 U. ll, lf7t "4Wfl JI,..,. •. •t I. ,_,.,. Malt Simpson <El Toro I. I 1aM1
•
1,
I
•
COMICS I CROSSWORD
MARMADUkl by lrld Anderson BOOMER
11Let "'' see that!"
J
"Better atop l••vlng your credit card
around. Marmaduke la at the meat market
trying to uae it!"
FUNKY WINKERIEAN
,. .sr
MOON MULLINS
I'M AACAIO
l C~'f
AF~P
Gf:NUINE-
oeE~
HIC7Et
H0"~£:-
HU?e,
~CDW-
GERIATRIX
DENNIS THE MENACE
. J -
MISS PEACH
A-.r.,·uil
~v,,~s-
M~~~ -.)
GORDO
/, .. _____ ....
by Tom Batluk
'TtOOFeET~
I& IDEAL.!
••
by Chari•• Rodrigues
by Ferd and Tom JOhnson
... I KNOW SXACT&.Y
WHAT A CERTAIN Pe~
IS THINKING WHSNEVER
~E L.OOKS AT Me .
JUDGE PARKER
..
by Wm. F. Brown tlnd Mel Casson
1..tit?oVvH ~19
WAU .. ~i
1cAet ~!!
1lllw SACK!!
DOOLEY'S WORLD
DR.SMOCK
<SSS ,~ DI DN'"T" KNOW ~Oe>O'T'\S HAP t?>Ae>IE!S, "1"00 .1
T'hundty. May 18. 1978
PEANUTS
c
D
HOO.I A80VT THAT ? 1
Wt:\LKED ALL iME WA'I
OUT HERE WITH 't'OVR
SUPPER Ot~ MLANCED
ON M"< HEAO!
DAILY PILOT I.'~
by Chtrtes M. Sch&flZ
...
T~IS 15 WMAT HAPPENS .
WHEN l{OV EAT IN TM' .
SAME Pl.Aa elf~ NJ6HT!
by Roger Bradfletd
by George Lemont
MOTLEY'S CREW by Templeton and Forman
100 6.lt.O .. 11:: YOO H.AD A Lowe~ INCOMe. WE'D
PAV FOR 6\l~RYTHIN6-
0f CO(M;e, IS: ')()(.I WeRE
!Jm~·INCOMi£60U WOUl..ON'1' N At-JV Fl~A~CIAL AJD ...
by Gus Arriola TDDAT'S GIDSSIDID PVIZLI
by Harold Le Doux
by Tom K. Ryan
YeH. 6EROMI~ MUSTA
EJIN IN JAPAN WHl'!N HE
MA'l'tniAT'WUN.
ACROSS
1 USSR news
ill}CV
!>Beat 1n"
"18V
10 Awkward
0311
14 In tenM
15 P0pe t
crown
16 Ol)4noon
11 Sttttched 2
"IO!d~
19 Pie.sed
<'O Hard looler
11 Sma• val
ISes
13 Pt1t•v·,
USI
25 Enotng 10<
thefmo OI
photo
26 T urn1 blc~
ward
JO Galls
J.c Remove
JS Stypt" com·
pouno
37 Sudanese
monev
J8 Oki Fr c<iln
39 Resolv~
42 Holy one
Fr abbl
43 Frentcfurt·,
river
'5Be111 went
'5 Heaped
48 Dilc:ovff
50 Poetry !Mdtn
52 G11el UNITED Feature Syndicate
!14 Hard to ltnd Wt<lnesdav's PvUle Sol~!'<I
S6 Sled doq
59 Doo Star
6J Orptical
64 Teng '}
WOids
86 DitPeese
67A-
ll8 Level
89 FHl!Slltll
70 Nnty e•·
piession
71 Ac111.i
belrlO
DOWN
t Cur1ers"
C<IOS
) I smell
I
•Veer,
'> Reserv8$
'°'future
use
Ii Pan AUev
I Jau tunes
'I Regions
9 Not coot1nu
OU~
10 Smo~er,
&CctSSOIV
11 Not em·
ployed
12 luncn
13 Weflta QUI
Illy
18 Loo4lld ob
llQlltlV
'" & I f lo • OIOlfl 'ii 'iTA'N
11 '• 0 0 l l Y) tlll 'i 0 'i'l
!II I , 0 .. o 11•1 •Ir .. ' s f
" & • I y . .. -. v t f D
A 'O A I ll•ll1£1l ( " ' s ... II A lS -lllYf l
• 0 A D s••ll !Cll I t I 0 •
c 0 11 -t lt ITIA 11-t w c
I II A , 'll lOIUI'-' l t l I
l &l•ll1&•• ... II D '
D l ' . • ris•• I l • '" ( • l I C (-· l !( •• • • 1• •• l ' llrJOI• f I • • c 0
"0 0. lfilB! ,., ~ T I 0 :!III .! II E l S I
21 Unonnc•
pied man
24 Abwn<:e or
26 Plert new
1url
V Oes1tov
stowtv
28 Mall! ser
V8f'f
29 More
sn1111«y
31 lhher ~
Pot1 32 "Not now' •
33 Coaster-.·
Y11titclll$
l6 M~k con·
tamer
40 Commns
With ()()Ofl·
dance
·e•u•n
'7 Repeat
49 Machin;:
oan
~ 1 WY01T11119
C11V
So:! • ~·ome
56 bt•3
56 e.111, , ... ,,,
57 Put down
58 Reduce 1ne
Df-Ufl'
6C S111e• ot
°""' 61 Chief Ouray
fol~
S2 Ory V&t
66 Roadmlo
~
'
....
-
I
• DM.YPtLOT
LOS ANGELES <AP> -Fonner Colwnbla 'Pictures president David Beaelman bu pleaded
lfq con~t to the u.en. of t4(),ooo rrom the studio.
The 57·year-olcl Beiehnan. ~ one of the
most powerful men in tbe mQvie Jn,duatry, stood be ore a Judge Wednesday and admitted be forged
U'u-ee cbedts on studio accounts ln 19'17.
HE WAIVED HIS CONSTITtJJ'JONAL pro·
t~tion against aell·lncrimination and said he un·
d,,erstood that h1a plea was tantamount to a plea of . 'gollty.
:· "Mr. Begel.man, you are charged with grand
tljert." said Deputy Oiat.rlct Attorney .Sheldon
Brown. "How do you plead?"
• 'Nolo cont.en de re.·'
Begelman said in a firm voice.
Burbank Superior Court
Judge Thomas C. Murphy ac·
cepted the plea alter he was as·
sured by Brown that no pro-
mises had been made to
Begelman regarding sentence.
"l 'M NOT GOING TO be a
U HLMAN party to a ny bargains." the
judge said.
' · He ordered Begelman to return for sentencing
J\Jne 28.
Outside the courtroom. Begelman told re·
p<>rters: "I feel I did the right thing -the ap·
propriate thing to do al thls time.
• "I'm pleased that much of this ls behind me," ~aid. ·' During the court proceeding, Brown dellneat·
ed the possible punishments Begelman could face.
HE SAID THE JUDGE WILL decide at sen-
i.nt'lng if grand theft will be treated as a felony or a
ousdt:meanor. The felony carries a maximum of
o~ to 10 years in prison and a $.S,000 fine. The mis-
demeanor carries a maximum of a year in jail and
~fine
Begelman also could be granted probation.
He was released on his own recognizance
pending sentf!nce.
Thtt case, which became widely known as "the
Begelman Affair." shocked Hollywood last fall
and eventually toppled Begelman from his position
of power.
HE STEPPED DOWN AS head of Columbia
wt October but returned to power ln December
with Columbia officials saying he was too valuable
aa,.executive to lose .
. • Begelman, a former agent, saved Columbia
from the brink of bankruptcy with several
rnoneymaking films. the most recent being "Close
Encounters of the Third Kind."
· However. public scrutiny of bis financial deal-
ings led to unr~st among stockholders as the
studio's stock plummeted.
' B EGELMAN WAS FORCED TO resign last
ll'e.bruary. He has since been signed to an indepen-
Y:our Horoseope
Taurus Told
Be Moderate
F RIDAY, MAY 19
By SYDNEY OMARR
· ARIES <March 21-April 19 >: IC patient and
perceptive, you gain. Let others make clear their
~. tenlions. Play your own cards close lo chest. Be
creel, willing to wail, observe and to detect sub-
trends, signals.
: TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Obtain 'hint from
A:rtes message. Avoid extremes, maintain
moderate pace. What seemed a pedestrian task
could actually brtng profit and glory. Know it and
proceed accordingly.
GEMI NI <May 21 -June 20); Romance,
creativity, relationship that "heats up" -these
are part of your personal scenario. Illusion, a
degree of wishful thinking also claim their roles.-
CANCER (June 21-July 22>: Stress practical
matters, including costs, values. property rights,
taxes. legal rights and permissions. Do your
homework: become thoroughly famili ar with
background. goals and potential.
LEO (July 23-Au g. 22): lntuition works over·
time -you are able to convey feelings and to
s ense what others want. des ire and need.
Aquarius, Cancer and Capricorn could be in pic-
ture.
VIRGO <Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Strive for new
start, added independence. original approach.
'toney, personal possessions, valuables are
spotlighted. Unorthodox procedures command at-
tention.
LIBRA <Sept. 23-0ct. 22>: One who aided or
taught you in past is again available. Know it,
make inquiries. tighten loose ends, make personal
appearances. Money offer is valid -know it and
respond accordingly.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Be adaptable
without scattering effbrts. What seems a deep.
dark secret could become cause for laughter.
Know It and m~intain emotional balance.
SAGITl'AIUUS <Nov. 22·Dec. 21 >: Friend sur-
pdses by announcing a "new deal." Key Is to be
attentive without becoming inextricably involved.
Obtain valid hlnt from Scorpio message.
.' CAPRICORN <Dec. 22-Jan. 19>: Be ready for
cltange, travel, variety. Accent on goal, achieve-
ment. relating to superiors. Gemini, Virgo, Sagil·
tarius persons are part or scenario.
AQU ARI US <Jan . 20·Feb. 18>: Be
pbDosophical; your thoughts, Ideas are. going to
gain wider dlstribulJon, recognllloa. Family af·
f~rs . home, domestic adjustment, talk or re-
sUl,nce change _.the.ae grab personal spotlight.
PISCES <Feb. 19·March 20): Aura of mystery
prevails. Be discreet. Don't reveal all you know.
Play cards close to chest. Partner, close associate
or mate it confused about ti\adaet, money matters
-and says so.
If May tt la Your BJrtllday you are creaUve,
sensual, determlned, stubborn and apolle4 by the
opposite sex. Leo, Aquarlua penom play lmpor·
f.tAl toles ln your Ure. ln October, you extricate
)iichlraelf from "trap."
BOttle Bill Penned
'«• • HARTFORD, Coon. <AP> -Pralaln1 "an Idea
't'l9te Ume bu come," Gov. Ella T. Graaeoalaned
JqlalaUoo Lbat will reqwl"e ~lta 0n IOda and lrltfr ~oatalnen ltarUnJ ln January mo.
:.• ~" leaden and membln ot cltliena u d environmental 1roup1 ••tched aa the tdwerw put her peJ1 to tb• leClilatloa that took Ill
~topaa.
•
dent produclna contract wtth Columbia. which
a uarantees him '300.000 a year. He had been mak-
ing $400.000 as president.
The theft charge stemmed from the forgery of
three checks -one ror Sl0.000 written in the nanJe or
actor Cliff Robertson. one for ~.000 ln the name of
director Marlin Rill and one for $2!5,000 in the name
or restaurateur Pierre Groleau.
It was Robertson who brought the matter to
pollce attention and publicly denounced
Begelman's financial misdeeds.
Under California law, the plea of nolo conten-
dere dtrrers from a guilty plea only in that lt may
not be used as an admission of guilt if civil litiga-
tion is brought qalnst Be1elman in the same
case.
this gadget could
save your IHe
. . .
Societ y Hosts
Guest Speaker
Guest s peak e r
Marilyn Cheroske wiJl
present a fashions col·
Jeclion a t the Sad·
dleback Area Historical
Society meelln&
scheduled at 3 p. m . Sun·
day in Lhe P eoples
Federal Savings & Loan 1
1 Bulldlng, S,addleback
Plaza, El Toro. I
Mrs. Cheroske's pre-j
sentatlon includes cos-
tumes uSed for· various
occasions dating from
1886.ttirough 1939.
CApFdRNIA I NATIONAL
MERCURY SAVINGS
""" l 11t111 """"ri11li•1n
E11ecu1wtt Offices: 7812 Edinger Av•.,
Huntington Beach. CA 92647
Southem CD/1IQ1M1 ROQlonlll Oll1ces ·
8955 Valley V•f:W SI • Bu1mo Park. CA 90620
2071 5 S. Avalon Blvd. Ceraon. CA00748 Gl
22821 Lake Foreal Dr. (LOkll Forest). El Toro. CA 92630 •
1001 E Imperial Hwy .. le Habra. CA 90631
• 140 L ono Boach Blvd • long Brach. CA 90807 14 t ou-. 0 1095 Irvine Blvd . Tu~t•n. CA 92680 , 1~~~'t"11
235 N C•lrus Ave West Covina. CA 91793
~::""111----
glidden's best flat
latex house paint
one coat
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I ' fNSIDE: •Ann Landers •Business
•Erma Bombeck •Entt~lnmenf Featuring ............. • ·---~CJ DAR.Y PILOT
..
'•
.. . .. ...
-
. .
, ·-
-
Recognize the Indian mp.iden? It's, Cher, with friends .
Former journalist.Ted Harp tums clock back with camera.
The Dague~reotypist
Smiling in his pictures is· forbidden because the traveling
photographsf is after authenticity. No one grinned for the
tintypes of the mid-1 BOOs.
By DENNIS McLELIAN
Ot .. o.11, ...........
The wbiie.baired photographer, sporting a
black vest, blue-stri~ llhirt with white paper
collar and spats, works quickly, ignoring the
growing crowd of ~pectators.
He slips a sailor suit onto a to~·headed boy
and places him on his fathet's lap.
The falber. wearing a frock coat and top
hat, is sealed ma century-bid chair; his wife, in
maroon Victorian dress, stands stiffly at bis
side.
The family stares grimly into the camera.
Perfect. The photosrapher releases the shutter.
Tbls ls not a Umts warp; it's an exercise In
nostalgia, courtesy 'red Harp's travellng Vic·
toriarl'Pbatograpbique Gallery.
UNLIKE MODERN-DAY photographers
who have a veritable bag of tricks to get sub-
Jects to sQille, bating tbe pearly whites in front
of Harp's cameru Is strtcUy verboten.
Aller all, t.bllt~ not Ole way the tintypes of
the mld·l.800s looked, and Ted Harp is after
autheoUcity.
"Most ot the people appreciate it done
ri&bt," says Harp Of his simulated tJntypes and
laraer sepla-tooe portraits. <lbe mm speed in
those day5, he explains, was so slow a fadine
smile would produce a blur on the picture>.
Dubbed the "ll&Wlew Brady ol the '70S,"
the 50-yev-old J~er newspaper ~porter bu been •ettlnc "Pl 6ld·tlme gallery fot ttte pd,l
six years ln ab itil centers throagbout
SouthemCalllonll . •
His la•t It.op was the .Lquna Hilla M~l.
where, as usual, Mt taped Sebtt Joplin back·
around mustc 'l'fed for attention with tts· /
· mo4ern-day Musak counterp¥t.
' Inside the white wrought.iron endoture that·
servet a Harp'• stud.to are .o clot.bfs. tKka
laden with costumes.
THE&E 18 EVE&YTHING from the velvet
• and lace hlCb-eoQ..O )'ktortan dress• tor fl\•
Two Ml trees are loaded with simulated an-
tique headgear. many of which Harp made
himself from original designs.
People come lnto the studio for as much the
entertainment of wearing the costumes as they
do to have a picture taken. says Harp.
··1 don't think there is anybody who hasn't
wanted to be in a role other lban the one they're
in." he says.
While his Job requires "some theatrics," he
doesn't. "affect anything beyond my costume."
When be })tarted the business, he says, be wa~d something that was uniqu~ and that woulti sell itself.
· "I'm not a salesman," he admits. "Like
many newsmen I am introverted. I Just put an
the stuff out there and I sit and read a paper."
IT WAS IN LATE 1970, the same time be
won a nia,ior investigative reporting award, that
Harp ser up an old·lime photography studio at
Calico Gh06l Town in the Mojave Desert.
"It was a former bordello, which seemed
appropriate for me." he explains with a laugh.
For a year and a halt he worked weekdays
on the San Bernardino Sun-Telegram. On
weekends he'd drive the 180-mlle round trip to
h1s 1tudio.
At the time, he says, he was the only one be ~ows ot in Callfornla who was doini the old
Picturell <He bad s~t more tban a year rt· qearc~ the period and developing the photo· ~grQh~e rocess for~reatlq the tin~ effect>. At e urgln1 the newspapers businesa
editor, Harp talked the promotion director of
-Saa Bernardino aho&>plag cen&er that was hav·
log an antique show. -..:
BE SET UP A CRUDE version or his
callt.r1 ~ the "people wete knee deep all the at_'..._..," he lafa.
-lr,hat did lt. Re ·-.andoned '-'' 24·year
foufnlnlm careel' and elllbraced the Victorian wod4 ot entlque pbotoerl,Pbl full UJl)e. ,.J la~ move tardoel ak l'epe&. ••t ~ago~ ~,.~._11-• newspaper
but neu,'' 11,)'1 Iii• aubV!RU!t \iildeftt. "I
• women -"I kncM' iilMN ~ WOllMn'I ltlts
UsU l net cared~' -So frock ~. Clftl
War mlll!? un&f~1 red flremen's lblrta and •·--i· ... U..-~'"lotmam . _ ( ... TSO RAal! PUt, Q)
o.ltf ..... "--"" u. ~·-
Ted Engard loves to be right in the middle of the music.
Ted Engard, Pied Piper
His mission is to instill en-
thusiasm and excitement
tor music.
By DENNIS McLELLAN oe .. ~Ptw ....
When Ted Engard was in fourth grade. he
decided to learn to play the saxophone. But
during his lessons he was unknowingly placing
his fingers on the wrong keys and the resulting
notes were Car from melodic.
"You'll never be a musician," predicted bis
elementary school music teacher.
Younll Engard dropped oul or the class and. disregarding the prophecy . took private lessons.
Today Engard, 26, has mastered virtually
every musical instrument and teaches music to
340 fourth and fifth graders of his own.
One of five instrumental music teachers in
the Newport-Mesa Unified School District, he
teaches a half day twice a week at five Costa
Mesa schools : Whittier, Wilson, Pomona. Vic·
toria and Paularino.
And, it's safe lo say, Engard will never of-
fer any of his students lbe discouraging predic·
tion he received at lbeir age.
IN FACJ', IDS mission ls to insUll in them
the same enthusiasm and excitement he bas for
mu.sic.
At the beginning of the school year be gave
a one-man concert at Paularino Elementary
School.
Engard. who has performed professionally
at Disneyland and Knoll's BerTY Farm, began
by singing a song he wrote himself.
"The song was about how music is every.
where we g~tores. restaurants. elevators-
and how we just turn It orr." he says.
He wants to make people aware they're be·
ing turned orr to listening to music. And by
demonstrating seven instruments to the children.
he showed them what they are missing.
"I'd walk right up to them so they could see
what my fingers were doing on the instru·
menls," he says. "That's something they never
get to see.''
SO POPULAR WAS his one-man show that
be was asked to do it at 14 schools. The district
even video-taped il for further showings.
lo teaching music, Engard, a talented car-
toonist. also uses a series of colorful drawings to
show the historical development of the different
instruments.
One. called "Hagar and the Hunting Hom,"
shows the evolution of the trumpet. ln the first
drawing a Viking clobbers a homed woolly beast.
"I developed a theory that he was cleaning
out the born and blew out the rest," says
Engard. Thus was born the first musical note.
Engard's cartoons teach music.
Engard, with his cartoons, goes on to show how
the different notes are made.
A former substitute teacher at Corona del
Mar High School and Lincoln Middle School,
Engard is in his second year or teaching
elementary school students.
<See ENGARD Page, CZ)
Snm1ner in Surf Oty
Crisp mornings, radiant sunshine. brown
bodies, seagulls. white sand. Beer cans, ham-
burger wrappers, street parties and the smell of
pol.
Summer has returned to Surf City. And
those of us who choose to make our home here
resign ourselves to sharing the ocean, the sand,
and all that makes the beach desirable.
For the permanent residents of this
epidermis or Newport Beach, the warm season
brings sleep interrupted by Led Zeppelin,
Hostess Twinkie wrappers in our mailboxes and
parking problems.
In order to co-exist wlth the summer ~ple
in relative harmony, the resident.I Ol t!)is
seaside resort community meet the mailman
before he gets sticky 100 on bis bands, sunbathe
on our decks Lnstead or venturlnl out among the
greasy bodies. and rise early in the morbinl to
we may park on the street and save our 1arac~
for frleOO...
Even my dog, Peter, wbO lli'eadY tmows
about the pound and $35 tlekeb realfies that
because of a local ordinance be Win no looser be
able to accompany me on our morning run
along the water's edse. He must wait In exile
for the whole season.
We all know about summer. And we make
provisions ror lt. 1
Unfortunately, even as a veteran of this
yearly chaos. 1 wun'l prepared for what hap-
pened the other day. While shopping ror flea
bombs (yes>. I ran Into someone who told me a
friend or mtne was seriously lll tn the h~ltal.
Feeling u thouth r had lo do 90meth.lni. J
stopped by the local nort1t to putchue some
nowera. I pa~ked In the lot adjacent lo the build·
lng, went lnaldt and ordered a large basket of
cheery yellow bloaom1.
Tho florist WU k1nd ~ to tell me that lt
Solo
By Cheryl Romo
I waited for just ts minutes and delivered th~
arrangement to the hospital myself, t could
save the S2 delivery charge. I waited. A few
mlnutes later, basket in hand. I walked out to
find a tow truck preparing to talce my car away.
Shocked, I asked the driver wbal be thought
be was dolng and be replied I had parked in a
private parking place. "1bis is the parking lot
or the fiorist. As you can see. I have just come
Crom there." I said. noting that the lot was adja-
cent to the shop and there was oo sign to In-
dicate it was a private place.
He agreed, but said be would have to take
the car unless l gave ,_lm 110. At this point, two
women on the balcony of a nearby building
started yelling. "You deserve It! Take her
earl'' AS 1 bad never seen either of these
women in my Ure, I was taken aback by a string
of profanities following their ln1Ua1 Jeertn1.
A crowd be1an to gather and the drtver
once a1ain lmlsted I give h,lm tJO. l dld. on the con·
ditioo tbAt be sf.• me a reeelpt~nd tell me who
•i&ned \bet.ow order. The women continued their
Jeerln1anda1entleman in a business suit came to
orter hU help. 'll'Ulatl)' the driver left and T ap-proa~bed thebuUdtna. ftowtrsitlU ln hand. to find
out what wu aotna. oe &ndlWhY ao much anlmoeity
was belnidlrectedtowtfd me. ct.a 80LO p.,._ Q>
I
Ct DAIL V PtLOT
••• Solo
(hoaa Paie cu
Ooe ol tbe women oo lbe bal~ny met me in
the hallway. I Identified myaell and uplalned I
would JWVtr lnlenlionaJJ y park In anyone:·
pl act and would not bl ve done so, bad there been•
al1n. She became belll1erent a,aln, puahd me
•l•lnatt.hedoorandatonneddownthebaU.
Then I met the man who 11.rthort&ed the or·
der and learned It wasn't even the woman'11
parkln1 place. }Je explained the alen waa down
beuuae lbey were painting lbe outalde of the
fiorlat abop. He said the parking attuatloo 1n the
beach area bad become unbearable. The
woman. he rationalized, wu reacUn1 to me u
a symbol and not a penon.
He concluded our conversation by saying,
"Wt\at'a the matter? Don't you have SIO?"
ORANGE COAST SINGLES: A pot luck dau-ner will be held at the home of Robbye Hoey at
8:30 p.m. Saturday. May 17. Call Robbye at
545·8488 for the details.
WE CARE: A non-sectarian support and
social group for alnale pen;ons. Meetings held
each Sunday evenina at 7 :30 at the Newport
Harbor Lutheran Church, corn6r of Dover and
16th Street. Newport Beach.
Solofztng for Smot.• calendar nw toeh Thur•·
do11 in the Dmlfl PUot and contains not~• of oc-
tivH'-• for ling~• for tM /ollor.qfng weelc -Frlda11
throuoh Tr.urldoJI. Send notic11 to Chn'Jll Romo,
Dofl11 PU«. P.O. Bo:r 1581>. Colta M•to. bSJe. BMMre
to incl~ JIOVr name, oddreu and~ n1'mber.
Notic•• nwat be in our handl tioo wnka In ~-
ANN LANDERS/ERMA BOMBECK
Safer Buses Asked
DEAR ANN
LANDERS: Your col
umos recently have in
eluded many letters
praising school bus
drl vers. I'd like to say a
few words about achoo!
buses.
Consideri n1 th e
changes in the desi1n of
cars <especially safety
features) over the put
15 years, I can't help but
wonder why the acbool
bus my cblldren ride ap·
pears to be Identical to
the ones I rode in.
have no an.swera ror you
but I wtll be bappy tG
print orw rrom aomeoae
"'bo do..s. E•peelally
"'ould I welcome a lettef
from m y frleoda In
Ddrolt.
Ana
~-·den
DEAR ANN
LANDERS· My 1-0n ls a
high school Junior ... e
17. He aeema to be con· plete lcbo& abe wUI Go& DE R ducting a romantic ln· marry yoGr eon. Toe bad A CORN: Yes. It
t.erlude wtth h1a '3-)'ear-he's •pendhis .o much 11 poHlble ror twins to
old En,U.h teaeMr. He money on &be 1'0m•n have different fatben. It
baa already apet over but tome Idell bave to can be proved by a blood
UOO on candy and 1et tb eJr lumpa tea"-
I walked slowly out of the buildin, and back
to my car. stlJI carrying the gtganUc yellow
basket flUed with love and good will. wondering
wbether th.ls summer wUl be even harder lban mbst. •.•• Ted Harp
The law requlJ'es that
my car have aeat belt.a,
yet tM. kidl are Jammed
into overcrowded buaet
w itb no aeat belts to
keef. tb e m from
crashLDi lnto that le rrl·
ble steel bar acrou the
seat ln front. You know
the one l mean -ll 'a
right there, walling to
take out their teeth lf
there ahould be a sudden stop.
nowera and la now look· flrt&,aild ud no one can Even If tbe babies
inf at a 930 tennil racket tell tbem aaythlas. u were •ired by dHferent
for her. you've beea on your f1Utere they are still
The real problem la aoa'1 back 1bou& thU -twlb1 -fntemal, not U.~t be bu told every. set .tf. Tbere art times lcl.enUcaJ, bowever. Tbe
one be knowa that be •hea allence speaks faet that &My were car-
want1 to marry tbe more ~~btly than rled by the 1Wotber at
woman H aoon 11 he worda. lh1a rd•· &he aamt Ula• qualifies
can aet a Job tbat wtll tloHblp moat be HIS tliem for lwluhlp.
SOLO/ZING
EAnNG ALOl'lilE : Dr. Stan Winter will dJs·
cuss the psychological and nutritional aspects of
eating alone during a lecture series, offered by
Golden West College. beginning May 26. Call
892·7711. ext. 591 for details.
SINGLE AGAIN: "Self·lma1e. Pursuit of
the Impossible, A Relationship with Mr. or Mrs.
Wonderful" will be the topic of a proeram
be1lnnlng at 8 p.m. Ji'rtday, May 19 at the Mar.
rtott Hotel. All ages, cost $5. For lnlormaUon,
call 839-1556
SAFARI SINGLES: A meetin~ and slide presentation will tuke place beginning at 7
p.m Frirtay, Ma) 19 at the University Park
Communjty Club House Call Betty, 5.52·9720, for
information.
PAREN'J'S WITHOUT.PARTNERS: A mid-
month dance wtll take place beginning at 9 p.m.
Friday, May 19 at the Costa Mesa Country Club.
Call PWP for more Information at 546·5788.
Loveean"Be
Pretty Sticky. ..
... with pretty
stickpins
to prove it.
The most-wanted
ace essory for
gift-giving anytime.
Three suggestions
from a large
selection :
Large heart, $42;
Small heart, $30;
or a heart
with a kiss of
a diamon.d, $64.
All in 14K
yellow gold.
(From Page CJ>
thinl\ it was a desire for iJ)dependence. J was
Uvine from paycheck to paycheck.•·
He credits bis background 1n lnvestlgaUve
reporting for helping him research the period
costumes and props.
What he ls trying to do. be says, is create
the atmosphere of photoaraphy's elorlous.
Oourtahing peak d the 18708 and 1880s.
Harp'a spelling of "pbot.ographique" ln b.la
atudlo name ls ln fact, a tribute t.o France where Louis baguerre Invented modern
photography In 1839.
A purist, Harp refuses to do Joke pictures.
He won't let men and women wear costumes of
the opposite sex or let a blond portray an Jn-
di an. for example.
•·1 JUST CAN'T stomach doing this in a
si ll y manner.·· he says. "I try lo guide them in
costume selection so they can get their money's
worth."
Harp has been known to bend the rules,
however, if he Is shooting al a private party.
He recalls actor Ross Martin's celebrity·
filled tennis tournament at La Costa Country
Club six years ago.
One man insisted on being photographed in
a green velvet dress .
.. Oh. it's perfect," agreed tbe other party·
goers.
Harp shot the man in the dress. It wasn't
until about a year later that a new TV show
called MASH went on the air. The man ln the
dress was Cpl. Klinger.
••• Engard
<From Page Cl>
BEFORE HE STARTED he thought he
would miss the advanced performance level or
the high school musicians. But he is perfectly
happy with the younger students.
"I like the kids· personalities at this level."
he says. "And they're so involved-I love this just fine."
During the summer when he's not teaching,
the one-lime Costa Mesa High School
newspaper staff cartoonist. divides his creative
energies between music and art.
This summer he plans to try to get
published a 90-page fairy tale be wrote and ii·
lustrated as a Christmas present for a friend 's
two daughters.
He's also working on another book with
Pomona Elementary School kindergarten
teacher Peggy Hawley It's called "Choices ...
and. according to Engard. is "al ong the lines or
'Your Erroneous Zones' for kids. ''It's pointed
tow a rd kids taking responsibility for
themselves." ,
If that isn't enough, he also is trying to sell
a cartoon strtpto a syndicate.
CALLED uaoADSTOCK," IT'S maln pre-
mise is "a group of young people going on a
filming tour or the world," he says. Their mode
of transportation? A dirigible.
So far lt has been rejected by three syn-~~~~~~~r-utes and, even more discouraging. Engard I: has been told that only one out or a thousand
NEWPORT BEACH
3412 Vii Lido• 67s:2J31
lOS A"'C.tLU/PASAOl,.4/S .. ,..]~ .. ltaA.ltA
'AL"4 Sl'IUNGS/HOfllOLULU
or crimped
with our
versatile cut . . .
cut alone .•• 8 50
N
cartoon strips are'bought.
But, like his fourth grade s axophone
lessons. he doesn't let that bother him.
"I'll be sending lt out again," be says with a
laugh, "and we'll see."
Correction
In Tuesday'• Happenings column in the
Featuring aectJon, a line was inadvertent·
ly dropped, resulting in the wrong iden-
tification of Robert W. Clifford. His cor-
rect title b president or Air California.
~ SlyllttQ ~ Cuc:. ~. Wet Set °' Hot !ton Set .• S16 oo •
••c.
...
l realize money la a
problem but ll the treat
minds can Uck polio and
get us to the moon, sure·
ly someone can deslan a
safer vehicle to protect
our most va lued
po ssess ions -o ur
children. -A PARENT
IN CLATSK ANIE .
OREGON
DEAR PARt<;NT : I
pay him enoulh. Thia Idea -or lilen.
boy la not qualified to do D i A R A N N OIANO OfllNING
anything. I don't know LANDERS : Is it poss1 •
wbat In the wotJd ti.! ta ble for twlDB to have dif·
thlnkin, about. (erent Cathers? If ao
This has got to be the bow can lt be proved.
teacher's fault. Sbe ll Are they actually twfna
divorced and I arn ture lf the( are sired by dif·
very experienced at tbll fereo fathers? If riot,
aort of thing. I'd like what are they?
your advice oo bow to Pleqe print this lett~r
deal with the matter. -a nd Httle a terrif{c
NO NAME NO CITY NO argument. I am count-
ST ATE lna Oil )'OU. Thanks a D~AR N.N.N.: Yollt heap .•. -I.ONG TIME
beat bet la to HY nothlnr FOLLOW!RS.
and do notbtn&. Vllle11 .C 0 R N I N G
the teacher la a coat· OBSERVER
Cleaning Up
On Miracles
A miracle is an event the deity?" she s miled that contradicts known patiently.
scientific laws and is Thanks to these ins·
often referred to as an tant miracles CHallelu-
Act of God. Jah! Hallelujah!). my
I have just removed a c l ot h es h ave been
blouse made out of a healed, but I'm the one
miracle <Hallelujah! who's sick.
Hallelujah!> fabric from I am growing up in
my washer. I don't want my utility room -gen·
to mention names, but tie cycle. no bleach.
someone does not have mild suds. cool iron,
their act together. flu(( dry. hang on a
E,...a
Bo.beck Save up to 40% in one
of the LARGEST Lighting
ter as I take 1t out or the Centers in the Western
dryer 1 United States.
Yesterday, I ctpp~ared ~=:=M::::S:i:" at breakfast in a T-shirt · •••t•IUCI that would have been ,i 7262 Edlnpr .... ~----tight across the chest of (71•> 142·2779 a Barbie doll. ...,lo.t,flll.iN.-.lM
"What happened"'"
asked my husband. ---------
·•1t 's my laundry It 's A"°"'c~Pttot all been divined by a ~
miracle. <Hallelu1ah 1 o.cc ope•-• HalleluJah!) Dad you _.__.,
bear angels singing• I ... c-.......
As a woman in her hange r, remove from
twilight years. I should washer. do not steam.
be taking long walks, no beat dryer. do not wr·
sitting quietly reading ing. keep out of sun, iron
good books. s miling on reversed side. cold
w isely, and passing rinse, wash alone, pat
down bita of bl.story to dry, remove trimmings.
my children. Instead. r dry clean only. <The lat·
am ln my utllity room ----------------------.....,...----=-----dido 't think you did.·· '---------~
read Ing washing In · "' 75Ll i1 •
structions Cthat have ,#A-------L l Utntlll/{>./tOOlY -------been sewn Into the
seams> and wondering
why m y mi ra cle
<Hallelujah! Hallelu-
jah!> fabric Just fades
on itself and looks like
something hanging out
of the rear pocket of a
mechanic's overalls.
I first bec ame s us-
pi cl o us of mirac•e
<Halleluja h ! Hallelu·
jab !> fabrics when l
bought my husband a
shirt one day and the
salesperson said, "You
will never have to Iron
this."
"That's a miracle"
<Hallelujah! Hallelu·
jah ! ). I said.
"Exactly. It will
always look as won -
derful as It does right
now."
"But the sleeves are
all wrinkled and there
are creases where it's been folded ...
Slip into softness with our llahan Sandal
Beautifully shaped. Cool and comtortable
White or Bone Calf . 42 00
~ ~"'iq SHOES
J" 'Ii ,.,...
St'. lo 1(
NC, IQ 10
Mr 4 1<1 •O
f\;.ll •l~•n .. 0001
"Which Is precisely 99 Fashion Island, Newport S..ch ... 75&-9561
why you have a miracle----------------------------<Hallelujah! Ha llelu·
jab !> selling on your
iron called permanent
press."
"But that doesn 't
make any sense."
"Are you questioning
B~clust~e
9.-poAted
'Demgu
by
J~
Weight Watchers. in cooperation with
Invites all figure-conscl~s women to attenci our
Summer Fashion Show
and a 9P8Clal \
Weight Watchers presentation .... ...-
On Saturday, May 20, at 10:30 AM, come to Liao Fashions on
Via lido In Newport Beach. for all the information necessary
help you sllm down for the exciting new aummer talhlons.
Weight Watchers lecturer Nedra Bazhaw will talk about the
program. and Weight Watchers own Chef Susan will
demonstrate the easy preparation of gourmet Weight Watchers meals.
No re&eMltlons or adml981on fee neoesaary. Just come in and
start plannlng YoUr own beautiful look tor aummerJ
Refreshments Served ,
Gentlemen, brtng your wtveal
:W2'4 Via Lido
Newport Beach
V8'idlttd Fr• Plrklng
'
' Business l'~. Mey t&. 1978 DAILY PILOT C3
H oniebuyer
Market
T ightening
WASH.IiqGTON <AP) -Home
buyers wlll hnd houses even
more scarce and expensive in
the months to come unJess lnfia·
tlon Is brought under control, the
nation's home builders say.
That assessment came ~s the
government confirmed that both
h ousing and the gen eral
economy are growing rapidly
after sluggish activity during
the winter.
THE ~:.::leNAL Association
of Home Builde rs said. however.
the next two years wi ll not be as
stron& for housing as was 1977,
when n early 2 mallion new
houses were built.
'"Infl ation and r1 s1ng
mortgage interest rates threaten
lo slow the pace of new housing
construction and home sales in
the second half of 1978," said
Ernest A. Becker Sr .. associa-
tion president.
Becker promised that most
builders wouJd freeze their pro-
fits in the next six months as an
anti-inflation mov('.
.. T HE ONLY PR ICE in·
cr eases will be in wages and
materials." he said. urging con·
struction unions to ro110-w the ex·
ample.
Even 1( his anti-inflation move
succeeded. housing prices would
go up at least an average of 6
percent this year, he said.
Housing construction was
strong in April. rising lo a rate
of 2.2 m illion units averaged
over the year.
* * *
Looking for Work APWI .........
An estimated 3.500 people lined up to apply•foi-Jobs at a
General Motors assembly plant under construction at
Oklahoma City. Applicat1ons were being taken at the
st ate fairgrounds.
Foreclosure Upheld
SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -California's non·
judicial procedure for foreclosing on trust deeds to
real property is constitutional. according Lo the
state Supreme Court's unanimous decision.
The ruling, written by Justice Wiley Manuel.
EVICTIONS
L.A. County
213-733-0623
Safari
Reports
;:::;;;:;;;W_E_SP_EA_K __ ~Inconie
YOUR LANGUAGE
J I' \ n 11 d r ,11" ( J I rl'
p r e 11 a r (• r t• 1· I I 1•
01 donn:.inrt• F1 .1nth
f l'h mod1tl' du·M''>
Hl'.tepl zubcrt•1t cn
la'>'>l'll t;l'rm.111
\' o r r l' 1 1· h l' m 1
prl'Jl ;.iras.,c 11 u1:~lJ
r rl't•Ua·ll<Jh:.in
Qu1i.il·ra quc ~t('d mC' p r 1• p a r <1 r ::i <• s t ;.i
n•t'l·t J Spani:.h
I would like ~ou to fill
lhb prc.,criptlon
Engh!>h
~o matlt:r ~hul tht>
langua~c. 1t .,till come-,
nut l hl• i.amc. F1lhni.t a
p1 l'~c·r1pt1on ... a sal'rcd
tru-.1 ;ind v.1• V.l·koo11• 1hl·
opportuml' to ., .. , 'e ·' Clllr
phJfmal') Ol•1.·1h
y 0 l l 0 R \'(I L" f(
DOCTOR CA:'-1 PllON E
L'S v.hl•O \(Ill Ol'Cd n
dcll\ l'rY r1rk UI) your
pn·:-.cr1p1ton 1r ... hoprtnf.!
n 1• J r h' . n r w l' v. 1 11
dl'll\ <·r promptly w1lhout
e'Ct ru t:harljl' A J:r<•at
many IX'Oplc 1.•ntru-.1 u!>
~1th lht·1r p~crlpl1ons
Ma y we compo und
yours"
PARK ·uoo PHARMACY
Fr" Delivery
351 Ho9pit•I Road
Newpot1 Beectl642·15111'
Lion Country Safari.
Inc .. Irvine. has report-
ed its audited 1977 re·
sults. showing gross re·
venues or $3,193.398 and
net per-share income of
$2.88.
This income figure in·
eludes an extraordinary
gain from extinguish·
ment of a $5.301.219
debt. or $.1.01 a sharf'.
REVENUES FOR
1976 totalled $6,237,163.
whi c h included
$1,649,906 from termina·
lion of manage ment con-
tracts and $1,294,302
from its former Florida
operation. Per share
loss in 1976 was $1.17.
Previously, the com ·
pany had reported its
annual earnings In a
dual manner because of
uncertainty over a pro·
posed lease agreement
with Stahl·Lacal, Inc.
Harry Shuster. presi-
dent a nd board
chairman of Lloo Coun-
try Safari. announced
this week that the con·
templated lease agree·
ment has been terminal·
ed effecUveMarch31.
For the first quarter
of 1978, Lion Country
5afa rl reported r e-
venues of $701,816, con-
tras ted with $568,270 for
the same three-month
period la s t yea r .
HOW TO BUY DIAMONDS
THE TRUE STORY
presented by
INNOVATIVE DIAMOND
MARKETING, INC.
FRI., MAY 18 -7:30 P.M.
TOPICS:
'. How • ... .. llllilMcl. ....... ~
2. Da•an 9ffed • ttte world •rbt l. Nu ..... ., .... trod! ......
4. How YOU c..1-doe...., ... .., ........ ,,.eel
s.•-.1•••d~ '"e:::::,. ......
SPEAKERS:
Antnony Seymour: President, Charles An-
thony Olamonm Glen R. Hammond: Presi-
dent. Innovative Olarnond Mer1<etlng, Inc. Call
for reservations and location
'714J 51Mt24 l21JI 62M271
171414t7-4311 IY84'"6S
r --....
said a foreclosing "constitutes private. not state
action ." and is thus exempt from due process re·
qutrements of federal and slate constitutions.
THE CASE AROSE AFTER Sus an and Gary
Garfinkle bou~ht a home in Lafayette in January
1970 from a family whose loan was secured by a
trust deed held by Wells Fargo Bank.
The deed had a standard due-on-sale clause
under which the bank could accelerate the balance
due if the home was sold without its consent.
The deed also had another clause allowing the
bank to collect the balance due through public auc-
tion of the property under certain conditions .
WELLS FARGO OFFERED TO let the
Garfinkles take over the loan at a higher interest
rate in relurn for not invoking the loan accelera-
tion clause. But the Garfinldes refused to assume
the loan on those terms.
The high court upheld the Contra Costa County
Supe(ior Court. which dismissed the Garfinkles'
consitituttonal cha ll enge because no state a ction
was itWolved.
WiUJam O. Burnett, Mission Viejo, has joined
the Newport Beach office of Business Properties
Brokerage Co.
He is former investment analyst for the Real
Estaters.
• The American Ad vertising Federation has
awarded Jann Church Advertising & Graphic
Det1ign, Inc., Newport Beach, first place in the
··eest in the West" c reative competition.
The "Ftrst Most Beautiful " award was given
for a direct mail poster promotional campaign de-
signed for George Rice and Sons Lithographers. a
Los Angeles printing firm.
Communication Arts magazine's March/April
1978 issue featured the design work of the firm. • AsbwUl-Burke & Co., lac •• has named Bruce
0. Carter, Fountain Valley, executive vice presi-
dent in charge of brokerage administrative ac·
tivities. .,
From the company's Irvine headquarters, he
will lake primary executive responsibility for of·
fires in Northern and Southern California.
H e is former senior vice president and
manager of Southern California and Arizona
operations for th~ commercial and industrial real ~state broke rage firm Grubb & EIUs. • Eugene M. l.yons has been elected vice presi·
~ent group sales at Pacific Ma&ual, Newport
~each. He is responsible for coordinating group in·
1>urance field sales operations with headquarters
t
upport functions.
He jolned the company in 1953 as a group sales
ralnee in Houston. a dvancing through group in·
urance field sales and management positions; he
erved recently as l(roup regional vice president
ror the South Pacific regi~n
Daalel O. Clark. Newport Beach, has been elect-
d vice president or Region 12 or the American
nstituteof lndu.c;trial E ngineer.;, Inc. The region in·
ludes 13 southern California chapters and she un.
verslty chaptttrl"in Anzona. California. New Mex·
co and Texa.v
He ls research and technical director for lbe
!TM Association for Standards and Research . •
Blck Telles. Newport Beach. hu been namtd
anager or special project.a for WlldOm Import
ale• Co. Inc., lnlne .
He is responslble for nallonal and regional •c·
unt sales in the 13 western atatea. He prevloualy
as an area manager with a brewery .
•
Bubar• Palm•t, k n Clemente. haa been •P·
toted u a loanomcer. apeclallitna In commercial
d lnduatrtaJ teal estate. at the Newport Center
allk of Amenea.
Sh• had managed the Caph1trano Palisades of·
cc In San Ch~mente sln~e January 1976. With tho
nk slnce 1973, abt ~an as 1 credit tralnee and
rved In loan operatiOOJ at the South Coast Town
ter in C:O.ta M•a and \ht aa.tboa branch before
oSan o&emeot.Ull~nt.
l I
_ .. ,..,.,..__ .... ,..(#"'• ,
•
Congress Coins Debate
Miss Libe rty Pitted Against Susan B. Anthony
WASHINGTON <AP> -
Before Congress has had much
time to think about a new. more
convenient dollar coin. it finds
itself refereeing a warm-up d.t-
bate with women's rights over-
tones.
The question on Capitol Hill:
lf the new coin is authorized.
should It bear. the image or a
mythological Miss Liberty or the
proflle of a real person . women's
s uffrage pioneer Susan B. An·
thony?
THIS WAS A paramounl ques·
t1on as the House banking sub-
com m1llee on historic preserva·
Uon and coinage opened
hearings Wednesday on lhe pro-
posed coin. It woold replace the
silve r dollar and would be
halfway in size between a
quarter and haU-dollar.
Initial l~stimony was over
whelmingly in favor Of the DO·
tion of issuing a new dollar coin
to reduce dependence on the
dolla r bill. to expand the
m e r c handis ing potential of
vending machines and, if ac·
cepted by the public. to cut the
government's currency costs.
But the Liberty-Anthony
rivalry stayed close to the fore.
THE TREASURY came to the
hearing touting its design pro·
posal: Liberty on one side; an
eagle on the other.
Noting that there are manf
distinguished Americans of both
sexes who could be considered
candidates for commemoration.
Stella B. Hackel. direct.or of the
U.S. Mint. t.old the subcommit·
tee:
"In our view. e xpanding the
field of design selection beyond
historical abstracts and U.S.
pre!:idents would set an unwise
course in coin design. and invite
a controversial debate which
would tend to damage the over-
all success of the proposal."
BUT THE CAUCUS of women
House members already has en·
dorsed an Anthony design. Rep.
William Proxmire. D ·Wls .•
chairman of the ~nate Banking
Committee. has introduced
legislation providing for the An·
thony design. and a companion
bill has been introduced in the
House by Rep. Ma r y Rose
Oakar. D·Ohio. a member of the
House Banking Comm1tll'e
Spokesmen for coin collectoN>
and the coin collecting industry
suggested the differences might
be resolved by resuming the
practice of minting special com·
memorat1ve coins from lime to
tame.
Commemorative coins were
dropped after a flood of ~pec1al
issues in the l93(hi.
Panel Wants Word
On Safety Hazards
WASHINGTON <AP> -ls there some consumer product or item
that seems hazardous Lo you?
If there is, the Consumer Product Safety Commission wants to
hear about'it.
You have two choices In bringing hazardous Items to the attention
of the commission: simply lQ·
form them or ask them to in· vestigate and establish controls new rule should be issued or an
to make the item more safe. old one changed or revoked.
IF YOU JUST want lo call the
problem Lo their attention. the
commission has a toll-free
"hotline." 800-638·2666.
T he othe r alternative is to
petition the commission to take
action on a product. Anyone can
do this and when a petition is re-
ceived the com m ission ls re-
quired Lo take action. either ap-
proving or denying the request.
and it must publish its d~lsion.
The requirements for a peti·
tion:
-It mus t be written in
English.
-Your name and address
must be included. and your
telephone number would help.
-Indicate the product you
want regulated and whether a
O ver 1,he Counter
HASD Ustn.gs
-EXPLAIN THE racts you
believe create the need for this
action, such as d etails of a
personal experience. researrh
or medical or engineering in·
formation.
-Make a s pecific request
that the comm1ss1on Institute
rulemaking and include a bner
description of what the rule
should include.
The petit1on s hould be typed
and include the word "'Petition··
at the Lop. The commission says
it would like five copies. Jr possi-
ble. describe the nsks of injury
that the rule would a ll eviate.
You can rile a petition any
time. Send it t.o the Office of the
Secretary, Consumer Product
Safety Commission. J l I 1 18th St.
NW. Washington. D.C. 20201.
Vp s and Doamu
Pel Up ., \
Up «>" Up JS I
Up U t
Up 10 • UP 1• I
Up "•I UP 7S/J
Up 1Su Up II •
Up 10?
UP 18 • Up 18 l
UP I\~ UP I~ o
UP l\.U
UP 1• • Up ,. I
IJP 1• o
UP I• l IJp •• J
Up I• J Up I< I IJP U l
Up t•.0
P<I.
Ott »• Ott "y
Oii " ~ Off " \ Off 10 J Off ••
011 ~' Off I I
011 81 0 11 11 Off I 4
Oft It Oft It
Oft " Ott ...
Off 6 I Ott • ,
Ofl 0 I
Off • J Ott \ y
()II \ v Oii s .. Ott \.
Oii ', Oft s.
MUTUAL FUND S
.. ,
"
I
-
Thur day's
Clo illl Prices
I
Tb~. -, .. ,.,.
NYSE COMPOSI'I1E TRANSACTIONS
STOCKS I BUSINESS
Home Health Care
Programs Sh<»w
Dollar Savings
By SYLVIA PORTER
'4nl ef , .. CitMMt
The Blue Cross and Blue Shield Plan in Maryland ha:>
reported that its home care program has res ulted ln an esttmated ~.000 h»savings In Its rirl!t two ye~rs or opera-
Uon. wlth the avera1e pa rticipant's hospital stay cut by 10
days.
-In Rochester. N. Y . scene or one of the nation ·s olde~l I and moet comprehensive home care programs. the local
1 Blue Cross plan says as many as 220 P"lients are being
taken care~ at home at an average daJly cost of W . com -
pared with the S200 daily hos pital care cost
Ir~ PIDl..aDELPHlA, ANOTHEll lons·standrng plan
has saved an average of 12 days per pal.Jent and cul $2 . .l ~Ullon off hOspltaJ bills In two year-;.
So ll goes. ln area after area where home heltlth care
programs have taken hold.
Of course. the cynicism continues. Oppos1t1on to ef
forts to control the upsurge m hospital costs seem~ to
JnOUnl In direct rela
Uonahip to eYidenei! of
any sUttHS In the ef-
forts.
Fights are breaking
out acroes the nation
bet ween those who
want to slow hospital
Money's
Worth
txpanaion and those who want lo accelerate it. Scorn
Jreets even we ll-documented studies that show that home
~ealth care programs actually save in tt~rms of hospitaJ
1ta ys and dollars spent. •
THESE STUDIES SHOW THAT Blue Cros1i home
health care plans save rrom 10.2 to 18.5 hospital days pt:r
case. with dollar savings per case running from $330 to
'9()0.
Eventually. the goal is to pass on the savings LC\ Blue
Cross subscribers.
Lower premiums also would become possible th.rough
the freeing of hospital beds and the lessened need for new
hospitals.
YET DESPITE THE EVIDENCE, THE battle is in-
tensive, with locallUes fighting tor federal help to m aintain
a nd enlarge local ~pitals. with the hospital industry con.
cerned about its future and with politics overruling
economics in instance after instance.
Meanwhile. beyond the fina ncial s avings possible
through well·managed home health care programs are
the emotional and psychological benefits. As one Delaware
patient said.
"While I'm still rar from well. today l 'm celebrating m,. 30th weddin~ anniversary here at home with my
tni'sland. I am really getting ·tender. loving care' from my
ramlly and my Cine home care nurse and doctor ..
Ntzt · Another "plua:" Job!
Stock Prices Hurt
By Selling ·Pressure
f,EW YORK <API -Stock prices turned downward 1n
hea trading this afternoon as investors sold issues that
hav risen in value during the recent rally.
fhe Dow Jones averaJle of 30 industrial stocks was orf 7.4St<>ints to850.92. Volume was heavy
(.
~tocks losing value outnumbered by almost 2· l lhose that
werubead.
lnalysts attributed the selling pressure partly to the fal~f ~ dollar today In foreign exchange trading and
pa lo mves tors wanting to reap some or the gains that
ma issues have rolled up recently.
I
I
I
\
TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS
&1 11 1<'·11 \\
EVINIHG --11:. ...
~O*I
Wf* melung • TV llC>PM'· .nee. O. and DeSoto
become 1tara of • rMl-ltflt
-gtney G GUMIMOKI
Wflell • renegecte lndlan
..... ~tt'1 tnend. MIMI
~the 11-ll.gfl inlO
the New MMloo moun-
talN.
• THI llW1V IUNCH
Mlltt ~ he hM lost
90flle lmportent papel'I
during ttlelf trip to an
-t partc, and.
franuc_c:tl..._
-~12
A COUt~I INNQ9!'
COMM iotw.fd .. a wit·
,.. ~ hOodlum.-'!!ftr to be abducted
I
Television Thurlday May 16 1978
Ioele Aotllnetttl attemc>t 10
round uc> • peel! of Wiid
~~an-.
d9nt " • wtldllfe '*"· • ..ow
•• • "WtH Uni11 Ottl!"
( t98T) Audre¥ Hepburn,
Al#I Altlln. A btlnd women
outwit• • trio Of would·be
heroin t~ (2 hit ) e 9 WE.L.COMC BACK. KOTTIA
"CIMI Encounl«t Of The
Cenot11 Kind'" One of the
8WMlllOOA co1wloc• .,.r
Woodman tfl•t being•
from tlnOt7* planet wtll
llOOf\ lend on campus.
• MOVJe
··~ "Night Puaage" llHT) Jamet St9Watt.
Audie Murphy. An outlew
dee«t• hit gang~
held up • lfeln gi.-diecl by
hie brotllet. 12 hrL I ·CMOL~ AHOfflENOe
a-t: Roddy McDowell. m ..ow:
TUBE TOPPERS
KTLA 0 8:00 "Wait t:nt1l D~rk ..
Audrey Hepburn gives a bravurci
performance In this t96i chiller about u
blind woman te rroriz<.:d by hoodlums.
Richard Crenna and Alan Arkin co-star
KCET 9 8:30 -The Heal America.
An examination of the fizzling popula·
tion explosion is presented by forecaster Ben Wattenberg.
KOCE 9 9:00 -Some of the Presi·
dent's Men. Press secretaries tor former
presidents discuss their roles in history
in this special telecast lst'.!e revi~w
below>.
QI TO 81 ANNOUNCED
The Trial Of Hllf'tnr 81sk•
Mot Lipe lllld ._.,iO' Bum •
..... Herv\t c8ilMI IO 4 IOf.
mll .....,~ l()t dowl"Q
~ 11C1111mea •• ''"' 4077tti (RI G TONIGHT
Hoer· Johnny Oareo"
Oue9i.. Eul>le ei.ke. 8w1
Comrt
• LOVE. AMINCAN 1 l'TYLI
' L.0¥9 And The LOU<l-
Moulh .. Jim end.....,, "'91
went• Qu,.. hOI~
"LOlte And The SollH>o
Susan end Oerelt find lhel
dtvorCie 11111 'I ell that "IY 8 ®) 8TARSKY &
HVYCH
"The Commll1ea·· When
61.,....y kills <1 treed r9')1at.
,_.. fly about htS ,.,,.,.,..
b4w9hlp on • mu<Cletove
~te O'OUO (RI
8) THATOIRL
'N You Were Almost The
I~= :w.n:r World '
.. t
0A1L v PILo• c&
• AuthOf Nor ' t PNO"
dl~CUllwe• ,.., Oto ...
·sc,.bbl• i>ot1bl>·•
Wf\ICll IOCUMI on Ille "*' .. · f'Nd lf'VIM. d tee •or of Al)()Uracy •n Mec!lil
will 1.n. •bol>• n1a grouc; •
go.II
D •SPY
·'Sh•11a
• MO\/IE
• • • AbOve SuN>ICIOI'
f 1943, Joa" C'raw!ord
Freel MecMurray
"488 Nl!WS 1:501 NEWS 2:00 G> HEWS
MOYie •*'It "Hired Wore 119•V•
RONllnd RuN.11, 8f ,.,.
Atiemft
2:2! IJ M0\11(
• • '" • Oellar 1 Jowiwiv
119461 Glenn Ford . .Ml:'et
8Wr
2'56 8 HeNS
3:00 G MO\/lt * "Tiie 'M1U1ng ~I
f 10331 WIHtam lundl(>ln
Paul Kellv
I IL.ECTNC COMPANY
Pf:MONAl FINANCE
"AMI Ellate 1n-1lng" 0 AaCHEWI 4t308 MOV9E
• • "Powderllag" p970)
Aod Tttytcw. Oeooia Cole
Two "*" allemc>I 10 rn-
CU9 • tv)ACkec:I trAin and tta
Bold Tia.at Tiger
• • • "Th• Savaga"
110521 Charleton Heston.
Suaan Motrow A wf'llle
ma.n. rtlMd by Siollx lnd1-
ans. ts tom be'-his
IOyalt ... when war bl'Nkt
out 12 lw'LI
t:OO. Cl) cu 8PEQAl
"F•tiYal Of The Start
Mexico" Hoeta &a..IMe s-• enct John Ritter
join gueel no.1 Ricardo
Montalban and en aasorl·
ment 01 AmerlCM and
Mexican creetiYe art11t1 In
a aalule to Mexico
I L!'T'9 MAKI A O!A.L
MICHAEL JACt<aON
Ear1hquake spec.afist Ot
Clenlnee Allen ••plorel
methOdt Mid vatldlly or
•trlhqu .... ptec:llCtloM. ID NIW80HECK
An intormati'4 eollectlOl'I
of Ofange County ,_ ..
~lend~
CAPTIOHIO A.IC
HlW8
MORNING
12:00. TWIUGKT 20HE
ID MOVlf •••A JI°'.-Mons••,
Maker" f 19441 J CanOI
Na11h R11on MOrlJllP
--.1y.three ~·· 111v.,30mtn )
• llwmHD .
Endcn ftftd9 tflllt M~
A_,.,. • Darrin'• tenlto-
Carol Lynley. playing a veterinarian.
cozies up to a 400-pound Bengal tiger in
the TV movie ··The Beasts are in the
Streets," airing tonight at 8 on NBC.
Channel 4.
&;) THEONOIN~THI
WAITEA IN AMERICA \
"Wright Morr!•" M°""'
won the Ougoeih"leim r:.f.
IOWlhlp thfee umes -
twice tor ptio1ograp11y end
once lot writing -atld Ille
NatiOnel BOOlt Award In
t9S7.
G ®> llAANE'f MIU.EA
"Inauguration.. The ""9ttth
pt9CinCt le t!WOwft Into .,,
Ul>fOlll' by I man ltlreelen·
ono 10 jump off 1 roof Into
the meyOfal parade • =:AIFRH
• lllOOm
Ctwtl end Tetrt b9c:ofne
M "'*'°8 • of a glt1 llfflo IS
et tM IOel'9 of ....... r=-EA8Y
Miiton e.ne: .. r ... : IOIMW•
market~; the Sen-
ior OleMert of S.C:ramen-
to. (RI
• THIGROWINO
WAN
"A~ Pereonallty
o.-•~·•rt" (I) AMIRICA 2NIOHT
0 ....v °"""1N au.ta: Dot"'9 ~.
Peul Jat>Ma. LOY9 And
1<1saes.
7:00 I Nee HEWS UAAICl.U8
MCNewa IOWUNOFOA
OOUAA8
• ILOVElUCY
Lue,. end Ethel try lo take
• memento of CAl!fomla
bac:ll to "'-York with
them
• AO.W-12
M..itoy and Reed haw to
ex«CIM their wltl '°"*'
1roey llaYe to dee! with a onnen dttver
• MACNEIL / l.EHAEA
RI.PORT 6) HOME GARDENER
"Indoor Pienta II"
(I) JOl<EA'S WILD
C'laa••~I Li.a Ing• e KNXT (C8S) Los Angeles 9 KN8C (NBC) Los Angeles
I KT1.A (Ind ) Los Angeles
KABC-lV (ABC) Los Angeles
(() KFM8 (CBS) San Diego G KHJ.. TV j Ind.) L08 Angeles
9 KCST IABC) San Diego
I KTIV (Ind.) Los Angeles
KCOP· T\l jlnd ) Los Angeles
9 KCET· T\I f PBS) Los Angeles
Cl) KOCE·T\I (PBS) Huntington Beach
Stars SpiCe TJ7
'Travelogue'
LOS ANGELES <AP> -To find tbe origin of
"Festival of Stars: Mexico," you have to go back
more than 10 years ago when Elizabeth Taylor and
other stan conducted tours of foreign locales.
"Those were basically travelogues and today's
audience wouldn't sit still (Qr that," said Bob
Stivers, exeeutive producer or the two-hour CBS
visit to Mexico tonight al 9 on CBS, channel 2.
What Slivers hud In mind was to lake a group
of American stars to a foreign country and weave
them in with the local culture and entertainment.
"The stars could be the sugarcoating," he said.
"We'd do a salute to a country each year -but
don't call it a travelogue because when you say
that people think it should be on a Sunday aft.er·
noon."
HE SAID: "\'OU JUST can't go out and do a
variety show anymore. There are only so many
stars and a week after the fall season starts you've
seen them all. Nothing is special any more. You've
got to have a con<:ept, like a circus or a beauty
pageant or a visit to a foreign country."
For bis first veniure he went no farther than
over the border into Mexico. Hosts for the show
are John Ritt.er, Suzanne Somers and Ricardo
Montalban. Guest stars include Roy Clark. Steve
Allen, Jamie Lee Curtis, Barbara Eden, Freddie
Fender, Rita Moreno and many others.
The result is a comedy and musical tour of
Mexico. It is a treat for the ears and eyes. ~
Roy Clark plays classical guitar with th ex-
ico State Symphony in the pyramids south o Mex-
ico City. His rendition of "Malaguena" is a
showstopping performance that is coupled with
some spectacular helicopter shots of the pyramids.
RICARDO MONTALBAN TALKS about hi3
native country and-introduces all the mariachi
bands of Guadalajara. They fill the square with
music and color.
"We taped the bands in the morning." said
Stivers. "At exactly 11 o'clock they all rushed off
to other engagements around town.''
Stivers, who produces such event specials as
"Circus~ the Stars," "Command Performance''.
and "11le People's Choice Awards," found taping
ln a foreign country could be snarled in red tape.
He wanted Vicki Carr on the show but could
not get her work permit cleared ln time. He said,
"They have a bureaucracy you wouldn't believe.
"'WHEN WE TAPED ON A ranch near
Guadalajara we discovered tt had only two
restrooms. We had 14 stars and 30 crewmen there.
so I called my office in Los Angeles and had them
buy five portabJelollets and put them on a plane."
ACTORS CO-OP
needs 100 extras for an upcoming Hotrvwood
fUm. Phone: 957·0282
1123 llrch ..... 10
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THE GONG 8HOW
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THE 8AADY BUNCH
Petet .. r az:ted by hl9 foot·
ball tewn '°' being • mem-bet oftheonow.
G) AMENCA 2NIOHT fI1l 28 TONIGHT •
Tile d11f«ent tOOla ullli:md
to 1.-:n handicapped ~
dfen trlld1Uonel tubjeell
areeutnlned 19 NEW8CHEa(
AA lnformettw c:ollectlon
ol Orange County -· government and coneumer
affllfa, people end aporta.
Cl) IN 8EAACH ~-"The Corning lee ,. .. Do
tile ,_t cl\angea In OU1
-!her h«eld the onNt
of 8 MW Ice 909? III MATCH GAME P.M.
1:00 fJ (() THE WAl TONS
Grandpa Wiiton 1t111t.,.
the tranqulllty of the moun-
1ai11 wtl8l1 he lnvlt• a U.S.
Army urnt 10 practice
maneuYefl tllefe (RI D THE IEA8T8 ARE IN
THE STREETS
A veterinarian !Carol.
Lynley) and head ranger
eAHYONEFOA
TEHN't'SON?
"Robe<I And Elizabeth
Brow11111g" Severel of
Robert'• Htracrdlnary
dramatic monologlMS end
Mlectlon• from Eltzab«h'•
popu&et ''Sonnets From
The Portugeae" are
perfOfmed
UC> 8 OflERA llOH
PETTICOAT
"Clel<e Voy1nt" Slelpper snermen and his «-
b«:olne targeta for the
U.S. Navy when the Jap•
nete ISUl1Ch I ~II tub
ldemleal to Ille See Tiger ·~AMENCA "The Bomb Thll Amed"
Ben Wattenberg ptedictl
m.t us. pOpu1e11on wta
atablbe at about 2e5 ~
lion by 2025, and that the
problama wilt be releled
mOfe to affluence than
~llltOn gr~h.
U OVfREASY
M111on Be<le. atreu: llUCMW·
martl.t llhopplng: the s-.
IOr GIN.ners of Sactamen-
10 (RI
"Daya Of Mey" A protlle of
the French Lef1'1 attempll
to win po.-In ltle str .. ts
and In Iha baflot bo•
~ 1"8end 1978 '9 8P£CIAl
"Some Of The PTMldent1'
Men" Pierre Salinger.
George Reedy, Ron ZAllgler
and Ron Neuen wlll
re1pond to que11lon1
about ~tlal power
and the preu Penet
moderator Elie Abel
t:aO G Ill ASH
''CINf Alh'' Flah coneid·
.,...1eev1ng the group llorne
IO ecoept the poajtlon of
cNef..of·pollce In a amaU
town In Georgie
10:00 0 OPE.RATION:
PAIHAWAY
"Too Your,g To LOY*"
McKay IRo~rt R4i°d)
-"• an unwed bj)AC1ent
mo111er 1-...re Winning.
ham) and her 10ver !Gery
Imhoff) when h« perenta
refvle to let them marry 81J NEWS 0 BAAETTA
"The Bundle" B•r•ll•
llruggtes to NW ll'le livet
Of two )'OUl'IQ ectr-
lnvolved •n an eictor110n
ICh8me
FESTMTIES -Host Ricardo Montalban <right> ts joined by Jerry
Stiller, Anne Mears and Samantha Sang <from left> in the TV
special Festival or the Stars: Mexico, tonight at 9 on CBS. Chan· ncl 2.
Philadelphia to Bollgmood
Douglas Going West
PHILADELPHIA <AP> -The
Mike Douglas television show, facing
Increasing competition from the
West Coast-produced Dinah Shore
and Merv Griffin programs, is going
to move to Hollywood, probably In
August.
"The move to Hollywood will
'broaden Douglas' appeal by expand·
ing the star availabtUUes for the
show." David E. Salzman, clWnnan
or Group W productions. s~es·
day.
THE TALK AND variety show, now
syndicated to 120 television stations,
has been produced in Philadell)hia
since 1965.
"Though we will miss this city. 1t is
necessary, in order lo keep the s how
succ~ssful. rresh ·and exciting, to be
located where the best entertainers
aremoreavailable."Salzmansald.
Salzman said that following a sum-
mer vacation, the new show will be
produced in the sh1dlos or CBS
Television City, next to the studios of
theLawrenceWelkshow.
THE MOVE TO Los Angeles was
precipitated by the ratings baWe and
the inability or Douglas lo attract big
name entertainers to Philadelphia.
Lately Douglas has been on the
road taplng his shows even though it
means higher production and staff
costs. Recent broadcasts have come
from Nashville and Las Vegas.
After her divorce,
k.a got to know
some pretty
Interesting
people •••
Including herself.
--...... -.............. i..-.-------- -- - -... ,.. .............. -..... ,. ,,
I
·"··· people end 8'>0f1•. 0 Tlfl MAOtCAl
.. l&ICAl WOM.D ~
~AHOMWI
Gueat1: Sandy Ou~n •
SWolo FrencN, Jim Hen·
aon end The Muppeta.
10:30 •• Nl'W8 MACNEll / LIHAEA
AOOAT m~ 11G>·=~
8TYL£
"LOlte Artd The P,reme·
~·· A ma.led eouple
llftd ttlernMlw9 bodtetlf!O
QOnttantty. "LOlte And The
Time M.ctilne" A young
rn.n ...,.,,. 1t1e1 11 • • nee
nice 10 fool Mottler Natufe
G MOVIE * * • "Time Limit" (19571
Ric:tlerd Wldmarl!. Richard
BMeNlt. An otflOer teces
poulble covrt-mer11e1
~of~thel
rnalntllln• he revealed
k'ltormatlOn to tne -nv
w1111e It! a P.O W. cemp. t2
hrl I •n.oooCOUPLE ,,.. •.• del9Mr N'le ~
from hOm8 10 ~ Mt
Idol. Paul w-.ma, .._.
~hergoea
• MOH1'Y PmtON'8
Fl YING CIACU8 • DOC CAWTT
Gumt· dlrec:tOf George Cukor.
• MACH&. I LEHflER
REPORT
11:S08(1) M"A .. •M
Bob Wllaon • tty.ng ~
atlet " ;ua-monltl con-
vtilMCenOA lrom I MfVOU9
bf Nil down
·~ R.elptl find• a 1U1tcue
et emmed w1111 t()()..dollar
blle and goea on • "'I09
~lptee.
t2=0l 8 Cl) C88 LA Tt MOVIE
• • • "C.V P_ .. I 19741
~ fOfsyttle. Anne Fran.
eta A rnotorttr eccodenlelty
11111 end 111111 a pedealr..,,
bu1 wtletl he 1111um1 to the ecene. 1t1e bOdY,,... dlNC>-
peereo
12:*>8 MOVIE * * •·~ "Topllaot' ( 196'1
.....,.ne tHreowl. Petet
Utllt>OV FOUf IMllP9'i·
enoed SpleS ..., • -ornat'I
end 11e1 IOYer 1n en a11emp1
10 11ea1 .,, ~•eo
degger trom • eun.n. 12
ht'a.. 25 min.)
• TM/THOR
~ e MOVIE
• • "Three Young ,........ 119541 ..... ,.
Gaynot. Jeffrey Hunlet In
Ofdet 10 SIOO Ilia teth«
lrom rot>t>ong • train, • "*' doM " tor lllm. ~ n!ng to return "'* money,
I.!._ hi .. 30 min.)
t2:37 II 0 TOMA .. S \lt.eout" T Ofn8 ..ital S
Iha aid 0( a partner 10 help
1'9dl down a l8fOll quenu.
ty_ of l\WCX>Oc:a.
t:OO U TOMOMOW
4:00 8 MOVIE *..., "Fout ~· ff)# A"
Ace" ( 196(11 Roger Hin.n.
4:10r~~AAD9 4:2S NEWS
4:30 MOVIE ·
•..., "Seer•• 01 The
Ch•teau' ( •9341 Jack
l.IRue. Clawe Oooo
Friday·~
Daya l..e Jlovlr11
MOANING
11:30 8) • • • "Zlegleld G1t1'1
pe.11 Ja"'" 8•-•rl .
l-TUMer
.AFTERNOON
t2:00 D • • ·~ ··MoonllMf
( 19551 8t8"'8'1 Grange<.
George ~ An t81h
century Enghlh rake
becomes • no1orlou1
emugoler. I t hr .. 30 "*'·. a.-oo III • •·~ "Bet-1<"
I 111681 Jo8f' <>-tofd. f y
Hatdln Scotland Ya(d IS
called in to ~'OMA •
-• of bmlrre murders
al a orcus I 1 fir • 30 m111 I l:aC). • e "lt't A Billinl
Wofld" (10MI Oebonlh
Wiiiey. Tommy Kiri!. wti.n
en enoganl "Icing" of tile
beac:ti bunoll .. ~
down by • beaut1tul newc:cr-. he deddee 10 '
become hit own shy~'"
OtOef lo """ l'let I I fl< • 30
mml
'Men' Scrutinized
Press Secretaries Spring Surprises
By 'A Y SllARBUTI'
LOS ANGELES <AP> -Up for
mind exercise? See public TV"s
"Some ~ the President's Men," a
classy study of how four ex·White
Ho.use spokesmen view their job.s and
art viewed by two of the press.
The men: Ron Ziegler and Ron
N~en, George Reedy. Pierre Sal-
inger, the respective voices for Presi·
dents Nixon, Ford, Johnson and Ken·
nedy . The press : New York
Tlmesman Sy Hersh, and Liz Trotta.
late of NBC.
PBS emits it tonight at 9 on KOCE,
Channel 50. And don't think it's
another of those talking-head
yawners Crom Washington, D.C.
MADE BY KCl'S AND KPSP of
Seattle and Spokane, Wash .. ''Men"
is crisply edited, never boring and
narrated with more than a dash of In·
sight by ~\fcer-intervlewer Mike Kirk of K .
The four ex-fugelmen and the
newshawks were reeorded in April
when ln Spokane for a college sym·
posium on the relations, If any, of
White House press secretaries and
White House reporters.
The hour is full of surprises, as ii·
lustrated when Henh, who got the
Pulitzer for his My Lai reports, says
he finds it hard lo believe that White
House spokesmen never lie for the
president.
Elucidating. he recalls his rour-
montb stint ln 1968 as'J)ress secretary
for presidential contender Eugene
McCarthy:
"AND ONE OF THE things that
amazed me about the job is. I was
stuplfled by the fact J was lying so
much. Just little lies ... it was the
easiest way to deal with a problem."
Another surprise, this from
Ziegler, who once called Watergate a
MOVIE RA11NOB
RJR AVIENTBAND
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Calt 142• 111t.
Put • ft• word• towortl fOr ou.
~L~
"third-rate burglary·• and wai-
proved a bit wrong: The White House
press corps should poke around mOrt!
for slories.
··1 don't think they probe for storie:-.
as much as they should," says he.
but adds that the daily frenzy of their
jobs -Hersh calls them a sort or
.. paid stenographer·· -leaves then
scant probe t.Jme.
One would expect all the verbal
fire to dwell on Ziegler's defenses or
Nixon amid the uncovering or the
Watergate cover-up. Indeed. ai-
Hersh says in an interview with pro·
ducer Kirk ·
••ff E'S IN A TOUGH position. He's
either a criminal or the all·timc
classic dupe. .
But Ziegler, at the symposium.
makes ma-dy mea cu lpas for
Waterga~ words later shown tn be
"incorrect.•· says he wasn't given the
straight poop. is "a victim . . of tht
Watergate cover· up."
He refuses to criticize Nixon
blames unspecified colleagues for
having "misled" him, says he should
hatve probed maUers more. and with
all this defuses his Nixon work 8!)
Topic A at the.symposium.
A good show, this "Some of the
President's Men," and you really
should watch It.
_\
..
0 DAIL V Ptl OT Thuredlrf, Mir)' 18 1971 ENTERTAINMENT I INTERMISSION l MOV1ES
T"'° Sho1 s Clo•i•g
7 Plays
There's nothing new on the local
theate r scene this week , but
playgoers can take their choice of
seven different productions at all
levels -professional, community,
collegiate and ch1ldreo.'a the~t4'r -
which will be on the boards this
weekend.
Two of these -"A Man for All
Seasons" at Golden West College and
"East of the Sun and West of the
l\1oon" at the Newport Theater Arts
C-enter -will be drawing their cur·
talns after their respective two-
wee k end e n gagements. Final
performan~s for each will be given
Sllnday afternoon.
.,..._ on Stage
tntermission
Tom Titus
1827 Newport Blvd .. Costa ~e'sa.
Reservations 64$-1363. "l
·Robert Ellenstein and Frtti\ Burr
head the cast of "Don't Drink the
W"ter" at the harlequin where dln·
ner is served at 7 p.m. and the show
starts al 8. The theater is at 3503 S
Harbor Blvd., Just over the city line
from Costa Mesa. Reservalionli
979-5511.
Her Life
Imitates
I
Her Art
JERSEY CITY. NJ
<AP 1 -Five years ago,
Diane Amabile played ..
"lady of the evening" In
a television movie. ln
that role, she ended up
behind bars.
She now works al the
Hudson County jail ai-a
tther iff's ide ntification
O frl<'<'r . t a kin~
prisoners' mug shol~
und fingerpnnts
AT GOLDEN WEST, Jon Barrons
heads tht1 cast of "Seasons" as Sir
Thom a~ More. with Jerry Usrey
playing the comic narrator. the Com·
mon Man. Charles Mitchell is direct·
ing the show. which closes out with
performances tonight through Satur-
Al Sebastian's Wes t , Morey
Amsterdam is the headliner in "Fun-
ny You Should Ask." a new play pre·
miering at the dinner house, 140
Avenida Pico, San Clemente. Curtain
times var y, so call 492-9950 for
reserv a lions.
. .. .............
··I fmd it Ironic that
five years later I wind up going to jail fo r
real ," said Miss Am·
babile. who played -a
h u ~ U er l n a m-0 v i e
"Death of Innocence ... BOB DYLAN (RIGHT) JOIN!MltE BAND' FOR FAREWELL CONCERT IN 'LAST WAL 1'2'
Big Blast In Sen Fr•nciaco Become• Mafor Movie From Mertl~Scora••• "I have been on the
job four months and find
1t very challengmg. ··::;he
!>8ld.
;
day at 8:30 and Sunday at 2:30 in tbe ON THE COMMUNITY front, two
main GWC theater on the Huntington highly dissimilar comedies are con· Whopper Windup
Beach campus tinuing their stints with "Any Num-
The Newport players will wind up ber Can Die" on stage at the
"Eas t of the Sun" with stagings at 11 Westminster Community Theater
a.m .. 1 and 3 · p.m. Saturday and and Moliere's "The Imaginary In-The Band, Says F areiooll in Movie
again at J and 3 p.m. Sunday in the valid" playing at the San Clemente new theater site, 2501 Cliff Drive, , Community Theater By MARY CAMPBELL they had two ideas. Why not ask a
rew friends to perform with them and
why not document it in some way~ N~port Beach. The children's pro· . . , A NEW YORK <AP) _ The Band · be fr d f t ti Ron Albertsen is dtrectmg ' ny gr m is mg 0 ere ree 0 a Number" as a freewheeling farce al started so low key, the story goes. So Robertson asked Scorsese to
direct. because he liked the way he
used music in his movies. To
Robertson's s urprise, Scorsese
agreed.
agi~~ee professional shows" conlinu· the Westminster theater, 7272 Maple that it didn't even have a name. A
ing nightly except Monday are St., with L ois Farah. J.D . secretaryinthe AlbertGrossmanof·
· Com edians" at South Coast Reichelderfer , Susan O'CoMell and lice, typing a client list. wrote "the
Repertory, "Don't Drink the Waler" Karol McGill heading the cast . band." Late r , in retyping, she
h H I · o· e Pia house Performances are Fridays and capitalized the name. at t e ar equin inn r Y h h J 3 The Band never took another name and "Funny -You Should Ask" at Saturdays at 8:30 t roug une ; SCORSESE BROUGHT in
Hollywood cameramen. They used
cranes, dollies and 3Smm film, mak·
ing "The Last Waltz" the first rock
concert movie shot in 35.
Sebastian's West Dinner Playhouse. r eservations893-8626. and has become among the most "The Imaginary Invalid" resumes respected North American rock
MARTIN BENSON is directing tonight and plays through Saturday bands . Robbie Robertson, Uevon
··comed1ans" for SCR with Hal Lan-in its third of rour weeks at the Helm. Rick Danko, Richard Manuel
don Sr. and Ron Boussom heading Cabrillo Playhouse, 202 Avenida and Garth Hudson, all but one of
the cast of the county premiere Cur· Cabrillo, San Clemente. Curtain time them Canadian, played the music of
Scorsese said one problem would
be that the concert would go on ror
hours and takes with big movie
cameras are usually a few minutes
in length.
tain is 8 p.m . with 3 p.m. m atinees on is 8:30 and reservations are being Robertson, made recordings -some
weekends at the Third Step Theater. taken at 492-0465. called classics -and toured -
---------------------------::---:--::---"everywhere, three times." A n They ended it with a blast. They
gave a b ig, highly publicized
s c ...... ··-494·1514
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494·1514
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THI MANffOUCN I ~us
MAUN1'11N1
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90Y1 IN COMPANY Cca1
"TUIHI .. POIHT" !NI ~ ........
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"FREE RIDE"
Ofel1 14YI
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TMEATAES-ORANOE CO
SENIOR CJTl1.ENS $2.00
50. COAST PLAZA
.
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"farewell to the road" concert'in San
Francisco in 1976, included a lot of
famous musician friends, rented the
San Francisco Ope r a's ''La
Traviata" scenery and 20th Century-
Fox 's "Gone with The Wind" chan·
deliers. And they turned .that concert
Into a movie -with Martin Scorsese
directing -and a three-LP record·
ing .
SO MUCH CARE was taken getting
he music just so _at the movie,
"The Last Wal :• only-...now has
~~~ 9 . er tson, the lea~r ·;na lead guitarist of The Band, says,
"The idea was to make the music a
glorious, wondrous thing, to make it
true and ftne.
"We .recorded it on a 24-track
syste m. We mixed it at the best
place. They told us we had the
longest sound mix ever done there.
'Star Wars' is now second."
The farewell concert -Robertson
thought calling it "The Last Waltz"
sounded better than "The Last Con·
cert" -started out fairly low key.
The group had been on the road
since 1959, formed around Ronnie
Hawkins' drummer, Helm, to back
Hawkins and be known as the
Hawks, or Levon and the Hawks. In
1965 they went ·out with Bob Dylan as
his backup musicians. ·
IN 1918. THEIR own bi«ihlY BC·
claimed re<:ord, "Music from Big
Pink." launched them. They first
played as a "major league rock act"
at a big skating rink, San Francisco's
Wlnterland, in J.969.
On the summer tour, 1978, they de~
cided they'd had enough of the road.
They would ~ll record together. But
they would pfay their last live gig on
Thanksgiving, at Winterland .
Then. six weeks before the date,
The camera and lights might bum
out. They might wind up with no
movie. But they would tr'1 it. ..,
"The lights blew out a couple of
times.". Robertson says. "Once,
when Paul Butterfield was perform-
ing , the whole stage blew. The only,
thing left ~as spotlights. They hap-
pened to hit Butterfield and cross
over onto Levon, who was singing
'MysteryTrain'withhim."
LATER, THE FILM looked good.
"I was producer." Robertson says .
"It was my problem to figure out
what to do next. I did a crash course
Jn-litll'rfinancing and contracts and
all that stuff. I went to United Artists
and structured a deal and they went
for it. The bottom line for them was
that they had the definitive music
film or the '60s and '70s generation ...
Now. with some money in hand,
Robert.son paid the performers and
cin ematographers. Each one.
without asking a manager. agreed to
take the same amount as everybody
else.
Scorsese added two elements to the
film. He did some shooting in a re-
cording studio, Emmylou Harris
s inging "Evangeline" and the
Staples singing "The Weight." They
were the first group to record that
song after it came out on "Music from Big Pink.··
AND SCORSESE interviewed The
Band. in Shangri-La, their clubhouse
in Malibu, late at night, so they'd be
tired and loose when they reminisced
about "the road." He spliced some of
those conversations between &tage
performances.
Robertson concentrated on "The
Last Waltz" for a year and a hall. He
also wrote songs during that lime.
"That's my therapy," he says. "It's
the only1 thing that keeps me from
running against the wall.··
c1nename Ei scAeen
fjJU 2553 c omPLE X
C"aPman -""• a. S.nta Ana ,,.. .... ,. Today Star.Cited
GREENCASTLE, Ind. <AP> -"Today" show
co-host Jane Pa uley will receive an honorary doc-
torate of journalism at DePauw University's com-
mencement exercises Sunday.
MATINEES SATURDAY & SUNDAY
·'CLOSE ENCOUNTE:RS OF THE THIRD KIND" (PG'
M()N/THIJRs-41)0 fRl-1:30-11>.1&
IAT~2111M ~7:»-to-111
"HOUSE CALLS" (PG)
l.IONIFRI_. 00
ISAT/8UN-4.1»7'M
"A TOUCH OF Cl.ASS"
~668AT/8U~:ll6+50
"FM" (PG) "PHANTOM OF THE PARAOfSE" I
l-10 8Af /90M-l-00.09 1:3C>IO:OO IAT~IO:OO
"SATURDAY I M(IN~Al-20 SAT~tH~
•·LIFEGUARD" MOHtf!I »1uoaAT~.l6-ll>.30
"BOYS IN COMPANY C" CR) "'n-ie LAST DETAIL M
"THE LAST WALTZ" "PHANTOM OF PARAOISEn
·sA TU ADAY NIGHT FEVER" (R)
"LIFEGUARD"
"HOUSE CALLS" "ANNIE HALL" (PG)
"THE FURY"
"EVIL"(R)
AU. Ol'IVa•INI OltSH 6'HP.M.""'""'T
c111W1 UtM1er 'a ,.,.. u11111u tr ,a.d .. Pttnn.11"411
'
At 27, she is the youngest person ever to be
chosen as the recipient of an honorary degree from
DePauw, university officials said. An Indianapolis
native. Miss Pauley graduated from Indiana
University in Bloomington with a political science
degree.
OAK STREET
SHOW SALE ...
Used Precusioo Stdbda. •2a. up
Morey Boogie Lro. 39.00
Oak Sktbd. Bianka 14 00
OSI Wheels 4 50
Pr9clalon 8-Jngs 1 .20
Oak Street Sul* Sk:ltes 1139 pr.
Metaflex Sit.ate Wheela 1. 75 oss WhMts .. 4.50
Krypton60~.~ortn98 70mml 8.25
Bolt Poelet Pld<a 3.95
0-'< St. tM11rieta 19.96
O.k St. Gto¥te 14.96
Poly Sktbd. Bltnkl 4.95
Squirt SIMI( 19,00
Squirt Lrg. w/-. 4&.oo
3M OeckTIOt41' a11tt.
Oak SkattboMil ~tonic sse.oo
Non Skid Dec* .t.15
S-.Pric• St ...
ll.00
10.00
l .00
.75
"'·~· .71
l.00
4.11 a.11
11.00
10.0t uo
11.00
Jt.00
.IO/ft. )t.00
.st
a.-1eec1as.... tot4 S. C...t Hwy. 4t~Hll
Mk1l11 Yi.te stlr'8
2>114 ~ P•k1 Pt IJMIU
..... , ... ., Wtlll Pw CfllH
I I
-.-----•r •....,••-••.---• .. ~···-----~-···
Burt ReYfM)lde ~-.Slldl&m•a·S-ll
SaMy ,le4d "nlrn.tlM -~ Do"' o.llllM ,..,. ....
In (RI
"THE END" " ,., IM CllMYC
"l,,e 8etey ·
Plue
u .oo ·1111 2:30 Sllt/Svn Plus
"Corna"
··MALIBU BEACH"
Ptut
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FEVEncA ) ~"ojtltAVOl 'A
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\ ...
r
e
My name 1s Nancy Pryor; I am 35 years old. I am a housewife
and mother of three childr<n. I would like to tell you sometl11ng
personal about mysi!lf.
One day kbt Sepkmbcr I JUSt broke down and started to cry.
1 couldn't nelp it. I had reached my breaking point. I felt like
I was.going to have a nervous breakdown.
It happened o ne Monday morning right after I got on the
bathroom scales to weigh myself. I had been on a strict diet for
nearly 2 months. I had gone off the diet over the weekend to
give myself a break and just to live like a normal human being
for a couple of days. Now the scales said I weighed 188 pounds.
I just cot,a(dn't believe it! That meant that in one lousy weekend
I had more than gained back every single pound I had lost in the
la st 3 weeks .
. f.1v hc this doe~n 't sound like a big deal to you, but to me it
1~11 u.\. J tragedy.
I had ~en trying to lose weight fo r the last 5Vz years. I had
tned hqu1d protein. I had tried fas ting. I had tried hypnosis. I
had tried exercise. I had tried sa una belts. For a while I even
used dangerous diet drugs. As far as diets go I tried almost every
one I heard about. T h.: Adkins diet. The Stillman diet. The
gr:.ipd rull tl k t. The Woml!n 's Ski Team diet. Etc. Et..:. You
11 .1mc 11 I tn.:d ti.
Thl' rl'-.ull!> were ;ilways the same. I would str:uggk and
struggk to lose a ft:w pounds and then the very first time I
would give my'sclf a small break the weight would come right
ha ck 'on.
It had happened many times before. but somehow this time
it seemed like the last straw. I didn't know where to turn or
what else to try. I was about to give up.
Don't get me wrong. I don't want this to sound like a sob
story. I'm not telling you all this because I want you to feel
~orry for me . There ts no need for that anyway. My story has
a very happy ending.
'My story has a happy endmg because the very next day
made ,a discovery that has changed my entire life. I found an
amazing way to lo e weight that I never dreamed existed.
I am not going to tell you where I found this secret.
However. I will tell you this much: I did not get this
information from a doctor. I did not get this .informa-
tion from a diet book . I did not find this information
in a magazine. I did not find this information in a news-
paper. I did not ger this information from any of the so-
called ··die t experts."
To tell the truth , I stumbled across this Information
totally by accident when I was looking for something else.
But all that doesn't matter. What does matter is that at
l:i': I have found an answer.
Le! ml! :c'I you why 1 think my diet secret is so fantastic.
' MELTS FAT FAST
First of all, this diet works fast. It literally burns off fat by
the hour. If you•go on this diet in the morning you will be
losing weight before lunch. )ou will lose weight faster on this
diet than if you ran 7 miles every day. You will be able to
measure the difference in your waistline in 24 to 36 hours.
I think this is the fastest safe diet in the world. If you can find
a diet that works faster I will buy it from you and gladly pay
you good money for it.~
NO HUNGER
I'll tell you a secret. You will never lose weight and keep it
off on any diet that leaves you hungry. Hunger is an irresistible
force. Sooner or later, willpower always gives in to hunger.
Thi5 diet brings hunger to a dead full st<tp. You will never be
hunSIY. As a matter of fa ct, one of the unique features of this
diet makes it metabolically imposable for you to experience
hunger. To me. It's like heaven .
76% MORE ENERGY
This diet converts body fat to body fuel. Starting on tho Sth
day of this diet your energy will bcain to Increase dramatically.
It will increa c every day until the 9th day when it begins to
level off. After that your energy lcvcl wHI stay about the same.
This new energy level will probably be about 76% higher than
your I.owl ls now.
l
......
~ -_. ... --......... -... .-... ~ _..._. --_.....,__...., *"" .
~. M8Y ti. 1171 DAILY PILOT DJ ~ '
le
" You will lose vveiglzt .faster on this diet tlzan . . .
if you ran 7 miles ei'ery day. You ivill be able to
measure _the dijjere1zce .rin your waist line in 24 to
36 hours. I thi11 k tlzis is tlze .fastest safe diet in the
11· you ca11 find a diet that
bi1y it fro11z voit a11d glad/))
money for it ... ''
world.
will
•
vV(Jrks faster I
pay you good
SIMPLE AND EASY
Th is d ict is very simple. It is easy to follow even 1 f you eat in
rc!>taurants all the time You do not count l:aloncs. You do no t
measure portions. The only thing you keep track of is how
mu ch you lo:,c .
HEALTHY AND SAFE
This is not just a weight loss diet. It is a health diet also. It is
safe. It is proba~ly much safer than the way you eat right now.
Don't ever take a chance with your health. It's not worth it.
Besides it is not necessary. You can Jose weight fast with my
diet plus get healthier every day you stay on it.
NO EXERCISE
You do not have to exercise to lose weight with this diet.
However, since after the first few days you will have a lot more
energy you will probably become more active. But you will lose
weight very rapidly whether you become more active or not.
AUTOMATIC WEIGHT LOSS
Right after you go on this diet you start to lose weight auto-
matically. You don't have to think about it all the time. Since
you are never hungry you would probably forget you were on a
diet if you weren't losing weight so fast.
As you can tell by now, I have come up with something
pretty good. I think r:!!Y diet is the best way to lose weight I
have every heard about. You will lose weight very fast and you
will never be hungry. You will not have to count calories or
measure portions. You can eat out as often as you like. Your ' health will improve and your energy will increase. Except for
when you weigh yourself you will probably forger you are on a
diet.
In short. this diet is fast, safe and simple.
There are four reasons this diet works so well. These four
I reasons make this diet different from any other. Here arc those
reasons.
Reason# t
Reason #2
Reason #J
This diet makes liberal use of a natural
food substance that eliminates hunger. This
food substanc;e is widely used iS\ Europe but
almost unheard of in the United States. 1t
looks and tastes e~ctly like table sugar. You
use it the same way. You can mix it in your
coffee or sprinkle it on cereals or use it in
recipes as a substitute for table sugar. This sub-
stance is perfectly safe. Remember -it is "
food not a drug. It is much better for you than
ordinary table sugar (sucrose) because it does
not provoke an insulin response. When eaten
regularly throuahout t~e day this substance
very dramatically reduces hunger. It also has a
soothing effect on jangled nel'\'es.
This diet has a different plan of attack. This
diet forces you to form a very new habit. This
new habit ts pleasurable and run. This habit
makes it possible to stay on any diet for life
without ever fcelina deprived. This new habit
makes everything easy. It Is so simple you will
WOl)dcr w\1y you never thought of 1t yourself.
This diet contain& S delicious foods Chat may
very well bo new to YOU'. 1 am rioina to • k you
to ~t at least one or these s foods every day.
_.. • • --91 ,_. # --_,. .,--.. --• """' .,....., •• ., A .-. -•
" ... I have lost 75 pounds. My
friends say I look 15 years younger. I
enjoy a peace of tnind I have never
before experienced. I feel good all the
time. Best ·of all, my husband has
fallen in love with me all over again .• ,
All of them are what I call 0 natural food
tranquilizers." At exactly the same time these
foods are releasing new energy into your
system they also work to release all tension
from .your nerves and muscles and gjve you an
emotional lift. Believe me it is very hard to diet
if you are upset and in a bad mood all the time!
Reason #4 This diet contains yet another unique food
substance that releases the natural fat burning
power of your system. This substance increases
the amount of calories your body bums each
day thereby allowing you to eat more without
weight gain.
A SPARKLING NEW BODY
This diet has been a Godsend to me. I have a ~parkling new
borrlY'.' I have lost 75 pounds. I now weigh 11 3 and I wear a size
6 dress. ( ( used to wear an 18). I have more en ergy now than I
had when I was a teenager. I am in better health tha~ can ever
remember. My friends say ( look 15 years younger. I enjoy a
peace of mind I have never before experien~d . I feel good all
the time. Best of all, my husband has falkn in love with me all
over again.
Will this amazing little diet work for you? I am sure it will.
All I ask is that you be open-m indoo enough to give me a
chance to prove it even though I am an everyday housewife and
not a diet doctor o r anything like that.
I have written a book that tells you about my secret dil't. ft i~
easy-to-read. It tells you exactly what to do step-by-step. You
can read my book in one evening. Then the very next day you
can start losing weight so fast you just won't believe it.
NO RISK
Here's how you can read my book and try my diet without
any financial risk at all. Go ahead and order my book by mail.
Keep it JC days and read it and check it out. Then 1f you an:
unhappy with it. send it back and I will return your payment
to you quietly and without qutstion.
If you are extra skeptical I ~uggcst you postdate your check
or money order by JO days. I promise and guarantee I will not
deposit it for a least that amount of time. Then if you decide to
return my book I will send back your uncashed check or money
order with no questions asked.
To order. write your numc and addrcu and the words MDIET
SECRET" on a piece of 1>4per and send ic with SIO.Oo to me -
Nancy Pcyor. Oep1 165, 161 Maplewood Ave .. P.O. Box tn.
Maplewood. New Jersey 07040. J will send your book promptly by
~um mail. If you have any questions you can call me. My number is
(201) 744-3777. Checks and money orCJt" should be made payable
to me .. Nancy Pryor. (It is oot a good idea to matl cuh).
I
....
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f: ..
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F: .. , ·' ... 1 ... ....
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, . . : .. ·' t • r. .. • • • • ' .. ' • j •
H ·~ ~ ~J
' .
ng
I n
(t'·
l)le
~le
Ir:.
fr·
al aso -
lingo
RulEmn
U. .._ 2 ... J I& SZ IJ.100
S .... 5-1. I ... I I& $199,,00
W .. ht a..dl. 4 Ir. J '/2 1& Sl6t,SOO
CClrCIM cllt M4r. D .... 1. Sll9,IOD
........ Ren 3 Ir. SI 59,500
~ Lovely vlewL $479.000
Costa w.sa. Top.-.. s ... saft.soo
Costa MetcL 5 ...... pft. Slll.500
E.etald IGy. ~ view 4 ... $495,000
&let akt IGy. Vfewt opa be-. $435,000
bwt aid toy. vi.-. llryUglih. $450,000
EIMrald IGy. 4 tr + views. $450,000
Ocecaft •I lob. J toc)ltMt. Sll0,000
z Au. ...... 2 llotnes. $1,000,000
644-7020
2123 SAM JOA9UIM HILLS ROAD
NEWPORT IL\CH
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNIT Y
Plllblther'• Notice:
G...et'ol 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••
ERA
FRANCHISE
FOR SALE
$2000 first com..,, Cir.st
serve. Call 96:J.89U evs
642-8631.
' UMIOUI IN C~IO SMORES
80x160 lot. 3 bdrm. colorful comfort,
palatial. only $210,000. See 4515
Hampden Road.
SLEEPER
3 bdrm. 3 bath. near beach in Costa
Mesa. Lil<e new. formal dining~
s unken liv. rm., study and a lge lot.
Just $109,500. nc
Mesa Verde Pacesetter. 3 bdrm.
immac., and a fun floor plan, prime
Mesa Verde neighborhood, a real
cream puff at $99,500.
IL\CH TIME
Just a few blocks, move in condition.
immac with beams. siding, atrium
and a pvt. patio. Tennis too at just
S99,SOO.
U ~ l f)U I: tff)MI:§
REAL TORS'. 546·5990
1525 Mesa Verde Drive, East, Costa Mesa
also in Corona def Mar. at 675 6000
I
I002G...,..e 1002
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
•
PlfCI SLASHm tH.poo
MOW S92.500
The owner says makE: off er on this
dream home loday. Tum your dreams
into reality . As k Hbout Jo&n
assumption on Lbis 3Bdrm home that
is convenient to everytbina. c•1
640-6161. • • oWHa llTI ... MAI.SI
New home in other area ready to
move into. Need q uick ofler on
immaculate 3 bdrm in North Costa
Mes a near all schools & shopping.
Highly upgraded decor. Flexible at
$79,900. Cal S4M I 4 I.
Serving C osta M e~a··lr v m e
H u 11t111y Iu11 UL' .i c h N '-w p u r I £3l"11: h
SHINGLED GAIDIN DUPLIX
Location convenient to Khoo!Jt. ~bops
and restaurants lt> a feature or th1• duplex that h8S" a wood 'n a!ass feel.
Exterior ts all t1h1n1le11 &nd the
int.erior needs decorator help. One
unit is 2 bdrm~ plUb den. the rental 1~ 2
bdrms and cute. A~kmg S17!5.SOO.
U ~l()U f tff)M f §
~EAL TORS', 675 6000
2443 East Coast Highway. Coron• cJPI Mo•
dlso •r ~cs., Vl·•<f•'. .ii !ia() $990
I'
!!~~~ .......... !~~,~~ .......... ~~~ ~~~ .......... !?.~~ ~!'! .......... !~~
DRIVE BY
1601 LINCOLN LANE
You'll see a large 4 bdrm .. 3 bath
home with formal dining room. family
room. wet bar & den. Ample space for
pool + play yard. Price $265.000
759-0811
1002 G......., 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
COUMTRY ESTATE JBr-R!n~~tchen , BUY
formal dining room.
lamily room +20' eame LAND room. Wall ol glua over·
looking free-form pool & park-lite grounds. Easy Near Newport's Back
financing. SM,900. Call Bay ! Commerclal ~ t.oday~7881 acre ! No Quallfylng !
Ol'fN•11'1 •,.11v,.•on1N<•• Owne r will finance!
UDO ISLE
Newly remodeled 3 bdrm . family.
2'h baths: l ·story home w:th
attractive So. patio. Price reduced
lo $238.000.
IACk 14Y
Fine 4 bdrm.. 2112 bath family
homE'. on quiet cul d e s a c .
Overstzed pool. playhouse. extra
storage. $189.500
MISA VERDE
Attractive 4 bdrm .. 2 ba. home in
immac. condition. $99.000
IAYFION'f'
Several fine bayrront home~
with pier & slips
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
341 Boy\1d1 o,,,,.. 1'1 S 67'.J f IC>l
G1•r.. 1002,Ge•uart 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
\\'L S I.L Y '.\
TAYLOR CO.
HJ-:A LT<>HS Sl lh"I' I ~H H
l lDIM +POOL , + lf.ACH
Bee1&tllu1 poo& hum•
located .war tht' bul h
Pc1vJill bad1 Y•rd w1111 ~~ patio f.w rntt'r
ta.&nroent Boan at·rez.,. Pn~ •t onh· 17~.90tl """"" ... . . \. l" .. ''" ...... , [flllffNI
COCINTRY
smlMG
&4 close to ttw --~t'h ' 8et-th1s bran.cl oew offrr·
Ina that pruvid~s
1paooua ( mly llvUlg at
!ta fllles\ 1n lhiB 3 bd, 2 ba
beauty Onl~ StJJ.000'
6Q6.7111 ("
llACHUT.t.T£
2 Story. •BDRM. ''" (•C u\1-.I" hOmt' Ov••r
••000 UPO"ades Va ultl'd ce1lmas. tarl(•' bm11)·
room '"' nule &o l h1· bead\. Call 98.U761 ,...,,f', 'f ~ • t •\ "-(l~f r I
Real FJ;tat~
l lfti CENTURY
AJI real estate advertlaed
ln this newspaper tS sub·
ject to the Federal Fair
Housing Act of 1968
which makes 1t Illegal to
advertise "any pre
ference, h milalaon, or
dtscrimlnallon based on
race, color, religion. sex,
or natlooal ongan, or an
intention to make any
such preference. hm1ta·
lion, or dascrimanallon."
J ASMINE CIEE:IC Gene ral I 002 [ •&lltfl :::;~;::; HAR.IOI VIEW-$239,000
Ocean & s unset view ! Wa rm &
1nv1ttng entra nce w /alricm .
Meticulously maintained 4 bdrm homE.'
with SJ?acious living. rm & a huge
recreation rm. Beautiful carpeting &
wallpapers. A great clos e tr
convenient !ocation. 5 Minute:. to
Fashion lsland.
NIWPOU
Nt"WPOrt Hetgbts to be
exact! Secluded nora &
fallha etitryway Largt'
UV\ng room host.I &11 18th
Century handcarved
Csreplace. ma~s1 vt' &
soraeous! Formal dlll1ng
room. Stepclown tam1Jy
room hosts wet bar &
wa I lo wall g!.,si.'
Private-t r ovi rJ I
backyard hosts magn1f:·
cenl blue free form pool'
lmmaculli• C' landsc·ap '"I? Just !1 11~.suu· A
mu.st tr• !!ol't' rooay-C:ir:
752 J';(X)
F'irsl re~saJe of ''PLAN •••••••••••••• .. ••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• c •• I ~ • . • I • • • I ' ' •
III" SlNGLE LEVEL-
three bedroom, ramily1---------
room. private patios-Yorktawne Villa end unlt. Pool, jacuzzi
CRAWFORD •
_______ _. Just reduced $4.400.
Large 4 bedroom, highly
upgraded home m one of [®lm1
and t ennis courts. 2 Bdrm, l'h bath, super
Prestige area in the sharp condo near shop·
This newspaper will not heart or Corona del Mar. ping and schools. Choice
knowingly accept any Gated community with Huntington Beach loca·
advertising for real security guards. "Its Uaa.. Vacant-immediate
est.ale Which i.s i.o Viol.a· OUl. l live there too!" OC<:Ul)aJlCy. Submit your
CANYON
North Tustln area,
beautiful country setting
on \14 acre with view of
hills. Space for RV. 3 car
g.ara1e. 1 year old. Call
546-5880
IHt Of Spf9as•
Gorgeous 2 stor y
w /spiraJ staircase, 4 BR,
Family Rm. huge Game Rm. poot Ocean & Bay
View. '60(),500.
0.ta Mesa·s best areas.
Owner very anxious to
sell at $87 .SOO. CALL
556-2660.
C:SELECT WESUY H. TAYLOR CO .. llA.LTO RS
2 11 1 s-JOGqlM Hila lood
_lion __ of_tbe __ la_w_. ___ ~ (1eanCole>. terme. Only $118,000. Call
COLE OF HEWPO~T M6-5880
I PROPERTIES NEWPORT CEMTB. H.I. 644-49; G
EXQ.USIV! ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ REALTORS
BUtORS: ActvertiMn,~~-67_~_s_s_1_1 ~-r
....... dtedltt.irads c1a1y cmd report er-AIAHDOHB>IEACH
ran .... dlahty. TM GIAMT-$97,500
DAIL y '9LOT .._1 Pnced thousands below
a..a.a&A.. .&-.... __ -ti s1nuJar models! St~ps to -·1 .,_.. .,_ ~ n-beach from soanng 2
c:otred .......... Otllly. s to r y w /2 . OOOsq It ! --------.i Pnvate courtyard entry + family room + dine Ho9n for 5* rm! Sweeping staircase
••••••••••••••• •••••••• to bdrm complex. Owner GeMral I 002 says bring any offer. Call
••••••••••••••••••••••• qlick. 847-6010 $6500 TO ASSUME •ll'IN Ill v." ~ llJN ll)H/ •I•(/. ?::ful~~~·w;, [ 9 IRA11
J'~~ HERITAGE
• • REALTORS
Colle<JePark
BARG AIM
Hard to believe value!
Upgraded Newport
Model ! 3 fplc's! Rare
w-0od paneling !
Sheltered coclttaU patio
w/BBQ! Much much
more! Hurry ! Call
645-0303
FORESTE
OLSON
•NI l'lf' "'f{1t.."1 ...
.-"!..:~HERITAGE
. • REALTORS COHOO $56,900 -
For the descrlnunating Gt•r.. 1002.--mt
couple. Large master •••••••••••••-••••••••
HAMDYMAN"S swte, formal d1n1ng, --------ii--------guest bedroom. Gourmet DUAM k.rtcben. Xlra large llv-EASTSIDE VA OR FHA
Garage fully insulated. .t.RARERMD Ing room. Enclosed MOIR Dad Tn••IJlff $72.000
COUNTRY LIVING
Bwlt in work bench. 4Bd., family room, di.o · patio. Secluded & qwet. Perfect loc:i\100 and Neat J BR family home. Large lot with RV ac-J.ng.AJl~inOriental Pool & rec. hall. For bomeforleellagers.3BR l~ B&tb!, bu1Hins. ___ R_l'_a_i~_·s_la_t_e __
cess. Newly painted, motif. lfyouareh>;oking =~1deta1ts. call -2Ba + xtraoffacespace hreplace l a vis h ly ~Bedroomg and waHollpma~inr. ror unusual. at. this ex-"""'•·1110•11• •·~1ok· ··<1· fordana. A pool for sum-landscaped. Near Mile ,..,... .. 11 t i 11 ....-m ' ..... •Y " mer. &a rage on alley. Square Part.
Mesa North. T r uly a ce eo pr ce, ca 1 ~ I Turn-around dri ve in 531·5800 ~~~:~"~:.o:::· ~~~?.~·~· ~'" _c~lftftj§ =.,!•;!.~ "'•" ~~....,~~u.~~,....~~orta~~
. :· llil1U~\ $79,900 4 . . . ·• DUPLEX l.~~~"""~-~:::i~=-~·~·~·~··~~~1::::::::::1 3 BR. 1~ ba, 2-car gar , -• Corona del Mar Duplex -lrg lot w 1alley access. j~t reduced to $175,000. 3
3 BR. 2 BA. seller very
aruuous & want." an offer
on Uus ranch sly It' houi.•·
tn the country No down
VA, low down FllA, Ol
ferro ar S'.'16.000
540.3666
Wftelc'111
REAL ESTATE Gftlffol
[ •.. 1m~1~·~1 [.CIHllHI -lft1GHTS l~~~.E.~U:""r!I. !-FOR~uw~411
coaoHADB.MAlt
• ·~-c---. DREAM HOME 14 YFIOMT K p Bedroom + 2 bedroom & 10021--------..1 221 nox I , C.M . TWO~LOT deo.Greatincome'Anx· hi&b on a hill with Charming home on the 646-9210, 759-5359. By ""'" •----"-Pie 'J •-;;..;....------.....---Find what you want In healthy clean air & wat«wtpierfi aUp. Lov-ownr ..-... a ocir...t..,. .......,. """"r. ~ ca. •·
PYT. COMMUHITY
111 C Of'OM del M•'• JCllllW Creelc.
G•arded gah COi ••ity. TW1 Wltldri~
MOClel Is • .,.,,,.., clecorohcl 2 .,._,
for•ol df11i119 roo•. nd dew. Two
flreploces. beMfMly lwhc:aptd cllMI
nte111y decorator to.chH. Use of all
e•chni•• cowunwity facilities of .....,,
cowh cM pool. $225,000
Waterfro•t Ho••• 2633 W. Coast Hwy.
Newport Beach
631·1400
GeMl'OI I 002 GeMrol I 002 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
~II. macnab I Irvine ~ realtg
IEAUTIRIL WILLOW PL4M
4 BR & f amity rm home affords all
the luxury or Woodbridge combined
w /excellent decoratinJ{ & upgrades.
Fully landscaped. s prinklered &
made for family lire. w /redwood
benches & BBQ pit. Don 't miss this
one at $129,900 ! Amy Brown
752-1414. <Z-119)
Owta WANTS TO S&IJ
Beautifully upgraded 3 BR
Deerfield townhome. Family rm -
central air -Italian entry We -
prof. landscaped patio. Comm.
pools & greenbelt.8. ll 's possible to
move·in quickJy for only $87,500.
Marlon Frizzell 752-1414. (Z·l.20>
'42·1235 ...... 200
tot Dowr Drive HetOor \/Jew C..nte.
lrvlne et C.mJIUS Veit.of t.ant•r 752 .. 14t 4
Dally PilotCIA••lfied.s. b tif I l I ly Ori •nl •-n · ---------1 F'lll5llUl ""'" fora~.673-8SSO ....., eau u v ew. m · e en ... "°''uence as ·-------• ~•'TED POOL OAN•v~··'''V"I '""''"''
~-DOINO .... -..·: BUSINESS
::1; UNDER A .. F•w~~~s
It you h•ff 11191 flJ.d
YOIH new FlctltlOU•
8u•l n••• N•rn• •nd
hno nol ,.i •ul>mllted
It for p111111Qll0n, pleoM
don't Iorgo& lh•t Ille
llrnll•tlon la 30 Cl•r• ttom dete of ftllng. The
DAILY PILOT •Ill
publlelt ~ tt•-t
tor 131 .50. Owt
ctrc:ul•llOn lllCludH .,,.
ontlro Ot•nge Coul
•••• •lld legal noclceo •PPHr In ell edlllono. In
order lo ouDrnlt your
•l •t•rn•nt t or
publlc:oflon ••nd
opproplfllto copy and • c:he cll lo THI DAit. y
PILOT, P.O. loa 1sto,
Cotto ~tt. CA t2t2'.
Wo'll Oo 1M l'fft. ~
lnforrn•llon •bout t.got
odnrtl•"ll pl••M coll
1'2-4321 Eal. 332.
maculat.e decor & cen· evidenced in bwltiM & ,......,_ E~~ser:::e!t E:Ide~~~tri~~~PJ~: !!11mm0""•n ~:.~~~;~~·~ [®lfialJ;I •kl•~ ..
stand l n g v a I u e at atlls DllU ownership bouses on dou·
$1..29,500. CALL 751·3191 . b&e lot in old Huntingtoo HOME
•
SEL ECT 642-5200 Unl.L'lual situation, have Beach. For appo1ntment RE. Office. xlnt loca-toi.nspectcaU9S2·7788. lllJCOME
PROPERTIES lion. Center or Costa ..Q.. K€Y " REALTOR
DESICiHB» ~J·J~te~=t~8~i~ VP.€ALTOP.s h OFFICE orRealtorAssoc1all'. FOR EXECUTlff active broker who ap. ---------1 \/erullle Newport lll3 Havr need for I good 3 l'
UVIHG predates lonovaUve ap-62.500 f1ll pric• R-2 property Front 2 t1ve 9alespe~on.
This beautif ully up-proecbes, or will seU o Super clean end unit bedroom finely deroral Roy McC~
graded Buccola Home! I~~~~~~~~~! lease. Contact; C .8 . w/frplc. Located short ed home. Cute rear I lllOtt.wportll•d
Spacious Living Room 1: Duncan drlvelromtbewater. bedroom t·o tt age & ColtoMnct 541.7729
with big Fl replace. $56,900 l)ya;646-ll088:~ 754-7100 pnvateotra~ next to lhe ·-------· E .-. .,...,,.. finished double aarage
Large Master Bedroom, Sharp, spacious rrnJy re-1~~~v~es~ ....... ~-~-~~~ S139.900. Juat listed 50
hlgbly upgraded wlth sideoce w /cheerful frplc I· call now & save. 64r>·7221 1--------•
private entrance to 4' xtra lanze room sizes CENTURY 2 1 CoroM•I W..
garden area. Slump thruoui. Xlnt location. SPYGLASSHIU POOL HOME Jusr n· ltoQe planters highlight n -8 ..... ,. .. 0 ..... ,..d.s create WESrCLIFFREALTY dured. Th111 home h u~
th b .. d PC _.., ... ~~ Tbe perfect fa m ily f e room-ac .. yar . part like setting around b BR many custom eature:-. MeuVerdeLlvlngatlta hi i l ome, 6 • 41,\ BA. Lu r ~1· l'uurt y ar rl Best! *129,000. Call t s mm a cu ate formal dining, aame OCIAH YIEW! c.oa -. .. • townbome. Better take a room. -ftl ... q"•tte-. A MINI .,._ beautiful olive tree and "9<TIWw look! ._7711 ..... uo ... •" ~i:w to ocean. deluxe many rOtlt' bushes. Bltn
Ol'f,.,,,9.11pv1V•OHINlf'1• _. • pgeous Cape Cod ln duplex, 4 6 2 bdrm un boo!Lshe.lves, Corm.111 din I ~ I CdM school district. lta; partUna for 3 can 1111 rm. paneled tamlly ~f ll~ft;Hj~ ___ JU_aJ_fA_ta_te ___ , ""'""' !ANCH ~:r..::r~~ ... ~·~:; ~::::~ ~~..:"
GeMrol 1002G1•1.. IOOJ PLtclnlaOanlflechd il ~'!c;,rt~ Ba~'::;~ ~!'!~ lli£°'~4131611MI ....................... ....................... as easy as dialing your Zoned Al! Owner ""Ill * 675-7060 .~
phone. Give us a can. j~~~~~~~~~ finance' No qualUylna! ~~~~~~~~ L) ·
'cae: 810111 ILllRS aa.
OVER 50 YEARS OF SERVICE
IA YFRONT WITH OCEAN VIEW
Great Offering! PrestlUous l Sty 3
Bdr m , 3 Bath Contemporary On
The Main ChaMel At Corona del
Mar. Incomparable View of Harbor
Boats. Luxwious Mirrored Living
Room W /LlJh tod Custom Bar .
Spacious Fam. Room. 2 Fireplaces.
Gourmet Gos Kitchen. $425.000.
Ill Dom Dim
•'
'
We'll do the rat. 6'2-5678 SelHdle Items 642·567S Come llDd see 1t NOW 1 I-RED CARPET '154-1202
GtMHI IOOZ G1Mr;lf 1002 Havt" sometlu.ng to sell'
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• WantAds Calll42·5678 Claaalfaed•dlldo1twcll
GARDBf WALi
To front door. Three bedroom
townbome. prtvate patlo. Upsraded
carpet, elem\ throughout, mirrored
closet doors In master sulte.
Community pools a nd Jacuzzi.
$84,250 fee.
A COLD'¥1U. M.a«a CO.
844·9080
t1•1 U*t0
.IOMMMHtUlllO Of~CIHml
,'
G1•rel 1002 o •• ,.., tOOI ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
COIMB DUPUX
ta conwl... locjlffoa. Cltw 8'•9 l ........... ,.... .... 2 .......
..... Ori.-. t.y 620 Ancle _, al fw
....... w..lt re-' otfwL ......... ....,.t Sl6t,OOO
\
; fl ,. .,,, ti\ "'' ... • .. • • • .. • ~ # ! ~·..::. .. -.... , .....
20NALOT
Rf'd\K'ed to St r..500 l
Bdrm. house plu"I a
bachelor apt. Steps ln
beach You own OM! land·
'673-3663 642·2153 t:ve!!o
asso·ciated
...... I It f JI.... tJ f /\ 1 '(•,,• s
• , , 't/lr I ti I lo" I b I t. ~ l.
DUPLU
SllS.000
Ono blk to be•ch. I<'~~
lban 4 yn . old. l,Jke nPw
bltbl, nice trp•'.1f fl drps. f'rl_)lea. 4 C.r gi.r
JACOIS IEAL TY
67S.6&70
Sett UUnp f-.t wtth Dally
Not Want Ada.
Ii
~;~ .. ·im ~;:,~ .. ;oi~~·~·~"iM4 ;;.;;~ .... ;; ;z.:.~ .. io;-...,_~-.M::.:::._ _o:;:;' 03
....................... ....................... . ••.................•.............•...•....... •·········•········••·· .•..................... ·······~··············· ......•.•••.....•......
M '111._.S. •••••••••••••••••••••• ...... ' .....................
a.oue•o
+ '°°" "'·"' It's low ..,_ • dirt)''
HC••+IMCOMI ... =o• caLRl PAii ~~~ .... !~.~~ ~~~.~ ... !~.~~ !~:-~~-.. !~.~~
So. of~ tane J bdrlnll. fmly rm, CllLU••A MIGUa SHOUS
Loiab lib a bof1M •he-re A rare a..S IUl'P"U~b' ... ~. IO"'"'" h·~m" I"' ~ Ch rl • n-.. _ .. UIQ • .., I " " .. • ff ul •Br. atraum. ap.ac Ou.a • DT+vcn • quJel ne1'1bborbood L• h •-WfaJo ro&mt"d! A
u Qdymau patadlle •
25prawllA1 SBdrm on larse lot + pool. Shovel ·-out. peiol 'em UJ>" YOY've Cot younelf llD Ht•i•. Priced dirt dmp. whlcb only aeems
rt111t. Don't wait! Call
l&or)'bome1'ilbmu&.ive mftllf'm 1ngo D•ar bl'aC • l•OnlS, uaed brick ffl>k. fJ ipa.oy •bow• pr• d c: or """'" 1188.000 ~ oUaer amenltiM. Some ownenb.lp Call I.Oday for To llSl .soo. OwMr mu..t
...,, view froio oiHwr aRit to 1tt Only lll:S.900 leave the area Mad 111 RulbrAn ~!::'.!~ ........ ..
IO-tolO
()'it~ ft( V• fl'\ •tJ',. fl .. , ~,.I
l•Bll
a.ate and MlJolelnc pauo 5'5-IM9l bl'hly moUvated. Sub-
deck nut your otrer on lbLI
PLUS beautiful 2650 sq rt 4
a roomy never-vacant bedroom home that 11 Bdnn rmtahpt. Beal El tale Ideally toe a ted neli't
ALL UOUCfD PQOll. perk and schdOlll.
on aoovenlud IOC.. Ju.st a 4 Br, 2 ba. formal dining. ~Joi to th~ bfach brtc.k f?l>lC. comer lot. 2
cur gar. 900 Dogwood CALLJl'OR.DETAll.S S73,500. Phone 751 ·0771 64 ... 7Z 11 eves. -----
THE .LUFFS ,,. Mesa Verde 3 HR .
F R. 2 frp lc ·s . 3082
PROBATE Samoa. Qui c k sale
£u1u,1ve Eastbluff! m.900. Ownr. 540·7998. Sa v e s s r o w n e r 646-3704 RANCH RIAL TY ucritlce! On e level ---------·---------551·2000
WARM AND COD
-Tiiis MWty ,.._,.,ed hw It footsteps
to th• beach. Metlc•loa worta .... alllp
throtMJhoelt wltfl oc* floors mid beam.
Ocean •lows. redwood decks mtd ttw..
b•drooms , add to th •
1pociOUUl4Ks. •• $239,500.
SOUTH
LAGUNA
499·4551
497.333 I
LAGUNA
NIGUEL
495-1720
DANA
POLNT
493-8812 twnJune. seen.le view r IY Owta 2 It OPEN SUN 1·5 1 r-r---------1
J uat ltated ! Hurry ! So Ide 245 E. Wil&on St. STAl'la HOME !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ~~'t last at SJ'3.000! ! .1 . 75IMMS8 Thi.sbdrm' dalr,1!_4gbaEabests!~~f 31 . $77,100 ,,...,; ~ Oaa ' .,... auu. u lftn Ul>O'&ded home, lush :mm: cittf~u. =~o~~'r!~!~ c rptln g, mirrored
FOREST£
OLSON ~an view. 3BR. Pvt home only S79,500. Cen· wardrobes Cozy frplc.
beach access $1'4,500 t u r)' 21 Doy I e Co dble car garage. A real
All· Dan 675-2311 Realtors, 541Hl68. 00.1 house. 7S9-~1 __;;--------• ----• r-:---.. ... ,.._"9_• Costa~ I 024 FOi SALE IY OWMR
••••••••••••••••••• •••• Moving out of stat.e. need llACHDUPUX l•MEAICOM'L to sell C.M. prop. two •r----..:..........:::::..;..:~--
SlOl,500 Large living room & blto BR homes, 1 E-side,1 w.
Bille to beach from this kitchen, w/frplc in fa mi· side. ~.900 6 $79.900.
investors •Pfflal. Prime ly room. Covered patio _646-611 __ 13 _____ _
Hunt. Bcb. location. Ex-on R-2'tot. Only $79.950. IY o--a
cellent rentals, seller JIM W~ REALTOR. .,," m_, help finance. For SSl-82&4 or9'19-2S31. Wal.It to park & So. Coast
pnvale showing, cau ---------Plaza. 3 BR. 2 ba, fam
M7.fi010 1---------1 rm. frplc, custm spa.
OP! .. '" Q • " ~ I UN 10 M ,.,. I • AXIi UPPElt $102,000. Ph 540-00IW I.~. I Needs some TENDER .,1iJ .. J1·!J LOVING CARE. Bring Lovely SBr, 2300 sq ft ~ . . .. :* JtiJi J_t paint & wallpaper 3 Mesa Verde pool home,
. .-:•=-:: =-==·~ bdrms. great location . w I s tu d y S 129. so o. W /Dew roof & copper _54S-__ 31S2 ______ _
.... ,.,...... '007 plumbing. Xl~t invest-CloM to •ach ment opporturuty at only .......................
3 BR. 2 ba., ~ blk. to bay.
t&t.~ C811540-115l 3 Bdrm home. o n beautifu l tree-lined
. street.. Only 167.300. ca11 Now $179,SOO!
Manba.JI Rlty 67s-4600
1.YOWMH
Two atry aingle dftlbng
w11uest nn w /kitch &
bUh. 6 bits from bay.
Double garage. m.
or 5311-828$
CDM20H I
OD lovely tree-lined st.,
w /in jotging distance to
the bch. 3 BR owner's un· at in front, 1 BR rental in
the rear. Great invest·
rneotan.~. #Al.UY 640.t90Q
,., y~ HERITAGE
. • REALTORS
'ic~~
HILLTOP DANA PotMT CONDO
Beauttf ul, nearly new. 3 bedroom. %,,_ ba th. 2 •tory model. Wood
burninf. fi replace. pool , saunas,
j acuzz : Lovely ocean breeies.
HURRY! $88,500.
DelLanooat
So. Calf ••atty
546-5605
.......................
red hill -; l :· .. 'l)
VILLAGE n1
FOllllAM
I deally located 3
bedroom home in the
University Park area
and features corner lot.
parquet noon ln Jiving
room and dining room,
extensive bn ck work in
yard and gas firepit.
~~ ..... !~!!!~.~ ..... !~.~
*SPARKLING LIGHTS*
See lhe twinkle or the coastline to
Palos Verde from...the living room and
master suite of this 4 Bdrm home. The ~ramatic free form radial stairway is
Just one of the pleasures that this
home will bring you and your f amity.
Please Call Opee Sat Ir S-
726 Kendall (Porta Fina)
MAY 0
COH POKA'lllON
380 GLENNEYRE
LAGUNA BEACH
CK
(714)494·2148
3 bdrm Cordova. frpl,
prof. landscaped , up·
gradu. Must sell.
830-2011
3 BR 2 Ba Condo. air
cond .. crpts, drapes.
pool, sgl story. 165. 750
714183(). S085
' .. wport •acJa I 06' • ••••••••••••••••••••••
VANISH
MANOI
..
NIWl'OltT llACH AXBl
I Block to W atet"
4 lecholn. 2 lottl, Dbl G_....
16 pan old
SI 15,000
645-9161
· '~ • Or11119tt Cv~ld Mt>sa THllWffS
Spanish Manor oo quiet
cuJ-de-uc in the Blur.ts. Mlwport INdl I 069 Ml.,_. 8"clt I 069
Wrought lroo & red brick •-··-••••••••••••••~ -•••••••••••••••••••• • entry. Classic white fitel)lace. Formal din· EASTIL.,,. Best buy In Bluffs, by
1ng. Bright kitchen 5 IOIM ~wnr 3 BR, 2...., ba. Open
Breakfast paUO. Fam.Uy Choice N.8. location . Sat & Su.n t -S. 640-8363.
room hosts secluded Btfl 2 story execut1v• <t99-3_l_4' ___ _
patio too! Huge bonus homr 5 bdrm. 3 ba. lvly ~-------room• 2 wet bars. 3rd pool sized lot located on
Patio with greenbelf choice qwet street. This
view! Just $174.500. Call home 1s pure charm. PANORAMIC
OCEAN VIEW today 752·1700 75&-1501
OPtN ,., o • o \ lt111.1 '0 A.I ~<I ~-"" ... -..... ml l;•Ulill. ___ _ Watch the sunset over
C&talma. bask in luxury
of custom features
Crpts, drps. wet bar
frpl l'. mirror ed
wardrobe. Enjoy pool,
sauna. jacuni & tennis
Walk to beach.
STATUS. STATUS. Ha~t!!·e~o3ob~ ba. STATUS BigCanyonE1Dorado·3 clean, $1075 mo. No
bdrms. 2v. ba, close to credit needed. Quick
pools. jacutzi & teruus possession. 9SHS88. Pvt ~
crts. Sunken liv rm. wet Ply. .
bar. frml din rm. big ILUFFS "'
rnstr bdrm w/balcony_ Unique "R .. model. £1 ..
Security gates plus super Great Vlew Open Daily. Marftft Real &tat.
up i r ad es . A 11 for ____ 6+M394__ 64"'5357 Sl.65.000. 759-1501 -
'
******* *CHAIMIMtl
old Sao Juan Qlplstra1Jo.
A flo rd a bh u p
ataln/down.ata lra coo· domiolum. 3 Bdrma., 1'1'1
bathl, carped.oa. filndow cowrlt\p, bullt·lftl, lWO
car aar•c• & pelio. By owner. Mon thru Tbun tdus>. eall 14f~U8 : tri. thru Sun. <dan> & evenlou. call <71• > .....
~
d
!5
a
t
c.
11-
ng
I 0
tt>·
tie
pie
lr~ rr-
lll aso -
or• w• lalh ,..,.
DCO*
i
rs
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I
. I
.. OM..V PILOT ~. w.r ta. t871 ...... U.r. !&ti cl ...._" UafwuchMd Ho.Mt UafwWth.d Hou.et U~ ApwtMettb F.rni.a..d Apo1 tn'"h Unf\rn.. ----"'--------------------....................... . ......... ....... ...... . ................................ ····· ··~····. .. ... ... . . . . . .. .. .. .. .. . ..................... . "--",_S. <>Awa .... ._.. 0.-1..e•t.t• 11 1 Ill JZOJ ,...,...,_1Hc• l240 a..wi-leilclt 3.241 New,ortlffdt 326' ...... IMdl 1741 eo.taMHo 1124 ···········••·········· .............•.•.•..... ··········•·•·•····•·•• .........•....•.••..•.............•..••••.•... ·•····•·········•••·•·• .................................................................... .
...... Mll# ... $9 tJOl --Pt If tf JOOO alb to beacl\. Lu.&uriOWI N1:w·ele1ant·2 bedroom S700mo 2 Br2 Ba condo ON WATER ranlasl l(' l br. panora mic O('Hn 2 Btt. 2 bn rrfn,~. ,t(l\t
Clfltll -1071 .. -............... •-................... adu..lt Uvln1 40+. Two (ss..'lO) or 2 bedroom + on the ocean ~t Blu~ 2 8d ' d 3 View. No £00 $11~. mo pool. •dult.. no pl'I
·-................... •2 T"-" ... * bedroom coodo in HUAt· den (1575). ~. & win l..alOOQ Villa. Teanis, z b:teth:;. (rpt/msi~~~o No~ 49113831S evf' $400 6-&6-200l
MUDtSTDl&*ff ...... ~~~I.a .. .._· N•ar1.M41l>aris.llioto l.Dlloo~~.T-llrk $4001 .. _ dowbome.5Blocksto p o ol a. p v l b c h Wate;front Ho me !i ~•---h l769 ----., _..,. -·--bdl. a .. SR Jba• 1-ll BR j.! moaw. •• coo. ...... r beach. Private 2 car 2.U.Tin-0230 631 1_, ·,.-. __, M.irr11· d c p1,. I. 'rn 1
Pvt. jactml. l&&Ddlick 6 Io rt c Sa a .J a a D 2~ ba: l ·S BR.' 2 ba. $ oa~..: •• ~llllon do~~1r1 f:~· Fully ma in •••••••n•••••n•u.... ctuldrtoo up to l yr-. 11111
COfW'ed patio 1urrouad O.pllUuo.t'::'°"* prape, frp~. a.89,000 recnnauuu center. ~ ~ fard. Adults. No S-O.•• 3276 S~TOIEACH acccptt"d sm ~ BB thta • Bll. arcldtecu tr.. Oma Yttllt eadl. l70t-11UAlabema. MiU Sullivan for •P· peg. l.Dr&uitt 52:518tb St. &.agi.o~ 3252 ••••••••••••••••••••••• crvt lhnM.>Ut ~ drpi. .•
dream home. loald• uart.or. ltooaalar i.an. Hunt. Bcb. SH·17ll polnt.mentat 752·2809 <n4)9e0Cl ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3br. 2ba 2 1try Condo No 2 B~l~Fi{01~10 ~J 2077 Wullo1·~ A\•
TWTa OoU.a t:U., cedar 6 mueb more. 0811 oae Owner. HOMEF'INDEBS DON'T MISS OUT ON Luxury for adlt.s, lg 2Br San Clemente $450. Art 2 BR coodo, yearly, panetin1, a.tom lisbl· afl&akl.nd. Sl50.000 Thowandl of Reotala nus Sharp 3 BR 2 BA home. formal dl.o. a vail 492-6700. 496-8432 m'I mooth
I.QI 11 CUit.om lrplc make 61M40t For~ ly 0..... Get Fut Reswta !pk. w tcpta. fn<'d yard: June sns mo. 536-6l77 s.ta AM 3210 p AJU( LIDO ~1!1~ ;:.~o~ HARBOR 8 U ~ MIW Sample: conv area. $&25. 963-4567 op ol bill location, lease ....................... 2 BR. 2 ba, yrly. ~~ ....... 500 6 ru •pl w tree room, SlSS lbr rum bu all agt, no ree. option conaldeted. (Ex· GO SEE nn.s ! 3 br. 2 ba. semuow,......., •· · uolta are all rented. sz102brptuWpd-appl ecutivevlewhomel Jbr / _,., .• , YQU.ril to expencac. by $Z.400mo lncome4 ·3Br SS2Ubrldda/ydtpatio AVAIL. NOW 4 BR 2 Ba • · w c • .,.... ~car Karage.
clllllQI 2~Ba 1tWtioe 2 · 2Br lJFETUIESERVICE w/c"'•, frea .. 1u pamled country . kitchen. family fncd yard. Only $395. VAUIY atALn .n_ Elm' .,. H B. .,.... ~ room. dining room. frpl 963-4567 Agt ootee.
A Di · I r UMI. 17081 .,.., · · 557-Gl22 lhruout. good loc. Only in Uvl.og room. close to ---· ----
. associated
8110fo'. 1.115 k f AL TORS
10/~ \.>\' Bulrioa 61 t IA'il
LA CASA BLANCA
Bach 12Br11vullnow
All UUI pd Cpl .. , drp-..
pool, lmlry ruc11 Adil
Ov t'r J!., no pd' 111
childrrn, Call S1i1
5~6-7707 or Ue n n
642.9137
-.
vi~on o $375.000.,841.26$5 days, ~.963-4567.agtnofee. beach, park, country LOOKATTHIS!
I JED II arbor lnvestmtmt Co. 538473t\Ves/wknda ...... , ... ,. 3207 . club. Owner. 770.2317 S28S lge 2br. must see.
11• ~ •••••• .. ••••••••••••••• Cl-Ol!le to beach, 3 br. 2 ba Gar. fplc. refng. more.
\ ~ C:.•hry Loh/ TRIPLEX C.M. STEPS TO BEACH. cute l wtfrplc. dshwhr, fncd LditForftt 3255 Sm ree. Open 1 days 9·6. ~'::'i8:,~~-A~~ckov!~1;:?t J BR 2 Ba. 1 blk to 111h St etypta 1500 By ownr. xlot cood. Inc BR bse, P.fitlO, lawn, util yd. Only $485. 963-4567. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 645-4900 pool, tplc, yrty a:io mo. CM. 1395 mo. + S150 ~l't'
••••••••••••••••••••••• S805. SLS0,000541-5777. pd. $360 lease. 673-5439, Agt. No fee. ___ On the lake, 3 bdrm 2 ba •Con11119r't W• or June, July. Aug, Sept, Agt 646-3255
P..AIUC YOUR HOllSI TWO CHOICE Cemetery C 673--'19i:s' Beach wal.k condo 3 br 2 townhouse, air cond. Sl250. 875-.-rl ----
n-.... .,ul 3 BR w/a vie-lots. aide by alde,botb for OVINGTON ba. upgraded cpb, bl~. private 1pa, club & lake TustlR 3.290 $3116 ""i >. ~R 2 Ba . fp t1· &rr':ronn pool al th~ S 7 2 5 • II E M 0 R Y FOURPLEX eoro.*' W.-3222 Y r I y I s e s 5 2 s . privileees. $645. 87l·3889 ••••••••••••••••••••••• IAYRtOMT ~!!;'8n!.1;~~r~v~ll~~,~~
lower level. Indoor spa, GARDEN MEMORIAL A beautifully maintained ••••••••••••••••••••••• < 7 14 > 6 4 s. 12 19 o r New 2Br. 28a. A/C. club 2br lud ok. Really Delux condo Fun"•"ti.e<i property. Onve hy JOlf.'
n-.mvefplollvtngroom PARK• 8 RE A . ~'Covinlton" located in DUPLEX 2·3 BR. avail. (Zl3>4»G281 !acll.$4:50mo.!l74·210lor ~iJar0pe. g~-6a~eJay~· Pool. secunty guurd. A.Jeffrey I~ or Bear t.t "~ room. Lots or Zl.3197·-an e qua 11 y fine Open views, dttk, Jae. Beautiful 38R 2ba 67J.5192all6pm. ~ . comppn1o1acy anclu ulll Baker St l Then <'.ill
square 7ootage situated C: rcW oelahborho~ or pro· a&W/te00.152-0811 bltins, frplc. aiock t~ ....._Vlefo • l2'7 •C ur'sGW• VISTADB.UDO SSM221 Owor1Am
on 1.4 acres. Call to aee. Ptoperty 1600 pertie.s.cai;r~-1~90,000. SPYGLASSHILL park. 1435/mo lse . ....................... 575/mo673-1020 ~01s ..... _._
$!168.000. .. ..................... l:Wrry, · S 12 50 mo I ea s e . 84&-7171 2 BR l\'J Ba. SJBS. Wftta.... 3291 Spectacular a pt, pool Brand new ~=t .! ht v HACH/COMM'L d ftU. n Panoramic view of ocean . Cord va Models •••••••••••• .,. ••••••••• JdC • lennas. $400 ror T "'• & city lites. 4 BR. fam Executive rental, walk to 97~ 645-2265 i BDRM & Fireplace. June. July & A~. C.:all 2 ba. no pets. Xlnt to~·· ~~fOt.~e':-~:; PLACE rm.beaut decor. Pool.2 beach. frpl. gardener qwet st.reel. bag yard. 548-853Safter3 t1 o n . btwn Hd) h ~ on Newport BJvd. -top.n .. P.N.1 frplcs. corner loc. ~1rgtw;1·2.islyty. 4 bdr~l NewporllHcJI 3269 1635. per mo. Scott Real· ~=';'1~1!':-°~ ~ 2~;~ ';:~ ~~-~~~~~~ $125 000. 644-1168, 83$-7100 • ama rm . _.. ••••••••• •••••••• •••••• ty. 5J6.. 7533 ra-4852, or t:lf 1 ~ , By !ease only. No pet.s. NO FEE! Houses.coodos, 1---------s.t.Ancl 1010 Ir# lsW/ 3Br,2baw/beaut.yard. Avaa Junel.962·1673 duplexes. Rental S!&S spac. 2br .. luds ok1• RESERVE NOW ....................... ,,.,...., 2100 ~mo. annual lse. 601 3 bdrm llh ba stove & Pavili-On.S75-49l2Bkr Must see. It s cute ...................... ..
3 br 2 ba, beautiful new -. .... •••••••••••••••• Narelsaus. 5"·0814 or frig ls• •. t • More. Sm Fee. Open u. G.MN 1102 2 BR. I ba. 11wet, n1
coodo.Muatsell.$54,000. loduatrlal Con · Q..3232 re .• PoO .,. ennts BlGCaoyoa2BR+den. 7days.64S-4900 . ••••••••••••••••••••••• Hurbor/W1lson. Ava11
541-4054 domlnhama, 2 nu unJta .............. 4 .. II c:::imf.)95. S84·2S32 or FantaaUcgolfc:oursevu, •Con1 -r'1Gtllde 12621 Flower S treet. ~!,.~.~s°:ve~l~. Wntw•ttter 1091 SboppiqCenteronBeacb adJoinio& the o.c. -••Dre sec., tenn11. $850. Garden Grove . Lui.:e 1 ________ _
....................... Blvd. $1,1.90,000. Triple Airp>rt.320064100sqft. WebavelOOO'sofbouaes, $325 lg 3bJ. kids/pl•ts SC'7·7°";833-3215 a..tahGcllcww!! one bedroom townhouse e..-d ... wE-Side
ONEYEARNEW net leases, Scott Realty CcotactWesternTeTralll dplxs, apts now, all w/buge focd yd & gar. Wehave1ooo·sofho~. cloletosboppln1. Laun·
B 2 ba SD6 950 16082 536-7533 Inc .• 4320 Campua Dr. areas. all prices. Sm Sm ree. Open !Mi 7 days. NT i:• Cany°::t~~r, 28j; dplxs. apts now. all dry I ac i ht I ea . No !...::: c' n'kr · (213,:1----------1 1110. N.B. ea. 92860 PH; Fee. Use our free phone 645-4900 wn ovime. vt go areas. all pnces. Sm ree. children: no peta. C..11 ~.ess r. · WRM REAi.TY 714/s.-1480 aervtce .,.. __ _., ~~. course ew, P garage, Us e our free phone Clyde at (714> 891-1013
3 hr, 2 ba townhou!>t.'
Many xtras. Children ok.
no pets. 646·4262 day ...
645-~eves. 431·'7383dy, (213)5&4·0427 OWNER/AGENT C . • ft.....11. ~..--S7SO mo. 640·8126, ·
1..£...&-...cr....a... 2200 ·~--r•--service. n•...ao...a W ev 33&8Carlsbad Blvd. ._. .._.. -645-4900 Summer·s here! $240. 833-3973 *eom-r•s Gttil• *'""'" "E * Etside 2 Br. 1 bath. pat1n
carlsbad,Callfomia •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• Musts.ee. Kid. Clean. At Plush lbr, lba w /boat 645-4.900 Cherry C reek ~dull Pool. kid., OK. no pet:. JUST USTID!
Cute Westminster home
oo R.,. lot. Lou of poten·
tial. $l6,000. Agt. 840-5060
714-434-173S. offers: Ol'flCE 1LDG srTI Beaut Spyglasa mu. vtew bcb. More. Sm ree. Open slip. 1 blk to beach. S700. LL.......-·-J·.._d or Apts. t & 2 BR. !pie s. we 5275 Ph 548-0916 30ubl•clltg HuntingtoaBeacb home. 3 BR, fam rm. U7days.oo.4900 ,_..., ... _.. h1tve l a kei:., i.auna .1---------
RHl....tLoc.'s.. 27,000 sq. ft. lot near 1mmed oceup. ~ mo. •Ca ••••r'•Gtll• 551J..8534,84<H91.9 U.Mali•d 3300 Jacum & pool Located I Br. Ras & water pd
Pacific• Hoapltal, S 673·89'1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• a12701 S. J:'aarvaew. Just Ad ult!>. no pet". n u ::a~.!:!:e~·:n:~:. PWitaShop. Cntr &Civic 12'5 spac. 2br. kids ok. Open! &ty like rent. 4 J bdrm 2 ba + den. in S. of Warner. N. of S.D ctuldren. $225. 645-8939. oet.ra ... Eatah Center. $13S.OOO. COllaM.M 3224 Nice area, yd & patio. Br,3ba,jacuzzl.et.c.1712 GardeoGrove. ssso. Fwy.556-1991.Nopeta. 2 Br. 2 Ba. mOl\t ullls pd ••••••••••••••••••••••• •I David Bourlte RJtr ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sm fee. Open !Mi 7 days. Hilhl.and. $125,000. S22-863J 13742 Newland Street. Mo. to mo. $300 AIJulb
...a.tto..s S. 1100 546-9950 New2brcoodo. Pool, spa. 64,S.-4900 ~ ~ C .... I G 11 rd e n Cr o v e . only 622 H a m11lon. For S-. t I 00 ....................... From S375. Kids • pets •Co.s r's Gtalde..,at -• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 12 1 .......... •~•5 000 LOT OK. 87M912 Btr U.fw111•d 3425 Beautiful. two bedroom ~14 -·~ -• 200· X w· waterfroot . · New 4Br Beach Coodo. 3 ....................... townhouses In excellent•--------
FANTASTICAL Eaatside Costa Mesa • oeaibborbood. Pnvate 2 bdr hse. nu cpts. d f°P'. • Large lot. Upgrading commercial. Riverside F.ast.ad flower 3bd 2ba. blks from ocn. xlnt rer l'ustln, 2Br. 28a, drps. patio v•ew from lovely pnt. S3001mo. !>to \•·
lbl Good t , Co. $55,000. Owner, fr/dr/lr, kid pet ot $C.95 required. S550mo. 53Sal· crpt.s. frpl , patio. comm ki·tchen .. en" IO&"'d refn g Isl & last and SJUO .r~••..a...a...-.MI poss e. erms. GCZ-8200. 642-761B/833-9'2:S.2 ly536-8832 BOATOWNER'SSPEC. pool. carport w1stor. ' .. ..,... ~ __ ,. JIM WEu.s REALTOR Luxurious twnhme 3 br. $330. 714·544~14. g a r a g e s ; P o o I . 5et' deµ Adil., only 1111
Sea cape & auuseta, a 557-G64 or 979-2631. ADVANCE MOTICE MESA oa MAR Lrg deluxe front 2 bdrm & 2YJ ba r I tJ i S320tmooth. can Clyde pets an 6 642-3915
bldl family paradlse. lncolnt,,., ,., 2000 OCEAMVIEWLOTS 3 BR. 2 be, reeently re-den w/2 ba, fu-eplace, & deck. 32!P~f8sts~ ~o~~ ToMlho•• <Manager. Apartment CLF.AN.Qwet 2 BR, l h.i 2Br, + bonus rm ln El ~ dee. Cls to •--1-. Avail clo6ed garage. No pet.s. $875 lease. "•2.3033 or u..turwllMcl 3525 #30l 89l·IOlJ ..,.,,. mo. No pet., J!IKI Mo ....... By the "'-a, your ••••••••••••••••••••••• u---build-..._in,. of· ~........ M a•2 3157 .,. ....,., "v ;x-...,....,.. .... ., """ " 6/1. uc>c cno. 6*2981 $445. gr ..... · or after6pm 675·121.S ••••••••••••••••••••••• M 1266 31i own pvt bch. park rent I 17U .... ITSOF fered 1st choice or _... 213 S92·254S lc6oalsa.d 3106 c1ple.6J1. .:,4!1-i4
onJ 60 CALL TODAY " magoa·fa'cent ready-to· 12621 Flower Street .• ••• ••••••••••••••••• Y $1 R I G Back Bay Area hse for lse NEWPORT TERRACE G d G L • • ALI. NF.W. 6 unit~. Fou1 'PK1096). MA.HO UV N build ocean view lots. •n-Ba 2 bdrm house unfum. 1 ar en rove. arge lBr ea Dpl f 1 I
You C .. _ earn and have a Land De 1 "UJC,. 3 • 2 c.ar garage, bath Ava.116_1_78 Walk to 2 Br, 2~ ba condo. View. one bedroom townhouse. • 1 x. rp c. g 28r. 2ba, two JBr. 2b.1 Calforwla Paclflc .... lmmedi ~e ope,!..~rges Lennis, jacum, pool, SS50 bea"h $360. /mo Ca 11 $1.50. mo. No pets. close to shoppmg. Laun· paUo, all utJI pd, $42.'> mo Cpl.; ·drps. bltm~ w <!car MobileHomeReally positive spendable 00 a . res.,.,._.e as mo., no pets, 2416 Les ~ 645-9219;645-9161Doris dry facilities. No yrly 67S-38S9 prk'g No l>\'L'> Jl11 V11·
2706Harbor.Ste 208 yourl.nit..laJinvestmeotin Jmlallautedoumberor ParreWay<TI•>544-8071 SJ&.8312 children: no pets. Call •...&......-p--t-.+-3807 t.ona 644!2164 54" 5937 Orange CoUDty. These these Iota are being of· or<n4>521·57llext323 DOVER SHORES, 1734 0 de 89 0 3 ----_________ __, units are rented to the fered to builders for aale l ... W SANTIAGO DR. XLNT Y at <714 > 1·1 1 · ••••••••••••••••••••••• New 3Br. 2Ba. l·lOO !>Q ri .
ESTATE SALE a ctive retired, our at this lime. (714) Lge 2 Br. Adult CoodoH;t; • 3242 VIEW. 4 BR. fam rm. OCEAN VIEW -Sao LovelylBR,$285.Wa lk ~ Ets1de No pt'ts
o e w e s t s o c I a I 498-0200. wtwalk lo closets. Pool .. .:=............. c.trps, & crpl. Jae in mstr Clemente. 2 sty end umt bay or beach. 2 IG f.. 548-840:;
Beach area, u · x 60' with p~menoo. N~w and Ma•••• Desert facilities. Eastslde. lsml BR. Indoor/outdoor pool. Twnhme. 3 BR. 2"'2 Ba. Balboa Blvd, 496·5660. -----fa ml J y room and pndeolownershiparea •--"' • 2400 petOK.$375/mo.Contact W.'•9'e8~MT wet bar w /relrlg . recfacil.Walktoshops& 661·2333 Spacious 3 bdrm 2 b.1
enclosed porch. Vacant foe Sl,:>50,000. 752-1920 .. ~•••••••••••••• Rita &4.5-9161 or MZ-1517 Al liiRF'aV gardening le pool serv in· ~-$475 mo. 770-2317. Coro.a*' Mer 382.2 ~e;~~e/~o. ~!~11~"
& ready to occu,py. Only d '-'U •IL 14/.. 601 IOAT SPACE cl. AvaJJ July 1. Ownr. ownertagt. •••••••••••••••••••••••
$29,500. Ruth Laurie. p~ •"CE $7995 1 BR. uW pd .• no pets, 3BR.2~Ba.12,000mo. ~~S::1es . 675·4054, 13742 Newland Street. I _________ Townhou~e '2 br. 2 ba.
_Bkr __ .646-4380 ______ --t ._,.. Forlhla cabin+ 5 acres patio, q ulet, 2072 RoyMcc.cle Garden Grove. BeautJful pool. Qwet area. $325.
Jbrexpaodoonwat.erin --10,.nl:MPM.1 lnbl-delertwtterms.ln· Newport Blvd. t ENG. lllOtt..,,..tllYd. SEAVIEW twobed.roomtownbouses ~ ~~ _mo __ 645-_5(Xl8 ____ _
W. Nwpt. $11,500. Marina taiol' unftnlabed. Partly 8C2-093S. $270. Coda W.S0 541-7729 Unobstructed view of I n e it <' e I I e n I Tl., ''"°rc5 Spacious 2 BR. encl palm,
Realty842-8850. 7UMITSC.M. furn. Beaut view. Bkr, ocean and Newport Bch, neighborhood. Private ~ .:ar. Child OK. S3SO. All Beautiful brand new 4-1 ~ 2or3 BR,pool,etc.patio, 3Br. 2ba. new. Full pauo view from lo\ely 'i.6456488
Flaming o Co ach br,loft,f/p.3-2br,l~ba ~-~ prage. ........ ]244 security,teorus,jacuni, kit c h e n . l'nclost'cl GARDENAP1'S --------w/cabana adlt prk near h 11 bl _.VT 642-0835 $395 1 Hoag. Top cond. xtra lrg town ouse, a tns, Propeaty · 2550 · · ·-.. •••••0 •.......... sw1mm1ng. SlOOOmo. g ara ges ; po o . CORONA DEL MAR
3126 lvng rm w/fireplace, 1 crpt.s, drps. Hurry, buy••••••••••••••••••••••• SUPER CLEAN 2 BR Sensational 2 br, 1 ba Co nsid e r l s e opt. S320Jmonlh. Call Clyde 2 Br Townhouse. frplc DmtaPoint
bdrm. Low rent PRIN· now. Tom Lee, Rltr, dpb l Ba. gar, small w/frplc,dshwhr.K.ld5& Agt10wner 75Hl373 ask <Ma nager . Ap ;.1 rt Pool.tenrus Som eoce.aft ••••••••••••• .. ••••••••
CIPALS ONLY Call 642-1603. CANYON LAKE ch.lid ok. no pets. $295. Pet ok. Only $395. forGary mentll301.(7141!S91 1013 & Cala.hnu views. Close t0r2bdrm,allnew crpt.'.
645-2020 642-870S until 8 VALUABLEFRONTAGE 1950 I< Meyer Pl. 963-4567.Agt.No!ee. flARBORVIEWKNOLL ~Unfwlt 3600 to fo'asJuon Island & fine drpr;, garages. $27~$3~:.
PM 3-28Runltsoaapprox. :11~:!~f~~mm:uso\~~ :!:~~; 549-3484 RENTALS Spacious 2 BR.&den.2YJ ....................... beach.A.t.ao1Br644 2611 ~& d epos rl'1.1 •I
REDUCED $2000. New ':...!'tole comoc'I. ... ~rt.8~· around 15 m 11 ea 3br,2ba Univ Pk ss:;o. b a • ·Cape Cod Elegant duplex. 3 BR. 3 .~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!ll~~~------
Mobile Home in El Toro 0 '""' nr. .,.., · sborellne lake. 25 ml 3 BR. 2 ba, frplc. nr So. 2br,2baUnivPk$495 Charmer". Gorgeous ha. rrplc. $600 mo. New deluxe 2 bdrm 2 ba I Brw/d1shwasher& ga1
adll pk. triple widely s175.ooo w1293 do. soutbeulofCorooa.lhr CoastPlaza.Rmforboat 2br,2baTreeM50 appt·s . Near by PoOI & 645·2111.646-6303 forlse.Carpets.drape~. new crpt. 1mmed oc
w/boo• .. uUI rm, bltn wet Owner will carry at 93 drive from Orange Co. at«age. IGda le pets OK. 552-9886or552-1800 t.emus. Avail. 6/1. $635 bit ins + view. $525 mo. rupancy. $265. 830-9325. -int. Ex cl w I H D Vi ,_._ Lrom l •--tMaJl A U Mo. Agt. 640-5560 2 Br. I ba. new cpts & bar, Roman tub, circle JOHNSON Bkr.714/ aew...... $12,!IOO. 1 yr"""'·~ mo. va drpf;. mature adults. no _67_3-8m ________ I Br. modern, pnvall•
Kitchen, & much more. B25-71H2or714/S45-S338. Custom homes from mid.June. 545-3740 llMTALS Olannelfront 3 BR. 2 ba. 2 pet s. SJ o o + . 6 3 4 1 BR + den. rrplc, 2 bl ks Quiet. clean & attract1vl'
Owne• transrerre ~OOOC.ALIFORNIA Q.OSITOOCEAM 2
2BBRR.·2
1Ba8a •••••• ····~~ car gar. Family pref. Shalimar.964-tOSS. rrom bch. $350 mo. Cill $240permo 494-6220 837·9"91 COVINGTON ····· ······~ as.w 0wner1agu48-1290 PROPERTY New3 br, 2~ ba &2 br. 2 3BR,2ba. · · · · · • SSS0/640 · l BR. adults, no dogs. cats _7_14_!87_o-8395 __ a_ft_7_p_m ___ 11.ge gound IPvel 3 br. 2 ba , .Solhlng like this <'harme
on Lido Bay. Uode
S!S.000. 67S-97<M.
FOURPLEX EXCHANGE bacondc».Pool,jacuui, 4BR.2~ba .•.•• ~/S75 3 er+den on WATER. ormotorcycles. I IEDROOMAn pvt yd. coble tv. $38~
Pndeofownershlpunlts. Local55'M620 dblgar,openbeam cell· 5BR.2~ba ... y····S600 Spac ious with view. •548·2720• 496-705K
Xlnt So. Coast Plan CallLUe<n4)674-2104 lngs.Chooeeyourcarpet. S12001mo. Wa te rfront ---------2530S.0.l.wA•• •------------------1 area Great income & $550 le $450 Westblutt Homes 6Jl-J400 ..__ lwah Fwnhlwd I BLOCK FROM OCEAN Duplex. fantastic ocee1n
FANTASTICAL PRJCED RIG ....... W 't Vlll.age Vlctorta & Ca· ..,..-J RD STORY. F ULL views, 3 bdr 2 ba . ., e 1.... b ~~-all°!1-lOACRES ~.m-2080 Yearl"'" 2 br -.5 2 br •-•••••••••••••••••••• OCE AN & HARBOR decb. 1SOO sq n. $450 .....,., 90 u:rry • c ..,. 1600 fl of waterfront, ,,~ ~· ' -.oa ls&c.d 3706 VIEW 493-4!960
dayCormoredetalls. R1 enlde Co ..... 000 Eastslde 1 br, ..-.. Stove $550., 3br1575. Wallt t ••••••••••••••••••••••• IMMEDOCCPY • C-t.. M 54"-3666 v ' .,._, · _, beach from each. Marina -------A.,. 8$3 v-Owner.n4-642-8200. & refrig, A1lo bachelor ReaJty&42-88SOAgt. lbr .. S3S-O ulll. 1nclud $38.'iPERMO.OH HwlctaqowlHc:h 3840
Shangri·la dbl wide lux· l.ct.s.'-'-. $UIS. Stove, uW pd. Call AVadMay26th. No pets. t650SUMMER RENTAL ...................... .
ury Uvl.og. Btfl l!Y18 2Br, Giro.es 2700 &s&-n75. HAR10R VIEW 67S.9229 714·7S9-IOlr7 SHARP. beach. 2 & 1 BR
2Ba Skyline In adul 28 28a d -frpl , <f1,hw a ,h1•1 . ••••-••••••-••••••••• Mee. Verde, 3218 Oregon r. • en. _..,,mo Bachelor. J·rm. Prlv. part. swimunng, Jacuni BR be lse 1.nc gard &44..a548 garage. pallo6, 960-Z35.!I & soclal a c tivities . IOACRllAMCH Ave.4 •2 • "50. • 't523C.U.MJ>ithtVufE · · bath. entrance Refng, CodaMno 3824
galore. All for unde -Remodeled ranch home l•t a. last, si5o dep. Charming 3 bdrm 2 ba, no cooking. Qui.et adult. ••••••••••••••••••••••• LIVE Nea r The Beach'
S24,000. Park ren HEWT'RM'LIX with open beam celll.op US/3C7·l404,41.5/3C7-82 Woodbridge Townbom~. 3 formaldinJ.nlrm. b11llv· Sl95mo.GC-3223 LA MANCHA .A"S Ccnodet Sol
S11X>-Sl40. BY BUILDER & views in all dlredlona 12B51g2br, Kids, petok. A bdrm 2 ba, sml pet OK. ing rm, lrg yard. 2 car eor-.. ..._. 3722 Large J.2&3 bedroom Beauuful Adull Apls CGlfonllaPadflc (1) 4 Br, 2 ba, slogle AND Just a short drive nice fncd yd le gar. Sm $415 mo. 833·8714 or garage,Sn1.11HarborRd ........................ garden 11 pts Ds hwhr. Gas&Wat.erPa1d
Mobile Home Realty story. deluxe owner's un· Crom Oranse Co .. Tbe fee. Open 9.15 7 days. 631·3624 t650/Yr lse. 631-1179 or S225 Bach. Ideal for bltns, encl Ji(ar. gas bbq 21681 Brookhurst, HB
2'706Harbo St.e208 It w/attacbed dbl gar, pool, spa & brick patio ~ 673-81.82 .· • Pool Gas Pd. 778 Scou 962~6'53 r. 7 (2) 3 Br spacious dlx un· are fenced lo for com C • Gm• UNIVERSITY PK-Oxford waitress. 3 blks to ocean. Pl &42 s<n3 i---------___ S_4_0._5_9_l __ ~ lls. Bite to bcb from plete privacy. The re: * A»M-r • Model. 3Br, 2~Ba. bonus 2 BR Condo. spbt level. furn, util pd. 675-8232 · · 2Br. children welrome. no
here. $198,000 full price. malol.os acreage ls for A DELUXE'! rm. 2200 ~ft. New cpta, frplc. ear.· wash tdry. Costa Meta 3724 Large 3 Br townhouse apt. pets. startJ.ng at $24~ mo NrDana Pl marina, 12x
2 br 1~ ba. encl. porch,
SlS.000. 493·5634, 496-8061
UJ78 slngle wide mobile
home, Costa Mesa area.
Low rent park. ~-48>3
2412 Delaware, H.B. you to do wtth u you s:m. Klda/peta oit. Must drpat • ~gldy upgrabed1t· ~~!-.,.,b113398tn1. !,:,es & ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 ba. frpk. paUo. garage 846-aMn 5.16-1718 please. Call now! see. H.u sar, ref rig, + +. • eps rom green • .. ........, ..., • • ~· . Quiet complex. Adult!\. ---------
SAN CLEMENTE 973-4626 Sm fee. Open M 7 days. ~" pool. SS50 mo. 4 BR, 2 ba, all bltns. crpta. SSO WEB & UP ~s-':89 $375. 64~3381 or Seawind Village
....... I.I. IK ~ ct.rps, ln Heigh.ts. rncd yd Studio. 1 bedroom New 1&2 bdrm luxurv DUPLEX 1631E.17thSUC,.SA *COM-..r'le.lde Deane Home, Univ. Pk. 5 $475.714 /646·2414 Maldservice,pool :? Br. l""ba townhou!le. adult apts an u pl:m:.
$86 900 BR. C.omm. rec. gmdr. 2376 Newport Bl c M paHo yard frplc "O<'I r S27" + pool 1 ... • CHOICIAYOCADO CJRCLETHJS Avail July 1, $750 mo. New luxury home. Z br. S48·9'15Sor845-396'7 · " • · · ~ rum " s. t",. Adult, pet park; 10"52 Sparkling 1 BR unlts, PARCas $250 clean 2br w/gar. Ml-4862 den. jacuzzi. 2'1'l ba, gar.laWJdryrm. ~!'> ms. waterfalls. pond:.' ~Panora_ mal-Lgwie.lh~trpleBeR•·. with secluded garden v,..,..,. ..... _ _._
1
Av--.. o Refrig, dawh, gd area. f11>lc, beam ceil. 2 ('ar SUSCASITAS TSLMgmt 642 moo From San Diego f'rwy
u .... patio. PLUS separate • ...._.. ...,. .. w ~IKI Sm fee. Open 9-6 7 days ......... .._.. 3241 gar. applns. 313 Island. 2 Br util pd Child t drive North on Beach l<• g u t I I • rm . ' guest apt. Zoned C·l, for ?an:ela witb beauUful 645-400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1875. ~rly. 675·4912 or Nicely fumlsbed I bdrm. . . . reno . McFadden then West on
wshr/dryer, kltch. addedpotartial. ~~ltoDl.:,!~•pe· rTearcmres. •C·,....••r'•~• YOUl.CHOIClt eves87s.520l. Cloted gar. $230. up. No pets. Mgr Apt 4. 1960 McFadden to Sea winlt
wJdiahwsbr; tge. fenced all!•CH TRI .. •v ~·--· --Adults, no pets. 2110 WaJJace,&45-7181 VLllage. <714>8!J3.5J9K yd. w/sprinkler system; ~ ..-....-C714)833-8714Agt. ..wV\ 2 bdrm dloln Three 3 Bdrm•. well Bhtrs nice 3 BR 2 ba Newport Blvd, 2 Br. I._.. Ba townhou.,.e.1--..;;;... _____ _
Jot."'-tll hed S 160 000 _,,., mo. ' 1 located. $$00/mooth to M. 1 • • ' HEAR IEACH ~ ~p.u .s • nn.encl.yard.Dnveby. 955()/month·Leue. $S5() o.Aval.now. BUNGALOW.frplc.mald gara1e. patio. puol. ~~t pat.io $1.2,500. Walk to beach or Del.... Iv nameunder1bat. 3U.9 r--&coi;r,'•y Agent844·1133 serv,employ. person. No jacuu1. Adult!. only &CMCCBfTER ----------1 Mar st\oppin&. Qv.iet -•••••••••••••••••••• Elden Ave. 8. ~So,.. "---t -y. Ne.-Terra~. 3 bdr smokers. S48·7Ur. 1375 646-2010 BRAND NEW Spac1ou:1 Ao for 5* 1.200 area with great 3 BR ....... Pa ... d ~""' ""'""" .. .._. • delWle J & .. Br All blln:.. =~~ ............... owner•sun1t.Upper2BR .. _ ................... 4.Br. 2 ba, rrptc. fenced LAGUNABEACH 2i,., ba, pool/jactsauna. HunffllcJt•leCICh 3740 TWNHSE, 2 Br I..., S., 2 t11>lcs. gar. Ille yd. 521, unltawtthoceanviewa. ,..,.,,_.._.. 3140 yard, $S2S Kida/pet ok. 497•2457 frpl.. + view. SS75 ........................ yrs old, Cpl('. pvt p11t10. Yorktown Just West vi I ACRES BERTIIA HENRY .... .'.:.'!'••••••••••••••• 754..(1838, 751-4.584 964-~orM&-7782 STUDIO gar. new paint. ad~~· no Beach Blvd. ~22l'J 01
XJnt mlnl·rancb alte, REALTORS IJSMcKnlebt Dr. Walk to 0-C.Poialt 122' "THEWRALETOWER" 2Br.nrocean.ahopa. Pan "WHldvRatn" pets SJOOmo &46· "'' 1_s.l&-_l_71_il _____ _ ~olOran~c:"~· 2J.5DeUlar 492-<ClZl beach. 2 Br, den, 2'-' ••••••••••••••••••••••• A landmark home . vm,W/D,fpk,2carga r. f\allkitcbcm&TV I Br apt Adult.'i only No NF.W XTRA Dix twn.h."'''
b'9 ~b. • DUPLEX. Up_ toe to the batlla. tlOOl'Wlt .June to Un.tque 1 bdrm duplex, ~~3mi Bsi'rt~ $n5. 873-8Gl7. LI.Dena ai Utllitl~ peta. LRG KIT, d1hm& apt. front wut. 4 , U1
· (71•>m·.._I beacb,only.S,000.Scott Octobe:r.4M-7&30 ~ftr,lraptfvyrd. ,..__ , .., ___ 2 bd =TOOCEAN uea" pool. 1Mll 7 21.<t Ba.formaldlrirm ~ • .._ Rea ._. A U J 1 -AT VlCfORlA BEACH. \A.-.c-an view ........ e • 2 Monrovia. sa30 ~-7924 bkaf•t rm, lplc. bltn~ .. OR lt.y. 638-7533 ... ..,.,. IHdl J 169 ,.,., va · une • _,,., Towerinl 3 BDRM. a. ba, den MOOtmo 305 L.a S.lles Mohl " ·· -r.o bouaea 00 ooe lot. ex· ••-•••••••••••••••••• tnc1. aw. 5f4..4538 DEN FLOOR PLAN. Jolla N8646-5389 evn ortWwn Blvd S290 lite 2 br. bcl:lm <'ell. W ID hkup, patio. dbl 41
IOACRIS celleot area, 185,000. Htl •lew 4 bd. tux Pu t•V.., 1234 btilton3levela. Localed ~l8Rhome,316 Ccdar BeacbBlvdatYotttown patio. pool, 11tove & tachaar,S41W ~36CM
Onecltbe,..,ncellen u·--u.ILl1 ... ,,... :::-Oalnl turn,~••••••••••••••••••••••• aFEWHUNDBEDn. 8 N t "h SU-0411 re t.na. Nr. 1hopptntt DelWle pool!lde Jttr~ litr no.ch •lt• left In So.1-----------------.,, FROM THE SAND, t, ewpor "' ores. Adulta no pets 313 17lh DOOL ar6puk'.. 3 BR, 2 be. 2·car 1ar. WJOUTSTANbtNO 831·2110agt. ..,._ ....... -,-...-lie to • · 2br, 2bla, bltnic. dah•h• ~.Bel....., Oran1 NEWQuality4-PlH •Pit Oft.= mo to brand new twnhse . '""'"""~""'" .......... Place.AptL.842·2464 Nr.beach.Adlu .no peb
Co. •a.a .,._,Co. Fae Gd l oc a U on Uf1 Sept 11.. O alter. Frplc, crpe,, drlle, PoOl, OCEAN VlEW. Wlll Br. 2 ba, refrias. Pvt pat. I.be beacll. Manager. ph. t.gc 2 br, 2nd floor upt aso. mo. 536-&.162 t....uc price~~ Anaheim, Cll. Bltr. llM3IO Jae, IM tc mo. Acroee lllle for ..,0 per mo. 1 bl.k to bch. '500, mo. t 86()..5328. ~'fenm.BKB. 8'1'WS31 from•= new apo.rta Good rel. Nq'Ulred. For Yr tse avail. 5108 Nc:p. -.,-.... ..,_. ,-8-..,.-.-.'""-H_OT_E_L_, w/Verondn. Xl.nt IOC' 1 IArae J br. 2 b8 w 1frp11 (n4)--1T 1---------fbnltWtBR..claded ••• ,._ ......... _r•-•.,. "all t"-Ave.--~ CA'-'" blk f rom ln 1nc• HI. S3GO mo i~ll lloll v•-· COST'• MU· • club. ·'7-eve• -1u.n.uc lWV.... --_.._ ROO ... s-eAW-"" AduJ•• , .......... a ..... ,,,,.,. Oll522-2080 ~ ~ apecioal ~lr1 ltJtt wtaidl ..-.-R.ealt)' 4.M.br.ll "' -·-~· '->, ..,,._ .. ,. ....., • .,....., ll3S-0:2llpagor93'i'lAtn 6 ,_ bome cm tars• lot. '800 . ._.... fhNN!I ~ ll&O/mo. $38-7056 Qui
n->-w ... ~~ou'• . .,......_.._ ~-· 11MR.I Sltate ................ ---.... ..,.40N"cttbeDd.2bdrm,1er. l W .. _ lOOO' -'bo ._ .... _... 37 ... Lafle 28drmsp&5. et NEW Z&J BR,111dull 11~t • ..._ ... -... _. ·-.... -•.a blk~2aGNndvtew e .... vt •-uaa._,....--bu1ld1n1 w /be...1 ut pool pobos tplc '' ~tor. .., e unit .-.aaorm•a ....................... It. 4'7-U08. AclUa. no dplll1, a pt• now. all ........................ landactplna. let.al ror NCUiity 13115 •up ''°"
ut-..wl.b four 2 Bf .... _._......... •Bl' H U NT IN 0 T 0 !II ,_. -ams. all pn~. Sm fN LAGUNA Bl:ACU MTR. :(l!".r.··~~~ 3S Mo ~b ..... .-di ot Adam~ blllicltwo:i.:.~;iji .-.;•:,t;DOQl ~ · Uae our Cr.ea. phnnt ll!IN.~•up~Mald. .......,._.... .. __ nun ·
elec ld&dl • I car r. 15• lloet ff•tmo. tnd lltor)' 3 bdrm, 2 ba. Loftl1 2 be', 2 be, ocean eervfce. ..-v. tokw' TV. heated Fullerton A\<~, Cl blll tlr.:i ' br t btl lrom
ld'l•dlumt.novtc Walerhon\ Boaau allbuUt';w:..r6'0.etc. vtew.Waato·bdl No •Cont-r'•W• DDOl m4J~.• wtNwPOrtA\>"flilblll oce~n :coe t'Jth ~1
lorta.MNIMO../Bkr. tll·l• PrtYaq. . . petl.llQOISM),~ MM90C) N.C.O.StHWJ. So.B&y l.631 or. ~--
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Af•lwwwata......_ ltf ............ , .. Offkea..w 4-400 ,._.,toU. !0111-tl'-d SlOO"" 11111 lllO Thuntday.M1y 18. 1978 DAILY PILOT
••••••--•••••........... w ............ d JtOO •••••••• .. ••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
• ......_ • .._. 114 ....................... %84J °'~l.Genl • prox '-"''ICk C •sH Loltor Found a pet! Cau • *"W-.d 7100 tW,W..t.4 7100 Wcmhd 7t00 ...... •••••••••••••••• 'n18 UCITING l x!3' ' )0/mo p18Z7 T-A Anlmal As•iatance ~~ -••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••-•••••••••••••••••
Brud aew delwte ape for rALM ...sA Al'TS. Wcwtdlf . NDeJl-0900 la' "· .,_d Tr""t Ueed Leque537·2271. ooftte. •642-1654• Acco1.1ntlog clerk. ex· .ASSIMILBS l"~11o.1r-.5 IL
Nnt. Nr. •Kb 6 Heil .Ml.NUT TO?iP1' • • ~" -penenced lo all phues --'"..-Extra a,e s br, z~ !>.. 2 8C1I 250-SOO IQ ft delun or loam arranaed for any Loa t : BI a ck L • b tafo/A,fL bookkeepln1. Trplna. We wlll train Appl)' Te lhir fo r Dana Pl
c.,-a.ange. $96. Extra Bach, lliZ BB face. w 19th St c M reuon Cred!t oo pro· Retriever male. May 4th. Pleasant air conditioned 111 m . M ~ c 0 r " go r branrh. Call Fullerton ~ 2 br, 2 ba S3:!:5 O.ll from $220 & up trom 1150 mo Tom . blem. Uorrow on lbe In Sol.Ith Oran1e County. TOUCH Of Cl.ASS offices. Costa Mesa area. Yacht.I. 1631 PlacenUa, Sa v 1 n a s & Lo• n . <71•>~-4= eves~ to Adwts.Nol>eta 541).2200 creased valu• ol your Reward.C.11968-9901 SOPIUSTICATED llOO mo.549-2221 . CM 114 /81142-'4 ror appt
9pm. L561MeaaDr bome.Calltodayfurla1t. Lolt: Old Enllish Sheep •MALE AND ASS ... ILllt/ .__E._O_.E_. ____ _
2 & UDIW"D. nr bt-h, open <S BIU ~3'1Newpon ~=~~S t'OW'teous lnlormalloo Dog. reward. An& lo FEMALE* /o;9'~~vll~~;:.~1 a1Cli()Mi¢s Banldo1
beamc:eU.1op,frplc.pvt M69860 Gatsby . CdM aru. CallM27494. lmmedopen.tnprorpco. IXPEIUINCID s~ Ad.U.s, 00 ""ts Penicnal telepbooe/ re· ~·~aXC!!J 6'0-7Sll. Escocb•Moctels ..i..w/e"-r• .. PCboardll .... 95 ..-•~ 4 ooo cepllonlsl, :.ecrclary, t.;.#-4. ESCORTS&MODELS .i.n "~-rr ...iQt 11 .,... ,.,.._ ... ,..,. ~l. -conference room. corree Rf"' ,.,,.,l LOST while toy poodle. "6entY """"''¥ )'., ... ·we le wtnna Growl.I\& co
••••••••••••••••••••••• & botpita!Jly llervices Licensed llome Loan remale. vie. Edwards & &corh & Modtta oriaolied, mature al Xlnt bent. Apply Sc•en· N~ea.r HuoUngtoo Harbor, Room w/ kltchenel&.e Excellent localloo. nea r ~rokers serv1na So. Edinger. HB. IUward' '714'91s-ootl.2 lltude. Muat enjo)' stat tlf1c OrHllna Coatro ... own«r· ·s
1
unit, 3 br, $50 week" up. rreewa"'" t:alif. for n yrg. Call our 84&-S302. 2~ typ1n1 & working for 40.o CamJJU$ Dr. N.B. or
• irep ace. C•m 548-9755 IA.KER CENTB n e ia res l off I c e. MC/BA/VISA 24 hrs. 1everal men. Liberal call AS'T·~l & ask for rm, 2 earaca. Kids & 714"837 3'744 LOST: BIBLE in leather benefits. call MONY Ray Gilman.
SOUTH COAST ~TIOHA.L IAMk An Independent Bank
849SunJ1owerSt, C.M.
E.01': small peta OK. ~ pr Ambaulldor lnD in Co.ti (714 )971)-2161 zipper cue. Name · Hol· ellable, employed 752-5131. EOE. 11/f' u ln ..,,,.., c u M ._,., u~ bor Ce female needed as•---;__ ____ _ IDO ... ove ..,,.. . a eea, ... ,, ..... r . n• AIRPORT OFFICES 9 % ly Visel in bible. CM l II BANKING 842-L121or960-5402 t.ral.lylocated.~rooms. ,,_ 11 50
0
area. REWARD. Ud housekeeper for busy. Auto messenger\ u _______ _.__. MANY wllb lctlcbeo, 1 '"' 2 room suites. 1 8:30AM call673-0134 young exec. Live rent AGGRISSIVI Um.e, Coot.act Jaci En· TaLER
phone" TV. Swimming services. Nolease req'd. freeinluuryoceaavtew .&mTUDE da. Title Insurance & t'orqur~a Mesa ore -n.IHdMffe'" pool, Jac&WJ, and rec. ~'!1J145Sui. !Dto 2208200 SN. ~0•. WTrwtl>Mdt IAst: Golden Rtve/lrlah LaflB'!coodo· Wtutrade A Trust, Newport Bch Expet pref'd. Call Mr.
All new 2 Bdnn, 2 ba1h In room. Dally & weeldy uc .. wo, e • · · Setter mix. Brown col· rel a. Forward back.gmd w a n" e d · S . h 0 e m.~ Donnelly at ~·2300.
HD at 9M2 Hamlltoo St. rates st.artJ.na from S54 a (714 )557·7010. of ~!ted I lar. Area ol Brtltol /Nwpt lafo" lUltad • • reply ~'ir:,~~ r~oxnpr ~~ llwf1~ AutomoUve Cal~ ~al
S3SO mo. 8-S, 546--'124· week. Olflce suite, M.V. al ~i:,,,~ooo2:d~ 81·644•2513 Clust.f10dAdt20t,Datly train . Benefits & TRANSRRMAN SaYt.cp ()peoHome2-5PM 645--'IMO •·· ~ d I 750 • • • Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, ..._ ....,.. , .. rr-Y ~ .. wy. e uxe. LowerCoata Rew a·r d G .o l d A.JI c.&alle5et.~f. 921627 man a ae men l o p · ._.,.. .. en"~·WOUou con· 2700 Harbor Blvd. ---------t~Su:•z•a-r ....... · 4200 ;,?;..2;air:,:1 ft. Pnd'er Faster Service Retriever, Male SI.In portunit1es. Apply In alder hi~y F1h vat~ Coalu Mesa.Ca 921526
QUIET, SHADY &: COZV. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..... · No Prepayment 5/14, Npt Ht.a area. Call W /F wilh Charisma to person. apprentice w t too s. Equal ()ppor Emptoyer
1 Br w/pvt patio. $195. ance apace for rent in 542-8834 ~. meet male 47+ Pouible StandatdSboeStores AAMCO. Cap. Bch
1T12Rona.ldRd.96Z-"77 GLAMOROUS Corona del Mar. Call Broker marriage Reply to: Ad 3C177So.Briatol,CM _496-_121_1 _____ _
....,.;;..CED YARD, KIDS 2 Bdrm. 2 Ba In Promon· OH.-.. Found: Puppy, 2-3 mo's oo 137. Daily Pilot P.O. •UTA.Iulo-YE Beauty r r..i'I _...._.. old, Bllt face. May ll, Box 1560 Costa Mesa ~ v-11 Ass·t needed for ou~)'
OK.3BR.S325. tory Polnl with forever CORO .... •DaM•R d 41 3rd vie: Wilson St., C.M. CA92S26 • 'AmbitiousCoupleWanted IOOIJ(HPllS operator. llrense rt• .,.....""_ VIEW . Decorator ~ ~ 1st, 2n T.D.'s . .,...,,.._ tome .. "'g""asmallbusl· '-"6311390 v•........,... ....... OFFICE Cred.llnoproblem. ....,........, ,_ "' Attouota receivable, ac· qua.vu. · rumlshed. Pool. Jac&Q.£1, 75,.590• nea p/tlme. Will not in· count& payable Relief
---------sauna. t.ennl.s. $350/Wlc. Two NEW presti&io~ or--"' ~· Blk & tan ~g. ••:,-w!! lerfere w J your present bl 'p Beauty salon in Hunt SPANISH STYLE, l'inale flceauit.-w/CdM charm Arranged by W 1s1de CM. Dobae! ~ job. Must be willing to PBX. caa er. Mk· ington Beach laking (.'On
level S BR owner's on.it ONTHEBEACH &: shared patio, So of CoutHomeLoans 6'2·7072/962·1360. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Jeam.llr.Hall,642-1634. nentpoiutioa,&OQdwor · fidenUalappUcauons ror
oo cul-de-sac. Near Spr· 4 Bdrm home with Coast Hwy. 560 sq n in Stt.ia• Ii l.D&CODd.IUoos. manicurist. Mu~t do
in&dale & Wa roer. privacy. $1000/Wk each suite. $'40 per mo. DO YOU NEED CASH? FOUND: Fem. Col Ile 1mf &NOii 7005 AMBITIOUS Couples acrylic nails. Please call
$42S/mo . Agen t al WATERFRONTHOMES Must see to believe Llt,2nd&3rd Puppy, choke chain.••••••~•••••••••••••••• wanting to 1upplement rorappointrnenl.963-0717
S.1371 or call owner at C.11631-1400 87S-23U ~=f~.ns Adami & Magnolia, HB. Credentialed Mualc family income SSO to Beauty ()perat.or N1&uel
84&6107. J~~~~~~~~~f;soo;Jsq;Q"'nn-:-. PPr;roC;;c;ess~ioo;;al~of.f.I Borrow $1000. Sl00.000 9&3-5430 Teacher avail for prtv ID· !:t P/time. 842-9Sl3 lor Huat Brtl au....as H111r t'a!>h1ons need!>
I. NI 1 · I flexible terms. past Found: lrls b Seller, structioa. 980-6108 a.ft 5. . ---------• aood <All·around h air ---------iealboa Island on bay. ace. ce ocauoo n f 1 Vi T lbe ., n ____ ... _ • New 2 BR" den w/fplc, new beaut bay view 3 back of Boat canyon, credit no problem. cau ema e. c : • rt -._.......... Apt Manager. mature •AUTO LOTMB4 !!.>' .!.!!,t. 499·2221 or
near Civic Center. Bel t>riba frpic.S7s-'1953' Lag Bcb. rn7/mo. Call usooobllgaUon. Busha rd, Ftn Valley. COOK.UllGCLASSESbe couple. New 100 uo1l ...,.,..,,,_ 5PM. 847-2323; art s. • • (n4)4!M-8031 STERLING FIN.SVCS 842-S326aft5pm. l/15, 1-1.2. 5 clasaes/ssl: adultcomp&ex. C.M. Apt FUU-or part·Ume. Easy,
96CH641 Balboa Bay Club studio Detk 5pac9 for R..t 714/951H610 (bier> , ,,,_,. .. Vic Rancho Saa ~-..1-~; ... ,... ,..., _10. + sal. No cbildren or pleasant work auiaUng Beauty salon Jn CM need!. ·1 J kin J · &AJ<:J1. uunuua~......-.... .... .. Call wkdays M the Mgr. Good pay and haJr atyUsts. 65% com· avlll · ast wee une QWIK 2nd.a, Make or buy Joaquin, small long balr . --· ' bmefi Opport · ~ 3'46 Lrg 2 BR co~do. W /D. $550. July $1000. 640-4287 Desk, chair, utillUes. StO·s·o.ooo. No pre· F cat. tortol•e shell. ~~ would .. ~..!...artl 642..an' d ta. unity for m ss1on. . refrlg. new crpt5, pat .. or64().53S7 Agent. 536-7504 • • ~ 111 own UUll&' a vancement. See Mr. pool,ChHd&sml petOK. paymt.penalty.673-7311. blk /brwn /red . nlte wt710 CM anUALOX Belanser. HOWARD BKKPIJRECEPT
$.1.'50. M'MBlA Jun. a.Sept 10. BeauUful· O.C. AJRPOlrT A.gt. REWARD! 5S7·9906 or ~ . pm. ' IMI ~Vl'Olel. Dove • Quall for growmg Irv. Co. Lite
l"9le 3144 ly decorated & complew· K .. u lrvlne Center oCfice Need cash fa.st? Use your 551M987. ._.__ w--a.....1 7075 neech Survey ~e. No Sta .. Newport Beach. t Y P' n a re q · d · C •I I ly furnished 2·sty S bdrm siatea from 132 to 2700 sq ~ua·ty ID Y""'r ._ __ ,. 2nd .,. _ _,,: Si·--.......... l. 5 ""• -,__ . salea. C.11 colJect ___ ...;._ _____ 1 831-0757. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 b h M d I .... ..,... ,.......,,.., cuuuu -~ ,.. Ii _,., -10 Blbysrtter wanted. over'----------at esa e ... ar ft. Will remodel to auit. . Call Dooa $44-3112, Vic: Adams 4 Magnolia, ••••••••••••••••••••••• orappt. _.._ Ul, lnfant. my bome. Ap-OOKK EEPf~R·Orangv WOODIRIDGE home. Custom pool & '1St~60 FarWestMortgage. HB.9118-2983,983--0841 Ellper. lady to do •-~ .. •A---.. n.... County A<'<'0 11nt1ng PIMIS APJS j a c. w I wate rf a 11 . bouseworlc Wed & Thurs "'"'""auu"""' . prox ......-w ... ,.,, ... e•es.
Gardener incl\.ided. $800. CdM dlx suites. uUI pd. MaMyW..tff 5030 Found: Fem. dog. brn opeo5484il6 Manufacturer or office flexi:::. ~.00/hr. ~~·Y 1 ~0~~c~u":~f~
Now you c an Uve In :;.es,0507 A/C, ample plmg. from ••••••••••••••••••••••• t.ooes, Mesa Verde area. partitions baa lmmed own · · Woodbridle too. Enjoy $16S. No lae n!IQ. 67s.&M>O 0 r 8 n ,. e C 0 u n t Y Red collar. M0-3890 ~r tor mot.her· openlnp ror auembly AUTOMOTIVE "'/ex per. 1114 I 549-2572
swimming, salling, bik· .F\Jm 2 BR Condo, C,M. • less home. Good cook. personnel. Apply In
ing & volleyball after a AvaU June 18 to Sept l. Main floor a~ M.nilable PubllahiDg Co. needs ln· Found: Large Male Lab. Uve·in . .-1343 peraon between Dam· USID CAI Por ~~r~a~~~n~;
day of work, as a ~.Sun; 751·5501 in Taj MaJfol 'Bldg. In vestor lor 2 new Orange lfuntingt.oa Harboratta, 3pm. Panel Concepts. ..CHAMIC! bmhwainCM.S49·3D4:! ..
member di the Village Lag Hls. 586-9070 County Publications· 8tM078 Former resident mgr Inc. 3001 S. Yale St, Su· Exe. salary, working
AalociaUon. Rutic l. 2, a VIEW. Fully. furnished Tenns neg, hlgb return. w 19~ yrs exper seeb U · ta Ana. E.O.E. t'('«MftUom for qualified bedroom apta. aet in a 2Br, 2ba. Avail May 22to Thia ls an unsecured in· Found: AJgban Hound. st 1pt manager poait.loo. used car mechanic to
lush poplar Is pine July22. $425/mo. ........ lllltal 4450 vestment. (110 892-4277 rmle. Vic: BolaaCbica & Z.3 days per wk. Beach perform hgbt mech.
la.odM:ape ON WATER 2Br. 2ba. ••••••••••••••••••••••• askforMr.Beot Botsa.HB.84&-6652 area.&42-4156btwn9&5. ll'l'rlllll~ work . Permanent,
FROM $340. fully furn. View " pool 4 DELUXE OFC'S Pvt party needs S50 to Found: Young Orange Help W.t.d 71 OQ 50=~ra vaned. Interest.Inc posa·
(114)S52-0400 ~/mf t H m Cool. rm., seat 2.5, all S60K 2nd TD loan on Male Cat. Looks like ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...,___,__. lmm-"1a•aty tlon ideal for aema· Cot Culver & Barranca 8 er r 0 n ° es paneled, sm. whse in re-Newport Beach property Morris. lnqul.re Laguna ,._.,...,.. "" "" ml.red type. Opp. for ad·
IOOtUCHPB
F 1L'hg. Exper . 7-10 ~r.1
Pegboard ::.yslem ... All'.
AIR. gen. ledger. T. bal..
Computer payroll for de·
lip firm. Good benefits.
Forappt.54().2860 __ ._~ . 631-1400 ar. t or 2 yr. lease. Lake t l""' Int ~-• ACCOUNTING LaDI •Short Term van cement . Near lbr Orange Tree coodo a •no . ,,. ... ,er s eqw· Bcb Caoyoo Sheller Sev ral & Asalgiunenta pool, tennis, lake setting'. VacatiOll Rentah 4250 Forest area. Kent ty S_115K. Agt 548·4063 497·3S52or"9C·7346 ~e:'~!:PT! ge~~j 3 SbitlsAvailable. Oranil' County Airport. Bookkeeper. p /tlme. J
Avail Juae 1. SllS. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Harlcins. . anytime. I nnattng. Gen'len· Musttuiveowntranap. See Mr . Belange r , day1> wk. Hrs Oex1blt' 67S-92Z9 On Lake Arrowhead, 3 714·581·9393 V..f T t Lost : Fem Siamese. r-•l b C:C.T IUS20 HOWARD Chevrolet. Sal open. 751·9560 Van ----------1 BR. 3 ba condo. New Sq f\ C 2 N rt -;Jf'" ,.. SO"!IS "Burrita"Vlc: Fairview lrles, trial alance & ocllly5 Dove & Quall Sis .. MatreJna.Ageney individual house w /condo beach/dock, Wk/season. 7liO • • on ewpo JI Ave, CM. AA 7; 957~0. financial report. Work Free. Top PQ. Vac Pay Newport Beach.
advantages. Zero yard Owner.213/541-8196 !~':.!112· Lease. Call ....................... UHl;S40-770t for small dynamic pro-YidorTt .. IS•'r IOOIOCllPB
ma int. Pool. tennis, .....,....., LOWEST pebertyfideveflriopersdt' XJnt s.nka Babysitter. P(f, 2 small Full cbar&e, full or "Part
sauna. om etc. 2 Br, 2 So. Lake Tahoe condo. Approx. 750 sq. ft. Zooed Lost: 5 /14/. Sml wht oe ta. en Y al· DivWalterKidde&Co ~7~ home. CM time .ror upholstery, de·
ba, mirrored wardrobes, Sips 6. Dock. pool. S32S C-2. wtr as cu pd. $240. llit•edloht ~:~'.!';:· ~:~ =:;a~ Doo.na 2J0112S. E.Briatol area. · ooratlnaco.MU400
lrg pvt pat, dbl gar wkly.$1l50wknd.644-4i604 mo. 130 E. l7lb St. C.M. fdT.D:a.mso Nwprt HgU area , StelO Newport Beach Blbysltter, care tor 3Yr BusboyiGlrls wanted. 3;, ~ri,:::J~~esmo. Hawaii , new huge Ste.S.Doyle548-1US8 211dT.D.Loms. lSthJ()rangeAve.Am.to •cc-~ <~~~W::& ~·.fM~R/·~~· Mon ·Wed.experne<:ess --------·-1 waterfront house. ~ig CANNERYVILLAGEon FairestTenn.uincel!K9 Gus. Needs medlcaUon. A """'......, .. -uve-aa ary. Apply In person TheV1r L.acJ-aleecll 3141 lsland. $175 wit. booking 31s t St. 870 s q ft SattterMlll)Co. Reward. ~ after ca.ax Carrs J rl Exper." refs. S52-56'18, tor Hugo Inn. '361 Chrr
••••••••••••••••••••••• oow.968-621.5,536-7759 w/customel' prkg. AN· 642-2171 545-0611 6PM. A full Ume posttk>o ls ~p=ffly 5.S7·2ill06 =eeal~~I Bch. No
OCEANFRONTDELUX Mountalnhldeaway Lake TI QUE , GIFT . Found: Male German available for an In· BABYSITTER·mature.&.;.... __ __......._ ___ _
Yearly lae, 2 BDRM Arrowhead 3 Br• frpl MARLNE. CLOTHING Retired couple bas mooey Sbepberd pup. Approx dlvidual wbo likes to reliable, WUlted for aum· fetena
from$500•646--0505 loc on m'tn st~eam: BOUTIQUE. Lease by tolend.t.st&2n.dTD'a 4.5 mo's old. Nr El ~=1!1!':7.:~~ rner,mybome.163-1586. cashier, prr & f'/T.
Ocean view 2 8dnn apt densely wooded. $75 ~~~· 675·6909 or Ag_enl,Hl3'7·3'744 DoradoBank.LaPHRd accuraeya.ndspeed.Of· ASSEMll.B~ 963-159laft6PM. company benellb. Call
w /pool. $375/lse. Laguna wkend. Eves.551-4l020. Private party will pay atC.bot.586-1.582 fice experience is es&en· For eledro mechanical BABYSITTER. mature. for app·t. 557-c700. ext
Really4M--007'7 ._...tosa.r. 4300 Main St. HB. suillble re· more tor your 2nd T.D. FOUND Sm long haired tial for this position. devices . £xper in for 11 mo. old gjrl. Mon.,_24411_. ______ _
Stur:bo bllt to bea b ••••••••••••••••••••••• tail or professional. Bllt Fastsrvc. 642-3573 bllc Pete m~. Vic Moote Wort In pleasant en-medwllcaJ a.saemblY of Fri. morning 673·82SS CA.R WASH H8.P • ~ c . toocean MS-3720 Vista. CM 645·3408; vlroament with good amall part.a pref'd Will CdM Great loc. Security. fl65. •IE SB.lCTIYl• · Pvt pty seeking ~ 1st company benefits iDcllld-Dawi · ---------1 Pull & par1·Ume
Util pd.493-7137;4!M-Galnareliable ltntalsW..twd 460 TD money. IMM at lK 66-Sln. iog 2 weeks vacation trainst,_.'c OSys~C· H.u-BabY9ltter for working lB&Over
or'94-2797 roommate. ••••••••••••••••••••••• oo Npt com'l bldg. Also FOUND: Fem. Collie. atur oae year. company A "' ,. .......,. mother lloo·Frl. 2 girls Metro Car Wash Ms-7464. Wanted: house to lease. have 10% $12.300 2Dd for Huntington Beach. paid lf'OUP Insurance, 1138Baker,CoetaMesa ages I le 4. Close to1 __ 2950 __ H __ ar_bo_r _B_l._C_M_
Mtwportm.cd 3169 •SHA.REAHOME• ~e3~i1::2~:M&~ ro:~:. 640-1391. Ask 536-UB&,Laurie ~ unioo, etc. Apply F.qual=::ployer ~~~~~':'n shier·Nursery ········~··-········· Share a br oo Bat. Peain. 640-0776 , rtolMlh 5310 "'8 .a. ..a.l!!.11! CO ... 51 epm. .F\J1.1 " part time. Apply P.AIKHE'WPORT $125/mo.BJU : · NOWAVAIL. •••••••••••••••••••••" ~ A ~--------Wes-Cal Nursery. l.S640
B11che1ors. l or 67~ Wanted: 2 or 3 Bdrms =edyl~ SpiriWRl'Cldlr DAILY PILOT ~bysitter. Hiidl'f.' Amy, ~ r ~k h u rs t . .. _ _._,...,,,·T--·--wtth garage. Taite year ••..cSo ElCam'-oR""al 330W BAYSf Aaaembly 'm21mo'so • mcute1 __ es ___ t.e_r_. ___ _ DCUIVU~m .. .;:;:.Ulso"""" ~... MtedAlaa h7 lse.Localrefa.541·3580 Brdter 963-4567 u..w • ... "' COST.AM"""'·· & a eood airl. I've lost
l'IV _.. ... ft-I ·--" ' SanClemente. Fully lie. ~ TDllNEE dad..... c.a.SHIER s --ctacular spa. tota •0 riV&eBal..,.....,.~ Find For appt, 492-'72116 Between lbe houra of HLN my Vol• my momma A ~ ~··TatGHT P RSON .& •! ha a to w or Is. my Tele,..,."n"" N---'ed for recreation program "~ ......._/l••nt/HC..CI• IAM·M>M. Call for ap-tttS0111.£1S .,...., .,, eau
social proif8m.1poola. ~r:-CV.m.s 'DHuMrm> ffllanc. Penwla/ RELAXINGMASSAOE polntmmtpleue ~ ~taW=a~:~&~ Sa~ tor C.~'';h·
tenDJa courts. At Fas nT •• .._.. .._ ........ r .... --.. ....................... Lost & Foiiltd Bob James-Llc Maaaeu.r 642-432. bt. 277 & PACIERS be M A.,...y 8-~ Mon -• e '-'AC --r-r~.--~--" Outcall~9 494 5Ul )'OU Jp mer oa t.bru Earrs Plumbln&. Inc .. Island. Ja mboree & Sa cu ~~ ........ ••-••••••••••••••••••• • · F.qual Fri, 11-4. Call after 4; 15 33 W . L I n co I n .
Joaquin Hills Road. S32..tl.34Slnceli7l OppwMllty 5005 ...-.-.c:1•llh 5100 u.a.~5.a.GE Opportunity Employer NEEDED ~lrvme Ana heim o r phone
(7141644-1900 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ ~ IMMEDIATELY!! ---------1 fi42,1753extll
•oa•rvE... ~~-a_.loowe r~oromhousmaettne TRAVB.AGEHCY scnau 1ETS RGUESCREORTMOD
5
B.S ... ______ 1111 TOftPAYI!! Bahysluer wanted tor·•-------..._.~ ·~ 1, IUUft"\. All shl.fta. day, swine & eves. Must have own CASHIERS
Eastbluff 3. br, 2 ba. Corona del Mar. Lit & FRANCHISE Hl~S OUJCAUOHLY ACCOUNTS araveyard includes l.raDlp.831-0728 F/tJme.GoodPay
Lease. lncl. spac. mast.er last. 613-5284 The new way to own a ~ftt.ft RICEIVAIU/ wknda. Long & short Babysitter needed for 2 yr Growth co.~ Locations
suite, din rm & dbl travel agency. Travel Nudist -Erase -631..Ut I llW~G term au.lgnment.s. Holl· old daughter. s days wk. We train. Co. Benefits
garage. Auto door Hse w /pool-spa $135. See Network.Startyourown. Zo b s " day & v~catlon pay. 8.5. Good pay. Jn my METROCARWASH
opener avail. Pool & ~ .. i:_ppreKc.B 15252 Not· Exp. no t r e qui r ed . m~EEZ'We -•SA~oy•5* CLERK
8
Hoapltaluation plan home. San•a Ana .-... 2950Harbor Bl.CM recreation area. Adult.s ''&''am. · Complete support & long " vail. .. • ..... ....... ., No ........ S42S t 1 Jd..... Here's the all-limt! quea· Outcall Muaaae 540-2.100. exl. 911. Diane. C ... ~ ..... a -v· .,....... · Roommate wanted. COM erm sen ce prov cu. lion they abou1d ut on a 9734329 Immediate opening on -"'
865 Amigos Way beach apt. S18S + .,-, util. Ca I I M r . Cb a r I e s TV quiz program: "What ---------busy deak ror lndlvtdual Blnldng For restaurant. Must be
Badwloc Unit.I. 1 Block Rosemary.~12 714-83S-9:M2 doyousaytoSatanwben •SHERJLEE• with at laat l year of SATWOllC eJC11tt'd. Apply to Food
f bea b. AU util aid be SNEEZES?" Certified lluaease v. rte d Ac~ 0 u D t s Experienced teller only. Mgr. HcMI Laguna. 425 rom c P ·Newport Beach ocean· SAMCLEMBCTE HotaeC.lls·Byappt. Recelvable1Blllin1 ex· ll•C..-Drf'f• S. Coast Hwy, Laguna
No pets, $250/mo. 201 E. front. 3 bdrm, Fem pre· TRIM GYM Belly Dancing Lessons 838.Q38 ~ence. Wiii prepare ~M7441 Eam orr pay for part. _BB_•_ch_. _ _._.1_is_1. __ _ Balboa Blvd. can Sue !erred. S7S-2986 Call LU ---------·-s:56-7707 Lad 1 ea ex er c I a e . 979-70l8 YOloea from aalel or· CAcrou From time employment. call _.&..IL.I-_~ ...._~ Offlcea..tal 4400 massage & nutrition --------FOXY LADY dera, post to ules Ota.apCo.Alrport> lor appt with personnel ~ netu.u
Dplx 3Br, 2Ba, 2 car••••••••••••••••••••••• center. All equipment In· National Blue Ribbon "-&..-u-~ journal and •wnmarbe F.qualOpporEmployer dept.9AM--'PM.M·F. Uve m • d•Y9 In June garaae w /opnr. 1800 aq ......... G al ~ ,._ at mootll end Apply pay-f\111 ch&r1e. CM area.
(l, balcony, $625 mo. THI! EFFICIENT cl......... real pe>tenti . Winner-Shoe Repair. M/C 731· 561 ,· ed ' Cl11ZEN'SBA""' S46-1.21119
A II """ WUI train. Sycamore Plaaa. Op· ment.a rece v on ac· ---------"'""' ------va Jun 1. ........ 32S4 or ALTERNATIVE BERTIIA HENRY poaite Poat Office. San c I count. Calculate sales Oll'COSTA MESA jj42,.2741for appt. Mo. to mo. rent Incl: REALTORS Jn•11 Ca"'•trano PREGNANT! ar ng. commissions. Interface Assemblers 2970 Harbor Blvd Clerical Kardell, posting
R Del M ...... -..... confidential counselln1 & with ma.rkeUJll •IMI ahlp· Ccls\a Mesa 1714 , !J79.4200 c I e r k " m 111 i n t a 1 n Steps to beach. L.rg 2 BR, e c e p t . s e r v . • 215 ar --4121 uff 5125 referral AbortJOft, adop-....... -... .... -eat in re· E 1 0 perpetual inventory rt>·
beam celling. frplc, gar penoaalir.ed phone cov· ~P U n&keepin& _..I ,---bl RECJRONIC qua ppo rtunity cords. Must have !edible ..._~r n .f req'd erage, conf. rm. mail 0 r •. o g e C ount Y ·~···••••• .. •••••••••• . ao v DI pro ems, etc. Employer M/F handwntlng •· s1m• pie
....,.,. • nc • serv .• underground prkg Publtabln1 Co needs In· BILL APCARE 54'1·2563 Accurate l.YPlnl •kills ... '6SO .642-4657 •---~rt. vest.or for 2 new Oranie .._, aodtbeabilitytoopente math capabilities. Hr~ ........... ·~ c LIMDA&Y-10.. t mEMBLERS Bankl.n• 1-5.Moot.bruFrl.~tfr· WESTCLIFF 2br. pool, THE VE ounty Publicatlons. PROBLEMS? • •flY are a mua · .. aduJta, 00 pets. $325 mo. SUITE ~Sf70 Terms neg, bip return. Oah:4M•t•I' Computer uposure a EXECUTIVE in&e beoefita. Al> at
673-QMO ' 11lis ls ao umecured In-Ctil~G.-...r. .... ... ,_ofltl pl1.11. Pleaae apply In AYnet Elect.roolca, 350 OFFtCESPACE vestment. m•> 992.4277 CIMc ServingaUOranpCo. person. TolnlertelectroaiccoD'· ~rPKTAIJ MCConruclt.C.11. ~9825yrly forleaae.2'110sqft. Y.blk asUorMr.Bent. 1 9•1611 83S-731J =.'::/"io::c~;~~ ~LI
Pe B root~~~ off S.D. Frwy on Crown Lease email beach hotel. AVOID BANKRUPTCY DANCEOFFUN TltBfDATA uaembllea after flow Clerical 1 roma. ValleyParkway.llluloo little money mtaker. Consolidate and reduce Beaut. oude &irl.s dance CORP. aoklerproceas. Requires SANTIAGO YOU .ARE
SPECIAL!
Promontory Pt 2br, 2ba, Viejo.831-3881 $10,000.536-70M payme nts thru U.S . & rap aeuloo. Pvt "mlr· Standard Memories abWt)' to lnterl>ttt com· BAll..IK
t'Gt.h<>dral ceil'1, bet vu. Court Plan without bor· rored rooms. lOAM to DMalon ponmt colOr codes and " ~ )'Tly, evall 1/1. Of. RllRIMT! Expanding business. Op· row I a ti . S T 0 P MM Mon·Sat, UPN to AnAppUedllapeticsCo hand solder ~lr~ult
138·902 evsJ wtn I We'veeG'•Prinafeverat portunlty tor am1bitiou.s f'orrlosuret. earnlah· 8PM &m. 625 N. Euclid. 3400W.Segerstrom wires. Qualified •PPll·
fn.3'11. Lido Mar(na VlllaJe. peraonto1llP1>letnen1 in· menl•. aulls. & r e -An.ah.53$-5."3 SantaADa.CAmot cant• mo apply In
---------•WbUettlutawe'reolfer-come.Cullle4·~7forln· poeseutam. FREESESSIONWtAD •n•1 ~-....... 2u -rsoa between I All
B A Y V I E W . lqfnereotonbMut.of-t.enn.w. t. I 4tcylfUuded ' _._ ...... ~ u All« PbOoe for
EAST BLUFF 1tunntn1 flee apace ovtrlonkiol INTERESTED IN ,,_ PALM & CARD AP F.ql&ll ~Y an appoinlftleDi af (714)
2br. 2be. trplc. Lie pa~ the Bay. Space from 290 SELLING YOUR WtW c 6 .... ••.a. Aw.$ Em~er M/F ~10
pool. lilata&re adult.a. No to 12'7011q. ft. lncl. crpts, COIN • ••"'""RY' ~ ~~~~~~~~ pets. sns. mo.. M).OMI d r p I • A I c . 5 d • 1 """'".,., . 10'"" Soedal ~ prtce wttb th1t t: Jao)IGrial aerv. •all &&UI CAU..NOWI .......... rliir:• ed. Hu Paycblcpowtrot._ ______ lillill
ON WATER. dock few JO' MPI 1..ac ..,,.. ...... ..._ -~.. L.-91oa..-..__ I Bdrm 1 .. a•ti. ApL pd.. Take advUltace ol '" • ,,.._ ....... 10" .... r Acdnl -.-C •OUGHS
CllPORATION uu.t.. • .,.~ ou:rsprtqfevv .. .tstr.e Colftl•uodri•t:lncel983 Leif&,_. HOO wlUama•youl ~wlU ~y
Cable TV. $850/mo. rent offer. We'll pro· C7141147•1934 ••••••••••••-••••• .. t.ellyourPut.Prt9eftt.4' o...--........... ..a. Waterfront Home• ""'·t ._ .... _ -• .......,. to"•• MOO bebb'comel.oourMftlC!ll Los t Norwelllft cu.ure ....... _)'OUOO CIDYadoul•~·
-413-1·-------1 by awnmer. Call or stop Btaut7 Salou. L•l'tlll• F.Jkbound. ~c Oranae • Love, Jlar'JU,,." Bui•· booUHpln1 a1111n· ~ Jlto 1br-~57 •• ..U~1 bwtn Beach, Prtme toe. •ooo Del Mar. Work. Mf..1671 ~111· Avail. for private mata. Work c1011 to
••••••••••••••••••••••• ...... • • ....... cN\ n........ a1111 hmtUA..'ITM ...... • so~;. ""om•. ,. ... ,. Udo lllartoa VW.C• :..~17· _, . ..,, ••• :==vi=· 221 W. Whl«.Wr Blvd. .... 0 to St. AcCOGD• 3~::~']f~11;!1~ Jm\lla()parfo -L06T: Red Dobl'mWn, 'I LaHabn 11J/9J'Mrm tao"-ttttdtd U1ruout
Jd. SllO. ........ (•t ~;r.:;::.... ..;.=1 IOZO :o-eni:tt.a~c~:.: DIVORC£1tsallkrupieJ' ~Halt'•
W.:d 9 1'• 31fl ....................... qaMUOOa. 141·11M aft ~ :.=..~'°" A~PI ............... -••••• u rou'"re DGt ~lhe xcro.. llGO,OOOmveet· tPM aoo&:Ma1D.•'°1
New I Br 1pl. nr UWe 8da \n cd1 DmllbuJa•OOO.OOOuoll ---~------DhawtlOll:4 No.,._.,Qalioalld
Wtllmlrwter UO.p. No JOU're mlaa1nl • lol oi ID Houltoo. 1°'51 fttll.m. Ha"'~JUUwant IU.D71 lntMQt1el~
1»«l1. Call for lDfo, 0•••1 lDlormaUoo H Ot.hera avaUabl•. Call to..Uf Cluall'ted ads do * • 114"'5-:4lo:J
...,.lQOL -.elhuomureaLbuY9. now,~l.54, •ll· ljW'llLMWIJI. tt•1111{th•••
-
ZS72$leroelmo Rold M1elion Viejo. CA IQ87I <San DWIO . .,..,,., to El
Toro Rd., east t o Jtroelmo Rd I .outb to Loa.Aliaolt
EqUaJ 0pp hiptrr • 1r
SEU. tdlt ltetm wtth a
DaUy PUot ClaasllJtd Ad
Excellent op port un It)'
for 1tn £x•cu11ve
Secretary with some beDklna •xPOn~te pre· fened. Mutt have good
abortkand and typ1na
aldlla.. You will Ub•ork·
bl& tn ow --lat •t·
.... and wUI 9*1
• llDe alarJ and many
........ benefits. Coo·
veafilrit Tuadn locaUon.
"-"COG.tact;
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.............. y_. cWc..,.,. a aoc. .......... ,
PACIFIC
Pa5qMMB:
Th4lf1dlly • ...., 11. 197'1
C.., 'a ClllWC.. ~ h•1•9 I' edl I I .............................................................................................. ·······~···············
KATHLEEN Uiu'a Home RepallS, 30 Childcare ln my bomt-. Slip Covera, Dra penes. GARDENING f1oors. carpets. bath•. Brickwork. Small Jobs . Resl~ntlal/Commcrcial REPAIR & REROOF. Ali
FLANAGAN yn exp. Doon. windows, Vlc. 19th/Pomona. Aaea bed 1pr.ada, UJ>hol.ltery SERVICE wal.11, paUot. windows. Newport, Costa Mesa 6 16 yrs exp, ref. to'ree t y p E's ·s h 1 n g I e s
ACCO U NTIN O ptiUoutc:.~HOIM 3-1 ~wk.645-84.34 cu1hion1 & pillows . 548-8375 Spec.price!orvacantre· 1rvme.675-3175eves. esUmate.GeneS8H33S. rockshakes-compo-tar BUSIN~ SERVICES. Oastom Cabtt~. free est. sldeocts Free est S41 :1930 S13tema • prottdUttS lDd carpenter. eomm'I. Cuwttodor Jerry's lnl. Decorators Exp. Japanese Gard~er. 'l"boMGuys 9'74.0SlO Mo•Mt Paul F. Gannon · ·
aoeei&lilta; acct'1 thna tta. No job too small. ••••••••••••••••••••••• welcome, 862""'~ ~plete yard service. -••••••••••••••••••••••• Wallpapertna Craftsman Re-Roof For Less
ffoanclal statements : John. 5.1H I082or 646--5031 R.J . Hultman 4' Son. Reliable &neat. 645-0694 Immaculate Cleaning Co. MOVING? 2131434-3942 Call Anytime
COil acct 'I . cub now Remodel & additions. Bedrical Rell bl Ex J For thou who deserve 894-0t.21 ~ · bu au,.nter &s Cabinet wrk su-46'4or548-4S4l. ••••••••••••••••••••••• a e pr apanese lhebest. "ni&-0377 Let Venatile 's exper'd WALLPAPERINO P"Ql ; pun: llll n-eeF..at.SmlJobs &re· U -~...a.a.Bond-" 11.&...&...L.-...1Ri---....1 Gardener. Reas. Free prof lonals k Wltha Woman'sTouch. SllylcJllils & aventory control: pairs. 673·5125 eves . ce."""'.. ..,.. rwa.v ......... nc est. 645-~0 aft 5:30. RoMmarie's Houseclean· nex~ove :t'*a:i:"tb Jan Blevma.~·1263 ..................... ..
libraries oataloged; Al""A UMOOB.li..t.ft_ Uc3'Z71.36 645-81n4 Mike Ing Refs. reuon. Own . k 1· b b b valuables document•· ..... nw • . --trans.642·1403.fM.5.3'39 transition on you & your PalnUna. Inter & exter. Y •a ts ric ten u p
tioa. Call neat.oesa ex-c.,.ts.r.tce CustomRoom Adds riELECTRJCIAN-Priced GwNls.rvtces . budget.~aoytJme neat. llef"s. Free est. ~:.t':.'eao1;r~ .. 2Ys~ .. ~ns.
perts. n•t~ ....................... CabJDell Countertope gbl-Cree estimate OD ....................... The Moppets Cleanmg , ..... " ""9 Cal1 Gre1 648-5631 --•
4_.•11 •--'-rpet Man will lay yours Apt·Office-Comm-Alt. LJ.l~~~!mall jo~3 '"'""' HANDYMCAN. HI omt~s~ ~rvtfs ceCa. ,ltopl c..oa ~!· work ........... ~••••••••• • ........., ~ ~~~ 661·0151 ~..... -.-or mine Repairs & CustomHomes &Units ............... UI ..,....,. a pts. onac e n IOUll .... • .._......... PETEBSP INTING .--_,,_..,.. r.........,.•--i..
·-··················· · · Quality not Quantity Craft.sma c.u 645-0302 • A ••••••••••••••••••••••• -..-B •I AppliaoceServ clearung too! Guar work Wm.B. Andersoo-Bldr r.tate S.. n. Hou 1 t c l e an In g -Expr'd. Reas Rates. p-•-1 ..a.1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• TRIPCHARGE$10. at biger aavangs. Free FreeEst. 63Hl361 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Dependable &JldHonest. Free Est. Call Gene .... tedwal ara.,...ca RepairyourTVtapedeck
-M-aft s A est.1·988-675"4 &tat.e & household sales, Art' H d d 642.&922 552"'°"58 llurala"'1"''· Sta'eO. Save$$$.~ -.. -.uo, . . al Build' ti Fre s an ymen oes ~-211' aft5 ~ 957·0100 Shampoo & steam cle1t11. tor e!eeks ad'd'if1:~r~~: exp.ulln' an~~· e all. Can't beat OUR Housecleaning S4 hr All PROFESSIONAL •--·-------
........ , .. ,. ~10bmlnrighbt1enersh :C1wht aldential projects-joint ~ t n · ' prica~;.~lyumpb~t!t:!lgect~ Barbara and Patty Refs. Painting. lntert Exter. ~••••••••••••••••• • .
u•• .. ••••••••••••••••• ~..-. eac · ean ventures. Ca ll 960-4180 .----ca ' ........ • · • 963-2304 Reas. work guar6'2..oa86 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •Save Mooe liv, din rm, hall SlS. Avg aft Sor 536-6974 •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• drywall. 846-8319 . Custom redwood patio CERAMIC TILE. Special·
Dr1 • ~ .rm $7.SO. couch $10, chr FQl1nl.ca COllnter Tops In· L.-.cap•g P~Ung. Extr4Jntr. Ex· coverall decks. ty: Entrieatnoors. ~yr.-
•R ve~11y1 r:rr1ngt.lot $.'>. Guar ellm pet odor. Custom remodellng &re· stalled to your spec1flca· Gt'...._ ....................... P"d. honest. neat. reu. MS-2133 exp . S ml r e p a irs . •LT~··~e C MoaS~~ Cpt rep~. 15 yrs expr. pair. 15 yrs In area. re· tions.Latest colors &de· •••"::":':?••••••••••••••• LANDSCAPING Uc'd964·100Dave ........ ~ 982-1883 '
AspbJt&46-4811. ~-0~0i myse lf. Refs ~·~~00.:':!~~iYu:ixl~~~~ signs. Free est. S7S-ll18 Haul. akiploader dump Re~~nces. F\ne . Exter. ~ainUng by ••••••••••••••••••••••• CERAMIC tile. New or re ·
lm••Stnice ,. _ _./~---"-we lcom e . P al umbo Gat•MtMJ trk, grading, trtt wrk. R.Si.nor. St. Uc .. Ina. Try Neatpatches&textures model. Free est. Sml
.......,....., -.....-Const.962.aa14 ••••••••••••••••••••••• demoUUons etc.831-1257 Di g -It L a ndscap e . me.836-MM24brs. Rlllm. ltl-1439 jobl welcome. 848·2968 •••••••••••••••••••••• • ••••••••••••••••• • ••• • • ---------Reason prices Free est aft~
DMVProblems? Founda tions retaining Randy T8ytor Construe· CLEANUPS · th 1819 CallanYumes46.7070 . p .. Yotr C..... Pt iln1 •---------Let our OMV e xperts 11 bl k t . R od dd" GARDENING -EDUre •••••••••••••••••-•••• c:i-..i.n..i ..... m· r-•.a-. -••••••••••••••••••••• 'NI daw C.ll • 11 I bel Call AIM En wa s. oc s, pa 10s. hon. em els, a 1· Harbor area E x · La ~-..-'C>U....::n • ..!..J.oo· f f · ~1. Uc'd. Uons&patios. 673.QMS. pen'enced reasonable 0CC Student. 1 Too truck. wncare, regular accts. t1al homes, int. & ext. HOMESAVERS. Plumb· ••••••••••••••••••••••• _.,..-es or ree con· Ucensed&booded · · Truh, tree trim, Ron Homes. buahleas. apta. Please check our re· ing Is Heating. Free est . Windows cleaned, r E"·
sult.aUon. sz::>.6728 All phases concrete & BobG44-4637 64.Z-5703, W1IM489 847-6461 ferencea. Lie • 320881 $10 hr. Honest & reliable asonable, bus inesses.
C.,..ecr ~=~~It. A~o~[:.m~~· e:{~ •VER\'LOWPRJC~• CHEAPEST hauling in CustocpLandscape ¥=rQ!~· rree eat. = ~~c OK. bomealrapta.84'7·4-Ml
-·•••••••••••••••••••••• Spiro. 5411-8250. Lic'd. OnGardenlngMa1Dt. town. Fr. esta. CHEAP! Services. Ken. · or Your maiddoesolt dowtn· ~.Free est, Any Pa tios, drive .... a ys , George ~2015 6Q..2985or6'5-1390 6"-3770 ProlpainUng&prep. Ext. looflllg dows" We do. Call us ~~Y~~ll All&JI or aidewalkss4s~ess. Clea n-ups, Haufing . lluucll • !I U.I•-Mot. Low rates. Rera ....... , ................ 631-<r217or6'5-2032
----------1---------•Uyouwantyouradvertis· Lltndscaping . _Im ·••••••••••••••••••••••• ••·•••••••••••••••••••• ~.~ ~rroR~ESS . Jfyouwantyouradverti.!i·
Jim's Boat carpenter & GARAGE SALE ads in Ing measage to reach med iat e servicing . Want a REALLY CLEAN NO WAX VINYL \'.OUNG MAN .. s yrs expr estab 35 ~~t:J1 tl::ki ing message to reach
fiberglaas repairs. etc. the Daily Pilot bring hap· more peop~e. at lower 642·9907 HOUSE? Call Gtngbam All brands. 1n walleovenng. Free Gunn 549-2ll6l more people a t tower Lorates.re!s.646-4778 pyresu.Jts.To placeyour cost, Class1f1ed ls the GirlFreeeat645-5123 Freeestirnatea esta.~6Andy. cost. Classified is the
drawing card, phone way to go! Call Now! Find what you want tD Rinehart Floorcoverio& Sell things fast with Daily way to go! CaJl Now •
Sellidleitema 642-5678 &e5678today! 642.-5671 Daily Pil"otCfa.ssifieda. Want Ad Results 642-5678 848-2818 Want Ad Help? 6'2·5678 PUotWaotAda. 642-5678
twpW_... 710 HlfpW_..., 710G HefpWmthd 7100 HefpW..W 7100 HlfpW..eed 7100 ... W..ted 71 HlfpW..... 7100 twpW..e.d 71 ..... W..e.d 7100 ................................................................................................................................................................ ··~ .................................. , ....... .
Cl.EllCAL COOK. p /t'-
Apply in person 3-Spm
Moo thru Fri, Coco's By
The Ai rport, 4647
MacArthur Blvd, N.8 .
DATAINTIY D94TAL/ORTHO Gectroaic Installer. Ap· GeneralOff~ ~.live in. Ex· Ace~ I"'? a.tr CHAIRSIDE. p /time, plicatioas for 1.nataller Is FIMAMCI Bookkeeping experience. per. Paid health lnaur. I& U.-a..11
l'UJJ time position open non-smoker. Fountain t.edmiclan, exper in the Large Resld'l/Comm'I typtna, & some boating vllC8Um. Ill.tit drive. be Coronadel Mar
as a v ideo display Valley97'9-1400 marine field ~·d. lstor Builders/Developer re· knowledge. Apply at free to travel. No Part-time, afteroooo-All s kills urgently
needed. Long 4: short
term asslgnmeata. Holl·
day It vacatloo pay. COOKS. breakfast lunch
Hospitallulion plan Ir dinner. Ma Darter's,
t.enninal operator for a ta1 . . S~"bclleass. CalFJC'orlianc dtD.e: a~indivldualtobead Pacific Ricging Co. amokeu. SlU Wk. nilbtl. $2.7S/1tart. Over Bas ic t Four m In i . Den recepUorust. C.M. --• div. Stn>og con-631·2181 63HllM9 21. computer . Some ex-area. Exper. pref. 4 day tervie.w, ~244.1. ult for tacta to develop commit· 8'f3..7SJO
perience isdesirable. but wk.40hrs.645-7SIO Larry. ~forprojectlO&lla& Genroral Office IMSUl•MCE wUJ train individb.aJ with eqult;y capdal. Track re· ~ Qllta lleu .\4eDC)' olrs LIV&IN /Jlature. depen· avai.labte 212 E. 17th St, CM
dernoastrat.ed typhlg ac· •D&n'AL Electra.le Tedls cord&refs a must. Write Ute typiDg •bookkeep-excelopportu:ntty for gas da b,I e ~eeded for
VOLT
ft "'·"'' ' 11 • ••~I ~ 'of 'I • 01 I •
3141 Ca f 11 Drhe
54M741
(Aerou From
Orange Co. Airport)
Equal Oppor Employer
Cl.EllS
COOKS curacy andspeed.Work P e riodo ntis t nee d s lmmed apeniaga •OP· Vaco Developers, Inc. ing.NewportFloorCov· w1exp Pay I& working bdpg1childcare.Age 6
Immediate opening for In pleasant environment p/time asst to work front portunilles ln an estab. P.O. Box 2M9, Laguna eriDg,675-1836 ccndilions the best (714 > & 10. Your Bdrm & bath.
exper'd in breakfast & with good company & back. Exper. pref'd. co. in Orange Co. airprt Hilla,92653 &'.2-6500 NptBch. n4!7:58-l!M5.
lunc h . # 16 Fas hion be nefits i ncluding 2 Xray cert req'd. Sal area. Applicants to JANITOR MAID. 5 Days per wk.
Island, N.B. weeb vacation after oi:ide open. H.B. 842-6631 ~u~c r:::t!:'m!': Salee~~work. ,.!-SC:~=E Ptrime. Laundramat 16-18 hrs wk, $4 hr. No *c~sw::a..........,. ~!!ar, compa ny pa1 DeotalAuistant Receo1 analog & di"'tal ..,_ h Good Nor So ~ 673-Ui80 smoking. Exper req·d. ""'"' Ant...., group insurance, credit 'd 1 .,.. Newport ocac . pay. aee. me """" 9'7S-012l XLMTPAY unioo,etc.Applyat WedCa&1Fr1_!.,~'d. exper req · nterview koowledge of Pacific are long term. Immed. ~ ne1 needed 1---------0RANGECOAST -.ruu11 byapptonlY,SS7·9051 ask CoestlsMexicanfuhiDg. assignments. Apply, Moo-Fri./tr.opport~: Maid, live-~. lovely N.B. GoodSWfh A•aiL DENTAL for Busch. Plus reason. mechanical Mao~er-. Inc .• 448 W. ty to learn grooming, all home w/pnvate room. 5 ~~~~!7,:>°m DAILY PILOT Do you like people? 0o Engineers =t: ::~r!~ 1Stbua;~~~t breeds.546-2848. ~aP!~"~k.,°dPs r:~f~r~:3:
Marine Ave, Balboa Isle 330 W. Bay St .• CM you want to use your JI. ENGINEER <U"-...u.. .. between the hours or man. Send resume to: _,.........., I(~ Opr Housekeeping, cooking.
Counttt help for fut food 8:00AM·5:00PM ~A7~~esa week ? Fresh out or graduate Box 174. c/o Dally Pilot, F.qual()pporEmp\oyer n.e Jolfy Roger lac. is need own trans. Non
restaurant. 1 person CalUor achool or with work ex· P.O. Box 1560• Costa t.Mina applications for a smtr. 644-0585 UTOTEM Tues thru Fri 11·3. Apply Appolntmentplease .,_... leceptlcMll•t per. needed for small Meaa,Ca.92162S GenenJOffice l~data entry operater. Maids Expe rienced .
at 2306 W. Oceanfront 642···UZl,ext277 Exper'd only. Benefits. ma.nut. co. in Mwlon GoodO.pa lmlty on~~1wn8Me>!.411Yorr~E!'f.: P&easant working cond1·
OpenmesNo-:A-vaUable Blvd.N.8.&'73-lSSS. F.QuaJOpportunity H.B.893-S032,846-3S40 Viejo. Resp. will include Girl needed for general """" "' ......... tioas Va0 •bood Motel for full or p/time clerks Employer _ d ft i g •· FoodServiee Help f 1 required Perrmneat full · -· · on 2Dd Ir 3rd shifts. No Couot.eT befp, Ptr. exper, Deolal ReC'ept.ionist/ M · ra n .,. many AM Salad Maker. All o f c e work w /ag · time day shift. Pay will 3151 Harbor Blvd, Costa
ex per ne ceasary-we Ai>Pb' hi person: Gary's Delivery man, 5 day aistaDt. Part time. Call engineeriog projects Cubler, Pll Cashie r. gresaive electronic dls· be based oo experieoce Mesa.~
train. Advancement op-~.?» E. Cst. Hwy, ~eek. ~A Times. Small Wed. or Fri. 497-l066 or =.gW~ '!!e .!~: Mon tbru Fri. Good ~riablut°~ol~vt;er:~e:: level. Apply in person Maids. laUDd.ry workers.
portunities to those w · ome eli very route. 495-6392evenl.ngs. in g. de Pend ab 1 e. benefits. 752·Tll3. 714.549.0954, S·S, Mon· 8AJl-SPM. Mon-Fri at wanted. Apply in person
qualify. For information C.,......,.._,.._. a 4AM to 6 AM. $275/mo, ha rd w 0 r k Ing in . ~-,,.1 Fri 1700G~ Ave, Irvine only: Ali Baba Motel,
gotoournearestmartet ""'"'-..--.-673-2515,646-1413 DEMTALASSIST. di 'duals Xlnt be--'".te .,.........,_ · 2250NwprtBlvd,Cll. oc contact the personnel F\tll or part Ume, day or Exper'd, happy, mature Vl • oci..... Yard work & eounter GllLFIJD,,.Y
office at e vening. Apply i n DIUVBY MEH indiv. for people oriented Only those qualified penoonel, Apply H .B. 1 rib b k LAIOltEIS Maids; top wages paid
12'421..ampeooSt person. for early AM newspaper preventative olc in Hunt. pleasecaJl Lillian F.quipment Rental, 7614 n~'{ ce ro erage. (20) Needed Now!!! Apply : The 1 n n at
GardenGrove 537-440 TACOIB.L in Costa Mesa. Must B c h . Xlot s alary . 581•3830 WarnerAve.H.B. :!~w1.~:g· eln::a'pafnucl~ Temporary Assign . Laguna, 211 No. Coast
Equal Oppor Employer 818 Pac. Coast Hwy, HB. have dependable car & 892-3353. &crow s.cr.t.y "--•orn-~S444. ments. No fees. Must Hwy., Laguna Beach. be reliable• $.150/MOO per lmmed ~.. '""' have car at phone. Apply ---------1~ Help needed for mo+boous.646-5844 D tal •--t...•-a ·opening for ex-Ptr person. good typing , Man Inc ·-w Maintenance Mechanic. CLBKTYPIST email sandwich shop 00 1• ~nmn per'd escrow secy· aldlll Ir telephone ex· Glass Tinting power. ·• '"° · must have min$ yrs ex·
NEWPORTCTR. Balboa Island. Apply, DBJYaYMAH R.D.A~ Salaryopen.CaU.l.AD· pe rience. Variable IHST~ 19th~:.:~ peringen'lpb.ntmaint
Part time. exp'd 00 IBM Ripp's Sandwiches. 3221,.\ Early momio8 LA Times P,INMm'afioll drews at lrvtne Savinp hours. 642-7860 Exper. bdpliu, over 21. F.quat 0ppor Employer Coat act Ron Cbower, Exec~---'ter. 6'4-<t613 Marine Ave. Across from route, CM , Htg Bcb. -....-752-2600, E.O.E. &M-e411M. 557-3170e'XtSI. E.O.E . ..,,_.... Fire Dept Cowse General office, sharp de-~ Waltnu . Must have dependable For lnfo· Pac Dental Exoelleftt P/tJme =· tall oriented typist with HAIRDRESSER WITH LABSupplyManuf needs MANAC&en'TIME
Scllool Counter Help, Mon-Fri, car.Good pay. 546-448l Seminars.po Box 5962 wtgdeaminepoten_ in good stills for wholesale CLIENTELE. GREAT penoo w/good de~rity Nationwide company
11 am -2 pm . St ax Delivery Person needed MiMiooiiill.i CA91345o; an expandjn& busmeu. fuur co. Travel &: ln· SURROUNDINGS. THE to aulat ln product.ion aeeka aggressive, am.
Earn up to PlO per wk. lkagers, 899 W. 19th St. ror busy N.B. travel (213)368-8000~ ~llforappt.494-5188 auraace beaefita. Salary HAIR HANDLERS. No exper. nee. Sclen~ bWolw individual for re·
Low tuition. Placement Cll ageocy.Musthave rella· Excellent Job, ex· SSSO. mo. Call Joy, 642-MM bacll1round helpful. &lonal ore. Surfa ce
_a_Riat_. __ 7S_l_·9_tM. ____ -1 C"'~ HELP bit motorcycle & In· DES.K Clerk, Ni,ht perie:aced only food, 6'5411MC. Hair styliata. Must be ex-8-4:30, Moo-Fri. Phone grinder. inside sales.
Ca ,.,,.,,_ .._ ,.,.,,....,..... surance. Will work ap-Audit«s. exper. desSaira· cocktail, hostess. Generalofflce.J&irlofc cdJeatcuaterwit.hsome 751·4920 ask for abipping/recelvln1orofr .. vpc. Delaney's now accepting prox 5 hrs daily. Hrly ble. F\lll " p/time. n References required. ~.... filling _ ... ,.....: fol'---'n" .... k •or Al SteiJbanie. ~ exper pref'd. For Hewlett-Packard 1i t· 0 18 ag •· -•leage pa1·d Clemente Inn , 125 .,,.,_, ' ._ ... .,...... w•• •· """' ,, . ....,,.d "'-mp'-te 3000 lnstallatio A app ca ions. ver . w e .. .,.. · .... __., .... SanCI 1beSpol1aman.Lak.eAr· wor"". Salary open. 646-271.6 L .... i M --... · ...., "' n. ny F\lll or P/tlme. 280 So. 833-9616 ~-· em. rowbeacL 714-337·3'112 or ---!'--......-... ,.. anwscap ng • ain· training pro1ram. Fr data processing ex-CoastHwy Laguna Deb 3379036 .--.,._...,_.......... HardwareSaJee.Applyln tenan~. Work wi,thout Inge benefits. Call Bel
pertence will be con· ' Delivery Pltime for LA DeskQlpervllor • · GBBALOMCI per s 0 0 • crown superviskla. Exper don· moot Equipment Co ~ol~~ti:,e ~ o.ta....,Opr Times deliv. So. H.B. ~ ev~g, ~'n!t EXEC.SICrY. Heavy pboaea "t.ypi.ni. Hardware. 3101 E. Coast ly. 751-0609 all 4:30 6 714/6'2-6422
P .A.D.S. De pt. 31. ~ft'!,ollY li~o8.~~~~· is ~P:::=~ i:._p_u:;;.-.. ' In Colfiroiedna de11 Mar. 10 Key adder. Good Hwy,CDM. &mda.)'s an for &eneral matn-17941-D Skypark Cir, ~ app ca........, •0r a · Diven rea estate phone manner eaeatial. LAUN DR 0 MAT -,_ ... __ 9271"' E O E lead data entry operator. 4pm or 84S-350t bef7am. DISHWAStB company looking for ~-" manuf. Sal com· fflllKD Woman for counter It te nance of a mobile
ll"'l'IUIC. ... • • • ,..,_, of 1 b t Ith ......u ..-111· home park. call for de----------· .. UJUmwn yr exper. DentaJAss't KltclllllD Helper Country snarp •~re ary w men1urate w texper. Need learn wash & fold. P /llme. tails. 8 ; 30•1 : OOPM Oonceuloo Help wanted. on~ mM 3741 or ~42 is Newport Beach practice ClubConv. lbp549-3061 lbortb.aDd. typtng, Cood IG-1118 person to 673-lfllO Must have neat, clean requued. Permanent r~t needs experienced D.A. C:.~~e 4' some abippln1 Is rec. Also.•---------• 499-3000, S.'f PM 499-4332.
appear. X!Dt job for stu-llme day shift. Pay will Gl·3'90 Dllllwu•u 1 Girl ol· ea&A&.OfRCI aome maintenance • LepJSecretary ._M_oo_·_Fr_I. _____ _
denta. Apply aft 7pm, be hued oo experience Retiree to work 5 da13 f!Cle, aelf•apeniskla es-Some leCJ'etaria1 e~per. cleaoup. Prilltin& PlanL Mat.ure&experieneed <5 Manufacturer " As ·
Manns So. Coast Plaza levet Appl¥ in person wk approx a bn a day. aeatial. Xlct workin&en· Type s:s. 10 Key addln& SJtoatart.5tl).802'7 yrs or morel, civil prac· aembler or mobile ru. 88S Sunflower, CM 8AM·SPM. Mon-Fri at liYoU'relooldngfarabet· Also, need lunch vlroGment. Salary open. macb. Fraatofc appear. Hostels, attractive, resp tice oriented law firm. =Ital equip. r eq·s
BebindSwnitomoBallk. 1700GilletteAve,lrvine terjob,)'ouwoo'twantto waitress, 5 d.aya. Appty 673-4400 OoodcobenefJ&s.HM>713 day & night shifts'. Irvine. Airport area. ed finisher in metal
...i11111111-1111111111111.-.... _._. m.lsa the employment morm,SargeoU'1,84SW. Eaecutlve Sec 'y . •• -1 Beautilulbayrest.Appty s:J3..38Z2 &wood-tonmlhatopera· Conlr~ 9IOO QusifiedAds 642-5678 colwnnslnClassiflfld. lStb.Cll (nopbonecaUs> Cballeagins position GB•-~ In person, Moo-Thurs, UGALSICllTAEY Uoo. Pay commensurate
SecArt/Graphlcs lo$860 HttpW..ted 7100 HetpW..ted 71 OW.wa•1r fjtflla w/C.M. firm or O.C. Varied =lnchld.lng 3-Spm. Cano's, ~I W. Chall e nging le&al ~~· call for appt.
CWcM&r/Manur to$l2K ............................................. Evenlnts eaiJ 548-T4l8 AiJi>Ort.GoodS/H&typ· filint, nmDin& errands. Ost.Hwy,NB. ~~ posWoo fori---------
Receptiaaist toS700 i M.url tng.Mat.bapt.ttude.&aay xeroxin1, typing etc. HOUSECLEANING, Pull fast aR.E.lnvest· Marine Hardwar~ lrvme Penonael Agency ask or a ce pbonea. Call Edltb at Muat have car Ir must or ptUme, own tran.s. ment firm. Ex per in aalespersoo, exper only ~~'ftbeo.t.a ~~=70 DRIVERS Draflipll'IOll MIF Avnet Electronics, type. Newport Ctr loc. Top salary. 6'73·1268. litiptkm •must. Ability Some wlmda. Full time. ~ ---i-. Men or Women. 25 Years Or older. Be&innerforamaUH'unt· 75U081 Hrs 8 :30·5:30. Xlnt 646«1 to work •/Iota ol ac:tivl-1_m..ao _______ _ ----c..--::.:::-Know the coast cities. Net $180 a =rt!:~f~ c~v~l lz41rt1 ~-coalr. P9Y ~1fr:: more ffoulecleanenneeded. ~Be=~~~C.g{i Mari e Carpenter .
Exper'd oob. Good pay week or more working for Yellow bWoulperionwtt.1ictraft: c•-H•w ... wltll Equal()pporEmployer Mature.Top•Carnec. foraPFt. marine painter &
&: beneftta, APPl.Y. Jolly Cab. tng potential for ml.so •ltllltJ. ~;'1' ~ General Office, PBX 6'2·l403 ~ Lepl aeeretaf'l', heavy = ~beoe°':i~".
Roter, 4008. co.at Hwy, 25 DRIVERS :r:.'!'°.!~ .. e~~:1 9J~: ~"s"tlff '°1 .. 0,.1 Aoawer. Serv. Op rs. Homeeleanlna . corporate, dot altllls, Apply ln penon, Basin
LagmaBeacb. 1n4>"•-,."m ---. "' "' 1mmed openinp ror ex· lmmed. ooentng, exper. abfllty ~o work uo-llartne,lnc. Meo or Women NEEDED FOR _.... INdtllwl. per'dorqualiftedpeople orwllltnld.ruIUcPtr. supeniled.Ma1llexper COOK WESTMINSTER EASY RIDER Dn workroo needs 1tateolP11dependsup: 0Wntram.54N525.11lE prerer. Small ofc. MATURE WOMAN
er.ttut•lunch.Apply SERVICE. Job starts June 12th, e~ women°itthne. F= :,~~s':~ OD UP:J· ~lpl' In SUNSHINEGI~ :;::;,.:_1 area, NB . :~~iC::Se:! :e~::i:c~ ~eaoe:J~~ ~ 1978. Class II lie. Will assist in Call151-6JJUoam-l pm. so.c.outPtau.4-day,40 person .-on· · am· Housekeeper wanted, mercbanta. JitftlWe hrs.
llaiDSt.BalboaPenn. securing license. GOOD DRIVING Drivers. early morning hr wk. good benefits. ~ 151 R.ocbelter St. Mon, Wed,..Frl. 5brs1dy, Lf911S.atl•t Need car, lite typln1.
R E C 0 R D R E Q U I R E D . delivery. LA Time1. Auto 567101. Ask for Dan. own traau. ref's please. m Ctr. Must llave Ml-3095. Cook·BroUwExp. A Ji · ak 0 coU· ... '"" CM umW . .AltGn.SantaAna 831....a. trPinatltilla. Exper aeancut.energet.lc. PP cations being t en N W. route. no ~· · · · ab J)ierd, but not nee. Mechanlc, exper on arull
fltimeNBloc. 541-7MI 20 nDIV£RS 6 N8 att1 545-mO FACl'ORY GD1£1AL ~ t4NllOO engines to maintain
Uftll tJriven "be-lpen nteded, J'ast ~ O.C. llfJr Baebelor bualneutDll n Jarae nee& of mowing
Coot. Dbmer top waia, Men or Women needed for local howehold movln.1 bulDUMch.eedrorsea'I . UllN .. 1$ seeks bouekfffer to LEOALSECRETARY equ.ipcnent. Brt1fs 6 OMIAr1 Club. 411-2211, SADDLEBACK VALLEY DIAL A co. !:xptirtenced onl)'. fadar'J penoanel tact; llM malatalalbelt.O•bomt Parttime,2·3d)'s,heaVJ Stranoo • tlm Har
_.1.lPID.extUT. RIDE SERVICE. Job 8, ...... June ForawtMM278 =illl'rtc'1. A•· \l,....M.s.dll' in Corona de& Mar. Mu.at -..ll.YPlot. mlo. 24 en1lnes. also amall
b WMw (eltetro meQl, !~ Dl'efer lo )(Mp a c:.lean yr• ••per, m•I ut trucks. Oood workl•g COOK ..6t • 1978. Good driving record · D1hw/W•tha1•11 Suldelert 4' Pa~. • ~·ReeeiViDI houaebotct. 1'ten·a~e =erul. Salary comm cmd. Pmntnt. Irvine ~d.....,.tapenoa req'd. AppllcaUonaacceptedNOW. 'lb wen ln automocJve/ da.r WMk. eo.N palod ill· ..-u..pbonels...Ua ~Pr1vr-· rrroom~. ~~~.· ....... Ask for Ctn· w .canas>aoo.
ftt WllM.e Hoaae. MO So. ._...,...~ & maria9 •anboute. QIU suraoce. r . . c . bAe tnnlP Lmll • sbori ·-u..... d:f N'f-GJl llledic&I Ntlttaot, r rr.
<¥ llwJ, Laauoa Bcb. ...-111.,11Ul'1 -.10a Altport.BESINC. wm ...sP,,,......, Holl· ~~t.oard ft'Cllllltfc •ll Jr mm ex---..... y···m 3'5J'IJ¢ber da1 " .. cauon pay. &lltClll....... .... Some bad ore Nq.
COOK UllKft M 0.taM•a ' Ho•plt•llj1llon plan ~. *P• 9-12. ._ lt~'tburt toc:aU l'ar fam pnc: Cit. Pleale Needed for SADDLEBACK S4t-al33 ••ell. wtQl. llwi>t Bc.b, ad a.ctN"ub•bouta .... MDCI resume to: Mn. ~ In. boa VALLEY DIAL A RIDE SERVICE. E.O.K. "1· t1Na. ..-career in Net ~ •• ~ewll(>rt
Mahin womaa. Sma Job starts June 5th. 1978. HouHkeeper. mature, --. ftoM t.ra1Dlq If nvt,A-..n,-. fi':1 llome la Coe AppllcaUona accepted NOW. Good Dlabl tlilll. 11-7, in 1u.t )'OUJ'OUqUll~l4NlOl .-.CAI.lie.,.
_...,_ en tu posltlon into tr~t.lon l.He lt 11ttt llome. CM. -.mt Fnl9l ote eap 1M1£:•·
OIAllE COAST YWJI CAI ~=l~ :.r;:;~tr. ··~a7:..... =-:::·:r:v.mt.:: =~· Ptr. I or I ~~If~. 'I
11JIO .... Htn a .._.., .. ~ .... caUt wltb bJI",... CAcrouf'rom amoker7-Ebelilb PIU· MMS37. lledlcat Mil« RN tor cHOiU.lolSlattrbeUuOSJN.....,.'.•~1 ..-.lpandb&1= ~Co.~> •sda,a,RJS•ll can tJquor store mana1er aleral•t oft S•tary lb IUCltJ.o:' et "!p!OJpQr.....,.. ,,.. M·-~ HHf airf·.acl ft + boftal. netot.tab . WtU tra .~~-·-Id, call eo.SITI. -IQ.SR· £\la m -Lynn, soo-.o.
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~?.~~~~ ..... ?!~ ~~~ ..... ?!~~'-~~ ..... ?!!! ~-~~ ..... !!~ ~~!'!~ ..... ?!!'! ~~~ ..... ?~~! u.....w~ Thurada7v1.00Mav 1a. 1978 OAJLV PILOT DZ
'" .......... --···~ ~ ~ ~ • SICUTAltY.._..AL .....,. -•1,r w IOtD ..... 8010
vgolCAL AliliJSTA.HT --Retaa:::~......... s:l:'r.:.:t~~ back· Jiiolqal~.rwqalNd. ........ _ ............................. "9 ...... ._ ................. ..
hll liait ror N 8 . f ..,."'1111· t PIT~ Ca1t Bob sround. full• par\ thm. Nwprt Ctr ocean \l\a I•• " • ~ OE Ab'~ <win· Btr Canyon-de~·" ~~ praetko\•, PR.fer Yola •l The 811 Yellow Appty Wes-Oll Nursery. office. Mull h•v• euell TOOL dOwmtM>~. MW ctlln IOf.alOU.O.n, S.f1'*' lab• x. lloMM Reauiiaraat for 15640 Brookburat , lldU. 4'. 1ugerior ln&elL Ma. · cbr.Navy/nast.75!MXJ78 ~\·~ .:i.i1:irr C'Om· •pp't. 54Mll0. ~estmlnsttt. =comm .• , .. per. M•11rns =:.~~t!!i~~: .~floral aola. iood cood.
M,. ..... PEO . -REST4URANTPIZZA •SAlESu.&..a* ~ frost rree. $19S. Balboa $LOO.Phone u'P&Rso&L~ RETAIL SALES ln Cd" ne.eda ceneral F.arn $?000 ~~lon ro. UBS Baytiub 548.e76 538--
Bu1lneu man seelu Sales Posfflo.l Im help. f'/P·Ume.f73.Wl weekly. Profeuional *~S/G. OfC APl'UCATIOMS Coppertone Side/Side Brown velvet 8i,t,' calm
P 'time a u ociate 1n fteltauranlHelp home closers. Back· Aceoun .•oSl7.500 relrif,frttUr,xlntcond. couch S250. Gold barrel
wholeule retail bw1 n....0.,.1 . 1111 eo.DJW .. e.... IJ'OUDd in boob. vacs. Employen ayAlJFees &c-as-ls.lmry Si!Q0.540-78CM aW1velchn$75.5'5-7334
neu. FuU, capttatued. Ywd PeMt Jmmed orw-oln•a. All etc. Double confirmed Ll.sReindersAaency lrPulrPd.... Oood·--'Fu Ml.crn5 ccuM.,.. G--'-ahifta --':"eet~ than leads. Everyday la pay. 4C8>BltthSt,steUM CallforanapPOtntment Wuherlsdryu$115 -o~ mihlure1 .So$7fa ~_.. ..._.l. ti day. Call Mr. Welty al Newport Beach aa:HllO for bolh -• 4-ilSY c a r 5, MJNl·STORAGE-COUple Hwdwant r11-lm1 na s ar ng wage. 540-5609. Golden Weal C.llfouppt/eatab 'M "14) r..:::7363 962-6511;1after.5PM. marble coffee tbl Sl.50, ua.iat.ant mars. 2 Days a Sec~ ,...... Propeaalve Increases. loaW.UooCo. \I I U'hf"" D8inUng SZS. Gold velvet week. 76IHIOllO 1 Exper'd mlY need apply. Ro pe r G a s R a n g e bench ~. 2 lamps SSO
•P= co•p•y welc-. W "-9am-3J>m Wed .• TbW"S, Salea·Mature person to. SICllTAIY ,...._ w/storage below + eye both.545-1404
M*h & llc:orh HI• ..t tr•HI. Grow wttlt • mtd l'"ri Ir Sat. work eves. The Coffee HunUnctoa Be~~b area, TOOl MAlB level oven & rotwene . ~ llaH Hulellt advw....t OJfD41lualtlff 31721Pac1ficC&tHwy Bean, S . Cat Plua. rorcooault.lntengloeer.2 Top pay for a good broiler.631·231'. Corner unit w /stereo
Female. Tbp money m1dt.l coa-••1beweftta. SouthLaguna 549-11'16 to3da;ysper week.Tfif; thillkr w/exp In pre· S150 : recliner SlO . Mustbavecar.631·3811 ,ft .. flJln b""-•-ciaion aut omatic 10"4.t' nberglus Canoe, l mahogany twin be d ...._..,tyatm;._al: .... wmlHtfp ••SALES•• ..... 1. 'lUUlg • ma1:hlnes. Croan tent 9 X 12", Coleman frames : odds & ends.
MOlDMAKIA l.Z13J429·9701 '2131435·9145 BeA~oflbeptt· Profitable p/Ume sales bookkeeploc. <714 > EJMfhliuring Co, 5582 stove&lant.em&4cot.s. _631_·~------
Top pay for a good 6501 !Sprfl19Slrfft,La.gleocll ferredal.afhtAnlbooy's positions eves S-9 Mon-848-0!22 ~FadcRnAve,H8(714) 842-8941 ?'sola,lightblue.
thinker w /exp to pre· ..... Oppcwf-..lty I 4ta,er Pier JI~ accepting ap· Friday. 531-0842. SICURfTY GUAIDS tm4561or(211)43().(1524, Alie&. 10 I 5 Xlnt COfldjUon SSS.
cision uuect mold, Croan ~!ft'=. fW~l~ri:::::: Sales related pos. Art F/Ume PC>6 avail. Above 'Ken or Gary 12.ePM. •••••••••-•••••••••••• 536-0117
En&Jneerin1 Co. 5582 _ f"' "'1111_..,. t Bartendert, Cashiers & Gallery.1)plngsklll5de· averace waces. Pal~ Tow Truck Driven ex-~~~~d::~.-0~~~· c~ir; • the Oyater Bar from s1rable. knowledge or weekly.Unitorm&eqwp per'd. Top pay. Apply. PUBUCFUR,NITURE ~~~~~~r~'1u'r:i~
430-053' K G rt t I 3-5pm Mon . Wed & cootem})(>(&l'Y art. Send furn. Paid vacatloo1. C.WTowiog lOOOlrvine a•lf'JION tbis.dinrm.28r's king&
12-&PM. en or ary. -n1ai• Thun. No Phone Calls resume to Cl~ed ad ~~i~wr~s;r:a Ave,NBM2·Usz * "" * rutl.640-6362 lill ' ~ Please. 103 N. Bayside no. 217. C/O Daily Pilot, betwn 10.m·lpm. al 920 TRAVa AfifNT FRlDAY 7•30 P.M. Moe:tusori l>inctt'fll Dr. NB PO Box 1560, Coala S M St Sant.a ..__ tDeaWn Welcome> ELECTRIC FLEX·A Mesa. Ca 92626 · am • ""a. Newport/lrvlne. Min 3 BED b AMI or AMS pre!'d. RESTAU••uw-E.O.E. Call 547-8507 ror yrsexper.Call7S4·1S55 CONSIGNMENTS • twin. os p1tal
SS2-7494. Irvine. ..._._ w.tect 7100 u.&... W.tecl 7 I 00 """'"I Saleswoman wanted fuU appt. STOCK LIQUIDATION style. lop or bottom .._..,. •..,... ACC"T/COiltf ~ tune, ,..., __ .. e Bakerv, . ITr•"'k Dr1· ver & Yard ....., ·~TERS •UCTIOM motor-r atsed, indepen
MOT-ROUTE ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• "'~ •i Se I S 1lfto. ~ ~ #1~,u N d Lis ~ Experienced thru trial 548-3031 rv ce t•t!on Allen-Mainte11ance. chemical 2075...,NewportBlvdCM ...... y. ew coo · u.
The Daily Pilot hna a PBX REAL EST ATE bal.ance. Apply in penoo cl dant. ex per d. Day & toilet co. 646-2700 833-9825 848-8686 "99. »ell $200. 58l-40l4
large route in M1.111ion Answe ring s ervi c e Personable licensee for attheVictor Hugo loo.San wich & Salad Aa· Eves.FuU&p/Ume.Ap
Viejo. Moo lh.ru Fri af· operator Cull & P tr. Call man•gement & aalea on 361 Cliff Dr, Laguna semblers. 5AM · tP M. ply, Shell Stauon. 17th tis ITYPlST /l'RANSCRlBER sJ::c~~ · l~~ ~~;e~:
lernooos. Sal & Sun ~3561 Riverside townhouse Beacb Must be neat. clean & lrvlne. NB. P/time needed. Cootact m-1.-1010 foam mall. tBS. 675--0184 mominf;. Must have de-tract. Salary plua house•---------• dexterious. S3 Per hr. Bobbieat846-2864 ..... ,_.... • ...... ..1.b _,_ h -x~__.__ RM"-....... 979.0747 for appt. a ft "~..ice Sta. Attend.a·• ••••••••••••••••••••••• """..... e car. ..,., cas ..-. -.-......-.--plus booua. Call Jeeette -·r ~ _., '" ..... Desk 7 drawers good for deposltreq.Gooddriving Exper'd or will train. at(n4)7"'"·l920. rt..11-'"ftg ..,,. for re· lOAM.Lori'sKilcben. exper'd. ~ll or p/Ume. V .. P..... lllCES&MonDS uc:1' ..,c: Al. -............,~,.... ..-Apply, ArcoStaUon. 17lh . . st enl. ...,. t 5pm. record. Call 642-4321 Artn & eves. Some habon.entednurse.Musl Secretary for 1 girl ore. &Irvine.CM PvltOUDtryclub. Form· New & used. buy. sell. 6'.S-7857.
Leave name & phone wknds. Call 640:1110 REALTOR ( be dedicated to good pa· Rapidly expandlng O.C. focall6'4·5404. trade. Cycle & Co. 2488 --------Your call will be re· betwn8-4:30 tl~t care. Contact Mra. Transportation firm nds . Waiterslwait.nisses want-Newport Blvd, C.M. Sont Bed for Sale Call
turned. Pharmacy looking for or Realtor Auociate. Riddell642-3410. ambitious, selt·•l4rter io Service staUon man, ex· ed. Exper necess. Apply 642·1910 Mer7 P~ .. 1856 Have oeed for 1 good ac-ri ed ..,56 k "'"" NURSES AIDES mature person to work Uvesalespenon. RM's I 1-7 perfo~m di.versified pe enc · -w + in person. The Victor 3whee1Schwlnn, $150.
7·3&11·7. Exper'd.Coun· 12·8PM. Knowledge or lloyMcc.dle Supervisor & 3.11 Relief dutes lncluchng_ rec~rd 10%onsales.S48·Ul96 Hugolnn,361CliffDnve. Almost brand new! l'tulfoe•ltocbr
try Club Conv Hos p. c06mel.lcs helpful. Apply IOMe Supervisor. LVN 3.11 keeping, r adio d is · LagBcb.Nophonecalls! 67~,anytlme. S3S 640-73!!7 ~9-:nll in person. 9:30-2:00PM . 1110 wportllYcL medlcallooa. Mesa patching, gen ofc. etc. SB"ICEDBJ --Mon Fri. Mesa Verde CosiaMna 541·7729 Verde Conv. Hosp, 661 Salary commens wtex· Y WAITaESS Men's 27" Schwinn Cont., MOVING : Oval Wal. din
NURSES Pharmacy, 2971 Harbor l•--------1 ~nterSt.CM54S-5585 per.Call5'0-050t. CLHK Must have exper & be xlnl cond. Sl2.5 . Rbt. nn set, 6 cbrs. like new
RN 1 Sl.263/Monlh RN tr Blvd.CM -Must be 18. Exper de· avaHabletowork wknds. Poat.S48-3876eves. $195. Std bed w/gd matt
s 13 s 2 / Mo L v N · s UCEPT. TYPIST •Sain *loe Vera• S:C~~a~~e~ui~i1:1: sl.l'able, but not nee. App #16 Fashion I.stand. N.B c-,_ & ~.Misc. M2-4207 ~8e2r3: ~ ~·e 1A '(,~If~ c ! l ~1~1~~: :.s ·d f ! ~nm t;: !~ ~;"':n~:,~~··~~;&c,~ Noo·surgicalface lift dis· work
0
mdependently a. ~a:ket~e~nVi~ufi'!:, Waitress. 11·3 or S-9 shift EicJi,.._. 8030 Beautiful dining rm ta bk.
F . S · w/own truck. will tratn. Ctr. Phone w kdys tnbutorsblps available. enjoy fast-paced ore. NB openings. Apply 1n ••••••••••••••••••••••• 6 rh.a1r5, custom pad:..:!
airview late ll<?sp .. Dtspatchers,Ftr&Pff. 3(). 30 -0603 524-6486. lmmed avail. O .C. · · person Tino's Pizza & 250mm Leitz lens for extensions.540-0616
250Meslal.larbor Blvd C<>!>la will tram.151...Z. -8_:_5_:_,_644 _____ , Airport area. Call Mrs. Service Station Allen· Dell. 30Zoi2 Crown Valley Le1canex SL. Like new. -~--
R EC E PT 1 0 N IS T · Salesclerk. Coala Mesa T 833-9721 dants (2) rt" C /U P k L Sl5C> ~1418 ..,URSES ... IDES SECRETARY. needed SlabOOen. 270E.11lh~t. • . 'd ,Apa I Caroe, Ni~""' way• a g una . r-.-~....._ 1055
" A CM FUU time Apply in 11r1U"O•-••y exper · PP y, rey &-... n..-w" .. 0 -....,. _..
"'·lly a'·'ied service Co r s m o Cc . H v y · · ~·-Chevron, 604 S. Coast llfHOUSEM N .,_.,,. •-••-••••••••••••••••••• PLUMBERS
7-3 Approved cert1r1ca· .. u qu u11 tele~-w/only It lYP· persoo_._10-_12_. ____ 1 UCEPTl-..IST ~La Be h W A ••••••••••••••••••••••• lion training program plumbers needed now. .,......... "'" ..... :r. gun.a ac Colden Retnever PUP· 13 5 McKnight 0 r
Mesa Verde Conv Hosp, Test req'd <oral or writ· ing required. 549·1633 for SALES EXECUTrvE The Akins Company Serv Sta Help needed im· Need person to learn J>teS. AKC Field & show Laguna. Kitch-Aid D/W. 661 ~1.erSt.CM ten ) Percentage pay. interview. Immediate opening In Prominent real estate med. Muat be 18. sbJppiog & rec. Also. pet. Shots, wormed. G E.Refng,1eJec clothe:. ---------• can earn $25·$30.000 per lhls area calling on all dt!veloper loolcmg for ex· some maintenance & dryer M0tt (94 7430 MUllSESAIDES yr. Apply Mon·Fri 8-~. RECEPTIONIST types or buaineues. periencetl secretary. Day/night shi~ avail. cleanup. Pnnting plant. raJSedwtrLC.Xlotd~p . · · .
& OttDRLIES The Earl's Plumbing ror insurance office. Comm. Sales, S32S and Must be excellent typist. ~U or Pit. Apply 990 E. S3Toat.art. 54(MI027 <213>425·1.:iel. RUMMAGE SAL t;
foe.: 1533 W Lincoln. Good typist. Pluaanl up per sale. For personal efficient. good with IWloft. Csl Hwy, NB DOG TR .. '"'ING SUPREME: 350. member Needed to give TLC lo ~ I ""'-... ...--n.u-. lheelderly patlents.App Ana he im or phone .,.,....e voce. vvuu com· interview, and full In-pie. front office ap-Service Sta. Allendaota WRITE~ Needs Help: Pvt 1 &boardl group. Everytlung.Ant1
ly. 1445 Supenor Ave, _&a.2_-1_1_53_e_x_t_1_1 ____ pany benefits.644·4242 for mation cal I Mr. pearance. Salary com· <4> P/Ume now to full ~eting, t_ypang. book· c asses ng ques to bathroom smks Morris 1-800-247-2446 mensurate w /ex per. l.lme in Summer. Will keepmg, P /time. 494.7430 John Martin S48-0059 9-5 Sat. Sun. May 20-21 S
N.B Pre-SchoolTeocher N:~~Ct:~Tcall ---------• Goodbeoelits&beautirul trai n . Apply, 2590 Yacht Salesmen needed NEED Family to board Coast Hwy. at BlueBird
OFFICE GIRL Over 18. & Ai• working environment in Newport Bl. CM bycreau·ve broker -will smell Pomeranian male Cyn. Laguna Bch
neat appearance, exper lrvine.~·7494. Marjorie,&44·2442 SALES Tustin. 714/832·2881 dog, 5 yrs old. Some ,77 KE-175 Kawasaki
not necessary. w11l tram. . . -R-e-ce_p_t-io_o_l_st-.-P-/-T-fo-r-1 GIFT SHOP Scrv. Sta. Attend. F /lime. train. ~II.or P/f. Heavy ~~&during vaca· English saddle, 81/J Hr
Kirk Jewelers. c M. Printed c1~wl board mfr photo s t udio . 20. SECRETARY Exper'd, lite m ech'I advertising support. lions. Likes people & W/ll riding lawn mower
545-!MBS htrlng tramees. $3.25 pr ~/wk Could become MARJllOTTHOTa MewportCewter knowledl{e. Apply 2590 541Hl31 ch 1 Id re n . Good . ·
hr to start. 40 hr work . We are seeking a people Exp, good typist. Sala"" _N_ewport........; __ B_l_,c_. M_. ---• YACHT SALES watchdog. Must have Dodge van seats .k nms. OFFICE HaP week 3002 S. Oak Sl. Ftr. 962-7877. oriented person able to • ., fenced.In back yard. Mny other llms 1516
J Herbert Ha 11 Santa Ana. Receptionist wanted ror work nexlble evening 1,.opeollliiii. 644-46iiiiiiil3iii. iiiiiiiiiiiiil S wt.lg .. Mtrial Poeitionopen. Estb Nwpl 67s-1607 Cumberland NR 548-7904
J ewellers needs f /time -beauty salon. Fashion hours. 3 Nights per week. 1" No esper req'd. Hot Air brokerage. S48·5SS6 Sat/Sun UM
orrice help. Apply in PRINTING ble. 75&-0941 Apply9am-nooo S.•cretaries Ballooos.642·3S4S. YARDMAN LOST: Old Enf(lishSheep· Treasurela nd Garage
person. 33.1.1 Bnstol St. Mon-Fri Personnel TYPISTS Rental center has open· d 0 lil • CD M · 5 ! 7 • Sale 661 Seal St. CM CMtSo.CoastPlaza> Exper'd business Corms Receptiooist&Masseuse 900NewportCenterDr ~Oprs.,sportswear ings fo r 2 men . REWARD.Noques\JOOS Behind Bethel Tower:.
coUatoroperator. Should for top c l us legit Newport Beach l Hf'KTARtES mlg. n make up to 16 Mechanical knowledge asked. M.,4yra.640-7Sll Cameras, camping,
---------1 know s napout & con-massage spa. Sal + Equal()pporEmployer .JUlll~I hr.642-M72dept7 •.....t-r ~CE HELP ttnuous forms. S.A. a rea. bonus. We will tuin. helpla.I, neat handwnt· Very lovable, friendly ........,, tires, um., cow-·
•HlrilN) Mow•
Growina agricultural
lrade assoc 1al1on
W/pleasant ofc raciUty in
Newport Bch has open·
mgsfor
SECRETARY
Tyi>e 10. S /H 80, die·
taphone. Exper necesi>.
Ability lo work w /out
sUperviB1on.
CLAIMS CLERIC
Doyou needext... lll-Olle)' Shoe salesperson, part Ing nee. Weekday orr. Bassett Hound. for sale boy boots, clothes.
OrangeCo.S40-80'l7. ,_63_l_-4838 _______ 1 ( SALISllPS &enjoy variety. Lel lhe time, women'• aboes. WU tram. Apply, 1930 or free. 5 mos old. sqyare dance dresses PRIM11~ --------•I 'rocaU 00 reader ad busl-freedom • fiexib1Uty ot Apply ln peraoa. P•ul Al· Newport Blvd, CM Female. 751-UB8aft 7. slips etc. May 17-218 AM ~d Litt.o ltEC.rJOHIST f d rt1 working temporary a&· t.n Shoes. 9 FHhloo ... .. I005 toS PM _,..... In is nesa •ccta or • ve S· signmenta of your ctao1ce Ia.and. Newport Beach rl11R' I Kees hon d. Ma I e . ---------Rot.y OffMf 1be JoUy Roeer. c. log. Hra Moo-Fri 9-5. work for you. Call Im· ••••• .. •••••••••••••••• blk/sllver e mos old Toys. c lothes, bshld
PnuO-ator looking for a f /llme Base +comm. Co. mediately SUMtB\JllORI AllERICANOAK AKC l200.751.Ql3 ' items, bikes, jewelry &
r-· perm. recept. Must be benefits. Will train. App-O ff · FOlt STUDBCTS LargestSelectioo ' jewelry makings, kg s1 Mui.t know snapout & personable, attractive & ly, Peooysaver. 1660 ~ ~ 0 ice • 1nn-.-fteCowrty Tiny toy, blk female bed,guncablne. l.rodtin" continuous business 'd p l p1a~··-A c~ l d Mf11Perh..rof prescribed ..,..... " exper . OSI ion re· .. ~ ve, ... 0 over oa .... Stewart Roth Antiques poodles. t9p pedigree. bone, Or polisher, etc. forms press. S.A. area or quires typing " 10 key activity, full & p/t. Must AKC OrangeCo.714 /54(MI027 adder by touch. SS75 to Sales!Stock. Mervyn's is be 18+. C•ll (114> 750E.DyerRd.S.A. .842-8740. linens. 1500 E . Ocean
$600tost.art.Appl,y, 17042 now taking applic•lions •. 557-0061 846-8154or871·2500. (atNwpt Pwy>?Sl-8922 FOR SALE: Siberian Blvd, Bal. 675"7563
Prodsffoll Tl'Oillee Gillette Ave. Irvine. ror p/t posltioc:'s in sales Eq~~ r· NIB Students wanted 14 and CHEAP!!! . Husk.y. A.KC reg. Very _Sa_ttsun __ . _____ _
Rubber bole products.~~~~~~~~~ &stock. DayUme,even-mpoyer oldertoworkafterscbool ENGLISH MANOR friendly. Gd. watchdog. Sat May 20q1. 8am·2J>m.
lrvinebarea.1M1uat1udpasl s • _ _.._ ings & weekend shills &SatEam.-totto~.""'r ANTIQUES U>vesklds.894·3775 . NewportHghtsElemSch
co. p ysica nc ng -_,..-Area avallable. Apply, 98111---------1 wk6'5-86l6 ..., ..... 1125A. VlctoriaC.M. .,.. _ _... _ _. Poodl d .. b parking lot. (Corner of
back xrays. Call for Lovelynewolc. Typing& Adams Ave, H.B. betwn Secretary 642-4703 .,..........Male.u t8el'l1ore.linre.), ~5 I.5th & Santa Ana Sts.
1_appt:....:...._.540-_7_639_._E_.o_.E_. _1 lots of public contact. UM. F.qual Opportunity Switchboard Oprs, wm ,._ ________ 1 wka,AKC.shots.S40-9l5S •-N_B_.> ______ _
Type so. 10 key by touch. p .-a..1~ T--L Varietyplua. To$867. Emplo)'fr · CUSTnura train Ptr to Ftr If de 1• AbiUty to oraanize tune •YQWVITIC ......, Micbele KLlhn 540-5001 ,._________ Ul9P ,__.· l be bl l. AntiqueMusicBoxes! L bl Old E II h Garage Sale. Sat. 9AM-" 11034 /Monlh. Apply at •• f'rDlll"( su~. mm a e o SlotMacbineS! ova e ng s 4PM. Furn .. toys &
important Personnel Otrlce, ~~ie::t~::Y SALES .x.lllRI workallablfts.645-81W7. Ck>cks! Sheepdog. Female. more.3:2lCoral.B.l.
Fairview State Hospital. 4340Campua Drive SUMMER SECRETARY Telephone work, part HUGE SELECTION Spayed. l"'1yrs. 75l·3&MI KEYPUNCH 2501 Harbor Blvd, Cost.a Dreasea & Coals <sz Mesa. Ume. "'-ricm Lh 58 Apso. lS.22~). bicycle & more.
Mln. I yr e x pe r in ---------• RECIPTIOHlST CASH hourly+ bonus. We1 ... l.al lyr,A.KC. Sl.50. 106 Coral, Balboa Island keypunch. IBM 3741 ex R~Ad Th1s Important P<>t on S46-3420 ~wed lhruSat 962-6592 6T.H977 per. desirable Will train _.... Lite gen'I ofc. Some Jobs our cuatomer service "t'"'H · ---------• ---------
quallfied person SALES REP to•~Sake ads req. typing. Good pay. Right abo"t now you team requires extensive Telephone Cross Bar 1802(7Kitterinl4.)7""1gm. rrv. Poodle puppies. Apncot. 13 garage sales in Green-
The above pos1t1ons offer
excellent working conds
& fnnge benefits Sal
commensurate w 1exper
Call Mrs Irwin for appt
83).8384
\\ ESTERN GROWERS
ASSOCIATION
1811 Quail St. N 8 .
In our ofc Mon .,. t 9·2, No ree. lmmed. uaign· .. tel ~ tact "lb PABX Teclmiclan ~ke -Shots. $75. 64&-9795, 2916 •~ Homes, Irvine. AP· Tues tbru Fr' 11 30-2 ·30 maybewooderia1wbere e.,........ con "1 te Good be · ~~~~~~~~~I ·-.. --NB .. """' 1 : • • menls. Long Ii short to ....... . 1~ .. ~ lor a our valued customers. •YI m. · : u •u><= Ave, · pllances, antiques, furn .• Oppor for advancement. term. Appl.Y. Manpower, "-·-"""IUljobuual W lf . n>e ----"awello...,anlud lrvineComplex. ~1066 •OYUTnrroR b TV' t k W1U tram. Apply, Pen· w 19tbSt Coe ......,mer . e. you d ..... ..,.,.,.l t ... tl t i:uuu.u Samoyedwhtfem,4mos. was ers. s , rue s. nysaver. 1660 Placentia Inc .• 448 . • la areenergeUc. articulate, ynam c, ye pa en TELEPHONE SPACE• w/papers. $75. cars. air conditioners.
Ave. CM M~r/19tb Street eothuaiast.ic & really en· person with excellent SOlJCITORS Orange Co Presa Club 64&-2Z31 toys, etc. 1 lite &O. or SA
Joy talldng to Pt"OPle/we communication ak.llla as Proa only. Sell Dally Ant.lquea-Planl-Craft Fwy. Enter off Walnut
REALESTATESALES 645-2CM3 cana.bowyoubowtoeam well~~oodtyping&fil· Pilot rrom your home Bazaar FnetoYa 1045 (corner of Culver & EqualOpporEmployer eood money by apPl.Yin& ing ability. If you enjoy Ear n $l60·S200 wkly SUndayJunel.8 ....................... Walnut>. May 20th & NOW these atlJ a. lntrOduce be~~ '!f~~'& ~C: Part ot Foll ume. llust ~ ~~ CUTE KITTENS. blk. _2_1.s_t. ______ _
IECEP'l.ST the beautiful Time-Life van be over 21 C.U ----·--..._...,., Uger. tan & wbt, grey, u f 1 r f ·t , Is THE Book Series over the yourself oo the accuracy 1·3PMoo y 892-SOU tur.6wbold.S48·2140 ""oU5e u 0 urni ure, phooe rrom our Irvine of your wo k. please con-country Fr. & oat anlt·
Openiois for 3 adlls to TIME • R.E. development co. ofc. Our guaranteed tact us now. 'W"l!.l i:aHOMI Private colledor selling Beaut1ful long-haired part ques. Kg sz box/mat-earn S200·$00tmonlh. needa elegant recepl. for b 1 AIU'" fine painllngs by lop Himalayan female cal. tress, 2 twin alao. sml
Ptr. approx lOhrstwk. To Join their pretty ofc. Mod typ· ourly wage + com· Call Mn. White A.Wt· SecNtlry American " foreign 980-3066 1lr l's 3-apd Schwinn.
C II f • 3 ..... _ tng, but great persooall· mlaaion + bonuses al· 1 • _... Pleasant work. sh ort a rtis ts . J erry Bond, week-old washer/dryer. ~_.:~ app t. ·5pm, ,...,..ProfnMo.ah ty. ALL JOBS FREE. =ourt~;:,::.~~"!: iormte ••• ewappt. hours, to p p•y. Set DonaJd Nkbolloa. John Beaut looa·ba.lred silver bedspreads. fabrics. --w.a. I .,ERat & LEE Call Coastal Penoonel ~ p ID I appt's, no selling. Talk to E. Bunde, Otto Antoine Kitty. lOmos. spayed, all games. toys, ladies
o,.ratonta ~ Agency, 540-6055, 2190 even ve three,C!Ollve-C1U OS er topexeca,profproepeeu C.lloqsse.Pricedat 60% shota.847-4B49.540-826S clothes (aomedeslgner>. ca.micat RefWlerv Harbor,C¥ nlenl p /tlme shifts. Assod•s. lllC. ooly. Hrs: 9am tol.2nood. of 1976 appraisal. men's also. 974 Sandcas-
$3.50 Hr to ata.rt. t-i.s. In 1977. we, at WALKER ---------• :=av!Ilemoon & COSTAMISA llon·'lbura. Expr womeo S0.3850forappl. ~gs~~.~~~.g:fn~~!:;!~~ tie, COM. Hrbr Vu ms
Chemistryorworkexper & LEE. broke our own Reliable person to ban· · l714J556-7075 ~apply.CallMrLouie 4'f1attop0Udesk.$250. dog548·2L53 CLuslt>. Friday 12'5·
w /chemicals helpful. record by doing over S2 dle phon e, counter , SPIHD~OUI '11' ... ual n....-E lo 557 1121• aft 0000· 645-7313 eve 64&-4463 c1ya ~Sa_t_!Sun __ g._5_. ----7AM·3:30PM. 549-3281. bUlioninsales&service. -..,_... mp yer 3 KlTTENS •. 2 all blk cu.a •• '"5, .,....t V"'"'e· marking in, typing etc. SUUt AT Sellldlelteme 842·5878 ..tlorRae M ,_ li r 8 ... ,.,~ • .,. --.... E.O.E. Full lime wort . Colt .... JOI_......... ---------a~. 1 ~ 00 em. ty many mlac items for
tryouareinterestedina Drapery Cleaners. 1702 "' '""'' • HefpW..tad 7100ltalaW..eed 710CI Regency Headboard, Qn wka.~5392 y~rd . P•lio. home. Palnler wanted mst be re.al eat.ate career, call Newpo rt Blvd., CM flUM.CHAl'•talteG ............ _ ....... ;.;.~-:-................... SI. Ji'iniabe d Aotq . S A r I . clolbinl old Oeogr & fut/Deal Three openings foe detalla oo our three· M2-0270 & ~ WILU Wbt11old $150. Semi pa ye"' em a e • m ui boob c b oaJ,y 1835
' Start today, gd pay for day liceose training pro-Boen~ typel4" dreaer Bugle, 2 yn old. Good PL sbef,:id Pl. Ne. Nr
dependab le person gram. Ctl•W TB.EPllONE SALES a nd m i rror USO. w/tlds.148·2034 . FordftllacArthur
548·5l00 Rataunnl mabt cite-up M Ma "'..... Aultrian conaole min'OC' Free pta 8 ta old ~
Part time person, lf youhavearealestate penon.fHOpm.17S.Ul32, Moll .... --..Y SEARS ROEBUCK & co. aso......, 1rtsh':~r.' • YARD SALE. 1912 •alad/aaod_..ch place, licenae. yo"'ll be in-callBudorJane. 8J~ eo95 .......... -Church, CM 9 to 4 .. ..., t.erestedlnournalionaUy ~ 18'7bul!i~1&nt1· _,..._, Fll(Sat. Cooler. rugs .
Colt.a Meaa. hn e-2. Call recognized Head st.art Wbat a Wooderful World TIME-LIFE Has immediate openinp for: qoea • oomea, 2 fteetoaoodbome3yrold dlsbea,dotbes,etc. ~1ie~roup SaleaTrainin&Program. of Sboppln1. ri1bt at •"w ~ ._ Teleph11 ,SciMs l1pr .. ul••n oak ets, b eavlly German Sbepbcrd '
--'""PY-"-·-·-----• your fincenlpa every-.-.... -carved oak cabinet from remale w 1papera. un· ......_ 10 0 Par\.Ume work. for re· WALKER&LEElaell· day! D all)' P1 l ol .... ~ ....... •/f Hearst CHtle. P .P . spayed. Mu.st be retired ...................... .
Urtd machlnl.at. BedH ~.our 12 new of. a.ainect Ada. To place __ 2 1 F ull or part·ltme. Excellent 1112-1961 couple or home wrrf)tl Leae land ror borses.
Mactiine a TOol Service. fices wlU bring us up to your ad, call 842·5'78 and ~ ., company benefits. Paid vacation, Routq TtNGdes anti· wortDDa ll)()ther. Needs Golden west /.Edwards.
54Ml227, m El. tfltb St, 45 offices ln the So. Calif. let a a...ukd Ad·Vltoe' 0 ---'W ~ JOW' aa. holidays, e mi>loyee discounts. caue ~ ca.rnd IOUd compantouhlp, 1rut H.B.M-NIO, 5*1.S42
_q-.._111 ______ _. area. helPJOU. *Ptba!f!alcenter. Enter a challenging world of oak bdrm set w1allllle -:icbUd.ren . .._1 al\ Quartu bone 1.Wlng.
" c.n today ror an in· HlfpW..e.d 7100 tw.W...t.I 7100 telephone sales. bed • mattrtH, lae s.aPll. • lill abownftete.m.~, DiBT TIME t.tn1tw" find out why ....................... ---.. -.......... ......, W/IDln"Or au ~illh 1010 ...;mall.;.,__.;.._ ____ _ rM I Yol.I .-. .... Jotn ... _ P ... .-. •• m.aieo -., .. J.. ..... --.... 1010-
, .. ~ r l e:~ ':t SAl.ES-JEW-RRY -r 1. 5".... " .,,..... 1010 .......... , .. ,··u··v··:·.··-; =~!!.5! .............. . EVENINGS WALICERtllLl!E. ~ ac.. 'I ....................... "' w··~
Addi wtt.1a OWtandin&. l FftOHT DAMA.G t:D Oood .ect l'umltuiel 6 "'" 1'5111'
auradln penonalitWa AskrotSandl Great ___.,_11 ., for career HI.liq-... 1, ~ 'W ~ ~INT SALE. aoe APPU•,."8-0Jl I Wiil TOP CASH DOLLAR wbo _._~·~-with (714)7724'10 fl V)l' ........... J 'Y -!6~... -• w......... "· • .,.. ftl' Harbor, .... qu.z.l~--P AJI> r o• Y O UR _, --caia>-..,_ ne jewelry. twelry expetleoce .,. ... en_, 8 ~ ....... --· ~ :TIOM JEWELR~· ~. kids. start at P.50 per but wlll traln mature. *PGIMl* WINNUl •• t • u..-.,_.. ••~ ' I e 08" GOLD
hr. ftoneea.4SZJ. •250! WALlll&LH l .. CASHPAID 1461 It u.t6ll r.lv&R S"'RVIC!::
Mtr ... a~:OOJ'.M. .... • ........_ ApPIYllr ""'8oo 9 lf•llllff-K~ 11 Weh r/Drjri.l ftetrh lledll ~ Uv nn ftan. FINE FURN la AN· ...... ..... .... , ......... w'......... ' '*1tl.Dl«notllT.f\D ............ lDllt Ooed. 1'1QUES.l62300 ~quat Opportunt~y AltEQ.!OpponunJl1 .._ •0 Diii" n liwM . ,. ·r i ,.,. ......_ ... nos. :-_.
Empjo1er .... ,.,u.,;.. •~ . ..: ~ ' Ii LIU •e• ..... lh4 . .• . ..... . l•r~•. aHDDlat •d
WAH'l'-Aonotf 3 ' ......... _ 1---= .... in....;."' c! I ·"~ I ' 1• M'oat1oin•l'-1 Warl &or• 6 "'IOTHllt . Xlnt "•iniolld ltodl. 14 wht aeee!~U---Of~~-lil-fllw J lo :zH-11Jf_1, ;'lfld -z.-. 1•NfftjlffMHt' '~1 ·-..; lfW~aii4....., '."lllld;ld.-~:-. ~---·• '·""'" 'f"-·"''.--' . J..r 1 ... .., 111·...-.--7'fl . .ll ,.Jib~~M.lllllD.. ·a-:-••
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.. DAILY PU.OT Thurldar.~ ... 1178 ....._ 1111 f060 ..._...._ .. Ide/ 11.ecrMtfrn.. T...W 9HOjAutoa. a..oort.d Aaltoa, l•porl9d
.... ••••••••••••••••••• "-'t/11•+ f 160 YeNcles 9530 ••••••••••••••••••••••• .41 •• \~.-•• ~.-•••••••• ••••••••v ••••••••••••• ... .... ••1• •• ~·· I-IOIO ............. 9040 Udo 4 Wl\rlr, a baca. ~ ............................................. '&4 Dodpslante. AM /FM ~ 9712 ...... 9727 ·-•••••••·-·--•• ·-·-·-·-••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• suoo. 7 6 PI o o e er Do d i;c e Ti rt d rt b stereo :dnt cond. Sl.200 or ••••••••••••••••••••••• -·•••••••••• ••• ••••••• ... "-bf l _... ·.AA_-•<l Cba.uia 24' Mlna motor I ·Spo ese UliY. b t r Ph t• c ._ .. M '71 BeauUfwl a.HK VVSJ MUST r-r1 1 38 .... '-40 om•n, •t"ft• ...,...._.. home. 23 000 t· 3)0cc enaine. disc: s 0 r . • ... pm 9"mlU •• t'OIDt d.LaakJDd mou·n.... . -x.&.I. fl$h. i.m twlo cileul, fuJJ ,_, __ _._..,. '6c L 11 ·•~ .. _ .. · -·;...,. Ptsm 1
11· brakes wide trit-hls of· MM08T. HOMD & C ~-.. ...., rlectrorucs radar full .. ~ .. oN mara ·race ......,, -·""""· ca · f d' I •·1 t' 1 "' Grs w ·-Sold T\lf&llJ Mt Sia&~ malln!ll, boupr sport fab eQwPi)ed ' XJnt orcn.iae. loaded w/aear, 83l-9721,8.»5.30. • 7~ ic., •or r r. • semJ.nat. '57 Intern•· MANY ~~~f!<;" :::~ :f J~~~i: w°t':~~ l:IO cond. •.soo. Call Robb ::1;.,!a~~·~ry clean me llotorhome 20• for Oona.I tractor. s ln to s l5000t.ak• 175-Mll. ~ -......... ...--sale. Low mUHae. ex· '119 Ford iv. t~. w/10~' new eng, S3000. l78S Toet.ooR"'°"'!
fetime family mem· 17. ci ........... 110 120 H P. 8' WUaon Sabot, aatl. tru. #700. 7S!Ht29 bwtn 4-1tar camper Lo m1. Moorovia Ave. C.M. UNIVERSITY
bersh1p Llndborg Rae· mett~. Geared for N.U baa, oara, cradJe 4:3Ut9pm m&.n.>' xtras. 7Sl·56ll • '74 Da\auo PU. New IMW RESALES 0-...abillt .., , quet Club. 1250 below L tor atora1e. $200. tires. Soper clean. Many ·--..=----.. 1--club rates. Wkends & ftahini W/balt SllC-.. etc M0-4438 RENT za• Flttball. sell 4 WllieelDriYH 9550 xtras. Asklng-tlSOO. .... Cara • GMC ••••-••••••••••••••••• alt 6 ... ., ...,..., On Vanson trlr. Xlnt · -•-•--' • _._ t t t97J 3 occo-T-L-~ pm . .....,._, ~-.a_.,,.. .,.,.1 --~· -o x raa. ••••••••••••••••••••••• -~ • .-• _11> W .• ...,..ED ""'"'--'72 Venture Cat. 15', fully 845-2283 CO Automatic, leath.-r In 2850Harbor8lvd. "'"I used cpt Sl.00 yd, • GI bo equipped w/trlr Must STA MESA -9570 terior. air cond & atereo Co6tu Mesa S40-964o
TOP CASH DOLLAR dog ~happing cage flO 15 aatron open w, 1ell 9llSO Call a.ft 7pm Bent new 27' Pace Arrow .._...,.,.. •yp •••••--•••••••••••••• OlOJOC> PAID FOR YOUR dbl CM&c $25. N1&ht sllld MHP Mere .. Vanson ~Trl9 · ' Dully·wk\y,P.P.Slps6. ~,,....., "14Chevrok!lcustoin Vun lt74 3.0CS. '74,loml's,xlntcond,new
JEWELRY, WATCHES. SLS. TV stand SS. Hdbrd. ~e/ofr.f E~~',!;....cond . 844H548 #I IM CALIF. c-•en. Ookl velvet ln· The ult I mat .. lu"ury Ores. S?JOO.
ART OBJECTS, GOLD, bkscase ty•"'. dbl -o. _,.,.. er.__. SUnfl.sboearnewcarl""'--Ti-ti 9170 WEOUTSELL ·-"' .. 7S1 ·9152'7 SIL "" -b ~.,-~ • ... terior '4.S85. 64.i-3379 coupe with leather in VER SERVICE, Rmd1v1dcrSlO(woodJ.S 38 fl Drake ·Cralt pa le racb i11clud $500. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ALLJEEPDEALERS terio r & sunroof l97SHondaCivlcS-spd.
FINE FURN. & AN· i(al fire t'Xtlll&WJJher $10. flybrtdoe aedan. 14 rt xtru840-3218daya r t 8 30 WHY??,. <-· """) 11QUES. 845-2200 2 bar stools S20 144 Lex· b • tk d paces or ren x • SB.ICT AUTO SALIS """°""'' • . XlnLcondUaon. ---------• tngton Ln. (Moollcello> ~7 wa ba{ou \ CAL Z'/, full cn.aiae/race. weekly/monthly. Adu.It.a. LARGEST Home ofselect vam, wUl rt74 l.0So 644·S633aft S:JO LUGGAGE TAGS CM ~1291 Kol\lef scoor .a ~iu> T 0 p c 0 n d . N e w no pets. 548-6173 rNVENTORY pay top dollar for nice F\Jll power. sunroof & . .
fromyourbualnesacard Cb eenH .. wml . Evlnru de . $13.SOO,. GREATERSAVJNGS low mile uaed van11. leatherlnt.erior. (46211. 74 Honda Civic, low .,,_.. Tt;HLING. Wallace ryaler em . v.a s. 83(M372 77 Terry-Taurus. 17~'. HUGEACCESSORY .,.,.,_ 19755301o miles. xlnt cond .. new
...:actu one card for each many extras. ...9,500. self-cont, bot sbo-r. • , .. _,., U l ...,..,,.. 7"'1 .,..... tag 1 "Grand Haroque''. ... _.., CENTER Wlthaircood &i.tereo res, ape . .....,., . ., . .,..,.., P UI one spare. We service for 9 + extras & Call 673·S099 for appt. ••Coronado 25, 3 sails. htr. gas frig & stove. sips EXCEIJ.ENT SERVICE (560M ,..LI. ~~"at~a~v~n:'an1tll ~hest Lake new! &'73-5427 Classic Bay Boat. fully f:~~ ~ ~~~t 6:SZ850·~2396 COURTEOUSPEOPLE Dodge, all pwr. A/C, i 976 H OI
strap, meetln1 airline ~ restored, x.lnt cood, ask· controls. Super cleaa, 32 Flammgo Expa~do. cust. int.. 360 VS, stereo, 4 apeed. auoroot Ir stereo
l.D. requirements. Pre Corning Counlerange inel&S00.631·1998 must sell. 645·0749 needs new home. Pnced COSTA MESA bestotfer 640-030 cassetle. <4NPHJIJ.
vent I~ & theft! For a wrt.h sel!·cleanin& oven. LJVEABOARD 64$-26.59 ' rightCaU55M17SNOW! A.MC.JEEP '73 Fon Ecooolille. auto. 1977 JZOI
personalized tae enclose avocado. works great • Ow T-.. =••· A•--... H boc d P/8, PIS. new fires, xlot 4 speed, stereo & air wallpaper, fabric or SlSOOrRestoffer 40 ens ......... a.new iuntream 31' twin 1970 ~ ar Blv . ccnclCZi
"Day Glo" paper & we PackJrtl Bell console ene. rugs. upbol. More IMh.. Sllpa/ Good coodition. Extras COSTA MESA cond. clean. 714/492·7911 . cr:::~~Olo
wtll back & tnm your stereo contemporary. thanS17.000investedlast Docb 9070 include easy lin hatch 714/549-1023 ..,L..asilMJ fSIO
tap. Or try two cards beautiful cond1tton. the year.Completewtslle.,~t ••••••••••••••••••••••• S6,29l5.00Phooe64&-6096 •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• :1::!c~t~.~~~~~
back to back. ~-·-.. i• areal .,00 Or Lido Island. $29.000. ill !;ip wanted for rr• Mot.or ........... t~i--,_..._ '84 Jeep Wa1oneer. 4·whl ~.Hl~cu#r
PRIC,..., """"'"' " ... .. arrangefl.nanclng. S 1 ~~-. ~ dn -•-t ~ .. 8 I ·-·..... _. & only 10,000 m1lei;! ~ Be:.l offer ENSJCNYACHTS a ler. Nwpt Harbor &Acceuorin 9400 ve, AU• .......... cy . ..,..orleellltg (004())
$2 ea or 3/$5 K.lng s1.te water bed-dark S48·1lll area. reward. 759-1477 ••••••••••••••••••••••• auto trans, $1500or offer. ts
WOW!!
'75 Hooda CVCC Station
Wagon Air conditioning.
AM /FM stereo, New
ures. new brakes, new
battery, luggage rac-k .
fancy Pin Stnping $2800
or best offer. 496 Cabnllo
St. CM (across from
Westcltff Plaz.a> ~9376
.._Ghio 9 735
••••••••••••••••••••••• 4tStaga$1.60ea. P&nl' wuh headboard & '84 F rd 240 6 I · :162-llO'lO • ..,._..,_ ? t31·2040 4t5-<t949 6J9lags Sl.SOea. drawer. on both sides. 18' So Cst Clas•1'c Bay Boat slip wanted for 34' o • cy engtne CAU.Ke. 540-7559 ----------'M. good for parts. still 10 Sl 40 .. aailboat. & auto trans. Both reblt. '73 Chev. Blazer. 4x4 . ._ _______ _
ormore · ea. als-Omcludesbeattngele· Boat. recond Gray CallW.'1934 $150 or offer. Contact Very clean. S38SO . .._Wmllct tStO runs S3SO SalesN0TaCxAIRncDl~ed menl $200. 968·8561 aft Marine 675-9016 eve Russ.644·0510.1131 Back 49S-4019afl.S. -••••••••••••••••••••• 497 3926
· 5·JOPM. S47·5812dys Sii SI It . BaDNB • Draw your own or send ps-1 es pos ion Y r . · Trucks 9560 WIWIU.IUY Mmdo 9738
name. address. phone & Office,.,....... & avail. Yacbtin1 Assoc. ••••••••••••••••••••••• YOUAOATSUM $1 ST "llOAOWAY •••••••••••••••••••••••
we'll make one card per Ecpil,....t 8085 S£A UY BOATS Corp.Nwpt.Bche48-~l Allot for Sole 'S:llntem'I PU. Short box. PAID FOR OR NOT SA•HA """
lag. Add2.'i'"each. ....................... Slip for 41' sailboat want· ....................... whtspokewhla, l.rg knob· TOP DOLLAR 835·3171
Send check or money or· Wood pallets. 40 each; Now n..n ed by Newport Beach Gce•al 9510 b1es. 4·cyl eng. orr. -aT-c"•s THJuu111•no111~111GM11c"'"1
rl<>rto: ~"x4S", 1•,;" deck at S4 vpu doctor.Callaft6pm, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 979-0Wor 754·0146 ~ _.. -•USED IMWt*
l'ILOTPRIMTIMG each. 47 each; JO"x45". Until 8PM 8"·7994. HaYln9 dlfflallty bay·
P.O. Uox 1560 ~ ... deck S2 ea. SSl-<!352 wan• ..... · Slip 'or 36, new a... or ..._'--0 car, '78 F2SO Ranger. with '7120024spd 175314) <.:ofttA Mesa Ca 92626 day or eve ~ • ..., -"'JI camper special pk&. '732002'5pd369KBV -' . . Jn..,. '!II week sailboat. Newport lnlckcwoJrp1Me7CCllll Loaded, must sell. '742002A.A/C/IS98.LPOI
Designers Leftovers Liv. New wood desks $99.95. IMJ~ • llarbor area. Will pay re-Ktn 540.7559 7Sl.._ '75S30l Auto. <916MTV I
rm Brkfmt S400/ofr Sofa Wood mes $60. Heavy du WEEKEND ward /bonus. 832·300. ---------1 WE BUY ·1520024spc:t.SR,137MUK tble SSS Lg Ant. chair ty typing tbls .... .,, Lg 832~ A-"--/ '76 Ford Crew Cab. XL T '77 320l 4'p .. stereo<09981 sm. Bdrm furn $50-$400. Blackboards $LS.Storage r~-'-ln . h1Jd -c;:;""Ju 9520 Rangeri.~ T. Auto. PtS. CUAM CARS '7220024sp.(544LlAI
1972MAZDA
IXlCOUrt
Anllques S20 up lldbrd & cabinets, used desks SPECIALS ......,...,ae 40 s. no c reo ... -.................. A/C, AM /FM. New tires & 11UCICS ~ o. 5-dcrys spread $225. Sleeper sofa ~SHS. <wood & meuil>. need slip for 33' saUboal. 1955 T·Bird, orig owner brks shocks + muc h
Sl25.Sat&Sun9-5332 Typewriters & Mr . Clonkey, Mintcond.Mon·Fra call more. 957·8011 or l"ftMUfil '751MW 3.0Sl
A real rotary hum! 4
speed trans <588GWY I
ONLY SI 185 ~venang Canyon Rd calculators. Stock #S54. 24, Cuddy l 714·997-4820. 494-7433. $12.000 _644-8499 ___ . ______ 1 """" Their best luxury sedan
<.:dM C.E. WHOLESALE Ci ban. Mere 228, trlr '49 Lincoln Cosmnnnlltan. '72 Ranchero CT. fully ClllVDRIEJ Not our line or cars Buy .... ,.. ............ ~ Barbor, Costa M~
~2.o791 OFF1CEFURNlTURE xtr loah.Speed& -"" equi p. Sl1SO. Firm. n~JllUL st for w h olesale
HEYER 6Jl~PlacenUa63C.1~~70 mao;l4.m + T&L Sid 90IO ~1:'::°~.f~~~ good 642·0322or644-4779 282.llHarbor Blvd. bluebook: balance on 48 ~••• ""' ••••••••••••••••••••••• COSTA MESA months. 1827N IF>
DUPLICATOR 5portWJ Goods 8094 st 0 c k • s , 3 2 2 · Wanted 30' slip or slde·tie, ·s1 Corvette, mint cond. 7; P~~ a~.~~ c~':! 546-1200 ~50re~°::~1 Js0~0ff:~ ;_;~·~~·~:;·;;~:·;:s·t~ ~~~~r. loa~ed ~WJ>Ort area, 7S2·1400 ~c~.1~0.~:r 1!1~j camper. PIS. air. P /B. -WE--P-A_Y_TO __ P_DO_LLA--R-
lncludes chemical & inghse Dix, l.Jtes, horn. Si l 960 + T&L W Ski .. _ .. , d bi trade for 280SL. Call both loaded w/extras. FOR'.I'OPUSEDCARS paper. Call 1·737~ wind scms fmt & bk. • ater .,..,UJn t s 544-4404. ukrorChuck 531-0346 aft 6PM wltdays. FOREIGN. DOMESTIC 1977, 16' Avenger. on lrlr wkndsanytlme. orCLA.5SlCS
s· lugh metal stairway. cooler chest, very few Stock 11673, 2A ·Sedan already to go, 70HP Mere '46 Ford Woody. orig Ir your car b extra dean
dbl wall gas heater. Bolh nu, S2.000. 630-7l72 Cnuser. OMC240, trlr eng, skis, ropes. jackets. motor. restored. good ·m El Camino 396. 4 spd. aeeusfll'St.
xlnt. Best offer673·6336 TY, a.lo. SI 6,500 + T&L etc. incl'd. Must selJ now. cond. Call 644·5736 new wide llres. Clean In IAUEtt IUICI(
Hlfi St.no 1098 $3800 837 3710 an. 6PM &out. Sl.S9S. 962·9~ 2925 Har bor Blvd. Pool tables. exquisite old • Stock lt57o. 20· Open, · · '53 Ford FlOO. P.U .. very fashioned model with ••••••••••••••••••••··~ Mere 228, trlr good orig. cood. Excell. '78 El CorM.o Cosla Mesa 979·2500
artistic piano legs. Slate. Brand New .. Sun su1 GOOD LOOKER!! Tr• P~ for restoration. Best of· V6, auto .. power steer· WE BUY
Leather pockets. Sl.500 Receiver. t:>hllhps Tum SI 0,050 + T&L ••••••••••••••••••••••• fl'r. 646-1397 lng. Soper Sharp! Only
value, sacrifice S48S. Lable, Techinccs Cassetl ~ Sdte/ 9120 600mi. 1409123J. USED CARS Odaverfree. s:J6.8l02 de ck. Quad rare x -·ss Studebaker Silver $5399
speakers Best offer St o c: k # 6 3 2. 3 0 · ••••••••••••••••••••••• Hawk. Gd cond. $800/bst. CAJ..LGARTH
f'or Sale, 4 Bob Dylan 645-3551 S~bridge . ~ton '67 Ford tnxk & ful· 751·257S, 552.0732 •77 ChH. PU Used Car Mgr ~~~~~.~~:.2· Fri· Solid oak 7' Stereo.' 1\vin;1IB~E2itriA.Ns ly~lf-contalned81lO\.•f Recrtaffoeal 4wh~ld.r1ve.V8,4spd.. 54().5630
-w/hand carved panels DELIGlIT ca er camper pa • Vthidn 9530 AM /FM stereo & more!
Many xtras. Good cond c G981'") .vei.a Verde Country Club 11650. 846-0903 $38,150 + T&L $2200. <7141847.9821 ••••••••••••••••••••••• l ""' · IOll~SO\' & so,·
• LINCOLN· MERCURY
ttouse of Imports 1
••• ..... ••• '•• •u••• ••••
• • • •• • \l ,),
·m 5301. 4·spd. mctatlJc
p~unt. 4-spkr stereo. 1m
mac. $12,750. 615-0690
•••••••••••••••••••••••
t975MIZ280
SEDAN Tobacco brnwn
& in immaculate c:ond1
taon' t229MFW >. Mu.,t
i.ee to appreciate! Buy or
le~
'00 BMW 1600. AM tFM. 1974MIZ450SE
new llres. very l.'lean. Complete with stereo.
must sell $1700 752-8300 pwr wandows and with
'71"'1 BMW 2002. mint only 34,0)() low males.
cond. AC. $3lOO 673.ans. < J4.2LJW I Buy or lease.
645-.5029 1975 MIZ280C
'77 630 C-1. silver Stereo. cruise control.
metalllc. blk leather. al PWT windows & lock'·
loys. AM 1FM 4 ~pcaker truly a ftne automobile'
stereo. 548-5038 <826MITI Buy or lease.
Membership. full eqwty IMhlrW.W QE.ARAMCESALE $6299
membership. Outstand· DE:MOIY ... -. For Sale 8' Cabover .... -W-..!I! ing investment. Save ~,.... 11&Tr' """ """
c.,. 9715
2626 HARBOR BLVD. ••••••••••"'•••••••••••• We have a good select aon
of other fine M BZs in our
inventory. Call~ Loday ! $3.ooothru Pvt Ply. Ask ••••••••••••••••••••••• camper. 1977 Pilgrim. Only 3 1977 Tiogas left' U£••1s-.a•s Stove, oven, xJnt cond. F II tr . d mg $15,000. 968~ eves GtMr.. 9010 nw "" u Y se ·contame
aft 7PM ••••••••••••••••••••••• SEA RA y $2200. ~7860· motorbomes. No "re·
9'STURDYDIMGY 8' Cabover camper. asonable"offerrefused. Ml-sa Verde C-Ountry Club llOl Coast Hwy. N.B. hydraulic jacks, xlnt BILL YATES
eqwty membership for w cover $250. 833-l092 631·2547 cood ... CJ\
~c. greatly discounted. lB',. canoe. car rack & .-------•1 · -· 7
68-
5792. VW.PORSCHE
Jlmost '.-.ioff. 556-31.38 paddles $300. Aft spm .. 72 TOLLYCRAF'T. V Camper Shell w/bool for -cry Co u ra er or M a z d a
San Juan Capistrano 111..aoo 493-4511
Groth Chur<Met
I 1211 ~ixll l l•d.
Httnhn<Jlon hoch
847-6087 549.JJ) I
'77Toyota PU. SR5
Long bed low m 1 ·s.
loaded w txt.ras. Will sell
w / or w/oot camper top 2 KinR Tut l1t·kets for We<I S49-32'70 good cond w /trlr. Look· Pickup. $250. 955-1978
.JWle 7 4 PM $35 each. loah, MGl'ilM mg for off era. Full st.em•--~-'------'66 Dodge. 1 lnT flatbed & boot. B · O · Ca II !r19-7Sl0. M6-Ml8 EqulpMtllt 9030 covers. Daya 9S7·1633. WAHTID
W--l-k -.-R f ••••••••••••••••••••••• nites 962·0800 Camper. self-contained u an e rag wane f 8' .._,.. ~ ton k cooler, as new $850 Also WAMTTO SELL 38' commercial diesel or ,,_..on 4 pie ·
8 storage boxes w/locks Ross whlteline r e · swordfisher with or up Must be less than 3
• 00·2020/tal 8 PM corder-400 n.; swim lad· without Newport moor· )TS old. ~3501 eves &
w/open·road camper.---------
fully equipped. xlot cond. '68 F2SO. Cimper spedal.
Make offer. 540-0400. very clean. AtC. 2 tanks.
Tnicb 9560 360 eng. 11995· S57·S658.
•• • ••• • •• • • ••• •• • •. ••. • aft 6pm or wk ends.
COSTA MESA '76 Capn v.a. must sell.
AMtFM cassette. P1S.
Dtx in~r 646-1578 WllUY
USID CilS!
We're the new Chevrolet
dealerstup in the Irvine
Auto Center We need
your used car' JOE
MACPHERSON
CHEVROLET
21AutoCent.er Drive
IRVINE
768-7222
9720 •••••••••••••••••••••••
•DRIVE A*
*LITTLE •.• *
SAVE A LOT
SHOP&COMPARE
BARWICK DATSUN
, "' tu;t11 l q11 t • 1111
8Jl-137549l-JJ7S
A11ss10N vi1io ii..Po11rs . . .. .... .. . ,, ......... ._ .. .
831·11•8 •95-1704
·73 2200. suck, ice blut'.
clean Mui.l sell' $6SOO
637 3321. 6394325
·m ~E. air. AM 11-'M.
4 s pd . e'<cellcnt rond 1
lion Call ufter 6. 645-9'1~J
'67 230. new enRtnC. mant
l'Ond. mu.'l Sl'c •
55 1 ij()7j I' I'
der. two s tep, stainless. ing. Ready to fis h. weekdays.
STE rt I. ING SI LVER and misc. boat parts. $28,000. 545-8734 Mos::r::-/ ••••••••••••••••••• .WO..INparW •••••••••••••••••••••••
----67 ZJ<fi. M BZ. xlnt cm1d .
COINS 1-'ranklin mlnl Call Daleat498-Z709. 9150 proof quality Sacrifal'e. 18' lobster. swordfish
b75-9925. 1 Lewmar winches, 2 #45 skiff, '77 Johnson. ex-•••••••••••••••••••••••
3-spd. I #16. 1 #2 reel tras. w,oo. 545-8734. Rocket Hon 125 $47S. Hon
Boxes. lrg 18x12x23, 200 halyard ssoo. Days 100S100,3biketrlerS17S.
Pd test. stand-up type. 556-6040 Charles. looh. ll..t/ Hoo 400 F exhaust sys
Creal for moving or Chartet-9050 $100. RD bar w/lamps
storage. $995 pr bundle WJLLARDBOATWORKS ••••••••••••••••••••••• S7SS52·9073
of 15 F'ree dPlavery ln· YARD SALE. Bo at Chart.er 60' Plush yacht. ---------
sade Or Cly. Call S52·34-H parts, marine hardware Reas. Hourly. daily, 1971 BSA Motorcycle .
- -----& lot s of teak & weekly.Mcxlco.675-2172 SOO~c Vactor 1900 Litton m1crowa\e, new mahos:any cabtnetry, All on~I miles. S600. good
S3i5. 10' velvet couch below cost. Items ob CHARTER 57' Columbia ~on. 675-1597 even·
s:n>. 2 chrs & ottoman solete to current com· Sailing Sloop. Memonal lDP; 7S2·95LSdays.
S'iS t>a. F'r<>ezer $50 pany produc tion. Sat Day. 3days for only S900 yz125D Trail ridden
Bu mper pool tbl $75 Dsk May 20. 9am 4 JOpm. Bare boat. 67S·091S or eblt M t 1 T 11 ~~·Slh;a:i'J.~ S'l5 ea. ll200CondorAve.F.V. 675-2075 borg ti~ez:e:soo~r~
---Mercury 20HP. low hours, loots, Soll 9060 _9'1_S-Oi __ 11 _____ _
AllPnt ion hobbyists & xlnt. $S50or trade own 13' ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ka Jewelry craftsmen As· Zodiac. 673-7123. FUJI . y A.MAHA wuaki ~ &c Honda i.'rtd beads. jewelry fand 175. s:tiOea.
1 n g s . m a c r a m e loats. 'ow9r 9040 DEAi.BS 714/5'5-6618 m!lle~aals , ceramics. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Yac~Broker1ge1 u......i-cnmpang machine etc. 35' Hacker twin Chevy lliUnga Wanted. ............ 350• 4-cyl, cherry . uoo E . Ocean RI vd. 283's. Flybrdg. slpS 6. lrg So.thwe1hnt leu t han 1,000 ma ·s .
Balboa 67S·7563 cockpit. $4000/bst offer. YocM Sales Stomt. S1115. 673-7123·
673-L281 an 3 PM. 2616 Newport Blvd. Honda 350, 4·CYI, xlnt .
23 Channel CB w /antenna Newport Beach stored. 9fJ,50 or trade for
I Renegade Courier mdl) Bay boet, 18' LapStrake (714) 673-9211 13· ZodJac. 673-7123. 8e11ch umbrella. cam as, Classic; Gray l /B. Xlnt. 1--..:..· -----------------
student dC!lk 1 drawers $2495/trade 759--0260 Catalina 27. VHF. elec '67 BMW R•S Looks &
Rd cond .. chaise loun~c Bay bout 18• G . start outbd. xlnt cond. runs great Xtra& ln-
nceds pad. chest or board 800 hrs (:3Y tn· $11.950. 830-508S eluded $1000541M634 drawers. very rea.'lona· · · overs. 1-'---------ble, call between 5-9pm xt.ras. $2350. 64.2-5583 Col 43 diesel, race/cnme, Kaw as a kl 1 O o, and
645-71157. 25· Seacraft twin Volvo 9 bags of sails, loaded Moped, SlOO or beat offer
170HP, I /O's. Cuddy wtequip, PP55&-9133 each. 673-302SalU Nci:~ilmt~cnhurJ~rn~~ cabin. outriagen, davits, 32' DSLCUtter, '76 '76 Honda SOO T win
lennls " swim mem-tandem trlr. Trade OK. Fully equipped. F..tate Beautiful cstm Sac_,,
IJendlipe av.ii. 844-0050 213-3J&.7393. Sale. thousand• o f Cash499-49l3
Doria dollars below market. -·------1 C'-ed~loat SERVlCEAFLOAT '76 Sus Rotary w1fair1n1
izg tenl 2 ke chesta .. 2 2 27' Columbia River YACHTS " saddle bep AM tFM
motor bikes . hxer up· Trawler. Monterey type. 201 E. Cat. Hwy. N 8 opt. 0.11 558-(1131
pers. Suzuki 135 & ~:~~19':-!~~i~~'co~~ 675-3ZSZ Motor..._ .. Wt/ :¥!...~ha IO. 844' 1923 an. w /Balboa lsl.and moor-So. Coast 22' raclnf sloop, R...t /St•... fl 60 .,...... ln• " dinahy. Aaklna good cond. s2 .ooo .•••••••••••••••••••••••
AJumlJlum patio t able, Sl6.000. 48' 7439. . 67~1714. 840-7123 Rent a 1977 Executive
chain. umbrella 1235. ---------• Motortiome or Minim·
6'D-403I i---------132 ft . Keteb trallerable motorbome•from Herb
Swlmmln1 pool. Above
grt)Wld. 18'xf' w/accaa.
'llever used. 831..-..
TAXIDERMIST'S Drtvat.e
col.JectkJn, lal ofrertns. szo.aso. a.g.9795
QUILTS. direct f rom
Salem. Ark. 9ullUna cir·
de. -..1es. Sac.
FOR SAU Sl6.000 alpa e Pl mt.r 4 Friedlabder. Call •DY of um 24' Reinell Seadan uUa 54(Ml()Ol ex 53 Ron lhe!le numbera
Bridle, OMC m, xtra 19Mn7
dean, d~l 1t.Uoo, VHF, 1-------•I 577.7rn
depth lloder. Wlt tanl, ••ff--~ a •da 21 82Mlll many xtru. Priced to -
move. Loaded for cruls· ii 20• mtr hm. 4111 ml.
°'$12.710. ina. Ne-w VHF. Ex· Xlnt cond, •uu xiru. eel lent condition! Prlcect to ..u. Ma.tJa
HAlllSOM'S $7500. cbrl. ec.ar7 evaJWtnda
SIA IA Y IOATS 6' 19'0H FOR RENT 20· Mtr Home e~'-~ ~~· SK7ft'7 3101Cod nw1, N.B. <Prt .. t.Partyt c:omptetel)' equlp'd , ve~
-... -. ma~w• W/Mb-6)1.U47 c:~an87J.6133 bet', knit trll<'cr. 3 '<tra -Mtt ~ ca.rda.. Sa.:. A41U11• 21, lt'JI. alnl 11'11 18' ()pew .._, ..,.
U$0/beat oiler Ne-a1JQ8 CON1Q"1 ''1 .... .._ Y1M121 aft Kome, •ooo ~li.!"HY s m 'lb . c 0 r 0 a "lwlQ~ CHY~ Wed .... Ull JIUU.~.1'11·1.MH"
Coroa omatlc olectr. :'I'm. au"•Y•d Ma/ 2. eot. 21. 4 M ~...SLSO/bmtof• =·· OWD 10~ oU I\ I
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
New'78
LUV Pickup Truck
• • • • •• • • • Immediate Deliver,! : • • • • Radio •
• HHter~rotter .
• Mlrron e
• Saddle vinyt benctl ... ,
No. 2t9159n&n • • • smai • • •
9701
67 Anglia.
Runs rreat. $4.90 . ~.&tMMS
H<>use of Imports
, • , t 1 I o I~• • •••
''• ' •II
1978 BMW's
HERE NOW!
COMPUTE
IOOYSHC>r
MOWOP84
oc••IMT
SILIC110M °' IMWllSA&IS
We ma1 have )'OUr next
car In our inventory. Qi ll
us today'
131·2040 49M949
~COUNTY'S IT
ttnur,r o f trnpart..-,
'74 Datsun 710. 4 dr. A C
xlnt cond ~ to belwve
&torr 673-8003
'73 Stauon wagon. auto .
A !C. $1100
495.5389
'76 2SOZ.. air. ma )(~. 4·sp .
lo mi's. 1mrrutc: $6950
~4484.
IE Datsun SW. 2 dr. runs
good. but body 1s lt'rn
ble &')()() 67 3 · :1620
SJ.350 or ~st olf..r l'I'
76t 0239 (7141
'68 280S~: classic coup.·
New r~tor:it1on. loadl'll
S8.950 I 496 14~
•·••···••········•····· '76 MGI
Cocl\crt1ble. • i.pd . elt'l O\erdr1ve. AM 1t':\I ,
rallyt• wheels. radial'
"Canary Yellow '"1th
brown tnm. Mint conll'
Very clean 3nd 1m
marulale throUJChouf'\:'
ILtc ZJSPOW I
$4295 . .
CREVIER
'73 Datsun 1200. 1:ood &' ~1
'
110
"
0
"'"'
cond Sl81l-O/b~st offer s""''" """ 546-1934 Oan 835·3171
Tl<l ULTl"'Al( DAIVtHO MACHINL '71 Datsun SIO. bmtblk. -rebuilt motor. sport s•&S ·70 MGB OT. runs good.
pension. mags. s port clean m & out. Sl500
whl. must sell M 11ke of 754 0736 momfogs
rer.496-3942aft6PM P..pot 9748
•'7'4 710•
Air. A M t FM , mag
wheels. 673·3550.
•••••••••••••••••••••••
'75504CL. great C011d . lo ml ·s. Offer?
499·3233.
'73a40Z. 4•pd. aar. mags. poncJM 9750
rachals. AM JFM. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1600. S48· l066
9725 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'74 Fiat X19, alnl cond. lo
mt at.ereo. 567-1.D aft 5
PMwkdys
'76 fut 128. ~t condl
lion. AM /FM 8 l r ll .
7Sz.9077 all 5pm
'Tl ~ aedan. 2-dr, 4•pd.
ori .. OWMr . Oood condJ tloa. excetl. trans. ISSO.
~
LARGE
S&ICTIONOF
Ill.AND M1W t 978
PORSCHE 9241
St. 1.11 for your best buy too.y Hurry'
llLL YATES
vw.roRSCHE
San Juan Capiltrano
111-4100 4tM5 1 I
1911 POaSCHE
ti IS s speed, 1~ cassette.
ITIQP & Oftl1 rr ,ooo miles.
111411.=rb! U llACIC
VAUIYIMPOIT1
IJ I ·2040 49M94t
1977 Ponche 911.S. only
Sttllllg •ft1UUftl wuh • 4500 m1 olr 1unroof, Dellt Pl.kit CIMllned Ad t.t.ber. AMt FM. io.ded. .... atm,a. malta' ••. M\aat ull. Sl8,SOO J• caU 142·51'11. ~
-
7 7
•t DEALIR IN U.S.A.
~~~VER
ROUS-ROYCE
U40J•mboru
Ht--19H<ll \'---~~
CLOSED SUNDAYS
. '63VW5mAN
1500. Good condition. 2
owners. 47 ,000 miles.
Rebuilt tran1ml11ion.
ALMOST NEW MOTOR. sc--,-n-.. -63.-.-bi-.te-.-A-,-c-. Xln--t• ExceUeot 1nt.enor. Good
.......,. Pri-"' 11. pp tires. Needs body went. ~ "~ tose · · Just bad tune up. S7SOor 7_1'_1846-__ 54Ml6 ______ 1 best offer. Call 540-5S95
Toyota 9765 7 1superbeetle ort1
•CHIV.'77
MOMl'ICAl.LO
Starr car. Wltb auto.
traoa.•do.ded! (3399).
Mow Olly $4991
HOWAIDCMYl'oltt
DOVE I& QUAIL STS. <Near MacArt.bur,
J amboree & Bristol)
NEWPORT BEACH
IJJ.0555 ••••••••••••••••••••••• S20001Bo
IEFORE YOU 71~. all Spm. 1970 NOVA. Dark green, 2 SBJ. YOUR 213.~ dys. door. Excell e o t ' transportation. Good TOYOTA, Extra clean ·11 Sqrbk. cond!tioo. -50. 67s.1S97
SEE US! ~:.i. ~tires + evenin&I• 75.2-9515dar.s.
MAaqUIS TOY OT A "72 Kinpwood wgn. new
MISSION VIEJO '64 vw Bug, tram as a!tenlator, p /B.
tl I ·ZllO 49S. I 2 Io Excellent PIS. A/C, bl mileage but 675-9933 good concl P.P. $1500.
'77 Celie. GT coupe Wbate Yot.o 9772 ,,_~ __ _.;.._IM7_·9640 ____ ,
w/tan Interior. Sspd .. ••••••••••••••••••••••••-------•! AM I FM ste r eo w 18 •-.ri.•RYOU IU1' track, wire wheels. deck -rack, pin atnpes. 15.000 AUSB>VOLVO,
miles. Cherry cond. See ua at Southern
$5795. Ask for Rick. Oranp Comity's Volvo
91iiUBat; 646-9303 Beadqaarten.
• 15 Toyota Corolla Xlot MAR9UIS VOLVO · . MISSION VIEJO =tbst °cJr. ~·~~ g e · 131-2110 495-1210
'00 Toyota Corolla. orig
owner. Economy car. Lo
mi's. Xlnt cond. $1000.
548-9767 aft Spm.
'75 Celica GT Llftback.
S.apd, alr, very sharp.
St795. 552-0617 aft 6pm .
75VOLVO 1641
SEDAN. Lo ml, perfed
cond .. traded for a
Mercedel. (53ZNBN}
SSZ91
House of 1n1port'.
• 'It • '73 Toyota Corolla, xlnt
rood. SUnroof. Must sell.1 ______ -'---
OUT'STAHDIMC:i
MOYA C:OMCOUIS
L1 .. 1d. be•tlhl &
.... Olt ... lloww-
_. .... &At l ....
...... 10,000 ......
Ciiia•• wire wllHls.
elec ••roof, ••r.e decll stereo, a r,
,.... wlltclows. e'4tc:·
trlc door locks.
$MIO.
13'"'147 Days
640-7171~
'71Nova,4SIK mi's, sood cood. Bit of r . Call 536-0019 OltAM&E COUNTY 6'2·21U.
·n Celle. GT, blk on ~lk .
ptmtripea, AM/FM ater,
maaa. $5800 /BO.
54M348.
VOL VO "72 Nova, 2 dr, &, auto,
EXCLUSIVELY VOLVO clean in 6 out. 23 mpg. .t.arsest Volvo Dealer $12SO. 962-tlSM ln=e=! ..,7 Qe..tte REALLY a.EAN DIRECT 4 spd., raclio. beater, lo ml Sbarpl (351RYO>. ~~ m~ =~·· "1:1t!MJf 77::.
9
2+2 owner jotned Air Force .• _._._ •-•-_.,. _ _..,...,,.. Sacrifice ! 644·6488 or 2025 S Auto, powerateering, air
644-7537. Anaheim 750-2011 ~'4o~~ wheels. Lo
.......................
T...... 9767 G._al 9tol ..............................................
$3499
Groth Chl"•r-:>lf't
1 s11 , a~,..h 1 .. ci
1--1 y""'''''"'" a. o< n
847Ml87 549lJ31
1976 TB7, v1ctory edit .. '73011y1lerNewYorker4
A/C, AJl/FI( tape, lug· dr, full power. 'M llerc.
p1e rack, 15,000 ma , Cougar; 240Z Datsun.
sharp. $5200/bst orr. P.P. 761H351 'Cl a... Impala, IOOd
551M»l0 lllck "I 0 tram., DIW batt.,
v lu••• 9770 ........... •-••••• .. •• :.,.~d Urea. $250.
••••••••••••• .. •••••••• BUlCK IJlvicta 'st. Good ...:..;..:...;;,....;.._ _____ ~ WE IUY & SELL cond, New tires. Best of-70 Klnpood l"Atate.
VAi .,sw·•ll'!!..EWS fer. 968-2791 paa •ID· PIS. PJDB .• v.. ,_,...,.. .., _..._MAIS A/C, All/FM, roolra LariestSelectiOO n(ID Oil game MIUW --.-.1058 IJl The Area!!! Buick pun: hue power. • WEST G Will trade for *'600 cub. 1i72 a.v Ncwa, v.a. etr. ERMAN Must use lmmed. tnm.SUOO. IMPORTS 980-4253 11~
1115 Rubor Blvd .. C.N.
645-6120
VOLKSWAGEN
511111 S.rolce
Top0ol1ar
Paid for Used vw·s
COMMOMWIALTH
MOTOIS
JIMCI lt5l
HGSo. Brist.ol
SamaAna
MMZ20
Approx. 2 ml. No. of
~oo.tP .....
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0..-IO .. .._...
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VW-POISCHI
San Juao Oaptarano
117_.00 4tMll 1
'911 a.,.a. HJI ....................... ... ................... .
• ~=· •
1977 CADILLAC
&DOIADO
COWIS umRXB>. • to Cbooee rrom.ulowM
$9918
Nabers
Cadillac
2600 lf.uti.11 erviJ.
C:1"IJ Mt~ ~O lfllXt
"72 <lu'Jl1-Sta. w111. rw-11 loedad. 4fiO .... lo mi. ..-.111.-0,FV
C..011h H32 .......................
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NEW '71 FORD FIBTA
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s3199
NEW '78 FORD MUST ANG II
lDOOl2+2
SUGGESTED RETAIL •••••••••••• SSIM.12
SALIS PRICE •••••••••••••••••• S4t54.12
DISCMllT •••••• 5600
'MEW '78 FORD LTD II
2 DOOi llOUIHAN
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SUGGESTIO UT Ali. •••••••••••••• SMn
SALES PRICI •••••••••••••••••••• S74n
DISCMlll ••••• s1000
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SALES PIJCE .................... St,338
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NEW '78 FORD FAIRMONT
4 DOOi 5TAnoM WAIOM
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'78. GRAND PRIXS · '78 SUNBIRDS 178 PHOENIX
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CAT.AUNAS·IOMMEVILLIS ESPRIT· FOi.MULA ·Tl.AMS AM LE MANS· ~RAND LEMANS· GIAMD AMS
76 DATSUN 280Z
8 cyl., 4 speed, air $6488 conditioning, AM/FM stereo
radio 'with tape, heater. (497PPK).
·7A CHY. MONTE CARLO . . 76 OfEV. MONTE CARLO
condltlonl'1g, power steering,$ v.-. ·""''° ~. factOfY air 29•. .
AM · rtfdlo. 'heater. whitewall ttres. tinted glaa. Landau tap.
(879KOO).
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Landau top. rallyes. ~.
(&49HOH). .
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whitewall nr.. ltnted t'--•
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Huntington Beach
Fountain Valley
EDITION
Afternoon
-N. Y. Stottks
VOL.. 71, NO. 138, .. SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, MAY 18, 1978 TEN CENT
BB Cha Political Aid 'Nixed'
By llOBERT BARKl:ll
• Of .. C*ty ..... ,...,
The Huntington Beach
Chamber of Commerce. which
raised, borrowed and spent
$2S.OOO in April's city elections.
J1l8Y find it difficult to find
political candidates who will ac·
cept its ftnancial support.
Two Hu:ntln8t00 BeacH resi·
dents seeking office-Harriett
Wieder and Steve Holden-5ay
thanks but no thanks.
Chuck Gibson, a third resident
of the city on the campaign trail.
said he would have to examine
the sources of contributions very
carefully before acce pting'
chamber aid.
None has beetl oUerect ftmm·
cial assistance yet but they are
local favorites and Republicans
-key considerations of the
chamber in previous endorse·
men ta.
All find problems with the fact
that ml\Ch of lbe money for the
chamber's political venture
came in a $1S.ooe chunk Crom a
single donor.
Builder G. Louis Graz1adio Ill
loaned the cbamberthe $15 000
to cover expenses in April when
rour of the five chamber en·
dorsees went down to defeat. Despite controversy and the
less than overwhelming success
thus far. Bob Terry, chairman of
the chamber's Political Action
Committee. said the group will
continue its political activities in
the rail. It Intends to sit out the
June primary
flolde n·. who 1s running
against five others for the 36th
State Senate seat relinquished
by Dennis Carpenter . said that
he has discussed the e lection
450 Affected
with chamber officials
He said that he wouldn't ac·
cept the money.
Holden said young people have
lost fa ith in Orange County
politics because of the m any re
cent indictments. He indicated
that the acceptance of money
s upplied by a single source
would add to the credibility gap.
He says that he has sought to
get contributions from many
s ma ll donors instead of large
contributions from .t iew donors.
Holden says that he ha::. raised
SlS.000 m this 1ash1on "but 1t
would be nic~ to have S7:>.000 '·
Mrs Wieder. who 1::. engaged
in a campaign for i,upervlsor in
the 2nd· Orang@ County Ql&trict.
says the chamber':> entry mtc.
politics on a financial basis ~ not.
a proper function of the orgartizd-
<See CHAMBER, Page Alt
FV Teachers Win
Five Percent Ilike
Tea chers in the Fount'ain
Valley School District approved
a new contract Wednesday call·
ing for a five percent pay increase
and an additional $200 in fringe
benefits.
The contract, which takes ef-
fect July 1, will cover about 450
teachers.
Dr. Robert Read, who led the
district's negotiation team. said
that the pay increases will add
up to about Sl million.
This includes salaty increases
as well as additional pay for
tea chers who advance on the
~a lary schedule because of
added experience and education.
Read said that the average
teacher, now e arning a bout
Ex-aide's
Son Slays
Instructor
AUSTIN. Texas CAP> -The
13-year-old son of former White
House press secretary George
Christian shot his junior high
school English teacher to death
in the classroom today. police
said.
Lt. Fred Maxwell . chief of
public affa irs for the Austin
police department, identified the
boy as John Christian, who was
taken into cus~and brought
to t h e po li o~ s tation for
questioning.
$16,000 will receive a bout Sl8.000
under the new contract.
Read said that about 85 per·
cent of the district 's $17 million
annual budget goes for salaries.
Yale Wishnick. president of
the Fountain Valley Educators
Association. said teachers gave
overwhelming support at a voice
vote Wednesday at Courreges
School.
Abput 200 teachers participat-
ed. he said.
"It 's a good contract. ..
Wishnick said. "For one of the
few times teachers can go home
in June knowing they have a
contract next year ...
Wishnick said one of the key
Chet and Jan Lynn of Costa Mesa were
playing darts at a local pub Wednesday
night when they wer e nearly struck by
their own car. Police said'a car driven by
Encarnacion Barhean. 35. s mashed into
the rear of the Lynn auto in the parking
lot outside the Bull and Bush. 877 W. 19th
St.. pushing it through the wall. No one
was hurt. police said. but they boo~d
Barhean on suspicion of drunken drivinJ?.
George Christian. who served
as press secretary for President
Lyndon Johnson and recently
handled public relations for Gov.
D o lph B ris coe's lo s in g
Democratic primary campaign.
, arri ved at the police station.
visibly shaken.
The s la in t eac her wa s
i de ntified as Wi lbur R od
Grayson, 29.
About 30 childi"t!n from the
Rescuers Hea<tfor Zaire class were brought to police
h e adquarter s t o g iv e
information about what they
saw.
Maxwell said Grayson was
shot three times -beneath the
right arm. in the right arm and
in the right side or the head with
a semi·automatlc .22·calibe r
,
An unid e ntified m othe r
takes her little d a ughter for
a swim in the big Pacific
near the Huntington Beach
Pie r . The toddler was one of
seve ral youngste rs getting
their first look a t the "bag
bathtub.··
~500 Europeans, 14 Americans to .Be Saved
• BRUSSELS, Belgium <AP> -
Belgian paratroopers took off
for. Zaire today. vanguard or a
Joint Western airborne mission
~'O rescue more than 2.soo
~uropeans, and 14 Americans
trapped behind rebel lines in
embattled Shaba province.
Orange Coast
Weatller
Falr through Friday
~.lth eo,a~lnued warm
daya. lncbs ranatn1 ,rom mid to &ipper 70s at the
beaches 8Dd IOI lnJand.
INSIDE TODAY
l>td p bow that Uvblg ca IN ~ to wnr lt9olilt~ Tlw daftQef• that lurk
... ,,., -cw cMtcdW °" PQgt A7.
l•tlex
..
Belgian air force transports
c arrying an undetermined
number of paratroops ln combat
gear left Brusse ls' military
alrport to begin the 5,000-mile
journey.
Two companies of French
Foreign Legion paratroopers,
Teen Cyclist
Badly Injured
lnHB Crash
A teen·aged Huntihgton Beach
motorcyclist was hospitalized
Wedn•r after his bike col·
lided With a car and he was
hurled headfirst onto a sidewalk.
Timothy v. 1\cl\en, 17, or 8141
Tyndall Drive was listed In
1uarded condJUon today at Run·
ti naton Intercom m untty
Hoapttal ~ multlple IAjurt•.
Nursing atalf spokesmen said
he eulfered head lnjurletr h'lc·
turea, abrasions and lacerations.
Pollce .-Id 'l'lchen was ridlnl
northbound on . Edwarda Street
near Edl.apr Avenue about 4: 15
p. m.. wheD be eolUded wlth a
tar drl"9 by Oenevine M. Vln
cent, 73, ot leell Bartlett Lane, ff unUntton BMth.
Neltbtr. Mr1. Vinc~nt nor
Tltben, who pOltff aat• ware no ~~ bi!lmet. WU clled M
UM HeDe •
meanwh ile, took orr from rifle.
Corsica for an undisclosed Maxwell said he understood
destination, reliable sources the boy arrived a fte r his
there said. French radio first.period English class had
reported lf\ey, too, were headed begun. Parents described the SWI.lzerJand for Africa. class as a special one for gifted
Belgium's /remier. Leo and talented youngsters.
Tlndemans, t.ol his hatlon tirne "The teacher was sitting on a Reb• .. maJ Set was running short for the stool, conducting class. He (the u.a a
evacuation or the civilians, m~t boy l just walked in the door and
of them Belgians, stranded in pointed the rifle at him. The 'V Ch Ji ·
the area of the copper-mining teacher dldn 'l lake ll real .r or ap n
town of Kolweii. seriously. He said somethi~.
"FighUne is taking place in and the boy just shot him," LAUSANNE . Swilterla nd
the s treets of Kolwezi, and Maxwell said. (AP\ -Charlie ChapUn'!l body
whites are the ma.1n targets," he Maxwell said he understood will be reburied in the llpot
told-reporters here. . the youth, an honor roll student. where It was dut up by grave
DtplomaUc sources In London was upset over an incident the robbers 2~ months ago. But a
said the operation had been previous day when a substitute protective vault wil! be built
mounted with the approval of teacher was present. arol.Uld it to prevent ~ recur·
Pretldeat Carter and the leaders "The boy was leadin1 a rence of the bharre theft or France and Britain, as well as discussion and didn't eel a very authorities said today
Bel1ium. good response," Maxwell said. The JOO.pound oalt coffin bold·
The UnJted States will not Jean Olson. mother or• pupil i. ... the remains of the 'ameci su~ly •-ps 1 • th in the class, described Grayson u-a wuu or Panes .or e as "fabulous. He has done film comedia n was fo und m •sion but may provide lesser tremendous things... Wednesday buried In o ~ornfield loltlUcal support of some kind, 10 mtles rrom "t'he ~t!t oge aald a State Department offlcl•l wbo alked not to be td~tltled. ''ote t R cemetery ol Corsier·sur ·Vevey
There had beef\ reports earlier TI 0 esume Where Cbapllo WU buried Dec
that U.S. planes might transport S A N T 0 D 0 M f N 0 0 • ;n · Bet1lan or o(her paratroopers to DomJnlcan Republic <AP> _ Two alleged thieves were •r·
the Central African nation. Presldfnt Joaquln~Bal11uert1 • rested.
Sourcea tn London said the 1overnmtnt ·~-v counUna final decision was npected to be in the preatdenUaJ el tJon wm Bea
made b)' PNlident Cartel' and resume u soon u coun~ Jig ch Crowd
I.he otbernational ltadefs. vote ll la. Amid on ol • About 1,&00 U.S. paratwroopen--power 1ttuaa1e am nc tour Bit turf and dazzling weltJ\er
remained on a lert at Fort military facllone, B1l1cuet'1 comblned to lu.t4l an estimated
Bra1a. N .C .. but •senior chtefop~t.left-of.centerA.n· 40.000 people to wes t county
., .... efftdal In~ Wta~ tonto Ounnan. da.hned victA)ry beaches Wedneeda)' It WH tl)e
11.ld lt w "verz...-O~" MY nd utod Plaldent c.ne,. for blHUt ~d crowd 10 f1r-Clll ums. ,_ AJ) bitp, thta •Pnna. u aald ..,_... _ _,.,,,_..,..~ ....
issues 1n negotiating was a re-
duction in classroom size from
t he ratio of 32 p upi is p er
classroom teacher.
The association railed to wm a
reduction in thas area. however
The association also was un-
s uccessful in achieving bind.Log
arbitration in gr1e~ance mat-
te rs.
The con t r act also m a kes
mem bership in the teachers· UD·
ion volunta ry ·
Wishn1ck said lht: agreement
wa::. the first in Orangt: County
this year
Fount .. 1n Va l le y !'!Choot
trustees will vote on the contract
next week.
HBMan
In Betting
Ring Guilty
A' Huntington Beach man ac
cused on arrest of ope rating .:
1tambling ring that brought in a•
least SlS.000 a week was founel
g uilty Wednesday or multip!l•
bookmaking charges.
Orange County Superior Court
Judge Robert P. Kneeland set
June 23 as the date he will sen-
tence Irving Joseph Richards.
47. of 21831 Seaside Lane. to
what could be a long term in
state prison.
It was noted durmg his tr1a!
that Richards has o long recor<1
of bookmaking and fraud al'-
Uvilies and Is currently serving
a nlne·monlh prison term ilT'
posed in Los Angeles Federal
Court for violating his probation.
Tw. or three men arrested
with Richards in Huntington
Beach last October filed gwlty
pleas rather than face trial
Pa ul Arthur Quinn. 48. an<1
John W. "J ackie" Monaghan.
45. both of Boston. were «er
tenced to 60 days in county 1at1
and placed on three year" prob-.
tion.
Her bert Frederick "Herb•t'"
Klug. 42. also or Boston. '"
scheduled to appear Friday on
Identical bookmakm~ charJ?~
He is expected to file <1 p!e;1
Arresting Huntington R~:ich
officer~ had Richard"' and ht"!
accomplices under surve1llanc1·
for four months during which
tht' group accepted thousand!\ of
dollar~ In betting on tht> outcom1•
of professional and college foot
ball games
Richards . an Edison Hu~h
School booster mem ber. used tii'
home 8." headquarter" for lht'
bettln{l operation
fl wB!I testified durmsc his tnal
that Rtt'hardA used hl!ll occupa.
tion as a pnvate inve5lJl'ator to
ll reat advarlMse in operatin~
gambling rmgs
He was de!t'nbed by a federal
CSee B()OKJES. Paie A.!>
lAAmuded
'84 Olympics
The Intern a ti o n a l
Olym pit' Committee 'today
provisionally ttwarded the
1984 Olymp1<' Game~ to
Lor. Angt1lf's and the
Winte r Game" ot 1984 to
SaraJno. Yuioslavia.
Thr IOC lhede 1L' ruling
condlhonal, uy1ng that
LoA Angeltft mu~t a1tree to
., t·ontra<•t \l'llh1n the
fr •mt~ork of the IOC
rulu by Ju}) 31 .
For adciltlonal deta1t~.
t tt Sport.~. ~ Bt
-
CAA. Y 11tLOT H F
WASIUNGTON l APJ -Saytni .. aovemment
does not know how to cut." U.S. Sen. S.( Harakawa
today announced his support for the J arvis-Gann
property tax initiative.
"I am voting for Proposition 13 in the belief that
the shock tre atment of Jarvis-Gann is what
government needs to bring about fiscal common
sense," the state's Republican junior senator said.
"The shock will be felt not just in California, but all
over the nation." "The Jarvis-Gunn initiative is a g rea t _
over-simplification of u complex proble m .·
Hayakawa said. But he said he was ·•frustrated by the fa ct that
tax cuts, no matter how wisely designed. s imply do
not make their way through the Legislature."
Teen-age
Atta cl{ er
Killed~-
VANCOUVER. Wash. <AP> -
I\ teen-ager brandishing a 3().
anch s word and proclaiming
himself the "Son of God" was
shot and killed in downtown
Vancouver todav.
Patrolmen said Gregory L.
Be vers, 18, was shot twice in the
stomach after he attacked them
with the sword raised above his
head. He died at Vancouver
Memorial Hospital 90 minutes
afle r the 1: 15 a .m. shooting. He said he decided to support the initiative.
which will be on the state's June 6 ballot. after the
U.S. Senato defeated ·proposals ·that would ha~ ...
reduced b y at least S2.1 billion the increase in t he
Department of Health. Education and Welfare';>
. Officers Danne Johnson. 30,
budget for the coming year. ..
I
Format of Jarvis
Debate Challenged
By JACKIE HYMAN OI 1111 Dalty l'llet s ... H
Tempers flared today during a
Newport Beach forum on the
controversial Jarvis-Gann tax
initiative when one panelist
cha rged that the format or the
discussion was unfair
Newport-Mesa school trustee
Donald Smallwood m et with
boos from some or the audience
when he protested the procedure
o r ha v in g a pro-Jarvis
representative speak, then be
questioned by a panel composed
o r b o th o ppon e nt s a nd
s upporters of the proposition
Rites Slated
For Jlalley's
Perry Moody
Memorial funeral services are
scheduled Friday afternoon for
Perry W. Moody, a young out·
do ors man and e co logy en -
thusiast who died Sunday at his
Fountain Valley home. He was
20 years old.
Rites for Mr. Moody will be at
3:30 p.m. at the Bell Broadway
Mortuary Chapel in Costa Mesa .
with the Rev. Lothar V. Tornow or
Christ Lutheran Church official·
ing.
Disposition or his remains is
being handled by the Neptune
Society.
No cause of death has been de·
termmed. Coroner's deputies in·
vesti~ating say it will probably
be some time before they can
d e t e rmine wha t to ok Mr.
Moody's life.
A dedicated outdoorsman. Mr.
Moody was a member or the
Sie rra Club, the Natiqnal
Backpackers, the National
Wildlife Federation and the
Friends of Newport Bay Oceanic
Society.
His family suggests memor1al
contributions in his name to the
Sierra Club, 1050 Mills Tower
San Francisco 94104. '
Survivors include his mother
and father. Loren Moody Sr .•
and Marie Moody : his maternal
g randparents. Mr. and Mrs.
Clyde Strong, of Costa Mesa; his
paternal grandmother, Mrs .
Eula Moody , of Arizona;
brothers. Loren Moody Jr.,
David Moody and a s iste r, Janet
Moody. all of Costa Mesa.
Bus Fond Awarded
LOS ANGELES <AP> -A
S23. l million award to the
Southe rn Callfornla Rapid
Transit District to buy 230 new
buses equipped with facilities
for wheelchair passengers was
announced Wednesday by Brock
Adams, U.S . Secretary of
Transportation.
"'"
DAILY PILOT
j
tf , '
The Jarvis-Gann initiative.
Proposition 13, on the June 6
ballot. would limit properly
taxes to l percent of cash value
and require a two-thirds vote of
the Legislature to levy new
taxes.
Smallwood. an attorney. said
he didn't believe the formal
permitted those opposed lo the
proposition t o ade quate ly
express their views.
Speaking for the initiative was
~oland Vincent. a Los Angeles
investment counselor who is
directing the campaign in
s upport of Prop . 13 in
conj unction with one of its
authors, Howard Jarvis.
"What we are seeing in
California right now is an
ec onomic a nd s ocial
r e volution," Vince nt told an
audience of several hundred
people at the forum sponsored
by the Newport Harbor-Costa
Mesa Board of Realtors at the
Marriott Hotel in Ne wport
Beach.
"Howard Jarvis is fond of
s a y ing . 'We ga v e th e m
(le gis lators > an unlimited
budget and they exceeded it' "
Vincent said. '
In one of his questions.
Smallwood challenged Vincent
to comment on the assertion that
property taxes, which are paid
to local government, would be
cut, while the state Legislature's
revenues would not.
"You're taJcing local con\rol.
the most responsive control. and
shifting that control all the way
to Sacramento," Smallwood
said.
Responded Vincent. "We don't
have the local control that
everyone is so fond of talking
about."
He also said, "We can't afford
our present school system. It's
like a Rolls Royce. The biggest
threat to our homes are schools.
We're talking about stopping the
government from confiscating
our property."
Arterberry
Service Held
In Huntington
Funeral services have been
held for Frank L. Arterberry lc?n~time Huntington Beach
01lfaeld salvage firm operator
who died last Friday at the ag~
of 64.
. A H~tlngton Beach resident
smce immediately after World
War TI. Mr. Arterberry founded
Ollf~eld Equipment Company.
behind the new Civic Center
near 17th and Lake streets.
During the war. he served in
the European Theatre or combat
as a tankman with the Filth
Army's armored division.
Survivors include brothers
David F. Arterberry of Long
Beach and Barton F. Arterberry
of Grand Junction, Colo.
Services were conducted Tues·
day at Pierce Brothers Smith's
Mortuary, followed by burial at
Westmlnster Memorial Park.
Body Identified
DAVENPORT <AP) -The
SaJlta Crua County Sherilt'a of·
flee says a body tound near here
laaL month WU that or Greeory
John Roth, 32, of San Francisco.
1HEFT SHIF'IS
TO NEW MODEL
KUALA LUMPUR. Malapta
<AP> -Mokhtar Ahmad bouahl a new car after h18 first one wu
stolen a month ago.
Today Ole PQUce told hlm the
stolen car had been found: When
he left his office to 10 to police
headq\latterl, he found bls new
car had been atoleo. 1
Arrlvln1 at ,poltce
headqu.arten. he reclaimed tho Aral car and r@Ol1.ed lbe theft. ot I.be eecond.
• and Larry Heckman, 27. said
they fowld the youth st.anding
next to a broken display window
at Main Street Loan Co. in the
downtown business district. He
was holding the sword in his
hand.
In his belt, police said, be car-
ried a nother s word or similar
length. along with a 16-inch dag-
ger and a rune-inch bayonet.
Policemen said they tried to
talk the suspect into surrender-
ing, but he proclaimed himself
the "Son of God" and moved towa rd their patrol car. He
chopped off the beacon unit from
atop. the car and the radar unit
on the rear of the vehicle.
Police said the youth then
wa lked away, but when they
tried again to get him to sur·
render. he turned and charged
at the pair, who were s tanding
near the car.
Heckman said he tried unsuc·
cessfully to knock the s word
from the youth's hand. Both
patrolmen said they were struck
by the sword. and the shots were
fired In the ensuing s truggle.
The officers were treated for
cuts and bruises at a hospital.
Fro..P~AJ
ZAIRE •••
American troops would be used
in an international r e s c ue
oper ation.
Reports re aching Kinshasa
sa id the r e be ls i n Shaba
pro vince, source or most of
Zaire's copper exports, were
breaking out of the Kolwezi area
which they occupied last week
a nd were moving toward the
gove rnment's air base at
Kamina, 1.30 miles to the north.
However. other reports said
the ins urgent forces were
headed west toward Angola.
w~tre they have been living in
exil e.
The government news agency
AZA P said paratroope rs
dropped into the area this week
recaptured the Kolwezi airport
Wedne~ay after three hours of
heavy fighting.
Foreign correspondents have
not been allowed into the area·
and none of the various repo~
on the fi g hting could be
confirmed. Nor was there any
information on government or
rebel casualties.
Th e Morrison-Knudsen
construction firm of Bo{se
Idaho. which is building a~
electric transmission line to
Kolwezi. staged an evacuation
Wednesday and took 77
employees and members of their
families lo safety by truck and
helicopter .
The State Department In
Washington said there was no
interference with the evacuation
from the company compound
eight miles outside of Kolwen.
The Americans were trucked 60
miles to Musonoi and then~ to Kananga, 400 miles fro the
fighting.
Morrison-Knudsen saic:f o
employees, William Starkey of
Boise. and Lonnie W. Glen of
Yerrington, Nev., and Glen's
wife and chlld missed the
evacuation. Also remaining
were eight missionaries, a
tourlst and a copper company
employee.
The State Department said
there was no evidence the
remaining Americans were in
danger.
Woman Freed
In Death of
~-husband
Murder cbargea bave been
dropped qainat the ex·wife of a
Sanla Ana man found floating ln
an apartment house awlmmlng
pool. Police aaid today.
Barbara L. Bu1'11S, 47, of 200
W. Keller Ave .• waa treed from
jail after an Initial autopsy
rolled to disclose the cause of death ot her ex·husband Don1ld
I\. McCullouah. 48, of the same
Keller Avenue address.
Offtc.re aaJd additional tox·
lcologjcal teeta have been or·
dertd and the retults may not be
known for a week or lon1er.
Police 1t first believed
McCollouab WU I drownlna vto-
tlm, but a bump on bll bt1d and
other lnlormaUon led later to
Mrs. BW'DI' ..-rHt. Police aald.
Officers aa.ld they don't mo.
whether the bump wu auatalned
ln the pool or elleft'bere.
, J
Neteftole
Paul Newman. whose movie
roles have ranged from a
cowboy to hockey player.
h as a n e w rol e as a
representative lo the United
Nations :>ession on disarma·
m e nl. Preside nt Ca rte r
m ade appointment Wednes-
day .
Fro. PGflf! A J
BOOKIES ••.
probation officer as "a smooth
and sophisticated confidence
man who on numerous occasions
has compromised law enforce-
ment officials.··
. The report notes that Hunt-.
~ngton Beach police have come
into contact with Ri<:hards' al·
le gedly criminal activities on
many occasions during the past
15 yea rs.
And it quotes a Huntington
Beach detecttve : "Richards has
never worked for a living and
probably never will."
The report includes a list of
Richards' past federal prison
t e rms, an account of three
cmirts-martial he faced while
serving in the armed· forces and
the listing or two dishonorable
dis charges -one from the
Army and the other from the
Marines.
;
~
Sony Trin1tnin Color TV
with remote cootrol. 21"·
19"· 17" & lS" diagonal.
And • all ln stock·
KV-8000 Sony Trln,!tron
Sony's newest AC·DC:
Take anywhere portabie. a
inch diagonal.
f'romPaqeAJ
CHAMBER. •
lion She cited ttae lcun by
Grailadlo as one of the reasons
she would oot accept ~hamber
financial assiJtance.
"When someone ilves that
kind or money . t.hey expect
something for it," she sald.
Mrs. Wieder added that If the
chamber confined itself to at·
tracting commercial and in·
dustrial business, it would not
have to try to get ita candidates
elected through financial means.
Gibson. who Is runninJl for the
73rd Assembly District. said he
would have to look carefully at
who is particlaptlng and who the
financial sources are lo the
chamt>er political effort before
making a decislon on whether or
not to accept aid.
Terry, the chal;man of the
chamber's Community Political
Action Committee. said Wednes-
day that most of the m oney
raised by the chamber rame
from solicitations of members
who gave less than Sl.000.
He said that there was nothing
wrong with acc e pting
Graziadio's loan and that money
spent by other candidates in the
el~ction was far in excess or the
amount or the loan.
Terry s aid that the chamber
ran a clean. up-front campaign
that emphasized quaHflcations
and issues.
City Councilman Don
MacAllister was the only
chamber endorsee to win in
April and he said that the en-
dorsement "nearly proved to be
a kiss or death ...
He said that he had not re-
ceived any pressure from con-
tributors.
Terry said that the G raziadio
loan is still outstanding and that
the chamber is scheduling
sev~ral £undraisinR events to re· pay 1t.
Neutron Ban Nixed
WASlllNGTON <AP> -Presi·
dent Carter still has the option or
permitting future development
o_f the neutron warhead. The op-
tion was kept alive when the
House voted 306-90 on Wednes·
day against a move to prohibit
spending for production.
8-foot
. S.urf Hits
Bea ell es
While l.00 lifeguards from 11
foreign countries met just a few
m1le1 away, a dozen Newport
Beach lifeguards were kept on
the run rescuing awlmmers
from Wednesday's big surf.
"It was really a roueb day "
commented lifeguar! Lt. Log~n
Locka bey who said the skeleton
crew p~ed 56 people out of the
eight-foot surl.
Lockabey said more than
40.000 people showed up al
Newport's strands to escape lhe
heat inland on a day when the
city's complement or guards
was reduced to those tbat work run time.
The summer s ta rr consists o(
high school and college students
who have not come on duty he
expla ined '
Lockabcy said things got so
hectic that Life,&uard Cb_ief
Kendall Jacobson was pulled out
of his desk job and pressed into
field work.
Me anwhile, top Hreguards
from all over the globe have
been meeting this week at the
Newport SMraton Hotel for the
convention sponsored by the
World Ute Saving Association.
"We contemplated trying tQ
get the guys at the world
congress to come and help but
their agenda was pretty tight.~·
he adde<f.
Lockabey sald the busy
guards did get some assistanor
from local surfers who were
res ponsible for a half-dozen
rescues.
One occurred at Orange St~t
at about 2 p.m . when West
N e wport r esident Patrick
Collins used his surf board in
rescuing a s wimmer who bad
~otten into a s urf-generated rip
tide.
. "There were several incidents
like that." Lockabey said.
"Unfortunately. we dldn 't get
the names of the other surfers
who helped out."
Lockabey said the big surf
riptides and In-shore holes have
led to three near-drowning cases
since Tuesday.
The 1979 ModeJ Line is coming soon. Manr
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I
• I
I\
l
....... -
"It'• eomU.1 to -•tlliq "bee• tti. bleb lib Gelle&Ja
. cae'& walk doWll t.be atreet wit.bollt 1ett.lq •-....r
Loses Power
Evangelist
'Bewildered' ·
DALLAS, Texas <AP> -Garner Ted
Armstrong saad he understands why his father
stripped him of his power m the World Church of
God and canceled his television show, "but that
doesn't make it hurt any less."
In a telephone interview with the Dallas Times
Herald the media evangelist said be is "hurt,
bewildered and c m"8rrassed."
HE SAID HF. 1$ LEAVING for three or four
days with "some old fashmg buddies" to try to sort
things out and let the dust settle.
Armstrong played down speculation that a
power struggle is under way for control of the 80.000
member church and college, which collects more
than $60 million annually.
"There is nothing more sinister in it than that
a man at the age of 86 once again wants to take
over complete control of what he started," the
younger Armstrong said.
HERBERT W. ARMSTRONG FOUND£l> the
World Church of God more than 40 years ago.
Gamer Ted Armstrong said what hurt the
moi;t was that his father did it all without consult· ing ham.
"I guess he rclt--thal I would try to come on
strong and urge ham to change his mind. He was
determined to do il, and he JUSl didn't want to have
to go through an hour-long discussion with me about It.•,
The media evangelist, who says he has not
talked to his father since the announcements, said
he has lost 10 pounds the past week.
BE M.50 SAID HE WILL NOT tape any of his
.. The World Tomorrow" radio broadcasts for at
least several days, until he is rested and in better
spirits.
The younger Armstrong hopes the cancellation
of his television show is temporary and be blamed
the cutback on financial problems in the church
or~anizataon.
He said despite his di sappointment he will re·
main loyal to his rather.
"I love my father. and I must defend him ...
The best thing for me is to Just try to remain low·
key and support ham as best I can."
Rivers in Sie rra
Due for Rampage
SACRAMENTO CAP) -Boaters and rafters
have been warned that many ~ierra rivers wlll be
cold torrents before the end of this month as the snow
melts.
The warning applies to the Kern, Kings,
Kaweah, Merced, Stan islaus, Tuolumne and
Mokelumne rivers, said Carl Moore, Information of·
ricer for the state Department of Navigation.
THOSE SEVEN WILL BE the worst, but Moore
said Wednesday all mountain rivers will have high
nows throughout the spring and boaters should llSe
caution.
Moore said that eight people already have lost
their lives in canoe. kayak or ran accidents in
California this year.
"AN ADDED PROBLEM TO the high nows is
the fact that water temperatures are very low. and
boaters wbo find themselves In the water may perish
from hypothermia (low body temperature) if pro~r
precauUoos are not taken.•• Moore said.
As an example or this year's dangers, Moore
said the U.S. Forest Service prohibit.I commercial
rarti.ng on the Tuolumne above Don Pedro Reservoir
when the now reaches 4,000 cubic feet per second.
The flow ls predicted to reach 18,600 cfs by Lbe end of
May.
Convention Boat
OK'd in San Diego
SAN DIEGO <AP> -A OoaUns convenUon ball
In Mlaaioo Bay bas been approved by the Clty Coun·
cit.
The propOSed 180-foot boat and rettaurant
needs the approval of the San Die10 Cout Re,ionat
Commllaion. Its promoter ls Bill Evans, owner of a
hotel near which the "B•hi• Belle'' wouldOoat.
Ev1JW. lt was lelJ'Ded, 1.ve camp&lp coatnbu·
tion1 to four of Lbe ftve cou:ncll memben wbo ap-
proved the plan by a5-l vote.
Mayor Pete Wlllon HJd be plana to l"fllUm tl.000
givenbllcampalpbyEnns"aboutayearaao."
"HeavtM no,'' aa1d l:nm whea a ~r
asked lf he intended Lb• contrtbutloD to.nu.ace tbe
vote of WUSOn. who ls nannc:I!~ the JltpubUcan nomlM&lqlaforaovtm0tof a. ·
~. M~ 18, 1878 s DA1l 't' PILOT A I :J
SUNBEAM ELECTRIC MOWERS
'~ \ ~· -~
om,. an the great pr1ce9
on gem mowers atlll dkln't
change Y'O\ir mlDd. So buy
electric. We won't hurt you
ther. either.
.
18" Twin Blade, 6911
lfo. VE18T ••••••
'~Ir Twin Blade 8911 'VDelun LEllTD
(Shown)
5 GAL STANDARD CITRUS
TWO
FLAVORS
PER TREE 6 66
Two &non and It' • anybodya
gueu right DOWWhlch one• are
Which. Lemon and Orange.
Rumpleberrf cmcl Whant•.
REPLACEMENT
LINE FOR STRING
TRIMMER
'~-99c
Aacl you woncS.recl what ypu• d do when you
whipped up the reel that came wlth your edger.
We wouldn't let yo.a 1tay lD supa•
GIANT
PLASTIC RAKE
It 1MC1RN8 M IDchM
CICI098. la tbat Piatt 1 ~.!:l:sT!.. ~~; bloworda.
WtW.'Nal.t.
BAMBOO
PLAMTER STAMOS r ·xr· ......... 411.97
8 .. xn-........ 6.97 rxir ........ 9.97
r ·x2r ..••.. 1 o.97 rxSr ...... 1•.n
Bad them In the .tore fot awhile and people
kept cnldng. "When you .goon.a put them on
mpedalr Mow we do It. Watch. they all go on
TGCation.
BEHR NO. 77
OU.BASE
DECK STAIN
6 77
GAL
NAVAL OR
.~ALUMINUM JEIJ.Y
YOUR CHOICE
99~~
SHOR!TS OR PACIFIC
PAnoms 2~ ~llldle~~togetaP1Sc9cmd ----..., .... •lWln--1 oun l8 OD 'fOUi' eJD: Yoa do die wOl'k ol
LAWN EDGING
NJ=~,... ~all the WfZ'f ~ ...
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KW.a at Map.n, 8dloal.
Grade s.
HANDIBRICK
TERRA ConA 4n RED IOI
AlmQUE
WHITE.
TAWJfY BROWM 577 Oil> '!OWM USED IOI
You get almo8t ! equa:re teet to the box. tl'a
the real look and the t .. llng W\tbout the
weight or the haule. Come to the Demo.
DIMONITllATIONI
"MANDI BRICK~!
ALL STORES SATURDAY. MAY 20
FROM lOTO 3
"conugcrt.d F!berglaa Patto Roo&g"
LAMJRADA
Saturday May 2C ,..
FROM 10 to ~
TORRANCE
Sunday May 2 !
FROM 10 to 3
-GENIE
--GARAGE DOOR
EXiRA
TRANSMITTEJ1
1999
Scne 80lll9 bacb on the tb1ng .,. uaually
don•t Mil on apeda1. e.pedaily by ltMU
(We mab tt back on the 9 •o!t battery?).
RU~TOLEUM
'337 , QT.
Mic. colon too. Kot tut the old brindle
brown and Old GreY Mar. SJNY· Beat ruat
(.bo beatl naat?)
0
GEDIMMERS
Nab tbe fom11y dmMr
Dicer. U IOIMOD9 .tarta to
nU.. ham lhe dimmer down. It ~ at om bouM.
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~.-11,1111
WASIDNGTON (AP> -An al·
tempt will be made 1n June to
eiU.•nd the orbital life of S·
year-old Skylab space st.ation IO
the world's largest man-made
satellite won't come crashing to
earth next year.
If a ground controlled
maneuver planned by the Na·
tional Aeron•utics and Space
Administration is successful, the
Skylab could stay aloft an extra
year. This would give a team of
spaoe shuttle astronauts time to
fly up and attach a small rocket
to the SS.ton vehicle in late 1919.
The rocket cou ld be
used to boolt the station into a
hiper orbit. where it would stay
for hundreds of years. Or it
could be used to 1wde lbe sta-
tion to an atmospheric re-entry
and breakup over a remote ocean area.
IF LEFT ALONE. however. the
space station lauched in 1973 is ex·
peeled to fall from orbit between
early 1979aod 1980.
The space administration is
concerned about an uncontrolled
re-entry during which the vehi·
cle possibly could s howe r
populated areas with lar1e
chunks ol debris.
EXPEn& &.\ Y CMNCES of
such debris causln1 death or
damage are remote because the
station ls orbilina over water 75
percent of lbe lime. But govern·
ment sclenlista 'V&nt to lessen
the chance of something gotna wrong.
In ~reparation for next
month s attempt to extend the
life or the satellite, ground con·
trollers in March began slowly
reviving the sleeping.giant.
The space station has bee1t
NAT10NAL
larply dormant since the last of
three tbree·man astronaut crews
left it in orbit in 1974. Its
systems gradually were checked
and batteries charged over
se~eral weeks. using sun power
gathered by the station's solar
panels.
justlnl the satellite's position an
space.
tr all eoes well. radio signals
will turn on Skylab's small
steering rockets to send the sta-
tion anlO a slow end-over·end
tumble. This procedure will be
aimed at reduclne the at·
mospherlc drag tugging the
space station toward the earth. THESE CHECKS SHOWED
the Skylab in excellent condl·
lion. and Robert A Froscti. ad·
mlnlstrator of the ·.space ad·
ministration, has given tM go-
ahead for the controlled
maneuver in earl~ or mld·JW\e.
The maneuver will i)\yolve ad·
Skylab ls fiylnjz In a sort of
standln&·UP pc)sitfon relative to
the earth. The cylinder·shaped
satellite is in a slowly·
descendina orbit that ·a brUlging
it as close as 230 miles to eartb.
\
you mean business. you want
fine detailing and QUOltv
craft~ In the shoes
you wear. nordstrom tokes
you seriously and offers a
range of styles and prices as
well here, some FLORSHEIM
exanples, al wtth antique
finsh leather us:l)erS. leather
soles. a.reno; a sid&-zjpped
boot fuly leather linect gold.
brandy. black: sizes 9-12.13.
' 14a; 8-12. 13, 14b; 8-12. 13. 14c:
6-12. 13. 14d 8-12. 13, 14e; 8-12.
13eee; 56.95. b. reno slip-on;
with moc piping; center
gore; fuRy leather lnect gold.
brandy, black: sizes 9-12. 13,
14a; 8-12. 13, l4b; 8-12. 13, 14c;
6-12.13, 14ct 8-12.13, 14e; 8-12.
13eee; 51.95. c. troy; front
overlay; center gore; d ring
· cm:ment brown block; sizes
9-12 13, 14a; 8-12. 13, l4b: 6-12.
13, l4c; 6-12.13.14ct 6-12 13e;
7-12.13eee; 38.95.
d. wawtci(; boot wtth instep
strap; dOlble leather sole;
· fuly leather Rnec:t brown
block: sizes 9-12. 13o: 9-12. 13b;
8-12. ~ 6-12. 13ct 7-12e; 7-lt
12eee; 51.95. •· brent wtth
smooth lea1her ~
leather quarter un1rv gold,
brandy, block; sizes 9-12. 13.
14oa 8-12. 13. l4ct 7-12. 13. 14b;
6-12. 13, We; 5-12. 13. l4ct 6-12.
13e; 6-12. 13eee; 36.95.
men's shoes on one.
1
7
Irvine
EDITION
VOJ_: 71, NO. 138, 4 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORN.IA
b
" . .. ' Ca~didate Watkins Puts Past Behind
REVIEWS HIS f'INANCES
Candidate Lee Watkins
By GARY GRANVILLE Of .. Deity pttM IWf
Lee Watkins reviewed his
checkered fin ancial past
Wednesday and said it has no
bearing on his campalgo tor the
Republican nomination in the
14th Assembly District.
Watkins is campaigning on a
slogan that promises "a busi·
ness like a pp-roach to the
management of government."
However, pllblic r ecords
show:
-The 37·ye&r·old candidate
listed assets of $10,300, including
a Porsche automobile valued at
Press Aide's Son
Teacher Slain
By Youth, 13
AUSTIN, Texas <AP> -The
13·year-0ld son of former White
liouse press secretary George
Christian shot his junior high I school English teacher to death
1n the classroom today, police I Jaid. Lt. Fred Maxwell, chief of
public affairs for the Austin
police department. identified the
boy as John Christian, who was
taken into custody and brought
to the. police station for
questioning.
FoiuHurt
In Crash
In· Irvine
Four people were injured ear·
ly today in a three-car crash on
Culver Drive in Irvine. Three
others in the cars, including two
children who were sleeping,
were unharmed, police said.
The accident capped a chain
of eventa that began when a car
driven by Nicholas Burger. 43,
of 18 Woodland, Irvine, ran out
of gas, stalling in the right·hand
northbound lane of Culver
Drive.
George Cflristian. who served
as press secretary for-President
Lyndon Johnson and recently
handled public relations for Gov.
Dolph Briscoe 's losin g
Democratic primary campaign,
arrived at the police station,
visibly shaken.
The slain teacher was
identified as Wilbur Rod
Grayson, 29.
A bout 30 children from the
class were brought to police
headquarters to give
information about what they
saw.
Maxwell said Grayson was
shot three times -beneath the right arm. in the right arm and
in tbe right side of the head ,.-ith
a semi..automaUc .22-caUber rtne. .
~ Maxwell said he unders~
the boy arrived after ht•
first-period English class had
begun. Parents described the
class as a special one for gifted
and talented youngsters.
"The teacher was sitting on a
stool, conducting class. He <tbe
boy> just walked in the door and
pointed the rifle at him. The
teacher didn't take it real
seriously. He said something,
and the boy just shot him,"
Maxwell said.
Maxwell said he understood
the youth, an honor roll student,
was upset over an incident the
previous day when a substitute
teacher was present.
''The boy was leading a
discussion and didn't get a very
<See TEACHER, Page AZ>
$9,SOO on which be owed $9,000.
and $59,800 ln IlibiUties when he
riled a voluntary petition in
bankruptcy in December, 1976.
-Watldu was charged in a
civil suit filed in Orange County
Superior Court in 1976 with col·
lecting money owed to a
partners.hip and diverting it to
"his own use and control."
-Leu tllu Dine months after
his bankruptcy case closed in
federal court, Watkins lent his
campaign committee $26,646.
Watkin s blamed his
bankruptcy on a Jan. 12. 1976,
fire inside his insurance office in
Anaheim.
According to Anaheim Fire In·
vestlgator Norman Morsan.
cause or the fire was arson. A
blaze was ignited after someone
doused records pulled from tile
cabinets and stacked on the floor
with a flammable liquid.
"We did a lot of investigating.
but there were no arrests,"
Morgan said.
Watkins acknowledged jn his
bankruptcy papers that in the
ensuing six months ~e received
$21.000 to cover bis fire loss.
But, he said Tttursday. the fire
loss eventually forced him into
voluntary bankruptcy.
.. r thought I 1tlld an umbrella
Policy that .covered the loss of
valuable records. But when 1
rea.d the fine print. I didn't.··
Watkins. a licensed inaurance
agent, said.
He said hls bankruptcy case is
an issue raised by rival GOP 1
candidate Marion Bergeson and
her supporten.
·'They've called every
newspaper from San Diego on
up to try to make this a cam·
paign issue and 1 see tt as a
personal attack.'' Watkins said.
tSee WATKINS. Page A2>
De6ty ........... ,....
QRAOOATANSOVSKJ JR., 9, SMfLESATTffEMANWROSAVEO HIM FROM DOGS
Ray Papetti, 11, Found the Strength to Resou• Boy Despite Four Operation•
Boy, 9, Meets. Rescuer
Man, 71, J/isits Youth He Shved From Dogs
By JERRY CLAUSEN
Of 111e o.tir,..... t4M
Nine.year -old Drago
Atanso»ki Jr. looked up from
his balfdages and bed linen this
morning , s miled and
acknowledged the big white·
haired man who walked into
Mission Community HosPjtal
room 160.
"He's the man who helped
me." Drago grinned.
ft was the first meettng
between 71 -year-old, Italian·
born Ray Papetti and the boy
since the man saved Drago from
the jaws of two powerful dogs
Monday.
Drafo. who lives at 24232 Twig
St., E Toro. and a friend were
playing in a field behind a shop-
ping cenler when two dogs
emerged from a jumbled pile of
crates and flats.
One of the SO·pound pit bulls
attacked Drago. he said Thurs·
day rrom his hospital bed. "When
t tried to get away from him, the
other one attacked.
"I pulled their ears and tried
to rip their mouths apart,"
Drago recalled,
Police Sgt. Robert Kredel said
an Irvine Company security
guard, Gary W. Mauldin, 24, of
Sa nta Ana, stopped to help
Burger, and drove him to a
nearby service station to gel
gas.
Kredel said the men left the
car in the road because it was .
heavy and unmova•e.
Beading tor Zaire
Drago's friend ran for help.
Papetti, 25912 Champlain
Road. Laguna Hills. was driving
by . the shopping center at El
Toro Road and Rockf1eld
Boulevard on his way to work in
the Saddlebac~ Community
Hospital thrift shop. He bas
helped there since bis man·
datory retirement from a Costa
Mesa aerospace firm six years
ago.
Burger's wife, Sylvia, 43, and
their 3-year--Old child stayed in
the car and waited.
<See CRASH. Page AZ>
Jarvis Debate
Set in Irvine
The controversial Jarvis·Gann
tax initiative, Proposition 13 on
the June 8 ballot, wm be debated
tonight al 7:30 on Channel 3,
Irvine Community Cablevision.
The program is sponsored by
the Deerfield School Advisory
Forum and audience particlpa·
tlon will be available by two·
way television at University
Park Elementary School or by
phoning questiOns to ~0100.
VltgU Elkid.I ot the United
Organlzal.ioo of Taxpayers will
apeak for the proposition and Kit
Drollinger or the League or
Women Voters will speak
against IL
IA Awarded
'84 Olyrrq1ics
The International
• Olympie Committee today
provlJIOnally awarded the
1984 Olymetc Games to
Loa An1elew ind the
Winter Gam,. of J994 to Slrljevo, Yuptavia.
TM IOC mWe Its r1aUna
Belgians Mount Rescue
KINSHASA, Zaire CAP> -
/'Belgian paratroops flew to Zaire
today to mount a joint Western
rescue mission for 2,000 of their
countrymen, hundreds of other
Europeans and 14 Americans
Isolated and threatened by the
rebel invasion of Shaba
Province.
Plane after plane packed with
elite airborne troops took off
from Brussels' military airport
on the 5,000-mile journey to this
Central African nation, a former
Belgian colony. The night by the
U.S.·made C·130 trarfapom was
expected to take at least 10
hours
An estimated 1,750 paratroops
Police Find
Red Hideout
ROME <AP) -Anti-terrorist
police have anifled out a Red
Bri1ades hideout in Rome where
authorities beUeve Aldo Moro's
kidnappers ma.y bave prepared
measag~s for the poUtl~laa'a famlly and the nauu stwern·
ment. Ellht pertOftl w8" ar-
reated. poll~aald today.
The police cobducted the
operation dwina u-. nt1ht. but
the publlcatJon Of the newa wu
delayed. the polJce u.ld. No
other immediate details about
and other Belgian military
personnel had been alerted to
take part in the intercontinental
operation.
It was rep0rted unofficially in
Corsica that three planes carry.
ing 250 French Foreign Legion
paratroopers had taken off from
that Mediterranean island bound
for Africa. "
t n Washington, a State
Department official who asked
not to be idenUfied said the Unit·
ed States would not supply
troops or planes for the mission
but might provide some lesser
logistical support. About 1,500
U .s. Army airborne soldiers re-
mained on alert at Fort Brag,-,
N.C., boWever.
The Brtt.lsh also were involved
In tlae planning tor th• rescue el·
fort, but it wu not known what
role they might play. Tb~ Beltian troops •ere re-.....,
ported headed for Kinshasa and
then on to the government·held
air base at Kamina, 130 mlles
north of Kolwed, a copper.
mining town at the heart or the
rebel·held area of southern
Zaire. .
There were confused rep0rts
about the mllitar-y situation
around Kolwez'i. The pro· West
Zaire government claimed Its
forces had retaptured the town's
airport Wednesday. The rebels
said they still held Kolwe1i and
the area around it for nine miles
in all directions.
tn a statement issued in
Brussels, the rebel Congolese
N attonal Liberation Front said
its forces bad had no contact
with government troops since
Tuesday and that the only action
was "terrorist bombings" by
government warplanes.
(See ZAIRE, Page A!>
"The one boy hollered at me.··
said PapeW. "Somethil1g about
someone being bitten by a dog."
Papetti rushed his six·foot·
two, 210·pound frame out the
door of his car and hurried into
the field. ,
"The boys's arm was gashed
open. blood was an over the
ground. It looked llke some
an.Imai thing out of Wiid
<See MAULlj;D, Page A2)
I
Irvine Studies
Traffic.Light
' On Goldenglow
Today'& Closing
N.Y. Stoeks
TEN CENTS /
BLASTS SMEAR TACTICS
Candidate Berge1on
IJergeson
Blasts
Mailer
By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of .. DMly ,..._. S'-ft
Marian Bergeson. Republican
candidate ror the 74th Assembly
District. blasted one'of her GOP
opponents today for a campaign
brochure he mailed to district
voters.
Mrs. Bergeson. of Newport
Beach, denounced the brochure
sent by candidate Horace L.
Watkins, who is running under
the name of Lee Watkins. as "a
blatant a nd cynical political
smear"
Watkins. however. defended
the mailer as "an accurate in·
terpretation or Marian's voting
record while a Newport-Mesa
Unified School District trustee ...
I .·
He admitted the research
work for tbe mailer was done by _
political consultants Arnold
Ford and Bill Butcher or
someone employed by tht!
Butcher·Forde political consult·
ingteam.
··1 stand behind it. I've told
Butcher and Forde they will be
fired on the spot if they ever do
anything such as this without
consulting me. And yes, in this
instance, I was consulted and
approved the mailer."
Mrs. Bergeson noted that the
conaultants "have been cited by
the Fair Political Practices
Commission for unethical tac
lies used when they managed
the Jim Slemons campaign in
1976."
Slemons. who beat out Mrs.
Bergeson for the GOP nomina·
lion in 1976. was defeated bv
Democrat Ron Cordova after
Mrs. Bergeson ente red tht"'
~eneral election campaign a." ...
write·in candidate.
She polled a record 35,000
votes in her last-minute cam·
paign.
The 37·year·old Watkin"
charged that Mrs. Bergeson and
her supporters have turned tht>
campaign from is,.ues l<'
personalities and criticized tht>
Bergeson camp for allegedly
contacting newspapers with
tales of his financial problems. rt is not the first time that
Watkins found himself opposed
to Mrs. Bergeson. In 1976, ht"'
was the CO·campaign rinanct'
chairman for Stemons.
In a pr~lease issued todav
Mrs. Ber n said she 1s of·
fended by. he use of "Ms ...
throughout the Watkins mailer
and to the statement that sht' ti;
retired.
(See BROCHURE, Page A2>
Coast
Weather
Fair through Frldny
with continued Wl'rm
days. Highs rangini from
mld to upper 70S at the
beaches and 80s inland.
'NSIDE TODAY
DUJ you know t l'lot litnng
can ~ hazardocu to your
heaUh~ TM dangtt' that /uric
1n a t11plcal daJI are detailed
on Pagtt A7.
•••ex
Al'\'-lwllla AU 1•""911t.,_ c. ... tflll " AO ..... W-. C1 ,,....~, a ,.,...,,.. cw
'"-"-·.... M~ll... ci ti=. ~"·"~ ~ Dl·ll :::r .... o.:... :: !!.'!!' ....... .......... .. ; .. rm1~ c::~ ......... ('!., .......... ... ..... ..
I
U OAk.V _,.lOT
MAULED .•.
Kingdom on televt lOo . TbOlc
dots ~ dracitna tb9 t1cl all over tbe lot."
Papetll doesn't know where he
got the strength -"l 've had
four operations in the last year"
-but be ripped a board from a
crate and lunged forward curs-ing in English and Italian.'
"I'd be lyine if I told yoµ I
wasn't scared," be said. "But I
guess I'd do it acain. Nobody
who's a man is golnf to see a
boy crying ror help and' bleeding
to death and not do w1'at I did."
Papetti held younc Draao up
with one big hand and 1wun1 lbe
board with the other. "They
were too feat for me," he said of
the bulldop. "I couldn't get in a
good lick."
Still warding off the attack,
Papetti half carried and half
dral£ed the youth to his car. "I
knew of a place where the police
stop for donuts," he said. "I
went to get help." He found it.
Drago fUlally was rushed to
the hospil•l. where he is re·
covering following hours in an
operating room to repair a
severed artery in his right arm
and numerous bites on his face
and back. He is in satisfactory
condition.
Reflecting back on the inci·
dent this morning, Papetti said,
"l 'm glad I was there. It alm~t
makes you religious."
He said he went to church
yesterday morning for the first
time in more than 18 months. He
believes God took a hand in the
' events.
·'If I had been 20 years
younger." he added, "I could
have swung those dogs around
my head
"They made me retire when I
was 65. I felt I was at my peak.
Now, with this, I feel like I'm
s t i 11 a useful member of
society ...
The boy he saved thinks Mr.
Papetti is a very useful member
of society. "I thought I was
dead.'• the young patient said.
Fro• Page A J
BROCHURE
Her campaign committee
chairman. Richard Spooner
said he has lodged a protest with
the county Republican Central
Commillee saying "the pretense
of documentation contained in
the mailer is no more accurate
than the a lias which Mr.
Watkins has adopted for this
campaign."
Points contested by Mrs.
Bergeson and Spooner include the
brochure's allegation that she
does not support the larvis-Gann
tax initiative.
Mrs. Bergeson also deCended
her record on the Board of
Trustees of the Newport·Mesa
Unified Schhol District, saying
she maintained a strong con·
servative position.
References to her approvaJ of
.. district policy allowing con-
troversial speakers on campuses
did not include the fact that
these speakers were to be used
to provide balanced viewpoints
in civics classes, not for indoc·
trination purposes. she said.
She also noted that an $1.100
trip to Florida that the Watkins
brochure said was paid for by
the district, actually cost the dis·
trict less than $100.
Mrs. Bergeson made that trip
as president of the Caliromia
School Boards Association which
paid the balance, she said.
1HEFT SHIFTS
TO NEW MODEL
KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia
<AP> -Mokhtar Ahmad bought
a new car after his first one was
stolen a month ago.
Today the police told him the
stolen car had been found. When
he lert his ofrice to 10 to police
headquarters, he found his new
car had been stolen.
Arriving al police
headquarters. he reclaimed the
first car and reported the theft
of the second
O ... NOI! COAST 1.
DAILY PILOT
~ °'-C.0.11 O.llJ =::-~ .. ,.,.,. _ .......... ~ .... ,, llf!M0.-
0...t"'*I"''"'~ ...... ~ ... ~":::..::..-..".t~"'=·-=-t.!:·~ "'" V•llo. ,,,,,,.., s_..__ V••,.• -~e.oc,.~c:..-1 • .,............,..., ''°" "..--'"1-n-"" ~ '"" ~:::~i::-'.::!."Ui:'..t~.:.,. -... -"-""e\lcltM-~·-Joe•• C... V1u~ .. -------
~1ll.-lfti.t ""-··· ............ """ ............
CIMtflnH."--t II_,_ ..... ............ Mt ........ ~tto'• °'"°" . eo.t•Mou 'lOWo., .. ySt,.... -~....':.~. ·:~~';;=~~~ ... S.C.01..,_tll V4'11fy 1'10, LA ... , tltom "'""'°'-"-Tetephon• (71•)teM311
Cleulftecl MY~MNen _,v"'i.,..._Olllc•
"1-alO '-.:;:;-
=:.-=:.::. o;: .. ~,'=-~= ~-:.-:r.~=,~·-~~:.::." ~-...... <'-~-...... c.u. ....... c.1~111• i...urfell.it ., ur~ 'tl t6 ~&~ _..,, ....... ...,
Dmlty ...... SIMt .....
Y:OUR HURT IN THREE-CAR CRASH ABOUT 2 O'CLOCtc THIS MORNI NO IN IRVINe
Wreckage of Vehlcle1 Blocked Culver Drive Ne•r M•ln Street After R••r .. nd Colllaion
Irvine Cyclist, 16,
Reported Better
An Irvine motorcyclist in·
volved in a traffic accident
Wednesday night was reported in
good condition todday at UC
Irvine Medical Center, after sur·
gery for a laceration that opened
his left leg to Ute bone.
Gregory K. Hobelman, 16, of
370J Parkview Lane. was the
driver of a motorcycle that
crashed into the rear of a car
stopped in traffic on Culver
Drive, north or Deerfield Ave.
A passenger. Jeff W. Mattox.
15, <tf JIKll Parttview Lane, also
was thrown to lbe ground. Police
said Mattox was treated at
Tustin Community Hospital ror
Teen Job Ce nter
Set Up in Irvine
Irvine teen-agers looking for
summer jobs -and employers
looking for temporary help -
can call the new Youth Employ·
ment Servic:e office in the Teen
Center, 18522 Culver Drive, at
752·5952.
YES. a non·profit organiza·
tion, offers free employment
counseling and placement to
people 17 and under. It is open
between noon and 6 p.m . on
weekdays.
cuts and released.
The driver of the car, Richard
L. Callihan, 34, or 15192 Vichy
Circle, Irvine, reportedly wasn't
hurt.
Irvine Chief
Plans Major
Talk at Meet
Peter~. Kremer, president or
the I. ine Company, is
scheduled to speak at a luncheon
meeting of the Greater Irvine
Industrial Leagl.le. o~ J une 1 at
the Reg:.,try Hot.el.
Company officials call it a
"major policy address."
Kremer plans to talk about
compa1ny proposals fo r the
Irvine Industrial Complex-East.
the Irvine Center"" (a regional
shopping mall) and future home
building. ·
Reservations for the luncheon,
at $8, may be made by contact-
ing the GIIL oUice at 955·1133 by
May 30.
GI-IL is an association or in·
dustrial and commercial firms
located in the vicinity of Orange
County Airport.
f',.._P-se A J
WATKINS CAMPAIGN. • •
"When you 're wiped out,
you 're wiped out and what I've
tried to do ia to get things
straightened out and work my
way back to the top."
Watkins has repaid some of
the debts discharged by the
bankruptcy court, including a
payment of $1.000 to a legal firm
that represented him in a
personal injury suit.
He also said he has "made ar-
rangements" to settle a $1,500
account al the Balboa Bay Club
in Newport Beach.
However, he1 said, Security
Pacific Bank officials have re·
fused to "negotiate" a $20,000
debt that was erased in the
bankruptcy case.
"I've done the best I can to do
the right thing and when you've
done that, you've done just
about everything you can do,"
Watkins said to describe his ef·
fort to make amends to his
bankruptcy creditors.
Watkins' creditors were paid
nothing in the bankruptcy pro-
ceedings. His $800 in assets
beyond the value of the Porsche
were personal belongings ex·
empt from creditor claims.
The civil suit filed in OraJl8e
County Superior Court showed
the plaintiffs as F r a nklin
Brandt, former Fountain Valley
City Councilman George Scott
and Donald L. DeNoon.
-Scott hinuelf ls a candidate in
the June 6 primary. He is seek·
ing tbe Republican nomination
in the 36th State Senate race.
Tbe complaint alleged tbat
Walkins waa not sharing Income
paid to the partnership then do·
ing business as Watkins
Insurance Agency. The orilinal
partnet"Ship agreemen~ showed
that Walkins' contribution to the
partnership was to be use ot hJa
agency license.
In tutn, the remainJng
partners were t.o contribute their
inauraiace expert.lae.
Bi&t when those partners
b e lh!Ted th• money the
p a rtnerablp earned was not
n owing into the buatnes•. they
sought a tetnpOrai'y reatralnlng
or der that would prevent
Watklnt from .. a11\1nlnt.
t1••nsferrln1. dt1posln1 of •nY
assets of the partntrthlp and
managing or interferin1·wtth the
manacement of t he
' partnenhlp."
Tbe plalntifla •Ito asked that a
-pwrmamm recetnr -~ d '1o liquidate and wlnd up t.bt
buainea partnel"lblp."
Watklna lfld be had no l'ff· olleettoa of die Jawault and
eompl8*d i,bat be had un-denrrtttm tM pertnenblp ft·
,..... 1iiillll IJl*atloM beciini•
profttab&e aDd tbm WU fOl'Cltd out"' ta. pUUMtlhJpA
"They used my agency and
my money for six months and
then forced me out." Watkins
said.
As best he could recall, he re·
ceived $1600 or $1700 for his one·
filth share in the partnership.
Brandt, however, recalled that
Watkins was paid "somewhere
in the neighborhood of $8.000"
for his interest.
Brandt said the civil suit was
settled out of court with the buy-
out or Watkins.
"No, the parting of the ways
was not what you could describe
as amicable," Brandt said.
As for the loans to bis cam-
paign committee, Watkins said
the figure of $26,646 is mislead-ing.
The candidate said the figure
represents a series of loans that
were made and repaid in part
and is the cumulative total.
"Actually, I think my net loan
contribution is right at $9,000."
Watkins said.
He also said those who have
lent his campaign money are
aware of his financial dif· flculties,
"I've tried to be open and
honest with everyone. And I've
J\Ot tried to hide anything from
anyone," he said.
Watkins acknowledied today
that he wlll amend a recent
campaign disclosure statement
to show what was·llJted original·
ly as a $4,999 loan from Warren
Lippa of Newport Beach as a
loan from GWC Services, Inc.,
also of Newport Beach.
Watkins waa an Asaem bly
candidate in the 72nd Dlltrict in
1974 when he filed u a candidate
H. Lee Watkim.
Records show he spent $3,971
of Sto.ooo he put loto the cam·
P• I 1n before wltbdrawin1 in
time for his name not to appear
on the ballot.
Watkins said his withdrawal
was 1n deference to a rival can·
didate, Marlin McKeev .
"A number of Pe<>Ple. lnetud·
Ing C!itate Sen .),-Oennit
Carpenter, aahl MeKee"'-tl'
would st.and a ~r chance of
wlnnln1 it he lot &he nomlnatloq.
So. ( bowed out.'•
Watkins dented that money
flowing Into hie eampalan ls
comtns rrom State Sen. John
Brld11. .. Vy pbllolol>hY. ls vety clcltt
to an,... but 11• "OObffn ""' volvH tn cawa._ W. OWll
and b ~'1tnl JIM .,., ·~ Wa~ , 1
Tbl p tudidMI .... ~A
als month Ptl'lod • part-tlilW
a•d• to AHefnbtyma n Roa Cofd~".~L~ ~ tlae '°* ablDGGnlDI U.."Nth 'Hit-rue for the State S.aw bl thl _.
Senate Diat.rlct.
f'roatPage A J
CRASH •••
The men returned and. ac·
cording to them. as Mauldin was
slopped and about to set his
emergency brake, his pickup
truck was hit from behind by a
speeding car. Burger had just
stepped free of the truck and
was uninjured.
K redel said the pickup was
pushed against Burger's car.
then wedged out of the way and
Burger's car was struck again
by the third car.
T he security guard and the
driver of the third car. Courtney
W. Rutherford, of Roswell. Ga ..
were bleeding heavily from their
foreheads when Kredel hap-
pened onto the accident, north of
Main Street, a minute after the
collision. the sergeant said.
Mauldin had been trapped
briefly in his wrecked pickup.
but squirmed out of it. Kredel
gave first aid and called county
paramedics.
Burger's wife surrered
whiplash. Kredel said. as did
Rutherford's wife. Penny, 34.
The Burger child and t he
Rut'herfords' IO·ye.ar·old son
were uninjured, Kredel said.
All were transported to Tustin
Community Hospital, where the
injured were treated and re-
leased.
~
Sony Trlnitrm Color TV
with remote conlrol. 31 "·
19" • 17'' & lS" diagonal.
And • au Ill stock·
KV-8000 Sony Trlnltron.
Sony's neweat AC·DC.
'hJte anywhere po11.1ble. a
lndl dla1onal.
TV·ll8 Sony Black &
Whil e. tt" .creen
meaaurtd dla1ona1')'.
8-foot
Surf Hits
Beaches
While 100 lifeguards from 11
foreign countries met just a few
miles away, a dozen Newport
Beacb lifeauarda were kept on
'tlte run rescu ins swimmers
from Wednesd•y's bt1 surf.
.. It was really a rough day,"
commented lifeguard Lt. Logan
Lockabey who said the skeleton
crew pylled 56 people oul of the
eight.foot surf.
Lockabey said more than
40,000 people showed up a~
NewPort's strands to escape the
heat inland on a .day when the
city's complement or guards
was reduced to those that work
full time.
The summer staff consists or
high school and college students
who have not come on duty. he
explained.
Lockabey said things got so
hectic lhal Lifeguard Chief
Kendall Jacobson was pulled out
of his desk job and pressed into
field work.
Meanwhile. top lifegu,rds
from all over the globe have
be~n meeting this week al the
_Newport Sheraton Hotel for the
convention sponsored by the
World Life Saving Association.
··we contemplated trying to
get the guys at the world
congress to come and help but
their agenda was pretty tight."
he added.
Stone Creek Sets
Artwork Auction
An auction of professional
artworks costing from $25 to
about $150 will be sponsored Fri-
day in Irvine by the Stone Creek
Elementary School Parent·
Teacher-Student Organi1&tion.
The auction. featuring works
from the Robert Sills Gallery.
will begin with viewing at 7 p.m.
at University High School's
mulliPUIJ><>M: rooms B and C.
The aucuon itself starts at 8:30.
Admission is Cree.
I',.... Page Al.
·ZAIRE ••.
ll wu repQrted tbat Zaire
Prtaldet\t Mobutu Seae Seko. tryln~ to crush the secoad rebel
invas ion of Sbaba ln 14 months.
new from this capital city to the
Kolwezl area today. Mobutu. a
general who seised power here in 1865, donned a oamounaae
uniform for the trip to the rront.
the rePoriuJd.
At least U Europeans .-one
Jtallan, tbe r•at applrenlly
Belgians -have ~n reported
kUJed to the Kolwed area since
the An1ola·bued rebels struck
Friday. Infiltrating tbrou1h
norther Zambia aritt quickly
aeiiJng Kolwesi. a town or
100.000 people. The two alMt bave blamed
each otfter for tbe civilian
deaths. The Mobutu government
said tbe rebels seized scores of
white hostages, and Belgian of·
flcialssaid whites bad become the
"maln target" in the fighting.
Some Belgian sources said the
rebet. in Kolwen bad gone Oil a
·•Frenchman hunt" because
French advisers help train
Mobutu's army, but that they
eventually began searching out
all whites.
Meeting Slated
By Equestrians
The Irvine Equestriap Com·
mittee will hold a public meet·
ing at 7:30 p.m. Monday to re·
port on research concerning
equestnan trail development.
The meeting will be held at
Venado Middle School. 4
Deerfield Road. Copies of the
preliminary report can be ob-
tamed at Irvine City Hall or by
calling Dain Anderson at
754-3656.
F,...PGtJeAJ
TEACHER. •
good response," Maxwell said.
Jean Olson, mother of a pupil
in the class. described Grayson
as "fabulous. He has done
tremendous things."
The 1979 Model Line is coming soon. Manr
SPECIALS on 1978 Model Line
Merchandise now! Come in soon as
avaUabiUtr is Jimited.
Sony
Headquarters for
the Harbor Area
T.V.·lodlo-St .. eo
Tap.lecordtr ........
,.
HMK·419. Sony's quality
packed lnte1raled music
system reatures AM/FM
Stereo Receiver, 3·speed aulomaUc turntable, cassette
player /recorder and sensi-base speaker S)'1lem. A very adequate 15 watt.5 RMS
or power all al a very
pleastna price.
SP.Mhlt S379!5
275 East 17th St.
Costa Mesa
CF-580. A superb stereo
castelte system with
FM/AM built In & phono input. Four speakers for
sound that has body and depth. AC or battery
operation.
Super Sony Specials!
, , .. dlCllJOlta.I
KV -l9Sl TR1N1TRON PLUS Sony'9 Oelu.xe 19"
diagonal T V. Includes
Sony's Lumisponder light
~cnsin" system and extra
large speaker SNCJAl
IAUPllCI
-I
l
17
'
Lag11na/SOuth £oast Afternoon
N.Y. Stoeks
ORANGE COUNTY, CA f!c>RNIA THURSDAY, MAY 18, 1978 I
TEN CENTS' • 1 It: : . -
Recounted
Candidate Watkins Puts Past Behind
REVIEWS HIS FINANCES
C•ndldate lee Watkin•
No Free Ride
8)' GABY GRANVILLE
Ol•OelfrPMltMltf
Lee Watkins reviewed his
checkered financial past
Wednesday and said it baa no
bearing on his campaign for the
Republican nomination in the
74th Assembly District.
Watkins is campaigning on a
slogan that promises "a busi-
ness like approach to the
management of eovemment."
However, ptlblic records
show :
-The 37·)'Hr·old candidate
listed assets of $10.300, including
a Porsche automobile valued at
Clemente Cuts
Spo11Ses' Trips
By ANNE COOPER °' .. Oioltr ..... Mllft There will be no more free
rides for busbanda and wives of
, San Clemente city officials who
had been used to accompanying
their spouses at city expense on
city business trips.
Tbe San Clemente City Coun-
cil unanimously approved the
recommendations of Its special
committee on salaries and ex-
pense reimbu.rsemenl Wednes-
day
LB Festival
~arking ·
Reviewed
By STEVE MITCHELL
OllMDe&fJ ..... ...,
Laguna Beach art
, feslivalgoers and beach VlSitors
1 l'bighl be parking out LagWla
• Canyon Road this summer re-
lieving downtown traffic woes ~urlng the frantic festival
months.
· Coucilmen ratified aeree·
.. ments with the three festivals
this ~eek that will see the city
-constfuct a dirt parking lot on
about six acres of tand a half
mile north of the junction of the
canyon road and El Toro Road.
Tbe estimated $50,900 project
would include grading six acres
of land on the east s ide of
Laguna Canyon Road for up to
800 parking spaces to be used by
festival and beach visitors dur-·
ing the six heaviest weekends or
the year In the Art Colony.
Orriciala at the Festival or
Arts, Art-a-Fair and the
Sawdust Festival were required
this year to provide more park-
ing by the South Coast Regional
Coastal Commission.
Tuesday, councUmen ratified
an agreement with the festivals
that the city will provide
peripheral parking spaces and a
shuttle bus service between the
tot and the various festival
grbuada.
The counctl expects to pick up
a portion of the estimated
$50,000 in coats from the various
festivals, but no determination
of exact costs bas been reached.
The cit.y's plannlng staff is
suggestlag a $1 per car parking
charge and. a $2 cbar1e for
buses. TtansportaUon IDto town
via 1buttle bus would be pro-
vide4 free, the staff recom·
mends.
An envir<lomental Impact re-
port ea tbe peripbeHl parking
lot bu been completed and is
(See PAIDDNG. Paae AU
The citizens committee, ap-
pointed after accusallons of ex-
cessive spending at conferences,
recommended:
-That all city business trips
receive prior approval from the
City Council.
-That expense vouchers be
s ubmitted for reimbursement
within lS days after the ex-
penses are incurred.
·-That officials be allowed $50
per day on ovemilht city buai·
ness trips and SS for every aix-
hour period on day.long trips.
Councilman Roy Hamm told
committee chairman Richard
Koester that a recent four-bow
city btminess trip to Anaheim
cost $8. Ul&u Uae ~SJtemed expente refmburnment .-i>·
cec:ture, Hamm uked ii lM ,,ould l•~e to pay $3 ol t.be • ...,... •
of his own pocket!
''Yes, that's the way it "°'1ld
work out." said KoesleT.
Hamm said be would predJct
that attendance to om-of-town
conferences might fall off, If city
officials find themselves bearing
a share of the expense. '
The five-member comn>illee
was appointed April 7 to recom-
mend city policy on salaries and
expense reimbursement pro-
cedures for members of the City
Council, as well as clty com-mlaalons, boards and agencies.
Questions of city policy were
raised in March. when then new-
1 y elected City Councilman
Howard Mushett lambasted
fellow coµncllmen Mayor
William Walker and Donna
Wilkinson for what he called ex-
cessive spending on hotel ac-
commodations and meals aL city-related business meetings
in San Diego, Sacramento and
San Francisco during 1976 and
1977.
Also in March, Mushett called
for the resignations of Planning
Commlsaloners James Chase,
William Greenwall aDd
Chairman MeUord Morgan. The
councilman said the com-
missioners had abused city ex·
pense reimbursement pro-
cedures by cbarglng their Wlves'
. expenses on a city-related con·
ference trip to Oakland in
February.
City Attorney MacKenzie
Brown advised Mushett and
fellow councilmen that the "city
has bad no policy UmJtlng tnvel
expenses or excluding bu.sbaods
and wives from expense reim·
bursement. Loa1Ume city employees reported that spouses
of countilmen and com·
miasionen bad traveled at cily
expense on cit)' bta1inen for at
leut 14 yean.
The City Council, Wednesday,
ln.strucU!d Brown to prepare an
ordinance baled on the citizens'
committee recommendaUoDI for
Council ~lion on June 7. The on1Y e ln the com-
mittee's ecommendatlons
wblcb the City Oouncll made,
based on a motion by Mrs.
Wtllllnson and unantmoualy ap-
proved wu to eliminate any pro-
vltlon ot bikln& councilmen's
pay, wbidl wtn rtmatn at AGO
permoadl.
TM •••.anum11•~1ee11 " mecle~ batlD ... .-aUltuat k ,
cllalnun, bouHwlre Ru h Dtnlloo. Mlncl manuladllw
Albefta.kMer, reeltor St ......
lllcllalee...... bwilMll COlllUI· tan& NCll1ll8li Beam. • ID. M......, rtport'' to tbe
(IN~Pa19,\I)
S9.~ on which he owed $9,000,
and SS9,800 in llabillt.ies when he
fileCl a. voluntary petition in
bankruptcy Ln Deeember, 1976.
-WatilDa wu ebaraed in a
civil suit filed in Orange County
Superior Court in 1976 wi\b col-
1 ec Ung money owed to a
partnersbi~ and diverting it to
"bis own use and control." -t.e. &llaa llble mootbs after
t\is bankruptcy caae clqsed in
federal court .. Watkins l~nt his
campaign comUlittee $26,646.
W a lk 1 p s -b 1 a m e d h i s
bankruptcy c a._ Jan. 12, 1976,
fire inlkle hi.I Jnsutance office in
AnabeiJD.
AC!l,Qn1lng to Anaheim Fire ln-
ves tlg ator Norman Moraan.
cause of the fire was ar5on. A
blaze was lgnlt.ed after someone
doused records pulled from file
cabinets and stacked on the floor
with a flammable liquid.
"We did a lot of investigating,
but there were no arrests,"
Morgan said.
Wat.kins acknowledeed in bis
bankruptey papers that in ttie
ensuing· six months he received
$21,000 to cover bis fire loss.
But, be said Thursday, the fire
loss eventually forced him into
voluntary bankniE>tcy.
... thought ('bad an umbrella
policy that covered the loss of
valuable records. But when I
read the fine print. I didn't,·•
Watkins. a licensed insurance
agent. said. He said his bankruptcy case is
an issue raised by rival GOP
candidate Marion Bergeson and
her supporters.
"They 've called every
newspaper from San Diego on
up to t.ry to make this a cam-
paign issue and I see lt as a
personal attack." Watkim said.
<See WATKINS. Page AZl
Man, 71, J?isits Youth He Saved From Dogs
By JIEllRY CLAUSEN Of .. Deity ...... SUff
N in e. ye a r. o Id Dr •Io
Atamovskl Jr. looked up ftom
his bandages and bed linen this
morning, smiled and
acknowled1ed the big whlte-
haired man wbo walked into
Mission Community Hospital
room 160.
"He's the man who helped
me.•• Drago grinned.
It was ·the first meeting
be.twe,n 11-year-old, Jtallan-
born Ray Papetti and the boy
since tbe man saved Drago from
the Jaws ol two powerful dogs
Monday.
Drac.o, who lives at 24232 Twig
St.. El ·Toro, and a friend were
playl,ng in a fjeld behind a shop-
ping center when two dogs
emerged from a jumbled pile.of
crates ·and fiats.
One or the 50-pound pit bUlb
attacked Dr~o. he said Thurs-day'ft'om lrla hospital bed. "When
I tried to pt away from him, the
Olberooeattaclted.
"I pulled their ears and tried
to rip their moutns apart,"
Drago·~allec\.
Draco's frienct ran for help.
Papetti, 25912 Champlain
Road. Laguna Hills, was driving
by the shopping center at El
Toro Road and Rockfield
Boulevard on his way to work in
the Sadd1e&ack Community
Hospital' thrift shop. He has
he lped there since his man·
datory retirement from a Costa
Mesa aerospace firm six years
ago.
"The one boy hollered al me."
said PapetU. "Something about
someone being bitten by a dog ...
Papetti rushed his six-fool·
two, 210-pound frame out the
door of his car and hurried into
the fi eld.
<See MAULED, Page AZ>
Saa Clemente Firm
Crestlite Company
Cfusing I ts Dt)prs
Crestllte Inc., a San Clemente
slri.p mining and manufacturing
operation which has repeatedly
been a target of complaints (rom
neighboring Shorecliffs resi-
dentl, is going out of business, a
move that will put 60 employees
out of work.
Winter rains caused $258,000
damage to CresUit.e operaUons,
aards· Baeked .. .
Hayakmm Pkt/ges Support
BLASTS SMEAR TACTICS
Candidate Bergeson
&rgeson
Blasts
Mtiiler
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
OI JM oe6l'f PINC IUtt Marian Bergeson. Republican
candidate ror the 74th Assembly
District. blasted one of her GOP
opponents today for a campaign
brochure he mailed to district
voters.
Mrs. Bergeson, of Newport
Beach. denounced the brochure
sent by candidate Horace L .
Walkins, who is running under
the name or Lee Watkins. as "a
blatant and cynical political smear.··
Walkins, how ever, defended
the mailer a.-; "an accurate in-
terpretation of Marian's voting
record while a Newport-Mesa
Unified School District trustee."
He admitted the research
work for the mailer was done by
political consultants Arnold
Ford and Bill Butcher or
someone employed by the
Butcher-Forde political consult-
ing team.
"f stand behind it. I've told
Butcher and Forde they will be
fired on the spot if they ever do
anything such as this without
consulting me. And yes, in this
instance, t was consulted and
approved the mailer."
Mrs. Bergeson noted that the
consultants "have been cited by
the Fair Political Practices
Commission for unethical tac-
tics used when they managed
the Jim Slemons campaign in
1976 .••
Slemons. who beat out Mrs.
Bergeson ror the GOP nomina-
tion In 1976, was defeated by
Democrat Ron Cordova aftt!r
Mrs . Bergeson entered lhe
general ele "on campaign as a
write·i date.
~-oiljlol'I"'" polled a record 35,000
voles in her last-minute cam-
paign.
The 37-year-old Watkins
charged that Mrs. Bergeson and
her SUJ>e<>rtera have turned lhe
campaign from issues to
personalities and criticized the
Bergeson camp for allegedly
con•acting newspapers wittt
talH of his financial problems.
lt is oot. the first time that
Watkins found himself opposed
to Mrs. Bergeson. In 1976, he
was the co-campaign finance
chairman for Slemons.
In a press release issued today
Mrs. Bergeson said she is of·
fended by the use of "Ms."
throughout the Watkins mailer
and to the stateme.nt that she is
retired.
(See BROCHURE. Page i\%)
Coast
Weather
Fair through Friday
with eontlnued warm
days. Highs ranging from
mid to upper 705 at the
beaches and 80s inland.
INllDE TOD~~
Dfd IOU know that lfving
can ~ ha.tardoia to 11our
MoUh1 11-dangerl that lurk
ira a IJIP(col dl.iy are ~taJled
onP•A1.
I
I
,..
!NityPtwlUH ......
THIS SIU ON LAGUNA CANYON ROAD EARMARKED FOA FESTIVAL PARKING LOT
Space for 800 Cara Would Relleve Traffic Woea In Downtown Laguna Beach
f',.... P.,,e AJ
MAULED •••
"The boys's arm was gashed
open. blood was all over the
g round. lt looked like som e
animal thing out of Wild
Kingdom on television Those
dogs were dragging the kid all
over the lot."
Papetti doesn't know where he
got the strength -"I've !lad
four operations in the last year''
but he ripped a board from a
crate a nd lunged forward. curs-
ing in English and Italian.
"I'd be lying if I told you I
wasn 'l scared." he said. "But l ~uess I'd do it again. Nobody
who's a man is going to see a
boy crying for help and bleeding
Lo death and not do what I did."
Papetti held youna Dra10 up
with one big band and swung the
board with the other. "They
were too fast for me," be said or
lht; bulldogs. "I couldn't get in a
good li ck "
Still warding off the attack,
Papetti half carried and half
draued the youth to his car.· "I
knew or a place where the police
stop for donuts." he said. "I
went to get help." He found it.
Drago finally was rushed to
the hospital. wher~ h~ is re ·
covering following hours in an
operating room to repair a
severed artery in his right arm
and numerous bites on his face
and back. He Is in satisfactory
condition.
Reflecting back on the inci-
-• dent this morning, Papetti said.
"I'm glad I was there. It almost
makes you religious."
He said he went to church
yesterday morning for the first
time In· more than 18 months. He
believes God took a hand in the
events.
"If I bad been 20 years
younger." he added. "I could
have swung those dogs around
my head.
"They made me retire when I
was 6S. I felt I was"lt my peak.
Now. with this, I feel tlke I'm
s till a u seful member of
society."
The boy he saved thinks Mr.
Papetti ls a very useful member
of society. "I \bought 1 was
dead." the youna patlentsald.
EN-companion
Sues Actor
LOS ANGELES <AP> -Actor
Nick Nolte has been sued for SS
million by a former girlfriend
who seeks reltef und,er the
landmark "Marvin dedllon" in·
volvln1property1harlftl between
unmarrtedpartnen.
In her cMI suit filed Wednesday
b> attome) Marvtn Mitchelson in
S uperior Court here, Karen
Louise Eklund, ZS, of Santa
Monica claimed the and Nolte, 34,
agreed to combine their earnings
and share all money and property
acquired during the five-year
"partnership.•·
The auJt said Miss Eklund and
Nolle Uved together from June
1972 until last October.
O"ANOECOAST \.IC
DAILY PILOT
Fire Seaaon ,.,.... r-.e Ai
He~; O/fidaU ~~~"~~~i~:. c11:
Ci•-u ---~-Hall at the public library. ~ na~ The 44-page EIR said con·
struction or the lot. located on
pristine Sycamore Hills land, in-By 1be Associated Press
Fire officlals are considering
a 75-acre brush fire southeast of
Lake Elsinore a s nature's
warning that the lire season has
begun in Southern Calif~rnia.
The blaze, the seeond m recent
days in the Lake ElJlnore area,
broke out in hilly terrain
Wednesday but posed no danger
to residents or homes, officials
said.
"It appears the fire season has
bit u.s with a bang," said a Lake
Elsinore fireman, echoing the
fe ars or county and local
officialJ that a coaUy lire season
is looming because abundant
rainfall has resulted ln a heavy
growth of underbrush.
Meanwhile, firemen reported
control over a blaz& 45 miles
north of Bakersfield that
destroyed six frame hoiuea and
damaged four others on the
grounds of ._the Sie rra Vista
Farm laoor Camp In
Rld1egrove.
Tulare County official•
estimated damages al $30,000
and said they were Investigating
the cause of the fire.
Authorities urged campers .to
be cautious when lighting
matches in recreational areas.
They said dry Santa Ana winds
have increased fire hazards in
these areas.
cludes clearing or brush and in-
stallation of temporary fenclna.
lighting and signs.
Grading will be restricted to
taking out ruts and smoothing
out the site. The EIR suggests
the area wtU be reseeded at the
end of festival time. Several oak
and sycamore trees on the
prope rty would remain.
The environmental report
must receive approval or the
city's board or adjustment for a
temporary use permit, design
review approval, and c!ity ap-
proval of the expenditure for the
parking lot.
'lllEIT SHIFIS
TO NEW MODEL
KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia
<AP> -Mokhtar Ahmad bought
a new car after his first one was
stolen a month ago.
Today the police told him the
stolen car had been found. When
he left his office to go to police
headquarters, he tound bis new
car had been stolen.
Arrlving at police
headquarters, he reclaimed the
first car and reported the lhefl
of the second.
Fro81PageAJ
BROCHURE ASSAILED. • •
Her campaign committee
chairman , Richard Spooner.
said he has lodged a protest with
the county Republican Central
Committee saying ''the pretense
of documentation contained in
the mailer is no more accurate
than the alias which Mr.
Watkins has adopted for this
campaign."
Points contested by Mrs.
Bergeson and Spooner include the
brochure's allegation that she
does not support the J arvls-Gann
tax initiative.
Mrs. Bergeson also d efended
F,....P,,.eAJ
MINING •••
stockholders to decide recently
to call it qults, said Mrs. Teel.
The oo employees to be laid orr
by the shut.down include prodUc·
lion managers, quality control
technicians, heavy ~ulpment
operators, maintenance workers
and others, said Mrs. Teel.
Southern Callfom1a Gas will
'also lose up to $90,000 a month.
which CrestUte has been paying
for gas to heat Its giant kilns,
she sald.
The mlne property. which
Creatlite has leased from
Estrella PropertlH, developers
of the fl'orater Ranch , will
automatically be ioned for res-
idential development, when the
cotnpany b.,a abandoned the
property. said Richard Ahlman.
San Clemente's planning dlrec·
tor.
Jarvis Moves
-" . To Davis' Side
LOS ANO&LES CAP ) -
Howard Jarvis, cruaader
11alnst hlah prQIM!rtY taicea. en-
doned bf Davl11 today for the
R epubllcan. •ube rn atorl al
nomlnatloo.
Ke ••Id the former Loa Anatt• pollce cblet II lb• only
candlhte an tltb« $.who realb' undll"ltanda lion
11, Cllt tax lnltlattV9 Wbl~ Jarv\a co.a utbiorid.
Jarvll bad prevlou1Jy tn·
dorffd ltate Sea. John Brt1p. R·F11ll.rton for the OOP
nomlnatlon, but earlier thJa
... t artao wWMtrew rrom °" .raee ud~U.W * ••Hort &o Dula.
he r record on the Board or
Trustees of the Newport-Mesa
Unified Schhol District, saying
s he maintained a strong con·
servalive position.
References to Jier approval or a district' policy allowing con·
troverslal speakers bn campuses
did not include the fact that
these speakers were to be used
to provide balanced viewpoints
In civics classes, not for indoc·
trination purp<>Ses, she said .
She also noted that an $1,100
trip to Florida that the Watkins
brochure said was paid for by
the district, actually cost the dis·
trlct less than $100.
Mrs. Bergeson made that trip
as president of the California
School Boards Association which
paid the balance. she said.
RotaryPlam
Court, Action
DUARTE <AP> -The ousted
Rotary Club of Duarte voted
Wednesday to seek court action
to retain its charter and 4\s
women members -lncluding\J:l
fourth female who Jolned last
week, the group's president
said.
At a meeting in Tokyo on
Tuesday, the annual convention
of the international service club
voted 1,080 to 36, to uphold lta
board or directors lut February
in their decision to oust the sub-
urban Los Angeles club for ad·
milting three women.
Last week the club admitted
tu fourth woman, Esther
Taylor, a businesswoman who
for aeveral moot.bl bad eseorted
th• Duarte club'• only bUnd
membe~. Art Speer, to club
m eettn••· club pteatdeat
Richard Key aald Wednesday. ,,,....,._,4J
TRIPS .••
City Council. commtttee
member NomaM Ream NCOm·
mended adODtlon of federal per
diem reln\buraem.at ratea,
which are adjueted tor inflation
and e«taln "hllh eoat" areaa,
Ukt Loa Anaelea or San f'ru.
claco.
"l don't tb1nk ci~ councUnMn
ahould •'-1 ta &be Mlt ~.
but I dOll ... thlbt ~ abould lt.lY
In a flea bar eltber." 11ld Bum. ·~flldilralra&.lwould allow reuanab&e txp11l1419."
..
f',...P.,,.AJ -
WATKINS CAMPAIGN UNDER FIRE
"When y~u're wip-4 out.
you'rt ,...-. out and What I've
tried to do ll to get tbin1a
1tral1bteotd <AA and work my
way back to the top."
W atJdns baa repaid some of
the debtJ dl1chargec1 by the
bankruptcy court, including a
payment ol ll,000 to a le1al firm
that repr~senled him In a
pertoo .. inJury •ult.
He a1llo ••lei ht hat "ma\le ar·
ran1erventa1t to settle a _ll ,500
account at the Balboa Bay Club
in Newport Beach.
However. he s aid, Security
Paciflc Banlt officials have re·
fusecl to "necotlate" a $20,000
debt that was erased ln tbe
bank~uptty case.
"I've done the best I can Lo do
the right thing and when you've
done that, you've done just
about everything you can do,"
Watkins said to describe hls ef-
fort to make amends to his
bankrupt.er creditors.
Watktns Cf'edltors were paid
nothing in the bankruptcy pro-
ceed lnas. His $800 in assets
beyond the value of the Porsche
were personal belongings ex·
empt from creditor claims.
The civil suit filed in Orange
County SUper1or Court showed
the plaintifla as Franklin
Brandt, former Fountain Valley
City Councilman George Scott
and Donald L. DeNoon.
Scott himself ls a candidate in
the June 6 primary. He ls seek-
ing the Republican nomination
in the 38th Stat.e Senate race.
The complaint alleged that
W atldna wu not sharing income
paid to the partnership then do-
in g business a s W atklns
Insurance Agency. The original
partnership agreement 1howed
that Watkins' contribution to the
part.nership was to be use of his
agency license.
In turn. the remaining
partners were to contribute their
insurance expertise.
But when those partners
b e 1 i e v e(I th e m on e y th e
partnerahip earned was not
flowing Into the business, . ~Y
sought a temporary. restrauung
o rder that would pre vent
Watklna from .. assigning,
transferring. disposing of any
assets of the partnership and
managing or interfering with the
m -a a a I • .!D e n t o f t h e
partnentilp.
The plalllUtts also asked that a
permanent receiver be appoint-
ed "to liquidate and wind up the
business partnership.'·
Watkins said he bad no rec·
ollection or the laws uit a nd
complained that he bad un·
dentritten the partnership ex·
penaes unUJ operations ~ame
profitable and then w ai forced
out of the partnenhip.
·'They ~ my a1ency and
my money for six months and
then forced me out," Walkins
said .
As best he could recall. he re-
ceived $1600 or $1700 for his one·
fifth share tn the partnership.
.Brandt. however, recalled that
Watkins wu paid "somewhere
in the neighborhood of $8,000"
for bis interest.
Brandt said the civil suit was
settled out of court with the buy-
out of Watkins.
"No, the parting or the ways
was not what you couJd describe
as amicable." Brandt said.
As for the loans to hts cam·
paign committee. Watkins said
the figure or $26,646 is mislead·
ing.
The candidate said the figure
represents a series of loans that
were made and repaid in part
and ls the cumulative total.
"Actually, I think my net loan
contribution is right at $9,000, •·
Watkins said.
He also said ttiose who have
lent his campaign money are
aware of his financial dif·
ficulUes.
"I've tried to be open and
honest with everyone. And I've
not tried to hide anything from
anyone." be said.
Watkins acknowledged today
that he will amend a recent
campaign disclosure statement
to show what was lis ted original-
ly as a $4,999 loan from Warren
Lipps of Newport Beach as a
loan from (}WC Services. Inc ..
also or Newport Beach.
Watkins was an Assembly
candidate in the 72nd District in
1974 when he filed as a candidate
H. Lee Watkin•
Records show he spent S3,971
of $10,000 he put into the cam·
paign before withdrawing in
time for his name not to appear
on the baJlot.
Watklnl said hls withdraw~
was in deference to a r ivaJ caD·
didate. Ma rlin McKeever .
"A number ,pf people, inctud-
i n 11 <Sta~e Sen.> Denna:;
Carp enter . 1aid McKeever
would stand a better chance er
wlnnina ii be 1ot the nominaUon.
So. J bowedout.••
W atklnl denied that pionttY
flowlna into bta camJ>ilan ts
comln1 rrom State Se.n. Jcmn
Brill•· ' ''M;y phllOIOphy 11 vtty cloee
to Bt\aa. but be bu been tn·
volved ln campal1ns ot hll oYin and b not 1lvlna me any help.··
Watkins said.
Tho GOP candidate was for a
she month period a part•Ume
aide to Aaaemblym,an Ron
Cordova, D-El Toro. the man
abandoning the 74th seat to Nl
for the State Senate in \be 36th
Senate District.
Wrs Caruing
'Big Prob'lem'
LOS ANGELES <AP> --
Something muat be done to cut
down on the number of car! ir.
the Los Angeles area. t:.S.
Secretary of Transportalior.
Brock Adams says.
Cars are too big. use loo much
gasoline, take up too much room
and are the main cause or COO·
gestion, Adams told the Los
Angeles Area Chamber ol Com·
merce Wednesday.
Recent statistics show there
are 3.505.767 cars in Los Angeles
County and 955.255 in Orange
County. Adams said that various
solutions under d evelopment
now -such as Come Together s
r egional van and car pooling
program -could ea~e the
automobile ;umble within \0
years.
Body Identified
DAVENPORT <AP> -The
Santa Cruz County Sheriff's of·
fice says a body found near here
last month was that o regory
John Roth. 32, of San cisco.
... The 1979 ModeJ Line is coming soon. Many
SPECIALS on 1978 Model Line
·Merchandise now! Come in soon as
Sony Trlnilrm Color TV
with remote cootrol. 21 " -
19"· 17" " IS" diagonal.
And • au ln stock-
KV-8000 Sony Trlnltron.
Sony's neweJt AC·DC.
Take anywhere portable. 8
inch diagonal, ,_
TV·lll Sony Black &
Whlla. tl ' acree n
m••nrtd dlaionllly.
avaJJabUity is limited.
I
Sony
Headquarters for
the Harbor ArN
T. V.·ladlo-Shreo
TapeRKordtr
let-.mc
HMK·4U . Sony't q1111lty
packed latasratad mu1lc
1y1lem laah1rt1 AM / Fii
Stereo Raulvtl', 3·"1•.0 automat.ic tunai.b&a. cUMtte
ptaierlr•cordar aQd senal-bua •pedff' ays1*cb. A verr adequete 15 wt lit RMS
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(" F' 5110 A superb stereo
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d"pth AC or ba ttery
Of>f'rl lion. s...,. Sony Specials!
19'1 clla1Hal
17
. . .
·Orange · Coast
EDITION
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA· .
Cash Woes Recounted
Candidate Watkins Puts Past Behind
REVIEWS HIS FINANCES
C•ndldate Lee Watkins
By GARY GRANVILLE ot .. OWtY ..... Mtff
Lee Watkins reviewed his
checkered financial past
Wednesday and said it bas no
bearing on his campaign for the
Republican nomination in the
74th Assembly District.
Wat.kins is campaig.ning on a
slogan that promises "a busi-
ness like approach to the
management of sovemment. ..
However, P'abltc records
show: ·
-Tbe 37-year-old candidate
listed assets of $10,300, includin~
a Porsche automobile valued at
Blgla Surf, Riptides
56 Rescued
By NB Guards
WbUe JOO lifeguards from 11
foretgn countries met just a few
miles away, a dozen Newport
tJucb lifeguards were kept on
lhe run rescuing swimmers
from Wednesday's big surf
"It was really a rough day."
commented lifeguard Lt. LogB.I'
·:Ex-aide's
:~n Slays ..
-Instructor . .
AUS'tlN. Texas (AP> -Tbe
13·year-cM aon ol former Wblte
Jfo~,.... leCl'etar)' .Oeorie Chris &hot hil j tlnlor ,hlgh
1cb English te11ther to de8th
In the classroom today. police
said .
Lt. Fred -Maxwell. chief of
public affairs fQr the Au'slin
police department, identified the
boy as John Christian, who was
taken into custody and brought
to tbe police station for
questioning
. George Cbrlalian. who served
lls press secretary for President
j,yndon Johnson and r ecently
handled public relatJons for Gov.
Dolph· Brisc:oe's loslng
. l>e mocratfo primary caMPaign.
arrived at t he police station,
visibly shaken.
T h e s lain teacher was
1dentified as Wilbur Rod
Grayson, 29.
A bout 30 children from the
tlass were brought lo police
he adq uarters to give
lnformalion about what they
saw
Max well said Grayson was
shot three limes -beDealh the
right arm, in the rtaht arm and
in the right side or the head with
CSee TEAatEJl. Page AZ>
' Lockabey who said U>e skeleton
crew pulled 56 people out of the
eight-foot surf.
Lockabey said more than
40.000 people s howed up at
Newport's strands to escape the
heat Inland on a day when the
city's complement of guards
was reduced to those that work full time.
The summer staff consists of
high school and college students
who have Qot come on duty, he
explained.
Lockabey said things got so
hectic that Lifeguard Chief
Kendall Jacobson was pulled out
of bis desk Job and pressed Into
neld work. ·
Meanwhile, top lifeguards
from all over the 1lobe have
been meeting th.is week at the
Newport Sheraton Hotel for the
convention sponsored by the
World Ufe Saving AssoclaUon.
.. We contemplated trying to
get the guys at the world
congress to come and help but
their agenda was pretty tight.•'
he added.
Lockabey said t he busy
guards did get some assistance
from local surrers who were
responsible for a half-dozen
rescues.
One occurred at Orange Street
at about 2 p.m. when West
Newport resident Patrick
Collif\S used his surf board in
rescuing a swimmer wbo ti.d
go\.ten into a surf-generated rip
tide.
"There were several incidents
like that," ~ockabey said .
"Unfortunatety, we didn't get
the names of the other surfers
who helped out."
Lockabey said the big surf.
riptides and in-shore boles have
led to three near-drowning cases
since Tuesday.
Jn two of the cases, both
r epo rted T u esday , the
swimmers were pulled Crom the
water unconscious and were
revived by lifeguards and
<See Sl)&F, Page A2>
$9,500 on which he owed $9,000.
and $59,800 "1 liabiJities when he
med a voluntary petition in
bankruptcy in December. 1976.
-Watklm was charged in a
civil s uit flied in Orange County
Superior Court in 1976 with col-
1 e ct in g money owed to a
partnership and diverting it to
"his own use and control."
-Less tbaa nlDe montU after
his bankruptcy case closed in
federal court. Watkins lent his
campaign committee $26,646.
Watkin s blamed his
bankruptcy on a J an. 12. 1976,
fire inside his insurance office in
Anaheim.
According to Anaheim Fire In-
v es ti gator Norman Morgan,
cause of the fire was arson. A
blaze was ignited after someone
doused records pulled from file
cabinets and stacked on the noor
with a nammable liquid.
"We dtd a lot of investigating,
but there were no arrests,''
Morgan said.
Watkins acknowledged in his
bankruptcy papers that in the
ensuing six months he received
$21,000 to cover his fire loss.
But. he said Thursday. the fire
loss eventually forced him into
voluntary bankruptcy.
·'I thought I had an umbrella
policy that covered the Joss of
valuable records. But when I
read the fine print. I didn.'t,"
Watkins. a licensed insurance
agent. said.
lie said his bankruptcy case is
an issue raised by rival GOP
candidate Marion Bergeson and
her supporters.
''They've called every
newspaper from San Dieao on
up to t11 to make this a· cam-
paign issue and I see it as a
personal attack ... Watkins said.
(Sff WATKINS, Page A.1)
I , o.ftyl"tleC ..........
DRAGO ATANJOVSKI JR., 9, 9Mll.ES AT THE MAN WHO SAVED HIM FROM DOGS
• Rey PapettJ9 11, Found the Strength to Reac:ue Boy Deapit•Four Operations
' s.;y, 9, Meets Rescuer
M~ 71 , Visits Youth He Saved From Dogs
By JERRY CLAUSEN ot• 0et1y ,.._sun
Ni n e-year-ol d Drag o
Atansovski Jr. looked up from
his bandages and bed linen this
mornin g. s m iled and
acknowledged the big white·
haired man who walked into
Mission Commur\jty Hospital ·
room 160.
"He's the man who helped
me," Drago grinned.
It was the first meeting
between 71 -year -old. Jtalian-
bom Ray Papetti and the boy
since the man saved Drago from
the jaws of two powerful dogs
Monday.
Drago, who lives at 24232 Twig
St., El Toro, and a friend were
playing in a field behind a shop-
ping center when two dogs
emerged from a jumbled pile of
crates and Oats.
One of the 50-pound pit buJls
attacked Drago, he said Thurs-
day from his hospital bed. "When
I tried to get away from him, the
other one attacked.
"I pulled their ears and tried
to rip their mouths apart,"
Drago recalled.
Drago's friend ran for help.
Papetti, 25912 C hamplain
Road. Laguna Hills, was driving
by the shopping center at El
Toro Road and Rockfie ld
Boulevard on bis way to work in
the Saddleback Community
Hospital thrift shot>. lie has
helped there since h is man·
datory retirement from a Costa
Mesa aerospace firm six years
ago.
"The one boy hollered at me."
said Papetti. "Something about
someone being bitten by a do&."
Papetti rushed his six-fool·
two. 210.pound frame out the
door of his car and hurried into
the field.
Newport Beach
"The boys's arm was gashed
open. blood was all over the
ground. It looked like some
animal thing out of Wild
Kingdom on television. Those
dogs were dragging the kid all
over the lot."
Papetti doesn't know where he
got the strength -"I've had
four operations ln the last year"
<See MAULED. Page AZ>
'Tempers Flare'
In Jarvis Forum
By JACKIE HYMAN
Of t• Oell' l"Uet SUttt Tempers nared today during a
Newport Beach forum on the
controversial Jarvis-Gann lax
initiative when one panelist
charged that the format of the
discussion was unfair.
Newport-Mesa school trustee
Donald Smallwood met with
boos from some of the audience
when he protested the procedure
or having a pro-Jarvis
representative speak. then be
questioned by a panel composed
of both °'i)ponents and
supporters or the proposition.
The Jarvis·GJlnn initiative.
Proposition 13, on the June 6
ballot. would limit properly
taxes to l percent of cash value
and require a two-thirds vote of
the Legislature to levy new
taxes.
Smallwood. an attorney. said
he didn't believe the format
permitted those opposed to the
prol>osltion to adequately
express their \tiews. <See FORUM, Pa«e AZ>
Beading for Zaire
and other Belgian military
personnel had been alerted to
tau part ln tbe lnterconttnentat
operation.
't was reported unofficially in
COrsica tba1 three planes carry.
int ~ Freocb Forei,n Lelion P.8rat~ bad taken otr from
that M.edJlerraoean laland bound
. for Afttca.
In Wubin1<on. a State [)epanrnel otficlal who uted
not to be l~entlf\ed aaJd the Unit·
ed StateJ woulcl not aypply
troopt or planes for th ma.ton
but mlaht p~vtde t0mt leuer
lotllUcal aup\)Ort. Aboyt 1,500
U.S. Army •lrbornt aoldlen re·
malned on a.lert at f"ort Brau.
N.C .. however.
The British also were involved
In the plartnlns for the:rescue ef-
fort. but It was not known what
role they mi&ht play.
The Bel,ian troops were re·
ported headed for Kinshasa and
then on to the 1overnment•l)eld
air baae at Kamlna, 130 mJlea
north of K0Jwe1l , a copper-
mlnlng town at the heart ol the
rebel-held area of southern
Zaire.
There were contu.ed HP<ft'ts
11>out th mJlltary eJtuaUon
&1'9UDd Kolwtil. Tbe pro-West
Z"re aovemm~nt clallned Its
force• had recaptUrel ttit town's
aJrport W9dnelda>1.
Today·s Closing
N.Y. toeks , " 4 I
l
N • TEN CENTSJ
BLASTS SMIAR TACTICS
Candidate Bergeaon
Bergeson
Blasts
Mailer
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of Ille O.lly ~ ... IUll
Marian ijergeson. RepubUcan
candidate tOr the 74th Assembly
District. blasted one of her GOP
opponents today for a campaign
brochure he mailed to district
voters. .
Mrs. Bergeson. of Newport
Beach. denounced the brochure
sent by candidate Horace L.
Watkins. who is runnmg under
the name of Lee Watkins. as "a
blatant and cynical political
smear."
Watkins . howtiver. defel>ded
the mailer as "an accu,..te in
terpretation of Marian·s voling
record while a Newport.Mesa
Unified School District trWit~ ..
He admitted the re!iearch
work for the mailer was done by .
political consultants Ar~old
Ford and Bill Butcher or
someone employe d by th~
ButcJtfJ'·Forde political consult-
lngtHm .
"I suand beblnd It. t '•e told
Butcher and Forde they will be
fired on the spot if they ever do
anything such as this without
consulting me. And yes. ln lh1!.
instance. I was consulted and
approved the mailer ..
Mrs. Bergeson noted that the
consultants ··have been cited by
the Fair Political Practice"
Commission for unethical ti.c~
tics used when they manaJCed
the Jim Slemons campaign in 1976 ...
Slemons, who beat out Mrs.
Bergeson ror the GOP nomina-
tion in 1976, was defeated by
Democrat Ron Cordova after
Mrs . Bergeson entered Ure
gener al election campaign a:. <i
write-in candidate.
She polled a record 35 ,000
votes in her last-mfoute cam-
paign.
The 37-year-o ld Watkins
charged that Mrs. Bergeson and
her supporters have turned the
campaign from issue" t"
personalities and critich:ed the
Bergeson camp for allegedly
contacting newspaper!'! with
tales or his financial probtems
It Is not the first time thar
WatkinJ. found himself opposed
to Mrs". Bergeson. ln 19'76, he
was the co-campaign finance
chairman for Slemons
In a press release issued today
Mrs. Bergeson said she Is of-
fended by the use of "Ms ·
throughout the Watkins mailer
and to the statement that she i~
retired.
<See BROCHlJRE, Page A%•
Coas t
Weather
Fair through Friday
with continued ~arm
days. Highs ranging from
mid to upper VOs at the
beaches and 80I tnland.
INSIDE T8DA 't'
Dkl p bow that lwmc;
can bt ha.ztlrdoiu to 11our
health'! The dallQen that h&rk
In a typfcOl da11 ore dettdl"
on Pag« A7.
DAILY PtLOT
• •WJI•• yo•'rt wt• d out.
JOU 'N wiped Mat ud wbat 1 "te
tr•ed to do ls to ·aet thln1s
slrai•btened out and work my
way back to the top "
W atkina bu repaid ~ome of
the debts dllobareed l>f the bankruptcy court. includtng a
payment of 11.000 to a lecal ftrm
t h•t repreae•led him In a
pertc>tlal lDJury suit.
He allO 'aid be baa •tmade ar·
range.anent." to 11ttlo a $1,500
account at the B~boa 8ay Club
in Newport Beach. '
However, he aald. Seourlty
Pacific Bank otflclal.I tlafe re·
fused to "negotiate" J'" $20,000
debt that was er aaed 'n the
bankruptcy cau.
"I've done the best 1 ean to do the rtghl thing and when you've
done that. yo"'ve done Juat
about everything fOU can do,"
Watkins said to deserlbe hi& ~r.
fort to make amends to his
bankr u)ltcy credttors.
Watkins' creditors were paid
nothing U\ the bankruptcy pro-
ceedtngs. His $800 In aaaets
beyond the value of the Porsche
were pel'SObal belongings ex-
empt from creditor claims.
The clvil suit filed in Orange
County Superior Court showed
the plaintiffs as Franklin
1 Brandt. !ormer Fountain Valley
City Councilman George Scott
and Donald L DeNoon
l' ..... P.,,eAl
BROCHURE
Iler campaign committee
c hairman, Richard Spooner,
said he has lodged a protest with
the county Republican Central
Committee say1hg "the pretense
of documentation contained in
the mailer is no more accurate
than lhe atlas which Mr.
Watkins has adopted for this >
campaign."
Points contested by Mrs.
Bergeson and Spooner include the
brochure's allegation that she
does not support the.Jarvis-Gann
lax initiative
Mrs Bergeson also defended
her record on the Board of
Trustees of the Newport-Mesa
Unified Schhol District, saying
she maintained a stron& con·
servat1ve position.
References lo her approval of
a district policy allowing con·
troversial speakers on campuses
did not include the fact that
these speakers were to be used
to provide balanced viewpoints
in civics classes, not for indoc-
trination purposes, she said.
She also noted that an $1,100
trip to Florida that the Wattins
brochure said was paid for by
the dist.ti~• actWllly foe\ the dis·
trict less than $100.
Mrs. Bergeson made that trip
as president of the CaUfomia
School Boards Association wh.ich
• paid the balance, she said
. Fre.PageAl
TEACHER. •
a semi automatic .22.caliber
rifle
Maxwell said he understood
the boy arrived after hls
firsl·period English class had
begun. Parents described the
class as a special one for gifted
and talented voungsters.
·'The teacher was sitting on a
stool. conductin~ class. He (the boy) just walked In the door and
pointed the rifle al him. The
teacher didn't take it real
seriously. He said something.
and the boy just shot him.··
Maxwell said.
Maxwell said he understood
the youth, an honor roll student,
was upset over an incident the
previous day when a substitute
teacher was present.
"The boy was leading a
discussion and dldn 'l get a very
good response," Maxwell said.
Jean Olson, mother of a pupil
in the class, described Grayson
as ''fabulous. He has done
tremendous things "
OAANQE C°"'1 ,.
DAILY PILOT
. ...., ....
~·-ft·---J.-•. cw-. ""'"'·--0.....•,__ , ............... R .. ,.,
'=~ ... Tl:!'
CMfltt M ..... _....,.~.MOR
A•\111°"' W,_.t .... 1!.W.
bimlett la a candid ln t• , ... prt~. lie 11 .... LnC lM JtepubUun ooml1'•tklift
in U.. _,State Seo• r•-. The CO'mplalnt aUe1ed that
Wal.kins waa ~ aharlnl tncome
paid to the partnen.h~ then do-
in g business as \V atklna
Insurance Agency. The orliPnal
partnership agreement showed
that Watkins' contribution to the
partnership waa LO be use of hll
aaency license.
In turn . the remaining
partners were lo contribute their
insurance expertise. But when those partners
belleved the money the
partnership earned was not
flowing into Ole business. they
sought a tempor&rY restraining
order that would pTevent
Watkins from "assigning,
transferring, disposing of any
assets of the partnership and
managing or interfering with the
management of th e
partnership." ·
The plaintiffs also asked that a
permanent receiver be appoint·
ed "lo liquidate and wind up the
business partnership."
Walkins said he had no ret'·
olleclion of the lawsuit and
complained that he had un·
derwritten the partnership ex·
penses until operations became
prontable and then was forced
out or the partnership.
"They used my agency and
my money for six months and
then forced me out," Watklns
said.
As t>est he could recall. he re-
ceived $1600 or $1700 ror his one-
flfth share in the partnership.
Brandt, bowever, recalled that
Wat.kina was paid "somewhere
in the neighborhood of $8,000"
for his interest.
Brandl said the civil suit was
sellled out or court with the buy·
out of Watkins.
"No, the parting oJ the ways
was not what you could describe
as amicable," Brandt said.
As for the loans to bis cam-~
paign committee. Watkins said
the figure of $26,6'6 is mlslead-
mg.
The candidate said the figure repr~sents a series of loans that
were made and repaid in part
and ls the cumulative total.
·•Actually. 1 thlnk my net loan
contribution is right at $9,000,"
Wat.kins said.
He· also said those who have
lent his campaign money are
aware of hls financial dlf-
ficulttes
"I've tried to be open and
honest with everyone. And I've
not tried lo hide anything from
anyone," he said. Watkins acknowled~ed today
that he will amend a recent
campaign disclosure statement
to show what was listed original·
ly as a $4,999 loan from Warren
Lipps of Newport Beach as a
loan from GWC Services, Inc.,
also of Newport Beach.
Watkins was an Assembly
F,....Page A J
FORUM •••
Speaking for the initiative was
Roland Vincent, a Los Angeles
investment counselor who is
directing the campaign in
support of Prop . 13 In
conjunction with one of Its
authors, Howard Jarvis. ~ .. "What we are seeing an
Ca lifornia right now is an
economic and so ci a l
revolution," Vincent told an
audience of several hundred
people at the forum sponsored
by the Newport Harbor-Costa
Mesa Board or Realtors at the
Marriott Hotel in Newport
Beach.
"Howard Jarvis is fond or
say ing. 'We gave them
Clegr.Jlators) an unlimited
budget and they exceeded it',"
Vincent said.
I n one ol his questions.
Smallwood challenged Vincent
to comment on Ole assertion that
property taxes, which are paid
to local government, would be
cut, while the state Legislature's
revenues would not. "You're taking local control,
the most responsive control, and
ahifting that control all the way
to Sacramento," Smallwood
said.
Responded Vincent. ··we don't
have the local control that
everyone is so fond o( talking
about."
He also said. "We can't afford
our present school system. It's
like a Rolls Royce. The biagest
threat to our homes are schools.
We~etalJdniaboutatopplngthe
gonrmoent from confiacatina
our propert)"."
'IHEFT SHIFTS
'IV NEW MODEL
.• KU ALA LUMPUR, ¥ala.yala CAP> -Mokhtar Ahmad bou&ht • new car after bl.a fint one wu
stolen a month ago.
Today the Police told him the
stolen car had been found. When
be lefL hil office to 10 to poltoe headq~ 'be round hls MW
car bid brJal lfoleo.
Arrlvln1 at police headq~. M rec.lalm9d ~ nrtt car Ind reported the tbeft
of t.b• leCIOOd.
candtcdt. in tile l-' DJt:
ltH wJ:teo Ill ftled" a ~aa ll. lM WaWM. ' 1 Recorda lbow M .. n.t SS.en
or $10,000 he put into the cam·
palgn before wttbdrawlna In
time ror tu. name not to appear
on the ballot. Watkins said his withdrawal
was in deference to a rival can·
dldate, Marlin McKeever.
·•A number of people. includ·
fng• (State Sen.> Dennis
Carpenter. said McKeever
would stand a better chance or
winning if he got the nomination.
So. I bowed out."
Watkins denied that money
rtowtng Into his campaign is
coming from State Sen. John
Briggs. .. My philo.wphy is very close
to Briggs. bul he has been in·
volved in campaigns of his own
and is not glvlng me any help,"
Watkins said.
The GOP candidate was for a
six month period a part-time
aide to Assembly ~an Ron
Cordova. D·EI Toro, lhe man
abandoning the 14th seat to run
for the State Senate in the 36lh
Senate District.
Nete ~
Paul Newman. whose movie
roles have ranged rrom a
cowboy to hockey player.
ha s a n ew role as a
representative to the United
N atioru. session on disarma-
m e rrt . Pres ide nt Carter
made appointment Wednes-
day.
Teen Enters Plea
In El Toro Murder
" PASADENA <AP) -A Van
Nuys teen-ager pleaded innocent
Wednesday lo charges of kid·
11apping. robbing and murdering
an El Toro housewife las\ year.
Brian Willis, who entered the
plea at his arraignment before
Superior Court Judge Kenneth
A. White, was ordered to return
to court next Wednesday for a
pretrial heartne. He was held in
lieu of $50,000 bail.
,.,....~~Al
MAULED ••.
-but he ripped a board from a
crate and lunged forward. curs·
ing In English and Italian.
"I'd be lying lf I told you I
wasn 't scared," he said. "But I
guess I'd do It again. Nobody
who's a man is going to see a
boy crylng for help and bleeding
to death and not do what I did."
Papetti held young Drago up
with one big hand and swung the
board with the 1>tber. "They
were too rasl for me ... he said or
the bulldogs. "I couldn't get in a
good lick."
Still warding orr the attack,
Papetti half carried and half
dragged the youth lo his car. "l
knew or a place where the police
stop for donuts." he said. "I
went lo get help." He found 1t.
Drago finally was rushed to
the hospital. where he is re-
covering following hours in an
operating room to repair a
severed artery in his right arm
and numerous bites on his face
and back. He is in satisfactory
condition.
Reflecting back on the inci-
dent this morning, Papetti said,
"I'm glad I was there. It alm06t
makes you religious."
He said he went to church
yesterday morning for the first
time In more than 18 months. He
believes God took a hand in the
events.
"If I had been 20 years
younger." he added. "I could
have swung those dogs around
my head.
·'They made me retire when l
was 65. I felt I was at my peak.
Now. with this, I feel like I'm
sti 11 a useful member o(
• society."
The boy he saved thinks Mr.
Papetti is a very useful member
of society. "I thought I was
dead,'· the young patients aid.
Fire Setu1on
Here ; Officials
Cit.e Hazarm
By Tbe Auoclated Prut
Fire officials are considering
a 75-acre brush fire southeast or
Lake Elsinore as nature's
warning that the fire season bu
begun in Southern California.
The blaze, the second 10 recent
day!\ m the Lake Ebtnore area.
broke out In hllly terrain W edrtetday but posed no danger
to resldenll or homes. officials
sa\d. ,
"It appears the Ore season hlls
bll us with a bang," said a Lake
Elsinore fireman, echoing the
fears or county and local
otflclals that a costly tfre souon
11 looming because abundtu\t
rainfall hu rdUlted in a heavy
arowth of udderbruab. ·
Meanwhile, ttremen reported
control over a bias¢ 45 mlles
aorth of Baker fiield that
dettro)'ed aix tram houte1 and
clamaaed ro\lr others on tbe around• of tbe Slerre Vl•la
Farm labor Camp ra
1Ud1earove. T•f•r• County ofUtiala
e Umat.ed damaau at '30,000
ar1d nld they were tnv..Uaatlq
the cau.e ol the fire.
Willis Is charged in the slaying
or 34-year-old Rachel Sparling
of El Toro. who disappeared
arter a visit lo her psychiatrist's
office on March 15, 1977. Her
body was round four days later
in the Angeles National Forest
above La Canada. She had been
shot twice in the head.
The murder weapon was found
in Mrs. Sparling's car. which
was abandoned after a hit-and·
run traffic accident in Granada
Hills.
Willis. a runaway from a Van
Nuys placement home, was ar·
rested the day Mrs. Sparling,
the wife or an Orange CoW'ltY
businessman and the mother or
four children. vanished.
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TV·ll8 Sonr Black &r Whtlt . t l' ac:re•n
mea1ured di onaJlf .
s.....,ej ShoteS
Y 011nger,. Davis
Leading Pack
SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -
Evelle YOUQger and Ed Davis
have put a little distance
betwffll themselves and other
contenders for the Republican
gubernatorial nomination. ac-
cording to the latest Mervin
Field California Poll.
A ,survey of 462 Republican
voters taken between May 1 and
May 8 showed Younger pn•-·
ferred by 'Z7 percent of t~e
queslloned. while Davis picked
up support from 2S percent.
Ken Maddy had 19 percent.
Pete Wilson 12 percent and John
Briggs. who withdrew from the
race Tuesday. one percent. with
16 percent listed as undecided.
The poll showed Younger, the
stale 's attorney general. im-
proving his standing for the first
time in more than a year. The
last poll. in late March and early
April. gave Younger 23 percent.
followed by Davis with 22 per·
cent, Maddy 18. Wilson 12 and
Briggs 2, with 23 percent un-
decided.
A poll taken in March 19'17
gave Younger 42 percent. but his
support dwindled to the low of 23
percent a month ago.
The poll also plotted what
would happen should any of the
candidates drop out or the race
or have his support weakened.
finding that Younger would
benefit m06t.
Ir Wilson were to drop out, the
lineup would be Younger 31 per-
cent. Davis 216 percent, Maddy 21
percent. Briggs two percent and
undecided 20 percent.
Without Maddy, Younger
would have 33 percent, Davis 29
percent. Wilson 15 percent,
Briggs two percent and Un·
decided 21 percent.
Without Davis, Younger would
have :n pet'eftt, Maddy Z3 per·
cent. Wl1lon ~ percent. Brtas
two pe~t and undecided 23
~rcent.
· F,.._P"fleAJ
SURF .••
paramedics.
John Goniales. u. of San
Bernudlno was hHpilaliaed
overnight at HO&f Memorial
Hospital before being released
on Wednesday. Natalia
Fi1ueroa. 18. of Santa Ana was
not hospltallzed.
Lockabey said anothu
near-drownin g occu r red
Wednfllday night at Corona del
Matt main beach when a
Placentia man got caught in
rou1h water while trying to
retrieve a ball.
In that case. Lockabey said
the victim. Merlin Allred, 35.
later told lifeguards he asked a
surfer for help and was refused.
Allred said he finally got out
of the water by himself. but
lifeguards and medics were
called at 9 p.m. to give him first
aid.
He was reported in fair
condlUon at Hoag Memorial
Hospital.
Lockabey said guards
anticipate more or the same
through Friday w hile the
temperatures remain up and the
surf is big.
He said guard coverage will
be provided primarily by jeeps
and patrol boats. "We sit in the
trouble spots and then can move
to places where we're called,"
he said.
Huge crowds are expected to
hit all ot the coast this weekend.
but by then he said more of the
seasonal guard force will have
been mobilized and the surf
should be down. he said.
The 1979 Model Line is coming soon. Manr
SPECIALS on 1978 Model Line
Merchandise now! Come in soon as
avall abilitr l s limited.
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SAUNICI
17
, ,
EDITION
VOl.. 11, NO. 131, .. SECTIONS, 38 PAGES
Cash Wbes RecoUntett
•
Candidate Watkins .P.uts Past Behiitd
REVIEWS HIS FINANCES
C•ndlct.te Lee W•tkln•
lllajoritg Vifte
By GUY GRANVILLE Of .. DllllY ...........
Lee Watkins reviewed bis
checkered financial past
Wednesday and said it has no
bearing on bis campaign for the
Republican nomination In the
74th Auembly District.
Watkins 18 CJrnlpaia_ning on a
slogan t.bat promises "a busi-
ness Ii k e approach to the
management of goven'Unent."
However. ·pueltc records
show :
-T be 37-year-old candidate
listed assets of $10,300, including
a Por~he automoblle valued at
Board: Welte
'Ignored Us'
. By WILUAM HODGE °' .. Dllll'J "" .....
·saddleback Valley school
trustees abandoned an agree-
.nent not to discuss Superinten·
dent Richitrd Welt.e's suspension
l ud made a statement Wednes-
day outlining events that led to a
. Qtit wtth Welte.
The statement, read by
Trustee Carole Neustadt, during .
HouwsOK
£or. El Toro
Noise Area
l.~ ... r. BJ KATHY CLANCY ... . .. ...,., .......... ~A Laguna Hihs firm won
perminlon WednesdaJ to build
lomes µistde a residential tiuild· '6a ban zone around El Toro ' MarineCorpsAirStation. ~ • .. But before Oranse County
tjlpenlsors voted 4·0 to let
. t.aauna Village Inc. be the first JO build (7S condominiums) in an
area once considered too noisy
fOr bousee they required that:
·-Permanent slgns be posted
vound the tract warning of a
:,.Jllgh noise area" and depicting
•Jet aircraft. -Homebuyers give aviation
easement.a above their dwellings
pd waive t.beil' ngbt t.o later sue
tor noise damages.
-The developer obtain signed
tiateroents from condominium
buyen stating the, ar.e aware of
the El Toro jet flight path near •
Uaeir homes.
· Supervisors al&o received a
••good faith.. agreement from
tbe developer that the 73 units
would be priced in the $56,900 to
$72.000 range for so-called
moderate-income (amities.
The board's decision followed
two hours of testimony froqa
those arguing on both sides ol
the nolae question.
They are expected to debate
,tmllar issues in two weeks
i1'ben aoother Laguna Village
devel~ment. this one for 327
homes ta before them.
The deVeloptnents are located
near Sant. Vittoria and Lake
Forest drives.
. Coun~ bealtb officer Morton
Nelsoa advised supervisors
Wednaday against permlttln1
4evelo~ ln that area and
said U bulldiq doea oceur, the
noise wammp are a must.
.. lly opinion ii there should
not be residential use ln that
area "'be 1aid. "What I am say-
1DI is lb.at an lndtvldaal wbo
(See NolBE, Pate~)
Wednesday'• board meeting, ac-
cused Welte of ignor.iJlg school
board direction in his manage-
ment of the school district.
''This community's school
board has, during the past 12
months, requested that the
s uperintendent implement a
number of policies," Mrs.
Neustadt read. "The superinten-
dent has either chosen to ignore
the school board or assign these
policies to an increasingly un-
responsive bureaucracy.''
Board majority me~bers also
accused Welte of trytDg to ex·
ercise "ultimate control" over
the cli.striet's schoola.
''The board majority cannot
and will not accept the role of
being a •rubber stamp' for rec·
pmmendations made by the
1uperlntendeot or 4lltriot ad·
minlstrators, •• Mrs. N'eustadt
said. "He (Welte> has chosen to
tsaore, more oft.en than not, our
ooncerns and our directions."
The statement claimed
trustees had asked for Welt.e's
resignation and be had refUsed
to resign.
The statement also outlined:
-Allegations that Welte has
not been visible enough in the
community during major ac-
tivities involving par~nts or stu-
• denta. -Criticism of Welte's atten-
dance at board meetings, alleg-
ing a "very poor" attendance
record.
-Criticism of Welte's wort
attendance. claiming he ls work'·
ing a two to three-day ~rk
week.
-Allegations that Welte has
asked that his name be removed
(rom di.strict stationery and told
the board he no longer wants to
work for them.
The board majority statement
also criticised Welte's manage-
ment style.
"The board majority believes
that the superintendent has
created a crisis management al·
mospbere in our school dis·
trict, .. Mrs. Neustadt said. "He
frequently isolates himself from
(See WELTE, Page A!)
Teen Ple ads
Innoce nt
Io Slaying
PASADENA (AP) -A Van
Nuya ~aaer pleaded innocent
Wednesday to charges of kid·
nappln1. robbing and murdering
an~ Toro housewife last year.
Brian Wlllis, who entered the
plea at bi.I arraignment before
Superior Court Judge Kenneth
A. White. was ordered to return
to court nelrt Wedneaday fo11 a
pretrial bearing. He was held in
lieu or $50,000 bail.
Willis ii cbarsed ln the slaying
of 3'-y~d Raebel Sparlinl
of El Toro, who ditappea.recl
after a vi.tit to ber psycblatrtat•a
offtce oo March lJ, 1'". Rw
bod7 ·-fOllDd four"" later lD tbe A.a9llll N8'klll*l l'Onlt
above La Caada. She bad *1
shot twtce ID the bead.
Tb• murder weepon wu found
lo .. ~ = ... ·. car, wbieh
WU abli an..r 8 bit-and·
run tr~ aeddent ln Orcada
Hlll1.
Wl1U1. I ,,....~ ftVii e'l.Ym
Nuy1 ~home, wu •·
rested tM day Mn. a the wll9 ol an 0r...,.
n.1.-amdtM....,. ,........_,..,..,,
$9,:500 on which he owed $9,000i
and $59,IOO ln llabWUes when be
filed a volunta.ey petUton in
bankruptcy in December, 1976.
-Watldu waa cbar1ed in a civil suit filed ln Orange County
Superior Court ln 1976 with col·
lectlng money owed to a
partnership and divertin• it to "bia own use and eontrol. ,T
-Las $1aaa allle -~ after his bankruptcy case closed in
federal court, Watkins lent his
campatin committee $26,646.
Watkins blamed his
bankruptcy on a Jan. 12. 1976,
fire lo&ide his insurance office in'
Anaheim.
Accordlneto Anaheim Fire In·
vesticator Norman Morgan,
caqse ol the fire was anon. A
blaze waa ignited after someone
doused records pulled from file
cabinets and stacked on the Ooor
with a flammable liquid.
"We did a lot. of investigating,
but there were no arrests.,"
Morcan said.
Watkins acknowledged in bis
bankruptcy papers that in the
enaulne six months he received
$21,000 to cover bis fire loss.
But. be said Thursday. the fire
loss eventuaUy forced him into
voluntary bankru{'!ct.
"I thoUgbt I hact an umbrella
p0liey that.covered the ION of
valuable records, But when I
re'a(l the line ~. I didn't,"
Watkins. a Jlcenled insurance
agent. said.
He said bis ~tcy cue iB
an issue-raised by rival GOP
candidate. Marton Beqeson and
her support.ft'I.
• ':l'bey've called ever-y
newspaper ftom San Diego oo
up to try to make this a cam-
paign iasue and l see it as a
personal attack, ''Watkin& 1*14.
<See WATKINS. Page Al>
Deffy"9tlteft,....
DRAGO ATANSOVSKI JR., 9, SMILES .AT THE MAN WHO SAVED HIM FROM DOGS
~....,... 71, F°1'"4 ~ ~ o Rncue8oyDe8PfteFour0peraUotl•
,• • ,t
Man, 71, Vi.si ts Yolllh He Saved From Dogs
By JERRY CLAUSEN
Of .. DMly pttM ~
Nine-year-old Drago
Atansovsld Jr. looked up from
bis bandages and bed linen this
morning , smiled and
acknowledged the big white-
baired man who walked into
Mission Community Hospital room 160.
Road, Laguna Hills, was driving
by the shopping center at El
Toro Roa d and Rockfield
Boulevard on his way to work in
the Saddleback Community
Hospital thrift s hop. He has
helped there since his man-
datory retirement from a Costa
Mesa aerospace firm six years
ago.
"'The one boy hoUered at me,"
said Papetti. "Something about
someone being bitten by a dog."
Papetti rushed his six·foot-
two, 21().pound frame out the
door of bis car and burned into
the field.
<See MAULED, Pa1e A!)
"He's the man who helped
me." Drago grinned.
It was the first meeting
between 71 -year-old, ltalian-
bom Ray Papetti and the boy
since the man saved Drago from
the jaws ol two powerful dogs
Monday.
Drago, who lives at 24232 Twig
St:. El Toro, and a friend were
playing in a field behind a shop-
ping center when two dogs
emerged from a jumbled pile or
crates and Oats.
SVUSD Board Raps
Jarvis-Gann Ballot
One of the 50-ROUDd pit bulls
attacked Drago, be said Thurs-
day f~m b.ls hospital bed. "When
I tried to get away from him, the
other one attacked. "I, pulled their ears and tried
to rip tbeir mouths apart, ..
Dra10 recalled.
Drago's friend ran for help.
Papetti, 25912 Champlain
Citing a potential loss of $20
million tn school revenues,
Saddleback Valley Unified
School District trustees voted
unanimously Wednesday to
oppose the controversial
J arvis·Oann property tax
limitation initiative.
Trustees were reacting to a
re~ommendation from Acting
Superintendent Donald Ames
that they oppose the measure
because it would "devastate"
the school district.
"It wtll c hange our
.larvis Baeked
' l • ff ayakmm P/,edge• Support
WASHINGTON <AP> -Sayirtg "government
does not know how to cut," U.S. Sen. S.l. Harakawa
today announced his support for the. Jarvis-Gann
property tax initiative.
"lam voting for Propo_,ition 13 in the belief that
the shock treatment of Jarvis-Gann ls what
government needs to bring about fiscal common
sense,·· the state's Rei>ublican junior s·enator satd.
.. The shock wiJl be f ~lt not Just ln California, but all
over-the 11aUon." ••:gae J arvis-Oann initiative is a great over4 sfmpllfication of a complex problem."
Hayakawa said. . • ,
But h'e said he was .. frµstrated by the tact t6at
tax cnta, rro matter how wisely de.tgned. simply do
not maketbelr way through the Legislature ...
He aald he declded to suppc)rt the lnltlative1
whleb will be on the a(ate'a June 6 ballot. after Ute
-U.S. 'Senate deteated _propoeata that would have
reduced by at least a:t billion the Increase in the
=ment of HeaJU\, Education and Welfare's for U.. conlJIC year.
educational program s
drastically," Ames said. "We
will be the hardest hjt school
district in Orange County if it
passes.
"We have a projected budget
of $37 million:· he continued. "If
Jarvis passes we will lose $20
million ot that."
Ames said the djstrict staff
was designing a $16 million
budget with an $800,000 reserve
as ~ contingency budeet should
the measur:e be approved by
voters .lune 6.
He Hid the Saddleback
district would be tuardesl bit by
the J arvts measure because svusp depeqds on pro~rty
taxes lor 8.0 percent ot its
income.
· "We must separate Politics
and education aDd take a stand
on P'ropogitJon 13," Ames said.
Trustees supported the m0ve
to oppose the lnltt•tl'Ve bu• were spill on whether the district
sbould aclverti"Se the
lmpllcatldlla OI , lta pauaae to
commwdly members. •
''I 'TI support the resolution
undetstandinf fully, the illU>ict
on our natlon:• educalidn'al
system." lf ar}t Pbllllps sa,i,d.
"But I cannot support spending
our dlltrict funds pro or cpn on ProPOSi~ 13." "I want. uf to b4', cauUous
about diltr1batlnl lnformatloo at dlstrlct ~xpense, •• Catote Ne~tadt .,reed.
Trullee Wltlt1m Kobler.
bowonr. •uPPQl'ted tnforQall\t
the cosumu.,lty of J ar~b
im•ll.c.atlon• !brou1b oe-w~ "It th•~ i1n 't what we re be,. for -eduoaUna the cbl.._ and t.be oomm....,t1_-&Mn wbat.,.. ·~dome up~ ... ~ •aJd·mtt-
Afternoon
N.Y. 8toek8
TEN CENTS I
BLASTS SMEAR TACTICS
Cmndldate Bergeeon
By JOANNE REYNOLDS-... Ot .. IMH,,.....SUtt
Marian Bergeson, Republican
candidate for the 74th Asseinbty
District, blasted one -of her GOP
opponents today for a campaign
brochure he mailed to. district
voters. .
Mrs. Bergeson, of Newport
Beach, denounced the brochure
sent by candidate Horace L .
Watkins. who ts running under
the name of Lee Watkins, as "a
blatant and cynical political
smear."
Watkins, however. defended
the mailer as "an accurate in-
terpretation of Marian ·s voting
record while a Newport-Mesa
Unified School District trustee."
He admitted the research
work for the mailer was done by
political consultants Arnold
Ford .-nd Bill Butcher or
somttpne employed by the
Butchet"·Forde political consult·
ingteam.
"I stand behiod it. I've told
Butcher and Forde they will be
fa.red on the sPot if they ever do
anything such as this without
consulting me. And yes, in this
instance, I ·was consulted and
approved the mailer.•'
Mrs. Bergeson noted that the
consultants "have been cited by
the Fair Political Practices
Commission for unethical tac-
tics used when they managed
the Jim Slemons campaign in
1976."
Slemons. who beat out Mrs.
Bergeson for the GOP oomina·
lion in 1976, was defeated by
Democrat Ron Cordova after
Mrs. Bergeson entered the
general election campaign as :.
write· in candidate.
She polled a record 35.000
votes in her last-minute cam-
paign.
The 37-year·old Watkins
charged that Mrs. Bergeson and
her supporters have turned the
c ampaign from i~sues to
personalities and criticized the
Bergeson camp for allegedly
contacting newspapers with
tales of his fmancial problems.
It is not the first time tblt
Watkins lound himself opposed
to Mrs. Bergeson. In 1976. he
was the co-campaign finan~
chairman for Slemons.
In a press release issued today
Mrs. Bergeson said she is of.
fended by the use of ··Ms."
throughout the Watkirul mailer
and to the •tatetnent that she Is
retired. <See BBOCBtJaE, Page AU
Coast
Weath e r
Fair throueh Friday
with continued warm
days. Highs ranging from
mid to upper 70s at the
beacbes and 80s inland.
INSIDE TODA~
Did JIC* ~ thot ltviJtg
COft &. MiordC*I to 10t.tr
~h? nw ~~ tM.i '""" in a trt*Ol daV ore dct<IU«f
°"Page A1
l •tlex
J
. .
MAULED •• :
'::TIMl -~'1.,.. waa 1..W ~. WoOd wu all onr tM
around. It looked like some
animal thins out or Wiid
Kinldom on television. Tho.e
dep were dragging the kid all
Oler tbe lot."
Papetti doe$n "t know where be
IOl the ltrenstb -"I've bad lour operatiom ln the 1,.t year"
-but ba rlPt*I • board rrom •
crate and lllftl~ forward, CW"l-
in1 in SQiU.habd Italian.
.. I'd be tvtno If I told you J
wasn't ac.red/• be aald. ..But I
1ue11 I'd do it acaln. Nobody
who's a man la 1o1n1 to s .. a
boy crytna for help and bleedlot
to death and not do What I dld."
p apettl held YOW\I Dra10 up
wllb one bl.a band and awuni UM
board wtlb the other !;rhey
were too fut ror me," be said ol
the bulldop. "I couldn't 1et ln a
1ood lick.'
Still wardinl oft the attack. Papetti ball carried and haU
draHed the youth to bl• car. "I
knew of a place where the po'ltce
stop for donut.I," be aald. "l
went to 1et betp." He round lt.
Dra10 finally wu ruabed to
the hospital, wa.ere he 11 re·
coverint following hours ln an
operating room to repair a
severed artery in hla right arm
and numerous bites on bis face
and back. He is in satisfactory
condition.
Reflecting back on the incl·
dent tbla morning, PapetU said,
"I'm glad I wu there. It almoet
makes you religious."
He said he went to church
yesterday morning for the Ciral
time in more than 18 montba. He
believes God took a hand in the
events.
.. If I had been 20 years
younger," he added, "I could
have swung those dog1 around
my head.
"They made me retire when I was 65. l felt I was at my peak.
Now. with thls, I feel like I'm
sti 11 a uaefut member or
society."
The boy he saved thinks Mr.
Papetu la a very useful member
of society. "I thought I was
dead," the young patlentsald.
f',...PageAJ
BROCHURE
Her campaign committee
chairman, Richard Spooner.
said he has lodted a protest with
the cOlmty Republican Central
Committee aa.ying "lhe pretense
or documentation contalned in
the mailer la no more accurate
than t'e alias which Mr. Watkins has adopted for this campalgn."
Points contested by Mrs.
BergesonandSpoonerlncludethe
brochure's allegation that she
does not support the Jarvis-Gann
tax Initiative.
Mn. Bergeson also derended
her record on the Board or
Trustees of the Newport-Mesa
Unified Sch.ho! Dlltrtct, saying
she maintained a 1trong con·
servative position.
References to her approval or
a district policy allowing con·
trovenlal speaken on campuses
did not include lhe fact that
these speakers were to be used
to provide balanced viewpoints
in civics classes, not for lndoc·
trlnatlon purposes, she said.
She also noted that an $1,100
trip to Florida that the Watkins
brochure said was paid for by
the district, actually cost the dis·
trict less than $100.
Mrs. Ber1eson made that trip
as president o( the California
School Boards Auoclalion which
paid Ule balance, she said.
Vote to Resume
SANTO DOMINGO .
Dominican Republic (AP> -
President Joaquin Bala1uer's government says vote countin«
in the presidential election will
resume u soon as the country
vote is in. Amid rumon of a
power stru1gle among four
military factions, lralaguer's
chief oppol)ent, left-of-center An·
tonlo Gmman, claimed victory
and asked President Carter for
help.
DAILY PILOT
.............
JOHN CHRISTIAN, 13, HIDES HIS FACE Al HE l.£AVIS SCHOOL AFTER SHOOTING
Son of former PrHldentlel PreH S.Cretery Acouaed of Staying Teacher
Boy, 13, Kills Te~cher
AUSTIN, Texas tAP> -The IS.year-old aoo of former While
House press aecretary George
CbrllUan shot his Junior high school Encllah teacher to death
ln the cJusroom today. police
aald
Lt. Ft-ed Maxwelli.hief of public affairs for t Austin police department, Ide tlfied the
boy H John Christian, who was
taken into custody and broul.bl
to the police s lallon for
questioning.
George Chriatlan1 who served u preaa secretary for President
Lyndon Johnson •nd recently
bandied public relaUona for Gov.
Dolph Briscoe'• losln& DemocraUc primary campaign,
arrlved at lhe police station,
visibly shaken.
The slain t eacher was
Identified as Wilbur Rod Grayson, 29.
About 30 children from the class were brought to police
headquarters to give Information about what they
laW.
Maxwell said Grayson was
shot three times -beneath the right arm, In the right arm and
in the right aide of lbe head with
a semi·automallc .22-caliber rlfle. ·
Maxwell aald he understood
the boy arrived after his
first-period English class had
begun. Parents described the
class as a special one for gifted
F,....PflfleAJ
WATKINS CAMPAIGN. • •
"When you're wiped out.
you're wiped out and what I've
tried to do is to get things
straightened out and work my
way back to the top."
Watkins has repaid some of
the debts discharged by the
bankruptcy court. including a
payment of $1,000 to a le1al firm
that represented him in a
personal injury suit.
He also said he has "made ar·
ran1ements" to settle a Sl,500
account at the Balboa Bay Club
in Newport Beach
However, he said, Security
Pacific Bank officials have re-
fused to "negotiate'' a $20,000
debt that was erased in the
bankruptcy case.
"I've done the best I can to do
the rlght thing and when you've
done tbat, you've done Just
about everything you can do,"
Walkins said to describe his ef·
fort to make amends to his
bankr&1ptcy creditors. W alldns · creditors were paid
nothing ln the bankruptcy pro-
ceedings. His $800 in assets
beyond the value of the Porsche
were personal belon1ings ex·
empt from creditor claims.
The civil suit filed in Orange
County Superior Court showed
the plaintiffs as Franklin
Brandt, former Fountain Valley
City Councilman Geor1e Scott
and Donald L. De Noon .
Scott himself is a candidate ln the June 6 prtmary. He ia seek·
Ing the Republican nomination
in the 36lh State Senate race.
The complaint alleged that
Walkins was not sharin1 income
paid to the partnership then do-
in 1 busln eu a1 Watkins
Insurance' Agency. The original
partnel'Sbip agreement showed that Watkins' contribution to the
partnership was to be use of his
a1ency license. In turn, the remaining
partners were to contribute their
insurance expertise.
But when thoae partners
believed the money the
partnership earned waa not
fiowiq into the bualnes1, they
tougbt a temporary restralnlng
order that would prevent
W•tkin1 from "a11l1nlng,
transferrtna. cllspolln1 of any assets ol &be partnenblo and
mana1inf or lntertertna with the
mana•emenf' or th e
partnenblp."
The plalnUffa alao a1ked tbat a
permanent receiver be appolnt·
ed "to liquidate and wlnd up the
buslne11 partnerthip."
W atklnl said he had no tee·
ollectlon of the lawsuit and
complained that he had un·
derwrttten Ukt parinerahlp ex-
penses . until operatlop1 became
profitable ancJ then waa forced
out of the ~nhlp.
•1Tbey used my asency and
my money for 1ht moolbl and ~f3. -{orced me out.·• Watttna
A9 bM be could reeaU, be re-ffl .. d '1IOO ot '1700 tor bll cme-
flftb aure ln a.e putnenblp.
Brandt, bowe••, Neall.cl that
Wat.kins was paid "somewhere
in the neighborhood or $8,000"
for his interest. Brandt said the civil suit was
settled out ol court with the buy·
out of Walkins.
"No. the parting or the ways
was not what you could describe
as amicable." Brandt said.
As for the loans to his cam·
paign committee, Walkins said
the figure or $26,646 is mislead·
ing.
The candidate said the figure
represents a series of loans that
were made and repaid in part
and is the cumulative total.
"Actually, I think my net loan
contribution is right at $9,000,"
Watkint said.
He alao said those who have lent his campaign money are
aware of his tlnancial dlf·
flculties.
"l 've tried to be open and
honest with everyone. And I've
not tried to hlde anythln1 from
anyone," be said.
Watkins acknowledied today
that he will amend a recent
campaign disclosure statement
to ahow what was listed ortiinal·
ly as a $4,998 loan from Warren
Lipps of Newport Beach as a
loan from GWC Services, Inc ..
also or Newport Beach.
Watkins waa an Assembly
candidate ln the 72nd District in
1974 when he IUed aa a candidate
H. Lee Watkins.
Record.a abow he apenl $3,971
or $10,000 he put into the cam·
pal1n before withdrawing in
time for his name not to appear
on the ballot.
WaUdnt said hls withdrawal
was in deference to a rival can·
didate, Marlin McKeever.
"A number or people, includ·
Ing <State S e n .> Dennis
Carpenter, s aid McKeever
would stand a better chance of
winning if be 1ot the nominaUOb.
So, I bowed out."
Watldna denied that money
flowing into his campaign is
coming from St.ate Sen. John
Brlaga. "My pblloebphy is very close
to Brlus. but be h.-~n in·
volved tn campaienl ol bis own
and ls not ldving me any help,"
Watklnt safd.
The GOP candidate was for a
six month period • part•ttme
aide to Auemblyaua Ron Cord~va1 J>.El Toro, tht man aban<IOl\lq \he t•th teat to run
for lbe State Senate ln the ~
Senate Distrtct. 1
Coals Flre Caqae?
JELLICO, Tenn. (AP> -
Smoldertn1 co•l1, Uftattended
oveml&ht In a lobby fttepl~.
probably caused lb• fire that
de1troytd the 16·.Y•ar·old
Jenklnt Hotel and kllled tewn
J)el'90ftl. a 1tate nre manbal'•
ornce apolc•man 1.W YedDM·
day. But public lntormatlon ol·
• ricer Oeora• Scbnltaer said
autJaoriU.. 1DQ MY• be IUl"e ~bat 1~.cl UM Tu.Uy ftf'e .
I
and talented younaatera.
•'The teacher wu 1ittin1 on a
stool, conductin1 claH. He <the
boy> just walked ln lb• door and
pointed the rifle at him. The
teacher didn't take it real
seriously. He eaid 1omelbin1. and the boy just 1bot him,"
Maxwell said.
Maxwell said he understood
the youth. an honor roll student.
was upset over an incident the
previous day when a subeUtute
teacher was l>retent.
·'The boy was leading a
discussion and didn't aet a very good response," Maxwell said.
Jean Olson, mother of a pupil
In the class. described Grayson
as "fabulous . Hf has done tremendous thin.JS. '
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WELTE.~. NOISE .••
lUa ~....,. wa.D deval~-1oe1 into that "!Ytbo\lld ~ reeommeadaUoaa on con· Ul• utllllc.uon ot ylq thtn. ·
troveralal W1eJ and wUl make A nolse comultqt hired by the
the ultimate declalon on h111 developer f09Dd Ulat that 11.6· own." acre area-in'questlob really fails
M ajorlty mem bera als o outside the average 1$ dedbeJ
criticized Welte'• handlin9 of lino set for the resJdenUal build·
merit pay for manacement Ina ban.
employees and a proposed 15 percent return on all sohool lnd a county hlrtd conaultaot
bud1et1 where there ls a •'flex· round tMt the pl'OCell used ror
tbUlty of f\anda." maltlnt tbat delennlnatJon w•
Contacted tb1I momtng. Welte valld.
dee lined to comment, saying he
would speak with his attorney.
"I'd better check with him
before I comment on the state·
ment." Welte said. "11 he says
lt'1 otay, then I'll have plenty to
aay.''
Fire SeaaoFJ
Here; Ofli,ciala
Cite HOMJrda
By Tiie Altoelated Pra• Fire olftciala are considering
a 75·acre bnlab ftre •outheut of
Lake Elsinore as nature's
warning that the fire 11eaaoo has begun In Southern C.llfornla.
The blaie, the sedtibd ln recent
days in the Lake Elsinore area. broke out in hilly terrain
Wednesday but posed no danger
to residents or homes. officials
said. "Jt appears the fire season has
hit us with a bane." said a Lake. Elsinore fireman, echoing the
fears of county and local
o£ficials that a costly fire season
is looming because abundant rainfall has resulted in a heavy
growth of underbrush.
Meanwhile, firemen reported
control over a blue 45 miles
north of Bakersfield that
destroyed six frame houses and
daeaged four others on the
ground• of the Sierra Vista Farm l abor C amp in
Ridgegrove.
Tulare County officials
estimated dama1es at '30,000
and said they were investigating
the cause of the fire.
Authorities uraed campers to be cautious when lighting
matches in recreaUonal areas
Dr'. Jerome Luc:u of the state omeo ol Nolt• Control eald Ke
wHn't questtonJn1 th• exact
locati~ of the Une. He 1a1d tHe
Usie can vary aayway bued on tlle
ell mate. exactnelt ol tlitht paU.
and other facton. •
'1Peopl1 on the around eit·
p0ted to the nolle don't live :a
damn where the lint ll," l.uca
conllnued. "They are eltbtr
aatiafied or dlllatiafled. ••
Lucas aald even If bom ..
could be lmutated acatnat ICMllll
on the lnllde. people alto Uve
out of doors.
"Over enouab Ume there la
enouah lttitatlon ... lt is a atnu factor:• be conUnued. "It ii a
cummulaUve ertecl."
Terry Hackett, attorney for
Laguna Village, sald bls client
had done what was required to
prove the land la out.Ide the
noise impact zone.'
He also noted the homes would
be insulated so inside noise levels would be below 1tate stand· ards.
There were a number of Leisure
W o rld residents io
Wednesday's audience who COO·
tended noile at their homes is
severe and new development
shouldn't be permitted under
sim Har conditions.
"l don't know what my decibel
level is," said Leisure World res·
ident Brad Miller, "but I know
that on many occasions we bave
to dlacooUnue our conversations
in the house."
Several residents of exiltlnc
Laguf)a Vllla1e homes argued in
ravor of the development, aaylna
the nolse isn't severe enough to
prohibit enjoyable living.
The 1979 Modtl Line is coming soon. Manr
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SllaAL IMIPllCI
L -" ......... BILLY CARTER POSES WITH ARAPAHOE. COLO .• GRADUATING CLASS OF NINE
'If I'd Had Eight Others In My Claaa, I'd Heve Been In Top 10'
NineiGrads Dear Billy
Fee Waived for Colortulo Commencement,
ARAPAHOE, Colo. <AP> -On the caC·
tus-studded plains of eastern Colorado,
celebrities are few and rar between. So folks were abuzz at the filling station and Coo·
nJe's Cut 'n' Curl when Billy Carter came to
town to speak to Arapahoe High School's nine
graduating seniors.
T hey cleaned up the town. fed him a
potluck supper and gathered a crowd of 2,000
for standing ovations before and after the
Wednesday niJ?ht speech. made from atop
hay bales covered with boards.
T HE MEMBERS OF THE Class of '78
s hared the makeshift stage. Four of the
seven boys will go on lo college and three
plan to stay on their families' farms and
ranches. Both girls in the class are married.
In his first commencement address, pre-
pared by his agent, Carter noted that if he'd
had just eight others in his high school class,
he would have graduated in the top 10.
Carter stumbled a bit in making the
speech, then pt)t down his notes and said,
"This ls the proudest moment or my life."
FEW P EOPL E E V E R stop in
Arapahoe. They don't even slow down. The
speed limit remains 55 mph on U.S. 40
through the half mile or town.
None or the 6S townsfolk could remember
the last time a "name" came to town. .
Over at the Shamrock Gas Station, where
locals shop for gas, fertilizer, bubble gum
and ice cream. Bob Roberts thought a long
time but couldn't remember "anyone near
famous" during his 28 years In town.
Not everyone took tQ. Arapahoe's moment
of fame. Al the gas stallon. town character
"Smiley" told a reporter and photographer
"where to put their camera" when they
asked for a photo, said Robinson.
SOME STUDENTS, LIKE SENIOR Phil
Lewis. said they thought "a regular. quiet lit·
lie graduation" might have been nicer -and
less trouble.
Carter, a gas station owner who mat:es
more money than the president by hyping
down·home homilies and his love for beer.
seemed an unlikely role-model for young peo-
ple.
"It was sort or a joke that backfired,"
said Rusty Haller, the class secretary who
sent the invitation, never thinking Carter
would answer.
But Carter cited hls small town back-
ground in agreeing to come to Arapahoe and
waiving his usual speech·making fee.
f;f>atty Hearst Wooed Poll Shows
:.B B nk p .d ? Younger, -·. ,, a rest ent. .
:: N EW YORK <AP> -While been free on bail after serving 14 Davis Lead,
::•he was out or jail, Patricia months of a seven-year sentence SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -
: Hearst got dinner invitations and mus t serve another 14 Evelle Younger and Ed Davis
~from the man whose bank she months before becoming eligible have put a little distance
helped rob. New York Post col-for parole. . between themselves and other
umn ist James A . Wechs ler She has maintained that her contenders for the Republican
wrote today. kidnappers coerced he r into gubernatorial nomination. ac-
Wechsler. the Post's editorial participationinthestickup. cording to the latest Mervin
page editor. said the information Asked if he thought she was Field California Poll.
came in a telephone call being punished for who s he is. A survey of 462 Republican
Wednesday from Miss Hearst's Hearst said : "Well, if s he voters taken between May 1 and
. uncle, William Randolph Hearst weren't a rich girl, compare the May 8 showed Younger pre-
Jr. average sentence for a crime ferred by 'ZI percent of those
• Wechsle r did not elaborate, committed under those condi· questioned, whlle Davis picked
: quotin~ Hearst only as sayin~: tions of terrorism." up support from 2.5 percent.
: "You know. one of the latest At another point he said : "I Ken Maddy had 19 percent,
.; things that happened while she still can't forget that Attorney Pete Wilson 12 percent and John
: was out is that the president of General William Saxbe calling Briggs, who withdrew from the
• the bank they robbed started in· her a common cr iminal. She race Tuesday, one percent. with
· viting her to his home for dm· was as normal a kid as there 16 percent listed as undecided.
: ner ." ever was. She never stole a mar· The poll showed Younger. the
• Wechsler said Hearst called to ble. state's attorney general. im·
: thank the ~ost r~r running a let· ''This was our first terrorist proving his standing for the first ~er supporting has niece and say-case or this kind. But for the time in more than a year The
mg she was a victim of the ~race of God she could be a last poll, in lale Mar~h and early
court~. cinder." April, gave Younger 23 percent.
: . "I Just wa~ted you to know a As for her participation in the followed by Davis with 22 per-
: krnd word 1s appreciated." robbery, Hearst said a friend cent. Maddy 18, Wilson 12 and
:: Wec~ster: quoted Hearst as say· described to him a concentration Brigg&.{2. with 23 percent un-
·: mg m has account of the con· camp survivor "talking about decided.
:: vers_alion. what people do whe n self· A poll taken in March 1977
·• Miss Hearst was returned to preservation is at stake and he gave Younger 42 percent. but bis ~= prison this week to complete her said, ·1 don't dare tell you what I suppof"!. dwindled to the low or 23
:: te~m for bank robbery after d id to save my I i t e at percent a month ago.
·: failure of an appeal. She had Auschwitz'." The poll also plotted what
( ~
' I
would happen should any of the
candidates drop out of the race
or have his support weakened,
find ing that Younger would
benefit most.
If Wilson were to drop out, the
lineup would be Younger 31 per-
cent , Davis 26 percent, Maddy 21
percent, Briggs two percent and
undecided 20 percent.
Without Maddy, Youn ger
would have 33 percent, Davis 29
percent, Wilson 15 percent,
Briggs two percent a nd un·
decided 21 percent.
Without. Davia, Younger would
have 37 per'ffnt , Maddy 23 per.
cent, Wllson 15 percent, Briggs
two percent and undecided Z3
per~ent.
2 Tots Left
In Bus Depots
LOS ANGELES (AP> -A Loe
Anaeles couple wbo allegedly
left their two 1mall IGOI at two
area bua depots 1a,y lt was God's
will that the cblldren be .aban·
don ed.
Alvin Underwood, ao, and his wlfe Cannella, 25, were booked
Wednetday for m•eeuaauon of
lelQny chUd abandonment. ~heir ~ea.M>)d 1on Devln wu
fOUild ln the DMn'I restroom. of
th• ContlMnta1 Trallway• bm depot. Tbetr mont b·old eon
N atb•D wa1 found at tbe
Gnybouad bu depot ln tlle women'• nttroom aboel tbe nme ti me. ,_.. are ta tbar bOllii.:-..... .. -.....,_ __
Victim's
Body
Identified
I
Oran1e County Sheriff's of-
ficers have ldentlfled the body of a young woman found on a COO·
strucUoo site ln the Orange area
as'that of Wendy Sue Klerer, 14,
or F ullerton.
Investigators said that what
they described as a brutal beat.
ing led to ber death. An autopsy
conducted by the coroner Wed·
nesday conlinned that findin1e.
Officers said they have no
leads at this point to the identity
of the girl's killer.
Her parents, Dr. Joseph and
Mrs. Lenore Klerer, told In·
vestigators they las t saw their
daughter Sunday when she left
home to attend a meeting In
Fullerton.
Officers believe she was
beaten in some other location or
in the killer's car and then
driven to Orange and dumped.
Constraction workers found her
nude body.
Coroner's officers said there
was no indication of sexual as-
sault.
State Delays
Medics' Probe
Of Waddill
Lawyers for the state attorney
general's office have abandoned
plans to hold a hearing this
month into charges filed by the
Board oC Medical Quality As·
surance against Dr. William
Baxter Waddill or Huntington
Harbour.
They said they will await the
outcome of Dr. Waddill 's second
murder trial in Orange County
Superior Court before setting a
date for the state inquiry that
will follow. whatever the verdict
in the criminal action might be.
Dr. Waddill, 42, is accused of
strangling a newborn baby to
death in the Westminster Com·
munity Hospital nursery shortly
after he realized that the saline
abortion he performed on the 18-
year-old mother 12 hours earUer
had been unsuccessful.
The jury in his rir s l trial
deadlocked at 7.5 in favor O( BC·
quittal. Judge H. Warren Knight
will decide June 2 if Waddill is to
be tried again and will set the trlal
date atthatlime.
Nice Kitties
Merry Dunn. animal keeper at the Santa Barbara Zoo.
holds three mountain lion cubs born recently and reject.
ed by thev mother. The rapidly growing cubs are still
bein~ bottle fed every four hours.
Grove Family Gets
$227,395 Damages
The family of a truck driver
who was killed four years ago
when his vehicle overturned at a
Mission Viejo construction site
was awarded $227,395 In
damages Wednesday by an
Orange County Superior Court
jury.
Ending four days of delibera·
lion. the jury in Judge Robert A.
Banyard's courtroom awarded a
total of $?.80,000 in damages to
the wife and five young children
or Thayne Nutter, 49, of Garden
Grove.
The award was reduced by 10
percent to reflect the . j ury's
thinking that Nutter was 10 per-
cent responsible for the accident
that led to hl.s death.
It was testified that the brakes
on Nutter's water truck failed
while he was supplying water to a construction project.
The vehkle plunged down an
embankment. sped t hrough the
backyards of nearby homes and
then overturned pinning him In
the wreckage.
Damages were assessed
against Paramount Equipment
Rental and Sales Inc .• the firm
which sold the truck to Nutter
and Wagner Electric Corpora-
tion, the firm which made the
defective brakes on his truck.
17th Anniversary $ale Includes
Heritage® upholstery,
~ -=
a most elegant statement
of your taste
SAVE 25o/lJ
Sale Enda May 27th
Grade E
Chair
Reg. 362.
Sal• -.
SEVllAL one snw AVAILA.IU
Choose Heritage and d!srouer a tremendous difference In quallty!
Beyond the superb fabrics and decorative opclof\S. there Is exc.elJence in
construcilon only custom craftsmen can provide. The shape ol each
finished piece Is contOUNd Into the hardwood ftame ttself. Hundreds of
hand operatk>ns are lavished on springs. p&ddlng and shaping. Four
different cushlOnlng opllons are at yow command Your Heritage room
ls-truly-luxury In depth. Let us Introduce you to the Heritage differ·
ence today!
PAOFESSfONAL l'fl'EAIOA DHIGHEAS
.
Gf'ede E
Wing ehelr
Reg. 414.
Sale -
2215HAllOl11.YD.
COS\'A M1SA .. M211
OAlLY PU.OT lh"'1Qa'Y. May 18, 1971
~ wltla~ Tom~~'\r
M11rphine
County Pot Boiling
RICKY TICKY POLITIX: You 1et the notion these
days lbat somehow. Oran1e County has been selected as
the prime battleground In the ftsht over PrbpoalUoo 13, the
so-called J~Gann property tax lnJUatlve.
Podiums and political plaUorms In our realon have
become pock-marked from the verbal blasts as proponents
and opponents wage the War of 13. And the heavyweights
tn•the batUe have been much ftl evidence in our re1lon.
Jn event you've been out of touch, '
recall that ProposiUon 13, if passed by
the voters June 6, would chop back
property taxes about 57 lercent.
The revenue loss to schools an city and
county governments would amount to
about S7 billion each year. That's billion.
AS FOR THE PRO and con.
Howard Jarvis bas been busily present
a long our coaalllne. pumpin1 for passage of 13. ocw.HOWN
Jarvis appeared on 16cal TV, HunUnaton Beach's
Channel 50. locking horns with Orange County Superior
Court Judge Bruce Sumner of Laguna. He bu appeared
before all kinds of groups here that seem to range all the
way from the Girls Scouts to the Blllionaire's Club.
BUT NOW COMES Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. The
governor has clearly taken to lhe stump in an effort to de·
feat Prop. l3, wh1l·h he has charactenzed as a blueprint
for chaos.
Brown selected the California Peace Officers Associa·
hon convention in Newport Beach Monday to unleash one
of his strongest verbal volleys against the initiative.
He said pas!)agc of 13 would cut back vital services and
l'Vt:ntually n·~ult in an unfair distribution of the
propt'rly lJX burden
The governor warned . "In five years, more than half
or the people will be paying more under Proposition 13
than they woulcl under Proposition 8."
Proposition 8 1s a rival bill also on the June ballot that
would provide a less drastic property tax cut and Is backed
by Brown He calls Proposition 8 a "cut, squeeze and trim bill ...
J arv1s counters by pointing his finger at the state
treasury surplus and alleging, colorfully , "There is enough
mont!y in Sacramento to float California on $100 bills."
BROWN SAYS IT isn't so. He told a group of firefight· in ~ officials in Sacramento Wednesday that the state's
l>Urplus, which is estimated between $3 and S4 billion, cannot
cushion the S7 billion yearly loss under the Jarvis plan The
governor notes the state's annual surplus is only S1 billion.
And the governor was back in our region campaigning
today
Brown also has his back up on taxes. He is pledsed not
to raise taxes and he repeated that pledge to the
firefighters yesterday. regardless of what happens to
Proposition 13. The governor complains vigorously that the
voters simply rerll.5e to believe that passage of number 13
will cause drastic reductions in public safety services. But
ht' believes it.
So the War or 1J rages oo. And much or tbe smoke seems
to be filling the air of our coastal region.
Zoo's Pandas Mate;
October Baby Due?
TOKYO <AP > -Lan Lan and Kana Kang, the Uneno Zoo's two
gumt pa11da!l, mated today for the second time.
The animals, gifts from the late Premier Chou En-lai to mark the
opening or Chinese-Japanese diplomatic relations in 1972, mated a
year agoforthe first Ume but railedtoproduceoffspring.
Lan Lan. the female, ls 9'h years old and weighs 235 pounds. Kang
K ttng is 71 2 and ups the scales at 257. Results are expected in October.
··Lan Lan became wanton. showing a mad desire for Kang Kang.
;rnd we removed the wire screen between their cages at 7 a .m .,"
~enior keeper Shiro Nakagawa said.
"Love began blooming and they mated in about25 minutes. They
then were separated but Lan Lan still was lusting for Kang Kang in
less than half an hour. We sent Kang Kang back to Lan Lan 's cage for
the second coupling. It was as perfect as the first mating which took
olace smoothly.··
Technicolor and black and white cameras and tape recorders
caught every movement and sound or the hour-long mating session. It
also was observed by several curators, animal keepers and
biologists. Nakagawa said
NATION I WORLD
Dissident to Be Exiled 11
MOSCOW CAP> -Soviet d1ss1·
dttnt Ywi Orlov was sentenced
today to a 12-year term of bard
labor and exile. and lbe m011t
prominent Russian dissenter,
Nobel Peace Prize winner An·
drel 0 . Sakharov. was arrested
with his wife and held for five
hours after they struck police of-
ficers outside the courlhowie.
Sakharov's mother-in-law said
the couple was released after
their detention.
A MOSCOW court gave
Orlov the maximum sentence -
seven yea.rs in tabor camp and
five years' internal exile, mean-
ing banishment from Moscow -
on a charge or anti-Soviet aglta·
lion and propaganda, allegations
based on documents be wrote
and distributed to Western cor·
respondents and embassies.
Orlov. held incommunicado
since bis arrest 15 months ago.
was then bustled into a van as
about 100 supporters outside
chanted, ."Yura! Yura! ". the
familiar form of his name in
Russian.
Pollce turned on the sirens of
their vehicles to try to drown out
the crowd. As the van drove off,
Orlov raised his hand to
acknowledge the cheers or s up·
port.
SAKHAROV, 56-yea r ·old
leader of the Soviet dissident
movement, had appeared out·
side the court building and de·
manded that police allow him
and his wife, Yelena. to enter.
They had been barred from the
court during the first Lhree days
of the trial.
The tallLebalding Sakharov shouted: " t me in! Under So-
viet law all citizens are allowed in
when the sentence is read.''
The police appeared to be try-
IDegal Alien
Pupils Denied
Texas Lessons
AUSTIN. Texas CAP > -The
Texas Supreme Court has ruled
that alien children who are in
the United States illegally have
no right to a free public educa·
ti on
The court said Wednesday it
found "no reversible error" in a
decision by the 3rd Court or Civil
Appeals here.
THE RULING upheld a sec·
tion of the Texas Education
Code making tuition-free educa-
tion available only to citizens
Reds Jail Nobel Winner
ing to calm tbe sltuaUoo. But
there was a scuffle. witnesses
said Mrs. Sakhorov slapped a
policeman ln the face, and her
husband hit a policeman who
was trying to reatraln him.
THE POLICE THEN
seized Sakharov by hia arms.
bundled him and his wl!e into a
green bus and drove away with
them.
"Nobel Prize for Orlov ! "
Sakharov ahoutea aa the bus
drove away.
It was tbe second tJme tbe
Sakharova were Involved In an
Inc I dent outside a Soviet
courthouse. Two yean .. o they
struck policemen at a
courthouse ln Omak. in Siberia.
when they were barred from the
trial of Muatala DJemllev, a
22 4'oln Bayh Bid
IMCttHOW °'"'°" I Tatar naUonall1t who wae sen-
tenced to 2~ yea.n ln a labor
camp.
More ERA 'Time Asked
WASHINGTON CAP >
Senate backers of the Equal
Rights Amendment. having
waited "until the last possible
moment," are seeking support
for a seven-year extension ot its
ratification period, which ex-
pires next year.
"I am not afraid to give the
people of th.Ls country more time
to study the ERA, to separate
the wheat from the chaff on a lot
or the false issues and outright
lies that have been perpetrat·
ed . . "said Sen. Birch Bayh
THE INDIANA Democrat,
who is chairman of the Senat.e
Judiciary subcommittee on the
Constitution, led the fight that
culminated in congressional ap·
proval or the amendment in
1972.
Twenty-two senators joined
Bayh in 11ponsorln1 the ex-
tension resolution on Wedn~
day.
The ERA would provide the
constitutional foundation for
prohibiting discrimination
because of a person's sex. Ap·
proval or the amendment by 38
states is needed for ratification.
Thirty.five stales have ratified it
to date, although Tennessee,
Idaho and Nebraska have at·
tempted to resc;ind their votes.
KENTVCKY•s
legislature a lso voted to
rescind its approval of the
amendment. but the move was
vetoed by Lt. Gov. Thelma
Stovall while Gov. Julian Carroll
was out or town.
The J ustice Department said
last year that Lbere was Jepl
precedent for a state rescinding
its approval of a constitutional
amendment, but that resolving
the dispute is ultimately up to
Congress . The seven-year
ratification period expires
March 22, 1979.
Bayh described the seven-year
limit as arbitrary and added,
"No one in Coneress at that time
could foresee that parliamen-
tary tactics by a recalcitrant
rew would prevent the ERA
from even reaching tbe noor for
a vote in s ome state
legislatures."
An identical resolution has
11lready been introduced in the
House and a House Judiciary '
subcommiUee on civil and con-
stitutional rights has begun
hearings on tbe quest.ion.
and to aliens who are legally in Balf Wa•• B~e this country D ., •••
U S . District Judge William
Wayne Justice or Tyler a lso has Country Bill White. 44 . u sin ger from ord . His tem~rary home 1s six feet long.
the issue before him . and the Tallahassee. Fla .. has only 109 davs left in three feet w1dt.> and 31 2 feet high. Photog.
U.S. Justice Department has his plywood box 6112 feet underground. He rapher lowered a camera through a 71':! ... in·
argued the provision violates the was buried in New Bedford, Mass .. on Jan. th opening and operated it by remote con-
equal protection clause or the 29 in an attempt to set a world's rec· trol for this photo. Constitution ~~~~~~~~_:_~~__.:~....:.....~..:......:..=.....:........:.....:..:.._~~~~~~~...:_~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Lawyers for Carlos Hernandez
and 10 other Houston children
said younesters have no control
over where they live but are sub·
ject to adult decisions
ONE OF mE children. they
said, lives with a sister and her
children. The sister 's children
go to public school in Houston
"but these children. living in the
same home. cannot." they said.
The appeals court said provid·
ing free education to aliens
would burden taxpayers or
diminish the quality of education
for citizens. It cited testimony
that educating the 5,000 illegal
alien chlldren in Houston would
cost as much as $8.35 million a
year.
WORLD FAMMS
MOVIE DOI
Storins SlaDI 2 States
Tornadoes, FwotU Hit Wyoming, Cowrado
"' ... itrc
Alllv"Qu• I) 3'
Attent• ,. .,
8•111mort .. n ,. lo•At ' .
8olM u ..
8oiton . , ...
Brown•v•ll• •J ,.
8ufl•lo .. ...
ClllC~ .. ,.
Clncon,..11 .. ..
Clevet•no •1 ,,. .02
0.1 Ft Vitti\ " 71
-
VILLAIE PEI CElllm
~nvet .. <IO ,,.
OeltOll 11 ,. ·" Helen• » ... ,,.
H-lulw .. " Hou SI on 17 ,.
J.CU'•lllt " .. 1(•11'' Cltv " JS
* Slllll CIASI Pt•za VILLA•* -
L .. V~> '° ,.
Little"°'" 11 " .ts
LMA .... le 11 ... Mleml '1 n •• MllweukM '1 .. ~ .. ,, p 16 g
Ne1'1•Ule 11 n
N-0.1.-el .. . IS N.,,.York » n . II
Olll• (llf , .. , ...
Offt•ll• ....
Ol'lendo .. ..
""llM'pftie .. " ~
...... 111. .. .,
ll'llbbll ..... .. J1 .11 SA1111DAY, MAY ZO, 2·1 P.M.
SUNDAY, MAY 21, 2 P ..... l P~
. *
s ~.-11.1'78
Th11rltday'• NYSE
2 p.m. (EDT) l'ricea COMPOSffE TRANSACTIONS
STOCKS I BUSINESS
BmaeBealila Core
Programs Show
Qollar Savings
Sy SYLVIA PORTER ~fr.I .. T .. Cf'-
The Blue Cross and Blue Shit!ld Plan In M11rylaod has
reported that it.3 homti care program ha~ resulted In an
estimated $250.000 In suvings in Its first two year:s of opera·
Uoo, wltb the averaee participant's hosp1lul 11tay cul by 10
dM)'I.
In Rochester. N.V .. see~ ol one of lhe nauon·3 oldest
aQd rnoet comprehen.~lve home care programs, the loul
Blue Ct'088 plan eays as mllQY as 220 p1i1Uent:s are being
taken care of at home at an average dally cost ol w. com-
pared with the S200 dally hospital care cost.
IN PlllLADnPIUA,.ANOTHEJl Jon11·1land1ne plan
hat saved an~uragt! of I2 doys per patient and cut $2.l
million olf hoepitaJ bills tn two years.
So ll ioea. In area after area where home health care
proarams have taken hold.
Of course, the cynicism continue~ OppQsltlon to el·
Cort.a to eontrol the upsurge In hospital co~ts seemf> to
mount In direct rela-
tionship to evidence of
any s uccess in the ef.
forts.
Ftghta are breaking
out acrou the nation
between those who
want to slow hospital
Money's
Worth
expansion and those who want to accelerate it. Scorn
areets even well-documented studies that show that home
health care programs actually save In terms or hospital
stays and dollars spent.
THESE STUDIES SHOW THAT Blue Cross home
health care plans save rrorn 10.2 to 18.S hospital days per
case. with dollar savings per case running from S330 to
$900.
Eventually. the goal is to pus on the savings to Blue
Cross subscribers.
Lower premiums also would t>ecome possible through
the freeing of hoepital beds and the lessened need ror new
hos pitals.
YET DESPITE THE EVIDENCE. THE battle is in·
tensive. with localities fighting for federal help to m aintain
and enlarge local hospitals. with the hospital industry con-
cerned about Its future and with politics overruling
economics ln instance after instance.
Meanwhile, beyond the financial savings possible
through well-managed home health care programs are
the emotional and psychological benefit.a. As one Delaware
patient said:
"While I'm still rar from well. today I'm celebrating
my 30th wedding anniversary here al home with my
hus band. I am really aetllng 'tender. loving care' from m y
f».mily and my rtne home care nurse and doctor.··
Nut: Anothe-r "plus:" Jobi
General Teaclws
R e tirement Arts
General Telephone Co. of California 1s expanding 1ls
program to teach personnel how to prepare for retirement
The decision to expand the voluntary program wits
made after 1.200 employees had completed at, according to
president Parker Sullivan .
.. Ova aE11aEMENT SEMINARS ARE not designed
to encourage General's employees to retire early.·· said
Sullivan. "but to prepare them as early as possible ror th~
long·range planning necessary to a happy and dignified
life in later years."
Video tape cassettes entitled "Changes'' are available
lo employees. regardless or age. Employees may view
them on their own tlme on company equipment. The tapes
feature outside experts on all of the program's topics and
w ere developed by
General's personnel dl'
------------partment. ( J ''The age or the ' ON 'l'HE JOB employee doesn't mat-~er." said Sullivan. "1:he
'-------------sooner a person begins to prepare for retire·
ment. the heller."
The program Is being offered on the job to manage-
ment employees between the ages or 50 and 65. Sessions
are :scheduled back to back lor the remainder of 1978 in the
company's Santa Monica headquarters and in Long Beach
and Covina.
The program was introduced in 1975. The seminars are
based on a retirement series develo~ by the Action for
tnde~t Maturity division or the American Associa-
tion of Retired Persons .
SUUIVAN SAID &l'HER COMPANIES have request
ed program assistance from General. including Rand
Corp. ln Santa Monica. Continental Airlines. Western
Airlines, Marin County employees, the Los Angeles Area
Chamber of Commerce. Aerojet General Corp., Mcl><>n·
nell·Douglaa Corp., Hughes Aircraft and T~W.
According to Sullivan, mo«t employees who have at·
tended the seminars don't dread retirement. "They feel
it's a beg1,nniog, rather than an endina:· be said.
The eilbt-week man11~ment program includes a two·
hour meetlng wMk.ly wlth authQritles In various fields.
Spouses ot empl~ee1 a.lao rnay alt.end.
Topics covered In the seminars and video cassettes in·
elude health and safety, housing and location. legal af·
ratrs, role ~djuatmenl and wse or time. sources of Income.
financial planning and company benefits.
NINETY PEaCENT Of' SEMINAR participants biavt
Lndlcated some Interest In retiring early -some a:s early
••55. the company said. Several have decided to prepare
themselves for another career after retirement.
General of Callfornia Is a subsidiary or General
Telephone and Electronics Corp.
Fluor ocarbon Lists
Gains for Quarter
'The Fluorocarbon Co .. Ane&Mlm. hu reported sal of
'7 ,139,846 for the fin\ quan.er etMted April 30. Sal~s tor the
like period tn 19'17 wen M.463.0tO.
Net Income lor the quarter was ~.748. up from In·
come or '227.00'7 durinJ um·a flrrt quarter. Per sbatt ln·
come fw' tbe ftrtt quat14r was r. eentt. compand wtlh 25
c:..u dun"' the Ilk• ~riod '" 1m. PluoroC&rbOn la a mHUfacturt.t ol DOG·met.aJUo pro-
duets made of nuorootutle compouocb end otM.r hlah
perform. a.nee materliltt. Tb comp•n)' oper1tt\ tt muual~ pla.nU and tells ID the etr~. •al•~.
petro·dMiinlcal. eladtonlc:a. eon&ttUot.lon, mtdlcat IJ')Cl
o«.bat lladu.tria.
' Business Thuf'llday, May 18, 1978 DAILY PILOT
t
Honiebuyer
Market
Tightening
W ASHJNGTON <Af» Home
buyers Will find houses even
more scarce and expensive in
the months to come unless infill·
lion is brought under control, the
nation's home builders say.
That assessment <:ame as the
government confirmed that both
housing and the general
economy are growing rapidly
after sluggish activity during
the winter.
THE NATIONAL Association
of Home Builders said, however ,
the next two years will not be as
strong for housing as was 1977,
when nearly 2 million new
houseli were built.
"Inflation and rising
mortgage interest rates threaten
to slow the pace of new housing
construction and home sales in
the second half of 1978." said
Ernest A. Becker Sr.. associa-
tion president.
Becker promised that most
builders would freeze their pro-
fits in the next six months as an
anti-inflation move.
"THE ONLY PRICE in·
creases w111 be in wages and
materials." he said, urging con-
struction unions to follow the ex·
ample.
Even if his anti·innation move
succeeded, housing prices would
go up at least an average of 6
percent this year, he said.
Housing construct1on was
strong in April, rising lo a rate
_pf 2.2 million units averaged
o~r the year.
* * *·
I
Looking for Worl.:
An estimated 3 .500 pl•oplt• lirll'<I up lo :1ppl~ 101 wbs ,1t <1
General Motors as~em bly p!.1111 11111lc>r c·onst nH·t mn at
Oklahoma City. Appltcat1om. \wn· lll·1n.i.: l <1kc11 at thl
state fairgrounds
Foreclosure Upheld
SAN FRANCISCO <AP) -California's non·
judicial procedure for foreclosing on trust deeds to
real property is constitutional. according to the
state Supreme Court's unanimous decision.
The ruling. written by Justice Wiley Manuel.
Safari
L.A. County
213-733-0623 Reports
~~WE~S~PE~A~K~~lncollle
YOUR LANGUAGE
J c ' o u ,1ra1., r :11 r e
p r 1• I' a r l.' r 1· t· l 1 t'
u rdonoJnCl' Franl·h lt'h mnl·htt' du•.,t•!'>
l<l'll"lll 1ubcrc1lt•n
l.l'~l·O Gt•rm.m
\nrrl'1 chc m1
I' rt· p J ras~c Q\ll"•l a
11ccH.i 1l.1h;,in
(~Ull>ll'fJ (IUl' ll"ll'f\ m1•
pr t•parar a l'"la
rcn•ta Spani~h
I would hkc you to rill
thi~ prescriptio n
1-;0~11.sh
!'\o matlcr whut the
l;ingua).ll'. 1t still coml'l.
11ut tht• ... :mu:. f'1lhni.i a
J>l"l.'Script111n 1s a sucr<.'<1
tru~l :ind "'c \\Clcomt· lhc
<1pporl unil) tn 'll'I'\ l' your
ph.1rm.ic) n~od~
Y OU_.f>R YO l;R
DOCTOR CJ\:°'f Pl 10:"1 E
L :-, " hl'n } nu n ct·d a
dellH'r}' Pick up your
pn·,1·r1ptioo 1f ~hopp1nl(
n l' .1 ' h' or "l' " 1 11 dt>ll\ u ,,, omptly without
c'\tra t"h<ir~l' A J(rl'at
m.1n~ people entrust us
"1th lhl.'1r pre ... cript1ons
~1 ,1 v "' c• c o m p o u n d \ours"
PARK UDO PHARMACY
FrH Oellvary
351 Ho9pllal Road
Newport BHCI\ 642·1581\
Lion Country Safari.
Inc .. Irvine, has report-
ed its audited 1977 re-
sults. showing gross re·
venues of $3,193.398 and
ncl per·Share income Of
$2.88.
This income figure in-
cludes an extraordinary
gain from extinguish·
ment of a $5 ,301.219
debt, or $3.01 a s hart>.
R EVENUES FOR
1976 totalled $6,237, 163,
which included
$1 ,649,906 from termina-
tion of management con·
tracts and $1,294 ,302
from its former Florida
operation. Per s hare
loss in 1976 was $1.17.
Previously, the com·
pany had reported its
annual earnings in a
dual manner because or
uncertainly over a pro-
posed lease agreement
with Stahl·Lacal. Inc.
Harry Shuster, presi-
de n 1 a nd board
chairman of Lion Coun-
try Safari. announced
this week that the con-
templated lease agree-
ment has been terminal·
ed effective March 31 .
For lhe first quarter
of 1978. Lion Country
5afari reported r e.
venues or $701.816, con·
trasted with $568,270 for
the same three·month
period l ast year.
HOW TO BUY DIAMONDS
THE TRUE STORY
presented by
INNOVATIVE DIAMOND
MARKETING, INC.
FRI., MAY 18 .. 7:30 P.M.
TOPICS:
I. How di• _._.-.cl.
Af md WI lwled
2. o .... ,.. ~ • Hw world ..artrd
l. Price 1t.llllty 9d trocll '9COi"d ._How YOU c.. ._... ...-utJ
.... ..., .. wtillnd.priQt
s. n. -···d c.,..... prtaa.c.......
6. How to ... .,... dian:> ...
SPEAKERS:
Anthony Seymour: President. Charles An·
thony Diamonds GJ!r R. Hammond; Prest·
dent, Innovative Dlalftbnd Marketing, Inc. Call
f0t reservations and locatron
C714t 11Mfl4 IJIJJ 626-271
'71414f7·4311 IYIHIHGS
Said a foredo.,mg 1 on.,tlllllt'~ (lrl\ ,111-. 1111t ~Lal<!
action," and 1:-.. th11 "' t'\l·rn111 from dut.' prnce!>s re-
quirements of ft.dc•r JI au<l ~l.111· <·on~t1tut10ns.
THE CASf.: AfWSf ; AITER Su ... an and Gury
Garfmkk bought ,1 home· 111 LafJwlll' in Jcinuary
1970 from a tan11h \\ ho.,1• loan w:i'\ secured bv a
trust deed held b.v \.\'t•ll:-. Fu1 gu H.111k •
The dec<I h;1d <1 ... tand.1nl <hll' on s.1\c clc1U'il'
under wh1th thl• ll:1nk t·m1ld at 1•elt·rat<' thl· balance
due 1f th(• ho mt· wu::.. .,old wit hoot 1!\ ~·nnscnt
The deed <tlso had 1moth1·1 l'lausc· <1llow1n~ th1•
bank to collect th<' h~tlunt't' dut• tl1rnuj!h public au<'
lion of the propL·rt}' u11d1•r l't'rtam t·ond1t 111ns
WELLS f"ARGO OFFERED TO let thr·
Garrinkles tak(• ovt-r tht• loan at a h1~her interest
rate in return for not 1n .. okm~ the loan accelera
t1on clause But th1• <i ,1rfmkl<'s r du ... ed to assume
the loan on thosi• kr 111:-..
The h1~h tourt uph1 lrl !ht• ( 'm1tra Cnsta Count~
Superior Court. Y.h11 h d1~m1 .... s<·cl tlw c;arfinkles·
consit1tut1onal d111lll•ng1· h1·1·•111)>l' no 'olulc action
was mvolvt:d
William 0. Burnt•lt, '\! 1:,swn Vw10. has Joined
the Newport Cka('h OlfllT ol nu.,itH''>'> Properties
Brok{•rag<• Co.
He 1:-. fornw1 1n\ 1".ltn1•11t ;ui ,dvst for the Real
E staters.
• The l\mL•riC'an i\tlv1•rt1 ... mJ! Federation has
awarded Jann ('hurC'h J\dH'rtislng & Graphic
Design, Inc., N1'wport lkJth, first place in the
"Best in the West .. (·11'.111\'t' 1·unipN1t1on
The "F1rl>t Most Ht•uut1fut'" award was given
for a direct mail po:..t<•r pr<1mot1onal campaign de·
s igned for Gt'org•· H11·<· .incl ~in ... Lithographers, a
Los Angele!'> printing ft rm
Commum1·at11111 \rts m.1_g.t1inc•'s March/ April
1978 issue• featured th1• dl'"•~·n "r>rk of the firm. ..
A~b"ill·Burkt' & Co .. Inc .• has named Bruce
0 . Carter, Fqunt.11n \'allc•\ 1•wcut1v<' vice pres 1·
dent 1n churgc or 111 ok1•1 :P't' administrative ac-
ti v1t1c~
From the comp;,rny'.; ln1nt• headquarters. he
will t akl· primary 1"<1lUll\I' rc -.pons1b1ltty for o f
fices in Northl'rn .mil ~0111111 ,.,, <::il1frirnia
He 1s forrnt·r ·,l'n111r '11·1· presrdent and
manager of Su11lla•1 n <'.t11rorn1.1 and Arizona
operations for tht• 1·1)1nrlw11 1'11 ;,ind industrial real
estate broke1 agt· firm Gr ubh & bl 11~
•
Eugeoc M. I.yon~ has ht'l'll clt•c·ted vice pres i·
dent group sales at Parlfir ;\1utual, Newport
Beach llt• 1s rl'~pons1hle for c·oorthnating g roup in·
surance field sales operations with headquarters
support function!\
He jotn<'d Ulc company 1n 1!15:1 as a group s ales
trainee m Houston. advancing thrnul'.(h group in·
surance ri<'ld sult·s llrl!J mana1-:t•m(•nt positions; he
served rl'n·nll~ "' group rf'g1onal vice president
for the South l'al·1f1r re~"'"
•
Daniel 0 . t'l"rl.., Nl'v.porl Beach. has been elert·
ed v1 ('e presul• 111 of H1·1 mn 12 of the American
Institute of lndust 11:il J.:111•int•n .... Inc The region In·
eludes 13 southt'rn CJh(r11 ma ('hapters and six Un·
iverslty chaptc·r~ 111 Arimnj. Cahforma. New Mex·
ico and Tell.as
He is resl'nrr h and ll'thnH·al director ror the
MTM Assocrnt1on for Standards and Res earch. •
Rick Tellf'!4, Newport Beach. has been nam<?d
manager of spcl'ial pro1erts for Wisdom Import
S•lesCo. tnc .. Irvine.
He is responsible for national and regional ac·
count sales In the 13 we:..tern stoles. Jll' previously
was an area manager with u brewery
•
B.rb•n l'almer, Snn Cle mente. has been ap·
pointed as a loan offker, !IP<'<'Ulhzinst in commercial
and industtlal real estate, at thl' Newport Center
Bank or Amt'rtu. She hod manogtd the· Cnptstrllno Palisades or
flee in San CtemE>nl~ s1nce January Ul7S. With the
bank stnc~ 1973, she oogan u 1 credit trainee and
served lo loan opca.ratlon~ at lht South Cout 'J'()wn
Center ln C«>st• M<'Sf\ and the Uni boa branch before
the Son Clemente ,isslcn rnf'nt
Congress Coins Debate
Miss Liberty Pitted Against Susan B. Anthony
WA S HINGTON <AP >
Before Congress has had much
time to think about a new. more
convenient dollar coin. it finds
1tiself refereemg a warm-up de
butt! with women's rights over·
tones.
The question on Capitol Hill .
tr the new coin is authorized.
should it bear the im&Jile of a
m ythological Miss Liberty or the
profile or a real person. women's
suffrage pioneer Susan B. An·
thony~
THIS WAS A paramount ques·
t10n as the House banking sub·
committee on historic preserva·
t1on and coinage opened
hearings Wednesday on the pro-
posed com. 1t would replace the
s 1l ver dollar a nd would be
halfway in s ize between a
quarter and haJf-dollar.
ln1tial testimony was over·
whelmingly m favor of the no-
tion of issuing a new dollar coin
to reduce dependence on the
dollar bjll, lo expand the
merchandising potential of
vending machines and. if ac·
cepted by the public. to cut the
government ·s currency costs.
But the Liberty-Anthony
rivalry stayed close to the fore.
THE TREA.SURV came to the
hearing touting its design pro-
posal: Liberty on one side. an
eagle on the other.
Noting that there are many
distinguished Americans of both
sexes who could be considered
candidates ror commemorallon.
Stella 8. Hackel. director of the
U.S. Mint. told the s ubcommit·
tee.
"In our view. expanding the
field of design selection beyond
historical abstracts and U S.
presidents would set an unWlse
course in com design. and invite
J controversial debate which
would tend to damage the over·
NEW YORI( CAPI Clow Ce>
•• ~ ... \~~C:::"t!I." co1u11.,111
ComCIH
-.
""" ·~~ "' ,.,.
14~ 1~
Hy•mnr
lnclNu<I lnlr•lncl
all succeas o( the proposal "
BUT THE CAUCUS of women
House members already has en·
dorsed an Anthony design Rep
Wilham Proxmire, D ·W1 s.
chairman of the Senate Bankmg
Com m1ttee. has introduced
legislation providing for the An·
thony design, and a companjon
bill has been introduced in the
House by Rep . Mary Rose
Oakar, D·Oh10. a ml'mber of thl'
House Banking Comm1Uel·
Spokesmen for com collector~
and the com <'Ollt>cting industry
su1rnl'st~ tht: d1ffe rt•ncei. m ight
bl' resolved hy resuming the
practice of mmtmg special com
memorat1vc com!> from time to
time.
Commcmorut1ve ('Otns were
dropped after ci flood of specrnl
i!>SUCS in the 193(},,
Panel Wants Word
On Safety H~zards
WASHlNGTON IAP> -ls there some consumer product or item
that seems hazardous to you.,
If there is, the Cons umer Product Safely Comm1si.1on wants to
hear about it.
You have two choices m bonging hazardoui> items to the attention
of the commission . simply in·
form them or ask them to in-vestigate and establish controls new rule should be issued or an
lo make the item more safe. old one changed or revoked.
IF YOU JUST want to call the
problem to their attention. the
commission has a toll-free
"hotline." 804H38·2666.
The other alternative is to
petition the commission to take
action on a product. Anyone can
do this and when a petition Is re-
ceived the commission is re·
quired to take action. either ap.
proving or denying the request.
and it must publish its decision.
The requirements for a pell·
lion :
-It must be written in
English.
-Your name and address
must be included. and your
telephone number would help.
-Indicate the product you
want regulated and whether a
Over The Counter
MASO Listinq~
-EXPLAIN THE facts you
believe create the rn.•ed for this
action. s uch a:-. d et ails or d
personal experience. research
or medical or e ngineering in-
formation.
-Make a spe('1fic r equest
that the commission institute
rulemaking and include a bnef
description of what the rull'
should mclude.
The pet1t1on should be typed
and include the word "Petition ..
at the top. The commission says
1t would Jike five copies. If possi-
ble. describe the risks of injury
that the rule would alleviate.
You can file a pet1t1on any
time. Send II to the Office or the "
Secretary, Consumer Product
Safety Comm1ss1on. 1111 18th St
NW. Washington.D C. 20207.
,..,. ~ Nw\IF'S "'" 17~ S(AIWlr 1S1;, ,,,, ..
6•.t. 6-11. Noxett ""' :10 'iwG\C:P \Mt111'1 J1h • II Vp• and Dotml# ~llvyM S7'4 ~ 'iwEISY I/ ... •Of\.tl 'ir.CIKl11e1 Cm ISM JO Jl'I• :~:~~<tnr 511 s••,, Ftrro 10>· , ... 'il•nelyn JIY, )8\• .. ew YORK IAPI -The IOllOWIAQ "" ~ .. 1~~:i:,sn ~:'. CmwTel 1'f 30 1\<o ·~ Olt•rTP 1~ 101. .. ~:~~~· 24-11. W•• ,no,., IN" o ... , 1,... Coun11" Conn Gen ]7 J7V, lnlerm• '"" ,.,. Ov•rsA1r S'" S'<o 11 n tn\,u,•n<« & lndu.it ConP•P ""'-lnlmlG• 13~-I°"' PCA rr>I ,,,,. 12"' 51trl51 \111 f) \IO(IU And .-.Arrttnl\. rnal 'MY• ~ uo
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AfAPtOI 6 ' CulltFtd .. I ~ • J•mWPt Sii. ~~ ~:~:xr ...... .. • 11''1 or w ..cin""'y
AID Int '°'" ]I'll. g:~~~'tb n~ n~ ~ri~w 16 16~ 11'4 17 f e<o8•11 ~·Vo· No W<Ur•hft lrj)do''Q betow '' arf' inc•
4VM Cp 1~' ... I'"> I '• "* ••• ,,_,..Ent I~ 16'<o T •Ml)ol• ..... J1''1 ud.0 Nel ...., pe<C._.I_ Cflaf\118' •r .. OIP
6-ddl\nW 10' It 10 .. 0•1• 100 1~ 111 ... JoSlynM ,...., 1114 PelerHH ,,,,, ,.,_. T..:umP 51 eo lditter .. nCf!' bPt'#firren lf'\e Pf'fV•Ot.t\ (10'\•~
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AdYMtcr 711'1 ?t Decor In ~ l '<o IClllY•r ..... ..... PatlibOn ll 7' T111•nv 11'• II"' v~ All>f'1\ ~~~ ;:~ 8:t~b:"' '°"' 111. IC•m•nA -~ PledA•I ,~ "''• TtPf'•'" "'" 1• .. N8mt L•\I .~ Pt l AlnAln 2'1''-)() teamp4m Ploruss .. 111J, T<K<oCp I MHIP.a } Up •\' A.lt(Oln( 19 19'>,0.IC.r> T 11'1> 131h 11•1. 11~ Ptntc:rtn 31\<t :n J ll-1' .... 1 !>'9,.qVt \ ... ...... Uo 40 • 6-llyr>B 17llo IP.. Oellnl8 1l ~ l(ale(;r• .... ' PionH18 1 ... 20'J. Trn\OcO tS\.1 1.1,., 1 PHt•IC • . /• Vo l\ I A.FtnCp 111'> 1A'h Oew•yEI .... "" K..,um 1 l Pl•\llne )'• 4'. Tri<..oPo .. .... • lnc!NU<' ,. .. l\oo Up Ut A.Furn ..... ... OtaCrJ\ 11 "~ ~•.,nyT •• I~ P090Pa •3 1 fl'• '"lnOG s• .. &"" s T-erPa .. I Vo lO ~ AGrttr 1) .. I• 01anCru 11 13'1> •:!l;!>v 33 lf'" Po\SI\ I'> l T f\Onf!I JO',, 11''1 • c.n"'""' l .. ,,, Uo lo I AM1<ros 20''1 11 OO<Ultl ·~ ·~ ~· ffl " IS ProorP ] 1" Un~<G•I • • I 0rt"qMl'l J .. .. VP ?6' "rvc..,.... .. so• ... OOllrG,.. ,, ... ,,._ !Keye Fib n"' n,_. PbS"NC '~ 11• .• U!> Suro 16'• 11~ • ~~·~~~ 1•, .. Uo 1~ t) 4WtldnQ IS\t.t lt•'• Oonld"' ,. 21\<o ~tYCFd 10'.; "'" Pu•l8"' 11 )l\o US Trc• IS .. I) ... .. \ ' Uo H I .,,., ... , 1• I•, .. Oor<hG• IO'h I~ enlnl 20 '°'"' PulOC..p ,. . .-UV•8s10 "'• 1l'-10 Mlr>Slfn ~ I . ... , Vo 11 • An.Our 1 .. 1 .... Dovie OB nv, n l<lt191 ... 1 ~ s-. Quallnns ... s UpPenP 11•,, ,,,._. 11 E8 Suor . ' .. Uo l'O 'J ""htu\8 JS•, 26 Oun-1r>O I'"' 14• ~n•t:V 17• ,.~ ::r.~Pr 91;1 tO V••vGas •O t011 11 ES•' wt ... '• Up 18 . Afll•Cp •• , .... Our,,on 11 211 r• OS 21 n 20·· ,, .... \1•11Du<n fJV, ,., .. I) M•,\lf• I " .. UD •w 1 ArdM•y 1 1'H El>frlt~ ~ •"-LA,..Oln ...... 20•J. R•vcnm SJ SS V•n<•Sn S'"1 & •• De<"°"' , ... . .. Up 1S. AlllWGs It"'-1''" EconL•b n•. 21"' ~RH 1 .... )0,. R•ymncl 11-... 12\lo V•t<ro • ... 10 •S P~\Ol~ll ... . ... Up 1S '· 4.0Col• ,,.,, 701,. EIPO\EI ...... 1111'> uneeo l1 23 RecoEoo • ~ ll•NBsn n·. 1J··· ,. oc.i .. , .. . .. Vo I\ I 411G .. \LI u"-151,. El«MrlM ..... 111$10< :n ll• R<WCIE • ll ll .. =~~~~ 1\1• '"~ " 4pldMll ,.., . • lJo ••• g::::~~ ' '" El•Nu<I ~ . .,, ln8UI ~3714 llOOl>Niy ,..,, ,,.,.
"'" '1 .. II EmP•r,..611 ~ .. . ... UP I• I U'-IS'.i.. EIMOdul '"· s ~lrn 11 .... 13 Rowton 11 .. 3 ... WQlllW• n ,,.,, 1• P6ulf11u• II'' I I Vo ... 8 .. •mRI • ,,,.,, 17 EnrDe• 12"'-n"' d\GE IS>ol. 16'• Rou~ ...... Wtldlrn ,,,. l Ji) 8Arr1\( II ..... Ull .. J tta\1CR\ .. ~. S' • if"'"''ll 1\<o 3'" /or RI 1'· 1'1> qu\SIO¥ is11,.1~ =~~/~~o ......... 11 ~l•lly "" . '1 Uo "' 8a\WllF '°~ E~~1AI '•"· , .. /. 5 1krl '"'" l8 ... S.Olte• ~ >·~ ) ]1 I n G•r1d!M • ' Up I• I 8 ayl\M-11\oo 12''" ~11'1> !AHi 18 ""' Sc.an Oat ~ ] ... =~i:~~i. )\<o llt. 1l M~lnoell' ' . I, lJD " I 8ttl1M 1 ·~· "' F•brt 1s1' l~I• ulLP II ... """ S< rlpt> ... 0 .. 3s-M )61? 14 Trr"rnttt 1 . .. tlo h I 8tl1Lao )A )4'\oo FldUnl l 7S"-1~ 5 <Cofm •l>~ll>f'o S.l\Oell '''• ..... Wood Loi ,, ,, ... 2S C.amc""' •" '• u .. u u 8 11>!>Co II 111'> ~:att~, I~ II'" <Quay ·~·'· 10 Svtm\tr 3µ,. )&.\'. :~19E117af .,,. s• .. 8tr11Sotl ,. JO'I> '°'" 0 14 ordln• 2 ... .)t,.. S.v•nUp ""' 411~ ..... ' OOWN~ 8orl<l\r ,,,, ·~ F180llr> 1&'4 11 ~auw ,,.,. 21•1. Sl\awml 31''> .13'" ZtOf\Ula lJI;,. .)All• Ha,,..... l_.,,,, 0..Q P(t 81kHlllP ,. ... Jl'A FIEmpSl ldC•e> •O 10'111 I Wll\nHJ II ' -I 011 1~ 0 eonan1• S.lll Ho 11 .... "" ~ldlRH 11·16 "" ·"'\.SDAQ Summary l Sc.tnOal ' .. -"' 011 II • 8tlnk\ ,.,., 8 FIWnFln 41,. SVt ~ld1B•\ ,...,. 2S~ l Ahn(.p wl } .. -.. , Ott " ~ Brook!> 1111'> ~ F 11<-or UV. I• ~1111~ ~11\o> • ln.>lhll'l n1+ -1\ • 011 .. ~ 8rwfom 19'1'> zo FlaWalU .... I lu IG 18 ,. HEW YOAK {API -MO\! OC:lt .. ov•r-s Oocut~I ... -., 011 10 J 8rwn1no 10'1> .,.,., Foru10 1&11.-,..,. MOnlCol 8 ~ 111~~~':'1~ \~':i~ IULf~'ed A\~~d N~ • Mon1tLO ,., -.. 0 11 ~I 8uckbff SJ.I• •V• ~~~~I~~ 1'-l"a MoortS 19 ... ,.~ I At>tlM(tr } . -.. 0 11 • I 8u0ey• 11:\1. ,, ... ..... I V. Moor•Pd ""' ..... o ••• 100. 39•.000 '"" ,, ... 8 AVM (.p I • -.. Olt •I ~[~~~~ sv, s ... Fron-El 16\oa 11Vt =~?.~" 2.... l 411heu18 • 181.600 ts•-. 16 _.,, ... ' Sunto10 ~·' -''> 0 11 • ft I ll'" 33 F•lldl<t •1'11 11''1 ~23 .... :r;.ciJ~\ ::::= I ~:: ]~~ .... 10 400~0•d l -'• 011 I I C..mpt>Ch GnRIEsl ,.,, • MOl<hM to>to n~ • .. " A ')lFld 17 -.... OH I , , .... '11-16 Gii Rein\ tlS lit MOIClub ~ s ... Frncll<e • 157.100 11\1, 11'• . ~ 17 McF dtlf I'• -'. Oii I I C.nt8dH , ... J .... GoYEFn ·~ ,,~, Mueller ""' ""' oe .. r ls.1.100 •• • • ... ., Pl<1\!h..,.. l • .. 011 11 C..o!>wCp """ ~ GrH nMt ••• ,.., 1l ~:~~~r 14 1s ..... ToyRU\ 1'8.JOO 11 ,,., .. "' ... Wh•mO ... '• 011 I I C.plnAlr GrtyAd• )1'1> ,.,,, 16 11 EnRIY 131.400 11 1 , .. IS UT L Co , .. "· OH .~ 1 , 16 7 13 ,. GlllnUt IS'" 11 ~~ff!~ 1 ,~ MoauCp/ •le.JOO ,., , ,, . '• I~ M fUUtQ 1•1 .. 011 6 I C.plKh 91• I"-GytodY" 1•. 4-'lo ~ &'"" ConnGen 117.000 )1 1111 .. t. " Mr'!> I Ni~ ll • .. 011 l> I l:~t.~~5 I~~ Ir.: HrpRow , ..... ~ NwlcMRE --·~ PC.I' tnl ., .. . 011 • I H•tllNI 14~ 15• ... 11~ ·~· """""<..i "6J •• G•4nMI ,, .. '· 011 6 I Chm Lu 1\ ,. H•nredF 111n n • .. NJNGI\ ltto 1~ Oecltn...s JJt 10 C:lrtlav 11 .. 011 ,.
C.nttUll 10 I~ HOIObm 1', ...... ,..lel\n" 18 28'1> Unch•noed I )rt 11 tndE'ti' 1 '• 011 ,~
CtrcleF S"> l>'> HOO\'er ., ... 1µ,, Nlel\n 8 11'14 ,.,,. T otol 1\\\181 7.Sl9 ?7 R•ndC.O I '. 011 ,.
C•UUl4 )II\.~·· HO•l1I" ..... 7 NoC..rGs HY't 1P• New nooh~ Jlo n ~~I•& • . 011 s. C•l1Ul8 331. ~ HuchP•P l1 l4 NoEOI u,.. SOY> S11h ~'""'•ow' 10 ,4 ". . , Oii ', Cl••kJL :.1,,. HyfllCe> , ... ,. ... NwlNG~ 100. 11 1ot•1 'AtH lt,441 100 2S ,.,f...,t>O ... . . Ott ,.
MUTUAL FUNDS
NEW YC>f!K 14PI 01v1d 1 83 3 O'I ~our E 11.71 • '"' 1ny\1 • n ,0 11 MCO 11 !6 II •l " 1y » /1 11 S•111 GI s /6 6 11 The followll\QdUO-Monln 140S1S)6 ... llcm 1•20IS1'1n•GutO 1070 ,..l MF8 141S l601Pl•ntnv ll 'M 11"8~v•••n 11'71JOJ :~·~~11=r~.:~ ~~~~ ,; : :~·~ ~::,.M d.!-':' .. ~ :~: ~';!·< ~ ~ IO~l. M~::~. .: ; ·N·z ~::i·.:; :~ ~ :r:: ~~~"~o~G.31 Nl
<1llon ol SKurlllM COFunCI 10 .. II~ hFr• 111"1 NL 1 ... v Co..nMI .... r,,11 Lyn<n p,.(. Fund\ (;om F •.JI • 11
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STOCKS I BUSINESS
Programs Show
Dollar Savings
ay SYLVIA PO&TEa
""''" ""'Ot'--
The Blue Crou and Blue Sh1~Jd Plan an MMtylaad ha~
reported that its homt! care pro"ram ha!. reaulted tn an
estlmated S2SO.OOO in imvlogs in Its first two year3 of opera·
tlon. with Ute averMge participant's hospital 11tay cut by 10
daya.
In Rochester. N.Y , acene ot one of the natlon·s oldest
and most comprehen:ilve home care programs. the locul
Blue Cl'Ol8 plan 111y$ a• many as 220 patients an! being
taken care of at home Kt an average daily cost of S2S. com·
pared with the $200 dWly hoepltal care cost.
IN PIBIADSLPIOA, AN&l'RER long·slanding plan
hu aaved 1tn average of 12 days per patient and cut $:id
million olf hoepltal bills tn two years.
So lt goes. ln area after erea where homti health c&rf'
programs have t.aken hold. or course. the cynicism continues. Opposition to eJ.
forts to eontrol the upsurge in hospital cosu sums to
moont ln direct re.la·
tlonship to evtdence or
any suctess In the ef· forts • Money's
Worth Fights are breaking
out aero.is th~ nation
betwee n thofie who
want to s low bo11>ltal
expan•lon and thoee who want to accelerate it. Scorn
greets even well·documented studies that show that home
health care programs actualb save In terms or hospital
stays and dollars spent.
TH&«JE 8T\1D1£S SHOW THAT Blue Cross home
health care plans save from \0.2 to 18.S hospital days per
case. with dollar savings per case running from S330 to
S'900.
Eventually. the goal is to pass on the savings to Blue
Cross subscribers.
Lower premiums also would become possible through
the freeing of hospital beds and the lessened need for new
hospitals.
YET DESPITE THE EVIDENCE. THE battle is in·
tensive. with localities righting for federal help to maintain
and enlarge local hospitals. with the hospital andustry con·
cemed about its future and with politics overruling
economlcs in instance after mstance.
Meanwhile, beyond the financial savings possible
through weU·managed home health care programs are
the emotional and psychological beneflu. As one Delaware
patient said: "While l 'm still far from well. today I'm celebrating
my 30th wedding anniversary here at home with my
husband. I am really aettlng 'tender. lovlrig care' from my
tamil:v and my One home care nW'ff and doctor.··
Nm. ~nothir-"plws:" JON
General Teaches
Retirement Arts
General Telephone Co. or Callfom)a 1s expanding its
program to teach pet"Sonnel how to prepare for retirement.
The decision to expand the voluntary program was
made alter 1.200 employees had completed it, according to
president Parker Sullivan.
uou. RETIREMENT SEMINARS ARE not designed
to encourage General's employ~ to retire early.·· said
Sullivan. "but to prepare them as early as possible for the
long-range planning necessary to a happy and dignified
life in later :vears." Video tape casseUes entitled "Changes" are available
to employees, ttgardless or age. Employees may view
the ni on their own time on company equipment. The tapes
feature outside experts on all of the program's topics ~d
we r e d eveloped by
General's personnel de·
------------partment.
( )
·'The age of the ' ON 'J'HE JOB employee doesn't mat· ter." said Sullivan. ''Tht> ........ ____________ sooner a person begins
to pre pare for retire ·
ment. the better."
The program is being offered on the job to manage·
ment employees between the ages of 50 and 65. Sessions
are scheduled back to back ror the remainder of 1978 in I.he
company's Santa Monica headquarters and in Long Beacti
and Covina.
The program was introduced in 1975. The semmars are
based on a retirement series developed by the Action for
Independent Maturity division of the American Associa·
tion ,of Retired Penons . ,
SVUJVAN SAID &l'HER COMPANIES have request
ed program assistance from General. including Rand
Corp. in Santa Monica. Continental Airlines. Western
Airlines. Marin County employees, the Los Angeles Area
Chamber of Commerce, Aerojet General Corp .. McDon·
nell·Douglas Corp., Hughes Aircraft and TRW.
According to Sullivan, most employees who have at·
tended the seminars don't dread retirement. "They feel tt's o beginning. rather than an endlne:· he said.
The etsht·week manqement program includes a two-
hour meeting weekly with authQrlties in various fields.
Spouses of emf>loyeee alto may attend.
Topics covered In the seminars and vtdeo cassettes in·
elude health and safety, housing and location. legal af·
falrs. role adjustment and use of time. sources of income .
financial plannini and company benefits.
NINETY PERCENT OF SEMINAR participant.& have
indlceted some lnterett ln retirlni early -some as early
as ss. the company said. Several have.decided to p~are
themselves foe another career after retirement
General of California 15 a subsidiary of General
Telephone and Electronics Corp.
Fluorocarbon Lists
Gains for Quarter
The Fluorocarbon Co .. AnMehn. ha.s reported sales of
$7,839.846 ror ~ rlrat quarter ended April 30. Sales for tbc
llke period in 1977 were $6,453,040.
Net lncome tor the quarter was $24.$,748, up from tn·
come of '22'1.007 during am·s nnt quarter. Per shart> In· com• fw tbe ftrtt quarter was Z1 ~nta. comp~red w\th 25
centl dll1'1na the llke period ln um. Fluoroearbon ii a manufacturer of aoo ·melallit pro-
ducts made or nuorop1 .. uc compounds and olber hlah
perrormance mated its. Th company opcrote \ t
manufact.urina planta and sells to 1.he aircraft. valve,
pe\ro·chehUcet, eleielrOruca. conttnlctlon, medic~ and
othet lndultrie1.
' • \