HomeMy WebLinkAbout1978-06-20 - Orange Coast Pilot17
,1
Welfare Fight Lootfts
'
'NB Crackdown Three Inj1•red
owed on Ii day In Crash Landing
.Fireworks,· Fests
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.: DAI l Y-Pl LOT ... : Plea
. ; . . -. ' :.· * * * 10~ * * *. . . . .
TUESDAY AFTERNOON, JUNE 20, 1978
VOL II, NO 171, l SECTtOH,, M PAGES F . . ID
At t't•llerton
to · Pu lie • •
the er
t
S5 Billi.on Plan No Clue --
· Reeycled Skateboard Al'Wlr._....e
O~n t' Gnt'bt·now. lti. of Rochester. l\linn .. temporarily
u n;. L• <1 red l hL' tradition a.I ver s ion of the popula r
skatl'hirnrcl with his hn m~ade rendition. Dave made
hie; "kafrho:ml hy allaching three ~els of wheels to a n
old tml<.'l ""nl
Lawmakers Eye ·
_Welfare Fight
S A C R A ME N TO rA P l -
California lawmakers. ha mmer·
ing oul a S5 billion rescue plan
for local gove rnment in the
wake of Proposition 13, have
becom e embroiled in a pa rtisan
fi ght over we lfare. <Related
ston es A4 >
Thal battle. which turns on the
key issue of whether welfare re·
cipients should gel cost-of-li ving
increases when other programs
a re being cut. threatened Mon-
day to halt prog ress towards
quic k floor votes on the IC'gasla-
tion in both houses
Re puhhcans a lso demanded
that police and fire services be
exempt from a ny cuts before
they will vote fo r fu nds to help
cities, counties and schools fac-
Saccharin
Case Pushed
WAS lll NGTO N CAP)
Proponents of continued use of
sa ccha rin are getting a nothe r
chance to argue that the benefits
of the artificial sweetener out-
weigh the risks.
Trade ;issociataons. medical
groups and those concerned with
obesity and diabetes testified
Mond ay before the National
Academy of Sciences. which is
working on a s tudy of saccharin
for Congress.
Spea kers attacked a Canadi an
study linking saccharin to blad-
der cancer m male rats, as well
as several othe r studies that in·
dlcated there may be a link LO
huma n cancer as well
ing a $7 billion cul July l m
property tax revenues.
"We support the full funding
of police and fire. We s upport r e·
duct ions in welfare," said As·
sem bly Republican floor leader
Paul Priolo of Malibu.
·'This is a 100 p e r cent
turnaround by the Re publicans
on t his committee ... an appeal
to the basest instincts." s napped
De mocratic Assembly Speaker
Leo McCarthy of San Francisco
111 r esponse to Priolo·s demand
for we lfare cuts.
The committee of six leaders
of the Sena te and Assem bly
agr eed quickly last week to
Democ rat ic G ov. Edmund
Brown Jr. 's request to use S4
billion of the state's s urplus fo r
direct aid to local government
a nd a nother $1 billion for short·
t erm loans.
But since then. attention has
w a nd e r ed toward dis putes
between McCarthy and Priolo.
~ leaving another half-dozen m a·
jor issues unsolved.
With 10 days re maining before
Proposition 13's $7 billion tax cut
takes effect, the committee still
has not agreed on how much to
give s chools, counties and cities.
or what conditions lo attach to
the runds.
As the Proposition 13 battle
per sisted in several arenas in-
sid e the Capitol Monday, county
worke rs outside picketed and
c hanted, "No cuts, no layoffs.··
If local government gets lhc S4
billion proposed in the rescue
ball, it will still face cuts ave rag
ing about lO per cent in un-
spe tified areas.
But Priolo and Republican
Sen. William Campbell of IJa.
tStte JARVIS, Page A2)
NB Holiday Crackdown Due
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of,,. 0•11• I'll .. Stell
Thin~s a re i;(OmJit to be dif·
ferent an Newport Beach this
Fourth of July. the city·s polic~
say.
Police, who have been trying a
low-key approach to controlling
the crowds that swarm Into their
city O\ier the holiday. are going
to t ry something new this year.
Capt Ke lson McD a niel. com·
m a nder or the police patrol
division. sord his men wall be is·
suing c1tataons to everyone they
find setting orr fir~works.
··Newport Beach is one of
three cities in the county that
prohibits the use of (!reworks,"
he said. "This year we plan to
enforce Uiat ordinance."
T he city's fireworlcs ordinance
has been on the books for
several years. but has been
widely Ignored by residents amd
visitors.
In addition to strict enforce·
me nt of the fireworks prohibi-
t Ion. Mc Daniel said large
pa rties are going to be dealt
'
with in a sllghUy differe nt way
this year.
In a plan that has already
gone Into effect. the host of a
loud party that is disturbing the
peace or his neighbors will be
arrested.
"It seems to be working out
rather well," he commented.
Newport Qe:ach's law e nforce·
ment problems in the pas t years
have peaked at the Indepen-
dence Day holiday when near·
riot conditions have prevailed in
Central ant' West Newport.
•
This year, McDaniel said the
department is going to fie ld a
force t hat consis ts of e very
ava ilable man -Including de-
tectives and administrative of·
racers -backed up by firemen
and ure1t.aards.
McDaniel said the llteguards
will ride as second men in their
six patrol jeeps whlch will be
turned over to the police defart·
ment so officers can patro the
beaches where Orcworks are set oft.
<See FOUllTH, Pa1e AZ>
SLAIN, BUT WHY?
Murder Victim Young
·Crash Landing
At Fullerton
lnjrues Three
Three peQple were injured
Mon da y evening whe n the
e ngines of a privat e p lane
conked out and the pla ne crash
landed in a parking lot near
Fullerton Airport.
P o lice r e ported the t win.
engine Cessna Skyhawk "ap-
pe ared to be a total loss" but
that two of the rive persons
a board the ill-fa t ed pla ne
walked away uninjured .
Most serious ly hurt in the
c rash landing in an industrial
complex pa rking lo t at 501
Airpark Drive was the plane 's
pilot . Stan Pyron. 46. of 1900
Camino Loma, Fullerton.
Police saad Pyron's leg was
broken.
A passenger. llele n Alvarez,
29, of 134 S. Orange St.. Brea.
suffered a broken ankle, police
said.
Another passenll'er, Ma rcia
Caldwe ll. 22, or Pico Rivera.
was c ut a nd bruised as the plane
bounced Into the parking lot
But neither Don Carpenter. 39,
of Fulle rto n , nor Mariana
Estrada. 30, or Anaheim. were
Injured In the c rash-landing.
police reported.
T h ey s aid a fe w seconds
<See PLANE, P age A2)
League Challenged
RENO <AP> -The Leag ue to
Save Lake Tahoe was accused
Monday of working in cooper&·
lion with California to block ex-
pansion of hotel casino complex·
es at Stateline, Nev.
In Irvine
Slaying
By PIULIPROSMARIN
Of IM 0•11• Piiot Stall
Ir vine p o li ce d e t ec t ive::.,
without clue or motive to the
murder of a Los Angeles County
man whose castrated body was
Co~ on an Ir vine !>treet June
11'9day asked the public to
he lp fmd his killer.
Police distributed photographs
of Roland Gerald Young , 23, of
• Maywood. to newspape rs and
tel<'vision sta tions on Monday.
T hey hope that '\Omeone who
they feel must have seen Young
in the last seven hours of his life.
will recogniz<' him, call police
and help them discover where
he spent the tame.
Poli ce have traced his move-
m ents up to his release from
Orange County J ail Saturday
night, where he had been held on
a cha rge or public drunke nness.
From that Lime. until an off
duty fire ma n discovered . his
still-wa rm body lying face down
near the middle of Irvine Center
D rive, nea r Deerwood , what
Young did is a mystery.
He had been s ta bbed four
times through the heart. He had
been mutilated
<See VICTIM, Page A2>
Or::c;, Coast
Weather
Som e high cloudiness
"1th pa t chy low c louds
along the coast early morn-
ing hours, but mostly s un-
ny. Lows tonight 60 fo 64.
lllJ:hs Wednesday ahout 75
at beacht's to84to88 inland.
ladex
Virga/ Partch. better known
as VIP and the creator of Big
George cartoons, 1s a seem-
ingly bottomless well of gags
and humor. For a look at the
Laguna Beach resident, see
1''eaturlng. Page er
INSIDE TODAY ..
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Aly..,, Senk e lrm••--'-· M. ltYd l vtlllHt
C.111..-.M•
Cl•SJUl9f ~let
cr.ttwer• OHUINaU<es
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.... .,........
NANETTE LYNN GRUS6 SEEKS PLAYMATE HONORS
Photographer Onld Chan Looking for 1Uldnlat•'
Talent Hunt·
Anniversary Playmate Eyed
WASHI NGTON CA P > -The brunette said she wasn't
ashamed of her body and figured she had to start somewhere to
taunth an acung career. so why not take off her clothes for the
Pla~bo)' maRazme photographer? . .
Nanl'ltt• Lynn Gru:.s, a 20-year-old hair stylist. wa~ one or
tht• llr!-it to apply for the chance of being the _25th anniversary
~l;n m<1tt• tt·nterfold when photographer David Chan came lo
tm\ ;, Monday for <1 week-long beauty search. ·
"I LIKE TO SEDUCE CAMERAS. I'm comfortable posmc
4£0d I ttunk I'm photogenic . I'm not ashamed of m y body at all.··
said M 1ss Gruss after s miling sweetly for some shots in lacy red
hikani panties and high-heel sandals in Chan's hotel suite. "My
mother doesn't know I'm doing this and she m1g)tt be upset , but
1 think it would be really nice«> be in Playboy.··
Mi ss Gruss will have to compete with about 6.000 aspiring
PlavmatC's by the lime Chan and other Playboy photographers
rin1sh thl'1r tour of 30 ~1ties looking for the ultimate in cen·
tl•rfnld-;. The wim er s photo will appear in the January, 1979, an·
niversary issue. She wi ll receive $25,000.
IT IS NOT TUE MONEY, CHAN said, that motivates
housewi\'es. secretaries. collegians aNd government workers to
undrl'::.::. for the camera.
"They JUSt want to be in the magazine. Mar:iy consider it an
honor." said Chan. grimacing at the mention or some of
Playbov·s rat·1cr competitors ... We don't do that gynecologjcal photograph~ We zoom in on the eyes, the clothes, .~he ex·
prl'ssaon There's an aura a nd sei:isualily to our beau~ies.
Chan, 40 and a bachelor, sa1d he looks for basic qualities:
· sm ilini:: cyec;, long hair -even when it's in disarray it can be
1·hurming a nic(• nn!-.c, a sensuouSmouth. a good. strong bust
11 1t·::. too big gravity takes over -and a nice llat stomach.
Thl' kind of girl you ci.ln be proud of and take home to mom and
dad "
APPLICANTS 1'1UST FILL OUT a form ~isling their
measurements. previous nude posing experience and the reasons
for wunt1ngto bethe25th anniversary Platemate.
Some responses have included : .. I have always thought of
ffiVSl'lf as an up-front person." "I believe I possess a lot or the
qualities that your readers love to dee." "l love being In front of
;.1 camera ll'i. almost a fetish ··
.Flees With S 1,300
Armed Man Robs
Clemente Office
A man with an automatic
w1:apon held up a teller Monday
at the San Clemente offi ce of the
San Diego Federal Savings and
Loan Association and ~scaped
with about $1,300.
San Clemente police detective
chief Pete Goodwin said Lhe man
lold the teller, "Give me all the
t·ash now. Hurry."
Waving his gun. lofle m a n
_llesturcd to others in the omc~ to
congregate in one a rea, while he
fled on fool. southbound through
OAANOE COAST
DAILY PILOT
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OfflCH
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M0-1220
an alley behind the bank.
The movements of the curly·
ha ir~d blond robber. who wore
glasses. were captured by a
security camera, said Goodwin.
The film is being studied by
the Federal Bureau or JnvesUga.
ti on.
The San Diego Savings of!ice
is located at 1650 N. El Camino
Real.
Witnesses told police the rob·
ber was about five feet, eight In·
ches tall and wore his hair s hort.
He was carrying a canvas
knapsack, they said.
No vehicle was heard or seen
by witnesses of Monday's San
Clemente robbery, but San
Clemente police r eported that
the suspect matched a descrip-
tion of a man wanted for ques-
t I on i ng in connection with a
Costa Mesa robbery. Tbe aus·
peel In that robbery drove a light-colored Volkswagen 1ed1n,
police said.
Fro•P~AI
PLANE •••
before the plane pancaked down
into the parkina lot that Pyron
radioed the nearby airport tower
to report one enaine had cut out.
Apparently the plane's second
engine went blank as the pilot
attempted to glide to a landJng
In an open field north of the
airport.
But the airplane clipped a
utility pole enroute to the ncld
and then careened belly llnt lnto
tht 1ndustraaJ parlc1na lot tnat an
hour earlier hftd be n fllled with
par~ed car~. police said
--
r
Nazi March Off? F,... Page :IJ
JARVIS ...
.. Group Willing to Change Site
elenda Heights Hid there wouJcf
be no Republican support for
even that plan unleas there are
•ome cuts in welfare. which ti;
bud1teted for 7.65 perc-ent In·
crea1H tor all recipients. at u
cost of S200 rnllllon unnually. CHICAG O <AP>-Under pres·
s1,1re ol a Sunday deadline, •
federal court began hearln1
arguments today that may de·
te rmine whether American
Na z i s marc h in Skokie, a
Chlcago suburb that is horne to
thousands or Jewish survlvora of Ultler's death camps.
P'rank Collin, leader of the Na·
tlon al Socialist Party of
America, arrived in cou.rt about
JO minutes after the proceedll\a
be1an. He has said repeatedly
that he will call ore the Skokie
demonstration if his tiny group
is allowed to demonstrate July 9
in Marquette Park. about a mile
rrom Nazi headqu arte rs on
Chlc110·1 Southwest Side.
U.S. District Judge George
Leighton is to rule on a Nazi
petition that aeekJ to eliminate
the Chicaao Park Dis trict's re-quirement ol a $80,000 insurance
bond as a condition for gather·
angs of 75 or more people.
The Nazis s ay the $60,000
fig ure reduced from a S350,000
bond invalidated earlier by
Lciehton -is excessive and
deprives them of their constitu·
tiooal riaht.I to speech and. as. sembly. ~·ft
.Je wish groups have said they
wi ll s ta ge counter ·
demonstrations if the Nazis
march in Skokie, whose popula·
tion of 69,000 It about 40 percent
Jcwiah. The militant J ewish
Defense League has vowed to
use violence to block the march.
The U.S. Supreme Court ruled
June 12 that Skokie could not de·
lay a demonstra tion while wait·
ing for a decision on an appeal
of three overturned ordinances
thut would have barred the
Nazis.
Meanwhile, Louis Black, a
Skokie resident. riled a suit in
Circuit Court to block the dem·
on1trallon. He said the Nazis
were .not legally registered with
Fro11tPageAl
VICTIM: • •
Investigator D. ll. "Mac"
McNeely said that from marks
on the street, it was known the
body had been pushed from a
c ar m oving west al about 35 to
45 miles per hour.
Mc Neely said that when
Young was released fro·m jail.
the man had been wearing a
be ige wide-collared vee-neck
pullover s hirt, besides the
trousers and shoes in which his
body still was clothed when
found.
Young. an unskilled laborer,
was a ready drin~er with a his·
tory o ( confinement for drunken-
ness. McNeely said. and had a
habit or removing his shirt whlle
drinking because he perspired
heavily.
The detective said a coroner's
autopsy showed that Young, who
had only 45 cents upon his re·
l ease from jail. and no
trans portation, had an unknown
amount of alcohol afterward.
possibly at a bar or a private
party.
McNeely said Young often in·
gratia ted himself with
strangers, and may have
hitched a ride or simply walked
into a party.
His body was found about 12 miles from the county Jail.
A further distinguishing mark
was a tattoo on his right forearm
which depicted a cat with a
raised tail.
McNeely urged anyone who
remembers seeing such a tattoo.
or recognizes the photograph of
Young. to contact him, at
754-3739.
"We have talked to virtually
every person this man knew ...
McNeely s aid. "Friends. rel·
atives. e nemies . Nobody
describes him as the All·
American boy. but nobody hated
him.
"We need to trace his move.
ments. We're fast running out of
people to talk to."
Youth Slain
In Robbery
STOCKTON IAP> -A 17·year·
old youth was beat~n to death with
a tire Iron and his companion was
beaten and stabbed after they
were accosted at a telephone
booth here, police reported Mon·
day .
Kot>ert Hamilton's body was
found In a park after his compa-
nion, Patrick lked'a, 17, crawled
to a nearby house where police
were called.
Ikeda told authorities that he
had been making ·a telephone
call late Sunday when three
youths approached with a gun.
They were forced into a car.
robbed and later ordered into
the car's trunk before they were
released In the park where they
were beaten, he said.
Constitution Eyed
OTTAWA CAP> -Prime
Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau
will present proposals today t.hat
could provlde a conatltutlon for
Canada. which now operates un·
dtr the century.old Britis h
North AmerlNa Act.
·-·-·-----·.
t.he stai. and thus not nlltled to
a permit. A Wednesday heatlng
was aet.
More lttan 40 ethnic croups
huv e assai led the planned
Skokie demonstration.
Julian Kulu, 1pokesman for
Chtca10'1 Ukrainian communi·
ty. auld: "To dismiss the ap-
pearance of awastikas, brown
ahirts •nd Jack·boot1 on
American soil a scant 1enera·
tlon after 6 rnUllon Jews and 6
rnllllon Chri1tlans died with
theH 1ymbolJ before their eyes
betray• wlllful Inattention to one
of tbe mo1t traalc cpl1ode1 or
human hiJtory."
Kulas taid at & newa con·
f erence in Chica«o th•t be and
other ethnic leaders would at·
t en d a S kok ie count e r ·
demonilration, which its or-
aanizers say ta expected to al·
tract 50,000 people.
In New Yori(, 8oMie Pechler.
Jewish Defense Leaaue national
director, said 134 bules t:arrying
aome 1,800 of t.ht rroup's aym·
pathlzen; from tM New York
area would leave for Skokie on
Thursday nlaht.
Gohettes Seen
Navy Plana Women on Ships
SAN DIEGO CAP) -The Navy plans to put its
first women sailors on seagoing warships in Sep-
tember. anticipating congressional 'approval soon,
the San Diego Union said today.
About 20 to 30 percent of lhe crews s tationed on
90 ships will be women, the newspaper said.
The Navy, lt said, is ''about to lssu~.a direct~ve
asking women to volunteer for sea duty. A meeting
of Pacific and Atlantic ship commanders is
scheduled in Washington. 0 .C., to discuss the subject
next week.
None of the ships, primarily lar~e tenders and
service ships with easily converted hving quarters,
was Identified.
Smell Fills House
Power Goof Cause
Of Rotting Meat
FRESNO CAP> Before Merl
Clemens reached the front door
of his small home southwest of
here. he kn ew something waster·
ribly wrong.
After a three·week vacation,
the five-member family came
home to Caruthers to find their
home <1nd a ll its contents
possibly ruined by the stench of
rolling mN1t.
A mix-up an paperwork from a
po"~r bill paid JUSt before they
left resulted in gas and electrici·
ty being turned off in the house.
causing about 700 pounds of
frozen meat to thaw and rot.
··Them m aggot~ were
something else.·· Clemens re·
called.
San Diego's
Beach Rapes
Onlncre™e
SAN DIEGO CAP> -Rape 1s
increasing along San Diego
beaches. police say.
A rapist is being sought for a
s tring of se.ven attacks on
women in Pacific Beach since
1977.
E ar l y Sunday. a man
weighing 220 pounds and stand·
ing six feet, three inches tall was
tackled by two men who said he
had attacked a neighbor of
theirs while she slept. He was
booked for investi gation of in ·
tent lo commit rape.
Early the day be fore . a
woman jogging on the beach was grabbed and dragged over
the sea wall and into the ocean
where sbe was raped while at
least three people watched.
police said None of the trio re·
ported the crime.
The mess led to a dispute
b_et~een Clemens and Pacific
Gas~ Eleetric Co. that caused
the.. Caruthen ... man to become &0
enraged, he went to a physician
for sedation.
Now he says the "hassle ..
seems to be ironed out and lhe
utility is cleaning up the mess
PG&E has hired a disinfecting
service to clean up the house. but
Clemens believes many o( the
fa mily's belongings, if not the
house itselr, may not b e
salvageable. .
The family's two freezers and
refrigerator-freezer had to be
buried in an eight-foot deep pit
and covered with li me.
The utility has found the family
a place to live until their home as
c leaned up and a company
s pokesman said they intend to
follow through "until that place
is satisfactory" tp Clemens.
As to why the neighbor didn·t
n·otice the s mell long before the
family came home. a relative
said . "The neighbor thought
their cat had died.··
SPY SATELLITE
SCRAPS SEEN
OTTAWA CAP) -More Crag.
ments from the Soviet s py
satellite that fell from space in
January have been found in the
Nort hwest Territories. a
spokesman for the Atomic
Energy Control Board says.
Spokesman Hugh Spence said
Monday prospectors have found
small particles of the nuclear·
powered satellite while looking
for uranium along the north
shore or Lake Athabasca, about
390 miles northwest of Prince Albert.
Th" proposal tentatively In
eludes n Sl.<>6 billion 1hlfl of
health and welfare cost.a from
counties to the state. but Priolo
said Republicans "will not sup.
port any buyout of any health or
welfare proaram that does not
save taxpayers any money.'·
Priolo and Campbell did not
specify how much Republicans
would denumd that the grant in
cre<.1ses be cut The welfare dispute left an
limbo a proposal by Brown that
school support m the relier bill
should be cut from $2.6 billion to
$2.2 billion to make more money
;1 vallable for cities and counties
T he plan would give $2.6
billion to schools, $1 15 billion lo
counties. S150 million lo s pecial
distracts and SlOO million to
cities
Meeting with police and fire
leaders. Brown supported their
pica that pol\C'C' and fire services
should not be cut, but he refused
to flatly endorse their no-layoffs stand
'"I'm going to do everything I
<.'an to mtnimaze. and hopefully
even eliminate, layo(fs of these
people on the street providing
direct services," Brown said. "l
have no doubt the people did not
vote to reduce police a nd fare
service .
.. I believe the number of
layoffs will be much lower than
p eople were ta~ki ng about,"
Brown said "There has been a
t•crlain amount of panic. we·re
not goant to have 100 percent
financing, but I don't think we
have to have these dire consc·
qucnces an the next 12 months.··
The only ma.ior cutback which
hH taken effect so far has been
abolition of most summer school
session.a. which were scheduled
to begin Monday for more than
100.000 high school students.
Frotte Page A I
FOURTH ...
The firemen will be used as
second men in the street patrol
cars and will be empowered to
issue citations along with the of· ricers.
Mc Daniel said visitors and res-
idents alike are gomg to have
ample warnin~ about the anti·
fireworks law.
He said t.000 signs that look
like parking signs will be posted
in the beach areas and there will
be foµr Jr,r.,ae signs at the main
~nlrances to the city. -
··we don't want anybody to
claim they didn't know about the law.·: he said.
One of the prime considera.
lions in enforci ng the fireworks
law is the fire hazard especially
an the Central and West Newport
areas where there are large
crowds and the houses are very
close together.
Traffic congestion in those
areas also poses a problem for
e m e r gen cy vehicles, so
McDaniel said the police depart
me nl is goin~ lo s hut dowr1
Seashore Drive during Lhe even·
tn&s.
.. Residents will be able to
have access via 36th Street onl y.
but they're goi ng to have to' be
a ble lo prove they live there.''
he said
The point of the closure is not
to inconvenience anyone, but to
k eep the roadway open for
emergency vehicles.
McDaniel said he wants resi·
dents and visitors alike to un· '
derstand that this year, ·the
police department 1s going to at
tack the fireworks problem ag-
gressively
"We·re going to write every
ticket we can." he said . "We·11
confiscate fireworks a:; con·
traband and destroy it."
PllOHIOITEO BY LAW ff 1ek0i1 1rm~ ~~,,,
,
VE $100 ON THI PUf'CHASE OF 1 LB. OR MORE SA OF THESE OFtt!AT AMERICAN CHEDDARS ..
BIG BARN APPLE PIE
NEW YORK WHITE MIDGET SHARP
NEW YORK COLORED SMOKY BAR LIMIT OHi COV~ PIR FA.Mil Y PLEAS£
'
MAllMll'lflUA ..
O~NA POtM1' ...... ,.-....,. ... "'.
I •
17
Orange Coast
·N
T oday"s Closing
~.Y. Sto~ks
: t ,·
VOL. 71, NO. 171, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JUNE 20, 1979 C TEN CENTS
Arilly Quarantines Pair for Virus
WASHINGTON CAP> -The
Army is holding two civilian re-
searchers in total isolation on a
military pos t following their
accidental exposure to deadly
lassa fever virus in a laboratory
accident, it was learned today.
Two weeks ago, a vial of con·
laminated blood accidentally
s plashed on one of the two
e mployees at the Center for Dis·
ease Control in Allanta, and both
men were exposed to the virus.
However. they have shown no
signs of contracting the dread
disease.
Officials al the center said the
researchers were flown to the
extraordinary isolation unit at
Fort Detrick, Md .• "strictly as
a precautionary measure."
There was believed· to be only
a slight chance that the re·
searchers would come down
Freeway
with lassa fever and still less
chance that they woutd infect
others. the ofCiciaJs said.
But the officials said they took
the drastic isolation measures
because there is neither a known
immunizaUon against the con-
tagious disease nor a cure for 1t.
Lassa fever was <f lscovered in
Africa less than 10 years ago
and has s truck in epidemic pro·
portions since then in Sierre
• ve
Broivn Gives CM Route Reprieve
jJy MICHAEL PASKEVICll
Of U1e Dally l"llot SLtfl
Fading plans for extension of
the Costa Mesa Freeway are
alive again today following a
r eprieve granted the route by
Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr.
Saying he was "disgusted"
with State Trans portation
'Director Adriana Gianturco's
plans to elimina te the route,
Assemblym an Dennis Mangers,
D-Huntingtoo Beach, announced
Monday that he 'bypassed Ms
{;ianturco and confronted the
governor.
The initial s te p towards
can celin g th e downtown
extension or Route 55 was to be
taken up at a meeting Thursday
of the Stale Transportation
CE>mmission in Los Angeles .
The assemblyman said the
re prieve from the governor is
for 30 days, but Mangers added
that he will seek furthe r delays
until an Environmental Impact
Report is completed for the
Route 55 corridor.
"We're convinced that a good
El R will demonstrate what local
traffic engineers have been ~ay ing a ll along-the re's no •
alternative but to exten9 the
-Gobettes Seen
Navy Plam Women on Ships
SAN DIEGO fAP > The Navy plans to put its
firs t women sailors on seagoing "Warshi~ in Sep·
tem ber, _anticipating congressiona l approval s oon.
the San Diego Union said today.
About 20 to 30 percent of the crews stationed pn
90 s hips will bE! women, the newspaper said. ,
The Navy, it said, is "about to issue a directive
a sking women Lo volunteer for sea duty." A meeting
or P acific .and A\lantic s hip commande rs is
scheduled in Washington, D.C .. to discuss the subject next week.
None of the s hips. primarily large tenders and
service ships with easily converted li ving quarters.
wa~ identified.
Mesa Rejects Bid
For Speed L,imit
The Costa Mesa Citv-Council
ha s r eJect ed a w es t side
woman's request for a new hear·
Jn£ on her orooosed 10-mile-per-
tiour speed limit reduction from
25 m .p h onHam1ltonStreet
Mrs . Pat Skillman of 546
Hamilton claim ed Monday lhe
city's traffic count overestimat-
ed the amount of cars that travel
daily on Hamilton.
As a resuJt. she said the s treet
should not be considered an
arterial highway and that the
10 -mile·pe r -hour redu<·tion
~ould be in order. She said the
'reduction would improve s afety
and reduce noise levels from
Garage A rt
passing autos in a densely
populated area.
Her request had been denied
earlier by the city Trame Com·
mission
Mrs. Skillman drew support
from Conncilman Dom Raciti.
but his motion ror a rehearing
died for lack of a second. The
council then voted 3·2 against a
new hearing. Raciti and Vice
Mayor Mary Smallwood were on
the short side of the vote.
Bruce Mattern, city director
of public works. said Hamilton
currently handles m ore than
6,000 cars daily. lie backed the
traffic commission's decision
not to reduce the s-peed limit.
freeway," Mangers declared
He said he will push ror a
"committment of funds" for the
E l R by Aug. 1 and continued
progress on the state's offer of
fund s f o r "operational
improvem en t s '' o n the
congested freeway. The freeway
now ends at Bristol Street and
form s a bottleneck through
downtown Costa Mesa.
Ms. Gianturco has publicly
said she opposed the $82 million
full freeway plan because 1t
would ha ve no s ign1f1 cant
impact on traffic congestion and
would disrupt the community
State transportation offi cials
are meeting with local officials
to discuss improvements. but
C'ity officials unlike the sta,te
repres ent-at1ves. believe the
improvem e nt<; s hould be
M ns1dert>d temporary until the
freeway is finished.
.. J had been pursuing this
from a moderate approach until
G1anturco put this thing <the
(·ancellat1on > on the agenda
without telling m e, .. said
Mangers ... , got disgusted.··
In describing his meeting last
Thursday with the governor.
Mangers said "what became
very clear to me is that Ms.
G1anturco had not kept the
governor informed of this issue
"I told him it's only indicative
.o f Orang e Cou nt y's
t rans portation problems an
generaJ a nd m enldon ed the
political implications of his own
re-election ··
Mangers said the reprieve
fr om th e gove rnor ca m e
<See FREEWAY, Page A2>
Saccharin
Case Pushed
WAS lll NGTON <A P l
Proponents of continued use of
saccharin are getting another
chance to argue that the benefits
of the art1f1cial ~"'ceten(•r out·
weigh tht' risks
Trade l.lssor iations. medical
groups and thost' concerned "'1th
obesity and diabetes test1f1ed
Mo nday before the National
J\(•a demy of Scie nces, which 1s
working on a study of saccharin
for Congress.
Speakers attacked a Canadian
study linking saccharin to blad-
der canc<'r in mall' rats, as well
as several other studies that tn·
dicated there may be a hnk to
.human cancer as well.
A res ident of Janesville. Wis., decided to
give his garage door a distinctive look. Al
. first glance. a passerby might think h~
was looking al the back of an old car. -(
--·-·--·-··
Leone.
Early studies indicated that It
killed up to half Its victims. but
scientists al the disease control
center who are studying the
fever believe the early reports
were exaggerated.
The virus is carried by a rat
found commonly in Sierre Leone
but not in the United States. and
scientists are attempting lo de·
termine how the virus spreads
rrom the rat to humans and
from humans to humans.
The identities of the two men
were withheld by the center. A
spokeswoman, Betty Hooper.
said that to name them would
constitute "a clearly unwarrant-
ed invasion of their j>ersonal
privacy" and on exposure 01
medical case histories normally
protected.
Details of the-incide nt, and the
Reeycled S kateboard lil"Wlrttlflolo
Da\ c Griebenow. ltl. of Rochester. l\tinn .. temporarily
unseal<.'d the traditional version of the popular
~katl•bo;ird \\ ith his homemade rendition. Dave made
his ~katl'hoard b~· attaching three set~ of wheels to an
nld toilet seat
decision to place the men an
·isolation. were pieced together
by The Associaled Press from
telephone interviews with the re·
searc hers the m selves . their
supervisor at the center , Dr.
John Bryan, and the center's
s afety director, Dr. John H.
Richardson.
The accident happened on.
June 5, while the researchers <See VIRUS, Page A2)
Murder
Details
Sought
By PfllLIP ROSMARIN
Of Ille Dally Piiot St.Ill
Irvine police detective!>.
witho ut clue or motive to the
murder of a Los Angeles County
man whose castrated body was·
found on an Irvine street Junt·
11 . today asked the public to
help rind his killer.
Police distributed photographs
of Roland Gerald Young, 23. of
Maywood. to newspapers and
television stations on Monday.
They hope that someone whO
lhey feel must have seen Young
in the last seven hours or his life.
will recognize bim. call polict•
and help them discover where
he spent the time .
Police have traced his m ove
m ents up to his release from
Orange County Jail Saturday
night. whe re he had been held on
a charge of public drunkenness.
from that time. until an off
duty fire man discovered h1!<.
still·warm body lying face down
near the middle of Irvine Center
Drive. near Deerwood . whut
Young did is a mystery.
lie had been stabbed four
times through the heart. He had
been mutilated.
Investigator D. IL "Mac"
McNeelv said that from mark!>
on the street. il was known the
body had been pushed from a
car moving west at about 35 to
45 miles per hour.
M c Neely s aid that when
Young was released from jail,
the man had been wearing a
beige wid(•·c·ollared vee·neck
pu ll over s hirt. besides th<'
trouser s and shoes in which ha s
bodv s till was clothed when
rourid.
Young. an unskilled laborer,
was a ready drinker with a his-
tory of confinement for drunken-
ness. McNeely said. and had u
habit of removing his shirt while
<See VICTIM, Page A2)
Holiday Crackdown Due
J
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of I,. D•lly Pilot Slaff
Tlungs a re going to be dif-
ferent in Newport Beach this
fourth of July, the city's police
sav
Police, who have been trying a
low·key approach to controlling
the crowds that swarm into their
city over the holiday, are going
to I ry something new this year
Capt. Kelson McDaniel. com·
m ande r or the police patrol
d1 v1sion. said his m en will be IS·
s uing citations to cvc•ryone they
find setting off fireworks.
"Newport Beach 1s one of
three cit1e'i in tht' county that
prohibits the use of fireworks.··
he said. "This year we plan to
enforce that ordinance ."
The city's fireworks ordinance
h as been on the books for
several years. but has been
widely ignored by residents and
visitors.
In addition to strict enforce-
ment of the fireworks prahibi-
tl on, Mc Danie l s aid large
pa rties arc"going to be dealt
with in a slightly different way
this year
SPY SATELU TE
SCRAPS SEEN
OTTAWA <AP> -More rrag.
m e nts from the Soviet s py
satellite that fell from space in
January have been round in the
Northwes t Territories, a
spokesman for the Atomic
Energy Control Board says.
Spokesman Hugh Spence said
Monday prospectors have found
small partJcles of the nuclear-
powered satellite while looking
tor uranium a long the north
s hore of Ulke Athabasca, about
390 miles northwest of Prince
Albert.
In a plan that has a I ready
gone into effect. the host of a
loud party that is dis turbing the
peace of his neighbors will be
arrested.
"It seems to be working out
Mesa Traffic
Panel Views
Bike Trails
The Costa Mesa Traffic Co m-
mission received city council ap-
proval Monday to study possible
ins tallaUon of bike trails and
sidewalks along Adams Avenue
between Huntington Beach and
Mesa Verde Drive West.
Citing "a very dangero us
situation" on Adams. Traffic
<;o mmission Chairman Robert Gra~am asked the council also
to consider a 10-mlle·per-hour
speed limit r eduction lo 40
m .p.h. on Adams until improve-
ments are made.
The council noted prior studies
a nd the high cost or adding b1k<'
and pedestrian routes, but voted
S·O to let the commission revive n study on the proposals.
The commission may ask lhal
a bike path be installed on
Adams from Mesa Verde West to
Huntington Beach and that
sidewalks be buHl on the north
side of Adams between the San-
ta Ana River bridge east to
Balearic Park.
Oraham asked for coordina-
tion with the county to consider
adding separate bicycle paths
across lhe new Adama Street
Orldae . '
The traffic commission will
dl1cuss the Improvements and
return to lhe council with its fm-
dlnas.
'
rathe r well,·· he commented .
Newport Beach 's la w enforce-
m ent problems in the past years
have peaked a t the lndepen
dencc Day holiday when near
riot conditions have prevailed in
Central and West Newport.
T his year. McDaniel said the
de partment is going to field a
force that consists of e ve ry
availa ble man -including de·
tectives and administrative of-
ficers-backed up by firemen
and lifeguards.
Mc Daniel said the lifeguards
will ride as second men in their
<See FOURTH, Page A2>
Co ast
Weathe r
Som e high cloudiness
with patchy low c louds
along the coast early mor n-
ing hours. but mostly sun.
ny. Lows fonight 60 to 64.
llighs Wt.>dnesday about 75
ot beachcs to84to88inland.
I NSIDE TODA 't'
Virgil Partch, better known
cu VIP and the creator of Big
George cartoons. as a seem -
ingly bottomless well of gags
cmd huTMr. For a look at the
f,aguna Beach resident, see
Featuring, Page Cl .
l•tlex
•• CJ
lllY-W.kt •r111••-11 LM. .... .........
~Ill.nil• ~ .... 11 ..
C-ltl Crtuw.,f
DOlllNttkH .... .,, ....... ... ,., .. I_
~ .. ..,..,..
lit 1111 .. ,,. .. ~
Cl AM L.a""r. M Mevlff IU M41tHI ~ .....
AS Nall-IN-C• U Of>a .. eC-y ., $=•1• l'tntt ., . ..
IM M
MWtlC""
Iii S ec• Martr.U M Tll..,h ....
M T-..1w1
CIJ -·~ CJ .........
·' . ,
At • •• •tJ IJ .. .. A4 114
DAILV PILOf l~ J1.1rnt?O 1971
Coastline Raps .
•False Ideas' -
By JACKIE llYMAN on .. oallyl'llet• .. 11
Adminii.trators nt CoastlJne
Communlly College say they
be lieve sugaeslions that their
facility be closed to save money
are based on false ideas about the
"college without walls."
A group of faculty members
from Coast Community College
District's two older campuses.
Golden West in HunUngton Beach
and Orange Coast in Costa Mesa.
recommended that trustees sbut
down Coastline and transfer its
classes to OCC and GWC instead
of ma king deeper across-the·
board cuts tn the wake or Propos1-
Uo.n.1.l.
"There are and will continue to
be those who didn't favor the
formation of this college in thE'
Tahiti R ace
SlowJ Down
In DoldruTTlJj
The Tahiti yachts were
wallowing in the doldrums
between 300 and 600 miles north
o f the equator today with light to
nonexistent winds and s ix-foot
swells coming from two diree-
uons.
Brian Carter. aboard Twa.
~aid the bght four to five-knot
~outhwest wmds have created a
beating situation.
~orcery's 9 a.m. position
placed her 1,661 miles from
'I ahiti. Tuia was 1.860 from the
finish, Westward has l ,935 miles
to go and Celebration 2,000
miles
Carter said large s harks had
appeared orr the boat and were
!)napping at everything thrown
overboard
The yachts experienced tor
rentlal ruin Monday night.
Weather expert Jim Woller of
Newport Beach said the con-
fused sea s apparently were
caused from hurricane Carlolla
tocat e d at 11 degrees north
•atitude and 115 degrees west
longitude
f"ro91 Page A l
VICTIM •••
drinking because he perspired
heavily
The detective said a coroner 's
Jutopsy showed that Young. who
had only 45 cents upon his re-
t ease from ja il . and n o
transportation, had an unknown
<i mount of a lcohol a fterward
possibly al a bar or a privat~
party
McNeely said Young often in-
1'( ra t i at e d him self with
!>trangers. and may ha ve
hilched a rlde or simply walked
into a party.
His body was round about 12
miles from the county jail.
A further distingu.ishing mark
was a tattoo on his right forearm
which depicted a cat with a raised tail.
McNeely urged anyone who remembe~s seeing such a tattoo.
or recogruzes the photograph of
Young. to contact him at 75~·3739 •
··we havt.' talked to virtually
every person tlus man knew,"
McNeely said. "Friends, rel-
atives. enemies. Nobody
de scribes him as the All·
American boy, but nobody bated
him
.. We need lo trace his move·
ments. We're fast runmng out of
people to talk to · ·
Tito Makes Plea
BE t.G RADE. Yugoslavia
I AP> President Tito said to-
day detent.e hlls broken down
hetween tht> United States and
the Soviet Union and appealed to
1 hem to make ··serious efforts to
tran scend t he present un
satis factory situation."
ORANGE COAST c
DAILY PILOT
·-N-~\ietftl--1-
'".I ~ V•tl ""tt~l-Cie-M~•
""""""-[OUOf'
r--··~ """"_, ......
U.'90H .._ .. .-,. !NII
4\\ht ............. (Oiltf"•
Coet•Mna~ M4!1t1no111:::":::~s.:O~!e0~
OtflcH t •O"N ft•Mfrt '19'Q.\.M'WW'f'f~\Ott1
HUftf1f'llQft" ..... trtJ\ ~h ~lfi'VAtd ~l•-'"•"n 'n<l•l•/'••Ao"" .. ~o..qol'r-
l~•(714J ~t a...,._ Altftftltlng 14Hf71
f1r!>t place ... said David A.
Browoell, Coastline dean or ad·
mini~rat1ve services. The col·
lege wasfounc:.hMi two years ago to
administe!rthe dh1trlct's outreacb
program.
Although the s ubject of
Coastline's future has been raised
at board of truslees meetings,
there has been no indication that
trustees intend to eliminate the
college.
However. Brownell said
employees expressed grave con-
cern over reports of a oossibte
clos.ing.
He disagreed with a statement
by an OCC teacher that Coastline
.lipends only 25 percent of its
budget on teachers.
That figure was incorrectly
fig ured. Brownell said. He said
that after districtwide programs
administered through Coastline
are subtracted from its budget, 46
vercent of the remaining funds
are spent on teachers' salaries.
OCC and GWC leabcers had
also pointed out that Coastline bas
no full-time teaching s taff.
Althouan this is true. Brownell sai~. CoasUlne employs only 42
percent of the district's part-time
instructors. with the others work·
ing for GWCorOCC.
apportionment based on average
daily attendance.
Coastline is attended by 23.000
people, theeqwvalentof S,OOOfull·
time students a year. Most of its
s t udents attend part lime
althoulh many are working on
• degrees. Brownell said. The two-
year-old college graduated 283
people this spring.
Luskin said h e believes
Coastline's chief contribution lo
t he district is its philosophy or ex-
tending education to people who
might hesitate to step onto a col·
lege campus.
Last year, Luskin s aid, some
7 .000 students ·who had never ·
taken a college course before at·
tended Coastline.
Many of these participated in
the Ehlerilus Institute. a pro-
gram for senior citizens. he said.
FOURTH •••
six patrol jeeps which will be
turned over to the police depart·
ment so officers can patrol the
beaches where fireworks are set
off.
The firemen will be used as
second men in the street patrol
cars and will be empowered to
issue citations along with the of·
ficers.
McDaniel said visitors and res-
idents alike are going to have
ample warning about the anti·
fireworks law.
He said 1,000 signs that look
like parking signs will be posted
. 10 the beach areas and there wlll
be four large signs at the main
entrances to the city.
"We don't want a nybody to
claim they didn't know about the law." he said.
One or the prime considera-
t10ns in enforcing the fireworks
law is the fire hazard especially
in the Central a nd West Newport
areas wher e there are la rge
c rowds and the houses are very
close together.
Traffic congestion in those
areas also poses a problem for
emergen cy ve hi c l e s. so
McDaniel said tbe police depart
ment ts going to s hut down
Seashore Drive during the even-
ings.
"Residents will be a ble lo
have access via 36th Stree t only.
but they're going to have to be
able to prove t hey live there,"
he said.
The point of the closure is not
to in('onvenience anyone, but to
keep the roadway open for
emergency vehicles.
McDaniel said he wants resi-
dents and visitors alike to un-
derstand that this year, the
police department is going to at-
tack the fireworks problem ag.
gressively.
"We're going to write every
ticket we can," he said. "We'll
confiscate fireworks as con-
traband and destroy it."
•
Deadline Set
For Banquet
In Costa Mesa
Costa Mesans have Just one
more day to maJte reservations
for the Friday evening banquet
celebrating the city's 25Ui yeur
of incorporation.
Tickets for the event or -
ganized by the Costa Mesa
Silver Anniversary Committee
are $15 per person. Deadline for
payment is S p.m. Wednesday at ~he Costa Mesa Chamber of
Commerce, 2960 Harbor Blvd .
The event gel3 under w"y Fri·
day at 6 p. m. wttl'I no-host
cocktails al South Coist Plaza
flottl, 666 Anton Blvd., Costa
Mesa
DinneT wtll be JJCl"Ved at 7.30
P m . In the hotel's Plan
BaUroom wt~h Spet!ches. danc
mg and surprises to follow.
(
GETS NEW TEAM
Commissioner Clartce
~ .................
ALSO REAPPOINTED
Commtaaloner Caratenaen
Clarke, Carstensen
Back as Planners
Costu Mesa Plannin g Com·
missioners Clarence "Chic"
Clarke and Richard Carstensen
drew praise and reappointments
TONIGHT
NEWPORT-MESA SCHOOL
BOARD -Special meeting,
Davis Middle School, 7:30 p.m.
WEDNESDAY. J UNE 21
COAST COMMUNITY
COLLEGE BOARD -Special
rneeting, OCC Auditorium. 8
p.m.
to four-year terms in unanimous
action Monday by the City Coun·
cil.
Clarke, a 45-year-old indepen·
dent insurance agent was first
appointed to the planning com·
mission in 1970.
Carstensen, 54, is a real estate
agent. He was appointed to the
five-membe r commission in
April, 1976.
Present terms for both men
expire June 31. The council, in
c iting "excellent jobs " b y
Carstensen and Clarke, qwckly
approved their reappointments.
The planning commissiQn is
rounded out by Chairman Oo'nn
Hall and Commissioners David
Lorenzini and Shirley Price, who
was appointed in April or this
year to tau the post vacated
when Arlene Schafer was elect·
ed to the City Council.
'Doomsday' Budget
Studied by OCTD _
Directors of the Orange
County Transit District IOCTO>
took a look Monday a t a
so-called doomsday budget that
would cut. off the distr ict's
reliance on property taxes and
increase bus Cares 100 percent.
But look was all the directors
did as they decided to wait until
July before making decisions
that could reduce OCTD
spending and service by as much
as 30 percent.
Tbe i dms da y budget proposal ca as transit district
General ager Jim Reichert
reported D's bus ridership
reached an all time high in May .
!le~chert's report s howed· 1.8
million passengers climbe d
aboard OC'l'D buses last month
an increase of 27 percent ove;
the same month a year ago.
OCTD's general manager
credited a cutdown of service on
n on -produc tive bus routes
coupled with improved service
on heavily used routes with the
patronage increase.
However, it was the doomsday
budget rathe r than added
patronage that drew the lion's
2 Perish
In Sinking
MEXICO CITY CA P l -The
California tuna boat Liberty Bell
sank early Monday o ff San
Carlos, Baja California. The
captain and chief engineer died
trapped in the engine room but
the nine other crew members
were rescued by a Mexican fish-
ing boat. the Mexican navy
said.
It said the Liberty Bell sent a
distress s1gnal which was picked
up by the Mexican coast guard.
The fis hing vessel Cuaubtemoc
was sent to the Bell in time to
save the nine. Names of the dead
and s urvivors were not released.
The survivors were heading
for La P az, Baja California. a
Mexican navy .spokesman said .
Fro• Page A J
FREEWAY. •
M o 'n ~ a y a n d t lta t o t h e r
legisla\ors a ngry over Ms .
Glanturco's plans to cancel
other freeways played a part in
.s waying the governor to
reconsider such acuons.
Mangers, who earlier vowed
to play "political hardball" it
the .s tate continued to ignore the
need for Ulc rreeway. said he
had hoped to keep Politics out ol
the matter.
However. he pr<>mJsed to "l:et
rt>a l political" ar the state
lranspor~Uon commission tries
lo lde·step the rC?pricva and
again inillilW tbe cancellation of
the freeway route first approved
ln 1944.
I
s hare or attention at th e
directors' meeting.
In a budget proposed before
California's voters gave their
overwhelming s upport t o
Proposition 13, the property lax
reform initiative. Reichert
suggested overall 1978-79 OC'l'D
spending of $58.9 million.
The doomsday version of the
revised budget would reduce
overall transit district spending
to S39.5 million.
Gone from doomsday would be
the entir e $3.6 millio n in
prnpe rty lax r evenue OCTD
expected to receive before
Proposition 13 became a reality.
Also gone trom d oomsday
would be $1.S million OCTD
could be expected to receive in
property tax revenue in the post
Proposition 13 era.
Should direc tors eventually
decide to continue to rely on that
$1.5 million in property tax
revenue, it is likely bus fares in
the coming fiscal year would be
hiked 40 percent.
But should they decide to
forsake property tax dollars in
their entirety. t he doomsday
budget calls for the 100 percent
increase in OCTD fares.
Such a fare hike would mean
the basic Z.cent bus rare would
J ump to so cen t s. And
commuters who now pay SO
cents a day round trip to work.
for example, would pay Sl a
dav.
• ________ _..:'~-......... -------,:::::::=.= -=------
·-·-'9<···
Clemente Sued
Over Housing
By TOM BARLEY
Of Illa Dan, f'llM Stiff
Legal aid organlzation.s which
c laim to represent minorities
and the financially deprived
sued the city of San Clemente
Mon day and accused the
municipality or raUing to meet
the needs or lo~·income resi· dents.
The Orange County Superior
Court action is almost idenUcal
lo a lawsuit filed last week in
which the county was named w;
defendant.
Headed by the Legal Aid
Society of Orange County. the
plajntiffs ask the court to order
the City Council or San Clemente
a~d . the city planning com-
mission to approve no further
subdivisions until the city adopts
"housing and land use elements
as partof1tsgeneral plan ...
H o us ing e lements are
described in Ute lawsuit as
"blueprints for addressing pres-
entand future noustngneeds."
The action alleges that San
Clemente is not observing a 1969
amendment to lbe state plan-
nin g law which requires that
general plans should include
housing elements.
The city is accused or "avoid·
ing the law for nine years and
s tanding by while its land has
been developed exclusively fo r
industry and luxury housin2."
The_ lawsuit is the rourth
Supenor Court action filed on
More Cuts
Eyed by
Trustees
Coast Community College
Dis trict trus tees will meet
Wednesday to consider more
l'utbacks in an effort to balance
the district's post-Jarvis budget.
H igher s t ud e nt fees.
s us pe nsion of district travel
a llowance s and th e
abandonment of construction
projects are set for discussion al
the 8 p.m. public meeting in the
auditorium a t Orange Coast College.
A Daily Pilot stor y las t
Saturday incorrectly listed that
date of this meeting as J uly 21.
District spokesman Richard
Simon said the higher fees for
s tudents could come in the form
of increased costs for health and
parking fees . Curren t law
forbids ~ommunity colleges
from charging tuition.
Trustees bave moved slowly
since the June 6 passage or the
Jarvis tax initiative which will
slice an estimated $15 million
from the district's proposed
budget of about $81 million.
C u tbacks to date have
included the elimination of
administration and sabbatical
leaves and the summer musical
at Golden West College in
Huntington Beach.
At a -special meeting Friday
night. trustees voted to spend
$1.5 million to maintain s~mmer
sessions at Golden West, Orange
Coast and Coastline colleges.
Trustees have asked teachers
a nd administrators at each
cam pus to s ugges t budget
cutbacks of about 18 percent.
A number of faculty members
have responded by calling for
complete elimination o f
Coastline College and the
dropping of district funding for
KOCE-TV.
r)
b~balf of low income and
minority groups in the last two months.
In eurlicr lawsuits. the lrvirtt·
Ranch and Santiago County
water districts were sued with
the allegation that multl-mill1on
do llar wate r proJects were
planned without consideration
for the housing needs of
minorities and low income rest·
dents.
The actions call for the setting
aside of those projects until the
districts have satisfied the court
that hous ing constru ction
s parked by the water improve-
ments will make suc h pro-
visions.
Named as co-plaintlrfs with
the Orange County Legal Aid
Society are Orange County res1. d~nls Llonel Bernard. John w
and J a01ce Shern am an. Lo~
Ange les Cou nty resident!'>
Dorothy M. McAleavey, Shanon
Garrison and Betty Sue Webb.
Also. the Legal Aid Founda·
tions or Los Angeles and Long
Beach and ~ Western· Center
on Law and Poverty Inc.
Fro• Paflr A l
VIRUS ...
were transferring rodent blood
s amples from a freezer to part
of the lab where tests could tK::
done on them . The blood
s amples were collected in
Africa.
Both men were working in a
laboratory designed ror max-
imum security. But they
evidently failed to use a glass-
fronted container which disease
ce nte r offi cia ls said wa s
s pecifically designed to protect
r esear chers against exposure
during accidents.
The researchers were wearing
the required gloves. but also had
on their usual street clothes in
stead of the scrub s uits normally
r e q u ired fo r s uch work
Richardson satd. '
One or the two researchers
said be picked up a sample tube
by its plastic cap; the tube stuck
lo its frozen raclt. and the cap
came off, splashing a bit of
partially thawed rat blood on his
clnthes and chin.
Alter the accident, the two re·
searchers decontaminated tbe
lab. left their clothes behind.
showered and changed before
opening the maximum contain·
m ent facility -one of two used
for experiments with the world':.
most dangerous disease agents.
It was aJso learned that four
days of a nxious waiting
followed, in whic h official!>
sought to determine if the blood
sample was. in fact, contaminat·
ed by the lassa fever virus.
During this time. the re
searchers were permitted to
stay home. The only stipulation
was that they come in each day
for tests a imed at ensuring that
the two men had not developed
any virus symptoms.
The first symptoms generally
include headache. sore throal.
cough, vomJtmg. diarrhea. pajn.
ma laase and fever over 100
degrees Fahrenheit.
Richardson and Bryan said ii
was safe for the men to be free
for the fi rst two days bttause
the disease isn't passed from
hu m an to human before the
s ymptoms develop. It normally
lakes be tween one and two
weeks for the virus to incubate
officials said.
')
Tuesday.~une 20, 1918 DAILY PILOT A3
So Ions Debate Welfare-Raise . .
HEROIC FELINES HONORED IN DELAWARE
Susan Dyson With Pets Tiki and Mlnet
..............
Furry Heroes
Woman Saved; Cats Horwred
WILMINGTON. Del 'AP>
T~o cats who kept their cool
del:ip1te lhe heat in lhe kitchen
have bel'n honored for heroism
by Gov. Pierre du Pont IV.
The pct t·at.'>. Tiki a nd Minet,
.1wakcned their m istress, Susan
Uyson; from a nap one evening
lal>l flebruary JUSl as s moke and
flames beJ!an to fill her Wilm-
ington homt!
Mrs. Dyson. who was 24 and a
little over eight months preg.
nant at the time of the fire, said
'he was taking a nap after work
1ng in her kitchen.
·"The cuts came an to the
ht·dro1>m and they caused a
ruckus .. They weren't fight-
ing. they were Just making noise
together and t hey never dn
1hat. ·· Mrs. Dyson said "So I
"'oke uµ.··
The living ro()m was filled
"'1th smoke and the kitchen was
ln flame1>. she recalled.
The cats were taken to the
~overnor·s office Monday to re-
t·eive the William 0. Stillman
Award of the American Humane
r\ssociation
The award is given to people
who risk t heir lives s aving
animals a nd to an ima ls who
save humans, said Patricia
Prescott. executive d irector of
the Delaware humane Associa·
l ion and a director of the
American Humane Association.
As Mrs. Dyson removed Tiki
from a boA so that he could meet
Lhe ~overnor, she said, "Oh my, his heart is pounding."
"It's not easy to break into
politics." the governor said.
Before the ceremony, Mrs
Dyson was asked a bout the
breed of the tan a nd black-
striped cats.
"They're just regular old alley
l'ats. ·· Mrs. Dyson said.
But Mrs. Prescott interjected. '"Now, now, now.··
·'They're a m ixed breed."
said Mrs. Dyson. who came to
the ceremony with he r infant
son. David, born the night after
the fire
Swine Flu Shots
Paralyzed Victims
To Collect Claims
\\ ASlllNGTON IAP> The
government said today that
anvone who contracted a rare
paralyzing disease after gettmg
'Wint' nu shOL<; 10 1976 will not
ha\ c to prove negligence to col-
let·t federal compensation.
The action c lears a maJor
~tumbhng block in nearly one-
th1rd of the 1,483 claims that
have been brought against the
government for $775 million by
persons or their survivors who
daim they s uffered injuries dur-
Air Cal Sets
New Flights
To Montere:r
Air California opened Jet ~er vic e from a half-d ozen
destinations today, including
Orange County, lo Monterey.
Local service to the CaUfomia
city is being offered on one
round tnp night per day on a Boem~ 373 Jet
However, afrline ofrlcials said
that may change when a new
'cherlule for all lhe airline's rl1~hts ts established nex t month.
Because Afr Cal is competing
witb three other airlines serving
Monterey, the s late Public
Utililieli.. Commission granted
the firm a 90-day authority to of-
fer reduced fares to Monterey
from San Francisco and from San Diego.
Tbe San Frandaco to Mon-
terey fare will be $7.SO, half the
regular rate. The tare between
San Diego and Monterey wlll be
$29 75, or SS less than the regular rare
A 1 r Ca I spokes man Bob
t>wyton said there will be no dis
count oo lhe Orange County to
Monterey rare under the r ~pt rue a<'tlon
•• '
mg the mass inoculation cam·
pa1gn.
Some 439 of these cases seek·
ing $365 million in damages in-
v o Ive Guillain-Barre, a
paralyzing rusease that can be
fatal. Some 535 of the estimated
15 milLion Americans who got
swine nu shots contracted the
disease. and 23 died, according
to the U.S. Center for Disease
Control.
H ealth. Education and
Welfare Secretary J oseph A.
Califano Jr.~ who announced the
action on negligence, said, "We
cannot estimate precisely how
much the federal ~overnment
will ultimately pay out in com·
pensation. We expect, however.
that the amounts awarded will
be only a fraction of the a mount!>
claimed."
Manson Gals
'With' Patty
PLEASANTON <AP) -
Two followers of Charles
Manson are being held m
a bigh·security area or the
federa l wo01en's prison at
Pleasanton and In a
separate building from ~nother inmate, Patricia
Hears t.
Prison officials said
L> nette Fromme. 29, and
Sandra Good, 34, arrived
Friday from a Wes t
Virginia prison and are
be ing treated "like any
other inmate."
Miss Fromme ts servlnt
s life sentence for at·
tempting to assassinate
President Ford in 197S.
M18S Good is serving three
is.year sentences for m ak-
ing death thrcat..s to bu 1-
ness leaders
Partisan
Battle
Looms
SACRAMENTO <AP >
California lawmakers, hammer-
ing out a SS billion rescue plan
for local government in the
wake of Proposition 13, have
become embroiled in a partisan
fi ght over welfare. (Related
stories A4 >
Thal battle. which turns on the
key issue of whether welfare re-
cipients should get cost-of-living
increases when other pi-ogr.am$
are being cut. threatened Mon-
day to halt progress towards ~uick floor votes on the legisla·
lion in both houses.
Republicans also demanded
that police and fire services be
exempt from any cuts before
they will vote for funds to help
cities, counties and schools fac-
ing a $7 billion cut July 1 in
property tax revenues.
"We support the full funding
or police and fire. We s upport re·
ductions in welfare." said As·
sembly Republican fl oor leader
Paul Priolo of Malibu.
·'This is a 100 percent
turnaround by the Republicans
on this committee ... an appeal
to the basest instincts," s napped
Democratic Assembly Speaker
Leo McCarthy of San Francisco
in response to Priolo's demand for welfare cuts.
The committee of six leaders
of the Senate and Assembly
agreed quickly last week to
Democratic Gov. Edmund
Brown Jr. 's request to use $4
billion of the state's surplus for
d irect aid lo local government
and a nother $1 billioh for short-
term loans.
But since then, attention has
wandered toward di s putes
between McCarthy and Priolo.
leaving another half-dozen ma -
jor issues unsolved.
With 10 days remaining before
Proposition 13's $7 billion tax cut
takes effect, the committee still
has not agreed on how much to
give schools, counties a nd cities.
or what conditions to attach to
the funds .
As the Proposition 13 battle
persisted ·in several arenas in-
side the Capitol Monday. county
workers outside picketed and
chanted, "No cuts. no layoffs."
lf locaJ government gets the $4
billion proposed in the rescue
bill, it will still face cuts averag-
ing a bout 10 percent in un·
specified areas.
But Priolo and Republican
Sen. William Campbell of Ha-
cienda Heights said there wouJd
be no Republican support for
even that plan unless there are
som e cuts in welfare, which is
budgeted for 7.65 per cent in-
creases for all recipients, at a
cost or $200 mil Uon annually.
The proposal tentatively in·
eludes a $1.06 billion shift of
health and wetrare costs from
counties to the state, but Priolo
said Republicans "will not sup-
port any buyout of any health or
welfare program that does not
save taxpayers any money."
Priolo and Campbell did not
specify how much Republicans
would demand that the grant.in-
creases be cut.
The welfare dispute left in
limbo a proposal by Brown that
school s upport in the relief bill
should be cut from $2.6 billion to
$2.2 billion to make more money
available for cities and counties.
The plan would g ive $2.6
billion to schools. $1.15 bilHon to
counties, $150 million to special
d istricts and $100 million to
cities.
M eMting with police and fire
leaders, Brown supported their
plea that police and fire services
should not be cut, but he refused
to ClaUy endorse their no-layoffs
stand.
Police Identify
Body of Man
In Hrmtington
Police have identified a corpse
found Saturday in the Hunt·
ington Harbour main channel as
that or Arthur J Shaw Jr., 23, or
Whittier.
The dead man is believed to
be a homicide victim whose
body 'may have been weighted
down under water ror about five
days before found by Orange
County Sberift's harbor patrol
deputies.
Shaw, who was known to Cre·
quent the Huntington Beach
area, was last seen alive June 12
by friends in Los Angeles Coun·
ty, said poll~ Sgt. Luis Ochoa.
Ochoa said police have no sus·
.pecta at this Ume. Shaw may
have died from a blow on the
head or by suffocation, officials
1ald.
The dead man was identified
• by several tattoos on his chest
and arm. One tattoo was the
na me "Artle" 'nd the other was
so m e type or ldentlfytns num~ral ''01201," Ochoa said.
ROCKWELL'S WHIMSY "The Checker
Game.'' an oil paintmg by America ·s
Norman Rockwell. will be featured at the 1~1~nnual Pageant of the Master s this
s er 111 Laguna ·Beach Portraving
D.Mly ............ " htrk• 0-0-11
subjects in the whimsical painting are
<from lefll Charles Sannes, Tustin; Susan
Wolf, Garden Grove; Charles Gilbert.
Sa.nta Ana a nd Bruce Cubbison, Laguna
Beach
Cop Cadets
Charge
. RB Abuse
By ROBERT BARKER
Of II"' D•lly Pilot 51•11
Two lluntmgton UeaC'h police
cadets l>quarcd off against two
city councilmen Monday night
for the second time in a con-
troversy growing out of a con-
fronta t1on al a city hall parking
lot.
· Cadet Dan Stack told a large
council audience that the con -
duct or Councilman John
Thomas last Wednesday "does
not reflect the integrity of a
council official "
"He verbally. mentatly and
nearly physically abused me ...
Stack declared
Stack said that he questions a!
a man of Thomas' demeanor
should be representing the coun·
cil.
Cadet Bob Blackburn also de·
nied charges that Mayor Pro
Tempore Richard Siebert made
last week that cadets were rude
and i nsolcnt.
"I was not belligerent in any
way." Blackburn said.
Siebert said that he was refer-
ring to a cadcl oth er than
Blackburn and Stack "who rude-
ly told me what I could do with
my car and myself "
Siebert said cadets owed tt to
taxpayers lo show dignity while
on duly.
Thomas said that he was not
allowed to park 1n the employee~
lot adjacent to Main Street
despite being a councilman
"It is another case of dis-
respect that police show to a city
councilman," he said
The parking lot controversy
flared last Tuesday and Wednes·
day during school graduation ex-
cr c 1 s es held at Huntington
Beach Hi.l?h School.
Masters Pageant
Readies· Live Art
By STEVK MITCHELi .
Of IN 0-41y P•lot Stall
Little Diane Baker sat •n a
bench by herseU in the crowded
dressing room backstage or the
Irvine Bowl on the Festival of
Arts grounds.
He r face and hands we re
painted gold and she wore an
Egyptian headdress m ade of
rubber. ·
··How does ·an that paintfeel on
your face?" asked one of 300
reporters invited lo a press
preview of the 43rd a nnual
Pageant of the Masters.
"Gross," she said, wrinkling
her golden nose. "Really gross.··
Diane, a Laguna Beach fourth
grader, appears w ltb Mike
Fagan. also 9. of Mission Viejo
1n a king-size r eplica of a
buckle, found in the tomb or
King Tutankhamun. The two
youngsters will be posed as
living recreations of the famous
bauble on ce worn b y the Egyptian king.
Reporters and photographers.
some from as far away as Las
Vegas and Thousand Oaks,
toured backstage a t the Laguna
Beach festival grounds for four
hours Monday night. talking to
m akeup c r ews, mode ls and
pageant officials.
The O'tl pageant promises to
take it's expected 300,000
viewers this year through many
parts of the world. with art
r epresentations from a ncient
Scythia to recent oils by Norman
Rockwell.
Six of the i:t "living pictures"
were exhibited for the press
Monday.
More than 450 volunteers and
staff members will take part in
the annual Pageant or the
Mas ters. with 160 models on
stage every night during the
six-week run.
It's Tom Smith's first year a:;
a model. and the San Juan
Capistrano plumber · doesn't
®
mind saying his wife talked him
tnto it.
The craggy-faced De troit
expatriate will portray an aging
Indian, mounted on a painted
horse in this year's pageant. He
Joins three other mode ls in R.
Br ownell McGrew 's "Tht'
Dinner," an oil painting or an
Indian CamiJy in the desert.
The Indians call McUrew "tht
man who paints the old," and
the origina l painting is on
exhibit at the Laguna Museum
of Art during festival time. It is
ow n ed by South Lagunan
Mickey McArthur.
Other works of art that wiU be
featured this year include a
prize -winning s culpture.
.. Fantasy of Wings," b}
La~unan Robert Krantz. a
marble sc ulpture from the
Acr opolis in Athens, and a
re presentation of the Trev1
Fountain from Rome.
The F estiva l of Arts and
Pageant of the Masters runs this yea~ from ~uly I~ through Aug.
21 in con1unc t1on with the
Sawdust Festival a nd the Art-a-Fair.
College Postpones
Sommer Schedule
Summer classes at Santa Ana
College have been postponed at
least until June i:t, officials an-
nounced, bec~usc of reduced
property tax revenues related to
passage of Proposition 13.
Unless the state Legislature
decidCJ) to fund community col-
lege summer sessions, official!>
said, they will be canceled. Stu
dents may keep posted on de·
velopments by calling the col·
lege at SJS.3000.
Among the most durable
gem materials in the world are
the two stones we call Jade.
Nephrite and Jadeite Long
belore Jade was used for oma·
menl or iewelry purposes, pre·
n1storic people recognized this
charactens11c and carved tools.
containers and eating Imple-
ments from II
EiEM WISE
1s found 1n Burma where the
mines haw been nationalized
and are government controlled
They 819 .. off limlts" to out·
Siders. When I visited there re-
cent ty, I was wamed not to
make purchases from 1n-
d1vlduals. Gem material can be
sold only in the government
store
Jade 1s softer than Diamond,
which means 11 Is more easily
scratched. But Jade is tougher
than Diamond. Jade IS more
cohesive and would 11urv111e. a
sharp blow Lhat could cti1p or fracture a Diamond
The least rare 1111nety of Jade
is Nephnte, a semi-transparent
mineral which occura In a
spinach-green hue as well as In
·grey, brown, yellows. 191 black
and lavender. The main
sourCIN for'Nephnte are China,
Siberia. New Zeeland, Wyom·
ing, Alask&, and the recently
discovered deposits 1n
Australia.
The current hope or a Nonh
American Jade eource lies In
Alastca. &rly •11rlore~ found
Jade In genera use by the
Alaskan lndlana and Eskimos.
One of Alaalca'a mountains 11
called Jade Mountain It Is en· 11rely green and contains
anormoua deposit• of Nephrite
The stone1 trom this mountain
occur In olive grMn, yellow·
green. grey·green and blackit~reeo
The beet quel1ty or Jade com·
" from the mlneral Jadeite It
Mary Barr. Oertll1ed Gemologist
CHARLES H. BARR
Jadeite 11 a semt-translucent
stone and most often white. or
green, or wtllte with green
spots The other colors are less
cqmmon, but sometimes very
lovely.
The finest green of Jadeite
may be likened to that of
Emerald. and it Is this anllde that Is often oof1'1p8red to Im-
perial Jade. Tzu Hsi. the last
Empress of China, valued Jade so highly that she ro1ected an
impressive diamond tiara of-
fered by a favor·seeker. but
welcomed a visitor whose gift
was a small but exquisite artl·
cle made of deep green Jade. The Chinese have long
venerated Jade tor Its beauty
and toughness. It is 11111 hlghly
regarded as It was centuries
ago and many ol the finest
preces seen today are relica of
ancient dyneatlea.
If yo..i ~Id llke to see the
two types of J~. J•delte llnd
Nephnte . • •nd the full range
ol colon In which they occur.
come Into Charin Bur
Jewelers. We have tl'lem to
-"OW you. WOfdl s*nt lowly
plcturM, b4A thent"• nothing lO
eq~1 ...ino the reel thlna Ochou said haw was at one um 11 member ot a motorcycle dub ~--....;;.._ ______________________________________________ _,_ ______________ ~ A.ccrwdlt~ ·-" ...... ,
~. • ..
'
~ILY PILOT l\Mday, Jun. 20 197& NATION I WORLD I WEATHER
Q Killer Satellites
~· Just
":·.1.,~ ~easting ....... ~ Tom~~''·'
Soviets Wanted
I • ...
Morphine On Space Race
Joust a Minute
LOWER THE DRAWBRIDGE: Our public schools face
clear financial dis tress these days. And yet only yesterday.
Orange County spokesmen for the California Teachers As·
soclatlon sounded as lf they want to play it like days of old
when knights were bold.
WASHINGTON (AP> -The <!arter administration ls warning the
Sovlet Union that It must •1ree to a ban on klller aatellltes or the
United Stat.es will not hesitate to escalate lhe arms race in space.
"We're the world's l'host technically advanced nation,•· an ad·
rhlnlsttation official said on Monday. ··we can achieve a system that
ls of hlaher quality and better
than theirs." race that could cost each nation He said he hoped the two coun· billions or dollars. The mo~ey shortage. or course, comes from the reduc·
lion in property tax revenue ordered when the voters
adopted Proposition 13. And CT A omcers had something to
HY about that ln a press conference.
tries would agree to curb anti· •
satellite systems before the THE OFFICIAL, who asked
They said teachers wouldn't accept cut.a ln pay or
fringe benefits. They said the state LeJlslature should
restore the funds needed to operate public schools at cur·
rent levels.
superpowers engage in a new not to be identified. briefed re·
and "unhealthy" space ar!Us porters on a new national space
FURTHBR, THE TEACHERS association people said
ir the lawmakers raH to restore funds, the CTA will recom·
mend that either schools not open at all in the fall. or that
· district.a keep golng at current levels until all the money runs out.
When the money runs out, the CTA says you just shut
down the schools.
This approach lndeed sounds very much like the d~ys
of old when in wartime, the knights feasted until they
fought.
In those days, the prince of one fiefdom sometimes got
crosswise with the prince or another little kingdom. So one
··t3 Thal a Schoolteacher Inside There, Johnnie?"
would march out and surround the other's castle with his
army.
ABRUPTLY FINDING themselves under siege, the
boys inside the surrounded castle couldn't venture forth
for meat or vegtables any more. But those surrounded
knig hts refused to alt.er their lavish life style. ·
They continued right on, having feasts and dancing
girls every night.
Finally the food ran out. They had ~ne last lavish
feast. Then the knights pohshed up tt}eir armor, lowered
the drawbridge and marched out lo meet the enemy and
quite likely end up dead.
You have to do4bt that very many citizens want to run
our public schools that way today. Most people, regardless
how they voted on Proposition 13. would prefer that our
public schools tighten. up .and make it through the next
school year.
The voters dldn•t intend for the school districts to feast
right up until doomsday and then shut down.
fN nus VIEW, the CTA has within Its ranks many
line educators who should .be able to help school boards
and administrators find areas where savings could be
achieved Yet instead the public is given a doomsday solu· taon.
How about instead we talk about eUminating all school
busing? How about reducing all athletics to the intramural
level and putting all extracurricular activities on a aeU·
s ustaining basis ?
Why not a call to civic organizations. church groups
and other philanthropists to come to the aid or our public
s chools?' Why, just last Sunday, some Orange Countlans
donated more than one mllUon dollars to a single church.
Perhaps lt is a bit early to force our public schools to
lowe r the drawbridge and march off into oblivion.
Dentist's
Sex Abuse
Trial Ends
NEW YORK <AP> -A dentist
accused of fondling sedated
fem ale patients had been
described by a prosecutor as a
''sick man" whose sickness
comes close to sexual desire for
corpses.
"It is only the warmth of their
bodies lhat separates the acts
from necrophilia." said Assis·
Lant District Attorney Linda
Fairstein of lhe charges against
Dr. Marvin Teicher. 53. ··rs this
not a classic example of a dirty
old man?"
TEICHER'S ATTOflNEY.
He nry Rothblatt, said in his
summation at the non-jury trial
in Manhattan Supreme Court
that his client "might have done
a couple of dumb things" and
used resuscitation techniques
that were "a little antiquated"
when he squeezed the sedated
young women. .
But he said there was "not one
bit of evidence'' to support the
charges of sexual abuse, which
could get Teicher up to seven
years in prison.
REFERRING TO Teicher's
claim that the patients accusing
him had sexual hallucinations as
a result of the drugs he had
given them, Ms. Fairstein asked
scornfully : ·
"Why is It that only attractive
y oung women have sexual
hallucinations in his office? ...
Common sense tells us our den·
lis t's hands belong in our
mouths."
AFTER THREE female pa·
llents complained to the district
attorney's office of having
"body soreness " and finding
their clothes in disarray aft.er
being roused from sedation, a
court order was obtained in Ju.
ly, 1976, permitting investigators
to put a hidden camera in the
dentist's office
A videotape made while an un·
dercover policewoman was be·
ing treated by Teicher was
played In the courtroom. It
showed the dentist hugging the
policewoman with his hands on
her buttocks.
ROnlBLATI' SAID his client
would have to be an .. idiot" to
molest two more women after
one bad threatened to file a
malpractice action against him.
But lhe prosecutor said the
second and third incidents were
evidence or "the sickness"
behind Telcher's acts.
Justice Dorothy Cropper said
she would deliver her verdict
Wednesday.
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policy recently drawn up by
President Carter. The policy Is
dedicated to continuing U.S.
t echnological s upre macy in
speee, with strong emphasis on
military systems to counter
possible Soviet threats.
Early In his administration.
Carter made a public appeal to
the Soviets to outlaw satellite·
destroying systems. But that na·
lion has staged Ci ve tests since
then and has given no s igns It in·
tends to forgo the killer satellite
system.
THE TWO NAnONS held the
first round of talks on a possible
ban last week In He ls inki.
Finland. But the briefing official
d e clined to dis cuss what
transpired, nor would he say if
the warning had been delivered
to the Soviets during the talks
He said I.he Russians "in one
sense already have a capabili·
ty" shown by tests in which they
have knocked several of their
own satellites out or the sky. He
s aid he did not know how close
the Soviet system was to becom·
ing operational.
IN RESPONSE to the threat.
the United States has started de·
velopi ng Its killer. s ate llite
system. But the official said "it
wilJ be a significant amount or
ti me before we can test It."
The Carter s pace policy slate·
ment says that without an agree·
menl the United States will de-
velop a "contingency reaction
capability which can effectively
detect and react to threats to
U.S . peace systems."
Carter's Is the first U.S. space
policy declaration since Pres1·
dent John F. Kennedy In 1961 set
supremacy as a goal when he
committed lhe country to land·
ing a man on the moon In that
decade. The Kennedy statement
c ame aft.er several Russian suc·
cesses that included sending the
first man into orbit.
Illinois
Readies
ER4 Vote
Gmter of Dri1'e
Cheryl Neilson, 11, of Juanita. Wash .. sits among 99 tons
of newspapers collected by Juanita Elementary School
PTA to help with her medical bills. The recycling. along
with other fund-raising events, made about $S.500 for
Cheryl, who spends five nights a week hooked up to a
kidney dialysis machine.
'Rolling Stones'
Return to Roots
By MABY CAMPBELL
NEW YORK CAPl -Mick Jauer played the nauJ?htV
;choolboy Monday night as the Rolling Stones played solid rock'n'
roll in lheir only concert here on this year's Amencan tour, at the
3,000·seat Palladium.
While the rest or the Stones made good, tight. loud music
which a Listener could feel from the feet through the abdomen to
the s inuses. Jagger was out in front, singing, always the eye.
riveting showman.
HE SKJTl'ERED AND PRANCED around Jn-Bdded apron of
stage with a cheerful. energetic frenzy.
. He said a few naughty words, some or them into the
m icrophone. and made a rew naughty gestures. at first looking ten-tativ~ and ¥oing_ on to. be. more boldly showorr. He wore a
mult1colored T-shirt, whtle Jacket and cap and shiny red pants.
short enough that bare leg sometimes showed above brown socks.
ONLY A CQUPLE OF OLD songs were done, "Honky Tonk ~oman" an~ "Roll Over Beethoven,·· the latter getting the night's
biggest ovation ..
· "I Like to do the new songs, .. Jagger said. He did play piano for
a soulful gospel number and followed it with a slow blues.
The Stones, who have been scolded by some rock critics for
playing huge halls and urged to "return to their roots" and play halls
~i~ smaller audiences, are doing both on this tour. They are appear·
ang in seven mammoth outdoor arenas, about 1-0 halls with 12.000 to
17 .000 seats and 10 more "Intimate'· theaters of around 3.000seats.
THE LAST TIME THE STONES were in New York they gave
four concerts in three days al 20,000·seat Madison Square Garden.
They ~rformed for the first time in New York in 1964, also at
the Palladium, then named the Academv of Mus ic. In honor of this
rirs t return, during the group's last two numbers the chandelier
was SWJtched on. Impresario Ron Oelsener said it hadn't been lighted for 32 years.
SPRINGFIELD, Ill
(A p ) -Thirty.six II·
linols legislators have
as ked President Carter
for assurances that a
vote against the pro·
pos ed Equal Rights
Amendment in the IJ.
linois Hous e will nol
jeopardize federal funds
for Chicago.
The bipartisan group
o f legis lators rrom
around the state, 28 or
whom are ERA oppo·
nents, sent a telegram to
the White House Mon-
day in reaction to an al·
leg ation by Phy llis
Schlarly, one or the
a mendment's major OP·
ponents.
Ca n o n
SCHLAFLV SAID
"s omeone high " in
ehicago Mayor Michael
Bilandi c 's
administration told ber
over the weekend that
Carter had threatened to
c ut orr unspectried
federal funds unless the
mayor for c ed
Chicago-area legislators
.to vote for ERA .
Mrs. Schlarty would
not identify the purport
ed informant.
A White HO\ISe aide
denied the allegations.
.. THE NOTION . • • Is
simply unimaginable
and totalJy untrue," saJd
Lawrence D. Gilson, an
official in the White
Hou s e o frl ce that
monitors admlnistraUon
of federal 1rants to
citlea. "AU I can tell you
1s It isn't so. It wouldn't
happen."
Bllandic could not be
reached for comment.
MRS. SCllLAFLV, a
conservative columnlat
from Alton who haa led
the nationwide fl&bt
a1alnst ERA ratlflca·
lion, made her late1t aJ.
le11Uon u the IUinots
Hou1e pre.Pared for o
showdown vote on the
amendment aa early as
WednHday.
;.
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CALIFORNIA Tueecsay, Jun. 20. 1978 OAILV PILOT ~~
Malpractice Suit Won
Father, Son Au:arded $500,000 in Death
SAN 8ERNARDINO tAP • -
A Super•or Court JtJry has
awarded $500,000 damages to the
husband and son of a regiitered
nurse wbo died alter lying un·
conscious in a hospital ward for
almost three da1s While doctor!;
allegedly failed to order test.s to
determme her illness.
The verdict Monday followed
a six-week trial against the San
Bernardino Community Hospital
and Dr. M. N. Estridge. Two
other derendants named in the
malpractice s uit, Dr. Owen
O'Connor and Dr. Clark Fobes.
w e re relieved or their
responsibilities.
TUE PLAINTIFFS, Dale M.
hospllal's emerKency ward Oct.
19 aft~r surrering whal she
believed to be a maid epileptic ~eazure. According to testimony.
O'Connor examlned he r, told her
she had lhe nu and sent her
home.
Two days later she was ad-
m llted lo the hospital in a
sem1comatose state after suffer-
ing what Estridge, the attending
neurosurgeon, diagnosed as a
major seizure.
tor was summoned and Mrs.
Stone was unattended for at
least four hours that day before
an electroencephalogram or
brain wave test was taken on
Estridge's order.
MRS. STONE died the next
day. never regaining conscious-
ness. An autopsy showed she
died or an undiagnosed brain
abscess which caused the epilep·
tic seizures.
Medical experts testified that
had proper tests been performed .,
any time between her first visit
on Oct. 19 and Oct. 23, the brain
abscess would have been found,
and an operation could have
saved her life.
Slone. 32, and his son Matthew
Dale St.one. 6. now of Min
neapolis, filed s uit following the
death of St.one's wife Barbara at
the hospital Oct. 24, 1972.
H OWEVE R, te s timon y
s howed Estridge declded not to
order any diagnostic tests im·
mediately. deciding that
because Mrs Stone was a nµ~e.
he would wrut until she regained
consciousness to discuss the
tests with her.
The $500,000 award was con· A t% _ L p t t sidered an unusually Jarae one n eu.llS ro es
Mrs. Stone was taken to the
But Mrs. Stone later lapsed in·
t o a deep coma and could not be
roused by a n y stimulation.
Tesumony indicated that no doc-
in the .death of a wife and
mother. ll included com·
pensat.ory damages for loss or
Mrs. Stone's earnings and
San Fernando Valley mothers «rnd
children attend a rally during a one-day
boycott to protest bus ing. Attendance al
schools dropped between 25 and 50 per-
cent. with 5chool officie:tls claiming the
lower figure and parents the higher.
general damages.
'Unfair to Poor'
Senate Kills College
Student Fee Bill
SACRAMENTO CAP> -A bill to
allow community college students to
vote "lo charge themselves a student
body foe was killed Monday by thl·
-.tate Senate
The measure. AB 1606 by A~
semblyman Paul .Priolo. R-Malibu.
was soundJy rejected on a 5·27 vote
Cr1t1cs complained that the rew
~tudents they said usually vote an
«>uch elections could force a foe of up
to SlO on the rest of the student body
and that the fee would be unfair to
poor s tudents. I3ut Sen. Peter Behr.
the mca~ure·s Senate sponsor, ~aid
the fee could be waived where it
would impose <f hardship.
Killer Get• Priaon
SAN DIEGO IAP > A JUdge .sen
tencing Jose Gonzalez to prison for
1<illlng a man and wife told him.
"that ~Ives you one f~e murder and
one free robbery."
( SfATE J
the methanol-powered car would
prod Detroit into products that could
run on the fuf•I from agricultural
wa~tl·.
AT&T Stand Taken
SAN FRANCISCO tAP>
American Telephone and Telegraph
Co. says it will not subscribe to any
Pacific Telephone tquity offerings.
Pacific Telephone board president
Gordon Hough said.
GOOD HEWS FOR DIAMOND BUYERS
"I Bought Diamonds
In New York For
Prices I Couldn't Believe."
-RR. (Bab) Rac1t1 , President
Rac1t1 Jewelry Company
#
12Pereent
PSA Seeking
Fare Hikes
SAN DIEGO <AP> -Pacirlc Southwest
a1rlines has petitioned the state Public UUlllles
Com mission for approval of a 12 percent increase
on all fares effectiv~ July l to give the airline
speedy relief from ris ing costs.
The San Diego-based airline submitted the
proposal Monday as rart of a year·long test or dis-
count rares during of hours.
O\JRING THE ONE· YEAR tesC, PSA offen to
provide discount fares ranging about 35 percent
below the new increased fares requested. The cut.
rate fares would be available from 10 a.m. to J
p.m . Monday 'through Thursday lo all passengers
making reservations at least five days in advance.
A commission staff spokesman said no· de-
cision would probably be made before July 1. but some·ag~ment may be reached later that month.
PAUL C. BARKLEY, PSA chief operating of.
ficer and executive vice president, said the plan
would boost t.he airline's revenues by about 7.5
percent. He said the increase was needed to
finance new jeUiners for PSA 's aitng fleet.
State law bans consecutive life sen
tences.
The 22-ycar-old Gonzalez was con-
victed or murdering James and Essie
ECfron In their downtown clothing
s tore last Nov. 2. He was sentenced
• Monday by Superior Court Judge
Earl H . Maas Jr.
AT&T had previously warned it
would have no choice but to take this
stand if a California Public Utilities Commi~ion order relating to Pacific Tel~pttone's taxes had an adverse
tmpact on the company's financial
stability. A PUC decision last Sep-
tember directed Pacific Telephone to
refund S205 million to its customers
and reduce rates by $60 mllllon an-nually. ·
Singer SenteRced
With diamonds appreciating so rapidly Jhese days, Bob Raciti
made a trip to Hew York recently to purchase "a few
diamonds 11 for local investors ~nd personal friends.
Fuel Non-polluting
SACHA:'\lENTO tAP I California
legis lators were permitted to ride
around in tht• fruit of their SH,000 re·
see1rc:h grant a non-polluting auto
that runs on fuel that could be made ,,r peanut shells.
And thev said Monday they hoped
LOS ANGELES tAP> -Country
•md Western singer Billy H. Smith of
Sherman Oaks was sentenced to four
months in prison after pleading guil-1.v to ev;iding federal income taxes of
SB.561.34 in 197l.
U .S. District .J udgc LaughJin E.
Waters s uspended the r<!mamder of
the three-yec.1r sentence Monday and
placed the 44-year-old Smith on five
years· probation.
Prop. 13 Limitation
To Residences Asked
SACRAMENTO <AP> -A con
st1tutlonal amendment to soften lhe
impact of Proposition 13 by re::.trict·
ing tts property tax cuts to res
1denCl'li has been jntroduced in the
state Senate
* * *
Assembly Won't
Take a Chance
On Casino Law
SAC RAMENTO li\P i The
California Leg1~lalure ha!> again vol·
ed d own proposali. for lei.:allzed lot
lcry mad ca::.ino gambling even
Propo::.ition 13 wasn't a strong
enough arguing point
The propos ed cons titutional
amendment for a state-run lottery
failed on a is.41 vote in the Assembly
Monday. with S'S votes needed for the
necessary two-thirds majority.
T H E CASINO-TYPE gambling
m usure died on a 22·52 vote with a
s imple majority r eq uired for
p assage.
The lottery measure, ACA 41, by
Assemblyman Robert Cline. R ·
Northradgc, had oocn defeated 25-43
in March. But he won permlssion
then to bring It up for another vote
after Proposition 13 was approved.
Cline said Proposition 13 created
the need tor replacement money, and
a lottery could bring In $250 mJlllon a
year, compared to the $115 million
the stnte now g.et.8 from horse racing
and Sl30 million from the liquor tax.
B UT ASSEMBLYMAN Mike An.
tonovich. R-Glendale. objected to
"aovernment ritlsing taxe~ by
swlndllna people rathflr than t.1x lnst
them " Other <>PP<H1f'nb 11aJ'f lot·
terle1 1n other 'lllttl' w. n·n't prr'<Juc·
ti\ -es -much f"f¥t-f'l\fe 4t1> •n-
Ucapal.«1
Casino aumblin~ W!IS propo ·etJ by
Assemblyman 8llrry Keene, D Elk.
who u1d "It would be an ¥Qrmous
aource or rundlnc In Callfomla and It
would stop tho flow ol California
money to Nevada."
'
The measure. SCA 66, was in·
troduced Monday while workers in
local governm~nts who said they lost
tht•1r Jobs to Proposition 13 were
picketing outside the Capitol, and the
NAACP was demanding s uch a Dills· type rollback.
THE Ai'1ENDMENT'S author. Sen.
Ralph Oills. 0 -Gardena, said he
rlidn 't know exactly how much rev-
enue the proposal would save for
cities, counties. schools and special
d1strict11.
But he said it would cut Los
Angeles County's revenue loss in half
under Proposition 13. a $7 billion prop-
t·rty tax slash that benefits both res-
idential and commercial property
owners. ·
"I think the overwhelming vote for
Proposition 13 was the high taxes
on residences," Dills said in an in-
terview. "The people were just up In
arms about that particular thing.
They are not worried about an In-
crease on commercial property."
BUSINESS PROP ERTY owners
.. are able to pass off .any tax increases
throu g h hi g her prices. but
homeowners and renters do not have
that ab1lily, he-said.
The amendment would restr ict
Proposition 13's cuts to residences,
including apartments, which Dills
said may result m reduced rents.
The measure, which would have to
be approved by voters as well as the
Legislatut.t. is targeted for a special
e lection that would be held In con-
junction wllb lbe November 1eneraJ
election.
That would tel around the June 29
deadUne for lawmakers to put pro-
posals on the general election ballot
and woutd give them unUI Aug. 15 to act on SCA 66, Dilla said.
llF. SAID THE amendment bad the
bDCkini of I.he AP'L-CIO, Calllort\ia
Teachers AssoclaUon and United
Teacher!'I ot Los An1eles. among
otherl" omrsant rm dH!n't know how
the business community would feel about it.
The measure would also alter 1
Proposition 13 provision rcqultin1 a
two-ttllrda vole ot local 1ovemmenl's
total electorate -not just those vol·
Ina -to raJ.se Liles.
..
Due to the fact that Raciti Jewelry.Company has.become such
a maior West Coa~• diamond buyer in recent years. Bob was
given the royal red carpet treatment by ma;or New York
diamond dealers and was even treated to a tour of th~
prestigious New York Diamond Club.
He left with the largest parcel of diamonds he ever purchased
at prices unheard of by today's standards. Come on in and take
advantage of these fantastic savings on diamonds while the
supply lasts.
Below ~s lust a small sampling of diamond~ pur.cha~ in New
York. Hundreds more are available In a variety of pnce ranges ·
and carat weights. (All diamonds are subiect to prior sale.I ..
These diamonds are priced
at $1,589 per carat
These diamonds are priced
at $989 per carat
Lot Ho. ~ Weight Priu Lot No. s ... WflgM Price
7858 A Oval 1.23 ct. $1,954.47 6103 Round 1.03 ct. Sl,018.67
7858 B Pear 1.25 ct. .1,986.25 5860 Marquise .76 ct. 751.64.
7858 c Marquise 1.14 ct Sl,811.46 5861 Pear .54 ct. 534.06
7858 0 Oval 1.08 ct. Sl,716.12 5841 Marquise .43 ct 425.27
7858 E Pear 1.01 ct. $1,604.89 7611 A Round .70 ct. 692.30
7858 F Pear 1.07 ct. Sl,70013 7611 B Round .77 ct. 761.53
7858 G Pear 1.42 ct. $2,256.38 7611 c Round .74 ct. 731.86
7858 H Marquise 1.08 ct Sl,716.12 7611 D Round .52 ct. 514.28
78581 Pear 1.08 ct. $1,716.12 7611 E Round .41 ct 405.49
7711 Round 1.20 ct $1,906.80 7611 F Round .27 ct. 261.03
7620 Round 1.36 ct $2,161.04 7611 G Round .73 ct. 721.97
~
leMe-.r, Y°" CCIII hcne ...._••a.tied...._. Mt• ... ,., .. cusfOlll ~ped .........
In yellcrw • white gold -~•tile pr••IMs ._.. .t lledtl'a.
In th• Hm bcw cna. Raciti Jew• t Co .. _, Is JM" •• 11., c ...... for .. y..-je.-y ....._
HOURS
MON-FRI
101.m,6 p.m.
SATURC>AV
. .
~
O•••g• eo.. .. o •• ,, p,101 Editorial Page
................................. 111111!1 ........................... _
Tuesoay, Juno 20. 1978
Robert N. WMd/Publilhff
Vote Tally Muddle_
Needs Correction
Final pnmary election return!> wcr4o!n 't avail~ble m
Orange County until 18 hours after the polls closed .
That slow count ranked the county 57th among
Californja 's 58 counti~s in announcing final vote tallies.
As things turned out, however. the slow count was
quick as lightning compared to the time it look to decide
the winners in two election races.
Eleve n days passed before county election officials
were finally able to say who won a run-off spot in the 2nd
Supervisorial District and who won the Democratic
nomination in the 69th Assembly Dis trict.
As time dragged out inthe prolonged vote coun~. first
one reason and then another was given for the delay.
While the reasons given may have been what election
officials like to call "normal clean-up." 11 days of dally-
ing over the vote count shook public confidence.
Waning confidence wasn't improved any when it was
announced Friday m orning the tallies were completed
and then Friday evening it was a nnounced there were
still missing ballots to be counted.
We don't think the democratic processes ar e well
serv ed by such ho-hum vote counting performances.
The Orange County Board of Supervisors should ask
for a report giving the reasons for both the s low initial
vote cowrt and the 11-day delay in settling two contes ts.
Whatever went wrong should be corrected if possible
before the Nove mber e lection.
Mexico's Miracle
The small miracle that seem s to be taking place
south of the border as Mexico taps her amazing oil de·
posits is perhaps the most heartening piece of news that's
come from anywhere in the world in recent decades .
The statis tics border on the incredible. A proved re·
serve of 16 billion barrels in the 200-square-mile "lake" of
unde rground oil. Potential reserves of 120 billion barrels
which approaches Saudi Arabia's estimated 150-billion-
barrel reserve.
Production. which a m ounted to 430,000 barrels a day
at the time of the oil cm bargo in 1973 has now more than
doubled and is expected to reach 2.5 million barrels a
day by 1980 -worth $5 billion a year in export sales.
For a country that h as suffe red. and s till s uffers from
g r.inding poverty and social inequ1ties, and was buffeted
j usl a couple of years ago by double devaluation of the
P<'~O. the whole story seem s unreal.
,.\s Pe m ex engineers extract the liquid gold not
without problems as farmlands are wiped out and local
n ·!'>1d<·nts jolted uncomfortably into the 20th centur_y
go,·crnment planne rs look to a ros ier future when the
m oney rolls in.
Already on the drawing boards .are plans for in·
<Jus trial expans ion. highway n etworks .. public health in·
s ta llalions, including adequate drinking water for all.
drainage and ~ewage treatment ~ystems, hospitals and
schools.
All of this 1s wondrous news for Mexico, and also for
he r neighbor to the north. Not only will it be very com·
forting to h vc rig ht next door to one of the world's
-greatest producers of oil and natural gas: pe rhaps the
Mexico oil boom will deflate the U.S illegal ahen dilem-
ma h y giving he r people good reason to s tay home and
cn1oy a better life.
Post1Wlll's Peril
If you have a m ean <iog a nd don't keep it confined
when the pos tman arrives with the mail. don't be sur-
prised if your mail delivery stops.
That's the word from the U.S . Postal Servke in a
m essage announcing a dog bite prevention campaign.
In addition to encouraging postal employees to take
!'afety precautions to reduce the dog bite injury rate. the
post office has advised delivery personnel that they are
not required to ris k injury by attempting to deliver mail
if an unrestrained animal threatens them at a particular
res idence.
And m ail service lo the residence will not be resumed
until the dog owner gives the pos t office written as-
~urance tha t the a nimal will be controlled during mail de-
li v<!ry hours.
So tie up Fido, or collect your own m<.111.
• Op1n1ons expressed In the space above are those of the Dally Pilot
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
artists Reader comment is Invited. Address The Daily Pilot po
Sox 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321 ' ·
Boyd/ Brides
By L.M. BOYD
Will bet you a small un·
specified s um that no matter
how many church weddings
you 've attended, you 'vc
never seen a bride walk
down the aisle. The aisles in
a church are the walkways
that go lengthwise down both
sides, and they're separated
from the main pillars. What
the bride walks down is the
nave.
Sixty-four inmates 10 the
Berkshire County Jail in
Massachusetts went on a
Dear
Gloomy
Gu
Any Sunday our
h ospital emergency.
rooms are turned into
docto1;s' offices fo r
treatment ol runny
noffS and bellyach
ln th~ confident
knowledge sorrfe froup Insurance plan wil plck
'up the facUJty cost..
J.R C
GI""'/ O•~ etlllllltnlJ ar• •••• =:.-:• ~~ a,,-:t.::-= r:::.:1..-=:-,..:.t" .......
. .
hunger strike Their ~om·
plaints : 'th e food was
abominable, and they were
not allowed lo have seconds.
When it comes lo walking,
sir. if your stride equals 15
percent of you r height,
you're doing it right.
One out of four college
graduates winds up in a job
that doesn't cequire such a
degree.
Q . ·'I las any American pres-
ident died of cancer ?'•
A. U.S. Grant did. Know of
none other. Speaking or
Gra"t. incideAtllll)I, it was at.
his presidenti&I nomination
that a fellow named Roscoe
Conkling coined thal still
popular phrase: "Let the
chips fall where they moy."
Q . "All lobster s have
claws, right?"
A. Not right PacHlc
lob8ters don't.
Oayllght Savlng Time ls
admlnlstcred by lhe U.S.
Department of TransPorta-
lion. Why? Whe,o you con-
sider the tact that Ttme mes.
lt'a lof'IC.1 DST should ~
overseen by the Civtl
Aeronauucs Board. SUlJ, It's
olso lrue that Time marches
on , ao may~ tt ou1hl to
t'Or:ne under the U.S. A~
Jnlentry Never mind, 'on·
ward
Jack Anderson
Teftmsters Strike Alriskan Gold
WASHINGTON -The v1rgtn
s tate of Alaska abounds in
beautiful bays. m ajestic mow1
tains and striking sunsets. But
Alaska 's two mos t notuble
land marks ma y be ltti
multibillion-dollar. oil pipeline
und Jesse Carr.
The two are not mutually ex·
elusive. Carr 1s the blustery,
burly boss of
Team s ters
Local 959.
which seems
to 'have cor-
ralle d just
-about every
working
Alaskan from
policemen to
hi g h school
principals
The pipeline, meanwhile, pump~
oil across the Alaskan tundra
and cash into the Teamsters'
coffers.
According to a confidential
congressional memorandum,
the pipeline has caused the un·
ion pension fund to s well like a
pregnant moose. Each Alaskan
Teamster is obliged to con
tribute $3 per hour out of his pay
to the pension fund.
THE NUMBER of contribul:
ing Teamster s mult1plied
dramatically from 2,891 i,& 1973
to 15,050 by the end of 1975; their
donations rose from $4 .2 million
to $25.6 million. The fund's as
sets now exceed SIOO m1lhon and
constitute an estimated 15 per
cent of all bank depos1l~ 1n the
stale.
Most or the moolah c<tme from
workers on the pipeltne, a tough
breed of men who have gone on
to other jobs and will never
benefit from the huge contribu-
tions they have made.
Declares the confidential
memo: .. Most of the 20,000 men
who have worked on the biggest
private construction project in
the world <t he p1pel1ne1 have
headed home for good, with f~r
few<>r than the 10 yC'ars or
Te amster service in Al aska now
required to gain any vested or
nonforfeitable benefit rights "
THERE ARE also no re
c1procal agreements between
the Alaskan pension plan and
other Teamster plans in thi:
lower 48 s t ales. "In other
words," the memo stales, "a
Teamster who comes to Alaska
from Texas· a nd works there for
four years before rcturnmg to
work as a Teamster In his homt'
Earl Waters
~late will l'et'eive no vested
benefits for his four YfCJrs at SJ
per hour under t he Alaska
plan '·
The memo also 1nd1cates that
the Teamsters may be violatmg
federal pension laws that re-
quire the funds LO diversify in·
vestments "so as to min~ze
the risk of large losses."
M EANWRILE. the enormous
fund has made Local 959 the
ri chest lode in Alaska sin ce the
1897 gold rush. And its leader is
known rar and wide as Boss
Carr. The title 1s undisputed: In
Alaska, Carr is "The Boss."
Footnote· We were unable to
reach Carr at the time w~ re-
~ea rc hcd this s tory. But a
Teamsters spokesman told us
the pension fund wus adhering to
the law Jt":. the l<.1w that s hould
be changed it thet.'e Is a problem.
he said. As for CQrr's power, the
s pokesman s¢d ~wer fs bad on·
ly ir it 1s abus'ea and Carr bas
not a bused his power.
FEDERAL J tJOGES Presi·
dent Carter probably wlll wind
up appo)nling half of the nation's
federal judges before be finishes
his first term. He ls quietly de·
termlned that they won't all
wear the brand or \he American
Bar Association.
Senate-House conferees are
now putting the finishing
touches to a but tharwru create
152 new judgeships. Several
more judges are expected LO re-
tire before 1981. This will permit
Carter to apgolnt more judges
than any past president.
In the past . most judicial ap-
pointments have been cleared
by the American Bar Associa llon . But Jlmmv Carter doesn't
bold the bar in the same rev
ereoce as his predecessors
have done. He recently com-
plalned that the Unlted State~
has "the heaviest concentration
of lawyers on earth." Then he
added wryly: "We have more
litigation, but l arn not s ure we:
have more Justice .• '. We are
over-lawye red and under-
represented."
THIS ATTITUDE pervades
the backrooms of the White
House. A~y General Griffin
Bell. for example. brought to the
Cabinet a merit selection plan
for choosing the new judges."
The president quickly agreed
wilh the idea of merit selections.
But he emphasized that he "does-
not want the membership on
selection panels to be limited to
lawyers.'' Se<:retary of State
Cyrus Vance, according lo tbe
confidential m inutes, "con·
curred."
Bell disclosed that he is "also
requiring nominees to submit to
physical examinations." This
got a rise out of Patricia Harns,
the Secretary of Housing and
Urban Development. "Physical
examinations," she cautioned,
"'should not prevent han -
dicapped persons or those wh~
have overcome heart conditions,
cancer or other afflictions from
serving as federal judges."
T H E PRESIDENT would albo
like to take federal judges out or
politics and appoint only the best
qualified judges to the federal
bench. But in. the past . pres1
dents have been obliged to clear
judicial apRQintments with the
senators from their home states.
Senate Judiciary Chairman
James EasUand. O·Miss , ha~
s erved notice on the White
House that no j udges will be ap
proved by his committee without
senatorial clearance. As a con·
cession. he agreed lo accept only
Appeals Court judges on merit
The attorney general .
therefore. i!5 trying to develop a
merit selection system that the
senators will accept He favon; a
plan developed by Sen. Lloyd
Be ntsen. 0 -Tex. This wottld
permit screening boards to
choose a slate ot candidates for
each judicial vacancy.
Be ll told the Cabinet he
thought this "is a good model"
and he "hopes other senators
can be persuaded to use it."
Brown's Batting Average Looks Worse
That great "silent majority"
that everybody ke pt talking
about finally came out shouting.
The blast was so loud that any
ordinary mortal having been
handed so stinging a repudiation
of leadershlp as the voters gave
Governor Jerry Brown would be
so thoroueJtly
humbled as to
f o r jet -a ll
thoug hts of
the Presiden·
cy. He woulct
e.,.en throw in
the towel on'a
bid for rc-
e lec t ion as
governor and
return to the
cloistered halls to m editate
Of course Brown does not view
himself as an ordinary person.
Still it is now. more than ever,
evident that he is no Messiah nor
even a Moses. I lis attempt at be·
ing a shining knight on the while
horse leading the crusade for
"a new spirit .. has turned S()
sour he is left looking like a
moth·eaten Don Quixote
Jn baseball terms his balling
average on issues wouldn't find
Sydney Harris
him a pface on the bench of a
Lillie Leagu~ team. I le swings
at the wind. ne haS'6lruck 'OUt of
five major proposals put before
the voters along with several
othe r rejections by the elec·
tor ale 4>f his pet ideas
HE OPPOS£D the death
penalty with all his emotions but
over 5 million Californians, m a
better than 2 to l plebiscite, de·
manded the capit:tl punishment
penalty. In 1974 he endorsed the
Wild Rivers initiative lo halt
further dam construction in the
!>l ate It was defeated. Ile has
C'onsistenlly opposed nuclear
power but in 1976 the voters re-
.1ected by more than 2 to l an in-
1 ti at i ve which would have
blocked nuclear power construc-
tion
In .hat same year he not only
'1gorously campaigned for
Cesar Chavez's farm labor in-
itiative but led Jimmy Carter
down the same garden path. It
wa s overwhelmingly defeated
costing Carter this state's elec-
toral votes as well as those of
the mid-west rarm belt states .
Althoui?h these earher set ·
backs provided ample evidence
that Brown is a leader without a
following. the s mas hing ap·
proval of Prop. 13 which Brown
so vehemently campaigned
against, demonsll'at.es how oom-
pletely out of tune he Is with the
majority of Californians .
MORE and more it becomes
obvious uiat if Brown listens to
anybody, and there is considera-
ble doubt that he does. it has
been t9 the whines o( fragment-
ed dissidents seeking privilege
under tM banner or "equa l
rights," or the ·•noble cause" oC
environmental protection.
In pursuit of "social reforms"
he has allowed his theories on
s ocial e ngineering to run
roughshod over the rights, the
needs, and the will of the ma·
JOrity.
WUILE IDS unorthodox style
may have momentarily cap·
t1vated the imagination of a
public turned off by politicians
of the old school. time h as
proved lltobeonly a facade
Many who saw him as some
kiod or a young Lochinvar are
now pointing to lhe polls and the
primary election vote as indica-
tions that his popularity has
slipped. They are impressed by
the fact eight political unknowns
challenging him for the
Democratic nomination polled
over 700,000 votes. They spent
nothing in campaigning. Brown
spent $1 million and still 1 out of
4 Democ rats pre ferred a
"nobotly" to him. More signifi-
cant is the total vote. Combining
the votes cast for Republican:> •
and Democrats 3 million Califor
nians want somebody else while
only 2.4 million still want
Brown.
THE TRUTH is Brown ha.!>
never been popular. He won
election as Secretary of State in
197<> over a completely unknown
by a mere 300,000 out of 6 million
cast. In 1974 he barely squeaked
out a victory for governor over a
Republican who failed to cam-
paign vigorously winning by less
than 200.000 out of 6 million. ·
Two years ago, running as the
favorite son candidate for Presi-
dent, Brown received 2 million
votes whlle 3.7 million Callfor.
nians said they preferred
someone else. That is popularity'•
'Confirmed Bachelor' Now Endangered Species
These.day!> l would hate to be
whac. was known in my parents·
time as a "confirmed bachelor.·
Because the modern translation
of that phrase is "closet
bomosexuaJ." Ask Ed Kooh, If
you don'\ ~Ii eve it.
Mr. Koch, mayor of New York
City, wa~ the victim or o rumor
tnHI durlng
the last
weeks of his
umpa1gn. for
the moyoral·
ty. Slnce he ls
in Ills mtddlo
501 and hu
never mar·
ried, natural· ·
ty the rumors
had to do With
his aUeitd botn0$cxuallty, It got
so bad that he u.ked the City's
Oeputment of Inv Ugatlon LO
look Into It.
I
li e \\ll:. to.di) CIC iHCd, Of
coursf', b~l what 1s interesting ls
the contemporar.r. a ssumption
that any m an who does not
marry lS, per se, a Jover of his
own sex As a statement or
truth. it is on a par with tht'
chouvlnist male a!lsumptlon that
any woman who docs not sue·
c umb to a swain's blandish·
rncnts Is "frili:i d "
I SUSP£CT that the percen
tUg<" or homosexuality has re
m u In\' d about l h c s ttm e
throughout the c~n And so
bu the percentage ot men who
preter to remain unmarried, for
reiu1ons hovmg nothinR to do
with thtS devintion. Some Rre
solllarlcs, some prefer lo play
th~ flt"ld. !\Omc keep " stet1dy
mlalress Cor decade~. whllr
others are simply ncutt'r
I further uspeci that mariy
more men are neuter than we
c.-ommonly s uppose. They have a
low, ba~ly per~plible, sexual
threshold. an<l the whole busi-
ness simply doesn't interest
them. ln past times, they were
n cc epted as ·con ft rmed
bachelors" and no one thought
about it; tod•y. our prurient
.cue!\S would be that they are
"latt>nl" homosexual!\, whatever
that menns
WllEN OOYl.E wrote his
Sherlock HolOl~s sloiics, QO one
took tt 1sk11nce that IJr. W4t{Son,
though married. spent far more or his time with Holmes than
with the UJ\Sttn Mrs W1tson. In
those dnys, th re was a great
deol of "mole bonding."
cspeclotly \n En.JUb oelri)'.
Boys grew up with boys. end-men
sought the comP'n1 ot ltll'D. No
doubt, !\OTrl" wel"C homosexual,
)
but many more were either
robustly heterosexual or Just
neuter.
TODAY, Watson and Holmes
would be s ubjected to lifted
eyebrows, as is any man past 40
who hns nol married. ll ls l rge
ly for this reason that the more
timid or frightent'd homosexuals
have wed and bred children.
which can be a grave disservice
both to wife and family. ComlJ\~
out or the closet is fDr healthier
for them and for society
-1'1'1~ bftt\ R>l' rs bet ween llie
hammtr and Ule nnvlt, and has
become an cndanl(ered spccl~~
In the Western world. Not every.
one cues for Belt. or for
domesticity. and we ouaht to
respect the withdrawn \Uc style at the isolate as much as we pro·
tect the clvll ri&hls or th de·
Viall'
I -
\
NATIONAL TU8$day. June 20. 1978 DAIL v PILOT A 1
··Non-smokers Open Fire on Puffing
.... ., ......
HE BELIEVES IN AMERICA
&~6~:rt;; EllHn
Spelled Luck
By JULES LOH
APS-lllCet'rM~I
MORRISTOWN , N.J . -Lu1,_s Villacorta
doe!>n"t trust much to luck. He talks, almost
evangellstically. about hard work and loyalty and
helping others as the way to happiness.
Yet the day that led to his respect for those
old fashioned virtues was the dav double sevens
ca02e up for him ·
LUIS WAS BORN IN LIMA. Peru, the son of a
doctor. When he was 6 his parents were divorced.
Doth remarried and Luis was packed off to board-
ing schools
"I never knl'w a family. I never knew a home."
After military school he was admitted to the
Peruvian cur force academy but it took only a few c AMERICA
months for him to realize J that was not the career for him. What, then? He
was rudderless.
"Father • ., he said, "I
want to go to the United
States."
IJ E AJD IJE llAD ALWAVS heard that all
things were possible in America. opportunity end-
ll•ss
"I imagined streets of gold and rivers of
:.il ver." he said.
He arrived in New York in January. 1962. He
was 17, spoke only rudimentary English, and
nothing had prepared him for the cold.
I le was not Jong discovering that the streets
-were not paved with gold, but hard concrete, and
that l)eople's hearts could be colder than snow.
T he only work he could find was pushing a cart in
the garment district. By spring be was nearly
broke.
"I KNEW I HAD TO LEARN English to get a
good job. In New York you can get by in any
language and don't bother to learn."
He decided to leave New York. He went to the
hus st atinn and looked around. His eye kept return-
ing to a particular bus: 77-New York to Mor-
r istown.
"Scvcn·scven. I could use some luck."
"Where is Morris town?" he asked the driver.
"In New Jersey."
"Do they speak Spanish there?" "Not much."
'Then I'll go." ·
IT WAS DUSK WHEN T HE bus arrived, and ,
raining. Luis wandered the streets, looking for a
hotel. lluddhng in a doorway against the rain, be
noticed a young man changing a tire. The man's arm
was m a cast and a s ling .
··Everybody drove by Nobody stopped."
Luis left his suitcase m the doorway and went
to help. The two talked. Soon the man knew Luis's
s1tuat1on
"\\'hv don 'l ~·ou come home with me." he said
to Luis ·''We h·ave room I'm sure my mother
won't mind"
"UIS MOTHER WAS MARGARET Pielstick,"'
Luis said. "She was the widow or a minister. She
asked only three questions: Are you in trouble with
the law? No. Arc you here legally? Yes. Do your
parents know where you are? Yes.
"She told me that her house was my house.
Soon I was part of the family. Her sons are my
brothers. Her daughter is m y sister. ll was the
first family I ever knew."
With Mrs. Pielstick 's help Luis found work: at
her urging, he returned to college. He is married
now. a Vietnam veteran. an American citizen. the
-;ucccssful manager of a fine restaurant.
''I HAVE LEARNED TWO things," he said.
''First. what I heard about America is true.
There s till are people here like my American
mother. Mrs Pielstick . Second, if you help others,
good fortune will come. Look at me."
I ..
Five Week
SUMMER SCHOOL
Grade 1-8
June 26th -July 28th
8:30 to 12:15
Phone Registration
Begins Monday, June 19th
631-1639
CHRIST LUTHERAN DAY SCHOOL
760 VICTORIA ST.
COSTA MESA, CALIF.
TOTAL COST FOR THS
FWI WEIK PROGRAM
S75.00 {PAYA.8ll AT s1&.oo PP waeo
NEW YORK !AP> "Smoking
s hould be confined to consenlin&
adults in P.rivute."
"I doo t spit ln your face. please
don't blow s moke in mine.··
A s these slogans from the national
.·nit.smokers' campaign suggest. life Is becoming more difficult for
smokers as their habit clashes with
ever more outspoken non·smokers.
The non-smokers are beyond the
dirty-look ~tage and do not hesitate to
speak sharply on planes, buses or
restaurants. Sometimes arguments
get fiery.
MORE AND MORE, IT also is
becoming illegal for smokers to light
up in public. Only eight states are
without some kind of ban on smoking
in public places, anti-smoking forces
say. Some 100 cities. 25 counties and
15 universities have separate rules
against it. And more bills against
smoking are expected be fore
legislatures this year .
On the fede ral level, the Civil
Aerdnautics Board is considering a
ban on pipe and cigar smoking on
airliners. The board is tied 2-2 and
the fifth member has asked fo. more
time to study the question.
Should the ban pass, a rule against
all smoking on airplanes would be
proposed, opened to public comment
and probably voted on next year.
HEALTH, E DU CATION and
Welfare Secretary Joseph Califano.
an outspoken non·smoker after years
of cigarettes, supports a total ban on
airplane smoking and has pledged to
help cure the country's "most pre·
ventable health problem."
And though he thinks "education
and not regulation" is the answer. >le
said in an interview, the bans against
smoking In public places "are a
healthy trend."
They prevent those who ObJect
rrom becoming "involuntary
s mokers." he said.
"Consenting adults cun s moke m
their own home . ..
CALJFANO ALSO SAID the smok
ing bans mesh with his proposed $30
million anti-smoking campaign for
fiscal 1979 and the new HEW division
on ·smoking and health. He said he
does not object to the "freedom to
s moke ... But I am saying we've
got lo put money into education t-0
combat the tobacco industry's Image
o f the Marlboro man and the
'Consenting adult• . can .,,aolw in tlw:ir
OIDn laotae ••• •
glamorous woman.''
Others are trying to do the same.
There is ASH. the 10-year-old ,
Washington-based Action on Smoking
and Health, which is fighting to in·
crease existing bans. There are the
American Cancer Society and state
lung associations, which are prepar-
ing anti-smoking commercials to be
broadcast this summer .
On the other s ide are the industry-
b a ck ed Tobacco Ins titute 1n
Washington and Smokers United, a
new group in New York pledged to
fight "obnoxious and tyrannical''
smoking bans. HEW proposals and
other proposed anll·smoklng regula-
tions
JAMES STEWART, DIRECTOR of
the new group; said in an interview
that the anti-smoking laws are
"simply unconstitutional." The
"campaign ~gainst the anti-smoking
campaign will be used as a focal
point to say 'stop all this anti-
everything legislation.'" he said.
Stewart, chairman of an insurance
brokerage firm. said his group now
has fewer than 200 members.
·'Two dozen or so are non-
s mokers," he said, ending that the
g roup "has no connection
whatsoever" with the Tobacco
Institute. •
NON ·S MOK E R S, STEWART
added. "can live their lives by avoid·
CAVES BECAME OFF-LIMITS
after a study showed that cave
guides and other employees who
s moke on the job faced an increased
risk of cancer because of the com-
bination of s moking and high radia·
t1on levels in the caves. The high
levels of radiation were round to pose
no danger to visitors.
State laws range from bans against
s moking in "all but the back 20 per-
cent of seats on buses·' in the tobacco·
state of Virginia, to the Clean Air Act
of Minnesota, which prohibits smok-
ing in all public meetings and public
places except bars.
Bans in other states and cities cov-
er everything in between. Some laws
ban smoking in certain stores or in
all stores, in elevators, in churches
and in schools.
ing place& with smokers i! they so A.MONG ODDITIES, 1r is illegal to
choose. I'm going to continue refus-s moke in bed in Independence, Mo .,
mg to give up anything, because this and Indianapolis.
IS an invasion or my individual ln Montgomery County. Md., tbe
rights." ban Includes opera houses, of which
ASH director John Bahnzaf dis· there are none. In Sacramento smok-agreed. mg is banned in alt shops except those selling tobacco.
"There is an old legal maxim -my ; State or local laws require man-
right to swing my fis t ends where your datory non-smoking restaurant sec-
nose begins," be said. adding that lions in Alaska, Arkansas, California,
smokers are "not given a constltu-Michigan, Minnesota, North Dakota
tionally protected right, but a and Utah. Such a law takes effect in
privilege." New J ersey early next year, and 17
One-third or all American adults s tates are cons idering s imilar
older than 21 are smokers, according legislation. Some restaurants and
to government statistics. Federal reg-businesses have voluntarily created
ulations now ban smoking on buses. smoking and no·smokmg areas.
planes and trains except within
s pecified areas. The government also
probibits smoking in coal mines. oil
and gas wells, and caves .
M EANWIDLE. ALL SIDES on the
public smoking issue agree that en-
forcement is next to impossible.
" " I dorino ... 11 Me f lomowow,
whevi I +ly on rny 1 vac.aliori ! '
r----
\
a
Unit.eel gives you more of tis
great land any other airline.
Now when you take off in the friendly skles, you can
take off 40% to more cities than ever before.
Just fly Monday thrbugh Thursday to any United
city, Hawa.11 and California i.Ot.raSta.te flights excluded.
save 30% when you fly Friday through Sunday. Kids
under 12 travelin.g with you save 50% off regular
Coach fare. Make your reservations and buy your Super Saver
ticket 30 da.ys before departure a.nd stay 7 to 45 days.
Return flight reservations may be cha.nged, but you
must do so at lea.st 30 days before the new date of
your return.
Seats a.re llmited. So call your Travel Agent. Or call
United at 537-7521. Partners in Travel with Western
Intern.a.tional Hotels.
The American Express" card. Dontt leave home
without it.SM
To make your
vacation even easier to
ta.ke, you can extend
p88J!lents on the
American Express
Ca.rd "Sign & Tra.vel • "
plan. If you don't have
the American Express
Ca.rd, call toll-free
( 800) 528-8000 for an a.ppl1cat1on.
Super Saver to 81 cities
.A.krOn
.Allentown
Baltimore
Ba.yCity
Bethlehem
Birm1ngha.m
Botse
• DetNit
Boston
Buffa.lo
Canton
Cedar Rapids
Charleston
Cha.rlotts
Cha.tta.nooga
Chicago
Cleveland
Columbus
raven port
DE13ton
Denver
Des Moines
Durham
Easton
Eugene ...
Flint
FortWayna
Grand Junction
Grand Rapids
Greensboro
Hampton
Hartford
High Point
Huntsville
IowaCit.Y
Kansas City
KnOxville
Lansing
I.as Vegas
LiDcOlI\
Medford
Memphis
Midland
Milwaukee
Moline
Muskegon
Newark
Newport News
New York
Niagara Falls
Norfolk
Oma.ha
Pendleton
Philadelphia.
Pitta burgh
Portland
Portsmouth
Providence
Raleigh
:Reno
Richmond
!Wchester
!Wck Island
Saginaw
Sa.lam
Sa.It Lake City
Sea.ttle
Sha.rOn
South Bend
Spokane
Springfteld
Ta.coma
Toledo
Toronto
Vancouver
Virginia. Beach
Warren
Washington, D.C.
W1111a.msburg
· Winston-8a.lem
Youngstown
lfobody beaW United's Super Saver Fare. lfobody.
l')J the friendly sides of.Unit.eel.
Ill ......... __ ,
..
•1'
·-
Jla DAILY PU.Cl ,~., J\IM 20 '"'
TH~ f MIL l ' ORCt1 •
"I'm jvst prefendin' I'm on avto maker and I'm
recalling this cor."
For the
Record
Blrtlt•
iAlf C&AME"T•
oa1eaaA1. NOS .. ITA'-.,_,mt
Mr • .,,,. """" 0.rrrl Gllle$Plt, W.. c:Hmentt. DOv.
-'--'· "" Mr, •nd Mil Sttven Wt DD, S•n Cl-te,bOy. -'-•.1m
Mr. tNI Mn.. Mlc:'-l "'"""·Oen• l'o4~. Olrl.
Ml. •nd Mr\. llOIWlld Odom. o .... Polnl. llOy.
Mr. •"d Mrs. ltylor Toomey,
~un• 8eec:11. vlrt. Mr. tnd Mr•. Arturo Gontalt" C.Olttra110 llNC.h, boy
J-.10. 1'11
Mr. tftd Mrs Gur Cl•r. Stn Clemente. Olrt.
Mr. •M Mo. 0119 C..rltlOll. Ml\>IOll Ille lo, 9lrl
JllM11. ltll
>Ar tt>d Mr\ Rooert B~ltY. !kin
Clementt. o•rt
J-u. "" Mr. •nd Mo Tlmoln• POnder. S..n Cll'me~tt. oort
Goal R eveale d
LOS ANGELES fAPl
-The prcserval1on of
his toric Los Ange lf's
landmarks is the goal of
a new group called the
Los An~eles Conservan·
cy
Death Notice•
'1DCE 1110n4US
SMITHS• MOllT\IAIY
627 Main St
Huntington Beach
">38-6539
SHlfffl MOITUAaY
976 So Coast Hwy
Laguna Beach
494·1535
1533 N El Cammo Real
San Clemente 492-0100
nOFAMILY
COLOHl.U fUNfll,U
HOME
7801 Botsa A11e
Wes1m1ns1er
893·3525
PACIFfC YllW
MlMO•IAl PAIK
Ceme1erv Mortuary
Chaoe1
3500 Pac1l1c View Onve
Newpon
Ca1tlorn111
644·2700
M1:COllMICIC
MOITUAllllS
Laguna Beach
494-94tS •
Laguna Hills
768-0933
Sal'I Juan Capistrano
495·'776
IALT%·1H~t•OM
.J.UMHAL HOMI
Corona del Mar 673-9450
Cosra Mesa 646·2424
HU.HOADWA't'
MOtTUAIY
110 Broadway
Costa Mesa
6•2·9150
$MIT'H-TUllflU.-UMI
MOITU.UY
WtsTCUff CHAm
427 E 171h St
Co61aMesa
~
c
Irvine Youth
Named Ensign
Michael G. Mallnick,
son of Mr. a nd Mrs .
Michael Ma linick of
18822 Via San Marco,
Irvine, has been com-
mi ssione d a Navy
ensign and received a
BS degree upon gradua.
tion from the Naval
Academy in Annapohs,
Md.
M alinick
graduate of
1Jigh School.
is a 1973
University
Law Students
On 'Review'
Two Orange Coast $lu
dents have been named
case and note editors of
the We!-itern S t a l e
UnivHs1ty Coll c~c or
Law of Orange County·~
"Law Review "
Th ev arc Mike
Merline· (If Huntington
Beach and Tom Rin gers
of Laguna Beath
Deat
Deaths
Elsewhere
Soviet
Topic
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITtOUS CU"NIU NAMt STAHMINT I"• to11owlnQ .,.,_, ••• Oo•"ll
Du\ff'M\\ ••
ICIYO'S SHO,. .in Edlnqt•
AYtt>W, ,_..., Vtlley, t.llll0tn1a
tl10t
Slated
Mtkoto Holdt. '021 LI•''" CJ•Llt
"-"'" v.i1w. c.i1ror"'• tllot 1t1yo ..,,,.. H91CN, ton Ullttft '" (It, ,o...,teln v11tey C•lltornl• '1108 1 f hi\ !Xllll\ft\ It (-l>(tl!O by .n In
Th~ Orangu Coufi(y
chupter or lhc Construe
tion S pec1flcallons
Jnstatule will meet July
11 at 6:30 pm. ut the
Alrpo rt~r Inn, 18700
Ma<:Arlhur Blvd .,
Irvine.
'\'be program wlll be
on ··Engineering and
Construction In the Sov
let Union," presented by
James Amrhein. direc·
tor or engin eering.
Masonry Institute or
America.
01¥10..al
MlkOto HOllU
llll• >ltltf'*1f W .. \ lilfd Nlth Ille
County C.l•<k ot <J•.n04I C.ounty on
Jun•'• "" l'ttSIN Publl•~ 0.M9 Cont 0•1ty PllOl.
J1Jr1f I) 20, 11..-d July C, l~I·
1l0Hf
PlJBUC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOc.IS eut lNU$ .. .,.._ STATllMINT
I lie lot1owlr>0 Ptrwnt •r• do•nq bu\I.,.\\ n
IU!SE•UIO. ANO CONStH,.TING AUOCIAtES, ~21 W Mt<Artnur
8tY<IDf sr::i•:n:111~~~'6!:c1t11 CtrCle,
Newport .. .Ch, C..llloml• tiMO
Or M. '""""'· tut Ooldtn Clrctt, Ntwe>Ort 6ff<lt, C..lllo..nle '*° fltl• butfMU I\ <...0UCltd llY t
09Mr11 pt•tw,.Y,lp
PUBLIC NOTICE
RescrvaUons at $10.50
can be made by calling
the C.S.I. office at ~3·8225. or m ailing l'e·
!'le r v atlons to Frank
Dave. Masonry Trade
Promotion of Orange
Co unt y, 4050
M et ro poll tan PI ace, , __ P_U_B_LJ_C_N_O_T-IC_E __ 1
Orange 92668.
Appointed
Jann Chu r ch of
Newport Beach has been
named a director of the
University of Southern
California Al"chltt>ctural
Cuild. Ms. Church 1s
.pres ident or Jann
Church Advertising and
Graphic Design.
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOYS 8USl"ESS
NAME STATEMENT
l l\e 1o11.,..1nq person lio ooono bu11
flf'S~ b\ SUPER sr c. SECRETARIAL
SE RViCE. m r11ird Slftel Su•U. J.
1.aourfll 8e&ch.C..l1forn1&~?6St
MerQtrft O W•ll&ee. lS S En
(JnO. Soult>~ .... C..1110<1\ld q?611
l hi\ l>Y\IMSS I' tondu<lfd bV "" On C11v1dua1
M&rqarfl D W•llaci> ln" ,,,t...,..,1 w•~ 111.0 wltn ll>t
Counlv Clerk 01 Or•nr.lf County on June<>. 1t1e
l'Ott.IM
Pubh\l\fO 0r.,. CW\1 Dally Piiot.
'""~ 1l 10 21 -JUiy •. ''" 11""·1•
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTlCE
PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE
OBITUARIES I LOCAL
PUBLIC NOTICE
,.CTITI<Mn •lnlNQ.t
HAMll'l'AHMINT
The lot1owln11 ""Oii\ ere tlo1"9
°"~'""' ... THI OAU.lltV A-AltfMIHTS,
1411 Wut ~ll *'"'-AMMtm, CA 92t01
0111119r ,..,..,., '""' 0.1.0 Aprtt 4, 1'11, UC Venture 0.1¥1, Huft!•
ll'ltt8ft0t.O..CA~
.Altll O.U.r. Trldl•, nei v ....
ture Orlw, H1111t1not011 8tK'll, CA
9264' ~"-c. O..•. ~ v ... i.... 0rl¥e, Hul!ffl\llOft 9Mcl\, CA~
Tiii• bu•I~ It <onlJlitt.O by t11..,..
l"'o<Mttl.O ~let~ Ol"9r ~ •
Otrl "'' t/1111. Alt110.-.
,,..,_ c>eno °'""'' Tr"'""
Tiii• at•l-t ••-' filed with the
c:ou,,tr Clttti of ~t/191 C:.OV..tr Oii """9 I, I f1t. """4M
P\ltllfll!M Of .... C:O.M 0.lly PllCH.
~ •• u. ~. 11, .. ,.
PUBUC NOO'ICE
•
ORANGE COUNTY I AT YOUR SERVICE l ueedey. JUM 20, 1971!1 DAILY PILOT .49
MesanSues
Over Tree
A Co la M4 1a
homeowner has gone Lo c o u r t i n· a b i d t o
force his neighbor to trtm
or remove a »toot pine
tree that ovethaqa his
property.
J oseph A . Mareno
claims in h1s Orange
County Superior Court.
laws uit that the tree
o wned by Richard and
Beverly Wiilson, 2737
Freemont Lane , en·
dangers the safety of
himself and his guests.
Ma r eno, of 2741 Free-
mont Lane, alleges that he
s uffered injury reeently
when branches from the
t.ree fell on him whtle he
was r esting in h is
backyard. He additionally
seeks $489,000 in damages.
VC lrrine Jtleel
Media Worksh---
On Courts Slate
Journalists and lawyers from
throughout Callrornia will
gather at the UC Jrvlne campus
this week for a two-day "Media
Workshop on News and the
Courts." Featured speakers in the
sessions Friday and Saturday
wlll include J . Anthony Kline,
legal affaJrs secretary to Gov.
Edmund G. Brown, Jr. Los
Angeles Times repor'ter Bill
Farr and California Judges
drawn from both the s uperior
and municipal co4rt systems.
Among the topies to be debat-
ed in the two-day seminar are:
"Shared Ethics of Courtroom
Coverage," '"Libel and Invasion
of Privacy," "Cameras in the
Courtroom?,'' ''Sent~nclng
llow Long and How Much?" and
"Juvenile CQurts."
The workshop, a repeat of a
session staged last year at UC
Berkeley, is s~red by the
California Judges AssoclaUon,
the Westenf Newspaper Founda·
lion and the Callromla Broad-
casters Association.
Organizers said they expect
more than 500 participants at
the UC Irvine ssion.
Padllers Safe Onlfl 11 •••
DEAR PAT: I'm expecting my first baby. and
recall reading that new safety regulations art! ln
effect for pacifiers. Can you tell me what they
are? I was given several at. a baby shower and
want to make sure they're sate.
G.M .• Mission Viejo
New Coasamer Product Safety Commission
standards, effedJve Feb. 26, problblt the sale of •
pacifiers with t'bbons, cords or 1lmUar Items
attached them for banging around a baby's
P h d neck. In addition, au paclflers will bave to carry a arent 00 label statlnf.! "Warning, do not tie pacifier
aroand child s neck as it presents a stnngalation
Cl 0 danger." The paclllers also mast bave a guard or
GI cs pens shield large enoag.b that the eJlUre Jtem cu.not be
aa drawn into tbe cblld's moatb. And the sbJeld must
A course in preparation for have at least two ventllator boles to allow
parenthood will "begin July s al breathing If Lhe paclfler sbolald be swallowed.
Teacher Exams Set
the Red Cross Chapter Head-quarters, 601 Golden Circle Dlaplarap Scare an Error
Drive, Sanla Ana. DEAR PAT: I read an Associated Press arti-
.. The class w.lll meet from 7:30 cle recently which stated that diaphragms, along
to 9: 30 p. m ,. on seven con-· h IUDs d '1f ill h bee ._ ... secutive Wednesdays. It will in-wit an U! p • ad n lmplica\CU in heart attacks. stro es and recurring vaginaJ infee-c I ud e pregnancy, labor and lions. J always thought th& diaphragm was one of
birth, and infant care. the safest forms of birth control. Is ·there some
··cot o problmi., Thtn wntf' to Pot Dunn. Pot will
c1't red tape. gettmg thf answtta and actton ~ n.ecd
to aolve ~lt~$ tn gotu!Tllm~ and ~u. Meal
your queatton.t '" Pot Dunn. At Your Snvlcl', Orange
Coast DoUy Pilot. P.O. Bo.z 1560. CO$ta Me.a. CA
92626. Al ma:l'IJI kUtrs o.r possible wdl be ~ed.
but phontJd inquiries or kttn• not mcluding tM
readtr"I J1'll nome. addre1s and ~u houri' phone
numberconnot be con.stckred. Thiacolumnapptor• dat-
ly ercepl Saturdays." •
IUD, wblcll are known to have poulble 1e....OU
compUcadoaa.
Dr. Kelli added daa& &be IUD eu be dugerou
to womtn wltJI a blstory of rtlftmaUc lteart dll·
ease. Became &be IUD I.a a110Clated wtu. latte·
Uoas In tbe aiertne Jlnlng, Dr. Ir.en& .. )'• &M
PN•lbWty exlata tha& IUda lnfecUolu eoa.ld ,.......,
damage bean valves. Be added Utat a.. Food ud
Oras Admlnl.atnUoo bu adwbed ••• wtu. a bl1tory ol rbeamaUc bean dbeue to avoid UM
IUD.
BeaUla Ce~ Traf'eb Too
DEAR PAT: I'm planning to travel In Europe
this summer. U I should become ill or injured
while there, will my health insuunc. cover the
cost ot medicaJ care?
W.L., lrvtne
Private beJltb Insurance reimburses for
medical expeases loctUTed overseas -Earope.
Sooth Amertca; Alrlca, Aaia or anywtlere else -
tbe 11me u It does for medical upeues lnearred
In the United States. las& be sue to get an
Itemized reeelpt. Wben you ftUD'n, aead I& &o the
Insurance company with Yolll' dalm for nlm·
banement. or nbmlt It to yoar employer'• P"4MIP ln1urance. July 15 at DC Irvine
The National Teacber Ex-
aminations ~ll be held at UC
Irvine Saturday, July 15.
Dead line for registrallon 'is
Thursday.
day registration i s not
Cancer Screening new research that. indicates otherwise? Rellli1tf1 Same aa Fini TlllN' " J .H .• Costa Mesa .
permitted. -
Applicants may register for
the common examination, which
includes tests in professional
and general education. or one of
21 Area Examinations, designed
to probe knowledge of particular
s ubject matter and teaching
methods.
Dr. Deryck Kent, assistant professor of DEAR PAT: How do I amend my tax return ar Se_ t for Newport gynecology and obstetrics al UC Irvine MedJcal I did not deduct ,St.ate Disability Insurance pay-
Cen&er, says the AP story appears to l>e lo error. ments on my 1975, 1976or 1977tax returns?
A free screening for coloreclal He reports that the diaphragm. along with J .J ., Newport Beach
cancer wiU be offered June 28 at spermicidal creams a6d Jellies, is not to bis IRS says .State DlsablUty Insurance (DSI> Scores Crom the examinations
are used by states for certifica-
tion or teachers, by school
systems for selection and Iden
tification or leadership qualities
and by ~lleges as part of their
graduation requirements,
the American Cancer Society, knowledge associated with heart disease or PIYIJ!eD&s oiay be deducted lo &be year ln wblcb
4030 Birch St .• Suite 101 , strokes. and In fact appears to give some protec· they .were wlt.bbeld by the state, lf you llemiied de-
Newport Beach. lion against both vaginal ancl uterine ol' tubal lo-ductions on Schedule A. You must Ole a separate
The screening will be held,-fedlons. He says the physicians In the AP utJcle, Form UMOX for each year you wish to amend your
from 11a.m.to2 p.m. The group which was concerned wllb a new birth control tax retorn. A completed Schedule A wllb the SDI
recommends that anyone over method based on using macons seerellona and entered mast be Included with eacb 1148X. The tax
Registration forms and in-
structions may be obtajned from
Gloria Sims. assistant to the
credential counselor, Room 417,
Social Science Tower. UC
Irvine. lrvjne, Calif. 92717, or
directly from National Teacher
Examinations. Educational Testing Service, Box 911, Prlnce-
tol\. New versey 08541. Same·
Upon completion or reglstra·
lion procedures each candidate
will receive an admission ticket
and notification of the eXiiCt
local.ion of the testing center.
Those taking the common ex-
amination will report at 8:30
a.m. and finish about 12:30 p.m.
A r e'b c x a m I n a t i o n s a re
scheduled from l :30 p.m. to
about 4: lS·p.m.
40 have such a test yearly. In-variations In body temperatW"e to determine the musfbe reeompu&ed using the medtod of comptit•·
formation is available by calling time of ovalatlon, may bave acddealally men-tlon and tbe tables appropriate or tbe rate 752·8600,.~p~~~~:~n:~o~~~~!~~~c·AT-AL i~i-~A-·
neeYele~s Open
The OC Irvine Recycling Center
will be open four days a week
throughout th~ summer months.
are used to sponsor speakers an(j
films on environqiental · issues on
campus.
The center. located in the UCI cor
poration yard on Jamboree Road one
block south of Campus Driv~ is
operated by student members or 'the
UCI Environmental Coalition.
THE CENTER IS open Tuesdays
· and Thursdays from 1 to 6 p.m. ;md
Saturdays and Sundays from 11 a.m.
ACCEPTABLE materials for re· cycling include newspapers, ledger
paper, brown paper sacks, telephone
books. magazines, cardboard .and
computer paper, clear a nd colored
glass and aluminum, steel., tin and bimetal cans.
to 4 p.m. ·
Proceeds from ~_, recycling center
More information on the UCI Cooperative flecycllng Center may
be obtained by calling 833-5547.
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE Jl'-lJBLIC· NOTICE
fllCTITIOUS 8USINUS fllCTITIOUS 8U$1NUS SU .. £RIC. COURT Of' Tif•
NAME STATEMENT NAME STATEMENT STATE Ofl CAlll'OttNh\ POil TM lollowlnQ per~ ,, 0011>!1 bU•I-T ... follOWll\Q l)er$On' are dolno THE COUNTY Ofl ORANGE ~' n : IMISl~S u · NO .... -.
BENTLEY PRICE ASSOCIATES TAOJAN OF NEWPORT BEACH ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE
1117 s. 54411• (.Ollf9e BIYCI . Sul"8 200. • Dovl~ ol Oe4 Merco. Inc. l* In Ill• Meller ol -"ppl•U110ft of AMhelm. CA9?D Illa Diiorio, !tulle•, Newp<>n BHcll. OA\110 GARRETT CASTLETON for
O.nnl\ P. Rouo, 1711 S. Stele CAlltornla '*3 Ola,,.. ol Heme.
C.Olleet BIYCI . Sulle XJO. AN1ne1m, CA Del Men:o, Inc., 1 C.lltof'nla cor· WH"EAEAS, D&vld Garrett <Alli.ton 9ll06 porallon. 1•'° Hartl« lsl*'ld !Klvw, llu llled Ns petition wltll Ille Clffk of
Tiiis ~~• '' condu<led t>y en on San Dieoo. CAlltomla '2101 llllt c.ovrt IOI' permisiiotl lo c~ ""
dlvieh>el. n11s t>uslnf'a I> conclu<1ed l>y • <or· name from Oevld C..rrell C.Slleton 10 0.-• P Rouo porallOn David Brouollton C.slltlon, now.
· Tiiis stat-I w•• toled woltl the ~I M.tn:O. Inc. tnerelort.
County Cltrk ol Orang. County on J. F. Miiter, Presloent IT IS HEREBY OROEREO t ... t ell June 1. 1'71. This s1a1ernent was llltd with ttw perwns ln.O lnternt«t In the matter
fltffUI County Clerk of Orenoe C.Ounty on atorts11ld .,,.,.., el 100 Clvk Center Put>ll~ OrenQP Coasl Odoly Piiot, June 12. 1911. Ddve WH I. S...t• Ana. C.lllOmle. In
June•. 13. :io.11, 197• fl°"'1t O.~rt'-11 Jon July II, ttle. •I 11 00
21.,. Publlllleel Oraqm CoHt 0 .. 1., P1to1. O'clock • m of wld d&v. end then -----------1 JuM20,21,andJiirv•.11.1971 •no there show c&u5e. If..,., ti..., 2391·18 have, wny wld 4"11111<.etlon for~ Of name SllOuld not lie or ..,led. PUBLIC NOTICE , .......
NOTIQ TO CREDITORS
SU .. ERIC>tt COURT Ofl THE
STATE Ofl CAlll'OllHIA l'Olt
TH 1. COUNTY Ofl ORANGE
Ho.~I
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED INt •
C09Y of INS Order 10 ~ Cause bt
l>UbllsMd In IN Orano-Cot\! 0.lfy -----,.-.,.,-.,.-----1 Piiot. a~ ol oeneral <lrcu1 .. ~ .... lc-1ofL" lion. pu1111,11eo In tht County of
PUBLIC NOTICE
Cen'I* .ludklel Dlatnct Oranoe. tor IOIK <GnW<utl ... weeu. IOftS,~Strwl DATED:Junel,191'
E\lale o l BETTY COSBY
l'IAltNEfT, ak• BETTY C .. IH-, C.tiforllje ,,,., Bruce W Sumner
SUMMONS Ju«IP ol lhe S<lc»rlor Cour1
C:... H~,.... Ot1teftlt, Ellt-U.&Sllupe BARNETT. Oe<M-.
f<IOTI CE IS HEREBY GIVEN to the rrtdllou Of IN~ na~ Mcedenl Plelnllll HUSSEIN A BARO
1r..1 ell per~s havlnc;i tlaoms &Qaonsl Deltndenl GENE ROSA REYES, IN wlo Oe<edent art r~uol?d to Ille JEAN ALLEN ESCROW COMPANY. 1"9m. with aw M<ttW<Y voucher~ on INC .. end DOES I lhrOUQll X. ln<lust~
41Mt efflct ol tM tle<k Of Ille lll>O"" en NOTICE I y., Mve .... ---. Tiie titted U>Urt. O< 10 pr-nl lllem. with Iha necos•rv YO\Khers, lo Ille ur» court may 419<1* ...,Ml .,._. wllhtut
dersl9neo &I the law Office 01 , ..... M l,.. llNt" """'' .,_ '"'°"° .YILLIAM II SCHMiDT, JO S•n ::!::!: ... .,.. ....... lflfwlll•tleol
Mlo11el Drive. Suole 300, NewPOrl AlllSol ~ "-~ ....,..... ..
lleecll, Calilom•• ~. wn1c11 ;, the Et Trt""81 --dK!dW Mitra 'u._ piece Of lllntnMs ol Ult llllCIMS•!IM<I 1n ...--<
Attorneyutuw
ZJUJ Cabot Ad., Sutt• 201
U.u,.. Hiii•, CA ti.SJ
Tel; ll14l1 ... lff1
Allonteysf .. .....,"-
Put>hshed OranQe Co.Isl O.lly Piiot.
June IJ, 20. 21nndJuly4, 1971
PUBLIC NOTICE •II mall..-s perL111"'no 10 tr.. ttlat• 01 '1" •IHI~• _, -UCI. ""-~Id NUdtnl wtlhln lour month' de ...,,,. • JO .W.t. Le• le l"forme· 1-----------1 .. • cto" que JI.... • ttttt ~!::e In• lint PYlll•tdllon of 1"'' 1 TO THE DEflENDANT· A clYll HOTlca TOClt•OITOU
Da~ MllV JO 1918 <omPl•lnt l\llS lite<\ llled b't 1111 plat~ NO. A-9S96f
GE ' llH tQelMI you.. SU .. ERIOll COUllT OP TME NE HENRY BARNETT • II vou Wl$11IOdltend1114• 1-sull STATI o• '•Lt-·Ht• ·o-Exe<utor ol lhe Wiit ol · • ,. ._. .,," ",. .. the-. named~· you m11sl, wttlllfl lO OeYl ...... tllll THE COUNTY OP ORANG•
WILUAMll SCMMIOT 'umm0tu Is ,.,_ on vou. Ill• Will! In Ille Mell~ of tht Est.ti• Of 0 .. AL · tllls court • written pleadln9 in M. COUNTS Oec:NWd :.:::...~~=.-' rnponse lo the tomplllnl. 111 • Notice la i.r.fJ'( oi~ 10 credl'°'s
Ot4t-.tm • Ju1llc• Court. vou .--1 Ill• with Ille hevlno clelM> '9'1nsl Ille Mid ~e·
Al..,..rterE..allW cou11 • wrll!MI ...-ino "' c.u .. .., dent 10 file Mid clelms It\ tht Offk• ot ~Wied Oranvo Goest Dell Piiot oral Pltedlng lo lie enttreo In Ille Ille Clerk at the ...,...._ICI court M 10
June• 11 20 21 191, 1 Clo< ketl. Unteu you 00 '°· your detlMlll present ti.em to tht undtr1'9neel et Ille
• ' ' • lt~1' will l>etnlef'tdl.CIOll"PPll<atlonofllMt office of IUATON. GAULDI N,
--------.-.::.=-'~111.-lnllff. end ttlls c-1 ,,,.., tn1ff a THOMSON & NELSON. llH S
PUBLIC NOTICE lud91M111 ~I you for In. relief de-Palnltr A-. Whltlltr. c.tltonl,.
m•ncHd It\ Ille compl .. nt. ""kh <oukl toto02, ""~ leltw offl<e 11 tht pl.tee ot
-----------rew11111 ..-nl~ ol w'9ff, lell ... blltlness ol.,. Yftdltn....., In'" mM fllCT1TIOUS IUSINES$ Cit mono"' prqierty Of Olller relief,... ten Ptrletnlno to said HI.Ille. Suell
NAME STATIEMEHT qu.sted In llletomplillnt. tlalms Wllll tht NUSMr"\I 1toucne,.,
T"9 tollowtf!Q pwlGft Is dOlllQ l>usl· ti. It JW wttll lo-" Ille Mvlu tt mull l>e fllecl or 111'9Hftlecl es •foreseld
MU as: • llfl .__.,Ito WI_._,,....-.... wlltlln four months •lier tne llrst OC»IEC:O CONSTRUCTION CO . ff M ,....,..,., • .... .,_ writtM pu!lllUllOll Of 11'111 nolke.
1rrss .. aim S«" Fountain Valley, u. """""·"_.,,....., .. w...u-. 0.led: MeYM. 1'111 ,,._ O.lff DK. 14, 1'77. Gemet Elmer Caueiman, Jr.
OoMld EuQeM Cortis. 111ss Palm J.H. Oofftel. o.rtt Execlllor of the .,111 •
SI •• Fountain ll•ll•v. CA'270e l'lyJ.llci'wtlnlJ.Oel!UIY of Mid~'
TMs llu>I""" I>~-by.,. If>. CSEALl . 8UlllTON, OAUU>IN, THOMA$
dl¥ICllHI. CHAlllL.al A. OAHGt.Of'P • & N•UON
OoAelcs E. Cort" ASSOCJATU AtWIOe.,.at u w
Tiiis stet..,_. w.s flltd "'"II lht Jl9 Wtal .........., , ... J .... ..._A-
Govtlty Cle<11 o1 Orenoe <:ovnty on &.Mlt .. ~CA~ Wlllttltr,~teMI
Juna 1, 1'1'. Tat: ctU l UM'ltt Putlllsllecl OrellOt eo..i Delly Piiot ~ Putlllallecl 0re11Qe CAIHI 0.lly PllOC. M41y 30 4tllCI J\llllt '-u .10, 1t11 •
l'\e!IP!eO 0r-. C:oest Oelly Pllol, Mty 30, June•. U, 20. 191t 21~11 J_._ u,:ao, v. im *>-"i----------~ ~--------1°'~111'1------------1
PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
Organs New ... 425 P-"99" cruite ship "Catalina Holiday ..
,tH:tory ,lmlncl,., laav• 9 :00 am dally from the Balboa Pav1hon 6nd
LESSONS INSTRUMENTS la...,ws Avalon· et 4:30 pm. Round Trip .••
•• S11.00. Un~ 12. .• $5.50. Rft«Vattons Ii II ~~+iR & lnf0fnwt1on:"1714} 67:U246.
,..,... llleftd MCM020
llOklPlll. ... t
ave
Mos t people are surprised to find how
little It costs to Insulate their home.
Even when they have an expert do the
insulating for lhe m.
Properly l ns ulatcd. your house needs
less heat In winter. And tn summer
youratrcondltionerdoesn't have to
work nearly as hard.
Whtch means you save on your
energy bills. Ev ry month. For as long
as you own your home.
And with the cost of all energy
headtng htgherand h igher. lnsulattng now
wlll save you more and more in the future.
Get a free estimate by calling an In-
sulation contractor. (You can get fi ls
number from the Yellow Pages.) O r call
the Gas Company. Our toll-free
number Is 1-800-252-9090. (From
area code 209. call 2 13-689-3334
corlect.)
Demand Is heavy. so call soon.
The sooner you call. the sooner
you can start saving.
Dolit wait. Insulate.
. .
.I. .. • • • ..
,IJ8 OAiLY PILOT T ....C.~ JUN 20 \911 ENTEAT AINMENT
Emcee Looks Back at Queens
Airport
Bound!
•~w....,....
HE CROWNED TV'S TEMPORARY QUEENS
Retired Emcee Jack Balley
Housewives' Dreams Came True
LOS ANGELES (AP> -It's been
more than a decade since Jack
Bailey lust dabbed away tears rrom
the eyes of one of the 5,000 problem-
plagued housewives he proclaimed
•·Queen ror a Day." But to hear him
talk, the show he emceed for 20 years
could have ended just yesterday.
Bailey, who spends most of his
time painting and making an oc·
casional foray onto the lectur e
tircuit. reminisced fondly about the
daily program he nursed from its
World War II radio days until U.s de-
mise from national television in the
mid·l960s.
"THERE WAS A CERTAIN en-
thusiasm," he said. almost wistfully.
"By God. you couJd never tell what
they would say next. They didn't
know. so how could you know?"
Corttestants on "Queen for a Day"
vied for high rating on an applause
m eter by regaling th~ audience with
hard-luck stories and materialistic
dreams.
"We were eternally ·accused of
having the saddest show in all the
world," Bailey complains in mock
seriousness
H E LIKES TO REMEMBER the
funny contestants -like the bride of
three weeks who asked for a new
the original grumpy morning wake-
up show 005ts.
"I wouldn't tell 'em the time I'd say, 'You got a clock. took at It,·'· be
recalls.
He was already a veteran an·
nouncer for such radio shows as "Oz.
zie and Harriet" and "Duffy's
Tavern" when, towards the end of
World War II, he accepted what was
to h ave been a two-week stint as
emcee on "Queen," then a relatively·
new program on the Mutual radio
network.
IN mE LATE 1940s, "Queen"
became one of the first programs
broadcast on Los Angelt!s' first ex-
perimental television station. Since it
had been broadcast live as a stage
show on radio, the transition to
television was simple, Bailey said.
.. A guy just came along and put a
little PQwder on our face."
Eventually, the show was broad·
cast on NBC and later, ABC.
Wetre still the
least expensive
service to the
~i_rp9-rts.
~~1~
Author Ang .... • mattress because hers was worn out. • D "I didn't usually break up, but I
did that day, and sbe got mad, ..
A Reader's Digest article by
Winston Churchill. "l think it was
called '&mday Painters,' " prompted
Bailey to take up his seeond career
as an artist. His home high atop
Pacific Palisades is decorated
almost exclusively with his oils -
mostly floral arrangements -and
meticulously executed pencil
sketches of glass vials and decanters.
No other means· of transportation could be more e<:onom·
1cal, convenient or trouble.free than Airport Service. For
twenty years, our air-conditioned buses have provided
tr~lers with rel'iable. comfortable transportation to and
from L.A. International Airport. No parking delay. no
terminal congestion. no tuggage hassJes. No one can
match that! Relax as you ride. Try Airwrt SeMce. 'T• • ' R • Bailey recalls. "She said, 'Wait a ltantlc alses m!nute, you:re laughin~ at tht: wrong
thing. We didn't wear 1t out, it's our
mother-in-law's and she wore it out.·
BAILEY HASN'T BEEN forgotten
by the women he led to the throne. On a recent appearance on the
"Tomorrow" show, Bailey said. a
group of 10 former monarchs turned
up and wanted to join him.
.
Script Scrap
.~IANK GRANT " ... ,,_ .. __
"RAJSE THE T ANIC" puthor Clive Cassler
1i.. ra1sinJ? a bit of th Old Ned in London. Seems
that the screen play vers ion of his tome is undergo-
m~ still another rewrite and Cussler claims that
wl\en he new to London for a huddle try with Sir
Lew Grade, Lew wouldn't take bis phone calls. But
Sir Lew has more important things on bis mind.
He's exvected to become a Jlrandfather courtesy of
son Paul and daughter-in•law Lisa P earce.
Also in Blighty, Ava Gardner turned down a
publisher's advance pitch of a half-million bucks
r to write her memoirs . Ava
made it clear that s he'll
.. never" write her memoirs for
public consumptiony adding.
"My private life is mine ex-
clusively." And Ava won't even
consider the Western Union
slogan: "Don't Write -Tele·
graph '··
New Two You: Francine
York & L.A. City Councilman
o•RoNu Arthur S nyder Still
Stead~ A!-. Tht') G°' Andy Wiiiiams & Laurie
\\'right There Tcally wasn't a "Close En
t•ounter" 1x't1.1.ccn Steven Spielberg's gJ. Amy l rv·
ing and Woody Allen. so stop the printed gossip
,rn rt•udy The wuy I hear it. S pielberg isn't upset
Jnrl may m fact be planning to wed Amy . And
~oss 1p<.'rs arc now fueling a fl ame that all is not
''ell in the marriage of Mia Farrow and Andre
Previn. T rue or not. lct'c; wait to hear it from one
o1r 1 hl• other
• • • BURT LANCASTE R'S VIRTUALLY
LASSOED by producer Parveneb Hargrove to star
in her $8 million suspense movie, "In the Hold," to
grind come fall on the San Francisco waterfront.
Dennl.s Quald and P . J. Soles, who became
:-.out mates while costarring in AIP's "Our Win-
ning Season." will tie the knot
on Chris\mas Day .... My
British spy reports that Ian
McShane and Sylvia Kristel
have crossed the PQnd for a
move to Hollywood with her
two-year-old son by a previous
b .b .... Also. vol atile playwri~ht John Osborne is
planning a nother trip to
Hollywood. not again this time
LANCASTU with CX·Wlfe JiU Benneu. but
''1th his new bride chis fifth>. former Brit1Sh
drama criuc Helen Oaw~on ... But Jill can't-com-
plain It wt1s she who innocently mtroed Helen to
101ly John
1\lso in London. peripatetic Britt Ekland found
J new p::iss1on of the month. young composer ·
1J('r_former Simon Turner, who's 13 years her
1unior. Not that Simon is a simple soul at 23. His
previous p::ish was Savid Bowie's wife Angie and
hi s mother's a cab driver in BliJ?hty.
John Travolta is said to have turned down a
quartcr-m1lhon bucks for a week of gigging a Las
Vegas showroom. Gad. I didn't realize the
"Welcome Back, Kotter" leleseries has made him
.,o indepcnrtcntlv wcalthv'
• • •
WHITERS ON THE DEAN MARTIN ROASTS
Lire after barbecuing producer Greg Garrison by
having the Screen Writers Guild arbitrate a com-
plaint against Greg for expanding Dino's roast
specials to 90 ~inutes or longer, while continuing
to pay the scnbes the hourly rate .... Coinciden.
tally. Dino Martin Jr. 's not of a mind to bask in
papa's image. He'll henceforth be billed as Dean
Paul Martm.
Would you believe that Dolly Parton's double·
feature posters ate selling at the rate o! ·a million
per week? My Nashville s py
isn't prone to exaggeration, but
I 'd like to have some or
whatever )le was drinking when
he sent me that item ... Dol-
ly, incidentally, not only ha~ a
three-pie pact with 20th-Fox.
but she's up for a B 'way
musical debut. Phyllis OUJer
gave me that item, explaining,
.. Funny thing b.appened to me ... '"°" on Rodeo Drive. I bumped lnto
{)otly Parton -a.nd I was across the street at ihe
time!"
New Two You: AU MacGraw and producer
Larry Span1ler •... sun Steady As They Go.
Barbara WaJten and AJaa Greeupaa •... My
'tudlo Sl>Y rePOrts the Roge r Corman'• out to cor-
ner thl' crenm of forelJ(n film directors ror hts
New World Plcs stable Rog is condud1n"
ro-productlon deals with Kurosawa. FelllD1,
Busman and Tntlfaut. Ro1 awready has a co·
prod deal w1th Moscow'• Mosfllm~ ror an epic film
\.Crslon of "lvnn the TPrrtble."
And she won."
The five contestants on "Queen"
were chosen from members of the
day's audience. who would write
their requests on their tickets.
"THEY WERE ALL read, believe
it o r not, even when we h ad
thousands of people in the a udience,"
Bailey said. "But YoU can imagt.D-e
how many dumb ones you'd discard.
like world peace and a cure for
cancer.··
Bailey's gift of gab. invaluable on a
show that was broadcast live ror half
its lengthy existence. has taken him
a long way from his home town of
Hampton, Iowa, where he began bis
show business career.
"l played the trombone, not well,
but loud." he said. "When they
played fast and high, they lost me.•·
They are all lifetime members m·
an ex-Queen's club whose motto:he
says, 1s ··unc~ a Queen. AJways
Queenly.''
Tahoe Roadwork
Holds Up Traffic
SOUTH LAKE TAHOE CAP>
The already congested traffic situa-
tion here is going to get worse for a
while as resurfacing continues on
three miles of U.S. 50 east or the
South Lake Tahoe airport.
LOS ANGELES INTNL AIRPORT
ONE WAY AOOLT FARES
Anaheim
Santa And
Orange County
Airport. Santa A/14
(Children J/2 Fare Ages 5 thru 11)
1>4.20
'>4.80
S5.60
Buena Park
Fullerton
Laguna Hills
S4.20
$4.20
57.05
Ufecilv~ Jun.: 20 1978
ST.40
$6.10
For lnfonnation See Your Local Travel Agent Or CaU
(714) 776-9210
South Orange County Area
(714) 581·5780
BAILEY, WHO SAYS he's over 60
but won't give his exact age, started
out in radio in San Diego as one or
Flagmen are controlling traffic in -
the area from 7 a .m . until 5 p.m. dai-
ly. holding back motorists as long as
20 minutes wblle the work is being
done.
Ride the Airport Bus!
Spring through Summer color-red,
pink, orange. white or variegated-
gTOWS in filtered sun.
GRO·POWER
PLUS
All purpose fertilizer with extra pene-
trating power for summer lawn feed-
ing. Helps maintain that lush green
loo" everyone enjoys.
GERANIUMS
There is a great selection of these
popular, hardy perennials Including
Zonal, Ivy and Pelargonlum vari·
etles. They love the sun and oome in
a f antastlc selection of reds, pinks,
lavenders and white.
DAILY GARDEN SEMINARS
Educational lectures on various plant/
garden toplcs.
Weekdays llam 1 pm 3pm
Weekends Hourly llam -3pm
. ' .
• "'~. I ))
" . "
We have over 68 varieties of this popu-
lar and unique nowerlng plant in al-
most endless color combinations .
They will bloom in partial sun through
late fall. We also have lmpatfen and
Fem baskets for more color In shady
areas.
FRESH cur
ROWERS
Roge r's Florist has a delightful
selection of fresh cut flowers ready
for you to create your own elegant
arrangements. Bouquets of fh>wers
a4d that 1peclal touch anytlm~.
OP~ JUl.Y 4th
MILDEW SPRAY
Foggy overcast mornings can cause
foliage mildew throughout your gar-
den. You can prevent damage by using
Metro's X-IT mildew spray. It's easy to
apply with a Gilmour sprayer.
Beautiful lily-of-the-Nile, has broad
arching leaves that grow in large gTeen
clusters. Stems from 2-3 feet, blossom
with blue or white flowers.
" __; SNAIL BAIT
AND LINDOCIDE
After the rains It's time for "That's If'
to control snails-easily applied
from a s haker top. And, for the best
all-purpose Insecticide use Lindo·
cide, a combination that kills suck-
ing and chewing garden pest'S.
Roger• Aorist ., 640-6n4
San Joaquin Hiils Rd. at MacAnhur Btvd., Newport Beach (714) 640..s800 •Open dalfy 9 a m to 6 pm.
r
.,
NATION I LOCAL Tuisdl,y, June 2:0. 1918 ' DAILY PILOT A J J
Imported Beer Sales
Triple in Eight Y ~ars
.... 1 .........
Combat 'Game'
Lt. Col. Ralph Newman, left, and Capt.
St_e':'e. Marks of the Army's 82nd Airborne
D1v1S1on prepare for a combat exercise
that needs no troops or tanks. It's a board
g~me that only requires a playing board.
p1eces and dice. This board represents an
area along the E ast and West Germany
borde r .
E~cutives '
President
To Speak
J:.ic:k I. Criswell, in·
ternational president of
Sales and Marketing Ex-
ecutives. will be speaker
when the Orange County
chapter installs officers.
The installation will
t ake place Wednesday
at the Airporter Inn on
MacArthur Boulevard
across from Orange
County Airport. Social
hour will begin at 6 p.m .
WASlllNGTON IAP > -SalH of
imported beer havo nearly tripled
since 1970 and while Imports still
have only a tiny share of the market,
their presence is growing.
Television ads extol Kronenbourg,
the beer Alsace hates to share wilh
us: bars around the country offer
Bass Ale on tap and Hemeken, pride
of lhe Dutch, seems to be ever·
~here.
IN 1970 THE United States Import·
ed 27 .6 million gallons of beer. with
the largest share. 9.5 million gallons.
coming from Germany.
By contrast. domes tic brewers sold
nearly 3.8 billion gallons of beer that
year.
By 1977 domestic sales had climbed
to about 4.8 bllllon gallons. while lm·
ports jumped to 78.9 million, the Na·
tional Association of Beer Importers
reports.
T h e owne r o f a Was hington
restaurant specializing in beer said
he thinks imported brews are becom-
ing more popular because American
products have developed a sameness
of taste.
MAURICE COJA. whose
Bric kske ller offers 600 different I brands includina 250 imports, said
that while Anlerican brewer'6 offer "excellent product.a. people want to
find dirrerent tastes and Europe1n
beers have a greater variety of taste
than American products.··
There Isn't an imported beer that
doesn't aeU. said Coja, whose biggest
problem is oblainlng a wide enough
variety or imports.
The growth in imported beer sales
from um> lo 19'17 also saw a new
leader ln the field: Heineken, at 31.9
million gallons. sold more ln 1977
that the total of all imports seven
years earlier.
AFTER THE NETHERLANDS,
Canada was the second largest ex-
porter of beer to the United States
last year at 23.5 million gallons,
foltowecfby Germany at 10.1 million.
Sales of German beers dipped con-
siderably from the year before as
Miller Brewjng Co., the No. 2 brewer
in the United States, began producing
Munich's Lowenbrau in this country.
One other previous ly imported
brew, Denmark's Tuborg, ia also
made here now. by Carling N~tional.
Mexico 1s the fourth largest sup-
plier of Imported suds to the United
States with Dos Equis and Carta
Blanca brands selling well in Texas
and the Southwest states.
Restaurant
and
Cocktail Lounge i ~
& ......
The
$5.88
PRIMERIB
DINNER
Special
Offer expltts .hme 30, 1978
On-the-Mall at South Coast Plaza Near the Carousel
on the First Level. For resenations call: 540-8822
Schl'duled to lake of-
fi ce are Elmer Stewart.
vice pres ident of Mccombs Securities
Co., Inc .. president; Jim
Kee ler of Keeler Ad·
vert1sang, fi rst vice pre-
sident; Joleen Parham,
personal services officer
for I r-.ine National
Bank, second vice presi· dent; Joe Toro, sales
manage r for Grand
Hotel, treasurer and
Joan Driftmier, service manager for Pacific
Telephone. secretary.
IOW Ill Cll lflmll MIKES IT EISY.
Criswell, is Ohio Bell
division manager or community relations.
For further informa-
tion, conta~t Elmer
Stewert. (714 > '5SS-Oll2.
Degrees
Go to 104
Miliitary
D e~pi t e e bbing
veteran student enroll·
me nts nationwide, 104
former service person-
nel received associate in
a rts degree~ at Sad-
dleback College·s 1978
co mm e n ce m e nt
ceremonies.
Maintaining a 3.5 or
better grade point
average were Ralph
Douglas. Robert Gulley,
John Hagle r Leslie
Irby : Nancy Jones.
Cheryl Livingston, Dan-
ny Shields and Thomas
Van Duesen.
Veteran Scott Corey
was awarded a $2,500
Ca l ifornia Sta t e
Scholarship and a cash
prize of Sl50, donated by
the Laguna Hills Rotary
Club.
Other veterans receiv·
ing scholarships were
Patrick Blake. Kristine
Borlf1e ld, Leonard
Carlson. Larry DcVore,
Danny Shields. Michael
Wasko and J ane Zim-
m erman.
Navy Grad
Robert -W. Lamont.
son of Mr. and Mrs.
James W. Lamonl or San Clemente, haa been
commissiooed a Marine
second lieutenant and
received a BS decree
upon craduation from
the Naval Academy in
Ann1potis, Md.
~· • HOMEOWNERS
• AUTOI,.~•
t,.YOU~Al"Y
• RABBITT
INSURANCE
!Mt·5554
1114 HAR80R 8LYD.
008M-mM-
..
New non-stop flights and a low $31.05 fare
Perhaps the most beautiful coastal re-
treat in the world Is Northern Callfor-
nla' s majestic Monterey Peninsula.
And now Alr California non-stop serv-
4ce puts Monterey within easy reach of
Orange County for a memorable va-
cation. a refreshing weekend get-
away or an Incomparable business
meeting environment.
Ftying Air California Is the q uick and
economlcql way to Monterey and the
Salinas Valley. Beginning June 20. our
dally service from Orange County gets
you there In only 50 minutes.
The fare Is only $31.05 (one way) and
there's an exclusive family pion that
can save you 30% any day of the
week. Ask about our thrifty EZ Fare and
speclal rotes for groups on business or
p leasure. With Air California's quick
and economical service. you've got
more time and money to enjoy Mon-
tereys limitless pleasures.
Stay In a beachfront hotel or a se-
cluded little cottage. Play the superb
eourses of the golf copltol of the
wortd. Shop for hand-crafted treas ..
• ures. Toke a walking ~'\•••I
tour Into Callfornlo
history and travel the famed
Seventeen Mlle Drive. Ch9ose from
I •
hundreds of delightful restaurants. Dis-
cover picture perfect scenes and sto-
ried places ... Connery Row. the
Butterfly Trees. Laguna Seco. Carmel,
The Lone Cypress.
Pebble Beach.
Pion now to take
off for Monterey on
Air California.
And make it
easy o n yourself.
Coll your travel
... .. -
... agent or Air --
California Reservations In
Orange County, (714) 752-1000;
Downey. (213) 924-3313; Laguna,
---~ (714) 496-6000; Los Angeles.
(213) 627-5401; son Clemente.
(714} 496-6000: Riverside/Son Ber·
nardlno. (714) 825-6900.
llR e CILIFORNIA
We' re easy to take-.
\
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Earth'IUake Data ,Disputed ·_,__ .. ,.
BERKELEY <AP> -Uruversity of
Ca Ii fornla a els m o logls ts have
challenged result.a ol satellite studies of
the eartbquake·causlni San Andreas Faull that suggest California's next
tetn bl or may be stronger and occur
s<>oner than expected.
percent more ''than we would have
auessed rroni ceologlcal blst.ory. · · lte 1a1d lt the calculationa are cor·
reel, the lar1er shifts mean the strain
around the fauJl is accumulating at a
faster rate than had been expected. im·
plying the next earthquake "might be
laraer because of the addillonal forces
accumulated or that the quake might
occur sooner."
could mean a major earthquake rulihl
occur sooner than we utlcipated," Bolt said. "But it would not mean its
magnitude would be greater. Tbe slie of
the shocks depend oo the strength of the rocks."
CALIFORNIA I NATION
r c·lft1urenee -
TWO ADDITIONAL Y!ARS 1
-
0F GUARANTEED
"MO INCREASE
IN PREMIUMS11
Business Packages, Commercial Fire.
Condominiums and Apartment Packages
Scientists at the Goddard Space
Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md. made
the predJction Sundav after wthur an or· biting satellite and laser beams to
measure ahlfts in the fault which trig.
,iered San Francisco's great earthquake
m 1906.
DAVID E . SMITH, a Goddard
geophysicist, said the fault is shifting
about three inches a year, or about 50
But Bruce A. Boll, direct.or of the
University of California's Se1smo·
graphic Station in Berkeley, contested
Smith's conclusions.
"EVEN IF THE three-Inch move-
ment pertains t.o the Bay Area -and it
may not a faster rate of displacement
Bolt said measuring devices used by
Northern Calllornia scientists peg the
fault movement at two inches per year.
Southern California scie.otlsts.
meanwhile. have calculated the fault
shifts about three inches annually in
their area.
BOLT SAID GODDARD scientists
should have used additional promon·
tories in California to distinguish
between the northern and southern
shifts.
BOB PALEY NOITHOC-546-3205
& ASSOC, INC. SOUTHOC-642-6500
~UEENIE
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I •• ~.t· .. I .. ;:fl ..
•• • 011 i ' . i.. ~· ... ~:!-
)
.. Take a bate Jetter to the Acme Taxidermist Compa· n ..
UC Santa Barbara
Gives Diplomas
A number of Orange Coast students are receiving
degrees from UC Santa Barbara at one of six mini·
commencements spread over three days -'8ne 9, 17
and 18.
Tograduate,bycity,are ----------
aafkoA -Suwn Eflui.111car11ci... VrdQer. Wllllem N. WhMler •nd
hf Ilea I--Jarrott Alc!wrO $ablM W,._r .,lper ueuq 9Hcll -Betty Scllw•ru.
Coreq ... Mar -Alc,,.rd Colman 8art>Ara Ann &aker, J~a.,.llne M . Votrnon Carion, Devon Rae Herketra111.
C.sta Mew -Toni Aff Bergman, S•r•'-Brent Jone s, Kirk A.
Cella Robin El>ckfey, Danie! Brien McCarter. Thomm H..-old ~lne,
Gaole. Anoe!• Kar Hue-•, OoMa ano Erin Marie O'Hara.
1111••1• Mas•lfo, Ll'8 t1nne Marer. Lae u•• Hllh -J amu Ma<k
1..1noa Jean M.li.<, Stewn How•rd Holi-lotr .-td C»rryf IL Ray.
Miiier. ~ancr Mari. Neal, Juoltll L•e11"a Nle-'il -Craig H
£uoenle Snellen. Joanne Kay Grffnl•w,JulleNwtPi..ca~Jutla Tall.u~wa. Marll O•vld u1..-s1<y Louise Wiidman
itr•d Robert H Webster MIUIO• Viejo -AICP>ard M .
Oa •a ~el•t JoP>n Wlllt,,ey 8arlt.er. Ka~yn S... Nut\MI. Thc>n\U
ttlflr••d. ~ICllUd o ·Nalfl . Lori Denise
f'"a11at•la Valley Cur• Loe ~ler10fl. Conley Porte<. C¥ol RM coiner. Greoorv Pavt Giron Sltulm1ures.,., CynlN• Louise Wolf
Nloftli ....... 9Nc1t -P•trlcla Mn
Casey. Barry W. Ood. Patrick JOMtP11
£vans. Heidi HUQIM>S • .Jefferson L.
Korpela.~~ Li,.... Curlis
Atlefl LustJo. IC.-lt> Afar. Martyn,
11obert Cauov McOullfln, Kim
Je•nlne Ol~n. Gregory Gordon
J>r<Ull, JUOtlT\ Sat A~lhal. Kenan
Cary fr.aver , Mon I<• Cherine
Toy Finn
To Pay
$10,000
PAWTUCKET, R .l.
c AP) -Hasbro In·
dustries, Inc., one of the
nation's larges t toy
m a nufa cturers, h as
agreed lo pay a $40,000
fine and to stop showing
a llegedl} d eceptive
te levision commercials
for two toys, officials said.
T he agreement ends a
l'h·year Federal Trade
Commission investiga-tion of the company.
The FTC said that a
com merciaJ for "Digger
the Dog" made it seem
~s though the walking
toy dog continued to
walk even after a string
was released and that a
commercial for "Bullet
Man" used deceptive
camera techniques to
make it look as though
the toy could perform
s tunt s it couldn 't
l>erform.
The company denied
the allegations.
N••••r1 .. ull -Greta Je•n
&.rgaahl. ,,,._re ~ii, Oall• Fr•nk Dearth. J_.frn Alltn Felcblein . .>een
Elirebeth f'1an•9an, Ronald 8 .
G•l•y, Pl"lf·hul Ho, KlnQCSon Cole
Humann. ~ l:v• l(-s.111. C.t....,1ne -le l.otn!J$1on, Cynflll•
Lynne Lalla,,o. Arthur James
M~rotrlll.
Ke .. ln I McC...rt?>y. Greoo V...a
McCarty. Ho1110ey Mont90"M'Y, Nell
8. Na<fl•r. Aef:IKU Paf11U50. TllOmas s. Powell, °'9'1Yft l..e$lle ~11. Kim Smith, Sl•ven F . Stuftft>Arg,
8 r11 ce Albert Tltels. Charin
T"°"'~ OMlra JNft Ven 0.-.
Pelrfcl• NI,.. Waf'lfstedt. Scott
Wiiiiam WIAl-Merlfyn Yardley.
$M Cfen '*' Fr..-C. Harcll"9. Helene A11ne Knutt, Ktvln A.
~OtHMv. ic-ui c. Mc/ilurr•r.
•nd Oebor .. s.. AocMord.
S.11 J -~'-P-1• JNn 0... -Marti J-c;.m-meu. Seutll Lae••• -LUii• Gall -•u•. Westmlaater -H•"<'I 9•th ~--
Comer Ge ts
BS Degree
Clifford K. Comer of
Mission Viejo bas been
commi&sioned an ensign
and received a bachelor
of science degree upon
graduation from the
Coast Guard Academy,
New London, Conn.
Comer;: is the son of
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford
(;omer,-0f 25192 Pradera
Drive.
Lee Named
The Orange Coasc
YMCA has a nnounced
that sWf member Steve
Lee has been appointed
youth director, and be
responsible for 'organiz·
ing activities for youths
between 6 and 16.
Big Band Vets
Plan Reunion
SPOKANE, Wash. <AP) ·-Remember the
"Delta Rhythm Boys?"
When George Robert Crosby, brother of Bing.
and Ray Hendricks get 0gelher this week, that
group is bound to be on lhelr minds.
The American Federal.ion of Musicians is
sponsoring their reunion ·at Spokane's Riverfront
Park to honor Crosby and his big-band sound.
CROSBY, llENDR.ICKS AND TUE late Bill
Pollard sang together here as the Delta Rhythm
Boys trio.
They were fired aft.er three performance5, but
Crosby and Hendricks went on to make lt blg dur·
lng the glory days of the big-band sound.
Crosby, 10 yean younger than Bing, worked
with the Crosby Bob Cats.
Hendricks was the first male vocalist hlred by
the original Benny GOOdman Bancf.
SINCE 'ftlEN, llENDRJCKS RAS played wlth
Sid Lippman, Ted FioRito, Benny Ooodman,
Hoagy Carmichael, Ray Noble and Meredith
Wilson -Just to name a rew ..
He married Laraine Day ln 1941
• I
• ....
Only 9 mg. tar
You won't believe they're IOV10r in tar
than all these otl1er lOO's.
19
MG.W U MC».Nte.
17
MO.W
U MO.Mtc.
100'1
18 MO.Wt
U MO.NIC.
Source of all 'tar' end nicotine disclosu1es in this ad is either FlC Repon
May 1978 or nc Method. Of AJI Brands Sold: lowtst tarr 0.6 mg.' tar,'
0.05 mg. nicotine, Kent Golden lighta 100'1 Aegufar end Mentbol-
9 mg. 'tar,· 0.8 mg. nicotine av. per cigarette, nc Report May 1978.
I
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19
MO.Wt
U MG.NIC.
,,
:. .... ,,,.. ... ", ...
18
MO.TAR U MG.NtC.
11
MG.TAR
0 .7MG.NfC.
10
MO.W
0.8MG.HIC.
Warn ing: The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Oangeroos to Your Health.
i
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1 •• 'N·s-1o•e•:···c•om•1•cs ... ·s.to•c•ks ..................................................... ~ .. P..OrtS •Movies •Television
.. T~. June 20. 1978 DAILY' PILOT ilJ
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Tller~'s:.·Nothing Irrelevant About Paul Salata
I \
By .JOHN SEVANO oe .... o.i..,,.......,.
The following is lotally irrelevant.
This is the story of Paul Salata -sewer contractor, re-
al estate investor , owne r of Salata Inc. (heavy construe·
tion and engineering>. community and charity participant.
family man. comic and orialnator of the idea that's
"caught the fancy of the world," -Irrelevant Week.
Now in its third year. lrrjllevant Week was founded by
Salata to pay homage to tfie last college player picked
each year in the National Football League draft.
''lrrelevant Week ls kind of a spoof on people who take
themselves too seriously." says Salata. a 1948 graduate of
USC. "l always s aid if I could, I was going to do sorne·
1h in g for the guy you never heard of.··
This year's unknown is 6·5, 200-pound Lee Washburn
from Montana State University, who was the last selection
on the 12th round by the Dallas Cowboys. Like previous
winners Kelvin Kirk <drafted last by the P1{tsburgh
Steelers in 1976) and Jirn Kelleher Cthe MiMesota Vikings
last choice in 1977>. Washburn will be nown to the Los
Angeles area and driven to the Balboa Bay Club in
Newport Beach where he will partake in a week's worth of
activities (June 24·31) planned by Salata and the Ir·
relevant Week committee.
Some of the events planned for Washburn will include:
visits to Disneyland, Catalina Island, Hollywood Park.
Universal Studios, the Tonight Show and Las Vegas: a
banquet and sports celebrity roast in his honor; a
cheerleading contest; and a regatta in his honor in
Newport Harbor
Sound wacky? It is. And Salata will be the first to take
Cull responsibility.
OMIY ,.. ... P-ltf U. P•YM
"They Uke to blame this on ftle," says Salata with a
smile. "I was in the National Football League Cl~ with
the Colts> for a little while and l always said I woutd Uke
to do something nice for the NFL."
How did the idea come about?
"[ thought about it for two or three years." he said.
"you know how you're al)Vays thinking of dumb thjngs to
do. Actually, l was spurred by an idea 1 beard happened 10
years ago when a group from Laguna Beach were drunk
one night and decided to call somebody and have a week
for him, all expenses paid.
"Anyway. I wondered 1C anybody had ever thought o(
doing something for the last player selected in the draft. I
brought the idea up to a couple of guys and they loved it.
·•w e caJled a meeting and about 20 people showed up
See IRRELEVANT, Page 8%
Tanana to Pitch
' Twins Threaten
Ryan-less Halos
From AP Dispatches
BLOOMINGTON, Minn.
The 1978 baseball season con·
tmucs to be a studr in frustra·
lion for hard-throwing r ight·
hunder Nolun Ryan.
Tht' Cal1forn1a Angels an·
nou11c:ed Mond<1 y that Ryan has
be<?n plact'd on the 21 day d1!>
~1bll!d h!>t retroactive to Junt' 13
bec;1use of a pulled hamstring 1n
\1)1<; ll•ft leg
Thi.: 3l·year·old R) an. who ha ....
p1t(·hc-d four no·hittt•rc; 1n his
r art'l'r and accumulated 112 vie
tories for the An~els in s ix
.lnge b Staie
All G4mh °"IC MPC (I tOI
Tonight Ca1ilo•n1• •I Mlnne'IOI• s ?SP m
WtOnPsdav C."'ornla •• Mlnrw..,C• s 1S pm Th1.,\oay C•lllo•n•• at Ml"M\Ola ti 10 • m
st·asons prior to this )'('ar, has a
d1s a ppomung 3-6 r<·cord and ~ 0-1
t.•arned run m·C'rage NOLAN RYAN
PAUL SALATA, THE FOUNDER OF IRRELEVANT WEEK, POSES WITH SOME OF HIS AWARDS. ' I
n' an la<.t p1tehed on .June 10
a g;un:.l the :"t•w \' ork \' anket's.
goi ng nine innings with no de
c1s1on. He was m1urcd two day~
later while running 1n the out·
field at Boston.
Tht.' Angels said they expect to
c-ull up a replacement ror Ryan
today.
tDodgers Continue Chase T9night Hyan compiled a 19 16 record
las t year. lie led the American
League m complete ~ames wilh
22 and in strikeouts with 341. the
firth time in his <.'areer he has
exl'eed ed the 300 mark in
strikeouts for a season. He also
finished third in the league \\'llh
a 2 77 ERA
1 LOS ANGELES (AP ) -The
, Los Angeles Dodgers have been I hot re<.'ently. winning eight of
thei r last nine games But l thcy·ve lost ground to the San
Fran<.'isco Giants in the National
Ll•aguc West. I That ·s hcrause while the r J)odgers h;n I" had their recent
t ~urge. the• Giants ha\ e done
t.'VCn better. winning nine Of 10.
~ ··Okay. but let·s try winning
I ~1ght of nin£' again and see what
t happens:· said Davey Lopes
) :o1fler the Dodgers· most recent
1 ''1ctory. a 5·0 triumph over Mon.
I real· Sund a:.. 'Tll ~akc my
<.'ha n ces No .maller what,
somethlng's gotta ha ppen th.ls
week with the Reds out here ..
Los Angeles opens a three·
jlam e series with the Hou~ton
Ast r os <J I Dodge I' Stadium
tonight. Meanwhile, tn San
Francisco. the Heds and Giants
begin a three·~ame series this
evening All four team!> 1.1.ere
idle :\londav •
Cincmna·ll and Los Angeles
open a three-game series at
Dodger Stadium Friday night,
with more than 150,000 fans ex-
pected to attend.
Tommy John. 8·4. is expected
to pitch for the Dodgers tonight
agains t Housto n 's Jame"S
World Cup Soccer
l Can't-miss Star
Discovers He Can
M E'.\:UOZA. Argentina <AP>
-\Vh at happened to Zico, one of
Brazil"-. biggest -soccer names,
who many thought would
become• a World Cup superstar"
Still unbeaten. Brazil a ppears
t o have-a good <.'hance to r each
another final. But for Arthur An·
tunes Co1mbra. the Cup has been
!>omewhat of a failure.
Zico. as he is known in Brazil,
1\ one of the losers in Argentina.
The 21 year-old striker was a
C'(•rtain name in the Brazilian
' hneup before the big tournament
~tarted But to alter two disap-
pointing draws in the first r ound
;1gains t Sweden and Brazil.
Coach Claudio Cou nllnho
dr<>pp<'d four from the starting
11.
Zico was one or them. Since
then. he has been a bench
• warmer and played only as a
!>ubstitulc.
t He came of[ the bench to score f a goal on a p en alty shot in
SD Cl-ULLENGES
SI'ARS'STREA.K
San Diego's Breakers invade
fountain Valley High School
tonight to duel the Oranae Coun-
ty Star!li in International
Volleyball Association action.
It begins at 7 30 as the Stars
co ntinue their four -game
homestand. The Stars are on a
fi ve-game winaing streak. which
includes a victory at San Diego.
Jay llanseth, whose rlghl arm
Is still arnng, ls not expected to
play for the Stars tonight. The
Stars lead the Western Division
with a 7·1 record, followed by
Santa Barbara <6·~>. San Diego
Is 3 3
Brazirs 3-0 quarterfinal win
over Pe ru. But that ·s his only
achievement in the Cup so far
"'It's always sad to drop a
player of Zico's class. But 1 was
forced to re·shuffle the team."
said Countinho. "I kept him as a
substitute. He has a g r eat
rapacity to score although he
hasn·t yN showed it "
Zico, who agrees he got off to
a bad s tart in the c h am-
pionships. probably will never
emer ge as a Johan Cru yff.
Holland's supersta r in the 1974
Wo rld Cup. or "The White
Pele, .. as he has been dubbed
back home.
Although he hates that
nicknam«>. his background is
similar to Pele. The son of a
poor tailor . Zico grew up in a
Rio de Janeiro suburb.
"There was not much to do but
to play soccer in the backyards.
1 was a SU"laJI kid but I adjusted
the game to my size," recalls
Zlco, whose nickname means
"srnall."
In a storybook career, Z1co
was discovered by scouts from
F lem engo, one of Brazil's m ost
popular clubs. as a 14·year-old in
1968.
Like P elc. he got his big
breakthrough at 17. scoring 35
goa Is In as many games for
Flemengo. Three years later,
Zico scored 49 during the quah·
fylng stage and playoffs for the
national championships to set an
all-time BrazHian record.
But as the BnJzillan game fell
under the Influence of the more
aggressive European style of
"total soccer," Zico's problems
~gan.
A\ 137 pounds and 5-foot 9,
Zico, whose lechnlque tops most
other players, says he can 't play
the tou~h game ---~
....
Rodney Richard. 5·7. The series
continues Wednesday night with
Rick Rhoden. 6·3. to hurl for Los
Angeles a~a1nst Mark
Dodgen Slate
All~.,. KAIC (7'01
T on•Qlll Hou\lon at LO\ Anoetn
WtcJnesd.ly HOU\IOn •I LCI\ AllQeln
T llUr\day Hov$1on •I lot AllQel~•
r Upm
I Upm.
11 Hp~·
Lemongello. 6·6. In Thursday af.
ternoon·s finale. Doug Rau. 7·2,
wi ll pitc h for th e Dodgers
against Joaquin Andujar, 3·4.
The-Dodgers announced Mon-
day that Sat11rrlay's game with
. the Reds will be televise(! locally
over KTTV. Channel 11 . The
ga m e was announced as a
sellout last Saturday and will be
televised natlonall~ by NBC TV .
beginning at 1: 15 p m
Don Sutton. 6·6, 1s expected to
pitch for Los An~eles Saturdav
against Cincinnati ·s Tom llumt•.
2·6, or Manny Sarmiento, 6·3
1n Friday night·s seriec;
opener. Burt Hooton. 5-6, 1s the
probable starter for the Dodgers
against Fred Norman. 8·3. On
Sunday. John is expected to hurl
for Los Angeles a~a inst Paul
Moskau. 0·2
peed, a Little Luck
Hyan rt•portedly asked the
Angels to trade him to the Texas
Rangers last week but a deal
""asn •t worked out prior to the
Junt• 15 trading deadline
The Angels, who <1rc 33·31 and
11 ~ games behind the Kansas Ci·
ty Royals in the AL West. begin
a three-game series against the
host Minnesota Twins tonight.
The Twins. 27·35. are 61h games
behind the Royals and brmA a
~1" Aame winning streak into
tonight"s game-.
Oak land baserunner Dell Alston eludes
the tag of Texas Ranger shortstop Bert
Campaneris after a botched pickoff play
m Arlington. Alston was caught off rirst.
but he reached ~econd sa fely when the
throw from first baseman Mike 1 largrove
was wide The A's won. 2-1 to snap an 11 ·
game losing streak.
Ex-Rustler Vataha Quits
GREEN BAY. Wis . -Veteran
wide receiver Randy Vata ha.
who suffered broken ribs against
the Chicago Bears last Oct 30
and m issed the rest ol the Na·
llonal Football League s eason.
has retir<'d. the Green Bay
Packers announced today
Vataha, 30. spent six seasons
with the New England Patriots
before commg lo the Packers on
waivers just before the start of
lhe 1977 season. Ile became a
.
'
starter for the Packers. then
was lost due to the rib injuries
Vataha played at Golden Wei.t
College and Stanford University
before going to the Patriots
ms name Is firmly entrenched
In the Golden West record book
lie still holds the lnd1v1dual rec·
ord for rnost recepllons In a
season fS4 ) and car eer <SS>.
most yards gained through pass
receiving Cor both season c 1.087l
a nd career 11,222 >. mos t
-. . ' ~ .. -..... . '. . .. ..... . .. , ... , .. , ... . . . . .... ..
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touchdowns received in 3 izame
( 2 l which 1s lied by seven
others. for a season <7l and for a
career l\Ol : a nd average yards
itained pass receiving ror a
game <34.0 in six catches for 204
yards l and for a season 20. t
C54·l ,087l
\' atnha played at Golden West
during the 1967·68 seasons a.nd
was moved to wide recewer
after startlng as a running back
his first season.
Among those candidates who
could be moved up are Dave
Frost and John Caneira. starter"-
at Salt Lake City, or relief
pitcher Mike Barlow, also with .
the Salt Lake City entry.
Whoeve r 1s tabbed. i t 's
doubtful he"ll see action tonight.
Frank Tanana (JO .JI 1<;
scheduled to sta rt against Min·
ncsota ·s Roger Erickson <6·41 as
the Ha los try to hold on to
!>econd place w1tll Oakland. Tex·
as and Chicago in close pursuit
The teams plaY. again Wednes·
d ay night and Thursday after·
noon before California moves on
to Texas ror a four.game stint IO
three days before returning to
Anaheim Monday .for the start of
a sevc-n-game homestand.
Surf Nabs
Top Scorer
Steve David, who led the
North Ame rican Soccer League
in scoring twice in the past three
seasons, has been traded for the
second time in 1978
David. 26. from P oint Fortin,
Trinidad. was acquired by the
California Surf Monday from the
Detroit Express for cash and a
~erond ·round draft choice next
year.
David started the season with
the Los Angeles Aztecs but was
traded to the Express after
three games this year.
"One thing we have lacked
this season Is an ability to finish
off goal scoring opportunities,··
said Surf Coach John Sewell.
"The acquisition of Steve David
should help that problem . Steve
has one or the best records as a
goal scorer m our league. He
seems to always be in the right t'
place a nd 1s an exce ll&nl
finisher.··
David led the NASL In scoring
both in 1975 and 1977 and, was
na m ed to the league's a ll-star
team
RANDV VATAHA
• ?lf OAlL Y P1LO T
O.llyPll .. .,._.
· SEWER WORK IS NOT IRRELEVANT FOR PAUL SALATA.
I i , ,.~,... Page B·l
( IRRELEV A~T WEEK. • •
i 1
~ ~ l
'
and everyt>o<fy wanted to contribute something, Now there
must be a thou.sand people involved."
Salata talks proudly of the notoriety the project has re·
ceived, not only across the country, but among NFL
circles as well. .. It's caught the rancy of the pro football world," says
Salata. "Somebody told me the other day that evea Tom
Landry, who doesn't usually say any more than ·o.K .
everybody m the bus· or 'Everybody out of the bus,' when
h met Washburn at a rookie camp commented. 'I see yo e the Irrelevant King'."
F r months of preparation goes into staging the ex-
travag a. There arc different commiu.ees for major &lfl
ideas, e Newport Beilch Chamber of Commerce handles
the par e, gifts and publlcity and the Balboa Bay Club is
the host.
The off. at events are compliments of everybody in·
volved.
''The Cowgirl Cheerleading contest is something
new." grins Salata. "It's being held in case Dallas decades
to move to Anaheim or Newport Beach. That way if they po, we'll be ready.
··Al first we thought the qualifications tor that would be non-wrnnt-rc:; who weighed ov~r 300 pound& and were
f<•male. " Rut that was dropped with a thud. Now we want
girls who will understand "
Other "specials" Include: a regatta, ("No start, no
finish, no bOats" >. a c·o llege rught, 1 "every sc.hool that
wants gets a moment to propagandize, and a whole group
equipped with drill team and pep squad and no affiliation
will be present''); and a banquet ("exclusively for mem·
bers and guests and anybody else who is interested").
Yes, Paul Salata is truly a character. Not only in com·
munity affairs. but in business and at home. too.
"l like to say I'm ln the transportation business," says
the 51-year-old Don Rickles disciple, "anything you can
flush. J deliver. Flush without Fear, that'sour motto."
All kidding aside, there is a serious vein to Salata.
There is the side that's mvolved in charity work.
another in raising scholarships for Orange Cou(lty athletes
and yet another in the church. ·
"I'm not that interested in fame or owning the world
or having the biggest <'Ompany in the West or anything,"
said S~· tam a serious moment.
"We ·ust like to s nd some time, meaning me and my
family I ife Beverh. son Bradley 25, and daughter
Melanie 23l. putting something back lnto the system, com·
munity and country that got us where we are."
Affiliated with the Newport. Beach community for 20
vears. Salata has alreadv l?iven a lot toward the communi· ty with rus leadership, guidance, humor and 'Irrelevant
Week. -W'hat could possibly be next?
"We kiddingly called Tampa Bay, who has the first
choice, and asked them if they had one more pick who
'>'ould they choose. They said Randy Simmrin. So this
year. for the first time, we will have as our s uest the first
guy who wasn't picked.
.. J ust remember. Regardless of what happens. it's all
irrelevant."
Wllnhledon
Choices -
~rg, Evert
from AP Di patches
LONDON -Defending cham-pion 8Jorn Borg of Sweden, bid-
ding to become tbe first tennis
player ln 42 years t o win
Wimbledon three years in s ue·
cession, is seeded No. l for the
men's sinales it was announced Monday.
Borg is seeded ahead of Jim·
my Connors of the U.S. for the
tournament which starts Mon. day. ·
Chris Evert of the U S. is
seeded No. 1 in women's s1n1les
wit h defending champion
Virginia Wade or Britain fourth.
Amtl• Ad.,a•ee•
EAST80URNE. Eneland Tracy Austin demolished Pam
Tceguarden, 6·1. 6·3, in the open·
ing ro~d of an International
tennis tournament here Monday.
Other results : Stephanie
Tolleson of Phoenix defeated
Sue Barker of Britain, 7-5. 6·4:
Lea AntonopoHs beat Marise
Kruger , So. Africa. 6·2, 3·6. 6·4:
Chris Evert topped Katja Eb·
binghaus, West Germany. 6·1.
6-2.
B e t l y S<t. o v e o f T h e
Netherlands s lopped Lele
Forood of the U.S .. 6·1, 6-1;
Di ane Fromholtz beat Rita
Gerulaitis, 6-1. 6-3; Marita
Redondo won O\l~r Fiorella Bonicelli of Urugfll!)', 6·1, 6-4 .
and Virginia R1nici or Romania
b eat Cynthia Doe rner of
Australia. G·l. 6-1.
Pam Shriver. U.S., defeated
Silvia Haniker. W. Germany,
6·3, 6-4; Laura Dupont, U.S.,
beat Frederica Thibault.
France. 6·2, 6-2; Judy Dalton,
Aus tralia, defeated Kathy May,
U.S., 7·5. 6-1; Belsy Nagelson.
U s :·"won ov~r Ftorenta Mihm,
Roma n ia . 7-6. 6 -4; Ann
Kiyomura, U.S. stopped Glyrus
Coles, Britain, 6-3,4-6, 6-2; Kathy
Harter, U.S .• defeated Briaitte
Simon, France, 6-2. 6·1; Yvonne
Vcrmaak. So. Africa, defeated
Diane Desfor, U.S .. 4·6. 6-4. 6·3:
Kate Latham , U.S. s topped
fhirbara Halquist, U.S. 6·4. 3·6.
7 5.
.~astase Loses
LONDON -llie Nastase was
among the seeded players to go
down to defeat Monday in the
S125,000 Rawlings international
tennis tournament at Queen's
Club when he lost to Australian
John James, 8·6, 9·8.
Raul Ramirez, the top-s eeded
player, did not play Monday bu t
other seeded players Adriano
Panatta, Tim Gullikson. J eff
Borowiak, Mark Cox and Tom
Leonard all went down to defeat.
BillY-Mart.to beat Gullikson. 6· l, 9-8 ; Panatta lost 6·3, 6-3 to
Chris Lewls of New Zealand
while Leonard was defeated by
Roger Vasselin of France. 8-6.
1·6, 6·2. Cox lost to Colin Dibley
o f Aus tralia, 6-2, 6-1 and
Borowiak went down to fellow
American Terry Moor. 7-5, 6·4.
Be1 lin Result•
BERLIN -West German An·
dreas Maurer upset eighth·
s eed ed R hod esian Colin
DowdesweU, 1·5, 6·2, Monday in
men's singles preliminaries of
the Grand Prix tennis touma·
ment in West.Berlin.
Baseball StanJings
MALCOLM REID M4)r. ·
1«1y1:
LEASE A
BOBCAT ... ...,
S'flif!..
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OUtaYOUll
TOOAY "-..., .. Arri C.5a11 jl _~~
,\MERICAN LEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGUE
Eut Dlvltloo EHt Dlvlsloo w L Pct.GB w L Pct. GB
Boston 46 20 .697 Chicago 35 26 .574
Baltimore-38 26 . 594 7 Philadelphia 31 28 .525 3 Milwaukee 37 ~ .578 8 Montreal 33 32 .508 4
New York 37 .578 8 Pittsburgh 28 33 .459 7 Detroit 31 31 .500 13 New York 29 38 .433 9 Cleveland 27 35 .435 17 St. Louis 23 43 .348 141,2
Toronto 21 42 333 231:.i Wejt Divlaloo
West Division San Francisco 41 22 .561 Kansas City 34 29 .540 Cincinnati 40 25 .615 2 Angels 3.1 31 .516 l ' ..! Dodgers 36 28 .563 51,!'l
Oakland 33 33 .500 2•:1 Houston 28 32 .467 lllr.i Texas 32 32 .500 212 San Diego 29 35 .453 121/'l Chicago :fl 33 .484 31,'2 Atlanta 25 36 .410 15
Minnesota 27 35 .435 "6•,',! Mo!MllY'I Scorfl
Seattle 21 47 .309 1512 ClllCIOO I>, Pl~tll •. 10 kwlln9'
()fll y .-me IChlldui.CI
.....,...k~ .. '~·~ BoltOf'I 10, Mtw YOttl • HOVSIOfl CAl<ftetU HJ •I~ IJoltftMI, n SHlll~7.~ $1. Lo11l1 18. ForlCl'I , .. , •I Pllll.o.111111• t<enws City•. aflCI } tC.MllllMOfl H ), n OelllAnd I . TeUl I ClllCllQO C8wrli UI II PllUt>ur9fl lllGCll-()fllyQ•"*~ •·11. n T.,..y'1G1mu Mon1ru1 CGrlm•ley ll·ll 11· New YMll
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1 ''·" All•nl• IP. Hlttiro 7.71 •• Sin DltQO (JOMl
Hew Yori< IG\llltll 1 01•180\lon (Torrez 11).1) n } ~.n 0e1ro11 18illlnQl'llm~lel TorOflt4 IGl<vin2 .. or Ctn<;lnnan (MO~ .. o.n 81 Sin l'ranclKO
IClrtiwOOdl 01,n IMoni.111sc.o 6·11. n lat11mor~ l "l\t Onoor 7 O et Mll.,eull .. w-...ey'lGames
Hr•Yi>•s).11,n Ho111ton 11 Otiflwa. n
S.etlle CM11cl>ell1·l)elClllt&00ISton~•"l n SI Loul\al Pft1lldelpn111 n Clot•Pland IWI~. •l •I IC•n••' City 18oro J ,.,.. Cnke90 M Pttbllwrgll, n Petlln 1·11.n MontrH 1 a1 Hew YOf'k n 0.•l•DO IKeouQll• Oal Tf'•H IMedlC,, I 11,n All•n•• •Is.,.. DltOO n WMnttOay'lGemes Ctnelnnato •l S.n FranCl\CO n A•I• et MIMMOla," 8afllm0f'e el Mllw1u-et. n Hew YO<~ a18M1on. n c 1eve1an<1et1Canse1 Ctly, n
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'JOHNSON & SON LEASING •••
ALL MAKES
ALL MODELS
MEW
,
600W. CPAIT HWY.• HIWPOIT MACH• '4MZ'2
OR
USED
SOCCER I OTHER SPORTS
A Baseball Entanglement Al'Wl~e
Chicago White Sox th ird baseman Eric
Soderholm <12> tries to avoid a sliding
Sea ttle Mariners· Le on Roberts.
Soderholm had tagged Roberts out when
he tried lo advanct! from !)l'cond on an m·
fi e ld grounder. Seattle won 7-4
Sunshine Returns Home
Fatts New Jersey at OCC Tonig ht
Thl' Califorma Sunshine. the
hottest team-tn lhe Americ~rn
Soccer League right now. hopes
to pick up at home where it left
off on the road when the Costa
Mesa-based franchise hosts the
defendmg champion New Jersey
Americans tonight 17:30 > at
Orange Coast College Stadium.
In their last home game. June
I, lhl' .Sunshine scored a 4·2 win
over the lndhrnupolt s Dare
Devils. That ~et an motion a
-.trcak that included four •Mns
and a tie in five road game!>,
capped by Sunday's l·O victory
over the same Dare Devils.
lncluded in that stretch was a
-
···~;·.1·•( ,.
..
4·0 verdict over New Jersey, the
first of three shutouts by goalie
Alan Paterson on the trip.
As a res ult, the Sunshme
moved into a share or first place
with the Los Angeles Skyhawks
in the Western Division after
Lra1hng by 22 points at the end of
May.
He's bt!en ~etting u lot of help
1n the scoring column. Poli
G arc1a. who went the first
month of the season without a-
goal, al)d Tony Dougla~. who
had the gaml' winner Sunday,
both have four goab and rank
among the ASL leader~
EI Tor o P icks AD In addition to a stingy derense.
the Sunsl'line has also bl.'cn on a
scoring tear. Friday, the team
whipped Cleveland 7·0.
Andy Chapman. thl' 18·~car·
old s tandout from England. took
over the ASL scoring lead with a
p:ur of goals against Cleveland.
giving him eight for the season
EI Toro I IJgh soccer coach
Chuck S\H•a1\ has taken over
t1u11es as athll'ttc dirl'ctor at El
Toro Hi gh, "uccccd1ng Paul
Pedigo. who is transferring to
Laguna Hills I tigh
COCA.COLA aonLERS'
SUPERBOWL Of MOTOCROSS
SATURDAY, JUNE 24, 8 P.M.
LA. COLISEUM
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You'll sit in a special section located directly 1n front
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Sports fans of all ages will enjoy watching 80 of
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Discount coupons are hmited~and available to 11-
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TOYOTA. OFFICIAL TRUCK OF THE AMERICAN
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•
PEOPLE IN SPORTS I BASl;BALL Ttmdly, June 20, 1978 DAILY ~LOT at
'84 Gam,es Bid in Limbo Grand P rix Event
IOC Has Proposal Bicycles to Race
In Mesa Sunday
LOS ANGELES CAP> -The Loi An1eles
OrganWng Committee for the 1984 Summer-Olym·
pie Games has returned here
afler a day in Montreal, where
they presented a contract to the
International Olympic Commit·
tee that could, if approved, free
the city of financial liabllity for
lbe games.
Upon landing Monday n.tght
at Los Angeles International
Airport, the five represen·
tatives told reporters that they ..... A....... considered their prooosal a
#V .. .._ "positive step forward. •1
Tbe unprecedented plan, presented Monday to
the IOC, would make the organizing committee
responsible for any deficits incurred, rather than
the Los Angeles taxpayers.
"We clearly stated that the taxpayers of Los
Angeles would not have financial responsiblllty,"
said John C. Argue, president of the Los Angeles
delegation. "We requested that the IOC represen·
tatives immediately transmit the memorandum of
agreement to their headquarters in Swillerland
for approval."
Argue said hls commit\ee also asked that the
IOC indicate within three weeks whether or not the
agreement is acceptable.
Howard Allen, another member of the com·
mittee and pre,sident of the Los Angeles Chamber or Commerce, also commented on the proposed
contract.
"The fact that it is going to be submitted is a
positive step forward, and at least there is a piece
or paper in front or them that they can respond to
for the first lime." Allen said.
----q.ote of tlte Dag----
London millionaire Horace CuUer on the
city's sentiment for hosting the Olympic
Games in 1988: "It's important that the spirit
of the event should not be lost in the pomp ac·
<'.Ompanying it."
~llere 111 S ports •••
BASEBALL -George Scott ignited a six-run
uprising in the eighth inning Monday ni ht with a
an RBI single to snap a 4·4 tie
as th~ Boston Red Sox buried
the New York Yankees, 10·4, in
a key American League East
game Cincinnati's Pele
Rose und his wife of 14 years,
Karolyn, have separated. No
legal proceedin~s have been started Tom Seaver, who
pitched the first no-hitter of his
12-year ~arcer FridaJL_..was
named National League Player l'ETE Rosa
of the Week ... The Yankees' Ron Guidry, who
struck out 18 California Angels Saturday, was vol· .
ed the week's lop American League player ...
The New York Mets have signed free agent Marty
Perez . . Tlt.o Fuenies, released by Montreal,
signed with the Oakland A's
SOCCER -Los Angeles Aztecs star George
Besl is being sued by an English soccer ~lub,
which alleges breach of promise. FuJhma Football
Club of Craven Cottage says Best signed a multi·
year contract with the dub last August and also
1>igned a note for 10,000 pounds . . '
TRACK An apparent national prep pole
\lault record by Crespi High's Anthony Curran in
the Ct F stale meet has been disallowed. Curran
Cincy Do~ates
All-st ar Balloting
NEW YORK !AP> -Five Cincinnati Reds
players, including home run champion George
Foster. lead the balloting as the third weekly Na·
tional League All ·star tabulations were announced
Monday by Commissioner Bowie Kuhn.
Other Cincinnati players currently leading in
the fan voting are: second baseman Joe Morgan.
shorts top Dave Concepcion, third baseman Pete
Rose a nd catcher Johnny Bench. Joining the Reds
C'ontin~ent in the >ofield is first baseman Steve
Carvey of Los Angeles, the overall ~ader in the.
balloting with 812,061 votes.
Foster Is leading among outfielders with
608.752 votes. Philadelphia's Greg Luzinski is
second with 582.979 and the Dodgers' Rick Monday
third with 575,115.
Concepcion. with 566,977 votes, holds tbe lead
over the Phillies' Larry Bowa, who has moved into
second place with 425,072 votes.
Bench, who has been out of the Reds lineup the
past three weeks with a back injury, still remains
.:1 solid choice as catcher. leading Steve Yeager of
the Dodgers, 673,933 to 446,883. Rose and Morgan
also hold commanding leads in the voting. Rose
has a 747.992 to 423,371 advantage over the
Dodgers' Ron Cey and Morgan leads Los Angeles'
Davev Lopes 701,269 lo 326.055.
The All-star game will be played JuJy 11 in
San Diego.
Luders efter IN '"lnl w"ll
CATOtli•
S<ltmlClt, Ph!.-phle, '04.717; 1c:.., Rell!. St. LOulJ, 114,1131; Steve ()n.
ll1ttro•. CNcago, 13-*; Pfll 1 08fner.
Plth1turo1t. u ,1•11 Lenny Renelle, Hew Yorll. 7,411.
SHORTSTOP
Dev• Concepcion, Clnclnnell,
546.'91: l.MTy lklw•, Pfllladelpl\I•,
appeared to clear 17-S\4, but the bar Quivered,
boU11ced off the plns and came to rest atop the
1tandard. two lnchft hlaber .
OTREB SPORTS -Fonner Pocono 500 win·
ners A.J. Foyt, Al Uuer, lobn.ny RG&llerford and
Tom Sne'¥a are amons 45
drivers entered in tbe eighth
running of the event Sunday at
Pocono IntemaUonal Raceway
tn Pennsylvania . . . Georae F.
Dallle1, t.be bead swimming
coach at UCLA since 1975, has
resigned to become coach or an
AA U team In Philadelphia.
Haines, a U.S. Olympic coach
six times, will leave UCLA June
~·"°'" 30 ••. Ion Coleman bas been fired as bead basketball coach at St. Louis
UJlive.tBUy after a 7·20 season ... Vlfors, who is
unbeaten ln four starts this year, bas been hs·
signed high weight of 129 pounds for the $350,000
Hollywood Gold Cup at Hollywood Park Sunday.
He will carry one pound more than J. Q. Tobin and
ExceUer in the 1\4-mile race ..• A rlverlront
sports arena, now under coo.st.ruction, will Ukely
be pamed after former heavyweight boxing cham·
pidn Joe Louis • . . A dozen women softball
players from Oftl Lyme, Conn. and Madison
YWCA teams were injured Monday night when
lightning struck a nearby oak tree during a rain
delay •.. Chances are slim that Super Bowl xm
will appear on prime-time television again next
January NFL executive director Don Wells says.
Among considerations made by the league before
it sets a starting time include weather patterns
and eastern newspaper deadlines.
Sports Oft Radio, Tl'
RADIO -Tonight -Baseball -Angels at
Minnesota, 5:30 p.m ., KMPC (710); Houston at
Dodgers, 7:30 p.m., KABC C790).
TV -No sports scheduled.
V-1•0•
Rosie ~ has been lost
for the season to the
Anaheim Oranges WC>l'ld
Team Tennis entry follow-
ing surgery in New York
Monday to repair ligament
damage in her right knee.
She was injured at New
Orleans June 3.
A Grand Pr1x racing even\,
complete with all the amen1Ues
except for the deafenine roar of
encinea, will center aJ'ound
Estancia Drive ln Costa Mesa
t.hls Sunday as part of t.be city's
SOt.h annivenary celebration.
But lnstead or silent autos,
racers will be piloting human·
powered bJcycles.
Sanctioned by the United
States Cycle FederaUon as a na·
tJonal classic. Costa Mesa's fifth
8llllUal Bicycle Grand Prix wt.11
feature European-style cycling
at l~ best as many of the na·
tlon's top riders compete for an
amateur purse of O't(er $4,000.
Pre-race ceremonies begin at
7:20 a.m. in the parking lot of
Estancia High School. First
race, veterans division, gets
rolling at 7:30 while the main
event, Ute 50-mile senior men's,
is slated for an 11: SO start.
Several otber actlvites will
tend to the carnival atmospbenl.
Two AAU running races art
scheduled, a big-wheel race b&
been added for pre-school totr.
and a bigb school "AnYlbina
Goes'' coolest will compete wltf
a live rock band Cor the t.eenq<..
audience ..
The running events wlll bt
three and six miles In lenitll
Middle school student.a, bitli
school girls, open women and
senior women will nm in UK
aborter race which atarta at
9:45. Categories-in the loncer
race, set for an 11:45 start, &r\.
for high school boya, open mer.
and senior men.
But the highlight of the day':
festivit.es will still be the blcycll.
races which are broken down lD·
to fi\'e divisions.
The program should concl~·
at 2:20.
Se ville Derby Set for Sunday
The Seville Homeowners Assn.
will conduct its seventh annual
adult soap box derby Sunday.
The event, which begins at
9:30 a .m. with time trials. will
start at the corner of Monteeito
Lane and Chico. wind through
Minosa Lane and finish on La
Vina Drive in the Mission Viejo
community.
A parade or cars is scheduled
for noon with the main event
slated for al p.m. start.
This year's event draws 21 en-
tries, including one woman,
Genice Steed. Based upon his
five previous victories, Ollie
Vaughn should be considered the
pre-race favorite.
Since road blocks will cordoQ(
off the course, spectators abouk:
park at the Glen Yermo Schoo:
parking lot. The school is locat
. ed on Trabuco opposite Modest<..
Street.
In addition to awards for the
top four finishers, trophies wil
be presented for best desicn am..
engineering.
Major
League
Leade r s
8eHd on 135 <It ~I•. I
AMJRICAN LliAGUll
C.rewMln
Plnlell• HY Cubbage Min
Reynold• S.• Ritt lUn
Ro.Jat•son O
Lynn Bsn
Molitor Mii
l•tc•llO Mii
8 .8el1Cte
0 Aa R H ~ti.
SI 213 3" 71 3"2
4S ua 20 sz JH
~ UT 18 SI .32.5
M 223 21 ll J2l
66 21• so " .Jll 0 ~6' 21 54 l11 s' 211 30 10 Jn
SS 178 31 n .Jt•
SJ 111 JO Sil .JIS
'1 241 15 1• .>u
The D iesel-powered Seville is now
avail able at Nabers Cadillac.
H-R-Rlce, BoUon, 21; J . n1ompsn,
Detroit. I•; G.Thomft, Mllw..,_"· 1•. 8eyl0f, C.lllornla. t•, E•4ns. Botton, u.
·-... '*'" Rice, lloston, M. si...o. Detroit. o : Ziak, Tun. O; G. ThomH.
Mltwauk .. , ••: ~ylor, C.lllornl•. 41; F0td, Mlnneso1<1. 41.
PltictW-. 11 o.dtl .. JI cwior.,, New Yori!., 11-0, l.000; Tor
rel, Boston, 10 2, .UJ; T enene.
C•lllornfa. 10.3, .1'9; ~ckersto.
901ton. 6·2 •• 150; Flan•11an, B•ltlmora, 10 4, .114; Patme.-.
B•ttlmore. 10-4 •. 114. 2 Tied With .100.
MATIOMAL LEAGUE
GrlHey Cln
eurrouoM4U
l-L4
8oweP"I
Puhl Hin
R.SmlUI LA MlldlOCk SF J>erker Pg!!
Conc11<lon On
Drleuen 011
G Aa R "l'ct.
0 i.. 0 IS .322
ti m 21 •S .JU
S4 1U 42 u .J20
Sf 244 U 11 .JIJ
)J 214 2.S 61 .JIJ
Sl t9S -•I .JIJ 48 111 28 SI .JIO
60 23' 37 7• .JIO
•1 UJ 21 n .lOf
SI 208 U 64 .JOI "-·-lutlnskl. Phlladelphla, tS;
Kingman. Ollta!JO, u ; Foste<, Cln· dnnell, 14; MOIWJ•r. LOI All(ltlH, 11;
Parker, PllUburQl'I. 11; R.Snulh. LDI
An11etn. II; Wlnlleld. Sen Diego, 11. ._..._., ..
Fo.ter. Cincinnati. 48; Montanu,
New Yon, 44; Per11 .... PllltbUrOh,
42; Mor941n, Clnclnnall, U ; C.r, LDI
An9eles, 42; Garvey, Los •~•es. 42.
l't llthltlt 11 Decltl-)
8onlt•m, OnclnnaU, 7-1 •. 17S; Han-n•. Allante. f>.1, .a$7; l.acJlry, New
Vo•'· l ·J, .IOO; Grlm1ltr, MontrHt,
II J, .7 ... Reu. Los Anvei.. 1·2 •• 111;
Perry, Sen Oleoo. 7-2 •• Ill; Moffitt,
Sen Frenctsco, i..z, .7!0; Monl-'U&CO.
Sen Fr•n<IKD, 6 2. .150.
Team Tennis
Standings
e.ASTallM OIVlllON
Boston New York
4ne,,.lm
Newor1-1nc11.,..
W L !"ct. Ga
" 1 .m -u 14 JOO 1
12 " .m • • 12 .400 •
t 17 .)46 11
WUTa•M OIVISIOM
Sen Dl990 It • ,.,. -
Golden Gm 17 10 ."30 111>
LOS Antel• 14 12 .531 4
PIMlenla f 1S .37S a
Se•tll• • " .n. 10Vt
~'-' .. ......,J .. ,, Wlm.,._.._
Pro Scores
The efficiency of a diesel ... the elegance of a Seville.
30 mpg highway/21 mpg city/24
mpg composite. EPA estimates.
Our dealership nou• l1as the 5.7 Litre
fuel-injected diL'S<!l VB avai~1ble m
limited number for Seville by Cadil-
lac. Wiien you vi:;;it us, you 'll d1s-
caver that impress ive mileage is 011ly
ij :OIESEL ~
posite estimate of 24 m~ by St"ville's
standard fuel ta11k capaci~/ rating of
21 gallons. Your cruisi11~ rattj.;e will
vary.
V8 smoothness.
The diesel for Seville is a VB. Its
dynamic balance helps assure
smooth ettgine idle. And its eight·
cylinder design contributes Jo 1111-
pressive acceleration.
vary depc11di11~ 011 Jh e coolant
Jem-pe~ature. ll:WNT JIU SMT II Sometimes . -. .
tl1ere will be no wait. When the•
green light tells you to "STAIIT."'
just turn the key to tlrt' start posi·
tion. Then, drive off.
Jot1nn1 Bench, Oncl.,.,.11, '73,tJJ;
St .. t Ye..-,, '-" .,....., -..Ml;
hd Slm"-S, St. l..Oul•. U.,M5, Bob
Boone, Pflll-fl)flla, 2'1,IS1. Cier1
C•rter. Monlrul, 10t,SJ4, BHI
P ocoroba, Allente, 98.•ll, Jolln
S!UrM. N-Y-. H ,7M.
l'tRST aASI: OS,017; 1111 lt--41, LM A ..... "• M9'tll~lettwL..e ....
nt,4tt; 0¥ry Templetof\ St. l..ovl1, • Oeklencl I, MllW'HOle 0
the beginning with the diesel-
powered Seville. Because this is an
American luxurv car that can
change your m1;1d about diesel
motoring with its impressive accel-
eration and quietness. Above all, it's
a Seville. With Cadillac comfort and
Ea~ of operation.
You'll notice when you turn the ign1-
tio11 key to on, arr amber liSht will
ask you to ·wAIT." This time_ will
1Wopower sources available.
We offer Seville u1ilh n 5.7 Litre
elect ro11ic-fuel ·injected gasoline
VB ... or an available 5. 7 Litre fuel -
injected dU.'Sel VB. Seville is equipped
with GM -built engines supplied by
vario"s divisions. See us for details.
SI••• Oanay, Les A•t•IH,
tll, .. I ; Dan DflH-. C1nc1nnall,
195,Uf: Tony Peret. Montr••I.
111, 171; l(tllll Htrntnoel. SI Loult,
115.•0I; Wiiiie Star91tll. PlllltMlrgh,
•5• HO. w 111i. ~l. New YOf\.
•4'.UI; 891>W•twn. Hwston,v • .uo.
'HCOMO use Joe Mor_.,, CJntlnnell, 701.Uti
OtYfY ~. '-" A..,...., 114,Mf; T~ SIU"'Oft, Pltll-IPltle, 146,Sf'.
Doe CtSl't, MonlrHI. 1'1 .. 77, Biii
M•Olo<k . ~" Fren<lsco. n1,10•.
Menn r T nllo, o.iceoo, uo.211; Mike
hM><\, St Louil, Ul,SIO THlllO a.ue
Pelt llow. On<lnnatl, 141,"1 .....
Cer, Let A• .. IH , 4U,J11: Ml'•
JU,Ut : tv•11 OeJHu•, c111ceoo. ----------f t~,424; FrP'll h~n. l'lttsbu,.gll,
121,)H; C"'Jt Speier, MOfttrtel,
115,™·
OUTPlaLD George Fostef, OmlMetl, ... IS1;
G<-19 LuilMt.I, 1"1111=~:: M?,tlt; IUO M....,., LM N'f,111;
...... Sftlllll, L.M ~, M6,.lt1;
Garry MeCICloa, Phlledetp"I•.
lU,11J: l4U 8roc:11., SL Lollla, JI0,752;
tt111 Orllley. Cln<lnnetl, ttt,W;
B•U Mc8rld9, Pftlt.cltlplll•. :IH,2-;
C.S.r Gaf'onlmo, On<lnnett. t .. ,.n;
O••• Parlltr, Plttslluroll. W,200;
ovsty a-..r. L.M ~ u1.-1 Oan l(I,..,_, Ollcaeo, t•l.IU.
AACHll'fCTVAAL 11!.MS All AVAtlAIU
-MANTl!lS, PANflUNO, DltUO
STOit! CAllNUS, UNIQUI! WALL
~. m:. -l'\UJI ~ U$-l'Olt
YOl.M AM8ttCAN 0AA "iffOSI
150 E. DYER ROAD
SMTA ARA• (714) 151""21
conveniena. ,
£PA figurrs are estimates. Ynur
actual mileage will vary dependittg
on how and where you drive, your
car's condition and available equip-
ment. J
An estimated 504 miles per
tankful.
The di.esel-paweri'd Seville has an
estimated cruising range of 504
miles. This ra11ge esHmatt is ob-
tained by multiplying tf1e EPA com-
. , . . ....
Among the elite . . . of the world's
luxury cars-Seville stands alone.
Only Sl!Ville provides this selection
of 5.7 Litre engines. Only Seville
brings together international siu
and design with Cadillac comfort
and convenience. ~ invite you to
visit us soon. Experience Seville by
yourself ... for yourself.
-~ u~~lVC
I
• I OAIL v Pll.OT l IJlddly June 20. •971 Business
Business Moves Told
Orange ColUlly Firms Report Pronwtions
Sandra l •. Wht'~lcr of Tustin has been llppoint
t:d u real Cl>llll\! l~nd1ng oHicer Ul Bank or
::\merlca's Irvine industrial branch \n Newport
Bearh •
Ms. Wheeler bas completed the bank'5 lending
offi cers' training program. She previously was an
executive secretary for two years at BotA's re·
gional headquarters in Orange. • Linda C:. Phllllps of El Toro has been named
escrow officer al the Laguna Hills Ba11k of America.
Ms. Phillips had served in the same capacity
at El Toro since September 1!175. -
With the bank since 1969, she began at
Anaheim main office and was assigned 'lo escrow
duties at the Newport Center branch.
* Roy S. Redmond has been appointed tnanager
of Union Federal Savings and Lou AssoclaUon's
Fountain Valley office.
Previously manager uf Unfon Federal's
Malibu and Newbury Pa rk branches. Redmond
has been with the association since 1!172.
He has been secretary.
treas ure r of th e Secu rity
Traders Association of Los
Angeles and a dJrector or the
Malibu Cha mber of Commerce.
•
REOMONO
Diane Kowalski has Joined BoteU & Jacobs,
lnc. as an accounl executive in the company's Newport Beach office.
Kowalski spent four years as public in!orma·
tion direetor of the Western Insurance Information
Service, a group of property and casualty insurers.
Kowalski is treasurer of the Orange County
chapter of the Public Relations Society of
America. • Anderson & Anderson Inc. of Newport Beach
has appointed Paul V. Porter as director of
marketing for the commercial insurance
brokerage.
Previously a consu1taht to the firm, Porter
will head the expanded Calirorn1a marketing and
sales efforts of the company.
• Nadine Henry of the Mission Viejo (;ompany
has been commended for "overall outstanding
achievement" by the Southern California Business
Communicators for work as editor of the Mission
Viejo Repe>rter.
She received the 1977 Award of Merit for
·magapapers" from the group, a chapter or the
Inlernationa l Assoc1at1on of Business Com·
municators. Published by Mission Viejo Company, the Mis·
sion Viejo Reporter is distributed free of charge to
the 13.000 households in the planned community.
Mrs . Henry recenUy has been promoted to com· .
municaUons coordinator. • Scott FerpjOO has been named maoaaer of
tealonal and spedal planninf for Avco CommUAJly
Developers of Laguna Ntgue -
Lee Stewart succeeds Ferguson as director or
publlc affairs. He comes from Jrvine Pacific
Development Company where he was ad·
mintstrative assistant to the president. He bas also
served as director o1 community relations tor the
Irvine Company. • Ray ~bmann ot Irvine bas been appolnted
vice president, marketing, for Cochrane Chase le
Company, Newport Beach advertisin&, public rela·
tions and marketing firm. Roscbmann was previous ly marketing
manager for Hunt-Wesson Foods In Fullerton.
Prior to that. he was with General Foods as a pro-
duct manager'. • Tricia McCauley has been named account ex·
ee\ltive ror Bob Thomas & Associates. Inc., Redon·
do Beach public relations firm.
McCauley bas been an art director, editor and
copywriter in the Roger Vega Design Studio in
Newport Beach for two years.
She is an h<>nors graduate of UC Irvine. • Donna Lee LaWTence has joined Times Minor
as corporate public relations administrator.
Lawrence will be primarily responsible for
Pro~ress magazine and be involved in other
publications and activities.
She was most recently associate editor of Ex·
ecutive Publications, Inc., which publishes The
Executive magazines of Los Angeles and Orange County. • National Systems Corporation of Newport
Beach announced the appointment of Charles L .
Cross, 37, of Corona del Mar, a vice president, to
the additional post of corporate treasurer and
chief financial officer.
David L. Reasor, 29. of Mission Viejo was
named to succeed Cross as corporate controller.
• Gerry While of Irvine joined Alltlme, Inc .•
headquartered in Santa Ana, as vice president of
operations.
White's respons ibilities include store opera·
tions of AJltime's 21 retail outlets in California,
Arizona and Texas, as well as
marketing and advertising
responsibilities for the cor·
porate operation.
Alltime operates authorized
sales and service cente rs for
Timex~ watches. The organiza·
lion also rbarkets other brands or
watches, watchbands, engrava-
ble jewelry. and offers engraving
services.
WHITI! *
GayfOl'd L. Hinton Jr., partner in the account·
llSTDIM.
ADIESEI.
Policy rrold ing firm of Price Waterhouse & Company, A• Newport Beach, has been el~ted president of the
Long Beach /Orange County chapter of the Comprehensive Care Callfonda Society of Certlfted PubUc AccountanU.
SEVILLE
( AUrOllNIA ll'A Ml'C ~TlilMTt.S CIT'I' HK.HWAY•COM81NlD
l l 30 14
Corp. of Newport 'Beach Hinton, a Fountain Valley resident. is a
a nnouncE:d Monday the member of the Orange County Estate Planning
adoption of a quarterly Council.
dividend policy, the first Also elected were Gary D. Jobnson of Costa
to be 4 cents per share Mesa, partner with Arthur Young & Company,
pa y a b 1 e Aug. 2 2 to Santa Ana. as vice president; Thomas L. Andrew
shareholders of record of Irvine as secretary and Howard D. Bland of
July 31. Corona del Mar. partner with Peat, Marwick ..,=c=.=1:::;:1=6=42=_=5=,=7=8=. ===:;;:-Mitchell & Co., Newport Beach as treasurer.
Nabers
Cadillac
2f:l:XJ 1:1.ubor Blvd. C~l<l Mesa. 54<>9100 Put • lew word•
to work for ou.
Particular People Select JOHNSON & SOJt
Home of the ··Golden Touch'·
"Follow througb Is very .aood. I've had
eleven yean of satisfied service".
MRS. FLORENCE L. HALL
lagun• Hiiia. C•llf.
ANOTHER SATI SIFIEO CUSTOMER
dOHNSON &SON
I* l 2626 Harbor Blvd. • Costa Mesa • 540-5630
PUBUC NOTICE
c~
lllO'Tla! TO Clll!DITO•S
SU Pl!lllletl COUltT 01' THE
STA Ta Of' CAUf'ORNIA f'Olll
fHI. COUNTY OF OltANGt:
Ne.A-t.1714
E 5l•te of GEORGE W. ROACH, JA,
~<eHtd
NOTICE IS HEAE8Y GIVEN to the
<teelol~ GI llw-~dK-1 , ... , .ii Plf'90M ,...,,,. claims -ln~t
,,._. ~10 ~er• f'tQ\llrfll 10 Ille
t"Pm. wllJt.,. llK_, vovcllfrs, ft\
·~ oHlct of .,,. CIVk of IM -...,,
Ill*! court. or to ~-t l!Wm, wltll
thr tW<~ vouc:hen, lo the ur.-
oeo117Md 8t .,,. •-attic. Of 8Rl1Cf!
ENGLE81lEOiT. UOl W<tstclllf Or.
Ori,.•, Suitt Jll. N-pof't Beech ,
C•lltontl• ,..., .mle11 '' .,. p1.ce of ~'""'of IN ....,.nl9Md 111 •" mef. ••• , Otn.t!N"'ll totfle f't&'lt CM ~Ot<At
o.rnt, within •-,,_lhl .itw lt>t llr.1 P\lbl I<., IOftof .,,,, f\OCl(t.
OtlMM.rfft,191'
MARY JANE ROACH
e"9Qllrtaof Ille Wlllot
tlle.,.,..llt'"l!CIOK-1
lltUU aNCM.a11taa4T
IMI ... "'"" °'· $ttlte)1J H••-1 9M<11. CA,_..
l1141MJ-1At
AllwMr fflt lr~rt• Publl,"-0 Or-Co.oil p.11~ Ptiol
Jw,,. '· u.10. 21. "" n•s.11
PUBUC NOTICE
MOTlca TO a1ao1TOttS
SUPa .. oa COUlllT OP Tit&
STATlr O,.CAUf'OlllMIA f'Olll
THlr COUlfTY OP OltAllOlr
..O.A"'7 ..
E~late of DOROTHY J . GAYNOR,
OKHsed
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
lo lh• <••Qltors Ot Ill• AbOYt
l\6"'9tl ~I ~ ... Def"-l\ay. lfl9 clalms llQ8;Mt tllf Mid dk-...
•"' '-Quit• to Ille llleflt, wltll ~ MUn.ry _,'-n, In ll>e otfiq qt IN
cltrlt of tlle etiow et!tllltd <-1, ~ to
Pr'tstlll tlltm, with t ... M'ffMrt
-'le•I.. to U. undttti"'9CI at UOt
WHICllll Ori ... , Newport e.acll,
C.llfwllle, wllkll h "" !Mk• .. ~ M IS of tllt ~II'! Ml~ ~lnf119 '° .. estal• Of -..Id ~ dent, wltM<t ._ mono.t .._ Ille flnt
ouetlul!Ofl al 11111 "°'Ice.
OetffJ..,.•.tm
PMll 0. ~Clafy Jr,
Encutorof tht Wiii Of ,,,....,.,_~
PAUi. 0 . ..a.Alll\' .llt.
IR1 W.ndlft on,..
Sel!W11t .. _,_,,.._.,CA ....
Tett .. J·U.
Ae....,Nl ..... P'w
P11blllllH Oranve 0..tt Daily PllOl,
June IO, 11 -July 4, 11, "" aaJe
*
Sears. Roeback and Co.'• M. E. Borkholder
has been named general manager of the Los
Angeles-Orange County Retail District
Burkholder succeeds Eqgene W. Weldon. who announced bis retirement earlier.
Since 1971 Burkbolder bas
been admlnistrative assistant to
tbe executive vice president.
Donald A. Graham has
been appointed to the new
position of president and chief
operations Offlcer of Mlcrodata Corp's domestic operations.
Graham was responsible
for the Sperry·Univac/Japan
joint .wentures. Previously. be was president of the Sperry.
Remington division, vice president and controller
of Sperry's Univac division, and vice president.
generaJ manager of the Remington systems group.
NB Finn Nrunes
Three to Board
Western Digital Corporation of Newport Beach
bas announced the addition of three senior ex-
ecutives to its board of directors.
They are Donn Tatum, cbairn1ao of the board
of Walt Disney Productions, who also serves on the
boards of Bank or America, Union Oil, and
Greyhound Corp; John F . Hughes, formerly cruef
Tinencial officer of National Semiconductor Co.
and of Perkin-Elmer Corp., and William C. May,
director, Semiconductor Products, Dow·Cornins-
PUBUC NOTICE
NOTIU TO c.-l!OITOllS
SUPall!Olt CO\lltT o~ THIE
ST ATa Of' CAUflOllNIA 11()4'
THIE COUNTY O~ OlllANG&
HO.A-tD ..
Emit of I.EE Ol~INS KRAAT?,
OKffMCI
HOT ICE 15 HEAE8Y GIVEN lo IM
tl"9dlton of"" .... ........, dlKedlftt
lllM tll --hWll'l(I U.itltM -O•lt\SI Ille M id dlKtdellt art reQUlred to Illa
,,,.,,,, "''"' .. ~~ lfl uw tlfke of the <lerll .. the •bOW -lllleG cowt, « to ~_,,. them, with ,... "'"'_., -"9n. 10 tllt .....
Otnltfttd et SSO Nt•port C:e,,ltr
Orlvt. Newpon ee.ctl, Otllfornl•, wNclt k .......... ...,_ 04 Ille _.,.~ Ill all men.rt pena1111n9
to lllt H'-of MIO ........ •11!1111
fllw lftoftttll .._ 1M I lrM "'*'c.tf left ., tlll• "°'ic.. -°''" Jun.1, '"' c.1 '" l(f'NU & Mlr'OilM o•t1i..1 C:O..C.C.llliOn ti "1e Wllltl"-fflM
Nf'll9d o.c..nt
alatAaO .a ..... MTO .... ,. .......... °""" °"'" ~...-.c.a .... A ...... , twC.btc~
ll'llOllll\M Or .... CM\I 0.llJ Plklt,
J-10. 27,-0JUlf f, II, ttl• u.,.,.
(JACK ANDERSON) REVEALS , In th• DAILY PILOT
Super Charger
Up to 100 tons of. scrap steel can be carried in this
40-foot long sc·oop-shaped c harging box. one of two being
unloaded at Ka iser Steel Corporation·s new basic oxy-
gen s leelmaking shop at its Fontana Works. Jl can hold
la r ger pieces of scrap. which means a sizea ble r eduction
in emissions from torch cutting of scrap steel.
Another Store Acquired
LOS ANGELES <AP > -Carter Hawley Hales Stores lnc. has
announced its acquisition of Thalhimer Bros. Inc., a Ri chmond.
Va.·based department store chain. in a S70 million stock exchange.
Monday's announcement followed last month's acquisition or
John Wanamaker. a Philadelphia chain of 15 department stores.
for $60 million and 500.000 shares of stock valued at S9.25 million.
OvPr The Counter
MASO UsfiftCJS
.A4VM<ed • -·--• -·· ••. o.cnneo ... -·-··· ........ .
Ut\CMnoact .. • · • • .. • • .... • · • Tot.it! luues .................. -Mt• lltQM .................. . New tows .................... . Total wtes .................. .
Public
To Gain
Benefits
SAN FRANClSCO CAP> -
Pa<'1fic Telephone h as an·
nounced l bat any savings the
company realizes as a result or
Propos1tloo 13 will be used to
benefit customers.
President Gordon L . Hough
estimated the company could re-
tilize a property tax reduction of
about $130 million, but tbat
would be offset by a concurrent
federal income tax Increase or
$70 million, leaving a net tax re-
duction of $60 m1llion.
·'Cus tomers are the ID·
dividuals who ultimately pay the
costs of operating this busmess,
so they should receive the ul
t imate benefit from s uch a
significant expense reduction,"
he said.
The method of passing aJong
the benefits to the customers
will be determined by the state
Public Utilities Commission .
* * * Bank to Lotrer
Loan PaymelU
SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -The
Bank or America has announced
it will reduce the amount it col-
lects on real estate loans to most
customers 55 percent as tbe re·
suit of the passage of Propos1 ·
uon 13
The action will lower tax and
insurance reserve payments
begmmng in August for about.
23.000 Veterans Administration
home loans. almosl all of the
80.000 f'ede ral Housing Ad·
ministration loans and about
60,000 conventional loans.
The reserve funds are used to
cover the costs of tSJ<es . special
ussessments and house in.
sur ance.
MUTUAL FUNDS
UllYln u : I'm Ldr 7 ... 1.22 lntc•p 1.00 NL -1r..n 11>.•S NL PrlCAP f-linct• Proq F .... s 04 Bullcll U.74 13.92 Emi>lr 11.14.. . Int lnv\I •.U 10 » -rrtll l.,..Cll C,twtll 11111 NL StFrm GI I> JI NI NEW YORK (AP) C.Mln 711 1-07 Four E 1110 NL In• Guiel 10.0I NL 8u.c 10 53 10.97 inC.oM •.12 NL Sr rm 8• • '1 NL -lllefollowlng~ 01¥10 279 3.04 Hllcm 14041SQ2 '"" '"°" 137 NL C•P•I 13"11•.18 N Er• 1089 NLSl•l .. SI '4 7141.10 talion~. SUPOI~ b'f Month u.as 1S l4 MonM 1.00 NL "'" 801 • 4 10.11 £Qu18 ... 10.0I N HOrtl • ~ NL Sle41C!meft Funas ,,,. N•l'-l AS-I· NIWS •-» I0.22 Optn 11.'4 w .. 111¥tstoo Gf'o<4>. Muni • lll '51 T x~ ,. • 40 Nl Am •no 1.l1 NL illlon of s.c .. lt~ NYVft 1169 l'-9' T1tFrt 12 36 NL IDS 8d S :19 UO ROAst 1,00 NL Pro FullCI I 18 NL AUO F I OS Nl
OHltn, Inc.. we CGFuftd IO.lS 11.19 IOetlly 0.-: 10$ Grt •.IS.... ~V•t t.6l 1007 Prolnc: 10 1S NL lftvesl 1..19 NL lheprk"•I~ CGlncm 7ff 164 AQrH •>• Nl tOSt\Cll S.ll S.n MiO o\M S.•1 S.'1PruSIP 9S310.41 0c .. ,, S.M Nl Ulttt wcurlU.. CsllRsM 1.00 NL 8otlCI 8.11 NL Mull .... •.n MOn Mkl I 00 N PU1n•m FOOCIS: Stein 'ICM ~:
could l1t"9 lleefl CilpPtH 1.00 NL C.011 l.94 9.77 !.•OQ. a l • .-,14 "°.... MONV I' 9-2:) IO. COnv 12 10 ll 22 B•lan 11.33 NL wld (Nfl -C.itf'llS'IT ll.j4 l2M Contfd 10.'7 Hl , •E • MSB FCI M.13 NL EQull 11 '9 U 78 C.p 0 •.tt Nl value! « llOucll'lt 0..lllW tOM II... g•lly I 1 00 NL SIOClt 17.,7 19.U Mut 8en 9.19 1004 Geol'Q 1318 I• 00 SloO 12 31 NL Cvelut pita Hit\\ 0..rtFd 16.61 ii.IS stny 10 :w..... Satect ........ Mii' FCI ,_. • Grwlh 10.60 II SI 'ilrillGlll 1120 NL
CMl'9CI ~ o.::w.~ ~l 7.01 ~~< ~~:~ :t 1n~9A~ ~ 1:~ :~f ... ~:; ~~·74 ~~~ 1~~ 1:~ fe~r t-11~~ l~.r, AGEFO S.SI S.69 Front 4.71 ,f.78 Mun 8d •.19 NL tstel tl.31 21 '1 Amer II n 11.G lllvt!SI 1.31 1 ff Tempt W 1103 '3 IS ~~~~.. \~~ =t =r ! : !·~ ~:~10 U.~ 11.t~ ~",1 Gf'lh ~ 11~ ?n'c~ ;:~~ ;:~ ~re"., ~ ~ ~= ~ ~~P ~nP• l:'tl •No~
AfUIUA 11.44 NL 0..epO IU3 NL LIMUt\ 9.A7 NL J•nu~ F 21.11 NL TxFr• 14.43 1s.t.I Vi\lil 11 82 17., rt\S 111•1 9 • IOJl'I ~tralst:~ Im :t ~Am~:c ~~ I. l1 ~I~~ ·n: 1~'.t ~.::...-car~ U1 ~~ ~~ ~~ ~t A~~t!-9 '? ~~ "Jt ~~; ~~ n:~ llNO~
A lr111T '·" 10.ll Lll)rly • 13 4.'2 fllrlll 10.QS N" BollCI 11.n .... Nelllnd II 4S A•wrve I 00 NL wnc GI • ll Nl A rte•,, FUl\ds: Menll•I ,,.. ,,,. ,,.."° 'll.21 UA Grwll\ s .. • l7 N L R .... ,. s... NL Twt\C Inc • " NL ~~ t: rn Co~r:: ~: IO.tJ l~C.e ~: NL. =~ I'~: NL ... J.~111" r.~ 10.M s.:~ ~:\: .~·~·:t.t~ \J~ ~ i'i: ~t
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TUMCJ:ly Ju11e 20. t91B DAILY PILOT c;;
Typkal Family
Stocks Look
Overly Risky
By SYLVIA PORTER
The following may be a profile of most people trymg to
manaie your family finances LO mid-1978.
As the 1975-78 expansion reaches late middle age, tht-
overall stock market remains way below cts '1Cak of a de·
cade ago. lnteresl rates climb to high levels and innauon
accelerates, the typical person might:
-Deeply resist taking risk.!! with money and become
more and more preoccupied Wllh preserving capital.
-Fear lnflat.Jon, expect it to worsen and increasinglS'
worry about maintaining the own dollar's buying power.
-Adopt a cool attitude toward buying stock8, not
because of an antlcipated business downturn, but becau.'\e
of a lack of willingness to a ssume even "moderate" risk~.
-Nevertheless, still feel investing is important.
THAT IS A TYPICAL American frnancial decis1on -
maker in mid·1978. according to an Opinion Research
Corp. survey or public attitudes toward investment con·
ducted for the New York Stock Exchange. The survey find •
ings are said lo be applicable to 61 percent of all U.S.
househol~.
Among its most significant dis closures is that those
with a household income or $10.000 or more value mcomc
over potential capital gains, and preservation or capital
and purchasing power above all else.
T h I s \ h e tn e ,---------....
dominates. Even
though most people are
not pessimistic about
the future and, on the
contrary. expect bust·
ness profits to climb in
the next few years. they
Money's
Worth
don 't plan to participate in these profits through ownership
or common stocks. 'Fir\ancial goals are modest and dl'-
fens ive; preferred investments are insurance, passbook
savings accounts. a home, savings bonds. employee sav-
ings plans. Savings certificates rank sixth. Common stocks
c.tre lasted i.n ninth place.
Less than hair those surveyed are intent on long-term
capital gains: less than a third are tempted by short·term
profits: only 27 percent are intent on accumulating money
(or large purchases.
INFLATION'S IMPACT HAS BEEN DEEP. Key goals
are keeping up wi~h climbing la ving costs, protecti_ng the:
fa"ily, providing an estate.-1'his attitude crosses aJI ag<-
graups. all income brackets
Yet , avoidance of risk-laking could ultimately turn out
10 be the riskiest choice 1f inflation continues to erode th1·
buying power. What does lhls mean?
First, any lingering doubts that inflation 1s the basic
evil should be wiped qut.
SECOND. LACK OF INVESTMENT knowledge b abys~al. reflecting a failure among financial leaders to
pl'ov1de the pubhc with appropriate educational tools and
the public's failure lo try to understand the relative n sks
and rewards of different types of inveatments.
Third. indifference lo investing m stocks calls for
change in tax laws to encourage a more positive view
s uch as mo.re l~beral tax treatm«:nl or capital gains and
losses. ellmmatmn of double taxation of d.ividends, etc., in·
stead of the harsher treatment being recommended under
the guise of tax reform. . •
Market on Move
-On Downward Side
NEW YORK CAP> -The stock market turned sharply
lower today, with traders exhibiting concern over intere~t
rates. inflation aod the value or the U.S. dollar;.
The Dow Jones average of 30 ind!,1.Slrial stocks was otr
8 58 poi nts to830.04.
Losers held a 2-1 edge over galoers among New York
Stock E"change-listed lssues.
Analysts said traders, who in ~eat months bad been
indifferent to higher interest rates, now appeared con-
cerned. The Federal Reserve Board met In Washington to.
day. and most experts believed the board would tighten
credit in an attempt to rein the growth of money supply.
Sl~bln The
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118 DAILY PILOT Tuelday, June 20. 1971 Television TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS
I I 1-.~U.\\
~NO ..ooaa• HEM EMEMEHCV~
A nut'N NII Almoert ~
pttel eblm .... h NmOl'a.
• OUN8MOe<E ' A lonely mpioaler llnd8
r~ With • wounded
t1renger lhe o~ beck
to'-'th
• ~DOWTEAT
~IW8lea
·'Of Hltcn. And Stnc:llM
And Big. Round Ooga"
• ADAaf.12 I
F04K wit,_ conlredlci
Malloy'• eyewllneu
account end eccuse Sot.
M.eOon.ict of red'"'
dnvtng I E..ECTRlC COMPAHV rrs EVERYaOOv·a
BUSINESS
"The Bual,_ Firm"
(I) C88NEW8 0 A8CN£W8 t:30. V'f THREE SONS
The OOuglM fatnMy returns
trom • trip to Britain and
Steve finds hlmMlf carry·
mg a tC)(dl for a IOV'ltf
widow.
Ragtinae Pals
II) ROOKIES
The RoolllH have 10
avenge the acclctentel
snooting of a man
ft) OVEAEASY
Mort Sehl, breakl111
ClepM; Sooal Secunty; a
vi9lt With Frllllk ThomM.
animator, Dlsney SfUdloa.
~ REAL E.STATe AHO
YOU
Billy Dee Will ia ms lleft> plays
ragtime composer Scott Joplin and Clif·
ton Davis is his close friend in "Scott
Joplin: King of Ragtime" tonight at 9
on NBC, Channel 4.
"What Is Real Estate?"
Cl) AMERICA 2HIGHT
Guest V1rg11 S•mrns
[§) MERV GRIFFIN
fL) MAaEIL. /LEHRER
Rl!.POftf
'11) ARA88 AHO
ISRAEU8
• The Palestinlal!S" Con°
1rasting perceptions or the
Patest1n111n atplr atlOn tor e
homeland ere explOfed.
(Part t 0121
CJ) JOKER'S WILD • Guesta. HermloM G1ngold.
Joanna Cemeron, Charin
HIJC, Melt Collin•
7:00 I) C8S NEWS
7:30 fl THE MUPPETS
Guest Bob HC>Qe
B N8CNEW8
UAASCLU9 8 ASCNEWS 0 BOWUNGFOR
OOUARS CD ILOllEWCY
A gawlry lad anct a comely
girl fall •n IOYG Wllh Lucy
and Roci<y. respectively. CD AOAAf.12
Malloy and Reed IWO<k wffh
young hot rod<let• in an
effort to gel them olf the
streets
0 C,V,OIO CAMERA 0 NEWLYWED GAME 0 ®) HOLLYWOOO
SOUAR.ES 0 JOKER'S WILD
G) THE 000 COUPLE
Oscer and Felix are
shocked 10 teern th•t a
compuler det1ng serv~
hu matched Otcar ano
GIOfia. Felix's e11-w1te CD AMERICA 2NtGHT
Guest: Virgll Simms. fD 24TOHIGHT
Clete Roberts h o1t1
Claannel Ll•t ing•
4) KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles
8 KNBC(NBCJ Los Angeles e KTLA find) Los Angeles
0 KABC·TV (ABC) Los Angeles
{)) KFMB (CBS) San 01eoo G KHJ· TV (Ind) Los Angeles
®) KCST (ABC) San Diego
Q) KT'TV (Ind) Los Angeles
Cl) KCOP·TV (Ind) Los Angettis
fl) KCET· TV (PBS) Los Angeles W KOCE·TV (PBS) Huntington Beach
tonight's lnve111g1tlve
report.
Qli) WONDERFUL WORLD
OF OQUNTffV MUSIC
(I) TME GONG SHOW
1:00 fl Cl) C88 REPORTS
8111 Moyera reporll on
Lawrence Be<ry, e realdent
ol Laredo. Texas. who
fought coy hall and won;
Marlene Sandera reports
on the eitueUon In T eiwan
a• the lJ s. comes clol8'
to full dlplOmatlC relations
With ,,.Ing 0 MANFROM
ATI.ANT18
"Melt Down" An evil 1(:181'1·
1111 (Victor Buono) promi•· es to atop aut>merglng the
earth wtlh melted Ice '' Merk Hams Wiii surrender
to lllm.(R)
U MOVIE
• •'h ··An American
Dream" (1986) Stuart
.VMman, Janet Uogh. A
teievlslon reporter Is
cauoht between the
un<ler'Worid and the police
Ill« kilHng his utranged
wileJ.2 hrs.) , 8 (!I HAPPY DAYS
"Marlon's Misgivings"
When Menon fear• She ts
losing Howard to a
younger women (Suzi
Ouatro).. She translorms
het'setl Into a ve<led beauty
and 1urn1 lhe Cunnmoham
hOme Into a ~ lrom
"Tile Arebian Nlghta "(!\) 0 MOVIE
Michener's 'Eden'
Eyes South Pacific
By JA V SHA RB UTT
LO S ANGELES IAPl
Jame s Mic hener. who se
wartime.• "Tales of the South
Pacific" won a Pulitizer, has
taken another 4ook there and
come up Wlth a public TV show.
"The South Pacific: End of
Eden?"
It's on KCET Channel 28,
tonight at 8. In it. he studies
such locales at Pitcairn Island.
.New Guinea. Tahiti a'lP tiny
Eniwetok, the las t site or
America's first II-bomb test in
1952.
(TV REVIEW J
tions. and bare-breasted swamp
Rockettes there doing tribal
dances with their men as a pre-
lude to tribal war.
And in Tahiti, we're again told
Capt. Cook and other early ar-
r1 v als helped ruin paradise with
"three Western imports which
began the destructive process -
syphillis, iron and whiskey."
* * • ... "Away All Bottt~ ( '9&8) Jell Chendlet.
~G9 Hadef. A ltan890't
CAN PfOYtll Ila wonh "'lftlle
\#td« and d\Klng World
W81 II. (2 hra.)
·CAM>l.~ ANOrNEHD8
~tt: Jean Staoieton,
Phil Sllver'I.
Cl) MOVIE
• • • • "Anna Aod Tha ISl"G Of Sltm" (19•41) "-
OOnne, Rt11 Harrla;on. A
wldoW, ecc:ompani.d by n.r eon. a.ccec>t• • poat In
Siem lo tutor the children
of th9 Iring. (2 hf• .. 30 min I 9 JAMEa M!CtiENER'S
WORLD
''Tiie South Pac:lllc: End Of
Eden?" The varloul cul-
turM of lhe South l'acJllc.
inua f9' uninfluenced by
the 20th century, ire
~· w TUAHA80UT "Shlltlng Gear1" Five
houaewtvea who changed
I'*' 111etlylel: 1 cllafter
boal capleln, • graduate
11uden1. a medrcal
student. • baking 1eacner
and a people'• repreMnl8·
1"'8 In ~Flenciecx>
l;30 D 9 LAVERNE &
8HIAUY
"The Obltec:le Course"
La~ Ind Shifley m.Xe
en ettempt to run an
obstacle course to quallly
10< police INO<k. IR I 48 CAOSS-WITS mJ OVEREASY
Mori Sahl, brHklHI
crepes; Social Security; a
YUMI with Frank Thomas.
ammelOI". Disney Studloa.
9:001J CBS MOVIE
• • •,; "Eacepe From
Bogen Count{' ( 11117) J&C·
lyn Smith. Mitch4111 Rysn A
state 1rwestlga10t finds hll
only hope In bYUdlng a
cue 90elnll a pow«ful
Polltlclen to be the man •
vlcflml?ed wlla. (RI 0 N8CMOVIE
"Scott Joplln: King Of
Ragtime" (Premle<a) Biiiy
Oee Wllllam•. Art Carney
The effort• of lhe rlehty
creetlve black mutlclen
Scott Joplin to gain recoo-
nflion and acoeplance in
Ille rnuaie WO(ld are !raced
In this dramatization of his
Ille.
U ®) THREE'S
COMPANY
"Home MOll18S" Chrl11y
crank• out ama1aur movie•
01 Jac:tl and Janet and Is
mlsi.d Into thinking she
l\Ua"hlt."(RI
Q) MERV GRIFFIN
Questa: Htlfm1one Glngolct.
Joanna Cameron, Charles
HI•. Mall Collini. Aidt
Th1blant. Richard
$4mmC>(IS.
f.li) THE UHWANTEO
Allena. employers and
immioratl()O oHIClals are
TUBE TOPPERS
CBS 8 8:00 -<:BS News Hour. This
special focuses on a one-man campaign
to clean up the streets of Laredo. Cor·
respondent Blll Moyers reparts.
KCOP Q) 8:00 -"Anna and the King
of Siam." This 1946 movie with Irene
Dunne and Rex Harrison i s the
"straight" version or the musical "The
King and I."
KCET@ 8:00 -James Michener's
World. The South Pacific is the subj~ct
of this travelogue presentation. <See re-
view below).
k1ttMewed on the prob-
lem ol llfeOel lmmigrallon
11 It ellectt Me11lcen
e11an1 •• u s ontnn• t""
rttldent• QI Cllitomta.. 6B MASTERPIECE
THEATRE
• Pold.erk" Polderk Is
saved from a French firing
aq¥ed, then flftda ~Nt "'-
lriend i. "'" ........ Geo<ge arrengos a merrtege
be~ ~na and
Reverend Whltworlh:
OemelU glvee birth to a
daugnter. (Pan 3 of 13)
Cl) THE FIGHT AGAINST
81.AVERV
"A Me~ler Of ln«lrance" In
17711. the cue ol a sieve
captaln throwing 130 Alrl-
cens overboard turned
public opinion against Iha
al•ve trade
9:30 0 ®l CARTtA
COUNTRY
''All About Floyd" Curtll
urges Chtel Roy to htre
another black pollee ollf·
Cllf. then dltcOYetS he hU
made e big mistake. (R)
10:00 8 0 HEWS tt'.I 20 / 20
Herold Heyes and Rol>flrt
Hughes ere t~ hosts IOf a broad<:Ut e01tl0n of a
news magazine fea1urtno
lour ma)Of atorlee done Dy
various correspondenta
fil) MICt4.A.EL JACKSON
Korby All>)'. lou~ of Ille
Child At>uae tntormatlOl1
Center, e11am1ne1 Cl'IMd
atx.iae. corporel pun1a11-
ment In sctlc>Oll. retlabllita·
lion end punllllment ol
abusing parent•. and
~his ol children. W CRIMINAL JOSTICE
ll+A NATION OF
ORPHANS
()) THE FIGHT AGAINST
SLAVERY
"Tight Packora And Loose
Pnckors" Conflict grews be•-1bokt1on111s and
the vested 1n1e1es1s pro-
1ong1ng slavery
J0:30 Q) Q) NEWS
tit MACNEIL I Lat~
REPORT
«!) DtAL AlCOH<X
"In The Beglnnl,!!i!"
11:001J 8 8 Cl) ORI NEWS 8 LOVE. AMERICAN
STYLE
'Lowt Arid Tiie Unateady
Sleedy" Ernie thlllJca that
h4r ~tit(· "tO-many
Stefll. "lov• And The
Ctyjn' CowbOy" Cleyoo
Pons decidea to m11ry
April Ann. 0 MOYIE • *"* "SunMt BouteYerd"
pll~OI Wllllam Holdan,
Glori• Swanson. A tao.d
movie tier proves to be
lhe downfall ol a promising
young writ«. (2 hrs I
G) THE 000 COUPLE
OICll' develop• a •lrong
attachment for Fal1•'s
d0c1or, 8n auracllYll young
woman.
Cl) MONTY PYTHON'S
Fl Y1HO CIRCUS m DICK CAVETT
Guest: Ed Ernswillll<. one
ol the IO<emotl a.r11SIB In
the ralatlvely new flelct ol
Video wt
Qli) MACNEll / LEJiAER
REPORT
11:30 fl(I) CBSLAnMOVIE * • * "Columt>o: Murder
Qy The Boole" ( 197 t) Peter
Feik, Jack Cassidy. Lt
Columbo inveGtlg&tft 11\e
ca.e of a mystery wnter
wtlO _,logty pulla Ott Iha
"perfect crime" In Ille
mU<der of hts ex1)8ftnet
(R)
0 BEST OF CAA80H
Host. Johnny Carson
Guestt: Sammy Dam J<
George Peppard. Charhe
Callas. (R) 0 LOVE; AMERICAN
STYLE
"LCM! And Thi TtaV411tnO
Salesman" A traveling
salelm4tn 1$ Sluett OUI •n
the country "Love Ano
The Topless Policy" Ira
anct HOW81d deotde that
11MMr lounge needs tc>pless
-•r--O ttl SOAP
(EplaoOa 411 JeMicAI hU
11aumallc lnlormat1on
regarding h., daughter
that w ll'\ldt reYMI to
Chait•: Denny g.t1 a
frlgh1eo1no ulllm&tum from
the OOdfatller. Burt Ila
happy -to I.ii hl1 Wife.
(RI (Network edvl1 ..
vi.w.r di.c:retlOnl
I HOGAN'S HEROES
GET SMART
CAPTIONED ABC
H£WI
WANING
12.-00 D TWILIGHT ZOHE
A timid benk clerk
ec;qulr• lM •blll1'f to read
othet people's mlnda.
Q) HIGH HOPES
q) HONEYMOOH£R8
Boaatlng th1t he II Ned of
his houMh<>ld, Relph bell
lhal he can bring • din,,... oueet l\ome u~edty.
12103 G 9 A9C MOVIE •*'""The Stoolle" (1974)
Jeckle Masoo. Oen Fraz.eir.
A amell·t1me po~ inform-
er abscond• with an
edvaoc. Mr-marked IOf a
narcC>tlCt sef~ (Al
12:30 D MOVIE
• • • "Mystery Of Ec!Wln
Qrood" (11135) Cleuda
Raln1, Verer1e Hobaon
AdAOled from Ok:k«11'
unflnlsnecl novel, a mot>
gathers with luatic. n a
go.i Wflen th1ee dttferenl
men ~ vlolellt deaths
beCauSe ol one jj•rl. ( t
• 'llr .25m1n)
G) MOVIE
• **14 "You Only Uve
Once" ( 11137) Henry
Fonde. SyM1 Sidney. Sent
10 pru1on ol Ilise cnargee.
a man beComel • ll•ller (2
hrs.)
Q) MOVIE
• • "Arturo·s Island"
( 19631 Regln•ld Kernen,
Key Mersman A 1-.aoe
boy •S attracted to hit
lathet's ,_ b<l<la ( t hr.,
30min I
1:00 0 TOMORROW
Norman Pe1te, B private
<letactlve. w.U d~ -•
1app1ng, corpo1a1e •P'flno
end electronic bugging, Ed
Hottmao WIH oemons1rate
ways of protecting oneee1f
from forgefl aoo mail
lh-0 MAVERICK
"'the Thirty-Ninth Star"
f: 15 IJ Cl) KOJAK
"The f)e1rayal" A sroolie
(Paul Anka) feeds l<ojalc
1ntormahon In orcter 10 tur-
lher h•a own catee< (RI
1:400 NEWS
1:550 N~S 2:00om NEWS 0 MOVIE
• • "The Mystery Of Mar·
oe Roget" ( 111421 MIU18
Montez. P•tric Knowiea. A
me<llClll eum•'* uncov·
.,. a m111• Ill« 1111
llGlf-dleapoeara. (I hf ,
1s1n1n I D MOVJE •• ,. "Sono Of Schetler ..
zade" (lllH) YY0/11\•
DeCatlO. Brian Donlevy A
Ru11ten nav•I cadet
.,,.,,.. in Morocco end
meet• an ••ollo danoet
who INIC>it• Nm 10 write
hll gree1•t mualc (2 tn I 2;HtJ HEWS
2.:30 8» MOVIE • * 'h "The JudQ4' SI~
OUI" (111•111 Ann Solliern,
Al9unclef Knoll. A tudOe.
hiding In the obacunry ol •
snort-otdat cook'• )ob.
r'4Uetantty returns h<>fne
~ ha IMmS he IS to
become • Q'andfllfl9f. (2
twa.)
a:00e MOVIE ••• ,. .. .....,., Weve At A
WAC" ( 111521 AOHllnd
Ruteell, Paul e>oug1u.
3:150 HEWS
3:20 e MOVIE . * • "The Myatery 0 1 ni.
White Room" (111311) 8ruoe
Cabot. Joet\ Woodt>ury.
4;008 MOVIE * * "The Sun N-Sets" I 111391 Bun Rathbone,
Oougl• flllfbanb Jr.
4:30 8 MOVIE
• • ··w•lrd Women"
( 1944) lOf' CNney Jr •
E~Anllers.
ID MOVIE "
• • "SI-Of Babylon"
( 1953) Rlcttard Cont&, Lin-
de Chrlarian
Tuesda11••
Dagti•e /tfo.,ie•
~RNING
11:30 Q) • * "My S1w Convic11~:·
(19521 Mlil11d MllChell. G1r.
ben Roland A prison
psycnlatrist, with the help
of eix Intelligent convlo1s.
attempts to de\lelop sn
effective rehabllt1at1on
program. (2 hrs • 20 mtn '
AFTERNOON
12:00 G • ~ "Sudanh 01145>
Mena Montez. TU<116n Sey
A handsome v&gabond.
with tha aio OI an oull....O
llave 1Naer1 retc:ueS the
reigning QUMn ol a mythl·
cal throne lorm her wldled
ehancellOt ( t IW .. 30 min t
3:00 9 • • "Dl'Mma 01
GI ... " (1970) John Denae.
Carillne Barrell Tho
romance between a ,_,..
age boy ano girt 1t affected
by the mo<a111v or their
time ( t hr • 30 min >
3:30 o • *'" · 0reone1 • (1969) Jack Webl>. Herry
M0tg&ri. Sgt Joe Friday
1nd Office, Gannon Inv.,..
1oga1e the murders ol 1wo
pretty models and lhe d•t-
appeerance of • lhlrd (I
hr .. 30m1n I
Devane Set
For TJl's
'Eternity'
LOS ANGELES CAP >
Wi lham Devane has been l>i~n4"'d
for the role of Sgt. Warden in the•
NBC six-hour mini seriel> based
on James Jones' book '"rrom
Here to Eternity."
Devane. the rirst !>tar signed.
will play the role portrayed by
Burt Lancaster in the multi·
Oscar winning movie. .
More stars will be named by
executive producers Harve Ben·
nett and Harris Katleman before
production begins July. l in
Cahfornia and llawati. "This look at the South Pacific
tS not intended as a guide for
travel, nor 1s it m any way in-
tended to be comprehensive." he
·says. "It 1s si mply a brief,
personal impression.•'
Th ere's also a s hot of a
jell in er zipping by. but no
Kodak-encrusted tourists are
seen. Which seems odd. Such
scenes would put the old and
new into sharper contrast,
heightened Michener's lament.
Mil She Testifg?
Devane starred as J ohn Ken·
nedy in the TV special "The
Missiles of Ortober." and the
movies "Marathon Man:· "Roll-
ing Thunder." "Family Plot''
and "The Bad News Bears in
Breaking Training."
MOST OF THE impression is
an implied boo al civiliz.ation, a
quiet lament for the old ways or
th<.' Pacific that are endangered
or -dying out, thank~ to what
~ome call 20th century progress.
Sad to say, a lot o f this one-
hour show 1s ~ery predictable,
offers Jiltle more in thought and
view than what you've already
perused in National Geographic
at thedentist'soffice.
There's yet another look at
how Pitcairn Islanders. descen-
dants of Fletcher Christian &
Co .. ar€.' faring nearly 200 years
.after Captain Bli gh lost a point
<>f order on the "Bount y.··
ALSO, ANOTHER look at
naked New Guin ea head-
hunters. their lives, their tradi·
THE HOUR PICKS up steam
onl y when it shows New Guinea
tribesmen fighting with spears
as an example of "how much we
have changed and how little we
~ave chavged."
This remarkable scene seques
into combat footage of World
War JI in tl1€.' South Pacific, ac-
companied by s uch how-war-
changed-paradise observations
by Melchener as:
··second lieutena nts from
NYU and UCLA told Solomon
Islanders about radios, baseball
and movies and, within the span
of a single conversation. whole
cultures stepped 50.000 years
ahead."
Michael Parks <left> as a Texas ranger
and Henry Gibson, a state investigator,
try to get Jaclyn Smith to testify against
her husband in "Escape From Bogen
County," airing tonight at 9 on CBS. Chan·
nel 2. ,/
Freddie's Ready to Boost NBC
By TOM JORY
NEW YORK <AP> -NBC will
attract a bigger television au-
dience \Yjth new and innovative
programming that is meaningful
lo the viewer and ''does not
violate general standards of
taste," the network's new presi·
dent, Fred Silverman, said Mon-
day.
Predominance in n etwork
television, Silverma n told ex-
.ecutives or the network's 216 af·
Ciliate stations meeting here to-
day. Involves innovation and
s tyle, a constant striving for ex·
cellence, and respons ibility.
"THESE ARE THE elements
of the kind of leadership NBC
will seek." Si lverman said.
·'They do not rely on short-term,
artificial rating advantages.
They reauire thoughtful plan·
nin g of an overall program
framework and then moving to
ftll in that framework, step by
s tep, over a period or lime."
lt was S1 lv trm an'o; fir<;t
public appearance since taking
over as NBC'" president June 9.
The 4-0-year-old programming
whiz. cred1teel t>y many with
engineering ABC's rise to the
top in the prime time ratinS?s.
apparently sought in his speech
lo allay fears or some who an-
ticipated a quick executive
shakeup and radical changes m
NBC's programming.
IN FACT, NBC announced as
the m eeting began. a major
ovHhaul of its previou~ly an-
nounced fall schedule, and
Si lnrman said the revi~ed edi·
lion "wdl put NBC 1n the
~trongest posilion it has <'nJoycd
in many years."
Silverman said the heads
of N BC's television, news and
sports divisions ··are f1rst·class
executives."
FROM Fashion · Island
Newport Beach STEREO SOUNDS OF TAE HARBOR
•
. . • II>• • • •• , ,,,. • ' • . . -
"Not yet I Not yet! ... I haven't told the
punch line, yet !"
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
CASEY
MOON MULLINS
GERtATRIX
I'l..L. 0€T ')Q.J ~
Gl..Ar Tu ~n~r • .Jue;\;£:,
ANP GET AWAY J:~
Al,l.. '™"68 W61~
'YOU 4!?AW IN ~~
___ b..:.v-.wm. F. Brown and Mel Casson
• I ,
A0Jot.r • ~ ii::~ ll~ NO
NN lV6 ~~ -'NoWN !
by Tom lattuk
'TMI& 15 ~E TIME I UKE
BE6T OF AU.I
By Charles Rodrigues
by Ferd and Tom Johnson
lAlEST STRJN<i B\KIHtS I
~ MftWj N~N
'TD 00 ~ tMIMm
W T ~ fW0&.4'-0M'f ,,.
DOOLEY'S WORLD
fJUI~
\ \ Irr;
OR.SMOCK
MOTLEY'S CREW
FFtEE f</4~AT~ INSTRUC'f 10~ v 800k W1Tf4 EIJEFl'I POftC~l\SE .
b ·).O
JUDGE PARKER
NANCY
WHY IS
YOUR
WINDOW so
8 LACK'f
FOR SOM! fU:ASON 11-iE -
J..OCAl.S ~ PLA'{ FARO
OR POKeR Wm! ME.
.. ~ -• le • .. .. .. -......-...... '
by Gus Arriola
• .. .:
\ ~
i
f
)
TllllldlY. June 20, 1978
PEANU1"
If WE BECAME L05i
IN ll4E WOODS. HOW
LONG COU..O WE 60
WITHOUT REAL FOOO?
DAILY P\LOT S1
by Charles M. Scttuti
i'LL 8Ef WE COULD
60 FOR A MONTH
WITHOUT REAL 1=000
by Roger Bradfield
'5!Y i~ ~ ~~~~-----L_,_~~-~~-\-~-'
by George Lemont
by Templeton and Forman
le-f'S 1'RY HOPS
AND ~l.E.Y ON I ~~~OR:rl.
TODAY'S CRDSSIDID PUZZLE
ACROSS 44 Pnce~
1Clblrt t 45 Unf1111an
5 Lm dlgm llOd ltPJ
lied lllltj
10 Eane 47 Bu!warb
141 • •• • Sluoner so 01'14118
1& Efl!Qlov tnt8fJ
ment 51 Siill>odt
16 Detee1l11e'a S2 U1moi11
QUiil 56 Grllfld
17 °"" .. Wvoming
delign 2 IMlge
M!f<h 60 PI. Buffalo
19 Bone Prof1~ 61 Hetmn like
20 Cemfv bv 64 "The Gth ot
oa1h !ht)
21 LM'lt intet 65 Mal!' ll>vf'r
~''"'' 66 Mr ~.,.li.1d1
2J Collar dnd 61 WOflt m<>nn
Id ti.ti IOtlOutlV
26 Cantrlll 68 lree
locatt011 69 Smell Clfglfl
P1ef1~ DOW,_.
27 New moon 1 SeeO tuft
fr,1111,JI 2 Rar
30Doq t.nod uq
34 OllO•d' dnd "°untl Toon J Cio.ed h.>nri
35 Brnulactor 4 RMPl!Cho
'17 Prr110Mlt111 6 ActOI Rich
38 Kettle Hnd lld
Perktn• 6 Homed
39 Tact lie 01 Yll)ef
"""' 7 . ommo
41 Recent NIC
type 8 Oiilh e1
P1ef11 p1ealng 42 ,, lollovn llUll)ltte
"Print g Chlngi>
""PS" 111991 llCI
(I Glmient dl-.ea
UNITED Fea ture Syndicate
Monday's Puzzle Solved
10 Borah:!> 39 P11m.1
I 1 In ldd<toOr JO T11t11 In••
12 Sunken 1h1nu
grOOVt'' 44 Worth u11
13 H8i1df.' Ou Ufll d (,JI
~1P 10011
l8Commu11< 46 l 1lh01011 • t1oar A~ Gt:;lh•t Padud 411 Burr:l 22 Prl!vd••C•t
IOI!> 'll COJ•S•
24 Afncan "" ho""''~
11011 'l3 Singh
2S Se.inwn bi' · ittCk
'l1 r.r~ !>!> GOd ot ro,,
28 M.itcrnJhv S,1 bght Pri·I <
rel.ih•tl 58 NL 1111111
29 Stnrr !>9 Pluml1k•·
31 litlt• lru11
32 01SChJ1g1: 6J Ruk•r At>ti1
33 HOOi 63 Masr ol
IOUl\cX £1«:1
36 Coirup11blt• Eng . ,
f J
88 OAtlV PllOT TuMOMy Ju.NI~ t91a
ieal
'Yankees' a,. Winner
A:; Dick Enberl, lhc voice ol the California
Angels, mtght put it. "Damn Yankees" at Sebu·
ttan 's West Dinner Playhouse "touches 'em all •·
It's a four-bagger 1n any ball park. a lusty,
cleverly updated revival of the baseball musical
from the early FUUee that's guaran~ to send
you home hummiJi1 at leut one song from it.s
socko score
A rt.bur Scbwarti, the designated guest direc-
tor for .. Damn Yankees. "!lays hit and run aU the
way in this sprighUy pace rendlUon with bis com·
ics batting cleanup. The laughs are as notable as
the songs in the San Clemente production, which
places considerable emphasis on character
WHEN .. DAMN YANKEES" first took the
field, it brought the Washington Senators out of the
cellar and into the P.ennant race. At Sebastian's
Joe H•rdy .•• Mr. Applt91(• Loi•. ~.:or,_i-
Joe Bovd • 'V•n8ur..,
Smolly . .
Linville., ..• Soflovllt
Henry
Rocky •• Sister . , Oorh ..
Wet< II
• BriMI A-y ~'"llROU Rll• O'Connor ... Lorul,,. Fo,..,.,..n
• LlllCY Ry•n MrOft Fletcller
Mlcll.el J•mH Collin' ........ VlnuTrMI • • .. .... Scot Oevlclo9 •• .. .. .. st ...... V•rd . • • ................ • .. .. Eric St....,.,
• •.. , .................................. W.,d$tnltll
· · · •· ··• ........ .. .......... lloulvnnT~ • • • •• • .. • • • • • . Beverly Mf"mo<• ..... • ... ... ............. .. ... Rk ... nlll_I_
it's the California Angels for whom the overage.
overweight fan sells his soul lo the devil for one
stellar summer, an astute bit of alteration.
The result is a superman in spikes played by
Brian Avery who looks as though be were
cloned from Tab Hunter, who played the role in
the movie. Avery is a strong actor with an engag-
ing manner who gives credence to bis assignment
and also contributes a strong singing voice.
Show Goes On
Old Globe to Rebuild
/ SAN DIEGO 1AP> -On a wooden am-
ph1Lheatcr in a secluded patk glen. the San Diego
National Shakespeare Festival has opened its 29th
:.eason. 100 days after an arsonist burned down the
historic Old Globe Theater.
"On March 8, I watched 43 years of my lire go
Intermission
Tom Titus
He'd be hard presssed , however. to try and
steal the show Crom Martin Ross. a diminutive
chap who plays the satanic sorcerer with outstand·
Ing aplomb. Ross revels in his deviltry and reaps
the evening's loudest applause with his song and
dance number "Those Were the Good OJd Days ...
GORGEOUS RITA O'CONNOa makes an ir·
restistible Lola. the ageless seductress who
weaves her web around the reJuc:tan.l slugger. Her
rendering of the show's top hit, "Whatever Lola
Wants," gives ber a chance to pitch her curves in
the right direction.
Strong support is provided by Linda Ryan as a
pushy reporter, Aaron Fletcher as the frustrated
fan who bargains his soul for a pennant. Lorraine
Foreman as the wife he leaves behind and Vince
Trani as the comical catcher or the Sebastian's
Angels.
The spotlight, however, is repeatedly snagged
by R~s Lynn Tepper and Beverly Miltmore as a
pair or frumpy housewives who are in and out or
the action continuously. Miss Tepper, a specialist
at thls art, is particularly hilarious.
CHOREOGRAPHY, BY CAROL Culver , is ex-
cellent. althoURh the idea of makin~ the "Two Lost
Souls" duet a disco number with chorus support 1s
questionable. Piped·in voices backing some of the
musical numbers are an irritant. distracting the
ear from the singers onstage.
These flaws are minor, however, balanced
against one of the most enjoyable productions to
date on the SebasUan's stage. If you're a baseball
fan you'JI enjoy it even more. but "Damn
Yankees" will delight even those who don't know
an infield fly from a ground rule double.
"Damn Yankees" wiU be up to bal for fi ve
more weeks at Sebastian's, 140 Avenida Pico. San
Clemente. to be followed on July 26 by Martha
Raye in the venerable comedy "Everybody Loves
Opal."
u p rn s moke." says Craig Noel, the Globe's pro· o .. •c1 uum
rlucrng director. "A few days later. at a meeting MAGlfA}r,~~1 .~ 0 with the mayor and other officials. l made the reY R : ~,st
mark that one cannot destroy human spirit. A
theater. yes. but not human spirit."
IT'S A TRIBUTE to the human spirit that this
rendition or one or the nation's most prestigious
Shakespeare Festl'vals is going on at all.
From the moment the first alarm rang out
across Balboa Park, the community rushed into
j,!Clion.
"It was an overwhelming response." said Bill
Eaton. the theater 's publicity director. "The peo-
ple seemed to take it personally.''
T\VO WEEKS BEFORE, another arson-caused
11 r e razC'd the park ·s San Diego Aero-Space
~lusC'um and Aerospace Hall of Fame. The people
~ere hopping mad.
The decision was made to continue the sum·
mer Shakespeare Festival, regardless of cost, and
within a few days around-the-clock construction of
a 662-seat wooden amphitheater and stage in a
wooded park canyon began with donations Crom $1
to Sl ,000 pouring in.
Ruby Cast
LOS ANGELES CAP)
Ruby Dee will play
A l e x Haley 's
grandmother in ABC's
"Roots : The Next
Generations." Miss Dee
Plays Queen Haley, a
s harecropper whose son
becomes a college pro-
f es s o r from Corne11
University.
C.ll M2•M11.
Put• tewwon11 to work tor u.
Just """' you rhouglfl M2
NOW PLAYING
OWdll' .WHIT t2
NewpM leach 6«·0760
...CMMAWULft w.tmJnswr 892-4493
IUlU PAM DRlfl·Ht Buena Park 821·4070
c1nename 6 scAeen
63U 2553 comPLEX
c;"apma11 Ave &. Santa Ana Freeway
"CAPRICORN ONE" (PG)
"THE LAST WALTZ" (PG)
"AMERICAN GRAFFITI" (PG)
"THE STING;.
"CLOSE ENCOUNTERS OF THE THIRD KIND"
"THE DEEP" (PG)
"IF EVER I SEE YOU ~Gc'IN" "FM" (PG)
"qoooeve GIRL" (PO) "~881T TEST"
"HOUSE CA,U.S"
"ANNIE MALC." (PQ)
"DAMIEN: THE OMEN 2" (AJ
"THE S~NT•NEL"
"O~MIEN : THE OMEN a" (R)
"Ttte'~TtHt!t"'----
ALL ORIV•·•H• onH •:>O, ....... Hn.T
Clllkl UMtff I I fFl'ff Unleu .. Kl4'111141 ~~ownCI
..
~'Evita'
Sanger Tom T. Hall
h as been named
headliner for the
fo urth annuaJ Truck
Drivers· Country
Music Awards Show
Sept. 9 in Kansas
City.
WILLIAM LEE
HOLDEN GRANT
D\MIEN
Readied
LONDON IAPl -
Producer Robert
Stlgwood was forced to
miss the New York pre·
miere or "Grease"
bec•use of three Royal
Charity prev iews of
"Evita." h.is new stage
musical about the life or
Eva Peron.
"Grease... his latest
film s tarring J o hn
Travolta and Oltv1a
Newton-John, opened in
New York on Tuesday,
June 13.
"Evita, .. directed by
Hal Prince. with music
and lyrics by Tim Rice
and Andre w Llo yd
Weber. opens its regular
run on June 21.
€)MEN Il
The first timewasooly a warning.
~ _,,_~""""'..,...
·~·, .. , ...... ., ... so
·~ MUM( "' m llSn" tMI LAST WA1fZtflO)
IO' KMllDU
JAW$ 2 (POI
tOln. NO '.USU
,,_fMlllC.MIL VIHtlNT
ltG WIDNUDAY l"l
~us
DIVll'S IAJH('°I
IOT ICMltDlll
JAWS 2 ff'GI tonr. NO MSMS ,,,,..,,, ............. o.u
"THAM' 4500 ITS FU>AT*
"1lAlllT nsr INJ
"ntl LAST WALfZM -...n-11
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au.t .,."°""' • iiii,.., .. ua
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"""' LOVI ANO DIA
...... t
ENTERTAINMENT I INTERMISSION
United Arfoh TIH.•atres
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•Horoscope •Classified I1 ~ • • • Ci
, INSIDE: •A1111 La11ders •Erma &ombeck ~e· aturing
Tueadar Juno 20 l\H8 bAIL v PILOT ........................... ~ ... llililllli ............................... ,.................. • ........................ ..
The creator of Big George
has become trained well
enough that gags for his
cartoons come to mind
easily.
By DENNIS McLELLAN
Oi I ... D~llt Pll .. SUH
'1t was a hot day in LngWla Beach : the kind
of s ummer day that prompts Virgil Partch to
don his blue straw hat and nde the bus instead
of walking down the hill to town.
By noon the c artoonist. ht!ller known
around the world as VIP. has been at hts draw·
ing board five hour~
By m1d -dav. then. he 1!> ready to exchange
the company of his pen-and-rnk characters for
the companionship of real-life characters at the
IV) llow,e, his favorite watenng hole across
from City Hall.
l'~ritz. the bartender. J?laced a glass of red
wint.-in front of Partch. a heavy-set man wear.
mg an orange shorts leeve sportshirt and a
perpetual ~rin.
"We had a St Paddy's Day party here that
wouldn't quit," observed Purtch from his stool·
top vantage point ·
By "wt•" he me:rns fellow cartoonists Frank
and Phil lnterland1 e1nd John Dempsey and as-
<,orted othl·r artists and working stiffs who
makl' regular mid-day forays into the bar
··GETTING IJ.\CK TO my youth." con-
tinued Partch. ''I'd close the Village Inn on
Balboa cvcr:v damn ni~hl But, by golly, I can't
do that anymorl' and that was getting my • work done tc>0." ·
Whill' hi s carousing ha!> been cut bac)S in re-
C'l'Ol years. Panch's cartoon output has actually
mushroomed
Vtrgtl Partch in his Laguna Beach house where he puts Big George through his paces. o~'" ,., ... ,,_.,. G«l' ",,,.._
.r
lie figures he works four times as many
hours now than he did 20 years ago. Thal was
hts heyday "hen he was s upplying 20 cartoons a
month to Pos t. Liberty, Cosmopolitan and
dozens of other magazines -
In thOM! days he spent only about 10 hours a
week at the drawing board. "All the rest 1
played wildly." That's why. he says. with a car·
toon1 st 's fl air for exaggNat1on. "I look like I'm
62 wherl'a:. 111 ~rtu<.illly I'm only 35
Even though ht.• has had "a few magazines
s hot out from under me." he is lOQ busy to con-
tribute to them .
He does two Sunday page cc.irtoons and 12
Big George and Captain's Gig stnps and panels
a week for Field Syndicate.
And when he is on "a working kick." hke he
"as the day before. he may draw 14 finished
panels and a Sunday page in one day.
If it sounds as though he is in a race to meet
an unrelenting newspaper deadline, it isn't so
He actually is two years ahead of himself.
Several years ago Partch was operated on
for cataracts on his eye. In order to allow six
weeks for the eye to heal after surgery he had to
have a six-week backlog.
That routine stuck "Just automatically 1t
stc.1cks up. Once you get into the habit you can't
relax."
But th~houghl of being away from the
drawing bo rd for too long is unthinkable to
Partch. wh knew tn the fourth grade what he
wanted to do for a li ving.
The self-described Navy brat was born on
Prtblov Island. Alaska. the son of a career Navy
man. '
PARTCU REMEMBERS earning dimes
from saHors for doing drawings s howing them
beating up the shore patrol.
His first publis hed ce1rtoo11 was in the
Vintage VIP ,,_ IM "9oll, 'Hl"llnt 'WaJ Dvet",
•11MI~ llY Liii ... arow" Md C'om1>ny
A. Sign of the Times
. Martha Killefer wanted something more than a plaque.
Signs of the times -Instead of a plaque or
t rophy or token of appreciation as a going-out·
of.office gift. Martha JUllefer m ade a request
for something special.
After serving a two-year term as chairman
of the board or directors for the Orange County
District of Childten·s Home Societ y , Mrs
1<11lerer asked the CHS staff for an identifying
:.1gn to stand in front of the buUdmg at 300 S
Sycamore in Santa Ana.
The offke had been without a sign for two
years and CHS lacked the funds for a re place-
ment. So Don Pickler of Outdoor Dimensions
volunteered to make one in time for Mrs.
KHlefer's farewell
"It's a great pleasure," said Mrs. Klllefer
as she viewed the s~n . which lis ts CHS
services. "It's something we can all display
quite proudly."
llappe t1 it1gs
By Marcia Forsberg
chef be under 40 years old, pass rigorous
physical examinations and speak French -
since all correspondence for the organization Is
done In the French language.
__ _.Exceptional Chef
Jung 1s the first Orange County resident to
be accepted ·in the 500-member organization,
rounded In 1865. Jung, who was born in Cologne.
Germany, received his training at Hotel
Kaiserhof and the Hotel School at Badwi.esee.
Re was cher saucier at Maxim's In Parts.
H&-he weJ'ked-w.U.h &.he M arrlott Corporation m
opening eight new hotels b<!fore Joining the 018·
neyland HoleJ in 1977
I
Rolf Jong. trvme resident and iher at the
OisneylllOd Hotel in Anaheim, has been selected
for membership in the Societe Culinalre Philen·
throplque. the most exclusive chef's oraanlia·
Lion in the United Statc>s
Acceptance In the Soclete requires thot a
People Peenng
Angela S. O'Shf'A, 21, daughter of Mr. and
I
University of Arizona humor magazine. Kitty
Kat. while he was a fine arts maJor.
Af~er studying at Chouinard Art Institute in
Los Angeles he landed a job at Disney Studios in
the early 1940s He helped draw Mickey Mouse
and Donald Duck and wound up in the gag de
p3rlmcnt
Later, whil e working for animator Walter
Lantz for S35 u week . Partch discovered he
could make that much by JUSt selling one car
Loon to Colher's magazine
He has been Creehincing ever since
Partch has lived on the Orange Coast since
the end oC World War II "Basically. as long as
there 1s a post oHice you can live anywhere you want ...
II E AND HIS wife. Helen. sold their
waterfront Corona del Mar home and moved in
to their Laguna Beach home a year and a half
ago
(
Mrs. Paul H. O'Shea or Newport Beach, has
graduated from Continental Airlines' hostess
training school. She is a 1974 graduate of
Ne\Vport Harbor lligh School . W.11 .
Obrecht. pro~ram manager with Douglas
Aircraft Company. has been named the Boss of
the Year by Newport Beach Charter Chapter of
the American Business Women's A~latJon
JennJfer lllnshaw of Newport Beach will
attend Wellesley College in the fall . Linda
H. McLaughlin, Costa Mesa attorney. has been
appointed by CaJHorn1a Women Lawyers as the
new J!Overnor of Dis trict 8. which Includes
Orange. Riverside. San Bemardtnq and Inyo
counties Ms. McLaughlin will complete the
term of Ellzabetb Y. Wllllams, Santa Ana at-
to.rnc>y, who res11ened h~r p<>sit1on in order to de·
vote more time to her law practice. Ms
McLaughJin is a graduate of Stanford Unlversi·
ty and Boalt Hall
VlrglnJa Banks of Laguna Niguel has been
inHlate.d Into KAppa Alpha Theta al !he
Universit~ of California. R1venide
ratem ilynihntes al OCR \nctUde BfftrMaso
of Newport Beach. Phi Gamma Delta; Mark
Lambert of Mission Viejo and Rob Spiter or
Hunlington BetH·h. both o( Pht Kappa Slfma
(See H/\PPENINGS, Page C2> ..
--------~-· ........... ,.. .. . . --. .. ... .. . . . . ... . ... ...,,, . .. -.. .. .
• 1 "' •'
"I got out of Corona del Mar because the
kids h ad grown up," he s aid. "We had a g1gan-
t1c house. My wife and I were rattling around in it ..
Partch 's "digs." as he calls the cluttered
room where he puts Big George through his
paces. is a bedroom downstairs in the modern
~plit-level house.
Over the yea rs. he s aid, he has become
trained well enough that gags for his cartoon!>
come to mind easily. Still, like all cartoonist~.
he sometimes worries the well will run dry
.. , think all the guyc; do that ... he said .. You
get panicky and go. 'This 1s 1t. ...
After more than 30 years of drawing his
zany band of characters. P artch still gets a kick
out of it.
·-.. get just as much fun out of the freebies
a:. I do when I get paid for it." He laughed. "So
<See V IP. Paite C2>
AOOPTlOO
DAYCARE
FOSTER f~'11LY CARE
PARENT/CHILD COUNSru
PREGNAHtV COU\'SfUf~G ~ ..
PUBLIC Ew:ATlON
PARENT EDUCATION
Martha Killefer with CHS sign.
I I'·~ t > 1
J
f .
·'
'
OAILV PILO f r 1.18""1811 June 20. 1918 AN~LANDER S/H OROSCOPE
l
( Boro•cope ]
WEDNE DA\', JlJNE It
By SVONEV OMARR
~Ill~ CM arch 21-Aprtl 19): Thi11 la your
power-play day. Know it and •ct accordingly
One at top mabs room for you. Bring priorities
\nto sharp, dear focus. Cancer. Capricorn
n1ure prominently. You make important ad·
van cemenl. You get backing f rom
"authoritative source ...
TAURUS CApril 20-May 20): You finish
• wbat you start -Individual who played key role
in your past could reappear. Aries, Libra flgure
prominently. Write. correspond. open lines of
~ommunlcaUon. Chart your own course. Refuse
• to be backed into comer. Protect your s pace!
GEMINI t May 21-June 20>· You gain
• strength. You are encouraged to be more ln·
dependent ln thought and action. Leo. Aquarius
: figure In scen ario. Accent on the occult.
finances affecting those close to you. Missing
article is located.
CANCER !June 21.July 22) · Intutuan pays
dividends. You're at right place at right time.
.·; Aquarlan is in picture. Emphasis on
·: partnership, legal green light -and marriage.
You get reports, letters, messages regarding
public reaction to your efforts.
LEO <July 23-Aug. 22): Light touch wins.
Avoid heavy-hande d m ethods. Leave fine
-pointa, details for another time. Accept invita·
tton to social outing. Diversify. Display
, versatility, adaptability -and humor. Gemini.
Sa,,lttartus persons figure prominently. You get
a · third chance" to correct an error.
VIRGO CAug. 23-Sept. 22): Break through ~ red tape --disp lay knowledge, become
•• thoroughly familiar with basic issues. You are
able to express yourself. to touch, to feel, to
love. Children are due to play key roles. •
Change. travel. excitement are featured. Wh at
had been a serious roadblock will be removed. .
I
LURA <Sept. 23-0ct. 22>: Obtain •alid hint
from Virgo message. Dlg deep for information.
Be analytical. Find reasons for recent bappel')-
ines. Member of ooooslte sex is drawn to you.
Gemini, Virgo, Sagittarius persons figure prom·
inenUy. You get reassurances which ald.....ln
building emotional security.
SCORPIO COct. 23-Nov. 21): Home, re·
latives. close n eighbors could dominate your
personal scenario. You m ake Important "cor-
rection" or adjustment. One who was envious,
who created friction. will now become'an ally.
Exercise ability to w in frie nds, t o be
diplomatic, to fight hard but to be gracious
when it's over.
SAGl'ITARl\JS •Nov 22-Dec. 211: Look tn·
ward. Know that being alone is not same as be·
ing lonely. You are able to perceive what people
want. what they think -and what you can do
about it. Pisces. Virgo fi gure prominently The
number 7 could play key role
CAPRICORN IDec. 22.Jan. 191: Be direct.
confident: take initiative, m ake views known.
You'll obtain needed support. Capricorn is in
picture and so 1s Cancer individual. Rela·
• tionship ts "serious" and you make correct de-
• .. cision. Older individual wants to help if you
• forgo principles. Be warned'
:. AQUARIUS I Jan. 20-Feb. 181 : You get what
:· you want. but the route is circuitous. Know it
and don't be discouraged by delays. misdirec-
: . lion. Aries. Libra figure prominently. Burden
not your own in first place is removed. Erase
• • an)' hint of guilt feeling. Support. prestige on
• the r ise. ·
PISCES I Feb. 19-March 20)' Flash of in·
!-.lght occurs. You see path leading to happiness.
Light replaces gloom. Allow yourself to be
.pleased, fu lfilled ! Be original. independent.
selfish tn sense that you protect your rights. Leo
1s in scenario.
If June 21 is your birthday you are attrac·
live. conscious of weight , physical appearance.,
moi;e so than the average person. Gemini,
Sagittarius individuals play important roles in
your life. October could see you rising up from
e motional. financial setbacks. You recover and
thrive. You are loyal, fun to be with, tem-
peramental when It comes to clothes, opinions
con cerning your a rtistic talents. Many of your
a mbitions are going to become ac\ualities in the
not-too-distant future. ·
,,1" lnnR
.111cnt1on -gc1 ll'I
with 14K
yellow gold
clCCents.
rhr 1,1'>)>1>
L0"1CS in
tiger eye,
green or
black onyx,
1ade , corJI,
malachite,
l.1pis lazuli
.111d (as shown)
h1 c:trntlian
P1 ice<. dlff cr
B.D. HOWES and SON
FINE JEWELERS FOR FOUR GENE RATIONS
NEWf'OR f 8EA(tt
}4UVla l.ldo •67S·27l1
•
Difference Between Love, SeX·
A ..
La•de1••
Ut;Alt ANN
LANDERS There's a
world or difference
bet ween love and sex.
lady Love Is dt!ep and
tender feeling or fond·
nes s a nd devotion
Pornography, salacloui;
wr iting. and erotic pie
tures are Intended to
arouse sexual desires .
d ay 1be t.ceeded bis
tbreshold of tole ranct.
Let'• hope your parents
never •S•in abare the
same dwelllbJ. Tbey are
a da11.lc eumple of two
people wbo can't live
....._ WITH each other -or
without each other.
never gel through all the
book• I recei v~d
Couldn't thlnk of a thing
I needed S<> I'm return-
ing your check." I felt
insulted. Your opinion is
wanted. -OXNARD
DEAR OX! Your 111t
was unJmadaaUve aad
tasteless. lier response
was boorish and crude.
I 'd say you're even.
1\:s for "Chilly In Phil-
ly ." Virginia ls defimt~
ly below the Mason
Dixon lint• but an}
Northerner t•an tell you
they know when they
cross that line There b
very little "Southern
Hosp1t e1l1ty ·
Southerners can come lo
Pennsylvania. however.
and be treated VE'r)
well l 'VE BEEN THERE
or course you
wouldn't put this In your
column because you
don't understand what
l 'm talking about.
MRS. P.
DEAR MRS.: 1 UD·
detstand very well. It's
YOU who don't un -
derstand -and obvious-
ly cannot deal wlt.b lbe
flcl lhal sex ls the ul·
tlmate expression of
Ion •IHI -fuffUJment tn a
close, he althy rel a ·
tlonshlp.
Sex without love Is
nothing but bedroom
aymnastlcs -e mpty
and meaningless. Love
without sex ls wor ds
without music. It's like
trying tO clap with one
hand.
Peop le wbo nee d
pornograp hy to turn
them on can have It as
far as I'm concerned. I
was never annolnted to
lell a dults wha t they
should or should not re-
ad or look at. Personal·
ly, pronography bores
me to death.
DEAR ANN
LANDERS: I'm writing
about your answer t o
Lexington, Ky .. regard·
ing battered husbands.
Please share this with
your readers.
I, too, am the grown
daughter of a battered
husband. He Is a won-
derfu I man. father .
husband: provider, etc.
My mother is a brilliant.
high-strung woman who
has alwavs had severe
emotional problems and
refused to deal with
them.
During my formative
years, I witnessed the
s ame pattern. Firs t .
mother would start to
abuse my rather verbal-
ly, then she would slap
r,r punch him. Finally he
Wedding and engage-
ment ormowacemenu run
on Sunday an the Dally
Pilot. Forms are available
at all Daily Pilot of flees or
by calling the Features
Department, 642-4321.
To ovoid disappoint.
ment. prospecti~ brides
are reminded to have their
weddmg stories: with a
bJack-ond·whtte gl.ouy of
the bnde or of the couple.
to the Features Depart·
ment one week before the
wedding
Engagement. announce-
ments. with black-and-
white glossy of the future
bride or the couple. must
be re ce 1v~d by th e
Features Department sir
weeks before the wedding
date
would walk out of the
house
One day, during a bit·
ter a rgument, mother
reached into the freezer,
grabbed a frozen s ide of
beef a nd threw ll at
father. It struck him on
the side or the head.
Several months later. a
blood clot on his brain
was skillfully removed
by a w onderf ul
neurosurgeon. By 11ome
miracle. father survived
and is now alive and
healthy.
My sister hates m y
mothe r and adores my
father. l love them both
because I recognize a
problem when I see one
Separate residences was
the solution. They love
each other and spend a
lot or time together. but
they cannot live
together. This s tory is
just one or many in
countless family closets
Thank you for letting ine
tell it. -J JN VALLEY
STREAM, N.Y.
DEAR J .: \'our
parenta obviously had a
udo·maaodlstlc 1ela·
tlonsblp. She needed a
man to punish and be
enjoytd being be lted
around.
The day Ma grabbed
the side or bef'f was the
••• VIP
<From Page CO
I know my mental faculties are getting un-
glued."
ONE OF THE benefits of being a cartoonist
ls beintt able to work at home. Partch notes,
however. that it took several years to convince
his friends that he was actually working.
• ''The kids I trained right away." he said.
"They'd knock on the door and say, 'Daddy, l
know you're in there."'
"But I love to work .at home. J don 't like an
office. The only reason to work in an o((ice is to
get a way /rom the house. This is my getting
away from the house. And I'm not cursed wlth
work while I'm here."
For emphasis, Partch hit the top of the bar.
which was now littered with the elbows of his
cohoru.
"You getting interviewed. ~gil?" said
Phil lnterlandl. s tanding next to h~brother at
the e nd of the bar.
Partch nodded. Referring to his fellow car-
toonists he said. "We never talk shop· the kind
or pencil we use. We usually talk about how
deep we are in the dog house."
Discussions. he said. are "nothing very pro-
found Now that 13 has passed we haven't had a
serious thought in hours "
HJlppenings
<From Page Cl >
Trudy l\1arcchall and Jim Harrigan were
honored recently by Wes t Orange County Hot
Line ... Mary Kuhlman wiU serve as new presl·
dent of the Women's Civic League of Newport
Harbor .
I n the interest o f being a good
neighbor, the new Los Caballeros Racquet and
Sports Club in Fountain Valley is inviting
charitable groups and business tennis associa·
ttons to use its courts for their special tennis
events. Club principal John Fleitt says. "It is
our pleasure to share the abundance of courts
during these s ummer months when so many
civic groups are searching for court time for
their evelllS ...
If you have an item for Happenings, send 11 to
Marcia Forsberg. Orange Coast Daily Pilot. P 0. £or
1560. Costa Mesa. CJ\ 92626. Or coll 6424321
sizzelink TM
A NEW LIMITED AVAILABILITY SAUSAGE
JUST IN TIME FOR THE 4TH OF JULY
Mldt from frt1h tMif end pork end slowly 1mok1d 0Y1r rt1I hanlwood.
SlntllnkT.M. I• fully cooked ind 1111on1d with a hint of onion for•
ttngy flnot. It'• ld11I for lunch, cflnnar or W111Ckt. Ottlt on th• Ifill.
H1Y11 tttt• before you buy.
I
OEAR ANN
LANDERS· A whil e
back a friend ot mine
had to be h<>spitallted in
another city for several
days. fl was nothing
serlous. r didn't know what to
send her so l slipped $10
Into an envelope with a
note suggesting that she
ask a nurse to buy her
som ething she might
need
After two weeks I re-
ceived a letter saying.
"Dear : I had so many
n owers they had to be
distributed to other pa·
lien ls on the floor. I' II
DEAR ANN
LANDERS: I don't want
to start another Civil
War. but "Belle From
Richmond" should have
s ign e d h e r l e tter
"Dumbbell From
Richmond.".
U she will look in a
history book .she'll find
that Vrrginra wa s
divided and fought on
both s ides the North
and th e South .
Som e tim es it was
brother agains t brother.
and rather against son .
DEAR BEEN : So
have 1 and my ex·
pertence was comple tely
dlfrerenl. Some People
have more people pro·
blems than others.
CONFIDENTI AL to
B r o k e n·llearted and
\Vant Him So Muc :
Sorry. dur, I can't glfl.
wrap the yokel and hand
him over to you. From
what you wrote I can't
understand why you'd
want hlm.
Mark Cross w.acom•s you to
CostcaJA9SG.
To soy we ve JllSt arrived may well be
o monument of understo1emen1
Mork Cross leo1her goods
hove been on Ame11con rrod111on
for generorions
And now we ve
opened our doors
or South Coosr Ploio
1n Cosro Meso
for rhe first rime
V1s1t us and discover
1he quohty thor s
mode us Mori~ Cross
Scxnh Coost Plaza
~ Drisfol Street. COStt> Mt>so. Co. 92626
--. ---r"'----
EVERYONE i\DMIRES A
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AT LILLIAN BALLARD'S it's as easy as
1. 2. 3. !
1 friendly. trained figure
consultants guide you.
2A . Peak health and energy
a re attained by comb ining
our exc lu s ive fitness
pro"ram a nd prov e n
nutritiona l principl es
designed with your personal
needs in m ind.
2B . S l e nderize wi th
Dancer cize. A bonus method
of fun exercises.
3. You could lose 1 dress size
by next month. Tell us the
s ize you'd like to wear. we'll
tell yo u how man y
treatments it will take and
the cost involved.
Lilllan Ballard makes lt
easy to get into shape.
SUMMER SPECIAL
20%SAVINGS
When You
And A Friend Enroll •
NO SHOTS. P ILLS. DISROBING
OR WE IGHT LIFTING
CALL NOW 63 1·2444
LILLIAN BALLARD
FIGURE CONTROL
SALON
369 E. 17th St.
Costa Mesa
HOURS: MON.·FRI. S A.M. ·8 P.M. SAT. 9 A.M. to 3 P.M.
• t L• • •' ,,, _____ -----~----------~-~~------·~~--~
. -. • .. • • :t' ,_ •• . . . . . . . ... ' . . ... "' ... -.. ............ '.
•
. .. --
'
1
PEOPLE I ERMA BOMBECK TU88day. June 20, 1978 O~IL Y PILOT t;J
BED TTI
Th!NJGHTMAR£ Undivided World of Sister Kate
By TED BARTIMUS
BELFAST. Northern
Ireland CAP> -To am
bulance drive r s in
Belfast she ls simply
"Sister Kate," the
woman waiting at the
door for the victims.
Her christened name
is Kathleen O'Hanlon
She cannot watch·a gory
TV s how because it
makes her s ick to the
stomach. but she is one
of the best emergency
room nurses in the
world. · ·u someone hands me
a blown-off leg or arm it
doesn 'l bother me to stand there holding it
awhile." says the petite
woman with a
hand s hake l ike a
wrestler and the step of
a birthday child.
During No rth e rn
lreland's nine years or
terrorism this Qursing
sister -" British collo· qulalism meaning senior
nurse -has held more
than a few mangled
limbs while s urgeons
fought to save lives of
bomb, gunshot and fire
victims.
Queen Elizabeth II .
defender of the Protes·
tant Church of England.
has recognized the ex-
pertise of this Jris h
Catholic colleen and
singled her as a member
of the Order o f the
British Empire
Tht Royal Acadmey
o f 'Nursing has paid
tribute to her frontline
cool by making he r
Sister Kate at Belfast Hospital.
cha irman of its Accident
and Emergency Room
Forum.
The casually room
staff at Royal Victoria
Hospital s peaks of her
skill and humor. student
nurses flock to her tee·
lures. and one am-
bulance driver who has
seen it all calls her "one
tough cookie but a great lady··
Al 47 and with no im·
mediate family nearby,
Sisl~ Kate spends most
of her lime working.
with time off for sleep
a nd some t elevis ion
.. and maybe a trashy
book. some kind of silly
novel.·· Once in a while
there is a dav to J?et
away frorn it all. walk·
mg the wild and windy
No rth ern Ire l and
coastline. Through all the in· Her sav1ngs go toward t l f on occasional visit to the erna war are which
families of her 20 first everyone in Northern Ireland ca lls "the cou s lps living In the troubles." Sister Kate
Boston area. She always has listened ror the m·
takes along her Norton s istent claxons which
High School football 'lhave become Bellast 's
jersey to wear w~en she anthem _ those am·
r oughhouses with the bulance sirens heralding
kids. more mutilation on her
"l love it here, we sterile doorstep.
have such a good team Stationed at the swing·
at this hospital," she ing doors leading to the
says. "People say to me underground driveway.
'Why do you stick with Sister Kate makes the
it?' But I don't see why first instant medical
a ll the decent people judgrients on casualty
should have to leave just ·cases without, she say~.
because of a violent few moral judgment.
This is my home. I was "The minute those
born here, and I'm not people come through the
a!raid to live here." door they cease to be in·
stigator or vlcl\m They
become patients. and
was dead when we got
him That was yester· day. Today it's part of
history. You go on.
"You always know
when yo u 've had
enough. You've got to get
completely away for two
or three days."
One of her most poig-
nant memories of "the
tro uble s'' i s or a
policeman blinded by a
bullet and a soldie r
whose lower jaw had
been shot off. The two
were great friends and
placed side·by-side in
the hospital.
"They felt the need to
communicate. so the
sold ier who couldn't talk
wrote notes and r read
t.hem to the __policeman
who couldn't see.··
that begins the f
next morning.
' The 1111• of m1nv c.hlldr., can become e nlfhtm•e
of thame end humlllttlon bee.,.. of bed-ttlnt end
•u emodon•I hnp11CJt, It cen ctuee wlou. ...vcl\ob
gletl probltma l•tlnt • llfetlrne. Don't let "'et l\ap·
pen to your child I Bedwe1 .. nt. ~not uUMd
bV ot91nlc cMtect « cf._ e11tt be .. ded -find
out how. Th9r•'• • ll"lted nurnber of Ylluabte
12 PIJI booklets tnllllblt -''BEOWETTINO
-WHAT 1rs ALL ABOUT ANO HOW
TO STOfl IT" -a r9')0ft bV four mtdteef doctors. ""°'" ~
mall coupon for yOl.lr FREE copy now -NO OBLIGATION.
! • • -,..-• ·ti~· ":".:.. ":, • • Tg:r..,-, l.:f::J!.n-:.. Ena -c {r..,.&Jot'l.t'llUI._ T70w.ict> Aoed,S.. ... tlM 1 ... 1~t Pel~ Aho, C.. M3IM {HV!!U•S t!(>•"O\ QQ• lat SI 729-4131t '-"· H•----------------........ ______________ o.-
Q. c,,..,, _______ ,., ... _ziP u
-0 ,,,_ (_l ..... 57---1971 [ftU"Taell Ta QU ... tv lor _____ ....._~ R oya l Victoria
Hospital is a concrete
octopus with glass ten·
t acles splayed over
acres of barricaded no·
man ·s land dividing
Rom an Catholic and
Protestant strongholds
at the top of Falls Road,
the neighborhood where
Kate O 'Hanlon was
raised.
the ones who need treat· ------------------------------
ment the most get the highest priority.··
Its formal entrance is
brooded over by a statue
of Queen Victori a
dressed in grime. Inside
it has become renowned
for treating burn and
blast victims. (ls reputa·
tion attracts specialists
from dozens of coun·
trie s, inc l uding
Rhod esia and South
Africa. to watch new
techniques for dealing
with trauma cases.
She says her sense or
humor and love of a joke, plus years or
seasoning and training.
help her cope with pres·
ure.
"I keep calm. If I lose
my head then everyone
else around me is going
to lose theirs. We've had
up to 150 people in shock
com e through those
doors in an hour. This
is n't a job where you
can flap about and say
·oh dear. oh dear ·
"Yesterdav we had a
young 1 British> soldier
come in hl're with a
gunshot wound and he
Get Rid Of
Unsightly Bulges!!
PRESENTING OUR NEW CONCEPT IN INCH LOSS
NO Starvation Diets
NO Pills
Also NO Shots
Put Pizza • ID a Cllfw"p ktw•t-.,
$~
1'11 C ROWAVE PIZZA
QUICHE
mix
'~ !>tick pie c:rus t
1 tablespoon wuter
I c up n cotta chee1>e 3 eggs
1-1 cup thinly !>!iced
pcppcron1, diced
l teaspoon oreAano, crumbled
1.-teaspoon sa It
3 -1 cup grated mon
terey jack cheese
Prepare pie crust mix
as package directs. us·
ing J tablespoon water.
Roll out to fit 7-inc h
ceramic quiche dish. Fit
pastry into dish. making
edge even with top or
dish. Hook lop edge of
dough over edge of dish
at intervals to prevent
s lipping down into dish.
Prick bottom. Cook with
full power in microwave
oven 2 minutes. Turn
dish h<1lfwa y ar ound.
Cook 2 minutes longer
Mix ricotta with eggs,
pepperoni. oregano, salt
and 12 cup jack cheese.
Spoon into shell.
Cook with medium
power 10 minutes. rotat-
ing dish halfway around
after 5 minutes. Sprinkle
with remaining 1 .. cup
jack cheese. Cook with
rutt power l minute
longer or until cheese 1s
melted. Let stand 5
minutes to firm slightly
before serving. Makes 2
s ervings.
Wash, Spin, Rinse • • •
There Isn't a reader
out there who hasn't nt
one time or another s uf.
fered the agonies of a
consumer lemon.
Maybe it was a sew in~
ma c hine th at onl y
worked in rever~e. dur-
ing a full moon. when
oysters were m !:.eason.
Ma ybe 1t wa s a
vacuum s weeper that
picked up pennies. pins
and ~mall dogs. but un·
fortunately not dust.
Mostly Ukely, it was a
car that was assembled on New Year's Day and
bad en early retirement
wish.
I never understood
why ma nufacturers
could not brin g
themselves to admit.
"Folks, you got a r eal
bow ·wow h e re. a nd
we've tried to £i x it. but
we're going to have to
replace it!"
Everyone has their
own entry for the Lemon
Olympics. For me, it
was a was her t h at
dldn 'l. Jn three years . I
had 28 service calls. I
not only knew my r e·
fairman, Hal, by name.
knew the ages or his
August for our vacation, through life-with the
okay?" Sombecks had it not
·•suit yourself!" I been for a stroke of luck
s hrugged , "but re · one day at the country
m e mber Hal is taking fair sulky races . A horse
the last two weeks of Ju-which bore the trade
-ly and that means we'll name of our washer paid
be an c11t1re month S48 to one. With the win.
without a repairman." nings. we bought a new
When my husband and was h er of another
I discovered l was going brand.
c hild ren and the ir
names. how much his
house payments r an,
what bis wife said to his
mother when she put on
a hard hat to clean the
to have another baby l ll was hard saying
dreaded telling Hal. He goodbye to Hal. My
had told me once before husband and I visited
that the washer was bim when he had sur·
working to capacity and gery but after we re·
a n ything additional · hashed the good old
would send ~t over the da ys of s pin. wash , edge thermostat. pump and
Hal and our washer leaks. we ran out or con·
wou ld have drifted versation.
oven. and how he didn't --;::=:=::::==:=::;::::;::::;::::;::=:::;;:::;;:;;;::;::;;;;~know how much longer
he could put off prostate
surgery. Basically, my washer
had four cycle settings :
WASH, SPIN, SOAK and
HAL. He was the most
d e penda ble . A week
without Hal was like a
week without clean
clothes. He became such
an intricate part of our
lives. my husband came
home one night and
said, 'Tm taking the
first two weeks In
CARPETS CLEANED
In yoyr home or place of
busin'tSS by Von Schrader
dry-foam method.
Hofuls • Ho....,.1
Ho odor
JJ'sCLUMIMG
CaltodeJ tor
tr.. ...........
20115-teAll•A"•·
Cede M9M, CA. t1'27
-Orange Comrty ••• ~
Set Your Comp~ for Hawaii August 16th
BJackbeard's is About to Pirate a Plane
Join the party flight to celebrate the grand opening of
Blackbcard's new restaurant in l.ahaiha on Maui.
Drawing for two free tickets to Lahaina, lodging at a
major hotel. dinner and cocktails at BJackbe.arcf s.
No losers! Change your vacation plans to board the
Western Airlines party plane. You buy the tickets. we pro-
vide mai tais in Newport Beach. bus to the airport, orchid
leis and other gifts. When in Uhairra.. be our guest for
dinner and cocktaU at Blackbeard's at Whaler's Wharf.
f or details. come to Blackbeard·s in Newport Beach
near the Orange County Airport. home of the finest Conb-
bcan spccialti~ this side or Hawaii.
-. . ~ .... . .. . ..
Pizza
cheese
quiche does
taste like
pizza.
SKIN CARE &
FIGURE CONTROL aNTE~S
HUNTINGTON HACH
894°7542
s-t•A.H
557·0>20
T~ 6)f.Jt1J
~ ......
tJt.9100
UUH-ltl•d
Mt!.~'°" v1t:.Jo49S-0401
HfZ2 C-,.. c.,.ur-CS•n 0 , •t Avef P .. w t
Dr. MAR(i)UETT A HUNGERFORD
Noted Therapist Now in Coastal Area ·
With offices in Costa Mesa, Newport Beach and Mission Vieio
Specializing
• In
MASSAGE THERAPY
AT
SADDLEBACK
CHIROPRACTIC
HEALTH SERVICE
So::ld•l!boc• Ci..opCY.•"' HA:>-tli ~··ce [} S. ::re DC :l ·l!(:lor
bo:>\I\ :>?"''"'°"' ~ "'°'\Oql! •"9ropy ::it '" be1• As :> v::iH
mPmbfo< ol the SCH S (). ~,for:j opol.&s ny~her(¥1y and
mohOq<' ~~ 10 potoet>t\ " in. ollKe Prt> 01 PO'' mos\099 s
::lete'"'"' .. -1 O" two \~b';eq.,enr oll e Vl\>ts. to ~•obi-sf> the ~·
proct'::lv•P f0t ecKh po!·P•" f':>••('f'•s Of>"'O"' C7e e<>~l!c ·~
borh proccd.M C7e omb<ne:l A 'Y?Col commt!lrl' ol lee""q
m0te re•OA'!d ....ti bo•t-J\ opposed 10 l"\t tt>e ~p.Aonon °' ~
mo\ ;aqp ... ch Ml hu'l' i ;)I s C.H s Al\() I '"'' '"" t bei·.,..,e how
qoo::l 1 l~el
Chn<colly, [} S.ci::ire D: f1n:h me effect ol l"OSSOQ8 CJ•d
hy::f,otl'ltllapy ~ odr"'1C.I to od111stme"t for Ch<Of'K and oc111e
plivs•C:>• ailment, ,...,, ti rnclu.:ie tow boc~ po•n, 1c>0l1C~
m1qr0tne ·lensOOll neocio<M•. ond e•un 'otol•O!tl~ •o hO•e CJ ma<e
inotough oppocn to total bo:ly core
Dr Hv"Qerford 1\ CJ prol~lfOOOI 01 what \he doe~. She ~CJ former
l!O\tern ~ d.flCIOI o! me Am.<ICon Mou098 and Therapy
'-1soc•otion; st'tl •\ on 11te norionol LD'Tlmlttee f0t conllflUloq
educo11on of AMT A and ()(! tho boord of ~ ol the United
Stole~ Pf,y\ocol fheropy As\0Ct0ll0'1. She ho\ ol\O oppoaed
before sMCJM! ~oo>m•tllW!~ ond on ~ rteW\ show'5
promo11nq r~ion of mouoc:r-i l/leropy ~ slOle ~
r
Dr. HUHGERFORD'S CREDITS
• Doctorate in Physical
Therapy.
• Former eastern director
of American Massage
Therapy Association
• Public Relations Director
of United States Physical
Therapy Association.
• Former State President
of New Jersey A.M.T.A.
• Candidate tor Ph.D. in
Nutrition.
• lefore You C~ a
MCIUCICJe Thet apist •••
ASK FOR CREDENTIALS
Dr. Hungerlord soys tho1 some doctors will presaibe
massage For their pot1en1s. But often. those patients
won't know where to begin 10 fnd o reputable
mossoqe thefops1, She gives some gUdelines. "Ask
For credentiols." she soys. "l~ for someone who is
o qroduae ot on AMTA approved school: oslt to
see a kcense; osJc them if they ere o member of o
prof essionof organization such cs AMT A Of
lntemotiord M~s Federctisn"
Dr. HUNGERFORD COMMISSIONED TO CONDU~T SEMINAR
The State of South Dakota requires all massage therapists to receive
three days of continuous education in therapy each year. Or.
Hungerford has been commissioned to conduct this seminar. which
will coincide with the Midwest Regional A.M.T.A. Conference of
therapists from 1 O states.
• MISSIOM Ylf!£ Snll•rhdt CM,roprectk Set tlcit
28882 Marvuetlt• Parkway 496·5851
....... Tllft.. ......... w .
Or. Midi•" CW¥W D.C.
UHO t4~artte Pnw-r Hl·561l
e4. -.d 11llrl.
• MEWPOIT llACH
hry CI flM. C. Cf'Mhl
1617 W..tclff Drfft 641-6164
.. "'" . .. .
-f
... .... ~
• ' ,,, t ...
• • -4• •• • • ----.... ....
___ DAll __ v_Pt_t._o_r ___ .. ______ r_ .... _ioay..._._J""9 __ 20_._,_l»'_a ~!.~.~ ....... ,!~~.~.~ ....... ~:!:!'"~ ...... J~!.~r.~'!: ............. ~.~~ ..... H .
He.wt for S. HcwMt For ~ G.....-al I 002 Cir..,... I 002 G~ f OOZ Ge•,..a I OOZ lc6oe Penfusulo 1 007 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
G ... ,.. 1002 GtlMf'aA 1002 ----------------
••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
1002 Q.,.., .. 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
~COATS & WALLACl
~REAL ESTATE, INC.
I\ IOCl\:IY OWNlO COMP/\NY Sl RVING
riff SOIH H 1'.0ASI ARf A SINCE 1951
•OIGIOUS POOL HOMI -beautlf ul 4
BR Greenbrook Pool home with lovely 1
covered patio. Pride of ownership,.
priced right at $112,000. Ceil 64o.6161
RAll-IH M. COSTA MESA -A 3 BR,
as immaculate as this with lush
landscaping. Highly upgraded. quick
possession, 2 blocks to super market,
shops. $79,900 and "Flexible." c ..
14Ml41
Serving Costa M esa-Irvine
Hunlmgtun Bedc.h-Ncwport B each
G1•1d 1002 a.a.& .... -.........•..••......... _ ..................... .
HANDYMAN'S
DUAM
Garage fWly insulated.
Built in work bench.
Large lot with RV ac·
cess. Newly painted,
paneling and wallpaper.
••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
U~l()U~
ON LIDO ISLE
LOVB. y OH UDO -Country Spanish
decor. 3 bdrms o r 2 and den,
completely remodeled, in finest taste.
Vacant at $310,000.
lllGHT & UGHT -2 spacious, sunny
patios, cha rrajng 3 BR. with huge
living room an<f SU'ndeck. Very nice at
$220,000.
.. IUU y A TTRACTIVl" -Lido Js)e
family home, 3 bdrms. cf\torful decor
a nd la nds caping, high beamed
ceilings, shuttered windows and a
south patio, $238,500.
U,_.l()UI: ti()Ml:S
REALTORS'
'lHE NICfST PEOPLE SELLING THC NfA rtsr HOMES
CORONA DEL MAR, 675~
MESA VERDE, 646-6990 • CALL US
1002 & ....... IOOZ
Four Bedrooal HolDe in ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
O:OOAL~
OPPOATUHIT'f
Mesa North. Truly a
Great Buy for $76,000.
546-231.3
Ol'I" 114 q •II\ I~ 10 bl N.CI
==~~ ["lfilll ject to the Federal Fair
Housing Act or 1968 DISl~MID
which makes it illegal to FOR EXECUTIVE
adver tise "any pre· LIVING
rerence, limitation. or Thi b tlf 11 diac.riminaUon baed on s eau u Y up.
race. color, reUgion, sex. graded Buc~Ja Home!
or naUonal origin, or an Spacious Liv~ng Room
intention to make any with big Fireplace.
such preference. um1ta· Large Master Bedroom.
t.100. ortliscnmlnation... hl~biy upgraded with private entrance t o
WESLEY N
TAYLOR CO.
REALT~JHS ~111l·t· t~Mu
4 II & FL WISTCUff-$17',tOO
Exceptionally well done home nr
Westcliff Plaza &Jld Mariners Park.
One of nicest in the area. Perfect for
c hildren. Owner moving out of state
a nd must sell. See to appreciate.
WESUY M. TAYLOR co .. ·RIEALTORS
2111 S-Joocpde Hlls Rood
NEWPORT CEMTH. M.I. 644-49 I 0
Tbls newspaper will not garden area. Siu.mp
«nowingly accept eny st.ooe planters highlight Gftleral I 002 GtMNI I 002
advertising for 1'eal tMhe rVoerdorn -Ll~a~kyatr.d . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• estate wbJch I.a ln viola· esa e vang a its ·
tionolthelaw. Best! $129,ooo. Call MAKES UF£ DOVER SHORES ---------i S:-~~ .11 \ ,,,,. ,, ,, , ,.,,, , EASIER NORTH $325,000 [ -I SO. COAST PLAZA Very prestigious custom
ERRORS Acfyertf •. ' · Enjoy the rich rewards e x e c u tr v e h o m e '
-L.-...... c:..._ ... ...._.r ~ ~ . • of IJving in a community Palatial . g.ated e~try .
-~ ,_. -. ~ surrounding a btrl Formal Living & dining dal'f ..d report ·· recreation area. This rooms. Fabulous kitchen ran i...clohly. RB>UCB> $3,000 secluded 2 bdrm, 2 ba & breaklasl room-loads
DAILY PILOT.._ FHA. VA 4 BR, over 1600 "Woods" condo orfers u or space Larg6t dlxe
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Din Rm super pool sized commun. hvmg. Secun Luxuriously larg~ & COITtd........_Ollly. yard. 'G~al area. w. or ty gates afford you peace private mahsler w1kang. .--------c Bnstol.S.of Edinger. of mind You enjoy Roman bat . Wa ·in freedom from ma1nt wardrobe Ma1d"s W....for~ .RED CARPET' womes. fffA/VA lerms quarters. Superbly
••••••••••••••••••••••• • .Jl:45-3474· Only S78.900. Phone to-landscaped! Owner will v day. 545-9491 fm.ance. To see lS to lov· Ge•:d lOO e Come by tod y
•••••••••••••••••••••• ..--dd_P_R_l_C_E_D_R_J_G_JIT __ , (~IWMJ!rnlmi4J. ~ ...... ·~··· ''"''< ...... a, •.
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VA Terms. great 4 Bdrm
2 bath family home ao ex·
cellenl location. f>nced
to sell at only $84,500.
Cal 1546-SEB>
~·HERITAGE
REALTORS
=~~~~::Efe~ su:a:::eT [® ll~!iH\rl crackling brick fireplace .--"~ . ---• •=•··~,
& a boat or trailer ac· Highly upgraded 2 story.
cess. The owner U1 not 4 Bdrm, 3 bath. dining
desperate, 'but would like room, island kitchen,
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751-31.91. Asking $130,000. Call
------....iC:SELECT ~Wl
eALBOA ISLAND T PROPERTIES --~HERITAGE CHARMER
'Th.ls laland duplex baa ---------~===~==~~;!.. loada of potential. Use
• • REALTORS
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Thal 's ALL you pay
fora
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in the
DAILY PILOT
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DIRECTORY
00 IT NOW•
642-5671 r:= Walker & lee
ORANGE COUNTY
HOME SPECIAUSTS
ff it is not here, our computer cah
find you your home In minutes! Call
us and come to the experts at
QUAIL PLACE PROPERTlES.
Ana heim, 4 B .•... $ 81.000
Chino. 3 B . . . . . 59,000
Corona def Mar. 3 F'·V .. . 303,500
Corona del Mar. 5 F -DR·V .. 459.500
O>sta Mesa, 3 ........ , . . . . 69.500
Costa Mesa, 3 F . . . . . . . . . . . . 78,950
Costa Mesa. 4 P . . . . . . . . . . . . 145.000
El Toro <condo>. 3 .. . . . . . . 64,900
El Toro <condo>. 2 ..... . . . . 69,750
Fountain Valley, 3 D 71.500
Fullerton (condo>. 3 B . 69.000
Irvine. 3............ 63,950
Irvine, 3 F·DR . . . 112.900
Laguna Niguel. 4 P·J·V . 99.500 __L.~on Heights. 3 V . . 147,500
Newport Beach. 3 FOR 159.SOO
Newport Beach. 4 F-DR . . 164.450
Newport Beach, 5 F·DR .... 214.500
Newport Beach (condo I. 3 V 224,750
Newport Beach. 2 OR·B V .. 350.000
Santa Ana, 3 . . . . . . . . . . . . . $9,500
Santa Ana, 4 0 . . . . . . . . . . . 67.000
Santa Ana, 3 . . . . . . . . . . 107 ,000
Tustin HiUs. 4 . . . . ....... 215.000
Westminster , 3 DR .. . .. . . 79.900
Yor ba Linda. 3 B . . . . . . . . . . 76.000
Yorba Linda, 5 V·DR-FR-P 133,500
Codes:
2131415 -Bedrooms
F -Family Room
OR · Di.nfng Room
P ·Pool
B ·Bonus
752·1920
v Vll'W
O ·Oen
.I JUCUl.Zl
Ci)UAIL
PLACE
PROPERTIESr"'
IOpen TH 8:30 P.M.)
IACk IAY
F ine 4 bdrm .• 2Va bath family home on
quiet cul de sae. Ovcrsbed pool.
playhOW>e. extra storage. Reduced to
$179,000
MISA YHDI
Attractive 4 bdrm .. 2 ba. home In
immac. condition . $99.000.
IAYFtlOHT
Several flne bayf ront homes
with pier & slips •
Bill GRUNDY, REALTOR _
1·11 Ro "ti•· Or•v•· N K bl'J 6161
'
3 BR. l ba ...... blk. to b.iy
Now SJ19.$00'
Matahall Rlt)' 67~4ti00
P'IHINSUU n .
• Bdrm. 2 bath. deer. OwMr Sl8UOO. 675·566C>
~tr-.o ltodr • 0.' • ••••••••••••••••••••••
eor.odetM• 1022 •••••••••••••••••••••••
IAVARl.AM
CharrninR. one or:. kind.
2 u •parate hom ~s.
alWaynented. Sl97.SOO.
HALPIMCHIH
REALTOR
I 002 , ___ ,_7_M_lt_z __
••••••••••••••••••••••• •• •• ••••••••••••••••••• WYCiLASS HIU
.. 1002 G......S
2 STORY 5'YGLASS HU,&. II u & e c u ~ tom 1 o t !
411 + DIH Th 1 f Abeotu~ top ot the btll. + HUGlFAM. e per eel amlly super view. A rare oHer. home. 6 BR. 4\.41 BA. 1na Pn c onJ I Located near beach lotmal dloln&. &ii me ..... n Y Pease. m.ooo U&WJMlW. loan. room.maid.a quarter, A,_Alt._~_5_1_12_· ___ _
No new loan C06l8. Best aorgeous Cape Cod •n JASMIHI CRIBf
rll\ancm1 avaJJable. Act CdM school district Slunnmg 3 bdJ 2 ba. Now I Call 983-6767 $358 SOO oi~·· '".,. ,, \ •ut• ,0 ,, •• r ' • f11mtly rm, 2 patlOiJ, luUy fll landt<'aped . [ e ·111m ru~~ll~ ·~::!~
,~~$;;dS!!)!4~.~S~O~O~~l~~~~~~~~IBY OWNER. 2 br cottage.
4 bllts from ocean. Prin
NEAR OCEAN onty. siJO.ooo. 64().6()64
Why rent" Spectt1cul11r
vaJue! Cozy townhomc
retreat! 3 large Bdrma!
Entertainers patio' Ten·
nis courts' FHA Terms'
Can't lwsl al llus pnce ! !
JI Urry, Call 645-0303
FORESTE
OLSON
•""IC. .............. ..
HOME & U"COME
A HUPY HOME * VETS *
'nuupotlesa 2 atory Con · 0 DOWN OCLOSING
a rare and surprising
spacious 3 Bdrm +del7
two slDry home. Massive-
used brlck fireplace and
many other amen1t1es.
Some ocean view rrom
master swte and adjoln·
Ing deck PLUS a roomy
never vacant rentaJ. All
oo an overs1icd lot. Just a
short ,iog to the beach
$279.SOO.
CAU FOR DETAILS
644-7211 do wtll make you happy• Homes m aJI areas of
Tius3 bedroom charmer ORANGECOUNTY ...
woo't last! Pnced at only VET AGT. :;~~~~yforde· ~~ ~
()11t.; a~·,f\1u1, CJ U '•fl
!•1111
fOURUHITS
in Huntington Beach.
Spacious owner unit .
I YEAR MEW SPYGLASS HILL
Bt.ll Buccola bwlt home Del.tghtlul 3 BR home on
3 br. 3. ba plus fmly rm pool.sue<> corner lot
situated on a lge corner Hurry. this one won't
lot. Localt!d 011 a last. $268.SOO. Fee.(7141
secluded cul·de·sac. 640-Sll2agent.
AmeruUes plus cxcllmg
1002 G.......a 1002 utmost carries. Will
••••••••••• •••••••••••• •••••••••• ••••••••••••• trade. For profit proJeC·
detail thruoul. Jwst hst-Cotta MHo I 024
cd ! 646 .. 7711 •••••••••••••••••••••••
$48,000
Not many left hke this
one . Loaded W/UP · grades, close to ever·
ytbing. comfortable
family home. Won't last,·
so you better hurry! Call
us today.
540-3666
Wltela11
REA L ESTATE
--------•I lion and l ax shelter RIDUCB> SI 0,000 benefits, call 962· 7788.
lmestoN $85,00C>
Assume 8h'7o of V.A loan
of $65,000. No quaJ. 3Br .
2ba. Owner may carry
2nd Southlander ·s
6.'.11·2133
.. Now unquestionably __ KE_Y_REA __ L_T_O_RS __
the best bu y In -------~ B A y C R Es T ; t h 1 s --------•ITnplex, 2 Br eacb, 2183
beautiful executive home MOVING??'? Pomona. CM. Sl25.000
has 3 spacious bdrms .. 2 Need housing info " Marshall Riiy. 675-4600 --------• baths. huge 1JV1ng rm Call toll free
wtth rrplc .. cMy ram1ly Ex!:mn5!5C:~40 UVE IN ONL.
rm. Lge 88xll2 fee lot. . and r ent thA otha r I N $182 000 No obligation. A sen1ce "' ' you own t. ow • ol Affiliated Independent Spacious 4 bdrm. 2 bath
..
~ OPEN HOUSE
oodPOOLHOEME Id Broken. i.q>per u.rut ; 2 bdrm. l
.. g area. asts e 1--------• bath lower : Just steps to <Asta Mesa, Ideal family --------beach. Xlnl cond. & good
·~ REALTY .;<
home; 4 bdrms. huge CATCH SOME rental area Pnced at fanuly rm with frpk. & $194 500
IZYUASHEW!
CO!lla Mesa's finest 3
bedroom . Double 642·~ Eves garage. Lovely yard wet bar; qwel cul de sac RAYS .___..._,..,.. :i66J
location . Price only on the redwood decking
U35.000 overlooking your free
associated
Won't last. S89.SOO.
fi,uf "--"' form pool & 1acuzz1. This r~--' PM lovely 3 bedroom. 2 bath 645-9161
~ home is located on a WuUu 'Bfq. quiet tree hned street in
!ROKE"S--REAL TORS
lOl' "' 8~•b• ,, • 71 lbb I
.,.. o-...... t.•··--....
BAY& BEACH
460 NEWPORT CTR. DR. 159-4111
a good area of Costa 9uiet ~Sac
Mesa. Owner will car ry---------• $129,000
2nd TD. CALL5S6·2660. Pf:toUMSUU The best or Mesa Verde
•
SELECT TRI.PW at a new low price. Love·
PROPERTIES Lov e I Y New P o rt ly, large SBr or 4 + den.
· Peninsula. Tri·Plcx: + 2'1't8a home w/ram rm.
GUEST BDRM TOO• rorm dining, & :J frplcs.
11tree·2BD units. Owner Your children will have a
wiJJ cooperate on install· safe. short waJk to the
menl sale. All onnual elem achool & park. B)I'
leases. Just S27S.OOO ror owner Open Sat/Sun 12·:>
this prime Investment. or by app't. 1863 Boa Vis·
CaJI now 673-.fl550 ta Clttle. 545-1476. ~.;:RETREAT [i'i*Hil GREENBROOll
FOREST FALLS San · --IY OWMEJl
Be rnadlno Nation al 4 Bdrm. 2 bath. Ex·
Park. Five bedroom. lc6oaltlclnd 1006 tremelypopularCamelot ~Y. hobby room. Cami· ••••••••••••••••••••••• Model. 1lus lovely home
ly room. completely re· RUSTIC is loca~ in an excellent mod6ied. Two fireplaces. neigbbort\ood oo a cul de
& above the s mog . CAPE COD sac. within easy walking almost YI acre includes dtstan<'e or S. Coast
CDM DUftLIX home and two lots. call Quaint 3 Bdrm • 2 bath, 2 • Plaza S~opp1ng. Many
SOU'nl OF HIGHWAY fordet.alls. story home PLUS rental ootstandmg features in·
And Just ,<I years old. 3 COLEOFHEWPORT wllt. Ideal Jocallon: 'h elude·
Bdrm· 2 bat h s REALTORS block from South CUSTOM DRAPES WA TERFtlOMT REAL ESTA TE --------• Brand new s bdr. cor al
downstairs. 2 Bdrm. 2 675-55 I I bayfroot & 3 blocks trom UPGRADED CARPETS baths upstairs. Large downtown s hopp ing. LARGE COVE REO. ~t.cheos with builtins, 4 TRADE YOUR REAL Must see to fully ap-PATIO MANAGEMENT RXEIUPPH Cay, prtv. comm., boat ~u· MITY •r:t r:oo slip, tenrus. xtras. $30.ooo -.-rv~ • -•• below builder's price.
car garage, with loads Of ESfATE FOR A FrNE preclate the Cape Cod D E S 1 G N E R
storage. Well pr\ced I YACHT. WE ARRANGE charm. Asking $279,000. WALLPAPER
A prl me preallaloua $2500 Total Doww Bier. 556-4380
Newport Beach tocaUon. Soaring 2 aty. 4 br +
A top local firm with pool! A handyman's
64~6200 AU.,675-2650 Call 4'x8' SKYLIGHT
l7141 lla..6755 OlITDOORGAS BBQ
Onty tM Deny PHot ,..ny t9fl9 '°" what•• new In y0vr local
community ••• 9'19(1 ct.y
years ol successful ex· paradise! Paint and pro· MESA VERDE
peri e nee . New port fit and you b.ave yOW'Ulf roOL j PETE
' BARRETI ... REALTY Beach real estate ell· an estate. Excellent Beautiful tree-lined
penence preferred. A r• Tnbm Uving. call quick, street surrounds this ex·
al opPort.uruty to grow & 847-«>lO onal f bo 1--------•1 help others. ApplicaUorui ""'"' 111q."\11111,,0111 "'"'' cepti amlly me. 3 ~~;~G~°l~d~~: 1elif:1tU1iiii·fl1 ~l~~:::~;:c£: lY=JxLD
DSJly Pilot, P .0 . Box . ""'· l;f:Ui}I: _. cess. Art! Call 64&-7171. w/buill·lm~ brick frplc'a,
l!i60, Costa Mesa. Cal.IC. • oPfNlll9•H HUNro11N<C1 • etc. One olock to the -::-----:------:---------+=lt!626==::.· ______ Have aomet.hini to aell? .~ beach ror only StllS.000 G~ 1002,Ge•r• 1002 WantAda Call&4Z·se78 Clwlfiech~doit well. ~ JACOISRIALTY ••••••••••••• .. •••••••• ••••••••••••• .. •••••••• •--------.~ 6711! L670 GtMral • I 002 ~~Mral I 002 ir"V
~II. macnab I lrvtne ~ raalty _
A llST IUY 9" WOOOllJDGI
A ppro>t, 1870 sq. ft. & under
$100,0001 2-stortes. 3 BRs f amlly
rm, dining rm, fplc & utlllty rm.
Prof. drape d & landscapt?d .
Woodbridge Estates "Lincoln"
model -ready for early move ln.
$99,500. A ppt . on I y . Natalie
Benfamll> 752-1414. CE·l14)
642-lllS
901 Dover OrlYI
lrYlne •t C.~ Valley C.nter
7S2·1t14
•••••• • ••• • •••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• I~==::::!!~:::::==~:::.. ---------
OW.. IOUCIHT AMOTHa
MUST S8J.
HAHDSOME HAalOa VllW HQML c__.._..,2.._2......_,_.._.
Mew C9'f'•I -.I la1wtlM tli llllry.
LAlx.-1..t., ............ fnff ""' lalW«Jebodl~o.-• ......... w1t11 av ,., .... ,. c,,........ ••d
e1• ltr pool Meplfkat .,. ... •lh.
MW •'4rw 1 11•1, ctty .......
••tafroat
Home•
2633W.CoastHwy
NfWPCr1 ~
631·1f00
1002 GtMNI l002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
~~~.!.~
c:oaOMA DB. MA.I
2 Custom homea to be built, tucked
away on a t(ee lined street. 2 blocks
from the ocean ln old Corona del
Mar. Still time to personalize.
~.oooeach.
.~IAH'9l~
844·9080
r1•1Mti4~HaJ.1flO, .,,,.........,°"""'
•. ,• • ... • • ··\t ~'. -.. . ._. ' .
'
Y2
ACRE
near Newport's Back
Bay! Zoned A·l Cor
horses! Owner wlll
finance!
RED CARPET 754·120'2
C7141673-7'85 :Pu;~y~~·fRF~P~~.
Axa.umtl 1'/REAR
9794J123 \AJ Blk. to beach . 2 Pn.nonly pleasel109 900 Houses. asking only •
Sl.S4.500. Owner r1n. IY OWNEJI
Realonom.lcs 675-6700 3 BR. 1~ ba, sep dining
I lie IAYF«OHT rm, under mrtt, sal.500
Sharp-upgraded duplex Shown by appt on!y·
111 /arulloua owner. Agt _S4.w.5 __ 7_6_Pn_n_e _onl_.._•Y ·--
64.S-1103
S@~~lA-J££tfS .. .; OPEN HOUSE
REAL TY
/' Tltot /nfriquitH/ Word Game wiflt o Cltuc4ft
-.r lot ClAY I '°'~ -----
r rrrrr1
[ I I I ·1 l 'I
. , -..
CUTIE
RV.STORAGE
Alley ucc•ss.3 Bdrm, 1~
hlith. Pnme t;·!llde aru. m.soo.
HURRY!
64 5-9161 • ... ..... ~-· .....
LOCATION
LOCATION
ud only Wl.300. 1 Bdnn
Mme on beauUful tree·
lined street. C311 Oet
l.anonat
So.c:••""Y
J4'-$60S
'
-.. ... _ -..... -_,__ -.1Fo..W. -1Fo..W. -1Fo..W. T-.Ju .. :I0.1978 OAlLYPILOT CS • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • •••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • n • • • • • • • • • • •• • ••• •••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ..;.:~~.;;.;;.;..;...;..;.;....-.._ _____ """.'"" _________ _ c:..e....... I 014 t'6cr'w IHQ I 040 ......_ I 044 1 --__ ....... I oa 1-•~a. I 041 Wiw,..n •lldl I 069 Hoe.Mi F'Of' Sde Ho.ua For 5-Mob1f .._,
...,. • • • ~...... -...,......--••••••••••••••••••••••• IE--ft...l-...,,. 1100 ....................... ••·•••••••••••••••••••· ·•·••••· • ·•••• •·•••• ............................... ~·············· su~ 1u ·•••••••••··•·•••·•••·· ··••·••·••••··•·•··•••• ~~
"'NfCI Former mdl In Rancho rSll y Nt"'J)Ofi a.oclt I O•t Ntwporl le«• I 069 ..................... .. -..CIDI.. SNC.IA&. IDmON SanJO.QUlll 2 8.r, 2 ba,. IM{ carmt'I Model, Jbr .............................................. . ~ ~ ,.ch~f'd 3 room ma1ter awtei. don w/wct bar Pror Ula, c:IOM to pool, puk, ..... ._°" •EXCITING• t.o t81,000I 1\al•·titf\ll tt l.unlJ)t room. patio and dec rt d Loe: on tub a.vu.me loan. 1820 Port LOW JAXESI 1....r•
modeled ~~.-3 J~. atrium modf!I 1 fairway overl001c'1 101! Cherles $138,000. Ca ll • F
1
rt. r So'edtlc ,_..... ~~-• (~ rm. N•~ mUe to beach. AJ>pl"Oll COWH w/vww of Sad· 644·2841 3 Bdrm .. z bath Back ani.at c propc 1 0 • Get aw_, from it all Ill uw-ma .. -dlebaclt Pnce '129 500 .. _ fered to PRJ.NCJPALS roof• N.,.w orod l lt
1
2300114 n tnclda rim.. 4s appl. Prine DOVER SHORES Bay INrnC wttb •n AO ONLY Luxurious 2BR. th1$ bUl •PP<>Ult.ed 2Br.
Rully •••• t•d, & • lf J!liiPBmm a li!!i! only no .... Pl• Call Owne< mu" '811 •• , ' e.'J.'~:J..:i ':'!';:"et n1 28A, .... ''"· bllios. .... ~· ,Tf.,",Jf'". P1' ':': ::,.~ to "1ow. C.il 'StS ... 7ii~8f03 1>2-Wl •·•: ?'2-07'8 alt 5 3 ... """ lnlh<pd. & ••· by 170 ft. lot ,.lb r..wi q poUo on tront w/vlew ..,..,ul Soolh P""'' de-
l•--------1 &weekends corated W/Jac u:tii & trees. Massive family of bay, balcoll,)' patJo olt c:or. inhpark. Priced to r -.Pftlft•.,.,.• · pool. Bltn microwave. room w•th used brick bedroom wltb fold dowo
11
t
1
Sn
900
S&iS ReaaJe Speclah1t.1 SUNSHINY THREE LAGUNA IEACH many o t h ~ r x tr a a • , bed for ovemi&ht auesta. ae a on Y • • bd l Rls'DENCES $229,500. Opn Sundays fireplace. bar & alidmr A d.icorator's dellaht (00782) 3,4 or l) rm mode a Entertainment home 5 ri....hl d D glass doors to 18 n.. by 42 h
1 1 1
d
11
c.lfofWw Poclfio avail, 11omo w/pools. w/pool, Walk t~ •c:hla & ~ 12-. l53l t_, an r . rt. junior Olympic llize w ch nc u es a 11-ucm 968-4002 •~-•~ 3 Hr " ba din •-1-Stltr c....,_ e~ hd TD • ~-d.i.n". """''· Two addl· turn I a h 1 n es . Th Ii M<>bile Home Realty
1111.W ...,,u...,, '' • ..-this 4 ~ $147,500. •u.ofi ...,.,. lc:M"leouJ home-like apt. 2706Jlarbor,S<e208 • 8',2 ba, lll'mal dining, .._Properties lim.18T,..,. SOZ-30!!8 'IHlll,U~ bona! lin>plaoe" kilehen "'""' above ...,.. nrnce 540.1937
brick frplc, corner lot, 2 JOG TO BEACH IY ow~u J -Cf•Hlc s, ....... H11elncfa w/) 3 Bdrois ... 2l-i batha. 'llrith built·ina, upgraded apacet below, now reol·•---------
car ear. 900 Doawood. Super buy, bi&hly \Ip· " bedroo•• Oc••• •l•w Vlctort• formaldlnl..irm.,coun· carpeta & fresh paint ed.AUUliaandadouble FANTASTICBUY .._TSI,,.,.,, ..... 1rnded,3 bdr. Ju»t burn New Tu<ll•mk Glen -._$161,000. try ki1Chenu0111eous de· 14o! Fil' '8le by .,.,,.,. ...,1ooe4 ,..,. .. , with nrr Ol>I wide""'""'"· am«
your toothbrush & move garden home, Heather 3 _ Jl!--a....i•• "==d.I a-. • ~ llotM eor! View t.O areenbelt. Astlne SU4.500. Must alley park1oa. Owner old, adlt pet park, nr
Clpenlfouoe by Owne<. In. Open Suadoy
12
noon model, 4 DR, a ba, ram ~ ---• • -Pneed to .. 11 now al ..n Immediately!!! C•U will "'"" own papen fwy, &b<h Open IJr plao Lovely back bey 8'ea. UI O<>ld. •u1 Sp.,.n>w, <m. Hi1bly upgnded wlll> ,.,.,., •leWL-1450,000 l13MllO. >S7-IB68orll3f...... wilh,.., down. C.11111' low •pa« '"11C Need
pool bome. 3 bd.r 2 ba, lrg Edinger t Bolsa Chica. w/deck & view. Sl64,000. ~97 ~JJ I •heot6'Q..S56() ........ ,cuJ below market at 132.*
PldO, <ounl klt<hen. ......, " ·• -SI 5,000 llOWM ~-..,.., CSll211Mlll
Move ln c odit1on Agt. •Woodbridae Prescott by l o1tbluff1, red11eed. •BYOWNER•BEACH .~~7~1'!"1•5;~7 Matta...._ s-..
........ (0< ul <k •ale. LOW DOWN PAYMENT. ownu Ob<. 3 ba, O Ka<. 4 .. -• -ffc 1' Just"'°, .. ., •way •• •-~M<rc-171411-ts S89,800. 268 Redlands Sharp 3Br, 1'4Ba, dbl Below mkt. $159•500. ...... 1044 ...,......... 1041 ... ,
4
4-0%
4
1. 3Br,2Ba,frplc.2 cargar -......:::AJl:_._ .... _____
1
_______ _
Or S48-08ll9 garage, take over big GI M2·l6&6or833-I6S3 ••••••h ••••••••••••••• ••••• .. •••••••••••••••• 111 a Carmel-like setting
loan at Bh'h. Priced to r-""·FOatwo C.ZfwtsOf~--.....RTUNITY m.--pvtst.inLlchtSands S£AV1£W !le!Jfaatat$71,*.0wnet • ........ IDE --...,_ -..-.-v ~38500 &ul262 •4 BR, .,., BA• aet832~S2 ~ Super Irvine condo. Up. without the bother. 2 to wvest 111 NB. Lovely -• -
10 Richagt IAlle'WAJH graded carpets, 2 car Bdrm., 2 bath O·Y·O "'1 duplex between bay & fiiEWPORTHEfGHTS $10,000 DN t ... IW•ldl
-----1-------•Yortiown Villas, J bdrm on Arbor Lake ill Wood-sarage,2BR,eachw/lts block to LarWla's Main ocean. Own e r will ~cottagew/lot.s $I 970/U--.&L. AbioluteJy l>reatbtaJdng ________ _, toodo, by owner. As· bridge! Owner wlll sell own private BA + Beach. $79,500. finance. Michael Real ol wood. new shake root. ' ""111111 ZUM, 2Br. 2Ba, rumpus
aumeble loan $61,900. Bl!LOW HIS MON11!LY pow d er ' o o m Eotale. 673-6880, dy,. & mpe'-'. l<ffnhou" 38' ..... comm f::'::· """ b". !IT• Royal
•EXCITING•
Open Sat/ sun 1·5 9552 COST a od carry the downataira. f7S,900. Ex-Rx Up & Save 968-888o, eves. $llUOO. Call 640.SU
2
Jae. tennia. No quaU ying Lancer in 5 •Adult Park.
Pet.tswoodHB963-8298 financing ! Hosts clwlivea,ent. Needs palnt & carpets needed, quick possess. Ten1us courts, swim·
lakeside living. Formal Loads of potential $75,000 957-1!198.PrinonJy. mioi. Jacuzzi, social ac-WAUCTOSUIF
3 bdr, 2 ba, formal dining
rm, 2lou, ownr. 644-1094 dining rooni. Big bay SweepiJJg ocean views. Nowisyourchancetoget 1---------1 tiviUes and much mucfl wtodow kitchen. Family Laguna location. 2 into a new 2 br, 2 ba S.C:....•
10
7
6
more. CJ~-2>
rm. Master sulre over-Bdrm .. hu&e den & 2 Newport Terrace ••••••••••••••••••••••• CGlfon.la,aciflc: looks lake. A truly aox-baths. $121,500. townhouse w /upgraded Open! Buy UJce rent! Sub-r~:..L.-.&.td MobUe Home Rutty 611ocbtoleach ious sellerofferingater· crptg & drps . Great mit.allterms&offers? .._ 2706HarborSte208
4 Bdrm, pool, jacuzzi nlic bargain! See It to· NORINS REALTY amenities & buyer con Trades! Etc! Fantastic 4 HelgWtHw 540-5937 :========:.!with privacy. $94,500. day! Call for details '4H9DI...._. move In immed. Seller. Br. 3 Ba, jacuui. Like Last chance to buy 1---------
Bkr963-8377 oow-752-1700 '"1~=::·:.~ • ..!."' * 494e8057 * will consider contract newcond.1712ffighJand. Oceanside homo In $2500/bst olr 8x42, 2 br. IMMACULATE 4 br
Jst spenc $6000 ln up·
grades. $89.900 lm ·
mediate occup or be.st
schools. 751-1806 P.P.
Dl'fN•11Q ·••\111N •'l~tN1•1· ------------------s ale. Call Hayward· SJ25,000.631--0900Agt. Presidential Hahts . lO Ba, vry nice, move out ~tm~~~1toa~h le IHllMI .. !6~!,~0~! ., .. =~~:"::-~t~~ •••I .... ,.. i;:~ :'f:ir~:~r,.~~~~~ :.:: .. ::=1: BR
locauoo near schools, l_~~~=~=-=~-~-~=~·~·-~-~ shrouded pool hl&HU&hts nyon views on spacious 1••1• ... •Y-V•fEW--H•O•M-l-1 Location & terms too! mended. 492·2780. Sunset mobile ~e. alum Ill·
parks, shopping centers.::: the rear yard of this IOL 3 Bdrm, 2 ba. Split "' S pacious Newpo rt PacllicHomeBuilders. suJated siding, a rear & golf course. $15,050 Woodbridglt fabulous 3 car garage, 4 leveJ w/Cam rm & formal Pl.US INCOME townhome. Gracious lri bargain. N.B. $34 .950 E.SIDE-ASSUMAIU toWinvestmenttoquaJi-By owner, 2Br, l Vi!Ba bedroom home lo the dln.iog rm. Offered by Lovely home, separate
1
el li · o JI IYOWMH terms. Own.r/blcr mov-Cute remodled 2 bdr. gd tying buyers. Owner will con o. ov patio, gas Ranch area of Irvine. ., .. ,~ .,.,., apt. + great ay view .., ... .._ .,.. .... ..... ......_ d C
. ----al $187.<J\I\. For de· B . cevarry, sovinnog. quwalloefry1~g1 l y .. R•~~t.ic lot on ..,.e""· '""· 67~CLt .... 631-4920 loc., l<g Y<d, $89,000. help nnan<e. Take ad· BBQ. ....... N< puk. 1111' ApPaloo'8 model by la ii• <a 11 · 6 Tl· "00. All ""' " '""I"'"' m one Call .... rm frool b I uU, <ed wood U..., P<t pnv.
2
bd, ex·
Take ove< $0$.200· 9 '• vantqe. Call 96U76T new elem Khl. F'Uhlng. """" in<!.., .. a l0<mal ......., 0< '41-7302 ,_..., p._rty on the ~• .,, o. " "~ • " ~ , • house. small bul eaally <ell "'4.$00.
521
.,,.. dys, loan. Principles o nly OPIN ,,9 .. •S1t>11.10~11.~1· s a1l101 . swi mming dming room and It au ---------Newport Pe n1n. The 1~ lmmJll expandable conlem ,,H........,, c An
7608 ,:;~:.":Y~t."·Ao~~~ [. RIJtl -~-ag_:=_i.s_i_.ea_poo_u_ts_tbia·_. &_w_ mk_eo~-~_:, :::,,~:. • tenific buy =i~~~ ~f ~~Y £!.~~i ~=""===-=UWim===· =·=··~I :r:::::::t1 _&_w_~-M-~-0-;-TH-S __ ev __ ea.
$6 6. -400 . Ca 11 I v an Plt.ESCOTI den, lge living & d1rung FIXER-UmR You Loved 10 Yrs Ago
631 1470. UNIQUE SET11Nli Woodbrld1e Piao. I, $ ,.., w /beam ooillngo. Charming ,., coti.go on • Bea ul <uOl homes FREE tiEWPORT HEIGHTS
Room for veg garden.
4Br + den, pvt pat.lo.
prol decor. Only SlOS,000
Southlander"s 631·2133
1n Huntington Beach. br, 3 ba, next to la~e. fireplace, view ot woods large lot w/private rear w/panoram1c o cean
Pvy pari1, w-. m.,t of bea<hdub. !7141731--& ooe ao. LI ke new '"d. '<Pa<ale hobby views availr0< sale<n>m SPACE REHJ all. a view! Pool, jac, ·--------i $220,000. Ph67S.SSJ1 room w/ba attached to $228.000. You must see
sauna avail. 4 Bdrrns. 3 MA.a""T'S YOUR * * * * * garage. $110.000. the quality of these ,.___. Dwtag .........
batM & 2 ca< ""'· Th;, ""~ Owne< will llnaoce. """'"· An euly V~ll " _....,...., -townhome ha• been up. PLliSUU 1 ._~ 1052 N!WPORT HACH ,....,mend"'. ,....... .._ 17·25
g "dod lo lt" • !ine<l. Bike lo lhe lake from UHCH llil. TY ••••••••••• •• ••• • •• ••• • REAi. TY 675·1642 o< 831·91 22 · Su n • e 1 An
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m e ________ 111 $119,900. Pvt Ply. your coiy 2 Bdrm,2bath SSl-2000 •o... ...... ,..., ....... ..., PacilicHomeBuilders. purchased through OUI' IW' 842·1383or848·2233 Townhome In Wood ·---------w.u "'TO BEACH
IRAMDH .! bridge. Feeling lazy? u~nn. .. SITYP""ll"' Laguna Niguel ~ 3 br 2 b• Mira Costa new office at 1062 NLo. 3 BR, Family Rm. 2Wbereelsecanyoufinda StroUtothepoolcloseby. "'uK "'-uMINIESTATE .. Fantas tic Newport Twnbse, or sbopp11111. State College (at a baths. fireplace, rully In· lovely 3 Br 2 Ba home Want Solitude? Take a Dean home. 3 bdrm, 2 ba R lty ~ Beach complex. Huf(e Good terms. trade or Palma>. Anaheim.
s ulated . Ea1ts1de. less than 1 mi to beach ~unba'"onyour secluded Pool, Jae, alJ upgrade:i. ea ~ ThlS describes th is s unken living room trust deed. 187 ,500. Memw Calif Multiple
-A900 f $80000' A """3558 "' .., '133,500. '1"'enl837·S998 ~-BEAUTif''UL SUPER w1f1·replace. wetbar & rcu...,..,... Lls"""'servtce. ....... · or • · gt.""'°' redwood dec k . This ~ Q UALITY "and U .....,........, -"& D~Mccardf• 0pnHseSat/SUnl·5. VHYPllVATI -balcony. Form. d1rung MableHo..Stor.
...., home haa •II lhe line . cu.tom exttuUve home Plan·· home wolb P••· <oom loft gou<mol P<CTURESQUE 39, tSMSOO 1810"-wportllYd. Beautiful 3 bdr 13, ba qualities o( an S&S built JUST PAINTED on a breeze cooled bill tected patio and park· kit chen. 2Bd, 2Ba. home overlk'g valley. ---------Coda-541-7729 ho m•. By Owne<. home. HURRYONTlllS w/._ view DI El hk• &<ound• t"o<mal ""<dully deco<ated •n ""·"°°'"'' '93-lti& ----~~~~~~~~~ F1'replace lg lot nr ONE! S88.500. •-·'de and out Beau•'ful N' 1 G lf c 4 ,.,_,_8 room. hvltlg room al ....... •.
1 -' ' Cal for Detaik u...., · u · igue 0 ourse. ~family room <both natur wUUU3 <>< t'O ors Sc.ta AM I 080 Ass u m a b I e i • re · 0 0 6
Id beach. Brenda. 833·9010 4 bedroom 2 story eit· BR. large family room with rir"'place• > and Around ~e corner to ~e ••••••••••••••••••••••• ......,.,....,~lODS. buy renlall.. OCY EANwneVlrE. W PyArRoK 3. or846-8380.$75,900 . 644-7211 ecullve home in the wJ fireplace. Ma n y ~ .. beach + JaCUUlS, tennis ............., F ·nr
Culverihle area of master bdrm operung to court.s,etc.Call:>46-2ll3. I-.. rmtt.own. ora o """" """"'·
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« "IEACH GIAMT" ,...,...,. Thl1Udea11y locat-~~9f,~·~ts.s22o lovely pado and '""'· < ~·" ,.,, .,~ ..
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• .,.. W18 171411414195 ~~ ~:O~i'"f~~~:; s BR w 1 sweepio~ ~r~v41i~.~:~~!:. _4_t_6-_2_4_1_1 __ a_1_0-_s_o_s_o 3:pa~a~:w;~~/~.f.; [~1!~~:!1·~1 Parties? WAUCTOfEACH
""'· 119"°/nl< VA.CRY atmway
10
aep, 2S ..., and Is Ukina oo!y •anten, f<WI & walnul . . ...: ::. ! Enlulaonu •tyle 4 OR OVER TO THE
646-28:17:613-6143 k:~~~ ~~;~i~k~~'::i~ ---------1 $115,500 for tJus 2200 sq 21:.·;,J:•d~~~ ~':; ~: t.r~ +grape arbor. Be _ ----·-!·~ bedroom home with waJl beaut.Uul club Wltb pool By OwuER ~arden area Formal All WET ft. beauty. many xtras. Below mkt. the flrst to s~ this exc1t· to wall carpet, family and Jacuzzi from lhis
" ·1 fam'ly room ••• 1ng hom e $239,500 l.206~EXLANE rm .. fireplace and din· s•m.rVIKING2BR2Ba 3 bdrm. t~ ba Super in ng,
1
and you'll stay that way S89.500. Call for appt 646 4380 Ruth La re ft BKR • I w.-.. ~ond. Nr schools & -'" " all summer 1n this .._....,, or .... ..-.. . n--•to -... ~1.-.racJ<lina wood bum-• .,,.. """3 ..-A 997 · • u 1 3 Br F.R. 2.388 sq. . ina. Sll2,900, • cal + FR home. Owner ... ing fireplace Priced ·~ r Westc iff. $152,500. Must 540-1720 moved to San Fernando. Stparlcs. $75,000 874 Darrell beJowmltt. · beautiful POOL. This ARCHITECT'S _________ , seU. nSatrSun Z·S. 1mmed1ate possession .
. 548-2535 .,........_._1__.... Spanis h home also 1 ..... DSC'"...,... WXURY ""TTHE Marin ty642-8850 S36.SOO. 646·-4380, Ruth
BY OWNER 847-6061 546-?306 rm. fam rm w/frplc, + ersonal home. Laguna IEACH $137,900 HarbOrVu Knolls Laune Realtor
"'--., features 4 br, form din ~ ,...-g, "' TARBELL
4 Br +beautirul pool. -·MELOC""TIO... 20x20bonusroom.Owner Nlguel.1600sqft.S8'7.500. lnUdoSands,onlysteps JBdrms,famnn,2'At Ba. · F1XED1NCOME1'
MesadelMararea.W1ll '""" . "'. " tmsfrd!Mustsell! Sub· ()penbouseWcd4:30lo tobeach.tennlsand com-prof decor, oak firs . ..1tla.Calfonia .. S'mglewideStarrcomu s ell ~ootra ct of s ale JBR2Ba,ntceb1gyard, mitalloffers!645-7221 6 :30. Ca ll owner . munlty pool, a spic & Reducedto$LSS.OOO. lot. fwy else, upgraded,
"97.500. Shown by app $77.950. Scott Realty Omu RAHCHREALTY ~ .. ~1122·7095, 494 ·575 & span 3 Br, single sty, 270'1Hillside.Dr,NB SotMt...... f086 supersavmgsatS14.400.
only. Call 6"'2·8$2S·Prin 536-7533 g 2000 ,..., w/huge famUy room and ~1643. ••••••••••••••••••••••• IS27J8.671 aoly 1---SH_AJC_E_R_O_O_F __ , " ii· ~For.st 1055 newlyaddedUvingroom lHUIARCHIAY Mcmn.Hol.Ston ~ p....1-.& I 02~ POOL HOME , • -r -... rr-2J NEW 4 br, J ba 2 story' 34 ••••••••••••••• ••• ••••• orEH WED I .5 OCEAN VU CbONthDO 4 BR, 3 BA. den, dining (7J 4) 1414'8'5
--
1111
lffi ff I , Oakdale. Woodbridge. 5004 RIVIR AVE 3 Bdrm + 2 8 8 + room, pool, spa 4s ocean ••••••••••••••••••••••• 41 'Br, 2 ba. bltnls&, D/~. -w~11.&1rR_...... •• !:.?~~906. Owner. 213· $ 1 0 ' 0 0 0 CAUFOIDETAILS garage. $85,000. Bkr view. ~forSale t200
OWNIR SRUHG aundry rm. poo pauo, .-..-n ·-·r ...,,..,.., 963-8377 DENNIS BUSH •••••••••••••••--•••••• llAPPY HOUSE w ANTS block wall '""e, in quiel '44-721 1 , ._ .... ·-MIMI RANCH sm FAMILY ...,,.,,. + sq. It. neighborhood with all Condo, Orangetree Plan I. DOWN DLX. BEACH DUPLEX ~
....,.,., ho I i' cl ud ·1 n a l BR 1 ba on the water • -•--L f O .. • Immaculate property. 499-455 t 2~ Acres 10 the heart ot Nrbch,mUesopenspace sc 0 s, 0 " ' ' ~~· -15 your backyard. Cool Parochial nearby. Only $42,000. Days: 542·3565. ••••••••••••••••••••••• O ........ ow o e r must s e 11. ---------raoctung country. South I .. __ ,_ $76,950 . C all DOW eves&wk:nds;SS1·6383. SI.I o ....... ~ $182,500 . Own/Agt """""--RM&tafe ol Orange County, all
h......,., e .. e "-~. "'·<380. llutb Laune 2-+Slodlo ll<and new, '"'· lba, 1142-33311 =·•••••••••••••••• usable.Xlnt1""'1•.BKR
4
•
5
bdrm,
2~ ba, Huge Realtor Atteatiot1 Vet. 4oarages, beam cellin,8s. den, bonus rm. all up-I~~~~~~~~~ <714> 676-5717 k:itcheo.splralst.aircase, . Own your own pool much paneling, frplc's .. ~. NocrediL.needect,I HYHMSPHASEill ....... .._. ORS22·2080
thick gold carpeting. home 3B 2Ba dtru' g •-VI · &..., OPEN SAT/SUN 1·5 hrs.I. 1100 --------k . r, • n "' elc. A blk c tol"la I'UfUlaDCe.957-1998. .__.......,MIS? $140,000. 496 7113, People who are seeing f ·1 $89975 M st -•-~''"" 3Bror2Br&denwtran-••••••••••••••••••••••• 21 Acres farmland $795 I .. f ami Y • • • u Beach. Ocean views, ....... t ua...t _ vt...1-1067 Seller says FREE mem (
"2-02llll ao ar>artment oo. "'I ""'' , 0 n d . By 0 w n" . _ • ..,.. · WU< m"' •i. vu, '° t ......._Fa ....... d acre, low down in !own, in Classified . WilJ your 552-3008, eve.. -.500. 494-2695 ••••••••••••••••••••••• bersbip in l.ennia club to wtr' gar dr opor' up. "-1 corner ol 2 streets, partly Sell lhlngs rut wilh Dally ad he lhett? To pl•.,. -1 u<k Y buy e< of I h h s•aded appl" atl<a<I F1eet wood. I b lg b<.
1
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Pilot Want Ada. your ad, caU642-S678 u.i•enity Parfl Quality cstm 4 BR home, 9uiet Cul ~Soc gClorgeout tow, 0 h 0
1 m e tnd.scpd w/dck. Pool, jac 3lx!AC, 4Wexpa.od/D. Priedceduv r1 rmgh:t 714/5.24·3590 <Has been Lease option or lo down 314 BA, beam ceilings, 3 Br, 2\AJ ba, fam rm. assic wrnte irep ace. & tenois. Fee land. farmed). E B 3 B I 0 form! ..11":-n rm, 2 frplcs . Form a I d I n i n g . .,.,., 500 0 2244 Port (67.s.>4) 1---------c--.. Mcr 1022 c.... .. Mer 1022 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• l eg ant 3 t , a , fonna dillrm,etc. o a Lge 1-;;t''/1ge patloa, Breakrast patio ofr .. .,,, . wnr. ~aPaclflc
1wnhme. PrestJge green-park-like sottlng Jot an-'-•-'-tlback. New kitchen. Family room. _ear __ lls_e_._644_-4887 __ .___ 6]• "300 CE
110111 ILllifS CD.
OVER SO YEARS OF SERVICE
HEAT AS A PIN
Elegant 3 Bedrm. Condo Protected
By Security Gate. Tastefully
Decorated W /Electric Kitchen,
Separate Dining Rm. Sunken Living
Room With Wet Bar. Fee Land.
Pool And Jacuzzi. Only $159,900.
HI 00¥at O~VE 631-1800
c._., Mcr 1022 Coro... .. Mer I 022 ....................... ·······•··········•····
~~~
•'OLD CORON.A ..
2 Fabulous properties
under $150.000
Both in xlnt cond., on R-2 lotR
aUAT DUPLIX
45x118 Ft. R-2 lot. Xlnt cond., w1th
n ice Ruest unit. Good income 1>«>tenUat.
A CQ.D'WaL 1A.'«m CO.
844·9060
1111 IAMMMG&.t!NHlla"O
IN Nhl"°'4T """°'
..
b elt loc ation. Agt, W/huge trees. Ocean v .......... au w -
SSI-4682, S.lOam or pm. v I e w s. LOVELY . paint in/out. Walk to Huge bonua room. 2 e DOVER SHORES RJvers1de County at a
$295,000. Will consider scbls, shops, & rec cntr. bars. 3 Patios. Asking Beaut. panoramic views LAGUNA HILLS lane freeway olf ramp.
700 ACRES
Shortoncash7 trades. Owner-bldr , $119,000 by owner. Sl7',500! Call fast of Back Bay, Fashion Dbl wide, 1972 Lancer, Some xlnt commercial
Own this JBr, A/C, pro--494-21115 837·3298or831·3877 752·1700 Cntr. 4 Bdrms. 3 full overlooking iol! course. potential Rapidly de-~~~~~1~ -~-ot-~-~-~-f-tc-':sux_:_~-y:-. -1=-~~-1 'tf~:.:·r.:~ [j ijil g~::f.!~~1~~~i ~~~~ ?.:~1~~f~~
... fo~~i~ that
wanta to spl'ead out! 4
Bdnna .. fam. rm., TRI·
LEVEL Piao 4 In
Deerfield Part Homes.
Sbor1 wallt to schocQ aod
pool. $129.~
Need.a pa.illt. minor re· --------garden area. Spacious-J _ __:•:.7.:14..:.l:..:1:.'.:'8:...a=•.:•.:.s __ 1=-:--0-R::-5.23-05.1--:-30-:--:::-: Plira, ideal for home & By ~er. Madrid 640. R-3 LOT neu describes the fee.I· Ti ed t R t' h ioua Pup1rty 1400
Income. Hurry. only S.Crll1ce..;.,S}~:.~ ··"'lb 11 Id h 1 ing ol this lovely 4000 sq r O en ing ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• .....,.......,., ,.., ama o er ouse. ft home. Xtra t.o rms &rgain priced doll bse
133
• OCEAN ~·1llOO R al lot from beach. lll0,000. built around central In Orange. Jus t on FRONTA"'E jss on e ty 494-0731 OWC. Bkr963-3377 courtyard. Spanish style market, over 800 IQ t\ v •
tWlthtl) DoWlt FOR IY o~-for comfortable livillg. p r I c e d r I • b l . s.uperb restaurant loca-
• ......... A.. p ...a... ,,..~ Game rm w/FP, bar rm Mlramar-6S-2l53XU Uon. Carlsbad. One of a '-""er .,_.... Nwprt Hgta lrg comer & 15x2S' kitcb w/bltin C•folwlaPodflc lund. $280,000. WRM Newly redecorat ed $6B 000 lot.2bdr2ba,famllyrm BBQ make ent.ertainlng ,~. "~oo nR:!~_T1735v Ownr/Agt. Blueblrd Canyon dplx. + boou.a rm. Sll9,SOO a convenience. S41S,000. ..-Viii ....,.,.. ~~~,Aat-Prio. only. 't 845-7°".()poSUnday. M.C. F'lnancial994·58SS FAMILY PARK C-twry Loh/
Greeftbelt v\e•! Super 3 Newport Crest tse w/oP· PIHMPO 13,000 under p11ced. Dbl c.ypb tSOO
BLUE LAGOON Vll.J..A-bedroom I Lo down
1
VA tJ(ln to buy 3Br. 2\1\Ba IMT WWe Goldeowe.t. Frwy ••••••••••••••••••••••• tttmsl C.traJ aJr! New "-~o . ..,.,.,. mo. "'·Jlfor Cu.t.om remodeled In· clae, AC, S• park. ,,,__plot,(
21
.._>, Stepetopvtbeach,2Br, .... i.•taodpa~I -.-... ....,... ""'"' tide/out, 38r, 2~'1a . (L8'771773) vois .. --2 ba, •tr• rm " stall 'REDCARPETfS4·1.202 1_deW __ la_l3_l_·l_Ml ____ 1 Quiet street, nr bcb & ......_..__..:_ ... _ Ston Harbor !'!~.al Park-. s hower . Security, 2 lh•u ..,~"000 ..._.._ .......,.,,v 1n ._.._.. 10.r ~ ~---0', . 1714)141-1195 PC>Ols,l4!ruua,fresh~• t, ...... ._. 1052 ....,............,...... n piu-752·1108 c rT>W
poeh cpt, dr,,., ref~, ••••••••••f;;~••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------·•---------._ t 1600 .. _. t.&ft..I•• l'T''" ' tt513 CAMPU5Dl..·fRVl .. E wather/ ... ,,er Incl~ . IY o .... ..._ EXCITING ••••••••·•••••·•••••••· •
-------1 ~·/~~~~~:ma . fllcoldWen Banker =~=·~~o:~~:: • • SIOO,OOONfCI WHY W4rT 2 BJl home ~1 ... p •-apt. f'OID llf'l:'.•c . .,.,.., ten· ~
'
..... b p ... ,_ ..... t:rt .. oclt RIDUC'1.......,
-..... UA r 1'Auu j "0 t l bbouae Uvl""· ln -Reh In ..... mec; ........ pln1 Ctr .a.....v • ·""""'.._••"' •· olc:. Ac"""'• from bcb. R{SIOfNll/\I. llR()( R"'1l CQM.,..,,, n s " ur • c u , ...... --,.v·. I .-q .....,.. ~· •"""'"--' • ,.,. $119 900 Prl ly comfort 4s b.annonr. ov· On Beach Blvd .. In ffB. Stop being a aecond $245,000. AJao 1uper 6· &e.D · n on · d,y adlt park. awtmmln". Produced tpend•bleJV 1uesaer-adeall1edea1 plex, blk to bch. Wht YllWLOT------------1 Jacu1d 4' 11oclal ao· 2~ years youna. Sec>tt and wehaveaooutatand. water. 139$,000. Ail . MOM41CH IAY TlllACI By owor, Back Bay •re•, t.lvitJ• 1alore. 2Br. tBa Reall.)'53G-7533 "
Ing one I Deerfield _-._eai_1 ______ 1 Large level tot with fantastic view 5 BR, 3 ba, 2 fri>ks, 3000 ln quality bom•. All IOI'
townhoute, Plan a. 3 BR, aq rt hie w /trg fd In cul· onlf ll2,80o. (8ClOS3> Ca.d•aJ-•/Towa-2~ DA. 1«1eou.~ condl· HARMONY of hills and ocean. One of the last de .• a c . M u• t s e 11 ~ '•Jflc ...., for Mlit I 700
lion. at an unbeUttvablt Deautitul ocean V\I home building sites left in one or the $137.000, OQqd terms. Moblldlome Realty •••••••-•••••••••••••• J>rice. Catlfordetaita. on quiet cw-dHec w1tg. South Coast's best communities. 5479'71 270$Ha.rbor. St.e20t OWNER wtll takt ~
paUo for eot.ertalnln1. 2 $150 000 n ... k A•~ on N.B. Golf 540.1937 down lndlan Well4 Rae:. red hill ~
BR. •P•C'iout double ,lot. • · ....... ......,, guet Club ~ <Palm
SlST,000 (28) Course, ~ acre horse 5 MINUTES FROM 801 Sprln11> Oatect tenoJ.
4 COU)WBJ. ••*Bt co. ranch. 2 houe1. 1 CQly sloalc wide 197<: comm. C.11 Oa.t.17~
worbhcp ••toraie nna. Ramada w /ooclo••d qt. 496 7222 O->-t 0836 Beaut""°' aolf ~ • .. bri ... ,_ tm ----------""'1 I • l°'8 ol rm fOt borse1. pore.., <'IL ..-ut, mac
,.,... MI 9 di .., .... Mt.Ill Id.I. 0 A. $!49.000. f Rei:10) pp~ a I I D I . fl'aclq a ClutlAed •d la
5')2-7500 .
UtUe It BJ111 Claulfied
ad1 are really •mall
"people to people" 1aJt1
calla with bl1 readerahlp
and bi1 tt.tult.tl To plue
)"OQI' tlualned ad, call
today 542-$871. = .......... ;;;;~= L.efme...... aood t«ms. ~1V11 ...... .._ 5._.. at cuy u dJ.U.n, YOW'
1714) 14Mlt& ~do~~~.::~·
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~ILV P1 0 1 T ...o.y Juo1 llO I 978 ._.... u .. ,.,...._, HcwH U•••••ct .,_.. ... h ,_,...., Af*t...,.ts twww.. ~ ••"h a.ww.. v...._ a.... 41.M>
·············~·~······· ······················· •····•••···········•·•· .........••••.•.....•• ..•...•............... . .... , •..•••........... ""-a .. n st.t. o.tof~ ......_u~ • ......_.a.oc~ 1240 t .... ,.,..._.. 326' eo.taMne 372• CodoMete 3124 ~~.~ ... ?~~~ ~~~e:u!~ ~:~~ ....................... r. I rty 2550 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. ••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• PAAI( MEWPOIT be. 1IP11 6. $2:95 ~ wlr.
8 =~• ....................... eo.t. MeM l214 OPEN HOUSE Plush 3 BR, 3 b" ~/bo"t 8 E A U T I F U L LA MANCHA AP'TS ,.00.__ ________ -4 •.. .. Bachelor•. l or 2 <714H9WOU. ... ••••••••••••••••••••••• N~ lqant 2 bedroom sUp l blk to beach fl:M>. BACHELOR Nr OCC Large l,24'3 bedroom ....................... ,_.~•-'* Tranquil Panoramic + den ($57$1. Cedar & ~&64G-4919 Rc;dec, 811')' 20' Uv rm. garden apts Dshwhr. ~ex!'~ lltlllhhto~ 4300
• 2 T1lftlXIS • 2 fr 38EDROOM Vlt!W 3 nlltr u Bdrm•. W10dow bome 5 Blocb (uJI lat.ch. Cu/wtr pd. bltns, mcl. aar, gu bbq Speetacular apa, total ••••••••• ••••••••• •• •• •
Nr l.lke Putt .Mtn to VA ~'HA 2 ~ b• 1-·r pJc • ..:p to beach. Pnvate 2·cat SU VIEW Sl75/mo.w6 IW Pool. Gas Pd. 778 Scott ret·rution proaram. •II SELECTIVh
bt-b l_. BR, 3 ba, t 3 BR, GARDF..NTOWNllOME balccmy & yard Auto gar age. Fully mun Unobstruct~ view or Pl 642·5073 aodaJ ptOt(riun 7 poob, 8 Glll.Da reha.bll'
2"'-ba, l 3 BR, 2 ba, ~ 20.rGarages aarQe opnrs ow. trash t.a.i.oed yard. Adull!I. No ocean and Newport ~rum. 1 br Pref. t.cM1s courts.At rrashloo rootnn\llle. ~ar. fprplc'a , $11W,000ea l-43J-t914 romp, beauufuUy cpl'd & pets. S2S 18Ul Sl. (7141 Beach. 38R, 3ba. New e age. No children ~ 2 Sr. ~~ba lsland. JamborM di Su oo-7464 170IH113 AJabanw, HB L.." 1•7s7-16ll dras>«t tbru out Only ll&O-ml full aecur1ty. Tennis: "' ~-$200. 00-2679 or _ _.. · pal.lo, arge Jruonwn H!llt Rood •SHARE A llOME• S3S-ln8 ....,,. S5SO/mo. To •ee ••all Jacuui. 11wt01 m1ng 548~ t~· frplc. encl. gar. -..
--------• 673-Zl.82. ~c.4t!!u~~~b::e SOOO/mocc>Mider lse opt. .......... Oltleoch 3740 mMamt M2·leo:\ (7141644-ttOO
MIWn.tPLIX Beutiful HlatoncaJ Home ill · N f Ed Agl/Owner. A.1k for RQ<l ••••••••••••••••••••••• EastbluCf 3 br. 2 ba. lge IY IUILDD with nice rental park like Flower Street sharp 3 br' pnme area· o. 0 at <714> 325-2996 or Dean SM•• • BEACH JJOTEL SUl'llt .... ICE mstr ste. ult blt.ns. Dbl
DesU'e ma tu.re womau
to share apt. Call
960-4464, Ask for J tm I "R I •-BR ~ 2u. r ed ~ uUJ incl. No pets. .Inger between Magnolia al m4'> 832·5144. S....,.t!y ~ • ,.. -40 .sg atry"'2·3 ; on nae. t-nc . . . & Nowl and. 159•2 SeaVlew"ome -~ ROOMSS37.50Week •Loekedgar.w/lg&lor. garw/elec:dropnr.PooJ Roommate wanted to all 11p~ious deluxe units. Nit trees · lot11 of 64&-l220 Maybrool<. n · Apt $165/mo. SJ6.3037 •D/W, patio, lndry rm & rec fac11. Adults. no llhare aBr. 288 coodo in
li\ke lo bch from here. extras. Near Elsinore Gemini Realty 839-6G23 BIG CANYON 2 BR + •-•--L 37... •Specialcabinetapac.:e pets. Pre!. marrk-c! cpl. SJC 493-6329 $198,000 f.p , 2412 Sl.25.000 price. Call for 2-3 Bdrm houses. Mesa den. fantaaUc golf crse ......-~• --Gila heat. gas cootting $i2:5. lse. Avail. July 1. · ·
Delaware, RB. 536-1718 Don Riverside Land Of del Mar, $f6S. Westside, GREAT 3 br , 2 ba, !rplc. vu. $850. 5" 7. 7044 . ••••••••••••••••••••••• gas bot water all free. '7S9-1745 Roommate wanted. r~p
fice714-6'74·3116 $4.25. CalJ 546-5880, ask dshwbr,patio,fncdyard 640-«>S8 ' 2 Bdrm. BUc to beaches/ •Adwts,nopets. frtoshr2BraptnrBeach ... wport Shorft for Leslie. Kids & pet ok. $435. town. Carport, paUo 1 Br $270, 2 br $3l0 Nwpt Kgt.a lovely area, 2 & Adams, HB. Judy, l)-5,
21r21aEoch *·25661\gt,nofee. Bit.ifs condo, 3 br. 2 ba, $450 yrly. 768·g451, Monthlomonth bdrlba,pnv.pat.io,g1tr, 833-96S4.Aft6,96Q.3846.
Fee Simple. Sharp UMIUMG •VACANClF..S• ooe level end unit. Best 494-8811 ZlZ3 Elden Ave. C.M. no pets. S325 mo. ~5804 --------&'l9-0730eves &wknd5 COUNnlY ESTATI 3 bd, 2 ba, fa m rm, Mesa HOMESAPTS·OPLXS Joe, scb ls, shop •g . Mew-rt leodt 3769 642·7605 or$.3223 ShareTwnhse3br, 2~bzi. He-r:r PetMltsula
3 I 2 lo ff. lhorp,
sale« trade. 646· l 757
Lrg new duplex By
owner. 2800 sq frt, 3 br 3
ba + 3 bra ba, frpl. Cosl>I
Mesa 675-7429
W.. rrc,.rty 2000
2\.'.a acres w/adjaceot 7 ~ Verde. avail July l ~ ·r---Lg • b ZYi b 1 gar, pooJ, rum. S200 itlO
............ nntional. "~parate S450 I mo N 0 PETS •LOW RENT• · ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Br apt w/eocl. garage. e~. ..,'-d a. lt!bnlrk + uW. S51·2.849. aft 7. """"""' -.. ..,., ,,.,.3627 SST~ Homefindera Nwpt Hghts. Brand new 3 $280. mo. l9l2 Wallace. pauo. ,.ew ecor professional a r tist's _ ....... _________ , bd bcb seoo yrly 67J.2S07 H '--T-~-..... 0pe be 11 rm. 21,; ba. Frplc, Sl'lrS TCIEACH &&s-5126or637·S89S · · ~ ..... ~ stuwo. . n am ce · V....., clean 3 Bdrm, 2 ba 3 bdrm, 2 ba, New crpt. D/W 2 car gar many e" 8 b Fl•,. R -ute" li v r1~~•· _,, d ,... •11 · · '" 3 r,2 a, Perun$650 1 "e 1 br, pabo •. pool. Ne_,,_ .Hts 2 BR, l ba, numga oom .. -~g.s an vrm,oe .,.,... N1"ce ynrd . Great yr• nr m ari na~ trastt"15/mo"'•"7089 2B -.. "' -....... Prof ~•u leU .... I g h l d 001 2 S "0 I A l 7 1 . ..,, . .._. r&guest.Perun$500 Adultsooly.Nopels.l..,.., '"'le. gar., crpts. d'"""'. ess1onw .-eop or n ea e Pne1gbborhood. ~75/mo. 4... . mo v a I • U .. ,,. • ,. • ..... u. M...a. Brdms+den or 3 bdrms. 771-0495 .,. 892·4659 Westcliff, lovely 3 br, 2 ba, S MMIA I.EMT AL Monrovia S23S MS-'1924 etc. Older adJt.s. S29S yr ....-.eur11
New .cp.L'& thtlJ-QUl ---------ram-rm, els to scbls. Call Bayfront, 4 BR. 2 ba. on · · ly. 548-5306 832-4134
C:cil Now 973-4'2' $335 3 br sundeck kids + 2 BR l ~ Ba condo• 848·2320. bl& bay. $850 Week ute, bnght. airy & new 2 DependableServace .... HWdelt.ElftC.. petsSmfce~900 carport. pool, kids ok, hr & 2 ba fl"'plc pool & 1.fill apt. close to beach, S1nce1971
•CONSUMER'S GUIDE S34S Evstwknds962.()678 Btful, immac, 38r, 2Ba jacuzzi Adults ~pets encl gar, ldeaJ for Qtut'L 163lE.J7thSt,C.SA , . HarborVuhomean park· 54&-042.i • · workin& adults S28S per Cht1st1an man needs
WOW ! 1 Super· S2SO fncd yd pabo Uke selling. $700/ mo mo. 1st & lasl + sec. No same to share Northwest ··················· .... ---------i <9offl.Ote•
Brand new Sao Clemente
d uplex. Wrap-around
view, backs on course.
Two 3 Bdrm., 2 batb un· 11.s. Excellent rent d1s-
tnct SlM,000.
Spanish Mansi°"
Converted to 3 units. Uni·
que property, newly re-
modeled with 1mpress1ve
facade 0 C'e3n view
$195.000
•••••••••••••••••••••••
••••••••••••••••••••••• lc6oof'11•blllla 1107 •••••••••••••••••••••••
ON THE BEACH !'!
S32S3br 2ba mores m fee
•CONSUMER'S GU JOE
6454900
$150 4b 2b J·acuzz1 pets pool sm lee6'5-4900 ....., '""" Nice 2 bdrm, big kat~hen. peta. 675-6349 HB 2br, 2ba apt. $125 r r •CONSUMER'S GUlDE u•.,......,.,. tll ... "1897 +sauna frplc d Jw gar ---------wood beam ceilings +u . ......,. eves. UDO lsu h Nice 2Br Dplx upstairs, share.Smfee.6454900 SUPEROELUXE ' . t ruout. carpeted. no frplc. W /D, gar age, •HOMESHARlNG'"
•CONSUMER'S GUIDE $425 •br 2 ba tge patio Charming, co;r:y 38r, AT BEACH!!! peta/cbildren. 6'&-1751 adults, 00 pets, nr Udo SERVICE
Rlfthlh Galan!! ldds/pet.um ree64S4900 ~Ba. $650, yrly lse. Avail B>nicecomplfum lsJe shwping. Avail ap-No l"ee! Til Placed
We have lOOO'sof houses. •CONSUMER'S GUIDE immed. 673-5604. S200fumpool +more Preview Opening prox 7/lS. t.se. credit ref. 530-2494
dplxs, apt s now, all WALKTOBEACH New 2br 2ba pool' $t60. S200superlbr utilpd S500mo.~6303 Rmmt wanted 00 shr 2 areas, all prices. Sm foe. S4104br 2ba fncd yd patio Fncdkidssm fee~·4500 •CONSlJMER'SCUlOE me&liBJIU SwPS to beach, lrg mod BR/2 ba In N.B. Furn &
Use our rree phone go.r sm f~ 645-4900 •CONSUMER'S GUIDE 645-4900 Occupancy late June ZBr, beamed ceilings, 1210/mo + util. Pr.elec:
service. Open 7 days 9-7. •CONSUMER'S GUIDE Newport Hts. 3 BR. 2 ba, Daily/weekly rent.al s t.art· Ba1 Bdrmchelor ~ frpl, all blllns. $450 yrly. mature, clean & active
•COftMlllWr's Guide r d · Fr e •· "'°" 6424657 person, onJy woman. Cal~ 6'5-4900 Rlfttals Galon!! am rm, pat.. bl gar.. mg 16/16. l r , uv rm, 2 Bdrm. 1 ba S320 · Yoslue 833-678'7 1~7pm,
,.. __ ..._.Mer 3122 We havelOOO'sofhouses, etc.$525.542•7945 k.itch Nr bch. S2SO wk. 2Bdrm,2ba $355 Ocean!ron, small 2Br 645-7S27aft8J)m.
....__""'" 11IDSJDCTC.O" d I II Hu--B Callll34·9500evs960·2?85. Beautiful park·llke al· $460 yrly ; dishwasher ____ _:__ ___ _ ••••••••••••••••••••••• " 1 ...... " p xs, a pls now, a v.-..u:.4 rMontegonr. HORIMS REALTY 1--------•I E·SIDE 2 BR. gar. $365 areas, all prices. Sm fee. parks.schls&pool. Min l SmtC:,._nte 3776 mospbere, pool, spa. Ex· 5009\.'.a Seashore: avail Offic.•l...td 440CJ mo. Large triplex $395 Use our free phone yrlseS675/mo833·1861. ••••••••••••••••••••••• celtenl location near 6-28 quiet persons pref ••••••••••••••••••••••• * 494-8057 * Fcmtastic View 646448,675-8258 service.()pen 7days9·7. DUPLEX. 1 BR. 1 ba. beaches, shopping. etc. &&s-2U7nocaJISat-Sun PtlOF£SSIOMAl
from this partially •Consumer 's Guide Th(! Bit.ifs. avail July l, 4 ..,,,...1y ~'urbash-', "'Vail Adults, no pets. Open MEDICAL/DENT~• 7 UMll'S C:.M. fumIShed 2 Bdrm & den 38r, 2Ba. huge mstr swte. 6454900 BR. ammac upgraded J°"uly i~ 5260 '& $2ao . daily 10-6. ~Va'llguard s.a.-• 3176 Sevenroomswte~
&auu!uJ brand new 4 l home Older adults only. hardwood nrs. frplc. bag ---------condo, 2 patios, nr pool. S31·9950or6Sl·3606 Way <At antersect100 of ••••••••••••••••••••••• pti
-Or. loft. f /p 3-2 br. 1•2 ba $750/mo yrly yd. S48S mo. 673-6336 or 3 BR w/fam rm, kJds OK, $650 mo. 497-4214 Santa Isabel &t Newport Br. tge portb, wallc lo ~ =tmC:~ea
townhouse, all bltns. 642-0282 no pets. No fee. S49S mo. Blvd, C. M.) 540-9626 beach, fenced yd. $32S Jay W. Yfftl Co ~~:· ~~-r~R?tu!. On The Wafff' DRAMATIC. nu 3 bet, 2~ Su.n&Sea RE .. S36-8Sl4 IMFAHTS OHLY Eves.-OOl8 4~2237 49M660
642.1603 Prestigious condo with ba. 2sty. FP. Nr bch. Lg BeauW'uJ 4 bdrm house liv ....................... 2 &from S210 mo+ uUl. Apwlwllh ,_11h'91d
pnme Bay, Ocean & Jet ydSS75-$62S. 640-lro.5 rm, <hrung, Camtly, utili· GtMrd 3802 No pets 2450 Newport arUrtfw•st.ed 3900
Easu.1de. unique 2 on lot Ly views FUii s(!('unty ty, 3 car garage. Nr. ---------· ··••••••••••••••••••••• Blvd.C.M. ••••••••••••••••••••••• One 3• 2 yr old tn level, 2 bldg. Pool and dock for LGE 2 br home, cplS, stv, schools & bus. $600. mo. 2 Ocean Vu. Cstm bit 3 Br. 12621 Flower Str eet , 1lf.E EXCmNG
EXPAMDIMG 71?
Fully serv. ofc spa~ starts at f)lt sq ft. in the
dynamic Newport Beach
rurport bus. area. Spa~e
avail: Mo-13.000 sq rt &
warehse sp. 32< sq ft.
ProJ. Ngr Judy Charit.
833-8813 or stop by Co01·
merce Park, 4100 Bmh.
bd 2 ba cstm home One 50 ft boat. 2 Bdrms. 2 refrag, fncd yd, ic:.i r , yrlse. 962·9908 alter 6. 3ba exec home. Lg F/R l'.\lllc:K fH ,, .... u ...... ~,r ... •PT"". adlts ..,.,"'/ o" .. 9806 ...,50/ r: .. o"""" Garden Grove. Large TV -~"""" ~ remodeled 2 br I ba By baths. FUily furnished. ·........, m · .,..... "'' mo ....... -=GO ooe bedroom townhouse New tnbses, 2 br. 1 i,.; ba, MINUTES TO NPT
Owner. SJ29.ooo. 64&-8300 ~~~'R0/i[g~a~OMES 3 BR. 2 ba + den. Lease l"IM 3244 Bluffs: 2 BR .. SS2S: Lge 3 close to shopping. Laun· E-sade. Cpts, drps, all BCH
13 lMih E-Side 6JH400 419 F1ower St. ~50 mo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• BR. fam. rm., $750 mo dry fa c 1lat1 es No bltns, fncd patios. Sml Bach i&:i BR Agt 631 ..,,...., •--------0 ooi... Bkr "•4-0134 children·. no ""'ts. rnll du.Id &_pet ok. Only $375 from 5220' & up'. Sn.nc house + 12 lge un· l•--------1 ' .,.,.,., ... , 1" "'' ,,_ ...,.. Ori b 2536 S t """ Walter at <714) 89J.l01J. mo. ve Y an 8 Adults. No Pets ats. Open beam ceahngs Lge. 4 BR. 2 ba home In JHE RANCH Plush 3 BR. 2112 ba, 40' Ana Ave the n call lS61MesaDr
All tuive yards or patio Mesa Verde. Avail. July boat slip, l '-2 blks to bch lcli)oa Island 3806 642-0282. (S lllks East of Newport deck:;. Income $43.680. Mewporthach 3169 8t.h.S48S F'lrst&la!ttmo. Sharp el<ecutive 4 br, Yrly.s75.57750rs75 5018 ....................... Blvd) 2adj.ofcs,pvtent.approx
Price $475 ,000. Rents ••••••••••••••••••••••• rent. families on ly. family room, frplc, air lbdrrnlba.fireplace,lrg 2 BR. b ltns . D /W , 9860 Rx33', S350/mo. 1827
low Dnve by 362·366 E . Waterfront Lido Isle mon· 549-16.56 Days cond. Near l en n is. Harbor View home. 3 BR. pal.Jo, ul.JI. mcl. Nu crpl& balcony, gar:, adlts, oo, ____ 54_s-_____ West.cliff, N863I-0900 ~Oth S t . C.M Call thly. 4 br. <213)270-4547 95S-2507Eves SS75·mo Purchas e-lsc loft. many cu s tm pnt.$42.5.yrty.675.3859 pets.548-<t29l.645·98S7 ltGGllll 4000 Fl.EEREMT!
owncnal{l 642·9666 or 1213>934·0920 ---------1 option avail. features. garden.er incl, central 1 2 BR ~ 8 •••••••••••••••••••••••
----S32S I BR. upst.aJrs. pet $620.644-8828 lcll)oaP.-...0 3807 oc. lh a, Roomw/kalchenette We'vegotspnngfeverat OR.ANGE Bayfronl condo. lrg 2Br. OK. 145 Mesa ~:5295 or Ontu ... •••••••••••••••••••• near new town ouse SSO k & Lido Marina Village 2Ba. btfully furn, !>hp "'"' ..... ., ~ Sl.500 Mo., newer J Br & fbcd yard. air cond. $345 wee up. While 1t lasts we're offer.
n • ' avaJI, adlls only. Mon· ---------• fam. rm .. custom home bltns. fplc . Close to bch. mo. evs · mg free rent on beaut. of Cou~ ..,....,.,"""" 21 $575 Lovely large 3 Br 64546.55 548 9755
PRIDE OF 67~y""r1en8.t.al. 675-6175 or 3Br,2ba,den. lgerecrm ... ~~ · r¥f •• on Big Canyon Fairway. shops, d ining. Yrly. 0-PoMt 3826 Ambassador Inn an Costa face s pace overloolong
Ow .... ERSHIP .,....,., (rplc . 178 E Bay IJ:"..L.J___J I ,i\gt640-6S00/759-0087 Adlts,833-3307,67J.70T7 Mesa 2277 Harbor. cen-the Bay. Space from 290 " S48S/mo 67J.3456 ... __ rt C--"--••••••••••• ... ••••••••••• trally0located. Z3S rooms. to lZTO sq ft. incl. crpts, mmer rentals by week rw;;;:::-Wft"t'WT' S2952BR + Rara0 e ..a....a 3 "2 Ba .. Al I n bl 30Tow .... HOUSE k 64"'-5,.57 .. COf'OMunMcr a.. Cu.:or apt, .,.e, lnS. MANY With kitc hen, d rps. A I C. 5 day " or month. 2 & 3Dr's from $350 3 Br kid o "'" ~ tw fee . SS7·082A U .... ITS S22S/wk. Owner 675-6775 Fee . SS7 082A 67§..7133 •HOMEFINDERS• ••••••••••••••••••••••• garage, laundry. $2.25 pbooe & 1V. Sw1mmlDg jarutonal serv. & all uul
" 1iOMEFINDERS Eves49S-0318 pool. J·acuzz1. and rec. pd. Take advant.age of -Beautifully landsraped , _or_67_5-80_1_B_. _· ----•-. • f & C ·-" 11w1a-.Ollleoch 3840 room. Daily & weekly our spnng ever... ret! two bedroom, one and ~, Dcaa Point 3226 re • --, rates starung from $S4 a rent offer. We'll pro· bath urulS with enclosed Ha.lae-su..furni5h.d ....................... RENTALS S.Ck•nt. 3276 '['I,, /1 ~rr~""ss ••••••••••••••••••••••• week. bably cometooursense$
garages. J ust four years ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 BR. 2 Ba · $.500/64-0 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ * * * * * 645-4840 by summer. Call or stop
new. Will exchange! An GeMrd 3202 2:[~:S: ~· !~. g~~~~ 3 BR. 2i,, Ba. S600 Lse ocean view condo. LARGE 3 BR single level by any weekday btwn
exclusive with Qu&1l ....................... RE 4937766 4BR,2V,Ba. SS25 3Br,2'-,Ba,2cargarage, GARDENAPTS owners unit. Xlnl loca· Stas:arlttltds <4200 8.30&5.30.
Place Properties Call •LOW RENTALS• 5 BR. 2''1 Ba. $600 2 patios, spectacular boo, near schools &shop· ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lido Marina Village
752·1920. lOOO'sofvacanctes SToro 3232 38R.2ba.N B. . S650 v1ew.$42Smo.49S-2168 CORONA DELMAR ping. $425/mo. Call PROMONTORY POINT 3'175V1a()porto
'
QUA. L •••• •••• •• •••••• ••• •••• 2 Br Townhouse, frplc owner at 846-67a7 or agt J une 15th to Sept 15, all (at Nwpt Beach Blvd> •HOMf:FtHDE~S • REAL nice 3 br. 2 ba S3953 Br gar+ view Pool, tenru.s. Some ocean al84&137L orpart. lBr & loft, cmplt· \714)675-8662
PLAC E All areas-All pnces C h h & Sundeck. Fee. 557-0824 & Catalina views. CIO!>e ly rum T..,.. ...... c ..... pool wt rplc ds w r kids HOMEFINDERS J ***•* . ,.., ........ '""• ' •557.0824• · ' • • to Fashion Is land & Cine actJVllies. " ... 675-5626. CdM dlx suites, utU pd, 1 S V CE pets. Ava.al. now $435. -----·~~·----I A/C I ir.... t 0 PROPEATIES•· L FE'ryME ER I 964-2566, Agt.. no fee S.JuCllt beach. 644·2611 SHARP, beach, 2 & 3 BR. . amp e P&«6• r rn
Good ln all 22 offices ~trano 327I r r p 1 , d 1 s b w a 5 h e r , Fantastic Apt, overlook· $165. No lse req. 675-~ 10,... Tll 1:10 r.M.I lFE~;t'{if.~~;Efor ~~~~~~~o:! ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lux 3 BR, 2~ Ba. front garage,patios,960-2.358. ~l~ar~'1c~o~~P:v:~~Y
COSTA MESA Homes aptsdplxesbnchs •HOMEFINDERS• 2Br, 2Ba. tennis, view. duplex New cpts, patio. 28r,cblldrenwelcome.no $12:i0.87S-9877
6 U ... ITS $155 bach appl sngls Duplex. private. 2 car gar, $SSO 673-7513 agt. pets, starting aU24S mo . ....;,_ ________ , For lease. altractive new •NEWPORTICH•
" $180 lb til L pd Fa.vlaiu Yahy 3234 gar. $385. 496-4330. ~ FUrn 2Br condo, CM. cJ)&d. office, approx: 2000 .....,.. •• what yoea"v• S240 2 b~ kidsp pets · ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'tS23 C.otPUSDa:IRVIME SciNa l4ltG 3280 Availi;/18 • 9/1. ~SO/mo. sq ft, comer local. wan-'-~~ for ....... ...,.,"3b k"d ts k 2 BR 2 b dbl a te CodoMno 3824 NEAii IEACH 536--0966 751-5501. dows on 3 sides, de· ~ ,,_.,..., • "'"' ~ r 1 s pe 0 . • a,. g r.. n· NEW 3bdr l 'i'l ba condo in ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 6 Wlit .. ho.se wittl S3754brkidspetsok. rus, pool, Jacu.ua, SJSS. W db .d S350 FANTASTCC s BR 2 Ba lrCIYIC:C:E:NTER 2 Br. d e .,, 2'h Ba, corator blinds. Avail tow 2 Ir, 2 bo CIRdttwo Call today & move! 1st, last & clean. 839-8883 sJ.~:V'es.g e · · fplc, D/W, cpts. drps: BRAND NEW. Spacious spacious. clean, quiet, w/gar. Rent Sil SO/mo
l Ir, 2 bo. Alt ~ a.oo Island 3206 lmrnaculat.ely clean 3 bdr move right in. $450 mo. NEAR NEW 2 BR 1 BA, deluxe 3 & 4 Br. AU bltns, choice area, pal.Jos, wile Tri-Co Rcalty 64S-062l
SAN JOAQUlN Rentals 964-2566 agent upstairs apaft. Nr. S. frplcs, gar, lge yd. S20 to Crescent Bch. Sum 11:.arr t 71H ST ,.....,, ldtch wjblhls. 2 car ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 ba on cul-de-sac, patio, v l E w THE Go L F • Coas t PT a z a a o d Yorktown · J ust West ol mer r e nt, $300 w k . ,.._ • -
paridng eoch unit. 110 WAMTa> ~~s~=r m~~'iv:il COURSE. One 2 Bdrm, W.....-.tw 3198 Woodland Vig. O/W. nice Beach Blvd. 960-2219 or 494.7430 GROUND R.OOR Yictori o. 6 4 2· 2 I 6 4 IALIOA ISL.AHO now. CaJI 54s-3123 2i,, ba, den. The other 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• cpts & drps. tsl, last $150 53&-171B SOOsq fl. AtC ore, pnv en·
Ownrflkr. 2or 3 Bdrm home or apt. Bdrm, 2 ba + den. Both Terrific 3 br, 2 ba. frplc. dep. Adults. no peLs. Call Oceanfront. 28r upper un-IJ'ance, ubl me. $250/mo
._..LEX
COSTA.MESA.
Trade your house or
duolex. 1-;ach unit has 2
large bdrm~ 2 umts have
.p\·t patios Pnn. only
$154.500
David Bourke Realtor
:>46-9950 ---
SAM CLEMENTE
IEACH TRIPLEX
Spacious, sparkling 3·2·2
10 top l ocation at
$157.500.
BERTI IA HENRY
REALTORS 21:, Del Mar 492 4121
LAGUNA HACH
DPLX
By owner. income S710
mo SllS.000 Sl0.000 dwn
642-940\
Jedlltrid/ rroper+y 21 oo •••••••••••••••••••••••
annual lease Nice. Pvt 3 BR condo, Cully crptd, $575/mo. Call for Info. dshwhr. crpts. Move 546-5880. ask for Leslie H U N T 1 N G T O N at, very nice, s ndeck. Bk:r, 675-0700
art ., .... .,....,., ..i~.b1•-stove.dblgar. A"'.7S2-0283or S49-7751 right 10 ! Etc. $445. LANDMARK CONDO, 3 June/J ul,yopen 675-1906 . p y.<r<.<.·.-..... ..... ..... Uf "6' BR2Ba.wetbar,pool& mce s uite. M.V. at ............ __ p1111.vda 3207 pat.. W ID hookup, tenrus Col.nnu. 3 bdrm, 2 ba $550. 964-2S66. Agt. noftt Spacaous 2 br garden apt . rec faciJ. $450. Coats & ..wPORT IEACH Avery Pkwy. DeluxPre. 750 -• -& swim Cacil. secunty, -·v Wall ...,.,. .. .,. r ""'" fL uf ••••••••••••••••••••••• ample park'g $375 rno inclu gardener, pool, ten· Close to frwys. 3 br, 2 ba, Pool. jacuzzi, garage, ace,.............., Lrg 3 bdrm 1 ~ b3, newly sq. l. ...,. sq. er
IAYftlOHT CONDO l005S San Pablo Court, nis 64().5023 cpts. drps, etc. Av:ul. adult laving. From $295 •LONG BEACIH Br. Stv, decorated, 1 house lo Mgmt.831-7444
Luxury l BR. 2 ba unil FV. (213) 325·7020, (213) Woodbridge 3br, 1'1'2 ba ~°('~ $405. 964-2566 Agt. t 77 E.22ndSt.64S-2A9S refr1g. $185. Util pd. ~~~erboalslip,plush Executive Offices near
w view. Avail monthly, 320-4631 Townhouse. $410 mo. · 2bdrl.,.,ba.carpeted,blt· Adults . n o p ets. 3 bdrm 2.,, ba condo. OC ~rport, all serv1ce11
or leas e opt $595 552-1947 Condonli::hau& 1 n 5 • S2 7 s . Ca I J <714)833-8974 waterlrootcommunJty. ~va1 labl e . S22S mo.
640-2981 H.tingtonlHch 3240 $4302b f d. u..t.nishH 3425 213/62G-4830, 7.JO.llAM. Spaca·ous 3 bdr 2 ba, sun-Bayfront lrg luxuno11S •-S2-·_W3 _____ _ •••••••••••••••••• • •• • • r + am + 1ne ·-'---------••••••••••••••••••••••• Ca h kids OK condo. 2 bdrm 2 ba. OCEANILYD.
Just "'r blk. to the jetty.
Spacious 4 bdrm. home
w ith family rm ..
enclosed yard & 3 car
garage_ Clean & ready
for Immediate occupan·
cy. S900 Per month
67l .. 400
HARBOR
PRIME LOCATION 3 BR Gar . Fee. 557-082.4 2 bdrm 2 b . I ,...., 2 WI'. 2 ba, qt st. rpet· Pof'C • garage, · b ·r II r . b d EXCEPTIONAL I •HOMEFINDERS• • . a, smg e s~., ed. carport, priv. stor $315 avail now. 2 bdr eaut1 u Y trrn1s e . OFFICES ~i:~ ~!, k~~$.i~ =.::;~Terrace Reason. 7Sl ·9408eves. avail. 7/lS. $259.847-0967 rent for mooth or Cor the 2 new s wtes with CdM
per mo. Scott Realty St nJ 1 BR rd S205 2br l.,.,ba pool! Kids. :e~bl~uJts. Boat slip okl charm and charisma.
53&-7533 LGllJllM leaelt 3248 To..,.... un ~ ' ~a s:iisn Gar. Sm f~ 645-4900 3 Mrm 2 ba lrg patio. 1 i,.; Prime location. South of ....................... UrtfurNshed 3525 ;fo\.1sinr:. area, . •CONSUMER'SGlJIDE blks to ocean . ..., blk to Coast Hwy. Spacious &
JBr, Z'hBa, 4 blks to bch, Victoria-Laguna Beach •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• park &bay beach. very reasonable. 675-2311 i~· 422 & 424 :h house,2bdr,frplc.ocean 2 bd. 2th ba, encl gar, LargeJ Brtownhow;eapt. 2BR 2 Ba.condo.w/tplc, 67S-6775or67s..a<ll8 ldealNewportBeacbloc
· · SJG.727! /960-1 · view, steps to beach. $650 patio, !rplc. No pets 2 ba, frplc. pat.to, garage. pool. tennis. $335. Avail CongenJal atmosphere.
Attract.Ive 3 BR. den, din lse. 848-0666 Irvine, $425/mo 581·0085 Quiet aomplex. AtlulL'i, July l. 642·1830 BALBOA ISLAND. 2 Br
rm, 2 ba, fncd yd, dbl Emerald Bay; near ly aft6 ~~~ $400. 645·3381 or SHARP/NEW 2 h~. 2 ba, ~~~WJ'!~eS22S, Sl~. mo. 645-7464
gar, WID hookup, bltn sand frontage· S BR ~Ullfwft 3600 frplc, gar., no cnildren, ---------r>JY· Laguna. tiny pent· =~?1:Sld&c?~· ~ Lease $2250 Mo. Agl: ••••••••••••••••••••••• $400. 2 BR 2 Ba, fplc. pvt S310.962-7788Mack Ocean Front 2 stry apt bouse~:;~~~-
12l3) 3~-7020. 1'2 13) 494-U77 2 sty, spac 3 BR, 2 ba. 2 yard, lndry rm. gar, no 2 bdr, 2 ba, condo, pool, B~ilwl:cJ~o~r~O-~~~· Realtors 499-4591
\lh\·1,znn n1 320-4631 •-Ht•-3250 cargar,opener.balcony, pets.833-3307agt. carport adults only ea14u1,.,..,., 675-""'""Y --r--RR ~ NB OJ' Newpon fits · · ...........,17 or ~ ll.1rhor IO\t'..,ln'l<'nl Co Attr. 4 Br, 2 ba .• bllrul, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sclll Aft.4pm· 9113.3254 2 Br. cpt.s, drps, luds ok, $310. ~3097 Ptcao
f e n ced Yd . N r View Condo Laguna . , no pets. $255. mo . Ocean vaew 2 br. 2 ba, Enc.the S.._
lndwilrlaJ acre. wcstsade Coron.cW Mer 1222 Brookhursl & Garfield, Village, 3 Br, 2 ba, 2 gar, Elegant 2aty, 3 Br 2~ Ba, fWS.2274. !rplc. $350 mo. 208 19th. ON THE BEACH 2 Office avail. Overlook.s
Co6ta Mesa /\lmOit lasl ~...,""'°1401 refrig, A/C, ten, 3 poola. sopenpiralbeamstalrcwlgsay •• lfndpll')'c, 2 Br. 2 Ba, m"'"l uUls pd. -~-""'"'---------Bdrm, 2 bath Patio, ai"""'rt & mountamt, Ole avail. Phil Sullivan, ••••••••••••••••••••••• _..._ "" _.......,., BBQ. TV. Gated com· .,,.... " RJ ~"2 03 ~ ·' H bor V ---------1 $450. 529-0384. 1213) Mo to mo -.n Adults ~ Michelson, Irvine. tr, .nu· 1 · •cluar ar iew MIS, 3Br. 2Ba, country kit 333-7'1tS rm lge patio decb in · · ...,.,.,. Kids ok. 3 br, 2 ba, $375 munily. S700/wk. 7S2-0234 • ..._ ..__ ~~-2200 rg J BR, tt75 mo w /blt & d h hr q_ul'et nbrhd.' Close' to only· 622 .H amilton, mo. '792\ Holl St. 83$-0211 ':'::!."::.::'::........... 97S-092?bet9&s. crack~i':g frp~ ::pe; ~...... 1252 shopctr,bus.NwptHgt.a. 645-00l4 pager9373. ONnlEBEACIHBdrm lxKllH•eOfficft
clean, gardener, muat ••••••••••••••••••••••• S550mo.543..J36S v1• I ·MEDl!B•Lov -=~el_y_Z_bd--2-ba-.-... -,-p-a_U_o·.· ~/ewlt.wllh privacy at ,,._ o.c , Al-rt .MULTIPLE zoned lots. So of Hwy, 2 br, l ba, see.847-3341. 2Br,2Ba.den Adllcomm , .....,. Ul~ .. _.., L ·r-
need partner or builder $425/mo. Frpl. patio, av811 Aug 1. $S25t mo . ....,._. _ _.. 2 Br, 2 ba, some uUl pd. beaut. drapes & w /w oc""°'9
642-9004. blt.ns.CaJ1673-3022. IY OWNEtt 861-2179. Enrl. garages. Couple shag, w /dlsbwasber & WATERFRONT HOMES For lease: 3624aqft.121g.
ul ••R Br 2'-'8a 2 1· l b~h pref. Children ok. No blt·ins.Walk lot.beat.er& exec. suites w /prlv . OfACllLDG Sm Avall J Y lS, 2 u • 1 l>a 4 · • m 1 o · LIM,_... 3155 .... ,,..,,... 3707 pet.I. $310. ~24 Elden. big shopping ctr. 5 min. 63J-l400 bathnn. Lg confcrenc~
Huntington Beach home, $t00. Adlts only. 1 bile to 1trade school, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 6'5-1~ to \Jch. No aml ch.lldNln rm (seats 12) wl blt-in 27•000 •"· fl. lot n"'"'r ri o pets. Coron a public park w/tennJs crts On th 1 .. 3 b 2 b ~ _ lk to be h ...,,. _ Call b T n rl ,. "' .... HJ hls Cal & bike trail lo bch. Kids e a ... e r . a, ..-. .... r wa ac + or Call ...,.....,95 pet.I. Avail Jul,y l ·July 14. 2 HR M • ..., P v. recp._ area Paclllce Jlo~pltal, 5 g ands. 1675·7258 OK no pets AvaJI Aug l A/C,pvtspa,club&lake moresmfee64S-4900 2Br , u~taJrs. nr shop· -.379$ furn hse, walking dis· w/lounge. Sep. ktchn. 8
Pornt.aShop.CnLr&Clvlc We b8ve several choice 2 ~/mo.962--06\&. · privp .$645.811·3889 ..CONSUMER'SGUIDE ping. cry clean, neat, •-•--L ,.. ... lance to bch. ssoo. additional offlceii. Can
<Alnter. Sl.35,000. BR home5 from $475 up 1 avail 7/1. $230, r efs, ~-...,,. '158-1439 furn. or PUJ'\lal. LocaUon
David Bourke Rltr Au "'t 67c cN>t\ ' • 3 BR lt\.l ba crp•· d.....,. ....._ Vlefo l:Z67 COIN Mete 3 24 adults. M9-4225. 556-3900 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------• provides ample patw,,0 • ''f'"'" ,,.~ bit A: •. • rd. ..... c 1' ..... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~·-5*9950 w .... Ill ga eoer OllC "*" Jul ~/Sid B OCEANFRONT UDO. Sandy beach. Lfle I ready 8CCe.JS to airport, ..... -,-.-.-.. -h...-t-----•eo.ta Melo 3224 to achl, shop'g & bch, ~5c:3 brFldds olt, gar $50 Wlll(I, Ur ~ :a*, n:~er, Adi~~ n~ DELUXE Br. alps 4. New c:ond. freeways, & rtstauranta.
a...:..-..£ ' 2400 ....................... S400mo 960-1417 '"" · ~ ·55Mm4 Studio, 1 bedroom ..,... $340 &7S-$3\2 I & 2 BR from $42.0, uW. $250/Wk. Min 3 wka. Ail· ~ •II MEFJNDERS• Maidservlce,pool r--· . Incl.~ ~5044 Call'114nS2.()6$1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• New 2 br, 1,,.. ha condo 2 BR walk to ocean l350 ms Newport Bl c M l Br l a.I ted S23S 2
LarRe 3 BR Cabin BIR ~.Also new 3 br. 2~ ask' for Ke~th. 0Bkr: Ml...,..f .. och lZ69 se41Mor&c.S-'*7 · • ge. P n • · Newly decorated L BR, NEWPORT BEACH . OmceSulte avail or Jd13 8ear AIJ ptne Int. 2 fp. ba condo $550. Dbl 982..wTt ••••••• .. •••........... !;.~k:,.,~e~trecs, ocean view. fireplace, ttePI bay-t' b(-1,1ch lfTD a;oo ln San Juan C4po
nr golf & 1kUniJ St.0,000. praiie, J)OOI , Jacuul NO 1-'EE' ffOUHS. condos, EXQlJISITE · covered parkloa. near POOL. Avail. ~ wt•ck. Short walk to d-=p(IC. &
Owl'lta,i. Call494·861l. Choolle your crpl color Sl6S 1 Br gar. yd, util du p I ex ..a . RC' n ta l $167.50 uUl pd abr 2ba 2 Br. 1 ba, children °"· villa&e. be•ch. ttflopplog. Call NOW ror be!« wits. rastaunnta. Pteu~ tall
Vi ctoria 4' C anyon part pd fee557oe.24 Pavlbon,67).48128kr. pooll•mfeeMS-4900 $2115/mo.Nod()ft can chu.tthff. S3SO month. Denoia at 845·6&46 or ..,1.8QC50or661·3606 Whether you'rl' buyini 831-21080 •HOMEflNDERS• ..CONSUMER'SG\JIOE &48-6530 ~ 75'>-0Jl7
3C'lllna. Cl11&1lhed ad· -----------Open! Buy Uke rent. 4 Br. --------If you're looklni for a bet·
vcrtaama wUI act your t2:i02br + k•d~ Sl803brgarag~·Yd 3 ba, JacuuJ. ~. 1712 28drm. Rap. adults CLEAN, quiet 2 BR, l ba, Lra 3 BR. 2 ba condo. N9t Bch oceanfront t.er}ob,youwon't•utto
moaaaetotherlpt peo-FeeSS7-<m& Petok. Fee SS10824 Ht&hland $3~5 ,000 . oaly.12:10 $2S.'i mo, no ~ 1981 ocean view. laundry duPlea, alps e. nr Mk't mlts the t :nplo111tent
p!A). Call Tod~ I 842-5678. •HOME FINDERS• •HOM EFINOERS • home. A&t., t:ll.QllOO Pb. 8'2-3118'7 Mapl~. 83l·l286. set-I•• f acU, $$00, ~ Bakt. C.11 Curt, 673 1573 cohunna in Clua11*1.
. -. . ..
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OHtic..... UOO w.eytoi.o.t SOZS r..top91 USO HelpW..t.d 7100 HetpWClllttd 7100 ····;ij(riiiviC:·i·· .. ~;1·c···;,,··c···~·s··H··· ··;:5·AN.DY:5;·· ····~:;:~~;;~~:;;···· =;;;·:~·~·~~·
H.tpW.teci 7100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• T~y. Junt 20 1978 DAILY P1LOT a
•Yll OMCU T¥ " ~ UuLuU M lb.Oii'-' ~llleiitater developer UI Co u Pl e pre re r r e tJ •
1WIDGal pbuM n• W73~ futuoo Island Req. ~n aenural bandy mao &
c ptlonul, urr•l•r>. bl • 2nd J'rutl Oeed 1nd1v Lo proceas Ace ta matnt, IJve on p"'miao:1. m nu. multiple lll'l oti---------•ICONCRETE-fioi.shers It Dtnt.al 1111 10\/recep~,
book.'I, NCR back11round. a..EIJCAL form Htten E•~r pre-Yrr. Mb81on Viejo. •rff. dirllH'l'l'lll~ l'tiom. ~oil f' W.m e&rTan&t'd for any •SHi:Rll.SF.• payabl• typ f1mmcual l Br apt provided ~ ho.p talil) sen lch ttason Cr~ll no pro· Certl.lied MUllC'U'r statement$, correspon 4.94 8S4J btwn 9AM $PM OUlJit:lllduli oPportu.nl\)' • ..,,,_I.AUST fft"ted. C-ll 648-7001 E:xp OOlY ~ to work 1n Uw pteaunl ~~ E1c~Jlent loolJon o r bwm ltorro"' oo the w llou.e C..lla By appl ~ce. & mamwn acct·
ffMWa_n crcu.d \ 1tlut' or your 838 ft8311 Ul& dept mos Grp ln1 A11t. M11naser Retire· ~ CIHTla btwr1t' C.11 today for lit!>l, plan ~1d by company ment ftome Live in or on
(714,lmJ.2161 1.'0Url~tnlormaUon FOXY L .a.DY S"nd Ru11ume lnclud call Sal opt:n 1146·6116.
atmuspht>re of Corporate ()ppor lor tndlv w/tx· ConatrucUon aupertnten· De nt.al Aot Chud.
offlctofNaUoh11I Ladil'l!' perm verbal & wnllen deot. 3 yrs up nee t 1t1m•. Sood b~neflt,f
Spt1clwl•.y Shops All commun1cution :1k elh1 Salary negoll•bl• H.B.~.&M-3540.
benefits. Apply in person Group insur~nce back CM/HB atta. Mail N ·
or send resume No ground helpful Siunlrl aume to p O.Box 11188. ---~ 11alary req. to controller 64.S-75M
CQ)'TA MF.SA r.-.,. A• °"9cG1 Metett 3Ge Sa11 Mlauel Suite 200 --------
900 llQ ft w1w11rk tirt'D, £» }-: JaX ~0. M/C 731 .)HI NB92GOO --------wet bnr. restroom. r,• ...... ,;:n, "'" ATTIHTION
S!OO/mo. Call 646-4296. 11 Llcl!naed Home Loan PREGNANT• C'11rln1t . Accounlm& Clerk w/malh SUMMll JOIS
to5pm Brokers IJHV Ing So t:onfidcnUal counaelini;t & aphlud1: Call Donna. II Oil ova
phone calls. Back Stroot. cant career l>Qlt1nlial for lrvineSQTH
655 BSl. TWILlll, wi680. q'*1fied candidate whO ---------can deal effectively COok. cooUnenlal, Y or
BOOKKEEPER full wit.be public as well as P/T, premium waae.
chargt>, thru flnnnclal wo.i in a team effort. Phone 4118·5448 blwn
statement. Manulactur-Benema include men-9-12am · lliiiimliiiiiiiill•----1 Calif. !or 17 yrg. Call our referral. Abortion, adop 644_1000 _____ _
Fw'ft. Offk:e n e a r e s t o f f I r c . Uon & kt!CP1ng.
Lido area bl!uutifulf 714-837-3744 Al'CARE 547 ~ u YOU are new to Coslu ing exper pref'd. For fast d.lrundcaJ/dental & twUon re· --c-~--,~ ......... -.. --.~--growing new company ~ • AcctnjJ ~ _ Bkkpng Mesa. temponnly dis Greal future for the right Dtl)'s ai Nl1bl1 furnlBlwd executive o Lst. 2nd & Jrd T. l> '1i lf .... D• & Vl,.tll fice space with recep-Credit no problem. " "' -tlonist. secretary. word 718-4271 Outccil Mcn1ap
TIMPORAllY cont.IJluing your eduea· person Call G. Baker. at I&\ n"CIAC mUTUAL . ApPlybetwn3-llopm ~giater Today t.o work lion. recently discharged 714.6'2 7840 \e.' ,-,.. 'J\lesday lhru Thu.nd.a.J
on various accowtting & rrom the service. or for 700 Newport Cent.er Or Reuben's. 251 E. Coul
DINT Al. ASSIST.
EXPER'D needed ror
C.M. denlal ofc. Xr91 ltc
req 'd . RDA p ref 'd .
Knowledge of fmt/bck
646·987!. Aft 6 oil
M7·128>
DINf AL AS5'ST.
Ownnde, pediatric den
taJ olfice. Costa Mesa. ~~eoce required processing, computer. & Arranged by For the FR of It!
CPA service on pre Coast Home Loams Serving all Orange Co ml8eS. $4~ mo. 67~ 835 7313
bookkeeping assign-any tt8JIOC\ seektng tern· IOOkJ(HPEll ,./C Newport Beach Hwy. Newport Beach.
men ts Work close lo porary or career employ-Rap 1 d I y e "pan d Ing Equal Oppor Employer D9CT Al. ASSIST.
your hom e . Figure ment. consider this uni· Newport Beach develop· COOK$HILPIR Cha1rslde. P /llml' 4
Udo Village
Karen
549-1684
4450 •••••••••••••••••••••••
4 DILUIE ore 'S
Cool. rm . seal 25. all
00 YOU NEED CASH"
lst, 2nd & 3rd
Home owner loans
arranged rast
Borrow 11000. SI00.000
flexible terms. past
credit no problem C11ll
llS no oblJgalion
STERlJNG FlN. SVCS
714/955·1610(bkr>
Clerks to Sr. Accoun-que oPP<>r Tbe women & ment company needs ex· ---------ExJ>enenttd. nl&hta. dtn· morns & 1 full day. Eit OUTCAU tants needed lhruout men we are lookmg for puienced bookkeeper ---------rwr house, beach area. per'donly.548-$504 MODILS OrangeCo. may be tJred ol lyplDg, F/C Pleasepbone Cl£RllS CaUMl!-9434. l'-'---..;.._----
EXECUTIVE Robert.Half's folding paper s. C714f640.5112 I\ ---------Luenlal R ecpl/Au t
Accountemps warehouse jobs & work· C 0 0 K S W a n l e d • needed for a new prac·
APPT REGlSTR~314462 SOOS. Mam.Ste SOI Ing for a limited mcome Brake & Front End Man UJOTEM Breakfast, lunch & din t1ce In COM _ 673-&Ma
No. Tower, Uruon Bunk Work w/young people Eltp. only, excel employ ner slutb. Ma Barker's dys,830-3S78eves.
XX DANCE OF ..-u N XX In The Cit)' of Orange Rapid adv. possible. If benel1l6 Apply btwn 8 & ~lllll&I Now.AYatl.able.. Restau.rant, 212 E. 11U11-------
Beaut nude 111rls Dance 714/835-4103 ¥OU are 18 or over & 8 PM Mon· Fri. Coast for ruH Ot' p lbme clerks St. C.M. ~ .,....., Alt't
& rap SE!Slitons al our new ---------1 would be avail to start General Tire 28SS Harbor on 2nd & 3rd shifts. No Chairslde. X ray Ucenae
locatJon 1s the most tux· ·--------•I work immed. Call betwn Blvd.CM C()()l(SWAMTID required. non-i1mkr llS unous in Orange County. 8·30am&2J>m :'.,~er Ad:in~~:J':C,~ Bruler & Saut.e Special· NB I Lido 67 3·9460.
paneled, sm. whse In re ---------
ar. 1 or 2 yr lease. Lake
Forest area K en t
Harlu.ns.
714-581·9393
"ri.Guar.Lomtt U you de!>erve the bel!l Accounting 645-6514 CARTERIA porturuties to those wbo t y . Contine ntal ex 6T.J.88IM
91 .......... T l try t Now O•"' ... h p.a.ar TIME ·-I l D ys/e e r II tif F nl . p erlence preferred. ---------''-~ erM oans i ,,..n "' rs ,.. • u• pan a v s. u qua y. or l ormauon Lunch & dinner. Apply in Denlal Asaialant. F /T .
V...._. Capital every day Apptox 20 hrs per wk . >\Ul'OMOTlVE or p/tlme Costa Mesa & go lo our nearest market person Mon· Wed 3·5, The rront & back ofc backu.p ---------i New businesses. bus1· 2060 S o Eu c lid . Accountlnft eitper.req'd. PAllTTIME/ Irvine 11r ea Steady orcontact thepenonnel VictorHugo lnn.361CUff help. Some CJat morn
5400 Ml ft ness acquisitions or ex· Anaheim Exc1tmi;t tie Good figure aptitude, 10 FULL TIME employment. 994·2331 oCC1ce al Or. ~una ~ach (NO work. Pref mature exper ~I ofto I lh h'l uuls534-1581 key exper Apply Na-la.42LampsonSl X •·JI ace wn pans on. any wor w • e ---llJgb School grads look· CAMPCOUMSELOR GardenGroveS37-4840 p H 0 E CA LL S persort, ·rayexpera: c
M a erdeOr.Plaza purpose OUTC•LL UonaJSy11temsCorp,4361 ;noforacareer?NotJUSl Mff Must have station T;'~ualOpporEmptover PLE~EI req . Sal ary open ~ Mesa Verde Dr. E Ft-ff Contultatfon A Birch Sl. N.8 . !Near OC ~... LAf " ---------1 642-6M) CM £... Airport) Equal Op· anot.herjoblfyouarel8 wgnorvan.Goodwages. Cooks wan ted, ex -•----·------
Call forappt. Jnlerstate M.aep .... -com rtunl E ,1 years or older, wllUng to .summer employment. ..-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-. perienced preferred. Oental Recpt. NB Ortho ---•545••-4•123---•I Business Services. 10·8 MC/IA 631-3111 •po--•ty_m_p•o•ye•r•. -•I start at tbe ground noor. 545·5145 1• NJ or part lime. Apn•y otc. Ortbo exp req. Start ---------r Mo n · Fr 1. 9 · 1 2 Sul work on establishing a CLERKS .,. t to S850 642 2626 CANNERY VILLAGE 52J,.007S TOUCH OF CLASS ACCOUMTIHe CLKS cari!er path. & have the CAR WASH HELP in penon 3.5 PM. Coco's 8 up · -
4l33tst 8treet lst,-hd & 3rd MODELS 1 Yr otc exp/10 key/m need, not just the wanl lo f\111 & part-umc IWENTORY ~~:m~cT.burgers. Dental Reeept. Matur<' 870' w tparkin~ Newport learn. here·s all it lakes 18 & Over nt · · woman. Type 50.4iQ wpm
RETAJLSTORE T.D.LOAHS C&llNancy640-1976 -Hlgb schooldiploma MetroCarWash Special 1 Day Inventory Counlerhelp. lOPM~AM. Beneflll.642-5897.
Lease by Owner c~~~ ESCORTS o\mblllous self starters ::::J~~~ude 2950 Harbor Bl. CM Tues AM 6127. No ex per Wiocbell Donuu. 2$3 E Dental AsslSt /recpt. full 676-8909or64S·lll60 Ca11hler Wanted part nee '50' People needed. l7thSt.CM. time. e•per. only .
A ...... ro-... ~""sq ft C·2. 130 633-3980 lkr 975-0062 646-7118 s,erious ~~ofu l .s, up . :GoodAnd md~v1nlorgarllec. hoardve the Ume, Thurs, Fri .. Sat, & ML aj or Hd ~llpt s l or e6 Count.er mrl PIT for dry ~ r..,.., ,. """' HA M IG Visa p ementmg Ule am1 Y m· "" Su Call B b f aguna I s area. l "" •---------E. 17th St. Suite Q. SJ40 Mott~Tnnt .ii M JA M come Prrca11rorappt. des1retogroww1than n. arara or Yrs&upC&lltoday. cleaner. ~r 8 e11 t DIS«Cl.HIC
mo Doyle548-ll68 De9cti 5035 -494-5168 aggressive & successful appt 540-3280 Cleaners. 2939 E Cat
'
__.._........... ............... ..asoo ••••••••••••••••••••••• sOcial Chiba 5400 rorporatJon CIVIL ~o~ 0 ff ice • Hwy. CdM. 675·3306 For downtown hotel In
,_ ....... llWWIW "' A mother w/Ume on her CALLTODAY l d Laguna Beach. Mu!il ····,··u·.·LD···T·O···s·u·.·T····· Lo· WEST ••••••••••••••••••••••• hands. make extra ROBERT PRICJ-: EHGIHEEIUHG 0 ove r oa COUNTER GIRL have exper. In 4200 NCR
money lh1s s ummer, O Lead~ oc firm offers 557•0061 Full time. apply In mach. Apply to Auditor.
5.000To20.000 sq rt M·G hthnltl•s SIMGU? p1tlme al home Call 979-250 oulslond1ng oppor for pers on 8A M·5P M . betwn lOam & $pm .
l.Ol'le, Costa Mesa ht T .D.'s. also Call INTRO VIEW fort he 842·9513 IAUllt IUICIC pro1ecl engineers. de· 3723 Birch St. N. B Cameo Cleaners 1650San 494-1152 .,.., 0 1ntl'lli~enl & discreet ---------11. d afts Equal()ppor Employer Miguel Qr NB 1---------w~LEYTAYL RCO 2-tT.D. Loma. way to meet new single Arif t S.~ 292SHarbor Blvd signers°' r men ex ·• Desk Clrlc /Nite Adtr. Ap
REALTORS 6444910 FalrestTermssmcel949 •W>nnle 7"'"Mll t / ~ COSTA MESA per'd m subdiv1S1on & CCllllhr&Casll ply m person. Surf &
S ......... -M._C ..-~... .... Ex p e r · d d I a Is. "0rangeCounty·11 l a nd d evelopm e nt CLERICnl'IST S d H L 3500 Sq ft, 2 ores del door U'l'1ft'I" 'T o. nameplates. emblems & #l Buick Dealer engmeenng. Registra-....... Http a ' otel. a(lun a
22' Sq fl. CMta MeH. 642-2171 54S.061 I ~--,..& colOt' separations. Xlnt ---------1 uon + 3yrseitper. req'd ~~l'.. ~h!~k .. ~~~: Min ageDet8
1
yrs. ~pp1y01n 1_De_a_~.__· _____ _
645-0191. 875-0508 M Pretoyww .ti working conds. Call AU1'0MOTIVE for project engrs. 2 Yn ln exec. olc. Xlnt typmg peraoo. ane~ a Ket e Dog Silt.er, retired person. ---W------0 2ND ortgage of S10,000 ~ 979-7600. IMMIDIATE mm exper req·d for de· of Fllh. 630 Lido Park mus t like animall1-.._... .twd 460 needed on my home Pis ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------• s1gners&draft11men: AP· shkrislltswk(6.5 'wFpl emx>1.b2le5 Dr.N.B.87~·3145 varied hrs .... us\ havl• ....................... caJI for details. 642·08911. Schools a Msemblera wanled for Ol'IHIMG M I ...
Hoose ror 2 udlli., Npt •~-......,1 IMtr.tion 7005 swing shlfl in CM mfg in Lincoln·Mercury de e!~ tn perRso~-rtto o-r . scheduling>. $4 Hr. Good Couple wanted to manage t r a s Port a t i o"
-ftlltnn I l .., 30 A k r M I '-' ffi fo lady r uentes at Ou.: ' IX'tn. co benefits. Contact Jan sm.aJI bustn-~. P/lime. Jeon.64.'>-,9441.644·7058 Bch. lmm.oculute Clean· r-~/ ••••••••••••••••••••••• pan . ...,, . s or r . a erswp o ce r Wu· Fr l & As oc •:"'" c 759-0323 759-0377 ~ Uf d/f .-.1 Clifford,642-52:>4. with automotive back 1 Jam 05 8 • Hess, (7141833.a383 Mr Hall642·1634 mg o. · Lost & Folatd1CJIMIF r--ftffs ground. Typing a must l40l Quall Sl. N l_J --StatA? Mutual Savmgs
Rent:tl wanted hy 7/l 2 lg ••••••••••••••••••••••• who successfully pass Assembler trainee for OMV expenence helpful ---------4001 MacArthur. NR COUllEI
or 3 bdrm, gur .. wtd ~---nh 5100 program will receive u<.I IJl!hltnll fiittures. Some but not essential. Apply Clencal Equal Opj>or Employer wanted for local de· hookup To $350. Sue, ••••••••••••••••••••••• vunce rl!Sru .... Isl Aid & warehouse & s h1ppmg to Mary Clarke. Business kd 1 833 44 CPR cert1fit:at1ons for duues. S40-4623 Mgr ADP CLHICTYPtST IJverles from Corona del w ays on Y .54 2 spaces Harbor Lawn pubUc IJfeguard employ Insurance co in N.B. MartoHuntmt(lon Beach
Rell ab I e . -work Ing Blue Spruce Section ment. Classes start Wed, ---------1 PENSION seekmg trainees for ac· area. 2\.'J to 3 hours per
Journahat needs one moving. l500 ror ooth or June 28. Course fee S45 •~SEMBLERS counting dept. Perm. day Monday thru l-'r1·
bedroom cottage or Apt makeofrer 544·2147 for 20 day proJl rum "'1 SERVICES pos.Lltetyping.SalWlO day S3 .00 /h ou r ; by July l in La~una &.ostl.Fomd 5300 1Volunteer serv1ces may 501'raineeAssemblers Good c o benefit!> 15c /mile . Call Car ol
CMtlYllS
Men or women 25 yrs or
older. Know the coast
c1Ues. Net 1180 a week or
more. Orange Coas t
Yellow Cab. 17300 Mt
Herrmann. Fountain
Valley. <No of Slatl'r
b etwn N e whope & Beach. Newport Bench ••••••••••••••••••••••• also be accepted as pay Needed lmmedlately HONDA AND Oppor & challenge of 833"8450 weekdaya at640-~...:._
or Costa Mesa. S200. or Lost or Found a pet? Call ~~Call ~.()Jll Loo&&Sbort Tenn BRITISH MOTOR CARS rered to resp. lnd1v. 1n Cred1tt~lectlon. Orange·1---------.
less. Qwetnesllt;SBt?ntlal. Animal Assts tant"c PIA.NO& Assignments IRVlNE our Newport f1nanc1al CLERK Typis t. pro· County dJstributor has r-. rL.--·--I nd
Euclid)
Reply to Classified Ad 3Shlfts Available gresslve N.B real est re-..... , "~ P ant s . League537 2273 no fee VOICE LESSONS " · 830.7000 firm localed in Fashion good t e I e .i hone CM Bt -•192. Daily Pilot.. P.O. · f Must have own tran.sp. Island We have unmed search appraisal firm --~~11t •. exper1 r presaier area. wn '
Box 1580, Colla Mesa. LOST Green Parrot ~~:1r!~11~ C411Toct.y5SM520 AUTO SHOP operungsfor has and dnt appor. ror :;'t;j~;'~~>llect~~~ &3 548-6485
Cal. ~ or telephone w yellow head. V1t -Free. Top Pay. vac Pay FORIMAH ..clEJUCAL an energetic i>erson Competitive salary ~9301 --W11terbury LanHe & TI.ITOR K-9lh. Cred relld· VictorTc::+a.wy Toyota agency en llunt t Flgureap&hteLypeJ w good ;JliJ;llng bslltU1lls. benefits For intet'vlewi---------
BUSlNESS man nf'eds 3 Y o rktown · 8 lng sper ialii.t. elem s.r-tlc" Beach n eeds s hop -aECE:f'TIOHIST phonenanu nga lies. call Miss Parker. EAMOPIAATOA
or 4 bdrm .. _"*"loteas"" REWARD968-8259 __ Read ing & math f1lmg & copy machtne 5479151 p 1 -·-1iu ..... "' .. DlvWalte.rKidde&Co foreman with Toyota ex .Q.ERKnrtST operation. Congenial · or a PY in ,_.._ ~1ust be near Nl'wpe>rt t..051' Samoyed female. 496-~ 4341 Birch Street penence. s Day week. -GEHERAL CLERK s taff. good bens. Oppor ~ 1525 E. Edinger. Includes processing Job!<
Harborlligh After6PM allwhite,v1cNewlancl& TI.ITOR 712Ul w/11et•on Su1te213 bestofbenef1ts.C&llMr IMailRoom> 10 grow Sal rom -EOE M/ on the IBM 1130. Soml'
751·1706 Yorktown. H.B 968 2491 dary crerl Reading & Newport Beach Sm1th84HIS55 mensurat.e wtskills & po· _________ , card deck maintenance
-or961:1· l l30 wnt1ng compt>lencies Equal Opporturuty Babysitler needed, m) Xlnt working conds & co tent. Call 642 7860 for in· Cutter wanted fOt' wet swt as weal as report prt> ....._/1frfttt/ Lost 2 Irish Setters. 1 4_96 __ 94_38_ --Employer M/F home. full time Call benefits offered t.erv1ew. mfgr. Exper desired or E~~~ledong. Porosbition reqm~ 11!.L..-....:• 957"""" will trru'n. APW, ...... wn l\JIVW e as1c co -,._ M11le, l Fem. yr old. Vic P R IV AT£ M US I C ---------eves. """"°. CUltl<TYP15T ~· 1 c ts & •••••••••••• •• •• ••• •• •• 17th & Santa Anu ~l. LESSONS Contact Shirley 644·4360 8:30-12am ! 837 . 18th St pu er con ep pro-~ Assembly Babysitter needed. part lndlv. w/good appear & St CM gramminR lechn1ques
°s 'rt-t 6005 C.M. Pis call owner. re· 16 yrs prof~s1onol u lime days. Locat.c.'<i from ----pleasant manner needed -·-· --·------• ~h eAper . or educ a
-,.pDnmwty ward.646-2844 per, Piano&clannet, SIO TRAINEE U d 8 ~"h ---------for loan broker firm D•'T• ...-.y Uon. Offers formalized ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---wk.546-3182 Magno a t r.,.,.. urst ,.. "'~'" h8
TD.a.V£J •GE .... CY LOST· M Irish setter.----to Newpor t BeUl·h CLERICAL Some phone work. Near Acea• tls•Clertl career pal .. 3Pm-ltpm '""' ... ..._~ " h h I redi ll'SEMBLERS 842-0917 Fashionlsle.644-8824 . -" Benet1ts include Under I yr old. No tags. Eam Hig Sc oo C ts· "'1 FUU Ume poe1tlon open medical/ dental & twUon FRANCHISE Vic Cameo Sbrs. CdM. lndependent StudyRead· Babysitter, needed for 10 SUMMER JOBS as a video olspl ay ref'uod
The new way lo own a Call642-1729 eng. Math, Spelling & & PACKERS moo girl, Mon· l'~r 1. Codlt.1Waffres1 terrrunal operator for a COl'ltac.'t Person el Dept
travel agen<"y Travel MISSING PENT/\X St\.JJySkills.()penenroll 8-spm.Singleparenlrcq All skills urgently Sdtoel Bas te /F ou r mini n Network Start your own ment. Total cost $200. NEEDED needed Lona & short E to -k computer. Some ex Iii\
Exp nol required . CAMERA.Lenses.~ck Woolbri~ht Academy IMMEDIATELY" respadlt. Your home or term assignments. Hoh r.!:'t':f:lioo~a~:m~nl periencelsdeslrable,but \81 PACIFIC mUTUAL
Complete support & long case Id No. engrav on 13861 Bei!ch, Wstmnster SUMMER mine. 675-3185• aft 7Pm · day & v ac at1on pay. aSSJst. lil-9194. will tram 1ndividu~ with 700 Newport Ctr Dnve
term servlce provided each. 175 reward, no 897·2855 Babysitter-lite hskpng Hosp1taltzat1on plan demonstrated typing ac New-Beach
C 11 M Ch I questions Co II Tom. -------H1 h r th . ht available Coe .... -., Wai•~· cura and ...,..... Work ...,.. • 8 r a r <'!I 6'\2-4321 Ext 2m Thanks 1 Summer educational pro-JOBS g pay or e rig ,........ ., """°' ex per . cy 61'="· Equal Oppor Employe1
7l4.aa8-9342 gram offerlod by top area person·rehable/ res pons App I y 6 t 2 3 . 9 a m . 01 plusant envlronmen't•--------
f'OUN t> II hagg tor PAY!!! 2 well behaved children. Jaspers. 3672 S Bristol. with good company ---------INTERESTED IN sma s 'i educators Elem &spec o ltd 1 SA benefits including Early 1nonnng deli......., "'.ELLING YOUR blackCockapoo.CM6304 educ avail 494·1385 All sh.alts. da), sw1n1r &: z.5·3 w ys rv1ne . ft ·-·~ ·~ "•"1'"" d · 1 d 559-0544 a!LS .30 weeks vacation a er on 'or .. A T1mee. Coat .. COIN LAUNDRY" .,...,.. ,...., l.1assesform immcd graveyar inc u es year . compa"ly oa1d """a. ~e---9 ., No
W -wknds Long & short """' ~ ....... • CA.LL NO ' REWARD. l..o!olt Goldt!n Jobs Wmhcl, 7075 term aASignmenls. Hoh-Ban.long 3141 c....,... Drin c • I group tnSurance. credit l'Otlect1ng. 832·TOl9 MPE IMC. Rtvr Neau male. 90 lbs. ••••••••••••••••••••••• day " vacation pay CUSTOMER 546-4741 ommercta uruon. elc Apply at
Cotnlaundriessincel963 493-42SlorN!turnto3482I Couple for secunty hire Ho~r.1lal•ution plan SERVICE CLERK 1/\crossFrom ORAMCiECOAST Btctr ·cTccht (714) 547.5934 Calle del Sol. Capistrano own mobile home. will 8V81 .i>r&Jl&e.Co.A1rporu toan Officer o..uy ... OT lmm.ed.~ 8ch. sta.r on ..erem1ses For · ~-Equal Oppor Employer l'Ulo n1o ponurutiee en an estab •UTO •~cy moreinfo546-1820Kcnt. Must enjo) customer 330 W. Bay St .. CM co. ln Orange co. airpM "' ,..__... REWARD· Lost Silvery· conta ct & have 11ood between tbehoursof area. Applicants to
ShowroOm & llhop, Brown M Cockl!poo. CM Ret1~ibl!-' professional communicative sk11ls.1•--------1 0 C ~ 8:00AM-5:00PM troubleabool, repair It
sq. (t • fenced paved tag OOU58. Cotrege Park man desires lo spe!'d Ltleaccur. typlnit req'd. Clencel rlllfe aan Call for lesl electroruc systems
yard. h0tst. compressor. area. Bri8hl, pla7fut. time at beach W 111 3841 c...-Drl•• UMION IA.HK loM ;;ii~er .v/min yrs Appointment please Recent analog & digital
part room. front & rear loveskids.M6-65S5afl4 watch your house. start 546--4741 If Prop 13 lending exper. Mus t be 64.Z.4321 ,ext277 exper req'd, lolerv1ew access. Near SUperlor & -------anytime 2 wks-2 m<MI tAcross From GIONewportClr Dr. NB capable or assuming b toni SST 905l k 19th lnCosla Mess Found DOG Female 63'7·3594. Tony. Or c Al Plejl!eContact H ruture administrat ive Equal Opportunity y app y. . as
LLOYD JOHusou Golden Lab Rtvr. Satur· ~-,..----'------ange o. rport> Dons MJtchell 558-5280 Urts Employer for Busch. · " " day . West cllff area. Babysitting/Lil hKkp on EQual()ppe>rEmployer Forinter vwappoinLment responsibillt1es & be ,._-.---~--.---~--_.-.---~--..._..
J o h n ,, o n s h e 1 t on 541H 928 wknds for parents who --------Equal Oppor Employer We Can Help I. growth & profit oriented.
McCalllster & Aasoc want to gel away. Very Major bank loan training 1---------Exec. Secretary $12K SM-2700 Found Rsnch Tract rel & res Ask for Mrs Fin<! whal you want in Ban.enderP(f,apply6/23 &MBAdesirable Oat.aProceMi.ng A/PayClerk loS900
---Irvine female Siamese. Pina642-8879 DrulyPllotClasslfleds. 9am. Jaspers. 3672 S Uncertain aboul your Ntgressive independenl DATAIEHCODH Jr.See/R~pt SMll
Cocktails . Newport Pb ' 5 3 fl --Bnstol SA fulure Lookan° tor a bank provides it Int lnsurSf'Cy toS12K Beach. near &y Full ;:ne 51 25., 3 er HelpW..ted 710C»tttpW.ted 710u · · · new career? Te~porery benefits, promotional op· A major life Ins . co lrvlne Personnel Atrenc
kitchen (not In u s e l . 6p -••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••Beauty Salon 1n CM al!ll1gn ments moffice.1n porturutles & sal com ~uarteredlnN.8.is 488E17lhCostAMesa
seats 100. good parking. L06T. "Wolf Wh1sllln1C -----------------"""' needs Wig Stylists. 65(7.., dualnal & marketlnJ! mmsurate w1exper. For seeking data encoders. Swte224 642-1470
terms. Agent. 751 1400 gray & yellow rockallel. INVESTMENT commission. 548·3446. s upport skills. Work Im med considerat ion ::1vl~~0!1 O:~·Y~~'nc1~: -...--.-.--~
Local business requires 6117 vicinity or Santa Beauty saloo in CM needs whel\ & where )'OU wanl please send resume & key tape or key disk Female Paclla1en. Mem
penon wbo llkes to v.ork Ana Ave. & Del Mer. hair stylists 65"',, corh· You don't pay, we pay salary history ln ron training. Add itional nu.sea. Call 548-~m 1S37
wtcrafts It can m CM REWARD! 645-SlSO SALES mlasion.548-3446 YOU fidenccto tnlning will be Untuc Monrovia Ave. NB
put>Uc. t4750. In\ entory Found· Male tiger or tab· IXIC. OFACH Cade l&OO key dbk. Test • equip. Income poten· by cat vie: Balboa Isle. Beauty Styhst. trwned to C8llorrometn loday PO lox 7120 ma wtll be on Uruvac ASHtHe TAQU
tial. 118-14.000 lhlll rom-'-'ured. taken to Arumal take over cUeotele. lop IEL[~ ,..._. .. _... Cade. Hrs will be llam R~tatl tackle dJUale1 1111 year. Call roll~t. Shelter. 642 3840. or ask Pre1111g1ous se.•ond \rust deed Investment wages. 837-8779. 837-42:50 -P"""""t•6 •60 7pm for fl mo's, lhen located In Newport
7 ~ ~-.....,. Aft.,.1 r1rm IS t.ccl:tnjl 31\ experienced 118JH~On & 3 ..,.11 ~ f ,. ' 8e ... eed f 1...._.,....._,, , .. me for Vend)' al 549-3153 or 1 0 C 1 _ .... -1• __ ,_._. SE>AVtC.E E> EquaJOpportm-ioyer ·""' : m or v mo~ ac,, n s man or
673.3000 10 sel prime rnnae Qunty rMI cmt1e _.,,' ,...... .., ooatot. nabasia Perm counter fr some service PalMTSHOft loans n eeded at ulon In Newport Beach 8331441 ---------d•lsnment to !lwlng work. Top pay. Chance
• Neta 1100.000+ I "f'lr SCRAM •m ,lllhlon Ill land Call t.aeuna N\guel 831-0542 ah1f\ lfdeaired ror adva.neemeru. Good
Full service. ~ da)'. "'L Prefer lnl11~1cl11nl With llood ·investor base 640-8l23 Garden Grove 838-0500 r-knowledge or Pacific
f\i
t.ermsmit. u.re. Aaent. 751-1400. ANSWERS and Real E.oltate snle!I llcen!le .... Alu-.t'I Liberal benellt paclulJte Coast ll1bln1 a mus.
&u.lnt WOtklna cond1. Send re1u.me to Ad •l39 Th111 Is en exceptional opportunity for an Day or ni1ht We tram Contact PeraOMel Deqt C/O 011lly Piiot, Box Bto rour own h<.181. Need Global Moun• lnliividunl with 1111rr~l'I In Stcurlti~ Sales 16.11 Plact>ntia, C.M Q.lltlCAL ll60. Coeta Meu, CA
itood hard worker to Minor Spong~ and looklnic lo enter n iirowih C\flented Sl'ICIA.UST Iii\ 03Ja6
operate our Interior SMOOMAN Industry Wllhout the concern or market IOOllEEPER 6 Monlh poi.. avail for In \81 PACIFIC mUTUAL
wookwork 11trl pplnl(1 Wint.er In Calltornla Isn't dedmc• Mtg. bUllness In lrv In· d 1 v . w I m al h com 700Newport0enter Or OAS MAN ror local or
8 a n d I n 11 & wood the anme 3nymori:. ln dust.rial complex seeklna Pre.hen5ion 1" or11ani11a Newport Beach wash. Salary + t'Olnm
bleacb.init rl. Stripping Loe Anitelett. I saw kid& l!:xcellent commi11&1on 11chedule permits qual'd. elderly. PITlm uonal abHh,y. Some com Equal 0ppor g I Call 645-1039.
ltitcbcn cablnetA, panel· building" SMOGMl\N unllmlted personal arowth and Immediate b"'-. with exp thru to la tult>r knowlcch1e helpful. A f1e11uou1 8u11nH• ,.mp oyer ood " .. tr f 1 I d "'"'' 111t11Mflt llltd -•L-... l lnt. btnlsttra, w en ,......... SlSO ln<'omC' Prt'llent lnvl'Stml'nt Counselona cam lnc1uding trial balance. en" t 11 1 n c u e •llll lite Covnty et.ill I• -~ noon...r.. doors, fumlturc, .. ••••••••••••••••••••• a mlnlmurfl of $3.,,000.00 11nnulllly Cell: 9711-7766 ror appl medical/dent1d & luH1on ••II• 10, "" , .. " •ft•t Delaney's Market Sl. 30lh !xper. nee:. Ut~ bpin~
etc. uperate thl!\ bu~I Dworcc/ Aftnkruptcy ----ref'~ w111e11 lllM c:o111111u1n1 & Ncwpc>rt Blvd, NB. !:x-Prolicteo<:y w/ti1urea. 10
neu OC'I 80% b .. ts. We ~ Our lonn"' orr wnltco to attracl saphlattcated 1>u11nuH• mu11 ,.111e perlenc~d !.'Uhler' a Key by touch. ODpor for au~ty equipment. Action1')'J>ma.ll60-54l9 lnvuto~ i1f'eklng •u,cun: invuim..,'-with __ .u....., /ti\,,_,.._ ,_m,a• fllubllc•tloftte-•u rt clerks. No p~one tails advanccm ni. 1tlnt co
ma •1
-",obs. Eem ytelds avern°ln° !2'1 ~'""""' '81 ............ ~ llllUIUM'-only II '"''' •t• please. boOfflt.. Informal oe .. iue ,. " h et11np-. C.il ltl9 Lftll ..., I ' --~ftl arseJobln ,............. lmockJ often .. (!ft )"OU 'l'OONewportC..nterOr Oel)ltllllet\I •• ll'lf ly Call •• u le alt hqi
ftawali!k!pt 6, l978. In· 1815So ElCaminoReal CallP:xM' VP 11t7t4·&«.-8824 use resultlttUna Daily Nflt'POrtDf>•ch DAIL" 1t1LOf 101 Dellamv.~~'!..r~me_ard·· -~---·---vestment of 11200 re · S&nCl m nte. Fully lJc Pilot C1ualfttod Adi to Equal~ Emplo1er 111 'o • m e11 o" • 11 u """ ,, .. ._ -.. '"'
quired ror proleas1ooal ror appt. 402. 7296 M= EQUITY FUNOS, INC. l'Qeh· U1f Or&113t Co11t ••neaety tOnM II v er Y . Ad It• on I>' • u you'"' In the market
tral.nee. lnv•lmebt tt· ----------martleL 15424321 2Y,hr~tdJ. Mu.st ba\lt for• better car, be sur. flllldld aftn t moruht In RELAXING M~GE 620 Canter Drtvt, ._.. 211 PboMtK2·M78 Have tomet.l'llJ\I you want ht. m ecoo car. S3$0 -400/mo, to cbeck the ~ny •1&l01
luU. can m1ln •bop. BobJam~·LlcMw~r Newport Beath, California 92l60 toldl• C11111l1ect adl do l'V!t W•t.mJn/118 area odvtnlMd ror Hie: 10 • lliven.kle. n4 5i&D <>uteall 9 t . •tc·SI u It well M2 11e1 ~us. Clu.3ll1ed
-~
....
. . ' "" .
Cal'peoter. Free est. Any
sue jobs Call Allan or
Tony,646.8649
IFYOU
have J servtt'l' lo o((er or
goods lo sell. place an ad
1n the Dail y rilol
Class1f1ed S\!t:t 1on
Phone 642 5678
TutorfncJ ..•••••.••••..........•
Credentialed teacher wll(
tutor In Muth. Reudlng
Sparush. SS7 •0CWJ1
AJI subjc.>cts. ls! thru 3rd.
Exper public r hool
teacht'r Eas tbluff &.Tell
6'14·01110
WMdow CIHfli'Mf ........................
Roofittq Wmdow washing 1::1 Toro
••••••• •••• •• ••. ••• •••. area. Good rate&. Xlnt
REPAJR & HEROOr J\11 rt!_ Bart837-3774
l y p e::. s h 1 rr ~ I es Sell wtlh EASE•
rocks hakes com po· tar ll"s " BREEZE
Free est :>4 l·S930 Classified Ads 642·!1678
~~~ ..... !!.~~ ~~~ ..... !!.~~ ~~~ ..... !~~~ ~~~·::! ..... !!.~~ H.ff> Wmt.d 11 oo ~~!.~~·:.~ ..... !.'.o.o. ~~~ ••••• ~!~~ •••••••••••••••••••••••
Help W..e.d 7100 tt.lp Want.ct 7100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
G....-dOfflce
Resp., dec1s1vc 1nd1v .
able to work w 'Ii le
supervision needed for
Fashion Isle. investment
fl rm 640-0123
GDWtAL OFFICE
~ B. insurance. 1:0. st·ck
ing person (student nk 1
GIHHAL OFFICE
Well estab 'I firm ,
pleasant surrounding&.
vanety plus To '$750.
Cllll Michele Kuh n.
54().SCJOl. Snelling & Sfiell
mg of Newport &.oal·h
Agency. 4340 Campus Dr .
HOUSKEEPER
Live-m. School children,
pref. dnver, xlnt sal
fl47·8567, H.B.
Housekeeper. llvc·ln. Ill
1:ook &dnvefor ">oung""
(•lderly lad} Pnv rm &
balh. NB 642·60.13
lntenor Designer-must be
a lhorougbly exp'd pro-
fessional. Large design
studio with all major
brands . Dick Metteer
Jo'ine Furnishings. l 727
WestchH Dr . Newport
Bearh. 646-1&78
for vaned duue~ mclu<l G1nj(ham Girl llouseclnR
Ille l,YPmg. filing. some service nds women PIT, ---------hvy lifting F time Sum toP\'ar nee 645·512.3
lntt'mal auditor f mcti
size Orunge Co hos p1t11I
Wrk w controller mst be
~µital exp, s trong on
cost reports. bud gets,
acct analysts & recon
cil.tation Pos1llon avail
1mmed. Call 495-4400 ext.
403
mer. P t dunn~ 1><:hool --------S2 75 'hr 833 8-150 G I fl L F' R I D A Y f o r
-- -Con.'ltrucuon Co Exe~µ
General Office tional oppor f bright
Mature. days Apply person on the way up
"'1i.30·10:30AM. Mon. Wed. Typing lite bookkeep
Thurs, Fri 2148 Newport ing receptionist Long
1Hvd. CM. l,111w1lco lerm exec potcn11al
Labs !714 > 759·0422 Ask for
GENERALOl''l'~JCE
l')Jll OT pt-lime. must t>n-
JUY phone contact. work·
mg w/customers & detail
work. fUIJ benefits. app·
I)' Mon·Fr1. 8am-12pm .
&rden's Pest Control.
696 Randolph, C M
546-SSiO
Jack Gewge
GIRL FRIDAY
Sportswear mfg needs
mol1valed-:.clf st ane r .
well orgaruzed Unusual
oppor. typlng. phone or
d.Prs inventory <'Ontrol
tH2-26fi6
-GU'I Friday. for contrac
Ceneral oCCice for J . tors offc. Some bkkp~
Herbert Hall Jewelers in exper r~'d , cons truction
S Cst. Plaz~-~79 exper desirable. ~aiar)
commensurate w 1 expt>r
Call Lucy, 642·0160 GEMEAAL OFFICE
Heavy phones & typing
10 Key adder Good
phone manner essential
Small manuf Sal rom ·
mensuratc -w,exper
M2-1!l16
General Office person for
mail µ1ckup. :.or1 . ills
lnbutc Supply room hw
t•ustod1al duties Xlot
l>cnd1ts. In me loc. Fred
S Jame!> & Co
Insurance Brokers
Maur1 ne Braul t'}.
494·L087. EOE
GUARDS
FUii & p1ume All arc:i!>
Uruforms furl\. Age!. 21
or ove r R e t ired
well'omc No expcr
necess. Appl). Um\er!>:il
Protection Servin•. 1221l
W 5lh St. Santa Ana Jn
tervwhrs9·12& l 4 Mon
.Fri
HAIRDRESSER
Hair cutung & wash &
sets. 494-5677
Oeneral Office. PHX HAIRSTYLIST
AnlllA'e r . Serv Oprs l .station now available
lmmed operungs for ex for rent. ALSO 1 p/limt.<
per'd or qualified people. station for rent Very
Rate or pay depends up busy shop. Easy lo bw Id
on exper Apply in c il e ntele. Tum Rae
~r!lon Mon-Fri. 9am Hairstyles645·4012
4pm, lSS Roche$ter St. CM H06pit.al Insurance biller
----trainee. 8·4·30 s hi ft
GENERAL
LABORERS
Urgently Net.'ded ' ' '
Please l'Ontact Person·
nel Office. San Clemente
General Hos pital 654
Carruoode Los Mares.
HOSTESS
21 or over. Slufl Noodle
IF YOU DON'T
WAHTTOWORK
-RIL~TIME,
DON'T!
Kelly has a pcrlect up
~ortu n 1t y f or men Jarutor. Janitress. p tllme
women ( 17 or over l to & ('time Irvine· area
earn extra cash J S Will train. Ideal for
ma1lroom helpers every housewwes. students &
Mon Tu ell 111 g ht 1 n cpls Call betwn 3-6pm.
Laguna Niguel 17t4) 833·7015.
This 1s a n ideal wa~ for
SH C ITIZEN S .
H OUSE WI VES. &
STUDENTS to s upple·
mcnl lhe1r income on a
perm p lime basis No
cxpcr neL~cd Call 1m
med. for local mterv1cw
KELLY SUVICES
8310542or8331~41
Equal Oppor Employer
lnsurance
PENSION
ACTUARIAL
ANALYST
liroWlh within our l!roup
µcns1on operations pro
v1des the oppor for a
qualt£1ecl p e r son a i-.
pension uctuarial
analyst Previous exper
in group defined benefi t
pension plan \'aluauon. a
computer <in Fortran)
µrograming background
& m a th d egree are
!(eneral reqwrements for
lhe pos1t1on. Benefit:. in
C'lude medical I dental &
twuon refund. Contal·t
Personnel Department
®PACIFIC ffiUTUAL
700 Newport Ce nler Ur
Newport Beach
Equal Oppor Employer
----Kennel ass "t, gen e r u l
deaning & ma1nt .
arumal hospital E 0 E
673·1050
Laboratory Aide
Exper in phlebotomy &
b<Jck Jab proce(lures -to
work in cl.JmcaJ lab in
N B Phone 640·0140 &
ask fo~Margar~
Legat Secretary
Exper'd secy for gen'I
practtce. Non smoker on·
ly H.B Top Salary M ag
II helpful. but not nee
~-1400 ------LEGAL-SECRETARY
l yr exp or ·legal sec
school Nr Orange Co.
Airport. 833-9124 -----
LEGAL SECRETARY
With Lake charge ability
5 Yrs exper. Xlnt typing
& s h s kills OC Airport
area. Sal open. 975-<n82.
545-1555
Legal Secretary Good
skills. Salary dependent
uponexperience.Lagun11
Niguel omce. Resume to
Box 264. '7r Daily Pilot.
P 0 Box 1560, Costa
Mesa. Ca. 92626 -----Ufeguard(froiMfl
Minimum age 16. See Ad
Wlder Schools & lnstrue·
tions
~ci.n
SUMMER JOBS R e !I t u u r u n l • 2 1 5 ---------•! Weekd"ay afternoons.
Tues. thru Friday $2 8S
hr Windjammer CdM Warehouse
Stock Clerks
Shlppmg & Receiving
Must have phone & relia
bte-b ansp. bon~hort
term assignments. Hoh
day & vac ation pay
Hos p1talnat1on plan
avail
VOLT
?( r.-it~lAUv ~ t:.1\IW ( "•
lt48 c...-Drive
546-4741
(Across From
Orange Co. Airport)
Equal Oppor Employer
.R1' er s1 de Or. N B
548·7<\18
Hotel Front Desk clerk
Excel working cond. Gd
Pay. elC1)d-prf1"'d . Apply
·in person. Sandpiper Inn
& Tenrus Club 2101 E
Coast llwy CclM
HOUSECLEANING
HELP
f\Jll time. Mon-Fri Part
time work avail dunn~
week or on Sat Will ac:·
cept students for sum
mer employ ment
~9525
HOUSEKEEPER ----------i Housekeeper. Apt. clean-Geleral Office ing service. exp. prlrd,
PART.TIME salary. fringe benefits .
reg hours. English spk
~yroll Clerk needed ap· Ing please, Call 644·2622.
prox. 20 hrs per wk. Ac-Park Newport Apts. NB
counting exper. req'd. lO HOUSECLEAN E RS
Key exper. Apply Na· needed Matllre. Top $$.
l.&onal Systems Corp, •361 Car nee 642·1403 &45·3439 Birch St. N.8 . <Near OC . -
Airpor t! Equal Op Housecleaners, Tues-Fri
ponunity Employer. 8·3PM Cail J anlt'c · 3
--------I Raggedy Ann's 64S· 1800
GENERAL
OFFICE
Housekeeper, mature 11 1
OJght sluft. Guest home
lnC.M. 646-6716.
Nauooa.I education firm HOUSEKHPER
ii; rclocatlntt its l!Ub· <Ant.> No exper nee.
\ld.iary accelerated pilot Will train 81hn1tu11l, trauung to the Newport bl k s · h licach complex. Thls re· 8 e to s pea pani"'
iocation has created 2 Newporter Inn Hotel.
l>051tlon.s ar a general of 6"·1700 Call Yolanda,
hC\' n•ture. Typing skill$ exu74 E.O E._ -_
a.a ple.uabt phone volte Housekeep r . ex p e r .
11rt netded + neat w/car. ref's , ~ days,
handwriting to help perm. for d\Jabled Indy
e nroll our stud nu S40 mo t ke home.
Ple93e apply at our cor· 1•1G20
POrate hdqrtn Mon·Frl -------
Jnsurance
PENSION 67~ 1530
UVEIH ACTUARIAL CHILD TUTOR
S to care for z children. PECIALIST over see diet, help 1n
Growth within our group personal hob1ts. recrea·
pension operation pro I.Jon and after school ac
v1des an oppar. for a t1v1t1es . Te ach Spanish
qu<1Hf1erl person as a language & culture, train
pens ion actuarial in good citizenship, take
specialist Previous ex dlsc1pllnary measures I
per In group dcfmed Yr experience. Must be
benefit pension plan b1 lingual Spanish &
\0aluat1on, a computer English. $702 pe r mo. <in Fortran> program· Take ad to Employment
mini( background & Developme nt Oe pl
malh degree are general D.O.T 099227. Ad pd by
ret1u1re ments for the _e_m....;p_l_oy:;...e_r _____ _
1>051t1on. BenefiL'l incl~e LVJll or RN needed p/time
mecJ1cal dental & tullion 11 7 Fri/Sator J·ll Wedt·
refund, Thurs . Good benefits
Contact Personnel Dept lnq Bever ly Manor. 340
@ PACIAC ffiUTUAL
100 Newport Center Dr
Newport Beach
Equal Oppor Employer
---------
Victoria, CM 642·0387
LVH rMSMft
Every other wknd off.
Must be dedicated to
good paUent care Apply,
1445 Supenor Ave. N.B. _________ , 642·3'10.
lllsurance
Sil. STA.ff
SPICIA.UST
Opportunity for ind Iv.
w/leedef'llhip potential
Responsib&llUes include
adtnlnistratJon o( G nat'I
union in~urance plan
Group Insurance or trust
admln1strat1on eic.pt'f
helpful. Musl hrwe xlnt
veYbial & written com
munic11t.ion aklll3 & be
well org1.1niud rO!'illon
o ffer ll slgnitlc ont
challl.•ngt & oppor for
11dv1mcem1:nt Bt>ncnts
Include medlcal1denl•I 4 luluon rcCund
---------MACHINIST
Fllbricator 5peclali11ng
In macbln!ng or plasllcs
hu opening ror C'llfl
mac hinist. Ap!)ly 1n
person.
KENNEDY
PLASTICS CORP
17372 Eashna n St
Irvine Indu strial
Complex
MACHl ... IST
N 8 . co. nf'OOs. Claiia A
Muchinlst for Br1di4"P<>rt
Mill & Hardlngc Lathe.
Clbee tOlcrance pr~cllflon
"Wk £xpu req'd. Top
bel\li. ~.E $$7-~l a k
Cor Roa Adam.a.
Maclune operator. assis·
tants nded lmmed f 1cor
rugated box plant 15561
Del Amo Tustin
MAID p/llme. Will train
Lido Shores Hotel. f\17
l.1do Park Or . NB
673-8800
Maid wanted, m:Hur•• &
expenenced Part llmlc'
student OK. Desk clerk
relief, l night a week
Some experience pre
rcrred. Handyman. li~ht
maintenance. retired
OK. &12·3030
MAID wanted full time or
p/timc. Seacllrr Motel.
1661 S Coast Hwy.
Laguna Sch. 494-4892
Management
MANAGER TRAINEES
A nat1onwtde Jewelry co
wall teac h you the
Jewelry busmess $250 :i
wk + comm. No exp ner
W1U train For appl cull
642·5163.
Manager needed. &b·~
O ld Fashioned I ce
Cream. Hunt. Ctr Mall
Ca l l 897-7 19 1 Wed
10Am· l2 noon.
MANAGEMENT
Looking (or f1nanc1ul
security in these uncer
tam umes Local ~mway
d1stnbutor will show you
how t.o get 1l w profitable
spare time business of
your own. 646-7989
MANAGEMENT
RESTAURANT
MANAGEMENT
with
JACklN
THEIOX
A futw-. wht\
unli,,.;ted pot.wtial!
Due to our t'Onllnued
growth. JACK lN T HE 8 0 X t~ a rn 1 I )
Restauranti. hdl> 1m
mediate opportunllles
{or qualified i.nd1v1duals
to train m restaurant
management. A career
with JACK IN THE ~0~
means:
•Start.mg salary
$225/week
-COmprehens1ve
benefilll program_
•Extensive training in
a competitive mdustry
lfttrriews Wiii ie
COftdsted
WB> JUME21
10cnto5pm
PIHMapply
inpet"'Oft:
JACKIM
THEIOX
R.._..Office
16162 leech ll•d
1._.....o-.leach
<San Diego Fwy, Beach
Bl vd exit., one block
south. Century 21 l)ldg. >
~rtings are In Great.er
Orange County area. in
eludi ng Santa Ana ,
Antlheim, Weetminsler,
Garden Grove, Buena
Park. Costa Mesa and
FUiierton
T~"°9f" ...
......JULY 10
For addlUonaJ lnforma-
Uon. please !tc'nd letter or
rcaumc outllnlnat
quatHlc•tions and U ·
p erlence 10
JACK IN
THEIOX
4833 Pr\.lllland Avenut'
Vernon. CA 90058 •~u.al Opwrtunlt.y
tmplcyer MI F 8 3, National Systemt Housekeeper. C.M. re
Corp, 4381 Blrch St. N 8. tim1 lod)' have c-er, 6
1NearOCAlrport> Equal dys, t>t t , oon s mkr
()pportUl'Uty Employer. 6'5 0681. __
® PACIFIC muT\J/\I.
700 Newport ~n~r Dr
Newl)()rt Beach
Equal ()s>por Employer
P1acll\J a Classified ad la ll& caay 81 dlaUna your The foatnt dNw In Lho Dhontl Give u.t 8 call Wal. . .a Daily PUot
W1'Udn th• r~t 642 "7S ctBMlrfed /\d 64.2-5879.
SEU. ldl Items with a WANT ACTION?
_Dally Pl.lot Cla.1tllt'd Ad Chwlltd Ads ~25678
• .
...
..
'. -..,,. -... "
'' •• •• • r
MANAGER
The Dally Pilot has open
ings for CircuJalion 01!1
tnct Managers m the
growinl( coast area of
CX~c Count)
Male or female. twg1nnflr
or exper1en<'l'CI ilpph
t·anlS are cnco1:raKed l11
apply t:xccllent benefit-.
inrludt.' i:roup 1ns uran1·c
paid by e,mploycr . ne w
model company <•ar with
personal use. v11eation.
sick leave. ~ion and
credit union
F.slabllshed scale for this
pos1llon 1s S168 to S.101 per
week based o n ex
penence. plus bonuses
M1rumum reqwrements
are age 18. generall> clean drivin g record .
willingness lO work with
young 10·16 age boy:. and
girls. II a m lo !l p tn
weekdays with optional
Saturday ovcrUme Not
Just newspaper delivery
but lolal management of
a defined d istrict or
cus tomers, young in
dependent distributors .
promotion. i;erv1ce. col
iecuons
Those qualified and In
terested come to 330
West Bay Street, Co~ta
Mc.-sa. Monday through
Friday 8:30·5·00 and ask
for Harry Se-eley m the
Circulation Department
Equal Qpportunit)
Employer
MANICURIST
Sh<.1rp. New Salon
Ca II ~-225(1
Man or boy wanled for
)&rd work SJ 00 hr
646-3782, in CM
MASSAGE TECH.
tst Class Legit Mas!lage
Spa. Cost.a Mesa Sulary
~ bonus. We will tram
6.11·9625. 645·3433
~1AT U RE WOMAN
p1l1me lo w elcom~
newcomers & contact
merchants. F1ex1t1le hrs
Need car. llle typing
547-:.195.
MECHANIC FOREMAN
Exper. trucks. forklifts &
equip . Mu :,t be
knowledgeable 1n
troubleshooUng, repaJr &
,E.reventave maintenance
firograms 3-5 yrs mech
ellper w1d1esel des1ra·
ble Submit resume or
letter w1exper & s alary
.Lf!_qJJ I U! ID C..A Ls_ 1 0
Classified Ad 11193, Daily
Pilot, P 0 Box 1560.
Costa Mesa. Calif. 92626
Medical Office Trainee.
gen'I assasting. Spanish
slolls needed Lale typ.
i.ng Musl be able to work
eves &t or wknd s .
S48-177t
MEDICAL ASSIST.
Exper in phlebotomy &
back lab procedures to
work 1n climcal lab 10
N.B. Phone 640·0140 &
ask for MargareL
MEDICAL RECEPT.
To work m clinical tab 1n
N 8 Typin g.
switchboard, Cilmg. Must
work well w/people. Call
Margaret for appt.
6t0-0140
Medical Ass\Stant
1.lrology back office
Mature woman. Typ1nf!.
storiliiln ii & x.ray
548-2247
MEDICAL
kit Ofc Antst111t
Bu"y Nwpt Bech OD.
GYN arrite 'Expr"d only
need 1.1pply Please send resumf' to Ad 238. Daily
Pilot, P 0 Boll 1S60.
Calta Mesa, CA 92626
MED.UCEPT.
MEH-WOMEN
Immediate
openings in
Europe
If you qualify. we II
Leach you d skill. pay you
while you learn. and ~1vc
you one of the bc ~t
ben~f1t p<.1ck:igt'!>
<.1nywhcre Then you II
earn you r keeµ 1n
Europe Join the people
who"ve Joined lhe Army
CallAnny
ODoortuniti
Costa f.<esa 54:~o2ti
Hunungton Bch 962 11821
Laguna H.1ll s 161J 5251
An Equal
Op(>Ortun1ty Employer
Mervyns 1:. now takm{! ap
pl.lcal.Jons for P T Sale:..
and stock Daytime .
everung, & wkend shrfts
a\ail Apµly jl 9811
Adams Ave HB £Jetw~n
lG-2 E 0 E
Motorcycle deln ery. F T
clean cut. bondable. non
smoker &W 6111. ~ hr'>.
Mon·Fr1
MOTOR ROUTE
The Daily Pilot has J
large route 1n :-11ss1on
V1eJO Mon thru f'ri af
ternoon-, S;1t dl Sun
mornings .~J~::.t h:.i \"t· de
pend11ble car SSO <·ash
deposit req Good dn v1n~
record Call !i42 '1321
Leave namt• 11t phont•
Your l0 all will be re
turned
MOTOR ROUTE
Oo:.ily Pilot route 1n
Laguna beach & Soulh
Lagunu. afternoons.
MOllday through Friday
plu:. Saturday and Sun
day mornings $450 00
per mo g ross profit.
SS0.00 c·ash dePoS1t re
quired Call 642·432l a!:ik
for C1rcul<.1Uon Leave
Name. Address. Phone
"umber and M<1ke or
Car. Good for student or
retired person
MOVIE EXTRAS
NEEDED BY
H OLLYWOOU
CASTING COMPANY
FOR MAJOR FILMS &
TV UOMMERlCAl.S S2S
to $100 per day 1f accept
ed Sma II f~e ! 71.\ l
761-12-W
NURS~lVN
3·l1Sh1fl F/t1me.59bed
rac1l1ty Xlnt bens
Bayview Conv Hosp.
2055 Thurin ,\ve. CM
642-3.505
NURSE~ AtDES
&ORDERLIES
7.3 & 3-1 l. Will train June
grads Mesa Verde Conv
H06p, 661 Center St, CM
NURSES
LAlDOFF.,
NEKO A SU MMl-:n
JOB?
~Ai~•
LVH't •RH't
FUii or p/tlme Exper
pret "d Will train
qualified peopJe. Apply
F1agsh.ip Coov Center.
466 Fiagsh1p Rd, N B
64.2-80oi4
NURSES AIDES
•ottDBLliS
Needed lo give tenflrr
loving care Lo lhc elderly
patients Will r rain
qual1f1ed pe r sonnel
Earn while you lc&m All
shifts a11a1l Appl)'. 1445
Superior, N,B 642 24t0
MURSiS A.JDIS &.~y 0.... ofc Exp. only
Benclilll &\6-3903 All 11h1fts ·rot> puy Xtn1
ben:oi Bayview Cnn\
ME "N ED'S FAMILY NOiip. 205.5 Thur1n Avt'.
PIZZA PARLOR CM ~~--~--~ lmmed opcnln1t full OU1ce m a nagt•r f n r
U'J'e for rHpon~ible men cstab\ashed lntenor dr
• worne-n w1 ouiao•n1 Al&n t\rm Ute bkkplnii.
pmionallUd It a iood at order f'xJ)C-diun.t. & grn
Utuda. Aool)' after 5pm ore work w tpubUt' con
da.lly ; as~ tor ,Jean or tact. Salary commNU
Mall, Me N Eds Ptna. wiabillt)' t.ocatton nr
410 E. 17t.b St .. C M O C Airport ~ tl>45
··~·, ~
Of l11:e p 't1me good
..-. f1gutes Lots of vane-
ly 111 beauttful New(>Qrt
Ctr lru.uran<'e ore Hrs
I .i. Mon thru Fri
833-9590
Office Ass't
:-.lew plan .. 11 Irvine has
n1..ul for r7 poble persun
to handle n m ous phases
()(office pn><-edurc Must
be i;:ood typ1:.t & un
derstand houkkeep1nR.
Opportunity for per!>ona
ble. selr suff1 c1ent 1r.
d1\1dual Call
11.\ i~-2930 for uppl.
()penmgs for 3 adlts lo
earn 5200-~ mo P 1T.
approx 10 hrsrwk Call
..ihns fur appt &12·6006
Oral Surgeon sursucal as-
., 1, la n l £xperienl'l'
n"oees:.dr)' Call ~·U727
or i.51 9184 afll'r Ii P~
HunUn(.'lon Beach ---
Partner wanted. rake
O\er expan:.wn proJt•<·t 1n
Oran&e Co Oppor for Ii
f1~ure income within ti
yrs For <1ppts onJy l'alf
646--4533 betwn 9·1 tam
9A IMSPEC'TOll
Dimensional & electncaP
inspection of sub-& final
electronic assembhc~
Exp. in inspection lu
MIL-Standards req'd
Growing electronics mtr
o(r<1 good pa) & beru..
con1oterual atmosphert>
Equa.I Oppor k:mployer
D!CC
Irv me S46-4i31
REALEST ATE SALES
Development Co w 1 over
g),000 in-hse, comm o~
l1st1ngs needs s harp
sa lesperson to handl1.•
sales. ads. R E loani,
prop mgmnl. etc Sm
draw agamsl comm lo
nght party Call 975--0555
Rec11pllon1st . p /t1 m e ,
t'ves1Sundays R\'11.l!i
J lair Styling. S.U·IUIS&
Recl'pt1on 1:.t ,T>I"''
~wport Be<1ch LJw ol
flee. Must type 60 wpm
li4().S900
Recepuorust-Typ1st I girl
oCfc. $650 mu.. Nr AJrport
752-5282 ___ .___.. -
Recept /Sec·y R c·u ~
Estate knowledge re<fd
l.Jcense pref"d Res1den
ual reai estate ofc FUii
ume. lnqwre964-2:57~
llECEPT /SECTY. PART TIME
EVENINGS For s mall r eai est11l e
firm near 0 C Airport
AdulL~ with outstandmf?. Pleas ant atmos pher l'
attra ctive personalities good skills r eq $Ii:!:>
who enJOY working with Month833-9293
kids Start at $3.50 per
S650 hr Phone 542.4321 criso. Recept bctwL>en:J ·00-5 OOP ~1 Alic for Sharon A haPl?Y personahtY & lite typing lS all you n~ ~q ual Opportunit ) for this front ofc-PO!. l'.rnpio~ ____ __ Lots ol room for adv <:o
PIX AllsWWSet"T. Ill growing rus t . Call
All stufts avad Exper ~-Coastal Person
pref"d. but will tram. nel Agency. 2190 Harbor
Weekends .i mus t Call CM for apptS57 rr;-: EOE ALL JOBS FREE
PHX ltecept.Joru.st/Sec y
Property mgmt (1rm hai. An~wering-~er\<1t'l' 1mmed. need Cor part
operator full & P l'f' Call time pirson. Must ty~.
835-356! lake shorthand. be gOOd
PIX OPERATOR on phoous. Hours 9 I
II 7 Sl\ifl. FUil & p /time Mon-Fri Could work intu
E,"<per d only Please full lime pos1t1on. Salary
contact personnel dept $400 per mo. LO starl. Ca 0
Sa n Clem e n te G c n · 1 _J_eann __ e _964_-2S66 __ . __ _
llusp 496-1122
PIX Operators RECErT fTYPtST Prof~sional Exchange. Challenging lull t tm t
under new management pos1Uon w1act1\e lrv1nt>
Ex per operators only ol Real Estate Ofc. Good
All s+ttfts-avt'lttttbl~usl lel.epb.oo~~ typing (till
have trans & phone. Al:lk q~drn,,!,!' ~cal skills re
for Manan or J ean 140l i--•"•'""""'°------• ,\\oeado. Ste 204. NB., _________ _
<Fash Island I 644 -7050
PHOTO LAB TECll
Day or n1 te P1t1me
SS7 2SS'l
PILOT
Corporate. exper d hght
pressunied twin Approx
60 hrs per mo. Send re·
sume g1vmg ratings, hrs
& compens ation r eq"d
to Jack E Bivin, J9S5
Birch. ste E . Newport
Beach, Ca 92660
Plumber Min eJCp. 3 yrs
in repair & remodel
979-8065
PllSSrstSOM
f\Jll tame. ITEK & AB·
Dick exp. l.aauna Hills
location. Cail ror appt.
714 SllG-3150
rr.ssPft'l0tt
Rental yard man. person
to help w 1cus1 omer ...
mecharucs. gen·• labor
Apply 1954 rlacenlld.
C.M.
U.Sdu
One of S. Cahf. leadin~
bidrs and developers 1!.
in the process of in
terv1ewing for their rl'
sale d1v1sion We! arc
seeking ambitious, 11"
gresi<1ve. licens ed 1n
dividuals who havl! d
l)06JlJve mentaJ attitude
and a real desire for SUl'
cess. but who understand
that their goll.ls and our.,
can only be reacnt<l by
bard work. We wUI train.
oall Cor 1oterv1ew Mon
Fn. 9AM·4Pl'tJ. ask for Bu.u, 980-4361
"""II tame Itek & A. B R.E Sales
Dick exp Laguna Hill~ 1,,., ........ "'°'
loc Call for appt S86 3150 S.. & be~
PRESS PHSOH Xlnt (){>ply to grow with
Rapidly 11row1ng S&L ex.pandina proie!!hionut
st.>ek.s lnd1v to handle j 1 rt rm. Super I ratn•n!t
person shop for quick Pleue call ror ;,ip}>t
printing of rorms on 11 838-49'll
1250 press Thorouah ---------
know! or ltt•k 10 I S
l"Amllra a must C:ill
tl3.'J-8383
State Mutu•I S vlnlt"
4001 MncArlhur Ul v1l
Newport Be: ach
Equal Qvpor ~mploy~
,..._tfOftWriln
F M exp not n '('. t'~CN
Restaurant Manaaement
Unique lunch & dlnncr
bo1.11e seeks person for us·t manager~ pos1Uon
Management expcnence
pt't{U"l"t'd Will l'OMidcr
lraJnlna nah1 person
S..1l :iry1 1n '4 11ranc:C1
bcncfitt 494.r.&'j
wrkiPI Cond Appl)' In If • p e r son .KF..NNF.OY >OU,.. not read111f th~
Pt.A'iTICS C..'()RP 11r.: UUJ~ i4h in Cluui1ect,
t:.a:.tman St lrvrne In l'OU rt mtuan11 • lot Of
dt.1!'11.riaJ Compl~:t neway Into.rm 11tlon u __ wdl 1.$ aom c~u:y._
•
I
t "
.... W...... 71 00.._.W_..., 7100 .... W-t.d 7tOO H.t,W•fed 1 100 tWpW•hd 7100 ~~·······~············ ···•·············•··••· ···········••··••···•·· .......•....••.••.....•...••...•........•..... .... -.c.. 80 10 T\MdJy Jufle 20, 1978 DAILY PILOT
S~ Dtll"UJ ti you StX:RB'l ARV-LEGAL , ·•v. • det1Dlte l\oed tor a 1 yr aq. or iea.i ..c pt11me Job Ui>c1 " ..n .elJOOl, Nr Qranae Co
s.c.f~Gw-·
•••••••••••••••••••••••
TE.I I •Rs 1-'RCffT DAMAGED Miktl-ous 1010 TV.a.lo. ...... ,.... 90ltO
I ....... llii' JiQTPOINT St\LE 3306 ....................... •• Stilr'90 IOtl •••••••••••••••••• !!, t
" ie:riouify Jntertsted lei Auport as.9ua ..... Ofl"lii9-:.•ortto.& tall us now, ... ..,, ~_1_~ _____ _ SECllRARY
<ff J.'u II time Ga(e
C"8rd. Secv.nty back 13.TUl.t • _.:urh)' patrol
~~~~!thl:~ U8:::.~.J}1arbor. W&GA&I TA.GS •••••·.·•••••• •••••••••• Go atter tbc t4.0U/lb~~, "
In•• f/leH•r• et our (f'Om)'OW'bUlinHscard <2> Advent ~no Loud o lzen• of the c\ D ~ldUIAI ~ El Toro •.Wuhen. dryen, ~Iran .~ one card Cor •~It Speuers. XJnt ca.4 yours.elf In thl• l"o brtmch Mine mo exp lat~ modelK. 'it' guor ~plus one spare We tim.m.~af'Upm rnaculate :M'S,.......--~ ~
req w / excel gro•lb UOO up. deUvered return l'ermanenlly Akal GXQ.mD UMetle ju.streduced$1500 ..... -. Immediate openl.n11 lft SALES
ourtamJ.Jy re11ta\U'afit1 at ~r'd ll\ tOdmeUes or
OM.tby •~•Uc.la. W• te direct sales? For gtuut
quire no provtou. ex per and prdi:table opportuni·
Join our frieadly team ty call 6'8-0757 Wed or
Small prof.,Jonul otrloe
ln N~wport Otnter Typ.
an& 11k1lla a must /\C· countin.: or LA-gal h rrn
exp desired Good
salary & outst11nding
benef\ts. Send resuroe 4s
rcfmces to Ad ltl28, C/O
Dally Piiot Box 1S60,
Costa Mesa, CA 92626
u&rd . Full tlme/SUm
IJler St.-c bqmd. $3. 76
hr
< u Gate Guard. Summer onlY for p/tlme. *'1.00 hr.
~UaJ Outltandlng in Kins '•· 836-i840 M/C. $C?Wed attractive tag & dock . uso. Ssnnt ..,_ Y•llh
SW'ance benerlls lnclu Maytag washer "'1(en strap. m.eeUng airlfoe CA.aooc> pre·emp $425. 54'·113 t
e m P I o y e e s t o c It tnore washer lffs 1..ate l.D. reqwrement.9. Pre-s.nsui 'fU 9900 tuner
Come see ui tod•y betwn Thurs 10to2 PM ~pm.
Call Mon-Frl. 9to4
494-857\ ownership plan. t•or con model Kenmore waaher vent loss & thert' For • S325 IM().f411 Eves '7S Searay 2CJ' OMC 185 llP
fideoual Interview con· Sl2S. Guar & deliv'd peraonallted tag enclose .• --eng. Lffs than 150 bn.
c..w.n
C.-T,..,.... w .....
WClftNues
Zl952 Avm.ida de la
Cart~ta. ugW>a Hilla
S•~IHthta
C."reallve d~ignet offers
position to enthustas1.1c well groomed r esp
petson. Exclus ive
Jewelry salon. P /tame.
WlU traln. N.8. 673"4734
StcwftyOfffc~ tact Shirley Frlzler 546-86'72 wallpaper, fabric or Sears 15 color TV. ex-Prof maintained Ml~
E,,tab'l security firm ~eratlons ortlct>r. "Day Glo" ~per le we cellent cond. $200 /beat cond pp (2ll) -.1943 needs rehable men & alencla Bank 2283t Refngerator, washt>r & wUJ back a. trim your otrer. 873-9077 Day · (1i4>67a.2i• !!:viii
women for uniformed Lake Forest Dr. El Toro dryer. also 1974 Mustang tags Or try two cards New speakers, 9es11n wknd. Inspect Sat/Sun
SECRET ,..RY 770-l616EOE 2+2 84812-iS backtoback. 12.3 ~ security position• In PRICES AcousUc, 0.2, S400. ------~
f''ASHIONJSLAND Costa Meta. Full or Tow"Truclt Drivers ex· ---------1 $2eaor3/~ 673-tl067 24· T·Blrd. tr1 ·hull •63 Fortune 500 company p/time Retired per'd. Top pay Apply. Washer. dryer, dlit 4/5tagsSI.60ea loah&Mcsffte Cutty cabin, head, bllit
seeks a sharp. mature welcome Phone main G&W Towing, 1000 lrvlne models. completely re 619taga *1.50ea s-.1--.a ta.nit. CB. etc. Nice. As .... SALES/Hardware r . ofc collect tot a Costa Ave. N8642·1252 b 1 ( . b d 10 $1 40 -.-r·-'" ,.,. .. ~ Ph ..... A•~ Expr. pref. F/tJme. App· secretary /tls We:.lem 3 w t, re 1n1s e . ye at or more ea. ••••••••••••• ••• ••••••• U<& .,_,,,. one "°"''.nr;r Re11onal Sales office. M es a •PP t < 2 l > guarantee. Your choice Sales Tax Included -
U4 E 17th St. C.Mei.a
9842 Adami. Hunt . Dch
'501 CatnP\lt Or, Irvine
F.qual Opp Emplyr m /f ly in person Crown Mst possess excel typing 255·0156. Trainee. culinary ewsine. $130 ea. Free delivery NO CARD" c; ... ,.. to 10 '78 Trojan 25'. Like new ----------1 ~(:M· 3107 L. Coast skills w/some SJ-I or die-Se-r-v-ic_e_S-ta-.-A-tt_e_n_d_a-nt-.1 ~~~o s~ Phone Sale ends June 30th Draw your own or send ••••••••••••••••••••••• Canvas. VHF. must~~
Restaurant ---------tapbone exp. We orrer wn · m. • South Coast Appliance oame. address, phont-&c Sl5,500. SS8·U3+ or
Saleslady, p/time Rers the prestige and secunty exper'd. FUii or p/llme TRAVEL AGENT 537.2542 we'll make one card pet ~ ~ 67S.1938 ..
1.--s.. C••nter req'd. Call ror appoint· of an International corp Apply, AttoSt.auon. l7th N..,..,.... 1 Ml --------tag. Add29each ~ 1 b'""d d" LlllRrll .. ment, 631-.3473. al0118 with an attractive &Irvine, CM e-.,.,. .1 rvlne. n 3 Send check or mooey or SW ffc ass1c 1930 " ge "I
FoodPreparaUon ---------•salary. benefits and Service Station Allen· )'l'Sexper.CaJl7~·1555. Refri gerator. West derto. ~-llf -h -, . llllAI ~r:~e~~a~ ~:~~.:.3'!
'Person wanted lo work Saleslady.3or4days/wk. working cond In NO dant, exper'd Day & TIAVILAGEHT inghouse. side-by side PtLOTPRtHTlHG Sma reag ters orsa e Sac. Bogardus Yacbts.
at lunch counter 10 lar1e Ref'sreg_utred. Pleases.ubmll resume 1.o EYet. f'Ull ~pltlme-AP· -·tt &/or ..... r~ing wb.Lte. 21 cu ft. Cherry. po. Box 1560 •Travel around the n7.000 .,..a""""" health rood sfore To00 548 3402 p 0 Do 7 l N "'"'Y<'' "V ... Sl90 548-8514 Id f rt '"°""""""' preparation. Previous _ · · x 4 0 ewport ply1 Shell Station, 17th & partner. 549·1966. , Costa Mesa, Ca 92626 WOC' in com o . -----
exp•r1ence de•arabl .... Sal ... lad ... mature. full Beach 9200(). or call ror Irvine. NB F're Ilk $250 -•Talce family & fnends EveryUung is new a~rd ~ " "' ~.. J 1nterv1ew. appl (714) ---------Tt'UekDrher eter e new Designers Leftovers Liv ANDyourcatordog. this 29' FairUoer. Tum
but not necessary . time Wed thru Sun 759-lSSlJoanStarr Serv SUt Help needed Im-Delivery prep. Vitamin Penneys 20 cu ft rm Brkfmt S400tofr Sora Operate as a the key & skim over lo
Uniform furnished . Hallmark Gift Shop --- -m ed Must be l8 &manerafmfg.Gdmath. 9681157 tble $65. Lg Ant. chair cargocarricr theisthmus.~.
Medical & hospital 840-1557 Day/nlght shin s avail. Lilli 'd K & ai...-•~ 8020 D>O. Bdrm furn '50·S400 Pa 1 th II ~y ...._ benefits. Apply Lindberg ---------SECRITARY F\111 or p/t, Apply 990 E. ng req . now LA .... , .. ._ Antiques l20 up Hdbrd & • Y ess an a sma CICnn ., • N utri lion• bet Wieen SA.USMAN WANTED V p CstH NB Orange Co. Days Fr ••••••••••••••••••••••• spreed '22S. Sleeper soh1 home would cost. It l f. • .•
Carousel & Bullocks. Sell Datsuns. Top plan 10 · Sales of 8 major wy, inges. English speaking ICH CRUISIRS Sl2S Sal & Sun 9.s 332 •For sizes & pnces ·'
1ower level In the Sou'" for top man. Exper'd. ~.~vision of International Small rapidly growing Neat & clean. Apply 8-10 _-..Xt M-S Evening Canyon Rd. ENSIGN YACHTS 13' IWchcraft 5'°0 ~ Pl "'' wrp Good S/H & typmg Mon-f)"i, Lmwllco Labs, "" vr.., &SHJP BROKERS ~ Coast au Shopping Uve & work In garden req. Pteviotas sales ex pr. company In Irvine needs 2148 Newport Blvd, CM 3.:;..10 spds & Molo·Cross CdM ~ 113 .,..5 ...,,.,.
Center. Costa Mefia. Ask spe>t of Calif. Apply sn r S d enthusiastic person ror bikes. parts·acces ,,.., 1 v• '"""''°"R.AD"' YOUR YAC•,.._ tor Manager. person only, Barwick pre · tea >' employ· ~manent posit a on R I .._.,,..,_.EM.a.TE 2816Lafayette N 8 1• "' n.t ---::.-..----4 Oat.sun. 33375 Camino meot wt xlnt company . UPHOLSTERY eprurs al makes. Buy rn~ "" . . . FOR REAL ESTATE. ________ _. paldfri.ngebeneflts.Call ic typing skills nee. Expr'd cushJon maker. sell·trade-cons1gn Cycle w 1warranty $79 WE ARRANGE APL
Aeltaurant Capistrano, SJC. fonppt. W\U train. Hrs 8·5. Mon· upholste~r or cush100 & Co. 2488 Nwpt Blvd w1remote $149 750-3791 78 Kawasaki Jet SJu, len 0 ETA l LS. ENS ( G l" ~-.... .,s s I F~ T o .. ._ COR· Fri. Starting salary IMO C.M 642. 7910 D""er Brown than 10 hrs use 3 mos YACHTS."""'~-'""' ---" a esman, I Shoe &.llE r. mo. 546·l676 Ask for sewer wanted lmmed Cor '""' .,,.,........., F.-eyPiuo irnlesman wanted 1n 63Mlll Mary canvasproducl3&yacht Girl's gm Schwinn stn-AMTiftUE -old Fact modLfiedeng _ •• ":l P--'-Fashion Is land for -----------upholstery company in gry, xlnl cond Make of """ CUstom rubber padding. loah,,Sdl 7 v6U
__... young, rapuJly growing •E-.O•.•E----•M•1•f'•1•H Sted&& Dtll•ery Cosla Mesa . f' /lime (er 642·96l2 .. ~Hotr Runs lake a top Over ...................... .
'410E.17thSt.CM. compa ny. Gd pay & -Gooddn vtngrec Apply permanent posallon, a..t.JOvt $2600 to replace FU.n TAMAHA
MAMAC.EMEtO' benefits. Ask for Morrey. SECRETARY in person, l526 Newport company bene. salary CGh 1035 Malte MeanOffer Sacraf1ce for $1500 •
·Opening-Days, wall train'. 756-0885 Blvd, Costa Mesa commensurate w 1eltpr ••••••••••••••••••••••• Authentic handcrarted 645-2200. 675·3662 DIALYS WearelooJringfora self For ac<'ounltng dept of ---------Spanish speaking Persian kittens. C F'A re china cupboard s, YachtB~erage
starter F/tJme day Job. SALESMIM-YACHTS f1nanclalsorv1ceslirmin Stockr oom attendant, welcome Call 6452247 g1stered. XJnt quality. fireside benches. coffee AVON l..lfe Raft 9· S2S() Lisl.lngsWanted!
Must be over 18. Male or Prefer experience an Fash lsle. Cd skills. l:x· need reliable person lo for appt. beaullful long ha ar tables. dough boards, Good s h a Pe· Ca 11 s.tllweshnt
fem a I e . Ca 11 Bob, brokerage & sailboats per .• lite bkkpng req d . work m warehouse. t.>leC · ---------From s how parents baby c radles. s pace 675-0915. 675-2075 Ysht SalH
•530-03·'-·12-------1 9>~ssion only . Kuna Call Ealcen640-0123. _ ~nroownlaedcgel'Ohmelppfounl.eAnnt WAITHS, hJNf'. _638-_~ racks Cobblers ben<'hes. _ _.._ Mrkiti•.rmr;{ 2616Newport Bl vd.' ma.nne. 675 1403. " For pvt club. .r.fust be -doll cradles. padded bar ~ ,_..fc• "-... 010 Newport Beac~ ·' --Secretary opportunity to grow w1a personable & able to ·~Abyssinian Kittens SlO &babblL b k .-.---... "' • (714)6739211
--------...iSaJesman. dynamic. ex Part lime. 10 2. Tul'S. lrg dastrabutor. Xlnl work varied schedule each,6wksold.645·1531 ng roo s ••••••••••••••••••••••• .
RESTAURANT penenced Part lime 10 2 Thu rs .M ust be benefits. 979.3000 for Good bener a ts. ca II --Come & See Beat the h•0 h pnce of dry Islander 30. MK ti. supe1
JACICIM
THllOX
MowHfiing
CourthrPtrs~
For anter v111w Mon Fri •1.""'"""h ood k II d 200INft Hfkkor -e. ....... ... ..,,., "'""vut; . 8 !> I s, c appt. 644·5404 Cor appt. No Reasonablt• d~k Underwater boat uuat, many xtrai;. -:1:.,.,.. 35pm,Watt-rbedi.Unltd. pendable Newport --'-----------1125 OfterRetuse<l '' bottom scrubbing & PP 1M~aNewport8lvd,Coslb Beacharea.673·5625 SUMMHJOIS Waitr ess. Apply 1n 646-7314eves 231 CciDrP•-topside woodwork main 644·1836. "-~ ---Bo at ass e m b I y". person, Sid's Blue Beet. "--------8-0 .. 0 nv tenance. Reasonahle . Secretarial Mal If o h 107 21st Pl. NB aft 3pm ...-.-.. CostCll Mffo s 2 7 Er 1 c !Ion l 9 71 Sales People Good typa·st wa'th nen'I of e em ay or nig t ••••••••••••••••••••••• pra ces 5.C 5404 or Sh ...... _ -d, '1 RDL' ... s h 1 fl . W e t r H 1 n I Rear 1 213/004 2989 Owuual, 1ese . r , lQUALUX f1ce knowledRe Good MacGregor Yachts, 1631 Waitress. busboy. & Golden Retriever µup This ll> a rad1o. whl. 3 sails, teak.
" phone ability ',day Sat. Placentia, C.M. .hostesses. Part time. p1e!.. AKC Field & i.ho" Pnvate Party lo4lh. M.M lnl. $23,950. 642·fn49eves We ha11e ammedlllte Management Potent.Jul & •,dayoffdunn,:: week. --------wk.nds & eves Mission pet Shots. wormed . Sale" ........ 9030 .
openiogsava11eblerorCallforappl.496·3010 832-7311 -·-SUPPLYCLERK VieJoCountryClub. raisedwlTLCXlntd1sp -- -••••••••••••••••••••••• 75 CAPE DOflY
U>urtter Personnel on all ---n.. S&L k 831-1.550 (2131425 1561 Diven-A-Call al '' Prll'e PENTA 8 970 "" Manne TYPHOON . 19' full ~eel, Sal-Reta1l SECRET1\RY TYPIST nogressive see 6 ---------~ I b bo t urwv• sh.l!ts. full and p1trt umt-"'" lodi r 1 1 . -receives & forwards your £' ...... ·--S750 s oop, as1c a ~ CURTAIN full lam"' .. ~hor lhand \' or entry eve pos. Waitr-.. ,,. • cook0 W"'"l DOGTRAJNING ~),.,,.-I ""'"15 .. l'C With t It&. lr ac<UW\ Pleaseapplyanperlian • " to r·u u ir ~..... .. ...... • .,.,..,..e c:ills Neary new ,.;~1184·7.9810 __ .,.~.986r1 ex as,,..,...,., helpful. apply In pert1on 1 supp es orm or· ed. exper only. Call for Pvt classes & boarding Only sooo 759-0llll Ask ~ _. ...... D II) Mt. Fuenles. al ders & -"*la eve mail lntervlewMonF)-laskfor JohnMartan 5480059 rorSrruthorHaase -----I 02 Oce• A.,•
Hwtlltii)fOR .. ech ~ Ro'·ert Bean. w1·111am clerk. Some heavy lirtanJt Jean or Sharon 67J..""•O -McriMlo"wt r Salff Mus t sell 22' Tempht-
Dn .a.pERY Fr~t&A'lSOC I-IOI Quail &ln-housedelivery Xlnt --· _...,... __ AKC SHIHTZU female Family Membership lo Special SD 215 amp sailboat. Rae~ equip ~ s N h benefits & adv oppor WAHTEODIUVER Black/white Papers, John Wayne's Tennis S\1995 General Marine w1trlr.645-498I.ofr.Dan '14621eadtllYd Exper prel'd,butwew11l ....!.::._!wportBe_~H' Contact Jan Hess. SUHDAYONLY Champ lines $250. Ph Club CallS3l 7fiOO Baltenes.6:U·4343 __..
•a.._H train you for -a perma •SECRETARY 83J.8383 TQ deliver Dally Pilot SSl-1234 ---------1t.-..-1..p 90•0 CAL2S.S6.250 -Mc}fo.a .. ach nent pot1ll1on an our To Pres of 1Jusy RF: SCateMutua1Savln1ts -For Sale John Wayne ~ ower .. 11usboatwas usedinoor
Laguna HlllsshoppinJt r1rm an Irvine Lite 4001MacArlhurBl.N.B. bundlestocarners Re-Engllshdulldog.lyrold, Tenni s Club Mem ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2boatsaitingclubin S<I/)'
EquaJ Opportunit} cent.er store Xlnt work· bkpng. typing, phones. Equal Oppor Employe_r qwreR van or large sta· has papers . ma I e berstup k5() 640-5390. Bay boat. L8' Lapstrake IM!go Had little us(' b¥t EmployerM/F inrt cond & employee N s H s 1 lJOn wagon and a good Housebroken. Sacnhce Cla.Mlc. Gray l/B Xlnl. cosmet.ically needs ui.>
---------1 benefit.s. Apply lo store ~~. 7~2.~31 req a ary SwitcNM>ard Op.r. dnvang record Phone S200 548·3076 78 Kawasaki J~ Ski, less 12495/trade759-0260 gr adan1t . Xlnl valu"'' •
-man a Ker. -M o n 1 ca --- ---P/ttostart. Ph 645-7~ 642 4321 end a&~ for . tban 10 hrs u&e. 3 mM Call Evelyn at ~ad RETAIL Hollawa-y. 770· 1001 , SECRETARY . HarrySee~lQey.At AKC R eg Sb ab Tzu old. Fact. modified eng.1--------•I Fraserlne. 714·673·!i2S~-
lmmed1ate F tT & P /T Moran Drapery Stores Position open to non Teachers1Cov t ~orkers_, U Female. '250. 7 Months Cl.lstom r1Wber padding FOR SALE
operungs sales & cashier 20 stores serving so s molung enthusiastic in· Prop 13 Concernang_you OP RTUNITY old. Call 642-7445 Runs lt~e a top. Over l97S 24' Remelt Scgdan ''• :.hare N~wport 1 t •
pos AppUcationsnowbe Calar. div. Accur typinR at 50 Start p/llme bus1ne1111 __ EMPLOYER Labrador pup, /\KC. 52600 Lo r eplace Bndge, OMC 225. xtra race/cruise. congenlar ang ~enatWard&Har---------"'J>mw/!ihorspdwntini.t ~ilong range security W eti D yellow F.papers.~hamp S1tt:raf1ee for $1500 clean.dual statJon.VHF', partn e r s P .P
nngtoo. lZ75 Bristol CM SALES Neat appear a must. Ap for appl. call 751 0028 ar4 oot11tnia11/ nr Imes. btful. 6 mos. shots. 645.22()(). 675-3662 depth finder. bait tank, 213/255-4863
ApplymPerson EO_E_ WE KNOW P I Y in Per s o n . Tea<'hers desiring !IUP· ~o~dhrd~;~rygsnr;:r~~~ Movint?. must sell NewPort Beach Te;;;s ::~: xtras Priced to 26' sloop. tnple ·;lanked
11 .... •5 Customweavc Curpels. plefl}ental 1ncome Need 2831 Mira Loma Ave. Sl.2.5180 846·94~ _ Club family mem mahogany hull, iilee(>s I "" YOU WA..._.T 18430 Pal'lfac St, L 11RgP'css1ve leadership Anaheim.Ca ..___toY-· 80 .. 5 berstup. S700 +transfer a..t~. encl head. teak trim, in l 3 Superv1:rnr. 11 7 " VaJlev t I - -~ ... ,. i 1 i S850o Charve Nurst• Good s111 ----=-------paten aa . ---------••••••••••••••••••••••• ee.e~es.49-1-4118 H•RR1Sow•5 !;.,37538moor ng .
"!' A JOB.'.'·' c~retary Personal Ausiness Fr s h odl "' " ... & fringe bcns. Mesa """' M 963 22 W ee c no e. gray F\111 size box spnng and , ir~.t. 11 "'Y IO T -_.._ Verne Conv Hosp, 661 We Also Know LOAH SECRET ARY anagement. ·7 -5 OMEN Sweet d1sposit1on needs mattress S50 ~ ll'lA A S 22 Culallna. ready to
Center St. t.:M :>48-SS&S You Uke P~• To exec VP & assistant TEACHlllS. loving home 644-4727 842·7456 3101 Coast Hwy, N li :.ail. 54000.
---&Y--u11..-ToT--mloaru1neededfor s mall -·cH"-•s. SOMETHING ------631 -2547 644-4250 RoWHe's Rog&Mop ---nd nd lb k 1 ·~ l;ft f)-eepuppyfromGerman Oris Art Must Se11 ·1---------c ::-:--------.-
Women needed for Wehcrfetheideal be:!7.ts.enSala:,.v w:~.!!~ TfACH!RS NEW IS Shepherd & regi!;tered Neman M o ore ·74 Hoba Cat 16. witrlr &
Houset•leaning Ser\ posfffottforyou. mensurat.e '4 /ex~r. c~ul Worldbook Chlldrrart lnshSetter 646·2200 graduation ~ult, !JSO·up 1---------•1 boic. xlnt, $1600. 645-4106
_S48_.(fl_S7 _ _ • s.tlftq TltM-lif• Marty. ror appt.fAO 5100. ~it~~~ ~i!~~I~~ ~:::: WAITING Free to good ho mt•. 536-SOl'I _ SEA RAY BOATS 554•3423_ ----
Sales loabhotpro•ed SECRETARY BOOK exper ntt Fur into con altered Blk Lab. all Mst aell Crest Elect Kain 1975 Catalina 22, fixed
tobeogreat KEEPER wanted pert ccrnang our Summer fORYQUI shot.'1.lovesluds549·0923 Goodcond Lotsofacces NOW Open keel .7~2HP Merc01 B.:! TRAINEE
A way for a high school
graduate to enter the
newpaper bus mes~
c:L-efor time. s m ore In CM Guaran•~ ····II Var~anla • ,.,J. 1 Bestofr540-2186 radios, Lifelines cockpit ,_ .,....,3800 '""""''""' Ttus 1:. bag new~ llun· 9w.,.,. ... odpartDoberman U til 8PM cushions . xlnt cond at.ttfth.lftDOfllh)hten """'. Calkim •. 557·104l 38. dreds of Army skills are puppies. 2 males left PLANTS· Spec amen n $4500 bst ofr. Mu!>t :;ell
& new cirrhala to (•-------·-· E O. E. open for women Only a 6'2·5788 an 3Pm dracenas and others $1511 Dy!> 646-4466, Lcnn1
So.C-'lf.toMm •SICRETAlllS• Teenager to help few s pecialties remain ~ 8050 up 6to8CtJuslmove<l 70aysaweek Wknds&eves837-001~
DAILY PILOT L-Adm Asst to pres tl8K w housework. 2 hrs a wk available to "men only " ••••••••••••••••••••••• from Bel Air lo Lido '"°M'Y• _.... fuft Legal Litigation S1 IK ll75·5847 please leave Move fust wh1le the OP· Great OJ)J>Ortunlty to buy ONCE A YEAR l2' Kite. trlr, cover. 2 Thas highly successfu l
local newspaper has an
npemng ror a tramee in
the circulal1on d epart
ment Selectt'd applicant "'II f'eceave a liberal
.i;tarung salary, in a Job
range ol $168 t.o S30l per
week.regularly
scheduled raises. bonus
opportunities. and many
fnnge llencf1ts irnch as
1>Bld vacations. paid
&fftfpod Sales/MktngSec S12K mesaage. portun1tles last Ca)I **I BUY** Rorgeous houseplan~at ~1Jc>18xlnt cond. SSOO ~=;:-· E~~l~~~:r~>'/g~,t;~i. TB.EPH".._ __ O_H_E__ ~e~~~e~t~t~:e1no~.r m Y ~a~~s~a'tr~1~ ~~~~~~i.lnce Arter CLEARANCE -;-.,-·C_a_t_a_ll_n_a_2._2_.-m-any
C "' ... YOUS"'Y? 4-02CJBirchSt.Stet04 SOLJClTORSoeededlm JosntheArmyand sellorSELLforYou Kl s M tt b xtras, xlnt t•ond """ '"' N Be be the ruture ng Z + a · ox CALL Caewpo11 11. ach 833-8190 med. No ex pr. nee Costa Mesa 540.10~ MASTYS AUCTION sprgs. rrnme 140. Baby $5500180.4~.
83• .. 095 rorAppt/Estnb '64 Pleasant evenin8 hours 646-16161ttl l -9625 s~I Ca11557 ll93 SoTe S6,370. -----~ -Can earn up Lo 53.75 per Huntington Och 962-8821 --------"-- . . -JO' Sporlbridge. rwan 18 ' Sol Cat S2000 1
For 411 lnhnlew ----------hour. Cell 754-1601 after l Lnguna Hills 768-52.Sl CASH PAID Queen Anne Din Rm ta Vars. tnm tab!!, elcctnc motOtCycles SIOO !>:.'QO TIME-LIFI PM.. For gd used' tum. anU-ble.. soUd oak 42x70, w/3 refng & :.tove. dock 111dt-__ Cluis646·7ti!"> .
uear.t ... hte •SECURITY* Xray technician. pt/time . ques&clrTV"s 957·Sl33 20''fills. 14 cu (t Hotpoint power. s hower. :mo ·73 Hobie Cat 16'. xint Ttfephw Solcltora 6 IO hrs wk Orthopedic refng .. self~efrst. 2·dr. gallon fuel. many extra:.. cond. Extras. SlJOO. or
Equal Opp Emplyr m/f S4 Hr. part or r /time. s urgeon's offc. F'ashaon Contemporary Wall unit fresh meal. frull & veg I only Stoel( 4632. best. Keith, S39-0576
group insurance and a -----------credit union. lfe wall also S.....treu.
be provided a new model Apply In person. l81 70
<'Ompany c ar with EuclidSt.FV
personal use pnv1lel(es. ---------
AppUcanL'I must be 18. SECRETARY /RECIP'T.
have a clean driving re Exper"d , for N .B
cord. have a high school arctut.ectural firm . Perm
d iploma. Hours are J>Ollition starts Jul~ I
senerally 11 A.M. to 9 Salury nego. 675-8233 for
P.M. wtlh some optional appl
Saturday overtime. ........;.--------
(( you are qualified and Secretary
are Interested in learn· Ole SECRETARY
sng more about where To The President
this training lead3, come Real est Investment firm
1.o the DAIL~ PILO'l' or for educ ators. Good
ftce. 330 W. Bay Street career oppor & ver)'
C-o8ta Mella and aslt for challenging Xlnt typ.
Harry Seeley In the lng/sh req'd. Exec secy
Cittulat.lon Department. ex per a must. Call Eileen
An Equal OpJ>Ortwul)' at 64().-0123.
Empl_oy_e_r ___ ---5-EC-RIT--A-l _Y __
&aleJi
.ALOIYEIA •
()raaruzed lndlv. w/gen'I
<>lencal skllle for health
mgml Carm In N B. area.
Type 6i 1-wpm. pleasant
phO.\e maMer 640-89!M>
forappt
Non-aurglcal faC<e flit.
Salespersons & dis
tnbutor1 needed. c.11
Suaan. 956·3457 or 7~9 .;::;;;;;;;;;;:;::;;::;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;f -----Sal~
ASSIST MA.MAGUS
We bave (2) full ~
PJtJme poglUons open for
aaalu man•1er1
FAalllon hAcltground nee.
Salary + C()dJm +prollt
sharing. Olli for appl
UM n. 1-11 644-1400
Sale-Clen. Gift. C&l'd1. • Drugs. NB Exp prfrd
'40-7373
Salaclt.rlt, 1lf\ Ullery,
I pay commensuratt
Wlt:qf!r Slimmer JOb.
Pb het1im 10 1J81S--
$1.62 per DAY
That'll ALL )'nu pay
fora
30clay ad
In the
DAILY PILOT
SERVICE
DllECTORY
DO IT NOW 1
•42·5'71
I •
*AGENTS* ~c!.~.·12nm wkdys lsle.640-4940 & recliner. S wivel containers 645·9319 ,..... ~ _ rocker 673·90R7 even S Sl 532
...._L.-..11 lngs. White Fox coat full a.. ' loah. Slips/
*AIRLINE* ....no,__M -length, was SllOO Mu!>l 24· E1tpres8 Crwscr VS. Docb 9070
TELEPHONE SALES ••••••••••••• •• ••• ••••• White dmelt.e set. ell lends sell $350. 673-9149 eves Lrlr. eltttnc rcfng, do<:k ••••••••••••••••• ......., tOOS to 70", 6 vnyl cov chrs. s ide power. tnm t:ibs. SU-"'V"'t• .. 1 lfya.cr.interfftwdln
.... folowlftf:
•Pf"O•lcff1t9 Hcurity
CMd Hnlu to the ...............
.~ .. •tlwg mtd gf"fttlf.
..._ ... of ltllport..t
,..,.. •• ..-yct.y.
•Pull t f "'• op · ,...........
•The INst • .,.. mid
b1Mtflt1 lft ftM MC.,nty ...-...y. ....... ,.....,
*UnlfonM ,. ....... d
MONEY ....................... hke nu, $85 549·1773 hlscell-ous Wlpt>rs, 100 gallon fuel. ...-~'"' .,. -·
AMERICAN OAK Wmthd 8081 1011ded. 2 only. Stock YACNewport646-<>IS1>f:
Largest6electlon Decorator I-urn 1 s· sofa. ••••••••••••••••••••••• lt631. 673 No deelets 30• Avalon moortn "'Tn (&PRIDE} mOrangeCounty matching chr. & e ncl Car cover ro r 1977 please front of Sean's & ~im
Stewart Roth Antique:. tables, e1tcel rond. I bed Camaro. Call Irene Thftt·Llf• Llltrarfu, 750 E. Ofer Rd S.A sofa. linen cover ed, 1 842.7456 Serie Sl,24 5 «:!a S2S.OOO 673'5099
Inc. .... ltoth t.I & (atNwpt Fwy) 75l·S922 recliner Yard tools. I -24 Cuddy Cabin. vs. trlr. We need a 11hp for our 29 ,..t""" op.s"-gs fOf' lawn mower. 1 edger, Playpen. porta-crib. & loaded. Ready t.o (i!(h, fl~ fo" a Ir I 1 n er . Dy~ . ~ fW1 I a-_________ , bothgasoUnepower Coll high chair. Call arter 5. hermen's deU1o1ht Only 213 ·691 ·3225 E~er.
' 0•·-, AnUque MusicBoxes~ 646-BOSJforappt. ~ oneStocktiSM 21369';-7815 Ad fnr fNI• ..... who w..t SlotMacblncs' --------Marty. ..~ town ,_.•N•a-Clock11! Kg sz bed. mattress. box Office ~tun &
...... HUGE SELECTION &prng & hdbrd ~ ~ct "-'-wt 1085 WE OFFER "-rf sofa ~-CoHee tbl S20 •• :.:!:';.:-; •••••••••• •••
: u i .. -...:~ All In good condition ore. Desks Cltarance
SoYe $1,'93
20' Runabout. VS. ttlr.
oneonl)' Stock 010
*~ ~S ... -"'~ • ...-m 964 1930 eves Some new Walnut finish .
• - ' Open Wed. thru Sat -------s l t s ea . H U R RY • HARRISON'S *CoMM. P WHldy l~Kltterini. Irv Thomas organ. too. 752.5511 eiu • "'Y •GNet a.-,._ (114) 754-1171 Quality h.ide-a-bed, S250. ~"""
IOATSLI~
NEEDED l M
MEDIATELY for .18 '
power boat In Newpoit Harbor. Days; 6*s«iq,
Eves. 5S2 079()
•NT ..... Pl• ·· 4116 67361979· l.298. CGoference tbl eo·· round. 3101 Coast Hwy. N 8 .
Mdyou,0....1: CALL TODAY * * * • * * For Sale Anti q u e walnut top, 8 r hrs. M50 ---•83•1•·254_'1 ___ ,,i's8D1fOlf""-•"' cL................... ...__-' runut 2 o·-~ ~9650. 9·& ••••••••••••••• •••••••• '"' _...-., ,..._._., VISIT ure. hung room ·
allHISdw START TOMORROW JONAntAN Btxnv·s sets, l dinette 1el. 1 drop SaJeemao desk. blk uphol 25' Blt)'finef sedan cabtn -·
•A .._.,, ... , wjlhg WJlOLESAL,E.AMt:R & leaf t.abkl, I dresser wit chair..s,_ me cabinet. 4· cruiser. ulty1 tt.qulpt. Ce1.,.... S•/
0 ,. d 1 J 8 c • r 1 URJ11S:H ANTlQU.-.S mirror s lldln1 glass dwr 114.'),3473.B73·3029 !luper t lean. l"'e nu R• tt20 714 /ll't't •095 NEW CONTAJNF.R dOOf'! 52649a4 Sa c rl f Ice SI I . SOO . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ty IN<l"fl 1'HlSWEEK 67Ml20. C11mper shell ror '76
AM-hrf•: TIM£4JF£ 8 29U"~CayWty ~.~ •••••• ~~.~! ~••••••••••• ... !!.~~ 31' Unlfltte. loaded. Ci!1· Courier. like new. ~-
•• :;; , I ID81111l'f" anUtn118, ~29U 134 sq yrda Honzon MlaU Saltwater aquarium hing, Bnstol cond. T IS, *'-9177 UDftMlt~ INC que Coco Plum Cpl... • n11h. p P. s3uoo 831 ~-1'18 Camper shell. aell or
•A t•pti •• Eqllal Opp Emplyt l'ft/f O.k Dln Set, 54" round f50 Four • "'"x 1 ~,., 983 321.C 21' Thunderbird 1-'om>ula. trade·tool•, must 1ee to
......_,._Or ..a...-a.. t !•--------· tbl, w/'J leaves, 6 tl\rs. ctlrome Porache rims -ZlOHP. rlsh/akl. VHF. apPredate.645-7309 •--...,..,.., " bliftt, aenrer. S7S 76'n '100. 8 drawer dresser M I
,.,.._At: Teller, P'Ai"t time. e"· ••!·~··· f75 Odds & ends. 222 Via ,._ &<>rv--1090 any !~81• Very c ean , rord '681 tC)l"I bvbblct to~ pes1fft~ pref~. Wiii PAiermo. NB. 6'7S-716ft ••••••••••• •••• •••••••• $4200 • ...-... PlY 982 6'7'1 VS, 1uto, frldgt, alOV\', BURNS co nalder tralnee . O?CA ·s \\"cit Thur.. Antlqut-uprl&rht piano. '75 Sldpjaclf 24. f /B, all toilet • wtr htr, hd~
Minim u m ~kflng ANTIQUES Ja;u• 1070 ltlnlquallty.ownermu.t ect,laod mtrtr.loh,., work, SlUO o .l).o tw~:._~-.1 :'r!!·. ~~l'g'~~~n:: WHOLESALE ONL y ....... ~............... sac $34.5. 673-2l.94 -Slip avail 846-2995 _'98_$284 _______ _
--"'"'ty ~trtlll s Cl~ l 58 Pear Diamond . Kimball atereoo Matan. 16' Starlin; w /35 iiP SHnJ.. TOP ror lm,~t ,.,..,le ... htc. E.O.E · an mtn e &NGUSHSlUPMENT perfert stone. scit an must tell, best offer Evlnrude, trlr. balt i.nk Pfcltu.,. Brand new.~
17'11E QfnterStrfft ONSA.UtNOW'I -Yellow JOld, fMn's rln1 Btwn 8 & '7pm onl)' ~ $481327 PtaGl8-9177 •
Anaheim ~ um,, MT LANO LEY r~~wn 8 & 'Tpm, m.eeo-1849. Campc-r shell for IS' btd
Equal Opportunity Make tour 1bopg1n1 FOUNTAIN YA.1.LEV · llanunood Resent thHtr~ SELL ldlf' Items with ~ .. hJah. carf9 doo&t-:
tmploytr Mi f' eaaler by Ull4J the atty ..... ,~1••• P'lnd what you wnnt In •tyle. ~orO(fer. Daily Pilot Clu11lfted Ad, '2 S. Call o t fpm .
Pilot Clautn Ada. • ~ • Daily Pilot Clualtleda 945-2183 842-M?IJ. 4115-m?. Mr. Pintar. . ' -·--..__ -
. ... .. ...
('fQ OAILV PILOT
•••••••••••••••••••••••
~CleoR!
78 Honda 7501'' with
WindJammer Lo mile!>.
$l650/bst. 960-5844 or s:JS.n11
Xlnt cond . ·73 250
Yamaha. SK m1 '9,
$400/BO. Call aft Spm,
.5.51-1198
'71 Husky dirt. bike. re·
bwlt engme. Must sell.
1>45-7813. or 231 Cabr11lo, CM. <rear)
'78 Honda 7S(), extras, 5000
mt.. $1850
673·7770
TMl25.Suluk1, 'ery good
cond. super clean $375.
54&-56<13
n KawasaJu KJl400 Ex
cellent Running Cond
'S3SO 00 farm Call 661 3067 a!t6PM
Vt t~IO'Nf"' If Ma -· ...i V•vG•• & 1a tO lt'l1rrc>r• ITGU "°'°4111 o
'5595
1971 GMC
'I~ TON ,.ICKUP
T l\1t orHt • futly factory _._. rrco1.azt.in&01
s4295
WE HAVE
A GOOD
'SELECTION
OFJIMMYS,
SUIUUANS-
&VAN
CONVERSIONS
MIC•9CltaAT fftl lu"ll D0111if1
Ma. COIH!'F't-alL41iHtQ 1#'\Ci•t•sn.•
1978 BMW's
HERE HOW!
COMPUTE
tOOYSHOr
HOWOPDI
EXCElLEHT
SWC'TIOHOF
IMWRESAUS
We may have your nt>xl
car tn our inventory Call
us todlly'
831-2040 495.4949
. . .
CREVIER
--------
Rat 9725 ···••·•··•············· '76 131 CleJn 22 m 1
stereo ca:.!>, auto, $3.500
642-6().(9 97~ 7613
·75 Flat Xl9. loaded, ~Int l•ond.
8.)2 0640
9755 •••••••••••••••••••••••
TUT DRIVE OUI
"LE CAR
OFTHEYEAR0
Good mventory m &tock.
Hurry while they 13.bt!
f~USTAFSON
llNCOLN MERCURY
1>800 l00<h &oui••o•d
84U.~;h. ffi
-111
"
•
Nabers
Cadillac
2hl 1(1 I t.11Ii.11 Iii\ d
( 11\l.1 \l.-\,1 "\.Jl)•JllHI
'780. Vih
Corvette-Sida now be1n1
taken on Indy !iOO pace
car 1n s tock. Fletcher
Jones Chevrolet 6633
Westmins ter Ave ,
Wes tmins ter , Ca
892-4444
'76 Corvette 1..82. 4 spd, T
top. rare, ltke n~11r
Orange, all options.
SJO.SOO Days 642· 7812
Wlcnds. eves 644-9222 .
1972 Mercury Marquis.
Xlnt t'Ond1lton. low ·
miles. vinyl roof, air con·
dltlon, power brakes,
power steering, stereo •
good gas mileage. Sl.915.
SJ6.lln4
""Home
of tit•
V1t1~9 ..
'74 MAblY
Yamaha 2SODT dirt needs
~ome work $150 Cal'I 631 1649
Motor HOMts, Sale/
tt...t/Storag. 9160
,,. ,,. -.
ALLEN · $1 SJ£ IROAOWAY
SAHIA AMA
1976 FfAT 128
SPORT COUPE
4 speed, radio & heater
1629PKJ I Pnced al JUSI
over wholesale bluebook at
MIRACLE
MAZDA/RENAULT
2150 Harbor Blvd C~'TA MESA
645-5700
'68 Bug, new tires, rblt
engine, xlnt cond $1200
6'l2 4J84 aft 3 PM
lrougtMn
fUlly loaded 1nclud10g
moonroo!. Llsl pnc~ of
'76 Vet T top. auto. PIS.
P /B A t C lilt wheel,
AM/FM, s new radials,
xlnt cond. l owner
S8.6001bst ofr P.P . Days
5.57-2647. Eves 759-9220
Auto lrans .. radio &
heater . pwr .
sleering. power·
brakes. air & much
more (Lie .
608KSXl
•••••••••••••••••••••••
Rent a 1977 Executive
(ADIL l.A( • Ol lJSMOilll !
t.MC TflU(k~ ~ .. ,, 01~ f •t A wary l: ••t l AGL.t•A "I GU El . Motorhom~ or M1n1 .
motorhome from Herb '76 Toyota PU SR-5, long
f'r1edlander Call uny of bed . new clutch &
these numbers radials Xlnt cond. $.1100.
898-6777 _01_3_-tmi ____ _
835·3171 I
f><E Ul.llMA!E. OAIYINO MACHINE
•usEDBMWs•
'7120024spd <75314)
'722002~p.(S44L1AI ~ Hlrwport• 11 Mfrs 11969 Harbor, O>sta Mes1t
I ,42..0JfS j
'63 Caravelle. hurd lop ·75 Rabbil. xlnt cond, lo
m1·s. $1000 down convert. 2 tops. umque 496-58571494·9049, Cune Ctll 536-6296
'68 VW Bug, xlnt cond
$1250. ALSO Datsun Rolls Royce 9756 camper s hell $75 . ••••••••••••••••••••••• 64S·8S27
"1 DEALER IN U.S.A. ------
W.656.
'76 Corvette, wht w /r~
stnpp1ng, wht lthr int. T
lop, AM I FM stereo. PS.
PB, PW. AC. tilt whl. lo
mi. ~1100. 673-7773
54748
J 142 77 mo tor ol8 mo. llOt
dow" ptu.t tu ' lfOt'tU~
O•le11•d 18.862 118 APA 1780
GUSTAFSON 537.7777 '72 Luv Headers, Holly,
828-8188 mags. runs xlnl. Needs
'74 2002A.A!CI ( 598LPO I
'75SJOJ Auto. (916MTV I
'76 2002,4spS/RC549Pf IZI
'76530i;Lux (606PHM I
'76530i ; S /fl(S8lRCS1
CJosH On S..ndoys 9727 JR
ROY
R CARVER
65. 122S Volvo Must
1tell. $500 firm
Aft s. 6'6-1216
Our Pnce
$12.599
Lease or Purchase
Ser. No. 689)S8Qt34683
FLETCHER JONES
CHEVROLET
6633 WesllllJnster Ave
Westminter
892-4444 ~~~~~~~eo..gc..
'75 Coupe de Ville. loaded, 9933 tfNCOlN MERCURY
HENT 23 ' F'reball. :-.elr-paint. Sl2'1S. 536-2S3J
contamed. Lot:. of xtrall '72 'Chevy steps1de 3 spd,
&452283 Tadio, mags, 1mmac. lo
'76 2002 Jade BGrn, 4 spd.
A JC, Snrf.A M !f'M
stereo. 25M, S75SO P P
frlJ..8284
•••••••••••••••••••••••
Brand Hew '78
HONDA Cars
.MANY
r ROLLS ·ROYCE
l~J,mbOree
IMwport Buell
1'---...J MO-MU
lthr int. $4900 P P . '77 VW Dasher Wgn Stick 714-673-2006
sh1lt, lo m1. Owner MOSO. ---------
12131592 522'7 '76 Seville, cmplt power.
••••••••••••••••••••••• I HOO l<O<PI &o.,l••o•d
~Mtnqron leoch
142 .. 144
m1. PP S2500 /ofr . F0R RENT W Motor 642-049Jdys ClOSEO SUNOAn grey ext. llhr mt. Rolls
Home com f1 I e le I) -------'72 Bavaria. l'lean
cqu1 p ·d . 'cry l'lt'dn VC111$ 9570 A.M FM tape, A C, S379S
b73 51.33 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 64.a 9966
To Choose f.rom!
UNIVERSITY
1961 Rolls Royce Silver
Cloud II Beaut car
Sl8.SOO 640· 7030
Volvo gnll 27,000 mi's P P 9 77 2 979-6046. ••••••••••••••••••••••• '73 Convert .• fully loaded.
N('.;W 78 JI Pace Arrow
Sip!> 5 Loaded Wl•ckly
rt·nl .. d onl.> b46 2JJ6
1fa)' 646-6595 eve~
'72CHEV 1h T0tt
Long Wht>el Base Van
\.'8, 3 speed, wr cond .
radio & heater
76 2002 Chert)'. auto, air
lo m1 li. AM f'M ::.tcr
cass. ong ownr 494 3151
OicaMObile
HOfldo Cars • GMC
TNeks
~Harbor Bhd
s.abaru 9762
·········•············· '77 DL Stn Wgn
5-specd trans .. air cond .
luggage earner, radio &
heater less than 12.000
011 Jmmac ul<1te !
(722SPO> <Stk 1648AJ
190RE YOU IUY
A US&> VOLVO,
See us at Southern
Orange County's Volvo
Headquarters
1977 Cad SevtJJe. blk on S3200 or best offer l'.:ves.
blk. leather. wire spoke 4!n·2351
whls, spee1al gnll. 1m "------
9935 mac cond.. full power. -__,.,,
all e"'lras SIJ ,200 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Ho"'•
ol •It•
V1l1119"
-ll7290K1 1Stkl826AT> 72 f'iltt' Arrow 24 F\llly $2496 hJad~ ~Ip!> 7 Gd !>hape
~JO 646-6.S.95, 646 2136
Trailen, Tron·I 9170 .•....•......••••••..•.
Laytor 16' • ~harp sips 8. Ei. lifl h1lt'h awning,
xtra:. ~295 fi4l\·758<1
ORANGE COUNTY'S
OLDEST
$
Sal~-~rv1ce Lt•as ang
Roy Carver.Inc:.
~la Mesa 54{M'640
'76 CIVIC CVCC
stn wgn
I cyl, 4 speed, luggage
ram('r, radio & heater.
lmm~culate' \033PBY >
!SLkP°J226)
Sl 191 .
$3333.
THEODORE
ROBINS
MARQUIS VOLVO
MISSION VJEJO
831·2880 495·12 I 0
494·8960 1976 A:.pen Wal{on
68CpedeV1lll'
~:XCELLENT CON
DITION
646-4533
Special Ed. lo m1 :.
640·l&i3
'63 Dart 6 eJ'!~me
S4S01 or muk~ orrer
964-3070 after 6 l'M
Canaro '917 Ford 9940 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
'71 MONARCH
1 Dl.SIDAH
Beautiful white
w /pwr . brakes,
wheel covers. fully
loaded. (847)
~· Tr;.ivel Tra1l~r I btlrm. '74 Ford E200 Superyan
S2250 Gd l'Ond 291 Monte Auto, PS/PB, air. Top
Vrst;i C.\1646-9566 1.·orKI. $3950. 646-6989
Rolls l\oyrr BMW
1540 Jam boret•
Newport Beach l\4(~'1S444 THEODORE ~·
ROBINS
FORD ·
2060 HARBOR BLVD.
.tOSTA~ESA : 642·0010
ORANGE COUNTY
VOLVO
EXCLUSIVELY VOLVO
Largest Volvo Dealer
an Orange County'
BUY or LEASE
DIRECT
·n Camaro, sliver T-top,
auto, air, pwr. lo miles
S5600 Call 640-7\54.
i4278
t 111 61 ftlO IOI '411 mo 1199
dO•n Oh.II t&J &. h~nse
Oo t &neo Odvme"t s,e,03& 16 APA IC 34 ----
.......................
'77 Dodge surft!r van.
23,000 m1 , AM l FM
cassette, xlnl cond.
$5000 Flrm 770-1890 MM~/,
Classics 9520 '76 Ford El50 Van con
'7.a BMW 3 OS <19.000 M1 ,
air. auto .. dark blue.
elec. sunroor. Ot•t'kl·r
FM. M1 cbellll XVS
radials Call 759 M21
FORD
2060 HARllOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA .642•0010
'7-1 Cn11c Hatchback. xlnt
l'Ond, 31.000 mt·:.. $2400.
Ca II a(t Fi :Kl\> m . 559-0914
Toyota 9765 • ••••••••••••••••••••••
·BfFOREYOU
SEU YOUR
TOYOTA.
[ft:jE~~
2025 S. Manchester
Anaheim 750-2011
76 Low miles. auto, P S.
P B . 6 cyl, A M FM
stereo tape,{ally wheels,
new s(~I rad1als. corr
sole. tinted glass. ~oma n
owner . beaut1tul
buckskrn in and out
5'1195 546-0400
GUSTAFSON
LINCOLN MERCURY
•..00 &eQLh ao.,r .. •o•d I
rtunl1"Qton ~
.•••••:••••:•••••••••••• H•rs10n, AM/FM w/tapc,
5.1 B~l'.:Y Xlnl l'Onrl a1r. complete custom int
'tfl 2002, runs. need-; work
Sl650 or best offer Eve~
548-lli34 SEE US! 842-8844
SM,900 & paint, & xtras PP
__ ~5~ S717510fr. 642-0493 days
Maida 9738 MARQUIS TOY OT A
MISSION VLEJO
831-2880 495-1 210
:iwedJ!>h Volvo Mecb-.n1c
al Ivan's, 1995 Harbor Chnroa.t 9920 l•••'••• .. l••'S•111U.• .. •······ •th ............ , .... , , ... .,...
~~~~~~~'#) .......................
56 Thunderbird. restored. Autos WCMhd 9590
white w black mt.. see to •••••••••••••••• •••••••
'77 BMW. 320!. auto. AC.:,
Blpt radio. wht tun, ovt
stand1ng cond S!.f.1so •6-1(}..J.2A2 miracle
mazda
Blvd , C M 6'«1· 1982 •••••••••••••• •• ••••• ••
P'62 P1800, new engine, ,. 4 I i5 Granada Ghia 4 dr, ,. P IS. P B. air. AM/FM.
Must.g 9952 ..•.....•..............
1967 Powder blue
Mustang, G cylinder. ~
11utomatic transm.
onganal owner ln e,,;
rellenl condi•ion In·
tenor hke new. All re
pair records furnished.
New carburetor . timanR
l'ha1n, turn s1gn11I
sys tem , muffler
radiator, e t c . Call
540-2279 after SP M.
dpprec1ate BeM 1:1rrer
Pvt pty. (714) 548-6304.
aft 7PM. 1714 I 770-4151
AK~
V4!fliiclft 9530
···•·•················• 6!! VW Camp1.·r Van,
eamper lop. R B eng.
AC. ~pkrll refng, slo\·~.
tul. nc~ tm.!t. $2995.
biS-~J
~ WhHI Drives 9550 •••••••••••••••••••••••
COSTA MESA
AMC· JEEP
#I IN CALlF.
OVERSTOCKED!
25CJS available
lll Plcku~ avarlabk
5.SCh~rok~ uva1lable
Z! Wa~onecrs ava1lobll'
VOLUME
OISCOUHT
OUUR!
COSTA MESA
AMC-JEEr
~ HarboT Blvd
COSTA MESA
7!_4/549-8023
73 ~e 1 2 ton 4X4, 6 cyl.
new 3 spd trans. transfer
ca.se, brks & halt. S2500
847 3986
1976 l<'ord. f"2SO, 4x4.
Ranger. V-R. 4 s pd,
('f'UISe, 1\Mtf''M 8 track,
aux. tank. l'.)lcle ruck.
Xlnt cond 30 .0UU
GJI l8S9
·n 1\5 Slater, Chcytmn
Pac kage. AM /FM
w tape, lilt, crsr. air.
loaded. PP xlnt cond
S8JOO/Ofr 642·0493 dys.
Tt11eb 956
l.i31Jltern·1 PU Short box.
wbl spoke whls, lrg knob
b1es, 4·cyl eng Ofr
979-0183 or 754-0146
WEWIUIUY
YOUR DATSUN
PAID FOR OR NOT
TOPDOLU.R
FOR TOP CARS
BARWICK DATSUN
',,111 lu.111t".ip1 .... tr.1nu
831-I 375 493-3~75
WE BUY
CLEAHCARS
&TRUCKS
CONNELL
CHEVROLET
2828Harbor Blvd
COSTA MESA
546-1200
WE PAY TOP DOLLAR
FOR TOP USED CARS
FOREIGN, DOMESTIC
or CLASSICS
If your car 1s extra clean see us first.
IAUERIUICK
292SHarbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa 979.2500
WE BUY
USED CARS
CALL GARTH
Used Car Mgr
540-5630
IOllXSO~ & ~ox • LINCOLN·MERCURY
2626 HARBOR BL VD
COSTA MESA
WEIUY
USED CARS!
We're the new Chevrolet
dtaJership in the lrvine
Auto Center We need
your used car'
JOE
MACPHERSON
CHEVROLET
21 Auto Center Drive
IRVINE
768-7222 7l Chev) l lon C & C. dual1--------rears 750 tires. t0.000 pd
GVW, long whl base, .WO..~
~ 898-5715 ••••••••••••••••••••••• -G""N 970 I iO fo'ord 12 tn. Xlnt P U. •••••••••••••••• ••• ••••
Has about everything '69 Sunbeam Alpine
SZ250 64&34:>B Fastback Nds some
'7" Chevy LUY trU\'k , work Must sell S3SO.
AM I FM 8 lrk, A I C, _840-_3309 ______ _
c11mper shell, <'U»tm in .Alfe ROfMo 9705
ter .. boot. radial tires, •••••••••••••••••••••••
'lint cond. S3000. 894·535l, '71 Spyder. mint corid an 6& wknds-840·4474. Must sell
'72 Mau.la PU w /camper 642·L'i06
:.hell, ster. etc Lo ml 's .. 73 Alla Spyder, excep.
494 _!!1 _ tlooal condition & lfp
'IM Fotd Shorttx.>d lruck pearance. ·Slttp~r ('SSS,
t>tockJand shell. Tacoma I ownrr AJfo dlr rblt eng
Mm&.b1gUres03t-41% & tr•nc w reept.s StSOO.
-~t-~
.Uake thou 1100\t A.!I 9707
househOld IU!ID!I )'Ou'rr ••••••••••••••••••••••• oot ua101 av111l•blt' lo . ~e other family by tid 74 FO?'. blue 4 door. AC.
\'t'rtlslnc them for salt m AM 1 M. lluto, $2300 /\ 1
<.:lua1f1ed Call G42·Sblfi <iti.pe T L C ~ 1486
. . ..
Capri 9715 ............•.......•..
1973. -l9.000 m1 ~
SI .750
71H96-7612 661 0271
'71 CAPRI 1600 CC. •I cyl
!>teel blted rad1ab $1500
548-9806, lift 5 Mon· F'r1
DatlMll 9720 •••••••••••••••••••••••
2150 Harb« ll•d.
Costa M~so 645-5700
·75 Dix Corona Station
Wgn. 4 spd. s hift. lo m1.
top cond Ong own~r
$3095. Ph 552·5321
many extras, belll oHer •
962 6091 •
'69 Volvo Wgn $1200 •
67~583 833 9321 ...
·w Toyota Coroll<i. ong
9740 ~?ood cond. $495
•••••••••••••••••••••••
·53 Volvo 122S Stat W~n
Good cnf( A:. 1s S65U
Mary 673 3234 aft 5
'66 .MIZ 250SE
In excellent condll10n
with 4 s peed, radial tires.
sunroof&AM/FM. $2600.
Pn . pty Ca II :>40-4930
----'75 Toyota Corolla Wagon. A.~. Us-... 4-spd, air. roof r ack. ~ cv
radio, ltlnt cond. 962·7517 •••••••••••••••••••••••
AMC 9905 "'~~~~~~ ...................... . "low ftric.s!"
LEASING
lo rru. llhr intenor $3500 • 644-6297 ...
it Ex~ul.Jve car SAL£• '77
,.. LTD II Brougham. 2 dr.
.it xlnt cond, P /W P1S.
it P t B, cruis e cont. T
it wheel. wire whE:el cov.
it 351 V 8, xlnt mileage.
S5200 Dys, 642 7812
Eves, wkcnds. 557·4.339.
1970 Ford Muvenck, J
speed $750. Call lrene
IJ42·7456 •DATSUMS• L-. SNcfl0tt
Of All Models
SALF.S·LEASING
PARTS-SERVICE
'73 MB,~. tan. bamboo
int . AM t FM . auto,
P 1Window. SOM mt.
Make orfer ~l ·5547 aft 5
eves
'70 Hornet. nu brakes, nu
tires. nu starte r
$.500/BO. Call aft 6pm.
536-4407
494-1131 546-9967 '72 Ford Grlln Torino
Sprt. auto, AI C, PIS.
good cood. $1100962·7517
·oo Mustang. runs good.
needs some work. 289.
automatic. Make offer.
547-3182
Mus tang Convert. 1968.
factory air , M1chel111
tires. sharp. Must sell by
Fr1. P P. Car ey 7~-7101
·~
J
COSTA MESA
DATSUN
00 Mercedes 280SE. xlnt
cond. air, /\M 1FM. 4-sixt.
$4900 Call aft 6, 645·9899
W clc ~ U..Coln 9945
2845 HARBOR BLVD
540.6410 540-0213
'78 TOYOTA
WJ.~
•••••••••••••••••••••••
'75 Bwck Sky hawk
S2950 Xlnt cond
Call 644 7015 '76. sold new '77, 280 cpe,
14.000 mi's . I yr & W.000
m1·~ left on warr Tobac
co brwn , lthr &nL
;\M 1FM cass, c ruise
cont $14,SOO 549-5150.
4 cyl radio &
heater pwr brakes.
.r a a. r W-LA 0....0. w
defroster (Lie
093YRT).
66 Bwck special
xlnt cond. 5450
492-5771 ·59 Kingswood Estate
Wagon. A1C. good cond. 9915 Best offer. 847·9891
'62 Cla551c 220.SE Coupe.
-I spd llllck. fuel m1cc ..
.llr, new M1chehns Ong
color & equip S7500
557·1868
53498 •••••••••••••·-·-·.·· ... ·.·,..·.··.1 ·n Monte Carlo. lo m1 'll.
perl'cct cond. Relocated
to Europe, must sell
640-9222 Michael Romen
l~~~~~~~;,;;;;i;;;;;;~ 70 280 SE Sed. Lo m1·s. I' Xtra dean Auto trano. ·77 Datsun 280 Z. /\ C.
AM/FM stereo II trat'k,
mags. louvre w111dows , ''
s pd. 18,000 mi. Pvt pty
$7500, 963-0867 ; }'12 2790.
*DRIVE A* * LITILE •.. *
SAVE A LOT
SHOP&COMPARE
BARWICK DATSUN
"·•n .l.1.H1J .,,, ~1, ·"'"
831· I 375 493-3375
Air, s tl'reo. s unroor
Mi chelin t1rell $6100
Callfi731592
'71MZB280S1':. Xlnt corid.
85.00o m1 . $6700 Ph
644-0147
68 280.SE. <I dr. lmmac.
Compl recond. en~anc.
New tlrl.'s, comp! serv
records. Call last detail
751-1337
MG 9742 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'74 MG ronvt. xlnt cond. ·n BZ10 Llftback. Stereo 1ns1de & out. lo miles. I
ca.ss, warr Owner mui.t yr warr Must sell. Ask-s~rifice 12600. 673 2194 Ing $3,250 Cal 1675-9033.
am '78. auto. AIC. MGI 9744
m1·s. must sell, 58750 •••••••••••••••••••••••
540-1+!9.494--0536 '76 MGB 26M. AM /FM
cass. tonneau cover. Ex '76 7 I 0 SM w,,. eel cond p p 544-2926 art 4 speed, sunroof. r adio & 6
heater Super clean l·ar --------
Less than 18,000 mis . ·77 MGB. AMt FM s tereo
(473PCF) cassette, 10,000 mi's, xlnt
$3259. cond, $5000. 759-l499
1119 33 -..,. 411 .... '" ao .. n Oh•• t11t & hc6n1•
Oelon..i -u &es 114 APA 14 34
GUSTAFSON
llNCOLN MERCURY I 1e11ow ••I....,, ''""'° ·-'""
I DOwef w•tW •t\Mt coYefl & 16800 Btoch lovl••O•d 1e 000 miles 1 YI ,..,,•nl\I
Hvnt<l\9101\ ''""'" (3-l«JMICI ~~~ ~,4~2~ .. 8~44~~!1.'fl ) I 0, 99 5
Tri..... '1767 1975 CADILLAC
•••• .. •••••••••••··~··· COUPED~ VILLE
'68 Triumph 2SO xlnt cond.
$2,SOOCirm.
497-3710
1970 Triumph GT6. new
tJres, runs :clnt Call aft
5::.1, 963-5734
Voluwagew 9h o •••••••••••••••••••••••
WEIUY&SEU
VOUSWAGENS Lar1lest~lection tnTbe~ea~• !
WEST GERMAN
IMPORTS
645-6120
8••CJ•/ ••t.,1or tult PO••r
1ac1<><V •+< oono '°"' ""'" & 1 yr ••rnntt I~) $6495
1974 PlY)i40UTH
SUllHG COUt'E
ditc• ••I.,..,, ,...g -·
IK•0<1 "" cono 6 -,,,.,_ !S.. l)IM?l
52995
t 976 CADILLAC
SIYIW
GOIO hlllhQt IUll ~ .,.
C-I-6 I 'I' .,,.fllllll1 l31N0MI
i8995
THEODORE n....i 974L ·72 VW bus. runs well.
.......-'Ill IOQb aood St950. ea11 ROBINS •• • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Pat. el-4070 qr 546--7955 l"(lr Sale ·73 Opol. t 9. FORD
?Ot>O 14AR6011 lllVO.
cosrA Ml SA M2 0010
liter engine. salvol'Cd
1125. ·5 Opel Cade I body. good condition Private
party, 827 2057
'72 240Z. pnmo. 57.500 -----
ml'!, AIC. Mic h elin Porsche 9750
radials, ma.11s. AM I FM ••••••••••••• •• ••••• ••• de/ogger. S3675 &4G·9MIJ
Mg..(M.J:j
Uttt. Is ~f")!!
1"77 YllS, only 4500 mi.
111r, 'funroo(. lt'ather.
AMt FM, load1.>d Must
M>ll Sl8.SOO MO 820ft
76 911.S Tar11 1 Ice areen,
1· alloy,. Cau, lo 1111'1.
xlnt cond •021r1 eves
VOLKSWAGEN s..-s....ic.
Top Dollar
Paid tor Used vw·s
COMMONWEALTH
MOTORS
SIHCI 1953
l442So. Brtnol
Sant.aAu
546-0220
Approx. 2 ml. Nu
&UthCoast PlaJ&.
'70Sedan de Vtllf, lo mt'\,
of lood ena. Sl300 L_ynn,
963-0l'll. 963.-U
Cl1Wtfled /\II, nrt rt•;•ll>
i.O\:ltl "pt>Oplr In Pt"Ol>ll.'
iialt'1 1.·aJb ~1th h11t rt•
adcn.hrr and bl)! rr'\ulli.' To plaet! your das<;1fll'd
ll<J. call tod11y b42 ~78
66 91.2. 'tint cond, eictru. is Rabbit, &Jr, J\M /FM, '70 Cadlll•c: CdV. cood
Mullt see to Rpprtt1ate. lo m.l,'s, 1ood ~'Olld. S2900 C'Ond, SUOO.
fl42 1.282 ~ S4U8S4
. -. -. . I
... . ...
• 1111 . ...
'68 NOVA. Rebui It engine
New trans. Privale Par
ly. Make offer. 897-1196
'73 Nova, 4-dr, auto.
PS/PB. $2000/80.
494-6671.
'74 Monte Carlo. PIS.
P/8 , P/W, A JC. grn w ·wht vinyl roof.
$3000/best. Must sell this
wk Rosemary. 645-6797
·77 Monte Carlo. At ~ P /S,
P1B, tale whl, ags
»4,7SO. CaJI 831· alt 6
Ho"'•
olllr•
"'···~11
'14 CHRYSUR
UIJ.•OH
Auto lrans .. pwr
steer1no. power
brakes. w/s/w fires.
AM/FM 8 track.
sunroof & air (Lie
237LEB)
52786
1111 -IOr • ,... ·~ Clow" Plllt tu l lio.no
o.ff«M ~ 11 l'OI12 """,.~.
GUSTAFSON
llNCOlN MUC:UftY
l tlDQ' .............. _
-·"''""..,_ 142 ... 4•
'66 Mustang, 6 cyl, 3 spd ts~~~~ on nr. fBlr cond, S800
Ho,..o
011~• v •• ,,,,
'77 MAIUC IY.
8 cvl . auto. trans ..
radio & h eater
oower s teertng,
. power brakes. air
cond (964RJYJ
I ,:~/~"'~~mo ' t 199 00"" Olut It• & t1cenu1 Ottfertd o•vme"t
• 13 "° 781100 APA U ~4
GUSTAFSON
llNCOlN MERCURY
I &81)() loo<~ &o.ilt•Ord
'71 MEltC
Zll'ff\'I U sroars cou,.
BeautHul c ream
colored. • speed.
disc brakes, deluxe
· wheel covers. body
aide moldl~a. Calif,
em1s111ons. & much,
much more (8474).
GUSTAFSON
llNCOlN MERCURY
I MOO -.0111 tw1••••f -...... °" .......
142 ... 44
no.3332
l~•••••H••••••!!.~~
71 Runabout. Xlnt cond
Ong owner. lo m1. Mi<:h
tires. &torr. 960-2177
·71 Runabout. Xlnt cond
$8501 bst or r.
64&3138
'73 Pul1o Squire Wa§on.
air. •·Spd, Ca1r cond
$J.250. 496-978S
77 Ford Panto, xlnt cond.,
9,000 m1, $2800 firm
636-8662 d,ys, 770·3005
eves
fllynDtlfh 9960 •••••••••••••••••••••••
1974 Ply. SatelUte Sta.
Wag. 9 pass .. PIS. P/B.
Air, Gd tires. trans
Cooler, air shock~.
trailer hitch, CB Radio
incl. Good Cond. $1.800
9'll S. Orange, S.A.
FOR SALE-1987 Firebird.
New rebuilt engine. new
body & paJnL, tires, vtnyl
top, shot'ks, good interior
& AM /1-'M stere-o
cassette. $2400. Pri. pty.
Call Chris at 49'1-4581.
'78 Tr1V1s Am, loaded
w /extras, lo mi's, still
under Warr. Nicest T/A
In aren. $72~0 /otr
7S9·9tOt, Lance or
Mz.t8o7.
ftsad1HMrQ 9970 •••••••••••••••••••••••
16 T Bird, fuJly loaded,
11\Qla C. $..\200. f>v1 P•r1 )',
5"0·7800 or U4-2t:lt
eveat•kndJ
'67 T. BIRO w I 1t.ereo1 cw ~lcot condllioe
Sl485/bslolrM$.JMl
Barfaln •hoppers road
0'4l lltUe ada ln Claulfl...,S
iqularly And t.be1 find
whatthey'r looktnt fOf'.
Huntington Bea~h
Fountain Valley
· EOtTION
VOL. 71, NO. 171, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES O~ANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
School Cut
Ocean View -Trusiees Slash Prograrm
Responding to restrictions im·'
posed on the 1978-79 budget by
passage of Proposition 13,
trustees or Huntington Beach's
Oce~n View School Dlstrlct
have:
-Canceled summer school. an
anticipated $500.000 saving of
money_ needed for ran scholastic
programs.
-Slas hed a month from
teachiag programs at Nueva
V_iew School. which caters to
mentally retarded and physical-
1 y handicapped youngsters
'13' Hotline Set
Information on the situation in
Huntington Beach's Ocean View
School District, continues to be
furnished by a telephone hotline
dea Ung witb effects of the
Proposition 13.
The number to call is 847-87~ . •
Bell Wins
Assenilily
Race Bid
The flna.I vote count in the 69th
Assembly District has Anaheim
attorney Paul Bell defeating La
Habra City Councilwoman
Robin Young for the Democratie
nomination by 10 votes, Orange
County election officials said
today.
The el~tion was June 6.
A count re leased June 7
s howed Bell the winner by a
narrow margin. but the tally
was admittedly incomplete.
flowever. Jast Saturday, lhe
Orange Count..y registrar or
voters said Bell was the winner
by seven votes in what was
billed i.s a final tally.
Registrar Al Olson said three
more votes were found MoDday
when another computer scan of voting re<:ords was taken.
Olson said this time he's sure
the tally is final.
Tahiti Yacht
Race Moves
In Doldrums
The four yachts in the 3,571-
mile Los Angeles to Tahiti race
were experiencing a case or the
.slows Monday as they sailed into
the doldrums about 600 miles
north of the equator.
The doldrums were reported
to extend from five to 10 degrees
north of the equator.
Jacob Wood's Sorcery gave a
position report which placed her
approitimately at the half way
point at the 9 a.m. rollcall. She
was 1.825 miles from Tahiti and
1. 741 miles from the start at Los An~eles
Bob Gosnell's Tuia was 1,941
miles from the finish, Willard
Bell's Westward. 1,994 and Nell
Kelly's Celebration had 2,114
miles to go.
On the handicap scale Tuia
was holding first place with
Celebration second. Sorcery
third and Westward fourth.
Coast
Weather
Some high c loudiness
with patchy low clouds
along the coast early morn-
ing hours, but mostly sun-
ny. Lows tonight 60 to 64.
Highs Wednesday about 75
at beaches to84to88inland.
latlex
Virgil Partch, betttr kno&Dlt
Os VIP and the creator of Big
George cartoona. it a 1eem·
lngly bottomleaa well of gags
and humor F'or a look ac Che
Laguna Beach resident, aee
/.'eorurin{l, Page CJ.
INSIDE TODA 't'
drawn from seven 0ran£e Coast
school districts.
-Voted 3-2 to continue a. year-
iltOJ.lnd school ..progntm for
youngsters attending Crest View
and Westmontschools.
On~ prospect for the district's
employees is Ute possibility or
salary reductions, a matter to be
further d iscussed in future
board sessions.
Authorization t~ lay off 100
employees was voted eigbt days
ago, to take effect within 30 days
if help isn't forthcoming from
Sacramento in sufficient sums to
retain the staff members 1tf·
Cected.
Discussion both among board
members and a large audience
was sometimes tinged with bit·
terness1at Monday night's meet-
ing, hela at Westmont Sehool.
Former board president
Charles Osterlund, who recently
was replaced by J ulio "Jay"
Rivera, conceded diUerent
things are of differing im-
portance lo parents, te achers
and taxpayers in li8hl of the
Jarvis·Gann Amendment.
"One person's blood Is another
person's blubber, .. he observed.
Trustee Margaret Stark was
the lone vote against cutting the
prosrams for the retarded and
physically h a ndicapped at
Nueva View &hool.
Trustee Osterlund joined her
in the 3-2 vote opposing con-
tinuation or the year-around
school programs, which passed.
The vote to cancel 1978 sum·
mer school was unanimous
Couaeilmen Disag~e FVTeacher
Hearing
Delayed
Cadets Claim
Verbal Abuse A three.week delay was or-
dered Monday in an Orange
County Superior Court hearing
scheduled when lhe Fountain
Valley &hoot District filed a
lawsuit a g ains t protestin ~
te achers following a teacher
"camp·in" at dis trict he ad·
By ROBEllT BARKER Ol "'9 Deity ..,... $Uff
Two Huntington Beach police
cadets squared off against two
city councilmen Monday night
for the second time in a con-
troversy groW\~ out of a con~
frontatlon at a city hall parking
lot.
Cad et Dan Stack told a large
council audience that the con-
du ct of Counc:ilman John
Thomas last Wednesday "does
not refJect the integrity of a
council official."
"He verbally. mentally and
nearly physically abused me,··
Stack declared.
Stack said that he questions if
a man of Thomas ' demeanor
should be representing the coun-
cil.
Cadet Bob Blackburn also de·
nied C~llrjtes tb•l Mayoi-Pro
Tempore Richard Siebert made
last week that cadets were rude
Mile Square
Development
Protested
A group of Fountain Valley res-
idents say they plan td pr<Jtest
proposals to develop the 87-acrc
northwest section of Mile Square
Park at a public hearing on the
plons tonight.
The 7:30 p.m. hearing will be
held in the Fountain Valley City
Council Chambers, 1<>200 Slater
Ave.
Bob Sklar. a spokesman for
Citizens For Mile Square Park
said his group wants to see the
undeveloped area used as open
park space with passive recrea-
national facilities.
But VTN Consohdated Inc. and
Johnny Mann Sports World are
two firms that have suggested ac-
tive recreational uses for the
area.
The VTN proposal calls for
bicycle motocro ss and
skateboard cour ses. an am-
phitheater and swimming lake
al a $3.2 million cost to the coun-
ty. The regional park is operat.ed
by the Orange County Depar.-
ment of Harbors, Beaches and
Parks.
The Johnny Mann plan sug-
gests a 35..year lease to use the
area as a soccer softball con·
cession at no county cost .
The Fountain Valley Planning
Commission last Wednesday un-
animously endorsed opinions by
Plal)ning Dirttl-Or Clint Sherrod
lha( criticiffd the VTN and
Johnny Mann plans.
PI anning Com miss loner
Barbara Brown said the com-
m lss ion's stand c losely re-
se mbl es th e nearby
nomeowners' opinions on why
both park proposals are unac·
ceptable.
Planning CO,!TlmiSSioners have
called for an environmental im·
pact report on any use of the
park land, a parking analysis
and a clty recommendation
against tbe skateboard and
motocross courses and swim-
ming lake.
"We are against public land
betng imed for private gain,"
said Sklar who adcledthat400res·
ldents and three homeowner
groups are up in arms about the
proposals.
Resident M,Yma Prince, who
llves near I.be park a.rea at the
com er 6t Edlnaer Avenue and
Brook.hunt Str.et, said minx of
her nel1tlbort tear exceaalve
noise and oerttna problems, and
propeftY devaluation lf the plans
are okl)'ed.
.. -
and insolent.
"I was not belligerent in any
way," Blackburn said.
Siebert said that he was refer-
ring ·t o a cadet other than
Blackburn and Stack "who rude-
ly told me what I could do with
my car and myself."
Siebert said cadets owed it t.o
taxpayers to show dignity while
on duty.
Thomas said that he was not
allowed to park in the employees
lot adjacent to Main Street
despite being a councilman.
"It is another case or dis-
respect that police show to a city
councilman.·· he said.
The parking lot controversy
fl ared last Tuesday and Wednes-
day during school graduation ex-
ercises held al Huntington
Beach High &hool.
About 20 people were given
tickets that were later recalled
Tuesday nlgbt. Bqt Wednesday
night, police barricaded the
parking lot to the public. setting
orr the confrontation.
Police say the s paces are
needed for employees who work
diHering shiC.Ls. Thomas and
Siebert argued that the lots
s hould be open to the public for
evening and weekend events.
Mean while . a n umber o f
citizens trooped to the podium
Monday night to give their views
on the apparent growing con-
troversy involving police.
Comments included:
-Doug Jobson: The owner of
the Pier Pizza Palace on Main
Street. Jobson alleged that he
had once been "railroaded out or
town." He claimed that he has
witnessed incidents or police
brutality. He said communica-
tions between the police and
community must be Improved.
-Susie Newman : She ob-
s erved that police work is
violent in nature but that police
are doing a good job. She m-
d ic a ted that complaints are
made by those who need to be
"hauled in" frequently.
-Jailer Howard Subnlck: lie
denied recent c laims by at-
torney Tom Whaling that an in -
mate was beaten in Huntington
Beach. jail. He said that blood
observed on the prisoner was
from a victim that he had at-
tacked.
-Pat Downey: He said that
visitors to the' downtown area
cause the trouble and that he
likes to have police protection
neMby. . .
-Sergio Martinez: He
claimed he witnessed an officer
running tra!ric signals and tried
in vain to contact Chier Earle
Robitaille about it. "If you do
that, you don 't s how respect for
the law." he said.
'
quarters. '
Judge Lloyd E. Blanpied Jr
set July 10 as the date he will
hear testimony. The ·district is
seeking a permanent injunction
against the teachers.
The restraining order against
the teachers issued earlier bv
Judge Harmon G. Scoville wiil
remain in effect until that day.
he ruled.
. Dis trict trustees took legal ac-
tion afler teachers slept in dis-
trict offices to protest plans for
the laying off of 96 teachers next
fall.
Dr. Robert E. Read. associate
district superintendent, said the
injunction was sought because
ttfe teacher sleep-in "was im· redinf district functions and' he acili t y was being
damaged."
.San Diego's
Beach Rapes
On Increase
SAN DIEGO IAPl -Rape is
increasing along San Diego
beaches. police say
A rapist is-being sought for a
s tring of s even attacks on
women in Pacific Beach since
1977.
Early Sunday, a· man
weighing 220 pounds and stand-
ing six feet, three inches tall was
tackled by two men who said he
had attacked a neighbor of
theirs while she slept. He was
booked for investigation of in-
tent to commit rape.
Early the day before, a
woman jogging on the beach
was grabbed and dragged over
the sea wall and into the ocean
where she was raped while at
least three people watched,
police said. None of the trio re-
ported the crime.
Edison High Sets
Report Card Date
Graduates and continuing stu-
dents at Huntington Beach's
Edison High School can pick up
their report cards beginning
Wednesday.
Spokesmen at the Charger
campus said today final grade
results may be obtained in the
front office of the school at 21400
Magnolia St .. during regular
daily business hours.
Gohettes Seen
I;.
Navy Plans Women on Ships
SAN DJEGO <AP> -The Navy plans to put its
first women s ailors on seagoing warships ln Sep·
tem ber. anticipating congressional approval soon.
the San Diego Union said today.
About 20 to 30 percent or the crews stationed on
90 ships will be women, the newspaper said.
The Navy. it said, is "abom. to issue a directive
askinc women to volunteer for sea duty.·• A meeting
or Pacific and Atlantic ship commanders is
scheduled in WashlnglOn, D.C., to discuss the subject
next week.
None or the ships, primarily lar1e tenders and
service stafpS wtth·easlly converted living quarters.
was ldenUlled.
. '
--.. -..,._..
..
fternoo11
~.Y. Scocks
TUESDAY, JUNE 20, 1978 TEN CENTS
OMly Pi,.. Stalt ~
HUNTINGTON BURN VICTIM TESTS HIS MUSCLE
Gary Weaver Visited By Men Who Saved Him
.Firemen Pals
HB Burn J/ictim Welcomed
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Ol IM O•rtr Pilot Staff'
One week out or UC Irvine Medical Center arter plastu:
:-urg~ry on electrical burns suffered a montn ago when he
(ell into an electrical power plant. Gary Weaver o{
Huntington Beach knows firemen are your friends -
I\ whole crew led by Randy Goodman and-the
paramedjc team which worked over his seared body the
night of May 19 showed up to welcome him home this
weekend.
TUEY DROVE \JP to the Weaver home at 2LS Oswego
Ave .. ju~l around the corner from Lake Station o~ Lake
Street. where he experienced the closesl brush with death
or his young life.
This lime lhe crew didn't come with sirens walling and
horns honking.
They arrived in their snorkel truck, bnng1ng a few
things the boy will need during his convalescence a t home. including weights to lift a s part or his thera py.
HIS ARMS. HEAVILY bandaged following plastic
surgery. are a bat out of shape. ,
A waterbed was also donated by the Waterworks. 4
Garden Grove furniture outlet. when the management
heard the burned boy would heal faster with fewer scars if
he had one.
Huntington Beach Firemen's Association member<:
showed up Saturday with special bedding lo fit the
waterbed and they ha ve also arranged to help lighten the
family's financial load.
The near·tragedy which struck a month ago forced
Mrs. Shirley Weaver. a working mother. lo drop out of
college and accept social assistance
She will be needed at home to care fo1· Gary, who was
climbing a ladder at the Southern California Edison
Company power transfer station at Lake Street and
Lincoln Avenue May 19 when he fell.
GARY PLUNGED INTO the yard below. brushing a
66,000i>Jolt power line that only arced but didn't ground.
which would have electrocuted hjm. .
Fireman Miles Haskin. aboard the snorkel truck.
promised the Weaver boy that when he's well , they'll give
him a safer look at the world below from aloft.
Another fireman who raced to Gary's aid that Friday
nig ht a month ago theorizes he has learned a lesson about
playing around electricity or other potentially lethal powe r
sources
"He was in a world of hurt." Fireman Tom Poe said.
"He was screaming ..
Teachers Protest
Prop. 13 Cutbacks ·
By KATIIV CLANCY
Of ... O.llr l'li.t SC.II
Schools should not open next
fall if Proposition 13 forces cuts
in the classrooms. spokesmen
for 30 Orange County teachers associations said Monday.
Members of local California
Teachers Association CCTA 1
Joined f e llow t e acher s
throughout California in asking
the Legislature lo restore funds
lost to schools by passage of the
J a rvis-Gann initiative.
IC the legislature falls. CTA of-
ficials will recommend eUher
that schools not open at all In
September or that they operate
ot full service until existing
funds run out.
Arlene Pave y of Garden
Grove. one or the teachers·
spokesman, said no decision has
been made as yet as to whether
a teachers strike would be called
nexl fall .
But what CTA hopes to do. she
said. I" put pres!(ure on the LeglRlature to provide full fund·
lng for public t.'<fucatll>n so that
clanroom teachtnR programs
won't beJ~rdlzed. R He) Stover, a state CT A
board member. said. "we
believe It was not the Intent ol
the voters or California to im
pair education for the children
of this state.
"Tea rhe rc; are bearing the
brunt ... or Propos ition 13. And
when we do that we are impair·
mg the learning in classrooms,·•
she continued.
"We feel very strongly that
was not the intent nr the voters."
Miss Pavey said so far. about
I, 100 teachers. or 7 percent or
the .county's t eaching rorce,
huve bet:n ~lv~n d i..:m isst1I
<See PROTEST. Page,\?)
College Postpone
Summer Schedule
Summer classes al Santa An~·
Co llege have been postponed m
least until June 'l7. orricials an
nounced. because or reduced
property tu.x revenues related to
PllSSH e of Proposition 13
Unless the. tat~ Legi!l:iture
decide ·to fund commuruty COi·
l~ge ummer sessions. omclals
s nld. lbey wut be canceled. Stu-
dents may keep posted on d,e.
vclopmcnts bt calling the col
lege at 835-3000
.•12 DAtl. Y Pll.OT f
WeHare
Increase
Debated
SACRAMENTO CAP> -
California lawmakers, hammer·
ing out a SS billion re$cue plan
for .local government in the
wake of Proposition 13, have
become embroUed in "a partisan ·
fi&ht over welfare. <Related
st.ori~s AO ~
Tbal battle, w..hich turns on the
key isaue Of whether weltare re·
cipients' should 1et cost-of-llvln,c
increases when other prosrams
are being cut, threatened Mon·
dar to bait protress towards ~u1ck floor votes on the le&l.sla·
lion in both bouaes. ·
Republicans also demanded
lhat police and fire services be
exempt from any cuts before
they will vote ror funds lo help
cities. counties and schools fac·
ing a $7 billion cut July 1 in
property tax revenues.
.. We support. the full funding
of police and fire. We support re·
duct ions in welfare," said AS· sembly.Repub~can floor leader
Paul Priolo of Malibu.
·'Th is is a 100 pe r cent
turnaround by the Republicans
on this committee . . . an appeal
to the basest instincts," snapped
Democratic Assembly Speaker
-Leo McCarthy of San Francisco
rn response to Priolo's demand
for welfare cuts.
The committee of six leaders
of the Senate and Assem bly
agreed quickly la s t week to
D e m ocralic Gov. Edmund
Brown Jr. 's request to us e $4
billion or the state's surplus Cor
direc·r aid to local government
and a nother $1 billion for short·
term loans.
But since then. attention has
wandered toward d isputes
"bet ween McCarthy and Priolo,
leaving another half-dozen m a·
Jnr issues unsolved.
F ront Page A J
PROTEST. •
notices
But so far s ix teachers as·
sociations have challenged these
dis missals by filing lawsuits and
CT A has petitioned the state
Supreme Court questioning the
constitutionality or Proposition
13 overall.
• Miss Pavey said the teachers
also will not accept cuts in their
pay or fringe benefits.
And she and other teacher
spok esmen criticize d county
school boards for making what
s he call ed decisions about class
size and salaries in board meet·
1n gs rather than in teacher.
dis trict negotiations.
A spokesman for the Fountain
\'alley Education A ssociation
..r1ticized his board or trustees
for making cuts in programs
white claimin~ they weren't
based on Propos ition 13.
In fact. he contended . the cuts
were related, if not specifically to 13, to hysteria of cuts brought
about by 13
The teachers suggested that H
cuts are necessary in school dis·
tncts they come about in the ad·
ministration. positions like cur·
r1 c ulum cons ult a nt , area
s uperintendent, ad~inistralive
assistants and coonhnators.
Miss Pavey said teachers also
wi II not accept class sizes of 50
t o 60 students and the CTA will
defend every teacher dismissed
in the wake of Proposition 13.
The organization has asked
local teachers to meet with their
trustees to call upon the state to
maintain current levels of fund·
mg for public education
ln add1t1on. they hope school
boards will ask state officials to
waive a requirement that the
school vear last a full 175 days.
Wit.h that waiver. the
spokesman said, school districts
would be able to maintain quali·
ty education until curre'l~ funds
run out.
And in the m eantime the
Legislature could work out a
way to make up the lost proper-
ly tax.revenue.
ORANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
•
. ,
S&MN, BUT WHY?
Murder Victim Young
Aid Asked
~ In Irvine
I
Murder
By PIULIPROSMARIN
Of tM o.1tY P't'-' S&aff Irvine police det ectives,
without clue or motive to the
murder of a Los Angeles County
man whose castrated body was
round on an Irvine street June u . today asked the public to
help {ind his kUler.
Police distributed photographs
of Roland Gerald Young, 23, or
Maywood, to newspapers and
television stations on Monday.
They hope that someone who
they feel must have seen Young
in the last seven hours of his life,
will recognjze him, call police
and help them discover where
he s pent the time.
P olice have traced his move-
ments up to his release from
Orange County Jail Saturday
night. where he bad been held on
a charge or public drunkenness.
From that time, until a n o((.
duty fireman discovered his
still-warm body lying face down
near the middle or Irvine Center
Drive, near Deerwood, what
Young did is a mystery.
He had been stabbed rour
tim es through the heart. He had
been mutilated.
Investigator D. H . "Mac''
McNeely said that from marks
on the street, it was know(l the
body bad been pus hed from a
car moving west at about 35 to
45 miles per hour.
McNeely said that when
Young was released from jail,
the man had been wea ring a
beige wide-collared vee:]leck
pullover s h irt, 1>esides tbe
trousers and shoes in which his
body still was clothed when
found.
Bolsa Chica
Study Eyed
By Chamber
A financial study concerning
the future of Bolsa Chica will be
presented June 27 at a luncheon
hosted by the Huntington Beach
ChamberofCommerce.
The program will compare the
financial impact to the city of a
marina-like development si milar
to Huntington Harbour versus the
preservation of the area as a
wildlife preserve.
Reservations at $6 m ay be
made through the Huntington
Beach Chamber or Commerce.
18582 Beach Blvd .. Suite 224.
The luncheon will be at the l lun·
tmgton Beach Inn.
Hiring
Excludes
Coast
ExecuUves ot Hughes Aircraft
Company, who a nnounced a
massive hiring program for
mo s t or thelr Southern
California divisions, s aid the job
expanaion.s will not affect their
plants in Newport Beach and
Irvine.
The Newport Beach-based
microelect ronics d Iv is io n
currently employs about 1,500 in
the main pla nt near Hoag
M e morial Hospital and a
satellite faclUty in the Irvine
Industrial Complex.
T he Irvine-based connecting
devices division has about 4SO
employees.
Company s pokes man Bill
Herman said Tuesday that any
job lncrease$"'in eilb&r of lho&e
divisions will be ''modest."
Meanwhile, the company has
plans to hire about 3,500 people
by year's end al the other
Southern California divisions,
including the firm 's plant in
FuJlerton.
The Ground Systems Group
housed in Fullerton will be
taking on 600 new employees.
about half of whom will be
engineers a nd the remainder
technicians and office workers.
a company spokes m an there explained.
Jn addition to this year's
hiring effort, Hughes Aircraft
Company executives said the
company's expansion will mean
t he hiring of 10,000 additional
workers to add to the work force
of 50,000 a t eight Southern
California planes over the next
five years.
RB Trustees
ToRevi~
Contracts
The Huntington Beach City
<elementary) School District will
hold a public hearing on contract
proposals with the district's
classified employees tonight.
The meeting will be he ld at 7
o'clock at Peterson School , 20661
Farns worth Lane.
Trustees offered the 320 non·
teaching employees a 30 percent
across-th e -board sal a r y
decrease last week because or
cutbacks associated with the
passage of Proposition 13.
The district also called for
keeping fringe benefits at the
current level.
Superintendent S.A Moffett
said the board's proposal was
made to meet the legal deadline
for the submission of a balanced
budget.
Moffett said that the board's
proposal will be adJusted when
the Legislature determines what
funds will be available for local
dis tricts.
Classified employees include
janitors. bus drivers, food and
clerical workers.
Ambassador Fired
CA IRO. E gy pt <AP)
Egypt's ambassador to Portugal
has been fired and ordered home
after publicly accusing Presi·
dent Anwar Sadat of destroying
dem ocracy in Egypt, letting the
a rmed forces run d own and
pursuing a peace policy that has
made Israel ·•more intransigent
than ever ...
'Doomsday' Budget
Studied by OCTD
Di r ector s of the Orange
County Transit District COCTD>
took a look Mond ay al a
so-called doomsday budget that
would c ut of( the district's
relia nce on property taxes and
increase bus fares 100 percent.
But look was all the directors
did as they decided to wait until
July before making decisions
th al cou l d reduce OCTD
spending and service by as much
as 30 percent.
T h e doom s day budget
proposal came as transit district
General Manager Jim Reichert
reported OCTD's bus ridership
reached an all time high in May.
Reichert's report showed 1.8
million passengers climbed
aboard OCTD buses last month,
an Increase of 27 percent over
the s an<e month a year ago.
OCTD's general manager
cre4ited a clftdown of ser vice on
non -productive bus routes
couple<\ with improved service
on beavtly used routes with the
patronage increase.
However, It was the doomlda.y
budget rather than added
patro'ha1e that drew the lion's
s hare ot attention u \be
dlnctors' meeUng.
In a budaet propoaed before Ca~lfornla't voters gave tbolr
o•erwhetmtna 1upport to
PropoalUon 13, tho property Lax
reform lnltlative, Reichert
s uggested overall 1978·79 OCTD
spending of $SIU mllllon.
The doomsday version of the
revised budget would reduce
overall transit dis trict spending
to $39.5 million.
Gone From doomsday would be
the entire $3.6 millio n in
property t ax r e venue OCTD
expected to receive before
Proposition became a reality.
Also gone from doomsday
would be $1.5 million OCTD
could be expected to receive In
property tax revenue in the post
Proposition 13 era.
Should directors eventually
decide to continue to rely on that
$1.5 mlllion in propert y tax
revenue, it is Ukely bus fares in
the cqming fiscal y.ear would be
hiked 40 percent. ·
But should they decide lo
forsake property tax dollars in
their entirety, the doomsday
budget calls for the 100 percent
increase In OC'I'D rares.
Such a fare hike would mean
the bask 2S·cent bus fare would
jump to 50 cents. And
commuters who now pay 50
cents a day round trip to work,
for example. would pay Sl a day.
Wlth or without the doomsday
projec tion , OCTD will
concentrate efforts In the
com ln1 flsc.I year on reducin;
int'fttcient routes as well as
service exp&n1ion plant ln favor
or known 16rvice needa that tend
to seek additional paasen1ers for
already ho11vlly traveled bu1
routes
ROCKWELL'S WHIMSY -''The Checker
Gam e ... an oil painting by America's
Norman Rockwell, will be featured at the
13rd annual Pageant of the Masters this
s ummer in Laguna Beach. Portraying
s ubjects in the whims ical painting are
<from left) Charles Sannes. Tustin : Susan
Wolf Garden Grove. Cha rles Gilbert,
SanLa Ana and Bruce Cubbison. Laguna
Beach.
Suspect Held
In Huntington
Robbery Try
A Canoga Park man Hunt·
ing ton Beach police suspect
wasn't going to blow his nose in-
to the bandana tied over it when
he stalked into a fast food ouUet
late Monday night, was in jail
today.
The suspect. who identified
h im self as James Edward
Gaylord Corry, 25, was arrested
and booked for investigation of
attempted armed robbery and
wearing a disguise in the a lleged
comm1ss1on or a felony crime.
Detective Sgt. Luis Ochoa said
Corry was captured at a Jack-in·
the-Box restaurant at Pacific
Coast Highway and Lake Street
about 11 :45 p.m. by two
patrolmen.
They were in the parking lot
arresting another man on suspi·
cion of beiftg drunk , in public
when Corry assertedly walked
into the takeout cafe in sus-
picious fashion.
They noticed him before he
noticed them, Sergeant Ochoa
said today. and w~n he did see
offi cers Bob Jefrrey and Ron
Burgess, it was too late.
Yankmg off the bandana and
discarding a knife allegedly car·
ried in his hand a roused their
suspicions. the patrolmen said.
Corry was held in jail today in
lieu of $25,000 baU on the two
char ges filed when he was booked .
Mayor's
KinOut
SAN DIEGO <APl -
The 29-year·old stepson or
Mayor Pete Wilson has
been fired from the facul-
tv of Torrey Pines High
School because of cut ·
backs from Proposition 13
"M avbe it's time for me
to start a new career ...
said Jon Robertson.
After three years as an
E n g lis h teacher . h e
needed only one more day
in front or a classroom this
fall to establish tenure.
PROHl81TEO av LAW
• ,
·-·-···· ....... -
Masters Pageant
Readies LiVe Art
By STEVE MITCHELL Of Ille Oahy Ptlol Slilll
Little Diane Baker sat on a
bench by herself In the crowded
dressing room backstage. or the
Irvine Bowl on the Festival of
Arts grounds.
Her face and ha nds wer e
painted gold and she wore arr
Egyptian headdress mad~ ... or
rubber.
· 'l low does all that paint tee I on
your face?" askect one of 300'
reporte rs invited to a press
preview or the 43rd annual
Pageant of the Masters.
"Gross," she said. wrinkling
her golden nose. ··Really gross.··
Diane. a Laguna Beach fourth
grad er, appe~rs with Mike
Fagan. also 9, of Mis~ion VieJo
in a king-size replica of a
buckle. found in the tomb or
King Tutankha mun. The two
youngsters will be posed a:.
living recreations or the famou!>
bauble on ce worn by the
Egyptian king.
Reporters aod photographers.
s ome from as far away as Las
Vega s and Thousand Oah.
toured backstage at the Laguna
Beach festival grounds for four
hours Monday night, talking to
makeup c rews. mode ls. and
pageant officials. .
The 43rd Pageant promises to
ta kc it ·s e xpecte d 300,00fT
viewers this year through many
parts of the world. with art
representations from a ncient
Scythia to recen\ oils by Norman
Rockwell.
Six of the 27 "living pictures"
were exhibitM for the press
Monday.
More than 450 volunteers and
stare members will take part in
the annual Pageant of t he
Masters. with 160 models on
stage every night during the
six-week run.
It's Tom Smith's first year as
a model, and the San Juan
Capis trano plumber doesn 't
mind saying his wife talked him
into it.
The craggy.faced Oe tr.01t
expatriate will portray an ~ging
Indian, mounted on a pamted
horse in this year's pageant. He
joins three other models in R.
.~
• r \
Bro wnc ll Mc Grew 's "T he
Dinner." an oil painting of an
Indian family in the desert.
The lndLans call Mclirew "the
man who paints the old." and
the o rigina l painting is on.
ex.h1b1t at the Laguna Museum-
of Arl dunng fesuval time. It is
o wned by South Lagunan
Mickev McArthur.
Other WQrks or art that will bt
featured this year include a
prize .winning s culpture ,
"Fan t a s y or Wings," by
Lag unarr Robert Krantz , a
marble sculpture from The
Acropoli s in Athe ns, and ~
representation of the Trev1
Fountain from Rome.
Thl• Festival of Arts and
Pageant of the Masters runs this
vear from J uly 11 through Aug. 2; in COnjunct10.n with the
Sawdus t Fes tival and the
Art·a-f'ajr.
No Violation
Ruled for
HBTrusfees
An inquiry into charges thal
tru!>tees in the Huntington Beach
City telementary 1 Schonl Distract
, 1olated .1 !>late anu-sccrecy law
.has been dropped.
Deputy District J\ttoro~y ~ob
Barton said that an examination
of school records failed lo show
:uw violation
The allegations were taken to
the district attorney'i; office by
parent Steve Sc humacher
Schumacher contended that the
board did not report that Dwver
SC'hool Principal Frances Ben
n 1e was i?J vcn a noti ce in
February that !>he may not be re
hired.
Dr. Bennie. who has been en·
brorled in a controversy with
som e members of the Dwyer
staff. has s ubsequently been
transferred to LeBard School
where she will be principal next
. ..
.
l
•
Irvine
VOL. 71, NO. 171, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
Today'H Closing
~.Y. Stoeks
TUESDAY, JUNE 20, 1978 TEN CENTS
_Arniy Quarantines Pair for Virus
WASHINGTON <APl -The
Army is holding two civilian re·
searchers in total isolation on a
military post following their
accidental exposure to deadly
lassa fever virus in a laboratory
accident, it was learned today.
Two weeks ago, a vial or con·
laminated blood accidentally
splashed on one or the two
employees at the Center for Dis·
ease Control in AUanta. and both
men were exposed to the virus.
However. they have shown no
signs of contracting the dread
disease.
Officials at the center said the
researchers were flown to the
extraordinary isolation unit at
l''ort Detrick, Md., ''strictly as
a precautionary measure." Tlle.re Wits believed to be only
a &Tight chance that the re-
searchers would come down
with lassa fever ond still less
chance that they would infect
others, tbe officials said.
But the officials said they took
the drastic isolation measures
because there is neither a known
immunization against the con-
tagious disease nor a cure for it.
Lassa fever was discovered in
Africa less than 10 years ago
and has struck in epidemic pro-
portions since then in Sierre
Leone.
Early studies Indicated that it
killed up to half its victimt., but
scientists at the disease control
C"enter who are s tudying the
fever believe the early reports
were exaggerated.
The viruS is carried by a rat
round commonly in Sierre Leone
but not in the United States, and
scientisls are ~tempttng to de·
Lermlne how the virus s preads
from the rat to humans and
lrom humans to humans.
The identities of the two rnen
were withheld by the center. A
s pokeswoman, Betty Hooper .
said t hat to name them would
constitute "a clearly unwarrant·
ed invasion of their personal
privacy" and on exposure or
medical case rustories normally
protected.
Details of the incident. and the
decision to place the men an
isolation. were pieced together
by The Associated Press from
telephone interviews with the re·
searchers them selves . their
supervisor at the center. Dr.
John Bryan. and the center's
safety director. Dr. John H.
Richardson.
The accident happened on
June 5. while t.he researchers
<See VIRUS, Page A2>
Nazis ..
Rebuffed Bias Law Eyed
lroine Weighs HomingControls
CHICAGO CAP) -A federal
Judge handed AmUican Nazis u
setback today in their attempt to
march in a Chicago park, bring.
ing the radical group one step
closer t-0 carrying out its plan to
demonstrate in the heavily
Jewish suburb of Skokie.
But U.S. District Court Judge
George Leighton said he would
hear another Nazi petition on the
matter, possibly later in the day.
Leighton turned down two mo·
lions aimed at eliminating in-
surance requirement for groups
that hold demonstrations in
Chicago.
The judge ruled in July that
the origin<tl $350,000 require-
ment was too high. The district
reduced the requirement to
S60,000, but the Nazib ind1catt>d
1hey weren't willing to post any
bond
Park On,t r1 ct attorney
Ri c hard Troy said he did not see
how the legal issues could be set
tied before Sunday. the day the
National Socialist Party of
America has a parade permit to
dem onstrate in Skokie. home of
thousands or Jewish survivors of
Hitler's death camps.
Nazi leader Frank Collin, who
arrived in court about 10
minutes after the proceedings
began, has said repeatedly that
he will call off the Skokie dem·
on s tration only if his tiny
~roup is allowed to demons trate
July 9 in Marquette Park, about
::+ mile from Nazi headquarters
on Chicago's Southwest Side
The issue before Leighton was
whet h e r t o eliminate the
Chicago Park District's require-
ment of a $60,000 insurance bond
as a condition for gatherings of
75 or more people.
The Nazis say the $60.000
figure -reduced Crom a $350,000
bond invalidated earlier by
Leighton -is excessive and
deprives them Of their ConstitU·
tional rights to speech and as·
sembly.
Jewish groups have said they
will s t age co unt er ·
demonstralions if the Nazis
march in Skokie, whose popula·
lion or 69,000 is about 40 percent
J ewish. The militant J e wish
Oefense League has vowed to
use violence to block the march.
Fettered Friends
Two green iguana lizards, their front reel tied over their
backs with cord, are s hown in a Nicaraguan market
where they are sold for food . The International Fund for
Animal Welfare has appealed to the Nicaraguan govern-
mt>nt to ban the commercial hunting of the!)e reptiles
'DQomsday' Budget
' ~tudied by OCTD
Di r ectors of the Orange
County Transit District fOCTD>
took a look Monda y a t a
so-called doomsday budget that
would c ul off the dis trict's
reliance on property taxes and
inc rease bus fares 100 percent.
But look was all the directors
did as they decided to wait until
July before making decisions
that could r e duce OCTD
spending and service by as much
as 30 percent.
The doom s da y budget
proposal came as transit dislnct
General Manager Jim Reichert
reported OCTD's bus ridership
reachedanalltime highin May.
Reichert's report showed 1.8
million passengers c limbed
aboard OCTD buses last month.
an increase of 27 ~rcent over
the same month a year ago.
OCTD's general manager
credited a cutdown of ser vice on
non · productive bus routes
coupled with improved service
on heavily used routes with the
patronage increase.
However , It was the doomsday
budget rather than added
patronage that drew the lion's
s hare o r attention at the
directors' meeting.
In a budget proposed before
California's voters ~ave their
ove rwhe lming s upport to
Proposition 13, the property tax
reform Initiative, Reichert
suggested overaH 1978-79 OCTD
spending or $58.9 million.
The doomsday version of the
revised budget would reduce
overall transit district spending
to $39.S million.
Gone from doomsday would be
the entir e S3 .6 millio n 1n
property lax revenue OCTD
expected to r~eive before
Proposition 13 bf-came a rectli ty
Also gone I rom doomsday
would be $1.5 million OCTD
could be expected to receive an
property tax revenue in the post
Proposition 13 era.
Should directors eventually
decide to continue to rely on that
SI .5 million in property lax
revenue. it is likely bus fares in
the coming fiscal year would be
hiked 40 percent.
But should they decide to
forsake property tax dollars tn
their entirety. the doomsday
budget calls for the 100 percent
increase in OCTD fares.
Such a fare hike would mean
the basic 25-cent bus fare would
jump t o 50 ce n ts . And
commuters who now pay 50
cents a day round trip to work.
for example. would pay $1 a
dav.
Budget hearings, aqd a pr'l>-
posed ordinance to prevent hous-
ing discrimination on the basis
of family status, will occupy the
Irvine City Council starting al
7 30 tonight at city hall.
The hous ing ordinance was
proposed last week by Coun·
cilman Larry Agran in the wake
of protests from family renters
in the Park West Apartments of
an Irvine Company plan to re·
locate them to rent their apart·
men ts to adults only.
That s pecific dis pute ap-
parently was resolved when the
Aid Asked
For Clues
In Murder
By PIULIP ROSMARIN
Of IM D•llY Piiot Si.fl
t rvine police d e tectives.
without clue or motive to lhe
murder of a Los Angeles County
man whose castrated body was
found on an Irvine street June
11. today asked the public to
help find his killer.
Police dis tributed photographs
of Roland Gerald Young, 23. of
Maywood. to newspape rs and
television stations on Monday.
They hope that someone who
they feel must have seen Young
1n the last seven hours or his lire.
will recognize him. call police
a nd help them discover where
he sp ent the time.
Police have traced hjs move-
ments up to his release from
Orange County Jail Saturday
night, where he had been held on
a charge of public drunkenness.
From that time, until an off-
d uty fireman discover ed his
s till-warm body lying face down
near the middle of Irvine Center
Drive, near Deerwood, what
Young did is a mystery.
He had been stabbed four
times through the heart. He had
been mutilated.
Investiga tor D. II. "Mac''
McNeely said that from marks
on the street. it was known the
body had been pushed from a
car moving west at about 35 to
45 miles per hour.
Rape Trial Delayed
Mc Neely sa id that when
Young was released from jail,
the man had been wearing a
beige wide-collared vee-neck
pullove r s hirt. besides lhe
trousers and shoes in which his
body still was clothed when
found. Suspect May Get Psychiatric Treatmem Young. an unskilled laborer,
was a ready drinke r with a his·
tory of confinement for drunken-
ness. McNeely said. and had a
habit of removing his s hirt while
drinking because he persp1re4
heavily.
A nine-day delay was ordered
tod ay in the Orange County
Superior Court arraignment of a
man accused of raping and
savagely beating a 13-year-old
El Toro girl.
Judge R Warren Knight or-
dered the arraignment of War-
ren Dale Clewell, 28, held over
until June 29 when he learned
that attorney Terry Giles is now
hand ling Clewell's defense.
Giles has replaced lhe public de·
fender.
Both Giles and Deputy District
Attorney Paul Meyer agreed to·
day that prolonged psychiatric
treatment for Clewell is of much
Irvine Water
Bonds Get OK
Some 38 property owners of
47.000 undeveloped acres wilhin th~ Irvine Ranch Water District
voted almost unanimously Mon·
day to outhotize the district to
Issue $995 million in bond!i tor
water and sewer projects.
The county Real,trar of
Voters reporte-d dissenting votes
In 9nly lwo of the 14 new s ub·
districts involved.
The lrvlrie Company, which
cast Its millions of votes ln favor
of tht bond lasue, owns nearly
tall the land In the dlstrlcc.s.
),
greater Importance to them than
the outcome or the criminal trial
which will be scheduled June 29.
And both lawyers agreed that
the filing of a guilty plea would
reduce the chances ol ensuring
that closely supervised mental
treatment will be available for
Clewell.
The defendant has on two oc-
casions attempted to plead guil-
ty to the charges.
"Ile needs intensive therapy
for a number of years in a con-
fined , closely guarded sllua-
tion." Giles said. ''We know he
needs this and he knows he
needs it."
Clewell is charged with seven
felony counts or kidnapping.
rape and attempted murder. He
is held in custody with bdlJ set at
$250,000.
It is alleged that he abducltd
the 13-year-old victim last May
lJ as she walked to her El Toro
home rrom nearby Serrano In·
termediate School.
Police said Clewell drove her
to a remote location In trvlne
where she was raped, beaten
over the head with a heavy
wrench and left (or dead l.n a
dirt ro:id.
Transcripts or the closed pre·
llmlnary hearing ln Saddleback
Community Hospital where \he
girl wa • patient· las\ June 1
reflect her a~temenl that ''he
told me he could kllJ me in five
seconds if I tried to get away."
Clewell , a s hort order cook.
was on parole at the time or the
offense. He was r eceiving
psyc hiatr ic treatment at
Atascadero State Hospital in
connection with his conviction
on rape and burglary charges in
Los Angeles County Superior
Court.
Giles commented today that
Clewell bas been re leased from
protective custody on several oc-
<See DELAY. Page 2)
The detective said a coroner's
autopsy showed that Young, who
had only 45 cents upon his re·
lea se from jail, and no
transportation. had an unknown
amount of alcohol afterward,
possibly at a bar or a private.
party.
<See VICTIM, Page AZ)
~
Gobettes Seen
Navy Pl.a~ Wo~n on Ships
SAN DI~GO <AP) -The Navy plans to put Its
first women sailors on seagoing warships Jn Sep-
tember, anticipi.ning congressional approval soon,
the San Diego Union sa id today.
About 20 to 30 percent of the crews stationed on
90 s hips,..will be women, the news paper said.
The Nuvy, it said, is ''about to tssue a directive
asking women to volunteer for sea duty." A meeting
o f Pacific and AtlanUc ship com,,,anders is
scheduled in Washington. D.C., to dl$cuss the sut)Je<:t
next week.
None of the ships, primarily large tenders and
service shlp5 with easily converted living quarters.
was ide11tificd.
('
. . . . -. . . --
Irvine COmpany. last Wednes-
day, call ed off the forced moves
and said the apartments would
be converted only as families
moved for their own reasons .
The ordinance. if approved.
would prevent a la ndlord from
taking such actions by eviction.
as the lrvinc Company original·
ly intended to do. • .
At budget hearings. coun-
cilmen will try to cope with an
expected $1.2 million loss or prop·
erty tax revenues because of
the passage of Proposition 13.
the Jarvis Initiative.
SLAIN, BUT WHY?
Murder Victim Young
Mesa Freeway
Pl,an Reneiood
IJy Mangers
By MICHAEL PASKEVICH
OI Ille Daily l'llet St.tfl
Fading plans for extension of
the Costa Mesa Freeway are
alive again today fo llowing a
reprieve granted the route by
Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr.
Saying he was "disgusted"
with State Trans portation
Director Adriana Gianturco's
plans to eliminate the route.
Assemblyman Dennis Mangers,
D-Huntington Beach. announced
Monday that he bypassed Ms.
Gianturco and confronted the
governor.
The Initial step towards
ca ncelin g the downto wn
extension or Route 55 was to be
taken up al a meeting Thursday
of the State Transportation
Commission in Los Angeles.
The assemblyman said the
reprieve from the governor is
for JO days , but Mangers added
that he will seek further delays
until an Environmental Impact
Report is completed ror lhe
Route SS corridor.
"We're convinced that a good
EIR will demonstrate what local
traffic engineers have been
saying a ll along -there's no
a lternative but to extend the
freeway," Mam~ers declared.
He said he will push for a
"commillment or funds" for the
EIR by Aug. l and continued
progress on the state's offer of
funds for "operational
improve ments " o n th e
congested freeway. The freeway
now ends at Bristol Street and
forms a bottleneck through
downtown Costa Mesa.
82,100 in Rings
Taken in Heist
A one-karat diamond ring and
14-ka.rat white gold weddinJl
band vaJued 8l $2,100 was stolen
from l~ Irvine home of San San
Won1. the 29-year-old housewife
repor~ Monday.
Mrs. Wong, w'ho lives In the
Woodbr1dg~ area, told police the
rinas were stolen over the
weekend.
City Ma n ager William
Woollctt Jr. has prepared o
budget to replace the pre-Jarvis
$12.7 million city spending plan
Woollett's new document sug
gests possible budget reductions
and urges council m e n to
withhold action until the Jarvi!>
measure is tested in the courts.
or until the state Legislature
takes some action It totals $11 5
million.
Mayor Bill Vardouhs plans to
s ubmit his own budget proposal.
which he says is balanced and
<See JRVINE, Page 2)
Newport's
Fireworks
Ban Pushed
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Ol U. Dally f'le.t SU.fl
1lungs are going to be dif ·
ferent in Newport Beach this
Fourth of July. the city's police
say.
Police, who ha\le been trying a
low-key approach to controlling
the crowds that swarm into their
city over the holiday. are going
to try something new this year.
Capt. Kelson McDaniel. com-
mander of the police patrol
divis ion, said his men will be is
suing citations to everyone they
find setting off fireworks.
"Newport Beach 1s one of
three cities i!JI the county that
prohibits the use of fireworks,"
he said. "This year we plan to
enforce that ordinance."
The city's fireworks ordinance
has been on the books for
several years, but has been
widely ignored by residents and-
visilors.
Jn addition Lo s trict enforce-
ment of the fireworks prohjb1-
t ion . Mc Danie l sa id large
parties are going to be dealt
with in a slightly different way
this year.
In a plan that has already
gone into effect. the host of a
loud party that is disturbing the
peace of his neighbors will be
arrested.
"It seems to be working out
rather well." he commented.
Newport Beach's law enforce-
ment problems in the past years
have peaked at the Indepen-
dence Day holiday when near.
riot conditions have prevailed in
Central and West Newport.
This year, McDaniel said the
department is going to field ll
force that consists of every
available man -including de-
tectives and administrative or.
fi rers-backed up by firemen
and lifeguards
Coast
~
Weather
Som e hi~h cloudiness
with patrhy low clouds
along the ce>ast early morn-
ing hours, but mostly l>Un·
oy. Lows tonight 60 to 64.
llighs Wednesday about 75
at beaches to84 to88 inland.
l•llex
Virgil Partch, better known
os VIP and the <'reruor of 81g
George cartoon~. is a seem·
ingly bottomless well oJ gags
and humor. F'or a look at Ch4!
Lagu11a &!och rfB&dent, :iet
Peacurin,o. Poge Cl.
..
Cl
= A4 At .. •••• •• a
\
-
•
A2 DAIL y "ILOf T~r June20. 11>7& •
~· idf'iles
},.. .. , .. Oemente Sued Hiring
Excludes
•
'
Over Housing Coast
ExecutJves or Hughes Alt:craft
Company. who announced a
maulve hiring program for
most or their Sout h ern
California divisions, said the job
expansions will not affect their pla~ts In Newport BeRch and Irvine.
By TOM BARLt:V
Of 1'-0.tll~ .. u .. SI.ell
Legal aad or~aniial.Jons wtuch
claim to reprl•St•nt minorities ~nd the financially deprived
s ued the rlty of San Clemente
Mon day and accused the
mun1c1palily of f.uling lo meet
the n('eds or IOW·lnrome resi·
dents
The Orange County Superior
Court action is almost identical
to 3 lawsuit filed las t week in
which the county was named as
defendant.
Meaded by thP Legal Aid
Society of Orange County. the
plaintiffs ask the court io order
the City Council of San Clemente
and the c1t:.i planning com-
mission to approve no further !>Ubdiv1s1on~ until the city adopts
··housing and land use elements as part or 11sgencral plan ··
FromPageAJ
VICTIM ••.
McNeely said Young often in
grat1ated him se lf with
s trangers, and may have
hitched a ride or simply walked
into a party.
His body was found about 12 miles from the county jail.
A further distinguishing mark
was a t.altoo on his right forearm
which depicted u cal with a raised tail.
McNeely urged anyone who
remembers seeing s uch a tattoo.
or recognizes the photograph of
Young. to contact him, at
754-3739
' We have taJked to virtually
every pe~on this man knew.··
McNeelv said .. Friends. rel-
a t 1 v e s: <'nemies. Nobody
des cribes him as the All
American bo~, but nobody haled
him
'"Wt' need to trace his mO\I C·
ments. We're fast running out or
Pl'OPk lo talk Lo ..
Frum PagP :1 J
IRVINE ...
inC'ludcs a $1.5 million reserve
A number of possibilities for
rt1i s 1ng new revenues arc
scheduled for discussion.
They include business parking
space fees, park and recreation
uset fees and proposed taxes on
new development
Also mcluded is an unusual fee
that would tax employees for
working for the city
As outlined, an employee
would be taxed at a certain
percentage or his annual salary
James llarrington. director of
adm1nistrat1ve services. said a o 2 percent tax would raise
S824,000 and take a bite. on an
a \" e rage an nu a I s a I a r y of
Sl l.780. ofS2J
A one percent employee tax
would raise $4 1 million and cost
an average-salaried employee
St 17 a year in lest wages, he
said.
Assistant City Manager Paul
Bradv :,u1d he will recommend
that no new taxes. other than the
new development fees already
discussed before Proposition 13.
be imposed
SPY SATELLITE
SCRAPS SEEN
OTTAWA fAP> -More frag.
ments Crom the Soviet s py
satellite that fell from s pace in
January have been found in Lhe
Northwest Territories, a ~pokesman for the Atomic
Energy Control Board says.
Spokesman Hugh Spence said
Monday prospectors have found
s mall particles of the nucJear-
powered satellite while looking
for uranium along the north
:.hore of Lake Athabasca, about
390 mile& northwest of Prince i\lbert
OAANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
'""'° Oritne)I COl\I O.Uy POCM ~'" -.Nt .. "c °""" "'-""'~"" "'"tt• ''""'"''"""'IWlhoO--(o,ht ~t~•f'qCoft\o4'f'j• ~at.-ip•cMM)t"t'\.t'•
oubt•\MO Moftd•• '"'°"~ F•""• IOf (O'\,. ~ ... --s. ........ ,,._ S.-.oc• ,,,.,....
,. "' V•ll•V lt••ftf' ~·eo•to.c.~ V•lltov •ftO ~ll'«"'~h(M\I ~~~t•lt• ~"<~~~~.~·:::t' ... ~ ~;. ~== ..-~ Colt• Mt\.e (Aljf'of'ft••.,.,. "-"-p,.._'°'"" •net P\IOhV..
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'
Houi.ing elemenl8 art"
deHribed in the lawsuit as
'"blueprints for addressing pres·
l.!nt and future housing needs ...
The action alleges that San
Clemente is not observing a 1969
amendment to the stale plan·
ning law which requires that
general plans should include
housing elements.
The city is accused o( "avoid·
ing the law for nine years and
standing by while its land has
been developed exclusively ror
industry and luxury housing ...
The lawsuit is the fourth
Superior Court action filed on
behalf of l ow income and
minority groups in the last two
months. --m earliel"' lawsuits. the Irvine
Ranch and Santiago County
water districts were sued wHh
the allegation that multi-million
dollar water proJecls were
planned without consideration
for the housing n e eds of
minoritjes and low income resi-
dents.
The actions call for the setting
aside of those projects until the
districts have satisfied the court
that housing construction
sparked by the water improve-
ments will make such pro-
visions.
Na med as co-plaintiffs wllh
the Orange County Legal Aid
Society are Orange County re!li
dents Lionel Bernard. John W
and Janice Shernaman, Lo~
Angeles County residents
Dorothy M. McAleavey, Sharion
Garrison and Betty Sue Webb.
Also, thc.t Legal Aid Founda-
tions of Los Angeles and Long
Beach and the Western Center
on Law a11d Poverty Inc·.
Feiree lumper
Pickup truck driven by Darrell Van Buren
Thorne. 21, of Orange, went up and over
Santa Ana Freeway fence. south of
Redhill Avenue near Irvine Monday after·
noon. when Thorne apparently fell asleep
at the wheel. Thorne, who highway
patr(}lmen said was uninjured, reportedly
lold them he had returned late Crom
weekend trip to Colorado River, and was
on the go again after only four hours· rest.
African Coal.s Revi,sed
WASHINGTON CAP> -The
Carter Administration has de-
cided to work with the Marxist
government of Angola "in more
normal ways," Secretary of
State Cyrus R. Vance said lo· day.
In a speech to a Jaycees con-
vention in Allantic City, N.J •
Vance said the adm inistration
has two goals: Reconcile the dis-
pute between Angola and
western-leaning Zaire: and
achieve a peaceful settlement in
South West Africa, or Namibia,
which 1s under South Africa's
control
the Untied States backed two
factions that eventually lost out
to the Marxist group now m
power. One of the losing fac-
tions, Unita. is still waging
guerilla warfare against the cen
tral government.
The Newport Beach-based
microelectronics d I vision currenUy employs about. 1,500 in
the main plant near Hoag
Memorial Hospital and a
satellite racility in the Irvine Industrial Complex.
The Irvine-based connecting
devices division has about 450 employees.
Compa ny spokesman Bill
Herman said Tuesday that any
job increases in either of those
divisions will be "modest."
Meanwhile. the company has
plans to hlte about' 3.500 people
by year's end at the other
Southern California divisions.
including the firmls plant in
Fullerton.
The Ground Systems Group
housed in Fullerton will be
taking on 600 new employees,
about half or whom will be
engineers and the remainder
technicians and offi ce workers.
a company spokesman there explained.
In addition to this year's
hiring ~ffort, Hughes Aircraft
Company executives said the
company's expansion will mean
tne hifin& of 10,000 additional
workers to add to the work force
of 50,000 at eigh t Southern
California plants over the next
five years.
Dead Man's Link
To Marines Eyed
Angola has served as the stag-
ing ground for incursions by
Katangan rebels into Zaire's
Shaba Province. It also supports
guerrilla forces striking against
Namibia.
A government official. back· ~rounding Vance's speech for
re porters in Washington. said
the administration does not plan
to establish diplomatic relations
with Angola.
According lo U.S. estimates.
some 20.000 Cuban troops re-
main in Angola, where they
helped President Agostinho Neto
take power.
Th e official who brief r<'·
porters in Washington said there
would have to be a reduction in
these troops before diplomatic
relations could be considered.
The idea of estabUshing lies is
··way premature now," he said.
Ckmente Man
PkadA Guilty
In Drug Rap
LOS ANGELES CAP> -A San
Clemente man has pleaded guil·
ty to a felony cocaine importing
charge stemming Crom what
authorities described as thl·
largest cocaine seizure in Los
Angeles history. Orange County S heriff 's
investigators still h ave not
identified the nude body of a
man in bis early 20s found on
Moulton Parkway in Laguna
Hills early Monday but they now
believe he was a serviceman.
possibly a Marine.
Investigator Bernie Esposito
said today t h a t gen eral
appearance, including closely crop~ hair. has led the search
for identity to El Toro, Santa
Ana and Camp Pendletor
Marine Corps facilities.
Esposito also !>aid cause of the
Pair Robbed
In Irvine Area
Two men hitchhiking to Tijuana
were threatened with a
knife and robbed by t hree
other men of $360, then released
al separate Santa Ana Freewa,>
interchanges in Irvine Monday,
police reported.
Enrique M. Robles, 54, of
Delano. and.George 0 . Gonzales.
39, of Lamont, said they accepted
a ride from a trio or Mexican men
at the Greyhound bus station in
Los Angeles.
After the robbery, Robles was
released al the Sand Canyon
Avenue offramp, and Gonzales
was let go at Jeffrey Road. The
victims were unharmed. police
said.
DELAY ...
casions despite his own convic-
tion that he is mentally ill and
needs the kind of therapy that
would prevent recurrences of
the Irvine attack.
H e was released from
Atascadero last March 13 after
more than four years of in-
carceration and over his objec-
tions, Giles said.
Fullerton Crash
man's death also remains <i
mystery pending toxicological
reports. An autopsy was
performed Monday afternoon.
he said.
The body was discovered by
motorists at 5: 15 a .m . Monday
in a remote section of Laguna
Hills a half-mile north of La Paz
Road. Investigators said the
body apparently had been
dumped from a moving car.
bouncing several times before
coming to rest on the road's
s houlder.
Investigators said Monday
they believe the victim was
murdered but had no immediate proof.
The body is thac. of a white
male, six feet. one inch tall and
weighing 160 pounds. The man
had short sandv brown hair. a
light mustache and a red-devi.l
tattoo on his left forearm.
FroftlPageAI
VIRUS ...
were transferring rodent blood
samples from a freezer to part
of the lab where tests could be
done on them. The blood
samples w£.r"p collecte d in
Africa.
Both men were working in a
laboratory designed for max-
j mum sec urity. But they
evidently failed to use a glass-
fronted container which disease
center officials said was
.!>pecifically designed to protec1
researchers against exposure
during accidents.
The researchers were wearing
the required ~loves, but also had
1.>n their usual :;trect clothes in·
stead of the scrub suits normally
required for suc h work ,
Richardson said.
One of the two researchers
said he picked up a sample tube
by its plastic cap; the tube stuck
to its frozen rack, and the cap
cam e off. splashing a bit of
partially thawed rat blood on his
c:lothes and chin.
Plane in Forced
Landing; 3 Injured
Three people were injureo
Monday evening when the
e n gines of tt private plane
conked out and the plane crash
landed in a parking lot near FulJerton Airport.
Police reported the twin
<>ngine Cessna Skyhawk "ap
peared lo be a toLal loss" but
that two or th~ five persons
a board the lll·fated plane
walked aw"Y uninjured
Most soriously hurt in the
crash landing in an lnduslrial
complex park1ng lol at 501
Airpark Drive was the plane's
pilo\.. Stan Pyron. 46, of 1900
Cumino Loma. 1-'ullerton.
Police said Pyron 's leg wa:.
broken.
A rassenger. Helen Alvarei,
29, o 134 S. Orange St.. Brea •
suffered a broken ankle, police
said.
Another passenger, Marcia
Culdwell, 22. of Pico Rivera. was cut and bruised as the plane
bounced Into the park'lng lot.
But neither Don C1tqxmt~r. 39.
of Ji'ullerton. nor Marians
Estrada. 30. of Anaheim. were
injured In the cresl'l·landma, po11ce reported.
They aid a few seconds
'f
•
llowevcr. the official. who
b<irred use of his name, said
there have been a number or ex·
changes between Washington
und Luanda. the Angolan
capital. These include a recent
meeting in New York between
Vance and the Angolan foreign
minister and a visit to Luanda
by Donald Easum. the U.S. am-
bassador to Nigeria.
In the 1975 Angolan civil war.
San Diego's
Beach Rapes
On lncrea,se
SAN DIEGO fAP) -Rape 1s
increasing along San Diego
beaches, police say.
A -rapist is being sought for a
s tring of seve_n a ttacks. on
women in Pacific Beach since
1977.
Early S ur.da y. a man
weighing 220 p<>unds and stand-
ing six feel. three inches tall was
tackled. by two m~n who said he
had attacked a neighbor of
theirs while she slept. He was
booked for investigation of in·
lent lo commit rape.
Early the day before. a
woman joggrng on the beach
was grabbed and dragged over
the sea wall and into the ocean
where she was raped while at
least three people watched.
police said. None of the trio re-
oorted the crime.
In his speech. Vance said
Angola and Zaire would have to
respect their common border
and not interfere in each other·!.
internal affairs "if we are to
avoid more Shaba incidents m
the future."
Without e laboration. Vance
called on Zaire to permn
"broader participation" in the
co untry's political ltfe .
Otherwise, he s aid. "it will be
difficult to achieve r eal
stability.··
Tbe United Slates, France.
Belgium a.pd other Western al·
lies provide m tlitary . a_nd
economic support to Zairian
President Mobutu Sese Seko in his campaign to stay in power
and to retain the mineral-rich
Shaba Province.
The overall theme of Vance's
speech w,as that the United
States respects the indepen-
dehce of tne African countries,
their economic development and
the rising blaek aspiralions in
Namibia and South Africa.
"We can be neither r ight nor
effective if we treat Africa simp-
lv as an arena for East-West competition ..• he said.
Doctors Barred?
\V ASHJNGTON c AP l The
Department of Health, Educa-
tion and Welfare today proposed
a regulation that would bar doc-
tors and other health officials
from dominating the boards or
Blue Cross and other organiza-
tions that benefit from govern
ment heaJth care payments .
·------
Superior Court Judge Robert
S. Stevens set a July 14 sentenc-
ing date Monday for Larry
Thorson, 33. who remained in custody.
Thorson was arrested Dec. 19
as he stepped off a plane from
)1iami. where he had flown the previous day.
Deputy District Attorney John
Watson said authorities found 23
pounds of 88 percent pure co-
caine · with a street value of
almost $6 million -in Thorson'-;
suitcase.
Watson s aid the cocaine ap-
parently originated in Columbia.
South America. and that
Thorson was believed to be a
courier in an international co-
caine-smuggling ring.
Until Thorson's arrest, Watson
said, the local <'Ocaine seizure
record was set Dec. 9 when
airport authorities found 23
pounds of the drug on Daniel Clif·
ford. 21. of Boston. Clifford was
sentenced last month to four
years in s tate prison here after
admitting to smuggling the co-
caine. which had an estimated
street value of f4·2 million. ,
Although Thorson and Chfford
were carrying equal amounts of
the drug. Watson said Thorson's
cocaine was worth more
because it was of higher purity.
ff I ktD'f crrm~ ~~,:0
...... ~ ...
SAVE $loo ON THE PURCHASE Of 1 a.tl.' OR MOAE
COUPON VOID WHCR'
PROHIDI TEO ev LAW
l.IMIT OHE. COUPON PER fAMIL V Plf.ASf
WESTCU,, Pl..A.li ',.. rr-.. ..._.....-.1Mt11 ___ .,,.,_._ .. ""'
OF THESE GREAT AMERICAN CHEDDARS...
BIG BARN APPLE PIE
NEW YORK WHfTE MIDGET SHARP
NEW YORK COLORED SMOKY BAR
I I •
' .,.
1
I
I
' I
17
l
•
Lagon1:t/South Coast
VOL. 71, NO. 171 , 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
. .
TUESDAY, JUNE 20, 1978
i\fternoon
N.Y.. Stoc k s
TEN CENTS
Press Gets Peek at 43rd LB Pageant
By STEVE MITCHELL
OI lttot O•lt• ~tlM Staff
Little Diane Baker sat on a
bench by herself in the crowded
dn•ssing room ,backstage of the
Irvine Bowl on the Festival of
Arts grounds.
H er face and hands were
painted gold and she wore an
Egypuan headdress made of
rubber. ·•How does all that paint feel on
your face?" asked one or 300
reporte rs invited to a press
preview of the 43rd annual
Pageant of the Masters .
"Gross," she said , wrinkling
her golden nose. "~eally gross."
Diane, a Laguna Seach fourth
grader, appears with Mike
Fagan. also 9, of Mission Viejo
in a king-site replica or a
buckle, round in the lotnb C1f
King Tutankhamun. The two
youngsters will be posed as
living recreations of the famo~
bauble once worn by the
Egyptian king.
Reporters and photographer5,
some from as far away as Las
VegaS" and Thous and Oaks.
toured backstage at the Laguna
Beach festival grounds for four
hours Monday night. talking to
makeup cr ews. m odels and
pageant officials .
The 43rd Pageant promises to
take it's e xpected 300.000
viewers this year through many
parts of the world. with art
reoresentations from ancient Scythia to recent oils by Norman
Rockwell.
Six of the 27 "living pictures ..
were exhibited for the press
Monday.
More than 450 volunteers and
s taff members will take part In
the annual Pageant of the
Masters. with 160 mode ls on
stage every night during the
SIX·Week run.
It's Tom Sm 1th 's first year as
<See PAGEANT. Page A2l
Teachers' Pay
Cuts Approved
By ANNE COOPER
Ol IM D..ilf ~llOI Sl.tll
Dall, f>llot Pllel.e _, l"alrl<k 0'0-11
ROCKWELL'S WHIMSY "The Checker
c;amc." an Oii painting by America's
~orman Hockwell, wilt be featured at the ~:3rd annual Pageant of the Masters this
..,um m1·r 111 Laguna Beach. Portraying
subJ~cts in the whimsical painting are
<fro m left ) Charle~ Sannes. Tustin: Susan
Wolf. Garden Grove : Charles Gilbert.
Santa Ana and Bruct: Cubuison. Laguna
Be<1C'h
A resolution allowing teacher
salary cuts of up to 20 percent
was approved 6·0 Monday by
Capistrano Unified School Dis-
trict trus tees.
A similar salary cut provision
affecting school administration
and s upervisory personnel was
also approved Monday.
Army Isolates Pair
Trustees said they took the ac-
tion to give themselves more op·
tions in brin~ing the 1978-79
budget into line with reduced
Spread of Deadly Fever Vi ms Feared Ma yor's
KinOut WA SllJNGTON !/\Pl The
Army b holding two civilian re·
searchers in total isolation on a milltar~ post following their
accidental exposure to deadly
l assa fever virus in a laboratory
al'cident. it was learned today.
Two weeks ago, a vial or con-
t am mated blood accidentally
:-.p l ashed on one of the two
~mployees at the Center for Dis·
~ase Control in Atl&nta, and both
men were exposed to the virus.
Jlowl'\'er, they have shown no
Fire Razes
«JO Acres
POR T RERO lt\P )
Aul honl1l's horH.' for conta1n-
mt•n1 toctav of <1 brush fire tht1l
S"°t'IJl U('rOSS lh(' border from
!\l<'Xt<'o and burned over 600
<1rn•-; of land on the U S side
;ind at INt'it 3.500 in Mexico
The t 1 re was !.t 111 out nf control
und s prl'arl1nj!. in :\1exico. a
C<il1fn1nia fl cpartmcnt of
Fon.•-;try spokesman said s hort-
ly after midnight
For a tame . the blaze
thrl•al<'m·d Hbout 500 structurt·s
in the -;mall C'Ommu nat ies of
Dogpatrh and Canyon City but
"inds gusting lo 20 mph carried
the fl amc•s awa.\
Baby Whale Saved
ORLANDO, Fla !AP) -
M arinc biologists are fighting to
save the life or a four-fool baby
pilot whale that beached Itself
near Vero Reach after its in·
Jured mothc·r flou. dcrcd ashore
and dil'd.
. '
Co ast
Weathe r
Some high c loudiness
with patc hy low clouds
a Ion~ th<' coast early morn-
tn~ hours. but mostly sun-
hy Lo"" tonight 60 to 6-1.
lllghs \.Vednl'sday about 75
:11 bl'a<•hes to84 toss inland.
Index
Virgil Partch, better known
as VJP and the crealor of Big
Ceorgt> cartoon.,, 13 o 3eem-
ingly bottomleH well of gag&
and humor. For a look at the
Loguna ~h realdent. iee
F'caturing, Page Cl
INSIDE T ODA l" .. CJ .. M ,..
"' aJ tl4 aJ •• .. ,.. ••
signs of contracting the dread
disease.
Officials at the cent.er said the
researchers were flown to the
extraordinary isolation unit at
Fort Dietrick. Md .. "strictly as
a_precautionary measure."
There was believed lb be only
a slight chance that the re·
searchers would come down
with lassa fever and still less
chance that they would infect
others. the officials said.
But the officials said they took
the drastic isolation measures
because there is neither a known
immunization against the con·
tagious disease nor a cure for it.
Lassa fever was discovered in
Africa less than 10 years ago
and has struck in epidemic pro-
portions since then in Sierre
Leone.
Early studies indicated that it
killed up to half its victims. but
scienlists at the disease control
center who arc studying the
fever believe the early reports
were exaggerated.
The virus is carried by a rat
found commonly in Sierre LC()ne
but not 1n the United States, and
scientist<; ar<.' attempting to de-
l<.'rm ine how the virus spreads
from the rat to humans and
from humans to humans.
SAN DIEGO <A P l -
The 29-year-old stepson or
Ma yor Pete Wilson has
i>een fired from th.e racul·
ty of Torrey Pines High
School because of cut-
bac:ks from Proposition 13.
"Maybe it's time for me
lo start a new career ...
said J on Robertson
After three vcars as an
En g li s h teacher . he
nl'eded only one more day
in front of a classroom this
fall to establis h tenure.
Heated Session Due?
Laguna Budget Probed
Laguna Beach councilmen will
tackle the city's S8 3 m1lhon pre·
lttninary budget tonight in a
session expected to draw heat
from downtown merchants
The appearance of local busi·
ness men is expected as a result
of approval by the council last
week of a series of ordinances
and resolutions that would m-
crease business li cense fees,
hotel and motel bed taxes. con·
struction taxes and other rev-
enue-raising programs to help
the city out with expected Jarvis
losses.
A second reading of those or-
dinances 1s due prior lo the
council's consideration of the
prel1 m1nary budget
Some taxpayers last week told
the council they don't want new
fees and increases. and that the
c ity panel was ignor ing the man-
dates of the Jarvis·Gann
landslide.
Mayor ,Jack McDowell said
late last week that many items
have been cut from toni ght's
agenda in order for the council
to devote more time to the pre-
liminary budget document.
A proposed animal control or-
dinance authored by Coun-
cilman Kelly Boyd will be put on
a back burner. the mayor said.
I n other action expected
tonight beginning at 6 the coun-
cil will consider a temporary
parking lot in Sycamore Hills for
summer festival parking.
A r e po rt on negotiations
between the city and Irvine will
be presented rc~arding con·
tinued use of Laguna's animal
shelter by that city.
San Clemente S&L
Robbed of $1,300
And the council will consider a
request to annex the Hortense
Mill er Garden to the city. That
2.5 acre parcel atop Boat Can·
yon would go to the city pro·
vidcd it is used as a garden and
not developed.
League Challenged A man with an automatic
weap.on held up a teller Monday
at the San Clemente office of the
San Diego Federal Savings and
Loan Association and escaped
with about $1.300.
San Clemente police detective
chief Pete Goodwin said the man
told the teller, "Give me all the
cash now. Hurry."
Waving his gun, the man
gestured to others an the omce to
congregate in one area, while he
fled on foot. southbound through
an alley behind the bank.
The movements of the curly
haired blond robber. who wore
glasses, were captured by a
security camera, said Goodwin.
The mm is being studied by
the Federal Bureau of Investlga·
lion.
The San Diego Savings ofCice
is located al 16:50 N. El Camino
Real.
Witnesses told r><>Uce the rob
ber was about five feet. eight In-
ches tall and wore his hair short
He waa carryina A canvas
knapsack, they said
No vehicle wu beard or seen
by wlt.nes.scs or Monday's San
Clemente robbery, but San
Clemente p0Uce reported that
the suspect matched a descnp-
tion of a man wanted for ques -
t 1 on i ng in connection with a
Costa Mesa robbery. The sus-
pect in that robbery drove a
hght;eolored Volkswagen sedan.
police said.
RENO 1APl The League to
Save Lake Tahoe was accused
Monday of working in coopera·
tion with California to block ex-
pansion of hotel casino complex-
es at Stateline, Nev
r
'"/'
Gobettes Seen
Navy Plam Women on Ships
SAN DIEGO CAPl -The Navy plans to put its
first women sailors on seagoing warships in Sep-
tember, anticipating congressional appto\'al soon.
the San Diego Union said today.
About 20 to 30 percent of the crews statione<j on
90 ships will be women. the new$paper said.
The Navy. it said, is ''about to Issue a directive
ask me women to vl>lunteer for sea duty." A meeting
of Pacific a nd Atlantic s hip commanders ls
scheduled in Washington. D.C • to discuss the subject
next week.
None of the s hips. primarily large tenders and
scrvioe hips with easily converted Uvlng quarters .
was identified.
' i
district revenues, expected to be
as much as $15.3 million short.
due to passage of Proposition 13
Stephanie Seach, president of
the Capistrano Unmed Educa
lion Association repr esenting
teachers. told the school board
the association will immediately
file a complaint with the Public
Employee Relations Board in
Sacramento, charging the di!>·
trict with unfair labor practices
in connection with Monday's ap-
proval of the teacher pay cut
provision.
* * * WeHare
Increase
Debated
SACRAMENTO tAP >
California lawmakers. hammer·
ing out a SS billion rescue plan
for local government in the
wake of Propos ition 13. have
become embroiled in a partisan
fight over welfare. t Related
stories A4 J
That battle. which turns on the
key issue of whether welfare re·
cipients should get cost-of·livlng
increases when other programs
are being cut. threatened Mon ·
day to halt progress towards
quick floor votes on the legisla-
tion in both houses.
Republicans also demanded
that police and fire services be
exempt from any cuts before
they will vote for funds to help
cities. counties and schools fac -
ing a $7 billion cut July l in
property tax revenues.
"We support the full funding
of police and fire. We support re-
ductions in welfare." said As-
sembly Republican floor leader
Paul Priolo of Malibu.
''This is a 100 pe r ce nt
turnaround by the Republicans
on this committee ... an appeal
to the basest instincts." snapped
Democratic Assembly Speaker
Leo McCarthy of San Francisco
an response to Priolo's demand
for welfare cuts.
The committee of six leaders
of the Senate and Assembly
agreed quickly las t week to
De mocratic Gov . Edmund
Brown Jr. 's request to use $4
billion of the state's surplus for
direct aid to local government
and another $1 billion for short -
term loans.
But since then, atte.-..ion has
wandered toward dis putes <See J ARVIS, Page AZ>
Laguna Home
Ransacked;
Loss ~,500
A Laguna Beach man re -
turned to his home Monday af.
ternoon and found more than
$3,500 in belongings missing
rrom the ransacked house.
John D. Owens. 75, told police
someone used a screwdriver to
open a sliding glass door at hJs
home al 1565 Tahiti Ave.
between 9:30 a .m . and 2 p.m.
Monday.
The burglars rlOed desks a.nd
cabinets, l aking cameras,
Jewelry, a fox s toic, cash and is
pairs or cu.mink~ .
A neighbor observed a young
man leaving lhe home during
lhe dayllahl hours Monday. He
Is described as six reet tall. with
a medlum build, Iona ll&bt
brown kinky hair and in h.ls ear·
l)' twenUes.
Earlier Monday. officials of
the California Teachers Associa·
lion. official bargaining agenl
for teachers in Orange County's
29 school dis tricts . warned
trustees not to force teachers to
accept pay cuts or layoffs in the
wake of Proposition 13.
The CTA representatives sa1d
they will campajgn to keep
schools from reopening in the
fall. If the st ate Legislature has
not allocated funds to local dis-
tracts to make up Propos ition 13
(See TEACHERS, Page A2)
ltfanlaaling
Comedienne Martha Ray<:'
will be grand mars hal of
San Clemente's 25th annual
Fies t a l a C hra s tianHa
parade .July 22. :\1iss Raye
will be in town to star in
"Everybody Loves Opal .. at
Sebastian ·s Wes t Dinner
Playhouse
Tropic Stonn
Spawns High,
Chilly Surf
South Coast lifeguards know
the s urf is up because they could
hear it this morning.
But heavy fog. which en-
veloped the coastal cities shortly
after 8 a.m. cut visibility to less
than 100 feet in Laguna Beach
and San Clemente.
"We've got some sets up to six
feet high," said Bruce Baird,
Laguna Be,ac h 's director of
Marine Safely.
He said the surf was running
between three and four feel with
excellent shape. "I can't tell )OU
how many surfers a re out there
because it's too foggy ." he
laughed.
The s urf began pic king up
Monday afternoon as a result of
tropical storms Bud and Carlot·
ta , located o ff the Baja
coastline.
The storm activity has done
nothing t.o help the ocean tern.
perature, which has dipped to a
bone·chllHng 56 degr ees in
Laguna.
"Jl dropped two degrees since
yesterday t Monday),'' Balrd
said. Sea temperatures las t
week were In lhe mid to high
&Os, but dropped rapldly over the
weekend.
San Clemente LiCeguard U.
Lynn Hughes said the surr has
been picking up In his city. too.
He said surfus were out in front
or the munlc1pat pier, ertjoyt113
waves up to ll)X feel hlgb.
Hu1hell said the surr has do~bled In Sltt from Monda)'.
'
\ 01\ILYPILOT T~ .Juo.10 1871
Derision D la11ed
Directors Eye
Transit Budget
Directors or the Orange
County Transit District <OCTD >
t ook a look Monday at a
so-called doomsday budaet that
would cut oft the district's
reliance on property taxes and
!ncrease bus fores 100 percent.
But look was all the directors
d id as they decided to wait Wllil
J uly before making decisionb
that could redu ce OCTD
spendlna and service by as much
as 30 percent
The doomsday budget
proposarcame as transit district
General Manager Jim Reichert
reported OCTD's bus ridership
reached an all time high in May.
Relchert's report showed 1.8
million paas~n1ers climbed
aboard OCTD buses last month.
an increase or 27 percent over
the same month a year a go.
Proposition 13 became a reality.
Also •one lrom doomsda_y
would be $1.5 million OCTD
could be eicpected to receive ln
property tax revenue In the post
Proposition 13 era.
Should director» eventually
decide to continue to rely on that
$1.5 million in property tax
revenue. it is likoly bus rares in
the coming fiscal year would be
hiked 40 percent.
But should they decide to
forsake property tax dollars ln
their entirety, the doomsday
budaet calls for the 100 percent
increase in OCTD tares.
....., ...... ,..... .., ~.ertc• O'o-tl OCTD's general manager
credited a cutdown of service on
non · product1 ve bus routes
coupled with improved service
on heavily used routes with the
patronage increase.
Such a fare hike-would mean
the basic 25-cent bus fare would
Jump to SO ce n ts. And
commuters who now pay SO
rents a day round I.rip to work.
for example. would pay $1 a
da\>.
SIX MODl!LS PORTRAY MARBLE fllOURl!8 IN THI! ACROPOLIS FROM ATHENS
Hillside Display Wiii Be FHtured In 43rd Annual P1geant of the M••••r•
However. ll was tne doomsday
budget Tether than adde d
patronage that drew the lion's
s hare of attention ' at th e
dir ectors' meeting.
l n a budget proposed before
California 's voters gave their
overwhelming s upport to
Proposition L3, the property tax
reform initiative. Reichert
suggested overall 1978-79 OCTD
S?end1ng of SSS 9 m1ll1on
The doomsday version or the
revised budget would reduce
overall transit district spending
to S39 5 m1lhon.
Gone from doomsday would be
the entire $3 .6 million in
property tax revenue OCTD
ex peeled to receive before
Kids to Ride
OCTDBuses
ToSclwol?
A recommendation that both
Saddleback Valley Unified and
Capistrano Unified School Dis-
tricts consider utilJi ing Orange
County Transit District COCTD>
buses in moving children lo and
from school was advanced Mon·
day night.
Saddleback Area Coordinating
Council's ISACC> executive
board unanimously approved
the recommendation following a
report by SACC president Biil
Tell mah.
Tellman said a Co unty
Counsel's deputy had told him it
might be possible for the school
districts to name OCTD as their
transporting agency and that
~uch pro~rams are being con-
ducted elsewhere In the stale.
Monday's recomme ndation
fo llowed earlier hints by Sad-
dleback Unified ofrlcials that
busing may be c urtalled as a re·
!>Ult of cuts In property tax fund-
mg resulting_ from ~pproval of
Proposition 13 on June 6.
An OCTD spokesman said this
morning there are two m ajor
problems with the SACC pro-
po~al : federal regulations pro·
hibit designinE: a federally
funded transit system to serve
schools and arter Proposition 13
approval the transit district is
having its own problems operat·
1ng with n.-'duced funds.
"'The way federal regulations
arc written. we would have to
give back every dollar of federal
transportation money we have
received if we tried to help the
:.chools, ··he said
The spokesman noted tha t very
few OCTD buses now serve Sad
dleback Valley residential areas
so that adjusting school hours lo
existing bus scheduled -as
Anaheim has done would be im-
possible.
OCTD h as rep I aced two
neighborhood bus routes with a
new Oial·A·Ride system which
began operations Monday. The
new system couldn't handle the
school chlldren, he said.
ORANG! COAST L x.
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•
l'ro. rage Al
JARVIS .•.
between McCarthy and Priolo,
leaving another half-dozen ma-
jor issues unsolved.
With 10 days remaining before
Proposition 13's $7 blllion tax cut
takes effect, the committee still
has not agreed on how much to
give schools, counties and cities,
~r what conditions to attach to
the funds.
Teachers Protest
Prop. 13 Cutbacks
As the Proposition 13 battle
persisted In several arenas In-
side the Capitol Monday. county
workers .outslde picketed and
chanted, "No cuts. no layoffs."
lf local government gets the $4
billion proposed ln lhe rescue
bill, it will still race c uts averag-
lng a bout 10 percent In un-
specified areas.
But Priolo and Refubllcan
Sen. William Campbel of Ha-
cienda Heights l.iaid there would
be no Republican s upport for
~ven that plan unless there are
some cuts in welfare, which is
budgeted for 7.65 percent in·
creases for all recipients, at a
cost or $200 million annually.
The proposal tentatively in·
eludes a $1.06 billion shirt of
health and welfare costs from
counties to the slate. but Priolo
said Republicans "will not sup-
port any buyout or any health or
welfare program that does not
save taxpayers any money."
Priolo and Campbell did not
specify how much Republicans
would detnand that the grant in·
creases be cut.
The welfare dispute left In
limbo a proposal by Brown that·
school support in the relief bill
should be cut from $2.6 billion to
S2.2 billion to make more money
available ror cities and counties.
The plan would give $2.6
billlon to schools, $1. lS blllion to
counties. $1~ million to special
districts and $100 mllllon to
cities.
Meeting with police and fire
leaders, Brown supported their
plea thal police and nre services
should not be cut, but he refused
to. flatly endorse their no-layoffs
stand.
"I 'm going to do everything I
can to minimize, and hof efully
even eliminate, layoffs o these
people on the street providing
direct services,·· Brown said. '"I
have no doubt the people did not
vote to reduce police and fire
service.
··1 believe the number of
layoffs will be much lower than
people were talking about."
Brown said.
By KATllY CLANCY
Of llM o.tly Pllet Stell
Schools should not open next
fall if Proposition 13 forces cuts
m the classrooms. spokesmen
for 30 Oranf{e Countv teachers associations said Mon.day
Members of local California
Teachers Association ICTA 1
joi n e d fellow teachers
throughout California in asking
the Legislature to restore funds
lost to schools by passage or the
Jarvis-Gann Initiative.
If the legislature fails. CTA of·
flcials will recommend either
that schools not open at all in
September or that they operate
at fu ll service until existing
funds run out.
Arlene Pa ve~ o f Garden
Grove. one or the teacher!>'
s pokesman. said no decision has
bl•Cn made as yet as to whether
a teachers strike would be called
next fall .
But what CTA hopes to do, she
said , is put pressure on the
Legislatur e to provide full fund-
ing ror public education so that
classroom teachin~ programs
won 'l be jeopardized.
San Diego Zoo
Trip Slated
By San Juan
A lrain trip lo the San Diego
Zoo. sponsored by the San Juan
Capistrano Recreation Deparl-
ment. is set for Friday.
Amtrak as scheduled to lcav(•
the depot at 26701 Verdugo
Strct't at 9::30 a.m. Return i::;
planned ror 6 p.m.
A rec of S9 for rh1ldren age 2
throug h 11 and Sl7 for persons 12
and over Includes Amtrak round
trip. bus transportation to and
from the zoo. admission. tram
ride and the children·s zoo.
Children under 8 years of age
must be accompanied by an
adult, according to a city
s pokesman. Sark lunches ure
permitted al the zoo
Required pre-reg1strat1on
must be made prior to s p.m
Tuesday al the city orfaces. 32400
Pasco Adelanto
Smell Fills Bouse
Power Goof Cause
QI Rotting Meat
FRESNO CAP> -Before Merl
Clemens reached the front door
of his small home southwest of
here. he knew somethine was ter·
rlbly wrong.
Arter a three-week vacation.
the five-member family came
home to Caruthers to find their
home and all its contents
possibly ruined by the stench of
rotting meat.
A m ixul) in paperwork from a :
power bill paid Just before lhey
left resulted in gas and electrki·
ty belna turned off in the house,
cnu~lna a bout 700 pounds or
frozen meat to thaw and roL.
'"The m maJ'S OU w"re
1omothlna else,' Clemona re-
called .
T he mess led to a dis pute
between Ctomens and Pacific
Gas & Elcctrtc Co. that caused
the Caruthers man to become so
enraged, he went lo a physician
ror sedation.
Now he says the "hassle"
11eems to be Ironed out and the
utility ts cleanlna up th~ mess
PO'E hM h1r~ a dlstnroellnR
sorvlcc to clean up the house, bul
Clemens bellevl"s many or lhe
family's bclon~in~s. If not lhc
h ouse Itself , may not be
salvageabl~
The family"s two freezers and
refrigerator-freezer had to be
buried in an eight-fool deep pit
and covered with lime. ·
The utility has found the family
a plact> to live until their home is
cleaned up and a company
spokesman said they intend l-0
follow through '"until that place
is satisfactory" to Clemens.
As to why the neighbor didn't
notl~e the smell long be'°re the
family came home. a relative
s aid: "The nei1;hbor thou1:ht
their cat had died."
Niguel~er
· l..o8es 81,400
A tourlet. who lett hit billfold
on his beach blanket whllo ho
took a dip tn the oc:ean at Nlauel
Beach Park. Laguna Niauel, re·
turned and round $1,400 had bffn
stolen
Or ange County s hcrlrt's of·
flccra said Richmond, Va., dock
worker Michael K. Ralterty told
them his wallet contaJntd Sl.400,
his driver 's llceose, credit cards
and other personal dotument.9.
•
Hazel Stover, a atate CTA
board me mber. said . "we
believe It was not the Intent or
the voters of California to Im·
pair education for the children
of this state.
·'Teachers are bearing the
brunt . . . or Proposition 13. And
when we do that we are impalr·
ing the learning in classrooms."
she continued.
"We feel very strongly that
was not the intent or the voters."
Front Page A J
TEACHERS
revenue losses.
··we will not tolerate cuts in
salary ~ing recommended by
some school boards in Orange
County." said Orange County
CT A official Arlene Pavey.
Mis s Seac h ca ll e d the
Capistrano Unifi ed board action
··speculative" and "arbitrary.""
saying salary adjustments
should be a matter or contract
ne~otiation.
Capistrano Unified teachers
are currently negotiating a new
contract. They have proposed a
10 percent salary increase. Con·
tract negotiations have been sus·
pended since the end of May.
with negotiators awaiting in ·
formation on what funds the dis·
trict will have available.
Superint endent Jerome
Thornsley told the school board
Monday that his latest informa-
tion from Sacramento is that ac-
tion by both houses of the
legislature is expected by the
end of next week to restore some
share or stale funds to local
cities. counties and school dis-
tricts.
Trustee William Thompson of
Mission Viejo. who cam e in late
to Monday·s board meeting and
did not vote on the teacher pay
cut provision. said he Intends to
carry on an exacting budget
analysis ·•to assure teachers an
this distract are retained at a llv·
mg wage · "' A beginning teacher with a
bachelor"s degree currently
earns an annual salary of
S10.5S5. An experienced teacher
with long service and a master·s
degree can earn S23,045.
'
f'ro• Page A J
PAGEANT •••
a m odel, and the San Juan
Capistrano plumber doesn't
mind saying hls wife talked him
Into It. The craggy-raced Detroit
expatriate will portray an aatna
Indian. mounted on a painted
horse in t.hJs year's paaeant. He
Joins three other models In R.
JJrownell McGrew 's "The
Dinner." an oil painting or an
lndlan family In the desert.
The lndlan& call McUrew "the
man who palnts the old ... and
the original painting is on
exhibit at the Laguna Museum
or Art during festival time. IL ls
o wn ed by South Lagunan
Mickey McArthur. .
Other works of art that will be
featured this year Include a
pr 1ze-w1nning ~cu lptur e.
"Fantasy of Wings.'" by
Lagunan Robert. Krantz. a
marble sculpture from The
Ac r o polis In Athens. a nd a
representation of the Treva
Fountain from Rome.
The F est ival of Arts and
Pageant or the Masters runs this
year from July 11 through Aug.
27 In con j unction with the
Sawdus t Festival and the
Art·a·Falr.
Tickets to the pageant have
long since been sold out. but
potential pageantgoers can pick
up a limited amount or Uckets
that have been returned to the
fe s tival offices the day or
performances.
'TimeT~l'
ProgmmSet
For Library
Dana Niguel Library vis itors
will travel through a "'time tun-
nel·' ·this summer through iJ
reading program for youngsters
up to the eighth grade.
The 12-week program begins
this week at the library. located
at Niguel Road and Coast
Highway. Youngsters will travel
through lime. from dinosaurs to
Star Wars dllring the program.
Ac tivities include storytlme
hours. special events and read-
ing throughout the summer
Participation in the program
1s not based on the number of
books read. but by regular visits
to the li brary. Additional "Time
Tunnel" Information is available
by calling 496-5517.
' ••
Murder
Details
Sought
By PJUUPll08MABIN
OI t• 0611¥ ~let St.it
Irvine poli ce detectives .
wllhout clue or motive ~ the
murder or a Los An1etes County
man whose castrated body was
found on an Irvine street June
11. loday aaked the public lo
help find his killer,
Police distributed photoaraph& ot Roland Gerald Youna. 23, or
Maywood. to newspapers and
tetevlslon alaUon.a on Monday.
They hope that someone who
they reel muat have seen Younr
In lhe last seven hours of his Ute.
wlll recoenlze him. call police
a nd help them discover where
be spent the time.
Police have traced his move.
menu up lO hi• relea.e from
Oranae County Jolt Saturday
ntaht. where ho had been held on n charge of public drunkenness.
From that Ume. until an of(.
duty fireman discovered h is
atlll-warm body lying race down
near Lbe middle o! Irvine Center
Drive. near Deerwood, what
Youne did la a my1tery.
He had been stabbed four:
times through the heart. He had
been mutilated.
InvesUaator D. H ... Mac"
McNeely aald that rrom marks
on the street, at was known the
body had been pushed from a
car moving weat at about 35 to
45 miles per hour.
McNeely snid that when ·
Young was released from jail.
the man had been wearing a
belse wide-collared vee-neck
pullover s h irt. be11ides the
trousers and •hoes in which his
body still was c lothed when
found.
Young, an unskilled laborer,
was a read.Y dnnker with a his·
tory or confinement for drunken-
ness. McNeely said, and had a
habit or removing his shirt while
drinking because he perspired
heavily.
Dead Man
Marine Link
Investigated
Orange County S he riff'"
investigators still have no•
identified the nude body of a
man in his early 20s found on
Moulton Parkway in Laguna
Hills early Monday but they now
believe he was a ser viceman,
possibly a Marine.
Investigator Bernie Esposito
sa id t oday thal general
appearance. including closely
cropped hair. has led the search
for identity lo El Toro, Santa
Ana and Camp P endleton
Marine Corps facilities.
Esposito also sald cause of the
man ·s death also rem ams ,j
mystery pending toxicolog1cal
reports. An <1uto p!ll y w e;~
performed Monday afternoon,
he said
The body wa9 d iscovered by
motor ists at 5: IS a.m. Monda~
in a remote section or La&un<J
Hills a half-mile north of La Pai
Road . Investigators saui th~
body a ppa rently had been
dumped from a moving car.
bouncing several times before
coming to rest on the road"s
shoulder.
lnvest1eators said Monda:s·
they believe lhe v1 ct1m wa~
murdered but had no immediate
proof.
The body is that or a white
male, six feet. one Inch tall and
weli:hine 160 pounds. The man
had short sandy brown hair. a
light moustache and a red-dev11
tattoo on his left forearm.
' I
Ii ,
Orange Coast
EDI T I ON
Tod ny41H Closing
N.Y. Stoek
.j
I
VOL. 71, NO. 171, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIF.ORNIA TUESDAY, JUNE 20, 1978 N TEN CEN rs
Ar1ny Quarantines Pair for
W ASHJNGTON I AP> The
Army is holding two civilian re-
searchers in tota l isolation on a m ilitary post following their
a ccidental exposure to deadly
lassa fever virus in a laboratory
accident, 1l was learned Loday.
Two weeks ago, a vial of con·
laminated blood accide ntally
s plas hed on one of the two
employees at the Center for Dis·
ease Control in Atlanta , a nd both
men were exposed to the virus.
However , they have s hown no
signs of •contracting the dread
disease.
Officials at the center said the
researchers were flown to the
extraordinary isolati'>n unit at
Fort Detrick, Md .. "strictly as
a precautionary measure."
There was believed to be onl y
a s lig.ltt cbance that the re·
searchers would come down
with lassa fever and still less
chance that they would infect
others, the ofticials said.
But the orticials sajd they took
the drastic isolation meas ures
because there is neither a known
immunization against the con.
tagious disease nor a cure for it.
Lassa fever was discovered in
Africa less than 10 years ago
and has struck in epidemic pro·
portions s ince then in Sierre
Leone .
Early studies indicated t.hat it
killed up to ha lf Its victims, but
scientists at the disease control
center who a re studying the
fever believe the early reports
were exaggerated.
The virus is carried by a rat
found commonly in Sierre Leone
but not in the United States, and
scientists are attempting to de·
termine how the virus spread!
from the rat to humans and
Crom humans to humans.
The identities or the two men
were withheld by the center. A
spokeswoman, Betty Hooper.
said that to name them would
constitute ·a clearly unwarrant·
ed invasion or their pers onal
privacy" and on exposure or
medical case histories normally
protected. I>et:ails·ef.t.be incident. and the
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Keef Plan Set?
Newport Council 'Last Hurdle'
O ffi cia ls from the S tate
Department of Fish and Game
say the Newport Beach City
Council is the last hurdle they
race in approval of plans to
dump eight tons of rock a nd con·
c rete off the Newport Pier
The material, to be dumped
about 1 75 miles offshore in 75
feet o f water will create the
a rtificial fishing reef t hat was
planned by the dcpartrm!nt last
year
llowe v _•r. last year's plans
called for the sinking of a
s tripped Liberty s hip o ff
Newport.
The proJcCl was delayed by
objections from Newport Beach
city councilmen led by Don
Mcinnis. a resident of the West
Newport oceanfront area.
Mcinnis said he wanted re·
assurance from Fish and Game
officials and the U.S . Army
Corps of Engineers that the sink·
mg of the 5'Up in an onshore can·
yon would not alte r the wave
action in west Newport where
beach erosion has been a major
problem .
Once those assurances were
given. Fish and Game officials
were prepared to move ahead.
but scrapped the project when
they found out that the stripping
of one of the 400·fool ships would
cost them $125,000.
J ack Carlisle, who is in charge
of the artificial reef program in
Southern California, said today
the use of rock and scrap con·
crete is much cheaper and will
provide a better habitat for fis h.
He said the revised plans for
the reef have been approved by
the Corps of Engineers and the
coastal commission and that the
only remaining approval needed
1s from the Newport Beach City
Council. If councilmen approve
th e project , Carlisle s aid
the reef could be installed by the
end of the s ummer
Special Election? CM Freeway
NB Parks Initiative Plans Get
Qualifies for Ballot Reprieve
An initiative petition c1rculat·
ed by Dr. Gene ALbert.,on bas
e noug h valid s i gnature s to
qualify for the ballot in Newport
\each.
\ A s pokesman for the c ity
clerk's office s aid tod ay the
measure. which requires placing
of pa rks in ne w de velopments
along blufftops overlooking the
bay or ocean. a ttracted t he
s ignatur<.'s or 6.387 of the city's
41.878 registered voters
Accordinr:: lO the city clerk's
spokes man, the measure will be
discussed by city council at their
July l 0 meC'lmg
Councilmen havt• tht> option or
orde ring a n election or e nacting
the m easure themselves.
Atherto n s a id to day hi s
m ea s ure isn't a blufftop setback
ord i n a n ce s i m il a r l o the
guidelines used by the coastal
comm1ss1on. The measure would
a ffect Irvine Company develop·
m ents planned a round the Upper
Bay and developmenli. in the
Irvine Coas t 1f the city annexes
that land
.. All this does 1s require that
the parks dedica ted in new de-
ve lopments he put a long the
bluff edge It d oesn't require
more nf anythini.t ... he said
A lherLon said he believes the
measure 1s v1r1uallv l'OSt·free
because th(' land for lhe parks 1s
a lready required of developers
··These p a rks w o uld be
cheaper to m aintain because
they wouldn 't have lawns in
them , they'd just have native
ground rover ,'' he said.
O.+ly l'llet SIAff ,._.
TAKES THE INITIATIVE
Petttion Passer Atherton
Alberton also authored the
city·s existing park dedication
m eas ure whic h up ped the
acr eage from two acres per
l.000 new residents to fi ve a cres
and imposed a fee schedule for
developers with projects of less
than 50 but more than fi ve units.
The parkla nd d e dic ation
measure was enacted by the Ci·
ty Council without going to a
public vole.
By MICHAEL PASKEVICll
OI -Dally l'llet SU.II Fading plans for exten~ion of
t he Costa Mesa Freeway are
alive again today following a
reprieve granted the route by
Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr.
Saying he was "disgusted ..
wit h Stat e Tra ns po r tat ion
Director Adriana Gianturco·s
pla ns to eliminate t he route.
Assemblyman Dennis Mangers~
D·lluntington Beach. announced
Monday that he bypassed Ms
Gianturco a nd confronted the
governor.
Th e initia l s tep t o wards
c an c e ling t h e downtown
extension of Route 55 was to be
taken up at a meeting Thursday
of the Stale T r a nsportation
Commission in Los Angeles.
The assem blyman said lhc
reprieve from the governor is
for 30 days, but Mangers added
that he will seek further delays
until an Environmental Impact
Repor t 1s completed for the
Route 55 corridor.
.. We're convinced that a good
E l R will demonstrate what local
tra ffic engineers have bee n
's ;,ty1ng a ll along-there's no
alternative but to extend the
freeway,·· Mangers declared
lie said he will pus h for ~
"comm1tlment or funds" for the
EIR by Aug l and continued
progress on the state's offer of
f un d s for '"op e r a ti o n al
i mprov e m e nt s .. o n t h e
congested freeway. The freeway
now ends at Bristol Street and
forms a bottlen eck through
<See FREE\VAV, Page A2)
Recycled Skateboard
Da\·(' Grieh<?now. Hl. of Rochester, Minn .. temporarily
un seate d the t raditional vers ion o r the popular
skatc ho°'ird with his hom em ade rendition . Dave made
hi!> !-.k<1 tehoard by a ttaching three sets of whee ls to an
olcl to ilet seat
Irvine Police Seek
Reason for Slaying
By PHILIP ROS MARIN
()t ,.,. D•lly l'olot Stall
Ir vine po lice de t ecti ves.
"1thout <'lue or motive to the
m urd('r of a Los i\n~eles County
man whose castrated body was
found on an Irvine st reet June
11. today asked the public to
help find his killer.
Police distributed photographs
of Roland Gerald Youn~. 23. of
Maywood, to newspapers and
television stations on Monday.
T hey hope that someone who
they feel must have seen Young
in the las t seven hours or his li fe,
will recognize him, call pol ice
and help them discover where
he s pent the time.
Police have traced his move-
ments up to his release from
Orange County J ail Saturday
night, where he had been held on
a charge of public drunkenness.
NB Firew.orks Crackdown Set From that time, until an off-
d uty fireman discover ed his
still·warm body lying fa ce down
near t he middle of Irvine Center
Drive, near Deerwood, what
Young did is a mystery.
By J OANNE REYNOLDS
Of Ille o.llr l"lM4 SIAfl
Things are going to be d1f.
fer ent in Ne wport Beach this
Fourth of July, lhe city's police
say
P olice. who have been trying a
low.key approach lo controlling
the crowds that swarm into their
89Rescued
By NB Guards
A r omblnatlon or 65,000 beach
visitors and two tropical storms
off the coaist or Mexico kept
Newport Beach lifeguards busy
Mond ay
Gua rds said th('y pulled 89
s wimmers from the surf that
wos runnjng at two to four feet
with occasional s e t s of s ix
rooters
A s p o k es m a n for th e
llleiuards said today the in-
cons1slenl sets conUnucd to roll
in, but surfers and swimmers
w~re disroaraged from getting
Into lM waler becauu visibility
was severely hampered by toe.
I ,
•
city over the holiday, are going
to try something new this year.
CapL Kelson McDaniel, com·
mander of the police p atrol
division, said his men will be is·
s uing citations lo everyone they
find setting off fireworks.
"Newport Bea ch is one of
three cities in the county that
prohibits the use of fireworks."
he said. "This year we plan to
enforce that ordinance."
The city's fireworks ordinance
has b'een o rt tl'te books fo r
se veral years, but has been
widely ignored by res idents and
visitors.
In addition to strict enforce·
ment of the fireworks prohibi·
lion. McDaniel s aid large
pa rties are going to be dealt
with in a slightly different way
this year.
In a plan that haR already
gone into errcct. the host or a
loud party that Is disturbing lhe
pe ace of his neighbors will be
a rTested.
"It seems to be working out
rather well," he commented.
Newport Beach's law enforce·
ment problem In \he past years
have peaked al the lndepen·
dence Day holiday when near·
riot conditions have prevailed in
Central and West Newport.
This year, McDaniel said the
department is going to field a
for ce that cons ists or every
available man -mcluding de·
tectives and administrative of·
fil'ers -bucked up by firemen
and lifeguards
Mc Daniel said the lifeguards
will ride as second men in their
o;1x patrol Jeeps which will be
turned over to th(' police deparL·
CSee FOURTll, Page A2)
,.
Gobettes Seen
Navy Plans Women on Ships
SAN DIEGO <AP> -The Navy plans to put its
first wom e n sailors on seagoing warshi ps in Sep·
te mbe r, anticipa ting congressional approval soon,
the San Diego Union said today.
/\boul 20 to 30 pe rcent of the cr ews stationed on
90 sh1ps ·will bt;! wom en . the ncwspapt>r said
The Navy, It said, Is "about to issue a directive
asking women to volunteer for sea duly " A m eeting
of Pacific a nd Atlantic s hip comma nders is
scheduJed in Wa!ihington, D C .. to discuss the subject
next week.
None of the ships, primarily lorge tende rs and
c r vicc hipS with e asily converted living quarters,
was idenllfied.
He had been stabbed four
times through the heart. He had
been mutilated.
Investigator D. H. "Mac··
McNeely said that from marks
on the street, it was known the
body had been pushed from a
('ar moving west at a bout 35 to
45 miles per hour.
McNee ly said tha t whe n
Youog was released from j ail .
the man had been wear ing a
beige wide-collared vee-neck
pulJover s hirt. besides the
\rousers and shoes in whi~ his
bedy still was c lothed when
found.
Young, an unskilled laborer ,
was a ready drinker with a his·
tory of confinement for drunken·
ness, McNeely said, and had a
habit of removing his shirt while
drinking hecause he perspired
heavily.
The detective said a coroner'!t
a utopsy showed that Youn", who
hsd onJy 45 cents upon his re ·
l e a se fr o m Ja ll. ii nd no
trans POrtation, had an unknown
amount ot alcohol a fterward,
possibly at a bar or a private
party.
<See VJCl'JM, Pace AZ>
>
Virus
decision to place the men in
1solation. were pieced together
by The Associated P ress from
telephone inte rv iews with the re-
sear che rs the m s elves , their
s upe r visor a t the center, Dr.
J ohn Bryan, and the center's
s a fe ty director, Dr. John H.
Richardson
Th e accident ha ppen ed on
June s. while the resea rchers
<See VIRUS, Page i\2)
Angola
Accord .
Told
WASHINGTON <AP> · The
Carter Administration has de·
cided to work with the Marxist
gove rnmeot of Angola "in more
norma l ways." Secre ta ry of
State Cyrus R . Vance said to·
day.
In a speech to a Jaycees con-
vention m Atlantic City. N.J ..
Va nce said the administration
ha s two goals : Reconcile the w s-
p u t e b e tween Ango la a n d
we s le rn·l eaning Zai re; and
achieve a peaceful settlement in
South West Africa. or Namibia .
which is under Sout h Africa·s
control
Angola has served as the stag·
1ng ground for incursions by
Ka t a ogan rebels into Zaire's
Shaba Province. It also supports
guerrilla forces striking against
Namibia
A government offi cial, back·
~rounding Vance's speech for
re porte1)J in Washington. s aid
the administration does not plan
to establish diplomatic relations
with Angola .
Ho wever, the officia l, who
barred use of his name, said
there have been a number of ex·
cha nges between Washington
a nd Luanda, the An gola n
capital. These include a recent
m eeting In New York between
Vance and the Angola n foreign
minister and a visit to Luanda
by Donald Easum, the U.S. am·
bassador to Nigeria.
In the 1975 Angolan civil war,
the Untied States backed two
factions that eventually lost out.
to the Marxist group now in
powe r. One of the los ing fac-
t ions . Un1ta. is s till waging
guerilla warfare against the cen
tral government.
According to U.S. estimates.
som e 20,000 Cuban troops re·
main in Angola. where they
helped President Agostinho Neto
take power.
The offic ia l who brief · re-
porters in Washington said there
would have to be a reduction in
these troops before diplomatic
rela tions could be considered.
The idea of establishing Lies is
"way premature now," he said.
Thie f G e ts Door
In Newport Beach
A t hief who apparently admired
the door put on a home under
construction in Balboa stole 1t.
Newport Beach police reported
today
The $350 door was last SEen
Sunday on the home under con-
struction al 607 W. Balboa Blvd.
Police said the door is a Dutch
door with stamed glass in the up-
per half.
Coast
Weather
So m e high cloudiness
wtth patchy low clouds
along the coast early morn·
ing hours. but mostl y sun·
ny. Lows tonight 60 to 64.
Highs Wednesday about 75
at beaches to84 to88 inland.
I NSIDE TODA~
V1rg1 l Partch. better known
as VIP and the crealor of Big
George cartoon.~. 1s a seem·
mgly bottomless Wt'll of gags
and htJmor. F'or a look at the
J,aguna Beach resident. see
F'tall4ring, Page Cl.
Al Yt ur Str.llt ••m••-• 1.,M aerd
autl~• c:.tlll-•• C:IMMllM ~'" , .......... d
0.1lllN•lk " •flt"1•1 .....
••IW\al-l't•twlltt
MerlM-
lallex
l2 OAJL t f>ILO I
Hiring
Excludes
Coast
Execuhve,!) or llughe~ Airc raft
Company. who announced a
massive hiring program for
most of th e ir So u t h ern
Califorrua dJv1sions. said the jbb
t•xpans1ons will not a ffect their
pla!'ts in Newport Beach and
Irvine.
T he Newport Beach based
m 1c r oelectron1c s d 1v1sion
l·urrenUy employs about 1 500 in
the main plant near 'Hoag
Memorial Hospi t al a nd a
sate llite facility in the Irvine
Industrial Complex •
The Irvine based connecting
devices d1v1s 1on has about 450 employees
Company s pokes man Bill
Heri:nan said Tuesday that any
Job inc~es in either of U\OSe
d1v1s 1ons will be "modest ."
Meanwtule, the company has
plans to hire about 3.500 people
by year's end at lhe other
Southern California divisions
including the firm's plant in
Fullerton.
The Ground Systems Group
housed in Fullerton w11l be
t ak mg on 600 new employees.
about half uf whom will be
e n.Qrneers c.ind the remainder
&echmcians and office workers.
a <:omµanv s pokesman then~
('Xplmnt•d
1.n c.1dd1t1crn Lo this year 's
hmng erfort. Hu~hes Aircraft
Company executives said the
c·ompany's cxp3nsion will mean
the hiring or 10.000 additional
workers lo add to the work force
n f 50,000 a t eight Southern
California plan~ over the next
Cave years
Tahiti Race
Shnm Down
In Doldrums
Th e Tah1 l1 y3(•hts were
wallowing in the doldrums
between 300 and 600 miles north
of th<;• t'qualor tocfay with light to
11onex1slent wrnds und s ax .foot
~wells coming from two d1rec-
uons
Brian Carter, aboard Tuia,
::.aid the light four to fi ve-knot
:--outhwest winds have created a
beating s1tuat1on
Sorcer y 's 9 a .m . position
placed her 1,661 miles from
Tahlli. Tuia was l,860 from the
finish. Westward has 1.935 miles
to go and Celebration 2,000
miles.
Carter said la1 ge sharks had
appeared off the boat and were
snapping at everything thrown
m·erboard
The yat·hLo; experienced tor
1 Pnt1al rc.11n Monday night.
Weather expert Jim Woller of
~l'"'-port Beach said the con-
rused seas apparently were
<:aus ed from hurricane Carlotta
locat\.'d at 11 degr ees north
latrturl<' <.ind 115 degrees west
longitudt•
Newport Man
Foils Theft,
Routs Burglar
A Newport Beach man who'd
lcfl his home for 10 minutes Sun-
<la) aft€'rnoon told police he
... 1 ;,rtll·d a burglar who wal.
J bout to walk off with has
televis ion "t'l
James W. Baldwm S r , 54. or
313 Lindo Avt• ~aid the thief
dropped the &et Jnd took orf run-
ning.
Baldwin !'>aid ht> anrl his son,
Jam es Baldwm Jr .. chased the
burglar . but lost sight of him on
Edgewater Avenue.
Baldwin told offi cers he'd left
the house unlocked for 10
minutes whit<' he went to visit a
neighbor
Tialdwm !'i a1d the burglar got
:.i way with $20 that h ad been in
ha~ wallet.
ORANGEC04S'T N
DAILY PILOT
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CleHllled Advertl•lf19 142•11171
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Garage Art
A. resi~ent of Janesville. Wis., decided to
g ive his garage door a distinctive look. At
first glance. a passerby might think he
was looking a t tht· b<.1tk of un old car.
Froa Page A. I
FREEWAY. •
downtown Costa Mesa
Ms. Gianturco has publicly
said s he opposed the $82 million
fu ll freeway plan because it
would have no s ig nificant
impact on traffic congestion and
would disrupt the COJilmunity.
State transportation officials
are meeting with local officials
to discuss improvements, but
city officials unlike the state
representatives, believe the
1 m provem ents s hould be
l'Onsidered temporary until the
freeway is finished.
"l bad been pursuing this
rrom a moderate a pproach until
G ia nturco put this thing (the
ca n cella tion> on the agenda
without telling me." said.
!Vfangers. "I got disgusted."
In describing his meeting last
Thursday with the governor,
Mangers s aid "what became
very clear to m e is that Ms.
Gianturco ha d not kept the
governor informed of lhis issue.
"I told hlm it's only ind1callve
o f Orange County's
'trans porta tion problems in
general and me ntione d the
political impucalions of bis own
re-election."
Mangers s aid the reprieve
from the gover nor ca m e
Monday and th at other
l e.gisl ators angry over Ms.
G 1anturco's plans to cancel
other ~reeways played a part in
s waying the governor to
reconsider su<:h actions.
Mangers. who earlier vowed
to play "political hardball" 1f
the state continued to ignore the
need for the freeway. said he
h::td hoped to keep politi<'s out of
the matter.
llowever. he promis ed to "gel
rt•a l political'' 1r the s tate
transportation commission Lrtes
10 side-step the reprieve and
again initiate the cancellation of
the freeway route r1rst approved
tn 194-1
Mayor's
KinOut
SAN DIEGO <APl
The 29·year-old s tepson of
1\1 ayor Pete Wilson ha s
been rired from the facul-
ty of Torrey Pines HtRh
School because of cut
backs from Proposition 13.
"Maybe it's time for me
to s tart a new career,"
said J on Robertson.
After three years as an
English t eac h er, he
needed only one more day
in front or a classroom this
fall to establish tenure.
FuJlerton Crash
'Doomsday' Budget
Studied by OCTD
Directors or the Orange
County Transit District lOCTD >
took a loo k Monday al a
so-called doomsday budget that
wo.uld c ut off the district 's ~ehance on property taxes and
increase bus far es 100 percent.
. But look was all the directors
did as they decided to wait until
July before making decisions
that could r educe OCTD
spending and service by as much
as 30 percent.
·T h e doomsday budget
proposal came as transit district
General Manager Jim Reichert
reported OCTD's bus ridershlp
reachedanalltime highin May.
Re~chert 's report showed J .8
m11l1on passenger s climbed abo~rd OCTD buses last month.
an increase or 27 percent over
the same month a year ago.
O~TD's general manager
cr edited a cutdown of service on
non -productive bus routes
coupled with improved service
on heavily used routes with the
patronage increase.
However . it was the doomsday
budge t r ather than added
patronage that drew the lion's
shar e or attention a t the
directors' meeting.
In a budget proposed before
California's voters gave their
ove rwhe ln11ng support t o
Proposition 13, the property tax
reform initiative. Reichert
suggested overall 1978-79 OCTD
spending of S58.9 million.
,ffouselwlder
Outfoxes
NB Robber
Newport Beach resident David
w.essler. 32, told police he. his
wife and two friends·were seated
at his dining room table when he
answered a knock at the door
early Saturday
The visitor said he wanted to
talk to Wessler because he had
"Just creased your Porsche ..
Rut when Wessler opened the
door he said the man was hold-
ing a revolver on him and an-
nounced. "This is a robbery."
Wessler said he slammed the
door in the man's face and ran
with his wife into a back
bedroom of his hom e at 42
Seascarx-Court.
He said that while they were
Jocked in the room, they could
hear the int ruder ins ide the
Newport Terrace residence.
"".essler's wife called police
w t 1le h e got out hi s own
handgun and fired a s hot
through the door.
Officers s aid the shot ap-
parently frightened the robber
off because he was gone when
they arrived.
The doomsday version of the
revised budget would r educe
overall transit district spending
to S39.5 million
Gone rrom doomsday would be
lhe en tire $3.6 million in
property tax revenue OCTD
expect ed to receive before
Proposition 13 became a reality.
l\ls o gone trom doomsday
would be Sl 5 mtllton OCTD
could be expected to receive in
property tax revenue in the post
Proposition 13 era.
Should director -; eventually
decide to continue lo rely on that
Sl.5 m illion in prope rty lax
revenue. il is likely bus fares in
the coming fiscal year would be
hiked 40 percent
But s hould they decide to
forsake property tax dollars in
the ir e ntirety, the doomsday
budget calls for the 100 percent
increase m OCTD fa res.
Such a f:lre hike would mean
the basic 25-cc nl bus fare would
Jump to 50 ce nt s . And
com mute rs who now pay so
cents a day round trip to work,
for example, would pay $1 a
d av
Frorn Page 111
VIRUS ..•
were transfernng rodent blood
samples from a freezer lo part
of the lab where tests could be
done on th e m . The blood
sam pies were collected in
Africa.
Both men were working in a
laboratory des igned for max-
1 mum securit y. But they
evidently failed to use a glass-
fronted container which disease
cent e r o fficials s aid was
s pecifically designed to protect
researchers against exposure
during accidents.
The researchers were wearing
the required gloves, but also had
on their usual street clothes m-
s tead of the scrub suits normally
r e quired fo r suc h work
Richardson said. '
One of the two researchers
s aid he packed up a sample tube
by its plastic cap; the tube stuck
to its frozen rack. and the cap
came off, splas hing a bit of
partially thawed rat blood on his
clothes and chin
Plane in Forced
Landing; 3 Injured
Three people were injured
Monda y evening when lhe
engines of a private plan e
conked out and the plane crash
landed in a parking lot near
Fullerton Airport .
P olice reportc-d th<.> twin
engine Cess na Skyhowk ''ap·
peered to be a total loss" but
that two or the five per~(>ns
tl board the lll ·fated plant>
wl\lked away unh\J ured
Most seriously hurl In the
crash landing In on lndusln&I
com p lex perking lot l'tt 50 l
i\1rpark Drivt• w3s th<· plant·~
Pilot. Stan Pyron. 46. of 1900
lnm1no Loma. 1-~ullerton
Police said Pyron's leg was
broken
A pass enger, Helen Alvarez.
29, or 134 S Ora nge St. Brea,
s uffered a broken ankfe, police
s aid
Another passenger, Marcia
Caldwell , 22, of Pico Rivera,
was cut and bruised as the plane
bounced into the parktng lot.
Out neither Don Carpenter. 39,
o r 1''u ll ~rton. nor Mariana
Estrad1. 30. of Anaheim, were
inJurPd 1n the crash landing,
police rePQrtcd .
Legal A (d Flies
Clemente Sued
Over Housing
By 1'0M BAKLEY °' ..,. o.11y ~ ... s .. tt
Legal aid organiiatioos which
claim to represent cn!oorities
and the financially deprived
s ued the city of San Clemente
Mon day and accused the
municipality of failing to meet
the needs or low-income resi
dents.
The Orange County Superior
Court action is almost identical
to a lawsuit filed last week in
which the county was named as
defendant.
Headed by the Legal Aid
Society of Orange County. the
plaintifrs ask the court t.o order
the City Council of San Clemente
and the city planning com·
missTun to approve no further
s ubdivisions until the city adopts
.. housing and land use elements
.as partof1tsgeneral plan."
Housing elements are
described in the lawsuit a s
··blueprints (or addressing pres-
entand future housing needs."
The action alleges that San
Clemente is not ooserving a 1969
amendment to the state plan-
ning law which requires that
general plans should include
housing elements.
The city is accused of "avoid·
mg the law for nine years and
standing by while its land has
been developed exclusively for
industry and luxury housing."
The lawsuit is the fourth
Superior Court action filed on
behalf or low income and
minority groups in the last two
months.
In earlier lawsuits, the Irvine
Ranch and Santiago County
F,.._l"ageAJ
FOURTH •••
mcnt so officers can patrol the
beaches where fireworks a re set
off.
The firemen will be used as
!;econd men in the street patrol
cars and will be empowered lO
issue citations along with the of-
ficers .
McDaniel said visitors and res-
idents alike are going to have
a mple warning about the anti·
fireworks law.
He said 1,000 signs that look
like parking signs will be posted
in the beach areas and there will
be four large signs at the main
e ntrances to the city.
"We don't want anybody t.o
claim they didn't know about the
law," he said.
One or the prime considera-
tions in enforcing the fireworks
law is the fire hazard espeeiaJly
in the CentraJ and West Newport
areas where there are large
c rowds and the houses are very
close together.
Traffic congestion in those
areas also P.05es a problem for
emergenc y vehicles, so
McDaniel s aid the police depart-
ment is going to shut down
Seashore Drive during the even-
ings.
"Residents will be able to
have access via 36th Street only.
but they're going to have to be
able to prove they live there,''
he said.
The point or the closure is not
to inconvenience anyone. but to
keep the roadway open for
emergency vehicles.
McDaniel said he wants rest·
dents and visitors alike to un-
de rs ta nd that this year. the
police department 1s going to at·
tack the fireworks problem ag-
gressively.
"We're going to write every
ticket we can," he said. "We'll
confiscate fireworks as con-
traband and destroy it."
,
water districts were sued witJa
the allegation that multi-million
dollar water projects were
planned without conslderati~n
Cor the housing needs of
minorities and low income re.-·
dents.
More Cuts
Eyed.by
T~tees
Coast Community College
Dis trict trustees wiH meet
Wednesday to consider more
c utbacks in an effort to balanee
the district's post-Jarvis budget.
Higher s tudent fees.
s usrension or district t ravel
a l owa n ce s and th e
a bandonment or construction
projects are set for discussion at
the 8 p.m. public,meeting in the
a uditorium cit Orange Coast
College.
A Daily Pilot s to r y last
Saturday incorrectly lis ted that
date or this m~tinR as July 21.
Dis trict spokesman Richard
Simon said the higher fees for
students could come in the form
of increased costs for heaJth and
parking fe es. Current law
forbids community colleges
from charging tuition.
. Trustees have moved slowly.
s mce the June 6 passage of the
Jarvis tax initiative which will
s lice an estimated $15 million
from the district 's proposed
budget of about S81 million.
C u tbac k s t o date have
in c luded the elimination of
administration and sabbatical
leaves~d the summer musical at G West College in
Jluntin n ach.
At a special meeting· Friday
night, trustees voted to spend
Sl.5 million to maintain summer
sessions at Golden West, Orange
Coast and Coastline colleges.
Trustees have asked teachers
and administrators at e ach
ca m pus lo s uggest budget
cutbacks or about 18 percent.
A number or faculty members
have responded by calling for
co mpl ete elimination of.
Coastline College a nd the
dropping of district funding for
KOCE-TV. (
Fro•Pa~Al
VICTIM •..
McNeely said Young often ln-
g rat i a t e d him s e lf with
s trangers. and may have ~itched a ride or simply walked
into a party.
~lis body was found about 12
miles from the county jail.
A further distinguishing mark
was a tattoo on his ri~ht forearm
which depicted a cat with a
raised tail.
McNeely urged anyone who
remembei:-s seeing s uch a tattoo.
o r recognnes the photograph of
Yo ung. to contac t him at
754-3739. '
"We have talked to virtually
every person this man knew,"
McNee ly said ... Friends. rel-
a Lives, e nemies . Nobody
d escr i bes him as the All -
American boy. but nobody hated
him.
"We need to trace his move.
ments. We're fast running out of
people to talk to."
\
17
•
' Saddlebaek
•
;\ft(~r11000
N.Y. Stuck~
VOL. 7', NO. 171 , 3 SECTIONS, 30 P AGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JUNE 20, 1978 TEN CENTS
Ar~y Quarantines Pair for Virus
WASHINGTON (AP> -The
Army is holding two civilian re·
searchers in total isolation on a
military posl following their
accidental exposure to deadly
lass~ fever virus in a laboratory
accident, it was learned today.
Res~archers Isolated After Accidental Exposure scientists at the disease control
center who arc !>tudying the.'
fever believe the t·.irly rePort:.
were exaggerated
Two weeks ago, a vial or con·
laminated blood accidentally
spl ashed on one or the two
employees at the Center for Dis-
ease Control in Atlanta, and both
men were exposed to the virus.
However, they have ahown no
signs of coQtracting the dread
disease.
Officials at the center said the
researchers were flown to the
extra6i'dinary isolation unit at
Fort Dietrick, Md., "strictly as
a precautionary measure .·'
There was believed to be only
a s light chance that the re·
searcfiers would come down
with lassa fever and still less
Teachers' Pay
Cuts Approved
By ANNE COOPER
Of IN D•ilf ...... St.lltt
A resolution allowing teacher
salary cuts of up to 20 percent
was approved 6·0 Monday by
Capistrano Unified School Dis·
trict trustees.
A similar salary cut prov1s1on
affecting school administration
and s upervisory personnel was
also approved Monday.
Trustees said they took the ac-
tion to give themselves more op.
lions in bringing the 1978-79
budget into line with reduced
* * * Special.
(.
Education
Debate Set
T rustees and district residents
are expected to battle tonight
over the future of special educa·
lion programs in tbe Saddleback
Valley Unified Srhool District
during the summer months.
Board members voted 3 to 2
la s t week to sc rap t h e
E speranza School contmuang
e ducation prog ram and the
aphasic program during the
s um mer Trus tees William
Kohler and Loa Young opposed
the cancellation.
Since the vote, district of-
ficials have been inundated with
telephone calls from concernc.'CI
parents whose children attend
the two programs.
"I do think those youngsters
have some excepllonal problems
that transcend the needs of the
regular s tudent," Superinten-
dent Richard Welte said today
He declined t o announce
whether he would recommend
that the board reverse itself and
orrer the two programs.
Board Pres ident G eor ge
Henry said today he expects a
fight over any m oves the board
makes to cut programs to cope
with reduced funding under the
Jarvis-Gann property tax limita-
tion inillalive.
"Everyone thinks that their
group is important," he said.
"It's unfortunate, but that·s the
way 1t is in this country."
The meeting, which will
featur e discussion of dis -
trictwide post-,Jarvis financial
implications, will begin at 7 p.m.
in district orfices, 25631 Diseno
Drive, in Mission VieJo
Co ast
1=....
We ather
Some hig h cloudiness
with patchy low c louds
alonJt the coast l'arly morn
ing hours. 1>ut mostly sun-
ny. Lows toni~ht 60 to &1.
Highs Wednesday aboul 75
At beachestoK4 to881nland
lade.:
Virgil Partch. ~Uer known
as VIP and the creator of Big
George cartoons, is a seem·
lngly boctomles:J weU o/ gags
and humDT. For a look at the
Laguna Beach resident. stt
Featunng. Page CJ.
INSIDE TODAY ..
CJ •• IM
A• At
IS
111 es .. .. ... At
district revenues, expected to be
as much as $15.3 million short,
due to passage of Proposition 13.
Stephanie Seacb, president or
the Capistrano Unified Educa·
lion Association representing
teachers, told the school board
the association will immediately
file a complaint with the Public
Employee Relations Board in
Sacramento. charging the dis·
tricl with unfair labor practices
in connection with Monday's ap-
proval or the teacher pay cut
provision.
Mayor's
KinOut
SA N DIEGO <A P >
The 29-year·old stepson of
Mayor Pete Wilson has
been fired from the facul-
ty of Torrey Pines Hi~h
School because of cut-
backs from Proposition 13.
"Maybe it's tim e for me
to start a new career,"
said Jon Robertson.
After three years as an
English teac her, he
needed onJy one more day
in front or a classroom this
fall to establish tenure.
School Kids
May Ride
OCTD Buses
A recommendation that both
Saddleback Valley Unified and
Capistrano Unified School Dis·
tricts consider utilizing Orange
County Transit Pistrict COCTD>
buses in movinf children to and
from school was advanced Mon-
day night.
Saddleback Area Coordinating
Council's <SACC) executive
board unanimously approved
the recommendation following a
report by SACC pres ident 8111
Tellman. .
Tellman s aid a County
Counsel's deputy had told him it
might be possible for the school
districts to name OCTO as their
transporting agency and that
such programs are being con-
ducted elsewhere in the state.
Monday's recommendation
followed earlier hints by Sad·
<See BUSES. Page A2>
Earlier Monday, officials of
the California Teachers Associa·
Lion. official bargaining agent
for teachers in Orange County's
29 school districts, warned
trus tees not to force teachers to
accept pay cuts or layoffs in the
wake of Proposition 13
The CTA representatives said
they will campaign to keep
schools from reopening in the
fall. if the state Legislature has
not a llocated funds lo local dis·
tricts to make up Proposition 13
<See TEACHERS, P age A2)
* * * WeHare
Increase
Debated
SACRAMENTO I/\ Pl
California lawmakers. hammer·
ing out a $5 billion re~cue plan
for local gover nment in the
wake of Proposition 13. have
become em broiled in a partisan
fight over welfare. <Related
stories A4l
That battJe, which turns on the
key issue of whether welfare re·
clpients should get cost-of-li ving
increases when other programs
are being cut, thre<1tc:ned Mon ·
day to halt progress towards
quick floor votes on the legbla-
tion in both houses.
Republicans also demanded
that police and fire servires ~
exempt from any cuts before
they will vote for funds to help
cities, counties and schools fac·
ing a $7 billion cut July 1 in
proper ty tax revenues.
"We support the full funding
or police and fire. We s upport re-
durtions in welfare," said As·
sem bly Republican floor leader
Paul Priolo of Malibu.
•'This is a 100 percent
turnaround by the Republicans
on this committee ... an appeal
to the basest instincts." s napped
Democratic Assembly Speaker
Leo McCarthy of San Francisco
in response to Priolo's demand
for welfare cuts.
The committee of six leaders
of the Senate and /\ssemblv
agreed quickly las t week to
Democratic Gov. Edmund
Brown Jr. 's request to use S4
billion of the state's surplus for
direct aid to local government
and another $1 billion for short
term loans.
But since then. attention has
wandered toward dis putes
CSee JARVIS, Page A2)
Transit Car Causes
Smashup in Viejo
By RE BECCA HELM Of tt.e Dally f'llM Stlllf
The worst part came at 1:20
Pm.
. I\ harried cabbie driving east
on La Paz Road near the In-
terstate 5 underpass in Mission
Viejo took his eyes off the road
briefly to look down at his road
map, according to the California
Highway Patrol.
In the next few seconds, the
bright yellow Dial-A-Ride sedan
ran orr lhe road to lbe right and
s truck the curb throwing the car
oul of control. It then veered lert
across the center divider and
smashed into the lert front of an
oncoming station wagon.
The driver or the lale·model
wagon, Anne Lynn Sellkov. 33, of
Laguna Hills, is lis ted in
satlsfsct.ory condition at Mission
Community Hospital. Her 4·
ytar·old dauahter, Laurie, also
taken to the hospital, was treat·
ed and released, a spokeswoman
said.
The driver of the cab. John
Robert Jones, 22, of Fountain
Valley, was unhurt. the CHP
said. Both cars s ustained major
<tam age.
For Orange County Transit
Dis trict information officer Tom
Eichhorn. the accident capped
off w ha~ he described as a
''typical" nrst day of a new
service. There were problems.
Monday marked the first day
OCTO's Olal·A·Ride s tarted
serving Saddleback Valley's 22.S
square mile area door-to-door.
Passenger transport by two
large OCTD buses has been <Jls·
carded because oCA'ow usage, of.
flcials say.
No such use symptom sur-
faced yesterday.
"We had an unexpected!~
heavy first da)'," Eichhorn &<\· mltt~d. ''Including one itroup or
40 people wanUnR a ride.··
Drive~ curried more than n
hundred persons back and forth
<Ste CL\Sll, Pace AZ>
''
c hanec that they would m!ect
others. the officials said.
But the officials said they took
the drastic 1solal1on measures
because there is neither a known
immunization against the con
tagious d1s1?ase nor a cun· ror It
Lassa fever was discovered in
Africa less fh'an 10 years ago
and has struck in epidemic pro·
portions since then in Sierre
Leone.
Early studies indicated that it
killed up (o halt it.s victims. but
Oally ,.Uot St.aft "llM•
Th<' virus 1s carried by a rat
found commonly in Sierre Leone
but not in the United States. and
scientists are attempting to de·
termine how the virus spreud~
from the rat to humani. and
from humans to human..,
Trial
Delayed
In Rape
A nane·day delay was ordered
today in the Orange County
Superior Court arraignment of;,
m a n accused of raping and
savagely beating a 13-year·old
El Toro girl.
Judge H Warren Knighl or
dered the arraignment of War
ren Dale Clewell, 28. held over
until June 29 when he learned
that attorney Terry Giles b now
handling Clewel!'s defe nse
Giles has replaced the public de-
fender
Both Gi~s and Deputy District
Attorney Paul Meyer agreed lo·
day that prolonged psychiatnc
treatment for Clewell ts of much
greater 1mporlance to them thau
the outcome of the criminal trial
which will be scheduled June 29.
'BRING IN A BOOK N«J GET SOME COOKIES'
librarian Ruth Fischer Treats Mark Mullen
And both lawyers agrel'd that
the fihni:: of a guilty plea would
reduce the chances or ensuring
that closely supervised mental
treatment will be available for
Clewell
The defendant has on 1 wo m·
<·asions attempted to plead gu1l
ty to the charge!>. ~Cookie Books · · 1 le needs mlens1ve therapy
for a number or years in u con·
finE'd , elosely g uarded !>ltua-
tion. ·· Giles ~aid. "We know he -
needs this and he know-s he
needs it ·· Library Siooe tens Its Off er
By WILLIAM llODG E
04 IN 0.ily Pl ... Stall
\\'hill• Ii bra ries from San
Clemente to Huntington Beach
are collecting fines and sending
threatenm~ notices, Mission Vic
JO·s Ruth Fischer is baking 900
chocolate chip cookil'"
But lhe O'Neill Elcmentarv
School vol unteer hbranan 1sn:t
slaving over a hl'>t 1>love doin~
penance for overdue librarv
books. ·
lier labor of lovt> sends a
mouth watering s ignal oul to
o·Netll's chilrlren that 1>a y
.. Brin~ 1n a library book and have
some cookies.··
"We lose verv few book'>
because !-.ludents· want to gel
their cookies." O'Neill·s media
C'enter coordinator Marjorie
Vanderveer savs ''There arc
-i tO children here and she bakes
two cookies per c hild
"But the re are always leftovers··
And those .. leftovers .. have
gained Mrs . Fischer a d1s-
lrictw1dc re put<ilton for her
rookies
That's because several district
administrators and school prin
cipa ls have worked at O'Neill
school during Mrs F1scher·s 10
years as rnluntecr libra rian
"Barry Ellerbroek <now La
Paz Intermediate School prtn·
cipal I can r ecognize Ruth's
cooki es anywhere." Mrs. Van-
derveer maintains . ..She uses
the best ingredie nts · ·
The whole thing got started
when i.chool officials noticed a
largl' number o( library books
disappearing.
· ·w c sat down and' we thought
we were losing a lot of books
because there was no incentive
for returning them," Mrs Van
rlerveer recalls.
.. Ruth thought the cookies
would be an in centive and
Lhey 've worked beautifully."
And they·ve earned Mrs. Fis-
cher a following among current
and former O'Neill students who
come to vis it her often.
She·s also been distinguished
as the first person in the district
to have a personalized parking
place. The yellow spray-painted
parking sign reads "Ms. Fish "
Thal might have prompted
Mrs 1-~1~cher's recent comment
in the wake of Proposition 13.
.. She s aid, 'I'm the only
person around here who doesn't
have to worry about job secur1
lY .' " Mrs. Vanderveer quoted of
her volunteer lit)rarian.
Clewell is charged with ~even
relony counts of kidnapping,
rape and attempted murder. He
is held in custody with bail set ~t
S250.000.
It 1s aJleged lhat he abduct~d
the 13-year·old victim lasl May
18 as she walked to her El Toro
home from nearby Serrano ln·
te rmediate School.
Police said Clewell drove her
to a remote location in Irvine
where she was raped, beaten
over the head with a hea vy
wrench and lett for dead in "
dirt road.
TranscripL'> of the clOS<'d pre·
liminary hearing in Saddleback
Community llo~p1tal where thl'
girl was a patient last June 7
reflect her statement thal "ht.'
told me he could kill me an five
seconds if I tried to get away."
Clewell , a shori order cook.
was on parole at the time of tht'
offen se. llt• wa .... r el·e1 van g
p syc h1atr1<· trc..itm c nt at
Atascadero Slate Hospital in
connection with his conviction
on rape and burglary ~harge3 m
Los Angeles County Superior
Court.
Dead Man's Link
To Marines Eyed
Giles commented today that
Clewell has been release.'<! from
protective custody on several Ol ..
casions despitt• his own convit:
lion that he ts mentally Ill and
needs the kind or therapy that
wou Id prevent recurrences ol
the Irvine attack.
H e was r e l eased from
Atas cadero last March 13 after
more than four year <> of in·
carceration and over his objec
lions, Giles said
Baby Whale Saved
Orange County S heriff's
investigators s till have not
uientified the · nude body of a
man in his early 20s found on
Moulton Parkway in Laguna
Hills early Monday but they now
believe he was a serviceman,
possibly a Marine
Investigator Berni(' Esposito
c;a id t oday that gen e ral
a ppearance, includin~ r,losely
cropped hair. has led the search
for identity to El Toro, Santa
A na and Camp P endleton
Marine Corps fac1htics
Esposito also said cause of lhe
man 's dealh also remains a
mystery pending toxicological
reports An uutopsy was
performed Monday afternoon,
he said.
The body was discovered by
motorists at 5: 15 a.m. Monday
In a remote section ol Laguna
Hills a half·mile north of La Pai
Road. Invest igators s aid the
body apparently had been
dumped from a moving car,
bouncing several ti mes before
coming to resl on ttle road':>
shoulder
tnvestlgator!'I ,aid Monday
they believe the victim wo~
murdered but had no lmmedintc
proof.
The body is that of a white
male, six feel. one inch tall and
weighing 160 pounds. The man
had short sandv brown hair. a
light mustache and a red-devil
tattoo on his left forearm.
ORLANDO, Fla. l~Pl -
Marine biologists are fi ghting to
save the life of a four.foot bahy
pilot whale that beached itself
near Vero Beach after 1t~ m
jured mother floundered as hon·
and died.
Gobettes Seen
Navy Plans Women on Ships
SAN OIEGO <AP l -The Navy plans to put its
firs t women sailors on seagoing warships in Sep-
tember, anticipating congressional approval soon,
the San Diego Union said today.
About 20 to 30 percent of the crews stationed on
90 s hips will be women. the newspaper said.
The Navy, it sald. is "about to issue a directive
asking women to volunteer for sea duty " A meeting
of Pacific and Atlantic sh\p commande rs is
s<'heduled in Washington, 0 .C .• to discuss the subject
next week.
None or the ships, primarily large tenders and
service ~hips with easily converted living quarters.
wus identified.
'
1\2 OAIL Y l'ILO I SB
·neath Motive Eyed
·I rvine Police Seek Slaying Cause
B ) PIULIP K0~~1ARI'
OI tl'9 O.Ur ""•'Si.II Irvine pol1c~ d~t~cl1vei.
\\<llhout l'lul' or motive to Lh1
murder of <1 Los Ani::t•les County
m an who!-i(' CJstratcd body was
found on an Irvine str ee1 June
11. today ai.ked the puhl11: to
help find his killt•r
PohC'e d1i.lnbulC'd photo~raph!->
or. Roland Gerald Young. 23. of
Maywood. lo newspapers and
television stations on Monday.
They hope that someone who
they feel must have seen Young
In lhe lai.t seven hours or hlS life.
will recognize him. call Police
and help them discover where
he spent the time.
P ollet: have traced his m ove-
m enti. up to his relea~e from
Orange County Jail Saturday
night. "'here he had been held on
a char~t· of pub11<· drunkenness
From lhat t1ml'. until an off
dutv fireman d1 sc·11vere d his
s\111 -warm bodv lying face down
near the m1ddll' of Irvine Center
Drive. nl'ar Deerwood, what
Young did 1s a myi.tery
He had been ::.ta bbed four
limes through the heart. He had
hl't-n m ulllall•d
Invc!'lt11w tor 0 . II. "Mac"
!\>kNl'ely s<Jid th<1t from marks
rm thl' ~treet, it was known the
hod.\ twd been pushed from a
car moving wesl at about :15 t11
.t5 miles per hour
Sl.AJN, BUT WHY?
Murder Victim Young
McNeely said that whe n
Young was released from jail.
the man had been wearing a
beige wide-collared vee-neck
pullover s h irl, besides the
trousers and shoes in which his
body s till was clothed when
found.
Young, an uns killed laborer,
wa s a ready drinker with a his·
tory of conraoement for drunken-
ness, McNeely said, and had a
habit of re moving his shirt while
drinking because he perspired
heavily.
The detective said a coroner's
autopsy showed that Young, who
had only 45 cents upon his re -
1 ease fro m jail. and no
trans portation , had t1n unknown
amount of a lcohol arterward.
possibly at a bar or a private
party.
McNeely said Young often in-
g rati a ted him se lf with
s trange r s , and may have
hitched a ride or s imply walked
into a party.
His body was found about 12
miles from the county jail.
A further distinguis hing m ark
was a tattoo on his rtght forearm
which depicted a cat with a
raised tail.
McNeely urged anyone who
re members seeing such a tattoo.
or recognizes the photograph of
Young, to contact him, al
754-3739.
"We have talked to virtually
every person this man knew."
McNeely said. "Friends, rel-
atives, e n e m ies . Nobody
des cribes h im a s t he All-
American boy, but nobody hated
him .
"We need to trace his move·
ments. We're fast running out of
peopl e lo talk to."
SACC Seeks Survival
The S addl(.'b<.ick Arc a
Coordi nating Council's ex-
ecutive board took the firs t s tep
Monday -in a drive t o remain a
~:oordinat1ng agen<'y be tween
::.outh <:ounty rc::.uJent~ and coun
~y governmt:>nl dci.pal{· Propos1
1100 13 funding cuts
Unanamou&ly approved Y..as a
propo!-ial to ~eek space in thl'
~1 uni{·apal Adv11>ory Counc il
1:\1A C 1 ()ffice in M1i-.s1on V1e10
:rnd lo s h;.i r <.• the CO!->t vf a
!'ll'crctary with MAC
H a pµrnved by a number of
agl'nc 1t>!-i involved, the move
would ~ut this ~car'll Sl8.90U
SAOC budiet down to $8,101. a 53
percent decrease, according to
president Bill Tellman.
The plan would abandon the
county's Laguna Hms office at
Moulton Parkway and Lake
F'orest Drive where SACC main·
tains its headqua rte rs and a
secretary whose salary is $11,000
annually.
Tallman said MAC's office, al
La Paz Road and Marguerite
Parkway, is donated by the Mis-
s ion Viejo Company . MAC's
s ecretar y of 18 months an-
nounced recently she is leaving
the area, and MAC directors are
f 'ro• Page' 11 I
JARVIS CUTBACKS • • •
between McCarlhy and Priolo.
leaving another half.dozen ma
Jor 1::.sucs unsolvt•d
With IO days remaining before
Proposiuon t3's $7 billion tax cut
takes l.!ffoct. the committee s till
.has nor aj!n•cd on how much to
g ive s chools. counues and cities.
or what t ond1t1ons to attach to
the runds
\., thl· Propos1t1on 13 battle
µcr:.1s tcd in several a renas 1n
side the Capitol Monday. county
worker ... outs ide picketed and
chi.lntcr1. "!'io t'uts, no layoffs ...
If local government gets the S4
J1illion propo:-.ed in the rescue
IJ11l, al will s llll face cuts aver<.114
ing about 10 per cent in Un·
s pecified areas.
Uul Priolo and Republican
Sen '\\'illium Campbell of Jlo·
<!1enda J letghts said there would
bl• no Tkpublican support for
(.'ven th<Jt plan unles~ there arc:
~ome t:uls m welfare. which 1s
budgeted for 7 fi5 pe rcent in
\.'reases for <.111 rl•c1p1ents, al a
cost or S200 m1ll1on annual!\
Thl' propo:-al tc ntatavcly in
dudes a SI 06 billion ~h1ft of
tiealth and welfare costs from
counties to the s tate. hut Priolo
-"i.lld Hcpubhcans "will not sup
port any buyout of any health or
wt>lfare program that docs not
sa\'e ti.lxpayers any m oney "
Priolo and Campbell did nol ~pecafy how much R<'publacan!)
would demand that the grant 10-
<:r('ascs ht' c ut
The welfare chs pulc lcfl in
limbo a proposal by Brown that
school support an the relief bill
.should be c ut from $2.6 billion to
S2 2 billion to m~1ke more m oney
a\':.ai lablt• fnr ('ltil's and counties
The.• 1>lan v.ould give $2.6
·billion t() sC'hools. $1.15 billion to
ORANGE COAST )D
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<'ounties. $150 milhon lo special
d1 !->tricts and $100 million to
i·it1 es.
Meeting with police and fire
leaders, Brown s upJ>Orted their
plea that police and fire se rvices
should not be cut, but he refused
to fl atly endorse their no-layoffs ~land
"I'm going t o do everything I
c·Jn to minimize. and hopefull y
('Ven eliminate, layoffs Of these
Pl'Oplc on lht: street providing
dm.'Ct services." Brown said. "(
have no doubt the people did not
vote to reduce poli ce and fire
ser vice.
.. I believe the n umbe r of
layoffs will be much Jower than
people were talking about."
Brown said. "There nas t>een a (.'Crtain amount of panic. We 're
not goint to have 100 percent
financing. but I don't think we
have lo have these dire eonse·
que nces in the next 12 months."
The only major cutback which
has taken effect so far has been
abolition of most s ummer school
sess ions. which were scheduled
1o "began Monday for more than
100,000 high school student5.
* * * E'ront Page Al
TEACHERS
1·t .. venue losses.
"We will not tol<.>ratc cuts in
-.<1lary being recommended by
'>Orne sehool boards in Orange
Countv." said Orange County
CTA o'fficial Arlone Pavey.
Mi ss Scac h ca ll ed the
Capistrano Unified board action
"speculative" and "a rbitrary ...
::.ay ing salary adjustments
~hould be a matter of contract
ne~otiat1on .
Capistrano Unified te achers
a re currently negotiating a new
tontract. They have proposed a
10 percent salary incr ease. Con-
t ract negotiations have been sus-
pended since the end or May.
with negotiators awaiting in-
formation on wha t funds the dis-
trict will have available.
Superinte ndent J e rome
Thornsley told the school board
Monday that his latest informa-
l ion from Sacramento is that ac-
1 ion by both houses of the
legislature is expected by tbc
end of next week lo restor e some
s hare of state funds t o local
cities, counties and school dis-
tricts .
Trustee William T hompson or
Mission Viejo, who came In late
to Monday's board meeting and
did not vote on the teacher pay
<'Ul provision. s aid he intends to
carr y on a n exacting budget
:ina lysis "to assure teachers In
this district are retained at o liv-
ing wage."
A beginning teacher with a
bachelor's de gree c urrently
carns an annual s a l ary ot
$10.SSS. An experienced leacher
with long service and a master's
degree can earn $23,045
seeking a replacement.
As proposed, major parts of
SACC's plan would eliminate the
$2, 700 r ent paid for the Laguna
Hills office, eliminate a $1.720
cleaning bill, cut office supplies
by $500 and cut the secretary's
pay to $5,665 with the MAC pick-
ing up the other half.
ParamoWlt, said Tellman. is
SACC's desire to save its Plan·
ning Committee which revie ws
building and zoning items for the
Laguna Hills, El Toro. Laguni.I
Niguel and Lake F orest areas of
the county.
The Planning Committee's rec-
ommendations are forwarded
:is the area's thinking on such
mattNs to the Orange County
Planning · Commission for final action.
SACC is an umbre lla agency
composed of area homeowners.
homeowner associations a nd
civic orgaruzat1ons.
MA C a council authorized
by the Co unty Board of
Supervisors -p e rforms a
s imilar function in Mission
Viejo.
The plan lo house both agen·
cies in Mission Viejo must gain
a pprova l fr o m SACC's
'Homeowner s Ass<><'iations' >
Presidents Council. the County
Environmental Ma nage m ent
Agency. the MA C and the Mas·
s ion Viejo Company. Tellman
noted.
From Page A I
BUSES ...
dle back Unified officials that
busing may be curtailed as a re -
sult of cuLc; in property tax fund-
ing resulting from approval of
Proposition 13 on June 6.
An OCTD spokesm a n said this
morning there arc two major
problems with the SACC pro·
posal · federal regulations pro-
h 1 bi l designing a fe d erall y
funded transit system to serve
schools and a fter Proposition 13
approval the transit district is
having its own proble ms operat-
ing with reduced funds .
"The way federal regulations
arc written. we would have to
Rive back every dollar of federa l
t rans portation money we have
received If we tried to help the
schools," he s aid.
T he spokesman noted that very
few OCTD buses now serve Sad-
dleback Valley residential areas
so that adjustmg school hours to
existing bus scheduled -as
Anaheim has done -would be im-
possible.
OCTD h a s replaced two
neighborhood bus routes with a
new Dia l-A-Ride system which
began operations Monday. The
new s ystem couldn't handle the
school children, he said.
Rabies Clinic
Set for Viejo
Me mber s of the Southern
California Veterinary Medical
Association are to conduct a low·
cost , anti-r abies vaccination
c linic for dogs, from 7 to 8:30
p. m. on June 'l7 in the La Paz
s hopping center, La Paz Road
and Chrlsanta Drlve, Mission
Viejo.
Vaccinations are $2 per dog
nnd are good for 30 months, as-
sociation spoke!lman Don Mahan
said.
According to public health of.
rlcials. dol's rour months of age
und older are required by law to ~e vacclnatt..~ and a valid vac-
'"?lna\lon certificate I~ needed lo
license a dog.
f
ROCKWELL'S WHIMSY "The Checker
Game ... a n 011 painting by America's
Norm an Rockwell. will be featured a t lhe
43rd annual Pageant of the Masters this
:.ummer in Lc.tguna Beach. Portraying
Dell• l'lt.C ~-, ~alrkll O'O..U
subjects tn the whim sical painting a rc·
(from lefU Churlcs Sannes. Tustin : Susan
Wo lf. Garden Grove ; Charles Gilbert.
Santa Ana and Bruce Cubbison. Laguna Beach.
FNHn Pag.-A I
CRASH ....
thr oughout the day, he i.a1d.
Normally. a nl:w service begins
.!>lowly and builds up
And there were more than a
few a dverse factors at work
Eichhorn lis ted a few.
Delivery of the 12. i.even-
passenger cab sedans ordered to
serve Saddleback was delayed
until next week Chauffeuring of
residents . therefore, was bemg
handl(;'d b y only five. four-
p:.assenger c<1 bs. In add1t1on.
radio dis patchers :rnd dr1vc.•rs
were unfamihar wath the area. a
('Om mon firs t day problem.
Eichhorn said
Unt•Xpt.'<'tNI. however . he said.
\\a:-the• poor radio com munica
taon Drivers not only had to deal
with interference from static but
found their radio frt.'quency in
heavy use by other op<.•r ators
Although plagued, Eichhorn
!'i a1d Tuesday the district Wt.I'>
taking 1t &111 in s tride and looking
forward to better days
OCTD has loaned the local
01al·A-Ride cont ractor three,
19-passcnger m1n1 -buses t o
bolster the temporary transpor•.
def1c1t The d1stritt will continue
to do so on an a~-needed bal>ls.
Eichhorn i.a1d
Cancer Death
Suit Filed
ESCONDIDO I J\ P > Tht'
husband and 4 year-old daughter
of a woman who died this year
of canct'r have filed a S22 million
la ws uit against the leader ar1d
two minister::; of the Mo rn -
1n~land religious group.
In thcu-suit, Forrest May and
his daughter. J eanne Marie. or
Escondido contend Kather ine
May died Jan. 20 because s he re·
lied on tn•<atment::. for breast
cancer from members of Morn-
1ngland rathe r than i.eeking pro
fess1onal help
,\uorney Wallace R . Nugent.
re-presenting the tlhtys, s aid
:\t onday the i.uat "chums two al·
legations or fraud, negligence
and malprart1l'e lei.lctjng to
wrongful death ..
PR0Hl81f£D DY I AW
Inside Peek
Press Previews Pageant
By STEVE MITCHELL
Of .. Oa•IY r>M4 Slaff
Little Diane Balter sat on a
bench by herself m the crowded
dressing roorn backstage of the
Jrvine Bowl on t he Festival of
Arts grounds.
Her face and hands were
painted gold and she wore an
Egyptian headdress made of
rubber.
"flow does all that paint leel on
vour face'!" asked one of 300
reporters in~tcd to a press
previe w or Ch e 43rd a nnua l
Pageant of the Masters .
"Gross," she said. wrinkling
her golden nose. "Really gross "
Diane, a Laguna Beach fourth
g rader. appe ars with Mike
Fagan. also 9. of Mission V1eJ<>
in a king-size replica of a
buckle, found in the tomb of
King Tutankhamun. The two
youngste rs will be posed as
living recreations or the famous
bauble once worn by the
Egyptian king.
Re porters and photographer!'..
s ome from as far away as Las
Vegas a nd Thousand Oak!>,
toured backstage at the Laguna
Beach festival grounds for four
hours Monday night. talking to
makeup crews. models a nd
pageant officials.
The 43rd Pageant promises to
take it's expect e d 300,000
\'tewers this year through many
parts of t he worlci. with art
reoresentations from ancient
Scythia to recent oils by Norman
Rockwe ll.
Six of the 27 "li ving pictures··
were exhibited for the press
Monday.
More than 450 volunteers and
staff members will tak~ part in
t he annu al Page ant or t he
Mas ter s. with 160 mode ls on
.!>tage every night during the
six-week run.
lt's Tom Smith's firs t year as
a model. and the San Jut1n
Capis trano plumber doesn 't
mind saying hi::. wife talked him
into it.
The craggy-faced Detroit'
expatriate will portray an aging
Indian. mounted on a painted
horse in this year's pageant. He
JOIOS three other models in R
Brownell M cGrcw 's "Th('
Dinner." an oil painting of an
Indian family 1n the dese rt.
The Indians call Mcvrew "the
man who painL'i the old," and
the o r1 g1na r painting is on
exhibit at the Laguna Museum
of Art during fes tival time. It is
own ed by South Lagunan
M 1ckey McArthur.
Other works of e1rt that will be
featured this year include a
prize winning s cul p ture .
''Fanta s y of \\'1ngs ,·· b)
Lagunan Robert Krantz. a
m arble sculpture from the
Acropolis 10 Athe ns, a nd a
rc•prcscntat1 o n of the Trev•
Fountain from Hom<.'.
Th<.• F esti va l of Arts a nd
Pt.1gcant of the Masters runs this
Yl'ar from July 11 through Aug.
2i 10 con.1 un c t1on with thl·
Sawd u st F e s tiva l and the
Art-a-Fair.
TickeL'i to the pageant have
long since been sold out, but..
potential pageantgoers can pick
up a limited amount or tickets
tha t have been returned to the
fes tiva l offices the day of
performanees.
Bus Fare
Doubling
Proposed
D i r ec tor l> o f t h c 0 ran g l'
County Trans it District <OCTD 1
took a l ook Mo nday at a
so-called doomsday budget tha1
woul d c ul off the dis trict ·s
relia nce on property taxes and
increase bus fares 100 percent.
But look was all the directors
did as they decided to wait Until
July before ma.king decisions
that could r e duce OCTD
s pending and service by as much as 30 percent
The d oom s day budget
proposal came as transit district
General Manager Jim Reichert
reported OCTD's bus ridership
reached anallt1me high in May.
Reichert's report showed 1.8
m ii lion passengers c limbed
aboard ocro buses last month.
an increase of 27 percent over
the same month a year ago.
OFFER EXPIRES
JULY 9111, 1978
ON THE PCRCHASE OF 1 LB. OR MORE
OF THESE GREAT AMERICAN CHEDDARS
BIG BARN APPLE PIE
NEW YORK WHITE MIDGET SHARP
NEW YORK COLORED SMOKY BAR
I
Tl.l!!d!y, June 20, 111a s OAJL Y PILOT ,\3
San Clem.e.nte Sued Over Housing Issue
# By TOM BAllLE\' Oii • .,_,. ,,._ llWI
w1al aid org11nullons wbkh
laim lo repruent. mlnonUes
ind the rinancially depr•ved
ued the ci~ ol San Clemente
~onday and accused tbe
nun1clpaJh.y or failing to meet
he needs Of low-income l't!St·
rents.
The Orange County Superior
:ourL &'Cllon is almost idtnUcal
SC Man
Guilty of
Drug Rap
LOS ANGELES fAP> -A San
:temente man has pleaded gull-
y to a felony cocaine importing
:harge stemming from what
1 utborilies described as the
largest cocaine seizure in Los
Angeles history.
Superior Court Judge Robert
S. Stevens set-a July 14 sentenc·
ing date Monday for Larry
Thorson. 33. who remained in
custody.
Thorson was a rrested Dec. 19
as he stepped orr a plane from
Miami, where he had flown the
previous day.
De puty District Attorney John
Watson said authorities found 23
pounds of 88 percent pure co-
caine -with a s treet value of
ali;nost ~illion in Thorson's
s uitcase.
Watson said the cocaine ap-
parently on g1nated in Columbia,
South America. a nd that
Thorson was believed to be a
, courier in an international co·
caine·smugghng ring.
Until Thorson's arrest, Watson
s aid. the local cocaine seizure
record was set Dec. 9 when
. airoo rt authorities round 23
pounds of the drug on Daniel Clif-
ford. 21 . of Boston. Clifford was
~entenced last month to four
years in stale prison here after
admitting to smuggling the co-
caine, which had an estimat~d
street value of $4 .2 million.
Although Thorson and Clifford
were carrying equal amounts of
the drug. Watson said Thorson's
coca ine wa s worth more
because it was or higher purity.
Air Cal Sets
New Flights
To Monterey
Air Calirorn1a opened Jet
s ervice fr om a hair -doze n
destinations today, inc luding
Orange County. to Monterey.
Local service to the California
city is t>eing offered on one
round trip flight per day on a
Boeing 373 jet.
However. a irline officials said
that may change whe n a new
schedule for all the airline's
flights is establ ishe d next
month.
Because Air Cal is competing
with three other airlines serving
Monte r ey, the state Public
lilllities Commission granted
the firm a 90-day authority to of
re r reduced fares to Monterey
from San Francisco and from
San Diego
The San Francisco to Mon-
terey fare will be $7 50, hair the
regular rate. The .fare between
San Diego and Monterey will be
S29.7S, or SS less lhan the regular
fare.
Air Cal s pokes m an Bob
Payton said there will be no di~·
count on lhe Orange County to
Monterey fare under the recent
PUC action.
Alien, 19, Drowns
SAN DIEGO IAP) A 19·
year-old illegal alien. Luiz Cruz
Salinas, drowned while wading
io a Sweetwater River pond near
lhe Cottouwood Golf Course, a
coroner's office spokesman said.
Manson Gals
'With' Patty
PLEASANTON <AP>
Two followers of Charles
Manson are being held in
~ high-security area of the
federal women's prtson at
Pie a s anton and In ..
separate buildlog from
another inmate, Patricia
llearst.
Prison orriclals s aid
Lynette Fromme, 29, and
Sandra Good, 34, arrived
ft'rlday rrom a West
Virglnfa prison and are
being treated "like any
other inmate."
Miss Fromme ls servlna
a life senlencc for at·
temptine to assassinutc
Presldenl Ford in 1975
Miss Good is serving three
15-ycar i;enten<'e!\ for mak
in.: death threats to bus1
neit" le ders
lO a lawsuit hied lut w"k tn
"htch lhe county wu named as
dc:Ctindant
tleaded b y the Leaal Aid
Society or Oro.na County. \he
plaintiffs a5k lhe court to order
the City Couhcll of San Clemente
and the cily planninc com
m1ss,on to approve no further
subdivisions until the city adopts
"housing and land use elements as partoTtt.s general plan.··
HoussnlJ elements are
described tn the lawsuit as
"blueprtnta for addressing pres-
enland ruturehouslngneeds ...
The itcUon atte1es that San
Cleme1'le Ls not observing a ~
a mendment to lbe stale plan-
nlni law which requires that
general plans should include
bouslng elements.
The city Is accused of "avoid·
mg the Jaw ror nJoe years and
APW....,..tlo
HEROIC FELINES HONORED IN DELAWARE
Susan Dyson With Pets Ttkl and Mtnet
Furry Heroes
Woman Saved; Cats Honored
WILMINGTON. Del. <A P >
Two cats who kept their cool
des pite the heat in the kitchen
have been honored for heroism
by Gov. Pierre du Pont IV.
The pet cats. Tiki and Minet.
awakened their mi5tress. Susan
Dyson. from a nap one evening
last February just as s moke and
names began to fill her Wilm
1ng ton home.
Mrs. Dyson, who was 24 and a
little over eight monlhs preg.
nant at the time of the fire. said
she was takjng a nap after work·
mg in her kjtchen.
.. The cats cam e into the
bedroom and they caused a1 ruckus . They weren't fight·
ing, they were just making noise
together and they ne ver do
that," Mrs. Dyson said. "So I
woke up."
The living roem was filled
with s moke and the kitchen was
in flames. she recalled.
The cats were taken to the
governor's office Monday to re-
ceive the William 0 Stillman
Bermuda Raee
Award of the American Humane
Associatton.
The a ward is given to people
who risk their lives saving
animals and to animals who
s ave humans. s aid Patricia
Prescott. executive director of
the Delaware humane Associa·
t1on and a direct or or the
American Humane Association
i\s Mrs Oyi.on removed Tiki
from a bo~ so that he could meet
the governor. she said. "Oh mv.
h is heart is pounding.··
"It's not easy to break into
politics," the governor said.
Before the ceremony. Mrs.
Dys on was asked about the
b r eed of the tan and black·
striped cats.
''They're just regular old alley
cats." Mrs. Dyson said.
But Mrs . Prescott interjeci.ed.
"Now, now, now."
"They're a mixed breed."
said Mrs. Dyson, who came to
the ceremony with her infant
son, David. born the night after
the fire
Ondine, Boomerang
Near Tahiti Finish
HAMILTON, Bermuda <AP>
-The 70-foot sloop Ondine and
the 64·fooler Boomerang were
h e a d e d f o r e a r I y e v e.n i n g
finishes today in the 635·mile
Newport-lo· Bermuda yac ht
race.
A U.S. Navy plane out of
Bermuda s potted Ondine 58
miles northwest or lbe island
:s hortly before 11 a.m . local
lime. Boomerang was five miles
behind her.
The plane was continuing its
search for yachts.
Membe r s of the R oyal
Bermuda Yacht Club's finish
line committee estimated that at
their current.-'raLe of speed lhe
two yachts would cross the
rinish line at the eastern end or
lhe islands at about 8 p.m. local
time.
Ondlne is owned and aklp·
pered by Sumner A. Lons or
Ford-Teug Visit
TOKYO CAPl -Henry Ford
11 met today in Peking wlt.h Vice
Prtmler Ttng Hsiao-ping. the
official H1'1nhu~ new~ ogency re·
ported . T he r eoort said the
Chairman or the Ford Motor Co.
headed a "party ot tourists
from the Unttf'd States. and
Teng had "a friendly conve~a
llon" with them
\ •
Ne w York and Is the scratch
lsma llest lime allowance> boat
in the fleet of 162 yachts. She
was first to finish and set the
ela psed time record of 68 hours,
8 minutes. 22 seconds In this
race f o ur years ago .
Boom er ang. a new yacht, is
owned and skippered by George
S. Coumantaros, 56. New York.
Both are in the Class A-IOR
<international offshore> group
which started the race at 2: 15 p.m. (EDT > l ast Friday orr
Newport, RI
Boys Drown
Playmate
PAWTUCKET, FU. CAP> -
Two 9-year-old boys pushed a
playmate into a flooded gravel
plt and the n caused him to
drown by preventing him from
climbing out, police s ay.
"While the boys dldn 't mean
lt , they did It," said Clty
Solicitor MotU Kando.
The death, ,.t CJrst believed to
be accldental. has been referred
to F amily Court, where the boys
were to be charged today wlt.h
being wayward ror commllinl
m anslaughter, Kaodo saJd. Th
boys• nmne!' hav• not been re-
lused.
. ,
standing by while l~ land has
been developed exclUMVely for
industry and luxury housing "
The laws uit ii. lhe fourth
Superior Court action Clled on
behalf of low income and
minority groups in the last lwo
months
In earlier lawsuits. lhe Irvine
Ranc h and Santiago C~My
waler districts were sued 'with
the a llegation that multi·million
dollar water pl"oJeCts were
planned wtthOut consideration
fo r the hous i ng need s o r
minorities and low income rest·
dents
The actions call for the setting
aside or those projects until the
districts have s atisfied th~urt
that hous i n g cons Lruct1on
iiparked by the wat,.er tmprovt
men ts wi II make s uch pro
visions
Na med a1> co-plamttffs with
the Orange County Legal Atd
Society are Orange County res1
denlS Llonel Bernard. J obn W.
and J a ntco Sbernaman, t.os
Angeles County res ide nt
Dorothy M. Mc~leavey, Sbarion
Garrison and Betty Sue Webb
Also. the Legal Atd Founda·
t ions or Los Angeles and Long
Beach and the Western Center
on Law and Pov~rty Inc
Coastline Defended . .
~ollege Officials Rap 'False ldetu'
By JACKIE HYMAN
C1U•01J1r PiletSUff
Adm mistrators at Coas tline
Com muntiy College say they
believe suggestions that their
j acility be closed to save money
are based on false ideas about the
·'college Wlthout walls "
A group of faculty members
from Coast Community College
District's two older campuses.
Golden West in JlunUnglon Beach
and Orange Coast in Costa Mesa.
recommended that trustees shut
down Coastline and transfer its
classes to OCC and GWC instead
of making deepe r across·the·
hoard cuts in the wake of Proposi·
lion 13.
"There are and will continue to
be those who didn't favor the
formation of this college 1n the
firs t place." said David A
Brownell. Coastline dean of ad
minis trative services. The col
lege was founded two years ago to
adm 1nister the district ·~ o utreach
program.
A llhough the s ubJec t of
Coastline's foture has been raised
at board of trustees meetings.
there has been no indication that
trustees intend to eliminate the
college.
However. Brownell l.aid
employees expressed grave con
cern over reports or a possible
closing.
He disagreed with a statement
hy an OCC teacher that Coastline
spends only 25 percent of 1t~
bud get on teachers
That figure was incorrectly
fi gured. Brownell said. He said
that after districtwide programs
administered through Coastline
are subtracted from its budget, 46
percent of the remaining funds
are s pent on teachers' salaries.
OCC and GWC teahcers had
also pointed out th al Coastline has
no full -t ime teaching starr
Although this is true. Brownell
said. Coastline employs only 42
percent of the district's part-time
instructors. with the others work·
·In~ forGWCor OCC.
College Pres ident Be rnard
Lusk in said some negative
publicity has been stirred up by
Coastline's lecture i.eries and
sum mer works hops on recrea
11onal topics.
He said that Coastline offers the
sa m e basic courses as the dis·
trict 's other colleges, and that lee·
tures and works hops in non·
academic subjects are a lso of·
fere.d at the distric t 's two
traditional campuses.
The administrators s aid they
believe Coastline offers several
distinct advantages to the dis·
tncl. in addition to the prestige of
having a model program s tudied
bv v1s1tors from all over the
w"orld.
Brownell pointed o ut that
Coastline. which leases all its
rac1ht1es at various sites scat-
tered lhroughout the district, has a lower cost per student than OCC
and G WC and brings in more
money (or lhe district than 1t
spends through ADA -state fund
Among the mos! durable
gem matenals In Iha world are
the two stones we call Jade,
Nephrite and Jadeite. l ong
before Jade was used for orna-
ment or Jewell)' purposes, pre·
historic people recognized this
characteristic and carved tools,
containers end eating imple-
ments from 1t
Jade is &Otter than Diamond,
which moons It 1s more easily
scratched. But Jade Is tougher
than Olamond. Jade Is more
cohesive and would surv1ve a
sharp blOW lhat could ct11p or
lracture a Diamond
The teast rare vanety of Jade
1s Nephnte, a sem1·tran1parent
mineral wh1ct} occurs In a
spinach-green true aa well as 1n
grey, btown. yellows. J8' black
1nd lavender. The main
s9urce1 lor Nec>ttnte are China,
Siberia, New Zeeland. Wyom·
ing. AlasQ. and the recently
d iscovered oeposlls 1n
Australia.
apportionment based on dVerage
daily attendance.
Coastlfue fs attended by 23.000
people. theequivalentor5.000full-
ume students a year. Most of its
s tudents attend part tame
a lthough many are workmg on
degrees. Brownell said. The two·
year -old college graduated 283
p~ople lhissprmg.
Lus kin s aid he be l ieves
Coastline's chief contribution to
Swine Flu Shots
the district as its philosophy of ex·
tending education to people who
might hesitate to step onto a coJ·
lege campus.
Last year. Luskin said, some
7 .000 students who had never
taken a college course before at-
tended Coastline.
Many of these part1c1paled 1n
the Emeritus Institute. a pro·
gram for seniorcitizens, he said
Paralyzed Victims
To Collect Claims
WASHINGTON ·fAP ) -The
government said today that
anyone who contracted a rare
paralyzing disease after getting
swine flu shots in 1976 wiJJ not
have to prove negligence to col·
lecl federal compensation.
The action c lears a maJor
stumbling block in nearly one.
third of the 1,483 claims that
have been brought against the
government for $775 million by
persons or their survivors who
claim they suffered injuries dur-
ing the mass inoculation cam-
paign.
Som e 439 of these cases seek·
mg $365 million in damages in·
vol ve Guil lain ·Barre. a
paralyzing disease that can be
118 Trustees
View Budget
Cuts Tonight
Huntmgton Beach Union High
School District Lru5tees have
....lated a 6 o·c tock meeting
tonight Lo ~tudy ways 10 cut
a bout $5.6 million from the dis ·
trict's 1978·79 budget
T rus tees will m eet 1n the
Fountain Valley High School
cafeteria. 17816 Bushard St. No
action on the cuts is expected
until the June 27 board m~ting
at Huntington Beach High
School, officials said .
School board President Zita
Wessa said the district wi ll lose
about $20 million of an anticipat·
ed $44 million budget because of
property tax revenue decreases
mandated by Proposition 13.
But school district aides said
Saturday the district may re-
ceive about S14 million from
state surpluses to help offset lhe
tax revenue loss.
Mrs. Wessa said the school
board must still find ways to cut
SS.6 million in costs by the June
30 state.mandated deadline.
@
CiEMWISE
Mary Barr~ C.er11fied Gemo1og1:1t
fatal. Some 535 of the estimated
45 million Ameracans ·wllp got
swine nu shots contracted lhe
disease, and 23 died, according
to the U.S. Center for Disease
Control.
H ea lth , Educat ion and
Welfare Secre tary Joseph A
Califano Jr .• who aMounced the
action on negligence, said, "We
cannot estimate precisely how
much lhe federal government
will ultimately pay out in com-
pensation. We expect, however.
that the amounts awarded will
be only a fraction of the amounts
claimed."
The Justice Departm~nt still
mus t r evie w the c l ai m:.,
Califano sa1d, and the decision
not to make v lclims provt>
negligence will not apply to any
non-Guillain·Barre cases.
"'To receive federal com -
pensation. Guillain-Barre clai-
mants W111 not need to prove
n~gligence by federal workers
or othenr1 in the swine rlu pro-
gram as required, b)' federat
law. and the law In m any
:-.ta t es." s aid the HEW
secretary. "Instead. claimants
in mos t cases need to show only
thal they in fact developed
Guillain-Barre as a result of .i
c;wine nu vaccination and suf.
fered the alleged damages."
The swine flu epidemic never
occurred. The administration of
Gerald R. Ford mounted the in-
oculation drive after a soldier at
Fort Dix, N.J .• died in February
1976 of a disease sus pected to be
s wine nu.
Swihe nu swept the world in
1918-19 and killed 20 million
persons .
Califano said that persons who
got shots were not warn ed that
they carried lhe risk that one m
every 10,000 persons would con-
tract Guillain-Barre aod that
one in every two million would
die from it
He s aid lhat prior to this cam-
paign , "there was no evidence
linking Gwllatn:Barre to flu vac-
cinations."
rs round in Surma where lhe
mines have been nationalized
dnd are government conlrolled
They are "oll Um11s" to ou1-
s1ders. When I visited lhere re-
cently, I was warned not to
make purchases trom in·
dlviduals. Gem material can be
sold only in the government
store.
Jadeite is a semHraMlucent stone and most often whue. or
green, or white with green
spots. Tll9 other colors are less
common, but sometimes very
lovely.
The finest green ot Jadeite
may be likened to that ot
Emerald, and •t is this shade
that ts otten compared to Im·
penal Jade Tzu Hsr. l he last
Empress of Ctuna. valued Jade
so tughly that she re,ec1ed an
impressive diamond tiara ot-
tered by a favor-Meker. but
welcomed • Y1S1tor Whose gift was a small bul exquisite art1·
cle mede cA deep green~-
The Chinese have long
venerated J9de for Its beauty
and tougtinets. It Is atlll hlghly
regarded as tt waa centur1es
ago 1nd many ot the finest
pfecn '"" today ,,. relics ot
ancient dynasties.
The current hope of a North
American J.cM touree llH In
Alatk•. ~r1y explorer11 lounc:t
Jacfe In general u1e by the
Alaskan 1041ans and Eskimos.
One ol Alaska's mountains 11 •
called JaclJ Mountein II Is en-
tt rely green and cont11n1
enormous deposits of Nephrite.
The atonea from this mountain
occur In olive gl'Mf'I, yellow·
green . grey·green end
blackish-gr.en
~·CHARLES fl. HARR 11 you would hke to see the
two types of Jade, Jadeite a~d
Nephrite •. and the full range
ol colors In Which they 09cur.
com e Into Charles Barr
Jewelers. We have them to
show you Words paint lovely
p1eturM. but the,.·a nothing to
equal aeel"9 the ,..1 thing
The beet q1.11Hty ot Jade com·
es from the ml~ral J•c:telle II
> .
·~o,_., ... ,
\
.J
' · .4.:f DAil Y ~LOT Tueedlty, June 20, 1171 NATION I WORLD I ~EATHEA
~ KIUer Satellites
Jut
:·:., Coasting , . with~~ Tom~~~.'
Soviets Warned ·
Marphine On Space Race
J oust a Minute
LOWER THE DRAWBRIDGE: Our public schools face
clear financial distress these days. And yet only yesterday.
Orange County spokesmen for the California Teachers As·
sociation sounded as If they want to play it like days of old
when knights were bold.
~
WASl:nNGTON CAP> -The Carter administration is warning the
Soviet Union tha~ 1t rnust agree to a ban on killer satellites or the
United States wllrno! hesitate to escalate the arms race in space.
"We're the world4s !'host technically advanced nation," an ad·
ministration official said on Monday. "We can achieve a system that
is of higher quality and better
The money shortage, or course, comes from the reduc·
tion in property tax revenue ordered when the voters
adopted Propositlon 13. And CTA ofricers had someth1ng to
say about that in a press conference.
than theirs." race that could cost each nation
lie said he hoped the two coun-billlons or dollars.
They said teachers wouldn't accept cuts in pay or
fringe benefits. They said the state Lesislature should
restore the funds needed to operate public schools al cur·
rent levels. ""
FURTHER, THE TEACHERS association people said
if tht> lawmakers rail lo rest.ore funds, the CTA will recom·
mend that either schools not open at all in the fall. or that
·districts keep going at current levels until all the money
runs out.
When the money runs out. the CTA says you just s hut
down the schools.
This approach lnde.ed sounds very much like the days
of old when in wantme. the knights feasted until they
fought.
In those days, the prince of one fiefdom sometimes got
crosswise with the prince of another little kingdom. So one
would march out and s urround the other's castle with his
arm y.
ABRUPTLY FINDING themselves under siege. the
boys inside the s urrounded castle couldn •t venture forth
for meat or vegtables any more. But those surrounded
knights refused to alter their lavish life style.
They continued right on, having feasts and dancing
girls every night.
Finally the food r an out. They had 1>ne last lavish
feast. Then lhe knights polished up their armor. lowered
the drawbridge and marched out to meet the enemy and
quite likely end up dead.
You have to doubt that very many citizens want to run
our public schools that way today. Most people. regardless
how they voted on Proposition 13, would prefer that our
public schools tighten up .and make Jt through the next
school year.
The voters didn't·inlend for the school .districts to feast
right up until doomsday and then shut down.
tN TIUS VIEW, the CTA has within Its ranks many
fine educators who should be able to help school boards
and administrators find areas where savings could be
achieved Yet instead the public is given a doomsday solu· t1on.
How about Instead we talk about eliminating all school
busing? How about reducing all athletics to the intramural
level and putting a ll extracurricular activities on a self·
sustaining basis?
Why not a call to civic organizations. church groups
and other Philanthropists to come to the aid of our public
schools? Why,.just last Sunday, some Orange Countians
donated more than one million dollars to a single church.
Perhaps it is a bit early to force our public schools to
lower the drawbridge and march off into oblivion.
tries would agree to curb anti·
satellite systems before the
superpowers engage in a new
and ~unhealthy" space arms
Dentist's
Sex A buse
Trial EnJs
NEW YORK CAP> -A dentist
accused or fondling sedated
female patients had been
described by a prosecutor as a
''sick man" whose s ickness
comes close to sexual desire for
corpses.
"It Is only the warmth of their
bodies that separates the acts
from necrophilia," said Assis·
tant District Attorney Linda
Fairsleln of the charges against
Dr. Marvin Teicher, 53. "Is this
not a classic example of a dirty
old man?"
TEICHER'S ATTORNEY,
Henry Rothblatt, said in his
sum mation at the non-jury trial
in Manhattan Supreme Court
that his client "mrght have done
a couple or dumb things" and
used resuscitation techniques
that were "a little antiquated"
when be squeezed the sedated
young women.
But he said there was "not one
bit of evidence" to support the
charges of sexual abuse, which
could get Teicher up to seven
years in prison.
REFERRING TO Teicher's
claim that the patient.S accusing
him had sexual hallucinations as
a result of the drugs he had
given them, Ms. Fairstein asked
scornfully:
"Why is it that only attractive
young women h ave sexual
hallucinations in his oHice? ...
Common sense tells us our den·
tist 's hands belong in our
mouths."
AFTER THREE female pa-
tients complained to the district
attorney's office of h aving
"body soreness" and finding
their clothes in disarray after
being roused from sedation, a
court order was obtained in Ju·
Jy. 1976, permitting investigators
to put a hidden camera in the
dentist's offi ce
A videotape made while an un·
dercover policewoman was be-
ing treated by Teicher was
played In the courtroom . It
showed the dentist hugging the
policewoman with his hands on
her buttocks.
ROTHBLA1T SAID his client
would have to be an .. idiot" to
molest two more women after
one h ad threatened to file a
malpractice action against him.
But the prosecut~said the
second and third in · ts were
evidence of "the ickness"
behind Teicher's acts.
Justice Dorothy Cropper said
she would deliver her verdict
Wednesday.
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• T llE OFFICIAL, who asked
not Jo be identified. briefed re-
porters on a new national space
policy recently drawn up by
President Carter. The policy is
dedicated to continuing U.S.
technological s upremacy in
space. with strong emphasis on
military systems to counter
possible Soviet threats.
Early in his administration,
Carter made a pubijc appeal lo
the Soviets to outlaw satellite·
destroying systems. But that na·
tion has staged five tests since
then and has given no signs It in·
tends to forgo lhe killer satellite
system .
THE TWO NATIONS held the
first round of talks on a possible
ban last week in He ls inki,
Finland. But the briefing official
dec lined t o discu ss what
transpired, nor would he say if
the warning had been delivered
to the Soviets during the talks
He said the Russians "in one
sense already have a capabili·
ty" shown by tests in which they
have knocked several or their
own satellites out or the sky. He
said he did not know how close
the Soviet system was to be<:om·
ing operational.
IN RESPONSE to the threat,
the United States has started de·
veloping its killer satellite
system. But the offlci;ll said "it
will be a significant amount of
time before we can test It.··
The Carter space policy state·
ment says that without ctn agree-
ment the United States will de·
velop a "contingency reaction
capability which cctn effectively
detect and react to threats to
U.S. peace systems."
Carter's is the first U.S. space
policy declaration since Prest·
dent John F. Kennedy In 1.961 set
supremacy as a goal when he
committed the country to land·
ing a man on the moon 1n that
decade. The Kennedy statement
came after several Russian suc-
cesses that included sending the
first man into orbit.
Illinois
Rea.dies
ERA Vo te
Center of Drive
Ch~ryl Neilson. 11, of Juanita. Wash .. sits a mong 99 tons
of newspapers_ collected ~Y Ju~nita Elementary School P~ A to help with her medical balls. The recycling. a long
with other fund·raising events. made about SS.500 for
C.heryl, ~ho ~pends five nights a week hooked up to a kidney d1alys1s machine.
'Rolling Stones'
Return to Roots
By MA.RV CAMPBELL
NEW YORK CA P> -Mick Ja~~er played the nauJ?hty sch~Jboy _Monday night as the Rolling Stones played solid roek'n'
roll m their only concert here on this year's American tour at the 3,000·seat Palladium. '
. While t.!ie rest of the Stones made good, tight. loud music whtc~ a listener could feel from the feet through the abdomen to t~e ~muses. Jagger was out in front, singing, always the eye-rivetmg showman.
HE SKl'ITERED AND PRANCED around an added apron of
stage with a cheerful, energetic frenzy.
. He said a few naug hty words, some or them into the m1~rophone. and made a few naughty gestures. at first looking ten·
tatave and going on to be more boldly showorr. He wore a
multicolored T-shirt. white jacket and cap and shiny red pants
short enough that bare leg sometimes showed above brown socks. •
ONLY A COUPLE OF OLD songs were done, "Honky Tonk \~oman·· an~ "Roll Over Beethoven,·· the latter getUng the night's biggest ovation. .
"I like to do the new songs," J agger said. He did play piano for a soulful gospel numbe r and followed it with a slow blues.
The Stones, who have been scolded by some rock critics for
playing huge halls and urged tb "return to their roots .. and play halls ~it~ smaller audiences. a re doing both on this tour. They are appear·
mg in seven mammoth outdoor arenas. about 10 halls with 12.000 to
17 .000 seats and 10 more" intimate" theaters or around 3,000seats.
THE LAS:r TIME THE STONES were in New York they gave
four concerts m three days at 20.000·seat Madison Square Garden.
They performed for the first time in New York in 1964 also at
the Palladium. then named the Academy of Music. ln hono~ of this
first return. during the group·s last two numbers the chandelier
was switched on. Impresario Ron Delsener said it hadn't been lighted for 32 years.
S PRINGFIE LD. Ill
<AP) -Thirty-six II ·
linois legislators have
asked President Carter
for assurances that a
vote against the pro·
posed Equal Rights
Amendment in the JI .
llnois House will not
Jeopardize federal funds
for Chicago.
The bipartisan group
of legislators from
around the state, 28 of
whom are ERA oppo·
nents. sent a telegram to
the White House Mon·
day in reaction to an al·
legation by Phyllis
Schlafly. on e of the
amendment's major OP·
ponents.
Canon
SCllLAFLY S AID
''someone h igh " In
ehicago Mayor Michael
Bilandlc's
administration told her
over the weekend that
Carter had threatened to
c ut off uns pecified
federal runds unless lhe
mayor f o rced
Chicago-area legislators
.to vote for ERA.
Mrs. Schla fly would
not identify the purport
ed informant.
A White Ho\,lse aide
denied lhe allegations.
"THE NOTION ... is
simply unimagina ble
and totally untrue." said
Lawrence D. Gilson, an
official in the White
House o ffice that
monitors administ.ralion
of federal g rantA to
cities. "All r can tell you
'" It Isn't so. It wouldn't happen."
Bilandic could not be
reached for comment.
MRS. SCHLAFLV, a
conservative columnist
from Alton who has led
the nationwtde Cltht
against ERA ratltlca-
Uon, made her latest al·
legation as the llllnols
House prepa red for a
showdown vote on the
amendmrnl as early as
W~dnesday.
t
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ITH 'it • t lf~ v. g~'-'? 1 n It ,, "· -"' ~~= I~ • s!i 1:~· =~~ l:l= 1% ,ti U~; ~ ~.,~~ 1 n ' ·:} ll'~ ~ Uon 's ecooomy showed virtually no ~~ 1 «> ' 1; l~ :! 8"~ gr ~ f6 ·· ,, Ilv.::. i4 H:li :J ~·~ ·· ; ~"' ~ ~ =i~irm oHi ~'. ~ ottvo:J~ Bi& p11 40 1 u..,-.... growth In the first three months this =~':,,1·tt . 1 '1"'-~ 8~?c~~ zJlH~ H"": ~ ~:,~,, "'(" ~ r.""~"" =Ut ' 1·lf' 1 w-"' EG g::f7 ~ ll1o11 ~ \ll year but did not de c line u
,.,M12·'111 ff mt'._ 4;, &~::'tm ~ •: a~ ~V•:_ II. ~:.'oJ/ ·:'t 4'8 1;:= ~ = .rt·s I ; 111;, ·::. ~g r.u~ 'llj ~t..,.:1v. economtSlS thought ft WOUld , tbet ~:.,1. i' " J! ,si?:.:1~ EG&O .. ~ .. lS-""' .... ::~A '· ~ T lt::: ~r: rt .. ·1 "t ~,::::."" PS~cr..:1 ~ . 11.:g '14.,._; :: Commerce Department said today
1ut1ar1" 1 1~ 1J~ "' 1:11111 1111 1 uJ 1" E111111tt1 ~ l' P' r. .... -"' =i0roW*t' 1 6 )0 Jt "'::·I.\ PU1>11c11. u 1 , 11 'fv. .. . n usually takes a growth in the
Aut'" 81 it !J -"" Efrri 110 S 19 271'1+ C.. """'.., ... 0 4H ~.1 M A I 1 11\lt Puelllo ' '4 '"•loll G N ti' l pod l f bo ti"•t -c-c -E•gltP T• tO 1• ,, -~ ti"m@on.so ts ""· • M ·~·a,· tt u " ?• :..:(.\ etSPl I a 10 M ff"'. \lo ross a ona r UC 0 a u
t c • »1 n,.-1, Eako '10 • i. ,..,,. • "• ~H~~l~c: ,. 1! '1'! 1~,. • "'II ro t • 41 m•-1-11 ~11mn , ',~ '%' ~~--percent pe r year t o keep the a ,., .... _ 'A E••tAlr 1 6AI Ill• t °" ' •• • M ~ i" 11 f-"" r urtx U "'· .. 1 111., 11" -v, E•Alr Pit M 2• "'" .. • "" " .. 1 o 1l"'-v. "'"""' 11 • 1 o Purlln!'• • P ~~-~ economy growing rapidly enough to L~1\ F
1
.: t u ~:--~ ~::mr. l~li ~ m: "I,.. HuvO -4°!~ ~ 1
'--°"~Ml"~~ 1i:~ 7~ :;:: ~Pll~l,lr :ilt 1: :; ... ; \'\ CrC3lC jO~ Md kCCp buslneSS active, "' II S l'IO It'-)-'• E.IKOd I U SC•~-Yt 1$ '"" I 68 • 41 U..,,+ 14 M n 1 j • 1 \/) kStO 11 10 UYI-\\ • t e
A"' ~ • .. W.,, '' t•ton t. • t lt•\ "' 1~ 1n pt uo . l •> ••••. MP: ~· · • ~ ~ .., ~ '· t3 1 ,, -\\ economlRw say. ;t• 't·'° i ;: )I~-~ mc:i11 .I1U 13 l:::. 0\11 :N~Cp uo. ·= ,t::-.... ~:~ .. t' bl' ': ft~;~ :lrPIA a ,,u~: ~ After adjustment for lnfiation. the ~SNat .~I li ;m··"' dl~•t O lOio .. IO 'r°'' ~IO~~ 1.s;a. 1:01t::::.~ MopJ pUM.1 4d1f~ .. II ,:;,•...,,,-'1'9-°' OlltiOn'S OUtpUt or goods ruJd SCTVices
tlolC ' 1 ii t " 14 1 s" • I '°"' .. " lrl•l'Alf t 1' 1l 11 flt!..... ==~ .. •·20 ~ ·~ = Ilg .,, f •• • nYt-\It grew by less thM one· Len th of 1 per.
I :: t~ HLJ,~; ~ fll'C:S:p1UL1
, "! tt~ \; 1~! .. iJ: .• • n' ~~...: -=~o :;& 1! ~ :~:: il! .:L n IS~~.::y, cent ln the first quarter. tho depart.
• •• 1, ' u.,. Ill itKAHC • • ...... I u• • i.v. "'1 MoltllOI• 1$ -,~. • •llPUf '°II ~I ·~ -~ m enl said ... .t • i.... . •01 .n If 6 '°"". I w pf • •• cNS\t-... AMftlfA 1.10 , • 'J\4 ...,,..., ll't tt 1m" ... .. •
I
luead.ay. June 20 Hl78 s OAILt PILOT
'l'gpicpl Fanai~y
Stocks Look
Overly Risky
By SVLVIA PORTER
The following may be a profile of most people trying to
manage your family hnances in mid-1978.
As the UrTS-78 el(pansion reaches late middle·age. lhc
overall stock market remains way below its peak or a de·
cade ago, interest rates climb to high levels and inflation
accelerates, the typical person might:
-Deeply resist taking n sk! with money and become
more and more preoccupied with preserving capital.
-Fear inflation, expect it to worsen and increasingly
worry aboul lllaintaining the owo dolla r's buying power.
-Adopt a cool attitude toward buymg stocks. not
because of an anticipated business downturn, but because
of a lack of willingness to assume even •'moderate" risks.
-Nevertheless. still feel investing Is important.
THAT IS A TYPICAL American financial dec1sion-
maker in mid·l978, accordmg1 to an Opinion Research
Corp. s urvey of public attitudes toward investment con.
ducted for th~ New York Stock Exchange. The survey find·
1ngs are said to be applicable to 61 percent of all U.S
households .
Among its most signifi cant d1sclosutes is that those
with a household 111come of $10,000 or more value income
over potent1al capital gains. and. preservation of capital
and purchasing power above all else.
Thi s th e m e ---------..... dominates. Even
though most P.e<>ple are
not pess1m1sllc about
the future and, on the contrary, expect bus l·
ness profits to chmb in
the next few years. they
Money's
Worth
don't plan to parttc1pate In these profits through ownership
or common stocks. Financial goals aTe modest and de·
fensive, preferred \nvestments are insurance, passbook
savmgs accounts, a homilllliiavittgs bonds. employee sav-
ings plans. Savings certtfimes rank sixth. Common stocks a re listed m runth place
Less than half those surveyed are intent on long.term
cap1tal gams; less than a third are tempted by short-term
profits. only 'Z7 percent are intent on accumulating money
fo r large purchases.
INFLATION'S IMPACT HAS BEEN DEEP . Key goals
are keeping up w1lh climbing living costs, protecting the
fa mily. providing an estate Thia attitude crosses all age
groups. aJI mcome brackets
Yet. avotdance of risk-taking could ultimately tum out
to be the riskiest choice if inflation continues to erode the
buymg power What does th1s mean?
First, any hngermg doubtci that inflation is the basic evil should be wiped ouL
SECOND, LACK OF INVESTMENT knowledge ts
abysmal, reflecting a fallure among fmancia1 leaders to
provide the public w1th appropnate edueatlonal tools and
the public's failure to try to understand the relative nsks
and rewards or different types of investments
Third, indifference to investing in stocks calls ror
change m tax laws to encourage a more positive view -
such as more liberal tax treatment of cap1tal gains and
losses, elimination of double taxation of divtdends. etc .. m-
stead of the ha1·sher lreatment bemg recommended under
the guise or .tax rerorm
OC Trust Acquires
Out-of-state Parcels
Wespac Investors Trust, an Orange County eqwty real
estate trust, has cwquired four properties for a total of
Sl6 3 million.
Wespac acquired the Tlberon Trail Apartments Ul
Merrillville, lnd. for $7 6 million T1beron Trail consists of
14 garden·style apartment buildings contauung 376 units.
The trust also acquJred Security Park. a Lubbock,
Texas shopping center and office complex, for $4.1 million.
The facility bas approximately 90,000 square feel of renta-
ble space.
President Leonard Rogers said that the trust made its
initial entry m the Dallas market with the acquisition of
the Rochelle Apartments, a 112-urut complex located on a
S·acre parcel. The pro1ect was acquired for $2.4 million.
In addition, the trust made its first acqws1lion in Tulsa
with the addition of Fountain Plaza, a $2 2 million office
building complex consisting of three bu1ldmgs contairung
72,000 rentable square feet ·
Rogers also announced that the Casa Marina Apart·
ments, a 175-unit project in Galveston, Texaii, has been
sold for $2.8 million
Profits A nnounced
By Manufacture r
J ames Dole Corp. bas reported earnings of $3Z:U58 or 28 cents a share on sales of $5,088,008 ror I.he nine months ended April 30.
Thts prof1l reflects a non-recurring expense of $135,105
02 cents a share> associated with the merger with
Newport Research Corporation of Fountain Valley.
This compares with earnings of 40 cents a share on
sales of $4,806,488 for lhe 'period last year
The company, at its Newport Research Division,
manufactures vibration isolated table systems and laser
application instruments, and its Dole D1v1sion. RedwOOd
City, manufactures equipment for the food cannmg, soft
drink, meat and aviation tndustries.
Housing Production
Drop Seen in 1979
Following a traditional cycHcal pattern, CaHforma
housing production will decline through 1979. according to
a forecast by Wells Fargo Bank.
William Ford. senior vice presldent and the bank's
chief economist, said housing unlta authorized will drop lo
nbout 225,000 units lhls year and to some 200,000 in 1979.
Typically, lhe state's annual houslng need ls 200.000-220,000
units.
A RECORD %10.900 UNITS was recorded by lbo stat.G
in 1917.
"Wo want. to empbastie that we do not expect a repeat
of the drastic decline in new bUlldlng thnt occurred in the
lasl recession," Ford s1ud, quoting from the housln1t
forecast ln t.bc June Issue or t.bo bank's monthly "Busin~ Review."
"Between 1972 and 1974. California housing fell by S4
percent. Our forecast Is for a 26 wrcent reduction througll
1979, .. be 6.8ld.
»owever. Ford added a word of cautloo.
"Our fo~cast wJll pro\re to be overly opUmlst1c tt a
renl credit crunch develops. We do expect a modest further
increase fn short-term ln~rest rates but It will stop short or the double-digit levels or 1974 •
1
I
' l
•
I
.
r IJllMSay, June 20, 1978 Television TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS
11 ·~~1l.\\
< E\IENJNG
"°SD• NEWS ~ONe
A nurM NII Rarn9W1 Ha..
polel •bl.la •th f\HT\Ofe G O~
A IOMly 9')tMI« 1111<11
rotnance wnn 1 wourl(Md
11r1ng« ltle nur-o.c ..
to health
• Pt.!MEOOH'TEAT
THEDAa81ES
"Of Hlr~ Anet surcr-
Ano BlQ. Round Ooo•" -~12
FOUi wit-contrldk:t
Malloy'• evewltneu
aocount and aceu11 Sgt.
MacOooeld ol reckleas
drivtng ( fn ELECTRIC COMPANY
'v m IT'S EVEAY'BOOY'S
BUSINESS
"Tiie Business Firm"
Cl) CBSNEWS ®I A8CNEWS
8:30 tD MY THREE SONS
Tiie Douglas ramoly returns
lrom a frtP fo 8roleon ond
SleYe llndS httn1611 Urry•
•no a torCfl tor • •ovel)
... 1<1ow
Ragtime Pols
G) ROOKIES
lhe Rookies nave 10
avenge 1he acc1d1n1a1
~tong of a man
fD OVEAEAS't'
Mort Sahl, br11lcfaat
cr81)8S Social Secur11y; a
IMlt with Frank ThOmn,
animator. Disney Stoooos.
11:) RE.Al EST A TE ANO
YOU
Btll:v· Dee Williams <left > plays
raglime composer Scolt Joplm and Clif-
ton Davis is his close friend in "Scotl
J oplin: King of Ragtime" tonight at 9
on NBC, Channel 4.
· Whal Is Real E1t1te?"
()) AMERICA 2NIGHT
Ouosl Virgil Simms
@) MERV GRIFFIN
OuoslS Hermione GongOld,
Joanna Cameron. Ch8rles
HIM, Mau Collins
7:00 6 CBS NEWS Q NBCNEWS
I) LIARSCLUB Q ABCNEWS 0 BOWUNGFOR
OOUAAS
Q) I LOVE LUCY
A gawlly lad ono 11 comffly
girl fall on love w11h Lucy
alld Ricky. respectively
G) AOAM·12
Malloy and Reed wor1c with
young 1101 rodd6fl on an
ett0'1 to get them ott tile
streets
Ell) MACHEJL I LEHRER
REPORT m ARABSAND
ISRAELIS
"The Pa1es11n1ans" Con·
1ras1ono percepllOfls or 1118
Palestinian aspiration for a
homeland are explored.
(Part 1 or 2)
CJ) JOKER'S WILD
7:30 fJ THE MUPPET$
Guesl Bob Hope
Q CANDID CAMER.A 9 NEWL YWEO GAME
fJ 9 HOLLYWOOD
80UAlllE8 0 JOKER'S WILD
G) THE 000 COUPLE
Oscar and Fehx are
ShOcked to learn 11'181 a
computtt dahng service
Plas ma10he<I Oscar and
Gloria, Fetut'a u-w1te
Cl) AMERICA 2HIGHT
Guest V1rg11 Simms. ID 28TONIGHT
Cle1e Roberts llosts
Channel Listing•
8 KNXT !CBS) Los Anqele'>
CiJ KNBC(NBC) Los Ange111~
O KTLA (Ind) Los Angeles
fJ KABC·TV (ABC) Los Angeles
(() KFMB (CBS) San Diego 0 KHJ· TV (Ind ) LOS Angeles
[§) KCST (ABC) San Diego
0) KTIV 'Ind ) Los Angeles
41) KCOP-TV (Ind ) Los Angeles
&!) KCET-TV !PBS) Los Angeles
'1i) KOCE·TV (PBS) Hunlington Beach.
1onlgh1'a lnve111g111ve
reporl
l'Il) WONDERFUL WORLD
Of COUNTRY MUSIC
(IJ THE GONO SHOW
8:00 f) (J) CBS REPORTS
8111 Moyers reports on
Lawrence Beay, a resident
or Laredo. Te•as. who
fougtit city hell aria won.
Marlene Sonders reports
on tile s11u1tlon Jn Taiwan
as the U S. comes closer
10 lull d1ploma1oc relations
w1lh Peking
0 MANFROM
ATLANTIS
•·Mell Down" An evil sc111n-
hs1 (Vietor Buono) promos-
" 10 11op wt>mero•no the
earth With melled kl• 11
Mark ~ris win surrender
10111m (R) 9 MOVIE * *'"* "An American
Dream" ( f966) Stuart
.v1111man. Janet Letgll A
1e1ev1s1on reporter Is
caught betw8trn tile
underworld and the pollC9
aller k11t1ng his eSlranged
wole (2 hrh)
0 @) HAPPY DAYS
·'Marion 11 M1sg1v1ngs"
Wt>en Marion rears slle 1s
lo~ing Ho ward to a
younger woman (Suzo
Ouetrol. she transtorms
herself Into 11 vetled beauty
and turns tt>e Cunningham
home onto a scene from
"The Arllblon N1gh1s." (R) 0 MOVIE
Michener' s 'Eden'
Eyes South Pacific
By JA V SllARBUTT
L OS ANGELES tAP>
Jame s i\11cht•ncr. whose
wartime .. Talcs of the South
Pacific" won a Puhllzer. has
taken another fook there and
come up with a public TV show,
"The South Pacific: End of Eden·i··
It's on KCET Channel 28,
toni ght at 8. In it, he studies
.-;uch locales at Pitcairn Island.
.New Guinea, 'fahit1 and tiny
Eniwetok, the last site or
/\merica's first II bomb test in
1952.
(TV REVIEW J
tions. and bare-breasted s wamp
Rockettes there doing tribal
dances with their men <JS a pre·
lude to tribal war.
And in Tahiti, we're again told
Capt. Cook and other early ar·
rivals helped ruin paradise with
"three Western imports which
began the destructive process -
syphillis, iron and whiskey."
,
• • * 111 '•Away All Boalt"
( 1858) Jetf Chandler,
Geofge ~..A lt&nepott
Cf ft Pf 0\'11 lit wotth Wf'ltll
un<* ettedl during Wofld
WW If (2hrl I
8) CAA<X 8UAN£TT
AHOFAIEHOS
Guet1ur Jun Stapleton,
Ptlll SllYe<t
g) MOVIE * * * * "Anne And The King Of Slam" (t946) lr-
Ounne, RH H1rrlson. A
widow. accompanied try
her eon. accepts a post lrt
Slam to tutor Ille children
of tile king. (2 hrt., 30 min.)
81) JAMES MICHENER'$
WORLO
"The South Paclfk:: End Of
Eden?" The various cul-
1ur,D ol Ille South Pacilic.
thJ'I far uninfluenced by
lhe 20th century, ·are
explored
'11) TUAtV<BOUT
"Shitting Gears" Fove
110uaeW1ve1 wtio cllanged
tllltf lllestylff: a char1et
boat captain, a gradulte
1lud1n1, a m8dlca1
11udent. a ba)t1ng 1eac11er
ano a people'& rep1-ta·
11ve In San Francisco
8:30 Q 9 LAVERNE l
SHIRLEY
"The Obstacle Course"
La-and SP!lrley maJce
an attempt 10 run an
obS1Kle course to quality
for police work. <R>
Q) CROSS-WITS m> OvtREASY
Mort Sahl, breakfast
crepes: Social Security; a
v11111 wllh Frank Thomes.
animator, Olsnev S1ue11os
8:00 f) ces MOVIE • * 'h "Escape From
Bogen Count/' ( 1977) Jee·
lyn Smith, Mitchell Ayon A
slele Jnvestlgetor f111ds 111s
only hope In bu1ld1no a
case against a powerful
polltlcien to be Ille man's
victimized wife (RI
0 NBCMOVIE
"Scott Jop11n Kono 01
Ragtime" (Premiere) Biiiy
Dee w omam5. Art Carney.
Tile ettorts of tile Ttcl\ly
creative black muS1C1an
Scott Joplin 10 gain reooo-
nlllon and acceptance •n
UW! mosoc; world are traced
on t111a dramatization or Ill$
lof8
Q ~ THREE'S
COMPANY
··Home Movies" Chrissy
cranks out amateur movies
or Jeck ano Janet and os
mosled into th1nk1ng she
hes a "h11 .. (R)
41) MERV ORIFFlN
Guests. Hermione Gongold.
Joanna Cameron. Charles
Hox, Mall Collins. Alda
Th1b1an1. Richard
S1mmOn6. fl!) THE UNWANTED
Allens, employers and
1mm1grauon olllc1ols are
TUBE TOPPERS
CBS fJ 8:00 -CBS News Hour. This
special focuses on a one·man campaign
to clean up the streets of Laredo. Cor-
respondent Bill Moyers reports.
KCOP (!) 8:00 -"Anna and the King
of Siam." This 1946 movie with Irene
Dunne a nd Rex Harrison is the
"straight" version of the musical "The King and I."
KCET@ 8 :00 -James Michener's
World. The South Pacifi c 1s the subject
of this travelogue presentation. <See re·
view below>.
onl~ on the prob-
lem of Illegal lmmograllon
as II olle<:ts Maxicen
a11en1. u S cltlztlfls and
r@11dent1 ol Cal1I01n(a.
l'Il) MASTE.ltP1ECE
THEATRE
• Poldark" Poldork It
sav.ect trom a French t11ino
squad, then londt that hos
lnenel 1s •toll 111111. George
arrang1s a m1rr1ag
bet-M~na and
Reverend Whitworth:
Oemelza gives blnh 10 a
daughlet (P11n 3 of 13)
(I) THE FIGHT AGAINST
SLAVERY
"A Matter Of Insurance" In
l 779. Ille cue of a alave
captain thrOWlng 130 Afri-
cans overboard lurned
public opinion agalnll 111e
slave lrael6
9:30 0 ®J CARTER
COUNTRY
"All AbOul FIOyd" Curtis
urges Chier Roy io 111re
anothet black police orro.
cer, men dlSCowtra he /!BS
made a btQ moslllke CR)
10:00 0 0 NEWS O ®J 20120
· HarOld Heyes and Robert
Hugnes are the l>olt• tor 11
bro&dusl edition ol a
,_. mag.azlne futurong
tour major starlet done by
VDflo<JS correspondents fE MICAAEl. JAQ(S()N
Ketby Alby, fOUndlf of Ille
Child Abuse Information
Center, eumonet Child
abuse. corporal punish·
men! 1n SClloOls. retoeblhla·
11on and punosnment of
abusing parents, ano
r_!2hls of chtldren
Ui) CRIMINAL JUSTICE
IN A NATION OF
ORPHANS
(I) THE FIGHT AGAINST
SLAVERY
"Tight Peckers And Loose
P11,1:kers" Confhcl grows
t>e'ween abol1t1on1a1s ano
the vested mter8$IS pro-
longing slavery.
10:30 G) Q) NEWS
fD MACNEJL I ~REA
REPORT
l'Il) CXAL ALCOHOL
"In The Beg1nn~"
11•00 f) Q fJ Cl) @) NEWS
0 LOVE. AMERJCAN
ST'f'l.E
Love A/Id The Uns1eae1y
Steady" Erno& th.nk1 thal
Ile would like 10 mauy
Steffi. "Love And lhe
Cry111' Cowboy" Cteyon
Potts dllCldea to marry
April Ann 0 MOVIE
•"•"Sunset Bou~ard"
(19SOI w111111m Hol0e'1.
C1or1a SwnnSO<l. A laded
movie slar proves 10 be
lhe downlall ol a promosmg
young writer (2 hrs I
G) THE 000 OOUPlE
Oscar develops a strong
01tachmen1 for Fel1M's
doctor, an 11trac11ve young
woman
Q) MONTY PVTHON'S
FLYING CIRCUS
Eii.) DICK CAVETT
Gues1· Ed Emsw1Ner, one
01 Ille foremost arll"s on
the rel11t1vely new field of
V•deo an
l'Il) MACNEJl I LEHRER
REPORT
11 :30 f') (J) CBS LA TE MOVIE • * * "Columbo Murder
By Tiie Book" ( 19711 Peter
Falk, Jaclc Cassidy LI
Columbo 1nves1ogates the
e;ase of a mystery wr11er
wt\O seemingly pulls ott the
··per1ec1 c.tome" on Ille
murd11 of hos e•·Par1ner
(RI 0 BEST Of CARSON
Host· Johnny CBlson
Guests· Sammy Oavos Jr
George Peppard, Chari.a
Callas (Rl
0 LOVE, AMERICAN
STYLE
'love And Tile Travehnq
Salesmen" A traveling
salesman Is stuck out 1n
the country "love Arid
l ht! T opiess Polley" Ira
and Howord Oocoele that
theor roul'lge oeeds topless
waotr-• 0 1!1 SOAP
CEpilOde 151 JltMIGa 1141
tr au matte. 1nrorma1ton
regarding 118' daughter
that "'* mu11 reveal to
Cn.ater. o.nny gets •
lrl0hlantr"19 uU1matum trom
111e oooratner. 6urt hu
hai>py ,_ lo 1 .. 1 ~ Wiie
(RI (Network advlut v-d1.cretlonl
I HOGAN'& HEROES
GET SMART
CAPTIONED ABC
~ NEWS
M:>ANING
12:00 0 TWILIGHT ZOHE
A 11m1d b&nk clerk
acqu1ree the abHlty to read
other P60Ple'1 mlnde.
G) HIOHHOPES
G) HONEYMOONERS
Boettl"Q 111111 h• •• !lead ol
h11 llOUsehold, Rali>h bell
that he can brong 11 dlnnet
q_uest llOme unexpectedly.
12:03 U ®l ABC MOVIE * • '" "The Stool ... ' (1874)
Jaclue Ma.son, Dan FrllZB'"
A small· tune potoce •nlonn-
er •b•conds w1111 an
adv•nce ea1-m1rkld IOI' a
na•COllCS set.up (R)
12:300 MOVIE * • * "Mytlery Of EdWon
Drood" ( t93S) Claud•
Rains, va1eroe Hobson
Adapted from Dickens·
unfontShed novel, a mob
gathers With 1ueta u a
goal When three d1tf11ent
men ~1 v101en1 <1ea1111
because or one girt. t t
llr ,2Smon)
0) MOVIE
•• • •,. "Vov Only Live
Once.. ( 1937) Hanry
Fonda. Sylvlo Sidney Sellt
lo prison ol ralMI charges,
11 man becomes a Wiiier !2
llr, I
G) MOVIE
• • .. Arturo s Island"
( 1963) Reginald Kernan,
Key Mersman A teenage
boy •s allracred 10 111s
talllef's new bride (1 hr.,
30mon )
• 1:00 Q TOMORROW
N0tman Pn11e, o prtvate
detective, woll d•S<:Uss wlre-
18Pptng. corPOtare spying
and electronic t>ugg1ng: Ed
Hollman will demons1r1111
ways ot protecting oneMll
lrom rorgfl(s and mail
tlHeves 0 MA\/£RICK
• Tile Thirty-N1nlh Siar"'
1.15 tJ (I) KOJAK
· The Betrayal" A Sloolle
1Paur An~al le41ds Ko1ak
1nlorma11on tn Oreler IO lur·
IMr hos own career (RI
1400 NEWS
f55 0 NEWS
2:00 0(!) NEWS 0 MOVIE * • "The Mystery Ot M11r-
1e R09e1"' ( 19421 Maroa
Montez. Patric Knowles A
medical examiner uncov·
.,, a mutder altet 1111
actrlU dWiC)peltL ( 1 hf ,
IS mtn)
0 MOVIE
• ·~ ''Song Of &:heriet•
Ude" (19471 Yvonne
DeCMIO, Brian Donlevy. A
Runien ria1111 c•d•t
arrfv.. In Moroc;c;o and
~t• .,, exotic dllllOlt
Who 1n.p1r11 111m 10 wr'lt•
1111 OfMllll mualc. (2 hrt )
2:2t8 NEWS
2:30 Ga MOVIE
• •~ "Tiie Judg41 Stepa
Out" ( 19491 Ann Sothern,
Ale.dnder l<noii. A Jud99,
hiding In the Obec;urlty of •
ahort-o<der COOi! ·a job,
retuctantly return• home
when he leerna M 11 to
b8COl"nl a ore.Mlather. (2
hrs)
3:00 8 MOVIE
•• ~ "N-Wave Al A
WAC" (19S2) lllOHllnd
RuSMll, Peul Douglu..
3:150 NEWS 3:20 8 MOVIE * • "Thi Mystery Of Tiie
w11111 Room" I 1939) Bruce
Cabol. Joan WOOdt>ury.
4:00 0 MOVIE
• • "The &in NfN« Sela"
11939) Sasol Rathbone,
Douglee Felrl>Mlc1 Jr.
4:30 8 M0\11£
• • "Weird Women"
( 1944) Lon Chaney Jr •
Evelyn Anker•
Q) MOVIE-• * "Sla"8S Of Baby\On" I 19S:J) Rlcilard Conle. l1rt-
oa Chri111an
Tue11da11~•
Day• b11e Movies
M:>ANING
11:30Ga ** "MyS1sConw:1••
( f9S2) Millard Mllcnett. G1l-
bmi Roland A prison
psyct1111rost, with the rie.p
ol SI• 1nlelllgen1 convocts.
allempts to develop an
elfecllve rehabllllatlon
p.ogram (2 hr$ • 20 min t
AFTERNOON
12:00 0 * ~ "Sodan" ( 19-45)
Malia Montez. Tuman Bey.
A handsome vagabond,
W.lh the Bid of en OUli.wed
Slave lellder. rescues the
reoonlng Q\-1 of a myttw.
cal throne form her wdced
Chancellor ( f hr , 30 m•n >
3.'(IO ®' • • ··0rNtns Of
Glass" ( f970) JOhn Oenas.
Cafllone Barrell. The
romance between a •~
age boy ano gort 111 nttected
by !he morality ol their
hme ( t hr a30 mon I
3:30 U * ••1t · Drag...it"
( 1969) Jllcit Webb, Harry
Morgan So• Joe Friday
/llnd Otllcer Gannon 1nves-I t1ga1e the murders ol two
pretty mooefs and the di ..
appearance of 11 third. I I
hr .30mon)
Devane Set
For TV's
'Eternity'
LOS ANGELES <API
W1ll1am Devane has been signed
for the role of Sgt. Warden in the
NBC six-hour mini sen es based
on James Jones' book "FrQm
Here to Eternity."
Dl·vane. the first s tar signed.
will play the role portrayed by
Burt Lancaster in the multi-
Oscci r winnmg movie.
More stars will be named by
executive producers I larve Ben·
nt:>ll t.tnd llarris Kntleman before
produ<.'Lion begins July J 1n
Caltfornta and llawaii. ·'Thi~ look at th<' South Pacific
1s not rntc:ndcd as a guide for
travel. nor 1s tl m any way in·
Cl.'nded to IX' comprC'hensive," he
:-avs "It 1s simply a brier.
p ersonal 1mprcss1011 "
There's also a s ho t of a
jetliner zipping by, but no
Kodak·encrusted tourists are
seen. Which seems odd. Such
scenes would put the old and
new into sharper contrast.
heightened Michener 's lament.
Will She Testify?
Devane <>tarred as .John Ken·
ned\ in the TV special ''The
M1:-.-.1lcs of October:· and the
mo' 1c!> "Marathon Man:· "Roll·
tng Thunder." "Family Plot''
and .. The Bad News Bears in
Breaking Training."
MO 'T OF THE impression 1s
<m implied boo at c1v1lization, a
<iuiet lament for the old ways of
the Pac1r1c thc.tt c.tre cndangcrt-d
or <i~ mg out, thanks to what
~ome call 20th century progress.
Sad to sav. a lot of this one·
hour s how is YCQ pred1<.'table,
offers little more in thought and
\'1ew than what you've already
perused jn National Geographic
al thedentist'som ce.
There's yet another look at
how Pitcairn Islanders, descen·
dants of Flct<.'hcr Christian &
Co .. are faring nearly 200 years
C1 fter Captain Bligh lost a point
uf order on the "Bounty.··
ALSO. ANOTHE R look at
n<1ked New Guinea h ead-
hunters, their lives. thei r trad1·
THE llOUR PICKS up steam
only when lt shows New Gwnea
tribesmen fighting with spears
as a n example of "how much we
have changed and how little we
have changed."
This remarkable scene seques
into combat footage of World
War II in Lhe South Pacific. aC·
companied by s uch how.war·
changed.paradise obser vations
by Melchener as:
"Second li eutena nts from
NYU and UCLA told Solomon
Islanders about radios, baseball
and movies and, within the span
of a single conversation. whole
culturf"s s tepped 50,000 years
ahead "
FROM Fash ion Island
Newport Beach
Michael Parks <left) as a Texas ranger
and Henry Gibson, a state investigator.
try to get J aclyn Smith to testify against
her husbancl in "EscapC' From Bogen
County," amng tonight at 9 on CBS. Chan·
nel 2.
Freddie's Ready to Boost NBC
By TOM JORY
NEW YORK <AP) -NBC will
a ttract a bigger television au-
dience with new and innovative
programming that is meaningful
to the viewer and "does not
violate general standards of
taste," the networ.k's new presi-
dent, Fred Silverman. said Mon·
day.
Predominan ce in n e twork
television, Silverman told ex-
t!Cutives of the network's 216 af·
filiate stations meeting here to-
day. involves innovation and
style. a constant striving for ex·
<.'ellence, and respons1b11ity
"THESE ARE TllE elements
of the kind of leadership NBC
wi ll seek." Silverm an said.
"They do not rely on s hort·lerm.
artifi<.'1al rating advantagt•s.
They reauire thoughtful pl an.
ning of an overall pro~ram
framework and then moving to
fill in that framework, step by
s tep, over a penod of time ...
It \\as Silver rn an·s f1r-.t
public appearance since takmg
over as NBC'" pres1rtcnt June 9.
The 4Q.year-old programming
wht7., cred1te<t ny many with
engineering ABC's rise to the
top in the prime time ratings.
apparently sought in his speech
to a llay fears of some who an·
ticipated <J quick executive
shakeup and radical changes in
NBC 's programmmg.
IN FACT, NBC announced as
the meeting began. a major
overhaul of its previously an.
nounC'cd fa ll schcrlule, and
Si lverman said the revt!'ied ed1·
lion "will put NBC in lhP
-.troni;e!ll J>OSitton it has en1oyed 1n many years ...
Silverman said the heads
of NBC's television, news and
s ports divisions "are first-class
l'xecutives."
STEREO SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR
\