HomeMy WebLinkAbout1978-08-16 - Orange Coast Pilot17
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DAILY PILOT
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WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUST 16, 1978
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llundreds E~pected
At Gridder's ftites
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Thousands. Pay HOma·ge to Elvis
llnder'Ootla
Ray Denies He
M11nlered King
WASHINGTON (AP>-
James Earl Ray took the wit·
ness stand before Congress to-
day and swore, as expected, that
"I did not shoot Dr. Martin
Luther King."
Ray, in his (first public ac-
counting under oath or the
events surrounding the April 4,
1968, murder or the civil rights
leader, told the House assassina:
lions committee : "My testimony
ts the same that I would have
given to a Memphis trial court if
I had hadthatopportultity."
The 5()-year-old Ray, accom-
panied by a phalanx or U.S.
mars hals, was brought into the
Pair Freed
Of Teen-age
Sex Charges
Charges or crimes against
children which led to the arrest
of two local men earlier this
month have been dropped in the
Harbor Judicial District Court.
-cnrlslfan'"Va:rt S8liufffin, 21, a
\ . transient who police said fre-
• quents the Huntington Beach
Pier and David Wooten, 43, or
3882 Claremont St., Jryine, were
taken into ~uat.ody by Newport
Beach alonai With a 13-year-old
girl.
Pollce alleged the child's sex-
ual semces had been involved
in dealin&s between the two
men.
However. those cbarses were
dropped by court officlala when
the t een:ace tlrl, a runaway
from Chicago, was taken back to
Illinois by her parents. ..
However, Wooten ln his court.-
appearance Tuesday wu ar-
raigned on a cbarae of carryinl
a concealed weapon. Be la
scheduled to return to the
municipal court ror a pre-trial
conference on the mtademeanor
charae on Sept. lL
commlttee•s ehamber under
aevere aecurtty provi.tlons. Spec-
tators, inclodlnt photographers.
were cautioried they would be
expelled if they so much as stood
while Ray, wearing an lll-fitUng
sport coat and gray tie, entered
the room.
After his attorney. long-time
assassinations buff and writer
Mark Lane. engaged acting
chairman Richardson Preyer in
battle over Ray's treatment by
.federal a uthorities, Ray
launched Into a long and ram-
bling preliminary statement, his
voice quick but halting.
Ray pleaded guilty in 1969 to
King's . killing but almost Im -
mediately recanted that con-
fession after receiving a 99-year
sentence in a Tennessee state
prison.
"In respect to my guilty
plea," be said, "it is not a dif·
ficult matter for an attorney to
move his client to a guilty plea.
I'm sure every member or this
committee knows this."
Ray's attorney at the time of
his sentencing was Percy
Foreman, a nationally known
trial lawyer.
Then Ray turned to what ap-
paremly ,,.wW be u.e underl~
theme of his claim to innocence:
that he was a mere pawn in
what be thought was a gun-
running scheme by a IU)'atery
man named "Raoul" and 1¥,BY
have been set up, moreover. bY
undercover operations of the
FBI. The story ls one wbtch Ray
bas long aired via prison in-
terviews.
R4y told the commlUee about
<See RAY. P11e A2>
Car. Snaps Power
GARDENA (AP) -About
2,000 cuatomera were without
power· early today in a two-
square-mile area, a spokesman
for the Southern California
Edison Co. aald. It was ap-
parently caused by a car ram·
min1 a utility pole.
ans
. ............
FANS OF ELVIS PRESLEY WEEP OPENLY AS THEY LEAVE GAAVESITE IN MEMPHIS
On Rrat Anniversary of the King'• Death, 12,000 Expected at Cemetery
Nixom Become Grandparent,s in Ckmente
By ANNE COOPER ot•DllllY .........
An elated Davld ElsenhoweT
described the birth oi bla
dausbter Tuesday as "just a
wonderful experience.''
The new father. flanked by the
baby'a srandfJtther, (ortner pna-
ldent Richard Nixon, met with -reporters outalde Saa Clemente
General Hospital where his
daughter, Jennie, had been born
a few houri earlier.
Eisenhower said be-and bis
wUe, Julie Nixon Elsenbo~r.
prepared forahe arrival of the
baby by at~ndins cbtldbirtb
cla11e1 at the hotpital. He u -
slated 1n the delivery or the nlne-
pound, four-ouqce girl born at.
1:32 p.m. Tuesday.
The natural childbirth de·
livery left bis wife "feelint fine,
really fine." Eilenhower com-
mented.
"I called the,Nixons and my
mother and my grandmother all
within three minutes of the '1e·
•uvery." be aald. "The Nlxons
came rieht &o the h0&plt.al , and
everybody ls tbrllled, Just
thrUled."
Nixon. who said be was
pleased that hil fint crandcblld
ii a 1irl, &old reporten Tuesday
evenln1 after vialtln1 bis
dauchter that be looks forward
to baby slttlnt.
The former, president sald be
won't try to infiuence his arand·
daughter's career choice. "Jen·
nle will do whatever she wants
to do." he said. ·
•·she is tbe first ctlild born In
the United States wlth r~latlves
on both sides who were presi-
dents," be said. "With that
berttage, she may be attracted
to politics. But it she chooses a
music career or-.some.thinl else. that will be fme too." _
Jennie Eisenhower, as well as
being Nixon's 1randd'aughter: is
the areat-~randdaughter or
(See .JENNIE, Pace A%)
PUcE A PET
Wl'l8 PILOI' AD
Hundreds to Mourn Tliompson "The respcmse was unreal.
The first one that.called picked
her up. She iot a super home."
That's the ad\lertisln1 success 1tor1 told. by a }Junurriton
Beach woman who plac:ed this
ad in the Dally Pl lot:
well beyond overftowlnf, by prtl·
ent esllmates.
"We've bad manyt~fl'.IOY telepbODe calls uldq aDOUt the
Ume abd 1 even rot ~uJte a few myself at home, ' said a
mortuary 1poa.man.
ThomplOft, 17, en bonor atu.
dent and ID&inHr. of lb• Barona'
tt11 Sunset Leaau• cbam·
plonlb.lp NUOa, WU killed lil•
ttUU; tJa a roUov• acddtnt 40 mUea ouakle 91rt1M.
HU teamMal•, b.alnNt~k WU1M Gltteu. J•ai at.o or rouoWn Valle~. IUlrel'W IMii WUrlee
O•rm11n aflep. I mo. ob4ld tmd. Ffm, Loves tvt!r·
)'Ont but prott'(tlVt! •U·
XII.XX
If you have • pet you want to
place ln a 1ood bomt, call
8U·5871. 'A friendly Dally
Pilot •d·vbor wlll help you
word your ad for tbt createlt Imp~.
Wt mue tt eaay for you to
put 1 fft WOidl to work for
yoo, lii die Dally PUC)\.
Tribute
Draws
Faithful
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP> -
Fair sides, long lines and a six-
foot-tall Dower-covered an1el
ireeted tile El•Jt Presle)' faltbfaJ today as they came to e•Y bomqe to tbe ltlng of rotlr
n' roll on the ftrat anniversary ~ his death.
Dick Grob, chief of security
for tb.e .. 13~·acre estate, said
more than 150 people spent the
night on the Graceland grounds
gathered in a huddle just behinc(
its wrought iron gates.
Several thousand were on
hand when the gates opened al
8:25 a.m. At least 12,000 were ex-
pecteii to. file by the graves of
Presley and his mother before
the gates closed this afternoon.
Scores of flower arrangements
lined the winding quarter-mile
driveway to Graceland Mansion
and more were crowded into the
gr aveyard garden to the south.
Among the arrangements was
the angel -a Styrofoam form
covered with white chrysan-
themums. its hands and wings
painted gold.
"A young woman from On-
tario. Canada, Barbara
McClean. came in and ordered
the angel," said MaCbrie Cox,
an employee of Burke's
Flowers, which for years
handled flower arrangements for Presley's mother's grave.
Manager Aneta Watkins said
she had bfflt' vetaCfflj-ioo 01""'
ders a week for such designs as
guitars, broken hearts, crowns,
crosses and the emblem TCB -
Taking Care or Business,
Presley's mofto.
Mrs. Cox said she had also re-
ceived an order ror a red rose <See ELVIS, Pa1e .U)
Coast
Weather
Low cloudiness nltht
and momlng hours with
mostly s11nny afternoon
'flbunday. Lows tonltbt 60
to 65. Highs Thursday 68 to
72 at beaches and 78 to 84
inland.
INSIDE TODAY
It'• no A,,,.U Fool -Angei.
onnounc1 pion• for on11
plowo// <Jnd world'• 1trt11 ~""'· StorJ/. Po.Of 81.
...
DAILY,PILOT § Widn!!!S!y, Auqult 16, 19711 ' •
··Carter 'Concerned' OVer Dollar Dip
WASHINGTON CAP1 -Pres1·
ot CW"l~r expre ed "d p cpncem .. today ewer
vi the U S. dolt r abroad and CJIJ~ for recomm nd•ttons for
tlon rrom top linanchal •d
"' rs Carter. In u 1tatemftrt lssued
al lht• Whale HOUM, S&ld ht! had •n di!l<'wt.~lng tb matter with
Treusury Secr etary Mlch.ael
8lumenlhal und with William
lllller. chrurmun of tht-Federal ·
Rt' l'rve Board
· ''T'bt' s harp de cline In the
dollar and dlJlorderly arket
coQdllion.'S. ut u lime when tlw'
U S trttde P<*IUon ta 1howlnt
111 ns ot rt•u l Improvement.
could ~•ten procreaa .tA>ward
deallna with our lnnutton and
•<'h lniblJ orderly arowtb ul
home 'md abroad." the stutt!·
ment 11&1d
The dollur 1Upped buck toduy
on Eur()pt•'i. mcmf'r murkt>ts bul ,.
•
1tay~ above lht! record Iowa bit
in trudina Tuesday. H did.
aomtwba~ bitter ln Tokyo.
"It looks as Ir that one-day
dollar recovery is now over ... a
London trader suid.
The dollar'• renewed weak·
nes1 pushed up the price of told. a tradlUonal hedge for Investors
In tlmes of monetar'Y uncertaln·
ty. but it failed to' reach the
record high set Tuesday.
The metal was trading this
morning at $215.50 an ounce in
Zurich. Europe's biHest buJllon
market. and 1215.70 ln London.
Tuesday was one of the worst
days in recent memory for the
battered dollar. which set record
lows agalnst the Japaf'\ese yen·.
Swiss franc and· West German
mark. But a reaction set in by
afternoon. mostly due to prof-
it-taking, dealers said , and the
dollar pulled buck.
Carter's s tatement was the
first from the White Howie in
weeks on the plight ot the dollar.
which the past year has lost
more than 30 percent tn value
against the Japanese nn. 33
percent aealnst the Swlu franc
and 1S percent against the
Germ an mark. ,...
The decJine w the dollar bas
pushed up prices or imported
goods from those counttjes, aucb
as autos. steel and electronl~
equipsnent.lwblch baa worsened
the nation's inflation rate at a
time when the administration 'is
trytna to find ways to control r\s. ing prtcea.
It wu not clear wbat klnd of
measures the admlnlltration
could take to stop tbe f aU ln the
dollar. Olle posaib1Ut.Y woutd be
to atep up lntervenU0n ln curren-
cy market& to buy dollars with
fore1tn currencies to tte.lte de·
mand and tbu. prot up tbe price. .
Schmitz Embraces Jarvis VteW
As Hopefuls Debate, Cordova IJmits f Jnks to Brown
............
JAMES EARL RAY WALKS TO THE WITNESS STAND
·Convicted Slayer Denie• Shooting Dr. King
F,.._PageAJ
RAY ON STAND •••
breaking out of Missouri State
Prison in 1967 and traveling in
zig-za g fashion to St. Louis, the
Chica go area, Indianapolis and
ultimately to Canada. where he
spent one night with a prostitute
and robbed her pimp the next
day then met "Raoul" by
chance on the Montreal docks
In return for money a nd a
never-fulfilled promise of travel
documents, Ray said he carried
items across the Canadian and
Mex ican borde r s for the
Spanish-accented "Raoul." who
had mysterious telephone num-
bers in New Orleans and no last
name Ray could remember.
red Mustang, arriving in the cily
where King was staying April 3,
1968.
He and Raoul took a room.
which, as it ha ppened, was
across from King's motel, and
d iscussed returning to Bir-
mingham to buy more guns." Ray
said. He also shopped unsuc-
cessfully for telescopic sights
while in Memphis, he said.
Ray said that. at Raoul's sug-
gestion on April 4, that he "take
in a movie" he· was out killing
time. including getting his
Mus tang, allegedly paid for by
Raoul, serviced several blocks
from the rooming house when he
saw rushing police cars and
other emergency activity in the
area .
By GJ\RY GRANVILLE
Of ... Dlilf'P ...........
State Senate candidates John
Schmitz and Ron Cordova began
a series or campaign debates
Tuesday with Republican
Schmitz clinglng ever so tightly
to Howard Jarvis.
Sim ullaneously. Democrat
Cordova was putting ~lance
between himself and Gov:-Ed-
mund G. Brown Jr.
Cordova said he will wait to
se~ ''whieb Jeny Brown" is run·
ning against Evelle Younger
before deciding who he will vole
for in the gubernatorial race.
Schmitz made it clear he is a
Howard Jarvis man.
Six times during the 50·minute
debate he mentioned that he car-
ries the J arvis endorsement into
his battle with Co rdova for the
state Senate seat being vacated
by Newport Beach Republican
Dennis Carpenter.
And even though the Jarvis
debate was settled by the voters
J une 6 when they approved
Proposition 13, Schmitz insisted
it is "the" issue in his November
e le ction confrontation with
Cordova
The Cordova-Schmitz verbal
due l al the Airporler lnn in
Newport Beach attracted more
than 100 people who paid S8 a
lunch to §ee and hear the two
candidates.
As expected', the exchanges by
the two men while answering
questions put to them by a panel
of newsmen were crisp and fre-
quently pointed. ·
If Cordova was on the de-
fensive when speaking of bis op-
position to ,Proposition 13. so was
Schmitz as he defended bis
membership in the John Birch
Society and bis bolt from the
Republican Party in 1972.
Schmitz called the society "a
ve ry fine patriotic organiza·
lion."
And he split hairs when be
said he was still a member of
the Republican Party in 1972
F,....PageAJ
ELVIS •••
arrangement from Priscilla.
Elvis' former wife. and th.-ir
daughter, Lisa Marie.
Also awaitlng the rans in the
90-degree beat was a row of air
conditioned souvenir shops and roving soda pop sellers
Afte r smuggling the items,
which Ray did not specifically
identify, be said he went lo Los
Ange les. took a bartending
course, tried unsuccessfully to
go lo work for the Internal
Reve nue Service. traveled to
New Orleans to agr"ee to the gun-
running sche m e with the
mystery man -and ultimately
returned to Los Angeles.
f',....P_,,eAJ
"I was taking a lock-picking
-rather a locksmith course al
this lime." Ray told the com mil·
tee.
At another point. he said: "1
robbed the -I was robbed or a
watch."
He told or trying to contact a
girl who advertised herself in an
unde ruound Los Ange les
ne ws paper "as a nympho-
somethlng.'' Apologetically. Ray
added, "Of course, 1 had been In
jail for about six ye ars."
Without detailing any actual
gun-running, Ray s aid he re·
newed the relationship with
"Raoul" and purchased a rifle
in Birmingham, Ala .. purported-
ly for eventual shipment to Mex·
ico. With that nne, Ray said he
drove to Memphis, Teno., in a
s
DAILY PILOT
JENNIE EISENHOWER. • •
f o rme r preside nt Dwight
Eisenhower.
Eisenhower said he and bis
wife a greed t o na m e their
daug hter J e nnie because it
sounds like Julie, but isn't .
.. Julie didn't want to have
a nother 'Julie'," h e said.
"Besides 'J e nnie' can 't be
shortened to a nickname."
Asked how be felt about hav-
ing his-firsl ()lild, Ei6enbowec
said. "It was time -we're 30."
Nixon said his d aughter, who
will be returning home with Jen·
nie in three days, "is doing
great."
"I was amazed," he said.
"She looks as 1f she's been out
ror a swim in the cold Pacific.
She·s come through in line
style."
The baby, described as havine
dark batr and eyes, may k>ok
like a Nixon or may look lilre an
Eisenhower. the former presl·
dent said, adding that perhaps
the two families bear a certain
resemblance.
"All babies are beautiful," he
said, "but I must say girl babies
are special."
The new father arrived tor his
evening visit. driving bis own car
· to a rear entrance of the
hospital, where a spokesman
Hid Mrs. Eisenhower is lo a
private room· in the 'maternity
ward.
While newspaper and
television reporters qulzsed
Eisenhower at the rear door, the
Nixons and their elder daupler,
Tt'iCia Cox, were driven lO the
hospital's main ,ntrance by
Secret Service aaents.
Forty mtnutt'I later the
former president emeried from
bl.I vlltt. accompanied bJ .Ja1a
wlte ~ Mn. COx. and pa4Md
at tbe bospltal entrance to
answer repotten' que1Uoo1.
The former pi'ealdent loobd
tanned and vleorous and very
happy.
"8eini a .rrandfather may be •
even gr eat e r than being a
father." he said. "Your ex·
perience with your own children
1s so immediate that perhaps
you lack the necessary distance
to evaluate and appreciate the
rela tionship to the fullest ex-
tent."
Saying he has teamed from
his relationship with his two
daul{hters "never to. indicate
what my cho1ce"19" 'Wberrthey-
have decisions to make. Nixon
said allowing children to make
up their own minds may be
more important these days for
girls than for boys .
··Julie is a n inde pendent
thinker. and so is Trh:ia," he
said of his daughters. adding
that he expects his grand-
daughter to be independent as
well. "I'm not going to try to ln·
Ouence her .W he said.
Then, appearini to have had
an afterthought, he laughed and
said. "But she is going to be an
Angels fan."
f',....PageAJ
RITES ••.
as a terrtflc athlete and poeslble
profeaslon•l football prospect.
came from a close-knit family.
He leave. hls parents. Robert
and Ann Thompson; a sister
Cheri, paternal grandparents
Oeorie and Kate Thompson, of
Arcadia, and maternal
II' ndparents, Reuben and Min·
nle Brown, of La Canada
.
JleMll Try Fails
LOS ANGELES (AP> -An ~lccUon aimed at reealllnt City
Councilman Robtrt c. rarnu in
b1a Soulb Central Los Anaetes
Dlltrlct taUed Tuesday by a
nearly 2·1 mutfn.
~
HE'S A JARVIS MAN
RepubUcan Schmitz
when he accepted the American
Inde pendent Pa rty's presiden·
tial nomination.
Schmitz said he didn't change
party affiliation until after his
AI P presidential nomination.
In a paraphrase of the well-
known Schmitz' re mark about
the first Nixon ttip to Com-
munis t C hina , Coro d o va
quipped , "I'm informed by my
Republican friends they took no
exce ption to John Schmitz leav·
ing the Republican Party, only
to his return."
But Schmitz pointed to his en-
dorsement "by all Republican
groups" and county GOP
lea ders to prove h e h as
"mended fences" with the
party.
Cordova wouldn't Jet up on his
attack on Schmitz' political
tra vels. however .
The Democratic assemblyman
said that. unlike his foe, his
O.lly ...... St.ff ,,_.
'WHICH JERRY BROWN?'
DemC>Cfat Cordova
political epitaph will not read.
"Have campaign. will travel."
Schmitz retaliated t o the
barbs by recounting his 2112 -year
record as a congressman and
511':? ye ars as a state senator.
Included in the record cited by
him was support or efforts by
Jarvis to reform the state's
property lax laws. efforts that
date back to the mid-19605.
Schmitz also said be is pN>b·
ably the only congressm an
ever sent to Washington who
saved the taxpayers m or t-
money that be cost.
Cordova called s uch claims
"war stories" and said he could
tell some of his own. He did.
In s ubstance. there was more
agreement than disagreement
between the two candidates.
Both. for example. s aid they
will work to strengthen local
government and against cen·
tralization in Sacramento.
Murder-so lei de
Parents' Battle
Ends in Deatlu
LA GRANGE HIGHLANDS.
Ill. !AP> -A newly divorced
couple apparently engaged In a
final fight that left blOQd s pat-
tered from room to room in their
home and ended in murder and
suicide, police said .
An o fficer . called t o in·
vestigate late Tuesday. said he
looked into the front window or
the home belonging to William
and Suzanne Donnelly. and saw
their 4-year-old daughter. Bran·
die, "standing in the blood In the
living room trying to wake her
mother .''
Mrs. Donnelly. 28, had bt!en ~tabbed 11 times in ..the ab·
domen. live times ln the throat
and once in the chest. A kitchen
knife and three table forks were
found next to the body. police
s aid.
Donnelly. 33, was found in an
a djacent ga rage. his head
placed under the exhaust pipe of
a car with the enl{ine still run·
nlng. Police said he had cuts on
his wrists and had apparently
tried to s lash them.
Authorities said every room in
the s uburban home west · of
Chicago was rovered with blood
and that a partial barricade of
furniture had been put up in the
hallway. They s peculated that
the couple fought each other
throughout the dwelling. The
daughter was Wlharmed.
Neighbors s aid the Donnellys
quarreled frequently and police
recently had been called to the
home to quiet a disturbance.
They said after the divorce Don·
nelly stayed on until an apart-
ment he had reoted could ~
r eadie<l. '
More Suits Filed
SAN FRANCISCO (APl
Nine more tawsulls have been
filed against Squaw Valley ol·
ficials and manufacturers or a
ski tramway that colla psed
April 16. killing four people and
injuring 30 others.
Both candidates also decried
expanded government spending
and "growth ot government ...
Both said they support extend·
ing capital punishment to cover
more crimes.
Disagreement came on the so-
ca lled Briggs initiative. prohibit·
in g homos ex ~a I s from
teaching in public schools.
Schmitz said he supports the
measure. Cordova said he does
not.
And while Cordova said he is
not certain how he will vote in
tbe gubernatorial race, Schmitz
emphasized that he is an Evelle
Younger supporter.
When it came time for them to
ask each other one question.
Cordova asked Schmitz what he
had done as a state legislator to
advance the cause or property
tax reform.
Sch mitz pointed to his support
or Jarvis in the 1960's ~d o
plaque he received in 11Wl from
United Ta xpayers. the Jarvis
support organization.
In turn. Schmitz asked
Cordova to show his "conversion
to conservatism to be other than
political."
Cordova said his record as a
de puty district attorney who
never lost a felony case shows
him to be something far less
than liberal.
Besides. Cordova said. his rec-
ord as a legislator. not political
rhetoric. should serve as the ex-
a mple or his conservatism.
Meanwhile. Da vid Bergland.
who hopes to make the No-
vember ballot as th~ Libertarian
P arty candidate in the 36th.
wailed in a hallway.
Bergland said he was miffed
because the debate sponsor. the
Building Industry Association,
didn't invite him.
Association spokesman Jim -
Beam said Bergland would have
been invited were be a bona fide
<'andid.ate.
Bergland insisted be will be
when Libertarian workers col-
lect the signatures needed to add
his name to the ballot.
Ufe Support
To Remain for
Comatose Boy
DEDHAM. Mass. CAPl -A
judge ruled today that a coma·
tose 12-year-old boy must re-
m ain connected to life-support
equipment despite a petition
from his father to unplug him.
Norfolk County Probate Court
Judge J e r e miah S ullivan
claimed that evidence was not
conclusive that the brain of
Louis Slone wac; dead . He had
been in a coma since July 2
when struck in the heart by 1t BB
a ccidentally shot by bis rather.
The boy is at Goddard Memorial
Hospital in Stoughton.
The rather. Neville Stone. 49.
said Monday. he· wanted lhe boy
removed from de¥~eepm1
him breathing. He switched
from tesUmol'ly July 26 in which
he pleaded with the judge to
keep the boy on a respiralor.
"A vegetable." Stone said. "I
can't live with seeing him like
lhat. ..
Myra Stone. Louis' molher.
had ukt she wanted her son to
remain on the equipment.
Deaths End Argum~nt
T111£k Driven' Flap Kill. 2, Injures 7
NEW IIlLL. N C !AP> -A
tavern argument between lwo
men over whose pickup truck
was more powerful turned dead·
ly early today when one or them
drove hls truck at hl.gb speed
through the parking lot. killtng
two men and lttjurtng at leaat
seven, autborltiea Hld.
The driver wua lnJund
minutes later when he was
chased off the highway by a wit-
ness ln another vehicle and bll
tr ck exploded ln n•mes.
Tbt driver. ldentlfled as
lames Carl Adam Jr .• 28, of
Princeton, N.C.. wu pulled
from the cab and underwtnt tur•
1ery at Wak Medical C nter for
tnternal and f aclaJ ll\Jurl Hb ~ndillr waa noL lmmf'dlately
known.
It was not immediately known
lf any char1es had been llled.
The dead men were Dale
Logue. 22. and David Simpson.
both consttuction workers at
Carolina Power & ... Ll1bt Co. 'A
Shearon Harrls nuclear plant
site near here.
The state Rl&hway Pntrol 1ald
Adnms and anqt.her man were
arauin& at Victor's OrtU on old
U.S. t over whOsc truck was t.bo
more powertul.
WttntssH said tbe two
planned to cbaln their tntcks
to1eit1er b,y tMlr s:ur end.t and
staae a tu& of war. But the cop-
test dtdn't start evenly •Qd
Adam s· o~pootnt 't truck wa
doiastd
A fight reportedly ensued and
Ada ms drove orr.
"Everybody tboughl be, was
going home." said a witness.
Elton McCall of Henderson.
"But he done a three.point.tum
up the road and came back tun·
nlns wide open.
·•Everybody l\hrted yell·
tng, 'ffe'~ comlni bact. He·a com-
ing back'."
Byatanders ~ to nee ~ tM
truck roared ln\Q Ute partlh1
area,
"They Just knock~d them
eveey whJch way,'' said Trooper
R . W ltlq, • ffiahwa1 PIU'OI
tnvesu,ator.
At 1eut atnn penou were
btlns tttattd tor fractures. cuta
and lntt rnal lnJUH•a at Wake
~ dlt'•1I Ctntt'r
-
_.,.._ . .,,
.-,
·Ora•ge lJoast
' (\ EDITION
'
Today's Clo lag
N.Y. StOC!ks
I
I J . VC>L.:~1, NO. 229, • SECTIONS, 42 PAGes ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16, 1978
, .
C TEN CE'NTS
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CREATOR PAYNE INSPECTS SHATTERED 'COAN GOD'
At Or•nge Co••t College, a Costly Act of VandaUam
-'God' TQppled --
$900 J7 andalism at OCC
By JACKIE BYMAN Of ... Deity ...... ....,
Orange Coast College irtstructor William 0 . Payne
estimates it may cost as much as S900 to restore a campus
landmark that was vandalized last month.
IT WAS A replica of a Mayan maize god that stood ln
front of tbe OCC Art Gallery, greeting thousands of stu·
dents since 1952.
"Students and faculty members alike had a lot of fun
with our 'com god'." said William 0 . Payne, who created
the slx·foot ceramic, cement-backed piece with student
Wallace Parker .•
"One of his hands was cupped and extended," said
Payne. "Mayans used to put offerings in that hand. I think
in my 2S years here 1lt OCC I collected Sl.31 ln pennies
from that hand. I also flipped innumerable cigarette butts
out of his mouth."
THE STATUE, valued at $3,000, was broken July 28 by
a vandal who also pushed over a metal statue, which was
not damaged.
A gardener and a professor captured a suspect, who
was turned over to Costa Mesa police, Payne said.
Payne, a pre-Columbian pottery expert who has
worked as a potter-archaeologist in Mexico. said it would
take several months to restore the statue and would require
creating several new panels.
PA YNB MID the statue, created tor tbe dedication ot
tbe college's Art Center complex, was an exact replica ol a
May an god found ln Copan, Honduras wbicb bad been
carved in limestone &bout 800 A.D. The OCC statue included llypbs or raised canlno of
Mayan dates. ''We kno,, the date system. but we clon't
know the writing system yet," explained Payne. "That's
one of the mysteries of the world."
Paul R. Cox, chairman of OCC's Division of FimtArt.a,
is reportedly looking into ways of raising the S900 to fund
the restoration.
"THE STATUE bad really become a campus celebri·
ty," a college spokesman quoted Cox as saying. "It was
the first outdoor art piece to be placed on the campus.
Following its destruction, many students and faculty
members have expressed a real sense of loss."
The reason for the vandalism isn't known, Payne said.
: Childrsex Charges
! ~Dropped by Court
Charges of crimes against
• children which led to the arrest
t of two local men earlier this
t month have been dropped in the 1 Harbor Judicial District Court. t Christian Vart Sahagian, 21. a
I transient who police said fre-
1
quents the Huntington Beach
Pier and David Wooten, 43, of
3882 Claremont St .. Irvine, were
\aken .iDto c...tody by Newport
Beach along with a J.:l-year-0ld f ~ girl.
Police alleged the child's sex-
ual services had been involved
in dealings between the two
men.
However, those charges were
dropped by court officials when
the teen-age girl, a runaway
from Chicago, was taken back to
Illinois by her parents.
However, Wooten ln bis court
appear,anca ,l'&&eacla¥-waa ar·
raigned on a charge of carrying
a concealed weapon.
Supermarkets Busy
Shoppers Stock Up as S~rike Threatens
LOS ANGELF.S <AP) -While
consumers jammed
supermarket checkout lines to
stock up on foodstuffs,' stores
from San Luis Obispo to San
Die10 braced for a possible
walkout by 70,000 clerks that
could be less than two days
away.
"At this~. we are very,
very busy," said Marlene Crites.
a worker at a Lucky market in
Mesa Nears
Oioice for
NewHoIDes
Costa Mesa Cit;f]uncil mem-bers are closing · on potential
s ites for about moderately-
priced housing un Uiat would
be built with the help of about
$750,000 in federal Housing and
Urban Development <HUD >
funds.
Two members of the city's
Housing and Community
Development Committee pre-
sented the. City Council with a
list of 16 possible sites Monday.
There was some disagreement
among council members as to
the best sites, but the council
eventually directed the housing
commlttee to get appraisals on
three sites. They are:
-A 2.27-acre commercially-
zoned parcel on Wilson Street.
The strip of land ls between the
parking area of the Harbor
Shopping Center and the Harbor
Racquet Club.
...:... A 1.69 acre site in the 200
block of Victoria Street across
the street from Costa Mesa
Memorial Hospital.
-A 2. 7 ·acre parcel on the
south side of Paularino A venue
at Yellowstone Drive. The
parcel currenUy is under a city.
imposed building frene because
of an ~~ dispute ov_er cltf
plans to put a new road tb.roUgb
the area.
The latter site was opposed by
Councllwoman Arlene S<:haler.
who said tbe Wilson Street site is
closer to existing parks. schools
and shopptn& facllities.
The city housing committee
will now appraise the sites and
contact property owners to see if
they are interested in making
use or federal funding for lower
cost housing. If an agreement can be
reached, the city would use a por-
tion of its $750,000 in-federal funds
to help the developer with con-
struction costs.
By reducing the construction
cost of the project, the manage-
ment would be able to keep rents
at lower levels, city officials
said.
The local housing committee
will return to the council in Sep-
tem ber with preliminary reports
on negotiations concerning the
preferred sites
286 Acres Burn
JAMUL <AP> -A brush fire
raging through inaccessible
· bruah land Tuesday burned over
about 286 acres some three
mlle•-..Soutbwest of State
hlghw.,ay 94 directly south of
JamuL oftlclali sala .....
Culver City. "I think people
beard the news about the strike
and they're out to stock up."
While stores in some cities re-
ported business as usual,
managers of others said buying
wasbriak.
"U the clerks vote to stnke,
we're expecting a lot more
customers," said Jim Willard,
night manager of an Albertson
market in Bakersfield.• "We've
already stocked up~· 'o meet the
increased demand.
However, be said. his store,
which normally operates 24
hours a day, will cut back to
nine hoW'8 in the event of a
strike.
Members of nine Southern
California locals of the Retail
Clerks Union voted Monday and
Tuesday on whether to accept
the stores' latest offer or
authorize a strike. Union leaders
recommended rejection of the
management proposal, wbicb
called for a $1.40-an-bour wage
bike over three years.
Results of the vote were to be
known this afternoon. and a
strike could begin anytime aft.eT
12:01 Sa UrdaJ, 48 hours aft.er
the clerks' contract expires.
Bob Voight of the Food <See FOOD, Page A%)
., ........
FANS OF ELVIS PAESl.EY WEEP OPENLY AS THEY LEAVE GRAVESITE IN MEMPHIS
, On Flrat Annlverury of the King'• Death, 12,000 Expected at Cemetery ·
Thousands Mourn Elvi.s
MEMPWS. Tenn. <AP> -
Fair aktes, 1Qn1 lines and a six-
foot·tall flower-covered angel
greeted th e Elvis Presley
faithful today as they came to
pay homage to the king of tock
'n' roll on the first anniversary or
his death.
Dick Grob, chief of security
for the 131h-acre estate. saJd
more than 150 people spent the
night on the Graceland grounds
gathered in a huddle Just behind
its wrought iron gates.
Several thousand were on
band when the .zates ooened at
8:25 a.m. At least 12,000 were ex-
pected to file by the graves of
Presley and his mother before
the gates closed this afternoon.
Scores of flower arrangements
lined tbe winding quarter-mile
driveway to Graceland Mansion
and more were crowded into the
graveyard garden to the south.
Amona the arrangements was
the angel -a Styrofoam form
covered with white chrysan·
themums. its hands and wings
painted gold. ,
"A young woman from On·
tarlo. Ca nada , Barbara
McClean, came in and ordered
the angel," sold MaChrie Cox,
an empl oyee of Burke'9
Flowers, which for years
handled fioWer arrangements
for Presley'e mother's 1rave.
Manqer Aneta WaUrlns aaid
sbe bad been averaging 100 or-
ders a week for such designs as
guitars, broken hearts. crowns,
crosses and the emblem TCB -
Taking Care of Business.
Presley's motto.
Mrs. Co" said she had also re·
ceived an order for a red rose
arrangement from Priscilla.
Elvis· former wife, and their
daughter, Lisa Marie.
Also awaiting the fans in the
90-degree heat was a row of air
conditioned souvenir shops and
roving soda pop sellers.
Mesa Park Users ,
To Pay Fees Soon
Harbor Area youth athletic
teams that have been tising
lighted Costa Mesa playing
fields free of charge may soon
be paying for th~ privilege.
It's not only b ecause of passage of Proposition 13, city
letsure services Director Keith
Van Holt told council members
Monday afternoon. but because
of "abuses" of the city's
hospitality.
In the past, Costa Mesa, unlike
some cities, hasn't charged
groups like the American Youth
Soccer Organization, Harbor
Area Baseball or Junior All·
American Football w J>ractice
or play under the lights.
charging the youth groups, but
City Manager Fred SorsabaJ
said be believes there should be
no exceptions.
"Perhaps this year we don't
need it," said Sorsabal, suggest-
ing that user fees be considered
in J anuary or next July.
However. he said the council
should discuss the fees at their
first meeting in September to
gear up for the expected pro.
tests.
Fountain Valley is now con·
siderlng a $10 per hour per night
fee for the use of ligbted fields,
said Sorsabal.
Irvine currently cbai'les for
the use of its playing fields, even
for daytime use, be added. I Schinitz, Cordova open Debate
~ By GARY GRANVILLE it ls "the" Issue in bis November
As a result, the flelda are
sometimes being reserved and
then utilized by out-of·towners to
avoid fees char1ed in their own
cities, Van Hoh revealed.
The Newport-Mesa Unified
School District used to pay for
lights at TeWlnk.le School or the
tennis eourta at Estancia Hieh.
but those costs have been puaed
on to the city as a reault of
Proposition 13.
Coast
0t•D1Mt.,......,.. election confrontation with
State Senate candidates John
Schmiu and Ron Cordova began
a series of campaien debates
Tuesday wltb Republican
Schmits cllngint ever ao t1cbt1Y
to Howard Jarvis.
Simultaneously, Democrat
Cordova was putting di1t.rtce
between bimleU and Gov. ltd·
mund G. Brown Jr. Cordova sald be will wait to
see "which Jerry Brown" ls nm·
nlna a•alnst Evelle Youn1er
before deddinl who be will vote
for Jn the 1ubematorlal rate. Schmitz made It clear he la a
Howard Jarvll man.
Slx tlm• dUl'tnl the 50-mlnute
debate be meaUoned that he car-
ries the Jarvis encloramnent lnto
b1a battle with Cordova for the
1tate Senate Hat tMin1 vacated
by N•w:port ~ Republican
Denni.I earpenter.
And evtn tboulh the .f U'\11
debate w• Httled by tht voten
Jbne • wb.a tbeJ approved
ProPC>l!Uon 13. Schmitl lnabMd
Cordova.
The Cordova·Scbmitz verbal
duel at the /lirporter Inn in
Newport Beach attracted more
than 100 Pec>Ple who pald S8 a
lunch to see and bear the two
candidates.
As expected, tbe excban1es by
the two men while anawertna
queatlons put to them by a panel
of newamen were crisp and fre..
quently pointed
If Cordova was on the de·
f erialve when 1peakin• of b1a op.
Position to Proposition 13 10 was
Sehmlta as he d efended hls
membenbU> In the John Birch
Soclety ana b1a bolt trom the
Republican Party ln l.1'12
Scbmltl called th9 aociety "• ve.ry fµ&e patriotic or••nll•· I
Uon."
Ao4 ... •Pait baln WMD he
aai4 be wa itUl a membir ol
tbt RepubUcan Party In 1'72
wbea IM *9llltd tbe Aaaeittao ~ • .,..... "Put1•1 ,.... ....
<9" DSMTS. p_,. Al)
Van Holt estimated it costs the
dty between S2 and $31an hour
for electricity plus the man·
Power needed to keep al) eye on
the switches.
And eometlmes, the teams
leave early and the lights stay
on for no reason.
Van Bolt would like to avoid
N"me Summoned
WASHINGTON <AP) -The
Justlce Department Is seokina to
extradite from En1land two of the U members of the Church ot Sclentolo1y who have been
charfed with tnakln• Into JOV·
emment offtcea, plant.in• bul· -1nf devte. tnd Ilea.Una olflcfal aoeuinenta. The aa.r. nint bav~
Meri lllued 11munon1a to ap. r.ar beb'e a federal ma,itti'ate tr• oa TIHU'Sdt1 for a ball .........
'
Weather
Low cloudiness night
and momlna bours with
mostly sunny afternoon
Thursday. Lows tonight 60
to 65. HiOss Thhrsday 68 to
72 at beaches and 78 to 84
inland.
INSIDE TOD~ W
It'• no April Fool -Angell announce plan• /er ony
plo110/I and World SerfH
gamH. St"'71, Page 81.
.,
.4% DAIL V PtLOT C
Colleges'
Budgets
Trimmed
CO.at Community Coll•C• Du· tlct ortlcials reported toch1y
at a t°'al or f1 l mlllk>n h~
en aha~ from t~· dl1trict'1
Mne· 79 budlel, which will now
tc>tal about 9 .5 mllUon.
ThMt Nprennu a cut ol 9 2
IM'rCtnl from l&at 7car'1 171.~
srt'llion bud1e t , • district ll>Okt man aold • Correllan Thompson, the dis
h"lct•a bualneu affairs vlct
Clhuncellor. a kt cut.a bave been
nuade by reducing staff. replac· lna less equ.lpm~nt and supplies.
and cuttin1 contnct services.
malnttnance and operlltions and
eapltal ouUay
In addition, althou1b basic
fllduu Uon tu.ltlon remalna htt,
1'borppsoa said taxp.,ers will
no longer underwrite fNe I~·
tures. semlnars, con~rt•. enter·
talnment, athletic pro1rams and
non-academic courses to the
tune of$1.3 million per year ..
Instead, admissions fees will
oow be charted for such events.
In addition, District Chan-
cellor Norman E. Watson has
formed a rund·raiain1 commit·
tee to investigate alternative
sources of Income. Trustees are
currently discusstnl a tee
schedule for publtc use of dis·
trict faclllties.
Some specific cost reductions
have included leavlng personnel
\'acancies unfilled. cutting con-
ference and membership expen·
ditures. -reducing the number of hourly employees and charglng
more for transportation.
The budget ls expected to be
given final approval Sept. 7.
UD REQUIRES
MORE 'STUDY'
SAN DIEGO <AP> -The
Child Guldahc;le Clinic plans a
little more counseling for a 10-
year-old boy treated briefly for
being a klept.omanlc.
While he was under study this
week. police say, the youngster
swiped $300 from the counselor's
desk
··Mesan . .,,~~,c~,.cL"~I~· I o
Bar bor Light•
Southern California Edison workman changes street
lights on Harbor Boulevar~ as pa!1 of c1t~·s s~1tcn to
more efficient bulbs that wtll provide the same amount
of light. but with a yeltowtsh tinge. New s-~I~ vapor
lights that require less electricity are bei!1g m~tall~
wherever they are feasible. city officials said. This pic-
ture was taken near the intersection of Harbor and
Mesa Verde East.
Charged
lnHo l~p
A Costa Mean woman who
police allege used a knife lo rob
a gas station near the Costa
Mesa-Newport Beach border
Tuesday afternoon wis arrested wlthln minutes by inclothes
Newport Beach o cera who
spotted her walking along Irvine
A venue. Cos~f.l Mesa police said.
ln custody today al Orange
County Jail on an armed rob·
bery charge Is 24-year-cld ·Mary
Susan Rowan, 467 Costa Mesa
St. She ls being held in lieu or
$25.000 bail.
Costa Mesa investigators al·
lege the woman walked up lo
Arco service atatlon attendent
Salvatore Princeado at about
2: 15 p.m. and asked for change
for a Quart.er.
When Prlnceado. 55. opened
the cash register. she allegedly
revealed a knife and said "I
want this money."
Police said he handed over
<.ibout S25 but not before tearing
one $10 biU in half. The t.ioman
left the service stallon at 490 E.
17th St. on root. oollce said.
Shortly after ·a radio bulletin
was issued, Miss Rowan was
taken into custody by Newport
Beach police oUtcers Mike
Hietala and Al Fischer. Costa
Mesa Lnvestigatorssaid.
They recovered a knife and
cash. including a $10 bill that
had been torn in half.
Airport Study Denied
By PIDUP ROSMARIN
Of tM Dally ,...._ SIMI
Tbe F ederal Aviation Ad
ministration hes, for the second
time, refused an Irvine politi
cian's request that it conduct a
comprehensive investigation or
air traffic safety at Orange
County Airport.
The first time City Coun-
cilman Larry Agran asked for
the study. he was a candidate
for the municipal office.
Alarmed by 10 aircraft acci-
dents in or near the airport ln
which 17 people died. he pleaded
an obvious need to study the
over all pattern of safety.
tivilies. it does not appear that a
comprehensive Investigation or
further review of Orang6 County
Airport accidents would be pro·
ductive at this time."
Allen said also, "As you know,
Orange County Airport is one of
the busiest airports in the na·
lion.
o.lty ~ ..... "--
FORMER PRESIDENT ANO MRS. NIXON AT HOSPITAL
Tricia Cox Alao There to Greet Her New Niece
Daddy Eisenhower
'-
Elate d b y J e nnie
By A.NNE COOPER Of, .. Dally Pltee S!Mt
An elated David Eisenhower
described the birth or ..bis
daughter Tuesday as '"juS'i a
wonderful experience.··
Tbe new father. flanked by the
baby's grandfather. former pres-
ident Richard Nixon. met with
reporters outside San Clemente
General Hos pital where his
daughter. Jennie. had been born
a few hours earlier. '
Eisenhower said he and his
wife, Julie Nixon Eisenhower.
prepared for the arrival-or the
baby by attending childbirth
classes at the hospital. He as-
sisted in the delivery of the nine-
pound, four-ounce girl born al
1:32 p .m. Tuesday.
From Page A J
Agran claimed to get no
response from the FAA. and in-
stead learned ·it had turned hjm
dowr only after reading press
reports that the agency intended
no action and was satisfied with
its m ethod or investigating iil·
dividual crashes.
'"Numbers of aircraft and
operations continue to rise, with
a corresponding increase in ac·
cidents and fatalities."
The natural childbinh de·
livery left his wife "feeling fine.
really fine." Eisenhower com-
mented.
DEBATE SETS TONE. • •
tial nomination.
Schmitz said he didn't change
party affiliation until after his
AIP presidential nomination.
ln a par aphrase of the well·
known Schmitz' rema rk about
the first Nixon trip to Com-
munist China. Corodova
quipped. 'Tm informed by my
Republican friends they took no
exception to John Schmitz leav-
ang the Republican Party, only
to his return."
But Schmitz pointed to his en-
dorsement "by all Republican
groups .. and county GOP
iead e r s to prove he h as
··mended fences" with the
party
Cordova wouldn't let up on his
attack on Schmitz' politica l
travels. however.
The Democratic assemblyman
said that. unlike his foe. his
political epitaph will not read,
"Have campaign. will travel."
Sch milz retaliated to the
barbs by recounting his 2'h-year
record as a congressman and
5'h years as a state senator.
Included in lbe record cited by
him was support of efforts by
Jarvis lo reform the slate's
property tax laws, efforts that
date back to the mid· 19605.
Schmitz also said he is prob-
6 bl y the only congressman
ever sent lo Washington who
saved the taxpayers more
money tflat be cost.
Cordova called such claims
''wa.f • .tori•" and said he could
tell some of his own. He did.
In substance, tbere was more
agreement than disagreement
between the two candidates
c
DAILY PILOT
llwOt-. c.a 0..IY ......_ __ KC..,
--*~'-,......_ ...... °'_ °""" "'*'"" .. ~ ......... -.... -·-_, ""°""' ,..Nloy .... c.t. Mow...._, .. k" ............... .._.., __
lo!n Val .. ,, tnolM, ~-Vo!..., -"-le«tl"-"'C-w • .....,.,......._
-19 .,_.__ .......... -_,. lM .._.... ............ 11 .. -... ..., -.c...-.~--· ..... ~-Jacll •. c.rteor
Vlo .......... I• ... -.. ._
""""'" .... ·-":::..;.~ °"'"'"·... MellmNf' .....
Mlll-WMtifle ~·"'°'
Both. for example. said they
will work to strengthen local
government and against cen·
tralization in Sacramento
Both candidates also decried
expanded government spending
and "growth of governm0 nt "
Both said they support extend·
ing capital punishment to cover
more crimes.
Disagreement came on the so-
called Briggs initiative, prohibit·
i!lg homosex u a l s from
teaching in public schools.
Schmitz said he supports the
measure. Cordova suid he does
not.
And while Cordova said he is
not certain how he will vote in
the gubernatorial race. Schmitz
emphasized that be is an Evelle
Younger supporter.
When it came time ror them to
ask each other one question.
Cordova asked Schmitz what he
had done as a stale legislator to
advance lbe cause of property
tax reform.
Schmitz pointed lo his support
of Jarvis in the 1960's and a
plaque he received in 1967 from
United Taxpayers, the Jarvis
support organization.
In turn , Schmitz ask e d
Cordova lo show his "conversion
to conservatism to be other than
polllical."
Newport Cop
Trainee Dies
After· ·crash
Newport Beach Police Depart·
ment trainee Gordon Roberts,
27, died Tuesday afternoon at
Fountain Valley Community
Hospital of Injuries suffered Ln a
motorcycle accident Monday.
Tbe Navy veteran, just a
month short of graduation from
the Los Angeles Police Depart-
ment Academy. sustalned mufti·
pie injuries when bis persona'
motorcycle rammed a parked
car.
Investigators said he was not
wearing a protective helmet
when he collided with the vehi·
cle 1>D Daisy A venue, not far
from the ne~hborhood where he
lived in Fountain VaUey.
Spokesmen al Pacific View
Memorial Park in Corona del
Mar said today funeral aervtces
are tentatively set for 10 a.m.
Frida)' in their chapel.
Roberts wu lea vlnl a
bachelor party for bi• beat
friend, Newport Beach Police
Officer Tom UUle, when the ac·
cldent occwnd.
The \'lctlm leaves hla wlle,
who la expecting their HCOOd
chUd, and a $-year-old daupter.
For Agran, that explanation
wasn"t good enough. It is those
very numbers of aircraft and
their relation to accidents that
be wants explored.
.. , called the Nixons and my
mother and my grandmother all
within three minutes of the de-
livery," he said ... The Nixon~
came right to lbe hos pital. and
everybody is thrilled. just
thrilled.·· Actually, though the FAA in-
vestigates most non-fatal air ac-
cidents. tbe National
Transportation Safety Board has
the main responsibility for in-
vestigating all airplane acci-
dents.
The FAA is charged with in·
slituling accident prevention
methods
Nixon. who said he was
pleased that his first grandchild
is a girl. told reporters Tuesday So for a third lime, he has evening ttfte r visiting his
a_sked both the FAA and the Na· , daughter that he looks forward t1onal . Transportation S_afety to baby sitting.
Board 'to undertake t~e km~ of The former president said he
thorough inv~stagat1on won 't try to influence his grand·
!lecessary lo provide the_ ~ax-daughter's career choice. "Jen·
1mum safety to those c1t1zens nie will do whatever she wants
w.ho use the Orange Cou~ty to do." he said.
Since the councilman's initial
r eq u est. several incidents
prompted. Agran to write again.
F.A. Allen. chief of the FAA
flight standards district office in
Long Beach, replied aJew days
ago.
Airport and t~ ~~ose who hve "She.is the first child born in
and work near 1t the United States with relatives
As before. Allen indicated
there is a contlnual review of ac-
cident statistics with accident
prevention ln mind.
But, said Allen. "In view of
specific accident investigations
previously conducted and the on·
going accident prevention ac-
Agran has said he believes
despite the loll In lives, the
crash record at the airport has
been a lucky one.
According to him. it is only a
matter .or time b e fore an
airplane crashes into an oc-
cupied school. Lndustrial or com-
mercial buHding.
Viejo Firm Figh ts
Housing Proposal
ByKATHYCLANCY "We don't feel it is ap·
ot1 .. o.i1y"1etsutf proprlate at this Ume to place it M lssion Viejo Company of· tlxcluslvely on the Mission Viejo fl~ials told ~~ge County Plan·· community," he explaine~.
ning Comm1ss1oners Tuesday Celestln's remarks came as
they don·t want to~ !iingled Qu{ km {Dissioners reviewed the
by the county to build so-t:alled7 ./ifst comprehensive revision of
affordable housing. --the 10.324-acre Mission Viejo
Company Vi~e President community plan.
David Cele6tin &aid he opposes a The commission will hold at
county proposal that would re-least one more hearing Sept. 11
quire his firm lo build up to 2,500 before making a recommenda·
or Mission Viejo's remalnina tion to cotmty supervisors.
10,000 units lo the low and county planners bad suuest-
moderate income ranges ed that the community plan re-
"The Mission Viejo Company vision require that one-fourth or
doea support the concept of af. the remaining 10.000 homes to be
fordable houalna," Celestin said. built in Ml.salon Viejo be within
He also aatd the company the price hnges of famllles
would "ec> along with" wbate~er earning 80 to 120 percent of the
houatng pollciea supervisors county's median Lncome.
~dopt early next )'ear for all of The. county's median income
the unincorporated area now ls S16,200
Commllsloners, however. sua·
geated that planners abandon
that provision and draft new
wording that would make Mis·
ston Viejo subject to whatever
housmg policy II adopted ll\ter
by supervisors
TONIGln"
THEA'ttR PRODUCTION -
"Onco ~A Ma~Colta Men C[\tlc Playhouse Com·
muolt.Y RecreaUon Center, West
end of Oranse Count7 F.U·
grounds, 8:30 p.m. Ad.minion
13.50
I
Supervisors by January are to
adopt a set of policies aimed at
f:;vidlng teas-expensive b0\14-
The Mission VleJo Comp~y·s
proposal also calls for addlDC
478 ad41ttonal acrea to the
planMd community.
About 400 ICNI would be ln
the north part ot the commWlltj
aloo1 El Toro J\oad and Oso
Creek.
on both sides who were presi·
dents." he said. ..With that
heritage. she may be attracted
to politics. But if she chooses a
music career or something else.
that will be fine too."
Jennie Eisenhower, as weU as
being Nixon's granddaughter. is
the great-granddaughter of
former president Dwight
Eisenhower.
Eisenhower said he and his
wife agreed to name their
daughter Jennie because it
sounds like Julie, but isn·t.
"Julie didn"t want to have
another •Julie'." he said .
··Besides 'Jennie' can't be
shortened to a nickname.·•
Asked how he felt about hav·
ing his first child, Eisenhower
said, "ll was time -we're 30."
Nixon said bis daughter, who
will be returning home wilb Jen-
nie in three days, "Is ·doing
great." _,,
"l was amazed." be said.
"She looks as If she's M.~n out
for a swim in the cold Pacific.
She's come through in fine
style."
The baby, described as having
dark hair and eyes, may look
like a Nixon or may look like an
Eisenhower. the former presi-
dent said, addlng that perbnps
the two families bear a certain
re1emblance. ··All babies are beautiful." be
said, "but I must say girl babies
are special."
The new father arrived for his
evening visit driving bis own car
lo a rear entrance of the
hospital. where a spokesman
said Mrs. Eisenhower ts ln a
private room in the maternity
ward.
While newspaper and
television reporters qulued
Eisenhower at the rear doo.r. the
Nlxons and their elder dauahter.
Tricia Cox, were drlven to the
hospital's maln entrance by
Secret Service agents. ·
Forty minutes later the
former "'ptelldent emerged from
hls vblt, accompanied by his
wlfe and Mrs. Cox, llltd paused
at the hospital entrunce to
answer repe>rtera' qu•t1on . ·
The former president looked
tanned and vtaoroua and very
happy. .
• 'Belna a «randlather may be
') ,
PROUD PAPA INTERVIEWED
Davtd Eisenhower
even greater than being a
father." he said. ··vour ex-
perience with your 'wn children
1s so immediate that .perhaps
you lack the necessary distance
to evaluate and appreciate the
relationship to the fullest ex-
tent.··
Saying he has learned from
his relationship with his two
daughters "never to indic:ate
what my choice is'' when they
have decisions to make. Nixon
said allowing children lo make
up their own mjnds may be
more important these days for
girls than for boys.
··Julie is an indepe-ndent
thinker. and so is Tricia." he
said of his daughters, adding
that he expects his grand·
daughtel' to be Independent as
well.
"I'm not going to try lo in·
fluence her." he said.
Then. appeartne to have bad
an afterthought, be laughed and
said. "But she is going to be an
Angels fan.·•
FOO D ...
EmploJ"ql COuncit said store of.
flclals were not op\imistic about
avoiding a walkout. .
·:The unions are t.breatening to
strike, and we believe them," he
said.
The 15 cnains lnvolved are
Albertsons, Alpha Beta, Arden·
Mayfair, Boys , CerUfltd
Groeers. H\lgh~1 A1M. Lewis,
Lucky &ores, market Basket,
Ralphs, Safeway. Stnltlw Food
Kina, Stater Bros., Tbttftimart
and Voos. For aeveral weeka. lhe
markets llavtt blct liant In tbelr
wtndo.in lUlvertlllnl for deb,
wllb no ex~tinte •aecM&ary.
By Tu• day cald Vbl1t.
· ·btotween 15.000 and I0,080 ..
persona h.cl aareed to \de jobs
as soon as • strike beg • •nd
some stores alreadj went train-
lnl them.
f
. -
-
• ~.Auguat 16, 1918 DAILY PILOT A:J
'Didn't Kill .King,' Ray ClailllS
crowm
To Mourn
Athlete
Hundrods ol mourmora att an·
llclpate d Friday a t run~nl
services for Ur t•ount.ln
Valley ffl&b School quarterback
Oou1 "lbompeon, who was falal
ty ln.lured ln ia car crash Mond~
t!D routctocoll If'
Spokesmen for th~ Pttk Fami -
ly Colool J Funeral Home in
Westminster . where thf' 2:30
p. m. rites are scheduled. sai~
chairs and u public addrHs
system are being set up out.side.
Tbe s pacious chapel. laree
enoueh to accommodate mo6t
funeral services, will be filled
well beyond overflowing. by pres-
ent estimates.
"W ~ve had many, m any
telephone calls asking about the
time and 1 even got quite a rew
my self a t home ," said a
mortuary spokesman. _
Thompson. 17. an honor stu·
dent and engineer of the Barons'
1977 Sunset League cham-
pionship season. was killed in-
stantly in a rollover accident 40
miles outside B~e. His teammate. lfback Willie
Gittens. 18, als of Fountain
Va tley, suffer head injuries
and has been transferred to a
hospital in Phoenix, Ariz., for
further observation.
Gittens was driving their
sports car en route to pre-season
training at Arizona State
University at Tempe, where
both had won Sun Devil football
scholarships.
California Highway Patrol in·
vest1gators theorize Gittens. 1977
Large Schools Division Player of
the Year, fell asleep at the
wheel.
Rites honoring Thompson Fri·
day are expected to draw
classmates and players from
rival schools.
"I think we can anticipate a
tremendous outpouring of
friendship," s ays Fountain
Valley Hid! School Activities
Director Boo Ferguson.
The funeral chapel is on Bolsa
Avenue just west of Beach
Boulevard. and rites will be
followed by interment al nearby
Westminster Memorial Park.
Thompson, whose coaches say
be was just beginning to blossom
as a terrific athlete and possible
professional foot.ball prospect,
came from a close-knit family.
Fifty-seven Orange County
social service agencies were
gua{anh.~ at least one more
month of county reve nue
sharing fWlds Tuesday.
But on a 4-1 vote the County
Board of Supervisors also
trimmed the agencies' combined
$96,365-a-montb budgets by 10
percent in preparation for cuts
that m ay be needed later
because of Proposition 13.
Supervisor s a lso said the
one-month extension doesn't
guarantee that the agencies will
receive any revenue sharing
dollars from the county for the
remainder of 1978· 79 . .. The agencies provide such
services as meals for senior
citizens, child care and aid to
the needy. Supervisor Philip Anthony
cast the lone vote against a 10
percent budget cut for the
agencies saying each JJTOgl'&m
should be weighed separately.
However, Supervisor Ralph
Clark s aid county departments
have been told to operate this
year with at least 10 percent less
funds and the community social
services agencies should follow
the same rules.
·Testifies
Before
Glory Earned
Dory Racers Aho Got Blisters
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of Ow O•llY f'llM SUtf
Lifeguards from the Orange Coast covered themselves
with glory. blisters and some other thing!; during the
onnual Catalina to Long Beach dory race this past
weekend. .
· THE GRUELING event pitted 11 teams of lifeguards
against one another in a 28-milc rowing race from the
Isthmus of Catalina to the Long Beach marina.
The winning perform.incc was lumed in by the team
from the San Clemente City Lifeguard Department. Al
Lavayen. 22. and Barney Voorhees. 31, crossed the finish
line in five hours. 10 mmutcs. JUSt eight minutes off the re-
cord set last year by Steve Helfer and Larry Moore of San
Clemente.
Right behind them was the boat rowed by Tom Snyder
and Scott Stuart from San Clemente St ate Beach.
~TEVE WENGER .\NO Eric Bauer from Newport's
M armc De partment h<td lhL· dubious distinction of
finishing dead l<tsl.
"Yeah. they ev<.'n finished behind LaguM Beach,'.'
snickert!d organizer Bob Schroeder. a Los Angeles County
lifeguard. Laguna's team consislt•d of the oldest entrant,
Bruce Beard. 47. and 17-ycar-old In grid Loos. the only
fema le In the race. Beard and Loos finished a respectable
eighth.
Schroeder didn't mention where h(' and his teammate
finished in the race. Voorh('{'S said the LA County team
gave his S'cm Clemente boat a real race for about half the
28-mile distance. ··Then they just broke. got sick and
started throwing up," Voorhees s;.1id
AFTER TlL\T IT was a fairly easy pull to the finish
across glassy seas protected from the sun most or the time
by high overcast. Voorhees. who's been with the San Clemente
Department for rour seasons. said the race was his Clrst -
and his last. "A lot of people do it iust to sav thev've done
it and a lot of people do it to win. I've done both, so I can quit
now." . It's not that the Laguna Beach resident didn't enjoy
the race, although he admits that he was a little
uncomfortable a boJJt six miles from the finish when the
sun came out.
THE REAL PROBLE!\l occurred after the race was
over. Voorhees and Lavayen had a little hand trouble. ··It
wasn't that we had blisters. We had pretty good calluses
built up.
"It's just that our ha nds were really tired. We could
barely move them to open a bottle,." he explained.
The bottles, of course, were congratulatory beers the
thirsty rowers were anixous to consume. Not to worry
about the poor lifeguards. Race fans helped them open the
bottles and even obligingly poured the contents into their
parched mouths.
Tax Anticipation
Note Sale Accepted
The sale of $20 million worth
of properly tax anticipation
notes has been unanimously
approved by Orange County
Superivsors.
dry period before property tax
paym ents are received ln the
fall.
Congress
WASHINGTON (AP l -
James Earl Ray took the wit·
ness stand before Congress to·
day and swore. as expected, that
"l did not shoot Dr. Martin
Luther King."
Ray. ln bis first public ac-
counting unde r oath or the
events surrounding the April 4.
1968. murder of the civil rights
leader , told the House assassina-
tions committee: "My testimony
is the same that I would have
giveh to a Memphis trial court if
I had badlhatopportunity."
The 50-year-old Ray, accom·
panied by a phalanx or U.S.
marshals, was brought into the
committee's chamber under
severe security provisions. Spec-
tators, including photographers,
were cautioned they would be
expelled if they so much as stood
while Ray. wearing a n ill-fitting
sport coat and gray tie, entered
lhe room.
Arter his attorney, long-lime
assassinations buff and writer
Mark Lane. e ngaged acting
cha irman Richardson Preyer in
battle over Ray's treatment by
fe d e ral a uthorities , Ray
launched into a long and ram·
bling preliminary statement, his
voice quick but halting.
Ray pleaded guilty in 1969 to
King's killing but almost im-
mediately ~canted that con·
fession after°)-eceiviog a 99-year
sentence in a Tennessee state
prison.
·'In respect to my gunty
plea," he said, "it is not a dif-
ficult matter for an attorney to
move his client to a guilty plea.
I'm s ure every member or this
committee knows this ."
Ray's attorney at the time of
his sente ncing was P e rcy\
For~man. a nationa lly known
trial la)Vyer.
Then Ray turned to what ap·
parently will be the underlying
theme of his claim to innocence:
that he was a mere pawn in
what he thought was a gun·
running scheme by a mystery
man named "Raoul" and may
have been set up. moreover. by
unde rcover operations of the
FBI. 'nle story is one which Ray
has long aired via prison in·
tcrviews.
Ray told the committee about
breaking out of Missouri Stale
Prison in 1967 and traveling in
zi1·zag fashion to St. Louis, the
Chicago area, Indianapolis and
t.1lUmately to Canada. where he
s pent one night with a prostitute
and robbed her pimp the next
day -then met "Raoul" by
chance on the Montreal docks.
In return for money and a
never-fulfilled promise or travel
documents, Ray said he carried
items across the Canadian and
Mexican borders for the
Spanish-accented "Raoul," who
had mysterious telephone m1m·
hers in New Orleans and no last
name Ray could remember.
After smuggling the items,
which Ray did not specifically
identify, he said he went to Los
Angeles. took a bartending
course, tried unsuccessfully to
go to work for the Internal
Revenue Service, traveled to
New Orleans to agree to the gun·
running s cheme with the
mystery' man -and ultimately
returned to Los Angeles.
Gem
Talk County T ax Collector·
Treasurer Robert Citron
reported that,JJank or America of·
fered the low bid or 4.71 percent
for the notes.
The county borrows funds
each year ·to carry government
activities through the so-oelled
Citron compared the 4.71
percent bid to the bid or 4.95
percent received by San Diego
County and 4.98 percent by Los
Angeles County.
H e attributed changing
m a rket conditions and the ,
county's strong AAA credit rating from Moody's Investors
Service for the lower interest
ratl'.
811 J.C. HUMPHRIES
Gemologut
DIAMONDS AND BLACKS
and the A frica1t ttOl'lomy
.,....,......
JAMES EARL RAY WALKS TO THE WITNESS STAND
Convicted Slayer Denies Shooting Dr. King
60 to Benefit
Service Districts --Split $12.4 Million
Orange County supervisors
ha ve managed to divide $12.4
million in state aid 60 ways to
help special service districts
cope with property tax lost
because of Proposition 13.
As a result. county officials
said today. the libra ry, street
sweeping. bug control and com·
munity service districts will get
nearly 80 percent of the runds
Baby Dinosaur
Bones Found
PRINCETON, N.J . <AP>
Geo logists have found 90·
million-year-old ske letons of
baby duckbill dinosaurs In Mon·
tana, Princeton University an-
nounced. The team, led by Princeton re.
search assistant John R.
Horner, said that the formation,
found in Teton County, Mont..
dates from the late Crustacean
period, university spokesman
George Eager said Tuesday.
He said Homer's team found
skeletal remains of 15 to 17 in·
dividual duckbill dinosaurs,
which died apparently just after
hatching. About 100 yards away,
the party found an adult
dinosaur skull which could have
been t.he dinosaurs' mother, but
identification of those remains
has not been confirmed, Eager
said.
they lost because of the property
tax limitation initiative.
Supervisors rejected a staff
proposal that would have left 34
special districts without any of
the so-called state bailout funds.
Ins tead, they trimmed the
county structural fire district's -
SlO. 7 million budget reques},
down lo S6.9 million, leaving olit
a proposed $3.8 million operat·
ing reserve.
In addition, the board agreed
to accept no state aid for the
county flood CQlltrol or harbors,
beaches and park districts.
agencies that have sufficient re· serves to carry them through
the 1978-79 fiscal year.
Supervisor Ralph Diedrich
said he expects the .. Legislature
to a llocate an additional $125
million in a id to special distticts
statewide so supervisors can
restore more funds later.
The ripple from Proposition 13
a lready may postpone construe·
tion of new libraries in San
Clemente. San Juan Capistrano.
Irvine and El Toro.
During Tuesday's hearing
Supervisor Philip Anthony
criticized staff proposals for
dividing the money, saying lh~y
failed to show which districts
really are in need of special
help.
"We are into a situation where
we JUSt have been playing a
game subject to arbitr ary
formulas," he complained.
Barned Up
Clauic Car Destroyed
"This is evidenced by the fact
that last year Orange County
government had the lowest tax
rate of any coonty. not only in
this state but for any large
urban area, and yet was able to
udeq uately provide all the
services needed," he said.
C itron noted county
government's 1977-18 tax rate
was $1.33 per $100 assessed
valuation compared to Los
Angeles County's $4.50 tax rate.
Black Africa now supplies more than half of the world's dlamondS. Zal,.,
alone, Is the source of 3S percent of the global sµpply, producing 17 mllllon
metric carats annually. That's more than twice the output of South Africa, which has long been conslder9d the world leader. Botawane produces
The diamond solitaire.
One smgle diamond. Set simply
and elegantly. To sparkle on Its own.
A South Laguna man with an
aching heart 1tood by the
roadside In Huntln1t.on Beach
Tueisday night and watcl)ed bls
90 p ercent-restored 1958
Mercedes-Bens luxury sedan
burn. The classic auto, today a
•charred shell. wo.a valued at up
to $20.000 due to the restoration
lnveatment, accordlnt to
Gtor1e Thomas of 6 Treasure
bland. Fl re "'l>opartment lnapector
Oary Glenn 1ald • rrtend WU
ttst·drlvlnl t.be luxury sedan soothbCJUnd on Brook.bunt Strftt
near Pac~lflc Coast Hl1hway
about t :30 p .m . •hen Ure
erupted.
Thomas, riding as a
passenger, an,d his unidentified
companion swerved to a halt
and bailed out as names erupted
into the car's interior.
"A couple or guys stopped and
tried to put it out with fire ex·
tingulshers, but It was too late,"
said Inspector Glenn. '
He added that wblle the
Butbard Street Fire Statton Is
not too tar dlatant, the car nre
occurred in an area wbert no
telephonet ore close by to sum·
moo omtt1ency ald.
Flames had ensulfed the
claaslc four-door sedan when flremm were able to reach the
scene.
·~
He said Interest on the $20
mllllon Jn notes wlll cost
$775,807.
But the runds will be
reinvested for short terms at
hlgher-yleldlng rates , he
explained, ~o the county's
Interest charge and other
expenses wm be paid wlthout
cost to t8xpayers.
Other bids received for tbe
county cotes were from Wells
Far10 Bank, al 4.72 perttnt;
Poyne Weber, 4.1.S pncent:
Security Pacific Bank, 4.758
percent and Chemical Bank, •·•
percent.
p
.-bout 2.s mllllon carats annually,
,ollowed by Ghana with 2.2 mllllon carats; Namibia, 1.9 mllllon. al1d Sierra Leone with 0.75 mllllon. Other pr'oducers are Tanzania, !.lbtrla, Angola, the Ivory coast and the Cen-
tral African Republic. Before clvll war
wracked Angola. that country pro-duced 1 mlmon carats yearly, and Is
expected to return to a produd1on I.wt
near that amount, now that conditions
ere again more settled there. The Cen-
Of lasting value. ,because no two diamonds
are alike. Come In to see our beautiful
select Ion of diamond solitaire Jewelry.
And youll know why it's the gift
that makeS a rare and
wonderful moment
last a lifetime. J. C. .JJumpfu.Uz:t Jeweler~ 1 tral African Stlllna Ora1n1a:::{ based In South Africa, handles
Black African diamond Milts, ClttOltt the unfrltndllnHI bttwttn tnat MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY' ~
apartheid country and tht rest Of ~
Africa. D4lmclf'Cfl obvlOUSIY pl-V • ma.. Jor ro .. In the •m.~nc· of Black, 1823 NE'WPORT BLVD. COSTA MESA
Africa. For tompfe, 2S ~of the CONVENIENT TERMS BankAmerlc.d Master ...... __ c.ntrat Afrkan Aepubllc's fqrelgn H· ---chlngeMtnlnGS CIO'nefrom dtamon-. r..m32illV•EAA.-.Sli.illN-T•H•E•SAM-•E.,.L.OCA~•T•l•O•N-mPl!H•O'!!!!Ni!liEa~-..1'111--m
• -
..
A.f OAILY PILOT s Wedrl•ay, AugUlt 11, 1'18
Hold 'Dult Freeway
NOW H KNOW D&PT.-6ome 1tan back. lhe atate
of Callfomla decided to lake UU. UtUt country road
lbro\llh Cost.a II•• and tum lt Imo a freeway. Jt wu a
vtalon tnto tbe tutu.re ot vut mapltudo.
Wben the atat.e hlcb•-.Y brUI deelded to do lbat, there
w11 a place aJonplde the road known u the Sant• Ana
Army Atr Bast. Nearby, the Army waa fl1lnl P·38
Lockheed lJibtnlq t\abten out ot wbat ta now Oran1e
County Alrport.
There were a f w h'u.it lta.ndl alon1 tM old ruraJ road
People drove by alowly. trylnc to conserve the one aet ot
Urea they'd been allocated by the OPA. They were aolna
nay on the la.ttnt-per-1aJlon 1uollne too, l•t they run
out of "A" ration coupona.
MEA.NWlllLE AC•OS8 THE lbe seas. a 1uy named
Adoll Hltler wu ran~ around and tryin& to flCW'e out
how to stall off General DWtpt D. Eisenhower from lnvad·
lnt Forteu Europe with bis Allied armies.
Back here in our bome reilon. however. the st aw
hi1bway people were lookln& ahead to wben World War JI
would be over and they could start bulldint some
:1uperhi&bways.
One of the roads they selected was Route SS, tbat rural
lane that is a major feeder from inland reaches lo the
State Highway Brau Work on Delaying Action
s horeline at Nl'wport Beach. Over the years. it has
variously bt.•en known as Newport Boulevard, Newport
Freeway. Houtt• 55 and Costa Mesa Freeway.
OVER THE YE.\RS, there have been a lot of changes
Jlongside that road. The Army Air Base went away and
the land has been transformed into Orange Coast College,
Southern California College <the Army chapel still stands I
and the county fairgrounds . The P·38 fighters vanished and
Air Cal now rues more peaceful missions out of the
aerodrome to San Francisco.
Traffic has increased. Commerce has increased. Smog
h<.1s leaped to terrifying levels. But the state highway brB;SS.
in their infinite wisdom. are still studying the road and try mg
to figureoutwhnttodowith it. The Orange County Transportation Commission got in·
to the act only this week, asking for further studies.
EMERGING FROM THESE deliberations, Bruce Mal·
tern, Costa Mesa's traffic engineer, attempted to analyze
ror the City Council what was happening to the future rate
or the old rural road that had been declared a freeway
route almost four decades ago. "I've got reason t.o believe we've got a delaying action
going." he suggested. By golly, that's it. A delaying action. Now we know.
If Hitler bad been that good at delaying Eisenhower,
we might still be fighting World War II.
Nixon No Longer
N eetb Public Fund
DETROIT <AP> -Former President Richard M. Nixon la in
the money -or at least he has enough or it to feel that he no longer
needs money from the public for legal help.
Lloyd Johnson, who succeeded Rabbi Baruch Korff as trustee
of the "Nixon Trust Fund" last year, says new income that Nixon
has received h&S1made the fund unnecessary.
Tuesday's editions of the Detroit News quoted Johnson as,say-
ine Nixon had told him recently that bis finances are much im·
pre>ved since he collected money for belng interviewed by David
Frost and began receiving royalties on bls new book.
Johnson, an Ann Arbor nursing home owner, estimated that
Nixon once owed more than $750,000 to lawyers defending his
claim against public release of the tapes and other evidence used
to prosecute the Watergate trials and support the House impeach·
ment proceedings.
Blfttkout, Lootiag
l\'.lemphis .. Reels
From Strikes
MEMPHIS. Tenn <AP) -A massive power f allure blamed by the
utlltly on ~abotage blacked mrt Memphls early today, acldln1 to lbe
woea of u city already reeling from walkouts by police and firemen.
Labor ltiadera threatened a 1eneral strike unleas a settlement comes
isoon
ScaHert!d lootiog was reported
ucro101 town before power was
restored. and ,a baby had to be
delivered by nasblight at one
hospital before emergency
power could be connected.
THE BLACKOUT also left some areas without water pres·
sure because electric-powered
pumps were out. Memphis In·
ternatlonal Airport bad '° shift
to standby power.
County police said between 15
and 20 adults were arrested on
minor charges stemming from
the looting, which was concen-
trate'.l al northside liquor and
convenience shops. They said
flve juveniles were in custody on
charges of burglary or attempt-
ed burglary. National Guard
, troops, already on duty for the
strikes, were dispatched to the
county jail to beef up security.
Mayor Wyeth Chandler ·had
been able to maintain calm the previous nights by imposing a
dusk-to-dawn curfew. Some
pickets have been arrested each
might when they refused to dis-
band by the 8 p.m. deadline.
THE BLACKOUT came on the
first anniversary of singer Elvis
Presley's death. Thousands of
his fans had come to this city of
650,000 to pay tribute at his
grave at Graceland Mansion.
but this was far fewer than had
been expected before the
strikes.
On Tuesday , Chandler
modified his no-negotiations
stance and offered to place the
strikers' wage demands on a
November ballot, giving voters
a chance to pay for the settle-
ment with a sales tax increase.
The strikers rejected tbe idea
and called for binding arbilra-•
lion. .1
Police Director E. Winslow
Chapman said at a pre-dawn
news conference that the
blackout was "probably due to
sabotage." The FBI was assist·
ing investigators of the sabotage
at the Memphis Light Gas &
Water Division's Cordova sub-
station.
for N allonal Guard services
back to 1968 and callinl for a
quick settlement.
Chandler, asked about the
governor's remarks thla mom·
Ing on ABC television, said they
s uggested an attempt at
"blackmall."
More than 1.000 National
Guardsmen have been patrolling
the city with about 100 non·
striking police officers and 75
sheriff's deputies, while 200 Fire
Department officials and non·
striking ~men have kept Q3 of
the city's 48 fire stations open. .
Senate OIU
Caner Plan
WASHINGTON -The
Senate today approved
President Carter's plan to
expand college grants and
loans, making them availa·
ble for the first time to mid·
die-in come students.
The 68-28 vote followed
approval Tuesday night of
a rival SSOO-per-student
tuition tax credit that
Carter opposes.
At the Whitt House. dep·
uty press secretary Rex
Granum said the presi·
dent's position "has not
changed. He is strongly
opposed to such.··
But Granum did not say
whether Carter would veto
the bill.
The Carter program
would provide aid to an
additional 1.4 million stu·
dents, with about 64 per·
cent of the benefits going
to students from families
with incomes of $15.000 to
$25.000 a year.
AP ......
. POLICE PROTECTION -!\1emphis police Lt. Louise Duna·
vent is escorted to her cur by striking policemen Jesse
Noe. left. and Mack Hughes Tuesday night. after she ut·
tempted to arrest the two for violation of a citywide
curfew. She was unable to arrest the sergeants she has
worked with for 17 years and broke down crying. They
were arrested by oth<.·r officers later.
ERA Extemion May
Get Senate Debate
WASHINGTON <API -Senate Majority Leader Robert C. Byrd
said today he isn't certain the Senate will de~w it proposed 39·
month extension of the Equal Rights Amendment this year.
The House voted 233-189 Tuesday to extend the ERA ratification
time limit to June 30. 1982 from Its current deadline of March 22.
1979. However, the measure is threatened with a filibuster in the
Senate.
ASKED ABOUT PROSPECTS for action on the extension in the
Senate. Byrd said. "I don't know . As or now 1 just can't say."
The West Virginia Democrat said he hoped the Senate would
have lime to debate the measure. but noted. "We have so many
things to get done in so short a time as Congress tries to adjourn for the
year in October.
Supporters or the extension hope the mementum or an unexpec·
tedly large House victory will hold up when the bill reaches the
Senate.
REP. ELIZABETH HOLTZMAN. D·N.Y .. principal sponsor ol
the extension. said the 44·vote margin was "larger than any or ue
anticipated.··
"The size or the House vole will give tremendous momentum to the effort in the Senate ... su1d Ms. -Holtzman, who 1s scheduled to
meet with pro-extension senators on Thursday.
Rep. Don Edwards. D·Calif .. floor .leader of the pro-extension
forces. said. "We thought we were•going to win by 25 or 30 votes."
,
UTILITY SPOKESWOMAN
Paula Payne said someone en·
tered the big plant and threw a
series of s witches -a complex
procedure requiring knowledge
of the system -which cut off a
main electrical link with the
Tennessee Valley Authority. The
TV A's Allen Steam Plant on
Presidents Island in the Mis·
sissippi River could not carry
power demands alone and
autom atlcally shut down.
Troops had been on duty at the
Cordova plant Monday but were
replaced by private guards.
HE
DELIVERS
MORE
·NEWS
It took about 21n hours to
restore power to all of Shelby
County.
Chapman said a non-striker
was being questioned but was
not considered a suspect. He
said the man requested a
lawyer.
THE BLACKOUT came at
12:32 a .m .. about 12 hours after
Gov. Ray Blanton stepped into
the dispute, demanding payment
.
EVERY
DAY
THAN
Twisters Hit Midsection WALTER
CRONKITE
................. ·--------· .. _ ---··· .. -·-·-·-··-·----··.
Thuntlentomu Spawned by ColdYronl FRANK
REYNO LBS
ln a typical half-hour show. a television
news personality reads only about as many
words as are printed every day on the front
page o! the Daily Pilot.
Te.,,er•••m
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JOHN
CHANCELLOR
Thus, your Daily Pilot carrier brings you a
lot more news of the state, natiotl and world
than you see on TV. And. you get' complete
news and pictures of events close to home that
Walter. Frank and John don 'l have time ror.
There are more than 900 Daily Pilot
•lr\ewscasters". Each is an independent
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To become a Daily Pilot "newscaster"
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DAILY PILOT
642-4321
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i
CALIFORNIA
Teaelaer Measare QUEENIE
Gays fA,imch
Protest Move
SACRAMENTO <AP> Eiupportcn of I ">
rl&hhi . lncludtna omeo promlnt-nt ll~rul polll1
clans. ha~ opened tbe campalin a1alnat an •nt1-
homosexu.al t acher metasutt on the November
ballot by denou.ndn1 lt as a t.btt•ut to civil rl1bta
The lnit.lauve. Propoaltkln e sponsored bJ Sen.
Jobo Brius. R t~llerton, b aim~ al flrln1 homot~ufll tHcht-n, tho\llh opponents say It'°"
much tUJ1JMtr
'M'AC'KS ON ROMOSDlJAL TBACHBU
··could be "xll'nck>d lo other mlnontJes. whfother Hx·
ual orient.aUon or polltlcal vteW'I." and threaten to
revivt ~McCarthy era or t.be 1950s. Aasemblyman M~oraly Leadt•r H('HUrd Bt.'rm<m. D·lkvttly Hilb.
uld at a ral.llYTut.'Miay
"Thi• b~1nous nd outrageous iolhat1ve
threatens tht' very s lructlltf' of due proceaa,"
Berman told about 200 pe~ outsidt> tbe Capttol
He Slttd he would tell hl.S colleagues that the cam-
pulan \J ··worth uuun1 a II~ bat or risk on."
Al~ ~J)l'ukm& at lhe rally wen-gHy activist
Frank Vel. who u. wulkang the length of California
lo drum up &upport for the campaign; As-
semblyman Art Agoos, D·San Francisco. Sen
Alan Sieroly, D·Los Angeles. J nd Sacramento
\l ,tyor Phil l.aenberg.
·I'm loc.*10& for some light 1ummer reading. You know.
an author who hun'l served ume, or a biography by
i.om~ y, ho hun'l lost all his fnends."
Quake Area
GOV. EDMUND BROWN JR. OPPOSES the
lnitidtive but was not present.
It was the first Capitol demonstration related
tu Proposition 6. which is Ulrel y to be one of the
rnoi;t emotional issues on the Nov. 7 ballot.
State Aid Granted
Under the me~ure. school boards could fire, SANTA BARBARA CAP> -Gov. Edmund G.
· or refuse to hire, any n 11chers. administrators or
counselors for publicly engaging in or advocating
homosexual conduct.
BRIGGS SAYS THE ME1<\SURE WILL let
schools dismiss teachers who would be poor role
models. Opponents say that current IB'W:s requ1r1ng
dismissal for .sexual misconduct with children are
adequate. They also s ay the initiative could be ap·
plied to defenders of gay rights.
Brown Jr. has declared a slate of emergency in
Santa Barbara County. where damage estimates
from last weekend's earthquake have climbed lo
more than $12 million. ' .
Brown, acting on a request for state a1d from
the Santa Barbara County Board of Supe~visors.
s aid Tuesday that "con<litions of extreme peril"
existed in the area . The county declared a local
disa ster area Mondav.
'Haak Speeulatioa'
PLUMalMG
Hl.ATING Govern ..... l/C]jnt n;sputes Sm1Ct'l-5:..~!f'vCN<Ooor ··~ ., CC.•11 ~-HIY-Mul
COSTA MESA642• 17SJ
15»....., .....
Hearst Conflict Chargel.;QM;;,,,;;;;;il·= ......... ~----~5-040----...... 1
SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -Calling
her allegations "rank speculation."
,, the federal government is disputing
Patricia Hearst's assertion that her
former lawyer failed to provide ade-
quate counsel at her 1976 bank rob-
bery trial because he contracted to
write a book about the case.
Auistant U.S. Attorney Ed Davis
Jr. made the statement in a response
filed to Miss Hearst's earlier request to examine F. Lee Bailey's deal with
the G.P. Putnam Co., a New York
publishing house.
In that request. Miss Hearst, 24,
cbaraed that Bailey's $225,000 con-
tract for a book about her actions
during her captivity by the terrorist
Symb100CSP Liberation Army con·
sUtuted arounds to aet aside or reduce ber seven-year prison_ sentence.
~hild Porno
S~spect Claims
Life Threatened
LOS ANGELES (AP> -A man
charged in connection with an in-
ternational child pornography and
prostitution ring says be broke his
wrist in a jail incident involving un-
identified persons who tried to kill
him
"They tried to kill me." Charles
James Hughes of La Puente said
Tuesday as he left a brief Superior
Court ball bearing.
HUGHES, 35, apparently blamed
his Injury on other inmates. But his
attorney, Howard Beckler, s aid his
client accidentally broke the wrist
when attempting to throw ba~k a
broom hurled by another lnmate.
( STA.TE J
Sptll &w•l•etl
IMPERIAL BEACH <AP > -Coast
Guard officials planned today to con·
duct a surface examination of a half·
mile wide oil spill that washed
ashore near the city pier.
Lt. Douglas Martin said a Coast
Guard helicopter crew checked the
spiJI a fter it washed ashore around
dusk Tuesday and that the oil formed
a circle extending about a quarter of
a mile offtbe shore.
4,SH Aft"ft O..rretl
TWENTYNlNE PALMS <AP>
More than 500 firefighters trylng to
contain a massive brush fire ln the
Joshua Tree National Monument
hoped for abatement today of the er·
ratic desert winds that propelled
names through twisting canyons.
By Tuesday evening the fire bad
swept through some 4,500 acres in the
park 20 miles northeast of Palm
Springs and was spreading rapidly,
the state forestry department report-
ed. The blaze remained 60 percent con-
tained, asitbadbeenfor a day.
Rape 8111811deeti
SACRAMENTO <AP> -A person who commits rape whUe carrying out
any unrelated felony could get an ex·
tra three years in prison. under a blll
on the Sen.ate noor.
The blll, AB 2.802 by Assemblyman
Eugene Gualco, D·S:acramento. was
approved Tuesday on a 5· 1 vote of the
Senate Judiciary Committee.
I
BylllaaeD.
CllristllSll, D.D.S.
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.,,......HMlt-Mflfl ..... ..... , .. ~ .. ,..... ... , ....
................ (Me .. .....,.
Judge Paul G. B~kenridge re·
U£..e.sl.Jfygh~ail fro~ 000 to t---+----!"$40,000 aoo onJere<Tlruihes 8.mt other
Col• Pl .. •••I Kiiied .,.:~ :::.:: :"C:..""': =
SACRAMENT 0 (A P > -A :,:...c .. i ~t":-=
liegblatiwe eomndttee hH -k+tfed--&. ... ,11 ... -.,.Nl.-...... ,.I.-."'.-.~,. ........ .,.., ....... ,'"l-
black legislator's proposal to urse ~= ..... ~: defendants in the case separated
from the general prison population.
Hughes and another defendant.
Joseph Francis Henry, 43, were or-
dered to return to court Sept. 6 for a
pretrial conference. Henry, an
amateur photographer from New
York City, reJUained in custody in
lieu of S300,00CJbaU.
'
Californians not to buy gold South =~.:.. :,_., ~.:.=r. African Krugerrand coins. ...,...... ... ,..-.
The measure, ACR 99 by As-
semblywoman Teresa Hushes, D·Los 7t07Wwlut ••A-. Wut:ul 1'w Angeles, failed Tuesday to get past 1t•-IHI the Senate Rules Committee, despite r
earlier passage by the Assembly with
little dissent.
WtdnMday. AUQ~t 16, 1978 OM. v PILOT A&
SpetlCHtlfl Li_.t :: r • • • • • • • • •:
Economy Snagged~!~ · f:
SACRAMENTO I AP > -A
legislative drive to put a government
sp ending llmlt on the Nove mber
ballot could depend on a vote tonight
in the state Senate.
The rate of the limit. a constitu·
tional amendment by Sen. John
Garamendi. D·Mokelumne Hill. was
left hanging Tu~sday when a con·
ference committee abruptly ad·
journed without finishing work on the
measure.
That qioant the amendment failed
to meet a Tuesday midnight deadline
for the Novembe r ballot. The
deadline can be e:ittended. but only it
the Senate approves a bill that it reject-
~d Monday.
BEFORE ADJOURNING, the
Democratic-dominat ed, two-house
committee t entatively approved a
limit formula similar to one proposed
by Republican Gov. Ronald Reagan
and r ejected by voters in 1973.
The Reagan limit was s ubstituted
for a more liberal formula tentative·
ly adopted Monday night but then
abandoned by the committee Tues -
day.
The bill extending the ballot
deadline, S.B 2243 by Sen. Alan Sjeroty.
D·Los Angeles, gives lawmakers until
Friday to put constitutional amend-
ments before voters in November.
IT FELL EIGHT VOTES short of
passage Monday, but Sieroty was
given permission to bring it up again.
That could happen tonight. when the
Senate is scheduled to meet.
Riding on the bill is the fate or a
number of constitutional amend·
ments . Including one by Assembly •
Speaker Leo McCarthy abolishing •
ho m eowne r property taxes and •
boosting renter income t ax credits. ff • . Sll!toty's bill fails to-pass . the • •• ,_1!!1.-.. -i -.;i;i
•
amendments couldn't go on the ballot :
until June 1980. •
. Gara~endi blamed the delay in ac-• ~a.J>L.a..:.iH .. E_R_B;::;..._==-!
t10n on his measure on a~ attempt by • FRIEDLASDER McCarthy. D·San Francisco. to put .. · • •
more pressure on the Senate to ex· • IS :ttAKISG •
tend the deadline. • GREAT DEALS •
GARAMENDI ADJOURNED the ! FREE :
committee Tuesday afternoon after • 50 . •
Assembly Democratic conferees said • GALS •
they coald not take a final vote on the • OF GAS •
a mendment until they met with their 1• ............... ". 00•-···· ... • •···.,
colleagues. • or Oii. ('llr\ '\;(;•:s •
Approval by the committee would • ... --.,.~·-, ... •
send_ the a~endment to both houses • ........ H ... ONDA, e •
for fmal action. • • •
In a bizarre move before Tuesday's • ill m 1 •r.,::•:.,.;• ~ •
a djournment. a ve rs ion of the :* • * • • * * • * • * •• R~agan limJt ~as proposed b:Y As· ... MG·TRIUMPH !
semblyman ~illle Brown. a liberal • • JAGUAR e ~ San Fra ncis co De mocrat who • •
origin ally opposed the" Reagan pro· • FIAT-LANCIA •
posal. • 1111t•1:m1a.. .. 1o11h• • m nn •-.. 11n
IT WOULD LIMIT STATE and ::-·* * * * * * * * * * •:
loea l spending to a perccnta~c of ... • ,!,?,!?,!~d • • state personal Income. That figure. • ....... t...... sn -tr
currently JUSt over 8 percent. woulrl 1t • * * * * * * * •· • • ~
drop by .o~e-tenth of 1 percent each • MOTORHO~F. tr
year unt1l 1t re ached 7 percent. • S~LES & RF.'.\TAl.S •
The Legislature then could allow • · ll:'eru\-r''s-ow • the limit to remain al that level. • Rr.m "n r. · •
According lo rigures Crom the • 537· 777i F.xt. 500 •
leg islative analyst. state expen· it******* * * * * ._
ditures could grow to S21.503 billion • • LEASING • it
in 1982-83 under the limit. That's $951 • "11 •·~--.• .,...._ •
million less than the-stafe is ii'roject:-,r-53;-7777txl.'OOO-ti
ed to spend. • * * * * * * * • * * * ••
..
FROM Fashion Island
Newport Beach STEREO SOUNDS OF THE HAR~OR ·
---
.4• c E ' .. %t ri I .. RObert N. WMd/Pubh1her Thomu .Ceevll/EdiCor
Orange Coa51 Dall y Pilot .... 0 a ..-ge WMtn.t<tay. Auguat ,e, 1978 Barbara Kr•ib ich lEdltorl1I P"9 Editor __________________ 1111!9 ______________ .... __ _
Bingo Games Call
For Close Study
Rowland Evans/Robert Novak ·
Ford's Book Takes on Reagan
T he Cost.l l\tcs..1 Chy Council h us <&gr('l'd tu 1mllatl• .1
new studY tnto the pros and cons or a llowi.ni: bm&o g a ml'~ for
charltuble pui"poses w1lhln city Umih
The renewed consideration come., .1fkr St Jo.ich1m
Church mude ..i ~inct're r'l'qUl-St lust Wt>t•k tu UM· bingo
1.1me~ to bobtc-r &agfling porish rl•vcnut•'
.. Last yt.•ar. nCter Califomiu voters rt•instatt>d bingo,
C~ta M~a becumtt the first Oranll' Cou~t ~ity tu muvl'
tow4trds lcgaliiin, the gamt• locully lh>Wl'Vt:r. lhl• t'll>
ordinance t.'\cntuatly "'••s set aside
This w..t' u sound dl'cl-.ton. on<.' thJt gun• tht· countll
an unity to an.1 lyze lhc cffocts in nl'ighboring ('lllt•:.
th per 1l bingo activity before going ,111 thl' way
•u lly.
Thl· Opt.•rations rt.'P<>rtt.>dly .irt: runnmg :.moothly 111
Huntmgton Bt>uch and Fount.Jin V.illcy Unforlun.1H•ly
the !l.umc cun 't be !>a1d for otht.•r OrJnge County <·1tw:.
\.-"'h t>r e hct.•nsl's h,1v~ bt.'l'rl rt.•vokt•d .1 m1d rumor!-> uf ~guniu'<i crime intl'rventton
A kt.•y to the council'!i. Se~tembl·r dl·C1s 1on 1s .1
thorough look at ordinanct.•s tn cities whcrl' bingo is doing
wl'll Thl' failures w urr.mt e ven closer scrutiny.
Mardan: Good Citize n
Some dectsions go bt.>yond dotla rs a nd cents. There.: 1::.
often a quell.lion oC public bcn~fil <md j way to say th unh
to good neighbors .
The good neighbors in this c ase arc the folks who run
Costa Mesu 's l\Iardan School for educationally disubled
youngsters ~Iardan took over the former s ilt.• of Costa
:\lesa City Hall more than 10 years ago. leasing lht•
building on 19th Street for about $24,000 a year
Last week . Ma rdan officia ls suid lhl'Y would ht•
willing to pay the appraised value of 5359.000 to make
the ir home permanent.
Councilman Dom Raciti protested vigorously. suying
the property could fetch a far highe r price in an open
bidding war und benefit the city tux ro tes if the non-profit
corporation couldn't keep up with the competition.
Raciti reasoned that the $359,000 price tag would
amount to i.l "give uwuy."
Fellow council members felt otherwise and voted to
get u second a ppraisal on the property <.1nd then begin
ncgotiutions with Mardan.
A group that has served the community as well as
:\lardan deserves cons ide ration beyond a few dollars th<.it
might be squeezed from the property Wh;il po~siblt·
occupant could do more in public service?
WASHINGTON l nt1matt-i. of
<it• r .dd Jo'onl. fl'Jrful that
pubh<'Jtion of his memoirs early
~ nt.•xt yt•ar will cr:.ick Republican
h.1rmo11y wldt• open. are quietly
tryini.: to sofH•n the former presi·
clt>nt ·.., ,1tt;1c:k ugainst Ronald
H~u~Jn
\:o 011e dirct•lly connected with .
the book (now <1boul half
hntsht.•d I -will
disc uss th e
m.tltt•J' With
vut1>1dcrs Hut
111s1l1 1·r-.. 1r1
tJ lk !> \\It h
Ford and his
~ n to l• r J >: t.·.
h J \ e l\'4.lrm·d
t'ord IS USIO~
h 1s book to
1.>lame his de-
ft·ul by Jimmy Carter squim.>ly
on Ht•ag;.in 's challenge
Public<1l1on Of the book IS
scheduled for next May, just as
µres1dentiJl campaign!> are gel·
ting under way Rea~an 1s a ccr·
Ljin canchdatt'. Ford tt poss1bk
one. Ford's intention lo use hi s
book to "prove the case" th;.1l Reagan's challenge against un
in<'um b<'nt R<.•publican president
dcctcd ;.i Democrat will release political hobgoblins.
Cool heads inside the Repub·
lican p.irty an• tryiAg to dis-
suade Ford But considt>ring
what one intimate call s Ford's
"hatred" for Reagan. success is
queslionablt>.
R.\FSHOON RISES -The Un ·
mis takable n se o f Gl'.'rald
Rafshoon within the Wh1tc
House is coming not al the l'X
pense of hb supposed rival.
press secretary Jody Powell. but
rath l'.'r domestic policy ch1l'f
Stuart Eizcnstal.
Thl' reason: llufshoon. thl' ;.id ·
n •rtising executive in chargl' of
rl'?ab ililut1ng President
Mailbox
Carter"b image. 1s now prcpnr
ing lhl' briding papt'rS for
Carter intl'rv1ews and other
pt'rform<inccs Th<•t JOb pre·
v io us ly had been do n.e by
Eizenstat
The obvious change is one of
style. Ralshoon insists on terse,
easily handled formula~ ror the
president on mnation. energy.
tax reform/reduction and other
questions. In contrast. Eizenstat
used to giVl' tum long. detailt.>d
memoranda~
''Refreshing. n
The change could become one
of s ubstance. Elzenstat 's pro·
gr ammatic liberaltsm has been
a major cause of the chain of
··compre hens ive" proposals
!>l rea ming fro m the While
House-The Rafshoon briefings
<irt.• greaUy diminishing this doc·
trmal lone.
A footnote: Rumors of J
Rafs hoon-Powt>i. power clash
are premature at the least. but
ther e was 01u.• dispute between
the m on M~urt€.'r's £uropean
lour. Powell urged a sorter tone
than Rafshoon in presidential re·
action lo the conviction or Soviet
dissident Anatoly Shcharansky.
The president look Powell's ad·
vice.
MANSFIELD WARNS -Am·
bassador Mike Mansfield. the
form e r Senate Dem ocratic
leader now representing the US.
in Tokyo. is dchvPnn~ somber
warnings to visiting Curter <.1d·
ministration officials about Japan 's growing fear of the
president's Far East policies
For the first time, Mansfield
says, Japanese politicians and
military leaders are privatl'ly
complaining about tht-relatiVl'
decline of U S naval stren~th
compa red lo the Soviet Cnion.
Despite ~lansficld's assurancl's
to the Japant•se govern ment.
concern 1s rising about lhc
steadfastness and relia bility of
Mr. Carter's policies.
Such concern~ have been
publicly t•xprcs~cd by m any
Americans -including MaJ
Gen. J ohn K. Si nglaub. forced
into retirement because he QUes·
t1oned US. troop withdrawals
fro m Sou th K o r e..i . But
!\l ans fi eld. .1 leading Vietnam
w;.ir dove, did not Joan the <.1 larm·
po111tt'rs until tht' J ;.ipanest•
the mst.'ln·., began <'Onvey1ng
the ir fears to ham
Not So Good a De al
The Costa Mesa City Council's c;lecision not to attempt to
c ut through the s trings attuched to so·calle d stalt>
"ba il-out" to c ities in the wa ke of Proposition 13 was
commendable.
Teachers: How Indispensable Are They?
'.'lot only does it serve as a r euffirmation of the city"s
staunch inde pendence in the face of increased stalt.•
control over local governments. it means c ity l'mploye('s
• can s till receive merit increases, estim ut ed :.it $355.000
next fiscal ye..ir.
T he pay agreement was reached last yt·ar and thl·
city has kc-pt its word.
The-complexities involved in the stall' rclit'f pl;.in
would aJso have cancelled thu frugality t h ul has led to .1
S4.2 million city reserve.
The city stood to r ccciVl' a sl<.1le hand-out of sli ghtlv
mo_re thun $1 million. Thul sounded pretty good until tht·
:;trmgs were unraveled <.1nd the penallic.·s for t.'XC('SSi\'l'
reserves we re consid ered.
In the e nd, the Sl million gift to the city would h uvt•
been slashed to u net city profit of less than S25.000.
Thanks, but no thanks.
• Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot.
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
artists. Reader comment is invited. Address The Daily Pilot. P.O
Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321
Boyd I Okay Sign
To the t.:dltor
Your t•d1tonal of Aug 8 which
reports that Orangl' County
teachl'rs rallied lo .. complain
with st>ur and disappointed words
".ibout thei r plight in post·
Jarvis California ends with the
admonition " .. for now al least. teachers had better be prepared
to accept thl' notion that th<' public
no longl'r considers them in·
dispens;.i bll'lo the system ...
What sort of fn'l' society can bt•
:-.uslninl'd whl'n..• teacher~ ;.ire not
indis pl•n:-wblt.".' What sort of
futun.· a\\ a its us all iflcachers arc•
merely considered public func·
tionaries no mort> important than
bu1 ldin~ inspectors or CalTrnns
truck dnvcrs '!
The editorit1l drngs out the old
When you make a circle
with your thumb and fore·
fing er. you mean every-
thing's all right. It's dlf·
ferent in Japan. The sign
m eans you're talking about
money. And when you so
signal in France. you're say·
ing something·s worthless.
Don't even want to talk <ibout
what it signifies in Greece
Am too bashful.
a rguments a bout sa laries,
b~ncfits and s ummer vacu·
tions .. ~on a level thatis the envy
of manywhopaytaxessupportlng
those lifestylc improvements ...
Quite apart from the years of UO·
iversity training and teaching ex ·
perience required to reach 'the top
of any salary scale in the county,
sulary and benefits for teachers
are modest compared to those
perfor ming such crucial tasks in All that a c itizen or the society as managing a fast
Uruguay needs to run for the food oulll'l or deliver ying
presidency of that country is Sparkletts Water. Further , long
a petition with 50 signatures. s ummer vacations are seldom if
ever realized by teachers with
Q. "Roy Rogers ' horse was familiestosupport.
Trigger. Dale Evans' horse liloated salaries ot some ad-
was Buttermilk. But do you ministralors, great numbe rs of
recall the name of the Jeep non·teaching positions. and ex·
driven by Roy's sidekick Pat pensive programs of doubtful
Brady?'' value mandated by Sacramento
A. Certainly do. Ne llybelle. and Washington all contribute
-----AH"ily '8 ~e eee• ef e ... tioft Ques tion -a rTses-ast'O --Q~ "Do all the s tates use in this state. It is most disap-
whether Walt Disney's Snow Daylight Saving Time?" pointing that the Daily Pilot
White was modeled after a A. All but Alaska, Hawaii makes no clear distinctions in its
real girl. That she w as . and Indiana. statement.
Marge Belcher was the Virtually a ll observers con·
yo un·g lady. She late r Q . "What was the m ost cede that it is the classroom
became Marge Champion of violent western film ever where education takes place. with
the Marge and Gower Cham-made?" the te<.1chcr in the vital role If
pion dance team. A. How about "The Wild education is of only nominal im-
A school in Mason City,
Iowa, recently sponsored a
kile·flYi.ng contest. One lad
n ew a kite tha t was only
three-fourths or an inch long.
He carried lt in a match box.
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
The Newport Mesa
School Board has more
money than tut year to .spend on fewer stu:
dents. so nat.urally they
are golq to cut QUt
bitb school busies and
rorce alu&?ntl to walk
up to alx miles to
tchool. That wm show the voters who•s boss!
E. L. P.
GIMlll'/ C.1 Cllftlftltl!O .,. tlltl-"'IUt •Y rte .. u .,_. .. •tt ........... ,, e! .. Nwt., .... i:::r.:.. ~?:l",...,. ..
\
..
Bunch'' as a candidate for portance t o the public of
that distinction. The whole California, one wonders who will
pop u I at ton of a town write the editorials or the next
massacres a band of would· century.andwhowillreadthem.
be bank robbers
How do you account ror the
ract that more peo(>le listen
to \he radJo In April and May
than during any other
months?
The municipal officials of
Tucson, Ariz., once passed
an ordinance that made it U-
Leatal for A viaitin& football
team to score a1aiost the
Univers ity ot Ar izona
Wildcats on their hottle field.
tr you've seen one termite,
you say, yOtfve seen them
all? Not quite. More than
2.000 specles ar romplne
around th.is earth.
Wor1a·1 first expert on the
a.rt of analidC-thal •• fish· inc. mr boy -wu not
mon but a woroan. Sbe, tbe
prior ot a Brt.U&h nunnery,
even wrote a treat.ls on how
to tie ruea.
WILLIAM D. CLARKE
ln~teod of saying "t~ pubUc no
longer believes teache rs are in·
dbpeti#able," the editorial might
better have &atd "some of the
publtc'" feel& thot WOJI,
-Editor
'Dllllftllt ••• '
To the Editor·
1 (ind it difficult to believe that
a newspaper ln this area where
lbc value of education is obvious
in the prosperity surrounding us
would make the statement your
Augu s t 8 editorial
makes " ... teachers had better
be preJ)llred to accept the notJoo
that tbe publJc no longer con·
side ra them lndlspcnsablc to our
SYStf!m."
11\omas Jert rson would turn
over In bis tirave at s~h a
stupid statement. Our school
system was rounded on t he
notlon lhaL. as he said, "Only
popular education can safeguard
dt°*racy." To expand on tb15
idea. he s aid. "I look to the d1f be a lot or money. but that is the IQ in the 98th percentile. or. oo
fusion of light and education as w e ll -earne d live lihood of one lest scale. a n IQ of 148. As·
the resourcl' most to be relied on thousands of people in the com· suming thut the members of thl'
for amelior ating the condition. mumty. Cos t a M esa CCC a r e of
promoting the virtue. ;.ind :i d· Why focus on that? Why not "normal" intelligence CIQ 100 1.
vancing the happiness of mun .. foc us on parts or the budget that they would be regarded <is
A nd whert.• were our a re not.so r eadily obvious. severely retarded if compared
newspapermen mcul<'ated with where error, folly and incom· to the average me mbe r of
his idea that .. A free press is the petence is hidden? Mens a. Maybe we should gather
only safegu.ird of public liberty.. One or the functions or a together a group or Mensans atf()
if not in the schools. responsible editorialist 1s Lo re· allow them to pass judgment on
Teachers ••rt• indispensabk in Cine public opinion. to be the the Costa Mesa CCC. Do you
;.i democnicy. and a news papt•r vo1Cl' of iJ vil'wt'r that looks suppose that the Mensans would
should be lhl' last pl<•Cl' to find a calmly beyond tht• s urface or tht:' dtt1dc that the Costa Mesa CCC
statement to lhl' contrary. I. as daily news and public opinion to could only exist in ;.in institution.
an individual teacher. may be. ofrer thoughtful insights on what and if a llowc,d outs ide would
dispensable. but teachers as a is happening. Your editorial as send properj.y values plunging to
whole certainly are not. paternalistic and misleading. the rock bottom depths of rinan·
BETTY J. ORBACH und as a professional teacher cial ruin? Or maybe the Costa
'Pat--•6.-t.1-' . and public employee. I resent 1t Mesa CCC feels that not only
., ......... M: R. BRYTA N mentally handicapped people
To the Editor : s h ou Id be kt.opt o ut o f the
I mus t r espond to your z f ._IQ neighborhood but mentally gift·
editorial of Aug. 8. "How Many Oii "fl_., ed people should be locked away
Friends Do Teachers Have?" lo To the Editor: as well.
point out that its apparent objec· I've been hearing an awful lot Probably the best solution to tivity is really masking a'l'l attack lately about th19 thing called the the whole thing is to p\.tt all or
on teachers and public employees "Costa Mesa Concerned Citizens the people with an IQ of 70 on
in general. Your phraseology is Committee." Seems to me that one street and all or U\e people
condescending and ambiguous. they are concerned about the with a n IQ of 80 on the next
and your a rgument clouds un-wrong thing. · street and 90 on the next and so
derstanding the general public As 1s typica l ot the times. they on and so forth. Thus. the people
sentiment behind Prop.13. are concerned much more with with 100 would act as a buffer
As an angry taxpayer myself. property values. and their own between the people with 90 and
and as a subscriber to your grasping c lutch on physical the people with 110. and they
newspaper. I want lo reprove things. rather than the possible would never have to meet. Of
you in your failure in not direct· transformation or another human course. the highest IQs would
Ing attention to some of the being into a useful member of live closest to the beach. That
areas of government spending society. should 90lve the whole problem.
where true wa~te and criminal In the first place. the theory even to the satisfaction of the
misuse of tax money is taking that moving "these people" into Costa Mesa CCC
pl <ice . You have in r ecent the a rea will lower property Boy, all them letters. Reminds
months exposed some of this values seems a little far fetched me of another organization that
pro d lgality in the county to me. In the second place. if is highly intolerant of people ~lll~&p~e.e1c;r..i11ii.ii.llJSOuiri:..'Ji.W.-u.o(u(Ai1c1:o1e~.11W9'.lba;y~wa11.gapp--ittt1helf!9'!E,....pel)plWlrlme!""llm"e!""'TlUrnt"ot..,arttttrvniwnt:""~N'lto,.--w ... :b ... <>-a .. l"tl-a-lit .. Ue d1Ue.renl. WM'
there? Other local government I Ive in a r es (den l i a I wa~ that now? BBB? No. QQQ?
operations will show equal and ne ighborhood. and are kept No. Oh. yeah. KKK.
worse wrongs. Yes. including locked away in an institution WILLIAM D. HARVEY
the administration of some of somewhere. how will they ever
our local school districts. learn to cope with the day-to-day
But sh am e! T o a dmonis h problems that we take in stride?
teachers and public employees How will they ever berome pro.
for their concern over their d~cing workers. with the skills
marginal material rewards by a n d me a n s to s u p p o rt
pulling on the bridle or public themselves?
opinion in the w:Jy you do is Now. let ·s look al things in
deplorable. True. what appears another way. There is a group
on budget totals as salaries for called Mensa. whose only re·
government employees seems to qulr~ment ror membership is an
Sydney Barria
• I.Allen from reader11 a~ welcome.
TM right to condense letters to fd
SJJGCe or ehmrnate libel u reserwd.
Letter1 of 300 word! or leu will be
gwn pre/ernice AU ~tera must in·
elude ngnature and maUing address
be.it names may be unthheld on re-
~lt j/ sut ficiffll re<Uon ia apparent.
~ITJI will not~ publtshftf.
Bar Should Nominate. New Judges
Thought1oJ Large
• If judges are to be elected.
and not nppolnted, they shou.ld
fi rst be nominated by the Bar. so
t h at we no tonier have a
politlcally oriented judiciary
made up l a rge l y of those
lawyers who take a partisan In
tcrcst In politics and are re·
warded with a party nomJnoUon.
• People who talk too m.uch
and people who talk too littl(
both s uffer from the same fear
at bottom, \hat of being milun·
dcutood -the lo<auacious
person exhibiting this rear by
overexplainlng and the taciturn
one by •lYlnl nothln1. • Little has chanted middle
class smugness in the ,full cen·
tury since Melv111e wrote· "Of
nil the preposterous assump-
tions of humanity over humani·
ty. nothing exceeds most ot the
criticisms made on the habits ol
tbe poor by the well-bous~.
well-warmed. and well·fed."
• What make& a ctaas1c la its
ablllty to survive both those who
are tnd.llfcrent to It and those
who adore It dumbly.
• WE 8BE1' aupertorlty only
when we are dented equality:
"black" would never have been
groe1 lmed as especia lly
beautiful It bltota had not at
first denl&rated Jt u uaJy. ·
• Most or the ferment in public
education today springs from
the ract that the schools are be·
ing asked not only to make up in
u hurry for their own defects but
also to com pensate for the
faUure& of society a~ a whole -
and they can scarcely do the
first job, mueh 1cu the second.
• President Carter seems to be
following the unproductive ten-
dency Of his predecessors and
payln1 too much attenllon to the
polls :ind the "tttnds." when he
should be attendlni to Winston
Churchill's wamln1: "The na·
Uon will find It v ry hard to loot
up to leaden who ar keepina
tholr oan to tbe around."
....
• •
NAT LON I CALIFORNIA Wednesday, Auguat 18, 1978 DAIL'( PILOT A 1
By BU Keane NUdity Ban BOoed Don't lease your new car-
SAN'fA ROSA ' ' Anye>'*older bathers on the area's popular
"Don't stond hefe with me. Daddy. i con
drive this one myself ~'
thun 10 U&.lthl aw:1wl.hln-1 In the tiuff
ulon1 tht' Ru ahan River can be
M>¢ked ror ~ ~ fine undtir •n or·
dtnanc• •Ppro\'cd that bi.na nudity ln
tht• rc»ut'l areu
I\ second off~Me means six months
in Jail und a S:IOO fine under the strict
ruf e1 aadoptcd 4 l Tuead-.y b1'. lbe
So"orna County B.t>arcl of
Supcrvlsonl
THIE VOTt~ WAS greeted with
hl'ckles, booei und ca~alls from a
nowd nf about 150, mo:it or whom
clalmod tOOy hnd enjoyed the SW\ au
mtturel ln the past.
"The river belongs to 110 ooe!"
th"Y ihouted · 'll 's ouc beach! "
Homeownt>rs alone _the Russian
River. ubout 50 miles north of San
Frnoclsco, have complained for
!>Ome time that they were forced to
wtlnc!>:. nudity and public sex by sun-
beaches.
MUCH OF TltE property as owned
by movle ttar Fred MacMurray. wbo was not pleased with the situation.
The two-page orcOnance bans
"nudity in public places and private
places exposed lo public vlew. •·
"Nudity is offenslve to the senses
of members of the public who wish to
use public beiiches; ~laygrounds and
UN-LEASE it! •
Call
parks and who are unwllllngtngly ex-SOUTH COAST NA. 'TIONAL BANK posed to such conduct ." the or-n
dlnance said. "It ts offensive to the 849 Sunflower st., Costa Mesa (71 4) 540-5300
Member FDfC
sen9es of persons residlng ln the
vicinity of such places because lt in-10760 Warner Ave., Fountafn Valley (714) 979-7350
terferes with said residents' f~ use _..!!!!!!!!~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!....
and comfortable enjoyment of their
property."
. THE ORDINANCE, WHICH took
effect immediately, said it applied
"even when such nudity is not sex-
ually motivated or otherwise lewd."
• Spiral sllced for easy serving
• Honey 'n Spice Glaze • Cooked 30 hours
H tlte O/ftgrnoQ • Nationwide shipping service
. • Old World Cheese Shop
• Sandwiches to go.
Boy $hoplifter, 7~ Convicted Ql,y· · · • Full service Dellcatesaen
vtg!!~~~"!~~s
. WINONA, Minn •AP> A 7 year-Old
l:>oY caU£ht shoplif\mg a 29-cent plastic
~uart gun was convicted in a formal
trial before a Judge who said: ··we want
to impress the child that this is not th~
w;.iy to go."
Winona County Judge S. A. Sawyer
uid Tuesday t hat court officials were
preparing a .. social history" or the boy
to help him d~cide dispositk>n or the
case He said the investigation would
try to "rind out what the situation is at
tbe kid's home and what kind of
guidance the young fellow needs to
been <.1rrested testified. answering
"nope .. to each or these questions: Did
ht> know what the truth was? Did he
know what a Ile was? Did he un-
dt.•rstand the difference between the
two? • -
THE J UDGE SAID he would consider
the testimony ''qualifi~d" Wld give it
the weight he deemed proper. The wit-
neu then knocked down the defendant's
story. setying tbere were no "big kids
with BB guns" and the two boys simply
decided to steal the squirt guns
"He duped me like hell." the defense
counsel said later of his client. "I let
him go to trial because he told me time
and lime again that he only did it
because he was forced to do it. l
believed it to the extent that I didn't
talk him into copping a plea."
When t he defendant t estified.
Forsythe added. "He pa~icked and
juiced his story up and said it wab"l:ll
just the big kids but his friend who
made him do it ...
our u st 3 Day WMkend Befon scttoot
ORDER YOUR HOLIDAY
HONEY BAKED HAM . TODAY!
straight~h himself out." ~
JAMES FORSYTH E. court -
appointed defense counsel, estimated
the 1 'r'.i·h<u.ar juvenile court .trial. held
Aug. 3, cos\ $300 to S500 in terms of time
spent by county officials.
L~nger Life Promoted .
An assistant county attorney pro·
secuted the case and a court reporter
and court clerk were present for the
triHI. However, Minnesota law specifies
that "a violation of a state or local law
or ordinance by a child before becoming
18 years of age is not a crime," and that
adjudication by u juvenile court does
not deem a child to be a criminal.
By Aging Americans
County Attorney Julius Gemes s..Jd
the boy was willing to go through with a
trial because he had been in trouble
previously and the county wanted
Jurisdiction so it could help him.
THE BOY WAS identified only as
Joey because Minnesota law prohitits
the identification or juveniles unless the
defendant has beeo certified for court
treatment as an adu.Jt.
The case began in April when
Richard Stanchfield. security manager
of a J .C. Penney store. called police to
say he saw two boys stool squirt guns.
'"The only way you can make them
learn anything is turn .them over to the
police." Stanchfield said . "Anybody
over the age of S -I arrest them. l feel
they know better by then."
ONE BOY CONFESSED, but Joey
told police older children with BB guns
had threatened to kill him if he didn't
st<'al the toy. The county charged him
with theft. and they boy and his court-
uppoinll.-d attornt•y decided to ask for a
t ri a I.
Sawyer said the same rules of
c.•v1dencc ;.ind other procedures applied
as in cases involving adults. but that
there was no Jury and the child could
not be fined or sentenced to a penal in·
stilution.
At the trial. the second boy w)lo had
SAN MARCOS !AP>-A group or ag-
ing Americans is banding together to
promote a longer lire. A spokesman
says they see it coming.
But the secret. says the spokesman,
1sn 't any panetcea or Ii ving in some
s hangri-la. Ins tead. it's living in
moderation.
T HE RESEARCQ BEING done by the
newly formed Committee for an Ex-
tended Lifespan shows, says chairman
A. Stuart Otto, that or 1,000 Americans
who lived to 100 or older .. "they do
nothing to excess."
·'Some are totally abstinent in df!ink-
ing and smoking -others indulge, but
in moderation ... the few that smoke
cigarettes do not inhale," Otto said In a
newsletter.
In addition, they get up early in the
morning, go to bed early, generally are
"devout believers" in God. &lay busy
and tr'y not to let things beyond their
control bother them.
OTfO, A 63-YEAR-OLD semi-retired
minister of an independent Christian
church in San Marcos called Church of
the Trinity, sa id his committee
"believes that long life on this planet is
part of God's plan."
Otto claims 300 members in the Com-
mittee for the Elimination of Death.
which he formed in 1974, and says he
already has 5Q in his three-month-old
expanded life group -all of them
volunteers living throughout the United
Stales.
The study of lOO·year-olds was done
Security .Pacific Bank
presents a
by a San Francisco member who wants
his identity private, Otto said in an in-
terview. Lt concludes that the length of
their parents' lives or their personal
wealth were. in themselves. irrelevant.
THERE ARE FEWER deaths due to
heart attacks and cancer as a result of
less indulgence in food these days and
fewer environmental toxins. Otto has
told the members. He went on:
"Altbouih high school smoking re-
mains constant, there has been a big
drop in college smoking in the.last five
years.
·'The number or e n trants in
marathons has doubled in the last two year~ ... a great many new studies
have lthown salt lo be toxic in variou5
disorders. . . recent progress h as
opened the way for the synthetic pro-
duction of insulin."
But keeping your teeth as-good as
ne w req u ires pro f essional
assistance. Let Dr. Rick Schoen help
you. Is he fashionable? Let's just say
that he's one to address for complete
dental hygiene services for the
whole family. He thinks you'll like his
style ... and his fees.
Rick Schoen D.D.S.
.. I 0221 Slater Ave., Fomtain Valley
~-s.!~~, •.. .~l .,..... • ...:•"-
AND THIS ~OTE of warning~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ women: "Males are increasing life expectancy
with exercise. and females are decreas-
ing theirs by entering the competitive
society."
SIZZLER
GRAND OPENING
On Bristol west of Jamboree
in Newport Shopping Plaza
Bring the coupon and someone you lilse to the new Sizzler. For $5.99 you'll
get two Steak & Malibu Chicken platters. each with a juicy steak. a tender breast
of chicken patty topped with ham and Swiss cheese. mustard sauce. baked potato
;ind Sizzler toast. But only until Sunday.
•Open 11 :30 a.m. to 9 p.m. Sunday thru Thursday.
11:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. Friday & Saturday .
• Steak. steak & seafood platters .:< ~
• Super luncheon specials '4"~!,:.
•.Gloi:ioWi sa'adJ\ar ~ "Financial Management Series t---
for the Small Business~
A ten-week seminar for owners
and managers of small businesses.
Security Pacific Bank will be
offering a series of ten evening courses
(at the locations listed) designed to
explain in dear, simple language what
financial management is and how it
can greatly improve your profitability.
Subjects will include:
Financial Statement Analysis
Profit Planning & Cash Budgeting
Cost-Profit-\blume Analysis
Capital Budgeting
Sources of Capital
The course fee of $140 is generally
tax~eductible and-includes texts,
materials and·parking. Enrollment is
limited though, so regist~r soon. For
registration information and brochure,
call (213) 613-5636.
LocatiO'n1
Culver City
Howard Johmon\ Mmor l..C'J~
5990 Gleen \'alll")' Cude
Long~1ch
!)ecuntv Pac1f1c Bank
102 Pin~ A\~
Irvine, Newport 8c1ch
Corona dcl Mar 1i1eh School
210 I East bluff Dr
Santa An•
~unty Pacific Ban\.
890N .. ~am St
Dates
Tuesday)
Sept. 12-Nov. 14
~n«Sday$
Sept. 13-Nov. )5
Tubda~
Sept. 12·Nov. 14
Wednesdays
Sept. I 3-Nov. 15
Cou~ Houn: 7-9130 P.M.
r
. -. .... ------------· I 2STUK&MAUBUaTKiEN-I i ~,~J'~~J,.!,,!~~w~~~ $5.99 =·~~s~ ;
~ GrandOpeningSpecial i
•
I Offer good now thru Sundoy, Aug. 20, 1971 only at: I
0yr nryut Slg!tc HUNTIN<>TOH UAOt
I ~ NEWPORT llACH 18552 Belch 81vd I
._ ~ 1000 Bnstol St North lL TOtO 1 I y COIT~ MISA 23501 El TQT'C) Rd. • 4Jlrl1I••
1Mte1 2196 Harbor 81Yd. ~ ''"* F1111.iy a ... ~~ 1011 -• ~------~---~~-----------
f
• •
•
)
... M-.. .... CWl....;...v_".;;.;o._1 ___ ..,..w.;.;•;;.;,;•;;,;_.,.;;.:.:.;.·Aue::?..:'*''·1m_~;\;;';---------------;::-:;::-:~=::=:=:::::~-;:=======C=O=M=lC=S=/=C=A=OSS=:::W::O:::A~D
MARMADUKE by BrlCI Aneltnon BOOMER by Wm. F. Brown and Mel Clsson .. _,_.,_ ... •
"Hold on, Grondmo. Marmaduke wonh
to bai* hello:·
FUNKY WINKER BEAN
MOON MULLINS
..
No, Miss S.··
1 LOVE MY
klTCHt:N·· MY
HoMEWITHIN MY MCME.
MISS PEACH
------
... A5 YOIA~ oun .. ~ IMPROVED
L.ATEL.Y I IIZ'A ? "--..
by Tom Batiuk
by Ferd and Tom Johnson
ACTUALLY, r'fs
1'}4E ONE Pl.ACE
-LM>Y P. ~EVER
t>l5TLl~8S ME·
JUDGE PARKER
DOOLEY'S WORLD
DR .SMOCK
POC'TOR
SMOCK, YOUR 'TAl?>t..!!! fS
ReAPY.'
QOrrf A &IT, LIEUTfHAKT ! HOW CAN 1 GET I CAH GIVE YOO Oto DOftfU SPENO ev T)if WAY. I HAVE A COF'Y IH TOOO. WITH Hl5 HOME
MUCH nMf IN THE Of THE MESSAGE LEFT ~ THE eARTENOEJl AOORf55 &AA? HIM! THf MAH~ NAME WA5 TONIGHT? AND PHONE
JUl.IAH KINGSTON! NUM&ER!
\
WEIG~T
ANO
F"ORTUNE WE'IGHT
AND
FORTUNE'
by Mell
YSSS IR,
HAVIN<S A -r1-r1-~ suRe
Het...PS!
by Tom K. Ryan
PEANUTS
00Ni6NE
VP. M!N.
WE'RE
A1.M05T
TME~E
WHEN WE GET lO 'THE iOP
Of ruf HIU..1HE ONLY nl1N6 ~oo·u. HAVE TO WATCH
OUT FOR 15 iHE ...
by Chants M. Schulz
'i'OIJ'RE ~Ll'r' 60IN6
TO Ul(f ™E VIEW ..
by Roger Bradfield
by George Lemon·t
so ARe 1"Me 1"Aet..es FOR FtOOFe~ .JONSS,
PL.OMeeR O'PAY ANP t..AwYeFt A.f!>R.AMS!
TODAY'S CBDSSWDID PUZZLI
ACROSS
1 Nobllnv
title
5 Glelmed
10 Conllet1 V\10
money
14 T Ufkieh 1tlle
15 Midi Oii I
loom
US H11.1tbov
17 UtJng
plll*
19Smll lelle
20C......bv
nec:essitY
21 Dfri
23 "9Y9' rvgs aHorte com-
mmnc1
28 Ac:cim'lt
29 Cone IOUfce:
2wotdl
)4 Mightily im-
111-.d
35 Rua riYef
:r7 Showt die
Wiiy
38 Middle: Pre·
39 DiStmct
kinds
41 -•WI:
Face to flee
42 Ecru
... Senlof
member
45 0-0.out
46 MicHoln
city: 2 WOtda
.aMeiiei..
llOllY
flO "-Got a Se·
eref'
S 1 Wf/fl(IO(t
53 Camper'•
t1em: 2
words
51 fin1111em:
2 words
61 -offlv
62 An•IOUI fOf
victOf)''
3words
64 Eqllll
lilSGroupof~
bites
66 Pllty
fi7~t ...
118GMtild
119 Brothers
DOWN
1 8Nt bedly
2 ArM> sul·
11n1te
J Spin
4 llNglfled
5 81110oos;
2 words
8 Equ1ne
1 Egg: Comb.
torm
• Tldv
9 fllg
10Vie
11 f rttricide
vic:tJ!n
12 HUl1ing
13 Obey
180Mtl
22Cuta md
UNITED F .. ture Syndicate
Tueedly'• Puale Sotwecf:
from
24 SIQlmor.
26 Dence
11 Poetic p<ep-
Olltion
2B Organ.c sub-
lt.-ra
3011inll
borllt
31 Chemed
32 Roman offi-
c!M
33 Rutw city
JS P9rfolm
lgllll
39Wort fOf
40 Madi be-
io...d
(J~llctN· ..
46 lelYll quclc.
Iv: 2..ords
47 StlMn Vtn-
c:ent end
Wllilm
Role
49 Orient
li2 USNA frwtl.
IMfl
53 Duel
~Addict
56Beg
56 Irie!\ llillge
58 Debtor
58~
neme
"Wide receivers
«J Obtlln:
Dill .
OR.ANGE COUNTY I OBITUARIES .. W**'-dey. Auguat 1e. 1978 DAILY PILOT A9 .
t,·, Handicapped Viewed UCI ~ets
Workshop
i.redor Advocates Public Empathy On Gays
PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE
NTtm TO c••o•TOltt 1u,..a1oa couaT CJfl
IU .. HICJa COUH ~TM• cou~::-;.t:.oe
ITATaWCAUP'Ott .. tA l'O• CAI• NUM•a• ....... ,. ... -:."" ...::.:-...... o•oe• TO~ CAUH
Ooollr .............
EDUCATION CHl!f
Falrvt.w'a Dtluono
Deatlu
lsewhere
ALBUQ UERQUE,
N.M . (AP> Lynn
Pleraon, 27, a lun g
tunce r p atient who
persuaded New Mexico
lawmakers to legalize
martjuana use for some
medical purposes. died
Tuesday.
._..Noilee•
ova1t1N
ttATHEIUHE DURKIN, ave tl.
llHfbotnl ol HunttnQIOft h.Cll, Ca.,
~ away on T-y, AU9USI IS,
191' at HMQ Metftorlel HOll>lUll. SIM II •u•vlved Dy 2 daughters A9ne1
C~ftHn al l'OIMlteln Velley, Ca .. end
P.J,icl• --OI Hunllf19ton 8HCll, c.e~ l \Olis J-Ou<tun o1 Tues eno J6/>n Our1<1n ot Clllc•QO, lllinoi<. 1
9refld<lli-and I tlf'Ml1"-MWI Mrt. Our-In llad !Mell a11 ectlve
"l•ITIDer ......., lltr l'lfflltl permitted of
llWI S. Int llo\ary' s 9y the s .. Ca\tiollc
Cf\jlrcll end tlle Huntlnvtofl 8 .. <11
S.nl°' Cltu-. Frlenos may cell alter d•M today, WedMldn. at Pierce
8rotrler1 Smltlla' -.Uory U1 Mein
!.!roe\, H""41'tolon .. Kii, c.. ROMrY
wlrt lie recJMld •t 1PM on Tllurlday, ~t 17, 1911 at S.lnt Mary's By the
S.t Cetllollc Olurcfl wller• Mou ot
C{l•"tlen llk#lol will De ctltOt•ted on
Frldey, AUQUtl ti, 1'71 It t :OO A.M
wl!ll tlM Rev. FetMr O.nnl1 Lyon• of.
tlcl•llnc:i. Interment wlll De In law 0004
~rd ~.,,. Pl.re. BroU..rt
smltlu' Mon~dlr9CIOn. SJMUt. • HOlMH
)IAltlA J. HOUAES, 19e '7, r9tl· c1en1 ot Huntington a..c11, ea. Palled
away on ~'f, A\IOUSt 14, 1t7' et
t111nt1noton Vallo Conv•lnce111
HOM•. Survived DY one deuo11ter ~orltt Luis of .. IHltl"'910ft Baacfl,
c)h • .t or•ndclllldren, 1 grt•t·
91endc lllldrett e11d 1 9rett·9re•I·
w•n<lll-. allo -llratN< Freftk Owdl.ro Of Volleto, ea. l"rlendl m•y c ell •t1'ftl1Nt et Pltrce Brothers
S-0.11111 Monuert. U1 Main StrMt,
HuntlnQIOfl 80acll, Co. where Ille
•QWl"Y wlll De r.clted 11111 ennlno, ~llUy, ""OUSI 1•, "71 et 7;00
P.M. Mau Of OvlSllan lklrlal wlll be ul~eted .. t :OO A.NI.. Of\ TllurtdeY. ,.....,., 17, ..,. .. St4 ... ~·.., _
~ .. Cetlloll' Cllwrcll. H11ntl1191on ~~II. CAI w4ltl Ille Rev l"etllar ~ n($-(yonsolllc\tllr>Q l111er,,,.,,1 wlll be
a\111• GoOcl $1Wp1Mrd Cemeltry, Hunl
l1>9ton 8eecll, Ca. Pl.re• lrot"9<>
sn..1111• _,._.,dlr.clon~.
RASH
P..AULENE ft~. wlle of tllit la1e
Morfl• Rasn S.n11ces wlll be t>eid on
Thouday .at 7fl>M H•rbor l.,lwn·'Moun1
Oii)• Cll•Ptl wllh lntet'meflt •1 Harllor
La•n-Mounl Olive Memorlel Ptrk.
18.L IROAOWA Y
MOalUAaY
110 Broadway
Costa Mesa
642·9150
SMfTK.TV1HILL..U.MI
MOllTUA.aT WUlC&JPll CMAPIL
427 E. 17th St.
Costa Mesa
646-4888
PBC&ll0n4HS
W'IH'S MOSTUAIY
627 Main St
Huntington Beach
536-6539
St48lfa ...a.TUA.IT
976 So. CO.St Hwy.
Laguna Beach
~1535
t 533 N. El Camino Real
Sen Clemente •92-0100 ,.,.,.,
CWAN u:
Noa
7801 Bolsa Ave.
Westminster
893-3525
PA~YllW
t • tOllAL PAU Cemetery Mortuary
Chapel
3500 Pacific View Drive
Newport Beach
644-2700
...CG• ICll • • MOn'UAllll
Llg\ana~
494-M15
l-ciuna H lllt
·-708-0933
San Juan c.ptatrano
485-17'16
Neptune Society
QIMAftOM 9UIUAL4'T SU
646-7-431 , _ _..._... ........... .. , c;:.:r..:a,.:.: ....
..... c.al ...
atuite of ••INI OAllNITT .U fllOlt OtUff 0#' NAMI
tltlNI G GARNITT O.C..IM. 111 IN M.ttW Of IM A#llcet19rt el
NOTICI IS HlltlaY GIYIN It the HOWAllO fllOOHES. ak• MAO LIN ~rMIW\Oftllt-.W_.....~~ TSAI, Ak• HOWARD l'l'.01. Fdt
tllet Ill.,..._ llevlfte CIOI"'' ou41ttl 0.•"911 of N-CO<>rdlnOlt tho services 1.1nd pro· A one-day series of .,. told .i.c.-itt.,.. -',..to file HOWAlllD l"DGHes. •orm•r1t
.I ,.. t ff ~...a f th d t ...... wll1' ... ~ -·· 111 --" •1 HO'#AltO fllEOI -MAO-.r& ml 1•1 ureo er""' or e e · work s hops examlnin& tN.ft1'9•1N<1et11of111t...,,.'-L•111TM1.11n111adeoeuoon 1n1"'' Velopmenlally dll'labled, Who ar.: djirc psychology will be llllM Cour1 f/lf to fr-t....,, wltll CO..rl tor"'°'-euowinv petllio...< To aor.M people. plactn1 mental· FYlrvlew'a p .. t lents o r . as the llJh t1tt "•<••Mrv -.fie,.., t• t"9 ""·to uw1~ ,,.. naf!lt ••om "40WAAo
I ----' ... _ • e d ln Science Lecture ..... ,,, •••• '''" Hewt11er11e l'OOHIS 10 HOWARD ltOlllMO '¥ r ta • ._ penona O\&l n I.IN eom-hoeplt l prefers to cull them. clieqts. Hall at UC Irvlne from ..._..,,,... ,_ CA.wtt1c11i.t11e FOGHES munlty la a welcomt bteaktbrouil\ ln Am on I h Is go u f s, Dr. DI · 1111<• et .Mi... ... ti. WldenltMf 111 111• ... ,.,., ordH.o t11euu per-
ln• ira.i-1 • .,.A ) to l-'~ To noon to 6 p. m. Aug. 27. 111 M•"•" wtollllftl '° ,.,. •"9W Of 1111ere•tt4 ,,. ew ,,..,ter ·~111 •P-\• uu -m n 100 Wtq. Buono aaJd. is "to be able to move Mid ., ..... t wltllln fouf MOlltllt pea• belOrt INS court In Dt!Nrl .... nt
Olbtr people, lt'I • Uareat. out lnto the community all the people Sponsors are the UCl atter tho uret i.111t11cot1t11 ot '""No.••• 700 0111< CMtt•r C>r•w west. ---.,._ DlB b1 f G S d C llOtl<• So11te AM, c:.111cr11le. °" A119U>t 1'. Dr ,_..,. uooo, new c t who urt c11pubk of It, with adequate ay tu ent enter. tbe o.i~ ... _., '"' me. •t 11 ·00 o•c1oc11 a.m .. •nd then ol cenl.ral dewlopm nt 1entee1 •nd '• tcurlty." Orange County Gay HtTVU>\JKlOCI tnCI tlttr• Siio'# couM. If •M tl\ev dlrutor "'Ce11k>oal education at Community Center ilnd li.cw!l'IHftlttWlll ::::.:~.:-.::::::im::: Cho~ 01
• 1 Co S h C l' f of""...,."'"*" It 11 fur1Mr ordered 11\ot a c°"~ of f'•lrvlt=• ate HoaJ!!:• 1n 1t» UE 8A..ID EVEN profoundly re· out ern a l ornlans WUdlllt tlll• ...... , 10 .,._ ~.,. 11W11aw
Mell, CNUet botb • • larded pert0na could live t.n the com· for Wbitman-Radclyffe. NtTCMeoot,.....,.aflOOu 111 11tt or.,.. Coast 0o1iv Poot ,.
But. more fundamoatally, be munlty. but they would require a ~!!:!:~ ............ ,... ::r:.=;.:,=.~:~tc1~.~,~~". bellevea the trend toward variety of special services. from Psychologists and TM:m -aia _., .. ,,__ut..,._"'"'ior __. .__. ,_ soclolo.ft"'ts wUl addre•• • ...,..,,. ,..cWt• 10 t11e c1ay ot ,..,. ,,..,1119. "malft.lt.rcamlna" the ~ '-a poraonal caretakers to daily pro-5 "' 00 ~1..-o--. OM" o.111r P116( De1ec1 Juty ie • ..,,. tnt of our IOdety'a values, value. 1ram1, that aren't currently avalla· s uch topics as gay self. Auo. '· ••. n.•· '"' ~ SAMUEL 011e1zl!N
tbat alto affect ho• .e reprd other ble outaide of loaUtutions. i m age, transexuallty. ==~
ape-clalerou1191ucbutbepbyaically However, borderline retarded gay parenting . OP· PUBIJCNOTIC"" onofl.IWAMIOtf .. di ao.-1 --.a • ..__ ld l press Ion, transvestism ~ ,_..XM.DAHllGalt nan c~r--llUU ~ e er y. persons and those with moderate re-db ph bl ----------4'7•A•lrelt'twn.~ui
.. Wit TEND TO DISCOUNT tardatloo are often a~le to live ~m· an omo 0 a. "~c::J~~=::r =::ii~
anyone who doesn't come up to the fortably ln homes with supervision Admission is $10 for .&LL u .&KISI T11e 1011ow1n11 ,.,,011 " d olnt P\tDll"'9d 0r.,. eoost O•••v P.101
standards we have," said Dl". D1-und to Work. the general public and " '°""' • ""'1::~-;~ MACHINE suv1ce. July"· Aue. 2• '· "· ,.,, n» 11
Buono. who moved from Syracus,l'. The main problems they run into SS for UCI students. 833 0555 msw.~eiv4.,GolteMew. PUBLIC NOTICE N.Y . to take over his position al arepeople'sunwiUingnesstotakethe faculty and s taff. • CA~~1emor .. 11.101eoc11r,..•111-----------
Falrvlew Aug. 1 Ume to llateo to them. and myths Further information .a..a. £-Our Ptou.cu1-cit,,CAtOUO ,1cnnousa1111 .. 1u
b h h ak may be Obtained from ,._ ..._.. Tllll eusiMU 11 'Olldl.lcted llY en MAMI ITATIMaMT '-"It u very much to do wit basic t at m e some people regard them h G C 1...s1.1oue1. Tiit •011ow1n11 per.on •• 001n11 values that we have in society," he as a threat, Dr. DiBuono said. t e ay ommunity LUSrSIBllUSt at w1111om~ IMlslneues:
aaid . Citing attractl·veness, in· Center (714) 534·3280 LINAJ&mft~., Tllll 11~ wes filed wllll t"4I ANIMALCRACKIERSl"ORCA'TS. .. bet 6 30 d """'~Wt.•• CowoW Clan ol Ofenta Couflty on July uu Ill C:.0.11 H1911W•Y. tlUI telJigence, strength and health as ONE CO~ON MY1 B is that ween : an 10:30 c:or-.:--.... (Mlfs11 11. ""· D•-L.ou1M 1Enoe11. m11 ,,..,
among the qualities our society th~ retarded rson will attack or llpTi.mw.~OilJfij[i;iJil~~N~EWPORT~~~~B~EA~C~H~~l 1"Wt1MledOrlfl9ltC01•tD•11~= vi;i:.·,50._.~i."'C011CM1ec1 b~ •n cherishes. abuse others. It's the developmen-Awo. 2. •. i.. n. ttn '"°'"'""'•'·
"If you don't have those kinda of tally dlsabl person who's most· TIAJt Al M *"" n11 ~~=.;.f::1 mec1 w1111 1,,.
attributes. if you lack any one of likely to be bused or taken advan-a•~ c eountvc1...-o10r-..c.ounrv°".1ti1• them. you're in trouble," said Dr. Di· tage of, not the other way around," ,,..r..kLectwe PUBIJC NOTI E "·mi. ,,...,
Buono, who is also working on the UC Dr. DI Buono said. h-W• th ... .,.. I ~ suN••°"COU"Tor: Pwll•lled 0re-.eoast oeuv Pilot. Irvine Medical Center pediatrics -· r TJ4. Ctllftr. A ,., •• , CAUll'Ott .. IA Jiiiy u. Aug. 7·'· ,., 1911 '81A78 Another common misconception, • cou111TvOtJ0•4'Mo1 .... staff. J "" c-t Hwy, S.. LaflM I f kid usa NUMH• A*>7 HE N(Jl'ED THAT in earlier, more heblsadid, "islthat d~tvellopmentdally dis-._....._ 4tf.J7lt pace or a. ~;~•J.!:::C:'ft'.':!: PUBLIC NOTICE
agriculturally oriented times. the de· a e peop e can earn an grow, l!:~~~~=======~-----------1 in ,,.. MattoH of 111e AOP11c•ll0tt ot
Velopmenlally disabled _ ..... ft~ particularly adults. But people in the CYNTHIA LOftlETTA ceAvEA•. • l"ICTmouuu11NH1 ,..,.,. (. Jd h th t th 1 lo\lnor, Dy LORaTTA 111\AIE OAIElll. "AMI ITATallHNt perSOOS and those With neurologic l 1e ave seen a ese peop e CBD· Petlll-•. l"or O\eft9fof Ne-, Tf\e tollowll\O penon '~ ooonq
disorders -could more easlly find change dramatic~lly... Particular People Select JOHNSON & SON 11~~~e.~r,~ "'~"J~~::~:: Du•1~~·~~;cAPEs. 1ou orov~
roles to fill. Able· bodied persons can help the CYNTHIA L~ETT• c~AVUA ..... Piece. Cost• MHa, CA nm
And It isn't that he hlm~ell doesn't retarded person's adjustment by Home of the "Golden Touch" ~"a~1:!:!.i'°".;~,c~.:-n:.:; 0rO:~~ •. Jt.~~~~.,~~10H
value intelligence. "We just shouldn't focusing and really listening when 1t•m• •ro"' CYlllTHIA LOitETT• r111s Dus•"""'''~ J>1 •"
exclude those who don'\ have It," Dr. the person speaks. ~~:~~A'° ~NTHIA LORETTA 111e11v1""°~J-s...M•.,e•
Di Buono said. "I• awrcv °'dwed t11eu11 Pff'JOftt Tiii• si..t-i •as filed w1111 111e
He also pointed to the related •'EVEN PEOPLE WBO are :=::-:!:r!":: =lft·=~ ~~~.ca .. 1io10ranvec-tT0t1Ju
1
v
struggles of the pbyslcallf ban-articulate may be in the company or NO. i •1 100 OYIC c.n1 .. 0r1w wu1. , .... "
d · ped t th t J k bod II I b I k i I Sent• ll11t, Gllllontle, on ~•mtier S, PuDl1111ed 0.llftlle C.O.St Oally Piiot 1cap o prove a ac o y peop e w o ta c re es around .. ,.. 01 11:00 0«100 •"'. one1 t....., 1u1y "·Aug 2. o. 1•. "'' strength doesn't mean lack of ablllty.. 1them ... Df. DlBuono said. •ltCI tllere "'°'* ceute. II any tlMy 1717-18 have, ""'Mid 11ttltlon for Che~ of
ed h bl bodied ,...no sllould no! De Oftnteo. "I TIDNK PEOPLE have to de· He suggestE t at a e-· peo-· 11 11 '",,,_ on1t.-.c1 111et • <OPY ot PUBLIC NOTICE
velop tha t empathy, putting pie who ~me Impatient with re· t11h°'e1trto'1!0Wcouse11ePUC>11111ec1 -----------
d d , In t ... Of ... COM1 0.ll'f PllOt, e C_, themselves in another's shoes, .. Dr. tar e persons attempts to com-l\ewspeper ot 11-r•I clrc11letlon, NOT1C:S TO CH DITO•~ DiBuono said. ''Go in an elevator or municate try to picture themselves in PUl>lllMdlll"4"-to11aos10ft<.. su,.H10ttCOUHOfllTHE WfflP. tcw ._ ,_lllln -h e><lo< STATI ~ CALlflOltNtA f'Olt a public building and see if you could a forei~ country. with unfamiliar 10th• d•Y o1se1d11t••in0. TH• eoutn"Y Ofl OHNOE
make your way around if you were money, anguage and customs. "Th I f I di f D•1"tt~i~(ri1'e1HN Est••• 01"'t~111ce c.t.Rl blind... e s ncare r en y concern or my J"°"°' IN euAKLuNo. 0ece•sed.
T t t f th Id 1 d th . "l recall being in a foreign city anu ti I Ill ti I bll s-icw Cou<1 Nonce 1s HEAE&v o•veM to 1"" rea men 0 e e er y an e1r I couldn't deal with the money par cu ar spec ca ons nan automo e. MICMILIM.llltO .. OH credltortollllit--Mf!ltddllcedenl
segregation from most of society is myse If... Dr. Di Buono said. .. A convinced me to buy from Johnson •. Son". O\.OMIN &OU>MIN ""' ... pen.om tiavlnv cl•i-•V-ifl$1 also becoming an lssue of values, he a •• o.11., °""· Wtt 2111 t11e wld OKedlnl ••• r~u''" to tile salesperson would say, 'It's so many NANNETTE S. FRYER ......,. a.eca. c.a . .,... them. w1t11 ow necfl•rY -..c11itr1, 111 pointed out. k • d Id . b lt141 MS.,.. taw otllc• of \lie Cltf'll of Int •llo~e "V littl . be. t fA h I roner. an I wou JUSt and them Coron• Def Mer, Calif. A""9eY fer:~ •ntllled COUr1. or 10 P<-t lNm, with ery e lS ang spen "" e p a bill because I couldn't figure out Publlslled Oronoe Coott Dolly Piiot .... necessary "Oli<lltn, IO Ille ullder-the elderly stay in society," Dr. Di-the "oms· .. 1 ended up with a lot of Ju•., H . Auv. 1. •. "· "" 11J0.11 ·~...oat,.,.,.., ott1ee of THOMAS L.
B ·d "W' U i.ng to'--" ANOTHER SATISIFIED CUSTOMER -----------LORD. ns11 P-cllValellcla,Sulle uono sai • ere a go ~ change... 201.a, L..,.,,.. Hlu•. eo111om1• •1•sl. elderly and yet we make these de· PVBUC NOTICE W111c;11 is ,,,. 111~• of DUslnns of 11>e
cisions as though it's not going to be .JOHNSON a SON ----.-.• -.----~:i::.:.':. .. .:...,,_~~!::~ true Of US. IU .. latOllCOUltTOflTMI tour mOftthS ilfler lllt tlf~ Pllbllc.atlon
O ... /OfF STA1'41CWUU~MIAflOtl otlllltnotl<.e.
"TO ME. IT'S THE same kind of
thing Cas with the retarded>. The
things that we value, we support; the
things that we devalue, we p~
aside."
IV TMIE COUNTY Of' CMlMtOI Oalod July to, 191'.
TakeCentetOrtve I it I ctT::;;.~::~to. ~::!;~".:w111o1 for new easy accesa 111 -~ ., .,. ..._'°" "•ti· ,.,. _-..a dec-n• from San Diego Fwy. lion of JUAMAOA LOU MOOfl l TMOMAS \.. \.OtlO
d.__. to H ti ........... "-t VAUGHN, AOop!lllQ .. ~ s.lto Jtl·8 ....... un "V'"" ~·er TO GAY LIEEVAUOHN: !JSJI "•-•Y9"Mia and Otd Wo'1d Vlll-cie. .., ~ Of tflft ('.owt, ,.., -~ "'"" C.t.tlia ..,_.., <ltld.,.,, ,,...,,... ID....._, Tet: CrMI ...... PtfMMllY ~ U. ...... kin ti A__.,._.__... Among bis duties at Fatl"View, Dr.
DiBuono said, ls to supervise and 2626 Harbor Blvd. • Costa Mesa • 540-5630 SHAWN ANTHONY VAUGHN, o Pullfl.-Or ... Coolt Delly Piiot. ml_., ....,_ tsw J..,... Of 1111• c-t M• •· ......_ t, •. ••. 1m ------~--~-------------------------1 111 Ille Colilt~Of Oronee, lt•IDOf ,...,.
.---------------------------------. Collfet1110, at Ille Courttoom of
Teenagers seeking job experience can volun-
teer for the Orange County Public Library's sum·
mer reading program.
Volunteers are sought to tell storlea, play the
guitar, perform puppet plays and work with art
projects for children. Certificates are awarded
that can serve as job references for future work in
parks and camps.
Information can be obtained by calling Chris
McSparren, 634·7800.
Volunteers Sought
IS YOUI MONEY
WHIU YOUI MOUTH IS?
Some of it should be. But maybe Or.
Flanzer could save you some. He
offers a complete line of dental care
for less than you might expect.
And if you have dental insurance. it
might not cost you anything? How's
that for being up front?
ActT.J., c.,.. ..... , ....... -
642-0112
---STUARDS
of La Jolla. Southern California's Finest Store for Men
Now ln South Coast Plaza '
Cordially invites you to get·acquainted with us at our-.first
Beginning Wednesday AUGUST 16th through Saturday SEPTEMBER 2nd
We are offering California's finest collection of MEN'S CLOTHING
LOUIS 10~ IAI Bii
~DPOID
Suits, Sportcoats, Sport Shirts, Slacks & Accessories
at SAVINGS OF 200,1o TO soo~ on selected items.
\
South Coast Plaza Ph 54.0·7162·
8 of A. M1C. VISll. l STU ARDS
lJS'per Level Ont or Am tlc.1'• Trul,y Flnt' Clothll'n
At.roll from I. M .tini:_ Op~n W&d ·Thur-Fri Evenin(rl unlil 9 P.M. Amer Ex. & Ofner
•
o.tion"*'lt tan ~ 2, 1'19. et t :OO o.m. Of tfl.t clay, ot roo Ch•fc PUBUC N011CE
C111ttr Drl¥e Wett, Sa11t• An•, -----------C•lllornle, IN!\ ond , ... ,. to lflow ~ICTtTlOUS eustNl!H
ceuw '''""' """ Miid acloolltlon should NAM• ITATIMINT no! 119 panted a<contlllQ to Ille pet!-TM IOl!Ow\1>9 ptf90n It 001n9 ll«A< I 11on Oft lllt ..... IL -·~' "YOU wlSll., --""•vi<• ol an 1(1\fLY, .,, 22nd St •• 1111. Cosl•
·attorney In ftlt mener. ¥0U "'4>uld dO Maso, CA 92627
50 IH'omptly so ttw1t yow w111,. propet· Jotln s_.., 1<l111ty, 111 22n0 s1..
ly repusenltlll et the lleerl"!I· •I I, Coat• Mesa, CA 92to27
OAT E 0 July 21. 1911 o1J1~1:,.~1-11 CO"ducled Dy .., ln-
ISEALI JOIWI S. 1Cl11lty
WILLtAM•.MJOHN Thia •t•t-wn flied •ill> t~• County Clerk 8y Et:llelyn Werd Cour>ly Clerk of 0••11911 County on o.puty Augu1t 14, 1'7*.
LAW O"'IQIOfl .. AUL ... AYMN
Met ....... -.-. ....... ,
LeeA ...... ~tll1t
ftl:ct1'1 ..... Aft_,._........,
""4111tNd Ore119A Cont Delly Piiot ... .,.. t. ..... 21."" nt•r•
PUBUC NOTICE
l"tt24t
PuDllSlttd Oranve Coast Dolly PllOI •1111. "· 2'. JO, Stpl ••• ,,,, ••• ,.
PUBUC NOTICE
'
--
........ ~·-·-·.
AJ• DAILY PILOT
P\JBUC NOTICE
P-ICT1T10UI ausi••SS ltAM& STATIMINT
w~. Auuuet ''· 1111
PVBUC NOTICE
PlJBUC NOTICE
lll·WU
NOTICa TOkCltlCHT'Ottl ..... ,...
IUP .. tlOlt COUllTOI' TMll
IT A Tl (W CAUllOttNIA f'Olll TMICOUMTYOl'MMIOt
lft Ille ~ll•r ol ltle ltl•lt Of 1.AUllA wen LUSti, OKffwd
NOTICI II MllllllY GIVEN to
,,... •• ....._ <l•lfN ..-illt\. lllt
witl ~•Ille UICf cl•'-Ill Ille
efflt• of .. <'-11 ot -~eulcs ~ .. 14' ..,_. Nm to Ille ..... ~ .... eHke Of J l'llANK "'1·• MAlt'flN Jll , ._WI~,. 81.-d ,
"1 lvl .. 1000, LM ...,,._I ... CA W2•.
Wflkll lt1., ~ Is IN piece ot llllsl·
-• et tilt ~"'*' 111 •II INtteo ...-1e1i11119 1o .,.._ _. ... Mii cltlm1
•1111 I.lie ,._.,, -.cllera """' be fttecl IW .._... et tfortttkl Willllll
~ ~ ., ....... llrst Pllblk•llOll
ol "'" -l<AI Ottt41J ... yM "19 "AY~O WALKE" TOOO
E.-c.-of-wlll
ol s.id dt<.-nt
PUBUC NOTiCE
"1CT1TIOUI •ut.1N•1S
NAMa ITAT•M•NT
The 194'-lfl9 --I• *6/lt Ml .......
i.4NIOM MACHI NIN G
Hi.VICI. ISH W. ~. '"i. .... c ....
Tom L "-'· 1124 II Cellto. s... Offf "4. CA. 9171'0
Tllh _._ I& tOftlllldM ~'I' .., 111 ctl~ldv•I
TllofftMLllleMOm
r11h •l•......t WM Ill ... Will! lM
C-ty Cl-· OrtrlOt ~h °" J11ly
lt, ""· ,......
P111»11.-Or-. Coest O.lly PllOt.
""'"'' 2. •. 14. :aa. tm
PUBUC NOTICE ... ,..
NOTICS CWIA._. Of'
lllAL PllOt'lltTY AT
PltlVATil SALi NO • ...,.
IN TN• MINlllCMt COV"T Of'
THI STATI OI' CAUl'OtlNIA POii
TM& COUNTY OI' OIU.NO•
111 tllt Metter ot lM lisi.te Of Ralpll
M.T11r .. 11.~
Notice k .... ..,., Oiwn U..t 11te .,....
~'''"'" w111 tell ot ,..,., ... wle. to IN hlollftt tnd bt<11 bidder, -le<I lo
<Oftflrlt\ttlon of wlct Sllcfwlor Cowrt •
... fW ··-.,. .. dtY of AllQllSt, 1'11. •I Ill• olll<• or HOLZWARTH ..
SCHOELLERMAH, Q50 Von lttrmoft
""•"-· S411to 450, ..._, ht<ll. Celllotnla 92660. CouMy of Orenoe,
Tit• followl"t "001'1 IS dOlllt
J. "llANIC MAlllTIN Jiii. A ...... ,....i.-
MlllWlllM,.. ......
St-of c.llfomlo, tll tlW netn. 11119
end 11'11_ Of Mid dKetMd ti 1he
time of dMttl Olld 011 Ille right title tftd ,.,,_ lllM Ille .st•• of .. 1c1 ...
<towel llt5 oc:QU!red Dy -otlon of
•-,,.. olhetwt• otller U... or 11'1 -I·
lion IA> tNt of Mid Cltee-. ot the
Hrne Of -It\, In tnd IA> all 1M <e.1tll'I
,...1 ~ tltueted Ill IN County of Or111199, Slllte Of Callfomlo. PW1k11l•r ly Off<rlbed os lol~, 10-wll. """-'°' GOOOW1N MACHINING SE"VICE, ISH W MKA~ 81 ....
Cesta MeM, CAtMo»
Wllll.wn t... ~ ..a1 Union
\t GleftA-CAtHOt
Tiii• ~ I• c-.C:-Dy en 1il4tvict11el
w 111i_,L GooclMft
Tiiis stat....m •M 11..0 Wltrl Die
C-ty Cltrtl al Or.nge ODunty on Jiiiy
11, tt7'.
....... 7
Pvb11"'9d Or .. Cotsl O.lly Piiot.
Aug. t, t, I ... ZJ. 1'71
2110-1'
PUBUC NOTICE -------------f'ICTtTIOUS euslNIU
NAME STATIMSNT
TM 1011ow1no perton I• d0i119 ~
neu n
HARBOUR BUILDING COM·
PANY, Ge111ro1 Co111rector, 71t Altll~ Or., Huntlnglon S.t<ll, CA.
t2'o6I Ectw-J Sftelllno, 711 All>l-
Or. H""tlnQlol'l BffCh. CA 9264 Tllll ~ il condUclect Dy Oii Ill•
dlv""'-1. E~ J 5111111119
TlllS \I-Ill wos llltd wltll IM
Countv Clerk of Oranve Collftty on Jiiiy
J I. lt71 .. .....,
PuDh"-" 0r-'9t Coosl 0.11'1' PllOt,
•11911s1 2. t. ••. n. ,.,,
PUBUC NOTICE
Ptcnnous BUSINESS
NAME STATEMINT
Tiie following P•tson Is OOlng
1>11.llMU 41\
LAKE FOREST POOLS ANO
SPAS. 23011 Alcalde, LOQune Miiis, CA
tUS3
PalrlCk A McNully, 2411 Otl Rio,
Ltke "-t, CA '2'311
Tlll1 IMlllMu I' condl;(;led Dy All lndlYicluol
Petrl<ll A. McNutty
Tiits ttaiternent w~ filed wllfl tlle
County C._ Of OrM9 County on Jiiiy
31, tt7S.
"'8492 Pubh"*I OrMgt C.otU Oolly Piiot
Augus12, t, 16,%l, lf7' llt'-7.
"''-• 1-............ CA..,.
UUI Q.-St
Pllbllshed Orenve Coest OttlY Pllol
""'"' J11ly 16, A14 2, t, 1•. ltll ttll-71
Pllbll"*I Or .... CNst Oolly PllO(.
A14. '· It, n. JO, ""
PVBUC NOTICE
PlJBUC NOTICE
"1cnnous ausoHu
ttAM• STATIMUn'
Tiie tollowlng pert011• ore dol"9 fllCTITI~aUSINSIS blnlneuas .
NAMllTATINNT WESTSCO~ fEVELOPMENT
Tiie f0Jlowl119 ponon " dOlllO COMPANY, 179S Skvporll Circle,
t>uslneH tt. ' Irvine. Colllornlo 92714
ROBERTS MOl.O Sl!:R\llCE. 1US Weatlloff Cor_ .. lon, o Callfomle W. MecArth.tr 111"4., C:O.U Mos.a. CA corperellon. t7'SS Sllyparll Clrc .. , m2' lrvlrw. Ctllfomlo927U
Nott V. Roberti. 1S3 Argonne Tlllt ~Is~ Dye tor·
Ave .. l..OflQ 8Hcll, CA '*3 porotlon.
Tiii• llW!nns IS toftduclM Dy ... Westf'olf Corporetlon
lllctMdUtl. J-A. WHalofl,
NOOI V. Rob9r1s P.-.sldtnt
This si.-wos 11..0 wllll Ille Tlllt s~ -flied .will! t"9
County c.-o1 Oronve COlll'lty on J11ly Coll"IY c1or11 or Oronve Coolnty Oft
31. tt11. AllQVi>I t•. lf71. ~ PllbllsNcl Or ... CMst Oelly Piiot. MOWS.It, OllltTNalt & altOWN
Alit-2, t , l6. 2l. 1'71 2t71·11 CMI C:.""91 Drt"'f
PtJ...: ~C NOTICE
f'ICTITICMIS 9USINEU
•AME STATUdNT Tllo followll'IQ _._,, ore llol"9
bllsl MU 05.
THE BALBOA BREAO COMPANY, .._.. Serr•. eor-del Mer,CA92'2S
Dvdley Foa Mlli.r, 1!01 W•1' B•y
Avenue.~ 8Hcll, CA 92660
Carol A. Lelt11ct, 40J·A Serra,
Corono del MM, Newport 8Hcll, CA
92'2S
Tiiis Duslnen Is con<lueted Dy • oener•• pe..-ni.tp. Dudley Fox Miiier
This sl•'-t wos filed wllll Ille
CO..nly Cllf'll ot OrAnQt c.ounty on J11ly 2s. 1971. .. ,., ..
Put>llslle<I Or ... ONlt Delly Piiot,
Aug.t, 16,23.30, 1978 2'ff.1ll
PUBUC NOTICE
P.O .... 1117 .._.,....._.,CA._,
Put>ll$11ect OrtnQt Coest Oolly Piiot
Aug. 16, Z3, JO, Sepe. 6, lt7' 4007·7'
PUBUC NOTICE
C"'"" ..... 11.S
fllCTITIOUS a~N&SS
NAM• STATEMaNT
TM 1o1-•no person ts olllQ -•· ... ,,.,
FASHION FAIR CLEANERS, 510
W. 1'111 St .. Coste Me'°• Ce. tit,,.
111vostme111 COflcepls, Inc .• •
C11l lor11l1 corporation, lOlt Linda
Une. A..-ln\ Ce. 92to5
This bu$1nest ,, conductM Dy • (Of·
poref1011.
lllveslmeftl Concoclls. lllC.
Dy·T-oSM'm,
Pr"'°'"1
Tiiis stet-i wM Iii.cl will! lM
County Clartt of Ot'onge County on
AUQUtt 10, 1'71.
011ova1111SC1tOW eottf'. ------------1 I.a 1 ............ .. _.. T'9dl•, CA t2llll
MOTi ca TO CllSDITOllS IKAW .... J. um< Ne.A-"2ii SUNltlOltCOU•TOf'TMll PuDll.,,.. OrtnQlt owm Oollv PllOt
STATI (W CAUPOllNIA f'Olt 6119• 16• Zl.111. ~. '· 1971 3"4-71
TMC COUNTY OP OllANOE
11'1 Ille MAllM of tllt Es1•t• ol PUBUCNOTICE GRACEAGHES~ •• bo------------
PUBUC NOTICE
------------1 OS GRACE A. ~o.t.N. 0.C.-0. cp...a NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to NOnca T'OatlDITOttS "ICTITlOUS •~NEU
NUK STAftM9NT
Tiii fol-no per-. Is doing DIN-
N'l.s •1 MESA WARRANTY SEltVlc;ES,
211J Ralalgll, Co9tA Mno. CA '262'1
0111tse Sharvl Crtdll, tlU
Aale!Qlt, Costa""'"°· CA mv Tiiis IM.dlness Is conouc-Dy en 1 ...
d1vl0ual o..ww s. Credit
This stell!melll w.s flied with the
Countv Cl«ti of Or•noe County on Awo. 1, tt7L .......
Publlstled 0r-. OMtlt Oally Piiot.
AllQ. '· 16, 23. JO. l97'I
PUBUC NOTICE
credllor'I lwYlfte cJeilM OMIMt lM SUPEllllOll COUllT Of' THE '°"' O.C-to file SAld Cltlms In IN STAT• Ol'CAUflOltNIA flOlt
offlc• Of IN d«lt al tM .icw ... 1c1 TMll COUN'TYOf'ottAMGE ,_, or to ~ tlWm to Ille ...,._ He.. 11.-m
cten!Qned at Ille Clffica of JOttN It. Est ate ol OV I 0 NEAGLE, CORCO"AN, t71H S ... llflo-r O.Ce•stc:I
81..cl .. eounow.r. CA'°'°" wNcll let· NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to, ... ter allk• Is lftlt pltce of lluslMss of the crectlloo of Ille -lltmt<I dl<-..1
111\derslonecl "" •II melttn perteln4'>1 tlltl oll pt.-lllvlno cl•I-e<;1<1lnst to wld esi.M. Suell cltl-with llM 1,,. seld doc:eOtnt •~• ,_,,..., to Ille
necessery ~ """' lie flle<I or 111em, •Ill! tne neceuery V011Cllers, 111 pre .. nled ts otonsold wltllln •-Ille office o1 tlle clffll of the ~ve
,,_,,.,, tflllr Ille flrsl P\lllllutton Of entllled court. or 1o present tllefl'I, wllll
lllls notko. 111e n•ceuuy vo11c 11ers to th•
D•ted ~~-~ALDSOLOAN u11dertl11ned tt tllt law ~fllct ol
THOMAS L. LORO. nsn Ptseo ... alulMARIONO.SOL04N ValellCIA, Suite 201·8, Laouno Mills,
Exewtoroltllewlll C.llfornla ms!, wnlch Is tne piece of
ofsetddetedem b11llness of ,,,. undonl9M<1 111 •II
JOMll "· ClOltCDllAN meti.o petUlnlno to Ille tttete ol wicl Attor..~~ de<edtnt, wltlllft folw>~ otwr Ille t712U. llVd. llrst P'lblkellon of tlll' notke. Tel: 12111"1..ftlt Otted Jlll'I' 20 1m.
PubllsNO OrlftDI Coast Oolly Piiot J-G. NIOQle Aug. t, 1,, 23.30.197'1 2'tt-11 Enc:waotttieWlllol
-tN-nemedde<edellt PUBUC NOTICE TMOMAS L LOllD
s.lte 211-• USJ'IPo-•v-... L..-.MlllS,CA~
Tel: CJMl llt.aaM
""'"'°' -·---""""""*' OrtnQt Coea Otlly PllOt,
,wAy 2'. Aug. 2, '· ..... ,.
Lot 11S o1 Trect 9192 es s"°""" on• Map recorded In 8-JM. _, 31 to
!O. 1nc111st.... Of Mlsc•ll•lleOllS AMpt,
records Of Oranve c.ounty. C.lltwl'llt. mot'• commonly known os: 21211 L.cKt
Colt Orlve, l..tQllnt Hiii$, Celllomla m». Terms al SOie CMll In tewful monev
Of Ille Unllild Sc.tes on UWWlrmellon of
sole, or part c•sll end balance
e videnced Dy note se<11••d by
Mortv•OI °'Trust.Deed on IM proper· IV SO 501d. Tffl pertenl Of AmO\lflt bid t.o be ClePOSll«f wlttl bid.
Biii$ or Offers to be 111 -111119 •lld
wl II be l"e<tl-t1 --'oreMkl offke at eny lime..,., Ille flnt Pllbflc.ellOll
llereof tncl llefot'9 ..... ol .....
Doted lllls ISOldll¥ol AUQUSt, 1'71 Actrnl nlstr Ator of Ille ESlllteOfUld RelpllM. Thrasll,
Oecedent
MOLZWAltTM &SCMOIEU.a aMAN A.....,. ........... _
C.VMlt_A __
IM-' llMOI, CM!tenMe .._..
Pllt>llslled Or-. Coott Colly Piiot,
AllOUSI It, 17, Z3, 1911
PUBUC NOTICE
SUPElllOltC:OUltTOl"THI '
STATE Of' CAUflOltNIA flOlt
THE COUNTY 01" OltANOE MO.A-tM1l
NOTICE 01" HEAlllNO Ofl
.. ETITION l'Olt NOeATI Ofl WILL
ANO LITTElll5 TESTAMENTARY, 1"011 AUTMOltlZ:ATION TO AD·
Mlltl STElt UMDEll THI
IND&PENOIENT ADMINISTllATION
Of' aSTATUACT. Estate OI RUSSELL 0 . R~ET,
•kt RUSSELL O. RDOU ET. Aka
RUSSELL OCTA\IE ROOIJET,
OontH<I.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN INI
RICK L. ROOUET lltl lllM lle,..ln • petition IOI' ,..._te of Wiii tlld ls-
s11t11ca of Let~ Test-'•'Y to tlle
"91111-r and tor eutllorlutlon lo -
mlnl•I« wndel"' Ille tnotptndont td·
ml11IS1r•tloll of E$t.._, Act. ,..r.renc:t
lo wlllcll Is m•d• lor turtll•• porllc111ars. _.., t...i Ille time •..0
piece of -Ing tlle SMne llM been WI
lor S.ptemt>er s. 1971, .. IO:CIO •.m • Ill Ille <Ollrt,_,, OI ~11 No 3 of
Wkl court, .. 100 ClYIC Center Orin
West, Ill lll• City of s ..... ""•· Cellfornla. Dated A191Sl 1•. 197'
WIWAM E. StJOHN,
Collnly Oertl
TltOMAS C. au.CK llSQ.
al.ACK & CURTIS u•t Dew ser.t
Sooltewt ......,..,.._.,C.._
TOI: 7U_..11
Att__.,. 9'r: ~
PutMISllecl Ortnee ea.st Oolly Piiot,
A119us.l 16, 17, %J, 1911
PUBUC NOTICE
...,.,
NOTICE TO CllEOIT'O"S
SUPElllOll CIOUllT 01" THE
STATEOf'CAUl'OltNIA l"O"
THE COUNTY Of' O"ANGE No.A-W61
EstAle ol ESTHER L. MILLER,
0.CH..0.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lo the
creditors ol ttllf above nernecl dee.dent
llltl Oii pertOnS ..... 1"11 Cltlll\t' e<;1<1IMI Ille S01d ~ ore required lo Ill•
tlltm. wltll Ille neussery vouc:llers. In
tlW otllco ot Ille clerk Of Ille tbow en-
titled C<>llrl, or to SW-1 1Mm, wllll lllt MCHstrY ¥0U<MrS, lo IM Ull•
dtnl9Md .. 9903 OUffY Strwt, T•n\Ple
City. CA. whldl ll IN piece of Dusi""'
Of the~ In tll ~ 119•· tal11l119 to Ille est.I• of wlct decedent,
wl11111'1 lowr ll'IOllll'll otter Ille first publlcollon Of this notice.
Oe1ed JtAy JO.~
KEH,.ETH EARL MILLER E_...,,..OftlWWlll °' ... _..........,
decadeftt
JAMii A.. MILL.«lt
PAUL C. JONRS ,.., °""' 54llwt T__,.aty,CA
IU-11'7 . ......,._._...
Publlshect 0....,.. eo.t Ooll'I' Pltot
J11ty 26, A119. 2. 9, M, 1911 2G1·7'
PUBUC NOTICE
f'ICTIT10UI aUSINIUS NAMS ITATaMllNT
Tiie fOI ...... ,__ Is dolllQ 1M$. _. .. ,
SECOND AVENUE, 22M Pt<lllc Aw .. Apt. E. eosu Mett, ea. mu
Kelly J. SNrs, 22'M Ptclllc A.,.., ""'·&,~ ...... Ca. mt7
This b4dlneu ts cionducted Dr on 111. dlv~I.
lttll!I J. s.an
Tiiis s~ wes fllect with tlle County Clefk of OrtnClll COuntv on Avaust. 14, 1'71.
AND
EYEIEAR
FOR
YOU AT
CENTER IN HUNTINGTON BEACH
SHOPPING CENTER
19121 Beachlllvd.
Phone: (71418-47-9833
All TYPES OF
PRESCRIPTIONS
FILLED!
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Kills all H l)Oled
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5st:~~·1 Ag
doors etc.. I ez. .'t
BURI
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bellow, water reaches
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lt1r0ttgh washer &
dryer _79c
Scrubs1t1 ooollware
clean ...
Scrubber
3t
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No additives or preset'·
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4:$1 ... ~
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Helps protect your family
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9 Voll Battery Not Included
Polaroid "Minute Maker"
LAND CAMERA
Takes blo 3•1, x 4 '" 60-second super color pictures. ON:19.95
Palaraid POLACOLOR 2 FILM
Ultra brtlhant 4.95
CIVllY f1ghte<'
TAME
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9 Volt Batwy Not Included .
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7 oz.
DRIED Flower
Arrangement
AGREE SHAMPOO
l tlVll '"" shfny R clean. Assorted
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V-Neck or Cowl Neck
Pull On 100°/o ACRYLIC
High fashion long
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•
Italian Brushed Knits
Y leek Stripe or Peasant Stripe
Fastuonable cotorful 6 8 8 tops to enhance anr
wardrobe. Ass't. sizes
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w.3.99
JET-X 10 PAIE
m •• Pressure Washer
JOHNSOll & JOHNSON
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Now slit-opening means
yoo get 1ust On!' swab
at a tlnio'
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Needs no gkle
or corners.
ASS'T. DESIGNS
Oil of Olay
Troptcat mo11t
btauty oil .
I · '1 .4. ·it 'i, ... , -.·1.f
SPIC and SPAN
REUSABLE
Shaker Canister
Reliable cleanser leaves
tub shiny smooth .
100L 3: $1
SAV.QN BRAND
Disposable Diapers
Po•o·s Cream &
Cocoa Butter .. , ••.
~& 1.39
Priers PR[VAIL WEDNESDAY . AUGUST 16th TttR!I SATURDAY. AUGUST 19th
r.i :Df' 'J Grt ~\M i-19.30 PM MONDAY THRU SATUROA't Y:OO AM TO 7:00 PM SUNDAY
Vitamin C
and Rose Hips
SUPPLDIDT
250
:.3.49 t;;~.
Vitamin E • •. u.
sr.3.99
Multi-Ydamin
Formula
..2.29
~almoliVe
DISHWASHING
LIQUID
I •
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AJ2 DAILY PILqT
Oaaltt ••
Dr . Paul W.
Meyer has been
numed to head
social science
divi sio n at
Christ Collt>({t.>,
Irvine, He lives
m El Toro.
SEAGRAM'S v.o. • Srn ll l'l\ nr~ CANADIAN
WHISKY v.o . . ,,,Ill,\\\\~·-~' ,., ... "
GALLO
TABLE WINES
•VllllOSE 111 •t111N1 GA1t01 ea
1.SlYIS. 50.7 01. •
WOOD INITIAL
STICKPINS & PENDANTS
Acatlt '9dl·tt-ldltel _... witll -................. lid .. .,,...., .. .......................... ,
...
Wedneed9y. Auguat 1e. 1111 HEALlH
Vegetarian. Diet Needs Sapplemelit.
BJ D~. STEINCBOllN
De1r Dr. S&dacrob: Our teenage
dau1hta ti a problem. We blame It
on her triendl at school. They've
talked hu Into Uvin& on a veaetarian
dlut.
J suppose we should be tbanlclul
1ht doean't amoke or .drlnk. Neither la ahe into druaa. Althou1h she looks
bo&autilW and uppeara to be the pic-
ture of health, we keep worrying that
lf 11he keeps on with her vegetarian
dlet she wlU eventually suffer for it
with mulnutrltion.
MOST OF THE arguments begin at
the dlnner table. We insist that she
eat with us. But what a depresaln1
1ltbt to tee her nibbling on nuts, and
eating a salad or takln1 dry cereal
while we dia lnto our steaks or ham-burgers.
This has been going on for about
three months. She bas not lost any
weight. Her studies are fine, she's an
A student. But we keep wondering
where it will all end. Do you have
any suggestions that may help solve our problem? -Mrs. E.
Dear Mrs. E.: Lately, many
youngsters have gone in for
vegetarian diets. And like you, many
parents are frustrated and anxious.
The main danger ls that they may
, . ~
DOCTOR IN
~THE HOUSE~
tater suffer from unde}'Douriahment.
The reason for this is mat they do not
have nutrition lmowled9e that will
supply all the ne<."eSSary nutrients
necessary for body 1rowtb and main-
tenance or good function.
FRIENDS OF MINE recently
came to me seeking advice slmllar to
yours. I talked to their 17-ye'1!'-old
daughter and round that she wasn't
getting sufficient nourishment. I
dldn 't try to talk her out of her
'
WASHABLE ACRYLIC
4-PLY KNITIING YARN ............. ,..18ef, ........ bittlllt,.,. '"'ii .... ,., -
ftll f..w..I a..,_• .W. ....,, tf .... MIW cele<I _. lettly l
~ ..... .., _,.,...., .................... ..
TRITLE'S
vegetarianbm, but convtneed her to ..
make ao adjuslment that not only would help her pel'SQllaUJ but would please ber parents.
She agreed to add milk and eggs to
her diet. In this way, I told her, she
would be getting the necessary pro-
teins, calcium, B vitamins. S.be
would still be on a vege\arian diet
bot It would be Jacto-ovo-vegetarlan rather than the "pure" variety.
Now she is happy. Her parents are
happy. All sit down to dinner , amica-
ble and not conscience-stricken. She dabbles with her salad and sips her
milk wb1¥ her parents enjoy their
steaks and roasts without meet!DB bead-on in nighUy feuds.
I SAU PRICE I
GILLETIE
"GOOD NEWS'' RAZOR
PACK 39c Of 2
CREAM or LOTION
•4·0?. LOTIOM 59 c •2·0?.CIUM
fOlllA•
A.MD IOOY H.
(
•I
INSIDE: •Stocks •Business -----·M-ov_•·-s ~·Te-•e-v1s-•o_"~Emm------------------------S_iDO,..tS -y. AUllUOI 10.1911 DAILY PILOT .r-• .,
It.Was Boo-dee Only f~r a Short WhiJ.e
• 8)' DAVE C\JNNINGRAM
Ot .. DettyPM .....
The cheta that aound"1 like boos bt!•an H u
supportive ''Jloo.deel Roo.:ct !" But by hb third
al ·bat Tueaday nl1ht. Joe Rudi'• ch na h•d
turud to ceoulnt boo$..
Rum 's. Blast Wins It; Ryan Faces Tiant had failed lo pick up runners in has first three trips
to the plall'.
"I was facing a good pitcher. lhars all." Hudi
s aid. "He got me the first three tames. and I got
him the fourth · · And with one swlna. Rud1 put the aame away.
Hla t.owertn1, three-run homer to left field gave
the Anaels and Frank Tanana a S·l victory.
"IT WAS A NATURAL high. knowing my good
record against them here." Tanana said. "You
almost know you're going to do a good job. The big
crowd also made It run." Cominl off a back iQJury. Ruch had struck out
twice andfUanded rtve runners on baae.
WltboUt hb support. tht Anlela wt-rt nursln1 11
z 1 l 1ad qalnat the Boston Red Sox be(ore a win·
hun1ry.adloutcrowdo(41.l44atAnabelmStadlum
Sludium.
The win enabled California to keep pace with
Konaaa Clty, which won In Detroit. 4·2. The An~els
trail the Royals by a ball game an the American
L~u1ue West.
In scattering six hits. Tanana surrendered a
solo run knocked in by Jerry Remy's two-out triple
in the fifth. and another lone tally in the ninth.
• Overshadowed by Rudi"s lh ee·run blast was
Boslock's three-for·four night at the plate. which
lifted has avertige over .300 for the first tame this
season.
And It sets up another pitching duel tonight. as
No lan Ryan takes on Boston's man of many mo·
tions. Lula Tiant.
The Angels got two in the fifth when Baylor 1 doubled down the left field line. driving home
Bostock and Ken Landreaux.
BOSTOCK ADM ITS his .303 mark P<>W 1:; a
long haul from April. when he struggled with an
average under .150. but the right fielder says it's
only a minor milestone . .\8 RE STRODE to the pla~ • fourth tlm~ ln
the seventh lnnln&. Ruell once a1ain saw a couple
of potential RBI Lyman Bostock on aecond und
Don Baylor at first.
Tunana. wbo improved his record to 16·7, has
never 106l to Boston at Anaheim Stadium. His
rE>cord ls 5-0 with a 0.37 ERA against the Red ~x al the Big A
.
RUDI SAI D HE experienced no pain from the
back muscle spas ms which bothered him earlier in
the week1 and he felt no added pressure because he
.. Mt-hitting over .300. that's my own thing ...
Bostock said. "I'm not concerned with that. What
See ANGELS. Page BZ
Says Lasorda
Pitching Will
Decide Division ~.JliJ.. ..... -~--~-...... "'.. ~..._. --#··------·----.ii ...
PHU.ADELPHIA <AP> -Los Angeles. D'odgers' Manager
Tom my Lasorda said the ught
. National League West race will
boil down lo pitching.
Someone quickly suggested
that wo"1d favor the San Fran·
cisco Giants with Vida Blul'.
John Montefusco, Ed Ha hck1,
Bob Knepper <1nd Jim Bar r with
Gary Lavelle and Randy Moffitt
in the bullpen.
Lasorda then quickly tried to
debunk that theory
"WE STRUGGLED ;it tht•
s t art," said the Dodgus'
Dodgen Slate
All CO...... M KAIC Oto I
To .. 191\1 l.Ol A~·~ •• -•-•P'I·• • JOp.m T11ur\O•Y lo\ Anq~IM•t Pnll-lpf\1a • JOO m
f'riOay l o• Anqples et Now York S p.m
m;inager "But would you
believe we have passl•d thl•m in
pitching staff ERA'!"
But it was hilling that pull ed
the Dodgers past Philadelphia
5·4 Tuesday night, and into a
first place lie with San Fran·
cisco.
Los Angeles outfielder Reggie
Smith hit his 26th hom e run
against the Phillies. and drovt·
in the winning run with a
sacrifice fly in the seventh in·
ning
SMITH S.\ID he doesn't feel
anybody would pull away in the
Ught NL West battle between the
Dodgers. Giants and Cincinnati
Reds. The Reds are just one
game out of first.
··1 think we h:c1ve t h<.•
psychological advantage to put
us in first place to stay.'· Smith
said.
The Dodgers built a 3·0 lead in
the first three innings. Stevt•
Garvey tripled with one out in
the second . Lee Lacy beat out an
infield hil. Garvey holding third.
Rick Monday singled in one and
Joe Ferguson another.
Smith unloaded hls homer in
the third, but the Dodgers' de·
fense betrayed starter Doug Rau
in the fifth and the Phillies came
up with four unearned runs to
t11ke the lead.
BOB BOONE reached first
with one out on an error by third
base m an Ron Cey. Ted
Size more beat out a bunt toward
third. and when Cey threw wild
for his second error of the in·
ning. Boone moved to third.
Ruthven forced Size m ore.
Boone scoring. R~u then walked
.Jerry Martin and Larry Sowa
loading the bases. and J ose
Cardenal cleared them with a
two out. 3·2 single.
But in the sixth, Monday hit
his first home run since June 26,
and the Dodgers won it in the
!'>Cventh on a lcadoff double by
Lopes. a sacrifice bunt sending
the runner to third and Reggie
Smith's sacrifice fly.
Rookie Bob Welch, 4-0 for the
Dodgers. pitches in the second
game or the series tonight
against the Phillies' Jim Kaat.
6·4.
l.OS AllGEl.ES f'Hll.AOELl'HIA
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Oranges Regroup
For Another Try
By The Associated Press
Vilas Gerulaitis and Martina
l'iavratilova we r e the best
singles players during the r e·
cently concluded World Team
Te nnis season and Tuesday
night they gave every indication
th a t won't C'h a ngc in the
playoffs. ·
Gerulaitis. in his first WIT
season. s t arted his s ingles
match with the New York Ap·
pies holding a slim 17·14 lead.
but it was no contest an.er that.
The 24-year-old native New
Yorker was brilliant as he
crushed Mark t;ox 6-1 and then
combined with Ray Ruffels to
defeat Cox and Anaheim player·
coach Cliff Drysdale by the
same score as New York opened
Services Set
For Thompson
Funeral services for former
Fountain V a lley Hig..h
quarterback Doug Thompson.
who was killed in an auto acci·
dent Monday near Blythe, will
be beld at Peek Family Colonial
Ful)eral Home, located on Bolsa
Avenue, just west or Beach
Boulevard in Westminster.
Services will beain at 2 :30 Fri·
d ay with internment rouowlng at
Westminster Memorial Park,
which ta adjacent to the funeral
home. .
While nower donations are
welcome, the Thompson family
has aaked persons to consider
donatinf to tbe Baron Gridiron
Booater• toward a cu rrent
scholarship pro1ram, to be r •
named lb' Dou1 Tbo11>paon
Sc:bolanhlp Award.
defense of its WIT title, blasting
the Oranges 29-16 in the opening
m atch of a first-round playoff
series.
Anaheim's Francoise Durr
and Anand Amritraj edged Billie
.Jean King and Ray Ruffels lo
give the Oranges a 7·5 lead.
JoAnne Russell tied the m atch
11·11 with a 6·4 victory over
Durr. She then teamed with
King to defeat Nancy Richey
and Kathy Harter 6·3 to give
the Apples a lead they widened
with Gerulaitis' performance.
The second m atch is Thursday
nig ht at the F o rum in
Inglewood.~
N avratUova wns equcllly im·
pressive as she !ilso posted a
pair or victories in Boston's 31·24
overtime win over New Orleans.
New Y"112', AMM!ftl 1'
(atNewY"111
Wom•n -R-1 (HY) ..... Durr M ; 111.tsttll·
K1"9 tNYI def. H41~0tlrr ~1·
Men-Oenlt•IUS INYI dtf. Co• .. ,, ~Ill•·
Ruffell tNYI dltf. CDtl•Or(ldalt .. 1.
Ml•M -OW"r-Amrttr•I (Al dtf. Kl1111"•u1N11
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Amrllr•l·As. Amrllr•I ILAI def, LtOMrO•
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A-2,120.
O.Uy PllM ~ lly •l<MN Keefll~
THE ANGELS' JOE RUDI (RIGHT) IS GREETED BY TEAMMATES AFTER HITTING A THREE-RUN HOMER TUESDAY. ... -.. .
Playoffs~ Series?
Advance Planning
Begi,ns for Angels
Th t' firs t m c.ljor lt•ugut•
baseball ph1yoff gaml' ever he-Id
in Orani;te County will be Oct :l
at Anaheim Stadium -assum
1ng the Califo rnia Angels can
win the American League West
That's a big assumption. but
1l s one that thl' Angels' oHict•
starr must make now 1f they
hope to be ready for th<.• bag duy
The importanct· of advancl'
planning is increased by tht• fact
that the Angels have nl'ver been
serious challengers for u pen
nant so late in the sea!>on
well. almost never
"WE HAD A DRY RUN at this
sort of thing in 1970." says
Angels' publications director
Mel Franks. "when we wen •
three games behind ~1innesota
on Sept. 4."
But that dream fizzled out
rather s uddenly.
·'The Twins cam<' 1n here and
s ~cpt a three.gam e series.·~
.,Franks, remembers. ··That pret·
ty Wl'll wrapped It up "
The Angels souvenir playoff
program wtts near ly finished
and tickets for the playoffs and
World Series were already print
ed They had to work that far in
advance so everything would be
ready in time.
PENSIVE TIANT -Boston's Luis Tio.int rests his arms on
beach balls that came from the stunds while watching
the Red Sox lose. He pitches tonight against Nolan Ryan
at Anaheim Stadium.
And those suddenly-worthless
tickets? Are they a prized collec
tor's iten'I for a few lucky Angels
funs now?
... "NO. ALL T HOSE"tftltets
\I.ere omclally dumped for-lRS
Is LA Free
LOS ANGELES tAP1 International
Olympic Committee negotiatOrs huve agreed
to free Los Angeles from finunciul liability
for the 1984 Summer Games. the Los Angeles
Times reported in today's editions.
The newspaper suid that F . Don Miller.
executive direclor of the U.S. Olympic Com·
mittee, and John C. Argue. teAder of the Los
Angeles Olympic Organizing Committee. re·
ported the breakthroµgh. However . contract
language mu.st be approved before the ugree·
ment b released publicly. the Times said.
The IOC has declined to comment on the
report. In New York Cit>:· IOC uttorney
of Liability?
Richa rd Greene said he had been instructed
by the orgoniz1tlion 's presidet1t and executive
director to make no st atements on the
negotiutions.
The toe executive board is to meet Aug.
29·31 in Lausanne. Switzerlund. to discuss the
Games .
Los Angeles uT\d the IOC have been ul
odds for St.?\'eral months over whether the cl·
ty must ussumc direct finunclul liability for
the Games. Th~ city hul$ threatened to
wlthdruw its bid to ho~l the Otymplcs unteis
the lOC r eluKes its r\)lc on rtnunciul
responsibility.
purposes ... Frank:. explains ··1t
has to d~w).t,h the way account·
ing and t~ are handled ."
Tickets and programs are JUSt
part of a myriad of arrange-
ments thl' Angels h:.ive aln·<.tdy
~tart<•d to mak<'
Thl' list sct•ms c•ndll's:-. a
poss 1bl<• plJyoff f ('l r t h t•
d1vis1onal title. TV and radio
logistics. conrtictmg dates for
us e of tht' stadium. allotm<'nl of
t1ckc;-ts and pr1oritws for "eason
t icket holders. extra c;ecurity
:-.li.lff . ushers. parking lot atten·
dants . thl• increa~d media at·
tt·nt1on. auxiliary bleachers and
much more.
"THE BIGGEST problem of
all." says Franks. ··wall be trJ ·
ing to track down hotels for
t·verybody During that same
time span there's going to be a
national sporting good!> conven·
t1on in town. with 30 to 40.000
delegates. and they've .dready
~ot their reservations "
One solution. says F ranks.
might be to lodge teams. media
and visitors in oullytng aret.L<r
and bus them to the stadium •
Most of the other problems
have been anticipated . and the
Angels staff has made pm·
llminary plans in cooperation
with Comm1ss1o ner Bow1~
Kuhn 's office. Among them
-IF THE ANG ELS finish an a
tie with l,S.{Vlsa~ City <or anyon¢ el~ 1 ~ coln nip will de<'lde t~
site of a one.game playoff.
-Season ticket holders will
be a llowed to purchase their
<:a mc seats for the playoffs and
World Series. at the increased
prices of S8 to $17 per seat . as set
by the commissioner's office.
Season ticket holders may also
buy a number of additional seat~
1d l'nt1~al to thf' numbe r of
season tlcket.c; they own
-A vailobility of tickets Lo the
general public will be limited to
about 10.000 per game IC season
box holders buy their full allot·
ment of tickets. un estimated
13.000 wlll be gone for each
gamt' On top of that. for each
contest. are ~ tickets to the
vislllna club, ubout 300 ror tbe
players, und varying amounts
Stt ADVANCE. P•'e az
-DAILY PILOT WedMeday, Auguat 11. 1171
A Cllpsute Report From the World of Bpona
A .. "'+ ;I I I
SWIMS ABORTED -Stella Taylor <left l was forced
to abandon her effort to s wlm from Bis:.nini to
Florida beca use of strong tides Tuesd ay. And Diuna
~yad tried unsuccessfully to swim from Cuba lo
Florida but gave up after 42 hours in the water
t.'arlier lhe same d uy
They Have Common Fate:
Each Challe nged Sea, Lost
From AP Dlspa&dles
~HAMI -Tt)e two swimmers seemed oceans apart -
one a gabby extrovert who unabashedly bustled sponsor
money, and publicity. the other a devout woman who
e;tepped into the surf with determination and a soft prayer.
But in the end. Diana Nyad and Stella Taylor shared a
common fate. Eachchallengedtbesea, and lost.
ll was Nyad, 28, who first gave up -weeping, swouen
and screaming at ber trainers Tuesday as they insisted she
aba ndon the 103-mUe crossing from CUba to the Florida
Keys.
She had covered more than 70 miles in 41 hours. 49
minutes since Sunday altemoon, but was pushed off course
by winds and had not made tt halfway to her targeted land·
ing.
Taylor. 46. had been swimming strongly since leaving
Gun Cay in the Bahamas Monday morning.
She, "too, was bothered by nausea and jellyfish stings.
but had stroked smoothly to within )8 mlles of lhe Florida
coast by Tuesday afternoon. Then. just as victory seemed
certa in, the current began pulling her north. The land
curved westward and the gap from her to the &bore
widened. She called it qutta about 3 p.m.
Nyad had s aid frankly all along that sbe was swim·
ming for money. She retained an agent, sold ridlt.s to news
organizations and signed sponsorship deals witb m akers of
toothpaste and bottled water
aa .. Retlw a.na-•••
Former Pro Bowl comerback Robert Jone5 retired, r~erve quarterback Carlos Brown was put on walven,
and backup center Rick Nuzum was traded to Green Bay
as the Los Angeles Rams reduced their roster to 60 players
Tuesday. The rookies lhe Rams announced as placed on waivers
wer e quarte rback Mark Manges, a fourth round draft
choice from Maryland. and offensive tackle Charles Peal
of Indiana, a loth round draft pick.
Fonner Burfalo Bills defensive back James. a Pro
Bowl selection in 1972-73-74, was placed on the Rams' re-
.,t•nc list. He had been attempting a comeback after three
yt•ars of knee problems.
Nuzum, who played in all Rams' games in 1977, mostly
on special teams, was traded to t he Packers f<>r an Un·
d isclosed draft choice. •
Rams had their last preseason practice ·at Cal State
Fullerton ttus morning. The team moves to its regular
s~ason training quarters in Long Beach next week.
Quote al die Da9
While tra ining for his heavyweight championship box-
ing m atch with Leon Splnks, former champion Mabam-
mad Ali says : "This m an is too ugly lO represent us
Spinks is so ugly. He's got no teeth. His mother says every
time he cries tears run down his cheeks halfway, stop and then run back." .
Ekelellere I• Spert• •••
FOOTBALL -Doctors say Darryl 8tln&Jey will need
no more surgery to treat the paralysis he suffered in a
spine-crushing football accident last weekend. Meanlnaful
estimates will require another 10·14 days . . . Former
Edison High and Orange Coast College
star Jack Clark was released by the
Philadelphia E agles . . . Bob Kalsu, the
only pro football player killed in action
rn Vietnam. has joined the game's im·
mortals in the Pro Football Hall of
Fam e ... Washington quarterback BU·
ly Kiimer signed a two-year pact with ~
the Redskins . . . The San Francisco
49ers have traded linebacker Skip Van·
derbandt to New Orleans for defensive
back Chuck Crtst . . . Buffalo sent tight JAOl CUllK
end Paal Seymour to Pittsburgh for wid\ receiver Frank
Lewis. . . . Ex-Green Bay Packer Fred Carr says he
plans to fale suit against his former team if he can prove he
was cut from the team while injured.
BASKETBALL -The IQnl awaited t.rade of George
McGlmlls of the Philadelphia 76ers to the Denver Nuagets
for forward Bebby Jones and guard Ralph Slmpeon was
expected to be completed t oday. . .Sidney Wicks baa signed
with u.eSan Die«oCUppers.
BASEMLL -Montreal's Ellla ValenUDe smubed a
two-out solo home run in the bottom of tbe nlntb innina to
give the Expos a 4·3 victory over the San Francisco Giants
. . . Dan Drieuell'S solo homer in the 10th gave the Cincin-
nati Reds a 4·3 win over Pittsburgh . . . Pinch-hitter Steve
Bn aa broke a 2·2 deadlock in the seventh innlnJ with a
nm·scorinl single to give the Kamas City Royall a •·2 vie·
tory over tbe Detroit Tigers . . . Ron Galclty posted his
m ajor league-leadine 17th victory with a four-hitter as the
New York Yankees beat the Oakland A's, 6-0. GuJdry's
ERA ls now 1.79 and he's struck out 191 batters ... atdaie
ZJsk's seventh-inning homer gave Texas a 1-0 triumph
over the Chicago White Sox . . . Geor1e Hendricks led a
17-bll St. Louis attack with a three-run homer and a palr or singles aa the Cards trounced Houston, ll·S . . . The
Oakland A's traded outfielder WUlle Horton to Toronto ln
exchange for Rico Carty.
OTHER SPORTS -J ockey LafJlt Plncay will ride Tri-
ple Cro91n champion Affirmed in Saturday's Travera at
Saratoga, replacln1 injured &eve Caa~ •••,_,r..,.._
R ADIO: Tontaht -Baseba ll -Dod c•n at
Phlladelphja, 4:30, KABC f7'0); Bolton at Antell, 7:80.
KMPC (710).
TV: None tdlectuled. .
BASEBALLIFOQT1'lALL
o.lly P9let """"" ·~ CMlllw I A FAMILY NIGHT SELLOUT CROWD OF 41,144 WATCHED THE ANGELS BEAT BOSTON AT THE BIG A TUESDAY
,. ......... J
ANGEIS ••.
concerns me ls what helps the
team. Tonight, this was a win
that everyone shared in."
And Tanana shared a lltlle
more than the rest. He seemed
excited to finally be involved In
a pennant race.
"It's here. Tbe feeling is
here," Tanana told reporters.
"The flag is ours if we want it.
A llfl'bSlate
AllO-" .. ICMPC:mtl
Tot1l9'1t B05tOft •t c:.tlfanlN 7:ll p,m lfllUnNY BO&tofl •• Cltlfoml• 7:ll p ..... r rldrl e.ltlmotW .. Clt,._. 7:Up.m.
It'$ just a matter or wno wants it
most."
THE TALENTED left-bander
admits he keeps a close watch
on the scoreboard to see llow
Kansas City is doing.
"Everybod y d oes, a nd
anybody who says they don't is a
liar," Tanana said. ··w e just
can't let it affect the way we
play."
The Angels will have to be ex-
tra careful of that during the
next.two weeks, because in that
span they face the power-laden
Red Sox five more times, in ad·
dltlon to four meetings with the
defending cbamplon New York
Yankees.
a OSTON CAUP'OtlNIA
8Vfletonu Rtmy2b
Rice If
Flstt c
l yMd
E"•ns rl
8•1 .. y d"
G.Scott lb
~lb
.. ,._.
40 00
4 0 I I
• 0 I 0
4 I 1 0
3000
4 0 0 I
4 000
JI 1 0
2000
.......
UndrHUll If 4 1 0 0
Le"610f'd3b , 0 0 0
llOlkKk rl • 1 , 0
BeylO<' lb 2 I I 1
Falr1y lb 0 0 0 0
"lldllf 4 I I l
A.Mlllffcf O 0 0 0
OooOwln dh l O O O Downln9 c l o o o
Cllalk n 4 O o o
G+'ICll 21> 3 0 0 0
Totals l1 J • 2 Tol•ts 2' 5 S s 9oston 000 Ott 001-7
Callfornla . 000 020 lOll-S
l!-G.$COCt. 0..lk. LC>8-8oslon S. Call-•
I. J8-8aytor, Fltll. J8-Atmy. HA-AWi 1101 s 8-8otot m , Undord. S-Lynn, H-
,,. H It I!• ea SO aosTOM
EckerM_., IL, 13-51 I S S 4 • I
CALI ..ottNIA
T•-• IW, 1~71 t 6 J 2 o 1
H8P-8aylor 2 ll>V Eckenlnl T 2·u A-41,14'1.
* ANeaL NOTaS -AllflOuOll tovr key Pl..,.,..
cam. -lrom Ille rOllCI lrlp wltll lnf11rles, Ille A~l1' medlul r900rt from tralMr ,.,...._
~,....Ice Cloftn't llPP99r trim. Outllelder Jw
•11111, llotll9ncl by bkk IPMMS, ••lur"9d to Ille llMUP Tuetdey .,., .. lln t bawm.sn ... .ff(._
and ,.lief plk ller Dy• MllMr Wiii ~ off t"9
d lNbled lfd INS-· Only pjlc .... De ... ......,..,
llltWA...,..,.. ~ti. FrO&t Is sltll 111 lr«tlon
tor ,, .. ,.....,. Of i-. o.c-~·· Jae~ Is scMctuteci to,...,.• c..11 remowci trr 1111 Mild
IOd•y, encl F..o.nco un Jae-son..., recov.rect
from the ,..,,II,. tract" sutll<lently to retvm eo
Ille lineup wl!Nn • Wffll. Miiier, recoverl119 from
• llnllM on Ills pl1Clll119 arm, 1,,,... 20 mtnu1e1 Of
... ltll\9 llf'«lke Tuetdey and Mid, "Tlllft -
«1ly • llttle -•Md no ~n. In • c .... • of
N 'l'S I ttlln* I'll .. rMdy .. -bkk." . An;el .. ,i...n ...,_,., •U-.:1 en ...... ""'In
1Nlr"'"1 °"""" ('l'M T1111l11011 frotn Uy !f ... Lr_a..cti,...tlllufelyltl 10 .. NslaA
12 etme• .... A/loelm.111•: o.sptte flnlllllnt \lie
rMCI trip wtth two 1trolotit '-· tM ""9111 c-llome Just ...,...,,. out of first ptoce and Ille bit Crowd T"'9dty eldlllllMd o -1 ot ,.._
,_, rerwty -111 Allolwlm. A toeel of 16 ~ ,.. ...... c1r..i-the~ ,.,,ac. ••Ill .....
-·· •11 ........ -..cirt tor tM ""'9K. • IN
Bemis Sixth
·In Ski Race
Mike Bemis of Laguna Beach
finished slxtb overall in the Long
Beach to Catalina water ski race
over the weekend out of 96
competitors with a time of one
hour and five minutes for the
round-trip competition.
Be mis was fifth in the men's
open division, bis best -ever
finlab in the distance race. He
was behind the boat of Scott
Campbell or Newport Beach on a
aid wtth bindings he mode
blmaetf.
Tbla Sunday Bemis will com·
pete tn the Endol lntematlonal
speed 1ld Jamboree at Lons
Jffacb Marl.M Slad1'1m be&ID·
nlsi1 al noon It 11 for both
bartfOOl aod llll compel Uon.
College Football Preview
Pitt Seeks Quarterback
PITTSBURGH fAP> -Tony
Dorsett is in Dallas, Matt
Cavanaugh is in New England.
and Gordon '<Too Much" J ones is in line at the University of
Pittsburgh.
Look for him t o find a
quarterback from prospects that
in c lude s ophomore Ri c k
Trocano. who s ubbed when
Cavanaugh was hurt last season.
and Scott J enner . a transfer
fro m California's Ame rican
River junior college.
Receivers also include Steve?
Gaustad and Benjy Pryor. a pair
of light ends who will batUe for
playing time "We have a real success story
here. I'd like to write one more
chapter," says the senior split
end who set Pitt football records
last season with 796 yards in re·
ceptions, nine touchdown grabs.
a nd innumerable slithers and
slides.
,. ..... r-.e•1
ADVANCE PLANNING: • •
He's six feet tall, 180 pounds.
with two very large hands, and
36 inches in vertical jumpin~
ability. Passes, punt returns. and
kickoff r e turns w ill ear n
him headlines. But he also un·
for networks. sponsors. umpires.
l ea gue offi c ia ls a nd no n·
contend ing teams. All those
tickets are sold . There are no
freebies.
-MEDIA SEATING will be
incre ased witb auxiliary sec-
tions . including use of the foot-
ball pressbox.
A N G E L G E N E R .\ L manager Buzzie Ba vasi is a
veteran of six World Series when
he was with the Dodgers. and -
public relations director Tom
Seeberg was with Cincinnati in
1970 when the Reds opened a
new stadium, staged an AU-star
game and played in the World
Series.
·c oils like a r a ttlesn ake on
downfield blocks .
"THE MOST gifted" athlete on
our squad," says Coach Jackie
Sherrlll.
.. If he was a senior in 1977.
he'd definitely have been a first·
round draft pick." says Gil
Brandt, personne l boss for
Dallas.
Stadium renovation to ac-
commodate the 1980 move of the ·
Los Angeles Rams to Anaheim
will not begin until after the
World Ser ies. so no conflict
would be created.
"They a lso had an All-star
Game here in Anaheim in 1967.""
Franks points out. ··w e'll use
the same methods for handling
the big crowds and media that
they did then."
Which means Pitt must find a
quarterback.
-T he Angels receive top
priority on use of lhe stadium in
the event of a conflict with a pre-
v 1ou s ly-ar ra nged concert or
event or any kind.
And if all else fails, the Angels
ha ve a guidebook provided by
the commissioner's office which
det ails everything that a playoff
contender must do to prepart'
itself.
Gone ls Cavanaugh. who took
his poise and arm to the
Patriots. "You're talking about
r eplacing a Tony Dorsett calibre
player," said Sherrill.
·•on~'Of..the big problems will
be the fans not being used to
playoff and World Series pro-
cedures.·• Franks says. "Our
staff has some experience. but
the fans in Orange County, un-
less they've been to the Dodger
playoffs and Series. won't be ac·
quainted with the procedures "
"I can't imagine a nything of
this magrutcade going smoothly ...
Franks sa~. "But with-all our
guidelines •nd preparation. we
should be able to handle It OK.··
YET SHE RRI LL, who
followed the toughest act in col·
lege football last season when he
replaced Johnny Majors~ Jed
Pitt to a 9·2· 1 record and the
eighth spot in the final r anking.
So now. the rest is up to thl!
baseball team on the fi eld.
-By Dave Cunningham
J ..... &s-
NISIMT ... Baseball Standings
"GAS
-SAVER511
MERCURY
ZEPHYR
AT
YIAl-IHD DtSCOUMTI
+PLUS+
•••••w 10 .. ,d
BIKE
wttt.~Pw 0 •
AMER ICAN LEAGUE
West Division
Kansas City
Angels
Texas
Oakland
Minnesotc.1
Chicago
Seattle
W L Pct. GB
64 52 .552
66 55 .545 1'2
59 57 .509 5
'61 61 .500 6
52 66 .441 13
47 70 .402 1712
44 76 .367 22
East Division
Boston
New York
Detroit
Milwaukee
Ba ltimore
Cleveland
Toronto
74 44 .627
67 51 .568 7
64 52 .552 9
64 52 .552 9
64 54 .542 10
53 64 .453 20~
46 71 .393 27~
TwMl!y'tl<wet
A1!1911 S, eo.ton 2
Mliw.., .... •. Toronto I ltnd tome. ppd • ral<O
MIMetOta '· Oewl-I ICanMJ 01Y 4, Detroit t THasl.~O
Hew v_._Oelll-0
8•1tlmore 1, s..ttla •
T ... r'tO.mft
8"to11 CTlant •s1 et..,..,_ 11•r•n •-101. n
ltenMI Clly !81 ...... S ft Spflhffff 1).101 II
Mln11H•t1 cz-•n -11er~1w1.1 ...
T...onto Ueltenofl , .. -JI --WI"' MU ........ (~II, ... , .. ·-•over HI," ti .... .-10 .... S-11 et 0.1..it ,.111 ........
12-~l n c11lce .. c~ HI at Te••• tAle•..,..,
7 .. 1.n
H-Y-I-el "41 et 0.klalMI 18robe'9
•-101.11 B••llmore IFla na9e11 tS IOI •I Sullle
!M<1.'"'9111111 1-4),"
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W~t Dtvl.slon
Dodgen
W L Pct GB
69 50 .580
San Francisco
Cincinnati
San Diego
Houston
Atlanta
69 50 .580
68 51 571 t
60 59 504 9
55 62 470 13
54 64 458 1411'?
East Division Ph1ladelph1a 63 52
Chicago 61 56
Montreal 57 62
Pittsburgh ~ b~
New York 49 69
St . Louis 49 70 , .... .,..sc-
Deeters s. Pllll-lpfw• 4
C"IU OO 12, Atlanta I
Montrut •.Sen l'rMl<lsco J
548
521 3
,479 8
.461 10
.415 l.S'-2
.412 16
Clnclnnell 4, PlllUJuf9113I10 lnntn9i1
New Yor-l , San 01990 '
St LOUIS II, "-IOtl S , ... ,..o-.
°"99" ~ "41 al 1'1111-IO'lla t IC ... M l.
" Houston (J Nlellro •·•I •t St Loul• t-rtlne.i
6·SI • So Olt .. co~11•11•0 •• ,, ., NlfW Ve«•
ll(-.... 11>131
All•nl•" Nl•ro 14-111 ., ClltCOQO IKMow
S-01
Ctn(lnNl! rlloMatrl "JI •t '''™"',.... !C...-OtlMI• •Ill ,.
S.n Fr....:1sco 111 .. l~il •I_,, .. , ti',..,_
• 11,"
Orange County s Oldest Lin_coln·Mercury Oedlersh1p
• Dozens To Choose From .JOHNSON a SON
• Bike With Every Zephyr [ iJ-I
2626 Harbor Bhtd • COlta Mesa • S40.5&30
..
TENNIS I BASEBALL I HORSE RACING
John Wayne TC
Wins Decade Title
The Dokf!ll ttom the .John Warne Tetlnll Club of
N~wport Bettb ca~ured Lbe Orance Count1 cbams>M>n•hlp
of the Decadt'natlonal amatalrteam tanll playoff a rettnlly
by d.te lbt' Five Mlco and a Mooee frOm Lake Forest,
HuntJ.nitoa Beacb and San Juan Caplltrano ln lbe ftnat.,
12-t .
The Dukes lnve FridQ for UM Western Rettonal
eomr:tlUon at tbt San Ftanell('Q Tennta Club wblch will ~ p •>'ed end. n.e naUOnal final.a lnvolvtnc four
rt!&lonal , wlJI be b Id at Fluahlq Me&doWI, N.Y ..
•pt. 10.
Membtn of the W1.1ne team lnelude John LM, Rick
Dow, MarU.Yn Koatt, PbebeStenton, Su.nny EJUott and 8.on
Toms c. ....... _ ..... _,....
Wimbledon W6t, the am>ual cbartty mixed doubl.H
tournament sponsored by tbe Newport Beach Chamber of"
Commerce women's dlvtslcm, will be ataaed at five area
t'lubt this weekend with the ftnall at tbe J ohn Wayne TC
Auaust 218-27. • .
featured opening matches on Saturday include: Dan·
ny Roeers and Ellen Bryant q&inst Weller Evans, Jr. and
Maril Lane <JWTC. 9); Tim ( ) Peralta and Susle Warfield vs. Tony Pause and Rodee TENNIS Chast~n at Balboa Bay Club.. -
<10 :30>; and Jim Straw and _ _
Barbara Shelton against
Mark Jones and Lori Schoetller <JWTC, 10:30). Sund~'s featured matclle$, both at JWTC, Include:
Jerry Van Linge and Gall Glasgow vs. Alex Polland and
Sue Arnet (3 p.m.); and Julie Hayward and S&e•e Slmoe
against Robert Cunard and Carla Wittenberg <9 a.m.).
Van Linge and Glasgow are the open division defend·
lng champions and are seeded No. 1.
G il Gerard, one or the celebrities participating, will bf>
teamed with Jeanne Brownell in the competition.
There are 120 t eams competing at JWTC, BBC, Irvine
Racquet Club, Marriott Hotel and Palisades Tennis Club.
lff c D m t t lffOl'a to BBC
1\1 aric McDevitl is moving from the Wayne club lo
direct social activities for the Balboa Bay Club.
Members of JWTC are involved in a jogging program
under the direction of Mike Amador and Jim Sizer.
Pro Tourneir N~n
The Arco Tennis Open. formerly the Pacific Southwest
championships, will be held at UCLA's Pauley Pavilion
from Saturday. Sept. 16 through Monday, Sept. 25 with
m any of the top names on the pro circuit participating.
This is the only fund raising program for the SCTA
which handles lhe junior tennis programs for Southern
C .1 lifornia.
The tournament has been moved from the Los Angeles
T1'nn1s Club this year. For ticket information, call (213>
467-5151
Y oldlt Pl"OfJ"I• MfH'ft Altead
The Southern California Tennis Association under
J ack Kramer is moving ahead with its future champions
program with boys and girls, ages 9 through 14, receiving
instructions from top teacbjng professionals.
There may not be any future Jimmy Connors or Chris
Everts among the group but that doesn't stop those
participating from moving ahead and taking advantage of
the program.
With Proposition 13 causing some cities to t rim
budgets and staffs, and with some schools eliminating
i:.ummer school, classes were filled quickly.
There are 1,000 youths receiving 18 hours of instruction
in the so classes held weekly.
In addition lo tennis instruction, the program is also
focusing on sportsmanship with 100 of the participants who
d<·monstrate this extra quality getting a chance to attend a
special clinic at Big Bear Tennis Ranch Aug. 28.
Among the Orange Coast area clubs participflting in
the program are Lindborg Racquet Club of Huntington
Beach and the Capistrano Racquet Club.
'
Gottfried,
Dibbs Roll
In Toronto
From AP Dltpatcbe1
TORONTO-Eddie Dlbbs and
Brian Gottfried captured second
round matches Tuesday at the Canadian Open tennis cham-
plon1bJpe with straight set vic-
tories over Canada's Rejean
Genola IDd Orea Halder.
• 111 ttller ~ ~: Jotl1' McEnroe,. u.1~ •·-..,.. ,.........._ °"'•· , .. ,..,, ,,_ ..._,._, INift, Mt. lilollet1o Loml»n:ll, ltely,
6 f, •·J; Adtl-P11net1e, llely, def. Erl(
OeMICl!tt, l're11<e, 6•t, •·1; Peul tcronl!, """'•Ii• ........ Vorneto. CIMI•. 0-6, w. ...,; Cll<lt LAwtt., .._~.def. R--e.t\eur,
C.-0., ..... •1 lllCI Colln 04 .... y. AyWali., ci.t. Alwore FlllOI, Olile, M , .. 7, .. 1
~---IVOll Moline, ~. clef. Woltell FIMI!,
"'°4oftll, ~ M ; TWll °" ... • Nelherlo<lch, oet .
Jot"'° I'll~. Ollle, ..._ 7-6, W; Reul Remlrei M .. ko, def. Pee o.,,pn,, 7-6, H . '
l.Mlz Atl.,elleeS
STOWE, Vt.-Second-seeded
Ha r old Solomon and San
Clemente r esident Bob Lutz
were easy victors Tuesday in the
opening round of the Stowe
Gr and Prix tennis tournament,
pushing aside Mark Edmondson
and Jira Granat.
1'1 .. -...
H..-old~def.ManE~.M.W.
8ob Lull, S.11 Ctome11te, def Jlre Grenet,
~Mii'°"'*'-· ._I, ... ; Tim G<Mllk-. def Ol<k
cnoty, Allllr•141. t-3,. W ; Elliot T•IUC'IWr def.
Llto Al~l, Argttltlne, .. I. W ; Kim W-k k,
AAKtr.U..dlllf. S4leW Dodlerfv. Al.litnll•, +., W ,
••: llornle Mlltoll, '°""' AfrJu. oef, PNr McN_,, AllWOllll.M. M.
A_,lalfhu
PHILADELPHIA-Defending
cha~J>ion Tracy Austin of Roll·
ing Hills advanced to the third
round of the U.S. Lawn Tennis
Assn. 's girls 18-and-under cham-
pionships Tuesday by def eating
Cindy Brightlield of St. Louis,
6·3, 6-1.
Only one of the 16 seeded
players suffered al'\... upset-
Torrance's Lucia Fernlndez lost
to Ann Hendricks of Mahtomedi,
Minn,, 6-2, 6·1.
Other results:
Merlo l'••NMldH, Torrllfl(o, def. M•rl•nne
Rl119, FrOllltllll. Mkll., M , M ; Kettly .-.clOn,
KlnQ of Pnluie, def. LllllOy T-. LH Veoes,
~I, •1; Pom Stlrl....-, Luthef'Vll ... Md., dlof Bet·
tlna 811119, Corot ~ •1. M ; Meroen t.oule,
Sen Fronc:ltco, def. L.etlle Hewett, Blrmlngllem,
Ale .......... I; Uflde Sieve!. PleOmont, dll S..y .i.ver, L~. 111,.•I, ~2;
AJamitos
Results ... .,.......,
..,.. .......... .-.i ... 1
l'lftt ,__.OHi L.uetiy Loncelot (CM'dOul
2 . .0, 2.«I, 2.AO; Bold TNClole IUptwtml 3.00. 2.10,
2.60; Sltom And CNrge ICletllMl l.IO; U eqcte
l•SI paid UO; (~I palct l.20.
Se<onct r--UO Moon Glr1 IP9merl S.IO.
•.OO, 3.20; OWi, Ami IWlllMrl 3'.00, l#l; Umits
HOOe I Llptleml •AO.
Tlllrd r--WMc:ll R Run (CJerlUol 2UO, l .IO.
5 00; L..11111 Oolonne ICt'Meffl UO, 3.AO; Unte
Pueblo Bar (Ml!l•I >.AO.
l'ourtll t~ StorY tc:.ao..I 10.C. 6.00.
>.00; Got T ........ (W-1 16.10, UO; Hllrrl CMI
I IHenl :tAO; P eucte IMI peld Jt1.50. l'lftll ,.__,.,..,.. Poge Ster IW._) •«I,
J,00, U O; Fl.., Uwl-.it ,...,,.,, •.OO, 3.llll;
Sten Allow,_,., (CMODlol ~.
Shrtll r-.-Go s.turn 2 1 BoAtl uo. •.IO. 3 60; Rock Ol'I -,._., •.«>, S.60; Mr Mostar
(Mylell •.eo; $UUO. (1041peld1'8.SO.
S.wntll r~ Jotw\ l\ltat:sonl •.ao, S 00,
•.60; Hu-11-1o111 CTreoaurel U .60, 7.60;
Jeb's Jtt ICM'doul UO.
Elglltll rece-Teutonk (ClefhMI 10.«>. , ""· •.IO; Stors Ouc.o !Hartl 20.«1. • 00; a.nu.we
(On-I •.«I; $2t..Cte 1241 pOldtS00.
Nlnlll r~w A Jet IW•llotrl 17.00, 6.olll, uo; L.lquld ~ 1u•m1 s . .o. 2 eo. tt>til
Aet. Folly 8er (Mltctwll) 2,20; Nallve Vll•llty
IClerltMI 2.20. Atte~.2". ..
V ocke Sparks Stars Past El Paso
With reserves seeing much of
the ~ction, the Orange County
Stars toppled the El Paso-Juarez
Sol with a tiebreaker victory,
12·6 8-12, 12·14, 12·10, 6-4 Tues-
da v' night at Fountain Valley H1~h School before 1,724 fans.
Larry Vocke, filling in for in·
jurcd J on Roberts in the second
game. had 33 kills in 57 at·
tempts.
Roberts strained a back mus·
cle just below the left shoulder
blade late in the first game. He
served once in the second, then
sat out the balance or the match.
Melody Parker also saw con·
siderable action and gave a
strong performance. The back·
court player made only four
service errors m 17 attempts
and added four digs. Parker
played in only her second match
of the season.
••we're trying to get back to
fundamental s until th e
playoffs," Coach Dodge Parker
said. "But we also want to give
some or our starters some rest.··
The Stars meet the San Diego
Breakers at Serra High in the
Border City tonight and could
clinch a playoff berth with a vie·
tory. The Breakers have lost
nine straight matches and are
last in the Western Division.
CM Runners Sought
To Subscribe
Any Costa Mesa High
School girl interested in
running OI\ the cr oss
country team in the fall
is asked to conta~t
Coach Bill WeUingill at
STOP
SMOKING '
--0-'lOUR
Community
Newspaper
CALL
642-4321
Direct or Collect
DAILY PILOT
-M2Sor~t&
the track at the school at
4 in the l!lftemooa.
Arran gements are
cunently being m ade
for physical exams in
order to start official
practiee Sept. 1.
Th®Sands have with Just one visit •.. at reasonable rate l
men e
HYPNONSIS
CENTER
Ste 126 (Medical Plaza>
493-3332
Wedne9day, August 16. 1978
GET YOtJR
51/0t/LlJER
WELL AROt/l/!J
DAILY PILOT 8 3
Baseball
Leaders
UH•"'-'-'STOP Tl!N
Bned Oft 27hl llab
N.ATIOMAL '-•AGUE G aa • ti I'«,
8urr0U9hs, Atlante 112 »1 H 1 II Jte
Rose. Clnclnnett 111 m I • t» ~
euoner, Ollc-,, Ml 71 81 •
COll(tlK ton. Clnclftftltll Ill •21 " 17' • !1Nf) 6CT OJ!cR Bow•. Phl'-*lllf'I• 1 ll •1J St 14' -
M..itocll, Soetl Fr•nclKO •• ,.., ~ '°' * W~llli•ld, s.n Fr-IK.o 111 lit SI llJ ~
R.S'"IUI, a..~ .. HI .. '°' .JIM me BAJ.LI •
M05T CUIB-L..EVcl
P/..AY!:lf:S I 5££
PO Nor f/Se e#at;N
'SHO()tDe/i:. Tl/RN -ro ~,eoK.e 71le1R.
8ACK.HAAIPS U/etL -
• 1978 Un1led Future Syndicate. Inc.
Ptrker. Pltb11Ur9h 107 '°4 .0 I~ ~
Ht-r PNl-ll)l>le .. >U .. -..,. .. _._
lwl1111tl, Phll-'Oftle, :It. FOllef Cln<•N..tl,
,. 11 $Mlttt, Let A~ M; P•rktr, PlltWUr ... n . O•w-., -1r..i. 20. E vetenllnt. _,...,
20.
R""°a;attM111 "' Fosttr. CIM•ftftltll . ., • C14>A. Sen l'r-ltCe
13 II Smltll, i.es a,...1~. 71; Garvey, l.M
Antel", 76; LuzJMlll, PNl.iMIOllle. H ; Wlnfield,
Sen 01990, I~ Pltclli ... 111 DedliHll
Bonll•"'· Cincinnati.'"'· Blue, Sen Fr-•-.
1-J, P•rrv. S... Dle90. U·S; MontelUKo, Sen
Fr•n<ISCO. ..... O.Moore. Oliceeo ..... Roger$,
MontrHl, IJ.7. Grl~ev.Mon!•••L IU
AM-rlCAN u:o~: R l"t1
C•r•w. M1,,...001• 113 •tt 61 1l .~
ll•ct. Bo\lon Ill ... , Ii ISi ,Jl,
A Ollver, re.... ~ lS. .0 11• 2Jll
Pu\lella. N-Yll'll 11 31• "3 .. ,31~ c; Brett. K~ Cit~ .. 3AO s1 101 .au 11-ns. s.~u. •s n• s. .. ·*
MunM>fl. N-YOt'll I 11 01 » 1)7 ·'°'
S..ndl>trQ, ,.... 110 J7'1 .a 115 ! ... ,O<ll, CM........ 113 ~ SI 131 • l
~tolll>. 0.troil 11• ... .0 1•1 1 "-·-Ill<•. llo\ton, 31; Hoitt. Mllw•ui.ff. 2t
G Tllomos, Mltw-... 11; .. .,..,, Calltenli•. ~.
T"°'11ton, Ctew4-. U . 11_..,..1 ..
111,e. ecKtool. "· St.W. o.trolt, •: Hl51!P, Mllw•uktt, H ; J Tnomp5on, Ottrolt, II , '"°'"'""· cir..1-.1• ~ 111 De<lsl-sl
Guldrv. N-Yol'k. 11-1, Gu••. IC.me•~.
10.1. G•I•. ltA-Clly, IJ.4; Eoenlev, ~.
ll-S. BilllnQtlam, Ottroll, 12.s; Torret, Bosten.
14-6. T•-· ceclttnll•. 1~7; llomo. S.ante, ....
Serna Wins at Niguel iOTOR1SfSROBB~
Area runners placed well in Sun-and Bob Kay. also of Newport. was
day's lO·kilometer r ace around second. BY GAS JHIEf ~aguna Niguel. including UC In:ine Mari Gibbs. Huntington Beach . ~thlete Ralp~ Serna. who placed fU"St placed first in the girls under 16 Motorists •tt btinq ~bbt4 by• sly t~f
10 the open.~v:tsion. divis ion, followed by Anitbelle who s!Nls qis Jtiile thty drive. ~
. In the diVlSton for bo.Ys under 16. Villanueva and Kelly Cerda both ol t ·1 · • 'ir ... carburetOI' whith Jim Berry of Newport Beach placed . • c.u Ptt is " u1 '' •
f. t "th Bob G d f s J Huntangton Beach. waslts precious fuel and uusts poor 1rs , WI ar en o an uan .
Capistrano fourth and El Toro's John Elaine Compo of Coron.., del Mar ~ire oerlormance. Now J~ can rtslO!t
Torigoe sixth. placed second in the women ·s 21·29 elhc1'flCJ thenh lo WYNN s•Carburetor
Men 16 to 19 years of age included ~ age group, with Christy Klosterman Cleantr. This SO«ial spray formula wons
Gordon Duff or Huntington Beach, of San Juan Capistrano sixth and wilhwl dismanllinQ lo islslanlly tt~t
fourth; Mike Calvano, Huntington Kathy Applebee of Mission Viejo 911m 1111! mnish.. curb rouqh idli~ 1nd
Beach, fifth; Sam Walling, Jr .. Hunt-seventh. st411inq, •s 11 increases mile~. So for
ington Beach, sixth. In the women's 30.39 group. Sue ~ molorinq, gtt WYNN'S Catburt1or
Steve Waggener or Irvine won the Petersen of Laguna placed first; C~antt 1odey.
30-39 age division with Laguna Debbit Wilkinson, Miss ion Viejo was r ... -.-.-. ..... .,.,.
Beacb·s Pete Petersen fifth. s~cond ; Donna Al~red, Irvine. , ii; 3 .f.KYJ flt~
, In tbe 50-59 age group, Norm Lu-th1r~: and Jo Anne Maller, San Juan 1111 ... •l.. 'J ~.J mian of Newport Beach placed first Capistrano, fourth.
WE'RE IA YING A. WHALE OF A
SUITS
From The World's
Finest Tailors
Now up to
75°/o Off
JUMP SUITS
JOGGING SUITS
Now 50°/o Off
c
L
E
A
R
SPORT COATS
Feather Suedes
Ultra Suedes
Woolens & Silks
Summer Fabrics
Now Up To 1/2 PRICE
SPORT SHIRTS
SWEATERS
Now 50°/o Off
Regular Price
..
... ~ .. ··~ ~--L~~~--~~~~---..a~-~lhing 1felct ~tc-·~~
t -
SHOES
IALL Y OF SWll UILAMD
O.urch
French Shriner
Now 1/2 Off
Odds & Ends Only
N
c
E ALL LEATHER
JACKETS & COATS
Now 1/2 Price
. .fM Cjantlem~ ....
3439 VIA OPORTO, NEWPORT BEACH
675-1717
UDO MdiMA VILLAGE
z : . ~
t
. ' SI DM..V Pti.OT Business
TV Ad Dollars Roll In
12 Percent lncreaBe Expected for New Sea.on
NEW YORK tAP> -Th 1\1·
tton'a "'• advertben. deapltt'
prices ~ •ooo for a »•eeond
tpol oo a prlm -Ume petwork
TV 1bow ancl mON than 1100,000
for a bk>ckbuster, ao far hove
bou1bl aa esUmat.ed •l.3 blllion tn commt.'f'Clala for the upcom-
AnlC uoson from ABC. NBC and
CBS. Networtt t-xtc:utlvecs ar• pre·
dlctl•t another atrona y"ar of
udvert1lln1 Hlcs, but tht>y•vt-
moderated lbeW prtce Mkes for
commerclall.
more ~leal 1rowth \ban either
the projected 14 percent rise for
tbo current 1977-78 season.
which ends ln September, or tbe
23 percent Jump in the boom
year of 1976-77.
Industry sources say the
chunae has UtUe to do with reac-
tion to the network's Uneul> of
new pro1rammlng this fall.
whlcb one advertising execut1ve
detcrlbed as "no better or worse
than usual." .... , , ..
THAT RA,.~ LED ~o mt
analysta to forecusl that the
three oetworb wlU collect 12 perrent more for prline·tlme
rommerdala dW"inJ the season.
brinlinC the total apent on that
powerful adverUaina medium lo
ctbout SZ.24 b1Wop.
THEY ADDED THAT during
the 1976·T1 and 19TJ-78 seasons .
the demand for TV time was so
iireat that prices shot up. OHSt..U.
"There were Jim two years or
advertiaers being burned to a
cr isp. ~t.ip s hows ~here Te:uco
found oal and natural gu in
the Bullhnor~ Canyon off
the coast or New Jersey.
V .!lue of lhe discover y
won't be known until more
<trit\ing is done.
Antbon1 Hoffman, a med.la
analyat for the Wall Street firm
of Bache, Halsey. Stuart,
Sheilds, said that reflects a
"I think in part what's hap-
pening now Is that the price
levels may ju.st be returning to
normal this year." said Dick
Low. senior vtee president for
media sales at Young &
Rubicam. one of the nation's
largest advertising agencies.
Steady Beef Prices
D~ for Short-Tenn
BUT AfTEll price hikes of 15
and 20 percent in high-demand
spots for the past two seasons,
Low said some 11dvertisers are
being squeezed out of the
network marllet. especially for
long-term "up front" advertis·
ing. an industry term used for
52-wee.ll season packages. WASHJNGTON <AP> -Government economists say retail
beef prices may hold steady (or a while because producel"I in ma-
jor market.a are not rebuilding bercb for future supplies:
"Cel'lainly frolll my perspec-
tive, the percent of sales ls not
as j:reat as it was durin& this
period lastyear .... The Agriculture Department said cattle are being sent to
feedlots in record numbers, which means more antmals are being
fattened for s laughter "A fair amount got diverted to
other media In large part
because of two years of double·
digit increases that advertisers
experienced,·• said Low.
RETAIL P&ICE8, WmCB R.\D risen more than 30 percent
from last fall. peaked last month at more than St.80 a pound before
dropping slighUy.
The department cautioned that retail prices will rise again
when cattle ranchers stop sending ~i!ers to feedlots and inatead
hold them back for breeding.
Once the rebuilding starts, the economists say, It will take 27
lo 70 months before beef prices drop substantially as the supply on
the hoof is increased.
ALTHOUGH RATES vary
widely by time, program and
network, the average price for a
prime time, 30-second spot runs
about $60,000 and can easily ex·
ceed Sl00,000 tor sports or
------..Oil Tallied
WE NEED A
RECESSION!!
How would o •ece\i.ion effect
onflo1t0n, nere9 rote\, O'id !he
~ ~? Moil for free "'flO"·
S~IAHM ........................
JMI I.JN.St. "-1 .... CA. tMl 4
KUWAIT fAP>
Crude oil production by
the 10 ·members of the
Organization of Arab
Petroleum Exporting
Countries averaged
19,897.000 barrels a day
in 1977, compared with
19.128,000 in 1976.
The organization's an-
nual report said the
group's total refining
capacity increas~ only
135,000 barrels a day, to L-_______ .. 2,458,000 barrels.
ORDER
YOURS
NOW • •
Two Orange County residents have been
named to new executive positions in Divenlfled
Sbopplq Ceaten, Newport Beach.
Gu, Carte, Mlaslon Viejo. bas joined the
organiiatlon as director of leasllig and Walter G.
Haag. El Toro, bas been apPointed controller.
Clarke, whose 14-year career in the real estate
industry spans lea.sing, development. constnaetion
and management responsibilities. assumes
primary responslbllity for leasing negotiations ol
the firm's new and existing shopping centers in
five states.
H,aaa. a certlfied public accountant wbo also
teaches Intermediate accounting at Cal State
Fullerton, will oversee financial activities with
respect to accoµnUng, banking and future growth
through financial analysis and control.
* Lawrence R . Holmes h as Joined
American CUy Bank as vice president/manager of
the new Newport Beach regional office in Corona
del Mar .
His banking experience ranges from opera-
tion's to commercial lending to managing an office
for a major branch-banking institution . •
Bonnie Handrlc•, Costa Mesa, has been
appointed manager of the Villa Park office of
We.at.em Mutual Escrow Corp.
Before joining the company. she was manager
for several tiUe companies in the San Diego area .
• Dr. Kameron W. Maxwell has been named
director of research and Dr. Jacqaes J. Keswlyn
vice president of corporate development at
Newport PbarmaceoUcals IDtenatlonal, Inc.,
Newport Beach.
speclala, aclvertistn1 industry
estimates show.
B14t executives at the thrt'e
networks say the "up.front"
sales. almost completed for the
upcoming season. show an in-
crease both in dollars and time
sold from last year.
They point to the relatively
moderate price increases as one
reason they expect strong sales
tn all categories of advertising
this year.
.. THE OVERALL per-
formance Is good lor all
three networks." said James
Shaw. vice president of sales at ABC.
"Basically Ute advertisers·
budgets are a little higher and so
are lhe prices." be said
Cal,.Vet Bond
Sale Related
SACRAMENTO <AP> -Sale
or SlOO million ln Cal·Vet bonds.
delayed for six weeks by
paa1Jage of Proposition 13, has
been announced by state
Treasurer Jesse Unruh.
The buyer was a syndicate
headed by the Ban1t of America,
whose Interest bld ot 5.4301 per-
cent was low among three bids.
Unruh sald the sale was
postponed to allow bond rating
agencies more time to evaluate
the bonds alter passage or
Proposition JJ.
"We are pleased to annOlmce
that these Cal-Vet bonds, the
first general obligation bonds
sold s ince the passage of
Proposition 13. have again been
granted a Triple A rating by
both Moody's and Standard and
Poors,'' Unruh said Tuesday.
Wires Dinnantled
Workers for Pacific Telephone dismantle the last few-
miles of the transcontinenta l telephone line in Placer
County. On Jan. 25. 1915. Alexander Grnham Bell placed
the first coast·to-co<.1st phone call from ~ew York to an
assistant. Tom Watson in San Francisco. over that line.
The national link h<.1s bcrn rrplact>d by underground c<.1ble
or microwave systems.
Over The Counter
MASOUlfincJs
Dr. Uooel Slmoa, former director of research.
has been named to the newly created post of direc-
tor of new product development. MUTUAL FUNDS
1000
BEAUTIFUL.
STICK-ON
LABELS
STYLISH TYPE
ONGOOO
OUAUTY WHrTE
GUMMED PAPER
• PERSONALIZED
•EASY TO USE
• FOR YOU OR A FRIEND
r---------~-----------, Fm 1n "* ooucion. cllp unct ,,...11 wltfl lt.75 + .2S posttee to. I
PHot Printing, Label Div. 1
A>et Office Sox 1580 • 330 W, Bay St. 1
Costa Mesa. Callfomla 92626 1
' Be Sure to UM Yo. Zlpcode •
PILOT PRINTING
I . ,
I
' I I
~ r
I
I
I
Maxwell ls former director of research and de·
velopment at the Hyland Diagnostics division of
Baxter-Travenol. Kestelyn, in addition to his new
appointment. ts the company's director of medical
affairs. He folned the company in 1975 . • George W. Mefferd, Newport Beach. has been
elected to the board of directors or the Independent
&ea-at. Soa.tlwat CaUIOAia.-'l'h&-troup-eon--
ducts an annual campaign for operating funds for
15 \pdependent couei-es and anivetslttes . • * Camilla Froet of Pasadena and Dr. Roger W.
Hey.as of Pasadena have been elected directors of
the James Irvine Foandatloa.
The•foundation. wblcb has offices in Newport
Beach and San Francisco. makes grants to
charitable instituUons in the fields of independent
hicher education, medical and health care. youth
programs, community services and cultural ac-
tivities. •
Le., Siegler, Inc.. Santa Monica, has an·
nou.nced the following personnel appointments:
-Harry J. Fltzpalrick, Corona del Mar, has
been named president or the company's energy
products dlvislon, Santa Ana. He succeeds Richard
C. F.iler, who has retired. He bad been marketina
vlce p~ident of the division since 1967.
-Lnraee A. Tbompaoa, Costa Mesa, bas
been named a COT'J)Orate vice president. He wlU be
responsible fot the company's fabricated product.I
operations, b<?ad.quartered at Troy, Michigan . • Bamra Mner bas been named a design as·
soclate at Interior Oeal1n Development, Inc ••
Newport Beach. She has exp(!rience in residentJal
and commercial dcslan. • Tbe lateraatloHl .\1toeladoa ol UaJlbHI C••makaton hu presented Oold Qujll Awardl
of Excell~ to Jerome F. CoWal. the lrvlne Co.:
EWe a.o• ••· Smith Tool; ttan Woll, for photo1-
rapby for Transamerica Flnanctal Corp.; and
De•• l'rltuebt>, Flw r C6rp. Wotr aiso waa
preseoted with an award of mertt.
: ....
e -VH . STOCKS I BUSINESS T;;ii~m;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-==;;;;:;;=====;;;;;.;=~t-::==---------:::---::~-=-' Stamps Can lick· TRANSACTIONS .
Inflation W 011nd
81 ILYVIA PORT~
Wblle the llOck ntartet lns been motUy a cfijaater ror
10 yean and stock valuee bave Jaued far behind Inna.
don'• ero1Jao of tbe dollar. at.amp& bavt continued to c:Umb
u mucb at 20 peretnt a year. Often tbc up1u.r•e ln values
haa been even more 1pectacular. and no reversal ls
fOHleeD.
A new force behlnd the splralln1 of stamp prtces is the
emercence ot the bit-money a~cate. Added to the ap.
proxJmatety ono million serious Individual stamp coll~·
tort in tbll c:ountey, the bls·money syndicates put ldab
leverage on .prices u
well aa provide a price · rtoor. The uamp
market bu mov•d
beyond tbe bobby of
grade school and hlJb
school )'OUDISters and
into tM area of m~r
...
lnvesti:oents. "
How do amateurs ietlnto the philatelic market! What
are the guidelines and lbe pitfalls to avoid!
-START AS A GENERAL COLLECl'O& AND lftvett
small sWN. Then develop a specialty and stu~ it. Get a
-100d deelet'..nd.-. tbe.~ ~»~!J.. ' ..
-Join a local stamp club. Attend M1ction1. Learn by
reading and-listening-~experts. --
-Avoid low.price stamps, which rarely show strong
gains. Focus on lhe $50 to $500 ranee for stanen. New la·
sues, which include U .S.· commemoratives, may be
aesthetically pleasing, but they offer only minor prcepects
for appreciation.
-Don't waste. money on cheap pack.U of at ampa."
Concentrate on higber·prlced spedmens.
-DON'T BUY WDOLE SHEETS OF ordinary new
stamps, for devaluation of lhe currency can 1l11b their
value. The prices of J)ost-1943 U.S. stamps bave net
changed from their face valu~ <or have even declined
below face values>. Their sole use is as postaae.
-Beware of improbable "bargains" of any sert. A
"stamp doctor" can manufaclure· appareoUy valuable er·
rors and varieties and' "improve" a stamp's qualJty to
fl eece the gullible. On any "bargain" offer, get the advice
of a dealet' or a reputable committee of stamp experts.
usually found in large philatelic societies.
-Be on guard against counterfeltlng. Ask dealers for
written "statement..-. of quality." that includes the promise
of a refund if stamps turn out to be bogus. The American
Philaletic Society. State College, Pa .• and the Philatelic
Foundation in New York have authentication services available for a fee.
-PEOPLE WHO WANT TO S~LL old collections
should have them appraised by reputable dealers or auc·
tioneers and compare the estimates. Stamps attached to
origtnal leUers may have high vatue.
Market Discounts
Hint of Rate Hikes
NEW YORK <AP> -Indications lbat the Federal
Reserve was taking steps to raise intereat rates as a
meansofstabllizingthefallingdoUarfailedtocutintoaatock
market rally today which was spurred on by an expnsalon of
concern for the dollar by President Carter.
The Dow Jones average of 30 fn4.ustrlals, cloeed up 7 .45
points toBM.58.
Advances continued to hold a 2.1 lt'ad over declines on the
New York Stock Excban1e.
Money market observers said lti9ppearecl that tbe Fed
waa raialng abort·te.rm Interest 1'ates, a common devtce to cut down the money sqppJy and contto.l inflaUon.
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WHAT AMaX 010
NEW Y~I( t.it.11'1
'"'
I -.
-DM. Y "'-OT Television (
TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTIN~S
Sl•pleUle
• I
Madge-Sinclair und Robert Hooks pluy
a couple who move Crom Detroit to a
small Georgia town looking for H more
peaceful lire in the-TV movie ··Down
Home,•• airing tonight at 8 on CBS.
Channel 2. "' au...: be Zae cw-.
Matllyn Sokol, Dudley
"·-~-~ ... --... ~ 7'SIOl§.wa UAMCW8
WOALDNEWI
TONIOHT
• 11.0V!LUCY
Ethel's ~ ends
up -"" Fr.cl end Alctly
lp1lr1g"" &he glriL
8) fHEF.BJ.
irtie F .8.1. ttlel to ptWent a
@"0-lnNew~
• ..w::Ha. I UttAl!R
AEPCMf ii) .O(ER"8 WILD
Oaa•~£u•i•••
I KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles
KN8C(NBC) Los Angeles e KTI..A (Ind ) Los Angeles 8 KABV TV (ABC) Los Angeles
Cl) KFMB (CBS) San Otego G KK>-TV (Ind.) Los Angeles
tll KCST (ABC) Sao Diego
1 KTTV (Ind.) Los Angeles
KCOP·TV (Ind) Los Angeles e KCET· TV (PBS) Los Angeles
• KOCE·TV (PBS) Huntington Beach
On KOCE To~•i
New Data Unveiled
In Rosenberg Case
~
By DONALD SANDERS
WASmNGTON <AP> -Public television, using newly dis·
closed mes to take another look at the Rosenberg atomic spying
case, raises some questions about the actions of two Judges in the
case tonight at 6 on KOCE, Channel 50.
A repeal with new material of ''The Unquiet Death of Julius
and Ethel Rosenberg" questions specifically the conduct of Judge
Irving R. Kaufman, who sentenced Julius and Ethel Rosenberg to
death and is now senior judge of the 2nd U.S. Court of Appeals in
New Yon City.
Television producer Alvin H. Goldstein and others connected
with the program told a news conference they have made repeated
efforts to contact Kaufman for comment without success. A dozen
members of the House have suggested an Inquiry into tbe posslbili·
ty or starting impeaehment proceedings.
.. DOCUMENTS F1tOM THE recently released FBI files give
evidence of two telephone calls to the FBI initiated by Judge Kauf-
man that seem to contradict his claim of detachment.'' the script
TUBE TOPPERS
··v~nG .,.,11•1 ,ency ..
N9wt't..O Ai.x Walker r«wne lo 1119 ~ Md
~ .. lof the cs. °' Ilia
Cllllclhood
....... IUthOf 01 ''The
~·· 0 MAYEM* "Su~tut• Oun"
KOC~ 9 6:00 -The Rosenberg
Case. A re·examirtation of the c&n·
troversial atomic spy case ol the 1950s
with new lnf ormation introduced <see story below 1.
8 QI POUCI ITOR'f
"Flf'I09'Prlnt"" A polloe Yet·
•lrl Ill the Latent Prlnll
OM.on Qtawe dlecoW· -oect with 1111 job unlll
IOll'le ~ed ectlon
2:001~
....... ''VtctlM"" (19811
D1r11 80garde, Sylvie Synw.
I OET-'ART '
~ • NEWS
MOVIE •
•• "The Tingler" (l9601
Vincent Price, Judllfl
Evalyn.
Kn.A llf 8:00 -That's Panthertain-
ment. Clips from five of the ''Pink Pan· ther" movies. ·
""' ..... -perepectNoe.. ~ • t40GAH'• HlftOd
Hogen ICMlnM to Oec> a
velueble l)lllntlng out ol
Ooec'tno'• ~ C~ 8 9:00 -·'The Deadly Trap."
Frank Langella stars as a man trying to
break away from an espionage organiza.
lion in this 1972 movie with Faye
Dunaway.
• JOHNCMll
Compo1er-ph1101opher
CeQI II proflled. llOrlg With
• looll It hit contributiona,
ldlM end lrwentlona. 11:001a•wo N€WI LOVE.AMENCAH
81'U
··1.0Ye And The Ohotee
Siie •. When 8lfl Ind Tippy
IUClion otf their ~
SIOnS pnOf to cliYof OiftO,
they find IMh ltlf'n vllu-
1bll. G MOVIE • * "The Hl'Wk 01
Catlllt" ( 19641 Jerry
Cobb, M11Y AMI. A young
Sp1nl1h noble191tn
~ cunninO Ind .......
ful hlC>fdplay to regain hit
ngll1tu1 1n11er11ance from
U'll evil g<>11Wnor. (2 1w1. I tD THE 000 COUPLE
After drl¥ing each ottier to
nut dlltrlCtlon. , .... and a..... 1ttend a group
lherllpy .-ion.
• FIJINWOOD 2NQtfT
Hoet 8*111 OlmOle Ind 1111
co-ft09t Jwry Hubblrd
WllCOnMI gut9tS How.-d
Pllmlr. Merle Jeae•. MOr·
ton Rote end Or. Oegl>od
In 1M ~of Normlfl ~·· Oft·bllt comedy tllll(.-wty ltlow.
• OQ<CAVETT °'*'= &t1hl l<ltt. (A) G MACNEIL I LIHAEA REPORT .
11:IO 9 (I) HAWAII AY&O
• ''Raitt Of CoW. FIMh Of
DtaJh" McOerrett
-c:i-tor.,,°'* lml'O-
glet IUlpaCttd °' murder.
(R) e 1'0NQHT
Hoat: Johnny Carso".
Owtea: Betty wtwt.. Mefie
Earle. ~ carroa.
JotlnnyY~. 8 1WIUGKf ZONE
• GCTeMART
MM go'9 to a ...,..... fllMt
to 001*' a lilt of KAOS
-~WOAU> HlW8 TONIGHT
MJRNING
12:00 8 TWIUOHT lOHE
Tiie eaptlM of a crutled
8-25 bomM can't flgwe °"' wtletl he .. °' wNit ~It· ·~ Art ~Id wummons
tram the IRS throwa R8lpt!
Into•~
12:IO 8 MOVIE • • • • .. Juliet Of . Tiie
Splrita"' I t9851 Sylve
KOldna. Marlo Pleu. Our·
Ing • ~ •• )'OUnO ....
IMrnt !hat ti. hUtbllld nu 1>e111 unllllthlul end
deeic*J IQ eontront ttlm
wtlh the fact. 12 llrl.)
• MOvtt **'"' ""Tom. Dick And Harry" 1194 ti Burg ...
Meredith. Ginger Rogera.
A tovety Y°""G woman it
fOfced to c:nooee ~
tlw• boyfrtends. 12 lw'l.I
• MOYIE-
··~ "The Lone Hind" (1954) B#bllrl H•. Joel
McCrM. When • ~
jOlrl9 • gtouc> of outllwa he lcllal the r..,.ct ol ,. _
end the lOve ,. ;._ wlte
,_fOrhkn (Uw .• 30min.)
1~9 (J) C88 LA~ MOVIE * *'h '"VMllln'" (1971)
RICh8'd BUf'ton. ''"
McSMne. A llldistlC ttllef
end ,.. ~ plltl •
~ P9Y1"ol robbery 8 0 MC MY8TEJW
MOYll
• • "Spic• Witch
Murdlre.. ( 19781 Sam
Groom, Tllhl Stlf'llng
1:008 TOMOMOW
Oueata: W1ll1ce .J.
~. IMd.-of thll
counvy'a Mua*M: Oreoe
t-..aae MOW * .... ,,.,., Lady" (19391
MatY E1lle. W.iter PIOQeOO.
2'-.S7 I NEWS 1::07 MOVI£ • • * ··Bri de C1in~
C 0 .0 ." C 1941) Bette Davi•. ~ Clgney.
4:000 MOVIE •·~ ··storm In A l~" I 1837) Rair Harrison, Vlvlen lAlgh • ··1 NfW8· 4;10 MO\ltE * * "High SellliOn FM spe." C 19871 P«• Van
&yc:a. Letitia ~.
dO.MOW • • * "Born To a. Bad'.
(1950).Joel\ Fon....,_, Rob-
-' Ayln.
4:IO 8 STEVE EDWARDS
Tlo•rsda9'• .·
Daytime Mo11if"fl
t.«>RNING
11:30 GJ * * * · 'Mlsa Sadi. ThompSOn.. ( 19541 Jose
Ferre<, Rita Hl)'WOrth. ft
young -oman with • quea..
tlonabte pasl becomes
1nV01111d wltri 1 Marine and
1 minitter on a Pacihc:
lllend. 12 llrS., 20 min. I
AFTERNOON
12:00 D • • ~ ""IS1enbUI"
( 1957) Errol Flynn. Come!
8ofeherl. AHer five ~,._
• tra~ lO 19'~
but to rec:ov. S200.oot 40
dilmonda. ( 1 "'·· 30 min.) 1:00 I.ti • * "Aide"The Tiger·· :
C 197 H George MOllf Pt
' erv. Vlctone SNw. All•
hill ~· murder. ~ niglltdUt> ownet Mltct.es
the ayn0icall"1 lelder. (I
tw •• 30 mm I 3:308 **'~''The L~ns"
( 1967) J-MICAr1hur.
Alchatd Todd. A ~
ptofeaor aetl hlmMlf up
es a se1t -proc111med
prophet o4 the "hippie'"
ITIOllerlllnt atter he joins
-two 1tudents Qpelled tor
publllhing en avent~de
~ .-.paper.
(1hr .. 30 min.)
'One Day' Tops
But ABC Still Rules Roost
NEW YORK (AP> -CBS'
"One Day at a Time" was the
week's top.rated TV program
for the third Um.e in four weets.
but ABC continued its domina·
lion in the networks:. battle for
the prime time viewer. figures
from the A. C Nielsen Company
show.
CBS. in fact. listed three of the
four most-watched shows for the
week ending Aug. 13. including
No. 3 "Alice" and fourth-ranked
"M·A·S-H." But ABC had run·
nerup "Three's Company" and
three others in the top 10.
ABC claimed the No. l pro-
gram nearly every week dunng
the fall and winter, but CBS
shows have been top-rated eight
of the 11 weeks sine~ the end o(
May.
EIGlfl'EEN OF the w~ek's ~
most-watched shows were r~
runs. The exceptions were an
A BC Sunday night movi~.
··Newman's Law." tied for 12th.
and "Switch" on CBS, tied for
No. 17.
CBS and NBC each had two
programs among the bottom
five . ABC's "Hardy Boy ~
Mystery" was No. 59, followed
by "Just for Laughs'' on NBC.
"The Carol Burnett Show" and
"Baby, I'm 'Back." on CBS. and
"Black Sheep Squadron" on
NBC .
says. .
"On Feb. 17. 1953. the Court of Appeals cranted the Rosen·
bergs a stay of execution pending an appeal. Two days later . . .
an FBI agent recorded the following conversation with Judge
Kaufman: 'l would like to see the Department of Justice lake a
firm stand on this matter and appeal directly to the Supreme Court
for an immediate decision'."
... ....,.....
JULIUS AND ETHEL ROSENBEAO AT 1951 TRIAL
'Their Espionage Cne Revived on TV Tonight
It was ABC's third week in a
row in first place, with a rating
for the most recent period of 15.
The networks say that means in
an average prime time minute,
15 percent of the homes in the
country with TV were watching
ABC.
CBS' RATING for the week
was 14.6, NBC's 13.4.
Here are the w~k 's top 10 pro·
grams:
The Rosenbergs, convicted of passing tbe secret of the atomic
bomb to Russia, were executed at Sing Sing Prison on June 19
1953. The documentary will be shown Monday night by the Publl~
Broadcasting Service. Demonstrations are planned ln New York
and other cities.
JUSTICE WlLLlAM 0 . DOUGLAS•of the S~me Court bad
issued a stay of execution wbicb would not norm have been act-
ed on by the court until tbe new term starting in ber. But the
late Chief Justice Fred Vinson called the court baek into special
session, and it overturned Douglas' stay by a vote of S.3. "Accord·
lng to an FBI memo, Supreme Court Justice Vlnaon and Atty. Gen.
Hubert Bronwell bad already decided on a strategy to block
Justice Douglas' stay," the program says. "Clearly, according to
the FBI memo, Justice Vinson bad violated Canon 17 of the judical
code of ethics ln h1s promtse·to help vacate the stay."
An appeal to President Dwight D. Eisenhower to stay the ex·
ec)rttoo was denied.
Also convicted wJth Uae Rclseober'5-.o1t a cbal',. of eonapiracy
was Morton Sobell. He was sentenced to 30 years and served 18~.
5"'1& of them tn Alcatraz.
FtcbtJ.ng to clear their parents• names are tbe Roseoberp' two
IOOS, Michael, 35, and Robert, 31, who have adopted tbe last name
of Meeropol. their foster parents. Michael was 10 and Robert 6
when tbe1r parents were ex~uted.
DAlLV PILOT
1 •
TV Newscasts Assaikd
.. ONE DAV AT a Time," with
a rating of 22.4 representing 16 3
million homes, CBS; "Three's Company,." 21.3 or 15 .5
million, ABC ; ••AJice." 21 or
15.3, CBS; "M·A-S-H," CBS, and
.. Fantasy Island," ABC. both
20.9 or 15.2 million ; NBC Mon·
day Movie. "Colombo," 19.7 or
14.4 million ; "Barnaby Jones."
CBS, and ''Love Boat.'' ABC,
both 19.2 or 14 million, and "Lou
Grant," CBS, and "Carter Coun·
try." ABC, both 19. l or 13.9
milllon.
SAN DIEGO CAP> -A former
president of CBS News says
local television news shows are
spotty and often cover relatively
insignificant and easy to gel
stories.
"There's tendency to get
what's easy to follow, to follow
the police calls, to do the visual
stories," said Sig Mickelson, 65,
·•and most or these aren't very
significant."
M lckelson is here as a dis·
tinguisbed visiting J;lrofessor in
telecommunications at San
Diego State University. This
fall, he will teach two under·
graduate classes, a . graduate·
level course.
MICKEUON, WOO ran CBS
News until 1961, predicts most
network news shows will even-
tually expand from one-half
hour to an hour. And he
forecasts doom for the television
documentary,
"There'll be some ftoundering
around at first," Mickelson said.
"But there are enough good
stories ln mos~ places to fill a
60-minute show. And television
is building up a cadre of better·
trained, better-educated people
wbo can handle these kinds of
• stories."
Coming to San Dleao titler
three years in Washington. D.C .•
wbere h e presided over the mer~er ot Radio Free Europe
• l
and Radio Liberty, Mickelson
views the budding taxpayers' re·
volt as a positive force on
television n ews because, he
says, it forces assignment
editors and their staff to seek
out vital issues over visua l thrills. •
HE ACKNOWLEDGED the
success of TV "ma~adne"
shows like "60 Minutes, ' which
offers three mini-documentary
segments weekly within a one· Jlour-fonnat..-alona with iewer
response and commentary.
"I think it'll bold lor a while
and then slump," Mickelson
said.
The next 10 shows:
"Laverne and Shirley," ABC;
"Hawaii Five-0.'' CBS. ABC
Sunday Novie, "Newman's
Law," and "All in the Family."
CBS. tie: ··uttt~ House on the
Prai .. ie," .NBe; .. Etg ·
Enou&h." ABC; "Happy Days,'
'ABC, and "Switch," CBS, tie1 and "Good Times" and "The
Jeffersons," both CBS.
"New 111c1 sllbllal-1peakl to
..,... •• (ttlq,.
the INU'Mftl of IDllsic." .,. __
-. P.t'IER FRAMPTON ' THE BEEGBES I
.. • ""--v ''SGrf. P£PPE¥S •
• ~,f.liiA"I HEARTS CLUB BAND''
i
1 •
ENTERTAINMENT I MUSIC BOX I RECORDS , W.clneedey. Augu1t ti, 1'J78 DAIL V PILOT 8'f
.B011Jl Fans Get a Kick Out of Ethel
.\I'll .. EtMl Merman la Just at lew fllcb of
the calendar awa7 from acbievlnl the dreaded ll
tle of •~enarian but tl '• a aale bet U,at ab ·u creel Uie d.8vmin1 of her 70tb birtbd11 with a
yawn and a ftw ban from an lrvl111 Berlin
tuambet.
For Etbel, bl•11 bt r , ahowed u1 at lbe
Hollywood Bowl last weekC!J\d
that. au U.. old' matic ia aUU tbere ln abuodaoce and tbftt a
can beat out a aahy ballad wttb
tbe beat of them.
·SH TOLD VS AT TBS
OQ\ael lhllt abe •u ~U...S to •ln• au nllbt ll t.bat ., •bat ..
wanted and 1he obll1•d •
dell1btod aucb ce •llh eocon
after oncore. moatoft.bem b'Om a
Merman IOfll book \hat conta1nl
aome of~ sreat411t IOft&I ever .. --. wrltlfn.
Backed b)' the Loa Aaaelea Pbllarmonic
TOM BARLEY
Mu81c8o•
Orchestra, Ethel pronced around th~ 1t11e wllh al
lHll 80 percent Of tbe fire and fervor that was
p11ckln1 lhem ln at concert halla 30 years ago.
Geor1e Oerabwlo, lrvlng Berlin and Cole
Portt"r were llf'\01\I her favored composers and
abo F,•ve ua memorable renditions or s~h class.ks
111 ' Blow Gabriel, Blow," "I Get A Kiele Out Of
You" lind man1 or the 1olden oldles from "Annie
Oet YourOun.'
IT WAS AN EXHAUSTING repertoire -or at
least. lt should have been -but It appeared to have
Uttle e(fe(t on Ethel who pranced olL the state ln
us spriahtly a fashion as she skipped onto It.
She remembered to remind us u ahe went into
her Irving Berlin medley that tM crand old man ot
American muatc la now 90 and sUll Un.ldlna away
at his keyboard.
Sbe dldn 't remind us that she Is now 69.
pushing 70. and brlnglng uudiences to lhelr feet at •a time when many entertainers of hera1e and ac·
compllshments are putting t.belr feet up and look·
in& back on the past with s~tlafactlon.
~
NOT ETHEL MERMAN. SHE'LL be back at
the Bowl next year. exercising thole fantastic voe at
chords and hitting us with that hlgb stepp{n1 energy
that some of us half her age just don't hav~.
Great stuff. Ethel. God bless you, love. You
are one of America 'a greatest entertainers.
~heryl Ladd: Finally She's Singing
81 JAY SBAUUTT
HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Cheryl Ladd ~ame
here ln 1'11 to sin1. Two flop records later, she
&l'led acting. Last season. she IOl her big break ln
ABC's ··CbarUe'a Angels" after Farrah Fawcett·
Majors left it.
Last week, Billboard maiuine's "Top 100"
pop music chart said one tune, "Think It Over,"
wa• '8th In rankina and beaded for 1reater
popularity. The slnaer: Cheryl Ladd.
A\ 17, lhe pretty, blonde·balred Huron, S.D ..
native finally ls aucceedln& ln her orieinal g<><il.
She began singing while a tyke.
then, after high school, foured
ln a band before cpming here .
Mlss Ladd, lunching on fish
ln her trailer behind the 20th
Century.Fox sound stage where
her aeries is made, said the re·
cord companies "weren 't
breaklng down my door."
"WHEN I FIRST CAME to
uoo LA, the music was all bard
acid·rock groups or Joan Baez.Joni Mitchell."
She smiled and said she ls of nelther musical
persuasion. Her bag simply is "pop," which in the
case or her debut album for Capitol Records.
"Cheryl Ladd," is or a melodic, gently rocking
nature.
Those who don't know she began as a singer
usually dismiss her as just another pretty TV star
out poslng as a vocalist;she concedes :
"When you tell people you've been involved in
the music industry eight years and they've never
heard or you, it's like saying you're an actor, an
Comedians Reunited
LOS ANGELES <AP) . bumbling outlaws from
-Tim Conway and Don the original "Apple
Knotts are reunited in Dumpling Gang."
• Walt Disney Produc· lions' .. The Appl e
Dumpling Gang Rides
Again."
Conway and Knotts
reprise their roles as the
The film also stars
Tim Matheson, Elyssa
Davalos, Jack Elam ,
Harry Morgan and Ken·
neth Mars.
Hilarious
-Reo11 Pll1UM llA8C TV
-Re• Re.a N Y 0.•ly N_...t
aclreu, to 1<>meone when you're not in a series.
••THEY SAY, •WHAT HAVE you done?'"
However , Capitol exeeutlves knew her work.
sbe said, from the early Hollywood days when she
cul a single record for tbem <the other single that
flopped was for another label>.
The "Charlie's Angell'· exposure didn't hurt.
either. · ··1~ I were just coming to them off the streets.
it would be a much different situation," she said.
Not only would the interest be less, so would be her
freedom ln choosing material.
ON nus GO-ROUND. thoueh. she said. they
let her pick three tunes for hel' album. includlng
·'Think it Over.'· and her producer the rest.
·<They reallrtnaated that it <a bitt-would be m
......""'°".~ .. Of l\11.l••t~Cll()ll•
lDDDOurfsnMOI C ••rt•-c-...... (jiji).
1un Wiii YIU 11•11T n Wll
WE TO ID llCITI Ill MDVIII
· PETEA SEllEU
c ··~ ' . Stm~ HM&T LOM•lltlJ Wfl8E& • •
111it1t; DYAN CANNON·
•w1i< NeMIV MANCINI • fucvt•YC Prtdvar TONY AfJAIU
Scrttl\ ha, bJ fWK • I ClAB-tuKf EtwAIDS
T~'~.~ IPGI
IAIM'S
SO. COAST Plll' Cntl.._,
JCIU1i1111 w..2rn
lllt ....
MAll'S "HEAVEN
SO. COASJ PWA CAN WAIT" (PG) ::.:: i;:::;J 12:'5-2:35-4:30-l:25 •mt 1:20-10:1S
.,,...,.. .. ., .........
"'C&.OSI IMCOUMl9lJ °' THl'nMDIM• • .........
the grooves because or the tapes they had or me.
because of the seriousness with which I wanted to
be a recording artist." she said
She frowned when told her visitor. whlle in·.
terviewlng Ben Vereen last year, expressed dis·
beUef when Vereen said the newest of Charlie's
Angels would duet with him in a coming ABC
music special.
uso DID EVERYONE E~E." she said of
such advance reactions to her work in the special,
aired l8$l March.
But she lit up when told Vereen, who doesn't
praise singers lightly. said of her: "She·u~\&q>rise
you. She's good." ·
"Oh,·· beamed the singing Angel. "It's won·
derful to hear that. He's not. too good. just one of
the great.est performers around."
·-~~o)
t
Togethente••
Peter Sellers and his actress wife. Lynnl'
Fre d e rick. are shown in Vienna where
they're filming a movie. "The Prisoner of
Zenda.··
.. ..........
..... ,. .. ~ .... . ........... ~ .......... ...,
•
"
..
.. DAILY PILOT Wtdneedly. AUCIUlt 11. tt71
O•t of Shadow
Hank Williama Jr. Back to 'Life.'
By 800TI SllDdD
MONTGOMERY, Ala. <AP> some are bol"n O'Ut. me ath&e\'
1reatn . Amf aome. Uke Hank
WUllama Jr., bue area Uu'ult
upon them.
Tb na It ot • cow.tey mUl.lc
leaend, W Warns atnee 1151 bu ruled
the void left wMn hls bard·Uvtnl
raUter, at eat •• dled ln the baclt
seat of a new tt.'53 CadUJac.
But now, after nearly 21 yean.
Hank WWiaD>S Jr. aays be'a t.hrwah
"llvln• for more than one man."
WllUam1 waa onl1 8 when he was
tbruat onto the atqe, .. packqed as
the 1hoat ol Hank WUUams." And the
country mus\c tabllshment col\·
spired to keep it that w1,y, be says
ALL NASuvtu.t: wanted me to do
wus sin& Daddy's son1s. drus like
htm a nCl act hkc btm, .. be says
· 'Thnt wos fine for them. but it
w a5n 't all n1ht for me · ·
lniUaUy Williams "thought being
Hunlt 's boy was the greatest thing in
the world." An idol by proxy, he was
a success as Jona as he "kept doinC
Daddy."
1t didn't take lona, though, for the
s cbiiophrenlc careet" to take it.s toll.
As a teen-ager , Williams says he
drank heavily. In 1973 he turned to ,
pills. Like his fathet had done 20
. years before, he besan in china closer
to ruin.
DIVORCED FROM his tirst wife,
WiOiams-~man:ied shor1ly after re·
turning to Cullman. Ala. His new
wire. Becky, is described by friends
as the "good hearted woman" or so
cnany country ballads. ~ "It: was Ole wbOTe coun(ry-mus1c
syndrome," he explains. "I woke up
drunk. went to sleep drunk. No
h angovers . Booze. sleeplessness.
pills. depression. It just got to be t.6o
much."
A faltering marriage and the
loneliness, music and alcohol that
were his legacy "ganged up" on him.
''So 1 tried the check-out route," be
says.
His suicide attempt was aborted by
friends, but it led him to a Nashville
psychiatrist who advised him to
leave Music City.
"MYt>SYCHIATRJST told me that
Nashville had ~tmost succeeded in
making, me H;m~ WOliiun.s ; .. just
like he is -dead ," says Williams.
The quiet, picturesque community
o f Cullma n -located between
N'ashville, where his father's legend
thrived, and Montgomery, where bis
father is buried -offered a perfect
s anctuary for Williams.
So in 1974 he moved to Cullman.
setting up household in a modest but
s pacfous A-frame home overlooking
a Jake -a place where be could
Movie Studio
Seeking Talent
LOS ANGELES <AP> -Columbia
Pictures is looking for acting stu·
dents for its Talent Development
Workshop starUng about Oct. 15.
Audition for the 12·week workshop
will be held in New York Sept. 18·22,
Chicago Sept. 25·27, and Los Angeles
Oct. 2-6. Columbia is accepting mail
applications at its headquarters at
the Burbank Studios.
Tuition is free and it is anticipated
that some graduates wiJl be offered
contracts. •
•
,,,...._..._
NOT LIVtNO FOR DAO
Hank WllUama Jr.
nurture his own musical concepts.
T.bose concepts blossomed the next
year when he recorded a landmark
country-rock album, "Hank WWtams
Jr. and Frt'ttnds." His days of singing
"crying-in-your-beer" songs were
over.
THEN TRAGEDY struck. While
c.llmbing a Montana mountain in
August, W75, Wttli•ms was swept 500
feet down the ragged side of a moun-
t.ain.
- -·'There-was a boulder sticking
straight up," be recalls, and I just hit
it straight on, head first. It just
literally split my face in balf:"
His condiUon was critical for three
days. Fifteen days passed and bis
weight dropped from 205 pounds to
160 potmds. At one point, "I resolved
myself that music was over," be
says.
Once be was moved from intensive
care to the reha bilitation unit,
bowever, doctQrs brought him a
guitar. And with Johnny Cash singing
at bis bedside, Williams joined in,
slowly at first, but eventually "roll·
ing along."
BY OCTOBER, Willlams was back
in Cullman, driving his pickup truck,
sbootlng bis guns, makis:'g ''hom~:
grown music" and "feebng good.
But five operations were necessary
to reouild his race. "It was a difficult time," he says of
the months of recuperation. But
those months taught him "how to re·
1ax. to enjoy life," something "Dad·
dy never learned to do."
Re reallud, too, that his father
"doesn't need me to keep his music
alive." He s ays, "I can stay home
and Daddy's royalties will roll in
every few months whether I'm out
there singing his songs or not."
STILL, WILLIAMS' act includes
some of his father 's hits -"Your
Che ating Heart," "He y , Good
Look in'," "Jambalaya." Williams
says, "I'll never leave them out."
One song missing from the act,
however , is "Lovesick Blues," which
established bis father as the greatest
draw the Grand Ole Opry ever had.
"I sang 'Lovesick Blues' for 20
years," says Williams, recalling
those years spent as his fitther's
"ghost." "I figure I've put in my
time. Let somebody else sing the
blues."
ABIAZI
N OW PLAYING
EDWADS'llWNlf•I
Newpclft Beach 64-4·0760
• .
ct ... ..,. ••
Wes'"*'9ter 092-4493
~V"~ Al"•~A~
• COVlA POUTICS ..... DA!I Y PILOT
--·
&fJ W@lill [[
®@[[Wfi·@@
..
ENTERTAINMENT I MUSIC FEATURE
MAllNEES SATURDAY & SUNDAY
.... r Pre•laed ......... c.. ''SGT. PEPPER'S LONELY
' DEAR PAT: My granddaughter sent a watch HEARTS CLUB BAND" (PG)
to me from another state. When it needed repairs,
I sent, it to Regency Time Ud. in New York City "THE BUDDY HOLLY STORY"
with my warranty and $4.50 for service. The watch ·JOHN 'f'IAYOl.TA "THE SWARM" (PG)
was returned to me, but it's not runnina and won't .......,..,.,
even wind. I wrote two letters inqulring what I 'WHO'LL STOP THE RAIN?"
should do next, but I haven't received any 'WHERE'S POPPAr(R)
response. I don't want to return it aeain if the ~-ii~tii.iiiilii'I~---------· -... ~~!· ~---( repairs aren't going to be made. I "THE CHEAP DETECTIVE" (PGJ
LS., Costa ~sa "MURDER BY DEATH" Regeaey TiJDe Ltd. advises yoa to mall lite
watcll for repair at no charce. lnclade an
ezplaaatory note and a copy of yolll' caneeled
check. Insure the package and address lt to Ute
auea&loa of Miss P . Gun1burJ. Al10 pat a
.. Rerepalt" notation on &be eavelope. Gu.n1bur1
told AYS that Rege'ncy doesn't answer
corres~e because It "receives handreds of
leUen, met lt woald nke at lean two fallUme
employees to answer the mall." U yoa.r watch ls not properly repaired this tlme, letAYS know.
Fae. nee,.,... .. .,.....,.
.
"HEAVEN CAN WAIT" (PG)
"FO~J.A r · (PG)
"FOULPLAY"{PG)
Kalett•Ne••
Stadlvllt
"FUN WITH DICK & JANE" •
"CONVOY"
"EAT MY DUST .. (PG)
DEAR PAT: When I was a llttle girl my
great-aunt used some homemade concoction to
repel llies. If I recall correctly, she used 1l li
cream ana-aom-e other comDlon household
ingredients and left the mixture oa...a.~late. The rues just didn't come. around. I'd reaUy like to
know what this mixture contained so l can see if it ••••!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!' J•----::l!'mrmfr'r!lllfllf!r---~ really works. ' N G.K., Mission Viejo • Tbe onJ.y Oy repellent recipe A YS cOul4 locate
tlaat uses cream. Is oae from an lUI farm
encyclopeclla. It promises f1les wDJ HJ 1ooA1e If
yoa eo~bble one-ball teaspoon of powdere4 black
pepper WWI one teaspooa each of browa niar and
cream, and spread tbe mixture on a plate. It may
not work. ba& U's worth a t ry.
a .. 2ma1cerswu. \'al_.le
DEAR PAT: How much would tt cOLSt to hire
someone to do the jobs done by a rullttme
homemaker? O.L .. Coa-ona del Mnr
A lot! Tbe American CouncU of Ltfe Insurance
estima&es lt woald cost more than sn,• a year to
hire outside help to do the cookbtg, cleaning and
nameroasodler jobs done by a homemaker. .
Ba9'elt't Seeta Etfe Care •..ic.
DEAR PAT : I ordered an eyes ight
improvement book from Instant Improvement Inc.
on March 9. My check has been cashed, but l
never got the book. Will you see if you can get it
for me? I'd rather have it tban a refund. .
E .W., Ne1fP')rt Beach
lutant Improvement's Southel'ft Callfornla
dlstribu&or was contactff by A YS. ud yoar Ion&
overdue book Is lD tbe mall. The volume yoa ordered, "Born Again
Vision,•• includes information about tbe Bates
System of eye exercises. Edncators al the
Soatbern Calllornla College of Optometry &old A YS
they do no& encoa.rage penons wltb eye problems
to rely oa precepts adVO«:a&H ln the Bates Sy1tem
-ftrst proposed more tllan 4t yean ago. It was
advised tbat yOll seek tile aervlce9 of a Uceued
optometrist by asking for references from tbe
Orange Coanty bMnch of the American
Op to metric Assoc latlon (556 · 38Z l).
()ptllalmologls&s <M.D., are kusted lb oage "4 If
tge Yellow Pages.
"BUDDY HOLLY STORY" (PG)
"THANK GOO ITS FRIDAY"
"HEAVEN CAN WAIT"
"AMERICAN HOTWAx" (PG)
"LL DRIV&·IN~ onN .. .lOP.M. ... HTLY
Cttlkl U"•w l: "'" U"lft' • K\cfdle f'lanrou"6
The big band sounds of yeste~ear are alive and well at the
Disneyland Hotel, where Btll 10le and his orchestra put a brassy
new shine on those nostaJglc "oldies". (Fans will remember Biii as
the Tommy Dorsey look-alike In the film, "New York, New York".)
Vocalist Chris COstello sings and Biii plays those danceable,
romanceable tunes every Sunday night from 1 to 10c30 p.m.
It all takes place in the Grand Ballroom. where there'll be soft
lights, drink service aU'our table, and a huge dance floor for
getting in the swing. 'nbkets are $3 for singles; $5 for couples.
KQRB/KBOB AM·FM bfoedcMta ltft trom the hottl .-y &lnday from 7:15 to 7:45 p.m.
Friday Night "Old California" Parties
Mexicaa Fiesta
First a "Welcome, Amigo" drink.
Then on to the buffet, featuring char-
coal·brolled New York strip steak
with ranchero sauce, arroz con pollo,
enchiladas, frljoles, salads, vege·
tables and desserts. Throughout the
evening, a strolling Mariachi baod.
f olklor1c dancers Md a plf\ata-break·
Ing party for kids ol all ages.
"Aug. 4 and 18.
Western Cookout*
Start the evening with a "Welcome,
Pardner" drink. Then enjoy the buf·
fet-charcoat-brolled New V()ft( strip
steak, barbequed chicken, Texas
chlll, beans, com on the c9b, butter·
milk biscuits, salads and desserts.
Accompanied by entectalnment by
our country western band. square
dancing for all, and a group sing.
along.
•July 28, Aug. 11 and 25.
For ,...rv•tlona, CIH 711·llOO. ut. 1215. Mee lncludet
grHlltJ and tu. ......... 12..50; cNlchn under 10-17.
S~Deli LwwJt.
You d .. JOn your own
IUpef'·undwfeh, Our
chef bUUd• It your way-
then Pllff on the potato
.,lad, a Juicy dlll pickle,
. and• bowl ol homemade
IOUP or chlll. WHkdaya
In La Cant Ina: 11:30-2:30.
~dining"' a comfQftabl•
Old Engllah aettlno. Lunch! 12-2:30.
Dinner. t.11.
I EIVaqae~
Tht at~a are thick, Juicy and bfolled
to pertec:Uon In our eatly Callfotnla
atyle alutt hou .... Dinner. 5:30-11 .
.Saaby Bralida. ' . ChMIPIQnt bullet lncludf• • apec· 0 .: tacular dllPl•Y of boutbon.glazed
• • \ l\em, llQ ot lamt>. attamtblp round
.. , • • of tiMf, ch .... bllntzu, e>melettta,
egg a, NI.eta, chHHa and other
..,.claltlH Pluun ttTIYOf tlnfulty
oe11c1ou1 dftMrta. And. or courae.
~ne. All fof Juet 18.95
Ctl•f'• 'Kllehen ando.tdtn. 9:30-2:30.
' whole elov• \ill teupoon whole allspice
• ~ teUP.QOP cardamom aeeds
' me~ham·1l1e fresh California nee· tarin•. cut tnto balv•
3 tablelpoons salad oil
14 teUpe>on Hlt
l tab*poon chopped sreen onion
1 quart abredded welt.em iceberg lettuce
Comblne water. lemon Juk:e. sugar. orange
' peel, stncer and ayrup, and aptca in small aauce pan; 1Unmw tor 5 minutes. Place nee· tartne llalvee, cut aide down, in syrup, cover
ud cook for 1 minute. Tum ftWt carefully, cov-
er a1atn. and ~ l to 2 minutes, Just unW fruit
ta b~rely tender..: Rem(!Ye nect lrutl-lvillL-. aloU.ed apooo ana cool~ aynap down to v,
cup. Strain out spices. Cool syrup and add oil,
aalt and areen oo!oo ; blend wU. Arra.nae nec-
t•'11Aea oo a bed of shredded lettuce. Pour
dre11tn1 over fruit, and lettuce. or pass
aeparaWy. f4ake• 4 aervtnp.
Peach yogurt freeze with plum ripple.
Although frozen desserts have been around
since the time or Emperor Nero, frozen yogurt
is a rtew sensation from coast to coa:it.. Peach
Yogurt Freeze with Plum Ripple blends the
tanginess of yogurt with the natural sweet
flavor of fresh California peaches, then further
tantalizes your taste buds with a ripple of fresh
plum puree. It's a super summer refresher
that's easy to make · in an electric, or hand·
crank, ice creatn maker. .
PEACH YOGURT FREEZE
WITH PLUM RIPPLE
2 large eggs
% cup granulated sugar
Y .. teaspoon salt % cup milk _ ......... -.. .
1 ~ pounds freestone peaches (4 medium or 3 large)
l container (8 ounees> plain yogurt Cl
cup)
"'pc>und plums (3 small or 2 medium)
2 tablespoons suear for plums •
Beat eggs with % C\U>S suear awl aalt. Tum
milk into small saucepan; bring just to bc)lling. r
Gradually stir lnto egg mixture.
Return to saucepan; cook over very low
h eat, stirring const antly. until slightly
thickened. Do not allow lo boil after adding
eggs. Remove from heal and cool. Peel
peaches, and dice to measure about 2"' cups.
Turn into blender jar and blend smooth lo
measure 2 cups puree. Combine with cooled
custard and yogurt. Pour boilinl water over
plums and let stand 20 lo 30 seconds lo loosen
skins. Slip off skins and dice to measure :V. cup.
Blend to a smooth puree, as with peaches.
Stir in ~maining 2 tablespoons.sugar, and ehlll
while peacb mixture freezes. Tum peach mix·
,.. • •Wro-klto-A~~an. and freeze in band-~
or electric lee cream freezer. Ullne ·8 parta
cruahed lcaJo 1 pert rock salt · \
F~ anttl tt bec0tnea.dlfficult to tum <or
electric freezer appears lo .... tow>. Remove
daaher. Spoon chilled plum mixture over peach
freeze, and stir in lightly just to ripple. Drain
water from freezer tub, and repack wttb 4 parta
lee to 1 part salt. Makes about 1'4 quarts.
French peach·tart serves glazed peaches in a sunburst display.
FRENcli PEACB TART Pastry:
2 cups sifted all.purpose flour
6 tablespoons sugar
'4 teaspoon salt s tablespoons butter or margarine
2 tablespoons vegetable sboneninc
1 elf#• I
I teaspoon water
I,\ teaspoon vanilla
In large bowl mix to1ether
flour . sugar and salt. Rub tn but·
ter al\d shortening with fingers until mixture re·
sembles coarse oatmeal Oakes. In another bowl
beat egg with water and vanilla and pour all at
on.ce over flour mixture; mix lightly with fork.
Form into ball and chill at least 1 hour, or when
firm enough to handle. Roll out into 10.incb cir·
cle and place in 9 or 9\.'.i-inch tart pan, pressing
dough over side and bottom of pan. Cht11, then
bake in 375 degree oven U minutes or until
lightly browned. Cool.
Filing:
Y.i cup sugar s tablespoons cornstarch
2 tablespoons flour
~ teaspoon salt
PEACH MELBA GLACE PIE
2'!.a to 3 pounds fresh California peaches
2 tablespoons lemon juice
1 cupsuiar
21h tablespoons cornst.arcb
"' cup water
'!.a to 'h cup raspberry jam
1baked9-lnch pie shell, cooled
Peel, slice and whirl in blender enoqh
peaches to IQake 1 cup puree. In saucepan, com-
bine puree "1th sugar, cornstarch and water.
Cook over medium beat until mixture-thickens.
Cool; cblll 30 minutes. Meanwhileicoat pie shell
with ball the raspberry jam. Pee and slice re-
mainlnt Qeacbel t.o inM ... ~ cape-sllffd peaches; pour Into pie shell. Spt..a oeoled
peach glace over peaches. Chill at leut ! bours
or overnight. Just before aernn,, awirl rem$· t.na Jam on top. Makes 6 servtno. ·
To peel peaches, dlp intQ boillna water for
about 30 aecouda: tramfer wttb a~· apooa to
cold and sllp off stinl.
1~ cups milk
2 egg yolks, slightly beaten -
1 tablespoon butter or margarine
Y.i teaspoon vanilla
1 teaspoon brandy -In medium saucepan, mix tocetller aqar.
cornstarch, nour and salt. Graduall)' stir ID milk. Place over low beat and coot. atkrin8
constantly, until mixture thickens. about 20
mlnut.es. Remove from beat and stir a littJe of
the hot mixture into egg yolks, ~ Yolb back into sauce pan and cook 2 mmutes, stirring.
Remove from heat and stir ln butter. vanilla
and brandy. Chill 2 hours.
Peaches U4l &Jue: 3 tablespoons currant Jelly
1 tablespoon fresh lemon Juice t teaspoon brandy s large peaches, peeled and sliced
In small sauce pan, melt currant jelly, add
lemon juice and brandy; stir pntiJ smooth. Cool
slightly. Spread cooled filling over baked tart
shell. Dip peach slices in currant glue and ar-
range in spiral over custard. Pour remaining
glaze over peaches and chill at least l hour.
Makes 8 servings.
Sslad features·
baked nectarines
and turlcey.
!
.
"'
I•
_(2 DAILY f'tLOT
Spicy Mold
SPICED FRUIT RING onto a platter .. Serve
2 envelopes un· with cream mixture
flavored celalin with meat.a°" salads. Water SPICED.. ,L.EION•'
3\1; cups canned . F&\JIT pineapple juice l teaspoon whole
2 tablespoons mixed cloves pickUn1 spice 1 teaspoon whole all·
Sugar spice v. cup lemon Juice . 2 cinnamon sticks
1 cup sliced fresh (3-mcb long)
strawberries Water
1 can <8 oz.) plneap· 2 envel!>pes un·
pie chunks. well drained flavored gelatin ~ teaspoon ground 1 cup sugar . . ganger ~ cup lem!'n Juice .
v,. cup mayonnaise 2 cups sliced fruit ~ fop dairy sour Csuch as bananas. ap· cr~am pies. Pe~rs. grapes. . strawbemes; do not use
Soften gelatin m Ilia fresh pineapple>
cup of cold w.at~r. Place Tie cloves. allspice
pineapple JU ace and and cinnamon sticks in a
pickling spice in a smalJ piece of cheesecloth.
sa~cepan. Bring to a Place a long with l :V. ~11. Reduce heat and cups water in a small su~1mer. cove.red, for 3 saucepan. Bring to a
minutes; strain out and boil. Reduce heat anji
discard spices. P~ut simmer, covered. for 15
o".er softened gdatan; minutes; discard spices.
stir to dissolve. Mix Ilia Soften gelatin in lfl cup cup sugar and lemon cold water. Pour hot
jui.ce. Refrigerate until spiced mi!ture over sof·
m 1.x tu r e beg In s ~ o tened gelatin; stir to dis·
th a c k e n . ~ o Id 1 n solve. Mix in sugar and
s .tr a w be r r ~es. and lemon juice. Refri~erate
pineapple; pour . into ~ until mixture begins to
t:ttuart mold. Chill until thicken. Fold in fruit;
firm and. read~ l<? serve. Pour into a 1-quart mold.
Meanwhile, mix 1 teas· Chill until firm and
poon suga.r with ginger, ready to serve. Jus~
mayonnaise and sour before serving_ unmolQ
~rea~; chill until serv· gelatin onto a platter.:
irtg tame. Just before Serve with meats, saladSc
serving, unmold gelatin qr:asadessert .
• <UCIY er flOl19 Maws
i=RYIMG CHICKEN ....... ...,.,.
PORK SPARERIBS
IAltM I
~UCEDIACOM ..........
~MOIB>HAM
• f'MDA"I I 90l.PAI
ORN TORTILLAS
......... CUT
Gre1nlew
POTATOES .........
s1~ ,
10~ ......
a.lk
Wieners
la die mal'UMI' of a l'N.Dcb muters»ece. Mre'• a dllHrt. tart wttb Cellfomla character. Juley, frelh C11lfornl1 summer fNtt.a are stars
of thl1 h1Jclou1 tart and are 1rr1n1ed· in
bt1uUtul JeweJ·Uke mosaic layen. Wltb the
bount1 ot Callfomla fruit In UM market. you can
create your own 1lamorou1 tarts. the
t"Nneb wax, .
Start with a l1cey-ed1ed pastry sbell and a
layer of treeb California plum fWlna. Then ar-
ran10 more poached plum slices with other
1ummor fruits -'"'b California peaches.
1tedlesa 1tr11pes. n~tarlnet and Bartlett pean
-in a moflalc pattern and brush all with a
shimmery current Jolly 1lue. It'• beautiful and
dellclous. MOSAIC i"8UIT TA.RT
Crw&:
t \'11 cupe flour
"'• teaspoon salt 'r'\J cup powdered suear
1 teaspoon grated lemon peel
\'11 cup butter or margarine
3 tablespoona cold milk
FUllllg: 2 cups quarterffl fresh California plums
(about~pound>
1 cup sugar
14 cup water
Das.b salt 2 tablespoons cornstarch
2 drops almond extract or 1 tabl~
lemon juice 1 lh cups C~fornla seedless grapes
l lfl cups sllced fresh California peaches
1 ~ cups sliced fresh California nectarines
2 fresh California Bartlett pear s,
quartered and cored
Ilia cup currant jelly ·
CRUST: Sift nour, salt and sugar into mix·
inf bowl. Add lemoh peel. Cut in butter until m xture resembles coarse meal. Gradually add
cold mUk. tossing to distribute evenly. Shape
mixture into ball. Press douah onto bottom and
sides of 9 or 10 inch pie plate. Prick with fork.
Bake in 425 degree oven 25 to 30 minutes, or un·
til golden. Cool. '
Fllllng: While crust bakes, prepare filling.
Com blne plums. sugar, water and salt in
saucepan. Bring to boil; simmer. uncovered. 3
to 5 minutes o.r until plWDB are just barely
tender. <Plums should not lose their shape.>
Drain and measure juice, reserving plums. Add
enough water to juice to make 111, cups.
Measure cornstarch into saucepan. Gradually
add plum juice. stirring constantly with wire
whisk. Cook and stir over medium heat until mixture thickens Boil 1 minute. Remove from
h~at ; stir in almond extract or lemon juice.
Cool slightly; pour into bottom of pie shell.
Sprinkle grapes over filling. Toss peaches. nee·
tarines and pears in an ascorbic acid mixture;
arrange in a ring over and around grapes. Last-
ly arrange poached plums in center"Of pie. Melt
current Jelly: drizzle over entire surface or
fruits. Chill pie 2 hours. Cut into wedges to
serve. Makes 6 to 8 servings.
JACK ANDEUON
REVEALS In the DAILY PILOT
SEEDLESS
llAPES
4~
ITAUAM
MASI
SNIMMILD.aAMT
Ml•
RIPEOUVES
.........,SAL.TIMI
CRACKERS
1~
I U. IOI
FOOD
Mosaic fruit tart is elegant combinadon of fruit.
•. ®
llRIR • -Get CharminS irresistible softness
, at an irresistible price.
How# ""11tf to it even more //
I
FOOD Wedneedey, Augutt 1e. 1'178 DAILY PILOT Q
No-bake peanut butter cheesecake pie.
Cheesy Peanut Pie
When is a cake not a cake? juice of 1 large orange low heat until gelatin is Chill until firm. Serve
Food Allergy rroblem
There is a widespread belie( among doctors
who practlce an orthomolecular approach to
medicine that chronic mood swings may be
caused by a silent food allergy. This type or
senaitivtty, sometimes called a cerebral allergy
or neuro-allergy, does not cause rashes. hives.
or asthma. Instead. it is believed. it may be the
cause of unexplained emotional depression.
Many Umes. the food turns out to be a com-mon part of the patlent's menu. such as milk .
eggs. wheat. corn, or· rice. Sometimes it is a
combination of several of these foods.
These allergic reactions do not show up on
the usual scratch tests for food sensitivities. bµt
do show reaction to sublingual <under the
tongue) or intradermal <under the skin> tests.
There are sotne doctors who prefer to use an
elimination method of testing one food at a time after a few days' fast to clear the system.
It is worth trying to detect these
sensitivities if you susi)ect that it may be the
cause of unexplained mental depression of someone in your household. Instead of treating
the effect of the mood swings with pills. doctors
who beheve in this theory are trying to get at
the biochemical cause. If it is found to be a food
or combination of foods, the course of action is
to eliminate the culprit from the patient's diet.
When the foods are staple Ingredients the
problem of providing food free of these sub·
stances can be very challenging. Labels on food
products have to be read with great care. to be
sure that the off ending food is not a bidden part
of the product. Often it is better to change to a
natural foods diet. to have better control O\ter
ever)tt.hlng on the patient's menu.
Freedom from depression and freedom
(J:om dependency on pills may be just the incen-
tive neeaed to-find out whether a possible silent
food sensitivity is the cause of trouble for so-
meone you care about. .
Here are some ways to bake with substitute
ingredients when the allergy is to wheat.
If you have a ff)eclal diet problenf, write to June
Roth cl o the Daily Pilot. Enclote-a-"41M,,H ffif·
addreued envelope for a personat replJI.
WHEAT-FREE BANANA NUT BREAD
1 ~cups rice flour
1 cup potato starch
1 tablespoon baking powder
11}.i cups mashed banana
·~cup Jight·brown sugar
'h teaspoon salt
2 eggs, beaten slightly
'h cup corn oil
2 tablespoons water
•,.a cup coarsely chopped walnuts
Sift together rice flour, potato starch. and
bak>ng powder. In a separate bowl. combine
mashed banana, sugar, and salt; add beaten
eggs. corn oil, and water. Mix well. Stir in dry
ingredients. Add nuts. Pour into a greased 8 x
4-inch loaf pan. Let s'8nd at room temperature
for 5 minutes before placing in a preheated
350"F. oven. Bake for 1 hour. Remove from pan
Sperial
Diet•
By June Roth
onto a.rack to cool. Makes 8 servings.
CORN BREAD
2 cups cornmeal
1 tablespoon baking powder
2 tablespoons sugar
l teaspoon salt
I egg
l cup milk
1,4 cup corn oil
Combine cornmeal. baking powder, sugar, and salt. Beat egg in a bowl ; add milk and corn
oil and beat well. Gradually beat in the dry in-
gredients. Pour into a greased 9 x 9 x 2-inch
pan. Bake in a preheated 37S'F. oven for 25 minutes. Makes 9 squares.
RICE FLOUR HERB BREAD
2 cups rice flour
1 ~ cup potato starch
In cup nonfat dry milk solids
3 tablespoons baking powder
2 tablespoons chopped parsley
2 tablespoons chopped chives
l tablespoon sugar
t teaspoon salt
2eggs
•f.t cup corn oil
2 tablespoons water
Combine rice flour, potato starch. dry milk
solids. baking powder, parsley, chives, sugar.
a nd salt. Beat together eggs, oU, and water:
add to ~ mixture and stir until just blended.
Pour into a greased 8 x 3~·1oaf pu. Let stand
for S minutes at room temperature before plac--
mg in a p. eheated 350"F. oven. Bake for 1 hour.
Cool on a rack. Makes 16 sli ces.
C.00.,..IQfll, 1071 J-A.olll
Club Calendar runs each Wednesday in the Daily
Pilot and conlatru notices o/ women's and service club
meetmgs and events /or the /ollowmg week -Thurs-
day through Wednesday Send riotices to Club Calen-
dar. Daily Pilot. P.O Bor 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626.
Be 8Ure to include your name and phoM number.
NotK:es must be in our hand& two weeks in advance.
To request a picture. WTite or call the Features
Department. 642·4321. Pictures are Umited to fund·
raisers open tp the public.
·.
Answer: .When lt's a
cheesecake poured into a pieshell.
The top of the fini shed
pie may be garnished
with additional peanuts.
This delicious dessert
snould be prepared
ahead of time so it can
'h cup peanut butter dissolved and mixture garnished with salted
1 package ( 8 becomes very hot. In a peanuts. Yield: 1 9-incb
ounces) cream cheese · ·bowl, mix peanut butter, pie.
1 can (14 ounces) cream cheese and con---------------------------------------------------s weetened condensed densed milk until
• be well chilled.
Individuall y ,
cheesecake and peanut
butte r are popular
foods. Combined in this
recipe, they make an ex-
ceptional dessert.
PEANUT BU1TER
CHE~ECAKE PIE
1 envelope un -
flavored gelatin
Grated rind and
milk smooth. Gradually beat
--1 ~up (lh pint)
heavy cream, whipped
11'4 cup quick cook-
ing oatueal
If.a cup firmly
packed brown sugar
% cup finely
chopped ~anuts
1h cup melted butter or margarine
Additional salted
peanuts In a smau saucepan,
mix gelatin and orange rind and juice. Stir over
in orange juice mi:irture.
Chill until mixture
becomes thickened.
Fold in whipped cream.
Place oatmeal into a
skillet and s tir over medium. heat until
flakes are toasted. Stir
in brown sugar, peanuts
and butter. Press mix·
lure firmly and evenly
into an ungreased 9 Inch
pie pan, lining the bot-
tom and sides of the
pan. Chill. Pile peanut butter mixture into pan.
Best Idea Since
Shopping Carts
~w you can do a week's shopping
~-~ '""' without forgetting a single
item! Use pre-printed
. Send
Today To
Become A
Super ShoP.,er
----------• Fllllnthl•COUflOn,metlwlth
a1 .11 + .IOpoetege a hendNng to:
I Not Pl'tnttng Shopping Ult I Raft •
1 P.O. Box 1-330 w .... , St.
I eoeta MeM, Ca1". m29 I . t
I ---~--~----~~..I I I 1ITMEL-~-~------~-1
1~-------..:-.ZIP-----1
shopping lists
prepared for you by
PILOT PRINTING.
140 eepM'ate ptfnted Item•,
ptu• eddfttoftal ..,.CH you
c•n flll In yourMH.
34 Staple•
21 Veget•blH
14 ffult9
e Beketyltem• s •veregn
11 ... rid
ffefi eftb'IH
11 °""' hm• 20 •ecetteneou•
L •••••• •• ••••• :.1 ________ ._ ______ -J
, -
.. ..
Now, a refreshing change of taste.
5 delicious new flavored teas from Lipton!
..
t A
when you
purchase
any box of
Upton• Flavored
Tea Bags . (
...... __ ~-··.:::--Jo-,~ -:.-..._ ....
Enjoy them Iced or hot.
Fragrant Orange & Spice, tangy
Lemon & Spice, refreshing Mint,
slightly spicy Cinnamon or hearty
Black Rum-they're all made with
a special blend of select teas.
Try these new Lipton' flavored
tea bags for a refreshing
change of taste.
-.. 'r•~ .......... "'
.. . .. •
....
I <e
)
~ DNLY~OT WedMldaJ, M!Owtt 11, 1t7t FOOD
' Food lnd11stry Jumping· on 'Lite' BandWagon
Wllb so.percent or calorie count. The markellnl mixes wltKft.tte" fl"06tine, at 100 "Lite" IJ"IVY mix al 10 • • •
Amerlcau con.actou1ly chotolate pie -sup· "Llle" on tbo label. w~· ra-1ories a one-twelfth calortu a servln1 "Flounder Stuffed
cautloua about calorie • Sii poted to HTVe •Ix -ls tried a Ptllabury lemon serving. Moat frosted < b-rown iravy and wttb Crabmeat'' ta an
the food industry l1 • l.500 calones. or~ per· sample and found it layer cakes from a mix chicken cravy mixes>. elecant entree that's
ru1bln1 to Join the 11ervln1. about the eame every bit as 1ood·tuUn1 are about 350 calories Pl i z a 1 overs In perennially popular on
·•Llte" Brt~•. 1purr.d "' resular chocolate and eaay-to-make as per serving ... Batter Wisconsin and Illlnola seafood restaurant
on by tbe 1tunntna ·~ cream pie. Banana ls more fattenln1 mixes. Lite" la the trademark can try "Diet Lile" mtnu1. uu of "Llto" been 1.:uo 1tnd coconut is Wttb tb PU.Lab f f eur aecret =n lent
lmp1 ....... ,........ l"'"'l" for &y l'art>era Gibbon• e ury pro· o another "light" cake rozen plua. 25 percent ..,-. ....... -" • l.380. 1 duct a 12·serving layer mix for the diabetic and lower in calorlea. And -both ln the and fewer calortM, the word H 0 M E M A D E cake wet1h.I in at l30 dietetic market -100 then, there's Pringle's the coatinc -ls low-fat,
"Utt" <or "U1bt"> 11 \beot.buhand,aret.he plH are only aeven In· 'L IGHT' LAYER caloriesfort.hecakeand calories a one·eigbth "Llgbt" potato-like tow·calortemayoonalse.
•bout to r e Pt ace so-ulled froztn ''Ll1ht chea ucroaa, welsh 14 CAKES from a mix may 120 for the froaUn1, per slice. sweetened wltb chips <the pseudo-chi"""' We UH It as a binder for
"natural" as the bt1 Pita" from Mrs Smith'• ouncoe. cost Sl.80 each, soon be possible -sav· one·twelfth of a stan· sorbitol. In the termls ball ca:>'. the crabmeat stufllng
bu 11 word for food bakery no calorie a nd taste like colored in1 obout 100 calories. dard-alae layer cake. o T H E R But the "tight" refers to and to help the crumb
adwr\ten und paclcnat> count.a or n"1J1Uon datu Cool· Whip We called Both PUlabury and Bet· Betty Crocker ls making L I T E C o M E R S taste a nd color, nol topplna adhue lo lhe
deslanen on the label. These tlny th~ company for the ty Crocker are test· vanilla and chocolate INCLUDE McCormick's calories. <See SUM. race C5)
'rbat bcood news for 1---------------------------------:;;:;::;::;:;:;::;;;;::::;:::;;::;;;::e:~s=lllL""------------~--------------------------------------------------------..;_,;,,,....:. .......... _ c alorie-countt'rs Thf'
growin1 lnsiatt'ncc on
•~11 fan nlna f ~ en
cour•1cs alt seam nts of
the food lnduatry lO roil
lhe unneeded ulortes
out of popular products.
However, Just u all
"natural" food.a arf'n 'l
neceaaarlly h~altby .
neither are all "ll&ht "
foods low in calortH
Some food manutac
turers are uslna the
word liahtly to aull
waistline watchers Into
lhinkin& ordinary pro·
ducts are less fatlenln&
than their compeUlors'
•Ca ution . l ook ror
calorie counts on the
label. "Ltght" c-un m~an
anything: colpr. texturt'.
weight or whatever' >
FLAT -GUTTED
BEER DRINKERS
Credit for launching the
"Lite" revolution &Ol'S
t.o Miller Brewing Co .
for succeeding at the
s upposedly Impossible
task of sellloi a less fat·
tenlng brew Miller's .. Lile" beer
was launched In. 1972
with a brilliant ad cam
paign: "Eveeything you
always wanted 1n a beer
und less" <one-third
less : under 100 calories
instead of lSO) Miiier's
won in the marketplace
but lost in the courts: a
legal bid to keep the
word "Lite" for itself
failed. Now. any product
can call itself "lite." Or
"'light."
Today, there are some
20 decalorized brews on
the market, ranging
from a lightweight 70 or
so calories a can IGabl·
inger Extra Light, Pabst
Extra Light. Players,
Olympia Golden. Light
_ and Carling Highlight
from Canada l a ll the
way up to a not-so-light
137 calories for Michelob
"'Light." Other me·loo
brews with "lite" or
"light" on the label in·
elude Schmidt's. Schlitz.
Coors. Iron City, Texas Pride, Peter Hand ,
Rheingold . Lucky 96,
Rainier and Canada's
Labatt's Special Lite.
Research s hows that
"'light" beer drinkers
are younger , better
educ ated and m ake
more money!
NAME YOUR
DRINK. for wine
drink e r s there's .
M anischewitz "light"
red , white a nd rose
wines. 85 calories for
3-and-one-haJf-ounce in·
stea d of fSO . "Pepsi
Light" is a sugar·
reduced cola partly
sweetened with sugar
substitute (47 calories
for 8 ounces).
LIGHTWEIGHT
BREADSPREADS-or·
dinary jama and jellies
are 16 calories a teas·
poon but "Potaner Lile"
is Potaner's sugar·
reduced Cruit s pread
with more fruit th an
sugar. Smucker has a
similar product without
the word "light" on th~
label. F lavor s include
grape, strawberry, a p·
ple. apricot, blackberry,
boysenberry and orange
marmalade -all 8
calor~~poGO.
Flelachmann is teat·
marketina if'new "light"
maraarlne made from
corn oil. Al 75 calories a
tablespoon, it's hardly a
llgbtwei1bt; diet
margarine is only 50
calories per tablespoon.
In Indianapolis a new ta·
ble spread baaed on
yogurt ta belns tested.
Named ··vogo-Llaht,"
it's 66 calories a tables·
poon.
'LIGHT AND
LUSCIOUS' froun
cakes and plea "that
nobody doeen't like" are
tbe bla .tnnen for Safa
Lee. Sweetened with rrutt 1uaar and very low
ln I at, tho cakes welah
~n at 120 calories for a
one ·•ilbth portion.
Caku include chocolate
or v anWa with chocolate
fro1tln1. and b1n1na ..a. banan,I tc~. Also · l*>calorteauueearetbe ,,.,, Sarah Lee froun
O'OCUrt cblffoo plea with ,~awberry. cberry or
,.iuebeny toppln1.
NOT SO LIGHT. on
'Grade 'N
Tyson
Chicken
at the low prices you've been wishing for.
We could get by on looks alone.
Tender. juicy chicken. This is the week to treat your entire family to it,
because this is the week we've got Tyson Chicken at the lowest overall
prices in town. Choose from a huge selection of all your favorite parts.
including whole and cut-up fryers. breasts. thighs. wings and drumsticks.
E:ven those brand new Tyson Chicken frankfurters. And all Tyson Chicken
is certified USDA Grade A, the highest quality set by the United States
Department of Agriculture. It means that each and every Tyson Chicken
you serve will have no bumps, no bruises , no discolorations and no
missing parts. You won't even find a clipped wing. Each package also has
a selling date stamped on it, so even If you buy in on the last day, It will
still keep in your refrigerator for three more days.
of their chickens in any way. Tyson Chicken is always dressed. packaged
and fresh chilled at point of origin to lock in all the natural flavor and
goodness. To help eliminate the worry of freezer burn, it's never frozen or
packed directly in Ice. You can depend on getting the very best chicken
from Tyson ... and the very best prices from Lucky. .
A healthy look at Tyson Chicken.
You get what you d~serve. . .
Tyson grows its own special breed af chicker1, bred to be extra plump and
tender. You'll never find any hormones or preservatives in Tyson Chicken
either. Tyson uses nothing artifk:ial or imitation to improve the appearance
Chicken is an excellent source of high quality protein. Amino acids found
in chicken are essential to both growth and health. Chicken also provides
many vital nutrients including iron. thiamine (vitamin 81). riboflavin
(vitamin 82) and niacin. Jn addition, it's ideal for people watching their
weight because an average serving contains fewer calories than most other
meats. Don't forget that every package of Tyson Chicken is guaranteed for
your complete satisfaction or your money back . Stock up today so your
whole flock can enjoy the delicious taste of Tyson Chicken. At Lucky. low
prices and high quality go better together. And that's what discount is all
about.
Fresh Chicken
WHOLE DODY
~~~~~~ ~9
U50A (jf'\AO£ A. • LG e"'
CUT·UP
CHICKEN 59 n\YING~
USOA GMDl A. • . . • LO e
CHICKEN DRUMSTICKS
& THIGHS .. tn .98 fl\YING TYSON USOA (jf\AD£ A
CHICKEN BREASTS
WITH RIBS 109
Fl\YING TYSON •
USOA GAADl A . . . . .. lG
FP.YING CHICKEN WINGS
l'l'lOM U)DA _Will A •••••
fresh Beef
•• , .... ' . AltAMllM
10 .68
18 W. LA llAIJllA AYDUI
Fresh Meats
~!PTFAK··· LI 1.69
DOMD.DS CROSS RID P.OAST
OQNOCDll(flCMUC"-• LI 1 .46
LAAGE EMO P.ID P.OAST 1 77 DOHDCD 11£U tO •
DlAOE CUT CHUCK P.OAST 67 000<01D 11£11 LI •
GP.OU MO DEEF PMTIES
C!)M01()1 •• JLI GAC.J ,46
SLICED OEEF LIVEP.
~>Hin
POP.K SAUSAGE
lfAUANV't\L
ll).86
LO 1,76
Canned& Packaged
b HARVEST DAY BREAD
lOO~ 11.'H<;tE WHEAi 36 ~Cjf'tl\UNCH .•..... 1001 lOAf e
r M!SIN DMM C£f'.EAL
0 LAO!'lll 100/ 00• • 99
[. ~~TOAYPOT~~~n •• 25
[. I.ADY ~EE SPINACH 11 OH•• • 43
~!~~~D OLACK PEPPE.P.01 <.A•. 79
r LIPTON ICE TEA MIX 1 ... 9 C d & P k d 0 UMONrv.\'Oll 7•01 ,.t\ ,o+ anne ac age. r ANTHONY MACAP.ONI
b POTATO o W..DOt\YM1!1><n1 •001 p,.,c, .42
r POTATO DUDS CHIPS OOllT"fCllOCIWI ,., '401 (>('u 1 .39
~y~~~f>DH< 69 [. H~~:~.~.~-K 6 DEA~~' co•. 53
•.....•.. 6 oz ~G • SLICED G"EEM DEANS
l "'OC°"•C"' .\. b G<\UHC,..HI , • •oO/ CA•.35 '-"' ~ _,,_ ___ ? P£AS6CAMOU
& TAB 119 o UOllY •ooz (Att .37 GMAAGE~ [. COF'FEE •..•• 6/120Z CANS q<X•llAl.O HUI) ••0/(AH2.29
Dairy & Frozen
bPREMIUM
ICE CREAM 119 lAOYtC£ • • •. YtGAl RO Cit<
r MAP.GAP.INE 0 wtilGfitl 'tiiAJCM&JI~ tOOl (t ... • 59
OIP.DSEYE VEGET AOlES ~ -0.1 ~l•NO CO!Vo "7 O()l'Pl<>) •OOl""C. .v
DOWNYflAKE W Af'flES I. ••1"11\oW.4 •101 """ .5 7
r MINUTE MAID JUICE
b Q\.<NGl (()H(IH!l\Art 100/ c .. 1 . 19
Health & Beauty Aids
P PP.EU SHAMPOO h coNCCM~c . 101 1.89
!~US~ •ood .89 L SCOPE MOUTHWASH 9 ' ...... ' .• 001 2.4
<AESTTOOJ~ASTE
11,(C. °" .....
SECRET P.OU-OM
•I(, QAijM\(
~101 1 .13
•~OJ 1.19
r LAOYL£EOKIMKMlxES 99 CHUMKUGHTMEATTUNA 1 29 0 )ILJIY()I\) • 1401 (AH • ~·~· ,, .. ()l (II" ' puNSHIHEVA~~LLA ~~~59 liquor, Beer, Wine Household & Pe t
r O C. M DAKtD OF.AMS 69 SA VE AN EXTRA 10 % ! WIMDEX ~~ ~~!".,. . 79
o n °' "'" • °" CAK fl«....ill or-• r APP\.ETIME APPUSAUCE AMD-n """..,.'IOOoQ.l.IOCC r LADY LEE SOfTOIEP. 1 59
De licatessen
;:
CHICKEN
FRANKS 59 TYSON 1101 ~(j e
OSCAP. MAY£f'. VAP.IETY PAK b 'l>\,>.•t O()IJool)O"C:Olt o)0/ ,.Co 1.69
r Dl.U£ CHEESE OP.ESSING 65 b ...... ' 801 lAA •
r PILLSDUP.Y OISCUITS
(, tuOIJW • Oii "61Uh·•·t-. I 'CI (AN• 16
r ORIOGFOP.0 HAM b OQOID 1 ,Q/ "'-C. .65
r LITE LINE CHEESE ~ OOllDl• .. >CfD •)01 ,..,, 1.J9
r NATUML SWISS CHEESE 9"'
b """" ll>Cfl• 0 01 .. c. • v
Produce
HAWAIIAN
PINEAPPLE
llll\Gl (, f\IP~
C~SABA
MELONS
~'WEfl c, SPI( y
[A .59
lD e 10
ITALIAN
PRUNE PLUMS 29
f'\Erlll!lt411•G • LO e
P.OMAINE LmucE
C~Qltlo<
CHEP.P.Y TOMATOES o ,001 u.•.34 f EAN.YTIMDDOU"OOH 9 99 o ••Gll>C Wiil .-0Cl 1cu •
b -· eoMOClf • • r>1111 Oii • r MAPJNA TOILETTISSUE LD"YP.OASTPEAHUTS 1 29 LMDMOUMTAIH'WIME o ... IC'~'o°""""" >•oy...,,.79 < .... '"'h• •.. ~ .... ,, •• ., -. •. ~ .. ""°''·u~. ••Ol~ • o~~ 2 79 '"''IP,_""'-FOOO ~ .... , .....• , ... ...,v~·· ·•'" ....
r LAD .• , YUlTOMATO_ SAUC•>ot ,~-.2"' ~,.'!:,,..,." ""-" · • ..n rr ~ 18 •·· · · -',,._. . ...,,.. "-" ·• · ,,. •.
)AIJIDla'IOlllll •)01 ll!AI
I> .19
IA .39
O ...,.. \I ~· .._ ll(~llOllC'llCQ>t • •~Ol CA•. 0. ..._. ____ ....w
f 49 £~VYTMIKOOG~ ~ .. ,.,,.-.... ._ .. _ ~:.(.~~~.. . ~70l Pl .69 ·'-··--····;_..··."!..,·'·~-~.--· :.. ... · -----·· --·>O-•O.a..<.-···58--· ....... -·IMl---·--!'l ..... _•--"""'.·----11!
•ANAMI... • 110 to. aTAfll COLL.IOI •'-YD·
'Uld.&flTON taa MO. IUCUtUVI.
... what .discount is all about.
( . ,.
• OAflOIM OflOvt 1 tl'lt MAeNOUA AYL
tT0 .. 110,IN
DAILY I A.M.
···•i"' ...... ~ ,_ ...
• • ti •\ .! •
./
I
FOOD WeOneeoay. August 18. 1978 DA.IL V PILOT CJI
Refrigerator Dessert
LIGHT AND LVSCIOU$ Graham Cracker
VANILLA CREESE CrumbCtust
CAKE
11lt. In a amaJl mixing
bowl tMut e11 yolb and
milk Add to the 1el1Un mhture; blend well.
white. Meanwhile. an
l1r1e mlx.lna bowl beat
cream cheese and butter
unlll Uibt and smooth.
Stir In thickened 1elatln
mlxt1u1: beat well.
2 pncka1ea un. na vored selaUn
1 cup 1uaar. divided
II 18 teupoon HJl
2 eaa. separated
l CUJ>mllk
1 tabletpoon pure
vanilla ntract
2 teaspoons letnon
Julee
l teaapoon 11ralod
lemen peel
• ~ .SliJD
(From Paae C.>
ftsh. Hens'a how:
QUICK caABMEAT
STVPPD ft.ovNDEa
1 pound f'lounder' (or
i.ole > hll«a. thin, rresh,
or dertosted
Crabmeal s pread
I rerape aaven >
3 tablespoons lo•·
fat mayonnaise
3 lableapoou un·
seasoned bread cnambe
Lemon juice
Salt or seasoned
salt
Pepper and paprika
Fille ts should be
thin. Cut Into eight
pieces. or more or less equal size.
Liberally spray four
individual oveo·prbor
!>Val gratin dishes <or a
shallow non·stick baking
pan) with cooking spray
for no·fat baking. Pul
one fillet in the bottom
or each dish <or In a
single layer on the bait·
ing pan). Top each fillet
with a mound of crab
filling, divided evenly
among the four flllets.
Dip each of the remain·
ing filleta in mayonnaise
<top side only), then In
bread crumbs, and ar·
range on top of the crab,
crumb-side up. Sprinkle
with lemon juice, salt,
pepper and paprika.
Place in a preheated
450-degree oven and
bake, un~overed, 20
minutes. <Garnish with
lemon and parsley, if de·
sired.> Makes four serv-
ings, 175 calories each.
QUICK caABMEAT
SPREAD
1 can crabmeat C5
and ~or 8 ounces)
1 and ~ tablespoons
Low-fat mayonnaise
1 tablespoon lemon
juice
2 teaspoons onion.
instant -dried, minced
Salt (or seasoned
sail> and pepper, lo
laste
Stir together and chill.
Use as sandwich filling
or cracker spread, or as
stuffing for baked
seafood (see recipe,
given>. Makes about one
cup, 15 calories per
tablespoon.
CRABMEAT SALAD
1 can crabmeat (5
and ~or 6 owices>
1 small rib celery.
minced fine
1 tablespG<>n onion,
chopped <or 1 teaspoon
dried onion flakes>
1 tablespoon dill
pickle relish
2 tablespoons low·
calorie mayonnaise
1 tablespoon yogurt,
plain, low-fat
1 tablespoon lemon
juice
1 egg. bard-cooked,
chopped
Salt. or seasoned
salt
Pepper and paprika
to taste
Lemon wedges, let-
tuce, parsley
Combine crab, celery,
onion, relish, mayon-
naise, yogurt. lemon
juice and egg, tossing
lightly. Season to taste.
Arrange on beds of let-
tuce, garnished with
l emon wedges and
parsley. Makes three
servini•. 120 ealorres
eacb.
2 pacta1ea <8 oz.
eacb> cream cheeae,
softened
\4 cup butter or
mar11rine.IOftentd
l cup heavy cream, whipped
1 c.ap fr••h 1tr1wberria
In top portion or dOU·
ble boiler mix 1elaUn. '4
cup of tbe 1u11r Mnd
Crisp Firm'
Heads.
Cook over boW~ water,
atirrina conatantl)' untll
1el1lln la dluolved.
about ' minutes.
Remove from heat:
atlr In vanllla extract,
lemon Julee and peel.
Chill ur\lll mixture Is aa
thick u unbeaten en
Jn another bowl, beat
tll whites until stiff. Gradually beat in re·
malning v .. cup sugar.
Fold Into gela,in mix-
ture. Fold in whipped
cream. Spoon mixture
into crumb-lined pan.
Chlll .
: .
al.DEN
BANANAS .
Ideal
For The
Lunch Box. c
Dessert loOks
baked but it's
done in the
refrigerator.
.
CRI , H Fiiuff ·
CUCUMBERS MUSHROOMS
2~ c c
More Specials In The Store
i •tunch Bags ......... o:: 39°
'-'!>Shoestrings !~~ 31o:4go
S$Corn FlakeSKelloggs ~99° ,
i~>HawaiianPunch2=-'1
E$Tomal08Saardens1de 3=-'1
Fresh
IPORKSTEAK
.• Blade_ s111 s~tfer
~IL
Vacuum Packed
Ran~om Weights
~
(Sllc:ed ... lb. *1") IL
~Beef Rib Roast ~s~r~ti~~!11e~~ .. s241
~Rib Eye Steak u.~s°~,;~m!'.~l' .. s3•1
~Chicken Franks L~~~~~~r:ty ~ 7SC
~~ucJ( ••• •111
lan11111Stl'* s1•• U.S D.A. CllO!Ce Beel Ctluek .•••
LUNCH KITS
Assorted Metal.
lnctudff
Vacuum
Bottle _$2••
AIREE 1DATACENTERI CLEARASIL
_sho =.ggo M: •248 ~g90
-• ., • f J
. """ ""'..... -=;.·
All ,..,... "* ....
Fla --c..~
) mo• . "ORIAlllZEll
~=-241
.. .... .j
More Great Bu ya!
~~ 11• loll'llt 1-11. 4ne C-.'::\; Stick Margarine .•••• C.-V~
%-£~,~ ...... 1:;:.4go
t~JackCheese ~~~~ !.1 11 ·
•EdwardsCoHeet:-•231
~MinuteMaid 8E~!! =59°
~Peanut ButterSk•PPY 1~99°
Large•AA' Eggs l~~~· =69°
Charcoal Briquetsr1:s 121
aeveraa• 4o-t •1 I I T s 111 Cragmoni.PllJsOeposlt ... lottlla nstan ea 8~?;:v 3.;:·
VIVA TOWELS
8~59°.
TOMATO SOUP
Town House -e,rn
1T..-~MD-Cl9TU
SAFEWAY OFFERS
eP!llJf&m'
::.'(., :.lur! '175 _....,a.. -.
...... this Isn't •llf
Mrs Wright'&
~-:~~~48 3c -,,,.,...
~;; .....
GIN or
.VODKA
More Salewar Spectals In your store!
... .... ,.,.., .... 11!! .........................
w1a-.eusoaro......,c1 .. 1 1 L, SAF.EWAY ........................ ..... .......... , ....
, ,
• 1000 • .,...,. Dr •• ~ h-" • .. No. CMet .......,, ~ 8Hdt • ~ Mon~dt lay Plau, ~tft ~· • .. nta AN,,...., et La flu, ........ YlefO
• • 211 L 1ntl ft.. Coeta MeN • • IOt C c.NftO 9'4tat, .. ,. Clefftente 3111 lo. lttttot, lt11ta Alfa
• •Adams at MalftOla, Hun411ieton ...... • 14411 Cutwr Or. at Watnvt. lrvlne
• -
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,.. rttf"",. ...... -........ ' ..... "'--· .............. ,..,.,
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.. OM.YPtLOT W9dneedey, August 11. 1971
Dinner With_ R _osy Glow
Ab-h-b .... Tber '1 11 uDtU melt.cl; 1Ur ln 15 lO 30 minutM. turnln1 Cherry tomatoes
notb.lq 11ko t.be aroma worcHterab.lre u uce fr.quenUy and bn&thlna a nd aree n peppe r
or barbecued cblcbn and ~ Julee. Brush wllh remalnlq alue. squares
sinlinc over red bot al.Ue CMll' chicken. Con· Stir toset.her contents
char coal emben. For Unue to ,nu 15 to 20 ATHENIAN KA.8088 of ira~ mix envelope.
va rie ty. why not try mlnut9 fOnier, turnlnc 1 nvelope < .. -01.> t Jul ·1 Ruby Olaaed Chicken ln· frequently and brulbln1 a u Jua sravy mix wa er. emon ce. 01 • s •ead of the tvpleal wltb remaJnln• itue.' ~ """'WIC.r ore1ano, an suaar;
" 1 ... w-pour over steak cubes tomato barbecue H uce to 1 ttl"V'lnp. "4 C\IP lemon Juice and let stand 30 minutes.
with chicken. O•..._ Me••••·· Ar· '4 cupoll Alt t t 1. b This del' .. btful Rubv ·•• • \4 tea1poon leaf erna e s ea. cu es
.. I raaa• C!hldcen ln •lnll0 With tomatoee and pep• Glaae ls P~•ftd quite layer ID aballow pan. ore1ano per on 8 skewers. Grill
simply from currant Jl'l· Bake In •OO de1treea v. teaspoon auaar or broil 10 minutes, tum·
ly , Wo rcesters hire oven 30 mlnut.ee. Brush 1 ~ to 2 pounds ang frequently and
sauce, and lemon Julee, chicken wttb J::: and 1lrloln ateak, cut ln 1· brushing with marinaile. creaUq • 1ubtly •~ broil 4 "-..... -.. -at •-b ......... •s in•• flavor wit!\ a bit of a ___ u-=-____ uc ___ '"_c:_c:_u_. _______ v_er_v_ ..... __ . ------...Llliiollloliil
tan•· It ~ 1 ros,y 1Jow lo tbe cblclten while
t>nhanci na the mlld
chu:ken navor Since this rttlpe may
become a real ~-out
h vorite, you'll be
particularly pleased to
know tbat it can also be
prepared lo the oven for
year round enjoyment.
Garnlab wttb fresh or
canned fruits on abort
wooden pleb ror a col·
orf~ and laaty ma.ID
dish.
However. if beef is
more to your litlnc.
Athenian Kabobs will
add Interest to your
meal. Chun.ks of $irloln
alternated on skewers
with tomato and green
p e pp e r s are com·
plemented with a
marinade combining an
envelope or au jws gravy
, e Super Savings at
_mix. lemon..Ju,ice. and oregano for a Gre ek
stylelttS . --·-
RUBY GLAZED
CHICKEN
1 frying chicken, cut
up Sall and pepper
v. c up butter or
margarine v. cup currant or ap-
ple jelly
1 t a ble s poon
Worcestershire sauce
1 tablespoon lemon
juice
G rill c hicke n 30
minutes, turning OC·
casionally; season with
salt and peppe r. Heat
together in s m a ll
saucepan butter and jel·
Kiwi-
.Top
Trifle
818de Cut Ront Or
Ctu:k
Steall ':.
l'OftK l.oilt-ftO. Cont8IM I C.... I a End Cuta .... r.na...
per
lb.
+
.49 .
I oz. Of 11 OI. Chub
Biiio ..... _
loz. -
pkg. -
32 oz.
.btL
+
....... ~ ....
Aflrl'q. tf 2
...... PtaaOr .. " .. ..... , .....
... •
....... ....... ,
Llllucl
ROUlldTop• l•ldwldl
39 =*11111
2A.:ll
TOTAL
SAVINGS
FOOD
Ruby glazed
chicken has a
rosy glow and
subtle flavor.
lplls
,,.., •••• ,, .... of . ........ "., ..
.. ,..., 2 .,.
.... .., ...... 1111 Cllul
.m111111t .... 111111, llut .. ., ....... "
RALPHS WILL IE OPEN , .... ,..-.... ....
. ...... a..,
Cll•llAnmtcln ....
&MgeY..,_
flwlm.11
P11DIJ11
In a way, the word
"trifle" seems a mis ·
nomer ror tbe dessert or
English origin that goes
by that name. Made
with lady fingers or
sponge cake, a;ometimes
soaked in s herry or
other wine, spread with
j a m . cove r e d with
custard and topped with
whipped cream it is
hardly a trifle in the
culinary sense. It's rich
beyond belier but so
good that even serious
calorie-counters forget
their figures when it ap·
pears on the table.
For Ralphs Number One Club Members Golden Premium Meats
Here is a new version
or the classic trifle.
Vanilla pudding s ub·
stitutes for the custard
sauce and is subtly fla~ored by the addition
or le mon-fl avored iced
d.ea mix. This is layered
with thin s lice s or
brilliant green kiwi -
that unusual fruit that
comes to us from New
Zealand. The tart-sweet
taste or the kiwifruit
contrasts wUh the
smooth richness of the
pudding and the
whipped cream. to make
a dessert that is well-·
nigh irrestible.
KIWI TEA TRIFLE
2 tablespoons lemon_.
navored iced tea mix
l (3'14-ot.) package
vanilla pudding mix
2 cups milk l (3-oz) package
ladyfingers
3 ripe kiwifruit
1 cup heavy cream
'4 cup si~ confec·
tionen' sugar
Combine iced tea mix.
puddia& and milk; coot
accordln1 to poddlnf
packa1e directions. Cov·
er wltb plasUc wrap;
chill tborou&bJ.y.
Line aides .pd bottom
ot 1 quart 1lu1 bowl
with split ladyfinaers.
Peel and allce kiwis; re..
serve a third of tbe
slices for 1arnlab. Place
a tblrd of the kiwi slices
over 1adyflnaers in bot·
tom of dllb. Cover with
1 half of the tblll4Ml PQd·
,dlna. Wblp cream;
1radua.Uy bHt bl we, fectionen' auaa.r. Spoon
half Of tbe cr .. m ewer
puddl=. a.peat kiwl and p IQen. Top
with ID of Whipped
cream aod tamllh with
kiwi allc:es. Qilll at least
lbou.r.
Dis
Week's
Sp~elal
OffeP!
, ...........•..... ·······~ ..... ONE CLUB I "44:
8fte .20wtth CCMIPO" I
Ught. ChldlnOltorWeter 53 : Cl**8nd .. Sea I~ OL I
Ta can •""" coupoft !
Limit OM 11111\ W OneCouoon Per C1IStolMt' I
Coupon E"9c:tM Aug. 11-Aug. 23, 1171. :
\.. n.c_v.,ONl.•-..--~-o...c ... cn J --··•••••COUPOll••••••••••
Pantry Fiiiers
=.17
~· -::-.48
•:.48 ,. ... .,. ··'"
Wines & Spirits
!!8''
UN. 53 """ . .
1::.85
a:.IL.83
Al Ralphs a..t lteald ancl Roasts
are USDA Choice exclllllwely
Super Dell
Hes/th & Beauty
Home 'N Leisure
':.' Z-lilJi'ODi=B•f Aont :.' 1•
':.' ,.. ':.' 111
':.' 1•
::1•
=-~-4;: .57
Super Produce
': .88
': .29
': .15
': .10
2 • .25
Super Floral
.... 39
i:.10
':.24
'':..""' 1'1 ~-311 Dt~Socb
0 ...... \ .......... ...
........ .,
• pltr ii
.....39 ~c;Ru.-voc1m'·~ 111 ScalChr..,.
'·~"'· 8" ,.._ 111*9Aaag.1711uAlag.23, 1'71
• • • • • '·~··11P-' .
SWffch to NUmber One* •• .Swlld1 to
.r••rltD··-~r-••«11>•••9'1 I ... M•c..,e. ,.. II ... Ah .en ... c..,.. ...a I
. · I iiiii'ot ~ ·11111 L ...... 9·9 I COtlll !! · II • I . ........ ... ...... I umio. ....... c..-.. c:--u. 0. .... ONC..-.. C--. c....-....,.._,,.,...u..n J c:..--..-.11...-..a.a COUPCJN •COUPO"'ii ~-··••••• L •••••••• ~
... & tmlll • l 111 sr. CISTl llSA -SM-. llftf lll.S ••l&UI PISU • .._._.aLS 129tllll..,..._,&Waft.
11211 UISf."""
-
f I
-·--cenama
-
----
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,J
' )
,
. . -
-.
'
\
FOOD
I
I
3
f
Sandwich
With
Flair
ll you have milk and
101urt on band, you
have tbe basic lnare· dlenta for any number of
quick refresbinc snacks.
CO'M'AGE CREESf;
m.1.£DP1TA
1 cup amall curd cot-
tase c:beele
~ cup plain Yorurt
~ cup pitted ripe
olives. cut into.wecties
YOGURT PINEAPPLE
8llM(E
1 cup milk v, cup plain yoeurt
1 tablespoon Oaked
coconut
11,'a teaspoons suiar
~ t.easpoon vanWa
!,'a (8-ounce> can
chunk pineapple In Juice
Wedlleeday, Augu1t t6, t978 DAILY PILOT C1
Salmon Main
. \4 cup whole natural D • h almonds, chopl)ed IS . ~ tablespoons mtnced parsley v.. teascoon rosemary, crumbed
Combine all lngre-
di en ts in electric
blender. Whir until
soiootb and frothy .
Makes about 1~ cups.
YOGURT PEACH
SMOOTHIE
Features Capers
Capers are • cla,ssic
accompanimt:nt to
seafood dishes aqd a
variety of salads. They
can be used as a aa.mlah
directly from the jar or
adcled to sauces, such as tbis creamy s auce, to
give 1t an added
dimension of flavor. The
2. salmon st.eak.s, ~"
thick · v, cup butter
14 cup lemon juice
i meuur!ng table-
spoon tarragon
~ Creamy Caper Sauce: 3 measuring table-
spoons butter
Preheat oven to 350°F.
Arrance salmon steaks
ln shallow 2-qt. baking
dish. In small SllU.C~an. JQelt ~ cup butter, re-
move from heat and add
14 cup lemon juice and tarragon. Pour lemon-
bu t\er mixture over
salmon ; cover with
aluminum foil. Bake at
~ tea.spoon salt
Alfalfa sprouts
2 pita breads, halved
4 tomato slices,
halved
Combine cottage
cheese, yogurt, olives,
almonds, parsley,
)"OSelDary-&nhalt. Place
80me alfalfa sprouts in
pita bread halves. Spoon
cottage ·cheese mixture
into pita bread. Add
tomato slices. Makes 4 servings.
1 <8~ ounce> can cling peacbsllces
14 cups milk
14 cup plain )'Olurt
3 tablespoons brown
sugar (packed>
Combine all ingre-
dients in electtic
blender. Wblr until smooth and ·creamy.
Makes about 3 cups.
COTTAGE CHEESE .
VARIATION: Substitute
!,'a cup cottage cheese for
yagurt.Reducesugarto2
tablespoons. Cottage cheese filled pita brea~-
1 tanginesa of the capers ! contrasts with the sub-
3 measuring table-
spoons flour 350" for'40minutes. .-------------------------------------------
t. tleness of the white sauce In an interesting
blend that augments the
flavor of a salmon steak
or any other poached or
broiled fJ.Sh.
'l'his creamy caper
sauce rates as a first
class accompaniment to
the ever-popular salmon
steak It garnishes.
CAPERED SALMON
STEAK Salmoo &eak:
"41 measuring teaspoon
salt v, measuring teaspoon
cracked pepper
lcupmilk
2 measuring table-
spoons lemon juice
1 measuring table
spoon capers, drained
Gantlab:
Lemon wedges
Dill sprigs
Salmoa .Steak :
Creamy Caper Saace:
In small saucepan, melt
3 tablespoons butter.
Blend ·in flour, salt and pepper. Add milk
gradually, cook, stirring
constantly, until
thickened. Remove from
beat; blend in 2 tables-
poons lemon juice and
capers. Serve warm
over salmon. Garnish
with lemon wedges and
dill sprigs, if desir~d.
Rice and vegetable pilaf • . .
Dressed-Up Rice
delicious served with a yosurt' and cucumber
rellab called raita.
Like the simple, basic
dress tbat fashionable
ladles dress up or down
for many occasions, rice is a basic cereal that ap-The Middle East is
pears on dining tables famous for pilaf of
around the world in ~wa-wblc~ ~ la iDfjnlie dreds ol dltferent WQ&. variety. With the addl-. lion of sugar, nutmeg,
In China it accompanies raisins and mrt.s, rice
meat and vegetable dish-becomes an ezotlc
es, unseasoned and un-dessert. Seasoned with
gamlsMcl 'Ibe Chinese b~rbs such as sage say that its neutral thyme, rosemary, and
rtavor cleanses tbe parsley and cooked with
palate, making it more vegetables in season, sensitive to the in-pilaf is an approprlate
dlvidual na~ and la· aceomppfment for ture~ of other diabe& dlt6;:; beef, pork,
served with lt. Many lamb fish. epicures .,ree.
One of tbe popular
uses of rlce In Japan la
in auabl. Cooked rice ta
mixed wtth a vtneaar dreHina 1 and arrqed
into • kind of aandwlcll
with 1llcea ol fresh, raw
fish. Indian coob like to uae 1hee (clarified but-t ter> bilhly seasoned
with 1arllc, canla.mon, ~ tumeric, cinnamon
stl,ct, eorJandei and
cajenne. The ieuci\lnp
cook ln the..--~~~
flavors, thea rte• and
ve1etabJee a.re Meted.
Tbe rualt: a rtcbli ae&l4illld_...._._
Tbe eeeompanytq re-
cipe for Rlce and
Veaetable PJi.t DUl7 uu corn oil m..,..me in·
1teacl ol butter which matea it eU1lbJe for
persona on low aaturai.
eel fat dleta. Servecl with
abtall tebaba, a leafy sree• lalad and frult for dessert. tbe QMDU II r..
laUvely low tn calories
yet 1enerous in
nutrlellta for persons OJl
low cbolelterol and low
1aturat.ed fat diet.I.
margarine
1 cup chopped onion
11,'a teupoona salt
1 cup lq araln rlce
2cupewater
t pacltase OOor.>
frosen atrlng beans,
thawed
2 medium carrots,
cut into julienne strips
. 1 medium 'reen pepper. coarsely diced
14 teaspoon sqe
~ teaspoon thyme
1 tlLbleapooa
cbappedl>Bft)ef
In a very &ar1e
saucepan or Dutch oven
melt corn oU marsaribe
over medium heat. .Add
onion and salt; saute
onlou di Mdm. Addi rlce antr water: mlx thoroqllly. Bi'inl to a
boll ov• ldah,beat. Stir
in be-. carrots. pep· per. ,.,. and thyme.
Reduce beat, cover. and
simmer 10-15 minutes
un\ll all _)Yatec ls
abtOrbed ancI veggu1es.
are tender. Transfer ta..
rlce lDt.o a Hl'V1Dc bowl
and aarnllb with ft.Deb'
cboppti:J pal'lle)'. lt de-l!rM. • ..
•
.I
BIG 24·DZ. llZE! .
-·BIG FAMllY FllDRITE!
I
••
"' ••• ~ il'4
I
L
Q DAIL V PILOT Wtdl'letdty, Augutt tt. '911 FOOD
Mouth-W ate~g Recipes for .'.Summer ~mi.ts
• Summer'• beat fruit bu\ler with 1~ cups con 2 tlbletOOOM butter i..1 teasJ>()On lemon s m a ll a mount or hot minutes. stir in lemon tahlespc>Ons butter and 2 ~eservea the bell pouJ. fecttoners' auaar unlit J teupoon vanilla Juice mixture into egg yolks; Juice; sieve and cool. tablespoons lard unlll 9-inch pie pan. Trim and
flute edl8' Prick bottom
and tides well wttb a
fork. Bake at 450" for
about 10 minutes until
nchtly browned.
bl• t.rea&ment -reetpu the mixture la fluffy. 4 dropl yellow food 2 fresh peach es. return all to pan. Cook 1 Jual before fffVin1. ar· mixture resembles
r cb wttb tM naYCW o< Stlr \n lboroutbly the colorln1 peeled and sliced minute <do not boll>. ran1e 1Uced peacbea on tmall peas. Sprinkle a
honeat·to.coodMu tlwh 1rated rind ot I or•nse. Baked t.tnc1'1 Butter To prepare filling: Jn Stir in butter. vanilla top of filling. Spoon on tableapoona milk over t'~ameey lM\tt.<Now la PEAOI PLtJM PIE Cruat u 1 ~·Quart aaucepan and rood colorlng. Cool plum mixture. Makes 8 nour mixture. l tables·
the ttme to en>o1 all tbe P ..... : Put ry < r er 1 p e combine sugar, fl our s I 1 g h tly. Pour Into to 8 aervtnp: poon at a time, mixing
1DOUtb·1tat.erlna CODCOC· .. cupauc•r follows> and salt. Gradually stir cooled pie shell. Chill. Ba&&er Ctast Pu&rJ~ lightly with a fork aftel' P&E8ff PLUM
tlooa \hat 11\Mt summer 1 cup all·purposc Toppble: In m Ilk. Cook over To prepare Topplna: In Into aff.e mixing bowl each ari:iUon. Shape
a teatival ol IOOd tblnp nour "• cup1ucar medium heat; s tirring a small saucepan com· sift to r I cup un· dou1h a ball Roll
toHt. ~teupoonH1l llableapeonwater co nst a ntly, unti l btne susar. water and s Ute regular all· outona edboardto
IWOIEN
Ftlllq:. l~~frab red
plums <.about 16 small> The freat American 2 cupsmUk 1 cup dlcttd r e d thickened. Cook 2 plums. Cook until plums purpose flour and 14 a circle' about 10 Inches
favorite h'oln ·w., back 2 ea yolk.I, beateo plum1 minutes longer. Blend a are tender, about 10 teaspoon salt. Cul in 3 in diameter. Ease Into a <See BEUY. Pace CH)
haa to be butt•r:ricb -------------~----------------------~===~...,.....----= abortcake, fllled wtth
sllca ol rtpto helh tnatt.
top9ed wit~ ht1clou1
wttlpped crHm. f'or
~ndreda of CalUor·
niana, &esb peadt Ume
\a a 110 Old Pashloned
SbortCJ.ke Ume -IWD·
mer woulcln 't be ••· mtr without It. Fresh ltom the oven,
warm and melUna·a.ood.
a Fresh Plum Kuthen
with its disUnctly
G~rman flavor bl a treat
for the whole family. Jta
special claim to IOOd·
neu -a toppinc of
dairy sour cream tor
<:ontrast wttb tbe sweet,
JuJcy plum cake.
Grand finale to a sum-
mer·best compan~·din· ner -FreSh Ras1 iry
Cake Roll. The ca e is a
li1bt, buttery roll sur·
rounding ftesb .caspber· nes and wtiipped creain.
Serve slices topped with
another s plurge or
whippe d c r eum and
s prinkling or more
ras pberries. A com ·
pliment-ga thering
~hoice for <ln arternoor
bridge •uncheon, too.
OLD FASlllONED SHOR'tCAKE
2•1• cups sifted re·
gular all-purpose flour
4 teaspoons baking
po"'der
'" cupsugar
"'2 teaspoon sal~
11:! cup butter
1 egg , slight!>
beaten
ia c up whipping
cream
1 tablespoon sugar
Sweetened s liced
peaches
Whipping cream
Lightly butte r and
fl our an 8-inch round
cake pan. Preheat oven
to 425°. Sift flour, baking
powder, \he 1.~ cup sugar
and salt into a bowl. Cut
in butter. Make a well in
center . Add egg and
cream; stir with a fork
just until combined. Pat
ihe mixture lightly into
the prepare d pan;
sprinkle top with the 1
tablespoon sugar. Bake
ror i:r to 20 minutes or
until golden. Partially
cool in pan. Cut 'f&rm
s hortcake in wedges.
split horizonta lly. and rm with peach slices.
Top with whipped cream
and additional peat'hes.
Makes 6 servings.
BLUEBERRY
BUTl'ERMILK
PANCAKES
2 aips unsifted re·
gular all-purpose flour
l teaspoon each salt
and soda
2 tablespoons sugar
2 eggs, s light!)
be a tea
2~ cups buttermilk
2 tablespoons buUer
melted
t basket <a bout 1112
<:ups> fresh blueberries
Confec:tloners' sugar
Wlalpped Orange Butter
Sift together dry in· gred~ents. Add eggs.
buttermilk and butter;
stir just until moistened.
Add 1 cup of the berries.
Bake pancakes on a hot.
Ugbtly greased ·griddle.
using a scant ''• cup bat· ter tor each. Turn once.
Arrange pancakes on warm plates; sift con-
lecttoners' sugar over.
Serve with the Orange
Butter and re maining
blueberries. Makes 6
servings, 4 pakca kes
eaeb.
Wblpped Orange But·
ter: Cream 1 cup sweet
. .
YOUA1WAY5 SAVEi
WlrH srArlR ·&ROS. 'OW•LOW PRICIS
a&•-~UGI ·-•wantWll -----t¥£•t ... C'f0# ... ," UNCOMOlllOIUl l '~ .. 111 O tO"lt•M •OU Oil•.,....~' tlf'lllWC'Mlf.,tAttM'""°""
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11111 .
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ROAST
II A.DM:UT
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KIC• BACOll t""' '9CCI.
··~ nawmu :• •
TUBB
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12-0Z. PKG.
.....------· ··~ ···~ deli. ! .. ---. 49~ lrnnu. ..... , ... '"'2"1 JUMISO IUlllTOS ~~ ... u. .di--
LB.
STATllll9'1a... ~80l.OQllA Oii $1 '' d{~~ -~ '8P' Cll«ICk. 'OT ' I '. 1UllEY SAUMI ............ u. ,.., Mii HAST..... LL
..-..-•lllQ.C.SMll s12• ~ l.: --·llCMG•._.. •1• lllF•IUOKVT ... llb•l.MOtOID ., .. SAUSAGE =--.... .' ..... (A. • .... .... T LL .............. LL .............. la.
~ . $11' ..... PllOZIM 1~i. s11• l'M1tf•llOTTI>UC&D22"J&l ., •• _,•CMUCll •1• llB•llOIJOC>•_... ., ... INOCIWUIST t>()t.,.a. ... u 1115 O' SHltMP "'G. ....... I.A llAll •-IHf. l.I 'I ........ T ... lL Tl• Sn&K ............ LL
OICNlllA181 • _.,.Oii $) 4 9 "'°"JllOZDI $149 1UP • IOIC.DI • 1 59 _, • CllUCll • ~ • 17• -•l.04M• 1'1Ull •2• u Fum .............. LL 1UllOT F1u.n ............ LL snw IUAT ..... l.• , • ...,_....,. LI .... 1ms1ouu .. u.
OICNl11AY91•890ltYl.RtlOll $149 ,...PllOmt $191 llS'•CHUCIC•.-USS ., .. -·-..&.tDID tiff mF•LOIN f2a9 . CJlllSESMOlllS ~ ..... u. ICILANDICCOD. .. ... La UO--.,... LL ••SnAK ........ 1.1 Y.eOl•SnAK .... "9.
.-Y'I $139' ,_.."90JDO $229 IEP"llOUNO•IONflUS .... -• , ff llD•lOlll•flUll•...UU .... 51.ULUlllACOll ~ ... u. DOVER SOU ... ~······ ...... l• TlltHAST .......... 1.1. Ctl•SnAK ...... La. 'l'WI ............. "'.A
'~ SJH .LIPIM TEA ..... :····· ·· ·111~z.cANS DILL CHIPS = ....... I .. ·~AL 51.89 CANTALOUPES f 5CTOU1.AYl·ulvANANlKRAUI 35c APPLESAUCE ~-.. I .... i~&lc ~ LMOl,._,2.~UL
IW.LOOG'• • · · · · ·· · · · · · · · •· · 1M>z. GATORADE ~(NM •• I ......... u4l. 47c I
1.~flOES ............. ,_99c·KIDNEY BEANS ==~·.. t ... ..,:I' 1 -'=~-
ISYRUP .. . .. ... ... .. .. ... -~ s1 35 fl'6:::~ ..... ~.67c ,_. 12c"'
1 .IORAIEEM PLUS ..... 1~ SJ 59 !'!!..~m~0«.0.•···~···'·~··1·'$131; ·Giiiis~.~~·--:634 PEACHES
• STAtWt--.•FOWCWD lllfWllUI f"Ulll CROCIC8l .1WIZ. fli1il · IXTMPMl:'l•~·IWOlf•pey 39c ==== ,~!!!!! .................... .-"c SOTEWEILL SPOEATOMARS J!~!:a__,,, ''~·! -E~t1'Jk .. :::::.::.::: 1 oc a•· LL
L•sa . 94c OtlllOIHQI........ .. .•.•. n.oi..u.i . .
• ! • .. ...................................... 11.0Z. MUSTARD =::~ ........... f ........... 1~5' AISORTBhUPAIGKT I°"'°"• IWU'f • UNIM.1'1D IN ••• POTS EACH $ 3 4 9 llARIA-........... --65c f~l~r~!.5. _s7as · HOUSEPLAN1S ........ .
'.•
-
~ihTRii::~:t[' :: ~~ ~:s~ i ~oq~~~ specials
BRAN FLAKES POIT •••• 9 ......... : ..... ,~ 75 • i •• mm Dile .~,---~-.-. .... ~
, ~-_ ,,I__ "'---__ ,,, __ _,, .,, ._ _ _ llllllrVI-.. rDl'11 111 ,me :=: ~ ,....,. ..... ,._ ........... 1..nUil-... ,... , ~ l
• ~411# ~ ,._,..~ • °""''1 .~..., . .-.. ~ . -. cmr s111 : , .. ~~~~Et;!;·~~;~~4~: [f~1'H~s ......... -~) ~-~--c2_0_9_~ !'!.CAA .. -.....
DINNEIS ............................................... -.69 GUPE Jlll Y -...... 1 ............. 1.19 ;_;_ : .JSC '. ~--........-.
5 ... H.R..,,,.IM1 P DINNER. $)1t ·PUREX DmRGENT ....... t ........ 41«9-r ...... ..,_. • ..,_°"_~······ .......... : ..... ,04Z. 4 DIAL GOLD , ..... ,IO,\l ................ I ... 1-oz.45c
BURRITOS .......................................... 2s ·re TOSS ••• son .... -51.!M iiiDo&: ............. _ ........ ~ ......... ,. .. 1~ $) stJH• TISM =:..... -~ 47~ ................... -. 79.' flll£Yall'S 38c] . m,SHELLS .......................................... ,,... l)!FOIL t:~n ......................... IA.
ORANGE PLUS ................................ ,~ 92• MARSARHI ~·ITU .. ,~71°
VAN CAMP'S ClREFllE STAYFIEf POll&IUl8 PAMfi SHIELDS MAXl·PADS ,_53• f_. 1u 1-.•1-~ . .., ----
OU...,,.. .... NGE JUla 1 93c CIEESE •llOHY••TCMN .•.• t . ~ •M>L
51.15 ...,,,.,.~._.__.,MM»O.,.·,;;;;;, .. : ............ , .....• M>Z.$ J 19 JACK CHEESE :r:.~.~·.. I \~,. 52.79
FOllMGST ICE CREAM.,. i.OM.IOUMI LEMONADE ~TMI ... I . . . . . ··~.89°
. '
j
I
I
W~y. AUOuat 11, 1978 DAIL V PtL0T G
.
New Low . ces Are Some g
~To SIDg out ·~~t acquired Fazio's 44 Southern Calllomi!emnukeu .
.-\1 ... BERTSONS Welcomes Fazlo's Customers Albertsons now has a total of 79 convenient locations to serve you better ...
·.· Ciiiiki·n~mog $ 08 · .
~·-1 Breast ...... !.~~~!.~~~~.~ ........... Lb.
. 'Oiiiiiii~" Round •• $ 88
Hams .......... ~~~~.~~ .................. Lb.
/
• Fresh Iowa Pork Chopa. Contains C9nters 1nd Ends
-.Quarter Pork Loins ........... ~~-~-~'..: ............... u.. s1 2•
•
.lanel L• 1-1.b. "•or Thick (2-Lb. TNclt '2.51)' ... ' SI Iced Bacon ........................... ~~~.~.~ ..................... Lb. 12•
Manager's
Frozen Spec ials
Mlnu'9 Miid, : .... Of Pklll 5 s 1 Lemonade ..... •·~ '°'
CllMM,S-.,Pepper•ll 790 ~~~~ .................... 1k<
iltirreat 5 $1 Potatoes ......... kL '°'
Swanson 590 . Entrees ,,s.:-t: ... ~ , ..... "~..... . .. ,~ ......
Cinned '8'' Hms ............................ 5-Lb. ·
i!'r ......... ~ 7 !1
Cii1ppe11 ::~-45c Meats ....... ..kL
AJblrtlonl ' ~~==~ ......... 99°
~ ................. .,
&-=:a~ ........... !, ••
f:~:r ............. -29°
. .
I
•
We invite you to compare our hurldreds of new low prices flagged in our stores.
Produce Manager's Special s
Golden Ripe CrlspSolld
Bananas Head Lettuce
L~ 10° 3!1
' Large Size CalHomla Medium Size, Sllclng
-Avocados Tomatoes . .
'
!1. 49° 3.L!1 •
Mtd. Slzi ._.-.~ "' --.-. ---·· -auortac1 Dole ~ollaga Plants Mushrooms . . ,.,.
-~ s12~ 4"Po•990 Ea •
1-C Drinks
All
Flavon 440
48-oz.
Can .
. .........
...... .,,, ..... ". ,, ,, .~ ............ ,.,,,. ~ .. ,,.-..: ''"~,.,., .......... ~ , ....... ~.-~ ..... . .
•
I
CJ8 ONLY PILOT
Raspberry
sponge roll
has a buttery
flavor.
...• Berry
(From Paae Cl>
t cupsuaar 2 lublespoons quick
cook 1ng tap&oc•
Crua&:
'~ cup t 1 stick) but
ter
1 cupsU&nr
l ' .. cups WlSifted re·
gular all·purpose nour
h teaspoon salt
1 ~ teaspoon cin-
namon 1_. teaspoon bruting
powder
1 cup d airy sour
cream
Halve llfld pit plums.
M Ix lightly with sugar
and tapioca. Let stand
for 15 minutes or longer
while preparing crust.
Jn a mixing bowl cream
butter; gradually add
sugar, beating until li&J.
and fluffy. Sift togetner
flour. salt, cinnamon
and baking powder;
gradually add to
creamed mixture (will
Qt! crumbly). Set aside
':i cup. Press remainder
to cover bottom and ex -
tend 1 inch up s ides of a
9-inch springrorm or re·
movable bottom round
cake pan, or an 8-inch
square baking pan.
Arrange plums, cut
sides down, in s hell.
Sprinkle with any sugar-
t a pi o ca mixture not
absorbed by the plums,
then with ~ cup
c rumbly butter-rlour
mixture. Bake in a pre·
heated 400 oven for 45
minutes, until topping is
browned and plums are
tender. Serve warm
with so ur cream
whipp1:!d in a chilled
bowl with chilled
beaters until doubled in
volume <about S minutes
with electric mixer at
highest speed). Makes 6
to 8 servings.
RASPBERRY
SPONGE ROLL
'2 cup milk
2 tablespoons butter
2eggs
1 cup sugar
1 teaspoon vanill<.1
11.-cups s ifted cakl'
flour
1 1~ teaspoons bak-
ing powder
1.-'.l,teaspoon salt
Confectioners' sugar
Preheated 325' oven
Filllng:
1 cup whipping
cream
2 tablespoons con·
fectioners' sugar
12 teaspoon vanilla
2 cups fr esh
raspberries
Line a buttere d
shallow baking pan < 10
by 15 by 1 inch) with
waxed paper, then but·
ter the paper. In a l ·
quart s.aucepan heat
milk; add butter. Cool.
In a mixing bowl beat
eggs until very thick and
lemon colored. Gradual-
ly add sugar and con·
tinue beating until
smooth. Add the 1 teas-
poon vanilla . Sift
together flour, baking
powder. and salt;
gradually add to egg-
mixture and mix only
until blended. Add milk,
stirring quickly only un-
til batter is smooth <will
be thin). Pour into pre-
pared pan. Bake in a
preheated-~ owen ---
-18 to :20 miDutes until
cake springs back' when
touched ligbUy. Loosen
cake from aldes of pan
and Lum out on a clean
towel that has been dust·
ed with confectioners',
sugar. Peel off waxed
paper and trim crisp
edges of cake. Starting
with the narn>w end or
tbe cake, roll towel and
cake together; cool on a
nrelr.
To make the filling,
beat '1!i cup of the cream
wltb confectioners' sug-
ar and vanilla until stiff ..
When the cake is cool.
carefully unroll tt, re·
moving the towel.
Spread the rllling over
the cake and toQ with 1
cup of the berries.
Carefully roll the cake
and dust the top with
.• 1eonreetioners• suiar.
Cblll for l to 2 hours.
Ser·ve sllced wttb re-m at n l n g ~ cream
whlPOed until llllf, and addltl0nal 1 cup berries
1weettn;ed to taste.
)lakes 8 fervlnga.
WedMlday, Auguat ti. 1t71
a rlOOf BOUHOll
Ancient Age
80 ftOOf BUllO(O M41SK£Y
Seagram's 7 Crown
IOmu
Gordon's Gin
IO PIOOf LICK! OR Qf.RK
Bacardi Rum
Cribari Zinfandel
BUllCUllOY VIII llOSI 011 OIA01 I •
Sebastian1 Wines
l IGHI 011 0411•
Lowenbrau
Old Tap
QT 6H, 40
~flt
11\Mll 5" 412
7S0.ML
CIHOlt 5" 4"
I lS-tTI 11" ... lltl'll I
750-llL <IS'41
l!>Oflll 1" ..... ,.
IHlll 2" 2n 'W•lfl,/
.. } t 41 • 3" 2"
1" pi
6 1'' 1 S2 1101 CAii~
6 241 2" 17(1/ 811!.
6 17 01 CAllS Ill#
111111 .99
JI•
1"
1''
3u
.90
SAY(
.37
•IOl
VAUit
-
FOOD
.Summer Cooler Time
St a y coo I and combines the subtle
refreshed this summer flavor of condensed
with a thlrst.quenchine chicken broth and fresh sipper. or a sumptuous. vegetables.
summer salad. The key
GARDEN SALAD
1 teaspoon vine1ar
'4 teaspoon hot pep· per sauce
2 cups chopped fresh
tomatoes intredlentl in the rec· •
tpea featured bere are
brotba -beef and
chicken. Try these rec·
ipe Ideas as comple·
menta to sensational
summer fare.
1 cup chopped zuc· 2 envdopes un-chini squash flavored gelaUne
1h cup cold water V.. cup chopped
2 cans < l~ ounces green pepper
eac h > condensed 11.-cup (1nely
This crisp, cool salad chicken broth chopped green onions
'
. -.,.._' ... .,. .
In saucepan, sprinkle
ge1atane on cold water.
Place over low heat,
stirring until gelatine is
dissolved. Remove from
heat : add broth and
seasonin,gs. Chill until
slightly thickened. Fold
in remainin1 lnare·
dlents. Pour Into a &-cup
mold. Chill 6 hours or
until firm. Unmold on
salad grffQS. Serve with
mayonnaise. Makes
about 6 cups, 6 servings.
..
•
..
I '·
r-t . . . t
..
DAILY PILOT € J J ANN LANDERS I HOROSCOPE Wedneeday. August 1e. 1e1e .:..::..::.::~:..:.;:=.;::.:..::.:..:..:.::.:::.::.:.:::::.::::.:::::.:..:::...----------------------------------------------------------"!'-------------------------_.;;-----------=-----------------~., Underwea r Theory ( C'alendar ] ,_,,__nEttl.£-. ~c· .. -R€€k---...:
0 E A R A N N ~ .......... _. ______ ..__. ______ __,
~OllP IAIY LANDERS: Ny mother
Mow t• ll a d ar penon. now In
fteW o-. ~ h r late 108. Sho raised
CMW'oft ""'°on ftve dauOlan and I'd tM 405 hlMy M)' abe did a f aJrly lood
kif dlt9ot .-Y IC'*9 to JOb Of It OOD1tdertn1 •ho Huntl~ c.tic. and worked a 10-boW' ft)' ln
Ot'd Wotlllt Vlltlfl. a dry loodl 1tore . .;:iiii;E&;;;;;;;;;1 Motlier formed our conces>U about a arHt
many thlnt• but my
1tron1t1l recollectlon
w H her preoccupation
wttb the condition of our
widerwtar.
Almost every day ror
JHtl Mamu wollld re-
mind ua lhat we muat
atwaya wear clean un·
derwear -no p1n.s or
rtps. Heaven tortildl She
sald, "A girl never bowa when she will be
In an accident. and
nothing is mor e
humiliating than being
taken to the hospital in
s habby or s oiled un-=.,-:::,.."'r.-:.=:. derwear " Accordin1 to
ee11 ...... _.._..,~ Mama, the nurses and :=::= '::" t::t,• doctors talk of oothlne ~--"" else. D_..__., Have you heard from
~I other readers who wor· r-we115 rled about such trivia? .-V. ,._. My sisters and I have ~OEVElOPMan laughed abou~ it for
& MOOELINOSCMlOLS years and now l 'vQ de·
OAAltSE coum cided t.o write and in-3 Town & Country. Orange quire on behalf or the -
(714) S47·8n8 &ETROIT F1VE ~~~~~~~~~l DEAR FIVE: Your mother bas lots of com·
pany. Many women are
haunted by lbe same
fear.
A very runny book by
LJz Smitb called ''The
Mother Book"
<Publisher, Doubleday,
Sl0.95) relates that HER
Get Rid Of
uusightly Bulges ,,..... .... .., -... .,. ..........
........ ett .. dl•h
..__. • tfo....,
Also ·
•• 14MCHlllH ..
.. Ullhlof
AcH • Dry ~ • Olly Sld1t
Wrillldn • U... • "-'"-
If y.. .._ c.._.
•mr.ly ~Mill
c .............. ...,
~ltU"/y
SKIN CAR!1r
FIGURE CONTROL
CENTERS
CALL NOW!!!
C .... MeM •••••••••••. H7-17JD
.................... lt4-7141 ........................ , ........ ...,_~T ...... 76Mafl ....... v..., ............ 71., S..INete •••••••..... 6t7-4tffl ,......,°' .............. fft..Jt t
#f FASHIOM 151.AHD
Mewpcwt leaclt
712-6461
•
•OC•er waa .. .., • ., on Mike.
••derwear. OM clay tbe 1 don't want to stop. dear wo•aa adually He 's got lots of good
broke Mr IMC!ll ID a cu qualities that make up
ucldeat. Tlat d•Uful tor this bad one. I need
4Hlllilter' rubed &o tM y o u r a d v i c e . -
bot•lt•I and &Ille ftrat HAYWARD READER
Ualn& Ul'a motber aald D EAll HAY: What
w11, "I laad on my kind of adl'lce? You've
Cllllrlat•aa underwear, already told me wbat a
dlaall llttavem!" .. neat guy'' Mike ls and
'fte book ii k&Jartou. that JOU cloo't wan& to
A perfed &lft for aayone stop •eeinl lllm. You've
ln a ltolpltaJ no matter alao told me be bas bit
wba& tbe condltion or ber you before. So now I will
(or Illa) underwear tell YOU that be will llD·
wben broaJ,bt tbere. doubtedly lalt you again.
D E A R A N N Don't be surprised If
LANDERS: Tomorrow one day be clobbers you
niibl I won't be going to over aometlalog really
a fa mil y re u n ton Important alld puts you
because I can't open my ln tbe hospital.
right eye. My boyfriend DEAR ANN: I'm sure
hit m e . It was over lots of lonely people
noihing at all. Actually, write to you. Since you
I couldn't remember his Hre against lon.ely
friend's name and be in· hearts clubs and com-
sisted !. "forgot on puter dating, why not In·
purpose. t.erview high-class pros-
1 must say he was pecu in your home ?
a.wrully ntce abOut It You could change a lot
right after. He took me of lives. _ ROGERS
to a swell steak place ARK •
and bought me two T· ·
bones -one to eat and DEAR ARK: I could
one for my eye. change lives all rtgbt -
I am 19. He is really especJalJy mine. All I
a neat guy except for need ls t-0 run a dating
this one fault. He has hit service -from my
m e a couple J>C times home yet. I want no part
before but never where or p I a y in g Cup Id .
It s howed. Now l 'm Everyone should find bis
afraid ii my folk11 guess own mate. He can then
what happened they will either thank himself or
make me stop see'ing kick himseU.
( Horoseope
THURSDAY, AUGUST 17
By SYDNEY O~tARR
)
ARIES <Mar. 21·Apr. 191: Family membe!"
ls responsible for pleasant surprise. Accent on
social event. celebration. wish fulfillment .
friendship tr<.1nsformed in serious relationship.
TAURUS CApr. 20-May 20>: Accent on goal.
career . authority. civic duty. making room for
yourself at top. Define terms. Avoid self·
deception. Get behind scenes. The floating lady
is being held up by "something ... Enjoy the il·
lusion. But don't take literally ev(ftYthing you
see.
GEMINI cMay 2l·June 20>: Good lunar
aspect coincides now with journey. education.
publication. communication. long.distance
message. Capricorn. Aquarius. Cancer persons
figure in your personal scenario. What seemed
an impossible dream may be closer at hand
than imagined.
CANCER <June 2l·Jut.y 22>: You gel to bot·
tom of mystery. You learn lessons which could
be the beginning of a fascinating hobby -or
profession. Aries. Libra figure prominently. Ac·
cent on finances affecting partner or mate. In·
terest In the occult ls sparked.
LEO CJuly 23-Aug. 22 >: You're offered
"new deal" or revised agreement. Key is to ac·
cept creative challenge. Another Le-0 -and an
Aquarian -could be in picture. Emphasis on
cooper14tlve effort. bearing views of others
without burying your own beliefs. Questions
concerning partnership, marriage arise.
VIRGO <Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Moon position
spotlights employment, basic services, general
welfare, health. Expectations are great -and
that is good -if you avoid losing patience.
Steady pace wins. Skipping essentials for sake
or short cut carries steep price. The choice is
your own. .
LIBRA cSept. 23-0ct. 22>: Accent on
creative endeavors. significant changes, love.
Social life accelerates -you communicate.
publish, travel, imprint style and individuality.
Luck runs high in games of chance -but don 'l
go overboard. Gemini. Sagittarius persons
figure in exciting scenario.
SCORPIO <Oct. 23-Nov. 2ll: Be meticulous
-check and doublecheck fine print. details. Be
aware of basic material -and your own needs.
Prote ct valuables. Get home, property ap-
praisal. Parent or authority figure could seek
your approval.
SAGflTARIUS <Nov . 22-Dec. 21): Yes, the
move ls good and neces&ary. where feeling of
betra)Ull ii COA<:enu.cl. !fb•number'-b-&-:-Wrttten
m aterial, once evaluated, will prove to be of ad·
vantage. Study Scorpio messitge. A GemlnJ
could play key role.
CAPKICO•N <l,)ec. 22-Jan. 19): Accent on
money and bow to aet more or it. Element of
llmlna ls on your slde. Taurus, Libra, Scorpio
figure prominently. Finances and domestic
situation combine -diplomacy now could be
greatest ally ln talking money with f amlly.
AQUAllRJS <Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Lead the
way, make puaonal a ppurances, stress
ortginality, independence, p1oneerlna spirit.
Define terms, refuse to takeJ>ack Nat to one
who attempts t.o lntimldate ~ Cycle is hi&h
and you will emeree victorious.
PISCES <Feb. 19·Mar. 20): What was a
"confidential report" becomes anJlable. Put toot down -draw line, live up to responslbillty.
Some may chide, but they actually are envious.
Weicht ol authority ts on your side. Member of
opposite sex ls intriaued and hardly makes a
secret ol tt.
tir.e statk:nery caoia del mar
,•
.....
SENIOR CITIZENS CLUB: The Harbol' Area
group will hold a festival on Thunday. Au&. 17.
at 15th and Irvine. Hours are from 9:30 a.m . to
3:30 p.m. At 6:30 p.m . an ice-cream social will
be held. followed by entertainment. Admission
to the festival ls free. The social costs 50 cents.
RETIRED OFnCERS ASSOCIATION: The
South Coast Chapter will meet at 6:30 p.m.
Thursday, Aua. 17, ut the EslrctJla Country
Club, San Clemente.
ASSISTANCE LEAGUE: The Newport Beach
group will hold its annual Thrift Shop ''Stuff a
Bag· sale from 10 a.m. to 4 p.cn. Thu_rsday.
Aug. 17, and 10 a.m . to 3 p.m. 'Friday. Aug. 18.
The shop, which will close for two weeks be&ic·
nine Aug. 19 and reopen on Sept. ~. is located at
505 32nd Street, Newport Beach.
IOI: The Newport Beach chapter will attend
the annual day at the races at. Del Mar Race
Track on Friday. Aug. 18. Malet reservations
through Mrs. H. Paul Smith.
PROVIDENCE SPEECH AND HEARING
CENTER: The Mission auxiliary wUl bold a
luncheon and card party from noon until 4 p.m.
Friday, Aug. 18, In Hammond Hall. St. George's
Episcopal Church. Laguna Hills.
AAUW: The Huntington Beach Branch-will
hold a membership coffee at 10:30 a.m . Satur-
day, Aug. 19, at the home of Mrs. 'Marte
Wallace. 6931 Vla Angelina. Huntington Beach .
Phone her for Information.
JUNIOR WOMAN'S CLUB: The Rancho Viejo
group will begin H membership drive wiUi a
luncheon at 11.30 a.m. Saturday. Aug. 19. for re·
servations and information. call 831-0717.
POLICE WIVES .\UXILIARY: The Newport
Beach gl"oup will hold a barbecue on Saturday,
Aug. 19, at the home of Lt. and Mrs. Gary
Petersen Recently graduated officers and their
wives will be guests
BIG SISTERS: The Orange County group will
hold an art auction benefit at 7 p .m. Sunday.
Aug. 20. Ht the Registry Hotel. Irvine. Viewing
of the art is at 7 p.m. Bidding starts at 8 p.m .
Tickets are SS available from the organization's
office or ut the door.
BPW: The Irvine Bus iness and Professional
Women's Club will meet at 7 pm. Tuesduy.
Aug. 22. at the University Park multi-purpose
room. This will be the last opportunity to
become a charter member of the club which
has been forming since April. For information.
call Karen Bocard. 833·6963. or Lea Alleman .
551·4803.
\
CHRISfl.\N WOMEN'S CLUBS: The Hunt·
ington Beach Group will meet at noon. Wednes-
day. Aug. 23. for u luncheon. Featured speaker
will be Karen Long on how to decorate with
baskets.
.\.\UW: The Westminster-Fountain Valley
branch will hold membershjp coffees at 7 .JC
p.m. Wednesday. Aug 23. at the home of Mrs.
Elaine Jumpe. Westminster, a.od at 7:30 p.m .
Friday. Aug. 29. at the hom~ of Mis. Mary Kay
Boston. FOwrtaJn Valley
For information. call Mary Ann McConahey.
751 -8105; or Gloria Bill. 848·0385
CLA~ REUNION : The Class of 1958 of John
Muir High School. Pas<.1dena. wiU hold a Reu-
nion on Oct. 21 at the South Coast Plaza Hotel.
Costa Mesu For reservations and information.
write to John Muir Reunion Committee. 2907
Ebbtide. Corona del Mar, CA 92625. Include
name and address.
Club Calendar runs each Wednesday in the Daily
Ptlot and contatru notices of a/Jomen ·s and service club
meetings and events for the following week -Thurs·
day through Wednesday.
(
~ Prlceetor bedspreads start
' at $130 twin size and $210
king size. 90" draperies
start at $70 per pair.
From these prices
SUBTRACT 20%
DURING THE
SALE PERIOD
Cttl( ... cau , .. Ml llttlAI ....... ,lllCf. '"' ..........
....... C•Hll SlloP 1J Fa111o0<> 111ano £_,. C...19< Newp0f1 Beacn Eeat 17111 StrMI MIO Mtwl>O<I F•-•1
11u16'4 Meo Tuton 111•1,.._1550
FINAL
MARKDOWNS
Dresses, Gowns,
Pant Suits, Coats f~
and Separates I . . r., \• "'.,_,.-.. .,
S1zess.20
YtilllH•to
160.00
... $60.00
to $100.00
Now S2()SO
Now s33so
tr.. SI 00.00 Now S4650 to $140.00
·~
'
~ r/l ,,, ~ ;401M ..... St.
L. M. BOYD )
S..ta Alta • 54J.t44t
Step out of your car into Patricia's
Free Parking in Rear
Yoor cilarge account welcome
• Master Charge •
ALL SALES FINAL
NO RETURNS • NO LAYAWAYS
INFORMS in th•
DAILY PILOT
i..~15...
W..-i•~
SALE
PRICE 5179 SALE $199 PRICE
our FAMT~STIC
SAVINGS. Come In ·and see the111 alL I 00•1 of
chain on dlsp'°Y In ••r colors Cllncl fabrics. FRIE
IMMEDIATE DEUVERYI
TAKE ITWITH·YOU AND SAVI!
•I ...
.,
I •
... w=-· ~1 .. 1•1 ••. ...... , , ... ,,,,, .......................... ...... .., ........... .. ,,,, .. ,. .......
WE ..... .
White or Wheat ... and the tempting Fiahermon '1 loaf, ca wtll aa I a mow
Honi Sltqua111 bread! ... and
fa lall. ..
Shftphmler Rolla ... white or
w/Mat, and deliciofu Skquaw Rolla, too .. .......
• Fruit DanUh ., ltaUUtetw or
,,. Cinnamon Twilt ... fM breakfast!
SWOIDFISH
.. mall
Ctlllr tll ••. .......... s4'!
Flat of S. .. s3n.
Frelh ... mild Oavored English aole
: Fram Clear Sprinp! Net wt 4 en each
... fl1£1S! ~· SJ4! ~ bn>ile•, b-b-q!
The Best of Spirits!
\ D. ... 'S -.· s4J•
Save SU>OI White or Gold-Qu.rt.
EaltJ T1111 •••. SS51
Stnlilbt -~ 80t Quart
-., VoAl •.. 5741
Now ... 1.49 ·-tM 1.76 liten
.' Cordon's •••• san
, Save 2.00 oo this oama brand! 1.76 Iv
Cubtl ot U.9.D.A. Chol01t-loln cut-WeNrn l88th4ktwered ind rudv for thf ftxtn'a! Sbwen priced aa IC&led
Llllb ClloPI :-1 •. 137\ I.al-Chops tr ... 53! v
u.s.o.A. Choi w...em re'9id u.s.o.A. Choice-W"t..n Lamb
~••••a,._. .. tWM1h •u•....._
.................. ., ¥'I tw fr ..,..
................... _ .. hit.
Miiie Tl I &ii I lll • lm! . wru • ft08 Tl -.111ar n ,.
• ........... Tl ...
YSa Tl mm.••-.•-.
Your coolt--OUt becomea a feoat whm you
offer Lamb aa the Mal't of the mmu!
You can count on tM fragronce. the tantolizing
·tende~11 to b• to ~warding! 7lte better woy te aatiafaction.
FRESH! WESTEll
RllSED!
Ground Lamb •• 89\
Lean western.railed Choice freih limb
/JJ1 n1a•b =-tin RJJSED! •••••••• ·ll ll
• Compare the quality! Oun is fresh ... really freeh ... ind from domestic lamb. raised in the west! and U.S.D.A. Choice!
FW FUVORED
CHCIGO STYLE $179 Padraml •
By the piece (IUCD. • .$1•)
alOICEIN9!
..USS LOIN SJ59 OIOPS • ~
Fre&b-U.S.D.A. Choice western Bar M •.. Half or quarter .
lparB Bibs~ . !lll
Fin«er lickin· treat! Fresh mid·we11tem grain·fed pork. with so much meatv iioodness to Mlisfy the hungry horde! Love the value
Beef Roast zm~ · Gro111d Beet=s1st
U.S.O.A. Choice beef for v1lue Chuck out Choice shoulder clod Lean-doe& not exceed 22% fat
' 7 Bone Roast •• s1 't GBIJIE r.ILK-FED VEAL 0 Bone Roast •• s11t
Chuck cut U.S.D.A. Choice beef Featured everv day at Et Rancho! Chuck cut U.S.D.A. Choice beef
111/f IBBBi :IO:nlfseaE ~-........... !I.IL
Round cut ol U.S.D.A. Choice beef ... boneless and rolled for a l{JUt roast for the rotisserie
~~g~ $14!
El Rancho'• thicker "ranch style"
Super Fresh Produce
............ 15!
. . ... ..
8111J11Mr • ..,.,. """" Plonnilv bffiM at Bl Ramho!
For aa.lada or cookilll! 38 oa bti.
Jelly ........... 49t
G!'Mt with lamb! S'mucbr'• 10 oz
Fnit Drillb IM , • 7ge
Punch, Grape or ;.L oz btle
Sweet & Sow •• 79C
Bartender'• friend! Tavern-Quart
Bricbt clean taste! Spriqfield 48 oz
Msgarine • • • • • • 79c
FJeilcbmann'• with co~ oil! 1 lb
Tea Bags •••••• 5111
Chuc-•-lui·a-Lipton! 48 ct
Water ... • •• '. 33c
Drink.ins or Purified-Springfield
lta&an 59 Dressing c
Wiahbone-m1kee a fme marinade!
8 0% bottle . . . natten green ealadt
Wine Vinegar • • 49c
Regina Garlic, Red. Champagne! 12 oz
... foil •z ••• ~ ••• 99c
Springfield 76 foot roll for value
Sego Liquid •••• 43c
Diet supplement-all flavon-10 oz •
PAPER
TOWBS 45c
Sprinsfield-eboog, thirsty! Roll
Fabric Softener s1 •• ~
Sta·Puf in tbe·gallon 1ize
Saran Wrap ..•. '1 19
Sea!. in soodneee! 100 ft roll
ERA IOllBI ••••••• s119
Fight. eoiJ. and atai~! 32 oz (Ho...,
FACIAL 59c nsSUE
Lady Scott-pretty and tum<! 200 ct Package for ao miny mieezee
Cat Food ••••••• 6•51
Springfield-all varietiee-6~ oz
Glass Cle•er • • 79c
Texize PJue-32 oz size refill
Delicatessen · Frozen Food
I 's Meats!: 45c lntre8s sWAISOll's ........... 59c
Fried Chicken (7 ti) Fiah 'n' Cbipe (I ti) or Turkey (I 'J/4 _, Your choice
Clinmen'• 'Crisp Illes .•• 24 oz . .)Ir -
_ fa lolls ••..• 69c
Shrimp, Chicken. Meat/Sb.rim~ os
V.e&etallla-•• ~
SpriQlfield aoodDIM ln 20 OUDCl:bis
Diessinl ·-•• W ti'a-<lf ~W"Mlt fallMf 8 OS.
Llllch Meats:n•1••
0.Car Mayer ... Beef or Meat ••• 12 oz.
Or Jui •111 mge ce... ~
Minute Maid concent.rat.e-16 oz
.., Pma· · · 11• ,. . . ..... .
Gino'• Pepperoni, S1uup--pkc ol &
JICI . : )..
.,Cheese'n'lut s 1" LOG 1a.. · L etc
Kaukauna Sharp, Wirw ot Swi11 Sprinifitld-.it O•von-half piton
Pricn in effect Thun. A&41. 17 throu.1h Wed. AUi. 23 O°perl dai~ 9 co t. : . Sunday 10 ro ?. No taln to dmlm
.. Flltm1111 ........
BubMr Be.th «' &tb Oll ..._16 oa . ... m .. •1 ........ no -................ .$1.11 a... r.u.:...a.i ..... , I lb Bnty Ctoe.._r "1dp Supreme 23 ot
-f ~__._.. .. ____,. -. ·-·· . . I
.. . .. -______ _,, .....
2 ..
..
. -
\ ' ..
..
~
BOATING
Cle
Thc>~Cou truining b..u-que Eugh• is shown under rull suil us
'ht> crubes down the coust from Sun Frunc1sco to tht.• Port or Long
B-..uc h whtire sht• will lead u purude or SJll uround the hurbor st urt·
mg at 2 p.m Saturday. Tht> Eugll' und bt•vt•rul other boats in tht•
.-\mt'racun Sult Trulning Associution rJCt' <.irt.· t'xpected to arrive an
Long Beuch Thursday night
On dine • ID Front .
KiaWa 15 Miks Behind i n Hawaii
HONOLULU <AP> -The 79·foot
s loop Ondine managed to slip 15
miles ahead or the 79·foot ketch
Kialo11 Tuesday as they fell into the
tight winds on the let> side of Hawaii
Island in the around·the-state yacht
race.
The race is the final event in the
five·race Pan Am Clipper Cup Yacht
Series
AT TUESDAY'S a fte rnoon roll
call. Ondine was 45 miles from South
Point on Hawaii Island, making only
50 miles in the previous eight hours.
Arter they get around South Point,
the boats should once again be in the
tradewinds for the beating leg back
up the east side of the chain and
through the Molokai Channel for the
Diamond Head finish BOATING
BEBJNO THE TWO United States
boats. in order, were Australia's Big
Schott, roHowed by Sorcery or the
Un ited States a nd Australia's
Ragamuffin. Ann v I Bravura or the United States.
Country Boy or New Zealand and
Australia's Nyambu
Then in a pack came Checkmate or
the United States. Hawaii's Carrie
Character
Boat Date
\
Selected
Aug. 20 has been set
as the date for the an·
nual Character Boat
Parade. sponsored by
lht: Commodores Club ot
the Newport Harbor
Area Chamber or Com·
m erce.
Thi! event this year
will be without a theme
and entrants are being
told to decorate as they
please.
Judging will be based
on divisions which in·
elude schooners, classic
yachts. tugs and work
boats. m ontereys and
boats or unusual design
or character.
Entry blanks are
;.1vailable through the
chamber offices , 1407
Jamboree Road, or from
local yacht clubs
Balboa Team
Wins Regatta
The team of Ty Beach
and Heidi Crase!, or the
Balboa Yacht Club was.
thP winner in Lido Isle
Yacht Club's Stewart
Curpent e r Me mo ria l
(/Regutta. a Yacht Rae·
ing Union -sanctioned
event for boy·girl teams
between the ages or 16
and 19. The races are
!>ailed in Lido-1.fs.
Silver Wins 1liird
•
Catamaran Crown .
Jeff Silver or Huntington Beach won bis third
straight national championship in the Pacific
Catamarans < P·Cat) Class last Sunday in a six
race series sail~ out or CabriUo Beach Yacht
Club.
There were 17 entries in Class A and nine in
Class B.
Second in Class A was Owen Minney of
Newport Beach and third was Craig Greaves, Mis·
sion Bay Yacht Club. San Die~o.
Winner in Class B was Steve Young or the
West Coast Yacht Club and second was Mark
Auchamcl. Newport Beach.
The P -Cat is a 20·foot catamaran produced in
Newport Beach by Westport Marine. It is one or
the few catamaran classes that rues a spinnaker .
The national championship was sailed over
Olympic courses.
European Crown
Taken by Greek
ATHENS. Greece <AP> -George Andreadis
of Greece won the European Lightning sailing
championship with Christoph Luthy of Switzerland
taking second ptace.
In the sixth and final race in the Athens leg of
the European sailing championship, Mando De
Amicis or Italy was first, followed by George An-
dreadis and Claude Lambelet of Switzerland.
The final standings had Andreadis first with 10
penalty points, followed by Claude Luthy with 20
points and American John Schnelder with 24.
PVIHJC NOTICE
PICTITIOUI eutlNlll
MAIM ITATIMllNT
' .......... ,.,. ,. .. o .... ,. 001,.. lllillMUt\
WIT WATllt "°' tue co .,... lol••W• llVll , C.O.I• Meu, c.a. ~v 1.IOYd HetW¥ Mil, ... s ,,.,.,_Im A,.. • •no. c:.i. Mete, CL ftU1
Pred L e11r1111011tr ~ . IHOO Al91M\'lul1'1, ,,._ Hlll'lllfll'Oll .. ~II. Co.
~
thl\ ltutl""I II COfldU(tff by o
.,._.,,.,,,., ... I).
L'°"lllK•
'"'' ,,.._ .... '''" ''"'" I ... '*"''' CltB f1f Ore1191C-y00\ July "· "'' "'1*11
"119111 ..... Or.,,.. Coest Otlly "llOI
1114 "· n. •· s... •· "" "'"''
PUBUC NOTICE
PfCTITIOU5 e UMNIU ...... ITATIMllNT
T ... foll0wl119 MACHll art 001"9
llllilMUM.
KING .... INTING ceNTElt, 2201
~ftlfl. IMM, CA '71U Tiit~ l..Ortlldot, IJlll LH
lelOMI, W.StmlM .... CA f26l3
OI.,.. Ge19w, 24511 So. lte .. ~
Av.., Ctnen. CAWIU Tllh IMKIMU Is <~t.ed llY t
..,..,.,~
TModore &.or..-• Tiiis st~ was fMod wltll the
Goul'lly CM ol Ol'e1>99 CIMIMY on
AllOUll 14."" MftJt
l"vblliMd Orel!Oe Coett 0.11., Pllol
Aug. "· 23, ». ~· m• ~11
PUBUC NOTICE
NOTICI! TOCfttEDITOH SU .. lftlCMt COU•T OP THIE
IT A ttE OP CALI l'OtlNIA POft
TMI CIOUWT'I' OPOftANOI! Ne.A....U Elltl• of CARL A. OLSON. Ot
CARL AATHUROl..SOH. 0ec .. M<1.
NOTICE IS HEltEBY GIVEN to Ille
Cl'edltol'I OI Ille tllove ......... OIKlldenl
tllel tll ,.._ 11tv1no claim• 99eln"
f.,. sold decedtllt Me reqylrtd 10 Ill• ,.....,, wltll 111* _s...., VOUC:Mfl, In
lilt office of Ille c...-11 of 1M -.,..
utled court, or to prtwnt them. """' Ille MCUS¥Y YGIKMrJ.. to ,,,. 11,._
oeral9ned al llSI Dove Slreet,
NeWPort ~II, C.lllomlt , Wlllcll I\
Ille plo'• Of bll\lnus of Ill• 11n-dersl9Md ifl etl -tters pentlnlno to
Ott os141te OI wld ~. wllllln •-tnOfltll\ efter Ille first !Mlblk-11on 01
'"'' "°'''·· Oeled JlllyS, 1971,
EDNA MARIE ORTON ~--.w111
of #It-.. "'"'" TULLY~MOUlt
llSI Deft,.,_., Stllto , ..
Ntw,.n 9-:11, CA ftMe
~ Att-'tlerll~ Publlsllecl Ortflllt CO.st Delly Pllo1
July i., Aug. 2. •. "· 1m nn.11
PUBIJC NOTICE
SU .. IEltlCMt COUltT O' tHI!
St ATE OP CALlll'OtlNIA ~Olt
TM ll COUNTY Of' OftAMOe .... .......,
NOTICE O~ Ht:AftlNO 0,
... ti TIC* l'Ott .. lt09AT• 0' WIU.
AN D L.ITTl!ltS 0' A O · MINISt•ATIOtf
Estote of ZELDA BEATRICE PRY 0 R, Otc.et_,,
NOTICE 1$ HEREBY GIVEN tllel
JAMaS E . HEIM, Pullll< AO·
mlnlJtretw, NI filed ,,.,.,n •petition
!or Proo.le OI Wiil 9"11 ~-• ol Ltt·
ten ol odmlnlstrotlon 10 tM P•tl·
ti-r, reftr91'1CO to""""" h mecte lor ,..,, ... , Port""'-and ttwot ,,,. "-
-ploct of ""'Ing tlle &amt NI llMn set tor August 31, 1t71, et t oo
• m , In the cow1r_,, Of Otpertment
No. 3 ol sold~. at 100 Civic Center
Orlve West. In "'9 City Of ~I• Ant , Celltornle.
Oet9d~ll.t7'. WIL.UAM IE. S4 JOWN,
CAlllMy Qef1'
AD .. IAN KUY .. Elt
COUMtYC:OUMHL AMOO•~lt.Qefhe,~y
MCM<C...-......
IMtaAN,CA
Tfl:IM""' •*'-rs•: ,.....1-ff ~'"*' Or-Cotst Dtlly Pl ...
A-.. "· 17. n. "71 3").71
PVBUC NOTICE ...,.,..
NOTICS TO c ••DtTO•S NO,,,.,._
SU .. lftlOll COU•T o~ tHe STAT11 OP CAU"°"NIA 'Olt TM• CIOUWtY Of' OftANOIE tn th• Mell..-of the Ell•lt of
NELLE M. GRUNQY, oko NELLIE
M. GAUNOY, Dt<MIOCI. '
Notkt 11 ......., 91..., lo creclitori
11.tvlno claims ooefM1 ,.,. wld dea·
d9flt to Ill• ulO cftlms In ,.,. office Of
tlle "erll Of IM -.Uld coul1 or to prettnt Ulem to ti. underllllMd •t ,,,. office ol Ro0e11 M., f'ISll, 61 So<llll
Ukt AY•nuf, P•Mdefto. C..tllornl• 91101, wllktt lotter office 11 U..Ple« ol
IMlslMll °'.,,. llllOtrsllJlled In •II mot· tera Pfftalnlno 10 sold estete. Suell
clelms wltll the NUSS...Y voucMrs
m11sl ti. llled or~ H otoruold
wllllln ,.,, rnol'ltlls •fttr IN first l>Ubllcetlon of lhll notice.
Oel9d AUO!i'I U. 1'11
H•ltn Ann Leno~
E ucutor OI "" Wiii ol Miid OtctcMtlt
1tOe•1tT M. f'ISI(
AttWM'totLAw
., s.wtll L.allt ·-........... CMtt.mlo '1tot t el: ltUI m..ns1
Pu.bll"'9d Or-Cotti Deily Pilot.
August i., U, 30 -Stpttmber •. 1'71
400).11
PlJBUC NOTICE
N0 , 1U>a
StATe Of' COflNl!CTICUt
SU ... ltlCMt COUltT
-JUOIOAL OIST•tCT OP PAl•~l•LD AT e PT.
JULY 11, 1'7'
THE FIRSt CONN ECTIC.Ul
$MALL BUSINESS INVl!STMENT
COMPANY VJ WALMAN REAL
ESTATECOM .. ANY,ET AL Second w as Steve
Cus ter·Carol Chase.
M in tol\ Buy Ya'cbt
Club, third was Jack
1''rnnco·Suzanne Oelke.
LIYC: fourth was Ran-
~}' and Debby Gallman. 1.~BYC. and firth was
Mall Madruga-Je rc lyn
Wright. S<tn Diego
Yacht Club
Naera NQ.Tl,UQ~t:QJA -
J.>. 111alfitlt1 In tN 41bovt tnlltl9d ectlon.
'" "" Pfeyl119 for ,_ IMreln WI lortll. Bob Osmer's Cal Big Nacra, won a decisive 1or11r1c1tor«•owreo1wldmo11~. victory over Geor..-e Ha milton's Crooked Sky in a ""' .n ,,,. .....,, tMt me un11n siatn &' ol Amerl<• h • perty ..._,,, et lM series or match races around the oU islands off um. o1 ,....,_t, ....,, foreclol<H"e by
Long Beach Sunday. so••. • recei ..... o1 rents, • oet1e1tno
The event was sailed for the Queen's Cup with
tbe start and finish viewed by spectators aboard
the Queen Mnry. Big Nacra won two straight races
in the best two of three series.
San Fraa~ro Eveat
Star Title Races Set
The world champlonshlf of the In·
ternational Star Clus wU be held ln
San Francisco tb1s year &tartln1 Oet.
8 for lbt nrst of six rues.
Twenty·seven countries a.re expect·
ed to be represented when lbe llUe
event for the world's oldest one-
desl&_n sailing class aeta under way.
The Reatatt.u wUI be e<>·bost.ed by St.
Francia-Yacht Club and the West San
Frenclsto Ba)' Star Fleet..
AFTER BE ING tXcludc41 for
1 vua1 ye.-n, the Star hu been N ·
lnstattd as an Olympic Cla.sa. Since
Its rei.nl&atetMtll the c.lau hu U ·
pertenced ll tremendous burat or
tompetlUve ene.rp.
The Star Class A!\socltitlon is seek·
ln1 flnanclal support ror the
"world's." Tax deductible donations
ron«e from benefactor. Sl.000 : spcnsor, $250; sustaining. $100; con·
trtbutlng, $50; supporting, W. nrtd
HSO<!iate. 110
CHECKS SHOULD be mude pnya-
.blt to the San Francisco Bay SaJ1ln1
l\lsoela&lon, 2214 Quesada Ave., San •.f'rancia<:O, 84124. •
'l'he ~ialion Is nlso prep:n111f u
souvenlr~uaJlty proftam which will
be on aalo durtn1 lh 'St. Franc~
Yacht Club'& Perpetulll Trophy
Re1atta st.artlna Sept. 14l.
, ........ nl, _.. 9lfltr tc1111141bf• ... 11.f •• , ... c-1.....,Cltefn __ .,, -
rNOlf41bl• at~· +.ft 01 t•lled for
In Note
A foreclowr• of • mort9099 end
pououlon ol u ld -•Ms, returne· bl• ti.fore IN ..... ~ Covrt on
the fir&\ TllnMY OI Augi.111 A 0 . lt11,
Ofld now ~ .. t11treln, ...ct 11por1 on
•PDlltellonJo uld ecllOo. liw • s11ttse. que11t .,.._,Of l'Ollct, It tclPHflnll t1141t
Ill• cltfendtl\t WllOH neme II ••
IO'llew1 Almo M . C.Olt, ll
ebsent from 11111 stet• Ol'd
the wllereello11t1 of a•ICI d•· f•lldonl 11 .,.._ 10 lllt Plelntlff;
11\0I notl" ol 1119 PtMtn<y of lhlt •<·
lion "'011 lilttl., 10 -lo her otwn
11411111 tlltl --'~ ... ...., It ••
0RO£RaO, INI odclltlonot notke oi
Ille ll"tlllllklrl tflCI ~y of H id OC· tlon tit 01"" ,,,. told cttfendtnt by '-'ntl • ltW Mii •ltHttd '°"Y ol 11111 °""' tf ~ lo be pulllltNd II' IM
Or0ll09 C..ll Delly ~IOI, e --'lr<11leted In OMI• Meta, c..11t«n1•,
.,,CO I .... IW t WCCtltlvt -··· onM Detore ""°"'tit. A.O. me. tfld
that r •Mii .. tuell -Wo ti. 11'1.tOe to
, ......... """"c-1. • ., ~ • Ult Caur1
...._.. '· LN<kt•l. ci.r11
6
4
2
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5
6
7
8
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.Y
p
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L
A
s
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F
I
E
D
6
4
2
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5
6
7
8
. . -. ~ ...
Wednesday. August 18 1978 * DAILY PILOT 0 J
The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast
DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS
You Can Sell It, Find It,
Trade It With a Want Ad (642 -5878 j One Cati Service
Faat Credit Approval .... ..... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
G-al I 002 GeMr.. I 002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1002
$66,000 ----------..... ----... --~-
Lovely , pride o f
ownership 3 bdrm home
in desirable residenlial
area. Enjoy lazy sum·
mer days 10 huge park
like backyard lm-EQUAL HOUSING maculate. Just listed !
OPPORTUN I T Y 646-77ll '
NiltMr'• Motte•: (~IW?11i!§lf115fl
All real estate advertised --
in this newspaper i8 sub· Real Estate Ject 1o the Federal Fair 1111111 _ ---.--Roualng Act of 1968 ----c..w.n.w.-c.w.o
which makes it illegal to * VETS * advertis~ "any pre · OOOWN·OCLOSING f~re'!ce, h !Dltat1on, or Homes in aJl areas or
discnminauon. b.ased on ORANGE COUNTY
race, color. rellg1on. sex. VET AGT ~ na~ooal on gin, or an Cal 54 I 01·00 mtenuon lo make any •
such preference, lim1la· ""'"'-~
lion. or discri mmahon "
nus newspaper will not
knowingly accept any
advertising for real
est.ate whlcb IS in viola·
tioo of the law
MESA "VERDE
ONLY $89,500!
Beauufu1 3 bdrm fmly
home w /atnum visible
from fmty rm & mstr
bdrm Bring-the outdoor
~COATS & WALLACE
Cc:P REAL ESTATE, INC.
A LOt:.lW O\\HlD COMPAN\ ~lHVING
IHl SOlJ IH co:st ARL.' SINCl 1%\
MctUMTAIM l l TltlAT MODJ ISkA
CAMYOM -:l BR.. 6 acres. nicety
improved for year round living. Easy
commuting for anyone living in
Southern Calif. area. Why live in the
city!? Call for appointment io see!
Call 5~1 41
COZY COMMUNITY -Stunningly
des igned townhome with meticulous
attention to details in an intimate
environment Convenient to
r ec reation. beaches & shopping.
Luxury 2 Bdrm home open daily at
only $162.000. CCII 640.6161.
Serving Costa Mesa-Irvine
Huntington Beach-N ewport B each ---------1 s~nery into your home ------------------for delightful living
······················~ G1wll 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••
IAUOA ISLAND
WallMn closet in mstr
bdrm suite Wel l
landscaped front. low
matnt yard Just 1n
trodoced to the market '
646-7711
C;:I Walker & lee
Real Estate
BUSY & NEEDING
Unique Homes of Mesa
Verde IS "plugged into'"
a relocation referral
service that has created
a demand for more
salespeople. We are busy
MlSA VEIDI ,.
REDUCED TO $89.000
Allractive 4 bdrm .. 2 ba. home in
immac. condition. Xlnt loc.
IACI IAY
Fine 4 bdrm .. 2'h bath family homP "-!".
quiet cul de sac. Oversized pool.
playhouse, extra &'l.orage. $169.000.
• IAYNOMT
Several Cine bayfront homes
with pier & slips
BILL GRUNDY , REALTOR
].11 ~o y ~1cl1 o .. ,,. tJ e bl':> 6161 Sbar\> duplex, 2 BR. 2 ba
units. steps lo North
Bayfront. Reduced to
S260.000. and need help ' Ex ·l ~~~iii~iiiiiiiiiiii~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! perience d or n cwf1
saJespeople may apply I l!L.ll&a • 1 ft I •y1 MESA VERDE s BR family home. Move· m cond. Good schools &
close to every.thing .
Attractive (anlJquesl or EASTSIDE ~ A •
fice & t.op quality tpeo HELP! PROIA TE!
plel associates to work "UALITY BUILT Reduced thousands. ex· with Contact Sandy U ecutive estate. steps to Orlowski or Jim Wood at 3 Bdrm 2 bath. lar~e ocean• BrP:itht aktllJ: 546-59!IO rarruly room. used brick
$1216.500.
EASTSIDE
COSTA MESA
Sharp 3 BR. 2 ba home BEACH DUPLEX
Newport schools. On a Olarmmg 2 bdrm units
quaint well maintained with fireplaces. s un
street Owner wall con· decks & encl 'd patios
sider2ndT.D. $95.750. Xlnt rental area with un·
fireplace. shake roof. "'ew Low pnce w1U SUJ·
newly p1ainted tn1011t pnse you! Hurry! Call
New carpet. Hurry• today for details 645-0.103
SBS.000 Call ~llSl
0 limited investment
potential $185.000
646-7711
FORESTE
OLSON
•• •H '' • lrl'
•·c--c--
Starting
a New
Business
A ccco1dln9 to
C•lllornl• 811.ineH •nd
Proltnlon1 Code (Sec.
111100 to 17930) 111
pereon1 doing bullneu
11n6e1 • tlc:tltlou• neme
mu1t flle a 11ettmenl
wllll Iha Co11n1., Clt•ll
end have II p11bll•h•d
lo11r tln1a1 I n a
naw1papar ""4ng Illa
are• In wllfc ll Ill•
IMl1lnau I• IOcelad.
the •l•tamtl'll 11
required by ••• end 11
necauer, '" protadln9
ro11r l1111lnatt ntme
Mott ll•nll• ttq11lrt
proof of flllng to optn
commardal ae~ntt
Ttie DAILY PILOt
p1ovl6e1 llolll llllnt and
p11llllc_e tlon .. rvlcH. W.e
ha¥e all ttla nacatNry
to1m1 and melntoln a
dilly ••rvlce to tll•
Oraitt• Covttty
co11rtllCH1M. littler •top
by ono or our
convanltnl ofllc•• or
pllona tlle LEGAL
Ol!PARTMENT 142-4321.
Eat. 332 ror rnor•
Int or rnetlOll end lorme.
DAILY PILOT
SlllC & ,INlt
3 BR·CUSTOM
$70,000
Absolutely true' Lovely
tree lined strttt. Frwt
trees and Clowers sur
round this brand new
custom built 3 bedrm &
family rm home Oc
cupancy date early Sep
tember . /\ true
BARGAIN HUNTERS
DELIGHT' Full price •
only S70.000 Hurry. call •
tosee7S2·1700
EAST SIDE
VA Terms, great• Bdrm
2 bath family home in ex
cellent locat1on Pnccd
to sell a~ only $8.2.500
C&ll 548-588lJ
~-~ HERITAGE
• . REALTORS
Little 11119!!
Classified Ads ure reully
small "people to people"
sales calls wilh big re
adersta1p and bag resuJts'
To place your clnsslflcd
ad, call today 642·5678
ILL HUMOR
C L A G N l 0 W Y T C A E C E R S T C
E H T A R D 0 R H H S 0 k T R S C 0 S
G V Y A H A W T U M C 8 P T E A S A C
T A T M R E T 0 W M 1 U N H N E T P Y
0 U If L ~ H ~ ~ ~ :IP A 0 T 0 Q U E H 8 N l 0 H E l Y A R G 8 R N R
£ S I 0 8 R H I U U S N N T G I 0 T U
N T 8 A l 0 P T T E ~ E I Y F Y R k 0
t E A E C S k E H E R H L T A W E T R
0 E T H E E P S R I t U l S A R D G S
S V l T S F I 0 N T B P l S J R R A L
R H R 0 H V U E I A S P P 0 " 8 M Y Y
T E R H E S S E tt H S 1 L R U H C 0 I
R 0 I E H S C 0 J 0 S C P l 0 S 8 E 0
M S P D W T J 0 L H M I M H l Y H C H
,,
FORESTE
OLSON
,_, UI A '"' I•'"'
A C()NV(Nl(NT Stt0PPtNC AHO
SfWINC GUIOC fOR tHE
CAl ONTH( CO
·-··-nr.·· .. '--"""' . . . -~ ,
9478 e.1e
"'11fTc....i-11Tc:...-r-
I
'
•
..
DAILY PILOT
~r·~£~
~
JIUMITS
E:trtrll daarp I Only a Yf'1I
oW Tt-nanl. pay ut. 2
l:UlQ. NC rm. pool. b
lroN En•llen• aru.
l\lfl0.000
IJ UMITS
AU 2 bdrm. 1olar PQC'l
Owntv will urry t·oa
tract w /$7:1.000 down
$17),1,Q)
16UMITS
Pr Ide ol uw~ntu" A II 1
br un1U Owott ,,. 111
CUTY 2ud W '?0'• dn
Je00,000
JONA LOT
Eul.Slde C<lltJt Meu. 3
~ houses oo coraer lol
Super loc auon sias.ooo
JONA LOT
EuWde Costa Mesa 2
sep bouse9 oo R-2 lot.
$129JOO
A fl€\TIG€ '-J---~-HOM€~
3333W. COAST HWY.
NEWPORT BEACH
641-6646
.. t nMETOIUY
MOUNTAIN RETREAT
Off higb••Y 38 near Bar
Park, S acre lot high on
hill m lreeS. Neighbors
walA!r and electric close
enough. Year round
vacation & permanent
home adjacent. Asking $18.~. Tenru available.
400(11" ~:.t
CJl .. ··-·· rt.·. ·-
llGCANYOM
Elegant El Dorado
townhouse in choice loca-uoo. 3 bdrm, 21,'J ba.
close to pool, jacuz.ii &
tennis cowu. Sunken Uv
nn wet bar. Security
gates. 759-1501
::;:, Walker & Lee
Real EBlate
YA TEAMS
This SUPER LISTING
offering up,raded 3 BR.
formal dining, n e w
cupets & tile is a South
0.St home. Minutes to
Mopping in Irvi ne m· Mtiial area. Offered al r;oo· Call today on this
: 540..3666
tlfltelc-.11
REAL ESTATE
LEASE OPTION
OHL Y $14,500
to u .. •• ._ ._ .... -.·re.. M ............. ':L .......... ....
..., ... .... --'" -• le•tly ,,. ....... ea.. to Cl "• ...... Aa ••~ ..... SIH.000.
ILUFFS CONDO
lafoy .. pri•ecy _.. W Im •ac f I I .... a••a tllfs cJw I ' ..... ~
nw..~1•a-.tw...twWf......_ ........... wltlt~c ... ,.... ..cf............... ...... .
• ~0 ........ ,,57,500.
EASTILUFF
CutOlllbtd two dory Eatllllirff e.-wtt1t ...... ""'of__. ............. 1.y. l'lrM ~ ...,... .,..... ......
....., ,._ ... ldtcMtl ........... .....
TM• I ......... wil ......... ..
$179,500. -
MEW IM BLUR'S
nw.. be*OOlftt two ...... Wf batl9
Fr.me•~ Jll tt.. eorfy ....... .... .,._,...: HICJlllY .-, .. d wttflt .._. .. ._
... Hen. Mlstloll ff.. floon ClllCI wood
pH•li'"lo _bfoy tll• water •l•w froM
1upstalrs balccmy • .S 161, 900.
BLUFFS VIEW CONDO
Woldt ... bifda fro. tWt Olllst ...... froM
row Hlree bedroo• Trl11a ••d Hit
:::'!!l !:. '::r!:d '!,i::-:0~:?
wellconrfmgs, redwood pcmellmg ••d
iMpOl"hcl ties. A Ylf'Y MCltedad Mttialg
priced at S 183.500.
llG HOME-COSTA MESA
Ideal for bge t.iily. An ...._.. wtt11
.... ~ ....... bnalrfatt roo-. ~
felleecl ~lot IOMd 1-2. Meer,... ...
sl;oppillg. Offend at SI 09,000.
644-7020
2123 SAM JOA(i)UIN HILLS ROAD
NEWPORT IEACH
SICUIJTY
MIMDID?YA
BJCitllUTY?
Guarded gate to lvly
adult complex w /pool &
clubbouSe. 2 bdrm, 2 ba
condo includes air condi-
borung. washer. aryer &
refng al great price of
only $78,900! VA terms
TOO! 5'>9'91
QUiil SALE!
Price reduced $5,000 on
beautiful 3 bdrm. & faml·
ly rm. home in pre·
stigious JASMINE
CREEK. Lovely appoint-
ments, frplc., securily
gate; pnce now only
$239.~-
. 5 BDRMS.!
Owner will help finance -----~--t h 1 s c b a r m i n g TWO• ... ,,·s Much sought after fami·
ly home in Eastbluff;
handy to shops It schools,
also catholic church.
$210,000
townhouse. Vaulted cell-.,,..
111gs w /Walls of glass. Lv· 4 Bdrm. + bachelor.
ly light-airy home. 3 Frplc., built-ins; steps to
bdrm. 3 ba In btn Back beach. $16S,OOO Including
Bay. Will consider lease land~EAMFROMT
option. 759-1501
CAPE SERIES
Two rar e con-
dominiums! A 2 Bdrm. 2
story home and a 3 Bdrm
3 Bdrm. + den home on
~ft. lot; frpl .• built·
tm. patio. beamed ceil-
ings. 1375,000
673-3863 642·2253 Eves
associated
BAY&
BEACH ·
450 NEWPORT CTR. OR. 159-mll
11ngle story home in Selling anything with a
pnvate adult comm.uni· Daily Pilot Classified Ad
URQK£RS-IHAL TORS
l!li'• W £,ol~f')O b1 1 li:t j
ty. LWlh landscap10g, l'1nd what you want in is a simple matter ... pool . putltng g reen & n..n .. PiJotClaaaifieds justcall642-~. clubhouse. $85,000 and ~ ·
55.000 -----------
PETE
R
642-5200
SIR. POOL HOMI
IM DISllAILI
IAYCRESTI
Four bdrms, 3 ba. lmly
rm, prmet ltilchen has
cook l.alaod. Very private
master suite · 1eperale wt.QI. Low maintenance
yrd bu I vly Anthony
pool • great for entertain·
101. Call lor appt.
545-M91
~ Walker & lee
WANTED!
Well cared for former
model bome ln On.qe
needl oew ~t ••• ao-
meone who will ~Y a
beautJf\ll Jannl year round ... 1omeoae who .-di a lot ot room wtlh
Uttlt maintenance. 3
Bdtm. walk·ln clOleta.
plftce lo 1ara1e. New
palot, paper Ir much men. SUJ,000
Ctl64+72ll
~II. .. inacnab / lrvlne ? realty
,IUCID TO SB.L-$ll7,SOOI
Harbor View Phase II Monaco on
lovely tree-lined street, near park
& sehool. 2 BRs, 2 baths + conv.
den. Freshly painted -move-in
condition ! Lois Egan 844·6200.
(N-137)
'42-1235 644-6200
901 Dover Oriw HM~ View Ceni.t'
Irvine et Campus Valley Center
752-1414
HUICT HOUSI.
NIFICT LOCATION
A bra.ad new glorious Cape Cod
home with every possible features
to make family living not only a
comfort but a joy I 4 bdrms.. 3
baths, exposed beamed celllnts,
tons of storage, 3 f rplcs., superb
kitchen, wet bar, view decka &
much, much more. $419,000.
A c:o&aW9.I. ...... CO.
... 844·90&0 . •
I UNDER $100,000 I
SLl9'mt -3 bdrm, 3 bath. near beach
in Costa Mesa. New, formal dining,
sunken liv. rm .• study and a lge lot.
Just $98,!500 VA.
MIU.OW -Lge fam. home in Orange,
70' x 100' lot and 2300 sq. ft home,
formal dinin¥, 4 bdrms. Presented at
$99,950. (Collins Park area)
4 IDIM Wmt POOi. -4 bdrm pool
home in Westside Costa Mesa, new
carpeting, 6300 sq. ft,....lot, $79,900 with
VA terms. · • I
llACHY -3 bdrm just a hop to the
beach and a shade below $95,500. Real
clean. newer and nice at $98,500.
U,_.l()UI: ti()Ml:S
REALTOBS'
THE NfCESTPf'Ol'U Si!LLING THE NEATEST HOMES
CORONA DEL MAR, 67fHj()C)C)
MESA VERDE, 646-6990 • CALL US
C::SELECT
I PROPERTIES
SELL klle items with a
Dally Pilot Claaslfied Ad.
~~~~~~~~
VIEW OF WATER
IOATS & UCIHTS
Terrific CGl9r' locatkllt wttll pmacy cabo•• ............ Qlllt -.., 3 bedroom S.0.. wlttt f..tly rooa
&let I I IF"s cWlgllt 111 lnllle T.,,..,
SUIMIT EXCHAMGI OI
LIASI OP. $179,500
Ge•rG91 4 ...._.. lul ... ....,. °"
corMr. Slwpl to POOL wttlt 2 ,.etos. o • ...toa11s11111t9•111ibe1t.
Wataftoat Ho••• 2633 W.Coast Hwy.
Newport Beach
631·1400
. . .
5 m>IM S....U STOIY
Jn po~ular Harbor View Broadmoor.
there s a 5 Bdrm. single story with
formal dinµlg, lots of wood, brick &
glass, two fireplaces & a deck that
extends into a rustic wooded area that
is community oWlfed and maintained.
This Unique offering is being shown
daily. Presented at $279.500.
UfllililfJUt: ti()Mt:§
REALTORS'. 675-6000
2443 East Coast Highway. Corona del Mar
also in Mesa Verde, dt 546 5990
\'..: l·:SLEY !'J
TAYLOR CO.
IU<A l.TOl\S ~111t't' HHf>
llG CYH <iOLf COURSE VIEW!
Spacious 3 bedroom townliome
overlooking the exclusive Big Cyn
C.C. Formal dining rm. largeiritchen,
2'h baths. Carefree living with tennis
courts, pool, jacuzzi and good
security. Call for infonnationS219,SOO.
WISUY M. TAYLOR CO., UALTOIS
2111 S.J ...... Hiltltoad
NEWPORT CEMT'Y. N.I. 644-4910
OVllLOOllNG
HARIOR ENTRANCE
Terrific view of'Newport Harbor &
ocean from thi1 beautiful condo.
Slip available. Yearly lease.
CHARMING CONDO
Newport Beach condo with 3 large
bdrrns. & 2 baths. Add a secluded
patio & pool to make this a great buy at $89,500.
LIDO REALTY
673-7300
A Division of Red Hill Realty
n·s so EASY
10 PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD
evou may use the handy order form printed below to furnish us with copy for your ad. e Please note that the bottom POrtion of the coupon may be clipped and affixed
to your envelope, saving you the time to write our correct addresa. we pay the poet.age! e ir you need more room for your message, just print or type it on another sheet or
paper and mail it.
•You may place yoor ad by phone. 1f you wish. Just dial (714) 642--5678.
c'ttllfl,11'11111111166 l66llllllltt I I llllllllflllllllllcClllll_, 1111111111 1111 lcllllll I I 11111
USE THIS HANDY ORD~R BLANK. WE PAY POST AGE!
4 WOIDS MAH OMl ~D LISS THAM J UMIS
2 .. ,.... 11MIS --
M.~ Sl.41
~· 16.11 SJUO
$1.D $8J.75
PAYMENT ENCLOSED 0 SEND BILL 0
Charge: BankAmericard # ............... Exp. Date •...
Master Charge # . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Exp. Date ......•.
Publish for .........•.• days. beginning ..•..•..............
Classification •........•••••...•.•....••••••..•.••..••......
Nanle .........................•........ .' ....••••..•........
1 •• ,.. ,..
--
SU.70 au1
$17.JI IJl.IO
SZl.00 $41.U
TO ..... COSf PIJ1 only one woiel on Md>
spece above lnctu<le vout ..,,_ °' p1ione number The QJlll ol your ., ........... ol ..,. non wtllClll IM ta1190fd
of Yollf eo 11 wntten Add
13 00...,. ,, "'°" ----°' DAil Y PILOT Boa MflllC9 .-i
qlleCI replleS
Address • • • • • • ! • o • • • • • • • ; • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ! • • • • ' ' • • ' • • • • • a
Qty .... , .....•.••••••.•..•.•.... -. Phone . • • • • • • . • • • • • • • . . BOX SERVICE ORDERED
Ill II lt#*,1#1 I I Ill• •I•• •I 61 ;t I' tltl'tt • 11111 1'1111111 116111 II' Ill 1¢11 6ll6PI •ttl6'1:1
Classfti.c:t Dept •
BUSINESS REPl V MAIL
"1111 t4A&S"-' loO IJ CIClal• ._ ... C;A\•(Wl ... A
~Coad DaDr Pilot
lox 1560
Cosio M••a, CGIJf, f 2,26
--------== ---== -::::= ----...... c-·---·---·· ..... -·~---... ,..,,_c.-_
•
.-in~
I l \.._.I< I \I I·,
·~i.., I ~OJ:.' We ' ~·11u .,,, ~•1
REAL ESTATE
Salespeople tired or a b1
office" Opening for one
real estate salesperson
ln small office. Same
location 25 Y'r Call Gene
646-3928 fl~3·4577 E' t•,
Lachenmyer
Real tor
~THE Rl:A L 1
ESTATE RS I ___.)
LUXUalOVS
&LAVISH!
Lwtury lnCameoSbores. Laree secluded Croat
eetio. Count.a.lo & pool'
Spacious oceanview liv·
ing room It family room.
Formal dining room.
Chef's kitchen has every
eonvnience. Lavtsh
master wing. Den or
study. Sewing & laundry
room. Includes pool ta. ble. bltd stereo system.
·~~~~~~~~~I fantastic stora1e too. I -Private beaches-and
much more! P'or"P'ivate
pttview call 673-8550.
CftN Ill 'I• II~ IUN IOllf NICI•
~THEREAL1
ESTATERS
----~ -u. .. ur.~"'eTSIDE RUSTIC 3 br. 2 ba, frplc. r-N--. petios, well deconted. COSTA MESA Owstbouse.1W,OOO. By
Very special country owner.a..7030.
English. Tbree large --... --adn--n...a.,,,----
bedrooms. two bath.I. ..-~~ tbree huge bric Lowest price 10 CdM.
fireplaces, tavern 2Bdrm, !Ba in front.
k1tcben with all the Sludioinrur. $135.000.
modern appliances. Byowner.M0-7804. Brick courtyard. Ex· ___ SOUTH ____ _
cellent financing. Pnced
nght at $159.500. OF .. GHWAY
COU OF NEWPORT REALTORS in Corona de1Mar.2 BR. '75-5511 1 BA w/frplc. in front.
--------• Ready to build additional --------i unit in rear. Owner am· ious.
POOi.HOME
Redwood decking. pool.
jaCUIZ.I & much more is
what t.h1s 3 bed.room. 2•-------bath bome in Costa Mesa•--------
has to offer. Owner is •ly OWNER
motivated & wants fa st 3 Br, 2~ ba condo, fam &
sale. HurTy, make an of. din rms. protesa decor
fer. CALLSS&-2660. lbruout. Many xtras.
-=:sELECT calJlm-1689or77~
T'PRQPERTIES eo.t.Mesa 1024 .......................
l!Aoa .......... a 10071--------••••••••••••••••••••••• X1nt. loc., nr. prtv. bay
beach; 3 BR, den. frpl..
paUo,2-sty. S19S.OOO
.Marshall Rlty. 675-4600
c--.. w .. 1022 •••••••••••••••••••••••
IRYIMI TllRACE
Reneg't lease $1052 yr
t.UJ 2008. 2Br den 2ba,
Hl9SantaneUa $159.500
Agt. 873-~17 /644-9915
NINE UNITS
COSTA MESA
One 2 BR hm + 8 unit.a
f4JMEW
C4J UMOO&.ID
XJnt Location
$130,000 Equity
Sale Price $365.000
GaUll&B.US
lobGairG.w
lll-2900
HOME+INCOME
A rare & s urpris ing 81/J,.o VA
spacious 3 bdrm home. ASSUMAILE Massiv~ used brick A fantastic two story.
fil'epjace and many other four bedroom pool bome
amenities. Some ocean with lovely patio areit,
view trom master suite heavy shake roof. double and adjoining d eck. garage! Great for
PLUS a roomy never parties! Near South
vacant rental. All this is c o a 5 t p 1 az a 1 on 1 y l:t a short jog lo the •. 900! Call 752-1920 . a~r~~daa1, )_ QUAIL
644-1211 PLACE
rtlOflltl~ ..
10,.11 llJO , ..... , /Jn Nll1EL
lll\ll[Y &
ASSOCIATES 20NELOT
RX.a UPPR 1.«e R2 lot, nr 17th St
BrlngsomeT.L.C. to this shopping area. 2 small
DUPLEX & you'll see a units,. SlCt.Mo.oool.r."'LTT
potenually beautiful 3 • _.. BR borne PLUS Income ___ l_l_l-1_4_3_0 __ _
from the sep. 1 BR rear
apt. Lots of s pecl•I Trade YoW' old stufl for
features to show you. new goodies with a
Please call 640-5112 agt. Classified ad. 642-5678
...................... ~ ...................... .
CE
110111 ILlllS CO.
9VER 50 YEARS OF SERVICE
-CORONA DEL MAR
CDM -lrvlne Terrace Lovely 2
Bedroom +Den. Jn Park·Llke
Setting. Surrounded By Trees And
Flowers. Oen Can Be Converted To
3rd Bdrm. Great Open Fritnd.ly
Feeling '1741500.
• 11 I DOYll HIYI 631-1800
I
t
\ •
,.
I
... IMl4n ..... S. Ho.et For Sde HowMt For 5-. W~y. AUgutt 16, 1078 * ....................... ······················· ······················· I
,.,. ,. ........ For We .... I 048 &.-. ,.,.... I OH ........ ..... '°'' ........ For,. Oht'a .. uatet• .... ~~~-~~ ...... "11111'-W. IPNmMH • •••••••••• •u•••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••• ....................... •••••••• •••••••• ••••••• ~· • ••• • 'o•• THE .._ oo ...__" t zooo
._ ..... 101 .. c:.e.w... 1024 ~ ~ IYOWMB V•WflOllVMI ............ 10" ._noporty JO -qcc' •
........ ~ •••••••••••••••••••
41
••• ~ BR towobouae, lr1 Brealbta .. lnl vie'"' .J •••~•••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••-•••-•••••••••• ••••••·--• .. ••••••• ••••·~;··••• $5000 SEA SHANTY ;auo. S UN ll S AIL bay. Co~pletely .. ;: WAMTED:
OAILY Ptl&r ••
•s-y "FOR THOS E WHO a.us. '83.~. 13S·317~ modeled. 3 Huae. old FUSSYIUYIR IT'S YOUR TUR ... • •-HAV£ KNOWN THE wkdys. faab.IC>Hd bedrma. Va· " ca .I~~ 4 br, ftmd7 rm. 3 ba SEA 6 HAVE FALLEN cant and walUD1. Call for thls profeulonally,
by ......... oucalyptwi +redwood tub 1pa In DOWN UNDER HER MAGIC n.ooo DOWN tT1 tastefully decorated lrta, rtdUlf traH1 t o ~•cl 11ded yard On ly SP£LL!" Tbl11 ru1tle ~ n.w !>sty 4 BR. 3 split:level 3 bedroom. ....._ ror ·nwat.ry h•· •auco David Bour~. o6der bonM could be t.M Ba. den, i>fnWI room. 2 family room home. iQa. .. , • Ulla u.ol• lllr.*-~· No gua1Jt1ln1 ! Own r IUUIUJ.meol ol a Uf8t.lme wt tbars. I'll carry at which baa hardly l>ffn •u• hJl Prlnd at 0..'9111t .tOJ6 wtUftnaru:e!CaJINowt d.rtam.Locat.slnpnme SllOO m o. No cre dit • lived ln and the owner
..._., IU-C1'7 RRDCARPET7M·L203 North Lacuna, cklie to ____. ... ""?·'""""· .,,_._c. baa had a chance of "'• •
11
' .,,.. IO•• '' ...... •••••••• ••• •••1u• the beach • vlllaae, with ~ /
1
.... -. ~~m ~! ford na a sale. Act
[
4 8 r. ct-n tr• I • r · a PANORAMIC Vl£W --~-:.;--HIWPOIT HEIGHTS ....,... •• , =~: .. ::.·:;.~ FIX 1i.~:~~~1;~~ ............ ,,..., ·.~..':..a~cb·11u!z.m:e;~~~~~~:
D BRICK Comer lot, 2 1Ly, 4 BR, --~ ••oc• , fzl • ..., 1014 UP ~vl.REPr~tE£. moc k family rm, dlnJna rm, tial ~can' ~ ..... nrs,l7tllo , Br. a-rann.1 din'-•, .......... ••••••••••••• r illn self cleantnc oven, wet-srevlt... . _.. ......., ....... .=;...,_lot ..... 2 11N4of l..t1 cathedraJ beam ce es bar, air cond., loaded OP1N1119.,,HIJl'<•0111AAr1· 9~. _....,. ••.-,__ thia h\Alt coUeae park 4& opeos lo SEPARATE W/extraa. SensaUonal at re f · 1 ~ pr. 100 Oot'wood Affordable ll br, I~ ba. home! VIK'ant' Comeaee DINING RM. Nitrrow Sl2S,OOO. C all today 'l'lil1S1j!,\I PllloMTll.mhwa. • haah lawn • m any tJ:U home and bn na In atalrwell lllads l<? 2nd T70.2Ul 1 UEIH:~
but ln"ea for HI• by YoUroff r ' Call ttory bdrm. that ll re· " S.Cll•• 107' SAVE owntt. We'll u v" rt' fU:D CARPl:."T7~ 1202 ~t OF "WIDOWS ~ . •••••••••••••••••••••••
allor't l'Otl)m . '°make• WALK",GLA.SSEDON.3 C!18iiFJ~ IYOWMH AioVETHEllACH
Newpott c...e.r.
640.5357
anol1tt ~ 7'IO TURTLllOCI #2 SJDES. WITH OCEAN -... ~ Nwprt Hgt1 lrg comer
Y11W-SIJt.9001 VIEW 1bisoldbouae1S • 1ot.,2 bdr2 ba,lamilyrm Ultimate REEFGATE ~18 000 I' I at•litedl ICM Turtl~rO<'lr Rroadmoor NOT "ASHACK".IT'SA + bonua rm. $119,$00. WEST condom1n1um. ••••••••u•••••••••••• plaa 2 h o1u l o v e l y SEA SHANTY. Vacant & '~lCMt. ()po Sunday. Rarely available, now at
'I OCIANVllW tooclUU view AJJ tile en underpriced at ....,_Ylefo 1067 ES ~B':/iTHAHENRY !A TSID£ n •w 2 2Slory,3beclrm,ll bath t ry Wood pane le d $1%4,000F.•rrtce ••••••••••••••••••••••• OOVERSHOR REALTORS
bedloom fOl:1do Wltla on ~ from &be beach fl.replace. Formal dlnln1 HURRY ON THIS! Ownr/Bkr must sell 4Br. 21SDel Mar
492
_
4121 tbe aeat bloc k arc Bnialbtatlnaoteanview room. Flora l atri um uas.:1-..llALTY *u...&R-Mowt• 3Ba. proflndscpd. &de·--------tlf '°°' You caa set Ui&s ot rf 1rld d and -,,..~ .._., _. corated w /Jacuui & • · au a u n bostJc waterfall 41 pood 98SS. Cst Hwy, Laguna 4 BR. faauJy rm, dining pool Bltn microwave By Owner.condo. Reef ::,t;>rooar .,,.., Call =~-~~,';:',::'~:~ ~~.~·~::;-& -4'4-07JI ~::'.;,.~!'. d:."~I', ::: ma~y othe< ,.,.; ~~.:0~!\.:~;~~!]1 ll.EDCARPBT
7
$4·1J02 totudeaway mast.er swtt' open kitchen, Gorgeous NEW HO,..ES in La~una 0 /W, cove red patio, 1229.~. Opn Sundays amenities. $112,000. wtlh romanUc fireplace. decorator master wmg. ,.. h H• numerous beaut. fru1t 12-5. 1531 Highland Dr. "912-7764 :utr, m.. rr.b painl, Va· Private balcony of H 0 M E F U L L Beach. Josep euo. B 64.S-C226or833-1316. --------c.a.nt.. lr1 cov paUo, Mesa master suite with view of 1 N S U L A T E 0 , Bia /Bldr. Ca1149U&l8. trees. asking ~.900. r· New lots-ocean view
cW Mar. the bh~ Pacific. Priced ing us YoUr offer. 837 ·9SOO custom homes. auoo S.57""470 f« quick sale! $125,500 p ,, o f e s s l o n a I I ~ 2 Homes + Studio WATlltFIOMT Harers R.E. 661-6404
SeUer will help finance. l a nd,~c ap ed m u c 4 garages, beam ceil· ~·--ri .. ~ 2Br, htory, 3 level COD· 4IDltMS11,900 Hurry" Ca.Jl 963-6767 moce . Call now 7S2 l700 ings, muc h paneling, W}j!f«kl. do. Newsboy model at FANI'ASrIC lot on ocean· Ju.& listed! Totally re· Ol'IN ,,; ~ ... , •u1, •t•k/ .,. , · oo ,,, Q "\" t •t •'"I' f'rplc's etc. A blk Vlctona • · ~ · the Cove. froot bluCC+redwood ex·
to joLD the winners and move up or
start your investment program! We
have an extensive Inventory and a
prolessional staff of over 45 readr to
discuss your needs with you! Comider
these -then glve us a call -Quail
Place Properties. 752-1920.
Two 3's ... Orange ... $118,000/ea .
3 ... SantaAna ... $34,000/ea.
4 ... Costa Mesa ... Jl.35,000
4 ... Costa Mesa ... $150,000
Five 4's ... Garden Grove ... $198,500/ea.
5 .•. Costa Mesa ... $215,000
6 .•. Costa Mesa .•. $210,000
6 ... Costa Mesa ... $270,000
16. . . Tustin. . .$625,000
JO+. . . Orange. . .mo.ooo
32 ... San Diego County ... $1,000,000
7 s + . . . Orange County. . .$26,250/ ea.
100+ San Diego County $3,360,000·
Ci)UAIL
PLACE
detOl'll~. lteady for [ I [ N 0Jb I i Beach. Ocean views, xlnt $539,000. paodable house. As-i1\~":'.~: ~=:~~II _ • nw•L _• 1mt1 = M,,J.;.~:.. -CHARMEll ""'~..... f1=:r:-· '!=·~· r .• ,fijiaf;11
1 4 t>r. 2 ba, 0 1w. fpl. t mi to SSOOO DOWN ~:illy'=~~ !'8:w!~cg~~ *1:i!;'J~~ 180 0.:., 0c ... View = .. ~:!? .. ~~!j~~!!r .• ?~ .:~:. _!l'Elli!! bc h, $79,900. Owne r Oontemporary 2 br 2 ba. de·sac w/roorn for ex· 4 bdrms, study, cedar 3 BR 2 Ba, lop or glus, !::;~;;~~~~~~I 9f»QJO: 6'2-8850 llST IUY IH view, $125.SOO. Lease OP· panslon. Access to tennJs paneled bonus rm & Cam must sell fast: Only
PROPERTIES™
(Open Tll 8:30 P.M.J
Noq"-""y-Dra-'"' '-. nu 2•-.-------ai IRVIME lion. 4!M-7084 & M · VN ... ~!_c ~ aClibo nt rm w /second brick frplc. Sl.39.900.
UIUll ...... """ ,.. ..::.::.::..:....:.:__...:...;.. ___ --1 cent.er. ~ .... u 4ba. View of big canyon. SCO'rrlEALTY sty, 3Br, 2"'a ba. Nr bch, S&THIS Huge 6 BR 4 Ba home '" Charming English cot· it'sagreatstarter. Fee land.
53
6.7531
8Kdn$129,950.6'e-1035 a.--3BR2Ba bill to 1be Ranch, over 3.000 ......... type4 brhomeon EALJY PortM nJ . h ""--
_____ ._...... ......... ~ ...
....... ., · e sq.ft. With garden room p .... ar"' ... 11.ke setting. By VALLEY R · 1748 a etg "'u .:_ ....._ M~ VERDE 4 Br 2 Ba, ocean. Close lo shopping of( th te bd m C..11 ,.. $215 000 --
xlnl ~.-.~.Open & freeways. prime loca· e mas r r ' owner Consider trade 511·9500 · Crl•wo f071
Sat!Sun 12-6. 2912 Andros tion. Offered for S69,500. 546-5880 for more details. $289,oOO. 4!M-269S For informa lion contact: ••••:?:•••••••••••••••• Lingo
SI.,......... lfll!E@ljll!iJll'!Fi!!!! UN& •9¥4"0 -.... ~~ :..'l::::· Mus:v.~~~~IC E-
962-44Tf {~:)546·8103 ILOCUFFVIEWS GORGEOUS VIEW Home: 640-8044 Large 4 br. 2 ba. cor lot.
"-...s~ HERITAGE
. • REALTORS
l ...... 2 ......
double 1ara1e. patio.
rNt trees, aprioklers.
$19,1100,
RlAl&rAn
BICYCLE TO BEACH Hentage Park 2 br 21~ ba.
3 br 2 ba. beaut. decorat· upgraded, landscaped, ed. bookcases, sltyhtes draped. S76 500. 55l·068S
home, 4 BR, library. wet-To many xtras too men· a re yours fro m this bar, o"ld plush carpets, $15,000 DOWN M SB8 800 I 2 b d ..., ticn-ust see. . . eegant e room. toplocation.Calltosee & •BYOWNER•BEACH Openbs 496-2381
ATTan'ION INVESTORS
-Two trlplans. will D-W-o.
hi Coeta Mel& Good..,_ ......... 0..
$ '19,500 ............. s 165,000: ..,~ ...... +othe r el(_tras New _.....;._ __ • ___ _
carpeting, extensive tile Woodbndge Brighton. 2
pat io w /cover . I us h BR + den. 2\12 ba. sun·
bath &den unit. Pool and compare. 581·1000 is Just 200 steps away. -....:. __ e_. ---·--
jacuzzi. Lush grounds 3Br. 2Ba, frplc. 2 car ga LSE/Of'TION TO.IUY
overlook Dana Potn ®ii-JM. "' in a Carmel·like setting Moothly lse Cully applied .. 1-.1129 493-1812 or 497·3331
~~~~~~~~~! landscaping, incl. fru1t deck upgraded thruout, trees. Xlnt neighborhood A!C. 'si.2111,500. 551-0685 JT'SOOOL! Mesadel Mar •-h 1 $104 SOO
Marina. Perfect Co ~~ onapvtst.inLidoSands to dwn payment ror liZ~:~~~ear ·roun • ~ Sl38.SOO 645-spacious 3Br, 2Ba MGYett..s
... S C 00 s . . . s CRlFJCE aru. 4Br. big pool, den 968-6073Qpo Hse Sat/Sun A w /bar S01,500. Owner -----'...;;..______ 2 beaut. new 3 Bn;, total·
will help finance. Prin Sl0,000 down-near ocean ly up g r a d e d . Ag t .
only. Call owner for appt + Edison Hi. Xtra lg 4 673-4311
5Cl-7539 br, den. rec rm, pool + -=--------
tg Coldwell Bonker
3 Monarch Bay Plaza
Lag\.lna Niguel
496-7222 831-083
Reduced $10,000. 5 BR San
Velarde, new crpts, prof.
laodscpd. 83C).2011
ONEHOUSEFROMTHE twnbse w /community ,_.S. IMO
BAY 28r, Sl.30,000, SB. pool. in choice area. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
dwn96:M888 V'll Irv REALTY Long Beach, recent\r re·
N.U.I EXCITING• furbished. 10 'U4its. B~yfront mobile home. stl-9500 • 9.SXgross. $210.900. L & B
llESAVERDE
SHOWPLACE
patio. 21381 Augusta Cir. WOODBRIDGE
968-5700. $135.000 New 2 Bdrm Townhouse
Mus t sell $68,SOO. Ph
645-9733 aft 5. 1,4 acre, park/view, crnr. $7500 DOWN ~~"nicer than most
runes, $179,900. By 3 BR. 2 ~. 0JW cpl.a, Univ Park 5 Br Cha n· owHr. 546·9i 69. 1967 drps, P!!IDl, Jenmar cellor model with land.
Balearic. home. Mm from beach. SL28 000 Call 5S9·67'26. l'U carry balance at S700 _;_-...:....• -·-----
COSTA MESA No need to mo. No credit needed. Sharp2600sq. ft. 4 bd. fam
qual1(y (Of' a mortgage 91S1·l998princ only. rm, lrg m.str st w/ frplc.
Jou. $1.S,000 to uaume Resale Speciahsts. At}. 613·5721 "V.A. loan. Nice 3Br _....:;;..._ _____ _
home. din rm. lg tam rm, 3.'4 or s bdrm models PRESCOTI' ~frplc,buae well a vail. some w /pools. Woodbridge Place I. ~.· 2~·900. Prin on· ~ ... on PrOperties 5BR. 3ba on cul-de·sar
03 .,..._. ...........,. next to beach. 731-4484
~~ • y-=-... E Open until sold. wkdys, ~... __.,. By owner $80,000. 1.;
Nr goU course, larger I mi to bch. 1800 sq ft. 3 BR LIVE IN
sty hawy home. 4 BR. 3 +. Huge used brick RIDGE BA. deo $169,000. By patios, off living rm. din· WOODB
owner. ~71.96 ing rm .• playrm & mstr for S71,SOO. 3 Bdrm, 11.7 ...:.....__;:___:_..:_..:__ ____ 1 '•-to · ed k'tch ba end unit. By owner. HEW IEAUTIES! suao.c, cus m1z 1 . Very unique & in xlnt .....:559-4..:___194 _____ _ Only 4 left or these 7 new nn.vt """ -1 custom homes. on a quiet ..:~--=...,...._._...,.,...., __ • ____ 1
cul·de·sac. Eac h w /4 By Owner. 3 brdm, den,
bdrms. 3 baths . we t· H4 bath. Xlnt. Huot.
bars, 2 frplcs & much Beach. 842·9158
THE
mqre. Come & see for
yourself what lovely Hunt Bcb Condo. by
b om es t bey are . owner. 2 story 2 bdrm l
Owner;agenl. SS2·4894 or ba, nr pool $53,000.
6'2·2164 or 673-0782 .....:M..:..7_-44.S_l _____ _
Beaut 4 Br. 2 Ba , new ~ ... ..--1042 plu s h c pt, M ah og ~
panel'g, sprnklr, con· •••••••••••••••••••••••
crete dr., elec gar dr OP· EXEC DUPLEX
nr. 119.500. w /$7500 dn. Asking only Sl.59.000.
Mesa de l Mar. 2811 SCOTTREALTY
Lorenzo Ave. Ownr/agt. 516-7533 n1 . ..,.
VA TaMS $73,500 lf'YM 1044
Super 3 BdrDl home. •••••••••••••••••••••••
nestled •moa& tall trees. Xlnt iln'es._..t
Added family & dining tw•ersity Park
rm, fantastic frpl c · 4Bdnn 2~Ba fam rm.
makes th.is home one of fonnaJ•din rm'. end unit,
thebestbuywoftbeyear. LaSalle twnbse . Only
714-7100 10% down. OJ"fler will
carry a 2nd. Also have
xlnl financial package
for investor. Priced right for quick sale at $109,000.
Broker cooperation. Call
IA.CIC IAY ~kc, ~7' The Bid Bly Village ...:::::::.:..:;.;;.:_ ____ _
coodo-3 Br, 2 Ba, 2 aty ... OWNEl-POOL
end unit, 1~ yrs old. 9%a.ssumableloan
Very de&lrable area. Snail down. S bdrm. 3
1115,TSO. Call 640-5112 ba, lr1 Country kll, aat. atrium Walle to scbool1.
park & sboppln1. Owner
moving will consider
lease w /option or co'fi.
GAME ROOM
... you've always wanted'
Just meant for Camlly
fun! Come see this 2155
sq. ft. 3 bdrm., 2112 ba .
townhome, located on
quiet cul·de·sac street.
SIR
' IM GREEMTREE
For the family that needs
the room, this Hampton
Plan provides the
answer. In addition to
the five bedrooms, it haa
a CamUy room, 2 baths
and to top oCI lh.e lroet-
1 n g, tt bu fta own
jaclllli. The beat part ls
the price • $105,900. Call
today for your appoint· ment.
NEAR O.C.C. 4 Br. Newly
ttmodeled kitchen. can
do better ror th1s price.
......... 75'-G62. tract $ll7~ 551~ or~~~~~~~!I
(%1.S) 313-4898 STEPS TO THE LAKE
red hill ~,.
552-7500
-----------------From thla beaut Ugbt SCC:\\4.1~ -8' £trs • ;us,i~ ~d~l~~ Tlwd lnlng•ll!_g Won/ Game--witlLtceltuttle. Arbidab.~lrrbdnrr
------..... a...GA•• POuAN-----baa., walnut paneled
•,.....,... i....... -"-des'l /Ubrary, 2 redwood '-• ._.... _,,,,"' decka ~beaut decorated
low to '°"" -....... _. .••• d ....... """"' w 1~ upera ea. -• ..uv. { See It duri.Qi open bouae
Sat/Sun 12·5 at 24
Lakevl•w , or ca II
5"$1.f511 or '40-1440. No
Ailapl-
Lido lale Trlr Prk. Furn. L-...a..-•-SI 10 P..t& llftt Properties213:~1 Hlwporf leadl 1069 ••••••••••••••••••••••• $35,000.
67
5-8839 --I OIO At t he be a c h • I o
Bayfront condo + .u· slip. ••••••••••-••••-••••• beautifully landscaped 1-·TIJPLEX---·$9-5•.o•o•o-
Sec. guard. pool, sub· -secluded adult park· 2 Bedrm. 1 bath~ no
OCEAN VIEW 3'00 sq ft
New, Victoria bcb clos WANTED ..:b;.::..y.:..:Agt~. 67_3-__ 512_1 __ --1 ~ wll pay ccnll
for wahrfroat a.o.. .
u.da 1• prefat rad.
Gi•e particulan: A«Je, etc.
garage, furn. Lse '9SO 1«1eoua dbl wide 1977 vacancy factor. Comer
mo, sale $250,000 . Cho.--p.a.d Off K.i.optcne top of the line, location. Won't last! Call 615-81139 r:-2Br. 2Ba, fam rm &
REAL ESTATE
OCEAN VIEW&
EA S Y WALK T
BEACH
Quaint & cozy, th i
dupl e x b as b e e
thoroughly refurbish
(or its new owner . We be
you'd like to be just tha
person ...
497-2457
lHM So. Coast Hi way
LAGUNA BEACH
RIDUCED
$10.000
NEW HOME WIT
S P EC TA CU LA
VIEWS: 3 Bdrm. 2 baths
j acuzzi. stalned glass
mi c r o-wav e. onl
$165.000.
The Fishing Realtors
497-1666
CHARMING
DETAIL
Unique d~1gn has 3 B
and 2 BA w /lg. decks.
Also includes wet bar.
mondrian windows
doors, bnck floors . Nea
beach. $LS9.SOO.
Reply to Ad 303, Daily
Pilot. Box 1560, Costa
Mesa. CA 92626
ATENCJON · AVlSO
'Ibis new Spanish vacant
...::.;..:......;;.;:~------•Owner-Sli.ahea &.he·price much more.If you want ~9161
ol this spacious Sand· lo live in this lap or IUX·
pointe home. 4 bdrms. wy with a paupen purse dining, family rm. thiaisit. (KTl.207-8).
fireplace. Lots or extras, ,.._f -'-PocHk
HAPPINESS IS •••
owning a sparkling 4
bedroom ·'planned unit
home" on a bill with a
view or Newport's Back
Bay & lush ireeo canyon
for ooly Sl.29.900. For
more llllo call 645-7221
now $105,000. BKR. ""81'-~1720 Mobile Home SaJes
2706 Harbot. Ste 208
OPEN HOUS~
REAL TY
/
540.5937 ll!ll!IUL. ---------·--rrap•rtr 2000
mansion can be yours for ~ less than $4-00,000. If you I 091
fail to come and see it -a 21 Wni*'ler
BIG GORILLA will pop ~ · . -•••••••••••••••••••••••
out ol your next tostado lrT; ff • EXTR LARGE 4 Br, 2~
& kiss you. Trade·Si. 119 Wftfdff Rffffy Ba. in ~r area. Has
Via Wazien. Lido Isle. -------=---1 lots of potential. Only
WIFC .. LIFT ...... •••••••1•••••••••
Hydraulic included with New duplexes & 4·plexes.
the imma~ 1973 Homet Bw)' direct from the de·
2Qd2 2Br. 2Ba, close veklper. (714 >63IM1tM
s hopping. Orange ltoo.fo ... ld $24~~~ E~TSIDE CM, 4 re·
'SL ... 500 sidences on a d~ble ----------1 wide R ·2 Lot. Agt .
'58 Universal, .U'. Mexico. ..:67S-6900-.-________ _
QW\t.ard Realty. We will $I 0,000 199.900. Bkr, 754-6262. lis t yours at 4 %. Offlarlealldah
673-8250--32 nd year. DOWN ••••••••••••••••••••••• Quiet cul de sac, 3 BR 2 MolHle..._. Coiorado River, or local 2 br + 4 br duplex w /pool.
park. Xlntcond. Nu crpt, Prime Eas tside CM.
bot wtr beater & ext Pride or ownership.
paint. F\dl length awning $127,500. Good terms
& wind awnings. Asking avail. Call 548·1790eves. sa~oo. 631·2205. d ya.
''U" must ''C" BA, 180 deg golf course For S. I I 00
view. new cpts. drps. ••••••••••-••••••••••• The best of Westcliff. paint. $140.000 balance.
561-4289. eves. G1A1 A HAMMER!
• •GUMAHIUS Six units-E asts ide
Neatly groomed 3 Bdrm at $1100 mo .• no credit EXCITING e ho me with beaullful needed, 96'1-1998 Prine. •
yard. Near Mariners _onl--=.y_. ------1 KIDS&PETS
school. s hopping, etc View Home ~ of a mile Crom the
Appointment only · Call ~.000. Galaxy Dr. beach. run in the sun.
-. Costa Mesa! Ideal for a Pnce slashed. Dbl wtde builder or a fixer. Older
Lanttr. nr beach, rock buildings in excellent.
s c a p e d . $ l 9 , O 0 O • upgraded area, cl01e to ~llSl Pnn only. 955·0212. 3Br, 2Ba, too many xuas
TIM Investments Inc to mention, in mos t . ~-~--HERITAGE ~1..._ .:...___ schools. transportation
• • REALTORS
OHESTORY
11..UFFSCOMDO
Sm&ll end unit w /sunset
view in the original
Bluffs. French doors,
wood floors, new carpel.
$1.36,SOO.
$8500
TOTAL DOWN
Broadmoor S eaview
home. 6 mos old. 3Bdrm.
2Ba, commuruty. Pool.
JacUUJ, tennis. No credl
needed. lmmed occupan·
cy. Owne r to carry
balance. 714-640-ms.
BLU,FFS. 4Bdrm, bonu
rm, 2~Ba. end unit on
greenbelt by pool.
S164,SOO. Agt, 8.13-8331.
beautiful S• Family
Park in California, -,._ ___... and shopping. Can add
848-8895 one unit! Only $210,000.
swiming pool. jacuzzi. Acreogt ffw Sde I ZOO
saunas. enclosed roller •••••• •• • ••• ••. •• ••. • •• s kating riok. minutes
from Fashion Island & 10 ACRES the Pavillion & only $33.SOO. CDL8246·7 I Huge trees on genUe rolJ.
Calfoniia Pacific Ing grounds. Two rixer
upper houses, many out Mobile Home Sales bld,p. Needs some help.
Call 752-1920.
'
QUAIL
PLACE
PtlortllTIES""
10,.. Q l :JO r.M.l
2106 Harbor. Ste 208 Good terms, owner ill &
540..5937 anxious. 5 DB.UXE UNITS
FARGO L a g u n a B e a c b • CA*YY VILLAGI (7141676-5717 whitewater views, blk to
BUI dbl wide 1977 ORS22·2080 beach &twn. Owner an:x· Lancer, completely up-. _ __._,,,......____ ious. Asking $395,000:
graded, (A3U66 > "% .. UAL TOR
Prime PenJn location. 1 MaWa. tfoMt Store OMIAC&e · 494-11f1
hie rrocn ocean by ownr, 848-41895 w ,rpreliminllJ')' plans for --------
Maam 2 bdrm c1na rm $.115.ooo -------liun.ite.118.500 1s+ UNIT·S .... J.-ff-..a~-..._ ..... 5.52 5448.. 963-8613 • 0up-_..:...::-·~~t---·~-c .. _:-~r-.. c-'7..;;...o_all-.1 . IUTIUYI •EXCITJNG• w11':!".:=-~
Laguna Nl·guel 5 yrs old. 1500 sq fl ea Newport Heights. 2 a...yUY9g -.. 61 aA-in beautiful CO
Will selti>oth or one (..-, bdrm. older home on l97S Madiaon 2Br. 2Ba, -...... ~ Two bedroom units. Over Re""'lty • intereet>. $1S0,000 each. large lot with private 20&16 living rm In Oliveobelnt550,000. SL00.000 upended 1n re·
a 631MJ291. rear yard. 3rd Bdrm. or Garden Paradise lor C & CO furblshl.q. Growth area
bobby rm. wltb bath at. two, enjoy the best for WALLA I • opport~ Owner wW
COUNriYCLUI $12,000 ~~~~~f:~er ~_!1··~-p--a.a-.W.',~~5'~~ ~nu. =~11 .
UYIMG DOWN MIWPOIT HACH M:: :"!teS::: Call 7sz.lll0.
Unique 3 BR, dlnfog 3Bdrm,beatedpool,2Ba I.EAi.TY . 675-1642 270IHarbor,SteJ08 ' '-'llAIL room. den" family room All uparcta. Indoor BBQ 140-Sf J7 Y~
on h111e pdm.--..o,c. J llcaftY•Ull50/mo.Nc DU P L .E' X 0 J1 17 ACRES Df: .&CE
w /tn •TIT lt'.nrrtlral credit needed. t5H.998. PENINSULA In quiet -MUST SELL rt.A features. A best valu Prinonly. block. Completely re· lMlded wtUi oab. 3 BR, NOfanES'"
at ... $l79,900. modeJed Wide at out. 3 Exceptional dbl wide 28A hocnewtth youroww co,. Tle:>o P.M.J 4tJ.t4f4 49&..5220 BR & 1 BR w n. paUos, • Parklane. Shows llkt prtvate lake, aecluded ---------,... 496-2411 130.1050 Walwf,_. HoaH 2 car encl pr. 118$,000. new. won 't l ut at .,.,Tenna. •unill.SanQem.
, Br, 3 ba. a.too aq ft Owoerwould like t.oc!Ole SM.-0. (~~2....._ FARGO ltun.i.u, Weatmlnster. WALK I M.OCIC sa~rlflce by owner. ln January 1979. Flnanc· Mllllt..-~ mom.-1 Wllluchaqe.
TOllACH $W1000 la1 .. !:~!a.~ 675-6349 ....._ ORm.osao Prinonly. 955..ozta '-·•~·-··-"'-3 ui '"" .....-"""""' TrM laveatmenu lnt-. Fa.,..,._ eJ(ec twwme ~ € 2'' 01' lledwood. 2 bdr .• 2 C1 rcW
bilbdnns,2frplc:a.3Ba, • fR€HIG llACH.POOL bdl.lencedyud,5Star 'Pra•M'fr \,oo c.M.DUPLEX
country ltlt, comttnmlty ~ HOM~ a HOTTUI bjlbJy d .. ireble P•rk, ........................ on 2 R·l lots. Ma1' be
clbhsf W/POOl/Jacuut • "'·--NB ~""""-• ar 2 •t" A pO(Jl •Jacuut. t Block lo eoe.t nw1• Npt. Beach a.PUt. OWQtr wtu um ~cloua ex•rclle area. 3*W.""1&ntli1Ny, ~ ...... a.. • '' • bMcJL Sacrlftce $41.000 wtretaU It.ore+ apt. or lit at 9'-'% intered.
Dceor•ted Uh dream 64M'46 tram. w/"1>lc, clilhwhr. Sll1S otc AHume 7~·loan. SH.000/0ffer. A1L Ito~ for only 111u,900 In •c. Onl1 '1Jf .900. ·
000
..... •:.t• a.14 dellrableloCllUon. Marina R•ltytu-8850 OVt1• DISPaATI al5. . ._. _. , ~ V~ aralTY ~ Oomplat.etJup11adecldbl Prllneeommttt. bkla. oa MSWPORTBE.ACff• AU lay., 3 bdhit ~z ba., UP wide, RoJ•I 'Moaarcb, a.t Hwy., ('ID bt u..ct Ohta n:NANCE ~
" 1-9100 , =:.' ='1• 'r;!~1~ "14h ':z~:~ 4 BR :at.:~:• onlf ;,:.;o:;c=f:.' :~ t:a+ 422 .,= :!:
Just moved lftic> town? fll..-OOCAYWOOD .. Ba.toftaldin.1.dto,2 ............ Shfti tat.le bulneaa Incl., = to b9uh; oaty
'Then &el at"qutiil&Aid with ftrtplaeee u • DA I" .. 1113 .... *· lS rn. OWD4lr ... /vi. m.t1IO ... the Clullfled A6a. JUCALTYJ'NC. Molli( .Qf.formaldiate.tamrm. wWftunN.M ·WO They're tb6 Mlilil way bQnuerm.i~c •
to filMI ,_&be lttmt ... SIU.. kf1e Item• with • w~ •co. Rltra ~-,..._need! n.111 PllotClalallled Ad. f'1l...oo
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It 11......... .,. .......... 'rhd ...... '244 ........... 32&-f CelfwMeM 3724 IAll.-1lmlltll&Unfwa. ........... u.tun. .. flwtlhftll1lt' .. • ................ -... •M•••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••• u••• ••••'•••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • u.tiwshtu• JfOO Mt _,..... lt6t C......... J2J4 .. C•1•T.... l br ,.,.D apt C....MeM llZ• aw.1o. ...... 0 •••••••••••••••••••••••
... ~................ -..... , ...... ••••••••• Vln.,.210.bal aadl+ boaua • ..._ ......_ __. ba ...... PllO&. rec .,... -no ••••••••••••••••••••••• -._ _,.. -cn'ING Gill1RClaMSl"fW S.'bltna•brtbl rm.,~ ''a.rm ., ... -+'""' r,." \V.1811'St. ·-MISA.-...S ......................... """'..,.. Am. ..... ~---&...... w......... plull .,, .... ::-. dbl .... Nr. ~-... Iott ol 1tor•••. ••. . Bub _,,.,. • B -as ON l'Ht SA.ND· 2 BR. 2 PALMMISATO.,_. __ _.... ...-. -.,!.,,_ ~-llo. tra1, mirrored doora. •ac'--1-11pt I ""t .....,, r ... ba pool 1 lllN\JTES ,,,.. 17.• tq. ft. lot Qtlf ....... • bl puel •· ,,. • ._.. •• tloo "-'~ IDltr auit.~l It cable ... ma -{i,4 or rtu • Pool. Jacldl.I, aclulll. no , , uuna, ym, BCH.
Pacifica Doepltal, s ....... ~. tar dt OJl91', •'11/mo. aecmtt)' ' • teula,.; ::i.uW eld. Btc*er ~ll.al50HarlaAve. CM ~~· Ml-565'1 Bacb,lUBlt ~ ... c.&r6Ctric .... 1111 L0nnJo A~e. call tJH/llo. IBr, I h jae. Adat ll no pete. . <-.Verde Dr. E. ott · tromSDO.•\IP· c.w...... 01'-. ,. '111.... -~ llotomo. Park tlllO/tOIH lltxlblllty. a..,.-...... -3741 HIJ'bor)54NHJ ......... 3144 Adult.I NoP• De~ Rltr ~c:!'~J: DUPL&X. Prmt. ' Br. l RM!bMl.aoGO BU.t•n'1Sctya, ....................... Stamotnc lJ'I a BR. 2 bf. ....................... 1111 W.. Dr.
di. VllW la'*'*•· betb. Sml rncd yard, BJ!!AU11J'ULcomtrloc•· t ltmwtoul l bl' prden apt. Pool. "3$. *DDHID NEW (SBlQ~trewpltt
BAltS I ARCS •AY Uaa.SMOOllMIMltlJ. cpta,drpa,emlchJJdOK, RANCHO tlon ·&::ir•ntrf • sszs. No pelt. Ytl)'. flOW.lahSt. DIUUt * 81aas·-·-
LOTS. Level. oua ON L I D O I I L g . oo oeta. lNI 1141111 Pl. ~ JOAQtfllf ah.Nbe. ty l 84rm, Adub. «·U'81. _...
¥Mw. Cout •~-au .. ur.111 r.111 snOtmo ..,,,_. lmmacul&W a bra ba tamrmbocMtoNewport ... .,......... J16t 3r!a~a~;;;1 g;!. llVHl~IWIST low 4000
•..U.IWft.. SlCICUOI furelahd a bedroom Jbr,lt.,rrpk,ramlb'Oft· coodo OD &olf coune. ~-/tDO)'rb'. • ...................... OK.tu:S.PbSU..5270 APTCOMMUMITY ....................... .
•0ww1A4J•W .. /IDO. b' Hr tior. A tcbooll OrHt Yltw, Dtr.t to ).100 lovely 3 Bdrm S3ZS tcnoat.bs Roomw/ldtcbtoette
Mtil• .. CIMT Wablftoomllom• · i.o-J515orl4l-441t · ch....,_. 61wlm pool •• .-, dJ.n1nt rm le pvt 8lcb 92.50 Yriy/Utlllnc. 2BR. laep9tpatlo. refrl& tolflf'[ POINT tlOweetAup. YllWLOT aM• · • mo. Call '4CMf3T peUo.abatba.llOC>/)'rl)'. <hal:Aat.'aJJ.-..ini. · Incl. $2115 mo. Ask for Ml 54M75'
Or-. MAal' 6 alaM I a+ faU\ rm.:fcc In Ira ~ • wtndl or M>-07$5 W~r.t Home. Bill,~ AmbMMdor Ian ia eo.ta
la*a, Plwdpw .,.., OlumliJ BR, 1ar, ~· ~'-•a cb, •,ra ..... ts1.·l400 4 BR~WBJllf!~!f'bl 2 BR. 2 Ba, wtencl. 1ar. Mela. ZZT1 Jl.atW, Oln· ll'mt ..U .aw. Red~ ~ ,eopea *50C) ~..,aw .. ._a~a OMTMIWA.,.. .a ..._., t.ns, 1325. No pets . ttl A.o apt community de· traUYlocated.21iroom1.
forquldlaaltl mo. 1\lJ .SJ5-4llS rw vllb6cle It boet. Va· IUPIJA TRl·l.SVEL· lat. =ct, Wlnter rentals. Wallace H1·2TU 0 aiped with you Ill mind MA.NY with kltcb", ~C9nll I Ir . bl«lr tp bHcb caot.9111$.N-111Jt O.m1mlt1t.U.poola ~~RA~l'::!: ~=·AVAIL. 837411115 reaturinasspaclousnoor phone 4'TV. Swlmmiaa
llA&.lY 64e-tll a.Mat S. t lo Ott 1, ms~o.a.b ::.,j~i!, 8~::0 !If~• opt 1151,000. Apntt75-1M2 Bachelor, f/MDi« cWun ~·1~~~2°1',,u.o3 =~·J=··aO:..':f; ... Del'Oltl•~ 1'75-4184 Zcide I Bll. l •· ,.,.,,,' · · --· -:-1u. SUO/mo ln.clll uU ~m •"""· Availal>le ra•-..... a ... 1.,;. fro-_.. a mo. ....... ~ .,... BACH·l 1112 BDRllS. vi,ty .-....., .,........ ... _.
! • br ror Lease Bl1 Canyon C\oltto•ater. M&-0.5l for occupancy Ju.oe20lh. week •
...._UU.•••a ..... t~• J BR. Iba, trc btekyard, 4~~~~r'ata!!!'~· Twnhm, l bdrm. View. C.lla.&2-3331 New 2Bdrm, 1Ba, pnv ._,., ..... ,~ ~ 1 ,,_.;....._ ______ --1 •• .. ••• .. •••••••••••••• cbUdren OK, StSO/mo .......... .,.Uoce,ca._ ... PoOl.jac,teooil'9S0./mo ......... _ .. _ ...,o ~'""..., Room "-ba•'-1--bm 1-I I .. 3202 5e.QIJO ... pa • 2-•lr. CW· M4-8741 ON THE BEACH. bach.. ...... \aPWMU ..... /mo. • Park lllre 1ettlna. -... QI rn Ill
..... ,................. de01ac, Colltl• Parle. from S1'10 " SlfO. lit + .131-4931Ja,5-4711. •Ughled tennll courts ex c h an I e r or It
Garden Orove Lar1t-&Side 3 Br. 3 ba, w/fp. n.t1 • dtpotl& requlred. P'tlr lease, 4 BR, fam rm, $50 sec. dep. Ref's . . ...,._ .... ...,.... •RecreationallacWUes household beJp 6 small 1Bdrm. zs.. frpk. rov New cpt.a. fresh paint lll "'9$. Avall Aua. 15tb. ORICAT VlEW, all re· f73.1JU lOAll-IPM. -,.... *f'ooJ &jacw:ii rent. MUM be felP)fta.
patio, •lit to arbla 6out.Lrfyard A.dlll, 6f0.4:M,5 after S PM decorated, VACA.NT. 2 Bdrm" den. rrpk, •GasBBQ Non-amolter pref'd.
tu0tmo.DMl27. f.c9..'!:u..S47S/ all "9tndl. =rbor View Hllla. Oceutront beaut. 4br. •lr:J!fbt. deck. up· •Sparkling clean laun· Ref's.f*.S.W
• ..-~ .... "'-_.. &&. /mo, yrly Jae. Call 3ba. + loft. Yrly lie. ff bl.IQ>und try tetUna. dry Bdrm rOf' wMU\' adllk. •tlOY&nNDER.S• ~·Ot,_.., Bl 11•ns1..m3 (714)156-51'11. • .. o c ren, no peta. •Garden patio kitchen Nr Vis bop . C 111 3 br, 2 , crpll, d.rpa, Vnlv..ltJ Park. Peters 2 BR.. 2 biba BIO CANYON $115. D&Y1. 646-4262 or •<>Pen beam celllngs . ta s Pint. . . lOOllGIVacuc1e1 , encl. beck yd. No ~ec Townhomt. Quiet TOWNH • -•&w-MT eves.84.S-9543 •Klnpi.t.ebedrooma $100. ma. Day 846-11•: All Allpri pe&a. "30.14S-D74. ..._. 4 Bdrm I~ ba OME. beaut up--v U'nLITIES PAID! •Lar&ewalk-incloset.s afl684.S-30S3.
'theMU::..tuat.at!!. ceotral a&r, iam rm'. 1raded. loada or lBr.lba.$f75yearly SlSSFURNISKED' •Privatedreu1ngareas Furn. room in Cotta IM03brlOdptuWpd 3Br,deo,2 ba,frplc.dbl atrium, trplc. brick amenitlea. No children, STBtSTOllACJt OOOD •Accent.edwaU.. Meaa. "-•'et home ror
Attwllea Sl8150octaa•fcdyrd pr. 8 E. Bay St. $&50. patio, laund rm, .uto no ,S160.M4-0509 2 BR. 1 ba., nr. N'pt. AREA ""-0.Hla,1ral eo2 Brklda park uUI catl'3t·2133 Joan aar. electro1tatlc air ffarbol'Vln homes3bd, JJarborYacbtClub. RUN~! Near comer or Walnut & wcrtingperaon. IU-4'194.
%.18 acres net. acrot1 557-0824 D.-,.. 322' fllter, d'lkto-wave oven. Carmel model, lmmac, Y .. adl' · "50 M5-t80() Fee Jeffery oll S. A. P'twy. Nice room, 1d loc. Non
Santa A.na/TU.llln Comm ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bel Air 1buttert, neutral '575. /mo prcMDU' toclu. (714 >Mt· 7000. aorey no 1moter. refa, over 60.
HoSpttal. For aale by ............ lZO• Lrll houae 4 bd 3 ba color tont1, Pro t Mt-fmact. . 1 Bedrm, Jacu1zl, pool, pm.. Rental center open 645-6708 owner. &abdlvtded, 1. .. ..................... fenced yud nr ~cboola' In~··· Nr aecluded saa Ir water paid. N dally9amto7pln. Lee Ute kit
..... each. '875 e.ch Far lse, lovety 3 BR, 2 ba 11575. 548··· MM&U . pool, ae. Wallr to ahoPI. •HOllEFINDER• pdl,:. .. ~11 only. srro. • -IHdt 3141 "~·Ref'•,..: SW both per ft. Quick bome, den, rrptc, pat. IC • Ubnry. t.nnl1, RefttaltGaJore Call_,,_ --.-.-•ct. 'P ._desired. Serious lo R.el'a req'd. 11125/mo + 8 Toro 3Z3J racquetball, community Uf'ETIMESERVICE ••••••••••••••••••••••• q se-UttC.11.
'quiries invited. Ulll. Forappt; 673-0191 ••••••••••••••••••••••• cent.er. Nr UCI. tuO. Ail 210fflc4!1ToRelpYou s~~: ~.~!ge.2 ~~· -OC!f,~OF Lie bdMn Studio/Patio •
. .._.,,.,.. .... I.Id. t•uP , 11 3207 Super 3Br. 2Ba. den, Mt-MIO JSmallP'eeTben llove llmorftS.tOK"' 1 & 2 BR rrom $420. uUI. pvt bath, pvt entr. kltclt 754-712l. .-................. Crplc. disbwuber, klda & WoodMdf...-Ett Sa FREEforUFE_ _ . ..... . 1 Ml-0505 Ir aar pvlp. SlJO. Htc _...._.,.__.. ~sai .... 11pc:1 vets OK.:.. .,.0-mCT. J-' 2Bd .ia f l ~ <lo the beach, all uUI pd. lBR.crpts.clrpt, kidaok. IDC . Bch.1162-7515 P.7,;,ty"~ 2550 &01ar'~-pd/~~~;ee ll&H•;973-29'fl . =-.. ~rp , FreeToLancllords bacb t21$, 1BR132$, l.se Nopet.a.$240. lBR. Walktobch.1chools
••••••••••••••••••••••• M«nJ::f""d/ ... /557:()824 , ............. 3240 Udeslted.1-492·3'110 MS-2274 &a.bopa S325+1st/last" Room ror rent. fem. -,.. r _., ''-' P '-bo Tb. R I Hskpa 1 cha1l&e. MDtn re-•BO EFIND~• ••••••••••••••••••••••• "'"'v. ara, aep. me: linlleok FeeS57-GIU Colly Eastalde 1 Br. avail. sec. ornton ea ty. aart. $48-.563& CHOICE OPEN HOUSE BR. 2 ba., din. rm .• we •JfOllEFINDERS• now. Natural wood thru· 831-0300 Cllfllfr-t.aclt 3218 New-e.legant2 bedroom bar, frpl. Nr. pool, on out. Lota of 1tora"e ,-, .. -2-B_d ____ tl-ll-•...,.to._,. 4300 PROPERTIES ••••••••••••••••••••••• + dan (....,5). ~ar •-areenbelt. $550. 55241155 Blt1r1 condo, 3 BR. 2 ba, ,.._ •• ~ t • •. ..,.e rm. par a y ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 bd. 1 b / I ed ~ ..,, "' pool new c"-ll f.alnt ••••••••••••••••••••••• space . ..,...... • 1 v"' rurn. Walk to bch & .._...._ y..._ • w enc~ gar, window home. 5 locks •-.... 3241 ed :t··--:-r-y • · ..... h•lli1ll1 3107 dl•R· $240. on-Fri. • .._. UUJ pd. S380/mo . .,.,.--1 lrc yrd w 1rrwt trees. to beach. Private 2·car -...--~· 1 r. ease. 731 .,..,.1 .....,... "' ~ acre bone pro-cloletobcbS&S0.4~ garase. Fully main· ••• .. ;;•••••••••••••••• No.i~baldren or pets. •••;;;;•;;,••••••••••• ----------4M.astl petties, Ready to build. c-.. Mw 3222 talned yard AduJt.a No $100. ue t.aioon Vuta 2 Av . A&lll. 15th. $S35 BEACH 2 Br Mesa del Mar. Cpts, St-u-d-lo-a-pt-s-. _Vt_b_l_k-to-•
$4660w/tenn.s. .-... c"" • .;. .. Sl. (·714 ) +2,ocnfmtonpvtbcb,2 Mo.A.gent640-0020 C\ltelbdrm,bugeyard. _._ enc paUo & gar be h ,.....,, 1 '' JI• acrt!S. Fantastic ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~l ........ pool 1 • ten n I s • n"" • UUl. pd. $295. yrly. .......,. ' Ca · ac · .,_,,, inc · util.
view as utill~ to proper-SC7S. 2 Br, kids pets yrd n4/49&-3217, 2U(10S-0230 2u.cottaie. fl\"plc. redwd 673-5439or833-6118 No peta. $'l90/mo. 11 Pehnanent. Stv & rerrig.
tytine. r7650wtterms. Frplc. 557--082.4 SPACIOUS-4 BR condo. decb. II pGJo. 1d. Nwpt
751-3896. 494-2'1'97or493-7137 ,u 2..., acres. Hone pro· • HOMEFJNDERS • Sharp condition. Good New 2 BR. 2 ba., wood Ra 9)0~. Lovely lBr. 1 blk to bay or EASI'SIDE 2 BR. l Ba ~ Hllh 3150
perty in the beautiful location. Pool & Jacuzzi. burning lrpl., wblte W beach, atreet parklng, Duplex. near Saint••••••••••••••••••••••• llarunnas. $6SO DLX 3Br , 2~Ba . ss25/mo. NEWPORT wa~view+aunrtae& ALK TO BEACH & S295mo.,yrly.861·2333or Joacbims. Mature COU· i.a.Au ... &HIUS
W "-· DELUXE Frnt dplx, 615 C""NTER REALTY aumeta! 2 Bib. to \be Pools rrom any ol these, &,5880 pie ... "" ., .. 0 3535 0 --""' .. 720"~~ Nr shops Marigold. $525 m o. ~1!12 ' beach, North La1una. all have DW, FP, 3 BR 2 ~· ""' · New adult delWte apts
scbooJs.1t"66peracre. M4-3K\S • $650. Vacant. Act. BA.2a:r.182S.2BRt 2Br.1B&dplx,cpts,drps, f\im&u.ofurn.Billiards.
f' DUPL~~utstand· $550 mo. yrly. 2 BR 2 Ba Wow! 4 br, 2 ba, dshwhr, 496-75.u ~ ~anBa f~~~1~. t3 ~~~ri;~mo. 3 Br. 2 baths, rrpk, 2 ca pool. Jacuua. ·s and ~~~ anvestor. t'Ntlhme, dbl gar w/opnr ~ds:=i ~· L..-...... 3252 $125. ~ 2 BR 2ron~ gar~M~~t~UI03 voUACCI:. VILLAGE ,._9•7~ :.626 1 & r:e'rig. l blk _fr bch. No fee. • · ••••••••••••••••••• .. •• duplex w /fp , $475. c:or-delW. 3122 · 252uStockport --wow. Stained gls, pauos, FP. Monarch Summit adult 642-8850.Agt. .. .... ••••••••-••••••• 2 BR Weatside. lovely 4. 581~151 581--6130
.. HWde I.E. Inc. 759-0717 eva: 675-3291 Brand new custom home a twnhse, 2Br &den, w ,tree plex, pleasant 1urround· OUk or g.7 dail Ul31 E. t7th St, S.A. br 2\11 ba, walk to beach. area usage. 1·3 yr lie. 4 brl • I ba1 duplex. ocean ings. s:ms. mo. 751·9930 eope.n Y M/F3Brpool condo, C.M. -------'---~Super 3 BR Carmel , v ew aundry 50' t -/2 • loves tors ... Prl celess Harbor View Home. 1575 view or ocean. many Owner/ag'493..o941 .....__ b' • o re ... v 3 BD. 2 ba, frpl, yd & Newport •oc:Jt 3169 w Yfti exec s (non. ~ean view. French Per mo. Possible ~m::.Senitltes. t&OO. $400.3Brkldape'8pool S,U:~5s:>ya~t1~::.; 'Tl,. ll~r!!, patio, 2 car gar, adlts ........................ ~~J;,~· !M uUJ
COUDtJ'1·•l)le home. No. lease/option, $163,SOO gar. Fee. 55'7·0824 eves. Nr. S.A. Country Club. PAD NEWPORT
.San Dteao Cnty. Cls Agent644-7383 2 bet +. 2 ba, comm pool •HOMEFINDERS• Bl""'A I . BR ondo GARD. .,.,.,APTS $4.2Smo. 631·1816 Bachel9rs. l o r 2 •IESB.ICTIYI• common clbbse. tennis &sauna S500 1162·7~ ...... rg 4 c · c.i.'" Bedrooma"Townhouses Gainareliable ens, Jae. Lo upkeep, 2bdrm.den,lrplc,cTJ>l8, (218)..... 2 bd.2 ba,2 car.gar,sea $750, Ready to 10. CORONA.DELMAR 2 bd. 1 ba duplex, gar. From$349SO roommat.e."5-7464 BR. al>a. att2-c.v aa.r.1 ~u1~~u. nice $47 5. terrace aarden home. 644-0350or"4~1117 2 Br Townbouae. frplc. crpts, drps, adlts, no Spectacular spa, totaJ •SHABEAHOU•
yrold. Preeeotownrwill • 4 J;\r. 2 ba, lam rm, frml Prlv bcb, pool,, tennis HVHbm beautMonaro 3 Pool.,tenola.Someocean pell, Wil1on 1State recreaUon program.1---------
ease· back ror t yr. COlta~ 3 224 dining, 1ardener, n *500. 551·5333 BR. lrl backyd, nr schi/· & Catalina vlews. Close 646-33115 social procram. 7 pools. 8 c:.tdow9
S140,000. By owner.••••••••••••••••••••••• peta.l..&e$595.846-lll82 Ni 1 •b ... _ t gmblt.9!00644.allO ~_!aab.ion1Mand&fine2Bdrm,2ba.1U9'sqft. tenniscourts.AtFashion U-'-1JS1 .. 1t
714;438-3446or 7ss.3535 gue .., ores, .,..,au . · ~ch. 6'4-26ll ~-En 1 laland. Jamboree & San ""---·-. -· 2br,cpta,drps,stv,1ar. 9'003brpetgarFrplc gardenbome,2br,2ba, S.a.-llh 3276 r•.-. c gar.D/W& J ulnHillsRod o'lluan"abomeoraptment '-;!.':: ~~~~r:~s~.919!: S6253Brkidagartee den, walk to pvt bcb. ....................... ~~r~a Verde °(7141644-lfoO ~t·CVAru 'UKJ.Mrrm
290 648-3l60 $4504Brkids5S7-tme Gua.rded comm. pool, SHOREa.IFFS•Br.2Ba. 3bdnn,2'1\ba.newcpts, ~<4«pNp.l"~ •••••••••••••••••••••• . •HOMEFINDERS• tenni&, adlt;a. ~o pets. on 1011 course. Pool, dlahwaaher. pat\o & New deluxe condo. Nice 2Br Dplx upstairs. o.•~b..N~
CASHIMAR.ASH SHARP 3 BR 1 Ba, $395 Ava.ii Sept 10. 2 story, Gardeniol meld. $565. bUmtlJQOmo.496-8033 garase. SS2~· Lse. 3Bdrm. lrplc. crpts. frplc, W/D. gara~e. 832-4134SiDcd911
For your house or bu.Ilda· mo., Call 54&-5880 ask for 3.Bdrm, 2Ba, lrg ram rm, AA epm 640-62lO. S. ..._ 613-7513· All· drpe. gar opnr. Days adults, 00 pets, or Lad~, ______ ;..;... __
blelot. Larry rrplc, DU paint. crpts, 3Br.2ba.dlnlo11rm.Cvrd c-.••-3271 Front cozy 3 bd or den, 213 /245·3648 /247-8978; !!1,e=·'·~~redit Roommate, Dalbo.a
SCOTT RULTY dshnbr. Family pl~. patio. 3 mllea to ocean. ••• .. ••••••U•••••••••• trp&c, dbl gar $550 mo. eves 2131244·5644. · Island, $142 Mo. lncl. uUI.
536-75ll u..e & v-..,E 968-7119. Avid.I now. $450/mo. Pb Be ut 4B r frpl M>-7*/831·m4/6'13·12169 Lr" 2 bdrm · t dlts Bachelor unit v, ~oct 3 BR. 2 ba. frl:l-8632 __.. -831.M.o&"' a r. am rm, c, " , qwe a . nr r be ch. All til pd 4BR,2ba,iatory,cor· lbdrm,fncdyd,gardner, ===x 2~ba..dbgar,bltns.Xlnt 3BR.2ba,ram.rm.Sub. stores, no pets $245. rom a u · Fnnatewanted.sunny3
.... ner lot. 9iOO mo. Availa· nr ~0n~wn8 H.B. fl7 3 BR. 2 ba b.se. pvt park· 1oc. 9560,830-1136 cbildren, no pets. -.so. 642-1Z76 No kids. no pets. 201 E. bdrm yrly Bal ls $177.
••••••••••••••••••••••• bl• Sept 1 R alto mo ....,.....,, 1•... d 1 ... _ ,.,,._ • ...,,. ""'"'-" Balboa Blvd. S2SO per Lon 673-3414 .. · · e r , · .tae yar • P ayuae, nr 3 bd. 2 ba. comm pool ..... ~ ..... _.. Quiet l bdrm duplex. mo.+ security dep. Call ---------~.'!':'!'!~.·.~..... 548-772!1 2 bdrm, rncd yd. &ardner, abcla • bcb, "°°'mo. 31134 Vla ·San Vicente crpt.a, clrpt, kit rum. yrd SUes.56-7707 Male. noo1moker will
.... ,.._.. 310 nrdwntwnH.8. ~mo. 49$-27'7 SQ5.528-5885all6 · Luxur)'3bdrm,~. 1800 3'2F!owerrear. share apt with remale.
2br2ba "arage -mo ·--...... e Sbo-s. Ocean Vu. ft' Lr tio b •-BCH DPLX 3Br. 2Ba . S:JOwk.,CM54&-2068 ...................... '. ' -' ---·o .llJ ... sq g pa ay .. ..__,,.-t-.J& •126 r 1 g •• 2 t ' & l d Guard gate walk l.03BR,l~bacoodoinSJC, · • -_ ~ rpc. ar.new cp ..... no Duplex, 2Br, 2Ba, bllim. '1157~os aun ry. Beaut La Cuesta Villa, beach rec area 4 bdrm Ml11lon Beach. 2·car oceanOK. ... v.~~.~ Sni7_21s ••••••••••••••••••••••• pets.'.....1$500 mo. yrly Need 2 unf bdrms w;pvt
avail Sept 9, wlnte · BR. 2 ba, fam rm, cov'd 2 ba.' ali upgraded'. pr, k1da OK. CaU Melin· .u ........ ,.,..,. -2 bd.. new cxpts, drps. pnt. 00-llill<: bath??, in 3 Br condo. ~~d.675 ·2651 . 21 Coll. Park 3 br 2 ba, lg pat.,2-cargar.586-2995. SlSO/Yrlylse.4912-2116& da, 495-0394, or Violet, balcony. 1ar. $325 . $45WallttoBeacb' _NB---._~ ......... 26:---32 ____ _ ---------1 family rm, encl. patio + N w H 8 3 BR 2 ba RV 848-0588, $390 mo. 3 BR. 2 ba apt. Few bllta B»-1325 Garage! 2 ladies looking ror man N En 1 ndSt 1 covered patio , 2 · · · ·11 • • ...._,.,.., JZSS li"omocean 1625 /3 BR b h bs ew I a Ye fireplaces, aml c:hl1d OK. :'• c to~bla, sbo ....................... Nice a BR. Harbor Lane 7s&.9S28· ......... .._.. 3140 Stove & Dwsh' whare eac e to
3 ==,! ,! ! No pet.a. Avail Sept lS. pain• ~ew d :::8• Lake Foreat I privacy home. pool, rela. $1'15. . ••••H•H•••••••••••T•• 6'5-4900 Fee a . 879-2706 . ~Fee 1525. 759-901.JS tainted 10$.!sl Eve:: plm. pool, Jae.' 3 bd, cul l.mmed. OecpJ. 48Ml.52 Huee matr 1uite. 3 br. a Sharp, beach. 2 & 3 BR. BIG CANYON EAST. 2 Roommate , M/F, Balboa
ffaadultcondo 2br2ba 962-3282' • ' de aac, will consJdert~:• ba . lat1ury, 4 2 (rplc ., dl1hwa1her, BR townbome. 2 ba. 2 lsl. $170. mo. !lln.Q 2 ~ter.3BR,2Ba,lormal din rm, frpl.' gar doo; le11e option. Call UNtr::t:lid 3525 ~.$585.497·1955 garage & patios. fplc's, 2·car gar w/auto BR.Mlcbael,673-94'1T
din-rm, $550. mo. <213) opener, aec. gate. pool, lmmac 2 Bdrm. Condo. Marilyn 179-8300 or •••••••••• .. ••••••••••• •BACHELOR• SGG-2351. opener. A/C & more 445-1219aft.6. incl. W/D • refrig. ~. Bltlna, W/D, patio. Pool. Slll-7868 Btookvlewlbdrm, 2~ ba Nr blacb, $205 incl utll. Avail9/1 no chlldren. no M abr II Nwpt twnbse
BALBOA ISLAN 7~ SMO/mo.96()..4 '1 ....._VMfo 3267 townhoin•. Frptc, A1C. m.scisorm.53SC,agt. Sea~ V-e pet.s.&44.0SOO ::~~~.~pool.
DUPLEX-2 BR, furn., We Love Kids' 3 bd. 3 ba, dbl 1ar frpJc, ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• tenni1, pool, Jae. de· l bd. very lJ'I wood beam Rew 1&2 harm luxuty THE N E W P 0 RT c;..
all new. S52S moolh. Ten 2 BR $300', · fncd yrd, S blka bcb, ~. Sbarp 3 br, 2 ba, cpta, contor wllt. Avail. 8/15 ceWna $150 mo loclu adult apt, tn 14 plan1 MARINA. beaut newly &-.. ... -4310 month lease. Gar.Call~! · · wuber/dryer booltupe frpfc, dshwbr, kida It r1ooe yr. tease~ $t75. util.640-75'3 · ln>m S2IO + pools, ten· decorat.ed 2 BR. 2 ba + ...,...,
PANORA.MIC m:: & 64.S-4900Fee ~.84&-8815 petaok.~.Act.Nbfee. m.eos2otl4&-8851 ~........_ nla, waterfalls. ponds! den, waterfront, sandy •••••••• .. ••••••••••••• ocean views. 2 BR 2 BA, 964-<2566or97:J.2971 _....._ 3124 From San Diego Frwy beach. lovely garden. Garace. xtra looa. H.B.
beaut.furn&ar ti •Luxury3br2\tba,2car.,..... 3244 ......................................... driveNortbooBuchto Boat s lip avail. No $35monlh.
location.$1400/mOCllh. gar, A /C, iardener. ••••••••••••••••••••••• SS7S.3Brlttdsgllrfee ·-•••••••••••••••••••• LAMAMCHAA"S McFadden then WMt on children. no pets. 14'1·1839
EXECUTIVE home. 521·5320 dy1, 644·11778 tl003Brlr~557-082t ..._....., 3706 Larae 12~ bedroom McFadd.en to Seawind 6'1U414 &cldt C.¥. lioOt_ I ....
BR+ den, 2 BA. 2 c eves. •HOME DER• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'ia.rden apta. Dabwbr, Villqe. <n4>893-Slll8 'rtblktobeach,3BR2BA, sale" secure Oft~ al· :..~~~~New Dix Tw~e 3Br, Mlwport IHah 326' LitU! Island Cbolce 1 br, liltm. encl. iar, IH bbq, Townbouse. love&y. apac. dowMtalrs. blt·ina, rrpl, ley, MO. SU-3800
.... 2~Ba. pl, faeuui "15' ......... ~···· .. •••••• pr, dect._pvt. A.vaU 1[2. Poot o .. Pd. m Scott " bome·llke. 2 br Willi patio, 1arage, lease . ..._...., mo.~!SO • ~~ Wlnt« or yrly lse S3lRJ fl.•S073-. ~. l'ltlilttnltan« + t SSO&;U'U4thSt.~140 ~...._. 4400
673-8700 Moft'THWOOD a&perb ex~ 'J 1JR, den DiO. Sliorlf&f' A .1111. Nftt 2 br ba ia)l bltii.s pitfOI, -Some with. aUL •••••••••••••••••••••••
a-L..-.. 144 3 Br. 2'1\ ba coado. P'rplc, -·"'Wea-home. Year around 219'1\ Abalone •ve. (213) 1 1 • ~ • u · prqe. Swim. mlna pool. STEPS TO OCEAN. shAf1> •MEWPORJ' WCH•
.,....._ ill ~t /dtp1, wash /dry. "-SSR vacation. On the water 923-05$9 ' ~· r en . gar, pa o. Jacuz:zl. Tennis courts. I lie 2 BR 1 Ba. winter ren· ;;:;·~~:;·;;;,:::;~·;;; tea!!~aar::,.mo. Yrly ~.:;ie ~~r;·~~~t,le cust6m bm. SWO/mo. Ice 4 br. 2 ba. bar view. TSLll":mF°· 642.1603 bit to Hun':Jfoo shop· ~~ pets. $400 mo. =~o,~;•~r·
.&Bdrm 2148 .,. ft '195 Bila vaulted celllnga Y~_1_..__. · &plc brown crpt '825 enicentttF JI. Adultl. windows, lbower. Aval . 9'0Nh·io.moo'ib. . 'Small maniedfamlly.To trt' & k II b ' -_..., 7'Z·Wrs . 'Garden like apta. aduJt ~~0 peta. rom $t35. NEWPORT SHORES· w11ar. Decor. blinds.
t7MS1.1 call141-3illl05PMto8 r..:c:ped ~ YdJ~· 67W700 U\ltnl, 2 bdtni, pool & Se1wlnd Vll,lqe, W55 3Br, 2Ba. yrly M85 mo. so.eor ptsq. ft. M5-3m
------· __ ..,. ;; Never lived In $S7S/ Mo. &Jper 3 BR, 2 ba, rlll'D. jacuul, 17'1 E. 22nd St. ~B ~illa1eLane, 873-1305eves. (8am·5pm) J.efmlt.... 1141 Ind prdmer. <N lJI) . m..a..11 .. a Ba. tam. fp&c, 9500/tDO. 9'18/&·lS. C.M.M.WC• n. . <714-·tml. ---------
··-·················· p Pt turn tree u&11 J. Dal · :..... ~ cood. • loc. '175 13M114. m.tl40 Br _._,...,~ _, PIOMOMTottY " 1200 '4 ft oCfke apaee, Bo. La ...... oceaa view atudioctg Fee557.-:M ean aMZ-..5 M.o. AaentSU.1.W Near new townhouse. a • ~ ~ .. come, 1 BR vl~w of bay It PCH, Npt Bell. Good .~ HOK ..... ,..1111 3707 center of town. 2br. no pe&a. St&rtlnt at SZTO • • &ocatJon. Robble,548-01$7
bOale.flaOfmO. • EFINDERS• NO.FEE!Housea,~ •••••• .. •••••• .. ••••••• 1'1\be, l&f, Inc~ yd, air mo . .....,. ::.8"~/mo.833-t200 •
.-..io JZZBHbdtpetl'ee "1JJll.r':!'ALS ~~;:..t• 1 llr, c:ompl. f\&nl. Avail caad.114$.100.MMISI. NICI.:, 1 ~2 br, pool. · Want Ph.D. J>a1cbologiat
l1Ufmt5Sr-oa( SBR.IBA V •0 "''5i>Om • · LW!bler-_.Y?lf ~detonwcU IA 1 IU'Q\!',_:frpfC' • ...-. ~LIFF 2br. S~ba to •bare fur• auhe
NMelli'l1•spm ... rtlHcla 31'9 •HOllitEFINDERS• "8n2•La.·····" -<n:!Bu,yUlrt.,_t,4Br ~ Ba cpt1 drne bltnAdlla . .0..M•IU-52:51 ~-Aaula~ Wl~Clffic:• aNJt ._.................. .. n, ,.. ·········-..... J • • • ,,,._ ' no pets -1728 Bed ~ •2Br/pdnrpald •BR..l~la ......... JS7: .... acuul, etc. 1'112 Winter rental. Spaclo&la· lt0\'9.eocltar,NrOCC.1bkletfromoeean.f255.l CordLn.'Ml.7533 • ____ _......._ __
Maplftcent beachfronl ,.2 +d1nJpet/Yr'd 5Br,'S8a .••••..... "7 Hllbland. JSU,000. ocua view apt. Stepe ..,.6'7.a31 1rar2 br Sl35. Frplc. 208 · Aiu .......
Wat Newport bome. s tGUBr/lrd;pt55'7-0824 IBR,2batm bome."-.. Gl.QIOO frocn beach.' Bclrml. 2 00St.9G8NO s.a..... 311' ~ .. 8d~z 2 bat.bt+dorm • HOKEJ'INDERS• llJu.l.Clnvkjo b a , I rp I c, D I w. 1 br prdee~. S.Ove • ....... •••••••••••••••• COUNTY foll. nl1 lie. $l.S00/1Do. SIAV11W waaber/dryer,. saraie. ref.ril. .~ • no petl. 2 br trtpld unit, matw-e Fcnvervlewotocean. nr Mr O.C~
-..1 I BR. family rm, e.a:ec Unobstructed vitw o{ teSO /mo. 645·2595 or SISO.M.-:20. adufta, '300. llUllast + beach, 2 br 2 ba, adult.I. ~UM» 1q t( avail•·
SXSCUTlVE HO• E. apacJoua home nr s. ocean Hd Newpor m.CIO 2 br, new epq. dr'pe. mcl. depoett.1112·.. .-. az.sm b[e", Ola&.act LOulae Dahl wa•-view. Lua new .~ Piasa. $550. Beaei. 38A. abe. New, beck J'd;~XW. Gk No 1-a·•n ,.. .. _ ._ CO&PORATEUALTY -__.._ l•ll aecurlt.). Tenni1. Morini to Canada mat -· -M&.zn4 • a..• .ttn .,,._... • ftCI I bd ~ walk to bcb. ins,.-two. IM. i bl. Hut• Jae1111l. awlmmib,. MU~bowM!lbol4.Uv· .....-~-• PtUO • '"'qe. MMIOO dean,.readynow. $S$0.
la room, llbra~ &.kteJBR.2be,dinlDs *°ltDOCODlider&..oPt. ~ nn, bctrm. 21" dr 1111 •IMS--. Patio. aekforM1ke. Allot bd sns. •1803 NEWPORT B~ACB. ~Lue Pie t nn. fpk, nr IChl .. alee Alt/Owner. Atk (or ~;.pleturea, pJanla. nfria.. Mhl,IU. no ,.ca., • ........, ........ apt $ _., MARINBRS MILE 100 ~ near. 1 m yard.11S00.~50l9 Oaq, at MMZIO or at ...... I' clllDa clotet. 1111';-..tf>Tm Br.,.#i bata.1 New aq. ft. crp&, tine. 1Wt ~ m:1n •11!~:; a8drm, IBa +· bonua: ('714> m•a 0nr1>.,,.. ~. c:=·.:1~'fv: ~LT. -' , .01mt Pb•il07 1 • ..._... • • MIO bath, Ill lltil. Jodd .. A•·
a• r". f 110 /Ill o -.ut.~tutepot. Nu 1f-$tJCutM~~ Spectl)'S..vttwHome. I:::, 1 Wnn. loft lfl i 6f'l .~ •••••••••••~••••••• .. •• J1141W«.5tie..,._ ~~., 8'llt. ~by •Piil ~~.=au 8114. DRAMA'ft£a..n.uJbd, l\t f'Pen,;...._ . ._._ •• bit·• a~wsbi ... ~ ~~.,_cloMtobch, 2br,l,.bacond0. Wanted: Spue for ...;;-~-.,....,---;.;;.;..;;;_..;; .. .:;;..;;sm;;;,,;;;.;..·1 .... ----'·-·.,,.,;;;%2;;;11;.;..·_.1'111Wull1 ... 2 BR I ...... 1".1"'.fttb$ tc ". MnCL-110.. • llft. u,,. 1•ra.i_t_t bot .a.... Pool.PQO.Mo. jewelr1 •Dlllfect~t
'1J!01'1ftlllWI JBJt. ... Cpt~!OCD be, bcMt. w0ocSbrlclit. 1d.$m/ ... !41Am, 1.171-917 ......-: -Rq.
0
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A= ~~ .• lr,ltM.. L-lllO.-._.· ......... '1711Pll J. ::-... ~a IOltJi 'l\'Ma,._tM,,.,,,,, for -..a. :~~c.:..:-~= ,_an_ .. _M..;..-.........---..__.._ .::oT.. :.;~.~-tnl/m Da&\J~=lt:rAt tt~t:..='Al ~=-~-~°=.~ ~:.;:rJ.~r~' ~ fot ule In =~==Al
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"'-•• UIO ...._w..tM 7100 Wedii.dey.Auou•t 1e. 1t1a '* t>Ak.Y PU.OT N ......__ ""••••••••••••••••••• 9;;T•••••••••••••••• ...., W..ted /.I 00 -----:"""'--------:--.....;-.--.......;;.;;;......;:::.;::~ , __ ._.. ,..... 1111111 . a...ta,.... , ... -. f 1 m. ......................... tWpw~ 1100 ....,w..t.4 1100 HefpW..e.4 11• ;~:··J·c~ .. -·-;··u ~ . .!~ .... ~!:;;;-a:;-·; .. ~ :.E:;~a;.,~~=t = "'*·r!~'-Auro:.... ..;;;;:;::.:~~-.~··· ....................... ······~ .......... ~--· r~ BT TIA.YIL~..CY) 97-=~~··':. •Hlll11 atcncthe • ..=:.,: ~1~ P.~0:0· UfllTIMI Due to eapen•l~.n e&.IRICAL _,Ell$ .. .. -.>. • ~SI lalJ. N -v~. aJe.Dder woman, IMO. diUdttn.tTS.5llO Pl· OPfiOITUMrTY ~Title Meda u Brt1b~r100 wa.oee "" ~ ·11'111._"-fte ... •lY ._ ... 1 ••• WMdt, Reward =--s*to. &...u lO S,U.ESPERSON ttper d A.S11.1t. Bkkpr. :,~awttcb~: ::·1 1woooav ._ •w travel 'C{· Tnnl MHl1S • Po"!!.~ Dell1-PUo& •• ,,._ ... Ulla $710 lc.-medcar&*ftJoowttb '!'oe P•Y· Pd partio1. dei1~er1 •ork. Xlb~ "' I N.cWOllt: )'OVOW'O --• • uva IMO, Cotta !'eePa1d a doo>eetJc lwruey car QtrJy booua pla.n. Title bendl1a 2 Day autinment. •u• 14M!91aft •••· a'ot re41 aatred:u.rCAT • ..a&u..ll.-la ....... Ca.llGI -~v•lodiv90UCh\ dealerlnOranaeCoon~. aper. 9ref'd, but not RaubcO~i:~k'e~"~. ~~ •. ~11!' .... ~ .. ~ .rft• £W~ ~•vPPQft~ llUbdtan.onaaiteol· -toOYerMeco.functMJnl. f!te deioo plan. E•· 11ec. Call Michele O.ta Me1a, Ca 9'l62e -......-~~...,, --eenict ond, abort taHtd. MA.SSA.. Calll.MIM 83"'2700.Alao ~:llent company 558-W4,e.i30. ,_,,r-.
1171151 al ft Call Mr . C arln; ~ • ..._. "8UllMODll.S =-~~•Deft· ~°teflt1. All repUet lk1aheeptqclerktobu C714>W>:.1~iF~11. E8~ office • • .., TM-G•L . lntDe.•111!\:ia!: ot ~~u:,~n~di:,~t~t die t,,.yrolli postlna overload
., hraltere atrtpplnt llCOITS care ol The Dalb Pilot. ace s receavable It ·=· >Mi .... ft'wtM -.b I,... ID l£WllM OU'ICAUOMLY ArtM11••••k P.O. Box 15'0, Coata ace'-~ble .. to key Qedcal ~ H7-oo61 . ~u. ,._ 0..... .... *-· .... ~......... Relp. adult •/ftiper. la Meu Callloruia 9312111 ~toucb.A~illperson If m181rcb8t,N ~..._,_ Uoa. ror Sale at far L08T: • 1r old wb!Y 611_,.140 needlepoint, kaltt101. ' · · Ship Yard 900 Udo Y•'re Giid Equal()pporE .,:;,... .•-. '-'ow ..a. '7000 tlraa. &a.oyed female dof. .. • crocbeUnc ~ crewel Allto,.tlag P.nDr.NB .m
·:.: 61 •..... Je.1m IMt-eet.pmJa.,.. Alllll1mF45.lov•walb •uat«S tor eoattloa Ln SJOO~erWMk BOOKKEEPER, ruu Y•'re aen '=1 1, ..... ·--. .. • n.owsa ff p Coat.a d ~ • a.rt.cw. Ml. to • Pkli. coolint ntb.l.n& needltwort lflop. Some 1uto Pihl& .s1 prepara· cbarce. Acct ·1 Service --.. ...
MYMOWTO...CIS Meu. Reriio•it11td. ~"b t;t•ue1 call bricttt. ta~nlat retail exper. helpful Uollman.llultbeableto L•I".°' Hilla aru'. Vounrtpt!KELLY! ~~wt t3.=1:· 'uuy ~of. o.w 1:n ......i ..... alt.• ore pm, boaa•. Would Jib to ~aft. 9am •and, m11k. p~tme 4t PleMam wonini eood. When you're with Ke"Y~ Natbr.i Heal''" .. _. on. fro9t IOO ....... -n .a.--l·l !pm tPIDll 11141 ba&I •J•-t ~sud. Leo• Auto ~ you alwa.,. h ood ... ,__ __ ,,.
fu\11Ue •I ... ~ l~f =._. •• R£WA AD for 101& Who bu boaleon w:\;. ASS'MILllS Body,lt2-9.'J7S. BOOKKEEEPER P'/C ~ :~11 tor F.OENB7SUIOO =l • p. r k 1 D. 1 ••\JC'lUNO Wtter t'Oe· ..u~ JlbaaU. !Mt v~ 8-lY &o Ad ... C/O Auto Painte PennaQeat p tr. Hr• AM )'OU. Ow-employees 1et c.... w .... ·r
tad.s.d. --llritdoft. ••l'JT' aet. J1mbor .. Blvd. ar Dalli Pllot Boz IMO, A min. olf mo·• factory M>Owt 842-~ s~wk.CallfJC.12Se. 'TOP PAY,..wecaDkeep SdliMt
• .-t• Ave, N.B. -.dDwn.~.TSl-1.«M>. Newporurw-.-a.&allw.CAmas UMmbb •xper req'd. · youubusyuyouwut EamuptotlOOpera
DUID.J ...., .. a.-lt21 Lott, bou 8chJtloo f'lt_111fS..,.. 53'0 AWUcatkint belo1 taken A'1l'ORENTA1. IOC>IOC9a ~1f»mediate usJp, Low tuition. Plac.m•
-.-IQ. ft. dla otc. VI ....................... tni•er. b1k w/chroDfe ....... •••••••••••••••• foralhhitt. 0 TRAINEE . Acco1anta payable. or: ll8lilt.. ~1.eJJM. _...St. Clf. ,...._ tua l!'YI wbla. Lut MID ft"OA& ol ....... lacerta WEISER LOCK upport.unlty for 10· general otnce expr. re-.,._..._
IDO. 1'MD-.-T-ICI( CASH 111.arht Baal«. Hatbor B • 1 uty.ch 1 rm . <X>llPANY t.eW~, friendly, neat cp.frecl. O.C Alrport area. -·~HONS Collector·Pinance Co ~ ~ -at Bak•. C ti. anyone "'tel'taeme. Whl more 51Wu~~F•dden. ::,eal8 ~ youq mnotan lfr. llill« S4CMl500 SICll'f MllS ~-o~ opporor. s.' /IUJ>•..; ~om' . fll Eft111SCUJ bl• 2ad Ttvat Dted llntqlnto,611~ amyoQ•Uor'!'ParUea. nuulBch · .-n:v. exper. STBfOS ~ •1 ...
.. f'W low arru,ed tor any Rewardfarntum. dlnner , daaetaa . F.qll&lOppEmplyrm/f ~-i~~1:n::m°!!~ ~~~~lay& PIX.TWXONS ~".!!!:.,.:./.~d:,,
ll 1DMITiff ~-Credit 90 pro-l4lll M, O'e1 Poodle ap. bosteHea. theater. Party avail. to auto rental reader ad copy onto "'91TS wlr apply tn pel"80ft. Ht) .. ~ ... IUl"9' .,. Borrow on t.M ln PR* c• anw-Pie-Boat Service avail. Ex· •54r1R.1u1•1 11!8 COUDter·man. Good driv· na•-2 D .. ,..... •M IXICUrt-Floaoce Co. 1505 .,, ... , .. t ::t::.r! ':!\'!~''. cN&Md value or your vie p~ i·vlctOri"a cluaive service by dis· or :a',c:::~nical in& record req. 831.2480 118';;.9pr:.ys-r!e~\0';,: •ms.a.ms North'l\astinAve.'SA""
----. laome.Calltodayf«fui. ~UReward~ cr,et. ladiel wbo realize devlcea. Pre"a'sloo "-or49}a30 6Pm. "'--ly Penn""aver, --cov-ewrteoua intormaUoa. the lmpcrtance ol c:om· " • """ \IU Competent leC1't!tar'Y (CM •ra1e. eoftf. rm. mall Ii•.._.... 1.;._ .. Siamete ut Seal point. P8tibleCOQlP&QY. MaJel& clean work for amall. SZOOA WHK lBllOPlaceotiaAve.C.M. CaJJorcomeintoday aalea omce· to perfom
""·· pattiq fa more ln ".'ftlA "911111 .... ~ front P••• de clawed hmaleclienteleK.alpine ltable mtg co. No exper Nat'I jewelry co. Jooklnc Boc*:atore de~. mature IL[IY complete clerlc ~IXWCUTIV£ Llcenaed Ho~e Loan Pa~eo de VaJJencla Auoc. JCatella Ave. aecesa. Call for app't, forlOeott1eticpeopleto ltenthusJastic. P/f incl. ~ ~ ucretary dutiea f /'4
SlJJTENO-.StJO Brokers 1erv1ng So. AliCIJl Pkwy .• $100 rew ADabehnSZ''J.1632 ~-Eoglneering learn busineu from wkoda.~3768aft6PM . Sl!Rv•ces manaaen. Mutt be .,a.i-
Calil. for 17 ~·Call our 110-'1385. Sodlta.IN 5400 834i>rOducUoaPI NB O'OWMfup. Forappt.Call Newport Buch 833-1441 to wol'lt independently,
,..A..Jj ~·~ nearest office, (714) F d 2 1 ii _""••••••••••••••• · · IM2-S183. IUSIOY , ·---N· 1 ........ ~ .. •lronl adminigtratlve, ~ ~ IS7~'4 oun : •m • ver · • · · Day •hilt avail. Union --•1ue -1._ typing, S/H skills. Call ..... C•••rMew Poodlu. corn•r of B.ICTaoMIC Babysitter needed. 9-3, s benerita. Please ca.JI for G~~~eG~~-.... Marta f/appt. 752-'300 surd:& So: ot·eoa l Ul, 2nd * 31'4 T.1>.'s. tlrookhurst It Garfield. SIM4Ml1 ASSIM d.ysJWkfor8moogirl. appt. 64S·SOOO ext 520 EOEMtF ,. H•y. A"vau~ble No.:! Creditnoproblem. Sat.. 8-12, To claim call CalllN'l'ROVIEWtortberllUIS AftZpm.646-llSC. Moo-Fri&am-5pm NEVER A FEE
S • .,. 731-427 I -.0185 lotelU1ent • discreet Medical co. In Mission EquaJ Oppor Empk>yer Construction 1uperiAta0.
c.&.. to aJ>PC'edate. $.1DS. • ~ to aneet new aiDlle Viejo 1-seek1oc exper'd BabY&itter needed tor 2 ·--:=~=:-i-•111.;~;;;;;;;;.;;;;;.;;;;;.;;;;;;;;i deot. exper. neceavy CallUncUm.2311 ~:;;'fldby FOUND: Germ Shep/· people.75:u411. aaaemblers worklna smaU-cblldren in my IUSIOYS Hmt..Beacb.eo.taM ..
OOI dlx ""* t me Loans coWe mix, F, l-4 mos old. w Jama II components. bome. Sdya/wk. SS!Ml.24. ClfRICAl area. Several project•
AJC, ample ~;~r::; OOYOUNEEDCASH? Vic Newbope It Trask, Good eye li&bt. manual l!,~t:.= Wlder way. Please ea.II ~Nolsereq.67U9()0 J.st.2:nd&3rd G.G.836-0&,aft6. I rl:' 11111& dexterity req'd. Xlnl Babysitter, 14 mo. boy. After3PM naanarUNITIES ~~or-~~~· Homeownerloaos FOUND : Small M ~;:'1llil0. bene:Otlt. New bulldint. llon·Fri 8-5. Call aft. n.--..Mn:er Ul"ru ••-•v _..._.
A.irl>ort sit ore, sect Y arranged fast. dact.cband, red, vie In· -·••••••••••••••• .. • Only depend a bl• hard 5pm 548-112:94. 2IJl11 w. Coast Hwy. NB A .major life insurance C arvcs 00 PNmisea. $125. Borrow $1000, $100.000 dianapolia & &uscbard, ScMoh & ~ lnd.lviduall call company headquartered oosultant to sb" mo 9579331 flexible terms, past HB.Plisc&U862-S987.l--••-H·-7005 Perm. work avail only. Banklna in Newport Beacb is faabionjewel.ry. P/tlafl. --·--· ------1 credit no probJem Call ------Call&aaao581-3830 n.-•-~0evet""ment -~--lndividuala with Xtra income f.or baclC ,to •• ••••••••••••••••••• Bank Seer' etary ............... ~.-...,.,....... _....._. or "--'-tma ..!J -'----•---a .... .,0 ws ooobllgatJon. FOUND: Gold watch. ~to Sl21C + stills and general office -..__.. 1 c;&· - -.... ~ SI'ERLING FIN SVCS N....-Pier ar a raJJ •-Be•• EST• 'TE c• experience in one or penses. Call ~aradlse •••••••• •••••••••••••• · -..-• ·e · """' .. ~ A .. .,.,.,.... .... Y Immed ,.......;., .. ;or ..,.Y Le Inc corp offers J •-·I ry D 1 t w.-; 100t-1.S00aq iun n4J9S5.1e1ocbkr> describe. 645·3588. att LICENSE ,_,,~ to bank -:;.na;;. 0~ traioillc "aaajgn~ terr =::or the ro11ow1na __.. rec or ~tive aeigbborhood INTERESTONLY Spm. eecretarial skills req'd. =ess.ca.reerseeker.
"'OllPi•& center for a0 -REALEST.ATEW. ANS FOUND: BUuJ duck. So· SCHOOL JRAIN££S Prefer banking exper. Vaom.2700. Denoia COOi 0 .. _ ...a ; Call Lou "-;or t c1c Denoia Personnel creaalv-e women's ""'ang.,,. 10 pnvacy O• meone's petbird.Owner Qll!l!.l!.llS ........-1' app · Service of Irvine. 2082 '•rt·tl•• poslfio• for llJ'lt! rest bolDf.'. 4 duddac Men. ™155, your own home. · ideoWy. IW.5-1508. rrl3'l lOC'~enced> <7U),..1234. Michebon. ••••oo1t Moadey• day week. Apply 2819 ~179-71.0fLenl'ox ~rs'tc,_. FOUND:Mn!dlrisbSet-._..Mctwe,.-.. w!"':: •e=~n -9...-JfiC Frldoy •. M .. t'llaYe =~Ave.cM.orcalJ JMCIOV'UOOD R. ter,4-$yrs,redeollar. divtduals for first shirt .,...~ C-raAtslst. good t""'9 ...t ..ttt --::-. ---_,__-*' s.: tt. ot pnme Mm+;n1rs. TNSt IW.5-1508. *CrashCGursuvallable po&itiom lo our Pl-oduc-City Baak ..... .._,. ...._ COOK·Immed openln1s ~trt Beach area. DMdi 5015 FOUND· M bile & tan •lbU!rialaprovtded. tiobll>epartmh ealt. Wewi.11 "' ., ... •--•--oaro-~omw~I Pbebloptfou1'rAappphllc If~~-breAppattly.~1!' . .-t"'.qa t• 1ppr9ved. ••••••••••••••••••••••• · •Small cleaaea for tra n t e r ght in· ..... • ..... , "" ..... · Y. 1Jpiilg4MO w,_ """"' •-w ...,..fer remodeling & LOWEST ~ ~~· ap-pencnallsedlnstructioo. ~~~~ '!'ndtbe micro-l~~~~~~~~~I PlPea~!AavveeCr.Ml860 ger. 16 Fashion lalaad, O.':~cy. Consi~r --· ~--,_ ... ~ .. ay "'""'""°'cs 1 ustry. D .... ...i .. ~ ""..uw.tl , • • • .. NB Jo6llt ot.u ~ "-" .... ~ ----, .. ________ , I 111plt9/Acdtlg ,.......L 110-~~ '7$·3080 a.t1r..tl.... Found: AVS)N. N~rt lcni&btclaMes. Comprehensive com. SOlllllW..tlmk ,. ....,.,. ..-..._..._ .......... _·_er_.__ lstT.D.'s,aho Bay. Owner ident fy. •Placement-up to 80% ..... v .._..,,ta in 1...... IOOGlew'!NSt CA.SHCARD Malla•_.._.. PA ..... RY
UT 1 ........ 4100 WT.D. &.o.s. 675.a9 commtuk>G. ~ ;/ca1 .!d'd:~ =~ COMES TO ec.niril.~ Ms(,..
-·-•••••••••••••••••• FaireatTennsaillcelN9 FOUND:UUJe calico cat -....3w..._._ tal. Call or apply a·n Is a a:gucatJons C .,_._:_ n ll:>"C ._.. A.UFORMIA.! -T""""9 w t t h e :it t e n s i v e ,,000 aq. ft. New SallerMft.Co. w!J>lnk flea collar, vie saJea~'" person 3952 Campus forexperteoc Branch k led f F h
...-ebousespace.HBln· 642-2171 54S.0"1 NwpUlgts.646-4906 'Cel,_.D ·• Drive, Newport Beach, Secretary. Sal com· Weneed~aalespeople We have immediate ~le o renc duatrial Park.894-5351 ... m•> 54CMJ080. Equal Op. mensurate wfexper, xlnt to lakunc this new ,,......1 -U alll ply ·.-tdtalys.~~~o:i:.· Retired -..•pie has money FOUND: 8/14, nr Civi~ • .-IOOJ 49¥442 port unity Employer beneflts. Call Mr. Lesch mar e\iog concept . -.-. "-· )'OU qu . y, ~ 30th S R Near new 2720 seat ind. & to lend ~ut&2ndTD'• -Cent.er S.A. Blk Poodle Katella M/F/H. 49'1·177L Protected territories -we offer a Wlique work-..,_. t., m. 2U.
de. 18081 Redondo Cir, Agent,l-837·3"1'4 "Petey BuUer" wearing BeaJEltateScbool 'Equal()ppEmplyrm/f xlnt renumeration . inaenvironmentlnaddi· Npt.Bcb 1'
•B.&at.Bch8'2·2834 CypressID.640-7329 3203JCamiDoCaplstra.no JRANSMASK Groundfloorapportunity tJoo to exceUent com· SanJllaDCapistrano 1---------1 for right penion. call pany benefits. Please COOKS 3SO~ft.lbclltclusofc& IEHDONLOHSAYS LOST: Biii: kitten. BANKING 955-CASH cootact: A~ly in person ~ ~ .paee, AU utll ~ Bunnese type. Vic 20th & Tbe Growth Workshop CORP m.,, 17th pd. Sl28/~ mo. 67S-62Sl. Irvine, CM. ...-enta "The A.uert:Jve • Penoanel Department C.M. c. '
Gen Mfg. Shop. 20'x40' • 548--0285/f1$-0084. Slnsle," a one day,~~~~~~~~ TRI.ER CAStla.....,
IQ Placentia Ave. CM. LOST: &Chinese Imperial worbbop. t :3<M:30 onl-F/time. DANflC
S Auguat 2lOtb at Un.iv of Allembly • Immediate full·time .-.. Exper. J)Pef'd. 1"11111
Sl.:IO. &62..., =~n~~~ :,~ Calif, Irvine. PJ>yaical WOtet It M.. portun.ity for indivld~~ Dan 6 nl1bts. New· s..-4550 \ J I ·-Ii Sd~ Boom 101. Coat 30 Auemblen needed wbo -'--. nut.lie COil· porter Inn. "'-1700· Call MUTUAi. •••• z.••••••••••••••• ~"' no onier care .., ve $15.00. Lecturer• Sd now. No aper. nee. 3 tad. Tx"pe.rieai'ce pre-Jtickauia. 700N:C:Oeotel' Dr ··~ without them. 6n-0119. tit u m i n , M i c b a e I -··-. No '-. Come in ~ -'" C Stora11e yard. Approx. QllU.,. •-fer red. b U t Dot ~ W.... ,,....._. •"'"-AID&IO 1ooxl30. r ear 2482 ' LOST: Siberian Husky, A r m 1 t r 0 " I · today.work tomorrow. oeceaary. We otier ex· lmmed. employment In m4Jf40.3528
Newport Blvd. szoo. mo. v rnale, copper/Wht, 1~ 731-0372/%13·'178-1720. Vld.orTemporaries,4341 celleot benefit.I, lnclud· C.M. 4'\N.B. areas. Call r-·-"'~-·-·-wy
MZ-3490 Shoply,.._. yrs, very friendly, wear· llESULTS<X>UNT Birch, Suite 213, N.B. log pald vacatioo, llfe & '""'460. ....., .... ~......... Cc IM tt.ID
..,. Wmthd 460" I st TRUST DUDS Cinallg2 00Ro~eg.sr •,,:!'1~1e038/09r. S.C.A.C. has caused S5MS20EOE health toaurance and Ca-ab-j-------,,~~E~m~plo~yer~M~/F~~ Need p/time hmch~lp.
'v 2-..11&3... .. --amploy for over 200 AndP._-,........, company paid uniform. er, aper, full·Ume,,. Prefer students or
••••••••••••••••••••••• nu 636-630() rnemben lo l•_. yr TV -.._,,... For more information Lamolcantomia. bousew;v-to wor'" 1--Vouog Female needs SWlNGS&REFrS, d d Comm'l m~del.in& · Exper'd. PreaU1lous callOiri.sl>etker. 8"-44U Oerical med. ytU;e work :v;ll~ studio apL Will pay up to CONSTRUCTION Fouo • re dish brown W •need all • N.B. boeel. 644-1700 ext Call betwn
$185/mo. Costa Mesa -APT&COMMERCIAL female lonchalr Dog. ~-(~)957 _a1es· SlS.Rict.EOE. •1WtwoodS.•'= <Ubierfordrugstott ACCOUMTIMG 815'1--0683. 2-tpm l7tt>
area. Excellent re· MIGUEL <Benji type) Vic. -.i>.-· " ._. ~ inCdll.Expprfrd CLEIK
rerences. No Room· ORTG DowntownH.B.sas.-0717 JobtW....., 7075 &1.ocmAuodatioll 673-25SO We are seeltinf an Comrter PencJlrlwaotect .
mates. Ask for Palli. M A.GE CO FOUND: 1 Huf(y bicycle. ••••••••••••• .. •••••••• Autollfanagement Cubier, dependable AtRecehable C erk. Sandwiches, exper pre-642·1045 bef 10 a.m., lll-7311 661-2511 Owner Identify by alze Female Companlon / All•ca& 51128EdiogerAve Evea/Wtnds. AP{I~ Gitt Immed. poaltloo avaU. I'd. F-time.Gary'st>ell, ~aftlOa.m. OPEHEVERYDAY cojor, frame number&: tra\lelcoot,abop.drive, l..Ll&Ce Huntin&tooBeach. SbopOrangeCo.Airport fat" reliable penoa with D»E.CoutHwy,CdM.
Archlted ne«Sa 1 Bdrm speed" date 4 locatloo apona, o.c . ex. tels. Mx1g1•llt <~~= CbU :~.~~eU::;bro~m,~1.rliss, COUM1'aHELP apt. Corona del Mar lost. Call HBPD, 8"--0830 AggreHlve individual d care, bef • aft ....
Im ed 2ndT.D. made-bought. 536-5832 1 ............ •~ ma"'•ge ooe of FAiual~ school,~ grader, CdM prel'd. Enjoy excellent For clrycleanen, C4M. l&l'ea. m · occupan-LutberlnvestmentCo. · Cert ried pract nurse ~ Or~ae Coun· .E: .,.,._.wrlt.y ElemScbldJstrict. COCJIP4Q1beneflts. AppJy Good•aaes. F/Ume. Ex· ~~~~~1 A&t for 661·2510 Found2LaJ'geredmale waotafem1patient. .ty'aftoestP&ldepts.A mp&oyerll/F -644-W183/673-3988. 9am-noon. Mon-Fri, per.• lnexper'd. Cali
dogt. Vie Euclid ' ..... IUCceafulbactgrouodin Qilld ~ Jeao7am-4pm,87S-3308
hfa 111jtaYftt/ Almomc1•nh/ Sater.Cal1962-65l7. Tlredotnmn.ln£younelf finao~ lnaW'an«:e a ~T... to$650 4PM~~~7&Foo~~~ ~"ae= CbmterbeJplOPM ·6AM .. ~~.c.~0........... r::rt~ f'ltlOiiah 5310 ::ci!r. ~~~ts :::00 + ~d!'i:~ Fee PaldlcunifonDI too! faSO hr. Vic P~uJarioo & Newport Beacb WlocbeUs Donuts 2S3 E.
........ . ••••••••••••••••••••••• -••••••••••••••••••••• br.IM'1-4S2:8 the ri&btal penoo. tr )'OU ~=~m:: ~ bbCIU57-3182aft8 F.quaJOsJllEmplyim/f _1_'1U.l_St._CM ____ _
Oppwlsally 5005 • 'ml:l•lltl 5100 Spirt........... llotber wtU lit are &o oriented and nls Penoonel Service of Circulators-Petitiona. COUNTER
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 11115So. ElC&ollDoReal t ddl '"d ID!an)lt or not lO Join our team. lfuntlo&too Beach, 111188 '4-tB hr. We pay caah Ck1"b Mxr1•.t IM!BeAa..t SanCJemeat.e. FuUyllc. o er •• Y• ra. please call Jean for a Beach. dally. Full or p/tlme. • ,... ..... ~
Blltli boutique. unique le
beMrtifuJ merchandise. Prestigious NB loc. norida business owner. Must sell. 8131262-6US or
714 J6C(). 7234
GYll
Belt buy in Orange Co.
1« equipment.. & loca-
Uon SI0,000 fUU price.
Owfter. 9'~. noon•
9pm,wtdays.·
POINY
PUICHER
ADS
Fouppt.C-'1298 Bl'owDeG-7087 conftdenUaJ interview at Start now. Must be l8. Gift.a, cards 4& cosmetics ror Dry Cleaners. Part ------------'Woman..., Scand a .. d ('114)545-9702. Butenden, experienced, 64.2-6856,behm12-l. _~_73'13. ______ ..... Ume.-.t.sLqBch RELAXING KMSAGE -. .-g · Monday.Friday private country <'lub. . . &bJamea.-LlcJlaueur Avail 91~rra u cook, 1:30a.mto5:00pm Call e44·5404 for in·~ girl wanted for CUSTOOtAN
OutcaDt-t,Gt-5111 =comp. driu~·1nabop. A·~~~ ~-ure at.ore. Ptr 12 Cl.ERIS Saddleback College, Mis· • ..,.. ....,...,. --------_______ _,,hrs. flexible. SJ per hr ilonVlejo.11pm-7:30am.
PREGNANT! C1rlag, lq Con91ep/L Wrlte Automotive.Machinist ....,StylstAtst. Apply In person, 193l Sal raqe 1838-$1054 + ONLY $2 coaOden&laJcounaelloili POBoxm.MeoJoPark, =-~°1pay.Top To tral.n for cUffalele. Newport8lvd,CM UJOJEM sbiCt differential. Z~~ &clop. ,:,~.;..... 7t00 ~1-· C~ ~·~!t~F!~cPlmc.Lup oflke. O(ltnhapNo.Available ~~ext 30'l or • ~ef~ ,:>;i APCARE 54'1·258ll ....... ,............... ~Auto--clientele for riabt party. =el' for fabric wbJalr. for full or p/time clerk1 ------''"-----
or less with a Peon1 •-• ._~...._ ~.-y M7"4250or837-ant tJ1*t. Abl4Jwllatr· on 2bd at 3rd shifts. No CUSTODIAN P\ndwAd.SlintaCorZ UteA&VICll .-caa:u;~ 411.acblotShop. cBebeavypbobes.Salary exper necessary .we 30 hn weelt.. Retiree
ccmecutive da{!. ltlcb (Wal M"'ilf Ahle to operata lo.t.ey • IMW. BU~. Clf. ..., ,,,..,... °'*'..;..... Hoaman Fabrics. tralD. Advancement op. pref. Mesa Verde Area . ........ •-·& "'-~ -r .__ ... ,_.. ~a.ch, wllllng to Manlcwilt 837-4250 or '1'10-Z.-poctunWa lO thoee wbo 847_,.., u-.f'ri. 9Au· Affiliate ii:id:;•a;,.,eiti or .._.. work some overUme. HOSTISSI! SS'l-tm. · --------quality. For mtormat.loo 5PM. -•
' MINJ-PAQC Nocommemahd1. s,rvtncaUOraqeCo. Wlll tral.n. S$00/mo to lleJ! We'relookinl f«a ~~'.!:------!'-•------ao&o ne.reet ket --------
The r\lbt petwn family 83$-7313 start. Call {or app 't. auiture petlOI\ to meet Beaut)' salon lo CM needs Q.lllCAL or coa°:ct the ~l Custom .~!Lard ~ cantum•toboursweet· For more lnfoYmaUoo *ftlt•• NV 753-7282. aodo-tourcuatomen. ha.Ir •lYlisti. Gum + T7pe opportunlt/ I& office at c:azopen_.9\ .._,.,.,..,..,"" 1Y into an ucitin1 and udt.oplaclyou.redcall TW._., • No telling required. comm.M.$446. ch11lenge olfere to UM2LampaoaSt stallen, exp ramfAatera.
profitable aeoeral ISCOITS• Please call Tom or l'WIP· lodlvidull to our a~--Grove ..... ·-PSqUl&l'edBoataJU.a?i b di.a b 1 Acdal · -' ... .._. l'l'anllforololotmalbl· 8Hut1 Salon In C.M. NewportP'lo ial,., ~ _,....__ :!:~a:°,ro.! .~·=~ 642~5&71 Pllforapp'L llW74t 'l'IWOl.UY"'"9 tervtew 9-1.2, l·3 Mon. need• Wl1 Stylish. located tnanFubl~': F.qual()ppor Employer C.h•rs.r.ke
No telll11c. No vend.ln1. VIDEO MOVIE PARLOR ~ Today to work thna Wod. Guam +comm. 541-3446 llllDd. We have tmmed. Exper. MC. P'emale. Ute
lilutt,be able to aenice M!Qlk Mila lGCmt iur. Ftee20miDWW!torJ cavadowaccount1n11& HAllC>Ua YW .BXKPJ\·TYPlS'l' .,,,.,,.rot: 1---~~~~-J t7pin1. P.rollcie.ocr
Jocal retail aceoats dtat i~SZO. B'•ltcraft :PJlll vtlH.. JlO ~. '.:.}H>otketJ>iDI aaalp· -l'OU{SUPCR Dut.r Wo_rk wltb eomputer ~cal _ Cl'.flHt ~ w /lijurea. lJl HJ b1-_..~Jor l'C*-l>)'--pro-W....,. --Aff.o-tt •-:1'"8J ---.. -W.k don to -1D"'*'Altm8nds pl'fft( ouU SOfiie h&r Q°=la#l·=> 'Ulft ~ lldormatQfe-C-.lt; ~:!:'~~0aa~ Lelt&.._. HOO ·-~C»NM ~ bc:m:: :~:0u:.,~ 14z.44JI ::'~~:::,~ M•:2~,J~ OSHMAN'S sp";;tl_, ::1.:'. ~iwC:': ·
expuaion. l>art·UIOe or ........................ W& Euc114.An1Wm tante .needed th.ruout Atn'OllO'l1VE beolieblccar~ct. <JOPea.lnalam·Spm> Goodl II• &rowtni •od 8am..... f~
fuJl-Woe. Dltplay •ad LGlt0tll'....saJ1et?C.U BzclUDI recordla1 ()NQreCo. 1a.wu.-• I.. C1ll Barb1ra at llallrooai.enttylevel H~f::log company DB.I ·.'"# mercl1andlae tatbfac· Ant ma I Auiataace 50-l421. • ~Half'• ..,,... uowl • C m4~ ~=~~Dept· see ltneral off\~ Uon loot. S\lltt.nteod or ~53'7·Zln.nofet. -.. Aecounte~pa S.1c:l6tt CASHCARD<X>RP ~s ~wltl!U.typtna HelpWaoted.141-?IU ~~ we~ba~. .,..r...,0 at'" 0 • &VUIT£S fOOS.Main,Sl.e501 But1 Chev1 Service · <km--• andl<IOd~~·· Cub: requtred 1 •vv.. : " erm1a nJll .ut No. Tower, U.._ 8aak Dept. to add ~lana 8Data ' Good .__ Dell¥ef7, earb' monUn£ ~~ttart .. 1owu ~·.'~U::!:iac~' ltcelta/MMlll 111n.at1ot~ tor 111t.t, qua c:k '8dflcS.ecuitt a1a'rr"cz~ Be• part ::'T: team! wau StrHt Journal.
rua>tolll..!l.S. j c.-u•-~;• J-~IJt '114/lllMlOI , mubanJcaJ, UA, STOCltROOMHELPER ersi II wys00. f»teue •PPl1 pel"IOI\ MCIO·l'rl, 40 pp muc
MlNJ·PACJl j -.-·-i -door11lu1 aU1omeot, fa.l:nUl.lri•u with marine ... ~'-,.">... on: JOUI' •mall ear ... ,.,,.
IJdanaaUaDCALL ~ , x H .<..-1 Ji ·1 • e&c. wt.o tee Pri• ln v .. .,._... =Mi &I •up NB. 1" It CM 1'()l.L..rRBS 1 LOil. Goklt.o retrtev•, ..-......'I A.0.pAlalqJr fent, llv• wo~maoablp. -Ptrma· term• It kit p1ckin• 2Ddr.Wll5pm·l :30em 16 .,.. in.-o. • ANV'l'UIE! It, 114 rn '*'• t5 lbti OCCULTIMOf le.aalJ"trm .. TVCdJf nm&. Y111itd 11 latez.t.1 oeceHarJ. Oood op. l~lrdlblft Allll 11 · Callt!,.J~Ts ~',_~bn~wlwhlte.: ........ 1 ..,___ ...._ .. _ Intl Jdw for uml-por&ually tor• •.•lf 12:111iun1.o ... m , &.4'M , :..i ,r~···· ·1 ,c ~ ~.w•. ·sr-...... , .., .,._,. ,, ~tne ()pportwdty -.rt.s'. u ; • . ., . ,. Oelhtef7..,... ror .. , ou.en:i--ms ·r ~eoa.tffwjll'thaue, t.-ct eank. ISP. M•ttJnas.K for advaacecnut QUAU'l'YCR WNO Zxc:eUmt 1'0rkiu c0n: -. • AM....,.....,... ln c. · gyi---,1.ct.cec.••Jt.:1'4'wut; •• dal17. IAM· Jftw,.,. ...... B•· tt.SO /h. Su Mr &A.ILBOATS dll. Co. beiMflt•olft'red. OSI r .........
..,, ....... -H, .• •·1111 '' : ,....., ''lg =·H,...~S:•f!1· 2.•~~H• pnftrr ... ' 1ttniu. HOWARD 751.J.Nmis.s.u.SA ,Plelitt •l'Pl1 la "nonlUN'S .::_:::,.._r.a. ~dlOf•lfut:T.~ Lott: lml blk rem !JlktL . t'n • ·-· ~enr·~d~ Ja.wolet. Dov••Qu•il ..... '''''JCliil at: alalliltltol i " I•:..
rr ~~oppA ....... ell cat. 5 ~ ~: 1:;. . .-ic T ;"1AMl'l'IAIMCO.. ...,~Beacb. ,... &alt lo••tJD nl w ~or:.Q.111 I .-..--
Ceater. ~t1t~owti * n.. collat. IOJQll Srtal.Ukllt --:.. ..... -•/fll:il*~ ~ 1 tlfm. -~· k"1' ... llOM ~ .~ iJ..... .._..,. '9teolfal.tll. ..._, 'll•~• tit f'rt. lfr:-;;.._~C...UJ -.._.,._~., ;;......,. "'..:-:..1 ......... , .. le atatUrtti r•l'cl.'CalJ .waa ·~ au.atfor • ~ .....
........... ., •· N•t '~r.~:;:.:·~~· ~~i ':'ll'up1111 .:-• · c.1c•1Tr.,.hll • ·~·~.,nu~-.-. __ . ~ .,;~nr~ ~~: '=' ~; ..... PP.__,'•-'1SH:..;.,n '/IHTff_.,.,_..J:...._ ==· .. °'A--'-:: -...; Oh•t 111 a call. Ha.-...CMq to Mil? 311df'4lclf',NnfJIWtlkb BliUl&0.~11.IP ..... DAILYPILOT ;,::.: ~·~·a"-• .. __ _ ., --1 • • • > • s .. 'lldDta.erM.IGllJI 1·a....,...,_.c1o1tw1U~ ~~~~~~~~~ ~HILPWAJn'DAOI
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.... -.... h I ......... QlllC.. ..... If a' tt11ud1 '' WILzJP••tlt ,......,.~""' Pods.rrice •• .,.. ............................................................................................................................................... ;~i ••• 1 ........................................................ .
86J Alldla , • TYPIHG/A1>.1Jti9d ClaUd CU., bQ7a ar atrla. Prof. IHdtu~ maln OCCStudeot. l Toe t.ruck. Wut 1 ~y Q.EAN PETERSPAJNTJNG Palutln& " Papertna. %2 E:lq)r'd.. Reu. rat.9. Serv TRJP~CllAROi:$10 llnlanableftaYa ,._ l·I. LP yant, ~ ~c.. Incl. tlunup .. nub. t.rff trim, Ron HOOS.Er CAU Olqham Eapr'd. Reu Ratea. yrs up. fr u est ReRal rs. a~.1d waab
..:',,.__ ~ • ...,_ lunch ... f all J•aua. haullni LJablllty lo· ICN'm,ICMDI Otri.Fr•est.IC.S-S1.Z3 Free E•t. Call Gene Anywhe~lnCo.&38-5381. IG4MT."CaJ
_______ 7_u_i_ Cwp'a · ..... .,. Coat a Men 11.U'ed 6 llc'd. Comm/ 1n HouleWOl't. all a.nu, n · m.0658 Colon Unlimiud inter\ •111""'9
..... t.1trt .. _................... .... ft e I V I!: R y ~ES'l'...:a=p• per.,rel'1,t.ramp. ~ Extr/l.nt.r. Ex. petnUn1 CaU497·3S19f: ..................... .,.
.......... , ............ Cu.atom R•mod•Un • Caa ..... ft&ASO;NABLE RATES. --·IC.5-i.aeo . m..-'d, honest. Deal, HU. .Umates. REPAIR. R!ROOF. AU -S...Moae1~ Addllloa•. C.ll vf.c ........................ ~~· t.awo Care. f'.rc'd984-1CM5Dave ~-...&. t )' pe II •• h In •• ea .
Dnww119•Parkin1 lot l.Anbolf6"'9oe.m.T40e c;..:,r::,-••b _ ............... ,_...... 1-r-rocbbaxea·compe>·tar.
•llepAln -S..leoaU•I ' . •lldcUuant •VDYLOWPRICES• ••u••••• .. ••••••••••• L.11.S.-Roto. ~od or 11\ne Bater. Patntinc by • ••••••••••••••••••• ~.t.!141_..., •Lie. NB. Cll SASCUSTOllbll..tor c.,,_n IQ.4M4arla.f.MJ.· ODOIRtulnallalnt · Seeded Lawna . R.SiPar.SUic .. ina.Try Neat.,.tcbea"taturea . All*ak-.aTt ttYbJJa1 UC!elMllfl~ ,i-1 Mt.2i0ia Sprtnklera, Plaotlna. me.&1&655U4bn. ,..IST. atJ.109 Horiaoo Rooftna. Qoality --..._ ._.... 1 xmtrelt f75-'7e33 work. reaaoul>le rates ... ,... I a.modelin1 addiUona -.urakaml'• Oal'denln •• · · Prd paJnttna. Ext " l.nt. PA'ICH P~TERlNG 631-4943 ••• __. ................ Carpenter , bandyOl•ll rdwd detlll '• apu, new Uuft.•ftmalot 36U:· · EuropunLlndacaper Low rates. Reta. Free ,All type s. Fre e ---------.. ~~. c.,..., n... • Call after s t'llllllb'.l.Jcd.Sll..aMI UMlU.llolnt•' ··-· Top WOC'k. l'alr price. •.53M'180,saM383 eatimates.Call540-682S Tie parent• n..a matu,. J«r,,...., --• Refl.Ml-48Tldayoreve. ••••••·~··••••••••-••
NIP penon to'""°' SMO • 0. QI .... Oarcli9DJnl a.rvtce. Yardl II A 11> S E R V I C E I.andlC.-'•I Tree trim Custom Wallpapert.o1 ft 111] CERAIOC We. New Ott re-hr wk lft ow-bome c.artn1 C u
1
atom rrami nl . .._.................. ClMAUlll Lawns. AGENCY mini. cie&n .. I ~ Allwork,.uar.Yree.at ........................ model. Free estimates.
for our bab.r • me C ... ~CO¥.,.., Qeel.-ua~ln'oom.1 Compl•t• yard malo· •llaJdServlc-e exp. ,.._ eet."PN~. ITMlJ8 PERRY'SPLUMBLNC 5.'IMlll8'7aftel'S .
...,. blhld cM*. Oa~ Rdlll\1117. Ou.arurteed teoHct. Trlcn treea Oail)'orUve-ln 1111-lll2orlff·Z912 Complete plumblna f,..Senb
repq lf,,ou '°" daldD ood co•en. R9dwood .. 111.a&Se t'Tteest .~ ~~~ LARRY'S Lawn care . lnt.~9tt'Ving-r-fork7 aeniCM. Dra1n. MWe ..................... .. ~~O::.:~ ct;i decks Brick work. •drtcll 81En•s.ntcet • CleuiDI loaured. llc'd pro· C..IQs.i>a't~~~· c I ea Din lbr Free Expert abapiilg. tbinnblg
Boa J.JIO, C.11. Boa* .Uat• Bob U tt t"o ........... ~;;. .... • ....................... •Part)'Servlee f--..awwk.Commor =~·at service. • s tump removal.
lncl\de appropriate tnft) D&M7 U " • 4 c HANDYMAN· Cacpeot.ry, oJleaenpr Service Rea , re a a on a b I e e ~DI lnl. Ex· Landa cape creattoo11o.
md .... DO. ~. ,.,... eat. ADJ Uc•n• M5-a'74 tlldr1caJ. plumblq 41 a:s.a.14 955-llll ~:.S..or~~ Beck. DRAINSQ.EARED. P1at -~-__; ____ _
..._ .. I t 1 :e/ we JQb&. Call Allan or t'ln . ...,.f7t7. ~ °'l·lt Landaeape. Beu. rate. $13.~0 : Mains. n-ee Service-all tY"PeS + S.wb ,_,....,. ~~~~C.:o • di 1 HoUlecleantna,xlntwort Price1.Prc1.landacape,. lnterlo\-, exterior,-JZ4.50. No 1ammlcks removal;pa.lmtreel~Y •••-••••• ........... c ••JC-wh i.::.:oramalljoba. ..._ .................. -~~· l!!xper. lnta....,.mo BeslderaUal Ir comm I Rooterman.838-2882. bt.-.•or~
Manne Repair /Malol ....................... lJeemed '1s.o3S8 HauJ, aklploader dump MiiDlll propebrtlilea ... ~le bard PLUMBING NEEDED. W •1 C11 • I ~
v...... -A. on~ L' d t t l i trtt. iradln• tree wrk So. American ,._, wtl~ .................... . .. .,.. •. -· 042$ or CALL '11 A-· - • ~na.."" __ ,. iu-r .-oun a aoo•. re an n1 ••~... detDout.loosetc Ill U51 . . ~ Y• 511-8082 -ll4hK.PUrMBf'NG ..................... ..
Freeest.6'7$.36.91 Wllla. bl!>~ks, patios ... _................. · • :=P•.b:t,~~~ ~~rt,k~a~~bs. _ F~l&EFFICJENT. Alol*.-UYeio&l1as_
--•· s.r.ke ~l. Lie d. TAYLOR PENCE CO. Sick Hoe · SkJp II Dump iw.. laria.641M929 ~t'IW1Tl5ena \4 cilf cn all wallpepu. tf I.Jc 10 yn exp. RemdJ. houaesoeeda 1ood ....................... All Pbues of conn ele Wood6Cbatnllnk truck. Aapball driveway • Mt do tbe b•ollnt Tbe reP'pe. repair l.nc We re· windawcleaoer!
wort Blook walls plan-Ucnu.m 536-1137 removal. Tcu>•oll·Flll Block Slumpat.one Walla, ffanpwi.5'1·acl04 pair It new ccutr Call "AClearVlew" 631-0Zl7
Dlvorce /Baollruft<'Y t.en.bri· ck Lie•~. . dl.rt·GradJ.oa. 50-0Ml or Houecleanlog • bao· Bri k ""•~ Pl t now! John Pal~ "
ln>mfllln&tofma ~. 6'2-68N .. Jihli M6-48l4 dymaorepain.NB/CM. ~.u;;:u~~it,':;F\ne1ot/ExlltacouaUc Karl lfajlck (7l4 > MOTICI Actlon....t.eaal TyplnJ. ....................... Bonded cPL 556-4123 aft !i 87S-Ol84orW.l90e pelntiq Free est. Low 898-Sl7S how Daily PUot Clas~ 980·5"'19, 645·2946 art Cement WQrk all types Cl H 11 G.Hwt...S~ orweekeoda. rates. Lie 360242. Call · ified ada display their
6PM.TPll. Call alt. s PM or wlmda: i.!:~cu:~n ~:!im°e~· ....................... .. .. P4111111N/P•'lrl~ .Paul.87M27 ~~don't o~ a gun to DMll.SAI• with Jeaibility
.......... f-~•-t dr w ID ... _ 642-8482 64&-3351 eervi""-•P.,,.,.liiao'7 . S" aJumiDum seamless 8At You1r Seirvlce.,..; ••••••••• .. ••• .. ••••••• . draw rut' when you and lmpaet? OOrads. we .,., ....... a . un: • .,....._. ralnptten w/baked on oua~c eao na. 0 J 15 1ntiD Ora Co .Houlepaintinc, Father " place an ad in the Daily an proud to say, really
WeaL •. a Daily Pllot SellthlnpfastwithDail)' enamel.Cstmbltonjob. Lauri. References. ~~tyStCU .~· IOO. Lob of ma. Satil. PllotWaotAda!Callnow 1et resutta. Phone
a.a.tnedAd.6'2-S678. PUotWantAdl. ClasslfiedAd.I 642·56'18 TbeGutt.ermen.5'2·12'2 M5-4UM S.laP«e c • cuar.Freeest.61M336 -642'5811. IG-58'71.
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MmlpW_... 7100 HetpW..ted 7100 HllpW..e.d 1100 HllpW..e.ct 7100 HelpW.it.d 7100 HetpW.... 7100 MlfpW..e.d 7100 .W,W..ted 7100 ....................... ...•.••••..•..........• ....................... ......•.........•...... ....................... ..............•.......• ....................... ... ......••...••....... noo . Holll,,.... De* LAD FOUST Dry cleaner needs pre· GIMHAL OfffCI! All abULa all. llaQ)' lnsw'ance Aieney. Ell per II YN. Alleru .. NB.. kk • l:Y/t fnlldc duUea. 4 day wk . Two opeoinp. HB. eon. INTBYllWIMG
ll50llT
MA.MA.Gas
R~sort and Spa located m Palm
Springs area is seeking experienced
couple ~ management team.
•CioodSaby
•O....,a-mp fa• .. • ca •• ., C9"
.......... mc.f
Qualified applicants only. Bring resumes to:
Sheraton Newport Hotel
Thursday 8·17 from 2·5 PM
and
Friday 8·18 from 9 AM to Noon
Ask for Mr. London or Mr. Chester
DBIVEIY
Person to make de · liveries, baodle olc sup·
plies & equlp. & take
care of gen 'l of c needa;
some heavy lilliog req'd.
DETAIL MEN
Triple your income
U you are now calling on
doctors. we need your ex·
pertise.
CASHCAaD
aaer, also, counter &irl. Electronics manulac· beoefita ·~ pref~ r.d-cd t)"Phl&. Jl\lll or 1-lt-W"Clllt Apply belwn lam · turer oeed1 full-time Pleau 'can for ap t . art time, in NB. · NIGHl'CUSTODIAN 1 :~.548~. penon for eeneral office 645-SOOO ext 520 lloa-J.:.1 MS-GUO 10pm-7am. ll\lll II Part
UCTIOMICS work, awitchbrd relieve, 11am..spiii. IHSUl+.MCI ~ 5'.00 br. C•ll
telex, etc. Muat have Prvperty and caaualty CAMPAIGN
TECtMCIAM eood nrure aptitude " U....J Aaiataot Accowtt lh· CANVASSERS Immed open.lop " op· type SOWPM. X1nt oppty ~ . portunities ln tab to 1earo. Call for appt FRONT DESK ecutl n. Ex pr. o ec. P\ill ar Part time. 3 eves,
co. l.n the 0r!:1:' co: Berkeley Control ('714 ) Mlnlm~ 2 )'ts l.ncl typ. aod Sat. & &m. hn r:e-
airport ~a Applicant!! 833-3300. lodustrial relA · Cl RIC i.oa. A.Ila beeftta. New qWed. Call R.11. Gnf·
to troublesbOot repair & lions lrvine. E.O. E. Good oppor tor a people Jlrvine &ocatioa1 · Fred S. (eiD after lpm. 586--0860. • · orieoted Ible t amea, n1urance
test electronk a)'te';Ds· General Office. Variety, wort fl~~E!i!°y Brokers. 494·1087 or I s..,W
Recent ~oe " d1~taJ good typist., will train, ..., '75Mll80 uk for llawioe ..._.Aw.. ~Wt~~sJ~~7:~ startts.W.5'0-5t0,NB. , xlut~=Nooo Brdey.EOE Newport Convalescent
for Busch. =~ JAMITOllAL ~!~;f &.1S5$ superior
EMfMMEalMG 0.0fflce $750 900NewportC'AoterDr Exper'dwueronly,part IA!ga1 F Paid
MW174 ~ valescent Holpital. 188ll
U u I 5'op P1oridaSt. 118.
Tu I •• ~Cf
PlaaUes fabricator has <Maide service. plumb·
openinp for machine 1n1 • e I e ct ri t' a I
abop trainees. Apply in ltoowledge req. must
penc:n. have tools I& t.nlck. com-f<mnedJ PlaaUcs Corp. P&Q)' bmefita. full lUne 11372 Eastman St. Irv. year round employment
111M11111111cellllll•1 Operator ~~Z/~cg1~~e
F\Jll or p/tlme. Muat tian '16IM188 bave worked with.---------
ftberglua. $4 hr. Hunt· MAIMTIMAMCI
lngton Bch 84'7·8310, B.ICTIJCIAM
53M'780 lat shift 7AM·3:30 PM PROJECT Fee Paid position for in· Newport Beach ~ ~tllDe, top w11•. ~to SI J,ee000 div w /good n1ure •P· l;'-ual 0p E l .,,..._ --,-MAC .. MIST CAL.CUL.A TOR tit u de. Ca II Li s a • ":At por mp oyer Reapeeted firm aeeks
EXP a "d In I c i v 1 I 848-1288, Al.lo Fee Jobs. J.U0111'J ...... "1 eqer iodiv for partners N.B. co. needs. Class A . ~ •---j •· Call Ka MacbiDlst. for Bridgeport engmeerull, p ....... ng "' Dennis II DeDJlls Person· Houaecleaoen, Tues· Fri. P /time 4' /Ume. Irvine aselst. Y, 833-2700. Mill It Harding Lath consulting firm l.n major nel Service of Huntington 8·3PM. Call Janice's area. WU1 train. Ideal ror Alto Fee Jobs. Denn.la 6' Clollet.olh'ance !....,.is1c!; Orange Co. area has Beach,16168Beach. RaggedyAno'a.IC.S-1800 housewives, altldents & Denni• Peraonoel r·--openlog for project cpls. Muat have own Service of lrvioe, 2082 work. Exper req'd. Top
calculatortodoresiden GENR 'L OFC JGAL Housecleaoiqbelp. Full traosp II phone. Call Micbelaoo beos.E.O.E.5ST·SI05lask
Ual subdivision calcula FRIDAY lime ~· Will accept betwn 3·6pm , (714 > • I for Boa Adame.
lions-previowi expe1 Xlnt opportunity for caod1datea with or 1133-'701$. LF.GALSECRETARY M 0 · 1 req 'd-aophlatlcated com qualified person who bas without tram. Top waies l(Alollnctoo Bch, mst AG 2 per a tor· wal
-Xlnt beoa. Contact J ack
G. Raub Co .• 125 Baker
St. Coal• Meaa. Ca .
92626.. <n4) 751·2510, ext
3U
Ha_, come to Calif. w /a
fresh new concept. Call
Mr. Jobnaon, (714 ) ~
CA.SH for more detail.
puter ayatem .. Apply 011 ex per. w /construction S«).9525 Janit.orial poeWona avail, have Jtlnt typing, iram· train le1al acly · Non submltreswne: contracla & some -P/f n.llbt work. Paya marl&aeaetariaJakllls, smoker. Top salary. JackG R•Co knowledge of leulog & Houseclean.en needed, well. Mlu. Viejo, Irv, bay oftice, salary baled _MS-_1_400 _____ _ A~· ~Y mgmt. New of. mature, top$. Car nee. Cll ll NB antH. Call "'°°aper.84'1-«Ml llaid.fulJUmeorpt-time.
KevinMcHUgh ice m ll'Vllle Industrial 642-1403orlC.S-S439 9All·lOPll.~.. Legal Secretary• a:perpref'd..
125 Baker Street Complex. Salary com· Housekeeper Ii ve in Jewelry~:·· minimum 3.,.. Calif. ex· ~
DOCUM....,.. ea.ta Meaa, Calif. 92626 meosurate w /ea per. Call Mu.t ......... i.. ~ ... 11.b & c:-1--i•.
Penn. opening for ag·
creaalve ma\nlenance
electrician w /manufac·
turln1 equipment in ·
stallation and repairi.
skills. 2·3 yrs. npr
Trouble shooting control
panels and de circuitry
Must be willing U> work
overtime. Excellent
benefits aod workmg
coodWoni mcl. 11 pa>d
holidays. Company paid
IJ'OUJ> im. plan. sick pay
beoeftta, liberal vacation
beoel1u. etc. Call for
appt. or 009>e to parson-
neJ off. betw. HJAM &
t..WM Moo. thna Fri. to complete application.
E.O.E .. M/F/H
DBCTALASST.
Chairslde, full time
Good benefits . H.B. m.5032 or 846-lMO
DENTAL/ORTHO Assis· tan\. P /Ume. Expr'd,
R.D.A nee. Pleasant ore.
Irvine. S59-07'17
Dental Aaa't, chairside. I 4~ days, no Sat. Salary
open. CM. 546-3000
•DBn'AL
Periodontist n eeds p/lime ust to work front
& back. Eaper. pref'd.
Xray ~rt req'd. Sal
open. H.B. 84U631
'""• ( 7 14 ) 1 5 1 • 2 5 1 0 . 9 7 9 : 8 3 o o b t w n drive. ~Uenl~" .._.,. :n..,.. aon. perlence lo domestic MAID WANTED
CONTROL CLERK EOE/MFH 3pm-S.30pm. benefit•. 846·8707, or law. Newport Beach law Permanent poaltion.
Take charge of docu· GIRL FRIDAY, ~ time 213JS82.l.882 KENNEL HELP-Wkeod ~~·Call Lido Sborea Hotel. ment control section of . J b f b' i live-In, aome wkday m.ao en•'. dept. Maintain Entertainment 0 or com tnat on HOUSBCllPB work. Call for appl. •""~••SECRETARY ---------1 " T'" _...,HU..-medical practice & real a..c.u ...... blueprint. archives, ,__.., "' estate lovestmenta. In· io ajr conditioned 540-4234. Laguna Wlla. Recent MAILCLIRI
CAUFOAM
16661 Von KarmaD
Irvine 557 · 7Ul0
EOE
operat.e blueprint macb. Groups, singers, variety t.erest.ln& job w /flexibili· Leiaure World all elec ..__._ ex&>. oeceHary. pre· (Warebouaeman > Gen1 ore exp helpful. acu wanted for pilot TV ty. Ofllce 00 the bay home. 5 day week. Sleep La ..... _.,. Products Mfg ferably probate. Xlnt Jl\lll time for publiahing MATURE W 0 MA N Growing electronics show and videobooklne. r t P f ttl d ln,.easywork.Pvtroom. oaada van driver & ._. ... "SJlhklllsreq'd. companv in Newport p1t1me to welcome
manuf.olfengoodpay Smallfee. ~~~~.~O Pref aeoior xpr'd pecbllot penoo. Ute C~Mra. Winalow for area ~18-a& 846-455! newcomers &r contact
benefits, congenial at 761-1.244 homemaker w /own ~ 'ReP&y to claaa1Caed aPSJt.GT·l06o · · mercbanta. Flexible hrs.
moapbere. Equal Oppor Video Castin& Service GUA:Q.I>S tramportalloo & re(s. ad no. 323 c /o Dally Pilot ia--------1 Need cu. Ute typing. Employe~lb 54" •731•F•a•ctory------•1 SECURITY ~~~+room & board. ~~.~o, Coata '=.Be~~:ef:o MAIL CLERK ::=~NtC w/tooh .
Irvine ..-. l•--------1La1UnaBeach W.CoutHwy, 8· tmow. alignment. Other
DOMESTIC
AIDE-1.Jve in for full time working pareots. w /2 acbool
chlldren in Hl.lDt Bcb.
IMMEDIATE Due to our recent ex· .M"W 'SEP .._R~T MOTOR ROUTI L I v e l o N a n n y Good opportunity for an Jobe •vallable. 210302 ~1 .... a.5 paF~GPl"OIP':~ .. ~l~~ -.vu " ._... Dally Pilot route tn ~forSyrokl. Individual wbo likes PaclflcCoastHwy.H.B. W'S'"~ ".. --uanl ~ ....... _ .... , ---· Be b ..._ South 5 dul per wk min, call variety. Duti• will ln· hirin1 MCurity tuartls The Orao1e County --ac • aftT.,_,"5-«199 clw.te mall dlatribuUon MediCAI Back office aul. for: Department of Mental Laauna. Aflerooooa, mkrofilml.ng. abelving bu,,y N.8 . 08/Gyn offr llVIMI Health oeeda a married llC!Dday throalh f'rld.I)' stock. occaalonal de· Expe.r oqly need apply.
f
DENTAL A.5ST-Q\nide. Eo&t •J>k'I. driver's Uc.
Ftr. Sal open. Frlflie Must love children.
beoef\U, bch area. Call Salary open. 84'7·3664 ask
•Elec. Aaaemblen ~
•Warehouse •lnvmb:lr'J
.-wPOITIUCH couple to work aa Ph• Saturday and &m· LOAMPIOCESSOlt llverieJ aod other miA· Please send raume lo
SANTA AMA weekend houseparents. ~~:-~ ~ PACXACHR cellaneooa wtgnments. Classified Ad •196. Dally AMAHBM Duties Include llvinl uu Caah .11::.=lt r;;;,~r:l. Procnuive aHinp II A valid driver's Ucense. Pllot. P.O. Box 15'0.
84'7 -2589. foe Bart. _ __..__..._ ___ ~-
Dental AM\ for ort.hodon· ~periea last PJT. will train Drapery room worker.
5"-S34S Experieneed or will
train. 6Gl.M3 Dental Alatst. N.B. ofc. 4 --------
GOOD PAY -NO FEE
NOIUlBJ.
To 4 a • t s.r.lu• call for nearest ocnce
551-902' 54t.a07 I
DRIV& IOl.-MJF
P!lime. 6-lOam, Costal•--------1
shelter home from Fri ...... ...-·..., 1o1m aeeks e:s:per'd loan an Auto and ability to Hit Cosu Mesa. Calif. 926216 =:: ~~ ~~ ~w!~.are.~~k Y~ packa1er proceuor heavy Items are re· Medical Office. Gen1 as·
COST
.... o...o1t•.a.1r , ... a.._ .. __ .. ___ t Name. Addteta. Phone •11·211"1 exper. l.n loans q~red: aome 1eneral or. st Spanish speaking. ,,.-~ .... ..., ..... ...,.,,u......,.... N be d Mak orilination&procesain1. f1 ce experience is WllJ train. Lite t)i>lng THI ror resldeat Juveniles. um r an • 0 II u a t w o r k w e l I helpful. We offer ex· Must be able to work Contact the Mental Car. Good ror atudent w/baatomen & have the cellent workln1 cond1· evesorwlmda.S41·n71
WHITI1B Hea1tb Penormel Office NCiredpenoo. abUlty to work uoder Uoo.a. a lood st.art.lq --------ARIA at ('714) 834·3911 for Mon f11Dlll• are pttlng preuure. Xlot atart.lnc ~ and outstandln1 lll9SIOll Viejo
further lnlormatloa. Ap-tbe campiq "hue" thl.a aal6beneftta. at: lu. Please apply MOTOR ROUTE Daya a wk. High pay
wJmedlcal ins & urulorm
allow. lmmed opeolna.
64M8611. Mesa area. 548-2253. TOPGUAIDPAY plylmmedlat.elv year. Il you have a StatellutualSaYings ....... ~ss•vt .... GS j'!e Daily PllotjJ!as a ...,...Dell911r ~""'· ..... _._...... ~~H-...: ca.mpertbat•aootcetting 4001.MacA.rthurBlvd _."-. _._ " Drher/Warehouae wanted,Ptr.9G-0738. &:.<Y_J ...... lru~ COUMTYOF med. aeU tt oow wtth a NewpoctBeacb 151SW.teliffDrive U'le route \n •lo!l
DENTAL ASSISTANT. ~:J::c~d~1 ~1\· u~~: D§iveralaoneeded. AW!YinpenaoMonday. OIW«H ClauifiedAd. Equal()pporEmployer ~~~:iE= X!~~:e=ra~a~;:
full time w/exper. So. Splall growing co. Xlnt Flyer delivery person, Frlda)'S.Spmat: PllSOMM&D.-r. day and Sunday mom·
U,. .. 1356 oppor for advancement, $3.SObr, Part time. Must WELLS FARGO 625N.RoaSt,RmG18q inp. Must have depen· _...;;_ ______ _... for a11re11lve indiv. haveownt.rana. lllleaae AU*RD SantaAna,CAa701 dable car. SSO cash
OENTA.L .ASSISTANT, s.aar, GIMI'· Tbe-pald..ll'b.._l61Q 58 .. ~ AfftrmatlveActlon v--.t !;&~ oa.v deposit required. Call-
&DA. nae. Garden B E eou '-= _il.IJ~ fff ~ aN:-for~
Grove/Wealm . .rea. =~16,s.U ! Food Prep{Counter Help, 1S32W.Commoowealth fran .. OrtGffOft f t't voupaylot tion. Lea~)'()W' N9Dlf:~ man all bn. Gioa'a Plua, ..... C asoda)''ad lathe Address, Phone Number
Dental A.at.. Reglat.eftd. '•DllVB* CdM.CallAndy'73-2'13'1w. A Hrielsp' nune ald, SUS D*•LY PILOT and Mate ot Car. Good -........ 1~ ... f OR br, e hn day, aftnooo to ""' for stuilenl or retired
F JWelJ eatabtiahed prac·
tice in xJ:nt bcb area. Non
Smoker, cd workina cood, Salary open
845CD
.._.-llUlng co ---. or l"\all t1me poe avail at ex· M~y. Tuesday, Wed· eveacbeduleeeo.Z128 $9VICI person.
people wlllln& to wort. cJUlive apart abop. Mmt oelday, Thuraday, lOam· 0 _ .. Cll R tl d _,__ ______ _
Neat ~· Good driv· have exp In retail sales. 6pm, CLOSED Friday rutewr ... , · e re DIRECTORY Have aomething you want lnt rec. Over 18. Co Call between 9·11 AM at· lady. Steadyp/l. SZ11mo. DO lTNOW ' to aell! Clasalfled ads do
vehicles. SU5 per br + '151M95AU for Beth • 2~0 W. w-~~d car, DO amolle. ~5'71 it well. 6U·56'18. incentives. Call Eric ---------1 .a --__. MS!··-l4N'700. eeBAI...... ... 2 I 7 1 DE AL p f T 111 E • e IC.f.t. -·-------1 PJUme.Penl\poe.AvaJJ S...AM.CA. CTlON to ..a.t eacineen in de----s 4 hn per day to work ln State I.Jc. No. C-60.1e houaewivea " colle1e For Clossilled Ad A lip ltdocwoen*atioa o( _.._ oar~ Ole doing "liria w/can. Over 21. _ Call
preet_aloa elee· Mea0t.,...,,..,,25ynor ..,., ID9iatatolcwon. ~ 9:3iQA)t.U:JO.. Koo-Fri. ---~• ~,.._ • .,......_ --~aa'••l .qvi,_ ddet'. Know U.. eoa Appl,-"1·5 Mon·Tliurs. DUE 'tO l'REGNANCY 1100-WMl · '41-5671.;..;._--·-~ meat. Kut hav. pi. c:WaNetSllOaweekor Taco Bell Corporate epldem1~~1P"alt~ (~SIJ)llaatbe1.,-------..--------.W. PCB lQOUt aper. more. Oru1e Coast Beadqoartera. 11381 need versatile Hair neat, personable " •-M~~/draf'Unl Yellow cab, 11100 Mt. RedtJAUAv•,lnbte. Styllat. 492.22u S•e eneraetlc. Lori '•
eaper. Call Sdee"11c Herrmann. Fountain a.m.nte Kttcben, 911-0741 art
Drlllln1 Cootroh, Valley. <No of Slater ••BALOllRCI lOAllforappt.
SS'l·IOSl aak for Don betwn Ne•hope • -Ut •--'-• HOS1US SW-, Euclid) ......,_' Dee, e Vl"tt .. •
lllYEI
WANTED
Puc6ciMe> w /ftlUNI. 10 AlllU to penoa. LtBJar·
Key bJ CGuch. Ot>Por for rftl,-414 N. Newport
ad'taneement. ltlnl to. Blva. N.B. ~. beneO&I. hafonnal ofc. Call Mllll• aft taml•ua..a. ______ _
_M_&s.olD0 ____ ~~~--1 COoet·PM
ruunav nury ~e P fl :.'ifu. • ~.· PAMTIY won• ounuAI URL --'l'Ylllna ... VI• are Htklnl ht· To dell ver DAI l.,)' phones. N.8. -Call mom.. dlvlduala with roo
PUDT buodles to car· _15Mm-....-..-.______ 1'8nlllllal • ~•Uoo
rt.. bl Luuna BHcb -• •JtPtf1eaca. £$y ex· area. ·1'9Gufres··nn or •••AL_..._. utlent cotVP•DY larp ltatroa •aeon and 1tAat tao.r A/P, MB • be:Mllltl. a.~. dri.._ f9COrd. ~ Pall time until ADDb'lamtoDOOO Call: S.pt-lllb. Part Ome ..-.PrtP.lolmtl' '4a:4Ut' &bene.fts'. Pleua ~au MAlllOTT tterra Mitt. _ta._am _ _..._..._,,.....,._, 1110Me•tc11tO....Dr.
.. ... • Nw,.tlNet. ~ir::•1 ..... ,.~M/P
Maoaaement * * NIGHT MANAGEIS * *
We aeall indtvlduab U\ the On.ni• Cou.nb' area to wort 11 p.m. to 7 a m .. six nl&bll a
week. Retail upr. be!pf1&I. but bot MC.
Paid tralnlnl provided.
sa.z per hr to start
SU5 per 1lr an 30 days
S3.~ per hr an. 80 daya
SUS per br aft 90 dayit
SUI per br aft 180 days sa.as per br an J65 d&.11
1'.me ,, balt ror over a bn
·or'° hr week.
Bea.nt s*I lncluctot pd medical, llf• lnll".
""*"~ l week• vacaUoo. alck &eavt " aaa~ ~t. All •ppllcatiou m~ have reliable trauportalfoe. AppllcaUofti
nallabla at any Stop.N·Go II.net or
dbtrlrt °"'"· . .
'
\
'
•
' l
;
"j
••
• . . . .
7100
• w 7 00
~!!!~ ..... ?~!! ~~~ ..... ?~.o! ~!!~ ..... ?!. Wtdlleldly. Awu.t te. ttn * DAILY PILOT p7 ~!_~•••••••u ••• .!~ ..... ?!.~•••••"!f~••••••~••• rurantln 1, 1 SCREENPRlNTINO CO sae0.,AIY HtfpW..ted 7tOOHttpW..t.d 71 00 MltpWCMhct 1100 CC:~ I appucabon• £)(pandln1 production Data ~101 Ot1ent •••••••••••• .. ••••••••• •••••• • ••• •• •••••• ••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...... I llcm1a ror •uu and or p&tt•tltnt lmmed openln11 for ed to aulal 1-t•-·t --•SHIPPING Ttlophone appl secly ' U employment. Apply acr"n printer. ICl'een am , ...... f'""1n * PS otk. Wellreu. eicper•d ••-H ltllOIT Moa-Tbur t ·UAM or bulldert & l hlpplns II' ~-":.~ r CMMtw .•hor\,hn. F1t1me. Apply. Blut' fo'tOlalt. Top money MaYllWM S.IPM 1 W 1 Pl'tJ>lr&WYt• • m •. mt. o G--'Ad Ot~ co. mail 1'1-0,~: .. ~ ~a~°"u'r~. ; !~~ Dc¥phl.o, ~ Via Lldo. lll\Jml.._~ca.r. 1-ll~ , ..... 1 tu111 f::=no /lra 0 tcdlolcal 0 P. documeo-'"-.... ..... .... _" '" ....,...., NB MAHAt•I -"'• tlco order co. aeveraJ ~-1'12lafter _.::..;..· ------M011LMAIDS 1416 YleO,.rto #4 C--6-~.' h~~.~~p~ peopleforeh1ppl.n14'dll· ·
f\all6puttme.No.. Resort and Spa .located ln Palm H.B. 1'75'2U2 1~-,.~ tobepartotanat'l<lata lributioearea; TIUPHOHISAUS p!~~~~rli noc. S&l 6 eo ...,, Asll> Sprinp area ls aeetiDI perienced Reita 1ud b co •t fublon llC'OCelSln1 co. Xlnt co Pick Sl.10 to 17 Ir. wuHnin. MS· TMS b In persoa on\) COil~ couple U manaaemt Ol team. uranl II u oPenlna for beneflle. Phone Ad· • era K·ORANOE RAOlOS __;==-----lll .. laalDU&rtMir ll .~~ Mz::;o''t Reltauran~ Salee Secy ~Yolvea mlnl1trallve Services POTO GOLD. Nda. o WANTED: No. Laguna C.ll. -.. lo Coul Vlll•&t lood lypln1 'or1anba· Maoaacr ror appt. lnte· •Packers more people iplmed. for Beacb. Older Jady . or • O. ••*n• If tu., l'laa Immediate openlnp flonal ekllla. c)'e (or 1rated Datil, Costa telephone project. Caab mother of youns chlld to
Monma& lllLPU. I •Ci ... ,... for uncfwlc.b mallen It c~aUona.Accuracf& M.esa,54&-tOllO. •Millpack1gehandler11 bonuaes pd dally. Day carefor~aend~!yr
b.allkpt, b•by16ttln • .............:>Ir I rood pnp. Phone Olen •ttentlon to detal a andeves6Ubavall.APP· old lovely.well ved ~tlpm. llClll P'rL Mt· ~ • between a A 5 p m m~t. 11\111 benefits In •Stock ct b £1 M aft. 511m Quall.Red aPDUcanta only. ~ clud dent.aUc xJnt. work· ty JO am to .s·30 pm aua ter to oro . Bri to ln ""~ .,_ •Secf9t-i95* wk d y s a t 1 9 o 2 school. Your home or ~--·· 111re1umes : 1coo ..... .-lopen.Call Wiii •Warehouse Westminster 4nd mlf\e. '9T·2362 /~ves. -..-·-·-~Newport Hotel mTAUIAMT H1LP Kalie. 759-M&l G.Olc/Bkkpr/Recept Saturdays till noon at Rell. required. N g 8 0 I D a Tl~.-.. ... tl • t7 from ., • PM eo.t.r wort" ualstut Empfoyen Pay All Feea No exper req, will train 7902 w t-•-te A H 0 LL Y W 0 0 --., goo "'"" food ......,.aUon. Expr. SECRETARY /JR. UsRelnder'SAdency fut, dependable. briaht. ea uuul r ve.1-------•
CASTING COllPAN and ptff. tuUUcoe. Uyrsor BusyNw)ltBchAd A&en· 4020BlrchSt.slelCM healthy people looltina Watmstr.Sult.eB. WAREHOUSE
roA 11.UOll FU.Ill Friday 8-18 from 9 AM Lo Noon over Nwpt Bch. 673-2130 cy nee-cfs' aelr-starter Newport Beach 833-8190 roe perm work. Apply ln Tenn.ls lmtructor. reUa· OSHMAN'S
TV COMMlltlCAL Ask for Mr. London or Mr Cheater or-~all 1 pm. Xlnt typm, 1kllla. It bk· C.allfor Appt/Plstab '64 penoo Starcreatof Calif. ble,exper'd. for morna ln
.111-QOO pet dA)' It ac ........._,••-&~ kpa. aood phone 3163 Redhilt. C .M . Irvinearea.Cal1Toum1, ~ YearlJ fM. (714 ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I -._., penonalit.y a must. This <Corner Paularioo ' 752-7355. 71MIM Qt ti ;;;; Women n • ed e d or ia a put spot for 1o-Secretary Fee Paid Redhill) --------• _N_d_u_p_m-'-.a~l-0-.--i PllO,• 11 ............. HouHcleanln1 Serv. mecne looking to move Enc.to SIZ,000 ThtCopyStop
reek .. at a.chwve tor td Jt =-.. werlnt ~ M-015'1 uP· ca.u Donna at B J lot1 corp &eeks dynamic SHOI SALISPBSOM Full Um• poa worbn1 in
nit sbop tall for lD ..-vtee. £¥per or wlll Ideal lota Uoa. Top SALES . Esp. mature Stewart Advert111ng participator for West busy ~ copytntJ bus. tervlew betweeo f.ll A ...._ r • Ptr J>.y It com m • lacutlvt. WCICI*\ f/brldal 41 clrese (710975-0881 coast ofc Call Willa. Ankt.tM••l'f U you re bri&bt. fnendlY
7-.-SAaUwBtt.h ewala& aliltfta 0-0 • Peraoaallaed urvlee d ept. Gd aalary & 833-2700. Also Fee Joba. Exp'd. Full time. Top aitiavea1oodperaona.U· r .. ..1 r \' It ..___..._ tu G . --------•I Dennia &Denna Penoo· commission. Apply In ty & can leam quicltJy New.pa-. auto """l• DW? wor. a& 0 rea or -.... App.., ene 1 Secretaries nelServ1ceolJrvtne,20S2 person. Paul Allan A~-•utn-l'IOD u 00.Frt A~tVa ..._m .. ~i" wJoYer30ynex~. For South Coast Plan .,.,..,. ..... ..
reap adult w/rellabt NIOt .... appt .. AIMrt UIHU SU-073U&.~·2.S81 ~ Bank Secretary ~~-~:ea::~ Island. ..!"'01 Copy.Stops .... car. Ov• _mo··-WlUti'a.ln. t/time. llpm· RealtyCo.,13SDoverDr, , __ .... _,A , ~ ....... ,, •• . ...ct. "
Permanent and tem· porary ware house
penanne1 lo work in our
clean 1bop. Apply in
pet'll()O:
-...... .. 7am.. Collllact Maurine, N.B. 631.:5252. Sales to~ .. oma ......... na'gger'o_rGsoodecy Ptl'IOlllMI SI 0,296 . 751·I050 in1a. The ~e111ter · Newj)Or ter Jon, 1101 I ;laywllt Com1tfor ...,.,. Silk ted E ~Mt IS ~ Jemboree Rd . Ne RECEPTIONIST-Part· Dindaalesuper.lcde· secretarialekillsreq'd. Feepaidopporw/maJor perfcreene,rwan · x· W '.,· 6 Nu.nse'e a.l.da. Jo' & Prr. 6t4-1100. EOE. Ume, ui>iat" lOAM to tire ror lucraUve career Prefer bankine exper. co! Call Liu 848-1288. enced 10 photo ~ork Tow, Truck Drivers ex· , 1119. I
'7.3 .. -... , .... •upm .. hl... 3PM Moo-Prl, s:uo hr. _ .. "q··-"'ivyou forlraln· Call Lou CopS tor appt Al.so Fee Jobe. Dennis & *-._c_olofr sepaidradt1on. ~Wd.TTop pay. Alrvppinly , 10.12md2·4PM -.. uu, <ii' .. n ,.,_.......__ "'w ...... , m4>848IZW · Dennis Personn e l " ..... ce or rap a van· ..-OWing.1000 e Ji.D" Convalescen .... ._ •. ~StOO ~ Ina wr.vorld's largest • · Service of Huntington cem~nt . C l assic Ave,NBGU.-~ JOIM'TH!
Holpit.al. 847·3Sl.S. Fee pe_td poa1t1on for ·---;c•--'c.-t emrloyment. service. Be h l6l88 Be h Graphics: 83J:Oll02 --------1 &bal1> secretary w/tocal _, ""'" .. Cat J ack Barrie. &-ifi ac · ac · · Tow truck driver nded #I TEAM!
• Office position avail IJllltnl oo. Call Vickie. Auto leaalna, accurate ~1.Soellillg &Snell· §""•C C s.u.t.y to $14,400 Single neect.le & special Exp. only. Muet live in ,
w11ucceaafu1 investment 848-18. A.Lao Pee Jobe typlnt, heavy phonea. ina of Newport Beach Ctte Bank Export coordinator pos: machine ~ater!l. exp. Cllf 646-9638 --OSHM•N•S manaaemeot firm 1· DemU lcl>eonia Person· Advapcement, 1ood "'dencv, .... ,.-catnpua ., 1 1 nee bes)efit.s I'uaUn area II" Irvine Industrial co; nelServfceolBunUnetoo benetltl. Airport area. ~-' .,......, ws11.u-a n111anA ro111 ° Jro~a 'l!oedflrin ~Terey TRAVEL AGENT. P/ 3333Bnstol
plex. Muat enjoy working Beach, 16181 Beach. ~ Jactie. 7S1"891D. aw tA. m in· time, commercial-lnl I South Coasl Pina
w /numbe•• -A ...._ ac-...... 0,.-REC~NIST Sales, F /P·T to sell div. CaJI Llsa. 841M288, SITIER, afternoons. for 5 exper. 631·4000: 751-8079 COSTA MESA ..-.,... or ti-i..w. • h Denni.a & Dennis Person-yr old boy nr California ao~ al Op E I M IF curate . Xlnt fringe Wellaroom ,persona· ii.:a ...... ,oVl'lo •. aveowo SECRETARIES nelServtceofHuntington Sc.bQol,C.¥.557·7297aft. Travel-Agt & outside ""'tu P mpyr
benefit.I. Opportwally for lnl•r ble with food typinl tramp. Mon-FrL Sal or Beach, 16168 Beach. Sp.m: sales person w /follow-
leanaln& & advancinf . Pos"ioo1 now avail skills. Pleaeaitt workin& c:omm.S31-08U !With&Wit.boutSHl [ng. Min 2 yn exp. Judy·i--------•
Ma.al telWDe to P.O. Box w/Jocal pay TV opera· coodJt1om. Salary '600 to SALIS nPISTS Service Sla. Attendant. ~~ 646-44118 Wig Stylists
JZ215. c/oThe Daily Pllot. Uon. 20-30 hrs a wk. start + benefits. Call Rhee• & exper'd. .FuU or p/llme. Stal Typist to SlOOO --------t uay COMPA .. ~ Box 1560. <At.a Mesa, Knowledteofthelrvine. Ba b t (714,9 ""'-PIX Appl.y,ArcoStauon. l7lh OlostrucSecy $l2JC TWOTRAlNE.ES .,.,. Nl Calli. 921S21S. Newport Beach area a c;J,H.ra a 55· "-mce Saltllody Long & short lerm as-& Irvine, CM Personnel Admin S20K an consumer services. ls lnt.erv1eWU1g lbr
plm. MU$l have own re· C~HCARDCORP.,. We &(e lookln& for two ~lgnments. Holiday & Service Station Allen-Secy/fteeept to til50 Good telephone voice. Ml'IG S"'LES & Office Dtfl•ery Ua. transp &c be able to women to manage our v a c a t 1 0 n p a y . d l 'd ~ & Manli Engineer to $22K pleuant work111g condi "' "' loy work flex. bn. Contact ltlCIPTIOMIST finance le laaurance Hospllalization plan an· exper · ay lrvinePersonnelAgency Ums. Salary SSOOlo S600 STYUSTS
P' /lame. Neat appear Joe Muter, 640·296 needed by Cbl.ropractor. depts. The women avail. P~vyes, ~1U st~:~:,l~~ 488E 17lh<Ata Mesa +benefits. Call Barbara F/tlme poe1lions for ex-
Valid. Cal.if. drivers he. betwn9:30amA6pin. Gd typlat. lite bltki;>1. cbolen will work on a Irvine, NB. ~teZM ~-1470 (714)955-CASH. per"d wag :i<ilt!S &
18 or older. Apply in ~ss:s8da a 1alary + commission __ ...;.__ _____ ~-CASHCARDCORP styllsts -to Mr Fuent"•. NESSEi_, Jtina "Y • buia + co. car. This OP-----_. -------~ Xlnt c:.areer oppor. & --· ..... f H I I t D D-....a ~ ui Service Stal.loo attendant. .,. ____ _..___ ds u e to nPIST Robert Bein. William or am -on ry ....._..... to $700 y req res even· F or p /T No exper ._,w .. ~ n v 111 management lra1ne" Frost " Assoc.. 14o1 Oeanen 968-3633 Fee Pald 1n1 weekend wotk. necess WiU tram Wages care for 18 mo & 4 yr old. Mas Card 11. Due to ex-Jl()lllUOO.S in an Orange QuallSl,N.B. Uvelyaalesofcaeeksen 'lblllsnotaclericalposi· ,3848C.mpuaDrive ~ Mst be flexible w trefs. pans1on Stewart Tilh: Co. are •.. L ibt>r.11
OFFlCE HELP-For KB.
PllSSO~ERATOR thuaiastic person ,0; tioo. We are looking for 546-4741 + comnuss + nuses. 839-5248 Aeromoza needs an exper'd typist. benefits.
Exp. AB Dick. 380-ltek front ofc activity. Call eaJee oriented persons. U\crose From 42m Birch St, NB. necesila senora vivtr en top pay. Pd p.arkang. Qtr·
Druptore. It bookkeep· lng. over 25. Mrs. Hatch
847-2:581
Pleasant working cond, ~. 833-2700. Also Fee Please call Jean ror a Orange Co. Airport SERVICE STATION man casa. cuidar nlnos. 18 & ly bonus plan. Title ex·
gd belief lt1, PIP Jobe. Dennia 4' Dennis confidential interview at EquiJOppor Employer wanted. 2nd shut. mus t 4. Sea flexible rt'eren· per. pref'd .. but not nee
Apply Personnel
Mon-Thurs IOam-12. 2·4
South Coast Plaza
Costa Mesa CM/NB 642--0621 Peraonnel Service of (714)5'3-9702. beexper'd.2800W.Coast _c_iaa_839-_5248 _____ Cal1Mlcbele558-lll4.ext
PRIVATICl.UI Irvine,2082Micbelson. ::C:::i.s~: SecretarylTypilt/P/t.ime HwyN.8 . Stock & deliver. full or 30. Office girl, PIT 4 PM to 8
PM Mon-Frs Call Mon·
Fri S.5 Oranae Co. Avla· Uon (714) 979-6334
REC E PT JON l sT I HELP! •1r-lc•1r......u-• PIT. Clean &neat. Apply V •LET HOST~ Mu.at be peo.. Raceationist Sales Food Products We are in need or a rast & F\lll7 Part U:::tten· at495 E. 17th CM. Ask for ,._
The Caty Plaza. Orange
pleorlented. call848-0668 Don'twu&u~~beaUng Sal+ C-+ Ccr accurate typl.st. ror busy dants. Mat be over 18. Larry or Paul PAaklHG
forappt. the tMasbea. Call ua. No Major firm eeeka self marketin1 research Xlnl wage. Apply 172A1 Over 18. neat In ap·
Westminster Mall,
Westm. Office girl wanted for
wknds Orange Co. Avaa-
lJOn. Moo-Fri from 8 to 5. (714)'79-6324
more ho hum days ln this startuopent.o relocaUon fi.rm . Involving publlca-Irvine Blvd T,.stin STUDENTS ONLY pearance w/gooddnvma rrodllCtioft Trw people meetln& apot. <>PPOI'.· Call Bill 833-2700. ti on. stat i 11 l i ca I. &'B-6M4 BARTENDER record. 5 nights week.
Equal Oppor Employer
Rubber hose products. Lovely ofc needs an out· DemUs &I>ennis Person-transcription. charts. HELPERS S2 .7S per hr. Apply
Irvine area. Mu.st pass ataodin& per•onality oelServtceoflrvine,2082 tables. reproducuon etc. Service Sta Attendant. $3.50 per hr. Hrs to fat wkdys . Ambrosia. 505 Window Cleaner. P IT
Office Maoager. inside co. physical lncludina w/eood t,yplnJ & aome _'Ml_clle.l_soo_._____ Qlngenial working con· F/t.ime. Apply. Chevron. your school schedule. 30th St. Rm. 211. Npt S6.00/br.
sales. No experience back xrays. Call for olc bkgd to handle front SALES-H o u seplant ditions. F ull benefit USIN CstHwy.LagBch Must have 1 yn school Bch 527-1098.
necessary. wm train. appt. S40-7639. E.O.E :· Will be dQio\PR knowledgableJieople package with dental, .,._ lell. 21+yrs &c clean cut. . y-a.t. r_.~-~ 25 old cc7 ....... •. ·-iA• i medical" life Insurance • .,.,r".ICe eta. a_ttendanl. 6'S-8375. Mr. lJemer. 10 Waiters. WaJlreuel. ex· • ....... ~" ;.77~ er ..... .._ Public Relations nesa~~Ai~.';!t ~·full & p i;ne to; holidays It vacation. Ftume. Exper d Ovr 18. AMto6PM. perlMced p referred. Schock Boats. 2900
· Co. mt., ..•... $9600 ·~ 181 S750. Call retatl sales p0e1llons. 18005 Stypark, J rv. Westminster. 893-7791. Private country club. LaFayette. N.B. 673·2050
Office
Profess.. todiv SOU&bt to 540-6055 Coutal Penoo· _m_-f7_60_. -----714f54&.38t4• Serv Sta Help needed im-T:~~~e-schl Cert ~~l;i,.~l;w~I Mlr"cll•liw
call 00 major acc:tJ. Call oe1A&ency,2790 Harbor. Saia Lady wanted F rr Secretary, pleasant work-med. Full or p/l. Apply TEACHER/Elem Expr. . •••••••••••••••••••••••
Dlll't Just Go
Back To Wark
Go Kelty &
Go Places
Donna833-2700.Dennia4r Cll over 30 yra. Ben-.Ots. iol cond, primary 990E.OatHwy.NB $3 .25 hr. Middle·aae Wartrea,APP,lyinperaon ......... 1005 Denn is Per sonn e l ALLJOBSFREE Q&O. wk. Recal M uty reaponslbilltJea· Clllng welcome Costa Mesa atl3pm,Slds8JueBeet, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~'t.c:. Irvine,' 2082 ..... $750 Fff Pd ~ 21.1 E .17!11 St. CM lo1&ing, tytng & LI~ ~~b:~~ ~~7PP"!:: 642-0fll . 107 2lat Pl. NB Gt-Hf "'-ric•
Penonablel.ndlv. eouaht Sa l~e /M a o agement work. ~ company perience. Salary open. ---..IC'"' ... 5 WAmESS o.llA.cffon Trainee "' .. ~ learn be n e r I t s • C o n t a c t H.o ff m a-n F a b r I c s . • 5'.o,...... """ 20th IL-L • by 1uccea1fuJ co. Call . ,_e , Maureen, 18003 Skypark 77G-._... Resea.n:h 4'development Expr. nee. Cl+ yrs >. Aug .12noon .-u~as1ng Candice 848·1288 Also all pbasee of lumber " Circle, Ste H, Irv. ...,_ mechanical background 21+. Cocktails. Apply in JOOORedhlll.CM &--6 FeeJ~.Dennlll&Den-~J materialrelall· 556-4671 SHIPPING working i n en -person Le B1arrlt.t Spnnger&Wb1te A~n nis Personnel $ervice or Ull-Gdetartlng rate,ach RECEIVl .... G glneerang building Restaur ant. NB. PH Auctioneers
Progressive educational Hwlt.lngt.on Beach 16168 levemenl bonus in 12 SECRET ARY " medical parts. Exper 'd 6'H700 544).4098 Uncertain about your fulure .. .looking for new
career? Temporary as·
signmenll in office. in·
dustrial & murketlng
support s kills. Wor
when 4' where you want.
You don't pay, we pay
)'OU.
firm seeks a qualified.ex-Beach. ' mootb.s. American Build· M aJor d lstrl bu tor r or in mech 'l engineering. ..-..,--ltf!!~llllll ... ==-~r=====Ml====m per'd buyer to handle ---------' lnl Center, Mr. H()wden, F\lll or~ time secretary Parker Han n I f In quality assurance etc.
purchasing for our cor· 962·3321. for Laguna Law Off ace. hydraubc & pneumatic Call Susan 581·3830. Xlnt
· t h RClJORANT --------Time & salary nexlbte. d t h d resp. courses pnn s op .,_,_ ed pro uc s ae 1mme benefits. Mission Viejo
& facilities. Manage· c KS & ~man need immed Expr .pl'ef.bulwilltraln. op ening for 1ndlv-area.
meol oppor. are avail to for proar easlve, fast 494-1071 familiar wtshlppmg. re· ---------1 rich~ndiv. Sal open. growtna frbls spa sales ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-.1 ce1vlng & inventory con· TECHHICIAHS
Xlnt & working coo· COUNTER operation. lnaide & out· Sec t lrol. Benema Include lmmed. openings & OP· ds . AtfcP y N.atlonal side salary +com· re ary · med/den•-1 Insur. paid -•-1 b ed nPISTS ..... Port u n 1t i es to a n Educa on. 4'01 Birch St, ..... son 85 00 exp. vac & slck leave. Sal established co. in the
N.8. CNear OC Airport) PERSONNEL Call 831·3424 "for In· SECRETARIES based on exper. Please Orange Co. airport area. Equal Oppor tunity tervtew." DAT .... ENTRY apply al Aerospace Sup· App tic an ls l 0
Call or come in today
Employer ~ "' ply. 360S W. MacArthur. troubleshoot,. repair & ·~~~~~~~~~! s110-~ PIX Ste 102. Sant.a Ana or coil test electronic s-tems. s e ... v I c E & I . F.11 . nd ,.......... .--ff 5'"" Loma ~1-2372. S57·ll051 ask for B~ch. IELL~
Newport Beach 833-1441 c111p ............ Wholesale, retail firm
Lag\maNI&uel 831-0542 Pu-.:.--·lftCJ/ w/lmmed openln1e. We've got the perfect Shipping 'l"CI &aHOME Garden Grove 638-o500 ~ ft. d lAQg hair ok. No exper jobs to lit your schedule ' ORDER RLURS ' ....,....
• NOTANAOENCY Faciffties • .. oo co•paey nee. Will train. Call for ~~today , work Lg mail order co. has SOLICITORS
N""'ER AFEE beMflts. .. .-.642-$183 ..,....,v.. Exp On1 ""-U tb a:.• M .._. TOPPAY-NOFEE sev~ral po6lllons aya1I . y.oJ/C eDa.lly
Equal Oppor Employer anager •Good_.._.,_.,, w-1 Sales... to $11,400 ~oRaa I unmed. Perm full-Um Pilot. Earn $160 • S200 a _______ ___,.At least 5 yrs recent ex· --·-. ~-->alcl " ~ work. Apply in perso week Highest com ·
ORDER DltHi per. Shirt 1leeve posi· · P'ee pal positioo offers Tt"'IDl'.-Y S.-.ices ~rest ot CaJif. 3Ul m1asion paid. Your ~ lion. &lpervtae 2. Please Pl•••• apply I• car & booua w/a fortune Redhill. C.M. ccorne phone at home Over 21 ·
ld uat type 50 wpm , send resume & sal re · PllSOH MONDAY 500 fooda ~·that seeks Cal.Uornearestoffice Paularino &Redbill) 1.D. card. Call~. 1
operate 10 key by touch, =ent to Personnel THIOU('f H FllDA y ~= ~ 551-9021 549-1071 _to_l_P_M_only--=-·----cC::~: :.,_x::!· :f~~~:: or, PO Box 2820, llT'WIBlf·5PMat: ly. Call Carol 148-l288. ·--E•O•E •..•..•. M•/•F--Sell things rast with OaJlY F1nd wha\ you want ln IJ oYce) 63l-0700 Newp or t Beach . Ca · * Denn1a & Denn1a Person· Pllot Want Ad5. Daily PilotClassifieds. -~------1 _92&63 __ • _______ , J de C 1 · nel Service of Huntington People who need people
PART TIMI Real &ta.te ace • IS Beach, mea Beach. should always check t._
WB·84DS •..t.•w••~ 111 17=~1d Have ~to sell? ServiceDiredory lnlhe lll-"'==:==;;;:c.~==~-=---=---~SewdQaod£v&Q ~·~ ~ . __,,Dl\&Y~-~O:~Dri'!~ ~~0~=:~ . Skill Training drop bundles of Dally commla1ioa spill pay, Equal()ppEmptyr m/f Sales Personnel
Pilat to canien. MQat 80/20. Eaatbluff Sbop. W
have .. .n «larf•ataUon pincCebt«, wry aurac-w.._......, s•••a••• Men and omeJl + ~ood drivin& record. Uve·omce. Brin& good1------•I i. "-'d RISTAURANT fw .. ~ ..... atf~•trL Cal "2-ta21, u t •or wol'kbablts ........ ui ential Several full le par t ·tlme po1llton1 di ·
Ham Sffley or Don ...::;;;i;;;;.;.;:•.:;;;;..·M).GQ20.;.;.;:...:;.;;;;..;__-1 COOKS & Immed iately available la our sales ....,
Williama. ~artment. Experience deatrable. but any Today 's Army offers training. ed·
PART TIME COUNTER irt!9m:1=.. ~tctc:;•~=·m~a~ ucatlon, good pay and benefits a' plus choice location. Opportunl· EVEJll ~PERSONt _ttL41.~--t010 ---lie• .for::advanc1ment. SQ ::what
AdWta wtab ...,,...,..;01, training you qualify for.
au.r.ctl" penonaliUet =·~~~ hr. Pbollie IOOl1 Ext
~. betw"n 4;00.5:0<
PM
Applf ID . )Htraon from
tA.11 tO IPll ! lot.mews ......, U\roqh ...... ••
Sales Perso1nel
Wllllld .._. 11111,upll ............ _ ... , .... S•"•'•/ full A part·Ume plUON lmmed a tel7 available in our aalea
departmenL Expenenc• deairable, but l ll1
111• apUtudt wlll ~ cootl<tued. For an
11\tetvltw pleue contact Ollr •tore manager
I \t ' • • ' J
f714t 64\.70JO
Find out how you·can
be paid to learn ..•
•heavy equipment• artillery
surveyor • administration/clerk
•air traffic control • mechanic
•truck driving• medical
SEE YOUR
AD IN .PB.INT-.... --·
IN 24 HOURS
Place your Daily Pilot
classifie d ad before
5 :30 p.m . and it will run
in the next day's issue. .
The Daily Pilot is the
only aftefnooo-Or-ange
County ne wspape r to
off e r you this 24-hour
service.
Stop by our office or
call 64 2-56i8 and a
friendly ad-visor will
help you place your ad.
·'
.\
l
..... , .... ,. , ....
·····-··
... '.·
I •
1 .. CWL.Y PILOT '* w~.Auo•11.1111 1111•1 .... lff4 ...._,_.. t040 I •'•···················· ...................... . ...... IOH t4e1' H• IOIO Jta..a lwfbcNi.rd t ' tq, 11• Bolt.on Wbaler 40hp V-9170 V-tl70 V-9110 , ......... "••-••••••••••••••••• , .. ••••ft•••••••••••••• Ylld I U-. XJ.Dt c:oaa: ~. COIDP. ovrtsi June •••••••••••••• ••••••••• ••••••••••••~•••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••• •••••••••••••• ~------• CA JI PST W 1 a. L ftMMI• 71. ttlr, lift cbl. uv ' Ont owner RV l'ord t707
CASH PA.11> a.mlOU'n ft'o9I ta.tel 1Y~...... llllltt. new bat. t2900, cu.tom E300 Ctual&alr ••••••••-.. •••-•••••
..., 111 ....stun. an • .. ~MNWS4Nll• ......... l'fMl:ll '78 c•···EA11 ~..._.CE wtth aJr 1ow m11eaae •sa.v110x
•laclrTV'1ll7-IW AMIN .wtol\an&able, -...... , ..... ~~~ fl1droplane bull. Race Iii ~f"llllll Nakeolfer 557.3044 SPICIA&.S•
':::f ~r~·:.'o.'ra~: :=n:':.~~~ ~ ~~~~~ ~\o.gr~~o~~·-~ :=::.,. .,_w-.W '~'° f.:.~~r' .. ":.~ .
...-Dr.CM wUlul~ODeytar evet. •C......_ ••••••• .. •••••••••••••• siereotape~1.t¥>0m i
Ill twta • ...,. l\ill Ne&uraJ ml.Dk fill~~. ~lr::c,~ tube. sns. Btavt clH•lc lauochl IJSTPllCI yW-!?'-10.!.'f!... ~ti~ a 11& • -.t.u.d ru1J .-w, '5500 vah•, or · mmt ..U lb.la wknd, wll S 11 HI -""' ~ .,.. ..... &lltl"' -I malteolfU' .... 1 a 'IV'•· 11" Ptbl eoa-eomMleraJJottst7MMI, t PAlDFOROllNOT ~~~!!!!!~!!!!!~~ wUI ~=:oad .... ~ an..wtcll.pooHabletlOO. ::O..-" Color ma_p.t f7S.O'I07 s't:.~ /:DOU.Al Ye~:!.~1,.~.~~!reo
• ~-' Cornpl41le. • .... 8 -•,.~· SIGG. 1S' lkleton Dater l&l'Stnt· RAND M1W t '1 a trtt, 44,000 ma •
... Salt: All&q I"" .. --t4N'715 .. '"" ......... •II lo I)' Dd by ooc CNW. Con· •AMH.Y.WA.eoM s9495 COS3LGT) BARWICI< OAl\U,_.
H . I ; ', 4 'I J ! j l !,
taW t• tb.n. S•U•t Olal•• roo• tbl w ta ua&ca.cl.MMOlhft.t tadO.vtGrutS5f.1'710 . •P3tl• Kla'f'l•QD'1cllaln.a o., • olabt a ton aaa Alr COMVlaSIOM • ..un-tlut..U llll\'Wl6tdlrs-. Cond. Ontl; Uk• new. Ampltller, A1t1r11 1 IMll.W t060 •e......... • - -IJb'.td.SllT to.-a mdl. HO OAC t ee. track and 1ptakera ........................ ::=.~::.;:~=-..:=
••
'
-.. 6 -"-'-• f\&ra . .-.)olfer.l'IHJ.DO f!r.!.:. ... 00nd ... I. Ph ll' Sol Cal. Newport ..... ,r,-'f .. •&".. .... --. HUl!!..E s •v1...u!!!..s •• -. .. •••••••••••••• ark wood. Wrou1bt Pair ant~u• popcorn Beacb u.down 1oclud. w A ~
rROHT DA 0 .. ..... 1111 ~ Dr. ......::.a. ... Ward'• lt" c!o&ot lv, port. Beltott•. &I I ..... co ... ~~ c--..~ .• !! ~. .. NB ~ttOdmv::P!:!-w /ltand. Brand o•w. 875-21191. mom'• •eves. OM~ v"'" " ~ .....,. rvu't'6 -_.-a .,.,..,,.. ... M --0... ,,. AG , l;w r•f W. _..,.., ..,. Hartlor. 0-... "11• dr'OP leaf . c.ot -· -· 16•HOlllcAT 114 ,._., 714
Saa&aADLm.m1 &able • • cutn. 11.nt ~~~~...;RCA Color Coaaole. Cleao wltb trailer. 49 , .....
CASH PAID cmd sm. -.&la blle. llO. no.-All/f'll lteno la tutDta-_m-47 __ 13. ____ _
1br /Dr1u I Refrl G&.a tbl. ~ .. II U " II.,. .. SAL&: Tt•c ..... dtlk ... ~,~·. ~ ~-=:: wmttacoraatasr.aw • hH·Value .. oo. 9poUlu ome. ct.A $51. trat.111 •Dolby l&QO. Soni Oll·M super coad;, fan·
UNd nfrip, rro.t-f1'ee 9IO*"MM012 PonableTV sis. 110-11.a TCaO reel-~reel '500. &atic price-Just reduced
Wubtn. df)'tn. a .. _.._ .._b _ .. 1 ~-• ~ f1S.GIDt ~But Appliat1"9. ll ru ... .,. "". ,.,..o CODISVO ... ........ ---------
Ad.a.Im, HB. m.otu Fru1t •'OOd. 644-8608 ~~::,::,tart· ' ! 'f m 1 • V e r y c l e a n 3 3 •
........... dryer .... •••••••••••••••••• Catamaran. Many Z"._ Jd pal4t • • Ql*8 Sala deeper WO Bou• for movioa. all 8111rtll fOIO Xb'u. Unbellevaba,, low Molarcvdet/ ll~$47.ai»l1'1.aM • Walnut a.eat 915S. Wiaeei popular 1iie1, loweat ....................... price~ "Wildwind • de-Scoahn: tlSO --------1 CWr-.S.MMl17 prtcea.Saleonmllprinl· fCA'VAK . Good cood. =~c;!..blo0 Call even-••••••••••••••••••••••• Gaa. Dryer, $75. Bab edcartma. lOX'lralreon· '300/0r be9t olfer. Must _.,.._£ c~table, ao. Sola 6 Loveaeat $100. An· lY 91-15. F'Nle dellveey aellNOW. '75-7'1'1M ......_.__ ~---Ronda ~ motorcycle. 13'J.71T8 Uque Cedar Cbest 1100 (with min order> <n4 > _. _... new tires. rack rar1.ni.
WE BUY
C&.iAMCAIS
&TIUCKS
Must sell due to tti>and·
IDI ra m1l y. 2·dr '72 1001.S. Sharp. Make o(r
7SNllll8
•AMUJMCl-AUDI IUYS•
1'78Audl tOOLS
.&dr , auto , au. H
ttlt. stereo, 3'.000 m1
<126HIE1
•$49tS•
l9'78Aud15000 ·.a dr . auto., P tS. P 18.
air . cusett.e. 15.000 mi
10119'1 I
•S97t5• . Mt-2301 ~U AM to a PM Lwlurtoualy appointed nms .,eat. 9&2-~
Forced air furnace 110. ~--mid-size. mld·rari8e 32' mu bL.lDw o.oJ.y Ill~ H11111t\1lJiecL ... ad.Justable, Black Forest Cuckoo it t030 cruiain1 yacht. Sleeps 6, ....... Sile/
642-o?'OS w/famp~ also aIDjle bOX ··Qodr.WOfll:rareat...-...... ..._...... onr_a.rclJJ(l Ul>lns, 2 ..... ,LSlof... 9jj0
--------1 spri.n1. mattress & base. 642-o705 New~" manilla liD& 18" bead1, shower. fur ... •••••••••••••••••••• Hot point, copperton 673-IMOI ft Avon rtdcreet fir brds galley, electric bot/cold RENT 23• Fireball lf
COSTA MESA
AMCLJEEP
#I IN CALIF. • CONNnL
~ -6HEVROltt
I t78 CHaOKH
CHl_=lf"----
$7995 .
refri1 W/aeparat Stron• wooden 1tora1e oiB bracket Uled $215 water aystem, 36HP • se .
freeier-S140.A>-7S63 S01&:2'tovesats.bu .,.oldoabox•~· Old. Nat'l n~tt-reia . ~Y!>~di~ .. Mall.>' ex·
pool table & lamp, trash 6'2.()705 <1935) $85 6'8-as82 . '1ra1. SrTp avaTrable.1---------
17 cu ft Kelvlnator, frost compacter, ladies golf Sears 1 hr Uk M&-2918. • • $41,500. Will consider , new 78 22' Motor
free. Cold. $1SO. 645-1CM7 clubelicart. Mans golf ~~ dJe nu, trade or lo cub down Is Ho me • I o a d e d ,
aft 5pm. cart. wolf rug. M&-9151 ~ 8 trk us!•pl~~~: carry 2nd. 815-1120. day /wk /mo. 675-5832
<JM17NN1U.71J 1
1971.J.ZOPICIUP
$7395
(J8AUPN140454 I
Relrl1. perlect cond. $75. 7• crushed velvet couch. 65 pc set Wards cblna, ~~ ........ ~!~Gil 2&tmult,ell;-6RP For'Rent '78 Pace Arrow.
Oa.n, ~15 or eves ISO. Plus velvet PIIfows. encyclOpedia eet. ladiel Evinrude, lood cond. 25', loaded! M/C. Brand ~
631..f938 sis. 28" bike. like nu. 751"'289 Bell offer. 873-3403. new! FREE 100
GALLONS GAS lkydes 1020 6"-IX4.. Sterling Sliver by SEA RAYS! HobieCatl4',
••••••••••••••••••••••• C4mer' Group. (2 twins & Gorham. Melrose pat· ~nr"IAL SALE complete w /..US. saso.
f\IM'la & C•"'MDJ ~~.~ 1.~ •• ~~e.z:"'?1isc. tern, 0-pc service for 8 «UI 673-9537
UJWV 5 _. .,LE"r ......... ...,.._ _......,. siiv!/~~~1 &4:e:e:. 1978 Racine sabot. fully
A MUSTSELL! Walnut coo· $1SOO. 75&-1057 24'Ctldc.trC.W.. ~ xlnl cood. S2SO
New It used 3, 5, & 10 sole stereo. dbl bed. Side curtialm. camper 751•3106, alts.
spds, bch cruiser s. dresser, 2 Lamps. 'IV. PolaroJd cameras S5 ea, covers, flab wells, 100 ----------mopeds, mo to cross lounge cbr w /ll·stool, ~Polaroid Copier SlO. gal. fuel, trim tabs. um Sabot xlntcond
blkN, parts, access, re· 751-7534 alt. 6pm. Patiocbain $5. 6'2-4503 heads, xt.ru. 541-4626. · =i:. :;:.":!u ~-::ec ~ovin&. must seU; Sec-MO~G SALE. Must sell T~~":nen 20• Double Maboi Hull 642-mo . tiooaJ couch. loveseat " Dinin4 ~ pi~. living (JI 221 with trailer. New paint.
3t70 NEWPORT BL CM c h• l r • x l n l c 0 n d rm, IU'l 8 bdrm1 comer u • • ....._____.,_ Slip avail. Bl .. Owner -------·--1 $250 /best ofr. 9-drwr grouping, exec aesk w/3 n.r. ~ ..,,. ti d f
Boys ' 24 " lO·s pd, dis-dreaaer, vanity w/mir -cbn.typewri~rEtcetc. Stock•55'2lc55' ~~!;~~O/o r .
assembled, brand new ror, refrig, end tbls. 53230aft5. Sll,931
tires S\50/ofr. 675-4788 dinette. + plus much Hoover Vac-Gd cond SJO. loah. 51a-;
e.ts 101s ~· All ln 11nt co.nd. AntQ drop 1ear tbl S2S. HARRISON'S Docb.,.. t070
••••••••••••••••••••••• Aft&. 6'2·70'1G Nice bookcases $15, SEA RA y IOATS •••••••••••••••••••••••
Siamese kittens. ti!$. kegw s.le 8055 642-4:i03 3101CoastHwy,N.B. SUPS AVAIL.AILI
64"'3609. ••••••••••••••••••··~·· KJtcben Items: Broiler 831·2:MT YACNewport&t6-0551
Reg. Himalayan M cat 5 Couch" m:::f::°• chair $lO; Elec cd pot SlO. Iron 9.lp f /'4' sailboat needed.
mo old, silver point. $30~ette $5. Antq lamps $l5, '88 SKIPJACK 20, OMC Quieteouple.Nocbildren
Papers/shots644·7739 6G-4503 ouldrive, completely MZ-133&daya 0. 1040 Garage Sale, Misc SCRAu •EJS overhauled. Ufily ~ut BOAT DOCK FOR RENT.
•••••••• .. ••••••••••••• 1f=.bi~~. f-.. ~~.nhesaedt: IW"L functional tra leT 10· Newport Isl.and. Max· .......,. -ANSWERS eluded. Dependable imum length 26 •• Call Golden Retriever pup· boards, odds & ends. Sat Cb:!.lfu V·8 eng, good 9151-llOlforlnfo. pies. AXC Field & show 2-5, Sun lM. 600 Acacia, Oa a or flsblog boat. --------
with purchase ol any •--------•I jeep with tb1a coupon BUY NOW!
CONSIGN NOW!
Net Sl10-S'l0() per week.
We have 1.1 million
dollar contracttial re· aervationa backing with
A.AA U.S./Canada & \be
following airlines; Un.It·
ed, Della, Western
Hughes Air West. Con· Unental, KLM "Dutch,"
Swiu Air, Lufthansa. •10% investment tax
credit depreciation de·
ferments. •We have 158 '78's in
fieet; need 30 additional
by AUIUSt 30. •SeWng 4 Stat 22 minis at
factory invoice.
100% financing of in· voice. sales tax aod
license tbru CROCK ER.
812.0 APR. 7 year .,ote.
2 facilities currenlll cperatiooal Irvine, C.U .
Colorado Springs, Colo.
WIWIU.IEAT
AMY WlnTIM DEAL
ONA.HY MEW
JEEP
WEARE
OVBSTOCKB»
252' Harbor Blvd
Costa Mesa
7 I 4 / 549-8023
7l IRlw'1MltfoMI
· ~4X4
6 cyl .. 3 •Deed trans .. 4 wheel drive. locking
bubs. removable top.
radio and heater.
<883JEY>.
$39ff
THEODORE
ROBINS
FORD
10 ( 1tr.P(,OIJ t LVD
I !J~T;. Mt~.'. t .. :;-!'('!(• pet. Shots, wormed, CdM. M=-~:y--Sli5Q0.67$-4870 $1,000llWAAD raised w /I'LC. Xlnt di.Ip . . ,... t u l CZl.3)425-1561. Antique furn & misc HARDENED lB'FonnulaTbunderbl.rd . ..., permanen 1 P n Grandopenin&of3rd r.b 9560
items. S.5pm, Friday on· News flash! "On the Xlnt cond. Nwpt. will negotiall t.e ihor facility San Franciaco. ••••••••••••••••••••••• AKC German Shepherd l)', 8/13. 9290 Lark.spur, Hollywood Freeway a 581-5012 temporary • P· Jo n Calli. March '79 1976 TOYOTA
pupa. Show background. Westmin. (Betwn Ed· prison van collided with l»SlSO, Janet 55'1·7702 "WESTERNGOLDEN * *
Top bloodlines. Black inger & McFadden and a cement m I x e r . BA<X AGAIN ext2L clally 8-5. TRIANGLE" PICIC .. TRUCK
andtan.838-9308 Magnolia fr Buscbard) Motoriata were asked to HP'74ClobotCbetv18w'1T0Rlmc·H.0290et, ReQWre Newport slip 30. For further Info. contact t~!~d. mags. rear
No early callers! be oa the lookout for a • llfandi Find• f Mr. Uasner ......._,.·mirror CKH784 I Golden Retriever pup· dozen HARDENED mny xtraa, mal see. an er. in era ee. 0-.'sRVRtwhlhhM:. •$3895•
pies, AKC reg., avail Yard Sale, Jewelry, Dolls, criminals." "1500/bet ofr. Mat sell. Call546-699l. 17141559-4446
2828 Harbor Bl"d. COSTA MESA
546-1200
WEP•YTOPDOLLAR Amlk0oHe•' 9709
FORTOPtJS'tDCARS ... ••••••••••••••••••••
FOREIGN. DOMESTIC ·71 Austm Amt't1<'tt o orCLASSJCS · If 1our car i.s extra clean 31•000 mi. aalOng llOO. aeeus rant. 751·9819
IA.UH IUlaC IMW 97 t 2
2925Harbor Blvd. •••••••••••••••••••••••
Costa Mesa 979.2500 IOI Md.A.REM'S
WE BUY
USED CARS
CAU..GARTH Used Car Mgr 15630 IWJD\11161
2626 HARBOR BL ~D
COSTA MESA
WEIUY
IMW
850No. Buch·Blvd.
La Habra
tComerBuch
&Wh1tt.1er l
7'4/522°5333
Cloled Sundays
IUYOILIASE USB» CA.RSI We'Te the new Chevrolet YOW I '71 IMW
dealership in the Irvine . MOW!
Auto Center. We need' ExcelJent selection of all your used car! models now m stock' JOE -
MAC PHERSON COMPUTE
CHEVROLET IODY SHOP
21 Auto Center 0-1 ve NOW OPEH
IRVlNE --
761-7222 EXC&Utn SB.lCTIOM~
WANTED! IMW RESALES
Late model Toyotu. We ~Y ~ve your •ext
Volvos. Pickups & Vans. :;:r~mveotory. Call
OaU us today' ll 1 -2040 49M949
CREVIER
SANTA ANA 8/12.Cal1673-S609 VW paru, TV, Chest, 8'2-Sm. loah.Spffd& OutsideCa.1~-0399 FSb~:tz~K;llhet~~~e~~ ~ ~~t,M~o Sat. 334 ~ ... ~ ..... ~~!~ ~~~ si:Jo~IO, fully .. ~ ............. !~!~ <J':~~~~gs =t~ra!~ l~~ &I Sf • llOAOWAV
~=====~I 835·3171
terms.957·1788 Hanel 1060 673-3"7'7 WANTED : Boe ton Allowtn11way Bob
THI UlTIMAn OtllY1NO MACtolfllr
•USEDIMWs*
'7H6004spd. C940N R.11
'753.0S.a l230RYF> '75530l Auto. (916MTV I
'76 2002.48pS/R <S49PHZ I
'76530!. S/RfS81RCSI
'773208/R <S67SXG I
••••••••• .. ••••••h•••• IMllDAHAMP! Res lbl dul vi Whaler 11·13' very ._..:;:re:n~tala=to~L~.A~ .... -J~~~=~=:~=~ ---------AKC reg Lhaso. 4 mo,s. Alfalfa leafy bay ~.85. Prefer• bly an old pons 8 a t. no ce clean· ..; /steerin'c . Pia '61 Ranchero "9$.
btful disposition. P.aad Nutrodogfood2Slb $6.30 Fender Baseman, but ~~-man, lnWres1 ,_led ln11 Call: "1·2595 ... ~ Open Ro d 18, -•-• B V-8 Automatic. Runs ..... llftporhd l290, bst ofr over $150. Free d ll Su anyt1Un1 In good worll:lne n::uuug or easw1 we •• a UUllJ. good. Great work truck ••••••••••••••••••••••• Must sacrifice. wile al· e v~ry open n· conditioo for around $100 equipped recent model 16' 140HP OMC J/0 . Nu SIC, aievy chusta, 350 55&-Sl6lS41-MM MfG ltwo 9705
lerglc. Shots, papers. o~·iF:.c.&Todt ~do. Call 861-GSl aft J::r{Y~'t:,to.~!\if:' lnt,rebltena. ~:Jrli>:-'°/flrm · .;:.+;:: ..................... .. Dys, 979-9032. Eves. N Bl dCM S.30pm. 1 1 t au ...... ! Callao.ytlme,673-1846. '78 ~ ~T PU. 350, 4 m•GTB2000.small work 9SS-0745. 2544 :"f:'crt v oca wa era .... v........ lilt/lo Senke ,_.. barrel. PS. PB. cstm needed. $3000/ or best of·
ShihtzulOwks, (a~:,,~3.)ge ~~~·:e~vr, ~.6'6-5857bome. T1 5 art.,._ &Accnsorl" 9400 fiber&Jassabel1.49W31S. fer.6.11..()8741645-3487
gold /whit e . AK C, 2 ~ Paiste cymbals. Compl 14 aid boat-runabout 35 •••••• .. ••••••• .. •• .. •• ••••••••••••••••••••••• '17 El Camino Classic. ,._. t707
females.S300 ea hardware, boqht for HP Jolm.lon 0/8, trlr, C 0 '"'*Sile/ Ford 292 marine con-F\llly loaded. XJntsb.ape .• _, .................. .
831-3825 Regist.el'ed Anbian Geld. sia. aeU Sl2IOO ftrm. 6 complete"°°· 815-'1028 ..., 9120 version + ttana headers. Makeolfer. 551·~
Refine d , Classic. mo'• old. Blackflray. 28, p S rtfitbin -••••••••••• .. •••••••• pump, flttin11 add lt74AUD1fi9X
Pet &11 Puppy $75. Putt Be a ut tfu l mover. &fU7GAft epai, Bob or Boat.0;9!.t t°un. nytn: Older umper f--sale, w/o abortblock $300. 983-011 '72FordCourter. 1•~ tr1 ~· ~1~ dCO.n0d ..
bloodline, no papers. Versatile. 979-1590 Jeff bridae newly rebuilt truck. $150. Stove & .....,.._ ·--' .. ,_,_ SljOO. 642-9387 (Barb) After 8PM. or · • refrig.640-2'100 m:.a:.u: 4--. rawaa, oo Da)'s644-26S2MichaJ <3SBKLM > . ..,._7072 (Sherry) Martin D-12/20 12 Itri.DI enaloe. Need• 1ome . men than 30 000 ml'• tol SI 999 Have a salt to go w I <Pep-· &Wtar $450. Call 5'6--0US wort. Overall condition '89 Ford EIOO, camper flt 15" rima (Datsun 510 l96S ~ord ~Ton
per) darllna female Toy II 1•aldGoock 1065 att&wkd.Qs e11celleot. Brand. oew top, nds Inter tlnl1b. "ID>· FA 661-asl. aJ'l Steps1de. $1200/or Nabers Fox Terrier to right ••••••••••••••••••••••• dinctlooal ~der and $1500. ~aJ'l 1pm. s:30pm. bestolfer. S86-0960
person Haebrkn, a ll ~1pread (Beal'a) 1973 Mutln Ml Guitar. PllZ.wayrl<lio. '9000or • AU1'40C .... rr& abot.s. t.yr old. Pd sioo. qul lime. or e & Ute ne;,, 9850. -.ooTB beat brter. Evenln11 8' bait cab over. sips'· AlllosforStM 11 Datauta. All tFM ..,.
sac sso Call 495.4597 &reen S?S 644-1.2« ang aftlPM MS-a378 Jacka. boot, ~50/ofr •-•••••••••••••••••••• st.ereo caaa. map, wide Div.ofN•bersCadUlac a m or a·ft. 10pm · · · 56-3611 AIM•ll/ ttk Urea. catm paint. I 421 IAICa ST.
Cloaed °" S-days
OltAH(il COUNTY'$
OLDEST ·
&
SaJee.Servic-e· Leaslllg
1ov c ...... 1nc. RoUS Aoyce BM w
U40Jamboree
Newport Beach 640-6444
2800 Bavena ··Gem ...
looks 4r runs better than
man,y 73's. Must see. Bet
olr 751-6892 ; 645-7434 . . . Jew .. t 1070 ~Alto ~~pbone, Corp. bu.1'75 25' Nova ClilllCI tSZO A/C. Stlll uode'r rac A~FROMFEDCO FreetoYo. 1045 ....................... c11arcutter, com-•l t•ln 351 Mere ....................... WUT,muatseU.P.P.Aft COSTA.MIS• NEIDHELI'?
....................... 2 Rod modern cut pletely reblt 631·201 cnlUe.n , cetm u~bol., Maloelddllres 9140 '52 BenUey Mark a.' dr ±546-3285 140.tlOt
FREE: Black Lab-Aust. dl•monda'4carat$1.2001 eves. ~yveca~i.,:~.:ta~: ....................... aectan:..10Qd leather, but '80Cbevy ~T. ods clutch 1---------u~!~i%.~:!~0•0, ~ .. ,{,(·wutk•olff'< ..auc.tc:1£DX>d>.•• cVtC;~ "'.iil .. I '" •r /~ f!.t. Wllnng to &e lC--Pcll' needs coemetlCl'. loclud· lcaaaort m1sc. Nu tires. The fastat draw In the Qu8.W'iedffoJ>eluls
M4-8325 PAY CASH for diacarded ._, XWi =* •• IOIS trade-for •lus wort O!' .... ~~ t'{!t repair. ~00 . Call.DU aft Welt. • ~• DaUy Pilot tntn.DAILY PlLOT
Free puplpes , pu;t jewelry, &Jl)' c:ood.-Wm-:S.J .. !:z.. ....... -.. cmce furnlabinp or f N::I~ .c i;;':i-y ~ uae~~: 6.aOpm,646-0881. Cl.aaslfiedAd.642·5678. HELPWANTEDAOS
Labrador8weebold. plctaap49M805. Offtce equipment: 1tetl Veryarudoul.87»-2096 675-C70 '72DataunPUw/sbell. tao ~........... .... tlOO 642·293'7 ..._._ ...__ ...... __ tr d ... TRO • B 1 '78 Puch M--•4port cood. Sl'75 See Sat 12-4 --. ... ---------•Mhc1l• 1w 1010 _.., a.....:a·wniro • e •8 JAN 25 • rtato ml ~offer!• •Cad •st ORIG Gd cond 21.0E 18th CM · · ....................................... -.... .
3 yr old SbeDbard, male1 ....................... abow diaplay, portable cond. :ittraa $1',150. 1i:s..1tJ74~ 'er! 91M no dents P /P . . • . ~natunCJ.needs1ooa LUG&AMTAaS typewrtten, additll 8"* . pm +T14).al8.22S6ber'2pm .. '5U'ord, reblleng, valve,
home. 6".e838evea. bm.iDeu card macb1Dee, poet. meters, 28 Foot Cutter 1974 F G •w::wdlt/ trans, reareod.. Make of.
Irish Seu.et' ood. Nda ~YoW' _ _.. for ch check protector, copper fly Bridle. SleePt six: SL "'5 9150 19112 CHEV. Impala fer.631-4715 . • I -one c..... .. fire extlnlulaben, tape L t I t ....................... Sedan. lmmacula~ coo.1---------Aovtn1bome. Free. tq plua one spare. We abooten;bandtn1ckl,1o· o • o 'ex r a•· dltloo, •2,000 orialnal "18 El Camino clualc. all
M2-019hft. s return permanently ~card apt.em, of· n'"6tl 9129 , MONDA lt6' miles. 9950. 813-3858 aft xtraa, mat sell. $:9000.
I'm • 5 mo old 111 milt aealed attndi9e tag • flC!e parttttcg:k dt1k Cris Craft Tri-Cabin 44• !Oa;.Lolllleale IPM 54M5U .__ ... _,.--' 1 __.. at.rap. meetlll& alrlloe tr'Qa, wuie eta, 4' y ht ''D ,, StrettLesal _,_ .. er. n-a 1.0 .. ~. Pre. 1te fbrtun1, 1tee1 lbelY· ac~rooo $1.SO.OO 14&-9018 '83Uncoln, new tire., ru '78CbeY. ~Ton PU. 6 cyl
lovintbomem.Qlll vmt lme • tbeftl For a lallsbulknor.,endm. = dbl =: Handaa.3SOXlnLcond. aood SIOO/D\akeolr. ~ Tempo campel"
To cood home, male penanahed ta( enclo9e All at cloeeout prtca. abia lO. 2 ma ~ 1; Call aft 5:30, 54M181. · 151·1.lA.15'1·1•1.
Onman S~d 'I !&:Gt:•~.-,:-:::-:-:: flMmfOPW.. 8/S'"1alle1, refrii, , fi.telt. ~ 4 cfi llO. Meda nreBEVVWV.
mantba. cau . wUl bed 6 trim JOO.fl"-a o. I• lotO mo pUot, depth llJicRt, "11 Hoact. coameaca • aooct home. $L575. Xblt concl
''Georp". Coc:kapoo, wb& i.p.. Or try two carda -.. ••••••••••••• .. •• winle11, ONAN swim ._ ~ =· ~~· 14.5-TllllZ 8'1-«morm.ann
II. Lenee dalJdren, DOl a t.dltobtPRJct.~ ~ p1~.:_r· IS :~~~·::. ':~ ~'3fm.M14m m '· •ae Naab Rambler .. tn v-9570 t.na-. IU-2251, d)'I. ".....,: -. ex cue, ..tor ovsbaw .. 000 -wen. 7K ~ I dr ........... " ........ ..
lh•orl/'5 ~_:-0· rolla,""9. Private parUee only ~~~ .. 441 ... ~ ~ tlOO.lbltolttG·IMS llAMD..W lt78 Hi,IQYnamelaKidCurry, •J5taoa.eoea. .. .,.,.. pl9aeMO-aa1 -.. --~ _, ....
I'm • a yr old SbeJU. lfl&apa.50ea. 1175 ud ._ rtlbt ~ MWm 4WllMIDrt¥et tllO llOODODelVAM ~. 11\1 people.,.. 10ormon$l.40ea. ltlt~ ~ tiabwt, TT 11' Sid 11 ..... Da, '15 Yamaba eo EndW'a ." ........... ,........ Cl,,_> <•lON>
movtq Is l Dd a ·1aome. s.a.Tulacludtd .._,. OML .. Mutt au.., 410 P'ord w 1Jtt .,_ I I ala& ;Gd OM. Y ~ti
59-1"1 NOCAJU>? s.u..-..s •l•ll nan ?/Moot. /Ollie1a' •eu...,w~, nbh, •VIMl~I
Free P\lop)'. i..b • 8bep Draw.,_,°"" or send •o.-n:rm. 14'1 1115 ••·'720S :, r:' ur.. Belt 40Aato0e.._ Dr.
miJL Ncla au..tioft, &ov• ............. pbone • 8. ID ID 0 'D d 0 r •• D am •• Cartbei D 19'71 Harter DavldlOD . '107•. lRVINE
lddl.buabota.m.Olla w11..-. .. card per w/beeftcl·VP Lt1Ue. ~ blo ~., .... Brand new ool1 lt76DQ0el4•4 IJo..J•I ·-------1 i.a.Add•eeeb. tJAOO. '°"9..et•lnk ·~ ti mllea. 1'ldl ii eat a ~-TOM'PICI• ,. •• • .... .... c:-* or IDOMf Of• N7-Gl'17 •a.etr. ~/M tande• &nlO <adll,ah). ODl)' u ~ "73 Olllclee BMD V¥ •alb ··-~ .................. •.:am~ ~mab~ PitDO. Jtboai' 1trJr, •:;A:. br~kH . =-.-~or ~:~~~t~t.::: .. ~=~i::.
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COSTA MESA
DATSUN
•DRIVEA *
*LITTLE. .. *
SAVEALOJr
SHOPA:COMPARE
BARWIC K DATSUN
... ' I • I I I • ,.1,I, 11, '
83 1·1375 493.337')
Over 200 Fiats to
choose from plus an
outstaodl.q selection
of Sporta can at
DICK lrfll.LER
llOO'ORS
120 W Warner. S.A.
SS1~
,
9742 •••••••••••••••••••••••
6tea1 '76 Midget. 30,000
mi's. Must sell now!
12.SOO. Mike, 536-1827.
ROY
CARVER
ROtlS·ROYCE
1MO.hm ...... Ntwi-te.•dt ,._ _ __, .......
Wednesday Aogust 16 1978
J
DAILY PILOT ,,.
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FABULOUS
YEAR-END VALUES ON
ALL BRAND NEW 1978 MODEL
CHRYSLERS AND PL YMOU1HS ..•
DON'T MISS OUT
ON GIANT YEAR1END SAVINGS
.• WI
FOR FLEET
SALE OR LEASE
INFORMATION,
CALL BR y AN YEAR-END
CLOSEOUT
OM ALL FINE
HESKETH.
546-1934
iiiiiiilii~ USED CARS~iiii:lii
'70 DATSUN
WAGON
4 cy1 engine 4 sp"'ed
1ransm1ssion. luggage rack, rltd10.
heater and wtstw rires. (442BEI)
. '74TOYOTA
COUPE
'77 PLYMOUTH
YOUR£ SEDAN va automatic lrans . a ir
cond111on1ng. cruise conrrol.
Power sreenng power brakes.
vinyl top. radio hearer & w/s/w II res ( 782RSVJ "
s3795
'71 CHEVROLET
Y~ACOUPE 4 cy1 . 4 SPeed transmission Power brakes v1ny1 top air
cond1t1on1n9 •radio & heater (106292] 4 cv1 auroma11c 1ransm1ss1on. radio and hearer ( 190454)
s1495
2:/6AMC
GllfMUN SIDAN
s195
6 Cyl . auroma11c transm1ss1on.
pwr steering. air cond . radio & heater 1669RXJJ
'76 DODGE
SPQttsMAN WAGON
VB auroma11c rrans heater.
POwer steering l POwer brakes
12 passenger model i015875J.
s1995
'77 CHRYSLER
COIJ>OIA COUPE
VS automatic trans hearer
POwer steenng & brakes. wl slw
tires. air COnd . POwer windows.
leather interior. split POwer sear.
AMIF M radio & v1ny1 rop (638SCNJ
s5495
'77 DODGE .
ASPfHW4GON
s3995
'78 CHRYSLER
LE 14RON WAGON va automar1c •rans so111 owr
sear. Pwr windows owr sreermg,
Pwr brakes AMt f-~ srereo
wt IJpe cru1"e co nrrol arr
cond1t1on1rg wtstw tires & hearer , 46'TXR1
s7995
'76 FIAT
WAGON VS. automa11c rransm1ss1on. POwer
steering. POwer brakes. air COM ..
luggage rack. radio, heater & w/s/w tires 1873PXUJ
4 cyl 5 speed 1r:insm1ssJon.
luggage rack. butker sears 8 v1ny1 side moldings 13SSR.1R '
ATLAS
CHRYSLER/PL YMOU1H
SERVICE HOURS:
MONDA y THIU FRIDAY
1.00 A.M. TO S:JO ft .M. SA TUlDA y l:OO AM;
TO '5:00 P .M.
' f
,
...
Huntington Beaeh
Fo1111tabt Valley
EDITION
Afternoea
N.Y. Steeb
VOL 71, NO. 221; 4 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE CX>UNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16, 1978 TEN CENTS
J Htitadreds ltl.ourn l'filleg Foot8all Sta . .
17
I
) Kundredl ol lftOW'Mn ........
Uelpated Ji'r'ld•1 at fan ral
aervlce1 for atar Fountain
Vall Y Hlcb School qu.arterbadl Doq ~.-on. wbo waa fai&.al·
ly ~\&Nd lD a ur craD Monda)' en rouwtocolMa • Spokeamen for Ute Pee* Fami-
ly ColOllial Fu.neral Home ln
WeJtmlnlter. w r lb l :ao
p.m. rltel an aehedultd. •aid
cbalre and a pqblic adclren
Shoppers
! Stoek Up .
·On Food
LOS ANGELES <AP> -While.
consumers jammed
supermarket checkout lines to
stock up on foodstuffs, stores
from San Luis Obispo lo San
Diego braced for a possible
walkout by 70,000 clerks that
could be less than two days
away.
"Al this moment, we are very,
very busy," said Marlene Crites.
a worker at a Lucky market in
Calver City. "I think people
beard the news about the strike
and they're out to stock up."
While stores in some cities re-
ported business as us ual.
managers of others said buying
was brisk.
"H the clerks vote to stnke,
we're expecting a lot more
customers," said Jim Willard,
night manager of an Albertson
market in Bakersfield. ''We've
a lready stocked up" lo meet the
increased demand.
However, he said, his store,
which normally operates 24
hours a day, will cut back to
nine hours in the event of a ·
strike.
Members of nine Southern
California locals of the Retail
Clerks Union voted Monday and
Tuesday on whethll"" to aeeellt
the stores' latest offer or
, authoriie a strike. Union leaders
recommended rejection of the
manaaemeot proposal, which
called for a $1.40-an·bour wage
bike over three years.
Results or the vote were lo be
<Sff FOOD, Page A%)
Hearing Slated
For Coast Man
On Theft Rap
A Huntington Beach man ac-
cused of receiving stolen proper-
ty in the theft of a safe contain-
ing $8,000 in cash races a pre-
liminary hearing in the Harbor
Judicial District Court Monday.
Richard "Rooster" Hopkins,
, 27, or 4216 8th St. was arrested by
. Newport Beach Detective Doug
Thomas in connection with the
safe theft from the Eastbluff
Cleaners last month.
Hopkins, who remained in
custody today at Orange County
J ail, bas been arrested twice in
connection with the case.
He was originally picked up on
Aug. 3 after an anonymous infor-
mant told police Hopkins had the
. missing sllfe.
He was released from county
jail five days later in a technical
• error. but was picked up the
same day when be returned lo
-___;;'----''-'--the--Ntow--~-n~ :--• . , ...-• a"" t"'' i tion to pick up the $L-46 taken
~ from him when be was bookeCI.
l Police re-arrested Hopkins US·
I ing a warrant they'd obtained i from Municipal Judge Donald
' Duogan when they were notified r of their suspect's release.
Bail on the court warrant is
Sl0,000.
I
t ~-----------------
t l'UCE ..4 PET L
f Wl18 PllDI' AD
"The response "was unreal.
The first one that called picked
her up. She 1ot a super home."
That's the advert.lsint suceess storf told by a Hunt1n1ton
Beach woman who placed tbls
ad in the Daib' Pilot:
\
German sbep. 8 mo. obed
. trod. Fem. Lovet ever. yone bul protective. xxx-xxxx
If you bave a pet you want to
place t.n a 1ood home, eall
H2·H71. A friendly Daily
Pilot ad·vllor •Ul help you
wor.. your ad for tbe areaa.t
Impact.
We make it eu)' for you to
put • rew words to work for
YOU. ln the Daily Pllot:
syatem are belnt •et up outalde.
Tbe 1paclou1 ebapel, Jar1e
enouab to accommod1te mo1t
ru.neral attvicet, wUJ bt filled
well beyond overflowln1, by pres.
ont tstlmalft. ·
"We've had manyt many
telephOM calla uklna aoout the
tiine arMM even 1ot quite a few
my•elf at home," aald u
mortuary spokesman.
Thompson. 17, an honor •tu-
dent and qlneer of the Barons•
1177 Sunset Lea1ue cbam·
plon1hlp season, waa killed in·
1tantly ln a rollover accident 40
mllea outside Blythe.
His teammal~. halfback Wlllle
Gltten•, 18, aho of Fountain
valley' swfered head injuries
•nd haa been transferred to a
hospital ln Phoenix, Ariz.. for
further observation.
GltteDJ was driving their
' Olllly ...... lc.ff .......
FOAMER PRESIDENT AND MAS. NIXON AT HOSPITAL
Trtda Cox Alao There to Greet Her New Niece
I
Daddy Eisenhower
Elated by Jennie
PROUD PAPA INTERVIEWED
D•vkl Eisenhower
North State
Gets 'Sliowers
BJ fte Aalodated Presa
A weak cold front 1UpJ)ed into
Northern C•lifornla, causing
light rain showers to fall over
the northern mountains, and
those clouds may not clear up to-
day ..
The National Weather Service
said today that tempenturet
will cool down throughout the
state, except for lhe deserta and
the central valley, wbJcb will re·
maln hot. Cloudt and fo1 will
bang over the coast, wlllle tbe
inlJnd ~an ex~ fair wellthel'.
The bilb temperaturet In
Northern Callfornla ran1ed
fiom 97 m StOC!laoft to 83 ln San
Francisco.
By ANNE COOPER
Of ... Olllly ...... SUit
An elated David Eisenhower
described the birth of Iris
daughter Tuesday as "just a
wonderfuJ experience."
The new father, flanked by the
baby's grandfather, former pres-
ident Richard Nixon, met with
reporters outside San Clemente
General Hospital where bis
daughter, Jennie, had been born
a few hou.rs earlier.
Eisenhower said he and his
wife, Julie Nixon Eisenhower,
prepared for the arrival of the
baby by attending childbirth
classes at the hospital. He as-
sisted in the delivery of the nine-
pound, four-ounce girl born at
1:32 p .m. Tuesday.
The natural childbirth de-
livery Jen. his wife "feeling fme.
really fine," Eisenhower com-
mented.
"I called the Nixons and my
mother and my grandmother all
within three minutes of the de-
livery." he said. "The Nixons
came right to the hospital, and
everybody is thrilled. just
thrllled.''
Nixon, who said he was
pleased that his first grandchild
is a girl, told reporters Tuesday
_evening aj:~Jsitj11g bis
ugbterTuato ~t-zl<n:wftfd.
to baby sitting .
The former president said be
won 't try to influence his grand-
daughter's career choice. "Jen-
nie will do whatever she wants
to do," be said. -
"She 4a the first child born in
the United States with relatives
on both sides who were presi-
dents.•• Jae said. "With that
heri~age, she may be attracted
to politics. But if she chooses a
music career or sometbinl else.
that will be fine too " _
.Jennie-Ei9enbower ,-u-well as----:-
being Nbon'• ar~4daui)lter. is
the areat.granddaugbter of
former president Dwight
Eisenhower.
Eisenhower said he and bis
wife a1reed to name their
daughter Jennie because it
sounds like Julie, but isn't
"Julie didn't want to have
another •Julie'," he aaid.
.. Besides •Jennie' c•n't be
shortened to a nickname "
Asked how be felt about bav-
inl bls lint chUd. Eilenhower
said, "It waa time -we're 30 "
Nixon tald hla daupter, who
will be retumlna home wttb Jen.
nle in three day1, "ii dolna
lfflt."
••1 wa amaaed," be 1aJd.
''SIM 1-1 u If ehe's been OUt.
• (Sft J&NNIE, Pase AJ>
•
sports car en route to pre·aeason
trainlna at Ari1ona State
University at Tempe, where
both had won Sun Devil football
scholarships
California Hipway Patrol bl·
vestlgators theome Gitt.ens, l'in
Large Schools Division Player of
the Year, fell asleep at the
wheel.
Rites honoring Thompson Fri·
day are expected to draw
claHmates and players from
rtval scboola.
"I tlUnk we can anticipate a
tremendous outpourin1 of friendship,.. says Fountain
Valley Diab Sebool Activities
Director BOb Ferguson.
Tbe funeral chapel ls on Bolsa
Avenue just west of Beach
Boulevard, and rites wlll be
follow\d by ilrtennenl at nearby
Westminster Memorial Park.
Thompeon, whose coaches say
be waa just beginning to blossom
as a terrific athlete and possible
professional football prospect.
came from a clOBe-knit famUy.
Re leaves bis parents, Robert
and Ann Thompson; a sister
Cheri, paternal 1r)lndparents
George and Kate ThQmpson, of
Arcadia, 4lnd maternal
arandparents, Reuben and Min-
aJe Brewn, of La Canada.
Teacher Issue Boils
DiAtrict Chief Stands By Charges
Foun~ Valley School Dis·
tricl Deputy Superintendent
Glenn Hardy aald today be will
stand by statements be made in
June that teacher 1roup leaders
now claim are criminal viola·
tions.
Fountain Valley Education As-
sociation teachers Tuesday flied
criminal charges against Hardy
and the school board for .. verbal
abuse and perjury,. for his re-
marks stemmina from a May 31
to June l teacher protest 1n the
school district headquarters.
The teachers were protesting
FVColonia .
{»ark Fee
Plan Backed •
By RAYMOND ESTRADA JR.
Ol .. DelW ...........
Fountain Valley City Council
members gave initial approval
Tuesday. to a plan to charge
Colonia Juarez area property
owners $550 In park site fees.
Calllna the move a com· promise, eol.Uldl members wt.ed
3 to 1 to lower the fees from the
originally proposed $1,000. The
plan ls expeded to come up for a
final vote Sept. $..
The fees would be collected·
from the owners of 76 lots when
the owners decide to split tbeir
SO by 300-foot properties and
build on the newly formed sub-
d.i visions.
But ttiree Colonia property
owners insisted the council
should drop the park fee en·
tirely.
Colonia community 1roup
leader Patricia Bitters of 172"9
Ward St. told the council the fees
are "terribly wrong."
Colonie property owner David
Hernandez, now a Santa Ana
resident, said the fees are "a darn
shame" and "take advantage of
the people."
Aurelia Luna, of 10«2 Avenida
Cinco de Mayo who has lived in
the Colonia since 1932, asked the
council to drop the fees.
.. I don't think it's fair for you
to charge us these fees because
our taxes are so high," she told
the council.
Councilman Bernie Svalstad
said the fees would, in effect,
pay for the land the city bought
eight years ago lo provide the
Colonia with a neighborhood
park at a cost of $U,143.
layoff of 98 instructors and a
wave of program cutbacks.
Teacher leader Yale Wtsbnick
filed the verbal abuse charges
with .Fount8in Valley Police
Department officials who sent
tbe complaint to the Orange
County District Attorney.
Wlsbnick made the charges
under Section 44812 of the
California Education Code that
says verbal abuse of a teacher is
a misdemeanor.
Teachers also charged Hardy
with perjury in connection with
his statements about the two-
UD REQUIRES
MORE 'STUDY'
SAN DIEGO <AP> -The
Child Guidance Clinic plans a
little more counseling for a lO-
year-0ld boy treated brieOy for being ak.lept.omanic.
While be was under study this
week, police say, the young.Bter.
swiped $300 from the counselor'a
desk.
N~wport Cop
Traine,e Dies
After Crash
Newport Beach Police Depart.
ment trainee Gordon Roberts,
27. died Tuesday afternoon at
Fountain Valley Community
Hospital of injuries suffered in a
motorcycle accident Monday.
The Navy veteran, just a
month short of graduation from
the Los Angeles Police Depart-
ment Academy, sustained muhi·
ple injuries when his personal
motorcycle rammed a parked
car.
Investigators said he was not
wearing a protective helmet
when be collided with the vehi·
cle on Daisy Avenue. not far
from the neighborhood where he
lived.
Spokesmen at Pacific View
Memorial Park in Corona del
Mar said today funeral services
are tentatively set for 10 a.m.
Friday in their chapel.
Roberts was leaving a
bachelor party for his best
friend, Newport Beach Police
Officer Tom Little, when the ac·
cident occurred. •
The victim leaves his wife.
who is expecting their second
child, and a 5.year-0ld daughter.
0
But Mrs. Bitters said the
Colonia Park "is a farce." The
park, al the comer of Calles In·
dependencia and Zaragoza, ls •
about .one square acre In size President Named
and includes a city water well s A N T o D o M I N a. o ang0~~~7~a::'if~iai~bh ~AP> '
Svalstad said the fees are Bolstered by U.S. backing, land·
cessary to be "fair" to other owner-b.usinessman Antonio ne d bo Guzman becomes president of Fo.untain Valley resi ents "' the Domlnlcan Republlc today in pa1.dthemthroughde~eloperco:s· the island country's Ural
ts mclud~ in the pnce of their peacefUI transfer of power to an
<See PARK FEE. Pate .\I> opposition party.
A South LalUJla man witb an
aching heart stood by tbe
roadside tn HunUngton Beach
Tuesday night and watched his
90 percent-restored 1958
Mercedes-Benz luxury sedan
burn.
The clanlc auto. today a
charred shell, was valued at up
to $2().000 due to the restoration
Thomas, riding as a
p11senger, and bis unidentified
companion swerved to a bait
and balled out as flames erupted
into tbe car's interior.
·•A couple of JUY• •topped and
tried to put it out with nre ex·
tingulabera, but it was' too late,"
aald Jntpectof Glenn. •
investment. accordln1 to Re added tbat while the
Geor1e 1bomu of t Tr uure Bushard Strfft Fire Station ls
laland. not too far d.lltant.-the car ft.re
Flre Department IHpector oeeurred tn an area where no
Gary Qledn sald 1 friend wu telephonel are clon by to swn·
teat·drlvln1 the luxury Hdll(l mon emeraeney ald.
southbound on Btookhurtt Street' Flamea bad enaulfed the
near Paciflc Coa1t ffl1bway claatlc four-door sedan wt>,en
about t :IO p .m . wllta fire ftiernen,..,.. able to reac)) the
erupted. . ..... -oene.
_ ..
night protest in the district of.
flees .
Hardy said the protest was
"disruptive and destructive."
Teachers have denied any
wronedolng.
School board President Pro
Tem Betty Mignanelli also said
she stands by the trustees• ac·
lions but declined to comment
further until she bas a chance to
examine the charges.
A spokesman for the District
Attorney's Offic~ said tbe
teaehers ch81'ges have not been
received.
Thousands
In Homage
To Elvis
MEMPHIS. Tenn. fAP>
Fair skies, long lines and a six·
foot-tall flower-covered angel
greeted the Elvis Presley
faithful today as they came to
pay homage to the king of rock
'n' roll on the first anniversary ot • bladeatb. -
Dlck Grob. chief of security
for the 13~·acre estate, said
more than 150 people spent the
nllht on the GracelaDd arouods
gaUlered tn a buddle1ult bebtod
its wrought iron gates.
Several thousand were on
band wben the gates opened at
8:25 a.m. At least 12,000 were ex-
pected lo file by the graves ol
Presley and bis mother before
the gates closed this afternoon.
Scores of ftower arrangements
lined the winding quarter-mile
driveway lo Graceland Mansion
and more were crowded into the
graveyard garden to the south.
Among the arrangements was
the angel -a Styrofoam form
covered with white cbrysan·
lhemums, its hands and wings
painted gold.
"A young woman from On·
tario, Canada. Barbara
McClean, came in and ordered
the angel," said MaChrie Cox,
an employee of Burke's
Flowers, which for years
handled flower arrangements
ror Presley's mother's grave.
Manager Aneta Watkins said
she bad been averaging 100 or-
ders a week for such designs as
guitars, broken hearts, crowns,
crosses and the emblem TCB -
Taking Care of Business,
Presley's motto.
Mrs. Cox said she bad also re-
ceived an order for a red rose
arrangement from Priscilla,
Elvis' former wife,· and their
daughter, lJsa Marie.
Also awaiting the fans in the
00-degree beat was a row of air
conditioned souvenir shops and '"1VilJ --.
Coast
Weather
Low cloudiness night
and momina houn wftb · 1
mostly sunny after~oon
Thursday. Lows tonjpt 60 too. -
72 at beaches a:nd.18 -to 8'
lDland.
INSIDE TOD4' W
11'1 M April Fool -AnQelt
announc• pion• /or on11
plo110/I and World S•riei gom,.. Sto111, Paoe Bl.
• •••
•
r
• ,41 DAILY PILOT MIF
Schmitz, Cordova Open CaDipaign
Under Oath
One Embrace• Ja"'is; .Other Shuns Government
87 GASY GMNVILL& .............
84.ate Senate candidates John
Scbmlta Md Ron Cordova bctan
1 Mries ol campalp deb&*
TuHday wltb Republican ~bmitt cl1nl1J\I evtt ao tllhtl.Y
to Howard Jarvia.
Si muluneoualy, ()eoi<>crMt
Cordova wu pulUnl dlllance
brl•HD blrmelf and Gov. Ed·
uuand G. 8rown Jr.
Cordo\la aald be wm watt to
Rt' "wbl<'h Jeny Brown" ls run
nin1 acalnst Evell• Youncer
t>.:fore decldina wbo be will volt•
rur ln t.be l(ubematorial ruce.
~hmtt.& made it cl ar he w u
Howard Jarvis mall\.
Six timm du.rtn& the 50·mlnu.t~ dt>batl' tw mf'ntioned lhul h.-car-
rtt.•ts th~ Jurvus cndonwment into
his battle wtth <.;ordova for lbe '4tat~ Senatt! snt bein& vacated
b)' Newpcrt Beach Republican
Denni• Cnrpenur.
And even lhou&h the Ja.rvb
debate wu 1 llUed by the voters
June 6 when they approved
PropoettJon U. Scbmlts lnailted
lt la "the" Issue ln bb Novembei'
eaectlon controntatlon with
Cordova
The Cordova-Schmitz verbal
duel at the A1rporter Inn ln
Newport Beach attracted mori\
than 100 people who paid S8 a
lunch to aee and bear the two •
candidates.
As ex~. t.be exchanges by
the two men while a_nswering
queattOM put lo them by a panel
of newsmen wett crisp and ft"e.
quenlly pointed.
U Cordova was on the de-
lenslv~ WMn speak:inc or bis op.
position to Proposition 13, so was
Schmitz as he defended bis
membership in the John Birth
Society and bis bolt . from the
Republican Party in 1972.
Scbm1h called the society "a
very fine palrlotlc oraaniza-
lion."
And he split haln when be
aald he was still a member of
the Republican Party in 1972 •
when he accepted the American
lndepeode~nt Party's preslden-tlal nominat.I .
Schmitz s d he dldn 't cbanae
party atn lion until after his
AIP presi nUal nomination. In a paraphrase of the well-
known SchmitJ' remark about
the first Nixon trip to Com-
mun ts t China. Corodova
quipped. "I'm informed by my
Republican friends they took no
exception lo John Schmitz leav-
ing the Republican Party, only
to his return." But Scbmiu pointed to his en-
dorsement "'by all Republican
groups" and county GOP
leaders to prove h e hti1s
"mended fences" with the
party.
Cordova wouldn't let up on h1a
attack on Schmitz' p0lltlca1
travels. however.
The Democratic assemlttyman
said that, ~nlike his foe. his
political epitaph will not read.
"Have campaign, will travel."
Schmitz retaliated to lbe
barbs by reeountlng bis 2'h-year
record as a congressman and
5'h years as a state senator.
Included in the r~rd cited by
him was support of efforts bl Jarvis lo reform the stale s
property tax laws. efforts t.bat
date backtolbemid·l960s.
Schmitz also said be is prob-
ably the only congressman
ever sent to Washington who
saved the taxpayers more
money that be cost.
Cordova called such claims
"war stories" and said be could
tell some of bis own. He did.
In substance, there was more
agreement than diSagreeQ\ent
between the two candidates.
CMlty ~ Sttlft ......
'WHICH JERRY BROWN?'
Democrat Cordova
'
'Didn't Kill .King,'
Ray Says at Probe
Both, for example, said they
will work to strengthen local
government and against cen-
tral~ation ln Sacramento.
Both candidates also decried
expanded government spending
and "growth of govemm"!nl."
Both said they support extend·
.. ing capital punishment to cover
more crimes.
Parents'
Fight Ends
In Deatlls
LA GRANGE HIGHLANDS.
WASHINGTON CAPl
James Earl Ray took the wit-
ness stand before Consress to-
day and s'W'Ore, as expeeted, that
"I did not shoot Dr. Martin
Luther King." ·
Ray. in his first public ac·
counting under oath of the
events surrounding the April 4.
1968. murder of the civil rights
leader, told the House assassina-
tions committee: "My testimony
1s the same that I would have
given to a Memphis trial court if
I had hadlhatopportunity."
The SO-year-old Ray, accom·
panaed by a phalanx of U.S
marshals. was brought mto the
committee's chamber under
severe security provisions. Spec·
t:.itors. including photographers.
were cautioned they would be
l'xpelled if they so much as stood
while Ray, wearing an ill-fitting
sport coat and gray lie, entered
the room.
After his attorney, long-time
assassinations buff and writer
Mark Lane. engaged acting
-chairman Richardson Preyer in
fi',.._PageAJ
FOOD .•.
known this afternoon. a nd a
strike could begin anytime after
12:01 Saturday, 48 hours after
the clerks' contract expires.
Bob Voight of the Food
Employers Council said store of-
ficials were not optimistic about
avoiding a walkout
·'The unions are tt1reatemng to
strike, and we believe them," he
said . The 15 chains involved are
Albertsons, Al~a Beta, Arden· Mayfair . B s, Certified
Grocers, Hug s, A. M. Lewis.
Lucky Stores. Market Basket.
Ralphs. Safeway, Smiths Food
King, Stater Bros .. Thriftimart
and Vons
For severa l weeks. the
m arkets have had signs in their
windows advertising for clerks,
with no experience necessary.
By Tuesday, said Voigt.
"between 15.000.and 20.000"
persons had agreed to take jobs
as soon as a strike begins. and
!lome stores already were train-
ing them.
Effectiveness of the strike will
be depend on whether Teamster
warehousemen and drivers con·
tinue lo make deliveries from
supply centers to the markets,
or whether they honor c:lerks'
]»eket-ttnes. ---In Northern California, where
the Teamsters are engaged in a
strike-lockout with four market
chains Safeway, Lucky, Alpha
Beta and Ralphs -clerks have
not uniformly honored Teamster
picket lines.
H/I'
DAILY PILOT
battle over Ray's treatment by
f~deral authorities, Ray
launched into a long and ram-
bling preliminary statement, bis
voice quick but halting.
Ray pleaded guilty in 1969 to
King's killing· but almost im-
mediately recanted that con-
fession aflevreceiving a 99-year
sentence in a Tennessee state
prison. "In respect to my guilty
plea." he said, "It is not a dif-
ficult matter Cor an attorney to
move bis client to a guilty plea. rm sure every member of this
committee knows this."
Ray's attorney at the time of
his sentencing was Percy
Foreman, a nationally known
trial lawyer. IN!tY ..............
41,114 FANS AT ANAHEIM STADIUM GET THE MESSAGE
A Salute From Old Friend Gene Autry on the Big Day
Disagreement came on the so-
called Briggs initiative, probibit-
i n g homosexuals from
leacblng in public schools.
Schmitz said be supports the
measure. Cordova said be does
not. And while Cordova said be is
not certain bow be will vote in
the gubernatorial race, Schmitz
emphasized that be is an Evelle
Younger supporter.
When it came time for them to
ask each other one question.
Cordova asked Schmitz what he
had done as a state legislator lo
advance the cause or property
tax reform. Schmitz pointed lo bis support
of Jarvis in the 1960's and a
plaque be received in 1967 fror_n
United Taxpayers, the Jai:v1s
support organization.
Ill. <APl -A newly divorced
couple apparently engaged in a
final fight that left blood spat·
ter ed from room lo room in their
home and ended in murder and
suicide, police said.
An officer. ca lied to in-
vestigate late Tuesday. said he
looked into the front window of
the home belonging to William
and Suzanne Donl\elly. and saw
their 4-year-old daughter. Bran-
die. "standing in the blood in the
living room trying to wake her
mother ..
Mrs. Donnelly . 28. had been
stabbed 11 times in the ab·
domen. five times in the throat
and once in the chest. A kitchen
knife and three table forks were
round pext to the body. police
said. Then Ray turned to what ap·
parently will be the underlying
theme of his claim to innocence:
that be was a mere pawn in
what he thought was a gun-
running scheme by a mystery
man named "Raoul" and may
have been set up. moreover, by
undercover operations of the
FBI. The story ls one which Ray
has long aired vil prison in-
terviews.
life Support fi',....PageAJ
JENNIE ••.
In turn, Schmitz asked
Cordova to show his "conversion
to conservatism to be other than
political" -'
Donnelly, 33, was found in an
adjacent garage. his head
placed under the exhaust pipe of
u car with the engine still run-
ning. Police said he had cuts on
his wrists and had apparently
tried to slash them.
Ray told the committee about
breaking out of Missouri state
Prison in 1967 and traveling in
zig-zag fashion to St. Louis, the
Chicago area, Indianapolis and
ultimately to Canada. where he spent one night with a prostitute
and robbed her pimp the next
day -then met "Raoul" by
chance on the Montreal docks.
To Remain for
Comatose Boy for a swim ln the cold Pacific.
She's come through in fine
style."
The baby. described as having
dark hair and eyes, may look
like a Nixon or may look like an
Eisenhower. the former presi-
dent said, adding that perhaps
the two families bear a certatn
resemblance.
Cordova said his record as a
deputy district attorney who
never lost a felony tase shows
him to be something far less
than liberal. Besides, Cordova said, his rec-
ord as a legislator, not J)Olitical
rhetoric. should serve as the ex-
ample of bis conservat~m ..
Authorities said every room in
the suburban home west of
Chicago was covered with blood
and that a partial barricade of
furniture had been put up in the
hallway. They speculated that
the couple fought each other
throughout the dwelling. The
daughter was unharmed.
In return for money and a
never-fuliilled promise of travel
documents. Ray said he carried
items across the Canadian and
Mexica n borde rs for t he
Spanish-accented "Raoul," who
had mysterious telephone num-
bers in New Orleans and no last
name Ray could remember.
After smuggling the items,
which Ray did not specifically
identify, be said he went to Los
Angeles. took a bartending
course, tried unsuccessfully to
go to work for the Internal
Revenue Service, traveled to
New Orleans lo agree to the gun-
running scheme with the
mystery man -and ultimately
returned lo Los Angeles.
"I was taking a lock-picking
-rather a locksmith course at
this time." Ray told the commit·
tee. At another point, he said : "I
robbed the -I was robbed or a
watch." He told of trying lo contact a
giFl-who advertised herself in an
-lilf'cfi!rgrottnd LOF Alf~gc;
newspaper "as a nympho-
sometbing." Apologetically, Ray
added, "Of course. I bad been ln
jail for about six years."
DEDHAM, Mass. CAP) -A
judge ruled today that a coma-
tose 12-year-old boy must re-
main connected to life-support
equipment despite a petition
from his rather lo unplug him.
Norfolk County Probate Court
Judge Jere miah Sullivan
claimed that evidence ~was not
conclusive that the brain of
Louis Stone was dead. He had
been in a coma since July 2
when struck in the heart by a BB
accidentally shot by his father.
The boy is at Goddard Memorial
Hospital in Stoughton.
The father , Nevilie Stone, 49,
said Monday be wanted the boy
removed from devices keeping
him breathing. He switched
from testimony July 26 in which
he pleaded with the judge to
keep the boy on a respirator.
··A vegetable," Stone said. ''I
can't live with seeing him like
that."
Myra Stone, Louis' mother.
had said she wanted her son to
remain on the equipment
"All babies are beautiful," he
said. "but I must say girl babies
are special."
The new father arrived for his
evening visit driving his own car
to a rear entrance of the
hospital. where a spokesman
said Mrs. Eisenhower is in a
private room in the maternity
ward.
Whil e n e wspaper and
t elevision reporters quizzed
Eisenhower at the rear door, the
Nixons and their elder daughter.
Tricia Cox, were driven to the
hospital's m ain entrance by
Secret Service agents.
Forty minutes later the
former president emerged from
Meanwhile, David tsergland.
who hopes to make the No-
vember ballot as the Libertarian
Party candidate in the 36th.
waited m a hallway.
Bergland said he was miffed
because the debate sponsor, the
Building Industry Association.
didn't invite him.
Association spokes~an Jim
Beam said Bergland would have
been invited were be a bona fide
candidate.
Bergland insisted he will be
when Libertarian workers col-
lect the signatures needed lo add
his name lo the ballot.
his visit. accompanied by his
wife and Mrs. Cox. and paused Cable Car a t the hospital entrance lo
answer reporters' questions.
The former president looked Theft Probed tanned and vigorous and very
ha.~~~in.J.? a grandfather may be SA~ FRANCISCC? <AP) -A Car Snaps Power even greater than being a distri_ct attorney s tear_n of
f th r .. he said "Your ex· investigators has been assigned
GARDENA CAP> -About ~ri:n~e wtth your. own children to determine if c.able car
2,000 customers were without P ·mmedlate that perhaps conductors are pocketmg fares.
power.. early tQda~ in a t~o-is sl 1 k tM neees&&l")'·•li.&~ _.l'b..e.ioyestigatio~y the same ~~-spokesma&:=""YQtt' ac ~lb _ ~~era=w.no:pro~
for the Southern California to 1 eita~~~ep to the fullest exe: city's parking meter scandal, Edison Co. said. It was ap· re a ,,0 was prompted by the release
parently caused by a car ram· tent. . d f Tuesday of a critical report on l till\ pole . Say mg he has le.arne rom the accounting practices of the m ng au Y • his relationship with his two Municipal Railway.
dauihters "never to indicate The audit prepared by the
F..-. PllflC! A I
PARK FEE •.
hOmes.
Mayor Pro Tern Roger Stan-
ton. who ca.st the only dissenting
vote. said the fees should not be
reduced . "This sets a dangerous prece-
dt•nt." said Stanton who felt the
Co lonia property owners should
pay the full $1,000 fee.
Co lonia property owners
argued that their neighborhood
ls not like the numerous housing
tracts built by large developers
in Fountain Valley. The Colorua. located between
Warner and Slater avenues just
west of Ward Street. is lbe only
Fountain Valley residential area
that has not prt!viously been
charged park fees.
The lot-splitting fees became
an issue when the city unveU&d
plans to build three new cul-de-
sac streets where dirt alley!' now
exist in the Colonia. Federal
funds are to be used for the
project.
Colonia leader Mrs. Bitters
said...she..iumsure if mor.e...reai-
dent& will ngh\-th& '6fiO-feeF
Mary Ruvalcava, 72, who has
lived in the Colonla since il
formed 55 years ago, simply
said, "Well, S550 is better than
Sl.000. ''
To f69.5 MilHon
what my choice is" when ~ey flTm of Del~itte, Haskins and
have decisions to make, Nixon Sells ror the Public Utilities
said allowing children to make Commission. offered no
Gary Davis, city parks direc-
tor. said the $41.800 lo be collect-
ed from the Colonla fees will be
ubsorbed into the city's general
park fund.
District Cuts 9.2o/o
~ College Budget
t;oast Community College Dis-
trlcl officials reported today
that a tcQl of $i .2 million ha8
been shaved from lbe di.alrlct's
1978-79 budget, wblcb wlll now
total about 169.5 million.
That rwresents a cut of 9.2
percent from last year's $76.5
mitHon budget, a dis trict
spokesman said.
Correllan Thompson, the dis·
tzlct.'a buelnesa affairs vice
chancellor. aald cult have been
made by reducln1 ataff, rcplac-
lhi less equipment and suppH ,
and cuttina contract 1er.tca,
maintenance and operaUons ana
capital outlay. Jn addition, altbou1b b._lt
education tulUon remalnl treo,
Thompson 111d ta~en lriU
no lon1 r underwrite free lee·
luJ'ea, semlnan. concort.s. ~nter-
tainment, athletic programs and
non·academic courses lo the
tune of SL3 mllllon per year
Instead, admissions fees will
now be charged for aucb events.
In additlon, District Chan·
cellor Norman E. Watson has
formed a fund·ralsing commit-
tee to investigate alternative
•ources of tncomo. Trusteea are
currently discussing a fee
schedule for public uae of d.ia~
trict facllltl .
Some apeclflc coet reductions
have lnch.lded 1eavlnt personnel
vacancies unfilled, cuttlnl con·
ference and membenhtp llJtPen·
dlturea, Ndoctq the number of
hourly e111ploy~ and c.bU'lllll
more for tranaportaUon.
The budag ls expected to be
given nn11 approval Sept. 7.
up their own minds may be estimate or how much money, if
more important. these days ror any. was being Jost.
girls than for boys.
"Julie is an Independent
thinker, and so is Tricia," be ~
said of his-4auehters, adding
that he eJC1>ects his grand-
daughter to be independent as
well.
"I'm not aolng lo try to ln·
fluence her." be said.
Then. appeartn~ to have bad
an afterthought, he laughed and
said, "But she is 1oln1 to ht! an
Anaets fan."
Nine S11mmoned
WASHINGTON <APl -The
JuaUce Department ls seeking to
extndite from En1land two of
the 11 members of O>e Church of
Scientology wbo hne been
cbaried with breakln~ Into iov·
ernmenl o<ncea. planlina tiu1· atns devtces and atulln1 omclal document.a. 'rbe other nine have
been tss~ summonses to •P·
peal' before • fcder•l maclltrate
here on Thunday ror a ball
hurln&.
Fido's Eat?
There's a Spa<Jin Hil Fwure
MUNDELEIN. tll. <A P ) -Bernie Brown SCA)'S.
"Send me your do& for 10 days and I'll make .. new
man of him." . Brown is opening a fat farm ror Fl~o m Sep.
tember. a $500.000 facility northwest of Chicago to be
named The Countryside Animal Spa .
He says there will be a ··complete health re-
vltalhation program" wh\rlpooJ. b:.iths .
therapeutic massages. oil blltbs .. deep hcMt treut·
menU5 with sun lamps. strict wetgbt ·control diet~.
coat cond1tioning. . The spa also wm offer boarding f actlit1es,
spacioU! suites In decorator colors The pet wdl
sleep on a heated fiberglass resting bench tbul pull$
from the wall. 1oln& sleepy bye to aoothinl FM
music that Will be piped in
Tbe cost pu do& for all this lu itury bas not been an·
nounced.
I
17
CALIFORNIA
Teaeher Mea 11re QUEENIE
Gays Launch
Protest Move
SACRAM!:NTO <A P l Supportt'n or "uy
r1a bb 1ncludma ~omt· prom1nt'nt llbt'r11 I Politi
l'1ans. have opened the campo1an •&•inst an 11nll
homosuu 1 te1tcht!r m«.-UW'e on lht' November
h llot by ck'nounclna 1t •• a lbttat lo cMI n1b\.ll
Tht' tnltiatt~. Propos1Uon 6 ~ponsor~ by Sf.ft
J obn Briga,, R "'u.Jlerton, '' aimed at flrtnc
homosexu·;l tuchcn, thou&h opponenta H )' It l<>H
murh fUl"thf>r
.\1T\O<S ON ROJllOSUUAI.. TEACH£1t.8
"could be' extt•ndt'\! to otht-r mlnontl~. wbt>lht>r 1c•
..... 1 om.-ntullon 0 11 poUt.lral vie~." und thrt.'•vn to
revlvt' the MrC:lrthy era ott.M l950s, A~rnblym•""
M"'Jorlty Leudcr Howard Bttmu.n. 0 B<'vet"ly Hiiis.
said ut .i r.ilb Tuesday
"This ht•1nou!. und outra1eou& lnUlallve
threaten~ lht• ' ... ry a.truclu.re of due proce&A\,"
Bt'rmdn told about 200 ~rsons out.side the Capttol.
He sa uJ ht.> would tdl has collet•gut>S thal lM cam·
P•llKft L' "wur1h taking a little bit or risk on."
Abo bPl'••kang al tht.> rally were guy activlSl
Fr.ink Vcl. who 1s wuUong the length of Callfomla
tu drum up ~upporl for the campaign; As-
!.t•mblyman Art Agnos, D-San Francisco. Sen
Al <rn S1eroty, O·Los Angeles, and Sacramento
~t ayor Phil l~enbt!rg.
"I 'm loolung for a.ome light summer reading. You know.
an .iuthor who hasn't served lime, or a biography by
som~ "ho h&an't 1061 all hts friends."
Quake Area
GOV. EDMUND BROWN JR. OPPOSES tht:
in1ttat1V, but was not present
It w)ls the first Capitol demonstration related
to Proposition 6. which is like ly to be one or the
mo~t emotional issues on the Nov. 7 ballot.
State Aid Granted
Under the measure. school boards could fire.
or reruse to ture. any teachers. administrators or
counselors ror publicly engagmg in or advocating
homosexual conduct.
SANTA BARBARA CAP> -Gov. Edmund G .
BRIGGS SAYS THE MEASURE WILL let
schools dismiss teachers who would l)(' poor role
models. Opponents say that cw-rent laws requiring
dismissal for sexual m1scondtlct with children are
adequate. They also say the initiative could be ap-
Brown Jr. has declared a state of emergency in
Santa Barbara County, where damage estimates
from .last weekend's earthquake have climbed to
more than $12 million.
plied lo derenders or gay rights ,;
Brown, acting on a request for slate aid from
the Santa Barbara County Board of Supervisors.
said Tuesday that •·conditions of extreme peril"
existed in the area. The count.y declared a local
disaster area Monda v.
'Rank Speealatio•'
Goverllnwnt Disputes
Hearst Conflict Charge~~ ..............
SAN FRANCISCO <AP > -Calling
her allegations "rank speculation, ..
the federal government is disputing
Patricia Hearst's assertion that her
former lawyer railed to provide ade-
quate counsel at her 1976 bank rob·
bery trial because he contracted to
write a book about the case.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Ed Davis
Jr. made the statement in a response
filed to Miss Hearst's earlier request
to examine F . Lee Bailey's deal with
the G.P. Putnam Co., a New York
publishing house. ~
In that request, Miss Hearst, 24,
charged that Bailey's $225,000 con-
tract for a book about her actions
during her captivity by the terrorist
Symb1onesP Liberation Army con·
slituted grounds to set aside or reduce
her seven-year prison. sentence.
Child Porno
Suspect Claims
Life Threatened
LOS ANGELES !AP> -A man
charged in connection with an in·
ternational child pornography and
prostitution nng says he broke his
wrist in a jail incident involving un·
identified persons who tried to kill
him
"They tried to kill me." Charles
Jam es Hughes of La Puente said
Tuesday as he left. a brief Superior
Court bail hearing.
( SI'ATE )
Spill E.¥a•l•ed
IMPERIAL BEACH <AP> -Coast
Guard officials planned today to con·
duct a surface examination of a balf·
mile wide oil s pill that washed
ashore near the city pier.
Lt. Douglas Martin said a Coast
Guard helicopter crew checked the
spill after it washed ashore arolDld
dusk Tuesday and that tbe oil formed
a circle extending about a quarter of
a mile off the shore.
4,500 An-es C'1Mtrred
TWENTYNINE PALMS <AP>
More than 500 firefighters trying to
contain a massive brush fire in the
Jos hua Tree National Monument
hoped for abatement today of the er-
r atic desert winds that propelled
flames through twisting canyons.
By Tuesday evening the fire had
swept through some 4,500 acres in the
park 20 miles northeast of Palm
Springs and was spreading rapidly,
the state forestry department rewrt-
ed . Theblazeremained60percentcon-
tained, asithad~nfor a day.
SACRAMENTO CAP> -A person
who commits rape while carrying out
any unrelated felony could get an ex-
tra three years In prison. under a bill
on the Senate floor.
The bill. AB 2802 bJ Assemblyman
Eugene Gualco, D·Sacramento, waa
approved Tuesday on a 5-1 vote of the
Senate Judldary Committee.
HUGHES, 3$. apparently blamed
his injury on other inmates. Bul his
attorney, Howard Beckler, said his
client accidentally broke lhe wrist
when auempting ~ throw back a
broom hurled by another inmate. €°'11 rs .. ••I &Bled
' BJ Dane 0.
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SACRAMENTO (AP I -A
legislative drive to put a governmen\
s pending limit on the November
ballot could depend on a volt' toni&hl
in the state Senate.
The fate or the limit, a consUtu
t ional amendment by Sen. John
GarjJmendi. D·Mokelumne Hill. was
left hanging Tuesday when a con-
ference committee a bruptly ad·
journcd without finishing work on the
measure .
That meant the amendment failed
to meet a Tuesday midnight deadline ·
for the November ballot. The
deadline can be extended, bul only 1f
the Senate approves a bill that it reject·
~dMonday.
BEFORE ADJOURNING. the
Democratic-dominated. two-house
commtttee t entatively approved a
limit formula similar to one proposed
by Republican G<>v . Ronald Ret.1gan
and rejected by voters in 1973.
The Reagan limit was s ubstituted
ror a more liberal formula tentative-
ly adopted Monday night but then
abandoned by the committee Tues·
day.
The bill extending the ballot
deadline, 582243 by Sen. Alan Sieroty.
D-Los Angeles, gives lawmakers until
Friday to put constitutional amend-
ments before voters in November.
IT FELL EIGHT VOTES short of
passage Monday. but Sieroty was
given permission to bring it up again.
That could happen tonight, when the
Senate is scheduled to meet.
Riding on the bill is the rate of a
numbef' of eoosti~l.HiQ~ .-imeoo. -
~.Auguat 16. 1978
ments. ancludlng one by Assembly •
Spec.ker Leo McCarthy abolishing •
homeowner prope rly tlixes a nd •
boosting renter income tax credits. If •
Sieroly's bill fails to pass. the •
<.1 mendments couldn't go on the ballot
unttl June 1980.
'oAJL'f Pit.OT ,45
Gar a mendi blamed the delay in ac· •
lion on hts measure on an attempt by : HERB R •
McCarthy. D·San Francisco. to put • FRIEDLASDF. •
more pressure on the Senate to ex-• IS ~AKISG •
tend the deadline. • • GREAT DEALS •
G:\R:\MENDI ADJOURNED the ! FREE :
committee Tuesday afternoon aft.er • 50 . •
Assembly Democratic conferees said • GALS •
they could not take a final vote on~ • Ot' GAS •
amendment until they met with their .... , ........... , ..... ..i ............... ..,
colleagues. •'or 011. ('llA~ca:s • Approval by the committee would '• •• _. • ..-..,,u.1.-,,_ •
send the a mendment to both houses • ......... .,.._,_,,., •
for final action. • e HONDA e ~
In a biuirre move befor.e ~ay's : t.J1 nn 111==:• -.m1 •
a dJournment . a version of the •* * * * * * • * * * * ••
Reagan hm1t was proposed by As-,.. MG TRIUMPH •
sembtyman Willie Brown. a liberal • · • •
San Francisco Democrat who • e JAGUAR e •
originally opposed the Reagan pro-• FIAT·LANCIA !
posal. • m .. ••111o1 .. H••·• ...
UT nu •nt--.,n •
IT WOULD LIMIT STATE ··and ·:-* * * * * * * * * * *! local spending to a percentage of • e TOYOTA • .,
l . Th fi 1•11···-G-·•·• state persona mcome. at 1gure, • , • .,-...... ~ '° .. •
currently just over 8 percent. would • * • • * • * * * * * * ~
drop by one.tenth or I percent each • MOTORH0'.\1 F. tr
year until it reached 7 percent. • 1 , , • • S •
The Legislature then could allow • SALf$ .& ~~·~'!Al. •
the limit to remain at that level. it Rf.:.SI-._!!\ ~·:\OW •
According to figures from the • 5:), · 77" f.xl. 500 ..
legis lative analyst. s tate expen· it******• * * * * *-..,.
diturcs could grow to $21,503 billion • • LEASING • •
in 1982-83 under the limit That's $951, • -'••-....,...,...•o.--1r • . . . . ., ... "._ .__ .... ,,,__ malhon less than the state as proJect-537.7m t:xl. 600 • ~~d. -............. ..
Judge Paul,G-.Breckenridge re-SACRAMENTO <AP> -A
-duced Hughes bail .fmm_UX>.000 to -tegjslative-committee has lrilttd
........... _,rl""91Y ..... ..... .., ........ ......, ...... :,:.c::....,~r.-=-.= Offer good at all Carl's Jr. locations through August Xl. 1978.
Ulk•~e..wttu•""' I" •• ......_..... 1 ... • thi•~••Y•wr J:QSTA'MES&: 27,f:"l?tlt_._Sm z AM :::'i__,_ "9'K..,. ::::':.' I THO WlfM. fbttllN ' :#"' ~ .::t ::..,"".:-!.:..= DAHA POIKT: 34312 hdftc C.... Hwy 1st Ott ~·
...,....... 1a.-uw. llVIME: 't 1012 ~Dr. 1st Mkhata•J
7t07Wul d 'Ir A.., I 17'71 MmcArtlllr lhd. lat MalllJ I
Weal I hr SANTAANA: 2092 S.1. ..... lst.aJ
lf3-I JSI • _ HIWPOU llACH: l ~=~ ~-=.. ~ rJ'1Z: SU lbtliie got "'8tel,. • .. ......................... ..
-s40.000 and o~ Hug~r f>laCi TegOOaU>f'"s ]froposa' lo urge d efendants m the o .. se sepa.rated Califomjans not to buy gold South
from the general prison population. African Krugerrand coins.
Hughes and another defendant, The ·m~asure, ACR 99 by As-
Joseph Francis Henry, 43. were or-semblywoman Teresa Hughes. D-Los
d cred to return to court Sept. 6 for a Angeles, failed Tuesday to get past
pretrial conrerence. Henry, an the Senate Rules Committee, despite
amateur photographer from New earlier passaee by the ASsembly with
York City, remained in custody in Utlle dissent.
lieu of $300,000 bail.
FROM Fash ion Island
Newport Beach STEREO SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR
-.,.. .. ,.._,. .......
,
.,
'
.48 B /P
O•anoeCoastOaolyPo101 Editorial P~e ........................................................ W~. Aug Ult 1&. 1971
Ro!Mrt N Weed/Publisher ThelmH KftYll/Edltor
Barbar• KrelbiChl Edltorlal P~ Editor
,.
If It Is IDegal,
Prove the Point
Huntington B<'U<'h poUcc.> beltevt> u lc>eul ht·ulth s p,1
llhould be clo:.C'd bC'cuu~r of ullcgt>d immor a l .md lllt•gul
.H'li\•itu~ ltutt ~o on lht>rt'
~ But thrt>t> tluntmfeton &•ach C1t.v Council mt·mbt>r~
ha vt-rt>hblod to n'vo kt.• lht.' Goldt•n Wt•st llt•Jlth Sp<s ·.,
hus l11l'SS hct•nst•
Pollct• ha\'l' pomh>d oyt that s ine(' 1976 fivt• Jrn•st.,
for ~olmt.tt1on of prostitution hJn• occurred at lht• ~p.1
The t•st.1hhs htnt.•nt 1s 1w ,ir .1 prt.•school .ind .in c lt•mt·nt.1n
...,t·hool
"lom· or lht• arrest.$ h.1~ .ictuully led to 11 convkllon of
prost 1luUon s0Hc1t{H ion
Somt• rouncll m t'mbers tK•lll'vt.• th<' undt.·rrnvt·r µollct·
nfrt('t'r~ "'t'rl' .u:tu.llly tht• ont"S "'ho did tht• ~olic 1ttn&
Tht.• City Council 1s not m .1 pos1t1011 to dt•tt>rmtnt•
'' hl•tht•r or not cr1man.1l soli('1tatlon took pl.1c1: a t the s p .1
Thal 1s lht• ddermm.ition of lht' rourl~
It 1s lht.• dut) of thl' pohct.• to mo nitor s us pt.'cll•d
crimm.11 .u.:ll\ 1ty .it :.my busines~ .md n ·port It to thl·
('OU rt!:>
Wtwn a conviction for allt•gal ..icts is prowd. 1t m.1 y
lht•n bt.• lhl' c ity father !)· duty to rcvokt• a bus int·~~ ltccnst·
1f the J ct1v1hc:> po!>e J thn•at to the pubhc wt•lfurt•
We're not .it Jll s un• tht.· s pa bl-longs tht.•rt• Hut wt•
.ire certain th1.1t until somt'One produce~ h.ird and-fus t
lt.•g a l evidence to tht.' contrary. its ownt•rs a n· e ntitled tu
l'CJU<tl tre <.1tment with <.1°ny otht.>r business
The council will recon~1der th(' busme~~ hce nst.•
rt•vocat1on next wt.•ek We trust they will do so c~ilmly .rnd
with full r espect for tht.· law •
Check the Guest list
Fountain Valley cit y hall work~·rs cl.nm the city 's
personne l director c ras hed one of tht'ir m el'tings .
But the personne l director claim!> s he was rn\'itcd
bt·cause she found a n announcement on he r d esk .
According to the rank alji file workers. the meeting
WiJ S unde r wa y fo r a bout 10 minutes whe n the
.1dministrator walked in .md s ul down.
Ont.• worke r had been discussing the form<.1tion of u
d e partment head committee to study low morale in city
hall.
It i; ha rdly ::.urprising th.it the discussion was all but
:-ttfled by the p ersonnel director's presence.
ll 's a lmost Cl·rt..1in tha t some of the wo rkt·rs :;udde nly
kit tht>y s hould h a\'e ht.·ld t he g ripe st.•s:-.ion ;.it tht.· nl·.in·st
p1~w parlor or at lt.·t.1st a bit farther from city hall
Thl' <:'mployet.·s a ppa rt•ntly belit.•vt.•d the pl'r!:ionnl'I
d 1r<:'ctor "ould rt.•port a ll to lht.· city m anuger
Al ;.my r a te. 1t wasn't much of a socia l o r •1
'bus iness occasiori. Someone fo rgot to ch eck the guest
lis t.
They Made the Point
:\ r ecent d e m ons tratioR against nuclear Wl'apons
'ys tcms a nd che mical warfa re de vices iJllcgedJy stockpiled
on the he avily populated Orange Coast at the Seal Beach
'\ J v al Weapons Station demonstrated something t•lst.·.
C ivil dissente rs und police who must obs t.•rvc a nd
t·ontrol t•xe rciscs in the people's rig ht to ;.isst.·mble a nd
l':<pn.•ss opinion cun cooper:.it c quite wl'll for the good of
pea c t.·. sakty ;.md public order .
Se.ii Beach Police Chief Edward Cibbare lli's 45·m an
force would. of course. pre fer things stay typici.llly s imple
.n no rmally s leepy Seal Beach.
1-1 appily. the protest staged by the S outhern
Ca lifornia Alliance for Survival had none of the overtones
thi.lt u sually mar s uch gutherings.
The c oalition is comprise d of 5'0 varied groups
opposed to the idea of nuclear arms s toruge here. They
showed that a protest movement needn't be un-American
or unruly to prove a point.
They m a y have a good point. If nucle;.ir we apons a nd
che mical warfare materiel are indeed present a t Se al
Beach. it might be lime now to re locate them. . -Op1mons expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot
Other views expressed on this page are those ol their authors and
artists Reader comme nt 1s 1nv1ted Address The Daily Pilot. PO
Box 1560. Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321
Boyd I Okay Sign
All that a citize n o r
Uruguay needs to run for the
presidency or that country is
a petition with 50 signatures.
When you IT\3k e a circle
with your thumb and fore-
finger, you mean every.
thing's all right. It's d1f·
ferent in Japan. The sign ------mans yott ti! ramn:c about
money. Anawhen yous o
signal in France. you're say-
ing somelhing's worthless .
Don't even want to lalk about
what it signifies in Greece.
Am too bashful.
Jtow dp you acconnt for lhe
facf 1na{ more ~ople-ftsten
to the radio in Apr I I and May
than during any other
months?
Q. "What was the most
violent western mm ever
made?" Q. "Roy Rogers' horse was
Trigger. Dale Evans' horse
was Buttermilk. But do you
recall the name or the J eep
driven by Roy's sidekick Pat
Brady?"
A. Certainly do. Nellybclle
Dear
Gloomy
t Gus
'
Of course there's no
real public sentiment
against llleaaJ MexJcan
a1Jen1. That's because
they do ·Work no one
else wants to do and do
ll so cheaply that
California buslnessmen
and Cnrmers make
mllllons off of t heir
labor.
R.R.M.
A. How about "The Wild
Bunch" as a candidate for
that distinction. The whole
population of a town
massacres a band of would·
be bank robbers.
Q. "Do ell-0\e liates use
DayUghi Saving Time?"
A. All but Alaska, Hawaii
and Indiana.
The municipal otflcW.ls or
Tuc3on, Ariz.. once passed
an ordlnan~ that made it ll·
leeal ror a vUttina football
team to score aealnst the
Un I versity ot Ar hon a
WUdcata on their bome field .
If you've seen ono termite.
you Uy, you•vo seen them
all? Not quate. More than
2,000 species are romping
oround this earth.
World's first expert on the
art or angllnt-that 's nsb
'"'"' my boy -wu not a man but a •"Oman. She, \M prioress ol a BrtUlh nunnery,
even wrotAI a treatJse on bow
to Ue rues.
. . ~ T
Rowland Evans/Robert Novak
Ford's Book Takes on Reagan
W i\SlllNGTON -Intimates or
G l' r J Id t' o r d . f e u r f u I l hut
pul.ll1<.:11tlon of h11t mtmoirs e~rly
nl'Xt yt.•..ir wall crack Rtpubllcan
h<.trm ony w1dl! open. ure quietly
I rymg to st>flcn the former prt:si·
d ent 'i. at tuck uguins t Ronald
lh•ugun
'.'lo om· dtrt-clly connecll'd with
tht' book cnow 01bout }lulf
finished 1 win
dl s russ thl'
OlJtll'r with
outs 1dt'rs Uut
1ns1dt'r s. an
t ,1 I k s " 1 t h
f''orcl und his
t.•nl OllrJgl'.
h.i Vl' )lo.irnt•d
Ford 1s using
h1 .., book t o
bl umt• his dl'·
frat l.ly Jimmy Ca,rter squarely
011 Ht.•agan's chullcnge.
Publication of the book is
schl'dulcd for next May. JUSt as
presidential C<1mpaigns are get·
ting under way . Rea~an is a cer·
tain candldatl'. Ford a possiblt:
one f'ord's inl<'ntion to use his
~k to :;proH• the cast-" that
Rl'agati's challenge againM an
Incumbent Republican president
l'll·cted a Democrat will releasl'
pol1t1cal hobgoblins.
Cool heads inside the Rcpub·
licn n party art• trying to dis·
s uade Ford. But con s idering
whut onc intimutt• calls Ford's
"hatred" for Reagan. success is
que!)taonablc•.
R.\ FSHOON RISES -· The un-
m i s t <1 k ab lc ri s e of Ge rald
Ra fs hoon within thc White
llousl' is coming not at the ex-
penSl' of his s upposed rival.
press secretary Jody Powell , but
rathl•r domestic policy ch1l'f
. ,,Stua rt Eizenslat
• Tht• reason: Rars hoon. the ad·
\'l•rt1s ing cxccut1 v<• in cha rge! of
l'l'~a bilit u l1n g Prl's ldl'nl
Mailbox
Carter 's image. 1s now prepar-
ing lht• brit•flng paper s ror
C arte r Interviews and other
pe d ormunces Th<1l Job pre-v lou s ly had been done by
Eizenstat.
The obvious change ls one of
style. Rarshoon insists on terse.
easily handled fQrmulae for tht•
president on inflation. energy.
lax reform /reduction Jnd other
questions In contrast. Eitenstat
used to give him long. detailed
memoranda.
''Refreshing. H
Ttw change could become one
of substance. Eizenstat 's pro-
grammatic liberalism bas been
a ma1or cause oC the chain of
"compre he ns ive" proposals
s tre aming from the While
Hous<'. The Rafshoon briefings
ar<' gre atly diminishing this doc·
tnnal tone.
A footnotl' · Rumors of a
Rafs hoon-Powell power clas h
a re prt•mature jt lhl' h~ust. but
thert.• was one dispute between
them on Mr. Curler 's European
tour. Powell urged a softer tone
than Rafshoon m presidential re-
action to the conviction of Soviet
dissident Am1toly Shcharansky.
The preside nt took Powetrs ad·
VICt'.
1'1.'\NSFIELD WARNS -· Am·
bass ador M ikl• M \jnsfield. the
form l'r Senate Oe mocrat1e
lead er now representing the U.S.
in Tokyo. is delivering somber
wa rnings to visiting Carter ad-
m in is tralion orricials about
Japan's growing fear or the
president's Far East polici('s.
f or tht• first tame•. ~tansfil'ld
~.1\ ~. J Jpanest· politicians and
m1lit,1ry lt•adt·rs a rl' privakly
:$.'Om pl.uning ,1bout lhl' n •IJtl\'l'
dechnl' of tJ S n.1v.1l s tn•ngth
compan •d to tht• Sovil't L:n1on .
Oesp1ll' MJnsftcld's assura nct's
to lht• J J pant•st.• governml'nl.
conc1.•rn is ris ing a bout lht•
steadfastness ,ind reliability of
~Ir C.1rter 's policies
Su c h concerns huve bee n
publi cly t•xpressed by m any
Aml·rtcans -including MaJ.
Gt•n J ohn I< Singla ub, forced
into rellrl'm<.'nl because he ques·
t1onl•d VS t roop withdra wJls
rr o m S o uth l\o r l'.i But
'.\I am.r1t•lct. ,, lt•.iding Vietnam
":tr dovt•. did not Join thi.· al.trm·
po1ntt•r..., unt il tht· .J.1 p.tnl'..,l'
tht•m ,t·IH·:-. ht•g.111 c·oH\'l'Y lni!
tht·1r ft-,1r~ to ham
Teachers: .How Indispensable Are They?
To the k:d1tor :
Your editorial of Aug. 8 which
r <.'ports that Orange County
teache rs rallied to "complain
wtlh sour and disappointed words
";.i bout their plight in post ·
J arvis California ends with the
admonition " ... for now at least.
tcaChl'rs had b<-ttl'r be prl'pared
to acct·pt th(' notion thut thl' public
no longe r cons1dt·r s the m in·
dispt•m;ablctothesyskm ..
What sor:t of frt·e society ean bt•
susl <1med wht.•rl' lt•aehl•rs ;Jre not
and1s pens;1bl e'' What sort of
future awaits us all irteachers are
mere ly considered public rune·
llon<iries no morl' important than
building ins pectors or C;.1ITrans
truck drivers->
The ed1tor1;.1f drags out the old
arguments about s alaries.
be nefits and s ummer vaca·
lions .. on a level that is the envy
or m any who pa y taxes supporting
those lifestyle improve ments."
Quite apart from the years of un·
iversity training and teaching ex-
perience required to reach the top
of any salary scale in the county.
Sitlur y and benefits for teuchers
are modest compared to those
performing such cruci:.il t asks in
the society as managing u fast
food o utle t o r delivNy ing
Sparkletts Water. Fqrther. long
summer vacations are seldom if
ever realized by teachers with
families tosupporl.
Bloated s ala ries of some ad·
ministrators. great numbers of
non.teaching pos itions. and ex-
pensive programs or doubtful
value mandated by Sacramento
and Washington all contribute
heavily to the cost or education m= lh1s .itilte. It 1s most aiS@·
pointing that the Daily Pilot
mukes no clear distinctions in its
statement.
Virtually all observers con-
cede that it is the classroom
wher e education takes place. with
the teacher in lhe vital role. lf
education is of only nominal Im·
portance to the public of
Calirornia. one won~en who wiO
write the editorials of the next
century, and who will read them.
WILLIAM D. CLARKE
ln3t(ad_Q[ !aym~-..q~ pubUc -no
longtr belieoes teacher1 are in·
dillpenaable," the editorial might
bettor h4Jve said "some oj the
public" feel& that WClJI.
-Editor
'DftllettlL. ·'
To lbe Editor:
I find lt difficult to believe that a newspaper ln this area where
the value of education Is obvious
ln the prosperity surrounding us •
would make the statement your
August 8 editorial
makee ..... teachers had better
be prepared to uccept the notJon
thot the public no tonaer con:
slders them lndispcmsable to ou.r
system.''
Thomas-Jefferson would tum
over In hls 1rave at such a
stupid statet0ent. Our ttbool
e11tem waa founded on the nOtloo that, aa be nid ... Only
,.
popular education can safeguard
democracy." To expand on this
idea. he said. "l look to the dif·
fusion of light and education a s
the resource most to be rehed on
for ame liorubng the condition.
promoting the virtul•. and ad·
vancing thl' huppiness of man · ·
A nd where Wl'rt' our
newspaperml'n inculc ated with
his idea thi.lt "A free press is the
only safeguard of public hberl~"
if not in the schools .
Teachers ur• indis pens able in
a democracy. und a news paper
should be the last place lo find a
statement to Lhe contrary. I. a s
an individual teacher. may be
dispensable. but teache rs as a
whole ce rtainly are not.
BETIY J ORBACH
opinion in the way you do is seven times yearly in order to
deplorable. True. what appears meet fleet scheduling require-
on budget totals as salaries for ments l.
government employees seems to Such u hazard exists indepcn·
be a lot or money, but lhal IS the' denlly or thc threat posed by
w e ll ·t·arnt•d li ve lih ood or nucll'ar and chemical warfare
thousands of people m the <.'Om· we apons stored and transport·
munity cd m close proximity.
Why focus on t hJl., Wh) not 1 A note of inte rest : According focusonp~rts ofthebudgetth.it 10 lht' Los Ange les Times.
are not so r eadtly obviou!>. August 7. 1978. JUSl two days
where error. folly and incom aftt>r the Seal Beach demonstra·
petence 1s hidden? lion 63 ions of bombs accidental ly t>xploded ul the Sierra Army
One of the runct1ons of .1 dl•pol ul Herlong. California.
responsible editorialist is to re Thl' cause of the explosion 1s un-
fine pubhc opinion. to be the kno wn 1
voice or a viewer that looks Four feasibility studies have
calmly beyond the surface of the been made by the Depurtmenl of
daily news and public opinion to the Navy to deh•rmine the costs
offe r thoughtful insights on whJl of n ·location According to a
is happening Your editorial 1s :'\avy study from 1970. the cost
'Pat-a•%-zc' patcrn ulistic and masleuding . of relocul1on would vu ry accord-.:;;••• -a• a nd as u profcssion;,tl teachl·r ing to the site from S98 million to
To the Editor: and pubhc employcl•, I resent 1t Sl69 million for thl· most ex-
1 mus t r espond t o your R BRYTA:"j pt•nc;1ve r e lo c:.i ta o n l o San
cd1tonal or Aug. 8. "How Many Cle m enlt• ISl j nd 1wh1 ch i ~
Friends Do Teachers Have?" to Puf:tllc DaM~ already owned by the navy>
point out thut its apparent objec· To the Editor: S urc ly our Departme nt or
tivity is really masking an attack As a person living within one Defense can absorb this expense
on teachers and public employees half mile of the Seal Beach rrom its grotesquely lar ge $127
in general. Your phraseology is b11l1on budget.
condescending and ambiguous. NavalWeapons Slallon a nd us J Th e Se a l Beach Nav a l work e r in the Allbrnce fo r and your argument clouds un-S · Wt'apons Sta tto n jeopardizes derslanding the general public urvival's eampaign to remove public health and sarcty by its nuclear weapons from that sentiment behind Prop.13. facility. 1 would like to have the pro x 1m1 l y t o e I e m e n l a r y
As an angry taxpayer myself. opportunity to elucidate a few schools. public beaches. res1den
and as a Subscrl.ber to your I h' h 1 bet' tial areas and business centers po nts w ac 1eve were not newsR_aper, l want to reprove made clear in your coverage of It exposes children and other
you i n your foilw:e in not direct-the demonstration which took res idents to the hazards of
ing attention to some of the place in Seal Beach Aug. s. nuclear storage und transporta-
are as of government s pending A research proJect completed tion. restdWtts who m ay be un-
where true waste and criminal in July. 1975. by the Government awar e or unw1lhngly e xpos ed to
misuse of tax money is t aking Accounting Office called for the s uch hazards. The bas I'
place . You have in r ecent relocation of the weapons stcition represents an unacceptable and
months exposed some oC this because of the inadequacy of the avoidable danger.
prud i g ah t' Hit-,t-1t-h~e~e~e.u1i1.rtn_.'1~Y--.tt":ar1tt"'IHl't't t°'l y~air:tl'1'I drt-tithltie~rrie~s!t1t1tt-•i.tt!-t11t~n..,t---DA VT D TRACHTENBERG
superv fsor"s oftke. Why stop necesSi£y to overloacf ~ks~"'"a~n""'d'--=c~
there? Other local government to violate other sarety regu)a,
operations will show equal and lions. The GOA report went on to wors e wrongs. Yes. including th t · the administration of some of say a a severe impact ex· plosive hazard zone extends
our local school districts. over approximately 98 acres or
Bqt shame! To adm on1$h devel~ped property in lhe sur-
teachers and public employees rounding community when the
for their concern over their station is handling 250.000 pounds
marginal material re wards by of conventional explosives on the
pulli~g on the bridle or pubhc wharf <as it does approximately
.Sydney Harris
• Letters from readers are welcom~
The nghl to condense letters to /tt
$p0Ce or ehmmate label u reserved.
Letters of 300 worth "" leu wiU be gsven JlTe/erence. All lellers mu.st in·
clude'"'iignature and mailing addresa
but names may be WtthMld on re-
quest 1/ su1J1c1ent reason u apparent
Poetrt1 unU not be published.
Bar Should No:minate New Judges
Tho~hftat~: • J( )Udges ate to be elected,
and .not apPointed, they should
first be nomhated by the Bar. so
that wo no longer have a
polltlc•llY oriented Judiciary made up largely of thoa~
lawyers who take a partisan in·
U1re1t ln polltlcs and are re·
warded with •party nomlnaUon.
• Peopl~ who talk too much
and ~Je who t-1k too little
both sUl/er from the same fear
at bolt.om, that ol beln1 mlaun-
d e ratood lbt loquacious
penon exhlbtlinl tbll rear by
overeq>lalnlna aod the tacltu.m one by MYtna noUll..QI.
• LlWe haa chiriaed m..,.
class smu~ In the ruu ctn·
tury since Melville wrote: "O(
all the preposterous assump-
Uons or humanity over humani-
ty. nothing exceeds most or the
crltlclvns made on the habita or
the poor by the well·housed,
well-warmed, and well-fed."
• What makes • classic la Its
ability lo aurvlve both tboM who
are lnditf crent lo It and Ume
who adore It dumbly.
• WE SEEK 1upertorlty only
when ,r,·e att denied equaUl,)':
.. blaa•• would nner llave bte1
proclaimed aa Hpeelally
beau&UUJ lf bJIOll had D0t I\
flnt cSecqrat.ct •t 11 ualY.
• Most of the ferment in public
educution today s prings from
the fact that the school$ are be·
Ing asked not only lo make up in
a hurry for lhelr own defects but
also to compens ate for the
failures of society as a whole -
and they can scarcely do the
nrst job. much less· the second.
• President Carter seems to be
followlna the unproductive ten-
dency or his predecessors and
paying too much altentloo to the
polls and~ "b'ends.': when he
should bt attendlni to Wl0$t00
CtutrchJll 's warrun,: "The na·
\ion will find lt very hard to look
up to leaden who are k..-plna
their •us to &.be irouncl·' ·
' l I
f I
f
~ I '
17
-
,.,
•
...
.Irvine T oday's C l oslag '
N. Y. Stoelul
t.
I
VOL 71, NO. 228, ~SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16, 1978
Schmitz, Cordova Open
..
HE'S A JARVIS MAN
RepubUcan Schmitz
Shoppers
Stock Up
On Food
LOS ANGELES (APl -While
consumers Jamm e d
supermarket checkout lines to
stock up on foodstuffs. stores
Crom San Luis Obispo to San
Diego braced for a possible
walkout by 70,000 clerks that
rould be less than two days
away.
"'At this moment. we are very.
very busy," said Marlene Crites.
a worker at a Lucky market in
Culver City. ''I think people
heard the news about the strike
• and they're out to stock up."
While stores in some cities re·
ported busi ness as us ual,
managers of others said buying
' was brisk.
"If the clerks vote to stnke,
we 're expect.ing a lot more
customers," said Jim Willard.
night manager of an Albertson
market in Bakersfield "We've
already stocked up" to meet the
increased demand -
However, he said, his store.
which normally operates 24
hours a day. will cut back to
nine hours in the event of a
strike.
Me mbers of nine Southern
California locals of the Retail
Clerks Onion voted Monday and
Tuesday on whether to accept
the stor es' latest offer or
authorize a strike. Union leaders
recommended rejection of the
management proposal, which
called for a $1.40-an-hour wage
hike over three years.
Results of the vote were to be
known this afternoon. and a
strike could begin anytime after
12:01 Saturday, 48 hours after
the cler ' contract expires.
Bob 1ght of the Food
Employers cil said store of-
1 ficia ls were not oplfmistic about ~ avoiding a walkout
f. ·'The unions are threatening to i strike, and we believe them," he
said.
The 15 chains involved are Alberts~ns, Alpha Bela, A.r~en-
~one Embraces Jarvis; Othe r Shuns Governor
By GARY GRANVILLE °'-~ ............
Slate Senate candidates John
Scbnutl and Ron Cordova begun
a series of cumpa1an debates
Tuesday with Republican
Schmitz clinging t'Ver so lightly
to Howard Jarvis
Simulta neously. De m ocrat
Co rdova wa:. putting distance
between himself and Gov Ed-
mund-G. Brown Jr
Cordova said he will wait to
see "which Jerry Brown" IS run·
ning agamst Evelle Younger
before deciding who he will vole
for in the gubernatorial race
Schmitz made it clear he is a
Howard Jarvis man.
Six times during the 50-minute
debate he mentioned that he car-
ries the Jarvis endorsement into
his battle with Cordova for the
state Senate seat being vacated
by Newport Beach Republican
Dennis Carpenter
And even though the Jarvis
debate was settled by tbe voters
June 6 when they approved
Proposition 13, Schmitz insisted
1t 1s "the" issue in his November
election confrontation with
Cordova
The Cordova-Schmitz verbal
duel at the Airporter Inn in
Newport Beach attracted more
than 100 people who paid $8 a
lunch lo see and hear the two
candidates.
As expected. the exchanges by
• the two men while answering
questions put to them by a panel
of newsmen were crisp and fre-
quently pointed.
If Cordova was on the de-
fensive when speaking of his op.
position to Proposition 13, so was
Schmitz as he defended his
membership in the John Birch
Society and his bolt from the
Republican Party in 1972.
Schmitz called the society "a
very fine patriotic organiza-
tion."
And he split hairs when he
said he was still a member of
the Republican Party in 1972
when he accepted the American
Independent Party's presiden-
tial nomination.
Schmitz said be didn't change
party ~liation until after his
AIP presidential nomination. In a paraphrase &f the well·
known Schmitt' remark about
the first Nixon trip to Com-
muni s t Chin11 , Corodova
quipped, "I'm informed by my
Republican friends they '°<>k no
exception to John Schmitz leav-
ing the Republican Party, only
to his return."
But Schmitz pointed to his en-
dorsement "by all Republican
groups" and county GOP
Irv ine Plea
l eaders to prove b e has
"mended fences" with the
party.
Cordova wouldn't let up on his
attack on Schmitz• political
travels, however.
The Democratic assemblyman
said that, unlike his roe. his
political epitaph will not read.
"Have campaign, will travel."
Schmitz retaliated to the
barbs by recounting his 2'~-year
record as a congressman and
51f.z years as a state senator.
Included in the record cited by
him was support of efforts by
Jarvis to reform the slate's
property tax laws, ·efforts that
date back to the mid-1960s.
Schmitz also said he is prob-
ably the only congressman
ever sent to Washington who
saved the taxpayers more
money that he cost. <See DEBATE, Page A2)
o.11, .... Matt ~
'WHICH JERRY BROWN?'
Democrat Cordova
FAA Refuses Bid
~ On Ai1-port ·Probe
By PIDUP ROSMARIN
Of 1M o.11, jtll<lt Statt
The Federal Aviation Ad -
ministration has. for the second
time, refused an Irvine politi-
cian's request that it conduct a
comprehensive investigation of
air traffic safety at Orange
County Airport.
The first time City Coun-
cilman Larry Agran asked for
the study. he was a candidate
for the municipal office.
previously condueted and the on·
going accident prevention ac·
tivilies. it does not appear that a
co.mprebensive investigation or
further review of Orange County
Airport accidents would be pro-
ductive at this time." ·
Allen said also,•" As you know.
Orange County Airport is one of
the busiest airports in the na-
tion.
Alarmed by io aircraft acci-•--·~st Units dents in or near the airport in ~W'-.;;.,
''Numbers of aircraft and
operations continue to rise. with
a corresponding increase in ac-
cidents and fatalities."
For Agran, that explanation
wasn't good enough. It is those
very numbers of aircraft and
their relation lo accidents that ·
be wants explored. ·
So for a third time, be has
<See AIRPORT, Page:\%)
o.llyjtll.cStafl ........
FORMER PRESIDENT AND MRS. NIXON AT HOSPITAL
Tricia Cox Also There to Greet Her New Niece
which 17 people died, he pleaded
an obvious need to study the
overall pattern of satety.
Agran <.'!aimed to get no
response from the FAA , and in-
stead learned it had turned him
down only after reading press
reports that the agency intended
no action and was satisfied with
its method of investigating in-
dividual crashes.
Viejo Firm Fights
Housing Proposal
Actually, though the FAA in-By~~ ,!i!~~CV
Daddy Eisenhower
Elated by Jennie
vestigates rrtost non-fata l air ac· _.. Mission Viejo Company of-
c i d e n t s . t h e N a t i o n a l ficials told Orange County Plan-
Transportation Safety Board has ning Commissioners Tuesday
the main responsibility for in· they don't want to be singled out
vcsligatmg all airplane acci-by the county to build so-called
dents. affordable housing.
The FAA is charged with in-Company Vice Pres ident
stituting accident prevent:ion David Celestin said he opposes a
methods county proposal that would re·
By ANNE COOPER
OI t• 0.11, jtllet St.Ill
An elated David Eisenhower
desc ribe d the birth o f his
daughter Tuesda,y as "just a
wonderful experience "
The new rather, flanked by the
baby's grandfather . former pres-Since the councilman's initial quire his firm to build up to 2.500
ident Richard Nixon. met with r eques t . seve ral incidents of Mission Viejo's r e m aining
reporters outside San Clemente prompted.Agral'\towriteagain. 10,000 units in the low and
Ge neral Hos pital whe re his F.A. Allen , chief of the FAA moderate income ranges.
daughter. Jennie, had been born night standards district office in "The Mission Viejo Company
a few hours earlier. Long Beach, replied a few days does support the concept of af
Eisenhower said he and his ago. fordable housing," Celestin said.
wife, Julie Nixon Eisenhower, . As before. Allen indicated He also said the company
prepared for the arrival of the there is a continual review of ac-would "go along with" whatever
baby by attending childbirth cident statistics with accident h0us ing policies supervisors
classes at the hospital. He as· prevention in mind. adopt early next year for all of
s isted in the delivery or the nine· But, said Allen, "In view of the unincorporated area.
agricultural land until later,
planners said.
The remainder would be along
the San Diego Freeway in the
southern part or the community
a nd would be designated for in-
dustrial development
Bill Olson. a county planning
manager. said the revision also
was designed lo give the Mission
VieJO Municipal Advisory Coun-
cil c MAC > a greater role in com-
munity planning.
"One of the keys in the entire
process was involving the MAC
in advising lbe planning com·
mission," he said
However. commissioners were
told that state laws restrict the
council's role to advisory only.
MAC member Gary Stoney
s aid the council realizes it is an
a dvisory bOdy only. He a~ked
r
Lucky 'stores, Market Basket ,
Ralphs. Safeway, Smiths Food
King, Stater Bros., Thriftimart
and Vons.
' _QQund, rour-oun..£.Ll.lrl born at specific. ;iccidenl inY~j~atiO!lL _:_:JY,...~J.9..!)J.l~. l! js_ aJ?-~-~~-~:::t__JtL.:·.aaaa..iipw. m1.IL.:.iT:uiie.eiaidl.la1Jy.~----"------,,-----_ _pwpnate at this tame to pl.ice it
The natural childbirth de -exclusively on the Mission Viejo
lbal •be r.ommunit~..rexisU:lo.seL ~ ~--...
f&Fth-the-groop!s..prec~--
t For sever a l weeks , the
markets have had signs in their
windows advertising for clerks,
with no experience necessary.
By Tuesday , sald Voigt .
··between 15.000 and 20,000"
persons had agreed to take joQs
as SOOJl as a strike. begins. and
some stores already were train·
inl them.
PUCE A PET
Wlm PILOI' .4D
"The response was unrea,,
The first one that called picked
her up. She got a super home."
That's the advertising success
story told by a Huntington
Beach woman who placed this
ad ld the Dally Pilot:
()erman shep. 8 mo. obed
trnd. Ft-m. Loves ~ver·
YOOt! but protective. XllX
xx xx
lf you hove • pet you want to
place In a 1ood home, call
6'2-5671. A frleodly Dally
Pllo\ ad-visor wUl h lp you
word your ad for the 1reat.est
Impact.
We mak'e lt euy ror you to
put t few Word& lo work ror
JOU, in the ~ Pllot .•
o I
PAOUD ,APA INTUVIEWID
Oll¥td !JaenhOww
livery left his wife ''feeling fine, ~ommunity," he explained.
really fine," Eisenhower com-Pair F reed Celestin's remarks came as
mented'. commissioners revie wed the
"I called the Nixons and my first comprehensive revision of
mother and my grandmother all Of T eeD•&ae the t0,324-acre Mission Viejo
wlthfu three minutes of the de-e community plan.
livery," h~ said. "The Nixons The commission wUI hold at
came right to the hos pital. and Sex Charaes least one more hearing Sept. u
everybody ls thrille d. just --e before making a recommenda-
thrilled." Charges of c'rimes against lion lo COWllY supervisors.
Nixon, who said he was children which led to the arrest Councy planners bad au11est-
pleased that his first grandchild of two local men earlier this ed that the community plan re·
is a girl, told reporters Tuesday month have been dropped in lbe vision require that one-fourth of
evenlng after v1si0ng Jiis Harbor Judicial District Court. the remaining 10,000 homes to be
daughter that he looks forward Christian Vart Sahagian, 21, a.. built ln Mission Viejo be within
to baby sitting transient who police said fre· the price ranges or families The rormer president said he 8 h earning 80 to 120 percent of the won't try to influence his grand· quents the Huntington eac county's m-Alan income. Pier and David Wooten, 43. of Cl'IA• daughter's career choice. "Jen-3882 Claremont St., Irvine, were The county's median income
nle will do whatever she wants taken into custody by Newport now is $16,200.
to do,•• he said. Beach along with a ll-year-old Commissioners, however. sug-"She is the first child born in girl. gested that planners abandon
the United States with relatives Police alleged the child's sex-that provision and draft new
on both sides who were presl-ual ·services had been involved wordin1 that would make Mls-
dents," he said. ''With that ln dealings between the two sion Viejo subject to wba&ever heritage, she may be attracted housing polic1 ls adopted later
to politics. But if she chooses a mHowevcr. those charaes were by supervisorS.
muslc career or something else, dropped by court officials when Supervisors by January are to
that wm be fine too 1' the teen-age alrl, a runaway adOpt a set or policies aimed at
Jennie Elsenhowerj as well as from Chicago, waa taken back to providinl less-expensive hous-
being Nixon's grnndaaughter. ls Illinois by her parent.I. Ina.
the greal·granddou1hter of However, Wooten ln hls court The Milskm VieJo Company's
form er president Dwi1ht appearance Tuesday was ar· proposal al&O calla for 1ddln1
Eisenhower. ralped on 8 eharae of camlna •7' additional acres to the
Eisenhower Hid be and ht• a concealed weapon. Ke ls planned communJt.Y
wlft a1reed to name their scheduled to return to the About -400 acra wowcl bo ln
d1u1bter Jenni~ becau11 It m\Jnlclpel court for a pre-&.rial tbe north part ot tbe community
eounds Ukc Jutte, but 1$n 't. conference on the mlademeanor aloni El Toro Dad and 01o "Julie dldn1t want to b1ve cbarieonSopt.. ll. creek. It would remain at (See JENNIE, P11e AZ> /
I
"We feel we do speak for tht
community of Mission Viejo,··
he said of MAC's elected mem· 1
bers. ~
r
Co as't i
Wea the r
i ~ ' .,
Low cloudiness night I
and moromg ~ Wt -J
mostly sunny affernoon
Th\lrsday. Lows tonigbt 60
to 65. HJgbs Thursday 68 to
72 at beaches and 78 to 84
inland.
l~PE 1'001' "t'
1-t'a no April Fool -Angela
annou"ce plant for onr
pla110/I and World Seritt
games. Story. Pa~ BJ.
..
l M
.r.i i .. ::
College .
FM Radio)
o.I .. ,..... MillJ ......
41 ,114 FANS AT ANAHEIM STADIUM GET THE MESSAGE
A Salute From Old Friend Gene Autry on the Big Day
Candidates
For Board
Examined
Three of the eight C<.1nd1d<.1ll's
for Saddleback Community
College trustee Donna Berry's
seat ar<' schedult•d for in
terv1ews today begmnmg at 4
p.m ..
The deadline ror apphcat1on to
replact-!\1 rs Berry who has rt'·
signed to move to ~orlhcrn
Carifomia with her ram1I~. was
Aug 15 College orflc1als said.
however. they will still accept
any applications be<.inng tne
Tuesday postmark
The board also h:.is scheduled
interviews for Thursday bt•gm
ning al 4 p.m Trustc•t•s plC1n to
question each c;1nd1dull.' ror ;m
hour and th<• ml·etings an· open
to the public
Mrs B<>rry rr prNH'ntcd om' or
tht> lurgest areas of the Sod
dleh<i ck District
The art.•a includt•s ~1Jss1on VH·
jo. h a lf of El Toro. Tr,1buco can
yon areas. and pa'"ts or San
Juan Capistrano .ind Lagun:.i
Niguel
Candldat(•S scheduled ror Jn·
te rvicws today a rl' Mtldrt>d
Windolph or L:.iguna ~igul'I. a
forml'r tcach t•r . Harold F
McGruth of Laguna Niguel. v1cl:'
president of admin1s trat10n rur
JoJos ;.md Naugl<'s lnc . and R
Richa rd Bruno of Tnibuco Can
yon. manage r of Sa I (•s <1d
m i ni s trat ion ror H ylund
Laboratoru.•s
Th<' other fi ve cund1datt·s an•
BrUCf' w Tunell or M 1ss10n V1l'
JO. <issistant manager or Securi
ly NC:1tional Bank 1n Laguna
1\iguel . Della F Janis of Mb;
s 1o n V1l'jo . sC'c retary and
treasurer of the Kenneth M
Janis. M D' professional cor-
poration: John C. Connolly of
Mission Vit•Jo. opl'rutions
manaf.(er and assistant general
manager of the• May Company in
The City in Orange , Glenn A
Burchett Jr. of Mission Viejo.
a r c h ivist with the Federal
Ar chives and Records Center,
and David C Biggs of Mission
Viejo
Cable Car
Theft Probed
SAN FRANCISCO <AP) -A
d istrict attorney's team or
investigators has been assigned
t o determine ir cable car
conductors are pocketing fares
f'rf*I Pa~AJ
JENNIE. • •
jnot h t•r ·Julte'." he said
·Bl's 1des ·J ennie' can't bl•
'hortPnl:d to a nickn:.1me."
Asked how he felt about hav
ing his fi rst child. Eisenhower
said . "ft was time we 're 30."
Nixon smd his daughter. who
will be returning home with Jen.
nil' in tfii'l·r 'ihlys. ··1s ao1ng
gre;it ..
· · 1 WjS am:n1'<I ." hl' said
.. Sht-looks .is 1f sht"s b<•t•n out
for .1 SY. 1m 1n the cold Pacific
Sht"s com1• through 1n fine
:.tylt' ..
The baby dt'scr1bt•d as havma
dark hair and eyes. m .iy look
like a Nixon or may look hke an
Eisenhower. the former presi·
dC'nl said . adding that perhaps
lhl' lY.o fomihL·s bt•ar a ct•rtain
rcst•mblancc·
"All babll'!-t are bt•aut1rul." he
s:.11d . "but I must s ay girl babies
art· special "
The new father arrived for his
1•vening visit driving his own car
to a r ear e ntrance o f th(·
ho:1p1tal . Y.h(•rt• a spokPsman
said :\lrs E1senhowt·r is in u
pnvall' room in thl' maternity
ward
W hilt• new s p;,ipt•r and
tt'levis1on reporters quizzed
Eisenhower al the rear door. the
Nixons and tht·1r cider daughter.
Tnci.1 Cox. Y.t•re driven to lht·
hospital's m ain entrance by
Sec rel Sen ice agents
Forty minutt'S IJlcr t ht·
forml'f prl'sident cmt•rg<'d from
his visit. accompanied by his
wife ;.md '.\lrs Cox. <1nd paused
at thl' hospital entrance to
unswPr r<'porters' questions
The forml'r prt•s1dl'nl h>0k1..•d tanne~ and vigorou~ and very
happy.
· · Bein_g a ~r•mdfalhcr may b<·
evt•n gn•ute r than being a
father," he s;.11d "Your ex
perience with your, own childr<'n
1s so immediate thul perhaps
you lack the nt'cessury distunc<·
to evaluate and apprt'c1ulc• thl•
r<.•la tionship tO the ruJlt'St <•X
tent."
Saying he has leurned from
his r e lationship with his two
da ughters "nl'ver lo indicate
what my choice 1s" when they
have dl'cisions lo m<.1ko, Nixon
said <illowing children to makt.•
up their own minds may be
more important these days for
girls than for boys
· • .J ulic 1s an independent
thinkt>r. and so 1s Tricia:· ht•
S<Jid or his daughters, adding
that h<' expects h is grand
daughter to bt· indt.•pendent as
well.
"I'm not going lo try lo in-
fluence her." he said.
Plan OK
S.lddll•buc k Comm u nity
t'olh·~t' trw;ll't'b Monday night
,1lltH'C.1h~tJ $150.000 from a tight
budjt't 110 the college's long
vtuont'd 3,000 watt FM radio sta·
lion can bt•com~ reuHty
All h.•\•hnical detai\J in prep-
ur .1Uo11 for the la rger student
ujJcrutt..J station KSBR are now
t•om1>lcle . Superintendent
'Robt>rt A Lombardi told
t rui.t l'C:. Thl· present station is
only 10 watts Th~ board must now allocate
th\• monl'y to show the federal
guvernml'nt that trustees want
tht· b1ggt•r radio station located
al th{' college. Lombardi said. or
pass by the. chanc{' forever
Part of thl:' allocation will
match part of a $129.000 Health.
Education and Welfare !HEW!
gra nt now pending. Warren
Dt•acon, KS BR's pro~ram
manager.~id.
The HEW grant is the final
step or a long, arduous pro-
cedure college oCficials have
gont• through to win the new
broadcasting frequency from the
Federal Communications Com·
mission <FCC).
Deucon said he expects HEW
to makl' the grnnt award an·
nouncement somefime in mid·
~eptember. lf HEW comes through for
Saddle back. Deacon said. con-
struction or a 1.200 reel transmit·
ler on O 'Neill Ra nc h near
Ortega Highway will begin Im·
mediately
KSBR's operators hope to be
on the air by Dec. 1
Programming will stress news
:in(l public affairs coverage.
Deacon said. Music programs
wall feature jazz and soft rock.
t.1 ilorcd principally for listeners
betwl'cn ages 25 and 45.
T he station will broadcast 19
hours. seven days a week. The
broadcast signal will reach
about 500.000 pt>ople from Tustin
to San Clemente.
Frona Page AJ
DEBATE ..•
Cordova called such claims
"wur stories" and said he could
ll'll some of his own. He did.
ln substance. there was more
agrt!cml'nt than disagreement
between the two candidates .
Both. for example. said they
will work to strengthen local
government and against cen·
trahzation in Sacramento.
Both candidates also decried
expanded government spending
und .. growth of governm~nt."
Both said they support extend-
ing capital punis hment to cover
more crimes.
Disagreement came on the SO·
called Briggs initiative, prohibil·
in g h omosexua l s fr o m
teuching in public schools.
Schmitz said he supports the
measure. Cordova said he does
not. And while Cordova said he is
not certain how he will vote in
the gubernatorial race. Schmitz
emphasized that he is an Evelle
Younger supporter.
When it came time for them to
ask each other one question.
Cordova asked Schmitz what he
had done as a state legislator to
advance the cause of property
tax r eform
Schmitz pointed to his support
or Jarvis in the 1960's a nd a
pl aque he received in 1967 from
Umted Taxpayers. the Jarvis
support organization.
,
Th e investigalio~ by the same
group or lawyers ~hO_probed the
city 's parking m~u ·~~an<M: s====-=111•s. ~romptea ~ r, ™ Tuesday or a critical report on
the accounting practices of the
Municipal Railway.
In turn, Schmitz asked
Cordova to show his "conversion
to conservatism to be other than
political ..
:.I~~1ih~~ Cordova said his_record ai ...,_
'-lm=-• _ ,,4epuly dlstrict attorney who
said, "But she is going lo be an nl.!ve r lost a (elony. case shows
The audit. prepared by the
firm of Oelbitte, Haskins and
Sells for the Public Utilities
Co ~1 ss 1 on. offered n o
estimate of how much money, if
an). was being lost .
ORANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
,.,,.O._C...tll>ell•"'lllt "'4ltl-~ .. (--"'°--· ··--""°"'°'-OIW'll ~ .......... ClD4'n9• •• ,,., ... ...uoiM.,. ,.....,....., ........... th• ........ rtcY, ,.,. °" ..
-... ....., .. a(ll .._....,.._ft·-
'•'" V•H•¥ t ,..,,._. \actdl~ll Vell•t end
Angels fan " him to be something far less
than liberal,
Life Support
To' Remain for
Comatose Boy
Besides. Cordova said. his rec-
ord as u legislator, not political
rhetoric. should serve as the ex·
um pie of his conservatism.
Meanwhile, David Bergland.
who hopes lo make the No·
· vember ballot as the Libertarian
Party candidate in the 36th.
waited in a hallway~
Bergland said he was mlffed
because the debate sponsor. the
Build.log Jndu.sta~ss~ciat!_on.
dido 't invite him.
.. ' . s .., ........
FANS OF ELVIS PRESLEY WEEP OPENLY AS THEY LEAVE GRAVESITE IN MEMPHIS
On Flrat Annlveraary of the King'• Death, 12,000 Expected at Cemetery
Thousands Gather
For Elvis Tribute·
MEMPHIS. Tenn. !AP!
Fair skies, long lines and a six·
fool -tall flower-covered angel
greeted the El vis Presley
faithful today as they came to
pay homage to the king or rock
'n' roll on the fil"St anniversary of
his death.
Dick Grob. chief of security
for the 131h ·acre estate. said
more than 150 people s pent the
night on the Graceland grounds
gathered in a huddle just behind
its wrought iron ~ates
Sever a l thousand were on
hand when the gates opened at
8:25 a .m. At least 12,000 were ex·
pected to file by the graves of
Presley and his mother before
the gates closed this afternoon.
Scores of nower arrangements
lined the winding quarter-mile
driveway to GrC:1celand Mansion
and more were crowded into the
graveyard garden to the south.
Among the arrangements was
the angel -u Styrofoam rorm
covered with white c hrysan
themums. its hands and wings
painted gold.
··A young woma n from On
tario . Ca n a d a. Barbara
McClean. came in and or.dered
the angel," said MaChrie Cox.
an e mployee o r Burke's
Flowers. which for year s
handled flower a rrangem ents
for Presley's mother's grave
Manager Aneta Watkins said
she had been averaging 100 or
ders a week for such designs as
guitars. broken hearts. crowns.
crosses and the emblem TCB -
Taking Care of Bus in ess .
Presley's motto.
Mrs. Cox said she had also re·
ceived an order for a red rose
a rrangement from Priscilla.
Elvis' former wife; and their
daughter. Lisa Marie.
Also awaiting the fans in lht.•
00-degree heat was a row of air.
conditioned souvenir s hops and
roving soda pop sellers.
Other Bill-Slaaky
Solons' Raise Halt
Faces Senate VOte
SACRAMENTO <A P l -A
proposal to halt a scheduled 10
pe rcent pay raise for legislators
is going to the Senate floor, but
the fate of a relC:1ted bill de·
termines whether it m ukes the
November ballot.
The Senut~ Rules Committee
approved a proposed constitu-
tiona I amendment and an ac-
companying bill Tuesday th<.1t
would keep the h.1wm akers' pay
at $23.332. blocking a r<;1ise to
S25,555 that is schedul<'l! ror
Ol'cember
The approved measure. SCA
71 by Sen. John Dunlap. D-Napa.
cannot be placed on the ballot
unless the related bill is passed.
extending the deadline for No·
ve m ber ballot measures from
June 29 to Aug. 18. That bill. SB
2243. has been rejected once by
the Senate but is scheduled for
anotht.•r vote tonight.
an urgency measure becaust•
oth erwise it could not haVl'
taken effect until J an. 1. after
the pay raise will have gone into
effect.
Dunlap's SCA 71 would ch;mgc•
the Constitution and authomw
the lawmakers lo alt<'t lh<'ir
sala ries. as provided in his SB
2244.
Unless SCA 71 reache~ lht·
ballot and wins voll'r approval.
the 120 lawmakers will get their
raises. provided by legisla tion
passed in 1977.
The raises would be their first
in two years. under a constitu
tional provision allowing 5 per
cent annual increases
Legislators also are g('tting
.:;uch fringe benefits as S40 for
daily expenses when 10 S(•ss1on
and free use of a car.
Mangers' bill would have de-
layed the r a ises until nc·xt
July 1. It passed the Assembly
79-0 in June
Planners
Eye Permit
For Condos
A public hearing on a pro·
posed conditional use permit to
a llow development of 253 Turtle
Rock co ndo miniums i s
:.cheduled for Thursday's meet-
ing or the Irvine Planning Com-
m is~1on
The commission meets at 7 :30
p m m city council chambers at
city hall, 17200 Jamboree Blvd.
The Donald L Bren Company
of Huntington Beach seeks ap-
proval to build the two-story
co11domimums on about 20 acres
near the Sand Canyon
Rt•servoir. along the future ex-
tension of Sand Canyon Road.
Tht· plan conforms to existing
zomng. according to Planning
Director Eddie Peabody, and
has a density of neC:1rly 13 units
to the acre
The dev£>1opment would in·
elude two half-acre recreational
arl'aS each containing a swim·
ming pool, a spa and restrooms.
Indiv idual condominiums
would be from 1.090 to 1,638
squa re feet in size. according to
rtoor plans. with two or
three bedrooms.
Peabod y recomme nds ap-
proval of the development, sub--
JeCt to review of la ndscape
plans
In another m a tter. com ·
missioners are scheduled to in·
spect site plans for a com·
mercial center. Trabuco Plaza.
to be built at Yale Avenue and
Trabuco Ro:.id. in the Northwood
housing development.
Inmate Dead;
Three Injured
REIDSVILLE. Ga. <AP> -A
group of white inmates attacked
black inmates with prison-made
weapons at the Georgia St.ale
Prison today, and one man was
killed and three others injured
before guards restored order.
prison officials said.
The disturbance -the second
maJor violent incident at the
racihty in less than a month -
was ended and all inmates were
locked in their cells. according
to a spokeswoman for the state
prison system.
It was not known how many
inmat<'S were involved in the in-
cident Wb1l e approving the Dunlap
measures, the committee also
-citing constitutional problems
-killed an Assembly-passed
bill that would hav<' blocked the
raise without a ballot vote.
FrowePageAJ
-e 'Ofl1'1Tt}tt" ~ Ill~ Iii ~ n ft1)•
proved Dunl a p 's measu res
r a ther tha n the Assembly·
passed bill, AB 2606 by As -
semblyman Dennis Mangers. D·
Huntington Beuch. because the
ballot approach is "far more ac-
ceptable." said Sen. John Stull.
It-Escondido.
Legisl ative Counsel Bion
Gregory. the Legislature's legal
a dviser . sitid last week that
Mangers' bill violates a constilu·
tional provision against chang-
ing state salaries by an "urgen·
cy" statute. one that takes effect
immediately.
Mangers' bill was drafted as
MRP0It'f · Pl:.l~}k. ·:·: ~
i;tJsked both the FAA and the Na·
tional Transportation Safety,
Board "to undertake Che klnd of
thorough investigati o n
necessary to provide the max .
imum safety lo those citizens
who .use t he Orange County
Airport and to those who liv<'
and work rtear it.'·
Agran has said he believes
despite the toll In lives. the
crash record at the airport has
been a lucky one.
According to him. it is only a
matter of lime before an
airpfane -craShes-into an oc-
cup1ed school, industrial or (.'Om·
mer elnl building.
To the FAA 's Allen, he wrote
that the accident prevention ac-
tions taken by the agency "fail. I
be lieve, t o address the fun-
damental question of whether
the nature and volume of air
traffic al Orange County Airport
Is compatible with citizen
safety."
He characterized llir traffic as
"a volatile mix of large com·
mercial jet airplanes and s mall,
numerous hol>l>y aircraft. n -
..._-~ s.uthC.0.tt ··--'""' ,_, I\ CM*•~ Wt\tf'NY\ ~ ~., ,,_.
='!a.~-:.~.,.r..:~.~~ U) Wlt\t •••
, .... ,.,...,
Vitt PTe"\t.11\t AM g.,_.,.,, Mit~
O.EDHAM. Mass. <AP) -A
judge ruled today that a coma·
tose 12-year -old boy must re·
main connected to life-support
equipment despite a petition
from his father to unplug him.
Norfolk. County Probate Court
Judge Jer emia h S ullivan
claimed that evidE>nce was not
conclusive that the brain or
Louis Stone was dead He had
been in a com a since July 2
when struck in the heart by a BB
accidentally s hot by his father.
The boy is at Goddard Memorial
Hospital In Stoughton.
Dip ~oneer~ Car~er
--··-· .......
"':::::: ... "'it
OHIHH \.-•-r NoM "'"'''.~' -"'M•"t•Ol•l'W''
Tet.pflo1te (11•)~
a.......-A4'119'\1""'9MM•11 -•Y•ll•y-Ofl><•
111.a10
,,_ -<'-""' ......
'-""'~ Im °"-= C-ri::t::'~°':i i::r •• , •• ~rl~-'::r.' ..... IR moy ... ,._...c .... ,_ -··· ......... _ 91 ....,,..,.,_
le<-tt•h M•I• H'41 •I CMI• lolt•I Qlll~~•• \vt>w•••tt.., •1 um•• U '9 :::::r-~ :~!i!.:' -ftly ...... , ...
The rather. Nevllie Stone. 49.
said Monday he wanted \he boy
n·moved from devices keeping
him brc-athing He s wttcbt'd
from t~tlmony July 26 ln which
he pleaded with the Judgt to
keep the boy oA o respirator.
"A v~.cet.able," Stone satd, "l
can't live with SCC!lna him llke
that."
Myra Stont-. Louis' motht-r,
had said !!he wantfd hf'r son to
remain on the equipment
WASIDNGTON !APl -Presi·
dent Carter expressed "deee
concern" today over the decline
of the U.S. dollar abroad and
called for recommendations for
action Crom top finanoial ad-
vlsora.
Carter, 1n a statement Issued
at the White House. said he had
b en diacuaalng the matter with
Treasury Secretary Mlcbu•I
Blumentho1 .and wlt.h WtUlam
Miller, chairman ot the Fedet'al
Reserve Board .
·'The sharp decline ln tbe
dollar and disorderly mark.el
condlUons. at .a time when the
U.S trede position ia abowlna
signs of real Improvement.
could threaten proueas toward
dealing with olir fnnauon and
achieving orderly growth ot
home and abroad." the state
m ent said.
The dollar s lipped back today
on Europe's money rqorkets but
stayed above the record lows blt
in trading Tuesday. 1t did
somewhat better ln Tokyo.
"ft looks as It that one-day
dollar rt..orovery la now over ." 8
1 London trader said.
Tbe dollar's renewed weak·
ncas pusht!d up lhe price or aold. o tradlUooal bf'dte for Investors
tn Um• d monetary unc~rtaln·
ty , bu:t It faUcd to reach the
tecordhlpactTue day.
The metal was tradto1 lhi•
momlnt at 121~-~ an oun~ ln
Zurich, Europe's biggest bullion
market, and $215.70 in London.
Tuesdsy was one of the wonit
days 1n recent memory for the
battered dollar. which set record
lows against the J epanese yen.
Swiss franc and We11t German
mark. But a reaction set In by
afternoon,· mostly due to /rof·
IMAkln1. dealers said, an the
dollar s>Ulled back.
Carter's statement was the
flnt frdm the White Kouae Ln
weeks oo the pll1ht of the dollar.
which \be past year bas l05l
more than 30 pc_rcent ln value
naalnat thCl Jap1ne•~ yen. 33
percent acolnst \he Swiss frunc
anu 15 porcent a1alnsl the
German mart<.
The decline in the dollar has
pushed up prices or imported
goods from those countrle•. such
11s a utos, steel and eleclronlcs
eQuipment. which bas worsened·
the nation's Lnn atlon rate at a
time when the administration Is
trying to find ways to control ris·
' lnR prices.
It wa11 not clear what kind of
m easures the udmlnl1tr1tlon
could take to stop the fall In the
dollar. One Po lblllt.y would be
to step up Intervention tn cWTen-
cy markeu to buy dollan with
rorei((n currenclc to create de-
ma nd and thus prop up the
price
)
···-· ..
(/
17
.
~ Afternoo•
N.-Y. Stoen
VOL. 71, NO. 221, 4 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORAN!E COUNTY, CALlFORNIA WEDNESDA-Y , AUGUST 16, 1978 TEN CENTS
Schmitz, CordOva Open CaDlpaign )
One Embraces JarviJJ; Other Shuns Governor
t
' r
' ,,
HE'S A JARVIS MAN
Republican Schmitz
8J GAaY GllANVIU.E ... ....., ......
State Senate candtd1tte1 John
Schmlll and Ron Cordova be1an
• aeries al campat1n debates
Tuesday wltb Republican
Scbm1ll cllnain& ever so liahtly
t.o Howard Jarvia. Simultaneously, Democrat
Cordova was pulling distance
between himself and Gov. Ed-
mund G. Brown Jr.
Cordova said he will wait to
see "which Jerry Brown" is run-
ning against Evelle Younger
before deciding who be will vote
for in the gubernatorial race.
Schmitz made il clear he is a
Howard Jarvis man.
Six limes durine the :iO·minute
debate be mentioned that he car-
ries the Jarvis endorsenient into
his ballle with Cordova for the
stale Senate seat being vacated
by Newport Beach Republican
Dennis Carpenter.
And even thou.lb the Jarvis
debate was settled by the voters
June 8 when they approved
Proposition 13, Schmitz insisted
it is "the" issue in bls November
election confrontation with
Cordova.
The Cordova·Scbmitz verbal
duel al the Airporter Inn in
Newport Beach attracted more
than lQO people who p~id $8 a
lunch to see and bear/the two
candidates.
As expected, the exchanges by
the two men while answering
questions put to them by a panel
of newsmen were crisp and fre·
quently pointed.
If Cordova-was on the de·
fensive when speaking of bis op-
position to Proposition 13. so was
Schmitz as he defended bis
membership in the John Birch
Society and bis bolt from the
Republican Party ln 1972.
Schmitz called the society "a
very fine patriotic organiza·
lion."
And be split hairs when be
said he was still a member of
tbe Republican Party in 1972
when be accepted the American
Independent Party's presiden·
lial nomination.
Schmitz said he dido 't change
party affiliation until after bis
AIP presidential nomination. ln a paraphrase of the well·
known Schmitz" remark about
the first Nixon trip to Com·
munist China, Corodova
quipped, "I'm informed by my
Republican friends they took no
exception to John-Schmitz leav·
ing the Republican Party, only
t.o his return."
But Schmitz pointed to bis en·
dorsemenl "by all Republican
~roups"" and county GOP
leaders to prove he has
••mended fences" with the party.
Cordova wouldn't let up on his
attack on Schmitz' political
travels. however.
Tbe Democratic assemblyman
said that. unlike his roe. his
political epitaph will not read,
''Have campaign. will travel."
Schmitz retalia ted to the
barbs by recounting his 2"'2·year
record as a congressman and
S\.\ years as a state senator.
Included in the record cited by
him was support of efforts by
Jarvis to r eform the state's
property tax laws. efforts that
date back to the mid-1960s.
Schmitz also said he is prob·
ably the onlx. ,P<mgressm an
ever sent to W8shington who
saved the taxpayers more
money that he cost.
(See DEBATE, Page A2)
o.llyNll ...........
'WHICH JERRY BROWN?"
Democrat Cordova
r
Guards • Deterrent to Arson?
LB Cable
Decision
Delayed
After hearing charges that the
cable television company serv-
ing Laguna Beach, "doesn 'l de·
• serve a penny, let alone• bil in-
crease, councilmen decided
Tuesday to delay action on' a
1 proposed rate increase until a
t public hearina is beld next
month.
Storer Cable TV Company is
seeking a 21 percent increase in
rates to Art Colony television viewers. Councilmen heard a rec-
• ommendation from their owrl
cable television committee for a
lower rate increase Tuesday.
Customers now pay $6.75 per
month for the service in Laguna
Beach, where the hills block
te levision reception. The cable
TV committee is recommending
an increase to $7.75 for basic
. service -instead or the com-
' pany's suggested $8.60 request.
Laguna Beach attorney Stuart
' Katz was critical of a notice sent
1 out with cable television bills,
which said the council would
, hear the rate hike request, but
did not indicate when.
"The public will bear the 11
percent cost of this increase,"
he told councilmen. "Yet no one
• has informed the public why the
increases are needed.
"I've been to other cities
' where the television reception is
better with cable, and I think
we' re getting ripped off in
Laguna Beach," he continued.
Laguna Maggie Meggs was
~ equally vocal-in-her-opposition ~ lo the rate increase. ~. "Storer TV thinks of Laguna
Beach as a little village of half.
·-witted people," she said. "The
service ls lousy and it there's
any rate change, it should be to
lower the cost." t But Coun cilman Howard
· Dawson, who is a member'Of the I four-member cable TV commit·
tee, defended his committee's
recommendation. <See CABLE, Page A2)
OMty ~ ..... "'*-
FORMER PRESIDENT AND MRS. NIXON AT HOSPITAL
Tricia cox Also There to Greet Her New Niece
Gladys Adams Dies
At 70 in Laguna
Gladys Adams, who ran the
reservation service for the
LalfUl\a Beach Hotel~otel A3· sociatioo for many years before
operating it Independently in re.
cent times, is dead at the-age of
70. Mrs. Adams was a 33·year
resident of Laguna Beach. and at
one time operated the Mar Vista
Apartments with her husband,
John.
When the couple sold that
busine'$s, the active woman
became the 1'eaervations
operator for the city's hott!l
•motel business, later operating
it as Gladys Adams Reserva·
tlons unW last January when
she dlscoverect she bad caneet"-. ·
She was a member of the
Business and Professional
Woman's organization, a
member of the Chamber or Com·
m e rce and attended the
Neighborhood Congregational
Church in Laguna Beach. · ·
She died Monday nig,bt at
South Coast Comm unity
Hospital. ·
r ~~~7tiiiimiiiiiiii.:""-:-~..;-.-::-~~.:.::....::.
J Burne
Mrs. Adams took care of shut.
ins for many years and never
missed a Chaplber of Commerce
breaklaslmeetin& In more than
,tryn~ a datt
ftiend. .
Claaaic Car Deatroyed l
f
She is survived by husband
John, of lhe family home at 788
Manzanita l>Jive; sisters Evelyn
Cross, Laguna Beach; Mrs.
Miriam Errant, Chicago and
Mrs. Barbara Fuacheim of
Grand Haven, Mich. f
A South Laguna man with an
aching heart stood by the
roadside tn Huntlnaton Beach
Tuesday oilbt and watched bis
90 percent-restored 1958
Mercedes·Beo1 luxury sedan
bum.
Tbe clasaic auto, toda)' a
charred lhell, wu valued at up
to *20,000 due to the restoreUon tnveatment, accordln1 to
Geor1e Tbociiu of e TreuUN
Itlana.
Fire Department Jnapector
GarJ Glenn Hid a friend WU
teat·dri~ U.e lwwry Hdan
10UU.bound oa ~ul'lt Street.
near Paclllc Cout lllabway
atiout e:ao p .m . wbesa fire
~-
Thomas, rldln1 as a
passeqer, and b1a unldentifted
companton swerved to a halt
and bailed out u namet eru~
ln\O tbe cu's Interior.
"A ~of CUY1 stopped and
tried to put It out wltb flre a ·
tlaauilben, but ii wu too late,"
1ald WPedorGlenn.
He added that while the
Buaha.,t street Fire station la
not tO() far dlit&nt, the car fttt
occurred tn an area where no
tetepbonill are dolt ~ to sum·
mon emerceney ahl.
Flame• bad ensulfed 'tbe
cla11lc fO\lt·doOt sedaa when
ttr.men wen able to reach tbe •cen•.
Grand Haven, Micb
Mrs. Adams was 1raduated
from &raduate Drake Univenl·
ty, re eel Vina a delJ'ee In music.
A memorial service wilt be
<See ADAMS, Pa1e .U>
A bOat crulee to Catalina,
1pon1ored by the San Juaa
Capistrano Reeteatton Depart·
ment, JI scbeCtUled lk'Om 1 1.ru.
to I p.m. 'nnandu. 'X'M IJt fee tnclod• U.. ·roUnd,trl.P and bua
ttllllportadaa fn• ti.. elty Of. oea '° lAllll BMeb Ud tMael.
t
Nixons
Welcome
Jennie .
By ANNE COOPER Of tlle.,..., ...... $t.lff
An elated David Eisenhower
described the birth of bis
clau1bter Tuesday as "jmt. a
wonderful experience."
The new father, flanked by the
baby's erandfatber, former pres.
ldent Richard Nlxen, met with
reporters outside San Clemente
General Hospital where bis
daughter, Jennie, had been born
a few hours earlier.
Eisenhower said he and his
·wife, Julie Nix.on Eisenhower,
prepared for the arrival of the
baby by attending childbirth
classes at the hospital. He as·
sisled in the delivery of the nlne-
pound, four-ounce girl born al
1:32 p.m. Tuesday.
The natural childbirta de-
livery left his wife "feeling fine,
really fine," Eisenhower com·
mented.
"I called the Nixons and my
mother and my grandmother all
within three minutes of the de·
livery," be said. "The Nixons
came right to the hospital, and
everybody is thrilled, just
thrilled~"
Nixon. who said be was
pleased that bis first grandchild
is a girl, told reporters Tuesday
evening after visiting his
daughter that he looks forward
to baby sitting.
The former president said he
won't try to influence his grand-
daughter's career choice. "Jen·
nie will do whatever she wants
to do," he said.
"She is the first chUd born ln
the United States with relatives
on botb stctes who wel'a presi.
dents," he said. "Wttb that
heritage, she may be attracted
to politics. But if she chooses a
music career or something else,
that will be fine too."
Jennie Eisenhower, as well as
being Nixon's granddaughter, is
tbe greaHcranddaugbter of
former president Dwight
Eisenhower
Eisenhower said be and bis
wife sereed to name tbelr
(See .JENNIE. Pa1e ,U)
PUCE A PEI'
PROUD PAPA INTERVIEWED
David Eisenhower
Supermarkets
Busy; Strike
Fears Spread
LOS ANGELES CAP> -While
consumers Jammed
supermarket checkout lines to
stock up on foodstuffs, stores
from San Luis Obispo to San
Diego braced for a possible
walkout by 70,000 clerks that
could be less than two days
away.
"At this moment. we are very.
very busy," said Marlene Crites.
a worker at a Lucky market In
Culver City. "I think people
heard the news about the strike
and they'ntout to stock up.••
While stores in some cities re.
ported bus iness as usual.
managers of others said buying
was brisk. ••If the clerks vote to strute,
.. The response was unreal. we·re expecting a lot more
The first one that called picked customers," said Jim Willard.
h Sb ot ho " niebt manager of an Albertson er up. e 1 8 super me. market ln Bakersfield. "We 've That's the advertlain1 succeaa 1tOrf told by a Hunttnaton already stocked up" to meet the
Beach woman who placed this increased demand.
ad ln the Dally Pilot: However, he said, bis store.
G rmun s~. e mo.~ wblcb normally operates 24
trnd. F.-m Loves t!Yer. hours a day, will cut back to
yonv but protectlv~. xxx· nine hours ln the event of a uu 1trtke.
If you have~ pet Y9U want to Members of nine Southern
place In • •ood holbe call Calllom a locals of the Retail
8'1·5878. A friendly Dally Clerks Union voted Monday and
Pilot ad·vlaor wtll belp you Tuttda,Y on whether to accept
word your ad for the sreateat tbt atoru• latest offer or
impact. autbortre a at.rite. Union leade'°"
We .make lt euy ror you to reeoaunmdld reJmton of the
pC&t a leW words to work tor mana1•mtat proposal, which you, In the O.U1 PUoc. can.ct few a tUO·•n·bour w.,e ~~-'!'!'-~ll'ii-mlll'!'...._. .... ""--· _ IMlle owr ~ years.
l..aguna
Police
Skeptical
By Sl'EVE MITCHELL Of ... Daffy ...... Sgff
A suggestion that contractors
hire full·lime security guards in
Laguna Beach to protect homes
unde r construction in the arson-
plagued Arch Beach Heights -_
community was met with skep-
ticism by police Tuesday night.
The hillside community has
been the target of 10 arsons in
the past three and one hall
months, and nearly aJl of the
homes torched or partially
burned were in the fr~ming
stage or construction.
Laura Wantz. who lives in
Arch Beach Heights, asked city
councilmen Tuesday night what
the city is doing to prevent
future arsons in the area.
Homes in Arch Beach Heights
are on long. narrow lots. and the
distance between dwellings is
often less than five reel.
Neighbors fear another arson
might result in a death. or
damage to already existing
hom es.
The woman suggested full-time security guards be hired by
the builders or 28 homes in the
community as a safeguard
against further arson attempts.
But Police U . Al Olson said to-
day he sees problems with the
woman's suggestion.
"The concept is good,·· the
police officer said, "but there
are problems with hiring securi-
ty guards. If you're going to
make 28 builders hire guards up
there. they're just going to go
walking around with weapons
spooking each other. Someone
might get hurt."
Olson said he will meet with
an informal neighborhood group
~day to discuss possible pro-
tection measures that could be
instituted.
<See ARSONS, Page A2l
Coast
Weather
-Lo.w ct'oudlness --night
and morning hours with
mostly sunny afternoon
Thursday. Lows toni&bl 60
to 65. Highs Thursday 68 to
72 at beaches and 78 to 84
inland .
INSIDE TODA~
tr• no April F'ool -Anatl•
onnounce plan# for on11
plo110/f and World Sen••
game.s. Story, Page Bl.
J
I
Mf'I ....
•1 ,11• FANS AT ANAHEIM STADIUM GET THE MESSAGE
A SaMe From Old Friend Gene Autry on the Big Day
Ban h I d ,.,....PapAJ
c..an JENNIE ...
Talk Doe
In San Juan ,
San Juun Cnp1strano city
councilmen ure to discuss un
<igreeroent tonight that could
lead to annexation of 88 acres or
Bear Brand Ranch land to tht..•
city by the t•nd of this year
They are expected to talk
about access to the hillside
pa rcel wc-st of the city through
Cullt• R1c<1rdo. CCJllt' Aspcro and
C rumrinl' Ro.id a nd consider
pre• 1oning propo~als before
.Julhormng ,1n agreement with
lh'J r Brand Ranch Company
lr,tc na1hng down ;.innt'xat1on de
tails. a cit) spokt·sman S<lld
About 40 ~angle -family res
1dt'nCe'> are planned on tht·
propt•rly
Approval of the <Jg rN!.ment
d11nng tonight's council session
could enable annexation pro·
posals to move before the coun-
ty's Local Agency Formulion
Commission for considerati->n
within the next three months.
the s pokesman said.
Access to the parcel through
city-owned streets has been
fought for months by city resi-
dents who believe the project
would increase traffic in their
· neighborhoods
Othe r ite>ms on the •council
iJgenda for tonight include a con·
tinued public hearing o n ..
~eneral plan amendment for
Window Hill. McCracken Hill
and Forster Canyon and u pro-
posed 82-ccnt general fund prop
crly tax rate and seven-cent
!>ew1:r bond lax rate
Fro• Page Al
ARSON .••
"Whut WC' rcully need up lher<'
is more eyes and ears," the
lieutenant s aid, h inting at <J
neighborhood wal<.'h approach.
lk said lighting in the area is
also important. noting that most
of the arsons were set in the prl'·
dawn hours
"We'll encourage people who
lave next to a construction proj-
~ct to aim their floodhghls next
door." he said.
Olson s aid hl' h as also as
signed a full lime investigator to
tht• <.1rson probe. ;ind said he 1s
looking into extr a patrols for the
tightly-packed community
The arson.< a<e also be•5 vesligatcd by the slate ·re
Mars hal's Arson and Som
vestigation Unit in Sacrament .
which oversees a ll intentionally
set blazes in California.
daughtn Jl'n111c be eause 1t
sound::. hkt> Julie, but isn't
·•Julie didn't want to huve
Jnot h e r '.Julie'." h e said
"Beside!> 'J enna~· e<Jn 't be
i.hortened tu a nicknamP."
Asked how he felt about ha't·
1ng his first child, Eisenhower
said. "It was lime we're 30 "
Nixon said his daughter, who
will be returning home with Jen-
nie in thn•e days, "is doing
great."
"1 was a m<At<'d." he said.
''She looks as 1f she's been out
for a swim m thl· cold Pacific
She's come through in fh1 e style ..
T he baby, descn~d us havmg
dark hair and eyes. may look
IJkt• u _;1.;ixon or may look hkt• an
Eisenhower, the form<'r presi
dent said. adding that perhaps
the two wmilies bear a certain
rt'semblan<.'e
"All babies are beautiful," hl•
said. "but I must say girl babies
are spe<.'ial. ..
The new father arrived for his
evening visit driving his own car
to a rear e ntrance of the
hospital. where a spokesman
said Mrs. Eisenhower ls in a
private room in the maternity
ward.
Whil e news paper and
tele vision reporters quizzed
Eisenhower at the rear door, the
Ntxons and their elder daughter.
Tricia Cox. were driven to th<'
hospita l's main entrance by
Secret Service agents.
Forty mi1tutes Jitter the
former president emerged from
his visit. accompanied by tlis
wife and Mrs. Cox. and paused
at the hos pital entrance to
ans\\ er reporters' questions.
The former president looked
tanned and vigorous and very
happy
"Being a grandfather may be
even greater than being a
father." he s aid ... Your ex-
perience with your own children
1s so immediate that perhaps
you lack the necessary distance
to evaluate and appreciate the
relationship to the fullest ex·
tent."
Saying he has learned from
his relationship with his two
d~u~hters "neve r to indicate
what my choice is" when they
have decisions to make, Nixon
said allowing children to make
up their own minds m ay be
more important these days (pr
girls than for boys
".Julie 1s un indl'pcndent
thinker. and so is Tricia," ht>
s aid of his daughters. adding
tha t he expects his ~rand
daughter to be independent a11
well.
"I'm not going to try to in-
fluence her," he said.
Then, appearinJ? lo have had
an afterthought. he laughed and
said, "But she is going to be un
Ao gels fan."
l.nw-cost
Limits
Assailed
By KATHY CLANCY °'"'~ ......... M iaslon Viejo Company or·
rtcluh1 told Orante County Plan·
nln1 Commlaaioners Tuesday
they don't wiant to be singled out
b)' lhe COW\l)' to build so-called
ufrordoblc housing.
Compuny Vice PresJdent
Uuvld Celestin said he opposes a
county proposal that would re·
quire his ttrm to build up to 2.500 or M lsslon Viejo 's remaining
10.000 units in tbe low and
moderute Income ranges.
"The Mlssjon Vfejo Company
does support the concept of at.
lordublc housing,·· Celestin said.
He also said the company
would "go along with" whatever
housing policies supervisors
adopt early next year for all of
the unincorporated area.
"We don't feet it ls ap-
propriate at this time to place it
exclusively on the Mission Viejo
community," he explained.
Celestln's remark's came as
commissioners r'eviewed the
first comprehensive revision of
the 10.324-acre Mission Viejo
community plan.
The commission will hold at
least one more hearing Sept. 11
before making a recommenda·
lion to county supervisors .
County planners had suggest-
ed that the community plan re-
vision require tha.t one-fourth o(
the remaining 10,000 homes to be
built in Mission Viejo be within
the price ranges of families
earning 80 to 120 percent of the
county's median income.
The county's median income
now is $16.200.
Commissioners, however. sug-
gested that planners abandon
that provision and draft new
wording that would make Mis·
s ion Viejo subject to whatever
housing policy is adopted later
hv supervisors.
Supervisors by January are to
adopt a set of policies aimed al
providing less-expensive hous-ing.
~
The Mission Viejo Company's
proposal also calls for adding
478 additional acres to the
planned community.
A bout 400 acres would be in
the north part of the community
a long El Toro Road and Oso
Creek. It would remain at
agricultural land until later.
plannJ?O said.
The remainder would be aJong
the San Diego Freeway in the
southern part of tbe community
and would be designated for in·
dustrial development.
Post.er Sale .;
In Laguna
To Aid Arts
Laguna Beach artist Craig
Kauffman will s ign original
posters for visitors to the
Laguna Beach Museum or Art
Aug. 23 as part of a fund-r aising
project to promote the visual
arts in Orange County.
Sponsored by the visual Arts
Committee of the Orange County
Arts Alliance. the non-profit
group 1s hosting a series of
poster signings.
A limited edition of 500 of
Kauffman's poster§ will be for
sule at the museum. and the
a ward-winning painter and
sculptor will sign 100 of the
posters. which sell for $25 each.
Unsigned posters are $10
Kauffman Is a lecturer at UC
Berkeley and an associate pro-
fessor at UC Irvine, specializl~
in palntinf and sculpture He wit be at the museum
beginnlng al 1 p.m He told councilmen that the
departmenl received some in·
formation Tuesday on the state
probe, but would not elaborate
"for obvious reasons."
Nigael Sewage .. Plant
OAANOE COAST l"IC
DAILY PILOT
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t•1n Y•HPW' lr•lnr S.M•.o.t<.• \l•Utt •tWt
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--~ OIMIL'4 •.Ja at&. a.y ~CM•-C•tlf_o_ ........ _
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Uouftl .. edt~ "•Gi........,.11-IMlllf!QA••n ~o ........ ~u
OffleH
CO.lo Mow lJO W." 8-• S-t ttunh"91Dftf1 .. tft t1111-ft-••rl S.001-\ Vlltn· UlOt I.A ... , -••'-"Ol_,,_
T~M (114)"4Mtt1
Cluelfted A~--.U.M11
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Saddleback Agency
Softens Objections
By JERRY CLAUSEN °' .. Del" ...........
The Saddlebac'\ Area
Coordinating Council has soft-
ened Its stand against a SIS
million sewage treatment plant
planned near Laguna Ni&uel
Regional Park.
Caught between opposing
views of two homeowner groups
executive board members voted,
8-1, to back away from a (our-
point objection filed with the
county Board or Supervisors by
the Lagunu Niguel Community
Association.
Only the Laguna N11uel
representative to the executive
board, a Uulson agency betwffn
south county resldenu and coun·
ty IO~rnmcnt, voted acafnst
the softer awd.
'J'be ~ voted to object only
to pln11tJ u~s U\rougb Crown Valle)' Partway.
l ..
Laguna Nie\&el residents op-pos~ t.be:...Allsn .water. M~
ment Agency plant on charges of
inadequate environm ental
documentatlon, its proxlm1ty to
two parks and several housing
de\relopments. trucklns of
slud1e to the plant v1a Crown
Valley Parkway and tbe a1en·
cy's alleged failure to notlly the
Laguna Niguel Community AJ.
soclatlon of plans to build tbe
facUJty at the site
F,...P.,,eAJ
ADAMS •••
htld at 2 p.m. Tburadav for Mn.
Adami at the Net1i.borhood
Con1r.ptlonal ctaard, l40 St.
Ann'• Drtve. TN f1rnlb' Jiu
•u.s1eated • alqle red "°" tn 111&1 of bouquett
. .. .,.
_ ..............
FANS OF ELVIS PRESLEY WEEP OPENLY AS THEY LEAVE GRAVESITE IN MEMPHIS
On Flrat Annlveraary of the .King's Death, 12,000 Expected at Cemetery
Thousands Gatlwr
For Elvis Tribute
MEMPHIS, Tenn. fA P> -
Fair skies. long lines and a six-
foot-tall flower-covered angel
greeted the Elvis Presley
faithful today as they came to
pay homage to the king of rock
'n · roll on the first anniversary of
his death.
Dick Grob. chief of security
for the 131~·acre estate, said
more than LSO people spent the
night on the Graceland grounds
gathered m a huddle JUSt behind
its wr9ught iron gates.
Several thous and were on
hand when the gates opened at
8:25 a.m. At least 12.000 were ex-
pected to file by the graves of
Presley and his mother before
the gates closed this afternoon.
Scores of flower arrangements
lined the winding quarter-mile
driveway to Graceland Mansion
and more were crowded into the
graveyard garden to the south.
Among the arrangements was
the anael -a Styrofoam form
covered with while chrysan·
themums. its hands and wings
painted gold.
"A young wom an from On
tario, Canada. Barbara
McClean. came in and ordered
the angel ... said MaChrie Cox.
an etnployee of Burke's
F l owers. which for years
handled flower arrangements
for Presley's mother's grave
Manager Aneta Watkins said
she had been averaging 100 or-
ders a wet>k for such designs us
guitars. broken hearts. crowru..
crosses and the emblem TCB
Taking Care of Business.
Presley's motto.
Mrs. Cox said she had a1so re-
ceived an order for a red rose
a rrangement from Priscilla.
Elvis' former wife, and their
daughter, Lisa Marie.
Also awaiting the fans in the
90-degree heat was a row 'Of air
conditioned souvenir shops and
roving soda pop sellers.
Clemente to Weigh
Sewer Bond Issue
San Clemente city councilmen
will be asked tonight to put a
U .2 million sewer bond Issue
which was defeated by 185 votes
in March on the Nov. 7 ballot.
Tonight's City Council meet-
ing will begin at 7:30 p.m. at city
hall. 100 Ave. Presidio.
A successful bond e lection
would allow the city to lower
monthly service charges from
$9.25 to $7.70, said Rod Coloma.
city finance director.
The Regional Water Quality
Control Board has required that
San Clemente make sewer im-
provements to meet the Board's
discharge standards. Fallure to.,,
comply with the Board's re-
quirements could result in rtnes
to the city as high as $6,000 a
day. Coloma said.
Meeting Board standards will
require rehabilitation of the
city's sewage treatment plant
and construction of a connection
line from the treatment plant to
a regional outfall currently un·
der construction in Dana Point
A successful bond election
would also finance construction
of a water reclamation plant.
which would increase the city's
water supply for irrigation
purposes. Coloma s<iid.
Voter passage of the S4.2
million bond issue would entitle
San Clemente to Sll.9 million in
state and federal grants. Total
cost for the proposed improve
ments is Sl5.4 million.
Also on tonight's City Council
agenda is a re<.'ommendation
from Stephen Burrell. assistant
to the city manager. that the ci-
ty hire BMC Landscape. Inc .. to
take over city parks main·
tenance at a monthly cost of
$12.000.
BurreJJ estimated that the city
will save $103.555 this year by
hiring the maintenaoce <.'Ontrac·
tor. low bidder among four for
the job. Ten city park main-
tenance employees have been
shifted to open city Jobs. after
the City Coundl voted in June to
discontinue dty staffed park up-
keep.
The move was made to cut c1
ly <.'osts. bringing the 1978-79
budget into line with property
tax revenue reduced by p<Jssuge
of Proposition 13
Before Congress
mediately recanted that con-
fession after receiving a 99-year
sentence In a Tennessee s tate
prison.
F,....PageAI
DEBATE •••
Cordova called. such claims
"war stories" and said he could
tell some of his own. He did.
In substance. there was more
agreement than disagreement
between the two candidates.
Both. for example. said they
will work to strengthen local
government and against cen-
tralization in Sacramento.
Both candidates also decried
expandl>d government spending
and "growth of governm~t."
Both said they support extend-
mg c<1p1lul pul'Ushment to cover
more <.'rimes.
01sagreement came on the so-
('alled Briggs initiative, prohibit·
1ng hom o~t·x uals from
teuching in public schools.
Fro• Page Al
CABLE •••
"A 11 of the communities,
:..round us pay $7.50 or more." he
argued. "And the complaints of
bad s"ervice in this area is. no
greater than other areas sueh as
San Juan Capis trano . San
Clemente or Newport Bea<.'h.
"Storer may not be the ul-
timate in systems, but it is cer-
tainly equaltolheothers."
But councilmfen decided to
hold the rate hike issue over un-
til its Sept. 5 meeting at which
lime the publie may comment
on the proposed hike.
Councilmen did approve a
$2.50 charge to customers who
want a mid-band converter at-
tached to their sets that will al-
low subscribers to receive an ad-
d1t1onal eight channels.
Burglars Hit
Laguna Homes
Burglars broke into two
Laguna Beach homes Monday,
taking camera equipment from
one and a television and stereo
equipment from the second.
Douglas Howard Smith. of 310
Dart moor St.. told police
som eont• climbed through a
bedroom window to gain access
to his home. where camera
equ1pml'nt valued at $1 ,800 was
taken
In th(' second burglary.
th1evt's forced open a sliding
gl a1>~ door at the home of
Thelma Roy, ransacking the
ho us c· a nd taking $200 in
television and !itereo equipment.
WASHINGTON <APl-
James Earl Ray took the wit·
ness stand before Congress to-
~ay and swore. as expected, that
· I did not shoot Dr. Mal'lin
Luther King."
Ray, In his rJrst publlc ac-
counting under oath of the
events surrounding the April 4,
1968. murder of the civil rights
leader, told the House assasslna·
tiona committee; "My.testimony
fstffe same tfiat T woufcrliave
aiven to a Memphfa trial court if
l bad had that opportunity.·•
"In respect to my 'guilty
,plea." he said. "it is not a dif
ficult matter for an attorney to
move his client to a guilty pfoa
I'm sure every member of UUs
commlltee knows-tbJa."
never:fulliUed promise of travel
documents, Ray said he carried
Ite ms across the Canadian and
Mt'xi can borders for the
• Sp<in ish-accented ''Raoul.'"' who
had mysterious telephone num-
b<.'rs m New Orleans and no last
nitm(• Ray could remember .
The 50-year-old Ray, accom-
panied by a phalanx or U.S.
marshals. wu brouaht Into the
commlttee's chamber under
aevere security provl1lo111. Spec-
tators. lncludln1 photographers,
were cautioned they would be
eitpelled if they so much as stood
while Ray, wearing 11n ill-nttlng
"port coat and er-.v tie, entered
the room
After hit attorney, lon1·tfme
auesalnatlons buff and writer
;Mark Lane, en1•1ed acting
chalrinan Rtchardaon Pteyer ln
battle over Ra1'• trutment b.)' f•d-ral autborfttu, Raf
teuncbed lnto • lOftl and ram -
bttn1 prellrillnll'J ll•tement, IUs votce quiet bUt b<ltt,. R•l p&ead41d su.Ut.1 ln u. to
Kin• • kllllna but 1lm01t lm·
Ray's attorney al the time or
his sentencing was Percy
FOremail. a nationaTiy 'known
\rial lawyer.
Then Ray turned to what ap-
parently will be the underlying
theme of his claim to lnnocente:
that he was a mere pawn in
what he thouabt was a aun-
running scheme by a mystery
man named "Raoul" and muy
have been set up. moreover. by
undercover operations or the
FBI. The story ls one which Ray
has long aired via prison ln-
tcrviowa.
Ray told t.M committee llbout
bnakin1 out of Mlne>uri SUte
Prtson in 1967 and travellna In
iif-zat Cashloo to St. LOuis, the
Chicago area. lndianopollJ and
ul\lmately to Canada. wb rt he
spent one otaht wttb a prostltut~
and robbed her pl.mp the nut
day -then met "Raoul" by
chaoce on the Montreal dotks.
lo return for money and a
Arter smuggling the items.
whJch Ray did not specifically
identify, he said he~ent to Los
An1eles. toolt ..--bartending
course, tried -uMucttssfully to
go to work for the Internal
Revenue Service, traveled to
New Orleans to airee to the tun·
tunning scheme with the
mystery man -and ultimately
returned to Los Angeles.
"f was taking a lodt-pleldng
-rather a locksmith course at
this time." Ray told the conmjt-
tee.
At another point, he sai4: "l
robbed lhe -f was robbed of a watch ...
H~ told or trytnc to contact a
1lrl wt>o odvorttsed berselt In an
und~raround Loa Anaele!I
n~wspaper "as a ftt.tnpho-
aom~thlnf." Apolo(ttJca.uy~ Ray
adde41. ••Of course, I had been ln
Jill tor about ah years."
••
• .
.....
OA:t. V PILOT use NATION I WEAlliER
b) Blackout, Looting
. 4'ast
::=.:;~ feasting
. '
....... ~ Tem~~''·r
Marplalne
Hold That Freeway
Memphis Reels
From Strikes
NOW •• kNOW DBn.-some )'Hra b•tk. lhf' llalt'
of Callfom1a dtt ded to take tbia Uttlt' country roiaa
lhrou1b eo.ta M a and tum It iJtto a fr'ffway ll wu a
vlsk>n lnto~ future of vast masnlt~.
When t.be stale h11hway brua decided to do that, ther_.
was a pl~ •&onnidt> lhe road known as lht s~nt» Ana Army Alr Base. Nearby, lhe Army wu flyina P 38
Lockheed .u,btni.ns llthten out of what ls now Orunae County Airport.
MEMPHIS, Tenn IAP> -A massive power railure blamed by tbe
utility on ~abotuge blacked out Memphis l'arly today, adding to the
wot•. or u city already reeling from walkouts by police and firemen.
Labor leaders threutened a general strike unless a settlement comes
!f()Oll.
Then \ftt"e •few fnall alands alon1 the old rural road.
People drove by slowly. tryl.na to conserve tht one a.el of ll~a lbey'd bffn allocated by ~ OPA They were 1oln1
t>ll•Y on t~ 18-cmt-per-caUon .rasoJme too. lust they run
out of ''A'· rMtton coupons
MEANWHILE ACaOSS nlE the seas, a guy named
Adolf Hitler was rantinc around uhd lryin& to figure out
how to stall olf Gt>neral Dwight 0 . Eisenhower from tnvdd
mg Fortess Europe with bis Allied armies.
Back here m our home re&i<>n. however, the slate
hlghway people were lootine ahead to when World Wa r II
would be over and they could sta rt building som~ superhighways
0ne of tbe roads they selected was Route SS, that rural
lane that as a ma)or f~er from inland reaches to th.-
State Highway Brau Work on Delar/ing Actwn
s horeline at Newport Beach. Over the years, it has
variously been known as Newport Boulevard. Newport
Freeway, Route 55 and Costa Mesa Freeway
OVER THE YEARS. there have been a lot of changes
alongside that road. The Army Air Base went away and
the la nd has been transformed into Orange Coast College,
Southern Cali fornia College <the Army chapel still stands 1
and the county fairgrounds. The P-38 fighters vanished and
Air Cal now flies more peaceful missions out of the
aerodrome to San Francisco.
Traffic has increused. Commerce has increased. Smog
has leaped to terrifying levels. But the state highway brass.
in the ir infinite wisdom, are still studying the road and trying
lo figure out whattodowith it.
The Orange County Transportation Commission got in·
to the uct only this week, asking for further s tudies.
EMERGING FROM THESE deliberations, Bruce Mat-
tern, Costa Mesa's tratric engineer , attempted to analyze
for the City Council what was happening to the future fate or the old rural road that had been declared a freeway
route almost four decades ago.
"I've got reason to believe we've got a delaying action
going," he s uggested
By golly, that's it. A delaying action. Now we know
H Hitler had been that good at delaying Eisenhower,
we might still be fighting World War If.
Nixon No Longer
Needs Public Fund
(
DETROIT <AP) -Former President Richard M. Nixon is in
the money or at least he has enough of it to feel that he no longer
needs money from the public for legal help.
Lloyd Johnson. who succeeded Rabbi Baruch Korff as trustee
of the "Nixon Trust Fund" last year. says new income that Nixon
has received h as made the fund unnecessary.
Tuesday's editions of the Detroit News quoted Johnson as say-
1s:1e Nixon had told him recently that his finances are much im·
proved since he collected money for being interviewed by David
Frost and began receiving royalties on his new book.
Johnson. an Ann Arbor nursing home owner, estimated that
Nixon once owed more than $750,000 to lawyers defending his
claim against public r elease of the tapes and other evidence used
to prosecute the Watergate trials and support the House impeach·
ment proceedings.
Scuttcred looting was reported
ucross town oofore power was
r estorecJ, ~ind a buby had to be
delivered by fl ashlight at one
hospital bd ore emergency
puwer could ht• connected
THE BLACKOUT also left isoml' .. 1rec1s without water pre!>·
sure lx.-cause electric-powered
pumps were out Memphis In·
tern1tl1onal Airport had to shift
to s tandby power.
County pohcc said between 15
and 20 adults were arrested on
minor charges stemming from
the looting, which was concen-
trated at northside liquor and
convenience shops. They said
n..,e juveniles were in custody on
C?harges o( burglary or attempt-
ed burglary · National Guard
troops, ulready on duty for lht·
strikt·s. were dispatched to tht·
county jail lo beef up seeuritv
Mayor Wyeth Chandler had
been able to muintain calm tht•
previous nights by imposing u
dusk -to-da wn curfew Somt•
pickets have been urrestcd ea<:h
might when they refused to dis·
be1nd by the 8 p.m . deadline
THE BLACKOUT came on th1•
fi rst anniversary of singer Elv1!.
Presley's death. Thousands of
his fans had come to this city of
650,000 to pay tribute at h1~
grnvc• al Gl'aceland Mansion.
but this w;is far fewer thun had
bet"n t·xpccted be fort< lht·
strikes
On Tue!>day , C h andler
modified his no·negot1a tions
slunce and offered to place the
strikers' wage dem ands on J
Novem ber ballot, giving voters
a chunce to pay for the settle·
ment with a sales lax. incre:.ise
The strikers rejected the idea
irnd culled for binding urbitn1·
tion.
Police Director E . Wins low
Chapman said al a pre·dawn
news conference that the
blackout was "probably due to
sabotage." The FBI was assist
ing investigators of the sabotage
at the Memphis Light Gas &
Water Division's Cordova sub·
station.
UTILITY SPOKESWOM.\N
Paula Payne said someone en-
tered the big plant and threw a
series of switches -a complex
procedure requiring knowledge
of the system -which cut off ;1
main electrical link with th{•
Tennessee Vall ey Authority . The
TV A's Allen Steam Plant on
Presidents lsle1nd in the Mis
sissippi River could not carry
power demands alone and
automatically shut down.
Troops had been on duty at the
Cordovu plant Monday but wer<'
r eplaced by private guards
It took ubout 2' 2 hours tn
restore power to all of Shelby
County.
Chapman said a non-striker
was being questioned but was
not considered a suspect. He
sa 1d the man requested a
lawyer.
THE BLACKOUT came at
12·32 a.m , about 12 hours after
Gov Ruy Blanton s tepped into
the dispute. demanding payment
·Twisters Hit Midsection
Thumlentorms Spawned by Col,d, Front
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fo r National Guard services
back to 1968 and calling for u
quick settlement.
Chandler. asked about the
governor's remarks this morn-
ing on A.SC television. said they
s ugges t ed an attempt at "blackmail "
More than 1.000 National
Guardsmen have been patrolling
thl' c ity with about 100 non-
striking police officers and 75 ~heriff's deputies. while 200 Fire
Oepurtment oCCicials and non
striking firemen have kept 23 of
the city's 48 fire stations open.
Senate OKs
Carter Plan
WA SHINGTON The
Senate todny approved
President Carter 's plan to
l'Xpund college grants and
loans. making them availa-
ble for the first time lo mid-
dle-income students.
The 68-28 vote followed
a pproval Tuesdity night of
a rivul $500·pcr -s tudent
tu1t1on lHx cred it that
Ce1rter opposes.
Al the White House, dep·
uty press secretary J,lex
Granum said the presi-
dent's position "has not
c h;.ingl•d tfo is strongly
opposed to s uch "
Bul Granum did not say
whet-her Carter would veto
the bill.
The Cartt'r program
would prov ide aid to an
additional I 4 million stu·
dt>nts, with about 64 per-
cent of the benefits going
to students from families
with incomes of $15.000 to
$25,000 a year.
Af'~
POLICE PROTiCTtON -Memphis police Lt. Louise lJun<.1-
vent is escorted to her cur by striking policemen Jesse ~oe. left. <.1nd ~1<.tck Hughes Tu(•sd;.iy night. <.1fter she at-
tempted to arrest the two for violation of a citywidt<
c urfew. She was unuble to (l rrest the sergeunts she h.is
worked with for 17 yt•urs und broke down crying. Tht>y
were arrested by olht•r officers later.
ERA. Extension May
Get Senate Debate
WASHINGTON <APl Senate Majority Leader Robert C. Byrd
suid today he isn't cert"tin the Senate will debate a proposed 39-
month extension of the Equal Rights Am~ndment this year.
The House voled 233·189 Tuesday lo extend the ERA ratification
time limit to June 30. 1982 from its current deadline of March 22.
1979. However, the measure is threatened with a filibuster in the Senate.
ASKED ABOUT PROSPECTS for action on the ex.tension in the
Senate, Byrd said, "I don't know As of now J just can't say."
The West Virginia Democrat said he hoped the Senate would
have time to debate the me<is ure. but noted. "We have so many
things to get done i~oshort a tim~ as Congress tries to adjourn for the
year in October
Supporters of the extension hope the mementum ot a n Wlexpec-
tedly large House victory will hold up when the bill reaches the Senate.
REP. ELIZABETH HOLTZMAN, 0 -N.Y .. prineipal sponsor oJ
the extension. said the 44·vote margin was "larger than a ny of u~
a nticipated."
·'The size of the House vote will give tremendous momentum to
the effort in the Senate," said Ms. lioltzroan, who is scheduled to
meet with pro-extension senators on Thursday.
Rep. Don Edwards. D·Calif .. floor leader of the pro-extensior.
forces. said. "We thought we wer e going to win by 2Sor 30 votes.''
AUGUST
ODDS 'N' ENDS
MAIN 9EACH ~;:.
240 IROADWAY, LAGUNA llACH
497-4403
COAST
). c ~
HWY
~ 0
OPEN DAILY g .
Qt FAH. ,/
Cl PARIC
VISA. 9-6 • FREE PARKING
FROM OUR GAIDEH DEPT.
c
GARDIA ~0.0LS _____ STEEL WOOL
C. CMOOSI ,. 8 PADS
ROMA
s&.ICTIOMOF ASSORTED SIDS FIOM
6 STYUS #l COAISE TO 6000 W~ SUPERFINE HAHDUS
YOUR CHOICE
BRA"SS
@
SPRINKLER
HEADS
.. OM OUR B.ECTllCAL DlPT.
SINGUPOLI
DIMMER SWITCH
1
' ~
i I
\
Glory Earned
Dory Racers Aho Got Blisters
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
OI l1le o.llY Pl ... 5'afl
Lifeguards from lhe Orange Coast covered themselves
with glory, blisters and some other things during the
annual Catalina to Long Beach dory race this past
weekend
THE GRUELING event pitted 11 teams of lifeguards
against one another in a 28-mile rowing race from the
Isthmus of Catalina to the Long Beach marina.
The winning performance was turned in by the team
from the San Clemente City Lifeguard Department. Al
Lavayen, 22, and Barney Voorhees, 31, crossed the finish
line in five hours. 10 mmutes, JUSl eight minutes off the re·
cord set last year by Steve Helfer and Larry Moore of San
Clemente.
Right behind them was the boat rowed by Tom Snyder
and Scott Stuart from San Clemente State Beach.
STEVE WENGER AND Eric Bauer from Newport's
~1 aran e Department had the dubious distinction of
rmishing dead last.
"Yeah, they even finished behind Laguna Beach."
snickered organizer Bob Schroeder, a Los Angeles County
lifeguard. Laguna's team consisted of the oldest entrant.
Bruce Beard. 47, and 17 -year-0ld Ingrid Loos, the only
female in the race. Beard and Loos finished a respectable
eighth.
Schroeder didn't mention where he and bis teammatf'
finished in the race. Voorhees said the LA County team
gave his San Clemente boat a real race for about half the
28·mlle distance. "Then they just broke, got sick and
started throwing up." Voorhees said.
AFTER THAT IT was a fairly easy pull to the finish
across glassy seas protected from the sun most of the lime
by high overcast.
Voorhees, who's been with tbe San Clemente
Department for four seasons, said the race was bis first -
and his last. "A lot of people do it just to say thev've done
it and a lot or people do it to win. I 've done both, so I can quit
now ."
It's not that the Laguna Beach resident didn't enjoy
the race, although he admits that h e was a little
uncomfortable about six miles from the finish when the
sun came out.
THE REAL PROBLEM occurred after the race was
over. Voorhees and Lavayen had a little hand trouble. "It
wasn't that we had blisters. We had pretty good calluses
built up.
"It's just that our hands were really tired. We could
barely move them to open a bottle, .. he explained.
The bottles. of course. were congratulatory beers the
thirsty rowers were anixous to consume. Not to worry
about the poor lifeguards. Race fans helped them open the
bottles and even obligingly poured the contents into their parched mouths.
Coroner's Report
Transient's Death
Due to Aspirin
A San Diego County transient
whose body was found on the
San Diego Fret-way in Mission
Viejo July 6 died as the result or ingested acetaminophetl, an
.aspirin subslitutC'
County s herirf"s investigators
said Tuesday the cause of death
was determined by a coroner's
patho l ogist following
toxicological and microscopic
tissue studies.
An inves tigator said his
department still does not know
wh ether the large dose or
non·restricted drug was
voluntary or forced, so the death
classification is still listed as
"undetermined."
Acetaminophen attacks the
liver when taken in large
amounts, he said.
apparently had been dumped
from a moving vehicle and was
pronounced dead on arrival at a
Mission Viejo Hospital.
He was the second victim
found on public roads in the
Saddleback Valley area this
year.
A nude body later identified as
Camp Pendleton Marine
Richard Aloen Keith, 20, was
found early June 19 along a
secluded section of Moulton
Parkway in Laguna HUis.
Keith died or suffocation. a
coroner's report stated. No leads
have been developed in that
case. either, an investigator
said.
The deaths are not believed to
be related, he added.
Tax Note
Sales
Approved
The 1a1 of S20 million worth
or property tax antlclpatlon
not~s has been ununlmously
41pproved by Orange County
Superlvsors.
Co unty Tax Collector·
Trt•usurer Robert Citron
reported that Bank of Americaof-
frred th\• low bid or 4.71 percent
for the notes.
Thl· county borrows funds
t'~<'h year to carry government
uctivlllt'S through the so-called
dry period before property tax
payments are received in the
1:1 ll .
Citron comAared the 4.71 per<.>~nt bid to lhe bid or 4.95
percent received by San Diego
County and 4 98 percent by Los
Angelt>s County.
H e a ttributed changing
market conditions and the
county's strong AAA credit
r•1ling from Moody·~ Investors
Service for th(• lower interest
rate.
·'This is evidenced by the fact
that last year Orange County
government had the lowest tax
rate or any county, not only in
this ~late but for any large
urban area, and yet was able to
C1deq uately provide all the
services needed," be said.
Citron noted county
government's 1977-78 tax r ate
was $1.33 per $100 assessed
valuation compared to Los
Angeles County's $4.50 tax rate.
He said interest on the $20
mi I lion in notes w i 11 cost
$775,807.
But the funds will be
reinvested for short terms at
hig h er-yielding rates, he
explained. so the county's
interest charge and other
expenses wiU be paid without
cost to taxpayers.
Other bids received for thl!
county notes were from Wells
Fargo Bank, at 4.72 percent;
Payne Weber, 4.745 percent:
Security Pacific Bank, 4.758
percent and Chemical Bank, 4.96
percent.
Viejo Tenninal
Wins Support
Of Supen;isors
The Mission Viejo Company's
proposal for a $1.4~ million
combination bus terminal and
train depot won the unanimous
endorsement or Orange County
supervisors Tuesday.
The board agreed to seek
$850,000 in state funds to build
the t erminal adjacent to the
railroad tracks and Interstate 5
near Cabot Road in Mission
Viejo.
Or a nge County Transit
District (OC'f0) directors last
week voted to ask for $750.000 in
state funds for a bus terminal
about three miles up the
freeway at Laguna Hills Mall.
An OCTD spokesman said
th e re would be some
overlapping of service area
between the two terminals.
However, both are shown on
OCTD plans and they could be
built to complement one
another, the spokesman said.
St ate officials have $8. 7
million available lo help finance
transportation centers
throughout the state. Allocations
aren 'l expected before 1980. o c To or r i c i a 1 s s a i~d
applications for tttmti'ims-ifSO
have been prepared by the cities
of San Juan Capistrano, Irvine.
Santa Ana and Anaheim.
Beer Theft T old
By Laguna S tore
Owners or Cove Liquor in
Laguna Beach told police Tues-
day someone sneaked. past a
clerk during working hours last
week and stole 20 cases or beer
and a bottle or scotch.
Police said the foreign beer
and the liquor was stolen from a
storage room at the rear or the
store, located at 1045 North
Coast Highway last Thursday.
Keith Arthur Klingbeil, 23, was
round by motorists in the fast,
northbotmd lanes of the San Diego
Freeway near La Paz Road. Disabled Students'
He WOfe no sblrt and a ruppte had beelt barned from b.ia chest
app aren tly wttb a vehicle
cigarette llgbter. Klingbeil
Man Attacks
Three Nurses
LA MESA <AP> -The
husband or a woman patient
attacked three nur ses at
Grossmont Hospital wltb bis feet
durina a visit, authorttles say.
The trio included Florence
Biesigl, who was hospitalized
with a black eye, bloody nose
and cheek lr\jury. Edwin F. Warms, 4S, was
booked ln S.n Dle,o County Jail
for 1nvesttaatlon of aaaault with a dqdl1 Mapon.
·to Be S-tuWed
Trustees from six West
Orange County school districts
have scheduled a joint meeting
tonight in Fountain Valley to dis·
cuss s~ial eduction programs
for handica.,ped students.
The meeting will be held at 7
o'clock in the Fountain Valley
High School cafeteria. 17816
Bushard St.
Local •school officials believe
the season will mark the nrst
time all 30 west county school
board members have held o
Joint meeting.
Federal and state mandala
requlre Hunt!Mton Beach Union
H1&b Scboo1 Dfstrtct otnciall to
cooperate wttb the nve west
county school boards in forming
handicapped student programs
by 1980.
High school district trustees
plan· to meet tonight with school
board members from Fountain
Valley, Ocean View, Huntington
Beach City, Seal Beach and
Weatmin.ster elementary school
dlstrlcts.
Otriclals trom the six school
dlatrlcts formed a West Orange
County S~ecial Edu cation
Con11ortlum last )'ear to meet lbe
federal and state mandates.
The Jaws require that tbe re·
1ional consortium provide equal
tducaUon (or all rea students who bave pb,ystcal or mental cU. abWtie1.
•
DellY "'-Stat! -YOU CAN ALMOST FEEL THE SPRAY OF THE OCEAN IN VIVIAN CALDWELL'S PAINTING
'They Come In Mere to Look at the Wave1, and That'• a Good Feeling'
Artist Translates
Ocean to Canvas
By SfEVE MITCHELL
OI Ille Deity Ptlet lt.lff
''I must go down to the sea again.
For the cau of the runnmg tide
Is a wild call and a clear call
That may not ~ demed."
"Sea Fevn" by John Masefleld
Her interpretations of translu-
cent waves and turbulent waters
draw surfers into Vivian
Caldwell·s Laguna Beach
gallery.
The kids set down their towels
and s urfboards and gaze at the
power in her oil-based waves.
crashing onto rocks or welling
up into peaks.
"They aren't thinking about
money. or covering their living
room walls, or wondering if the
painting matches a particular
sofa." the nine-year Art-A-Fair
exhibitor says.
"They come in here to look at
the waves, and that's a good
feeling."
The people who do pay from
between $400 and $4,200 for her
unique style or art do so because
they too are captured by the
power she transplants onto can-
vas.
And for a woman who is ter-
rified or the ocean, that's quite a
trick.
The Phoenix import says she
has nearly drowned twice. and
her nearest encounter to the
ocean these days is knee-deep
with a large lens camera.
"Don't let any artist tell you
it's wrong to take pictures of
your subject," the 41 -year-old
woman advises. "God never
makes the right composition
anyway," she laughs.
Vivian takes hundreds of still
photos back to her Laguna
Beach gallery where s he dis·
plays them on A screen and then
paints what she sees.
She used to paint on location.
in various areas in the Art
Colony. "but the wind would
come up and knock my easel
face down in the sand."
Or beachwalkers would come
up and watch her work .
something with which she can-
not contend. ··r have to be alone. Even my
family knows better than to
bother me when I'm working."
she says. The Lake Forest resi·
dent shares a studio in Laguna
Beach with three other artists.
She also hates to have people
calJ her work seascapes.
"Artists have painted the sea
for years, but they use it as a
vehicle for man and boat. Or
they're painting roam against
rocks. or for atmosptrere.
··But nobody paints the sea as
moving, liquid, trans lucent
water ."
That's what Vivian Caldwell
captures. She calls her work sea
portraits.
'Tm doing a small portion of
the water, rather than a large
expanse or ocean."
The award-winning artist cap-
tures movement in her waves.'
And how does s he transform
that wave action onto the can-
vas?
"You're not going to believe
this but I put on some soft rock
and dance while I paint." she
laughs.
"The faster the song, the more
movement in the water.··
Festival-goers are immediate·
ly struck bv the vivid colors and
action in her exhibit. located in
the second half of the Art·A·
Fair grounds out Laguna
Canyon Road.
"I don't know anybody who
isn't moved in one way or the
other by the sea." she says. "It
makes some people restless. and
is a calming-factor to others.
.. And." she adds. "the ocean
makes some people sick to their stomachs."
"Maybe. I'm a masochist to
paint something that I fear so
much." the former model and
singer says.
But that's a feeling, too. and
Vivian Caldwell knows how to
use emotion to ar6stic advan·
tage.
2 Hurt in Fire
OCEANSIDE <API -A ditch
digger and a fireman were
burned Tuesday wheh natural
gas from a broken pipeline in
the middl e of Oceansid e
Boulevard was apparently lgn1t·
ed by a spark from a trenchin~
machine. POiice say.
Saddle back
FM Radio
Plan OK'd
Sa ddleback Community
College trustees Monday night
allocated Sl50,000 from a tight
budget so the college's long·
planned 3.000 watt FM radio st2·
lion can become a reality.
All teehnical details in prep-
aration for the larger student·
operated station KSBR are now
<.>omplete, Superintendent
RobHt A . Lombardi told
trustees. The present station i~
only 10 watts.
The board must now allocate
the money to show the federal
government that trustees want
the bigger radio station located
at the college. Lombardi said. or
pass by the chance forever.
Part or the a llocation will
match part or a Sl29.000 Health.
Education and Welfare <HEW~
grant now pending. Warren _
Deacon. KSBR ·s program
manager.said.
The HEW erant is the final
step or a long, arduous pro-
cedure college oCCicials have
gone through to win the new
broadcasting freque-ncy from the
Federal Communications Com·
m iss1on < FCC 1.
Deacon said he expects HEW
to make the grant award an-
nouncement sometime in m1d-September.
If HEW comes through for
Saddleback. Deacon said. con-
struction of a 1.200Jeet transmit·
lt!r on O'Nt•all Ranch nt-ar
Ortega Highway will begin im-
mediately.
KSBR's operators hope to be
on the air by Dec. 1.
Programming will stres!> news
and public affairs coverage,
Deacon said. Music programs
will reature jazz cind soft rock.
tailored principally ror listeners
between ages 25 and 45.
The station will broadcast 19
hours. seven days ci week. The
broadcast signal will reach
about 500.000 people from Tustin •
to San Clemente.
le ~-
G em
T alk
By J. C IWMPHRIES
Gemolog131
DIAMONDS AND BLACKS
and lhl' A/ncun t"t'Onomy
Make a rare moment
last a ·lifetime
with a rare gift.
Black Africa now supplies more than
half of the world's diamonds. Zaire,
alone, is the source of JS percent of the global supply, producing 17 m illion
metric carats annually. T~----than twice the output of south Africa, which has long been considered the
world leader. Botawana produces
about 2.S mllllon carats annually, followed by Ghana with 2.2 mllllon car at s; Namibia, 1.9 mllllon, and Sierra Leone with 0.75 mllllon. Other producers a re Tanzania, Liberia, Angola, the Ivory Coast and the Cen-tral African Republic. Before clvll war wracked Angola, that country pro-
duced 2 mllllon carats yearly and Is expected to return to a product(on level
near that amount. now that conditions are again more &ettled there. The Cen· tral African SelllnQ Organization,
: based In South Africa, handles most
Black African diamond sates, despite
the unfrMndlln ess betwetn that apartheid country and the rest of
Africa. Diamonds obviously play • ma·
Jor role In tl'tt tmtroence of Black Africa. For example, 1S percent of thi
Central Afr~n Republic's foreign ••· chtngt earnings come from diamonds.
'
One smgle diamond Set s1mpry
dnd elegantly To sparkle on •ts own
Of last mg value. because not wo diamonds
are alike Come 1n to see our beaut1f\ll
selection of diamond so11ta1re 1ewelry
And you 'll know why 1fc; the gift
that makes a rare and
wonderful moment
last a hfet1me J. C. .Jlumpfu.k6 /fa we tr6
MEM8ER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY @
1823 NEWPORT BLVD COSTA MESA
CONVENIENT TEAMS BankAmertcaro--Masitt OlarQe
l2 YEARS IN THE SAME LOCATION PHONE ~1
IJ
l
II'
t
A8 L /SC
Orange Coast Oa11v Pilot Editorial P!HJ.e .......................................................... Wed~. Augu.\ 18. 18711
Rober1 N. Weed/Publisher Thomu Ke.vll/EditOt
S.rtMar• KrelblchlEditorlAI PA91 Editor
Public Passing Up
Chance to Speak
Judeing trom poor Jtll•nd.tnct" ut rt'C't•nt pubh<·
forums an San Clcmenlt• :\Local C'O.!stal ProarJm < U'P 1
the c1tiztmry has appanontl) p,1 C'd up ..in opportunity 11;
tnflUl'OCe the futurt> Of lhl' Cll) ~ c.myon~. bluff~ .111t.I
bl'i.IChl'h.
lmpressivt-\'!forts h,J\'l' bc<'n m a de by tht.• n .. glon.JI ~tjff or lhl' Cahtornt,1 Coustal Commi!'sion. which ''
dr 1ftin~ S.m C'll•mcmtt• ~ ~talt• m and 1tt.'(f I.Cf'. lo bOl1t•1t
opinion from city n·~1dt.>nt., on bt• t ~t.· of S.in Clc.•m1•n1t··.,
t.'o,1t-tlint·. •·
T\\o mel'ling~ l~•~l wct•k oHt>rt·d tht• publit• .in
opportunity to respond lo rt~ull!. or thl· opinwr. !-..1mphni:
A tot.11 or 30 peoplt• attt•ndl"d tht· t\\u ml•t•tm~s wmt· of
thl·m from out of lo\\ n
Al ~t.H<l· an thl' dr.1ftmg of tht• 1.CP ,1n· 'ut•h mallt·r.,
a~ wht•lht>r SJn Clt"mt·ntt· will contir.ut• to hjvt• afford,1blt.•
cous t ,11 ho usmJ!. "ht>I h1.'r tht· pubhc h.1s udt·quatl' .u:ct·!'>:-.
to San l'h.•mt.•ntt• bt•acht·~ 1cullt"d "the bt·st .ind h1rgt•M 111
Southt>rn Or:inge County" in a commission r(•port 1 :rnd
whether cily canyons an• :td{'()u.1tely prob'ch•d
On the.w and othl'r important coast<il 1~sut.·s wt• .irt.·
'Sure San Clementi.! r cs1dents have som e conc ern~
Infotmat1on on th{' LCP and on future pubhc meetings
where the plan will be discussed is availablt' from tht·
South Coast Region..il Commission. 666 E. Ocean Blvd .
Long Bt•ach 90801.
San Clemente citize ns c.m h ave <i voict• in tht· city's
coast a l phmning. They should exerc1st> it
Great for Lagunans
Laguna Beach has an bpportunity to acquin· an
is land of beauty just o utside the city limits. <.ind tht·
c hance s hould not be lost t o fears of mainten a nce.• costs.
Horte nse :\tiller. a former teac her who h as
maintained the Hortenst-Mille r garde ns be hiod Boat
Canyon. h us alread y g iven h e r 2.5 acre land. complete
with l.500 varieties of pla nts and trees. to the city upon
he r death.
The gift is a generous one. Her only stipulation is thut
the c ity maintain the grounds and open it to the public.
Luguna Beach had a s imih.ir opportunity many yl'ars
ugo to acquire a large garden s pot within the city. But
the City Council at that time turned down an offrr for
the plush 11 -acre Smith t•state near Eme rald Bay
ThJl wus ~· d ecision that city officials han· lt\'l'<i l(1
rl•gn·t
If the land 1s accepted and annexed to the c ity. thl'
cost for m:.untenancc would bl' less than Sl0.000 a yt.•ar.
And the garde n gift comes complete with a 50-membc r
Frie nds of the Hortense Miller Garden volunteer group.
which has vowed to help maintain the gardens and conduct
tours .
If their g roup's help can be a ssured. the city should
<tccept the offe r and go a head with plans for annl'xation.
They Made the Point
A recent d emonstration ug:.sinst nuclear Wt'apon~
~yslt•ms and che mical warfore devices allegedly s tockpill'd
on the heavily populated Orange Coast at the Seal Beach
Naval Weupons Station demonstrated something else.
Civil dissenters and polict' who must obsl'rve and
cont rol exercises in the people's right to assemble und
<>x prcss opinion can coopernte quite well for the good of
pt•ace . safet y and public orde r .
Seal Beach Police Chief Edward Cibburelli's 45-man
fOl'cc would. of course. prefer things stay typicully s imple
in normally s leepy Seal Beach.
H uppily. the pro test s tuged by the Southern
California Alliance for Survival had none or the overtones
that us ually mar s uch gatherings .
The coalition is comprised o f 50 varied gro ups
opposed to the idea of nucle<.lr arm s storage he r e. They
s howed that a protest move m ent needn 'l be un-Americun
or unruly to prove a point.
They may have a good point. lf nuclear we <.1pons and
c he mical warfare materiel arc indeed present <.at Sc.ii
Beac h. it.might be timt> now to relocate them.
• Opinions el(pressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
artists Reader comment 1s 1nv1ted Address The Daily Pilot. P O
Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321
Boyd I Okay Sign
When you make a circle
with your thumb and fore
fing er , you ~mean e ver y.
thing's all right. It's dif·
ferenL in Japan. T ho-~itfn
means you're tatJOng aboul
money. And when you so
signa l in France, you're say.
ing something's worthless.
Don't even want to talk about
what it signifies in Greece.
Am too bashful.
Q. "Roy Rogers' horse was
Trigg<!r. Dale Evans' horse
was Buttel'milk. But do you
r ecall the name of the Jeep
driven by Roy's sidekick Pat
Brady?"
A . .Certamb' do.l'lel1Ybelle.
t
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
Or COUl'Se there•s no
real public aenUment
against illegal ~exJcnn
nllens. That's becau.'le
they do work no one
lsc wanta to do and do
H 10 cheaply that
CaUfornla buslne.ssmen
and farmers make
mlllloos off of their
labor.
8 R.R. M. • ~ l:I'. c-. ........ ....... , ,....~ """' -... _ _..,,.... .........
~tz=,r-.....---·
All that a ci ti zcn of
Uruguay needs to run for the
presidency of that country is
a petition with 50 signatures .
How do you acc-ount for the
fact that more people li sten
to the radio in April and May
than during any other
monlhs?
Q. "What was the most
violent western film ever
made?"
A. How about "The Wild
Bunch" as a candidate for
that distinction. The whole
population of a town
masRacres a baod of would·
be bJlnk robbers. _
Q. ••no nll the s(ates use
Daylight Saving Time?·'
A. All but Alaska, Hawaii
and Indiana. ..
The municipal omclals of
Tucson, Ariz.. once passed
an ordinantc that made It' il·
, legal fOf' a visltlnf football
team to acore against the
University of Arizona
WUdcat.s on th~r borne field.
If you've aee:o one termite. you say. you•ya lcen them
a!l? Not quJte. Yore than
2.000 species are romping
around this earth.
World'• Ont expert on• the
art of antllnt-that '• fllb· ma. my boy -wH not a man but a woman. &be, the
prtoraa ol a Brttlah nunnery,
e'f n M'Ote a trutile on how
to Uc rue..
Rowland Evans/Robert Novak
Ford's Book Takes on Reagan
WMilllNGTON Intimates of <; n .ii d f'' or d . h• a rf u 1 that
pubht•utlon of his memoirs early
rH•xl ) t'<tr will cr;14.•k Rl•publican
h.1rmony wldt• OJ)('n. ure quietly
try1111( to softt.•n tht.• former presi·
d1•nt ·~ att•u·k agatn!.t Ronald
H1·a~t111
No t11l l' dm·<·tly connccll'd Wlth
tht· book 1 nuw ubout hJlf
(lril!llll'd I will
d I~ l' U., S l ht•
m.1th'r "'1th
outi..1d1•1 s Uul
111 s I d l ' I .., . I n
1 ,1 I k i.. w 1 l h
Ford .rnd his
l' n t o u r a g l' .
h.1v1• ll•arnl-<l
l"ord 1s using
h1i.. IH10k to
bla m t• his dl'
fl·at by Jimmy Carter squarely
on Ht.>..ig..in 's cha llenge.
Pubhcat1on .of the book 1s
scht>duk•d for nl'xt ~lay. just as
prl's1dl'nt1al campaigns are get·
t111g under way Reaj!an is a cer-
t o.1111 c.md1datt·. Ford a possibll'
ont.· Ford's 1ntl·ntion to use his
book to "pru\l' thl· case" that
Rcag ~1n 's ch\llll·ngt.· against an
in.cum bent lfrpublican president
t•IN•ted ,, Dt>mocr:.it wi II relt'ast'
polit i<·JI hobgoblins .
Cool hl'ads inside the Repub·
lican p;1rty arl' trying to dis·
su ude Ford. But considering
what CY.W intimate c..ills Ford's
"hatred" for Reugttn, success 1s
questionable.
R.\FSHOON RISES -The un-
m 1s takable rise of Gerald
R a fs hoon within the White
House is coming not al the ex·
pt'n~e of hi~ s upposed rival.
press' secn. .. tary Jody Powell. but
rather doml'sl1c poJic.y chief
Stuart EmmMat.
Tht.' rl.'U~On n .. r~hoon . th~· ad
vt'rt1s10g t.•xecut1ve in charge of
, 1·t:Jb il 1lat1ng Pres1dt!nt
Mailbox
C11rter'h Image. 1s"'now prepnr·
ing lhl' brit>fing papl'rs for
Curte r interviews and other
JH•rformances. That job pre· viou ~ly had been done by
Eizenstat. '
The obvious change is one or
style. Rafshoon insists on terse.
easily handled formulae for the
president on inflation. energy.
tux r eform/reduction and other
Questions. In contrast . Eizenstat
used to give him Ion~. detailed
memoranda.
''Refreshing. '1
'rbe change could become one
of substance. Eiiens tal's pro·
grammatic liberalism has been
a major cause or the chain or
"comprehensive" proposals
str eaming fro m the Whitt•
House. The Rafshoon briefings
art.' greatly diminishing this doc·
trina l tone.
A footnore : Rumors of u
Rafs hoon-Powell pow~ clash
are premature at the least. but
t her e was one dispute between
them on Mr. Carter's European
tour. Powell urged 61 sorter tone
than Rafshoon In presidential re·
action to the conviction of Soviet
dissident Anatoly Shcharansky.
The president took Powell's ad·
vice.
MANSFIELD W.\RNS -Am·
bassador Mlkl' Mansfi eld. the
forme.r Sen ate De mocratic
leader now representing the U.S.
in Tokyo. is delivning somber
warnings to visiting Carter ad
ministration offi cials about
Japan's growing fear of tht>
president·s Far Ee.1st policies.
For the first ti mt•. M ansfit'ld
s:.iys. J apanest.• pohliciuns an<.I
m ilitary leaders etrt-privettdy
complaining about lhl' relative
decline of US naval strength
compared to tht• Sovit..•t Union.
Despite Mansfil'ld 's assurances
to the Japanesl• government.
concl'rn is rising a bout the
s teadfastness and reliability of
~Ir. Carter's poltc1t.•s.
Such concerns have been
publicly expressed by many
Americans -including Maj.
Gen. John K . Singlaub. forced
into retirement because he ques~
tioned U.S. troop withdrawals
rr o m South f\o r e:i . But
~r :ms field . a ll'<1ding Vietnam
w<.tr don· did not 10111 thl' Jl<1rm-
pointt.'r~ until th•• .J .1p.1nes t•
tht-mi..l'I' <.'" bt..•g .1n c11nv•·y1nc
their fear.. to him.
Teachers: How lndispenSahle Are They?
To the Editor·
Your cd1tori:.1l or Aug. 8 which
r eports that Orange County
tt-achl'rs rJIJied to "complam
with sour and disappointed words
"about lhl·1r plig ht m post
Jarvis California e nds with the
admonition ... for now at least.
lt..'uchers had bl·lll'r be prepared
lo :.iccepl the notion that the public
no longer cons iders them in·
dispensable to the system."
Wh:.it sort of free society can be
sustained where teuchers are not
tndispl'nsable'1 Wh :.it sort or
future awaits us :.111 if teachers are
merely considert.>d public Cunc-
tionunes no mon: important than
building inspectors or CulTra ns
truck driver:-.·•
The editorial drags out the old
a rgume nts about s alu ri es.
benefits and s ummer vac<i·
lions ... on a kvel that is the envy
of m any who pay laxes supporting
those lifestyle improvements."
Quite apart from the years of un·
iversity trmning and teaching ex-
perience required to re.1ch the top
of any salary :-.ca le Ill the county.
salarv and benefits for teache rs
;ire modes t compa red to those
performing :-.uch cruc1:.1l tasks in
the soci('ty us managing a fast
food o ull<'t or d e liverying
SparklNts Water. Further. long
summer vacations are seldom if
ever rl'ali7.e<l by teachers with
, familicstosupport
Bloated salaries or some ad·
ministrators. great numbers of
non-te<.1ching positions, and ex-
pensive programs or doubtful
value mandated by Sacramento
;md Washington all contribute
heavily to the cost of education
in this state. It is most disap-
pointing that the Daily Pilot
makes no clear distinctions in its
s tatement.
Virtually all observers con-
cede th:.it it Is the classroom
• where education takes place, with
t he teacher In the vital role. If
education is or only nominal im·
portunce to the public o f
California. one wonders who will
write the editorials or the next
century. and who will read them.
WJLLIAM D-:-~uRkE
Instead of saying "the public rio
longer believes teachers are itl·
dilpenaable." the editorial might
better have said "some of the
ptibllc'· feels thol wo71
-Editor
'Dltllfttlt. •• '
To the Editor:
l and il difficult to believe that
a newspaper In th.ls orea wher e
the value or education is obvious
in the prosperity surrounding us
would make the statement your
Augu s t 8 e ditorial
makes " ... teacftcrs had better be prepared to accept the notion
that the public no longer con·
slders them lndlspenJOble to our system."
TboJna1. Jefferson would turn
over ln bls ar vt at such a stupid 1tatement. Our school 1y1tem waa founded on Lhe
nation lb.al, U be Hid. "Ont.y
popular education can safeguard
democracy ... To expand on this
idea. he said. "I look to the dif·
fusion of light a nd education as
the resource most to be relied on
for a meliorating the cond ition.
promoting the virtue. etnd ad·
vancing the happiness of man ...
And wh e r e were our
newspapermen inculcated with
his idea tbat ··A frei: press is the
only safeguard of public liberty"
if not in the schools. ·
Teachers are indispensable in
a democracy. and a news paper
should be the last place to find a
statement to the contrary. I. as
an individual teache r. m<.1y bo
dispensable. but teachers us a
whole certainly <.1re not.
BETIY J . ORBACH
'PatenaaU.de'
To the Editor:
I m us l r es p ond to your
editorial of Aug. 8, ··How Many
Friends Do Teachers Have?" to
point out that its <.tppa rent objec·
livity is really masking an attack
on teachers a nd public employees
in general. Your phraseology is
condescendirtg and ambiguo us.
and your argument clouds un-
derst:.inding the general public
sentiment behind Prop.13.
As an ahgry t axpayer myself,
and as a subscriber to your
newspaper, I want lo reprove
you in your fai lure in not direct·
ing <Jtlention to some of the
areas or government s pending
where true waste and cr iminal
misuse of t<.1x money is t aking
place. You have in recent
months exposed some or thts
prodigalily In the county
supervisor's office. Why stop
there? Other local government
operations will show equal and
worse wrongs. Yes. including
the administration of some of
ouriocal school districts.
But s hame! To admonish
teachers a nd public employees
ror their concern over their
marginal material rewards by
pulling on the bridle of public
Sydney Harris
opinion in the way you do is
deplorable. True. what appears
on budget totals as salaries for
government employees seems to
be :i lot of money. but that 1s the
w e ll -earne d live lthood o f
thousands of people in the com·
munity.
Why focus on that'! Why not
focus on parts or the budget that
are not so r ead ily o bvious.
where error, folly and incom-
petence is bidden?
One of the functi ons of a
responsible editorialist is to re·
fine public opinion. to be the
voice of a viewer that looks
calmly beyond the surface of the
da il y news and public opinion to
offer thoughtful insight~ on what
is happening. Your ed1tor1;.tl is
paternalistic and misleading.
and us a professional teacher
and pubhc employee. I resel)l it
R. BRYTAN
seven times yearly in order to
meet fleet scheduling require·
men ts).
Such a hazard exists indepen-
dently of the threat posed by
nuclear and che mical warfare
weapons stored and transport·
cd in close proximity.
<A note of interest: According
to the Los Angeles Times.
August 7. 1978. JUSt two days
a fter the Seal Beach demonstra·
tion 63. tons of bombs accidental·
ly exploded at the Sie rra Army
depot at He rlong. California
The cause of the explosion is un·
known.I
Four feasibility studies have
been made by the Department of
the Navy lo determine the costs
of relocation According to a
. Navy study from 1970, the cost
of relocation would vary accord·
ing to the site from $98 million to
Sl69 million for the most ex-
pens ive r e loc<ltion to San
Clemente ls l:rnd <which is Ptal»~ Ba~ a lready owned by the navy >.
To the Editor : Su r e l y our De pa rtme nt of
As a person living within one· Defense can absorb this expense
ha lf mile of the Seal Beach from its grotesquely large $127
N I W S d bi Ilion budget. ava eapons talion an as a The Seal Beach Nava l worke r in the Alhance for Survival's campaign to r emove Weapons Station jeopardizes
nuclear weapons from that public heaJth etnd safety by its proximity to e le m e nt a r y racility,.J would like to have the schools. public beaches. residen-
opportunity to elucidate a few llal a reas and business centers.
points which I believe were not It e'xposes children and other
made clear in your coverage of res idents to the hazards of the demonstration which took
.\
S
.. od
tlh
ln·
in·
aC·
a l
bas
in·
!Ci·
in·
Ion
ti al
M s
n.
'AA
tin
ays place in Seal Beach Aug. 5 nuclear stor age and transporta-
A research project completed t10n. residents who may be un. led
in July, 1975. by the Government a ware ot unwillingly exposed to s u c h h a z a rd s . Th e t> as e llC· Accounting Office called for the renresents an unaecentable and. mt r.al.oc.aUoruilJhe:.weaporuLstaHeo ~ )" ----because of the inadequacy o .... f_.lbe ....... _a=· v=orcrar>~ aunger. -
facility and the res ultant DAVIDTRACHTENBERG
necessity to overload docks and
to violate other safety reguta.
tions. The GOA report went on to
say that a severe impact ex·
pJosl ve hazard zonQ.. extends
over approximately 98 acres or
developed property in the s ur-
rounding community when the
station is handling 250,000 pounds
of conventional explosives on the
wharf <as it does approxilllately
• utter• from readers are welcome.
The right to condense Inters to fit
8J)OCe or eUmlnote hbel ii rtierved.
utters of 300 words or less will be
given preftrtmce All 14?tteTS muat in·
elude signature and mailing address
but names may be withheld Mi rt-
qu.est If 6Uf frcient rte.ton ii apparent.
Poet"J will not be pubhsMd
of
l)l'IS
on·
ac· ,
' . ' I
I
' • I '
Bar Should Nominate New Judges
ThouyhUatLarge: • ( Judges are to be elected,
and not appolnt.od. they should
Cirst be nominated by the Bar. &0
that we no longer h a ve e
polltlcally oriented judlciar)
made up largely of those
lawyers who take a part.Jilin in
terest in politics and are re·
worded with u party nomlnaUon.
• People who talk too mucb
and people who talk lOO UUle
both 1uffer rroio the tame f.ar
at bottom, that ot betn1 mlMn·
derstood -tbe loquacious person exhlbttin1 t.bls roar by
overHplalnln• and the taciturn
one by aaytna not.blna.
• Lillie bi.a chanted mtddle·
closs smugness tn the full cen·
tury slnce Melville wrote: "O(
all the preposterous assump·
lions of humanity over humani·
ty. nothine exceeds most or the qltlcisms m~c on the habita or
the1 poor by the well-bouaed.
wet ·Wonned. and well·fed. ''
• Whal makes a classic 15 Its
ability to survive both those who
are indifferent to lt and those
who adore il dumbly.
• WE SEO superiority only
whtn wo arc d~nled tquallty:
"black" would never have been
proclaimed as especially
beauHM ii blfota bad nqt at rtnt dentarated It u u,1y.
• Most of lhe ferment nit public
education today springs from
the tact that the schools are be·
ing asked not only to make up ln
n hurry for thair own defects but
also to compcn:sut~ ror the
failures of society as a whole -
and tb~y can scarcely do the
flrsl Job, much less lhe second.
• Presldtnt Carter seems to be
following the unproductive t n·
dcncy of h\s predecessoTs and
payln1 too much attention to the
polls nd t.ba "lttnds.'• when he
should be auCDdlna to Winston
Churchill's wamina: "Tbe na·
lion •lll find it very bard to look
up to 1.taden who are heP1nc their ears to lbe 1round. ••
'
ii
CALIFORNIA
Teaelaer Meas..-e QUEENIE
Gays LaunCh
Protest Move
SACkAMEN1'0 tA f'l Supportr~ of alUY
righl..'>, inrluding M>m•· promtnt•nl hbtrul polltl
rwn:-.. hJvt• opt>nt'd lht• <"amp,;ii.en 1.11.iln111t <An 1.1011
homt.,1•x11al tN1rhf'r m t-Hun-on thf-November
hljllot by dt>noundntt It a thr.•1tt to ch'1J rt1hts.
The lnitlaUv~. Proposition 6 "~ by Stn
John Brtu:.. R f'ull •rton le; lllmei<t at ftrln1
hornoc.-xu .I tt"aChf'M, thou.«b Ope>OMnls HY It pa
murb f\ather.
ATfACKS ON 'ROMOSEXU.\L TEAC'Ha:;as
·could t:.'\'~tt·ndt'tl toolhe r minoriUes, whtt~r sn ·
uu l orlt-JllUllUfl or pohUcal vle'Nl'>," »nd lbre41ten to
fl•VIVt' lb.· M('(.'~1rthy l'U or the·~· As.,rmblyman
M .!JOr)ty u.;dt>r H1TW•rd Serm;m, 1) Beverly Htll~.
111ud ul ,, ndlyTut·~d.•)
· 'Tht~ h'-·ant1u:. .. nd outr..il(ec>us inlttullve
thre.itt•r\.' the Vl'fY atructure of dut.• ~*=5!.,"
Strmaul to4d ..1bout 200 persons otlUl<ll' t.he Capltol
He SJtd lw would tell hb cou~agu~ that the cam-PJl~n 1s ··~rth twung 11 lttt1~ bit of nsk on."
Also speaking a l the r<illy Wl'rt• gay §rllvlst
Frank Vt•l, who 1::. wulkmg tbe lt'ngt.h of California
to drum up ::.upport fo r th~ campaign; As-
semblyman Art Agnos, D-San Francisco. Sen.
Al.to S1eroty, 0 -Los Angeles, and S<1crameftto
Mayor Ph.lllsenberg
"rm look10g tor s~ hght i;ummer reading. You know,
an author who hasn'l ::.erved lime, or a biography by
somt.'<lflc who hasn't lost all h1S fri ends."
Quake Area
GOV. EDM\JND BROWN JR. OPPOSES the
initiative but was not present.
It was the flrst Capitol demonstration related
to Proposition 6. which is likely to be one of the
mo::.t emotional assues on the Nov 7 ballot.
State Aid Gramed
Under the measure, school boar$ could ftrc,
or refuse to hire, any teacher~. a~ministrators. or
counselors for publicly engaging m or advoca ting
homosexual conduct.
SANTA BARBARA CAP ) -Gov. Edmund G.
BRIGGS SAVS THE ME.\SURE WILL let
schools dismiss teachers who would be poor . role
models Opponents say that cur(cnt laws requiring
dismissal for sexual misconduc( with children are
adequate. They also say the initiative coulp be ap-
ptit>d to defenders or gay rights.
Brown Jr. has declared a state or emergency in
Santa Barbara County, where damage estimates
from last weekend's earthquake have climbed to
more than $12 million.
Brown. acting on a request for state aid from
the Santa Barbara County Board or Supervisors,
said Tuesday that ''conditions o!..ex:treme py.il",
existed in the area. The county declared a local disaster area Mondav.
'Rank Speeulation'
Govemment Disputes
Hearst Conflict Charge~~~
SAN FRANCISCO c AP l -Calling
her allegations "rank speculation."
the federal government is disputing
Patricia Hearst"s assertion that her
former lawyerfailed lo provide ade·
quate counsel al her 1976 bank rob·
bery trial because he contracted to
writ~ a book about the case.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Ed Davis
Jr. made the statement ln a response
filed to Miss Hearst's earlier request
to eumlne F . Lee BaUey•s deal with
th"£ G.P. Putnam Co., a New York
publishing house.
In that request, Miss Hearst, 24,
charged that Bailey's $225,000 con·
tract (or a book about her actions
during her captivity by the terrorist
SymbaonesP Liberation Army con-
stituted grounds to set aside or reduce
her seven-year prison. sentence.
Child Porno
Suspect Claims
Life Threatened
LOS ANGELES IA P > -A man
t'hargcd in connection with an in-
ternational child pornography and
prostitution ring says he broke his
wrist in a jail incident involving un·
identifit'd persons who tried to kil'
him
"They tried to kill me." Charles
James Hughes or La Puente said
Tuesday as he left a brief Superior
Court bail hearing.
HOGHES, 3S, apparently blamed
bis injury on other inmates. But his
attorney, Howard Beckler, said his
client acddentally broke the wrist
when attempting to throw back a
broom hurled by another inmate.
Judge Paul G. Breckenridge re-
-duced.H~ baiU.com ~.J)OJ) .w
U0.000 and ordered Hughes and other
defendants in the case separated
from the general prison population.
Hughes and another defendant,
Joseph Francis Henry, 43, were or-
dered to return to court Sept. 6 for a
pretrial conference. Henry, an
amateur photographer from New
York City, remained lo custody in
lieu of s:n>,000 bail.
(~sr._:4_TE_J
Spill~
IMPERIAL BEACH <AP> -Coast
Guard oCficials planned today to oon·
duct a surface examination of a hall·
iplle Wide oil spill that washed
ashore near tbe cit.)' pler.
Lt. Douglas Martin said a Coast
Guard helicopter crew checked lbe
spill after it washed ashore around
dusk Tuesday and that the oil formed
a circle extending about a quarter of
a mile off lhe shore.
4~H Ana CINarred
TWENTYNINE PALMS CAP>
More lban 500 firefighters trying to
contain a massive brush fire in the
Jos hua Tree National Monument
hoped for abatement today of the er·
ratic desert winds that propelled
names through twisting canyons.
By Tuesday evening the fire had
swept through some 4,500 acres in the
park 20 miles northeast of Palm
Springs and was spreading rapidly,
the state forestry department report.
ed. The blaze remained 60 percent con-
tained. as itbadbeen for a day.
Rape BID B11elcetl
SACRAMENTO CAP> -A person
who coaunits rape while carrying out
any unrelated felony could gel an ex-
tra three years in prison, under a bm
OD the Senate fioor. •
Tbe bill. AB ~ by Assemblyman
Eugen• Gualco, D-Sacramento, was
approved Tuesday oa a S-1 vote of the
Senate Judjcfary Committee.
Cola Prep•.i Kiiied
SACRAMENTO <AP> -A
legislative-committee bas -kU&ed-a.
black legislator's proposal to urge
Californians not to buy gold South
Alrican Krugerrand coins.
The measure, ACR 99 by As-
semblywoman Tel'fSa Hughes, D-Los
Angeles, failed Tuaday to get past
the Senate Rules Committee, despite
earlier passage by the Assembly with
UtUe dlasenl
I
By DaneD.
Qrtstmasa, D.D.S.
' ' weone.oay. Augutt 18. 1976 OAIL 'Y PILOT ,4 5
Speaadtllfl l..iadt ::f • • • • • • • • •:
Economy Snagged[~'~ ~
SACRAMENTO I AP> -A
legislative drive to put a government
spending ltmit on th(' November
ballot could depend on a vote tonight
in the state Senate.
The fate of the limit, a conslitu
tlonal a mendment by Sen. John
Garamendi, D-Mokelumne Hill. wus
left banging' Tuesday when a con-
ference committee abruptly ad·
Journed without Cinishlng work on thC'
measure.
That meant the amendment fBlled
to meet a Tuesday midnight deadlint·
for the November ballot. Tht>
deadline can. be extended. but only if
the Senate approves a bill that it re1ect ·
~dMonday.
BEFORE ADJOURNING. the
Democratic-dominated . two-house
committee tentatively approved a
limit formula similar to one proposed
by Republican Gov. Ronald Reagan
and rejected by vQters in 1973.
The Reagan limit was substituted
for a more liberal formula tentative-
ly adopted Monday night but then
a bandoned by the committee Tues-
day. .
The bill extending the ba llot
deadline. SB 2243 by Sen. Alan Sieroty.
D-Los Angeles. gives lawmakers until
Friday to put constitutional amend·
ments before voters in November.
IT FELL EIGHT VOTES short of
passage Monday, but Sieroty was
given permission to bring it up again
That could happen tonight, when tht:
Senate is scheduled to meet.
"niuing on the bill is the fate of a
number of constitutional amend-
ments. including one by Assembly •
Speaker Leo McCarthy abolishing
homeowne r property taxes ttnd
boosting renter income tax credits. If •
Sieroty's bill f a ils to pass. the •
amendments couldn't go on the ballot
•Jnlil June L980.
Garamendi blamed the delay in ac· • HERB •
tion on his measurt" on an attempt by ,. •
McCarthy. D-San Francisco. to put • FRIEDLASDER •
more pressure on the Senate to ex-• IS ~AKISG •
tend the deadline. .• GREAT DEALS •
GARAMENDI ADJOURNED the: FREE :
committee Tuesday a fternoon after • •
Assembly Democratic conferees said • 50 GALS •
they could not take a final vote on lbe • Of' GAS •
amendment until they mcl with their ,. -~h ................ , ....... ~ ....... ..,
colleague:;. ,• oroll .('llA'C·•:~ • Approval by the committee would • •• •H-9• .. -" .a.. •on.>,.,. c send the a mendment to both houses • .. ..,., .. , __ ,_,.. •
for final action. • e HONDA e ...
In a biiarre move before Tuesday's • • •JIW.,•••11·• • . . • IJlm. ,._ •.cm
a dJournment. a vers ion of the •*., • *., • • • * * • .,•
Reagan Hmat ~~s proposed by As-,. MG-TRIUMPH • semblyman Willie Brown. a liberal • • •
San Francisco Democra t who • e JAGUAR e •
originally opposed the Reagan pro-• FIAT. LANCIA !
posal. • me&111•1e.wu1i.• .._
U1 r.n ,."'......, •'"7 -.
IT WOULD LIMIT STATE and :' * * * * * * * * * * *ll
local spending _to a percentage or ! • .!~!~~. • : state personal Lncom e. That figure, • 1 •• .-c,,.... U1 _ .._
currently JUSL over 8 percent. would • • * * * • * * * * * • .._
drop by _one-tenth or l percent each • :\lOTORllO'\IE ~
year unt1l 1t reached 7 percent. • · . • : ,.
The Legislature then could allow it SAL~,~.& ~ ~-~!Al,S:•
the limit to remain at that level. • RESf.R\ 1-. :\OW •
According to figurt>s from the • 537-7777 Ext. 500 •
legislativ(• analyst. state expen· .,. * * * * • • * • * * 1"'
d1lures could grow to $21.503 billion • e LEASING e :•
in 1982·83 under the limit. That's $951 • An.u.-...-• .,.__ ..., . lb . . ..... ,.ae-i-.s-a.n..-milbon less than e state is proJect-537 .7777 t;xl. 600 •
ed to spend. • • * * * * • * • • * * *!"
.
t
I • FROM Fash ion Island
Newport Beach S"FEREO SOUNDS ·oF THE HARBO.R j
I
I
..... .. . . . ........
' •
Orange Coast Today's CI081 ..
N.Y. Steeb
VOL. 71, NO. 228, .. SECTIONS, .. 2 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
t
f
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16, 1978 N TEN CENTS i ----------------------------------------------------------------------------~~-------------..------------~.;;.;.~;;.;.;.~4
Schntitz, Cordova Ope~ Ca1npaign
' '
!
HE'S A JARVIS MAN
Republican Schmitz
Shoppers
Stock Up
On Food
LOS ANGELES IAP> -While
conisumers Jammed
supermarket checkout lines to
stock up on foodstuffs. stores
· from San Luis Obispo to San
Diego braced for a possible
walkout by 70,000 clerks that
could be less than two days
away
17 "Al this moment. we are very,
very busy," said M;irlene Crites.
a worker at a Lucky market in
Culver City. "l think people
• heard the news about the strike
and they're out to stock up."
While st.ores in some cities re·
, ported bus iness as usual.
• • managers of others said buying
was brisk.
"If the clerks vote to stnJ<e, we're expecting a lot more
customers." said Jim Willard.
night manager of an Albertson
market in Bakersfield. "We've
already stocked up" to meet the
increased demand.
However, he said. his store.
which normally operates 24
hours a day. will cut back to
nine hours in the event or a
strike.
Members of nine Southern
California locals of the Retail
Clerks Union voted Monday and
Tuesday on whether to accept
the stores' latest offer or
authorize a strike. Union leaders
recommended rejection of the
management proposal. which
called for a $1.40-an-hour wage
hike over three years.
Results of the vote were to be
known this afternoon, and a
strike could begin unytime after
12:01 Saturday, 48 hours after
the clerks' contract expires.
The l5 chains involved arc
1 Albertsons. Alpha Beta, Arden-
.. Mayfair. Boys, Certified
:-·Groeers. Hughes. A.M. Lewis.
1 Lucky Stores. Market Basket.
. Ralphs. Safeway. Smiths Food
• King, Stater Bros .. Thriftimart
and Vons.
For several week s. the
mnkets ha"e--mnt signs in their
windows adven.tstng foT clerks.
with no experience necessary.
'Pair Freed ,
~Of Teen-age
! Sex Charges
~ Charges of crimes aga!nst
· children which led to the arrest
-~J men earlier 1hlS
month have been dropped ia the
Harbor Judicial District Court.
Christian Vart Sahagian, 21, a
transient who poUce said fre·
quents the Huntlnston Beach
Pier and David Wooten, 43, of
3882 Claremont St., Irvine. were
taken Into cuatodY by Newport
Beach along with 1 13·year-old
~rl.
Police alleJed the child's sex·
ual services had been involved
in detlint• between the two
men.
However, thole char1es 1"l'e
dropped h)' court offlcial• When
the teen·afe eirl. a runa, .. y
from Cbicago, wa.a taken back to
lllln.ola bJ her parent.a.
However, Wooten ln b.la eourt
ap_purtn.c• TUe1day was •r·
raa&ned on a chara• ol carrytna
• COOtHJrd WHpon. ff• II
1cbeda.led to return to tbe
munlclpil ecMart for a pN-trtaJ
conferenc. oa the lnlidemeanor
thara• on Sipt.; lL
...
One Embraces Jarvis; Other Shuns Governor
By GARY GRA~VILLE OI .. o.Hy Pl6M M.Mt
State Senate candldutes John
Schmitz and Ron Cordovu beg1m
a ser1e~ of campaign debates
Tuesday with Republican
Schmitz cllnaing ever so tightly
to Howard Jarvis.
Simultaneously. Democrat
Cordova was putting distance
bet ween himself and Gov. Ed-
mund G Brown Jr.
Cordova said he will wail to
see "wh..ica..Jerry Brown" is run-
ning against Evelle Younger
before deciding who be will vote
for in the gubernatorial race.
Schmitz made it clear he is a
Howard Jarvis man
Six times during the 50-minule
debate he mentioned that he car·
ries the Jarvis endorsement into
his battle with Cordova for the
state Senate seat being vacated
by Newport Beach Republican
Dennis Carpenter ...
And even though lhe Jarvis
debate was settled by the voters
J t.lne 6 when they approved
Proposition 13. Schmitz insisted
It ts "the" issue in his November
election confrontation with
Cordova
The Cordova·Schmitz verbal
duel at the Airpot'ter Inn in
Newport Beach attr acted more
than 100 people who pai~ $8 a
lunch to see and hear the two
candidiites.
As expected. the exchanges by
the two men while answering
questions put to them by a panel
of newsmen were crisp and fre·
quently pointed.
lf Cordova was on the de·
fensive when speaking or his op·
position to Proposition 13. so was
Schmitz as he defended his
membership in the John Birch
Society _and his bolt from the
• DallJ ~I'°' Staff """"
FORMER PRESIDENT ANO MRS. NIXON AT HOSPITAL
Tricia Cox Also There to Greet Her New Niece
Daddy Eisenhower
Elated by Jennie
By ANNE COOPER
01 t .. O.lly Pl191 Staff
An elated David Eisenhow.er
described the birth of his
daughter Tuesday as "Just a
wondett'ul experience."
The new father. flanked by the
baby's grandfather, former pres·
!dent Richard Nixon, met with
reporters outside San Clemente
General Hos pital where his
daughter, Jennie, had been born
a TRhOUJ"S'-earli~
E\senhower satd he and his
wlfe, Julie Nixon Eisenhower,
prepared for the arrival or the
baby by attending childbirth
classes al the hospital. He as-
s isted in the delivery of the nine.
pound, four-ounce girl bom al
1:32 p.m. Tuesday.
The natural childbirth de·
livery left his wife "feeling fine,
really fine," Eisenhowef com-
mented.
''I called the Nixons and my
mother and my grandmother all
withifl-three-mlnu~-the...cle
Hvery." he said. "The Nixona
came right to the hospital, and
everybody is thrllled, just
thrilled... .
Nlxon, who said be was
pleased that hilt first grandchild
is a atrl, told reporters Tuesday
eventna arter vlsltlna his
daughter that be looks forward
to baby 1ittlng. Tb~ former president said be
won't try to lnfluence bis arand·
dau1hter'1 career chotce ... Jen·
nle will do whatever she wants
to do.'' he said.
"She ts the first chtld born In
the UnJted States with relattves
on both sidel who were presl·
dents," he aaJd. "With that.
bentaie. 1be m~ be attracted
to polltlca. But if 1b chooses •
music career or aometbinl ell•,
tbat will bt ftne too."
JenllM Eilenbower a• well a.a
belnll Ntxon~a aranddau,1\ter. ti·
tile 1rea~-•randdau1ht., of
formt1· president Owt1ht
PROUD PAPA INTERVIEWED
David !JHnhower
Elleo~r. ~
Eleenhower aaJd be and hll
wlfe a1rHd to ·name tbeJr
dau1bter Jennle becauat It
aou.ndl like JWle. but bn't.
"Julie didn't v..a.nt to bav
•<lee ISNNIE. Pase AJ>
Republican Party in 1972.
Schmitt called the society "a
very fine patriotic organiza.
lion."
And he split hair& when he
said he was still a mem~r or
the Republican Party in 1972
when he accepted the American
Independent Petrty's presiden·
tial nomination.
Schmitz s!lid he didn't change
party affiliation until after bis
Al P Presidential nomination. In a paraphrase of the wel1·
known Schmitz' remal'k about
the first Nixon trip to Com·
munist China. Corodova
quipped. ''I'm informed by my
Republican friends they took no
exception to John Schmitz leav·
ing the Republican Party. only
to his return."
But Schmitz pointed to his en-
dorsement "by all Republican
groups" and county GOP
lea de rs to prove he has
"mended fences" with the
party.
Cordova wouldn't let 'IP on his atta~k on Schmitz' political
travels. however.
The Democratic assemblyman
said that. unlike his foe. his
political epitaph will not read.
"Have campaign. will travel."
Schtnitz retaliated to the
barbs by recounting bis 2\.'J -year
record as• a congressman and
5'h years as a state senator.
Included in.the record cited by
him was support of efforts by
Jarvis to reform the slate's
property tax laws. efforts that
date back to the mid-1960s.
Schmitz also said he is prob·
ably the only congressman
ever sent to Washington who
saved the taxpayers more
money that be eost.
(See DEBATE, Page AZ>
Delly Pllet SUff .......
'WHICH JERRY BROWN?'
Democrat Cordova
Dollar 'hnproves'
Carter 'Concerned' Over Slump
LONOON IAP> -President
Carter's statement today in
Washington expressing "deep
concern" over the decline of the
dollar came· loo late lo affect
trading on world money markets
and the U.S. currency came un-
der renewed pressure.
However . the doll a r 's
perform<fnce was improvement
on the reeord lows it reached
around the world Monday and
Tuesday.
The exception was Frankfurt
where the dollar slipped further
against the West German mark.
closing at a postwar low of 1.9370
marks.
Gold priees. which have
soared as the dollar declined. were higher.
Carter. tn a statement tnued
at tile White House, said he had
been discussing the dollar's
troubles with Treasury
Secretary W. Michael Blumen·
thal and Willia-m Miller.
chairman of the F e deral
Reserve Board. and they are ex-
a mining measures to alter the
dollar's downward course.
The dollar has lost more than
30 percent of its value against the
Japanese yen. 33 percent
against the Swiss franc. and 15
percent against the German
mark the past year.
Informed sources in Paris said
today that deputy fin a nce
ministers from the world's 10
leading industrial nations will
meet there Sept. 8 to discuss the
slide or the dollar. Countries in·
volved are the United States.
Britain. France, West Germany.
Japan, the Nether lands,
Switze rland. Belgium, Canada
Free Movie
At Library
The Friends of the Newport
Beach Public Library will
sponsor a !ree film Aug. 22. far
all area children as the grand
finale or the SUfl'\mer reading
program at the library. .
Screened beginning ..at 10 a.m.
will be "The Time Machine," a
1900 version or the H.G. Wells
classic featuring Rod Taylor and
Yvette Mimieux.
Doors will open at 9:45 a .m.
and parents are asked to pick up
their children by noon. The
scr eening will be at Edwards
Newport Cinema in Fas hion
Island.
PUCE .4 PET
Wl'l1l PILUI' AD
"The response was unreal.
The first one that called picked
her up. She got a super home."
That's the advertistna suceess
story told by a fful1Urt1ton
Beach woman who placed Lbis
ad In tbe Dally Pilot:
Germon &hep. 8 mo. <>bed
trnd. Fem. Lovfa ev.-r.
YOOt' but P~l'CUw XU•
XXltlt
Jr you have a pet you want to
place lo a good home call
6'2·5878. A friendly batly
Pllot ad•\rtaor will help you
word your ad tor lbe anatett
impact.
We make It e y for JOU to
• put a ftw words to wotte fOr
yO\l, in De1b PUot.
and Sweden.
In London. the pound sterling
was worth $1.9770 compared
with $1.9843 late Tuesday. The
dollar gained about half a cent
in late trading after Carter's
statement.
The gold market was buoyed
by the price obtained by the lf.S.
Treasury on Tuesday at its
latest sale of gold bullion. An
I
average price of $213.53 dollars
an ounce. the highest ever paid
at a U S. gold auction. was paid
for about lO tons of the precious
m etal.
Gold closed in z'urich.
Europe's busiest buJlion mart.
at $215.875 an ounce. up from
$213.625 at Tuesday's close. The
London c losing price was
$214.75. up from $213.
.. rvine Request
Air Traffic Stzuly
At Airport Nixed
By Pm.LIP ROSMARIN
Of .. Delly Pltet S!Mf
The Federal Aviation Ad ·
ministration has, for the second
time. refused an Irvine politi·
cian 's request that it conduct a
comprehensive investigation of
air traffic safety at Orange
County Airport.
The first time City Coun·
cilman Larry Agran asked ror
the study . he was a candidate
for the municipal office.
Alarmed by 10 aircraft acci·
dents in or near the airport in
Newport Cop
Trainee Dies
After Crash
Newport Beach Police Depart-
ment trainee Gordon Roberts,
27. died Tuesday afternoon at
Fountain Valley Community
Ho~pital of injurtes suffered in a
motorcycle ,_~~ldent Monday.
The Navy veteran. just a
month short of graduation from
the Los Angeles Police Depart·
ment Academy, sustained multi·
pie Injuries when his personal
motorcycle rammed a parked
car.
fhvesligators said he was not
wearing a protective helmet
when he collided with the vehi·
cle on Daisy Avenue. not rar
from the neighborhood where he
lived.
Spokesmen at Pacific View
Memorial Park in Corona del Mir safcf today funeral services-
are tentatl\rely set for 10 a.m .
Ftlday in their chapel.
Roberts was leaving a
bachelor party for his best
friend. Newport Beach Po1lce
Officer Tom Little, when the ac-
cident occum!d.
The vict\m leaves his wlfe,
who ts exPectinl their second
child. and a $-year-old daughter.
Center Invitee
Senior Singers
Older adults are eligible to
Join tho tbora.l lfOUP al Qqts
Center fn Newport Beach fOt' -.
rebeanal from 1 to 2:30 p.m.
Sept. 7.
The ~ llas perfbrmecl at
other MnlClil' cWaem c~ anct ~
feat-.re1 a h·)tear..old plaao pla.tw. Sol Onen. •
wbich 17 people died. he pleaded
an obvious need to study the
over a II pattern of safety.
Agran claimed to get no
response from the FAA. and in -
stead learned it had turned him
down only after reading press
reports that the agency intended
no pction and was satisfied ~itb
its method of investigating in·
dividual crash~.
Actually, though the FAA In·
vestigates most non .fatal air ac-
c id ents. the National
Transportation Safety Board has
the main responsibility for in-
vestigating all airplane acci-
dents
The FAA is charged with in·
s tituting accident prevention
methods.
Since the councilman's initial
request, several incidents
prompted. Agran to write again.
F.A. Allen. chief of the FAA
flight standards district office in
Long Beach, replied a few days
ago.
As before, Allen indicated
there is a continual review of ac-
cident statistics wilh accident
prevention in mind.
But. said AJJen , "In view Qf
specific accident investigation.s
previously conducted and the on·
going acci<lent prevention BC· :
<See AIRPORT, Page AU
Coast
Weather
O'W-cloutttlll!R 'DtJibl
and morning hours w1th
mostly sunny afternoon
Thursday. Lows tonight 60
to 65. Highs Thursday 68 to
72 at beaches and 78 to 84
inland.
INSIDE TODAY
It'• no April Fool -Angela
announce plan• for on•
pla11olf arad World Serie•
gontca. Story, Po.ge 81.
DAILY PILOT
Oltly ...............
•1,114 FANS AT ANAHEIM STADIUM GET THE MESSAGE
A Salute From Old '"•nd Gene Autry on the BIO Day
Hearing Slated
For Coast Man
On Theft Rap
A Huntington Beach man at·
cused of receiving stolen proper
ty in the theft of a safo cont;.11n
Ing $8.000 in cash foccs u pn·
limtnary hearing tn the Harbor
Judicic.11 Distl'ict Court !\Tonday
R1chJrd "Rooi.la" ll11pk1n:..
2'1. or 426 8th St w.1:-. ,1rn·slt.'d b}
Newport Bt•ach Ol'lecllvt• L>oug
Thomas an connection with the
i.Jfe theft from the Eastbluff
Cleaners last month
Hopktns. "ho r<·ma1nc•d in
custody tod.1y al Or.mg<.• County
J ;.111. has bl•t•n arn•::.tt-d tw1rt· in
connt•tl1on with the case
He wa~ originally pickt>d up on
Aug 3 Jfter an Jnonymou::. infor
mant to"1 polke Hopkins had the
missing safe
He was relc•ased from county
Jail five days h1kr in J technicul
t>rror. but wui. p1ckt•d up tht•
same day when he rt•Lurncd lo
the Newport Beach police sta
tion to pick up the Sl 46 taken'
from him when he was booked
Police re-urrested Hopkins us
mg a warrant they'd obtained
from !\lumc1pul .Judge· Oonald
IJungun whe>n lht•y were notified
of their suspt•ct 's n·lt•ast•
Ball on lht• court warr<1nl 1s
SI0,000
Froat Pa~ A I
AIRPORT •.•
tiv1ti<.'s. it does not appear that a
comprehensive investigation or
further review of Orange County
Airport accidents would be pro-
ductive at this time ..
Allen said also. "As you know.
Orange County Airport is one of
the busiest airports in the nu
tlon.
"Numbers of aircraft und
operations continue to rise. with
a corresponding increase in ac
cidcnts and fatalities."
For Agran, that explanation
wasn't good enough ll is those
very numbers or aircrurt and
their relation to accidents that
he wants explored
So ~r a third tame, he has
asked both the FAA and the Nu·
tional Transportation Safety
Board "lo undertake the kind of
th o r oug h inv estigation
necessary to provide the max·
imum safety to those citizens
who use the Orange County
Airport and to those who live
and work near it "
'
f'ro•PapAI
JENNIE ...
<1nolht'r Ju lit"." he said
·'Bt·.,1des 'Jennie ' can't bto•
::.hurtent>d to a nickname."
Asked how he felt about hav
mg h1::. first child. Eisenhower
::.aid. "ll wus time we're 30."
'\lixon :.uid his daughter, who
will bt• returning home with Jen
nil· in thrl't' days. "is doing
grl·al "
.. , """ .1 m •1zed ... he :.aid
"She look:. .1s 1f sht.'0S been out
for .1 .," 1m m the cold Pac1r1c
She's coine through in fine
Sl't le "
The baby. described JS having
dJrk h~11r and eycs. m ay look
like a :'\1xun or mJy look like an
Eisenhower. tht· former pres1·
dent .,aid. adding that perhaps
the two families beJr a certain
n •st• m blanct•
.. ,\II b.1b1t·i. an· beautiful." ht·
!.,IJd. "hut I must say girl babies
are special ..
Tht· new father urrived for hb
Pvt·ning visit driving his own car
to ;1 rt· a r t•ntr an cc o f tht•
ho!.p1l al , wht•re a spokesman
said J\lrs Eisenhower is in <1
private room in lhC' maternity
ward
W h i I l' n e w s p a p e r a n d
ll'lt•v is 1o n n ·portt'rs quizzed
Eist•nhowt·r at the rear door, tht.•
Nixons and their elder daughter.
Tncw Cox . were driven lo thl'
hospital's main entrance by
Secret Service agents.
Forty minutes later tht>
formt>r president emerged from
his visit. accompanied by his
\\ 1ft.• a nd Mrs. Cox. and pau::.cd
ut the hospital e ntrance to
answer reporters' qu~tions
The former pres1dt•nt looked
t.tnnC'd and vigorous and very
hJppy.
.. Bein~ a gr;mdfather may be
t•ven grcatl'r than being a
fathl'r ." hf' s aid. "Your ex
pcrience with your own children
1s so immediutc that perhap!S
you luck the necessary distance
lo c•valualt• ;md <1ppreciate the
relationship to the fullest ex·
tent."
Saying he has learned from
his relationship· with his two
da u~hters "never to indicate
what my choice is" when they
havl' decisions to make, Nixon
su1d allowing children to make
up their o wn minds may bt.>
more important these days for
girls than for boys
··Julie is un independent
thinker. and so is Tricia." he
s.1id of his daughters. adding
that he expect s his grand
daughter to be independent us
well
"I'm not going to try to in-
fluence her," he said
Colleges'.
Budget
Trimmed
\.:ou11t Community CoHeae Dis·
t rk t ortlc au h1 reported t.oday
t h.1t ,1 lvt •• 1 of f7 2 million has
ht•1•n shaved from the district's
lV71t· 79 hud&ct. which will now
toti.l uboul $69.5 million.
Thut rtpresents u cut of 9.2
v•·n·t•nt from last year's $76.S
m1llrnn budget . a district
'llllkt•:unun i.a1d
Corn·llun Thompson. the dls·
trlct 's business affairs vlce
<'huncC'llor . said cuts have been
m.1dt• by reducing staff, replac-
ing less t'QUipment and s upplies,
Jnd cutting contract services.
mamtenunce and operations and
cJp1tal outlay
In addition. although basic
t•ducation tu1t1on remains free.
Thompson set1d taxpayers will
no tonger underwrite free lee·
tures. seminars. concerts. enter-
tu1nml'nl. athletic programs and
non academic courses to t he
tune or $1 .3 million per year.
lnsteud. admissions fees will
now be charged for such events.
In addition. District Chan-
cellor Norman E. Watson has
formed a fund-raising commit·
tee to investigate alternative
sources or income. Trustees are
currently discussing a fee
schedule for public use of dis·
trict facilities .
Som e specific cost reductions
have included leaving personnel
vacancies unfilled. cutting con-
ft•rcnCl' und membership expen-
ditures, rl'ducing the number or
hourly employees and charging
more for transportation.
The budget is expected to be
given final approval Sept. 7
Streets Due
For Closing
In Newport
A number of Newport Beach
streets will be closed briefly
while they are resurfaced with
slurry seal b<'tween AuJ(. 21 and
Aug 31. '
A city s pokes man said most
streets will be closed for only
three to four hours. and none
longer lhun one day.
Included are m<1ny Newport
He ights streets in the area
bounded by Newport Boulevard.
West Coast Highway. Irvine
Avenue and 15th Street.
So arc streets in the Harbor
View area bounded by
.MacArthur Boulevard. Crown
Drive. Crown Drive North and
San Joaquin Hills Road .
Also to be resurfaced arf'
several small streets off San
Joaquin Hills Road between Spy-
glass Hill Road and Reef View
Circle, includlnR Ocean Birch
Drive.
Author Plans
Talk on Book
Leland Cooley, author of "The
Art Colony." will discuss his
new book, "The Dancer." Sept.
19 at a luncheon meeting of the
Friends of tbe Newport Beach
Libr ary.
The meeting. coordinated by
Mrs. Gilbert Ferguson, will be
held at 11 : 30 a. m. at St. M lchael
und All Angels Church Recrea·
lion Room. 3233 Pacific View
Drive. Corona del Mar.
Advance reservations arc
necessary Donations of $4.50 per
person. payable to Newport
Beach Friends of the Library.
can be sent to Mrs . Joseph
Johnson. 1053 Dover Drive.
Newport Beach 92660, or she can
be contacted at 645-3322.
Deadline for reservations is
Sept. 15~
/
CREATOR PAYNE INSPECTS SHATTERED 'COAN GOD'
At Orange Coast College, a Costly Act of Vandalism
I
'God' Toppled
$900 Vandalism at OCC
By JACKIE HYMl\N
Of tM Dally PllM 5 .. H
Orange Coast College instructor William 0 . Payne
estimates it may cost as much as $900 to restore a campus
landmark that was vandalized last month.
IT WAS A replica of a Muyun maize god that stood in
front of the OCC Art Gallery. greeting thousands of stu·
dents since 1952.
"Students and faculty members alike had a lot or fun
with our 'corn god'." said WiWam 0. Payne. who created
the slx·IOOt ceramic. cement-backed piece with student
Wallace Parker "One •f his hands was cupped and extended ... said
Payne "Mayans used lo put offerings in that ha~d I think
in my 25 years here ut OCC I collected Sl.31 m pennae~
from that hand. t also flipped innumerable cigarette butts
out or his mouth."
THE SfATUE. valued at $3.000. was broken July 28 by
a vandal who also pushed over a metal statue. which was
not damaged.
A gardener and a professor captured a suspect. who
was turned over to Costa Mesa police. Payne said.
Payne. a pre-Columbian pottery expert who has
worke d as a potter-archaeologist in Mexico. said it would
take several months to restore the statue and would require
creating several new panels.
PAYNE SAID the statue. created for the dedication of
the college's Art Center complex. was an exe~ repUca of a
Mayan ~od round in Copan. Honduras which had been
carved in limestone about 800 A.O.
The OCC statue included glyphs or raised carvings or
Mayan dates. "We know the .~ate s:rstem . but w.~ don,'t
know the writing system yet. explained Payne. That s ·
one of the mysteries or the world."
Paul R. Cox. chairman of OCC's Division of Fine Arts.
is reportedly looking into ways of raising the $900 to fund
the restoration.
''THE SfATUE had really become a camp\!& celebri·
ty." u college spokesman quoted Cox as saying. "Tl was
the first outdoor art piece to be placed on the campus .
Following Its destruction. many students and faculty
members have expressed a real sense of loss." .
The reason for the vandalism isn't known, Payne said.
f'ro•PageAJ
DEBATE •••
Cordova called sucb claims
"war stories" and saJd he could
tdl ::.ome or his own. He did.
In substance. there was more
agrt'l'mtmt than disagreement
bl'lwecn the two candidates.
Both. for example. said they
will work to strengthen local
government and against cen-
tralization in Sacramento.
Both candidates a lso decried
l'xpanded government spending
and "growth of govetnm'!nt."
Both said they support extend·
Ing capital punishment to cover
more crimes.
Disagreement came·on the so-
called Briggs Initiative, prohiblt-
1 'lg homosexuals from
Leaching ln pubUc schools.
Schmitz said he supp()rts the
measure. Cordova said be does
not.
And while Cordova said he is·
not certain how he will vote in
the gubernatorial race. Schmitz
emphasized that he is an Evelle
Younger supporter.
When it came time for them to
ask each other one question.
Cordova asked Schmitz what he
had done as a state legislator to
advance the cause of property
tax reform.
Schmitz pointed to his support
of Jarvis in the 1960's and a
plaque he r~eived in 1967 from
United T axpayers. the Jarvis
support organization.
I n turn, Schmitz as ~ed
Cordova to show his "conversk>n
lo conservatism to t>e other than
political."
Cordova said his record as a
dl·puty district attorney who
nc.•ver lost a folony case shows
him to be something far less
lh<.tn liberJI.
Bt.>::.1dcs, Cordova said, bis rec'
ord c.ts a legislator. not political
rhetoric. s hould serve as the ex-
;.impll• or his conservatism.·
Meanwhile. David Bergland,
who hopes to m ake the No-
vl'mber ballot as the Libertarian
P<1rty candidate in the 36th.
waited in a hallway.
Bergland said he was miffed
bl'cause the debate s ponsor. the
Building Industry Association .
didn't tnVIW him.
Mesa Woman
Charged in
Armed Heist
A Costa Mesa woman who
pohCl' allege used a knife to rob
,1 {!US station near the Costa
~I oi.o -Newport Beach border
Tucsduy ufternoon was arrested
within minutes by plainclothes
~l·wport Bl'ach officer s who
s potted her waJking along Irvine
Avenue. Costa t4esa police said.
In custody tQday al Onmge
County Jail on an armed rob·
bery charge 1s 24-year-old Mary
Susan Rowan. 467 Costa Mesa
St She.• 1s being he ld ln lieu of
S25.000 bail
Viejo Finn Fights
Housi11g Proposal Costa Mesa investigators al·
ll'gt• the woman walked up lo
Arco service station attendent
\. S.tl\.Jlon• PrincC'.ido al about
2 . 15 p. m. and usked for change
for a ouurtcr. By KATHY CLANCY
Ol fN Dally Piiot 5\Alll
"We don't feel 1t 1s ;ip-
propriate at this time to place 1t
exclusively on the Mission VieJO
community," he explained. Mission VieJO Company of·
ficiuls told Orange County Plan·
ning Commissioners Tuesday
they don't want to be singled out
by the county to build so-called
afford;.1ble housing. ·
Company Vice President
David Celestin said he opposes a
county proposal that would re·
quire his firm to build up to 2.500
of Mission Viejo's remaining
10.000 units In the low and
moderate income ranges.
"The Mission Ylcjo Company
does support the concept of af·
fordable housing," Celestin said.
He also said the company
.would "go along with" whatever
housinl( policies s upervisors
adopt early next year for all of
the unincorporated area.
Celestin's remarks came as
commissioners reviewed thl·
first comprehensive revision of
thE.· 10.324-acre Mission Viejo
community plan.
The commission will hold at
leust one more hearing Sept 11
before making u recommenda·
t1on to county supervisors
County planners had s uggest
ed that the community plan re·
vision require that one-fourth of
the remaining 10,000 homes to be
built in Mission Viejo be within
the price ranges of families
earning 80 to 120 percent of the
county's median income. .
The county's median income
now is $16.200.
Wh<·n Princeado. 55, opened
lhl' cush register. she allegedly
rf'vculed a knife and said "I
wunt this money."
Police said he handed over
ubout $25 but not before tearing
on~ $10 bill in half. The woman
left the service station at 490 E .
17th St on foot. oolice said.
Shortly after ·a radio bulletin
wa:-. issued. Miss Rowan was
taken into custody by Newport
St'ach police officers Mike
Hietalu and Al Fischer. Costa
M ~sa investigato~ said.
They recovered a knife and
cash. including a SlO bill that
ht1d been torn in half. Agran has said he bt•lleves
despite the toll In lives, the
-a8.s1i record at the airport bas
been a lucky ont>. ·
According to him, it is only a
matter or time be fore an
airplane crashes Into an OC·
cup1ed school. industrial or com
Thousands ViSit Elvis' "Gr&ve
merclal building. •
ORANOI COAST
DAILY PILOT
ll-'111-~ .............. ~·-)I
JHlll CW ...
Vtt f' "''•"*"'•NJ c-,,.,_., .. ~
,.
(
H
MEMPHIS. Tenn. (AP) -
Fair skies, long lines and a 'six·
foot-tall n ower-covered angel
ereeted the Elvis Presley
faithful today as they came to
pay homa1e to tbe kin1 of rock
'n · roll on the first anniversary of
hisdeatb. ,
Dick Grob. chief or securltr
for tli~-acre estate. said
more than 150 people spent the
night on the Graceland grounds
gathered ln a huddle just behind
its wrought iron JJates.
Several thousand were oo
hand when the gates opened at
Cable Car
Theft Probed
SAN FRANCISCO (A Pl -A
dlatrlct attorney's team of lnv~stigators has been assi1ned
to d ctermlne lt cable car
conductors are poc:ketln• fares.
The tnve1Ugatlon. by the 11m•
group of lawyers who probed th•
dty '• park Loa meter scandal.
w11 prompted by lbe releaae
Tuesday ol a crttlcw report ou
the accountlnJ pnctlees ol t.bt
Municipal RailwQ.Y.
8:25 a.m (At l;;;t 12,000 were ex-
pected to m e by the 1raves or
Pres ley and his mother before
the gates closed this afternoon.
Scores of nower arrantements
lined the windina quarter-mile
driveway to Graceland Mansion
and more were crowded into the
graveyard garden to the south.
Among lhe arrangements was
the angel -u Styrofoam form
covered with white cnrysan·
tht'mums. Its hands anct wings
puinted gold. .
··A youni woman from On·
tarlo. Cunada. Barbara
McClean, came ln and ordered
the an1el," said MaCbrte Cox.
a n employee of Burke's
'Flowers wblch for years
handled hower arran1ements
for Presley's mother's arave.
Manager Aneta Watlclns aatd
she had been avera1in1 100 or·
ders a week for such ~eatans as
gultart, broken heart.a, orowru;,
crosses and the emblem TCB -Taktn~ Caro of 8u1tneu.
Preoley 1 motto
Mra. Cox Hid 1he had also re-
ceived an order for a red roae
arranaement from Prlacllla,
Elvt1' former wife, and tbelr
dau1bter, Uaa Martt
Alto awalttn1 the fans tn tM
90·dt8r beat wu a row of air
condl~ souv.ntr lhope end
roving soda POP sellen.
.
.;., PAHi 0' ILVll PftULEY WEEP OPINLY Al THEY LIAVE ORAVESITE IN MP'Pttll
On ,.,., AnnlverHry OJ tM King'• D•••"· 12,000 bpected •• Cemetery •
( '
J
Saddle back Afternooa
N.Y. Stoeks
J .
; ·. '
VOL. 11, NO. 228, 4 SECTIONS. '2 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY. CALIFORNIA WEDNESDA-Y1 AUGUST 16, 1978 TEN CENTS I
t
Schmitz, Cordova Open Cam.paign
. '
:
I
r
t
~
HE'S A JARVIS MAN
Republican Schmhz
~Viejo
Shoppers
Stock Up
On Food
LOS ANGELES <AP> -While
co n s um e r s j a mm e d
supermarket checkout lines to
stock up on foodstuffs, stores
Crom San Luis Obispo to 'San
Diego braced for a possible
walkout by 70,000 clerks that
could be less than two days
away.
17 "At this moment, we are very,
very busy," said Marlene Crites.
a worker at a Lucky market in
Culver City. ''J think people
heard the news about the strike
and they're out to stock up "
While stores in some ~ities re·
po rte d business as us ual.
managers of others said buying
was brisk.
"If the clerks vote to stnke,
we 're expecting a lot more
customers." said Jim WiJlard,
night manager of an Albertson
· i market in Bakersfield. "We've
a lready stoclted up" to meet the
increased demand.
However. he said, his store,
wh ich normally operates 24
hours a day. will cut back to
nine hours in the event of a
strike.
Members of nine Southern
' California locals of the Retail
Clerks Union voted Monday and
1uesday on ·whether to accept
; the s tor es· latesl o rre r or
· authorize a strike . Union leaders
r ecommended rejection of the
management proposal, which
called for a Sl.4-0·an·hour wage
hike over three years.
Results of the vote were to be i known this a fternoon. and a
[ strike. could. be&in anytime aftet
t
12:01 Saturday, 48 hours after
.. the clerks• contract expires.
Bob Voight of the Food
~ Employers Council said store or-
1 ficials were not optimistic about
~ avoiding a walkout.
I ..
'\
Coast
Low cloudiness night
and morning hours with
mostly sunny afternoon
Thursday. Lows tonl&ht 60
to SS. Highs 'Ibunday 68 to
72 at beaches and 78 to 84
inland.
INSIDE TODAY
It's no April Pool -Ano-If
announce plans for onw
pla110// and World SerlH
10me1. Story. ~ 81.
, .
~One Embraces Jarvis; Other Shuns Governor
By GARV CBANVILLE
OI .............. ._...
Slate Senate candidates John
Schmitt •nd Ron Cordova began
a series of campaign debut.es
Tuesd ay with R ep ublican
Schmiu cllngln1 ever so tightly
to Howard Jarvis .
Simultaneously. De mocrat
Cordova was putting distance
between himself and Gov. Ed·
mund G. Brown Jr.
Cordova said he will wait to
see "which Jerry Brown" is run·
ning against Evelle Younger
before deciding who he will vote
for in the gubernatorial race.
Schmitz made it clear he is a
Howard J arvis man.
Six Limes during the SO·minute
debate he mentioned that he car·
ries the Jarvis endorsement into
his battle with Cordova for the
state Senate seat being vacated
by Newport Beach Republican
Dennis Caa>eoter.
And even though the J arvis
deblile was settled by the voters
June 6 whe n they approved
Proposition 13. Schmitz insisted
it is "the" issue in his November
e lection confrontation with
Cordova.
The Cordova·Schmitt verbal
duel at the Airporter Inn in
Newport Beach attracted more
than 100 people who paid $8 a
lunch to see and hear the two
candidates.
As expected. the exchanges by
the two men while answering
questions put to them by a panel
of newsmen were crisp and fre·
quently pointed.
H Cordova was on the de·
fen sive when speaking of his op·
position to Proposition 13. so was
Schmitz as he defended his
membership in the J ohn Birch
Society and his bolt from the
Co. Flays
o.lly Pl ... '""' .,_ FORMER PRESIDENT AND MRS. NIXON AT HOSPITAL
Tricia Cox Also There to Greet Her New Niece
Church Lease Due
In Industrial Park?
Church services may be con·
ducted in Mission Viejo's in·
dustrial parJ< ti SOOft as October
if Orange County planning com-
missioners approve a recom·
m endation by Municipal .Ad·
visory Council members.
, •·we intend to use this lthe in·
dus t ria l park sp ace> as a
-ctturch~ bible-school amheading-
room." Sheets said . "We plan no
social activities lhere and our
ser vices a r e Sunday a nd
Wednesday evening."
Republican Party In 1972.
S<:,bmitz called the society ••a
very fine patriotic organiza.
lion."
An(! he split hairs when he
said he was still a member of
the Republican Party in 1972
when he accepted the American
Independent Party's presiden·
tial nomination.
Schmitz said he didn't change
party affiliation until after his
AIP presidential nomination. In a paraphrase of the well·
known Schmitz' remark about
the first Nixon trip to Com·
munis t C hin a. Corodova
quipped, "I'm informed by my
Republican friends they took no
exception to John Schmitz leav·
ing th e Republican Party. only
to his return."
But Schmitz pointed to his en·
dorsement "by all Republican
groups" and county GOP
lead e rs t o prove h e has
"mended fences" with the
party.
Cordova wouldn't let up on his
attack on Schmitz' politica l
travels, however.
The Democratic assemblyman
said that. unlike his foe, his
political epitaph wUl not read,
"Have campaign, will travel."
Schmitz reta liated to fbe
barbs by recounting his 2~-year
record as a conaressman and
S"h years as a state senator.
Included in the record cited by
him was support of efforts by
J arvis to r eform the state's
property tax laws. efforts that
date ba·cktothe mid·1960s.
Schmitz also .said be is prob·
ably the only congressman
ever sent to Washington who
saved the t axp ayers m ore
money that he cost.
<See DEBATE, Page A2)
o.tly ""'Stiff ,.,...
'WHICH JERRY BROWN?' ../'
Democrat Cordova
Low-cost Plan
Nixons ...
Welcome
Jennie
By ANNE COOPER
Ol "9 Deily '11et Staff
An elated Davjd Eisenhower
described the birth of his
daughter Tuesday as "just a
wonderful experience.•'
The new father, fianked by the
baby's gr'andfather, former pres-
ident Richard Nl.xon , met with
reporters outside San Clemente
General Hospital where bis
daughter. Jennie, had been born
a few hours earlier.
Eisenhower said be and bis
wife, Julie Nixon Eisenhower,
prepared for the arrival ef the
baby by attending childbirth
classes at the hospital. He as-
sisted in the delivery of the nine·
pound. four.ounce girl born at
1:32 p.m. Tuesday.
The natural childbirth de·
livery left his wife "feeling fine.
really fine," Eisenhower com·
mented.
"I called the Nixons and my
mother and my grandmother all
within three minutes of the de·
livery." he said. "The Nixons
came right to the hospital, and
ever ybody is thrilled, just
thrilled."
Nixon. who said he was
pleased that his first grandchUd
is a girl, told reporters Tuesday
e v e ning afte r visiting his
daughter that be looks forward
to baby sitting.
The former president said he
won't try to influence bis grand-
daughter's career choice. "Jen·
nie will do whatever she wants
lo do," he sttld. "'
be fs thlfttrsr dfild born in
the United States with relatives
on both sides who were prai·
dents.'' he said. "With that
heritJtf(e, she may be attracted
<See JENNIE, Pa1e AZ>
Sharing
Burden
Asked
By KA Tin' CLANCY
OltM Oally Pli.t Sutt
•
j
i
Mbs ion Viejo Company of-ficia~ told Orange County Plan-
ning Commissioners Tuesday ·
they don't want to be singled out
by the county to build so·called
affordable t.pusing.
Company Vice President
David Celestin said he opposes a
county proposal that would re-
quire hls firm to build up to 2.soo
of Mission~jo's remaining
10,000 units in t he low and
moderate income ranges. ·
"The Mission Viejo Company
does support the conce't of af·
fordable housing," Celestin said.
He also said the company
would "go along with" wh atever
housing policies s upervisors
adopt early next year for all or
the unincorporated area.
"We <lon 't reel it is ap-
prQpriate at thls time to place it
exclusively on the Mission Viejo
community," he explained.
Celestift's remarks came as
commissioners reviewed the
first comprehensive revision or
the 10.324·acre Mission Viejo
community plan.
The commission will hold at
least one more hearing Sept. 11
PROUD PAPA INTERVIEWED before making a recommenda·
David Elsenhower lion to county supervisors.
Agencies Get
FlUfl]s, But,
Budgets ·Cut
County planner~ had suggest·
ed that the comtl'unily plan re·
vision require that one.fourth or
the remaining 10,000 hJtmes to be
built in Mission Viej6 be within
the price ranges or families
earning 80 to 1.20 percent or the
county's median income.
The , county's median income
no\T is $1~.200.
Commissioners, however, sug·
gested that planners abandon Fifty.seven Orange County that provision and dralt new
social seTvice agencies were wording that would make Mjs-
guaranteed at least one more sion Viejo subject to whatever
month of county r evenue housing policy ls adopted later sharing fUl\ds Tuesday. b · But on a 4·1 vote the County Y supervisors.
MAC members have recom·
mended approval .o f a
conditional use permll for the
First Church of Cbrisl Scientist •
,to lease space at 23854 Via
Fabricante.
The permit would allow the
church to locate temporarily in
an area not normalty used by
churches. _ _. _ _ _
If county planning com·
missioners approve the permit,
it would set a precedent -at
l east temporarily -for
churches to Joc:ate in low rent.
industTlal space ln Mission
Viejo.
Does MAC Govern
AU Mission Jliejo2-
Board of Supervisors also Supervisors by January are to
trimmed the agencies' combined adopt 8 set or policies aimed at
$96,365-a-month budgets by 10 providing less·expensive hous·
percent in preparation for cut.a in~he Mission Vie'J'o Companv's that may be needed late r ""' bec_ause of Proposition ia. proposal . ~o calls for adding
SJ&pervisors also said the 478 addtttonal acr es to the
one· month extension doesn't -t&e.!ROlJSING. Page AtJ
guarantee that lbe agencies will
MAC members recommended
authorizing tbe church not more
than a five-year use permit to
occupy the space.
Church Board Chairman
Robert Sheets told council mem·
bera hla congregation be8an
lookln1 ror new apace aftel'
school officials raised the rent
on Cordlllera Elementary
School.
"We had been renUns the
space fOI' S240 a rnontb, then It
wu tab~ to~ the flnt of th
year," Sheetl uld. "After
Propoattton 13 pa11ed tbe1
raised It to S'!lll, but haw aince
lowered It to '7~ 1 ~ontb. ••
Sbtet.s N.ld thO con1re1aUon
bad met .i Cordiller• School for
live yea.rs.
Mission Viejo's Municipal Ad·
visory Council, which has been
m a king recommendations to
county officials on commuruty
matters for four years. may not
have the authority to re present a
large portion of the community.
Some officials in the county's
Environmental Management
Agen.cy believe the council was
restrlcted to the borders of Mis·
aion Viejo as they existed ln
1974.
"There seems to be a con·
sensu1 float1n1 around that
evel')'thlq east of Marsuente
Parkway is not under the
Municipal Advisory Councll,"
Cbalrman Ted Keene told eowt·
ell mtmberl
Ht USd \be CO'l.Dey counsel'•
Aftce II lDve1t11atint ti~• ad·
v1aory a&ert9Y'• formation docu· mentt, · .tnoha4lnt • Board of
S'lptrvlaora resolution 1t1Un1
that t.bt coyncll'• area of
-
authorlt,y is "co-t.erminous with
Service Area 9 "
Several <'Ouncil members
argued that the resolution in·
tended that the sphere of in·
fluence grow as the community
grew.
"We ha91e lots of documenta,
but we don't seem to have any
proof," Keene said.
An Environmental Manare-
mant Agem~y SPoketman aakl
the issue -m.ilht have to be set-
tled Lhrouib annexatlon, a move
that would ~Ulre bomeownen
in tbe afteded aroa to vote for
MuntclpaJ Advisory-Council
• repreaenutlon
rece lve a ny revenue sharing
dollars from the county for the
remainder ot 1878-79.
The agencies previde such
services as meals for senior
citizens, child care and aid to
the needy.
Supervisor Philip Anthony
cast the lone vote against a 10
percent budget cut for the
agencies sa.vlne each prolfam
should be welahed separately.
However, Supervisor Ralph
Clark said county departments
bave been told to operate this
year with at least 10 percent less
funds and the communlt)' soelal
serv1ces aaenctes shollld follow
tbe same Nies. That uea "l{ould lnehade
homee bWJt after A~l974. the 1ear the lldvtlorJ wu '91--! .& --.! ortctnawd by a vote ot lalb1 ..,...r1Q8D .tUT1Ve8
VleJo homeownera. BUCllAl\EST, Romania (AP>
A countJ'. eoamel'• ciftlce IWd1 -Hua &GO-fq flew arouiia
of the matttr la txJ)ecteCt w bit ••ml• ID tbe Sovttt Union c,o;.
completectlbi>rUY. · · ·. ·• 4aY and Udved In ftomaala.
PUCE A PET
Wl1B PIL<Tr ADV
"The response was unreA .
The first one that called picked
her up. She 1ot a super home."
That's the advertising success
s tory told by a Huntington
Beach woman who placed tlU8
ad in the Dally Pllet:
Oermun shep, 8 mo. obt'<I
tmd. Fem Lo.l(t'S ewr·
yune but protecf1ve xu· xx xx
If you have a pet you want to
pl ace In w good home call
6'2·5678. A friendly Daily
Pilot •d·v\sor will help yoia
word your ad for lbe 1reate.st
Impact.
We 1"ake It Hl7 '"" you to put a I w words to wwlt lor
you, In the Daily Pilot.
. . ..
By JE.JUtY CL\USEN Ol•o.11, ............
T h t• Sa d d I .-b ii <' k /\ r t• .1
oord 1ntttm.i <.'OUfl<'ll hu~ 'Jo(1ft
t'lll'd lb 'lOlnd ua1uniit ti Sl~
million a.u" itl(t" t l"\!utmt•nt pl.Ant
pliann d nl'.tf l,,MiWl<I "'lt(U••I Rt•Jeio111.1I P,1rk
('auiiht bt•t w ~c>n opJ>t"tntt
\'lt'WS O( 1'411 hom\"()Wnt!t jtroUp'
i·~ct'utlvt-bourd mt•mbc.•,-. vutt-d,
8 1. to bl.t<'k M" Q)' f~m a four
pomt obJM'lion filt"<I '4 Ith thr
county Uo4lrd of Sul)\•rv11>ors lly
tht· Lu1i1w1 u Nl1i1ut•I C'ummun1ty
f":.M>CUd.lOO
On ty tht-l.uaunu N 1aue l
rPpnsmtaUvei to lhf executive
buaNl. a llallon acenc:7 bftWHQ
"'ut.b oounty r tdenta and COWi·
l) lfOV •rnml•nl, voted UilUn. t
tht· '!Oft er :.lund
The board \IOlt•d tu obj•cl only
lo pl.tnt U<'<' lhr<>u.ch Crown
\ allt'V l'.1rkwuy
t.uiun.i N11uel rf'lldenth OP·
JM>llt lht· Aliso Wut('r M unu1t>
mvnt A1n1cy pwnt on chvrtce11 01
1 n a d t>Q u .. t t> r n v Iron"' t• 11 t u I
dot·uml'ntuhun. ill\ proximity to
t ·u purks und lil.'Vl.'rut hou~lng
d •v .. lopm1·nls. truck In)( of
.. 1 o lhl.' plunt vlu Crown
Dally l"llll M.tt ~
41 .114 FANS AT ANAHEIM STADIUM GET THE MESSAGE
A Salute From Old Friend Gene Autry on the Big Day
,..,.... Pa,,. Al
JENNIE ...
tu polit1ci; But 1f sh(' choos('s a
music c·art>cr or something t·be.
that will bl• finl' too "
. JennH• Eisenhower. as well a~
he1r.g Nixon's grunddaughter. ts
the ~rt·Jt ~randdaug hter or
formt-r presi d<.•nt Dwight
1'; ist•n howt'r
Eisenhower said hC' und his
wife agr eed to nam e lhc tr
da ughter J e nnie because 1t
sounds like Julie. but isn't
"Ju h e didn't want to have
,1 n o t h t• r · ,J u ll e · . " h t• s u 1 d
"Besides 'Jennie' cun't bl·
s hortened to u nickname ··
Asked how he f~)t about hav·
ang his first child. Eisenhower
S<tid, "It was l ame we're 30"
Nixon s:.ud his daughter . who
w1JI be retunimg home with Jen-
nie m three days, "is doing
great."
"I was umazed ," he said.
"She looks as 1f she's been out
for a swim m the cold P acific
She's com e through in fine
style "
Thl' baby. described as having
dark hair and l'yes. may look
like a Nixon or m ay look like an
Eisenhower. the former presi·
dent said. adding that perhaps
t he two families bear a cert;.iin
resemblance.
''All babi<.>s are beautiful," he
'\aid, "but I mus t say girl babies
are special "
The new father arrived fo r his
evening visit dnving his own car
to a r ear entr ance of the
hosp1tetl. where a spokes m an
said Mrs. Eisenhowe r is in a
private room m tht' matern1ly
wa rd
Interviews Set
For 3 Trustee
Applicants
Three of the eight candidates
for Saddle back Community
College trustee Donn a Ber ry's
seat are schedu le d for in·
tcrviews today beginning al 4
Pm.
The deadline for application to
replace. Mrs. Berry. who h11s re·
s igned to m ove to N(lrthern
California with her family . was
Aug 15. College offi cials ~aid.
however. tbey will · still accept
any a pplications bearing the
Tuesday postm ark.
The board also has scheduled
interviews for Thursday began
nmg at 4 p m. Trustees plan to
question each candidate for an
hour and the meetings are open
to the public.
Mrs . Berry represented one or
the largest areas of the Sad-
dleback District.
The area includes Mission Vie·
jo. hatf or El Toro. Ttabuco can·
yon areas. a nd parts of San
.Juan Capistrano a nd Laguna
Niguel
Candidates scheduled for in·
te r vicws today ar e : Mildred
WindoJph of Lagune1 Niguel, a
form er t eacher ; Harold F
McGrath of Laguna Niguel, vice
president of administration for
JoJos and Naugles Inc.; and R
Richard Bruno or Trabuco Can-
yon. manager o r ~ales ad
mini s tratio n Cor Hyl a nd
Labw'atories.
Recall Try Fail8
LOS AN~ELES fAP> -An
election aimed al recalling City
Councilman Robert C Farrell in
his South Central Los Angelt-s
Dis t rict failed Tuesday by a
nearly 2-1 m argin
Opposition Diminishes
Valley Parkway •nd the ••en·
cy'• aUe•ed faUiµ-e lo noUly the
La1unlt Nlauel Communtty A9·
t1oc1utlon of pluns lo build the
f JClhty ut the tilte
The proposed plant l1 part of a
S45 million wastewater system
plannt>d to serve a SS-square·
mile .ir~u in southeast Orange
County, lncludln& El Toro. South
Luauna, Lttguna Nlauel and
Lngunu Hiiis. which includes
Lel~ure World.
Approved by the county Plan-
mng Commission. the facility's
con1truction wus uppealed to tht
E',....PageAJ
DEBATE •••
Cordova called such c laims
"war ston es" and said he could
tell some of his own. He did.
In substance. there was more
ugr eement than disagreement
between the two candidates .
Both, for example, said they
wall work to strengthen local
government and against cen-
tra hzution in Sacramento.
Both candidates also decried
t•x panded government spending
and "growth or governm~nt."
Both se1id they support extend-
ing capital punishment to cover
more crimes.
U1sagrccment came on the so-
called Briggs initiative. prohibit·
1n g h o m os<.>x u <i l s from
teaching in public schools .
Schmitz said he supports the
nll'as urc Cordova said he does
not
And while Cordova said he is
not certain how he will vote in
the g ubernatorial race, Schmitz
emphasized that he is an Evelle
Younger supporter.
Wh en it came lime for them to
ask t•ach other one question.
Cordova usked Schmitz wh<it he
had done as a state legis lator to
Jdv.inct.• lhl' cause of property
tax rt'form
Schmitz pointed to his support
of Jar vis in the 1960's and u
plaque ht• received in 1967 from
Unilt•d Taxpuyers. the Jarvis
s upport organization.
In turn , Sc hmitz ask ed
Cordova to show his "conversion
lo conservatism lo be other than
political."
Cordova said his record as~"ll
dl'puty district attorney who
never lost a relony case shows
him to be something far less
than hberal
Besides, Cordova said. his rec-
ord as a legislator. not politic1d
rhetoric. should serve as the ex·
a mple of has conservatism.
~lcanwhile, David tiergfand.
who hopes to make the No·
vcm be r ballot as the Liberta rian
Party candidate in the 36th.
waited in a hallway.
Be rgland said he was miffed
because the debate sponsor. the
Building Industry Association,
didn 'l invite him.
Tuim' Mo11UJ
ShowPlwtos
"Photo Brag Night" is the
them e or Saddleback Mothers of
Twins Club meeting this evening
<8·16) at 7:30 in the home of
Charlene Delgado, 941 Lansing
Ave .. Costa Mesa.
Publicity agent Jean Stewart
said members can bring pie·
lures or themselves a nd their
c h i ldren. Prizes a re to be
a warded to those who correctly
identify a nd> match the most
photogr aphs
At 7 p. m. Thursday. fathers of
twins a re to join the mothers al
a po1ynesian s tyle progressive
dinner at the home or Erica and
Don Marrin in Mission Viejo.
county Board of Supervisors m a
July 30 letter sl1ned by Laguna
Niguel planning c h,11rm"n
W1llium Dennison
But the Leisure W<>rld plan·
nine committee. r epres<.>nting
Leisure World's 20,000 residents.
riled a letter Aug. 7 urging the
county Board of Supervisors to
deny the Laguna Niguel associa·
lion's appeal.
The Leis ure Worlders said the
facility is an "integral and vital
ele m ent" 1n the wat e r and
se w age agency 's treatment
system .
The letter noted the proJect
meets state and federal pollution
control demands. will conser ve
ener~y and will cost <.1n est1mat
ed $150.000 more for l!Vl'ry
month it is delayed.
Saddleback Are..a Coordinating
Council President 8111 Tellman.
d Laguna Niguel resident and
m ember of Laguna Niguel Com·
munity Association. warned that
the coordinating council would
look bad no matter what action
1t took Monday.
.. A reverse decision would be
knifing Laguna Niguel in tht!
"""',..,.,... JAMES EARL RAY WALKS TO THE WITNESS STANO
Convicted Slayer Denies Shooting Or. King
'Didn't Kill King,'·
Ray Says at Probe
WASH I NGTON IAPI
J ames Earl Ray took the Wit·
ness stand before Congress lo·
day and swore. as expected, that
"l did not shoot Or. Ma rtin
Luther King"
R ay. in his first public ac-
counting unde r oath of the
events surrounding the April 4,
1968, murder of the civil rights
leader. told the House ussassina·
lions committee: "My testimony
is the same that l would have
given to a Memphis trial court if
I had had that opportunity.''
The 50-year-old Ray. accom·
panied by a phala nx of U S.
marshals. was brought mto the
committee's cha mber under
severe security provisions. Spec-
tators. including photographers.
were cautioned they would be
expelled if they so much as stood
while Ray, wearing an 111-fillmg
s port coat and gr:.iy lie. entered
the rgom
Arter his attorney. long -ta ml'
assassinations buff and writer
:O.t ark b ane. engagt.•d ucling
chairman Richardson Pr('yer in
battle over Ray'!> tre<1tment by
f e d e r a l auth o r ities. R ay
launched into a long and ram
bhng preliminary statement. ht~
voice quick but halting
Ray pleaded guilty tn 1969 to
King's killing but almost im
mediately recanted that con·
Cession aftt-r receiving a 99-ycar
sentence in a Tennessee stall'
prlSOn.
"In res p<.>ct to m y guilty
plea," he said. "it is not a dif
fi't'ult matter for an attorney to
move his client to a guilty plea
I'm sure every membe r of this
committee knows this."
Ray's attorney at the tim£> of
his sente ncing was P ercy
Fore m<m. a nationally known
trial lawyer.
Then Ray turned to wh at ap-
parently will be the underlymg
them(• of his claim to innocenc<'
that he was a mt-re pawn m
wh at he thought was a gun
running scheme by a mystery
man named "Raoul" and may
have been set up. moreover. by
undercover operations or tht•
FBI. The story is one which Ray
has long aired vi._. prison in
terviews
back. and the county wlU decide
W(' c.in't mc1ke up our minds."
he• S...l td
~lo:-.t board members. indicat·
ed they be~cve the plant should
a nd will be built in Lagwna
N'guel and that the coordinating
council s hould then do what it
can to make living conditions.
better in the surrounding area.
The coordinallng council ex-
ecutive board was criticized
eurlier by its review commltl~
for fully supporting the Laguna
Niguel associulion's four-pojnt
s tand
Services
In County
To Get Aid
Orange County s upervisors
have managed to divide $12.4
million in s tate aid 60 ways W
he lp spet'lal ser vice districts
cope with prope rly tax lost
because of Proposition 13.
As a result. county officials
said tod<iy. the library. street
sweeping. bug control and com-
mun 1ty service districts will get
near ly 80 percent or the funds
lhl'Y lo:-.t because of the property
Wx limitation initiative.
Su per visors rejected a s tart
propos;.il that would have left 34
specwl districts without any of
the so called state bailout funds
Jns tead. they trimmed the
county structural fire district's ~10 i million budget request
down to $6 9 million, leaving out
a proposed S3.8 million operat-
ing n•servt-
ln addition. the board agreed
lo Jccept no stale aid for th!!
county flood control or harbors.
bt«•thl'!> .ind pa rk dis tricts.
a~t·nc1l'~ that have sufficient re-
Sl'rves to carry the m through
lht' 1978·79 fiscal year.
Supt>rvisor Ha lph Diedrich
,,11d he c•xpccts the "Legislature
lo a llocall' an additional $12.5
million m aid to s pecial districts
statew1dl• so s upervisors can
n·stor<• more funds later .
Thl' ripple from Proposition 13
already may postpone construc-
l 1on or new libr aries in San
Cll'm t•ntt'. San Juan Capistrano.
lrvinl' and El Toro
County oCficials said they also
will review curtailing street
.,weeping, recreation programs
Jnd landscape maintenance in -
the unmcorporat<.>d Saddleback
Valh•y and other ~outh county
com muniues
ORANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
t.,.. f'>-renQt> (N\' 0•1ly Ptlol ""'"'wNcft r\tom ..,..,,.,., '""' ,,_,,...,.... p,,.,, ,, pubh\MOl>t ""'°'~
(04\f P\11M1\l'Hnq Como•fty ~' .. f'to.t'Q!t\•,... OIJ&it\~ Mof'ld•¥-ttwW41' F~• '°" c:..a.. ~ V~f~,~~~h ,~u;r.= o::::~ }~~.~~:t~~:'.,:~~.~,;c'~
""nri,,._.1 oun•• t'l+"ct nl•nt 1, bf J)O •\t IMY \H~I Co\f•M'""'" (.,ltforn1ctm.16 .... ,,,. ....
p,,."o~nt ""'° f>vot•"""
J.cfl" C""9y Y•u P•f•,10l'nt tt!"O c..nw .. ~
'"•mnKH\ttt fdllOf'
TJte~\AM~
~A~QinQ Edl!IOf ,,.,.,,., ........ , •·<~,, .....
A\\1\1.tnt Mtin•o•t'IQ E.dl~
Saddleback Vall.-, ome.
1\101 l• p., ,.Ootd •t S,.,, 0J.etiit Ftetw•Y
Office• Coo.I•~'-" l)l')Vrt_.,, S.'f\tfl!ol'\ Hut\t•~on Bt-..-., tll ,\&r.w-r.8oufiit.vMd ~a..~" ,, .. G..........,reSt'"'
~-V•19'y~Oft.c•
5'1-«310
f•-SMIC-
496--MOO
~~:'·t'~ ;;~a:= .. ~~.:::~":'~.~
"'•"'' or .-o_.,,.t;wm•"'' n•rtlf' m•_. M
'f"PfOd11i10d ..,lf~t '~••I ~rl'f'llHtOft of tDOrtiQM ~
\.IO"d ''"''' C)O\tit~ 0•1d •t Co'\t• tftelleW. C.othfor"•• \&11>\f, •P1tOn '°'" t•frt~r U SO
MOn1t'll• DY "'•'' "4 \0 montPll¥ ""'lt•"V dil"ifl#\4t•Ori\ U to monthly
Wh i l e nt>ws p ape r a nd
tel evis ion reporters quizzed
Eis~nhower at the rear door. the
Nixons and their e lder daughter.
Tricia Gmc , were drivt'n lo the hG~p~al 's main entrance by
Se<'l'et "Servlce agents
lt'orty minutes l ater the
Corm er president emerged from
his visit. accompanied by his
wife and Mrs. Cox. and paused
at t he hospit a l entra n ce to .,.
answer reporters' questions.
Thousands Visit Elvis' Grave
,The form~ president lwked
tanned and vigorous and very
h'appy. t
"Beiol{ a ~randfather may be
even greate r than b eing a
father," he said. "Your ex-
perience with your own chltdren
is so immediate that perhaps
you lack ~ necessary d~lttn«>-
to evaluate and appreciate the
relationship lo the rultest ex·
tent ··
Saymg he has l~arned from
his relationship with hls two
daugh\.ers "never to Indicate
what my choice is" when they
have decisions to make, Nixon
said allowing children to make
up their own minds m ay be
more important these days for
girls than for boys.
"Julie '5 an independent
thinker , and so Is Tricia," he
said of his daughters, adding
that he expects his grand-
daughter lo be Independent as
well
"I'm not aoiit• to try lO in·
nuence her.'' he sal<I
Tben, appearlnJC to have bad
an aftmhoU&bt. be lau,hod and
aatd, "But a6e ts pn1 lO be an
Ansell fan."
MEMPHIS, Tenn. <AP> -
Pair skies, long Unes and a six·
foot-t;ill !lower ·cover ed angel
greet e d the Elvis Presley
faithful today as they came to
pay homage to the kihg of r0ck
'n' roll on the first anniversary Of
his death.
Dick Grob. chief or securil)t
tor the 13~-acre estate. svht
more than 150 people spent the
night on the Graceland grounds
gathered in a huddle JUst behind
its wrou~ iron izates.
Several thousand wer e on
hand when the gates opened at
F,...PageAJ
HOUSING. • •
planned community.
A bout 400 acreii would be in
the north part ol the community
<tlong El Toro Road and Oso
Cr eek . It wo uld remoln at
agricultural land until later,
planners said.
t
The remolnder would bo a.Iona the S.n Dieto Free•hy ln the
southern part of th• comuumft1
and would be dellpated for tu-~uatrial dtvelopmenl.
8:25 a .m. Al least 12,000 were ex-
pected. to lite by the graves of
Presley and h_i~mother before
th£> gates c1osea-ihls afternoon.
Scores of flower arrangements
lined the winding quarter.mile
driveway to Graceland Mansion
and more were crowded into the
graveyurd garden lo lhe south.
Among the arr.angements....was.
the angel a Styrofoam form
cover ed wit h white chrysan-
themums, 1ls bands· and wings
painted gold.
.. A young woman from Qn.
tar i o , Ca n a d a . Ba r bara
McClean. came in and ordered
the angel," said MaChrie Cox,
a n e mployee o r Burke's
Flo w e r s whtc b fo r years
handled itower arrangements
tor Presley's molber 's arave.
Manager Aneta 'Watkins said
she had been a verag"ing 100 or·
den a week for such desl1na as
gutters, broken hearta, crowns,
crosses and the emblem TCB -
Takin4 Care of Bu sineu .
Prt11ey s motto.
M "· ColC said she had also re· , ctlved an order tor a rod roee
arr•fltemenl from Prlacllla, Elva.• former wllo, and their
dau1hter. Llla Mam. ·
Also awatttq tbo fans in the
90ld eJree beat wu a row of alr'
condllloned toUVenlr •boPI and · rovtnf IOda pop sellers.
~ '~.
,,, ......
FANI OF ILVll PAU&.rt WEEP OPENLY A8 TH!V LEAVE GAAVE81T£ IN MIMPtttl
On Flflt Annlverqry of the King'• O.eth, 12,000 Expected at Cemetery
..
•
Glttry Earned
Dory Racers AIAo Got Blisters
By JOANNE REYNOLDS Oltllieo.6ty .........
Lifeguards from the Orange Coast covered themselves
with glory. blisters and some other things during the
annual Catalina to Long Beach dory race this past
weekend.
TOE GRUELING event pitted 11.teams of lifeguards
against one another in a 28-mile rowing ra.ce from the
Isthmus of Catalina to the Long Beach marina.
'l?be winning performance was turned in by lbe team
from the San Clemente City We111ard Department. Al
Lavayen, 22, and Barney Voorhees, 31, crossed the ftnisb
line in five hours, 10 minutes, Just eight minutes on tile re·
cord set last year by Steve Heller and Larry Moore of San
Cletnente.
Right behind them was the boat rowed by Tom Snyder
and Seotl Stuart from San Clemente State Beach.
STEVE WENGER AND Eric Bauer from Newport's
Marine Department had the dubious distinction of
finishing dead last. J ~
"Yeah, they even finished behlnd Laguna Beach."
snickered organizer Bob Schroeder. a Los Angeles County
lifeguard. Laguna's team consisted of the oldest entrant,
Bruce Beard, 47, and 17-year-old Ingrid Loos. the only
female in the race. Beard and Loos finished a respectable
eighth.
Schroeder didn't mention where he and his teammate
fmished in the race. Voorhees said the LA County team
gave his San Clemente boat a real race for about half the
28-mile distance . "Then they just broke, got sick and
started throwing up," Voorhees said.
AFl'ER 111AT rr was a fairly easy pull to the finish
across glassy seas protected from the sun most of the lime
by blgb overcast.
Voorhees, who's been with the San Clemente
Department for four seasons, said the race was his first -and his last. .. A lot of people do it just to say tbev've done
it and a lot or people do it to win. I've done both, so I can quit
now.'' .
ll's not that the Laguna Beach resident didn't ertjoy
the race, although he admits that be was a llttle
.Jlllc.om.fort..a.ble about six miles from the rmtsb when the
sun came out.
TBlf REAL PROBLEM occurred after the race w as
over. Voorhees and Lavayen had a little band trouble. "It
wasn't that we had blisters. We had pretty good caUuses
built up.
"It's just that our hands were really tired. We could
barely move them to open a bottle," he explained. -
The bottles, of course. were congratulatory beers the
thirsty rowers were anixous to consume. Nol lo worry
about the poor lifeguards. Race fans helped them open the
bottles and even obligingly poured the contents into their
parched mouths.
C'.oroner's Report
Transient's Death
Due to Aspirin
A San Diego County transient apparently had been dumped
whose body was round on the from a moving vehicle and was
San Diego Freeway in Mission pronounced dead on arrival at a
Viejo July 6 died as the result of Mission Viejo Hospital.
Tax Note
Sales
Approved
The sale of S20 mllllon worth
or property tax anticipation
notes bas been unanimously
upproved by Orange County
Superlvsors.
Cou nt y T ux Collector·
Treasurer Robe rt Citron
reported that Bank of America Of·
fered the low bid of 4.71 percent
rorthenotes.
The county borrows funds
each year to carry government
activities through the so-called
dry period before property tax
payments are received in the ran.
Citron compared tbe 4. 71
percent bid to the bid of 4.95
percent received by San Diego
County and 4.98 percent by Los
Angeles County. •
H e attributed changing
market conditions and the
county's strong AAA credit
rating from Moody's Investors
Service for the lower interest
rate. Delly ,.. Matt ,....
"This is evidenced by the fact
that last year Orange County
government had the lowest t ax
rate of any county, not only in
this state but for any large
urban area. and yet was able to
adequately provide all the
services needed," he said.
YOU CAN ALMOST FEEL THE SPRAY f'.F THE OCEAN IN V1VIAN CALDWELL'S PAINTING
'They Come In Here to Look at th• Wavea, and That'• • Good Feeling'
Citron noted county
government's 1977-78 tax rate
was Sl.33 per $100 assessed
valuation compared to Los
Angeles County's $4.50 tax rate.
Artist Translfttes
Ocean to Canvas
He said inte~t on the $20
million in notes will cost
$775,807.
But th·e fund s will be
reinvested for short ter1n1 at
higher-yielding rates, h e
explained, so the county's
interes t charge and o~her
expenses will be paid without
cost-to taxpayers.
Other bids received for the
county notes were from Wells
Fargo Bank. at 4.72 percent;
P ayne Weber. 4.745 percent:
Security Pacific Bank, 4.758
percent and Chemical Bank. 4.96
percent.
By STEVE MITCHELL
Of Ille Delly l'INt St.tff
"I mu.tt go down to the sea again.
For the call o/ the running tide
Is a wild call and a clear call
Thal may Mt be denied."
"Sea Fever" by John Mcuefield
Iler interpretations of triinslu-
cent waves and turbulent waters
dra w surfers into Vivian
Caldwell 's L aguna Beach
gallery.
The kids set down their towels
and surfboards and gaze at the
power in her oil-based waves.
crashing onto rocks or welling
up into peaks.
"They aren't thinking about
money, or covering their living
Vi • 'T' • _ .-1 room walls, or wondering if the leJO i ertm1"-"' painting matches a particular
sofa." the nine-year Art·A·Fair JFJ;• · S rt exhibitor s~s. ~-lf'IS UpJJCJ "They come in here to look at
the waves, and that 's a eood
Of S • feeling." uperoUJOr8 The people who do pa~ from
between S400 and $4,200 (or her
Tbe Mission Viejo Cqmpaity's unique style of art do so because
proposal for a Sl.4 million they t~-c:rptured by the
combination bus terminal and power she transplants onto can· train depot won the unanimous vas.
endorsement of Orarq:e County And for a woman who ls ter-
super..:laors Tuesday. rtfied ofitbe ocean, that's quire a
The board agreed to seek trick. ~.000 in state funds to build The Phoenix import says she
the terminal adjacent to the bas nearly drowned twice. and
railroad tracks and Interstate 5 her nearest encounter to the
near Cabot Road in Miss ion ocean these days is knee-deep
Viejo. with a large lens camera.
Orange County Tra ns it "Don't let any artist tell you
District <OC'TO) directors last it's wrong lo take pictures of
week voted to ask for $750,000 in your subject~" the 41-year-Old
state funds for a bus terminal woman advises. "God never
about three mi!es up the m a kes the right composition
freeway at Laguna Hills Mall. anyway," she laughs.
An OCTD spokesman said Vivian takes hundreds of still
the r e w o u Id b e so m e photos back to her Laguna
overla pping of service a rea Beach gallery where she dis·
between the two t erminals. plays them on a screen and then
However. both are shown on paints what she sees.
OCTD plans and they could be She used to paint on location.
bother me when I'm working,"
she says. The Lake Forest resi·
dent shares a studio in Laguna
Beach with three other artists.
She also hates to have people
eall her work seascapes.
·''Artists have painted the sea
for years. but they use it as a
vehicle for man and boat. Or
they're painting foam against
rocks. or for atmosphere.
"But nobody paints the sea as
moving. liquid, translucent water."
That's what Vivian Caldwell
captures. She calls her work sea
portraits.
·'I'm doing a small portion or
the water. rather than a large
expanse or ocean."
The award-winning artist cap-
tures movement in her waves.'
And how does she transform
that wave action onto the can·
vas?
"You're not going to believe
this but I put on some soft rock
and dance while I paint," she
laughs.
"The faster the song. the more
movement in the water."
Festival-goers are immediate·
ly struck by the vivid colors and
atetion in her ex.hibit. located in
the second half of the Art·A·
F a ir grounds out Laguna
Canyon Road.
"I don't know anybody who
isn't moved in one way or the
other by the sea." she says. ··tt
makes some people restless. and
is a calming factor to others.
"And," she adds, "the 0«>an
makes some people sick to their
stomachs."
"Maybe, I'm a masochist lo
paint something that I fear so
much," the former model and
singer says.
But that 's a feeling. too. and
Vivian Caldwell knows how to
use e motion lo artistic advan-tage.
built lo complement one in various a reas in the Art
another, the spokesman said. Colony. "but the wind would 2 Hurt in Fire
State officials have $8.7 com e up and knock my easel
million available to help finance face down in the sand... OCEANSIDE <A Pl -A ditch
transportation centers Or beachwalkers would come digger and 1t firema n were
throughout the state. Allocations u P and w 8 t ch her w 0 r k. burned Tuesday when natural
aren't expected before 1980. something with which she can-gas from a broken pipeline In
O C TD o ffici a l s said notcontend. the middle of Ocea nside
applications for terminals also .. 1 have to be alone. Even my Boulevard was apparently ignit-
have been prepared by tbe cities fa mily knows better than to cd by a spark from a trenchin~
SaJdleback
FM Radio
PlanOK'd
Saddleback Comm uni.t y
College trustees Monday ni'1t
allocated $150.000 from a litht
budget so the college's lo~·
planned 3.000 watt FM r adio s'fa.
tion can become a reality.
All technical details in prep-
aration for the larger student·
operated station KSBR are now
complete. Superintende nt
Robert A . Lombardi told
trustees. The present station is
only 10 watts.,
The board must now allocate
the money to show the federal
government that trustees want
the bigger radio station located
at the college, Lombardi said. or
pass by lbe chance forever.
Part of the allocation will
match part of a $129.000 Health.
Education and Welfare <HEW•
grant now pending. Warren _
Deacon. KSBJl,'s pro~ram manager. said.
The HEW erant is the final
step of a long, urduous pro·
cedure cou,ie oflkfals have gone through to win the new
broadcasting frequeoncy from the
Federal Communications Com-
mission I FCC>.
Deacon said he expects HEW
to make the grant award an-
nouncement sometime in mid.
September.
If HEW comes through for
Saddleback. Deacon said. con·
struclion of a I.200 feet transmit-
t e r on O'Neill Ra nch necc r
Ortega Highway will begin im-
mediately.
KSBR's operators hope to be
on the air by Dec. 1.
Programming will stress news
and public affairs coveragt-.
Deacon said. Music programs
will feature jazz and soft rock,
tailored prjncipally ror listeners
between ages 25 and 45.
The station will bro"adcast 19
hours. seven days a week. The
broadcast ~ignal will reach
about 500.000 people from Tustin
to San Clemente. of San Juan Capistrano, Irvine. machine. POiice say. Santa Ana and Anaheim. .~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~.....;;;.;"-'-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
/' ... ~-· ........ .._,_ ...... ~---· .......... :J::.. ·• ..;.~ rz, .. ~· . ,, --~~ -ingested acetaminophen, an He was the second victim
.aspirin substitute. found on public roads in the IJeer Theft Told Coumy sheriff's investigators Saddleback Valley a rea thi,s Make a rare moment ~
last a lifetime
with' a rare gift.
~·tfle-teuse4ef.dsUt -)!Oar ---._ ... _-. •--o: _ -·,,...
was deter mh1ed bra coroner's A nude body later identified as uy--ugiina Store pathologist following C.amp P e ndl e ton Marine
toxicological and microscopic Richard Aloen Keith, 20, was Owners ot Cove Liquor in
tissue studies. found early June 19 along a Laguna Beach told police Tues·
An investigator said bis secluded section or Moulton day someone sneaked past a
department still does not know Parkway in Laguna Hills. clerk during working hours last
whether the large dose of Keith died of suffocation. a week and ~le 20 cases of beer
no o. r est r l ct ed drug was coroner's report stated. No leads and a bottle or scotch.
voluntary or forced, so the death have been developed in that Police said the foreign beer
classification ls sutl listed as case, either, an invesU1ator and theiiquor was stolen from a
''undetermmed." said. storage room at the rear of the
AcetamlftOpbep attacks tbe The deaths are not believed to store, located al 1045 North
liver when taken ln large be related, he added. Coast Highway last Tbunday.
amounts, be said.
Keith N1bur Kllnibetl. za. was
toand bJ motortst31n tbe fast,
northbound laaesoftbe San Diego
Freeway near La Pu .Road.
He watt no lh1Jt and a nipple
bad been bu.med from his chest,
apparently wlth a vehicle
eigarette l'-bter. Klingbeil
Disabled Students'
Needs to Be Studied
Man Attacks
Three Nones
Trustees from six West
Oranae County school districts
have acbeduled a Joint meeting
toDiabUn Fountain Valley to dis·
cuss 1pecial eduction programs
for bandleapped ltudeota.
The meet.lfta wtll be held at 7
o'cJock in tbe Fountain Valley
Hllh School caloterla, 17816
Bushard St..
Local sdlool offldall believe
tbe MatGn wtl1 mark \be flrat
UUM all 30 west COUlrt.r ICMol
bo1r4 members bne beld a
joint IDelt1nJ.
Federal ucl 1ta1e mnd.M• ;r.,.-=r~~-= coo ........... ., ....
county school boordJ ln (ormJn~
handicapped student proirams by 1980.
High school district trustees
pton to meet tonight wltb school
board members from Fountain
V lley, ~an Vlew, ltuntln&ton
Beach Ctt.Y. Seal Beach and
Westminster elementary school
diatrlcu.
Officials from the slx school
dlttrlcta tormed a W•t Oraq41
County SpeelaJ Education
Conaortl011t lut yur lO meet UM
federal aad stau mindlltn.
Tbe ldl ~ldft tbt tJM N· 1Joa.1l CCllllGi" a an..t.11 equJ
ldaca•IQn tat Ill •ea .. ..._.
•llM> baft ...,._.or ...a• ...... . •
Gem
Talk
By J.C. HUMPHRIES
Gemologist
DIAMONDS ANO BLACKS
and the A/ncan ttonomg
Blac.1<.A.Mca now supPlfes more"\hen
half of the world's diamonds. Zaire,
alone, ts the source of 35 percent of the otobal supply, producing 17 million
metric carats annually. That's more
than twice the output of South Africa,
which has long been considered the world leader. Botawana produces
about 2.S mUllon carats annually. followed by Ghana with 2.2 mllllon carats~ Namibia, l .t mllllon, and
Sierra i.eone with 0.7S mllllon. Other producers are Tanzania, Libert•, Angola, the Ivory Coast and the c.en-
tral Af ric.an Rec>ublfc. Before civil war wracked Anool•, that country pro-dJK~ i mlllton carats vurly1 and IJ txJ)ttted to rttum to a production level
nMt thlt amount, now that cOOdltlons •re 1galn ~ Mttled there. The cen-tr al African Selllf\9 Oroanlzatlon1 : baaed In SouU\ Atrfc:a, twindfts most Bl.ck AfrkMI dtamond satn, desofte
the "nfrlendllnHt betwten th•t aperte..fd country •net UM ,....,t of
Attic.. OiamOndi ob¥1ouily pl~• fN· ~ rote '" tM '"*r.· of Iii.at Afrtc.a. F« .....,,..., 2j I* CWll ol .... c.tr•= ..... k., .......... ~ ClM'9 from CIMmalMa.
..
The diamond solitaire.
One single diamond. Set simply
and elegantly To sparkle on its own.
Uf tasting value. because no two diamonds
are allke. Come 1n to see our beaut1fut
selection of diamond so11ta1re Jewelry.
Andyoull know why 1Hthe gift
that makes cl rare and
wonderful moment
last cl lifetime.
•
J. C. .J./wnp~ril6 jew,f-r6
MEM8Elt AMER ICAN GEM SOCIETY @
t823 NEWPOAT Bl.VO COSTA MESA
• CONV£HIENT TERMS BanMmenc:.~ 0wve
J2 YURS IH THE SAME LOCATION PHONE &48-3401
•
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i ,.
.. ,.
'.
..
IA4 OA"-V PILOT use
~ ...... ~ T--~~''·'
M .... •l•e
Hold That Freeway
NOW ws &HOW O n . 1ne yean back, the 1t1te
of CaUfontl• dfflcled to lak• tbJt Utile country ro1ta throup emu M•• and tum It Into I freeway. It WU • v ton lntotbe l\ltu.re ol vast mapltude.
Wheo the state htP••Y bra11 decided to do tbat, there
wH a place alonplde the road known u UM Santa Ana
Army Alr Base. Nearby, the Arm~ wu fiyln1 p.31
LC>ckbeed u~ n1hten out of .that .. now Oran1e
County Alrpon.
Tb«t' wttre a few fruit atanda •lonl the old rural road.
People drove by aJowl)'. trytnf to conserve the one aet of
tires they'd been a~ated by tM OPA They were .iotn1
t>lltY on the ll·cent·per·a•Uon ll&IOllne too, lest they run
out of "A" raUon coupons
M EANWHJLE ACaOSS ftlE the seas, a IUY namea
Adolf HiUer was rantin& around and t.rylna t.o riaure out
how to 5tall off General Dwllbt D. Eisenhower from lnvad·
ma Fortess Europe wttb his Allied armies.
Back here in our bome reaton. however, the state
highway people were lootin& ahead to when World War 11
would be over and they could start bulldin1 some
superhighways.
One of lhe roads they selected was Route 55, that rural
lane that is a major feeder from Inland reaches to the
Stolt' Higltway Brc.w Work on Dflaying Aclion
shoreline at Newport Beach. Over the years. it has
variously been known as Newport Boulevard. Newport
Freeway, Route 55 and Costa Mesa Freeway.
OVEB THE YEARS. there have been a lot of changes
a longside that road. The Army Air Base went away and
the land hus been transformed into Orange Coa~t College.
Southern California College <the Arm~ chapel still stands I
and th£' county fairgrounds. The P-38 f1~hters vanished and
Air Cal now fli es more pea~ful missions out of the
aerodrome to San Francisco. .
Traffic has increased. Commerce has increased. Smog
has leaped to terrifying levels_. But th~ state highway bra_ss.
in their infinite wisdom. are still studying the road and try mi
tofigureout whattodowitb It. .
The Orange County Transportation Commts~ion got In·
to the act only this week . .asking for further studies.
EMERGING F&OJI TB~E deliberations. Bruce Mat·
tern Costa Mess's traffic engineer. attempted to analyie
for the City Counctl •bat was happening to the future fate
of the old rural road that bad been declared a treeway
route almost fOUT ~ ago . ·T ve got reason to t~beve we've got a delaymg action
going." he suggested
By golly, t~t's It. A delaying action. ~ow we know.
If HJUer bad been that good at delaytng Eisenhower.
we might still be fighting World War II.
Nixon No Longer
Needs Public Fund
DETROIT c AP> -Former President Richard M. Nixon is in
the money -or at least he has enough of it to feel that he no longer
needs money from the public for legal help.
Lloyd Johnson, who succeeded Rabbi Baruch Korff as trustee
of the "Nixon Trust Fund'' last year. says new income that Nixon
has received has made the fund unnecessary.
Tuesday's editions of the Detroit News quoted Johnson as say.
uui Nixon had told him recently that his fi.nance!i are-much im-
proved since he collected money for belng anterv1ewed by David
Frost and beaan receiving royalties on his new book.
Johnson an Ann Arbor nursing home owner, estimated that
Nixon once 'owed more than $750,000 to lawyers detending bis
claim against public release of the tapes and other evtdence used
to prosecute the Watergate trials and support the House impeach·
ment proceedings. ·
Blackout; L ootin g
J\femphis Reels
·From ·strikes
MEMPHJS. Teno IAP > -A m assive power failure blamed by the
utlUty on ubot.u1e blacked out Memphis early today. adding to the
woes of u city already reeling from walkouts by police and firemen.
Laabor leaders threatened a 1eneral strike unless a settlement comes soon.
Scattered JooUng was reported
across town before power was
restored, and a baby had to be
delivered by fieshliaht at one hos pltul befor~ e mergency
power could be connected.
THE BLACKOUT also left some areas wtlhout water pres-
sure because electric-powered
pumps were out. Memphis In·
ternutional Airport had to shift
to standb)' power.
County police said betweeh 15
and 20 adults were arrested on
minor charges stemming kDm
the looting, which was concen-
trated at northslde liquor and
convenience shops . They said
five juveniles were in custody on
charges. of burglary or attempt·
ed burglary. National Guard
troops, already on duty for the
strikes, were dispatched to the
county jail to beef up seturitv
Mayor Wyeth Chandler had
been able to muintain calm thC'
previous nights by imposing a
dusk ·to-dawn curfew. Some
oickets have been arrested each might when they refused to dis ·
band by the 8 p. m. deadline.
THE BLACKOUT came on the
first anniversary of singer Elvis
Presley's death. Thousands of
his fans had come to this city of
650,000 lo pay tribute at hil>
grave at Graceland Mansion.
but this was far fewer than had
bee n expect ed be fore tht'
strikes
On Tuel.day. Chandle r
modified his no-negotiations
stance and offered to place the
strikers' wage demands on ;,i
November ballot. giving voters
a chance to pay for the settle·
ment wilh a sales tax increase
The strikers rejected the idea
and called for binding arbltra·
lion.
Police Director E. Winslow
Cha pman said at a pre.dawn
for National Guard services
back to 1968 and calling for a
quick settlement.
Chandler . asked about the
governor's remarks this mom·
ing on ABC television. said they
suggest ed a n u tte mpt at
"blackmafl."
More than 1.000 Nation al
Guardsmen have been patrolling
the city with about 100 non-
striking police officers and 75
sheriff's deputies. while 200 Fire
Uepartment officials and non·
striking firemen have kept 23 of
the city's 48 fire stations open.
Senate OKs
Caner Plan
WASHI NGTON -The
Senate today approved
President Carter's plan to
expand college grants and
loans. making them availa·
ble for the first time to mid-
dle-income students.
The 68·28 vote followed
approval Tuesday night of
41 rlvaJ SSOO-per.student
tuition t ax cr edit that
Carter opposes.
At the White House, dep·
uty press secretary Rex
Gr a num said the presi-
dent's position "has not
changed. He is strongly
opposed to such ...
But Granum did not say
wh'et-her Carter would veto
the bill
The Carter prog ra m
would provide uid to an
addittonal 1.4 million stu-
dents. with about 64 pt•r·
CC'nt o f the benefits going
to students from families
with incomes of $15.000 to
S25,000 a year.
NATION I WEATHER
Afl .......
POLICE PROTECTION -Me mphis police Lt. Louise Dun<.1·
vent is escorted to her car by striking policem en Jess(' ~oe. left. <.tnd Mack Hughes Tuesday night. after she al·.
tempted to <1rrest the two for violation of a citywidt!
curfew. She was unable to arrest the sergeants she has
worked with for 17 years and broke down crying. They
were arrested by other o fficers later .
ERA Extension May
Get Senate Debate
WASfflNGTO."HAP~-Senate Majority Leader Robert C. Byrd
sa id today he isn't Ci!rtain the Senate will debate a proposed 39·
month extension of the Equal Rights Amendment this year.
The House voted 233·189 Tuesday to extend the ERA ratification
time limit to June 30. 1982 from its current deadline of March 22. un9. However. the measure is threatened with a filibuster in the Senate.
ASKED ABOUT PROSPECTS for action on the extension m the
Senate, Byrd said."[ don't know. As of now I just can't say ...
The West Virginia Democrat said he hoped the Senate would
have time to debate the measure. but noted, "We have so many
things to get done in so short a time as Congress tries to adjourn fort he
yeur in October.
·supporters or the extension hope the mementum ~t an unexpec·
tedJy large House victory will hold up when the bill re1tches the
Senate.
REP. ELIZABETH HOLTZMAN, D·N.Y .. prineipal sponsor oJ
the extension, said the 44-vote margin was "larger than any of us
antitipated ...
"The size of the House vote will give tremendo"s momentum to
the effort in the Senate, .. said Ms. Holtzman, who ts scbeduJed to
meet with pro-extension senators on Thursday. .
n ews conference tha t the ~.'._~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ blackout was "probably due to
~abotage." The FBI was assist·
ing investigators of the sabotage
at the Memphis Light Gas &
Water Division's Cordova sub·
Rep. Don Edwards. D·Calif .. floor leader of the pro-extens10~
forces. said. "We thought we were going to win by 2S or 30 votes ...
station
UTILITY SPOKESWOM.\N
Paula Payne said someone en
tered the big plant and threw a
series of switches -a complex
procedure requiring knowledge
of the system -which cut off a
main electrical link with the
Tennessee Valley Authority. Th('
TVA 's Allen Steam Plant on
Presidents Island in the Mis·
sissippi River could not carry
oow e r dema nds a lone and
a utomaticalJy shut down
Troops bad been on duty al the
Cordova plant Monday but were
replaced by private guards
It took about 212 hours to
restore power to a ll of Shelby
County.
Chapman said a non-striker
was being questioned but was
not considered a suspect. lfo
said the m an r equested "'
lawyer.
THE BLACKOUT came at
12:32 a.m., about 12 hours after
Gov. Ray Blanton stepped into
the dispute, demanding payment
240 IROADWAY, LAGUNA llACH
497-4403
OPEN DAILY
VISA. 9-6.
t;AOM OUR GAIDEM DEPT.
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FREE PARKING
Twisters Hit Midsection
'f
Tluaulentonns Spawned by Cold Front
Tfta~t•re•
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Calllo,.,.la
HA D
GARDEN TOOLS c
-YOUR CHOICE
FllOM O_Ul_PLUMllMe DIPT_. __
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CALIFORNIA
Teae•er Meas•re QUEENIE
.
Gays Launch
Protest Move
SACRAMEN1'0 cAPI Supporten or W41Y
rights. includlna Wml' promint"nl J1bcral politi
c1ans. tu~ openad t.bf' um~tin •1ulnst an antl
homOiex~l teacher measur~ on the November
bullot by denounctna lt 85 a Un-at to civil nl)\t.a
The inJtJath-e, Ptope>altlon S sponsored by Sen.
Jobo Brla1ts. R f'ullt'rton. ts .ilm("Cf at flrln1 homoeexull.I wac:hen. thou&h oppont"nt.s uy 1t 1oes m uc b l\artber
\TT;\C'KS ON ROM~IKXU.\L TEACH'ERS
"could be eicte-mlC"d to O\ht'r roin<>rllh':'\ whf't.ht-r sex·
u11l onenbauoo or pohllcal vie'tl'S." and threaten to
N'VlVe Uw Mc<.:arthy ~rtt e>t tht' l91SOl\, A. semblyman
M~orlty LA.t•dcr Howard B(•rman. D Bc•vl'rly Hilb,
Sit ad al a r ully 1'ut~ ")
"Tha~ h.-rnou' .ind outrageous lniliattvl'
threatens the vt-ry structure of due process,'
1k•rm an tuld about 200 persons outsjd£' the Capttol
He S<tld hf> wuuld tell has colleague~ that the cam
plll£0 I~ "Wurth t.1lc1ng a httle bit or ris k On."
Aho ~peakin~ at tht• rally wert> gay activist
Frank Vel, who is wulking the length of California
to drum up s upport ror the campaign; As-
semblyman Art Agnos. D-San Francisco, ~n.
Alun S1eroty, 0 -Los Angel~. a nd Sacramento
Mayor Phil Isenberg
"I'm looluna for aome hght summer readtng. You know,
an ilUthor who hun't M!rved llme. or a b10&raphy by
someone v. ho hasn't klsl all h1s friends "
Quake Area
GOV. EDMUND B&OWN JR. OPPOSES the
an1taative but was not present.
It was the first Capitol demonstration related
to Proposition 6, which is liki!ly to be one of the
most emotional issues on the Nov. 7 ballot.
State Aid Granted_
Under the measure, school boards could rire. SANTA BARBARA !API -Gov. Edmund G.
Brown Jr. has declared a state of emergency in
Santa Barbara County, where damage estimates
from last weekend's earthquake have climbed to
more than $12 million.
· or refuse to hire, any teachers, administrators or
counselors for publicly ~ngaging in or advocating
homosexual conduct.
BRIGGS SAYS THE MEASURE WILL let
schools dismiss teachers who would be poor role
models. Opponents say that current laws requiring
dismissal for sexual misconduct with children are
adequate. They also say the initiative could be ap-
plied lo defenders or gay nghts.
Brown, acting on a request for state aid from
the Santa Barbara County Board of Supervisors.
said Tuesday that "conditions of extreme peril"
existed in the area. The county declared a local
disaster area Mond av.
'Rank Speealatioa'
SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -Calling
her allegations "rank speculation."
the (eden.ti government ls disputing
Patricia Hearst's assertion that her
former lawyer failed to provide ade·
quate counsel at her 1976 bani( rob·
bery trial because he contracted to
write a book about the case.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Ed Davis
Jr. made the statement In a response
filed to Mi&S Heant'1 earlier request
to ..-m1ne F . Lee Balley's deal with
the G.P. Putnam Co., a New York
publishing house .
In that request. Miss Hearst, 24 .
charged that Bailey's $225,000 con-
tract for a book about her actions
during her captivity by the terrorist
Symbumesr Liberation Army con·
stituted erounds to set aside or reduce
her seven~yearprison sentence.
Child Porno
Suspect Claims
Life Threatened.
LOS ANGELES CAP> -A man
charged in connection with an in-
ternational child pornography and
prostitution ring suys he broke his
wrist in a jail incident involving UO·
identified persons who tried to kil'
him
··They tried to kill me," Charles
James Hughes or La Puente said
Tuesday as he left a brief Superior
Court baH bearing.
HUGHES, 35, apparently blamed
his injury on other inmates. But his
attorney, Howard Beckler, said his
client ac<:ldentally broke the wrist
when attempting to throw back a
broom hurled by another inmate.
.Judge Paul G. Breckenridge re·
duced Hughes' bail from $300,000 to
S40.000 and ordered Hughes and otM-r
delendants in the case · separated
from the general prison population.
Hughes and another defendant,
'oseph Francis Henry, 43, were or-
dered ,to return to court Sept. 6 for a
pretrial conference. Henry, an
amateur photoerapber from New
York City, remained ln custody in
lieu of $300,000 bail.
SpHI~
IMPERIAL BEACH CAP> -Coast
Guard officials planned today to con·
duct a surfaee examination or a half·
mile wide oil spill that waabed
ashore near the city pier.
Lt. Douglas Martin said a Coast
Guard helicopter crew checked the
spill after it washed ashore around
dusk Tuesday and that the oil formed
a circle extending about a quarter of
a alle oll the s'bore.
4,500 Attes 0..rred
TWENTYNINE PALMS (AP>
More than 500 firefighters trying to
contain a massive brush N'e in the
Joshua Tree National Monument
hoped /or abatement today of the er-
r a tic desert winds that propelled
names through twisting canyons.
By Tuesday evening the lire had
swept through some 4,500 acres in the
park 20 miles northeast ol Palm
Springs and was spreading rapidly,
the state lorestry department report.
ed . The blaze remained 60 percent con·
tained, as it bad been for a day.
Rape BID aaelcetl
SACRAMENTO <AP> -A person
who commits ra pe while carrying out
any unrelated felony could get an ex·
tra tbree years in prison, under a bill
on the Senate floor.
The bill. AB 2802 by Assemblyman
Eugene Gualco, D-5acramento, was
approved Tuesday on a $-1 vote of the
Senate Judidary Committee.
C'efa Pl OJI .... llflf.ed
SACRAMENTO CAP> -A
Jegiilative .A:Omplittee has killed a
black legislator's proposal to urge
Californians not to buy gold South
African Krugerrand coins.
I
By Duane D.
CllristlRSln, DJ.S.
The measure, ACR 99 by As·
semblywoman Teresa Hughes, D -Los
Angeles, failed Tuesday lo get past
the Senate Rules Committee, despite
earlier passage by the Assembly with '--------_..
little dissent.
W.,,....y, AUQ1iat 18, 1978 0.4.ll v Pit.OT A&
Spendhtg Li_.t :: • • • • • • "• • • • .:
Economy Snagged~~ ·~
SACRAMENTO <AP> A
legislative drive to put,. u government
spending hmit on thl' November
ballot could depend on u vo~e tonight
in the state Senate.
The rate or the limit, a conslttu-
tion a I amendment by Sen. John
Caramendi, D-Mokelumne Hill, was
left ban&iflg Tuesday when a con·
ference committee abruptly ad·
journed without linishlng work on the
measure:
That meant the amendment laJled
to m eet a Tuesday mldnlght deadline
to r the November ballot. The
deadline can be extended, but only lf
the Senate approves a bill that it reject·
~dMooday.
BEFOllE ADJOURNING. the
Derno~ralic-dominated, two-house
committee tentatively approved a
Umit formula similar to one proposed
by Republican Gov. Ronald Reagan
and rejected by voters in 1973.
The Reagan limit was substituted
for a more liberal formula tentative·
ly adopted Monday night but then
abandoned by the committee Tues·
day.
The bill extending the ba llot
deadline, 582243 by Sen. Alan Sieroty.
D-Los Angeles, gives lawmakers until
Friday to put constitutional amend·
mentsbeforevotersinNovember.
IT FELL EIGIIT VOTES short of
passage Monday, but Sieroty was
given permission to bring it up again.
That could happen tonight. when the
Senate is scheduled to meet.
Riding on the bill is the rate of a
number or constitutional amend·
ments. tndudmg one by Assembly •
Speaker Leo McCarthy abolish.tog •
homeowner properly taxes and • .,.....,.",\
~sting renter income tax credits. IC
Sieroty's bill fulls to pass. the ., ••
amendments couldn't go on the ballot 41
until June 1980. ~ •
Garamendi blamed the delay in ac-• HERB • lion on bis measure on an attempt by •
McCarthy. D-San Francisco. to put : FRIEDLASDF.R 41
more pressure on the Senate to ex· • IS '.'IAKl:'lfG •
tend the deadline. .• GREAT DEALS :
GARAMENDI ADJOURNED the ! FREE 41 committee Tuesday afternoon after • 50 .,
Assembly Democratic conferees said • GALS •
they could not ta.Ice a fmal vott' on the • OF' GAS •
amendment until they met with their •• .............. _ .......... ~ ......... .i
coUeagues. .• orou. ('llA~<a:s « Approval by the committee would • ... ~.-.,,..,_,.., •
sen~. the a~endment to both houses • "'e'"• •8• Y•0-N-DA ... e .. ror final achon. • . ~
In a bizarre move belore Tuesday's * . ~••u•••• • It U'I r.1. •-•nn , adJOurnment. a version of the • • • * * • * • • • * •• a~agan limit was proposed by As· ! MG TRIUMPH • semblyman Willie Brown. a liberal · • ' ~
San Francisco Democra t who : e JAGUAR e ~
originally opposed the Reagan pro-• FIAT-LANCIA :
posal. It •Jltt&11n1•w~.... ..
U'1 nn • .....,.... •.-in ...
IT WOULD LIMIT STATE and ..... * * '* * * * * * * * ·~
local spending to a percentage of • e TOYOTA • ~
1 . Th r· • t•••u• . ., ... ( .... "..... • state persona mcome. at 1gure, it''''°"""'•" u• ,. .. «
currently Just over 8 percent. would • * * * * * * * * * • * ~ drop by one-tenth of 1 percent each • 0 F. ~
year until it reached 7 percent MOTORH !\1 •
The Legislature then could ijJlow : S.\l.ES & RF.~TAJ.S'
the limit to remain at that level. • Rf.SER\" E :\OW !
According to figures from the • 5.17-7771 '1-:"t. 500 •
legislative analyst. state expen· »* * • • * * • • • • •-.
ditures could grow to S21.503 billion • • LEASING e « in 1982-83 under the limit. That's $951 • u • _ _,.,...., o.....u. •
million less than the state i.s project· •" .. 537.7m·t;t-6t;U-•
ed to spend. • * • * * • • • * * • * ·~
Don't miss out on these super savings -a double deal on our double delicious
Carl's Famous Star.Hamburger.
Inside there's a lean. 100% pure beef patty. charbroiled to mouth-watering per·
fection. And ifs garnished with great Ingredients. too. Lettuce. tomato. our zippy
special relish sauce. and real egg mayon·
naise. And for the finishing touch. a .
toasted sesame seed bun. · o ·
That's Famous flavor!
FRoM Fashion Island
Newport Beach STEREO SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR :
• I
,.
.
I r
..... ,. ·~
t
. .
A• se Robert N. Weed/Publisher Thomas KeevlltEd1tor
orangeeoas•D•••vP1101 Editorial. P~e w .. ....., ............ ..,,
------------------------------------------
Playel'.' Selection
Should Be Broad
Larui1n!t Ebt-rhng, for ntn~ yl'ur& prt.-sldt'nt of th ..
bourd of directors of the Irvine Ranch Wdter Oistncl.
MHd upon his n-,tinjhon Crom tht.> bourd July 31, 1t 1~
ttmt.· ror som~ new pluyt.·~
I ndt'(>(i tl '" Th~h ~bt.·rhng pt.•rha~ "al\ ab h.trd.workinte und
conscientaow, ,1 direC'tor as the-l)t"Ople might find. nl'itht.•r
h t.· nor four o the r s or the r <'cently expandt.•d
~evt-n m ember tx>.trd w:es <'holl.en by tht> pcoplt. Th~y
"l'r t.> uppotntcd b)' a ~angle comp•.iny
Tht> IRWl> h~1-. :iim~ it.s inception ~en undt?r lhc
control o! the pnmury lundov.-nl'r. tht> lrvlnt.• Compum Th~1t wa~ not impropt>r ~hffi tht1l p~rt of th•• county was
opt.•n farmland a nd rJnchlund
But lht• r '1p1d dt>velopmt>nt of tht• cit) of f rvlnl' did
not indudc <.·oncomllJnt rdeasl' of p owt.·r from tht.•
landowrwr to the mcre.1 ing numbt'rs of people "'hose
lh't.•s ar~ .i fft.•<.·h'(f bv d1slncl dec1~1on.'>
With Ebt.'rltnt1'~ t\.'~lgnation. the boJrd has the ctwnce
now to uppornl 10 his plJre lhv next-highest vote.g etter in
lust Novembt.•r 's dt:'cUon or the board's two public
me mbers
By ~o doing tht> boJrd not only would de monstruH:
good faith wtlh the pcopll' it ~erves, but might lessen the
pressure or a city law~u1t \\h1ch seeks to force public control
ortheIRWD
Concern Is Genuine
I rvint' Councilman Arthur Anthony has been the
object of some unfair criticis m for his questioning of a
nonprofit cultura l organization's proposal to convert a
warehouse into u fint' arts rehearsal hull
Irvine Cultura l Center Inc. certainly has in mind the
best interests of its potential d ance. music. drama and
gymnastics stude nts in seeking a h<.111 large enough lo suit
their specific needs.
But the group hasn't taken into account ull of their
interests. That's wh<.1t Anthony appa rently is uttempting
to do.
The warehouse 1s located near enough to Orange
County Airport to he within a high.noise zone.
The zone a lready has been judged too noisy. unde r
city ordinunet..'. for instructional activities.
Anthony's c1 ppeal of the planning commission
;1 pprovul simply will pe rmit the City Council to do what
the commission did not : Determine wheth e r the
w<J r e house can e ffectively screen out the noise from the
stude nts. at IN1st lo &.1ccepluble levels.
The a rts group should have applied for its building
sooner. That way the appeals process <of which any
citizen muy avail himself) would not have come so near
the prog ram 's proposed September start.
At any rat e. Anthony shouldn't be m ad e the he avy for
his genuine concern over the students' comfort.
A Cheer for the CofC
A bright. new publication should give Saddleback
Valley r esidents a handy resource for reaching ne ighbors
and c itizen services in the a rea.
The Saddl e b ..ic k Valley Chamber o f Co m ·
m e rce-sponsored community directQry includes maps, li~ts
of schools. zi p code information and other important
anf ormatiop for local r esidents.
The directory is the first such publication backed by
the chamber a nd is the first booklet lo include phom.·
listings for a ll of the area in one directory.
Previous ly directories were published for separall'
community a reas such us El Toro. Lake Forest a nd Mission
Vic.10.
In addition to the convenience of looking a t onl'
directory :.is opposed to fumbling through two or three.
the c hambe r ·sponsored booklet promotes u community
spirit.
That 's som ething usually lacking in a gathering of
individuul communities in an unineorporaled county
.i r c:.i.
• Opinions expressed in the space above are those or the Daily Pilot
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
artists. Reader comment 1s invited. Address The Dally Pilot. P.O
Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321 .
Boyd I Okay Sign
When you ma ke a c1rcle
with your thumb and fore·
finger, you m ean every·
thi ng's all right. It's dif·
ferent ln Japan. The sign
means you're talking about
money. And wb en you· so
signal in France, you're say·
ing s omethin g's worthless.
Don't even want to talk about
what It signifies In Greece.
Am too bashful. -
Q. "Roy Rogers' horse was
Trigger. Dale Evans' hone
was 'Buttermilk. But do you
recall the name of the Jeep
driven by Roy's sidekick Pat
Brady?"
All that a citizen of
Uruguay needs to run for the
presidency of that country is
a petition with 50 signatures.
How do you account for the
fact t hat more people Usten
to the radio in Apr il and May
t h a n d u r i ng any othe r
months?
Q . "Whai....,vas the D'lO&t
violent we~ fijm ever
made?"
1---_ A..: Certainly do. NeJI !)e.Jle.
A. How about "The Wild
Bunch" as a candidate for
that distinction. The whole
popu lation or a town
massacres a band of would·
be bank~
. .
Dear
Gloomy
t Gus
Of course there's no
r eal public sentiment
01ainst Illegal Mexican
aliens. Thdt's becnuse
tbey do work no one
e lae wantl to do and do
it so cheapl y t h a t
CaUforaJa buainessmeo
and rn·meTa matte
mlllions off o f their
labor
Q. "Do all the states use
Daylight Saving Time?"
A. All but Alaska, Hawaii
and Indiana.
The munlclpaJ offlclals or
Tucson, Aril.. ooce pused
an ordlnlU>C'O that made tt II·
le1al for a visltlol footblll
team to 1COH aaalnst lb•
Unlverslt1. ~f A rhon•
Wlldcata on \heir home field.
If you've uen one termite.
you say, you've teen them
all? NC?t quite. More than
2,000 species are routptni
around thls earth.
World's fim upert on the
art ol antlina-lbat•s f••b· Lni. m1 boy -was not a
m an bUt a woman. She, the •
prloreN tA • Britbb nunnery,
even wrote a treatise on bow
to ti• rues.
Rowland Evans/Robert Novak
F~rd's Book Takes on Reagan
W ASlllNCTON -lntlm;.ites of
Gt>r J ld f'ord , fearful that
pubhc.1t1on ot his memoirs e111rly
nt•JCt yt•ur will crack Republican
hurmony wldt• open. ure quieUy
I rylng to soften lht.• formt-r presi·
dt>nl '!> ull;,1ek ugainst Ronald
ltt•l•~··" .
N1> ont· d1rcl'lly connected with
tht· hook t now u bo ul ha lf
flrH Sht'd I will
d IS C U ll:, th t•
m a tt1•1 with
outs 1dcn •. But
1n 11 11.frr:.. 1n
lJl k~ Wl l h
Ford untl h1:!
l'lllour .. q~e.
hJvt• learned
Ford 1~ u...ing
h1~ book t o
bli.1mt· h1~ de·
feat by J immy Curt er squarely
on Reagan's challenge.
Publica tion or tbe book IS
scheduh.>d for next May. just as
pres1dcntwl campaigns are get·
ting under way. Rea~an is a cer·
lain candidate. Ford a possible
one. Ford's intention to use his
book to "prove the case" that
RC'ag:.m 's challenge against an
incumbent Republican president
e lected a De mocrnt will releasl'
political hobgoblins.
Cool heads inside the Repub·
licun party· are trying to dis·
suadl• Ford. But cons idering
what one intimate calls Ford's
"hatred" for Reagan. success is
questionable.
R.\ FSHOON RISES -The un·
m 1s taka blc rise o f Gerald
R a f s hoon within the White
House is coming not at the ex·
pense or his supposed rival.
press secreta ry Jody Powell. but
rathe r dom estic policy chief
Stuart Eizenstat.
Thc reason: Rafshoon. the ad·
vertising executive in ch:.i rge of
rc h abilitat1ng Prt>s ident
Mailbox
Carter'!. image. is now prepar
Ing the brie fing paper s for
Carter intl'rv1ews a Jld othe r
performance!>. That Job pre·
v io u s ly had been do ne by
Eizenstat.
The obvious change is one of
s tyll'. Rafshoon insists on terse.
easily handled formula~ ror the
president on inflation. e nergy.
tax re form/reduction and othe r
questions. In contrast. Elzenslat
used to give him long. detailed
memoranda.
''Ref reshing.11
The change could becomto Ont•
of s ubstance. Eiienst::.l 's pro.
grammatic liberalis m has been
a m aJOr cause or the chaln of
"comprehe ns ivt-" proposals
s tre :.im1ng fro m tht-White
House. The ·Rafshoon briefings
are greatly diminishing this doc·
trmal tone.
A footno lt•: Rumor s of a
Rafshoon-Powell power clash
are premature ut the least, but
there was one dispute between
them on Mr. Carter's European
Lour. Powell urged a softer tont'
than Ralshoon in presidential re.
action to the convtction or Soviet
dissident Anatoly S hcharansky.
The president took Powell's ctd·
vice.
MANSFIELD WARNS -Am.
bassador Mike M ansrield. tht!
forme r Sencite Dl'mocr at1t'
leader now representing the U S.
in Tokyo. 1s dehvt>ring somber
warnings to visiting Carter ad·
minis tration officia ls about
Japan's growing rear of the
president's Far East policies
For the first t imt>. Mansfield
says. Ja panese politicians and
military leuders arl' priH1tely
complaining a bout tht' rel<1l1w
d('C lim• of l.i.S nuval strength
compared to the Soviet Union
Despite M:.ins fi eld":; assurnncl':.
to the ,Japa nese govern mt>nl.
concern 1i:. ris ing ~·bout tht•
steadfastness and rehabihty or
:\Ir. Carter·s policies
Suc h concerns hJve been
publi cly e xpressed by many
Amt>rtcans -including Maj.
Gen . J ohn K. Singlaub, forced
into retirement because he ques·
t1oned U.S troop withdrawals
fr o m So uth K o r ea But
M ans rield. J leading Vietna m
war dove. did not ;oin the <Jlarm·
pointer<> until tht· Jap,tnt'Sl'
t he m S(.'IVe!> bt·g:.ir. conn•ying
their fears to him.
Teachers: How Indispensable Are They?
To the t;<S1tor ·
Your editorial of Aug. 8 which
reports that Orange County
teachers ra llied lo "complain
with sour and disappointed words
"abou"t their plight in post·
J arvis California ends with the
admonition " ... for now at least.
teachers had better be prepared
to acct:'ptthe notion thatthe public
no· longer conside rs them in-
dispensable to tht• system .··
W h :.it, sort or free society can be
sustained where teachers a re not
indispensable? What sort of
fu ture a waits us all irteachers are
merely considered public func·
tlonancs no more important than
building inspectors or CalTrans
truck drivers?
The cdttorial drags out the old
;.1 rgume nls about salar ies.
benefits and s ummer v aca·
lions . . .on a levelthatis the envy
of many who pay taxes supporting
those lifestyle improvements."
Quite apart from the years of un·
iversity training and teaching ex·
perience required to r each the top
of any sala ry scale in the county.
sal:.iry and benefits for teachers
are modest compared to those
performing such crucial tasks in
the society as ma naging a fast
food o utle t or deli verying
Sparkletts Water. Further. long
summer vacations are seldom if
ever realized by teachers with
him ihes tosuf1l>Ort.
Bloated salaries or some ad·
ministrators. great numbers of
non·tcaching positions. and ex·
pe nsive programs or doubtful
value mandated by Sacramento
and Washington all contribute
heuvily lo th~ eost of-edueation-
in this state. It is most disap·
pointing that the Daily Pilot
m akes no clear distinctions in its
statement.
yea r s from kindergarten
through high school. All thre<.'
have learned to read. write and
compute here in the valley. We
have had some s mooth times
and we have h<1d some rough
times but they have learned.
thanks t o m a ny a patient
teacher.
I want the teacher!> or mv
children to know that there are
par ents who do not s ha re thl'
views of some local reporters or
editors. I want these teachers to
know th<Jt there are parents who
want lower taxes but who wunt
the cuts made in the proper
priorities. But most of <Jtl . I
want them to know that. as a
parent, t eachers are a numbe r
one priority because my kids are
my number one priority .
GLORY NARDOZZA
'Dlltletllt •.• '
To the Editor :
I find it difficult to believe that a newspaper in this urea where
the value or educa tio n is obvious
in the prosperity surrounding us
would m ake the s tatement your
August 8 e dit o ri a l
makes ..... teachers had better
be prepared to accept the notion
that the public no longe r con-
side rs them indispensable to our
system."
Thomas J efferson would turn
over in his g rave at such a
s tupid statement. Our school
syst em was rounded on the
notion that. as he said. "Only
popular education can safeguard
democracy." To expand· on this
tde.a:11e-said. ·~1 look to the dif·
fusion of light and education as
the resource most to be t elfed on
for ameliorating the condition.
promoting the virtue. and ad·
vancing the happiness of m an."
And wh e re were our
newspapermen inculcated with his idea that .. A free press is the
only safeguard of public liberty"
if not in the schools.
Teachers are indispensable In
a democracy. and a newspaper
should be the last place to find a
statement to the contrary. I. as
an individual teacher. may be
dispensable. but teachers as a
whole certainly a re not .
BETTY J . OR BACH
'Paterw.a.ti<-'
To the Editor:
I must r espond l o }Our
editorial of Aug. 8, "How Many
Friends Do Teachers Have'?" to
point out that its <Jpparent ob;ec·
tivity is really masking a n att<Jck
on teachers a nd public employees
in general. Your phraseology is
condescending a nd :.imb1guous.
and your argument clouds un·
derstanding the general public
sentiment behind Prop. 13
As an angry taxpayer myself.
a nd as a subscrib(•r t o your
newspaper, I want to reprove
you in your failure in not direct·
ing attention to some or the
areas or government spending
whe re true waste and criminal
mis use of tax money is taking
pl<Jce . You h ave in recent
months exposed som e or this
prodigality in the county
s upervisor 's office. Why stop
there? Other local government
ope rations will show equal and
worse wrongs. Yes. including
the administration of some of
our local school districts.
But shame! To admonis h
teachers and public e mployees
for their concern over their
marginal material rewards by
pulling on 1he bridle of public
opinion in the way you do is
deplor able. True. what appears
on budget totals as salarie~ for
government empfoyee& •et>ms lo.
be a lot of money. but trutt is I.he
well -earned l ivelihood or
t housands of people in the com·
munity. .
Why focus on that? Why not
focus on parts or the budget that
a r e not · so readi ly obvious,
where error. folly and incom·
petence Is hidden?
O n e of t he functions of a
r esponsible editorialist is to re·
fine public opinjon. to be the
voice of a viewer t hat looks
calmly beyond the s urface of tht>
daily news and public opinion lo
offer thoughtful insights on what
is happenjng. Your editorial ts
paternalistic and misleading.
and as a professional teacher
and pubhc employee. I resent 11
R.BRYTAN
Fottr l•t• Si.r
To the Editor :
In J recent editorial on the
Wldt•ntng or Irvine Center Drive.
your newspaper claims that the
Irvine City Council m ajority ac·
t1on was misleading <Jnd that the
m :.iJority •·perhaps unconscious-
ly" have presenll'd :.i plan for j
:.1x·l<m(• road ··dressed m the
nC'w clothes of a four lant:' road ··
:\I 1ght t sugge~t that your
editorial writer 1:> doing the mis·
le:.idin(.! and was apparently "un·
conscious'" :it the Council meet·
1ng . Members of thE.' m a;ortly
made' it quite clear what the
road was -six lanes or pave·
ment striped as a four lane road
until such t1ml' as six lanes
might be required. which as a
real poss1b1hty. They further stat·
t•d their conce rns not only as to
Irvine's own transportation re-
q uirements but as to Irvi ne's re·
lut1onship to county planning
Whal the citizens of Irvine
nl'ed from }our newspaper is to
bl· respons ibly mrormed of the
s1gmf1c:.int arguments. pro and
con. on major issues confronting
them . If your newspaper then
t akes an ed1tori aJ stand on such
an issue. 1t s hould be derived
from a dt>monstrated knowledgl'
and understanding of the facts
and-argumentti.
.JOHN R. CARLYLE
• LetJert from readers are welcome
The right to condense letters to flt
rpoce or eliminate libel .u restn-ed.
Letttt-s o/ 300 words• or less totll ~
gn.ien pre/trence. All letters mwrt m·
cttllU rignaturt> and mailil'l9 address
but nomes mCJJI t1t' withheld on rt·
~sf I/ au/ ficlenl reason I.! apparmt
f>oet'JI will not Ot' J7UblUhed
\
Virtually all observers con·
cede that it is t he classroom
where education takes place. wl\h
the teacher in the vital role. If
education is of only nominal im-
portance to t he public or
Ci.tlifornia, one wonders who will
wr ite the editorials or the next
century. and who will read them. WlLt.rAM~~~------------11111!!~~~!!!!!!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
'"'''ad 01 saying ··t1w J>Ublk no Sydney Harris longer bcli~• teacherir are In· --::;.__--='------
dl1~11tobk." tM editorial msght
f>ftffr ha~ said "some of the
pubUc" fttla that WOJI.
-EdUor Bar Should Nominate New Judges
Ne. J PrlerlClf
To the Editor:
I s urely hope that the teachers ot my three cbUdren will not
have reod your editorial of Aua.
8 or. if lhey did. wUJ totally la·
nore lt• dcmoraU1lng tone.
Pe rhaps for those people who
do not hove cbtldrcn tn sch~I.
teachett bav• become d41perwa·
ble. But for those or WI with
school age chUdren. t he only
real indllpenuble uapecta lrt 11
• $Cbool syatern are cbUdren aod
ttetb ra . Bow ~an you haw
education without tuchera!
ty lhr children have ll·
tended ~ ln lhil area tor l•
•
Thought• at IATOf:
• If ju.dies are to be elected.
and not appointed. they sbouJd
first be nomlnated by the Bar, IO
t h at wo no longer h ave a
poUllcnlly oriented j udiciary
mode u p la r sely or those
la"yen who take a partlaan in·
terest in politics 1&nd are re·
warded with a purty nomination.
• People who talk too m uch
and people who Wk too UtUc
both suffer from the same real·
at bottom, that of betnc mllWl·
dcutood -tb~ loquacious
penon exhlbitlna l b1-fear by
overexplalnln1 and the taciturn one by uylna notblna ·
• LlUle ha1 cban1ed middle·
class smugness in the Cull cen·
tury slnce Melville wrott: "()(
all the preposterous aasump.
Uons of hum anity over human!·
ty. nothing exceeds m ost of the
criticisms made on the habits of
the poor by the well-housed,
wcJl.warmed. and well·fed."
• What makes a classic Is Its
ability to survive both those who
are indllferent to It ~nd those
wbo adore It dumb I)'.
• WE SEEK suptttorlty "r.'y
wben ~ are ~nled ~uaUty ·
"btutc•• 'fJOUld never have been
pro~l al m ed as espec\olly
beautlluJ lf blfots hod not at
tint d~ted ll as UJIY
• Most of the ferment in public
educa tion today s prings from
t he fact that the schools are be·
Ins asked not only to make up In
a hurry for their own defects but
also to com pensate tor the
fnlluros of soclety as a whole -
ond they c n scarcely do the
nrst Job. much less th~ second.
• Pre$ldent Curter seems to be
tollowtng lhe unproductive ten·
dency Of hi!! prt!decessors and
poylnr too much uttenlion lo the
poll" on1 tlu? "trcnd11. ·· when he
.;hould be 1tt ndtna to Winston
ChurcMll 1 w~rnlna ··The na·
I ton 'hlh C •• ld l l \ f"V hard LO look
1•s1 to 1cudl.•"t ,. ho ntt kcepint t:.c.! ears lO tot ar0und."
..
STOCKS I BUSINESS ~.August 18. 1978 s DAILY PILOT 85
VaJuesRUe ..
Stamps Caii Lick··
Inflati o n W 0 11nd 1 -' 1
By SLYVIA PORTEa j
While the stock market has been mostly a disaster for 1
10 years and atock values have laiied far beblod..infla·.) ·
tlon's erosion of the dollar. stamps hive continued to climb / as much as 20 percent a year. Often the upsur1e ln values $•
bas been even more spectacular. and no reversal ts••
foreseen. i
A new force behind the spiraling of stamp prices ls the ~ emerg~ce ol the b!J-money syndJcate. Added to the ap. 1
proxima&ely one mUllon serious indlviduaJ stamp colltt· :
tors ln th.ls country. the big-money syndicates put W,h "
leverage on prices as
well as provide a price
floor. The stamp
market has moved
beyond the hobby or
grade school and high
school youngsters and
into the area of major
lnve,stments.
Money's
Worth
How do amateurs get into the philatelic market? What ·
are the guidelines and the pitfalb to avoid?
-START AS A GENERAL COLLECTOR AND invest··•
small sums. Then develop a specialty and study it. Get a ·
good deaJer and use the dealer for advice and counsel.
-Join a local stamp club. Attend auctions. Learn by
r4»ding and listening to experts.
-Avoid low.price stamps. wbicb rarely show stronl'
gains. Focus on the S50 to SSOO range for starters. New is·
sues. which Include U .$. commemoratives, may be.
aesthetically pleasing. but they offer only minor prospec~.
for appreciation. ~~
-Don't waste money on cheap packets of stamps.'!
Concentrate on higher-priced specimens.
-DON'T BUY WHOLE SHEETS OF ordinary new
stamps. for devaluation of the currency can slash their ·
value . The prices of posl·\943 U.S. stamps have not
changed from their race values <or have even declined
below face values>. Their sole use is as postage.
-Beware of improbable "bargains" of any sort. A
"stamp doctor" can manufacture apparently valuable er·
rors and varieties and "improve" a stamp's quaUty to
fleece the gullible. On any "bargain" offer. get the advice
of a dealer or a reputable committee of stamp experts.
usually found in large philatelic societies.
-Be on guard against counterfeiting. Ask dealers for
written "statements of quality," that includes the promise·"
of a refund if stamps turn out to be bogus. The American··
Philatelic Society. State College, Pa .. and the Philatelic
Foundation in New York have authentication services
available for a fee.
-PEOPLE WHO WANT TO SELL okl collections
should have them appraised by reputable dealers or auc-
tioneers and compare the estimates. Stamps attached to
original letters m ay have high value.
A stamp professional may charge for an assessment of
a collection. if it is not sold to him. An auctioneer may
charge a commission of 20 percent of the collection for
auctioning it. or less if the collection turns out to be ex-·
tremely valuable.
~__pater's Bra!n
-~~·.-:-circuit boat d is the Airnrirr' 1Jf-::r
termilial computer system m~nuf acwred
by Sycor. Inc .. of Ann Arbor. Mich. The
combination of memory chips and micro·
processors control the input and output of
the system. including data cornmunica·
lions. video display stations and printing
devices.
Altec Corp. Reports
Nine-month Gain
Allee Corp .• Anaheim. has reported that sales for Ule
nJne months were $27 .117 .ooo. compared wtth sales or
W,689,000 for lbe Uke period oft.he prior fiscaJ year.
Net Income for the nine months was SUfl,000, compared
with $38.000 for the Uke period In 1977.
Results for the quarter were sales oU9.680,000 and net ln·
comeofS236.000.comparedwlt.b1alesotSl~S1',000andnetln·
comeots149,000 ln the thlrd quarter al fllc:a1 lf'1'7. •
Allee develops, maoufactul'OS and Mila sound and com·
munlcaUon equipment lncludh\I lndustrlal/profeulonal
aound equJpment, home htih ndelity •.Peaktrs. musical
sound eqwpmtnt IU)d lntucommunicationssyatem.
Anaheim F irm to Move
SAN DIEGO CAP> -Oentral Automalioo Inc. plllDI to
move lll corporate bead(lulll'lcrs to San Diep from
Anaheim.
TM liim ('Xpects to report $100 million ln tales t.b1I
year, aaid Pttl dent<balrman Lawrence Golbom. It tlm'll
out mectlwn-11~ computers with plantl tn Anaheim: Santa
Ana~ 81.lrllbston. Mm : PtlnCetOD, N.J.: Brtuln and Wttt ~rm....,. )
GOeborn akl a plant m., 111o ~ bUlll ln san DMtO. .
•bHt 400 elQp&O~ woUld occupy t.M ne• ~uarten -~ tn lbo La Joli• &ualnewand Sctence Park b)' JJa.
'
-ONLYPILOT Television \
TONIGHTS LAfEST LISTIN
~ ... , .....
•1 W'ifOl9 A~clr'---__ mnd...,..al·
.v'== • • .,. ""°"9 .. T....,..
''~)Ma~ ..... atd~A-...... ...............
~---... CM Ww.(t~I
• llUAll OCWT IAf
n9~ e l1Wl80flM ~ s---. potlrtQ .. • Otll'I
--...... ~of ...... Ill\..,.,.°'"""'" ~·~ -~eMV
A* Cot.ft _, H*fV
Pe.kt on"-~
MO c;....,.; ~-· Con111mer tntotftltllon
C«Mer Pttt•v Mcln4"'41
tirlglllltld~~
-~ The "-"*'D . Samii c... ""-tecl The COi\•
tr0"9f•el AoMnl>iltQ •
SotM11 ttOINC 10Y c:eee al
""' ~ 1950°• ......... mined by AMn Goldtttln """° .. Mt UC1 '°"V9 of the
event• wlllcll h•v•
occurred -IN flr.t broedcM'I ot IN ortginlll
fltm.
()) C:.NEWI 9 WON..DNlWS rONeH't
l:30 • tll'f THREE 80M
lJnde Chetiey' S r°"'9r'hC
..... ot ~ .. prontl)C
Em11's tMdttf to QUtt het
}Ob arld buy I 11Ck" CO
Pago PllQO •• lot' hoO
• ...aw.l JACt<80N ~11. Robert and Oo<o-
111y OeBon. """'° have
.ooc>ted 16 hind~
~ I Ot mlnOrtty Chlldr..-i.
()) TO TUL TlfE TRUTH 9 MERY GRff1N
Sl•pleLfle
:\I adge Sinclair and Robert Hooks pl<Ay
.1 couple wbo move from Detroit to a
small Georgia town looking for a more
peaceful life in the TV movie "Down
Home." airing tonight at 8 on CBS.
Channel 2.
Oaa1111ef Lbt 1119•
8 KNXT (CBS) Los Angefes
G KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles e KTLA (Ind I Los Angeles 8 KABC-TV (ABC) Los Angeles
(I) KFMB (CBS) San Diego G KHJ-TV(lnd) Los Angeles
9 t<CST (ABC) San Diego e KTIV(lnd ) Los Angeles a> KCOP·TV (Ind l Los Angeles Cl ~CET· TV (PBS) Los Angeles 'G!> l<OCE·TV (PBS) Huntington Beach
On KOCE Tonight
New Data Unveiled
In Rosenberg Case • By DQNALD SANDERS
WASHINGTON <AP) -Public television, using newly dis-
closed files to take another look at the Rosenberg atomic spying
case, raises some questions about the actions of two judges in the
case tonight at 6 on KOCE. Channel SO.
A repeat with new material of .. The Unquiet Death of Julius
and Ethel Rosenberg" questions specifically the conduct of Judge
trving R. Kaufman , who sentenced Julius and Ethel Rosenberg ~o
death and is now senior judge of the 2nd U.S. Court of Appeals tn
New York City.
Television producer Alvin H. Goldstein and others connected
with the program told a news conferen~ they have made repeated
~(forts to contact Kaufman for comment without success. A dozen
members of the House have suggested an inquiry into the possibili·
ty of starting impeachment proceedings.
"DOCUMENTS FROM THE recently released FBI files give
evidence of two telephone calls t.o the FBI initiated by Judge Kauf.
man that seem to contradict his claim of detachment," the script
says. .
'** "'*' da1t1nu• dan-oatO"" ........ tr..o
by • tl1ldl ~ at •
newtrt wlldllfe '*" '"> •TMn ,AHTHMrM&mfr
The Plnlt ......... hoet• "" °""' ~..,... ..... ,..., ....... -s PfOduotr
llek• ldweldl ~
clll)t from Ihle "'* '*1tfl. ., lllme ~. 119Nnd-~-loOll .b ""' .... •llltn.--."~
OfTMP\ntt Pent'*." eo llCIKT• ~
"Lollt Welkend" ConN-
elon t9'gnl .._, TOM end
Abby ...,.. IM t!lt9dfOtd
~ *"'In""'._,.. '°' a ... eftd. (RI G MOYll
• • • ''Cftenoe Of Habif'
( INll) EMa ~. -...Y
T'IW Moen. ~ \fOUllO ncM.
Hate and • doctOt IOr'm a
tlrong fnendahlp wflllt
WOflUftg logether In• QI*·
to etlnlc:. (2 "'9.I
• OALFOfMAJAM.
Hlgtllghta of t11t t2 hour
OU !door c;onoert wtllc:h
took place •t the ~
Motor Speedway. Ctllfof.
tlla. , .. tunno Sant-.
Aeroemlttl. Tad Nugent,
Delle Maeon, Heart, Rubi·
c:on, Mahogeny Al.wll, Bob
Welch,.,_, Fcnigner.
• IVINNll ..
8YZANTIUM
A retired movie producw
tr.wla to t11t C--fllm
fMtlval to get beek .. tor
8 -""" acrlpt whlctl. by some coi1'1ckNnoe, outllnM
the plans ot an lntematton-
., terrorist 0tganczatton lo
destroy bottl Rullia ~
the United Slit• (Par1 1
012)
··ANNA~. Society wtfl not IOtQIW the
ecendal ot "*' love Mt1lk
wMrl Anna llnO Vroneky
ratum to St. Petenburg.
(Pert 8 ol 10)(A) 9:00. C88 MOtotlE * * ''The DMdly Trte>"
(1t72) Franlt Lengalla.
Feye Dunewey. A man
finds hit ,,.. llnO that ot Ilia
lan!liv encteno-d """"' ht trial to bfMk "-ot 1111
Job for an ffpjonage
organlntlo!'t. D ntEOTHEA
SAOADWAV
A mut6cel I cernedy enter·
talnment ~ t1arrlnQ
TtrtH Br-er. 'Marty
Allen. Frank Oonhln and
~Greco. e o CHAALrS
AHOa.S
TUBE TOPPERS
"VOUnQ Uaft'1 Finey"
Nawtywed Alell W•lkar
tfltlltnt to 1111 l\Olne IM
~· lor the d~ of his
ClhlldhOod
HalMll, lllllnor ot
"~" 0 MAvt.AQ(
"S..bstltut• Gun •
KOCE 19 6: 00 -The Rosenberg
Case. A re -examinution of the con·
troversial atomic spy case of the 1950s
with new information introduced I see
story below l .
D 9 POUCI STORY "FlnO'fprlnt" A poljQe _..,.
eren 111 Ille la'9nl PrtnCI
Ol\llaiOl't OfOWI dtscowr•
aged with hi• jO(I unlll -""'•petted ac:llOn ~-him ,_ 09'9C>Kt-
2:0080 NEWS MOVIE •• *~ "Victim" (IHtt
o.t11 Bogatda, Sylllla Sy""
I GET8MART
2:-'0 • NEWS :
MOVIE • • * "The Tingler" ( 195~
Vincent Price. Judith
(\191yn
KTLA 0 8:00 -That's Panthertain-
ment. Clips from five of the .. Pink Pan· ther' • movies. · 'A' at HO<Wt8 HEROE8
2:36 D MOVtE •
CBS fJ 9:00 -"The Deadly Trap."
HOQ!!' ectwn1M to kaap a
v.atM l)elnctng out ol
Goering'• hands
• • "f'atac lady" (I~
Mary Ellll. Waller PldgeOn. Frank Langella stars as a mim trying to
break away from an espionage organiza-
tion in this 1972 movie with Faye
Dunaway.
8) GETSMA.RT
Mex ooee 10 • IJWlm ltlMt
to ObCaln • 1111 ol KAOS
~II flit CAPTlOHS> WORLD
HEWS TOHIGHT
2':31U NEW8
3:078 MOVIE
• • • "Bride Came c 0 0 .. (19411 8•11•
Dav11. Jamee Cagney. ~
\ ''The Jade Trac>" CNr1lt
-the Anga4t and hlS own prioelela collte:tton of
Jada to lrll$) • ~ thief
(Al
• MUN GfW'RN
Guette: ZN 2se Gabor.
Merllyrt S~ol. Dudley
Moor•. Otenn &liper S GAfAT
Pf.Af()AMANCtS
"The Arctta Promlte ..
ObMIMd t>y unrequited
low. • atll' .(;f'()Med actor
(Anthony Hopkin•)
~ bent on 1111·
C)eliNCtlon. (Rt e f.VliNINO AT POPS
Mime rendllJona Of mull·
c:ient' daydr-8'e I*·
tormad t>y Claude Kipnltl
and ,.... c;omoany of -1.
to the musrc of Mozart's
"Elne Kleine Nac:ntmuslk " Cl> MOV1E
• ·~ "Lewman" (1t711
Burt IAN:ealer. Robert
Ryen A manoflal trlnSl)Ort·
"'II _.. prlSOntrS finds
hlmaelf In • holllle New
Mexico town (2 hta )
1°'°° G POUCE WOMAN
"Mutdtr With Pretty
People'' Peppel' poeM as
• model to ln~tlgaca ,,...
Sleyleg of • powtr1ul rnod·
ti~ owner. (A) Bn:=..cva
HUTCH
"The Actlon'0 SWlty end
Hutctl lnflltt .... crooQd
~bllng opet .. lon (RI
11J CATA8TROfttllES
THAT QtAHOE M£N'8
lNU(PAAT1)
8i) 11U. MOVERS'
.IOUANAL.
"The Very Remarkable
Yamato family" Modem
Japan and "' peoole .,. ~.(Pert 10f21(AI 10:30. NEWS
tlll JOttNCAOf
Compo1er-phllo1opher
Cege ta profiled. along won
e IOOk at his contrlt>uti0'1$.
ldNI end Inventions
11:001QG(J)Q) NEWS
LOVE, AMEAICAN
STYLE
"LOYO And The Divorce
Sale" When Bitt aod Tippy
llllCliOn off ttltlr ~·
sion1 prior to dlYOf Clng.
c11ey 11ne1 eaen hem vtlu-
able.
Q MOVIE
• • "The Hawk 01
Caellle" ( 19&4) Jetty
Cobb. Mary ~ A yotJnQ
Span I ah noblen1an
amp1oy9 cunnlnQ and •Ill·
tul 1WOtdplay to •8Qlln his
righlfvl lnherllartee ffom
lht tvll OOv«no< (2 hrs.)
Q) THE 000 COUPLE
Aller driving MCtl other 10
near dllCrac:uon. Felt• 111\d
Oscar attend a g•OUP
Clierefl'f MS$IOn ti> FEANWOOO 2NIGHT
Host Berth Gimble and h11
cio-hoat Jetty Hubbard
wetcome ~I How9rd
Palmer. M«1e Jeeter. Mor·
ton Rote end Or. OlgOOd
In Ille pr..,..,. OI Norman
L-·s olf·belt comedy
tlllk·Ylriety lhow.
fD DtCK CAVUT
G-t: Eartha Kitt (A)
• MACNElt.. I La.REA
ASIORT
11:308(1) HAWAllFM-0
"Fluh Of Color. FIUll Of
Deal It" McGarreu -en. tOf'" opal smug-
gler tuepeciad or murder.
IA) 8 TOMGHT
Host· Johnny Carson.
G~e: Betty White. Mwle Eana. Diahann Cllff<>ll,
JoMrry Yune. 9 TWll.IOKT ZONE
~RNING
12:00 9 TWIUQHT ZOHf
Tiit ca.pram Of a erQhad
8-2S bomber c;an'C llgu<e
out where lie i. or what l'., 1111 I HIGH HOf'ES
HONEYMOONERS
An uneapec1ed eumtn0ns
from c11t IRS th<ows RalPf\
Into a pan;c.
12:JO D MOVIE •
• • • • "Jul181 Ot n.
Spirits" 11965) Sylva
K--. Mano Piel! Ouf.
ing a --· a young wile leefns rhat het llu~
hes bMtl unltlrlllul Ind
dectdee to c:onlronr llHn
With Che fact (2 llte I m MOVIE
• ••;, "Tom. ()l(;k And
Herry" I c9• 11 Burgess
M«ed1lll. Ginoer ~
A lovely young woman 11
torcad 10 Clloote .,.,_
three boyfnends 12 hrs I
Cl) MOVIE
•• 'It "Tiie Lone Haod"
f 19S•I Barbata Hale. Joel
McCrM When a Widower
io-is a grouo ot ou11awa 11e
IOMI the respect Of his son
and Che love llta ,_ Wife
Ila lo< him ( t tw • 30 min I
12':37 8 CJ) CBS urrE MQVIE
• ••;, "Villain" {~711
fi1ch1td Burton, Ian
McSl\ene A sadll11C thief
and 1111 ~ plan •
big payron robbery
• ®J A8C MV8TERV
MOVIE
• • "Space wacch
Murdeta" ( 1978) Sam
Groom. T11M Scerllng
1:00 D TOMOAAOW
Guests Wallace >
Mllhentmad. leedef ol rhta
country·• MusMma; Gr8Ce
4:00Ci) MOVIE *'"' "SCOftn In A T..cuph
f 1937\ Rex Harrison, Vlvlefl
letgll
4:050 NEWS
4:100 MOVIE
• • "High Season For
SPfll" I 11>&71 Peter Van
~· LeCJtta Roman
4:30GJ MOVIE
• • • "Born To Be Bad"
c 19SO)Joan Fon111ne. Rob-
'«t Ryan.
4:IO ID STEVE EDWARDS
Tlucrsdag••
Da11d11te ltfo.,lr• I .
MORNING
11:30. ** * "MIUSld• ~
TllOmplOI>" f 1954) JoM
Farrer. Alla Hayw<)(1h It
young women w1c11 • q~·
11on1ble past t>eco,,,..
involved w1111 a Mtnnt Mid
a m1n1sler on a P8C11w;
1S1and (2 hrs • 20 min I
AFTERNOON
12:00 Ci) * * '" "ISCanbul" f 111!>7) Errol Flynn. Cornel
8orc:hetl Att• lwe ~
• creveller rt'lums to tsc-
1>11110 racoww $200.000 111
diamond&. I I hr., 30 min I
S:OO 0 * '* ''Rtdt The Tigw"
(1971) ~l)t Monl~
ery, Victoria Stlaw. AICar
his par1,.·, mut"der ••
NghtctuO °""* ~
the tyndlc:at•'• IMder. l 1
hr . 30mln I
3:30 ....... "The LOV9-ln1"
119671 Jam. Mac:Arthul •
RICllatd Todd. A C:OllllOI'
ptOl8$SO( sets h1mM1I tlp
as a sell-proc;ta1med
j)f opflel of Ille "htj)poe '
movement allet lie 1CMns
IWO SludenlS expejted fOf
publlShinQ tn a11en1~oe
llndergtound ~
( I hr., 30 min I
'One Day' Tops
But ABC Still Rules Roost
NEW YORK IAP> -CBS'
.. One Day at a Time" was the
week's top· rated TV program
for the third time in four weeks .
but ABC continued its domina-
tion in the networks' battle for
the prime time viewer. figures
from the A. C Nielsen Company
show.
CBS, in fact. listed three of the
four most-watched shows for the
week ending Aug. 13. including
No. 3 .. Alice'' and fourth-ranked
"M·A·S-H." But ABC bad run-
nerup "Three's Company·• and
three others in the top 10.
ABC claimed the No. 1 pro-
gram nearly every week during
the fall and winter, but C86
shows have been top-rated eight
or the 11 weeks sine<.' the end of
May .
EIGHTEEN OF the week's 20
most.watched shows were re-
runs. The exceptions were an
ABC Sunday night movie.
.. Newman's Law," tied for 12th.
and "Switch" on CBS. tied for
No. 17.
CBS and NBC each bad two
programs among the bottom
five . ABC's "Hardy Boy~
Mystery" was No. 59, followed
by "Just for Laughs" on NBC.
··The Carol Burnett Show" and
"Baby. I'm Back." on CBS. and
··stack Sheep Squadron" on
NBC. .. ,...,.,.....
JULIUS AND ETHEL ROSENBERG AT 1951 TRIAL
Their Espionage Caae Revived on TV Tonight
It was ABC's third week in a
row in ftrst place, with a rating
for the most re<:ent period of 15.
The networks say that means in
an average prime time minute.
15 percent of the homes in the
country with TV were wa tching
ABC .
CBS' RATING for the week
was 14.6, NBC's 13.4.
Here arc the week's top 10 pr<>
grams: "On Feb. 17. 1953, the Court of Appeals granted the Rosen·
bergs a stay of exec"""n pending an appeal. Two days later . . .
an FBJ agent recorded the following conversation with Judge
Kaufman: 'l would like to see the Department of Justice take a
fiTm stand on this matter and appeal directly to the Supreme Court
for an immediate decision'."
The Rosenbergs, convicted of passing the secret of the atomic
bomb to Russia, were executed at Sing Sing Prison on June 19,
1953. The documentary will be shown Monday night by the Public
Broadcasting Service. Demonstrations are planned in New York
and other cities.
TV Newscasts Assaikd
SAN DIEGO <AP> -A former network news shows will even-and Radio Liberty, Mickelson
president of CBS News says--tually expand from one-ha lf views the budding taxpayers' re.
local television news shows are hour to an hour. And he volt as a positive force on JUsrtCE WILLIAM 0 . DOUGLAS.of the S~reme Court had spotty and often cover relatively forecasts doom for the television te levision ne ws because. he
.,issuedastay ofexecutionwhicbwouldnotnorm havebeenact-insignificant and easy to get documentary. s ays. it forces assignment
ed on by the court until the new term starting in tober. But the stories. . editors and their st aff to seek
"ONE D.\V AT a Time." with
a rating or 22.4 representing 16.3
million homes. CBS; ··Three:~
Company," 21.3 or 15.5
million, ABC; "Alice." 21 or
15 3. CBS: .. M·A·S·H," CBS, and
"Fantasy Island." ABC. both
20.9 or 15.2 million; NBC Mon·
day Movie, "Colombo." 19.7 or
14 4 miUion ; .. Barnaby Jones.''
CBS. and "Love Boat." ABC,
both 19.2 or 14 million, and "Lou
Grant." CBS, and "Carter Coun-
try." ABC. both 19 1 or 13.9
million.
.. ..
late _Chief J~tice Fred Vinson ca.ped the court back ln~ special "There's tendency to get "There'll be some noundering out vital issues over visual
session. and it overturned Douglas stay by a vote of 6-3. Accord-what's easy to follow to follow around at first." Mickelson said. thrills
ing. to-:.m.EaLme~.-Supreme Coud..JuaUce.Vinson and A~. Gen... ---::ll[LpOIRe_cam:,_m::::mi •l.li£VI!uaL:" · · Bul-t.hue ar& enoug.b good-_ · _ _ _ _
.ltubl!TrBronwett' had already dectded-orra strategy to btoelr stories," said Sig Mickelson, 65, -s~!IYI lYiMrJ'tilfe! to"'~l!-:r-HE ACKNOWLEDGED the
Justice Douglas' stay,'' the Pl'Oil'~ ">'5• "Clurly, accordinf to "and most of these aren't very 60-m~~ show. And televmon s uccess of TV .. magazlne"
the FBI memo, Justice Vinson bad VlOlated Canon 17 ol tbe judical significant ... • is ~u,ilding up a cadre of better-shows like .. 60 Minutes." which
code of ethics in bis promise to help vacate the stay." M lckelson is here as a dis-trained, better-educated . people offers three mini-documentary
An appeal to President Dwight D. Eisenhower to stay the ex· tinguisbed visiting t>rofessor in who ca!? handle these kmds of segments weekly within a one-
ecution was denied. telecommunications at San stories. hour format, along with viewer
Also convicted with the R06enbergs on a charge of conspiracy Diego State University. This Coming to San Die_go afJer response and commentary.
was·Morton Sobell. Hewes sentenced to 30 years and served 18'-', !all, tfe will teach two under-three years in Washington, D.C.. ··r think it'll hold ror a while S~ of them in A.katraz. graduate classes, a graduate-where he pr'esided over the a nd then slump,'' Mickelson
::Dre imxt.mslmW.s: --
"Laverne and Shirley." ABC~
.. Rawa il Five-0 ," CBS. ABC
Sunday Novie. "Newm a n's
Law," and "All in the Family."
CBS. tie; "Lillie House on the
Prairie.'' NBC ; "Eight f~
Enough." ABC; "Happy Days.:·
"BC, and "Switch." CBS. tie.
and "Good Times .. and ''The
Jeffersons ... both CBS. Fighting to clear their parents' names are the Rosenbergs' two level course.... merger of Radio Free Europe said.
sons, Michael, 35, and Robert. 31, who have adopted tbe last name -----------------------------------~ of Meeropol, their foster parents. Michael was 10 and Robert 6 MICKELSON, WHO ran CBS
when their parents were executed. .News until 1961, predicts most U NIVERaAL 8TUD108 TOUR ~·.MCA -.... '•" I v ~ I ,.,,,~, , ~
81'YGetwhohasa feelinr for
the amazement of masic. ..
P£i'BR FRAMPTON
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LONEIY HEARTS CUJB BAND''
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