HomeMy WebLinkAbout1978-08-28 - Orange Coast Pilot17
Attended £oas.t Wedding?
·Nixon Estate Millionairess
Dome of GOP Robbed Again;
Fund,• raiser Loses .Jewelry
DAILY PILOT .· af e • ID esa;
* * * 'IOc * ·* * · ..
MONDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUST 28, 1978
llOL. 11, NO. 149, J SECTIONS, 2t .. AG•5 ara e Ruine
Fund-raiser
Nixon Retreat
Opened to GOP
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of tN O.ally '""-' 51.all Former President Richard
Nixon opened his San Cle mente
Estate Sunday to more than 400
of the Oran ge County Republican faithful who paid
$250 each to shake his hand and
tour his house. The event, s taged by the
county 's GOP financ e
·committee. marked the first
time Nixon has participated in a
politically-oriented affair since
his resignation from office four
years ago. <Related story, AS)
It attracted a handful of
county Republican candidates
for what turned out to be a
nearly apolitical evening.
The former president in a
brief speech discussed only one
issue Proposition 13 and what
it m e ans generally to
Republicans.
Other than that , the talk
covered baseball, his new
granddaughter or his memories
36th State Senate District and
Marian Bergeson, a second·time
candidate in the 74th Assembly
District. All three candidates
were on hand Sunday evening.
Mr . Nixon was mos t
animated in greeting Mrs.
Bergeson, clas ping her hands
several times during their chat. The former president and his
wife spent a little more than 90
minutes at the three·hour event
co-hosted by a list of local
business and political leaders,
including industrialists J .
Robert Fluor and Arnold
<See NIXON, Page A2)
Thieve§ Rob
Rich Widow
Of Je~lry
Witnesses Cite
'N ~ Wariting'
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of .. D.alty l'llee Sutt
Joe Quintana, 40, a painter who lives at 2140 Federal
Ave ., in the older Republic Homes tract of Costa Mesa,
thought it was the waler heater exploding when the plane
hit bis house about 9:30 Sunday night. A litUe later, Quintana sat in the back seat of a police
car in nightclothes, watching his home burning.
He had rescued bis exotic birds after getting wife
Bertha, 28, and daughters Cecilia, 5, and Marisa, 3, to
safety. but the plane hurtling out of the sky. into the
carport destroyed the 1939 Cadillac he was restonng.
"There was no warning. We were just able to jump
out " said Quintana as his family huddled in the police car.
'Other residents of the area lined Victoria Street.
expressing no hope for anyone who was in the plane.
"This makes four planes that have hit in our city."
remarked Costa Mesa Police Capt. Ed Glasgow.
Brian McDaniel, 16 . of 21996 Summerwind Lane.
Huntington Beach, and his buddy Larry Mosqu1ta, 18, of
Reseda, just missed being killed in the crastl.
"The plane hit over there and we were right under it,"
said McDaniel, pointing lo a gouge in Victoria Street.
"Hey, it missed our car by 15 feet .. .It made a
touchdown there and then slammed into the house."
Sue Ratkoski, 816 Victoria St .. did have warning of the
impending crash. .. Trembling with emotion, her arms folded as though to
of early days in Orange County CANNES France <AP)
1---t-----1t8-Nixoo e~s--~•fe-t1i;eeled-T~~o. t biev.es_
party goers in a receiving lane. robbed American millionairess
keep herself warm, Mrs. Ratkoski recalled it in a
streetside interview. iii1Elfi~7-:~..,~~ •-.:-.. ___ __,, __ '--~81111Tltlotoreyclists ar~ raeing along the street
A party spokes!11an estimated F lorente Gould of her art
that the ev~nt raised more than treasure\. Sunday, a trio got
$100,000 wh1ch wl~l be used to away with her jewels, worth
bolste_r the campaign coffers of millions of dollars, police said.
candidates s_uch as R?bert Mrs. Gould, widow of an heir
Badham. seek mg . re·elec~1on. to of the American railroad tycoon,
J.he 40th Co~eression~l D~stnct, was visiting~riend£ else.where .in.
John Schmitz, running m tne Cannes when three young
masked, armed men broke into
Co ast
her 42-room villa El Patio dur-
ing the day. tied her Braz.ill an
maid to a Louis XVl chair and ~~her, and ~nt half an
hour collecting the jewels in her ~~~~=---t___!!!he~duroofi~mrEm:;nt~ws;1t;1ijt-cam~~th~oS'! Weather ace
Patchy early morning
low clouds. otherwise fair
through Tuesday. A little
warmer Tues day with
high s ranging from
mid-708 at the beaches to
upper 80s inland. Lows
tonight 65 to 75.
INS IDE T OD,\"
Yodnglten 8 to 16 learn
about sa.iling In a Balboa
Yacht Club program. See
photo•. PaoeC1
l•dex
At'f_ ...... At~ a ...... .._ ... ....,.. a
LM.ifetf M .....___..... aJ ....... ......... ., .. ~ "'El.._ .. ~ Ott et-a CIMks .. ........ u O-;;• .. T ... I.._ ., a..-..-. u n...e-., .. MMINI .... M....... M ........... • , ... ._..Ill... A4
........ C1·2
t
C4R MOJ'ES F ASf
IN PILOT AD
"I sold my car faster than I
ever drove it, and I got exactly
what I asked for it."
That's the story told by a suc-
cessful one-time car salesman
who put this ad in the Dally
Pilot:
'71 LTD 4 door. Gd tires,
brks. Gd trans. $600/offr
XXX·XXXX
If you bave a car you want to
sell, call 642-5618. Yol1 don't
even have to write the ad,
because our friendly ad-visors
will help you write a best seller.
The Daily Pilot ia a place
where puttlng in your two cents
can mean cash returns.
'
o.llf ........... llY OarJ Amllrott
ENGINE IN FOREGROUND MARKS PATH OF PLANE
Tall Section Sticks Out of Garage (Background)
Fiery Plane 6rash
Kills E_our
Of Ult o.lty l"IMt Staff
Inve~tigators today studied
charred wreckage from a
Sunday night plane crash in
Costa Mesa that killed two
Oxnard couplies, but said they
had few clues to the cause or the
crash.
Identities of the four dead
people were being withheld
today by Orange County
Coroners until all family.
members were notified. The plane slammed into the
garage or a home at 2140
Federlk) Ave., Costa Mesa at
aboul 9:40 p.m., but all five
members or the Joe Quintana
family were able to escape
without injury.
Tbe two couples apparently
new out of Orange County
alrPort at 9:30 p.~m. Sunday after
allendinl a weddlng.
Scores of people told police
they saw and beard tbe twin
en11tne Beecbcraft Baron In
Mesa nei r .
An of ·duty Irvine police
officer, Pat Rogers, saw the
plane bank sharply right, its
right wing engine afire and
lights out, and then curve into
the ground, exploding in a ball
of fire.
However, other witnesses said
the light plane was not on fire
when it plummeted toward the
Quintana home, narrowly
missing a home on the north side
or Victoria.
A Huntington Beach man who
was driving by said be "could
feel the heat" of the explosion.
"We are assuming they were
headed home to Oxnard," said
Guy Moshier, \nvestlgator for
the N atlonal Transportation
Safety Board <NTSB).
He said the pilot did not rue a
filgbt plan with Or~nae County
Airport. Tower offlciala today •'1d they heard no warnlnp of
<See PLANE, Pa1e A2)
•
'
,
again," she rem~mberS thinking, as she put her two little
boys to_ bed. "Then I realized it wasn't motorcycles ... lhaf the
noise was above the house and I knew it was a plane and it
was in trouble. "My husband had just come in from the store and
came to tell the boys good night. We both knew it was a
Rlane ... •lf raDTnfo tfie Kitchen and looked out the window-and -
heard an explosion and saw the tail end sticking out of the
house all on fire," she continued. .
"My husband called the fire department and I ran out
and started directing traffic because at lbe time it needed in front of our house.
"It's hard to believe there were no cars bit with all the
(See CRASH WITNESSES, Pa1e AZ>
Air Cleared
Outhouse Skunk Removed
BUTTE, Mont. CAP> -Smoke bombs didn't
work. Neither did dumping the daily proceeds of a
portable toilet on his head.
But after six days, Forest Service officials
finally shooed an unwelcome guest from their
outhouse by dropping a noose around his neck and
yanking him upward.
Ranger Dean Reed said the invader of the only
outhouse at Highland Mountain's fire-lookout
station was a skunk.
It apparently crawled under the outhouse and
fell into the ho6e, Reed said .
.j
)
~-----~-- ----
A2 DAtL y F'tL't>T s
Mediators Battle Mail ·Strike Threat
• WASHl!ilGTON (AP> -*•\b a 1trlk• doaclll or tooilh,,
fecteul medlMor met toi~
wltb r preaeataUvet of th
Po.tal Servi~ IDd Ila uSou ID
an effort to av.t tbreateaed
walkout.
ltowe\·er, no protrftS was re-
ported wtul tbt ....,
under way and Po1tmeater
General WllUam F . Bolter
mtateld bls bard·llne position
that u n 1eadera have 11ld
l .. v .. u...m no aJternatJve to a
rtrilce. Bell.., aald b believes a
wa1koUl wUl not materaallz .
CbJd ftdenl mediator Wayne
Horvlt& m t with the two 1l.d&
both aeparately and to1ether,
1poke1man Jobn ltoaera aau1.
But Roten aJd ther~ wa no
• breaktbroQah to rtipc>rt.
Whlle the meeUns• MN beint
held at the medJaUon service,
Bolger made a 1peech e1Hwhere
In W aabln,ton repeattna bl• de·
t rmlnat1on not to aweeten a ten·
tatlve contract that the union.a
consider Inadequate.
"Havina turned down that
contract, t.be unions now want us
to return to the bar11lnin1 table.
But, as far as I'm concerned , we
Oelly ~ ... S\ltt,....
TAIL SECTION WAS BIGGEST PIECE LEFT OF BEECHCAAFT BARON AFTER CRASH
Twin-engine Craft Torn to BH• by Impact Sunday Night In Costa Me1e
f'rolflPa~A I
PLANE ...
lrouble from the aLrcraft before
1t went down.
··All th e important
instruments were destroyed by
impact or the fire." Moshier
said today
He said the JOtnt NTSB and
Federal Aviation Administration
investigation could take as long
as three months.
Mos hier said interviews with
witnesses would continue to
establish ··what attracted their
attention to what was happening
in the air."
He said it was not uncommon
for conflicting reports to be filed
by witnesses to a plane crash.
The plane struck the garage of
the Quintana home, destroying a
vintage 1939 Cadillac and
causing heavy damage to a
hedge and palm tree.
However. Costa Mesa firemen
-had the blaze out before senous
structure damage resulted.
The four occupants of the
plane,, apparently died within
seconds after the collision.
One young witness to the
crash said the plane came in at
fu ll throttle, the pilot apparently
unable to ease the plane into an
t•mergency landing on Victoria
~treet
Youth Cited
In HB Blaze
A 9-yea r -old H unti ngl <'~
II a rbour boy play ing ~\th
matches has been blamed for a
Sunday fire that caused $10,000
1n damage to a two·story house
under construct ion, of£i c1als
!>aid.
The yomh apparently found
some matches a nd began
ltghbng them at the site or the
new house. 16281 Spartan Circle.
The matches ignited a pile of
building debris, said police
arson Investigator Bob Russell.
No one was hurt. The damage
to the unoccupied structure was
confin ed mainl y to the
entryway. The youth was
appre hended by police a nd
released to his father 's custodv.
Kenyatta-Funend
IHlly ~· ......... ~ O.y ,.,,._
ARROWS SHOW PATH OF PLANE ACROSS VICTORIA
Hole (foreground) Believed to be lnHlal Point of Impact
f'ront Pa~ A I
CRASH WITNESSES. • •
traffic on this street," said her husband, Paul.
Quintana and his brother-in-law, Rudy Sanchez. 19,
started to attack what they thought was an exploding
water heater with a garden hose before realizing it was a
plane crash.
Sitting, watching his home burning, Quintana said he
never gave the possibility any thought before.
"But when you read the paper. you worry," he said,
before leaving to make a telephone call to an aunt.
"She might be worried. . .• " he said .
did our baraalnlna. We aave in
on some things we wanted, and
the unions gave in Of) some tbey
wanted," Bolger told the con·
venlion ol the National Leacue
of Postmasters.
The postmasters, who general-
ly are at lower-level manage-
ment ranka, gave tum several
atandinl ovations.
Questioned after hta apeecb
about the etrike poasibUlty,
Bol1er asaln predicted one
would not matertallze.
·'I malled my telephone bill to-
day." he said.
Bolger. u he bu frequenUy in
the past. pressed for pursuinc
the legal steps when a contract
is rejected. These steps include
binding arbitration 11 the two
aides cannot find an asreement.
Polkfl Dedleation
Pope. Retains
Chief Officials
VATlCAN CITY CAP> -Pope
John Paul I demonstrated today
his dedication to the policies of
Pope Paul VI by continuing in
orrice the chief officials of the
Roman Catholic Church's cen·
tral administration appointed by
his predecessor.
The new pontiff reappointed
French Cardinal Jean Villot as
Sec retar y of State. the
equivalent of the Vatican 's
prime minister. and the heads or
the nine Sacred Congregations.
the main departments of the
Vatican Curia.
Among the latter 1s Cardinal
John Wright of the United
States. who heads the Congrega·
lion for the Clergy and did not
participate in the election of
Pope John Paul Saturday
because he was recuperating
from eye surgery in Boston.
the Curia, the church's central
bureaucra cy, expired
automatically with the death of
Pope Paul on Aug. 6. But John
Paul had been expected to reap·
point most or all of them both
because or his commitment to
carry on Pope Paul's policies
and because of his own lack of
Curia experience.
His only experience at the
Vatican was as a member or the
executive board of the
Congregation for Sacraments
and Divine Cult. He has spent
nearly all his life in the Venice
area. as a priest in his native
diocese in the Alps. as bishop or
Vittorio Veneto and the past nine
years as Cardinal Albino Lu·
ciani. patriarch or Venice.
Elected Saturday on the first
day of voting by 111 cardinals
locked in the Borgia Apartments
of the Apostolic Palace. the pope
is to be crowned Sunday.
Bola•r said that be doesn't
thlnkJhat most of bis employees
want an Wegat strllte.
"They realize that a strike
would do permanent dama1e to the Postal Service ...
He said the diversion of much
mail to other means of delivery
would hurt the unions by reduc·
ing the need for manpower ln
tbe Postal Service.
··A strike would be tbe wont
possible thing that could happen
to the Postal Service," Bolcer
said.
One mlion president is man-
dated by members to call a
strike by midnight EDT tonight.
1f there is no resumption of
bargaining. Another union presi-
dent, under similar mandate,
has a midnight Wednesday
deadline.
Bolger said plans for moving
the mail include possibly asking
President Carter to call out
troops to handle mail. forbidding
some types of mail and· allowing
private companies to deliver
first-class letters. In normal
times. the Postal Service bas a legal monopoly on first class.
Under ·'Operation G rapblc
Hand" prepared by' the Pen.
tagon. up to 9-0,000 or mote
troops could be used to help
process mail in 68 critical cities
across the country.
In addition. BOiger could sus-
pend delivery or certain types of
mail deemed to be "nonesseo·
tiai." It is believed third-class
advertising circulars would be
the first to be suspended in a crisis. Jn another affirmation of Pope
Paul's policy. the pope recon-
firmed Arc hbishop Agostino
Casaroli as Secretary or the
Council for Public Affairs, the
Vatican's foreign minister.
Fro• Page A J
The Valtcan announcement
said all the heads of congrega.
tions would serve the remainder
of the five.year terms to which
they were appointed by Pope
Paul. However. this five-year
period does not apply to Villot,
Casaroli. or Archbishop
Giuseppe Caprio. the substitute
secretary of state. who are the
pope's personal choices.
In addition lo Cardinal Wright.
the congregation heads are
Ca rdinal Fraojo Seper of
Yugoslavia. the Congregation
for the Doctrine or the Faith, the
former Holy Office: Cardinal
Sebastiano Baggio, Congrega-
tion of Bishops; Cardinal James
P. Knox, Australia, Sacraments
and Divine Worship; Cardinal
Eduardo Pironio. Argentina.
Congregation for the Religious;
Cardinal Agnelo Rossi,
Evangelization of the Peoples;
Cardinal Corrado Bafile, Italy,
Causes of the Saints: Cardinal
Gabriel Marie Garrone. France.
Catholic Education: Cardinal
Pierre Paul Philippe. France.
Oriental Churches.
Vatican sources said the pope
may call a consistory this year
to appoint n·ew cardinals.
Several cities which traditional-
ly have cardinals presently are
headed by bishops . They include
Tokyo, Dublin and Turin. Also,
the pope is said to have prom-
ised a cardinal's red hat to
Bishop Ernesto Civardi.
secretary of the conclave whjch
elected him.
The pope dug into the business
or church administration after
pledging to overcome "internal
tension" W1thin the church and
to continue the work of hi s two
predecessors whose names he
took.
All executive appointments in
NIXON RECEPTION. • •
Beckman.
Actor John Wayne. one of the
co-hosts. arrived with the
Nixons. but stayed less than a
half hour, departing the former
Western White House in one of
Fluor's corporate helicopters.
Partygoers were invited
through mailed invitations
restricted to county residents
that financ e committee
members felt could pay the $250
per person ticket price to
support the Republican cause.
Guests met in Irvine for the
40-minute bus ride to Casa
Pacifica. Guests from the south
county were bused to the party
from Concordia School in San
Clemente.
A 11 were greeted at the
Spanish-style home by mariachi
music. rnargaritas and Mexican
food from Nixon's favorite
restaurant. El Adobe in San
Juan Capistrano.
A bout half an hour after
guests were ushered into the
s wimming pool area and
gar den s. the Nixons.
accompanied by Wayne. strolled
in from the house.
The former president. trim
and tanned, was dressed in gray
slacks and a navy blue jacket.
Mrs . Nixon wore a pink. floor
length gown set off by a double
strand of pearls.
They were introduced by
Repulibcan activist Victor
Andrews who assure d the
Nixons they had the "love and
admiration of not only the
people here. but millions of
citizens in this great nation of
ours ... Andrews' introduction
was punctuated by applause
from the crowd.
Nixon spoke for about 10
minute&. ativinat a Republican
pep talk that avoided specific
political subjects. except when
he came to Proposition 13 and
the taxpayers· revolt.
H e said the lo ng -held
Republican belief in limiting
government spending ·'is a
cause worth giving to a nd
working for "
He took a verbal swipe at two
of his favorite targets eastern
liberals and the media. blaming
them for not recognizing the
importance of Proposition 13.
which he predicted would be the
most s ignificant is s ue
nationwide by 1980.
"They said it was just
so m e thing th e kooky
Californians had done." Nixon
said. He told the crowd similar
ballot issues would be appearing
in other parts of the country.
After his talk, the ex-president
and his wife were joined by
son-in.law David Eisenhower to
receive their guests.
Nixon autographed copies or
hi s m e moirs brough t b y
partygoes r s a nd chatted
amiably, pausing rrom time to
time to pose for photographs.
Guests were invited to tour the
Nixon home. which has not been
opened to the public since it was
purchased as the Western White
House m 1969.
The home's living room and
dinin1t room. decorated with
oriental art objects. were viewed
by partygoers who were told
that all the flower ar rangementl>
were prepared by Mrs. Nixon.
The second-floor study used by
Nixon and his ground-rtoor
bedroom were also openeci to
guests who admired needlework
by daughter Julie Eisenhower
that decorated both rooms.
The home was closed to tours
at about 6 p.m. when the Nixons
left the party.
. • . -L.,!>_NDON <AP> -The British
governmenT1s a1rTil'Ung' a··--u:s =]l)1 -A - -•---
J
two-ton army gun carriage to • • lf. oves gain Kenya to carry the body of the
late President Jomo Kenyatta at
t he _funeral pr~cession , the T p . D II
Foreign Office said. 0 ro p 0 ar
OAANOECOAST s
DAILY PILOT WASHINGTON CAP> -In
another action to help support
the dollar, the Federal Reserve
~ ps toaiY to en:-
CQUU&e. bowlw.ine or foreign-
.v.;;m;.:;nar-+--held dollar&1Jy Ameriean baRks:.
.. ..., ... _
Pre\tOent •'"' ftutlilJ~ , .... ~
Vo;,f "' .. """'•""0.-.. ~ -··11-l.ctltOt
n:::~~,:;:-
0...lffK LMt a-..1'.M" 4\\t\t9"t "'-"'-t'"O E•ton
Office• Co\I• Mc .. 1)11 Wot a.y\-H~7:.. "::~~~~ \~~=r:!::::!.o "'41dl•N<~ v.11 .. HIO• UI Pu"""" •IS...0-Fr-
f~ne (T1t)~
Cla~eclAd'ffrt ..... ~ s.ctd-<• Vtllt¥ -Olf1C1 511-t310 '·-s.nc;--..00
'--~0r ..... c-.o..-01i.. M0-1220
~''t:'~ "" °:.:P: •. <::r:.::i:=::.·~~ .... u .... ~"~ •• -::r ............ , .. ~=l~v;:::.,::1-1 •-1•1 .-•min i ... •I
~-.,.,, "°'' ........ "' C.0.1• "'"'' C.lllt"ll• hll"•l•ll•ll ... Ct,, .. , u to =t.'..:~ :~:~I~ -•M• ""Ill•••
About $500 billion in U.S.
dollars are held overseas. They
are called •·Eurodo llars"
because they are outside the
control of U .S . banking
authorities.
The amount of foreign-held
dollars has grown sharply In re·
cent years. in part because of
the U.S. trade deficit that sends
dollars abroad, and they have
frequently been used b y
speculators to drive down the
overall value of the dollar.
To encourage use or the SO·
called Eurodollars by American
banks, the Federal Reserve
Board today removed the re-
quirement that U.S. banks mU5t
maintain reserves equal to 4
percent of what they borrow
abroad.
"The effect ol the reserve re·
ductton ls intended to encourage
member banks to substitute
Eurodollar borrowlnu for
domestic borrowings as a· source
of funds," the board said.
If the action has the intended
errect. it woURI mean some ot
the Corei_gn-held dollars would be
-..etumed to tbli"-counfr)' for WI
ln domestic lending.
f'roal'ageAJ
JEWELS •..
could find , the police reported
Another m e mber of the
household staff found the maid
and called the police. The
thieves were described as hi&'hlY
professional. and no leads were
reported.
The theft of her art collection,
which included palntin1s by
Renoir and Bonnard, is still un-
solved.
Mrs. Go~d la the widow o(
Frank Jay Gould, wbo died in
l~ alter they had been married
for 33 years. She has been a
leading member of Riviera
society for years
'
-·--· _..
d
hawa1ian ...
pl~&l/Lour nllN -
8¢1'lction cl' ~i1.en
44 f81hion ialend, newport center 644·5070
•
7
\ ·•
OraDge C•ast
EDITION
I I
,
" I
VOL. 71, NO. 240. 3 S&CTIONS, 21 f'AGES
., UTBUa .. vtNSSL ..............
Joe Quintana, 40, a paialer wbo ltvel at IHO J'ederal
Ave., ID tbe ot•r Republic Homea tract ol Colt.a Neu.
tbou.lbt it wq tbe water llealer u]>lodiq when the plane
hit bi's.._ about t :ao Sunday nllbt.
A little later. Quintana sat ln t.be back aeat of a police
car in "'f':flolhel, watcbi.nt bis home bumina. Re l'elCued llll exotic birds after &ettinc wife
Bertha. .. and daqhtera CedUa. ~. and Karisa, 3, to
aaf ty. bat tbe plane hartliu out of the aky into the carport destroyed tbe ta Cadillac he was restorina. '''lbere wu no wamina. We were just able to Jump
out.'• aid Quint.an• u bis family buddied in the police car.
Other residenta ol the area lined Victoria Street.
expresalaa no hope for anyone who was in the plane.
.. Tbls makes four planes that have hit in our city."
remarked Costa Mesa Police Capt. Ed Glasgow.
Brian McDaniel, 16, of 21996 Summerwlnd Lane,
. .
..
I
Huntington Beach, and bJs buddy Larry Mosqulta, 18, of
· Reaeda, just m1ued beiu killed in the crub .
"Tbe plane blt over tlsere and we were rilbt tmcler it,"
said McDaniel. pointing to a eouse ln Victoria Street.
"Hey, it missed our car by 15 feet ... It made a
touchdown tbete and then slammed lnto tbe house.''
Sue Ratkoeki1 816 Victoria Sl., did have warning of the
impen~rasb. Trem with emotion, her arms folded as to
keep hersel warm, Mrs. Ratkosld recalled~ a
streetside interview.
"ThQse damn D)Otorcycllsta are raciq aloq the street
again," she remembers thinktq, as sbe put her two little
boys to bed.
"Then I realized it wasn't. motorcycles ... that the
noise was 11bove the house and J Dew lt wu a plane and it
was in trouble.
"My husband bad just COl!lt. in from t.be store and
came to tell the boya good nllbt. We bOtb knew it was a plane ...
NIC TEN CENTS
··1 ran Into the kitchen and looked out the window and
heard u exploeion and saw the tail end sticking out of the
house 811 on ftre." she continued. ·
")(y husband called the fire department and I ran out
and at.arted directing traffic because at the time it needed to be clooe. Some cars were stopped in front of our house.
She had never performed as a traffic cop before.
"I just did it because I bad to.." sbe said, stllJ shaking
u the 6laze caused by tbe crash began to die down.
"It's bard to believe there were no cars bit with all the
traffic on this street,·' said her husband, Paul.
QUlntana and bis brother·in·law, Rudy Sanchez. 19,
'11larted to attack what they thought wu an explodint
water hea~r with a garden hose before realizing it was a plane crash. .
Sitting, watching bis home bum.inc. Quintana said be
never gave the possibility any thought before.
"But when you read the paper, you worry," be said .
befon leaving to make a telephone call to an aunt. , "She might be worried. . .. " be said. • ,.
Mesa Plane _FoUr
Opens Bmne
Nixon Is Host
TQ Repuhlic8ns
By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of .. o.lty l'tt.e St.Mt
Former President Richard
Nixon opened bis San Clemente
Estate Sunday to more than 400
of the Orange Count y
Republican faithful who paid
$250 each to shake his hand and
. lau».uutering
.Cutback Asked
For Bluffs
Res idents of The Bluffs may
be asked to again reduce the
amount of water they put on
their lawns in an attempt to rid
the area of groundwater that is
,eroding the blufmne and en-
dangering a sewer line.
The landscaping irrigation cul·
back is one of three staff
recommendations to be discussed
at tonight's Newport Neach City
Council meeting.
Councilmen, earlier this sum-
mer, were told by a consultant
that tbe water flowing through
the ground under The Bluffs
came from outside the area, to
the east of Eastbluff Drive.
Consulting engineers from
James Montgomery and As ·
sociates estimated that a total of
250 acre feet flowed through the
area annually, of which 200 acre
feet came from east of Eastbluff
Drive.
But those findings proved to
be erroneous. A new report,
given councilmen at their after·
noon study session today listed a
total of 60 acre feet flowing
th •
witt\ a~ 38-acre feet coming
from outside The Bluffs.
Based on those new fin"dlngs.
c;t p ff members recommended
three projects to reduce the
problem:
..J -tnstallation of drains
(Se:: CUTBACK, Page AZ)
Palchv early morning
'""" clouds, otherwise fair through Tuesday. A little
warmer Tuesday with
high s rangine from
mid-708 at the beaches to
upper 80s inland. Lows
tonight ~ to 75.
l~SIDE TOD/\ t'
Younglfen 8 to 16 !Gam
obout 1ailing in o Bolboc
Vocht Club program. See
photo1,PGQsC1.
latlex
Al Y .... ..._. At l'llr-.... a
..... .. ~YllMI Cl
L.M.leyt .................. .. ...._ ... ~ .,.
ClllfWtlla Al ~..... ...
0.-.. CMI ....... aw =:... < = T•w=-:: ............. ~ .,..
............ M~ M .... , 7 SN ..... ..._ M .,...,.. ci.a
tour bis house
The event. staged by the
county 's GOP financ e
committee, marked the first
time Nixon has participated in a
politically-oriented affair since
his resignation from office four
years ago. c Related story. AS>
It attracted a handful of
county Republican candidates
for what turned out to -be a
nearly apolitical evening.
The former president in a
brief speech discussed only one
issue -Proposition 13 and what
it m eans gen era ll y t o
Republicans.
Other than t hat. the talk
co vered baseball, his new
granddaughter or his memories
of early days in Orange County
as Nixon and his wife greeted
party goers in a receiving line.
A party spokesman estimated
that the event raised more than
$100,000 which will be used to
bolster the campaign coffers of
candidates such a s Robert
Badham, seeking re-election to
the 40th Congressional District,
John Schmitz. running in the
36th State Senate District and
Marian Bergeson, a second-time
candidate in the 74lh Assembly
District. All three candidates
were on hand Sunday evening.
Mr . Ni xon was m ost a nimated in greeting Mrs.
Bergeson, clasping her hands
several times during their chat.
The for:mer president and his
wife spent a little more than 90
minutes at the three-hour event
co-hosted by a lis t of local
business and political leaders,
in c luding indus trialist s J .
Robert Fluor a nd Arnold
Beckman.
Actor John Wayne, one of the
co-hosts, a rrived with the
Nixons-;-but-stayett less than a
half b~. departing the former
Western White House in one of
Fluor's corporate helicopters.
Partygoe rs were invited
through m ailed invitations
restricted to county residents
<See NIXON, Page AZ)
Mn. Phillips
-Final-Ri~lfll---
Funeral services are
scheduled Tuesday for Mrs.
Gladys Hoffman Phillips, a resi·
dent of Costa Mesa for more
than 50 years who died Saturday
at Costa Mesa Me morial
Hospital She was 82.
Services will begin at 10:30
a.m . at Westminster Memorial
Park, Westminal'er.
Mrs. Phillips, a native of
Norwalk, first came t o the
Orange Coast area in 1912, living
brlefiy In Westminster before
rt'ovlng to what later became
Cos•a Mesa.
She was an avid gardener at
her home at2441 Elden Ave.
Mn. Phillips is survived by
her hus band, Bentley : a
dauebter, Ella Brown or Cosi.
Mesa and a slater , Frances Hay
of Oreaon. Mra. Phillips also
leaves seven grandchildren and
18 great·araadchildren.
Mesa Eateries,
Night Club
Report Thefts
a man with a handgun made bis
way through the kltcben door
and forced employees of another
Costa Mesa restaurant to tum
over an estimated $4,000.
Police said the robbery at the
Reuben 's Resta urant at 1555
Adams Ave. occurred as the
restaurant was closing for the
evening.
Newport Police
Probe Jewel Theft
Newport Beach police today
inve1tJ1at.ed the theft of Jewelry
valued at more than f1 ,600 trom
a home In The Bluff 1.
Resident IUcbard K. Menkin
saJd be discovered the theft Fri·
day momin&.
Police nid the bur1lar pried
open -sliding window to aet lnt.o
the house.
ore a s Delay
Postal Walkout?
BVU.ETIN
WASIONGTON <AP> -Tile
Po1taJ Sentce agreed tb.11 after·
noH &o re.pen nep&latlou wUll
aaloaa tllat bad &Jarea&elled &o
atrtke, delaylq for 15 day1 aay
poulble ltrtle, a aloa 10VCe
reporW.
WASIUNOTON <AP) -Houn
from a deadllM fM a national
mail atrlke, tbe poatmaater
aeneral uraed h1I employees to-
day not to ''take U)' W.JJI or
rula actlona." Bu~ he a1atn re-
f aed to return to the bar1alnin1
t.ablf. • ,. Poeuuate.r1 General ,William
...
F. Boleer's warning came as
chief federal mediator Wayne
Horvitz met wlth represen·
tatives of the Postal Service and
the three unions that recenUy re·
jected a tentative settlement.
The rejections set the stqe
for a poalble walkout as early
as toniaht. despite a federal
eourt order orob.lblUng a work
15toppue or slowdown.
Tlie l>oetal Semce for weeks
'111 bffsl dewlopln1 cont101ency
plant which would include the
use of federal troop1 to help IOl'l
and deliver. the mall1. But
Bolser ~ that a 1lrike
WOQld c•u~o wides pread
< MAIL, P~e At>
Family
Escapes
Injuries
By MICHAEL PASKEVICH
Ol U. D.lltr rtt.t SUH
Investigators today studied
charred wreckage from a
Sunday night pl ane crash in
Costa Mesa t hat killed two
Oxnard couples. but said they
had few clues to the cause of the
crash.
Identities of the four dead
people we re being withheld
today by Orange County
Coroners until all family
members were notified.
The plane slammed into the
garage of a home at 2140
Federal A.ve., Costa Mesa at about 9:IO p,lftAI but all five
MORE CRASH PHOTOS
APPEAR ON PAGE 3
CAR MOYES FAST
IN PILOT AD
"I sold my car raster than 1
ever drove It, and l got exactly
what t asked for It.'·
That's the story told by a suc-
cessful one·time car salesman
who put this ad in the Daily
Pilot:
'71 LTD 4 door. Gd tires.
brks. Gd trans. S80010Cfr
XXlMCXXX
H you have a car you want to
sell. call 642·56'78. You don 't
even have to write the ad .
because our friendly ad visors
wm be1p you writ' a best seller
The OaJly Ptlot Is a place
where putting tn your two cents
can mean cash return&
\
i ., r
OAILYPtlOT
Chained
Woman
Killed
VUMA. Arla. <AP) -A
chaiud woman mptoy died.
poa1il>&y by tbolllnt. •'10tMr
WU Shot eel WOLaftded end MV9D
ot' rs chained by a rot>Mr who
took I.hum hoc1Qe as they at·
rived f« ""°" at a auperma"'* • lOd•Y police aaid. f'of~ ~ U.. buildlaf
-on• ol UH' lug \ Safeway
t.larl.ets to the area ..,,... and made
.. 1 uru-at -ready IUl'Ch of the bo~ laden alUc bot said lbe rob
bt>r a~ eKaped •Ith the
content.I ol the W .
Jtne Garaa. m.anqer ol t.be
1nnt department, uld tbe
~OIT,l&ft who died ldenlJfied ..
L .. ur~ 8ohannoft -had not re-
sisted wbea chained but became
upset wben a tater-arrivina
v.oman resisted and •as shot.
He sakt Mrs. Bob•nnon eltber
sJ1pped oc bed 10me sort ol a
seizure. pos.4'ibly a heart att.ack ...
and fell forward agaimt a chain
which was around her neck and
a pipe.
"l yeUed. 'She's dyine. she's
dymg. · but the man just cussed
al her. and said, 'If sbe wants to
die, let her go ahead and dle',"
Garcia told a reporter.
The dead woman's husband,
Jack. who reportedly had heart
surgery recently, collapsed in
the market's parking lot and
was taken to a hospital by am-
bulance. He was discharged
several hours later.
Garcia said when he arrived
al 5 a.m. two men already were
chained to the pipes of a com·
pressor. He said employees
were taken hostage at gunpoint
the robber had a handgun -
as they arrived over the next
three hours. Some men had to
remove their trousers.
Police said the robber was
described as a young man wear-
ing a mask. dark pants and dark
shirt. For several hours, he was
believed in the building.
Fire Department trucks
raised ladders lo the roor of the
one-story building so police
could reach it.
He is believed to have fled
after forcing a woman employee
to open the store safe. Garcia
said he took "a large bag or
money."
The dead woman was round
still chained to a wall, police
said. An employee reporting for
work noticed her and called
police. officers said.
The wounded employee, iden-
tified as Flora Burks, was shot
in the stomach and thigh. Her
condition was regarded as
·serious, police said. Ambulance
attendants said she had "Jost a
lot of blood "
The robber apparently gained
entrance by lowering himself by
a rope after breaking a hole in
the roof The bwlding is on the
north side of town on Fourth
Avenue, the main commercial
street.
Newport Bay
Span Funded
The allocation of funds for a
new Pacific Coast Highway
bridge over Upper Newport Bay
has been approved by the stat.e
Transportation Commission.
The $3.6 million allocatton was
part of a $420 million package
recommended by CalTrans
Direetor Adriana Gianturco.
City officials in Newport
Beach said the construction
timetable for the bridge calls for
its completion by mid-1981 .
750 Deaths Listed
JOHANNESBURG, South
Africa (AP) -South African
troops who-~Zambia.
last week killed an estimated 600
to 750 guerrillas of the
Soul-b-We&t AfT'ica.. Peo.p}-e's.
Or~aniz.ation in retaliation for a~
S\\ A PO shelling that killed 10
South African troops and
wonnded nine, a Johannesburg
newspaper reported today.
'
ORANGE COAST s
DAILY PILOT
•t_ .. _
PrH °'" ,~ ~ WW
JI<•" c:-r .. , Vi< f Pre•ldenl •nd Gtl'Wf" .. Mlr..,, .,_., .......
Etll!er
flle-tilM .......
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TefepMM {T14) IQ.4321
Q eulf!M Actve,,llMg IO-M71
-.. -~ "•""-°"'<• 111.a10
,,-~ ... c-1o
4'MIOO
,.,...,_,~o..,...c ....... ~ ......
Mo.1220
c. ........ "" o..1-ceetl ,,,..1.,,.,. c-= ... -.wr.;. 11--:-:r. ...... , .. ,.,,•:;.,:;. ·:r~r=··~· ~~.:.:~ -: '""""''-~0"4 <Ian OH••r. N ICI •1 C..le llM•• c ....... ,. •• '"•'c.' ., .... ~~ =~r....·;; :~:.:.~ ••11111•••
• •
~1 u
°"" .................. NIXONS OPEN ESTATE TO COUNTY REPUBLICANS
Former P,.sldent •nd First Lady In E•rlter PoM
F.-...P-.AJ
NIXON RECEPTION. • •
that finance committee
members fell could pay the $250
per person ticket price to
support the Republican cause.
Guests met in Irvine for the
40 -minute bus ride to Casa
Pacifica. Guests from the south
county were bused to the party
from Concordia School in San
Clemente.
A 11 were greeted at the
Spanish-style home by mariachi
music. margaritas and Mexican
food from Nixon's favorite
restaurant, El Adobe in San
Juan Capistrano.
A bout half an hour after
guests were ushered into the
swimming poQl area and
gardens. the Nixons ,
accompanied by Wayne, strolled
in from the house.
The former president, trim
and tanned, was dressed in gray
slacks and a navy blue jacket.
Mrs. Nixon wore a pink. floor
length gown set off by a double
strand of pearls.
They were introduced by
Republican activist Victor
Andrews who assured the
Nixons they had the "love and
admiration of not only the
people here, but millions of
citizens in this great nation of
ours." Andrews' introduction
was punctuated by applause
E'ro• Page A I
PLANE •••
Outer Fights
For Program
GRAND TETON NATIONAL
PARK, Wyo. <AP) -President
Carter, determined to win the
<'ongressional fight over his em-
t,~ttled energy legislation. is
£ndh'g his vacation two days
t-ur\v and returning to
Washlngior1 on Wednesday.
White House press secretary
Jody Powell announced Sunday
that Carter would shave two
days from his two-week western
hoUday to work on "some very
crucial domestic matters that
are before Conjfress."
Heading lhe Usl is delicate
natural ga compromise letlaJa.
tion that is the centerpiece or
Carter's energy plan
. ·-..
NY-Yuit?
NEW.YORK <AP) -Former
President Nixon, who five
months ago proclaimed his love
or New York City, reportedly
plan& a relu.Fn-v,i6it. to ~ Bif
App_le.
Nixon Ii expec o
eulogy at a Sept. 13 memorial
service for Elmer Bobst, a
pharmaceutical executive,
philanthropist and Nixon backer
who died recently at age 93.
The magazine said the two
knew one another for 25 years
and grew so close that Nixon
viewed Bobst as "a father
llgure."
Nixon was in New York for the
first time in six years last April.
He lived ln the city between 1962
and 1968 -the years between
his unsuccesful bid to become
governor of California ·and his
election as president.
Terrorists Kill 3
MADRID, Spain <AP> -
Police say terrortata shot 'and
klUed three policemen In almost
simultaneous attacks today l'n
northern and western Spaln.
..
Pl••P.,..AJ
MAIL •••
econon:Ue problem.I and, if pro-
1oo1ed. could threaleo t.be Cutu.re
ol tbe ~ s.nte. ltMU. p,... ..... caner. vacatioa.ina
tD W)'Ollilii, toid ~porters be
bu beat in toueb wlth Labor
Secretary Ray Marshall about
tbe poltaJ dtapute, but would not
tom ment t\u'ther.
Tbe unlona bave maintained
tbat formal contract ne1otla·
t1on1 m\llt be reopened to avoid
a 1trlke, but Bolger today re.
pealed bil opposltlon to aucb a
move. Boller baa said the lssue
can be reeolved tlnub flet·
flndlnJ and arbltratfon and
doubted that a walkout would
lake place.
"I malled my telephone bill to-
day," be aald.
John Rogers, ·a spokesman)or
tbe Federal Mediation and <Jon-
clllatJon Service, described the
meetina by union leaders with
mediators as "exploratory
talks." The mediation service
said no formal contract talks
were scbeduled.
Bolger said, "There is a
peaceful, and I emphasize,
lawful way to settle this dispute,
and l sincerely hope that the
workers who have rejected the
negotiated contract will also re-
ject any call to rash and illegal
action," Bolger said.
AU three unions representing
the postal workers have rejected
a three-year contract tentatively
agreed upon July 21.
Rebe/,s Fig~
In Nicaragua
MANAGUA, Nicaragua <AP>
-Nicaraguans seeking the
ouster of President Anastasio
Somoza clashed with national
guardsmen in mafor towns
across the country as a general
strike gathered momentum and
reports circulated of rebellious
t.alk in the army.
National guard sources said
there have been open dis-
cussions of revolt broadcast
over guard radio stations. But
foreign diplomats said they
believe Somoza will be able to
retain control of the guard,
Nicaragua's 7,SOO·man army.
Officers of the guard are re-
ported upset over Somoza's
capitulation lo the 25 Sandinista
Liberation Front guerrillas who
seized the National Palace and
more than 1,000 hostages last
week and forced the president to
let them and 59 imprisoned San·
dinislas go to Panama.
Jury Resumes
~.
Deliberation
On Jet Suit
A jury that bas been asked lo
award 98 Orange Coast residents
at least $1.4 million in damages
for the alleged disruption of
their lives by jet aircraft based
at Orange County Airport, re·
sumed deliberations today.
The seven women and five
men took their seats behind
locked doors in Superior Court
Judge Walter E. Smith's
courtroom today after a three-
d a y weekend break that
followed two days of delibera-
tions
Lawyers for both sides expect
.a long deliberation. The jury is
being asked to return 54
separate verdicts, one for each
home allegedly affected by jet
noise in the Newport Beach and
Santa Ana Heights areas.
•
Board Boa. Botaad
Crane lifts board of directors table toward opening Cup-
per left) in the 8th floor of Downey Savings corporate
headquarters near South Coast Plaza in Costa Mesa.
Four-bWldred pound slab of oak has built in microphone,
telephone and tape recording facilities. not to mention a
digital clock.
Pope John Paul i
To Keep .Officials
VATICAN CITY <AP> -Pope
John Paul I demonstrated today
his dedication to the policies of
Pope Paul VI by continuing in
office the chief officials of the
Roman Catholic Church's cen-
tral administration appointed by
his predecessor.
The new pontiff reappointed
French Cardinal Jean Villot as
Secretary of State . the
equivalent of the Vatican's
,,.,.... Pflfle AJ
CUTBACK. •
around the endangered sewer
line.
-Reduction in the
homeowners ' watering pro-
uram. -A joint city-homeowner proj-
ect to correct drainage along
the bluffline through the tract.
Homeowners have contended
that the groundwater problem
existed when city ·councilmen
approved initial development
plans in the late 1960s and
therefore the cost of correcting
it should be borne by the city
and the Irvine Co .. the original
landowner.
Holstein Industries. developer
of The Bluffs. is seeking city
council approval for construe·
lion or two final projects of
seven units each' in the tract.
Action by city councilmen on
Holstein's request was delayed
while the Montgomery report
was corrected.
Councilmen are expected to
act on the development plans
tonight City starr members are
recommending a series of sub-
surface drains be included in the
project to take ground water out
of the area and dump in it Into
an existing storm drain.
prime minister, and the heads of
the nine Sacred Congregations,
the main departments of the
Vatican Curia.
Among the latter is Cardinal
John Wright of the United
States. who heads the Congrega.
tion for the Clergy and did not
participate in the election of
Pope John Paul Saturday
because he was recuperating·
from eye surgery in Boston.
In another affirmation of Pope
Paul's policy, the pope recon-
firmed Archbishop Agostino
Casaroli as Secretary of the
Council for Public Affairs, the
Vatican's foreign minister.
Trio Nabbed
In Newport
Home Entry
Three San Bernardino resi-
dents were arrested this
weekend by Newport Beach
police after they allegedly tried
to burglarize a Peninsula Point.
home.
The trio, two juveniles and
Robert Collins, 24, were taken
into custody by Officer Gary
Milius and Sgt. Darryl Youle at
18th Street and Bay A venue ~
they allegedly fled the scene of
the crime.
According to police reports,
Robert Davidson of 1540 Ocean
Blvd. awoke shortly after S a.m.
Saturday morning to find three"
people in his home.
He chased them out and
phoned police who stopped their
car. Officers alleged they found
a loaded 22·caliber handgun in
the car as well as four items al
legedly stol e n from tht:
Davidson home.
~
hawa1ian ...
44 feehion lalend, newport center 944-5070
>
COSTA MESA FIREMAN WATCHES OVER SMOLDERING RUINS OF PLANE, GARAGE
Garage and Old Cadillac Belf19 RHtored by Owner Shielded Costa Mesa Family
Heart Attack Kills
Actor Robert Shaw
,.,..,....,....
SUCCUMBS AT 51
Actor Robert Shaw
SWmonCops
Seek Driver
Of Death Car
Stanton police today are
seeking a hit and run driver who
allegedly struck and killed a
pedestrian early Sunday, police
reported. #
Mustafa Mohammad Musa,
27. of Hawaiian Gardens, was
pronounced dead on arrival at
Stanton Community Hospital at
2 : 13 a.m., police said.
He was struck by a car as he
walked along a curb on Beach
.Boulevard near Hopi Road, police
said. Officers said they have
impounded a car matching the
description of one witnesses
reported spotting al the scene
and are conducting tests on the
auto today.
NEW YORK <AP> -Robert
Shaw, the actor known for
portrayals of rugged adven-·
turers in such movies as "Jaws"
and "The Deep," died or an ap.
parent heart attack near his
home in Tourmakeady Island
near Dublin, his New York press
agent reported today.
The Sl-year-old actor. who
also wrote several books and
plays, was driving with his wtre
Virginia and l'f.1-year-old son
Thomas at about 5 p.m. Sunday
when he suffered the attack,
said publicist Myrna Post. He died at home, she said.
Born in Lancashire, England.
Shaw started his acting career
as a member of the Old Vic
drama company in the 1950s and
performed in numerous produc·
lions in England.
The brown-haired. blue-eyed
Shaw came to the attention of
the American movie-going
public as a villain In the James Bond movie. "From Russia
With Love," He went on to ap-
pear in such films as "Robin
a nd Marian," "The Sting" and
"Black Sunday," but found his
greatest acda~m as a fisherman
in the thrillers, "Jaws" and
''The Deep.''
Two films made before his
death . "Force Ten from
Navarone" and "Avalanche Ex·
press, .. have not been released.
ln addition, Shaw made a
name for himself as a writer.
His first book, "The Hiding
Place." was published in 1959. It
was about wartime Germany,
and recently was made into a
full -length motion picture. He
wrote four other novels.
Glass Booth." a docu-drama
about the trial of Nazi Adotr
Eichmann.
Shaw, whose first wife, ac-
tress Mary Ure, died several
years ago, is survived by his
wife and 10 children.
Sky Display
'Dazzling'
Fed Eases
Dollar
Support
WASHINGTON <AP l -Jn
another action to help support
the dollar. the Federal Reserve
Board took steps today to en-
courage borrowing of foreign.
held dollars by American banks.
About $500 billion in U.S.
dollars ar~ held overseas. They
are called "Eurodollars"
because they are outside the
control of U .S . banking
authorities.
The amount of foreign-held
doJlars has grown sharply in re-
cent years, in part because of
the U.S. trade deficit that sends
dollars abroad, and they have
frequently been used by
speculators to drive down the
overall value of the dollar.
To encourage use of the so-
called Eurodollars by American
· banks, the Federal Reserve
Board today removed the re-
quirement that U.S. banks must
maintain reserves equal to 4
percent of what they borrow
abroad.
··The effect or the reserve re-
duction is intended lo encourage
member banks lo substitute
Eurodollar borrowin~s for
domestic borrowings as a _source
or funds.·' the board said.
If the action has the intended
effect, it would mean some of
the roreign-held dollars would be
returned to this country for use
in domestic lending. This would
reduce the amount of dollars
held abroad. contributing to
overall strength or the American
currency.
The action is the third taken in
recent weeks by U.S. financial
authorities to help strengthen
the dollar on world money
markets.
Tustin Slwot
Victim, 24,
Said Critical
An unidentified 24-year-old
e6NOORD;-Ma&~P-}-man wu. reporte4 ln-critical
°"" ............ .., 0.., ....... ARROWS SHOW PATH OF PLANE ACROSS VICTORIA
Hole (foreground) Believed to be lnltlal Point of Impact
VI IA ~ ST • 0 ~ n ~ c( .g ~ ~ ~ a: ~ ..... ..\, ~ $ i ~
1 th ST
o.ity ............
CROSS INDICATES SrTE OF PLANE CRASH IN MESA
At the Comer of Federal Avenue and Victoria Street
3 Suspects Held
In Multiple Rape
A lengthy investigation into
the forcible gang rape of a
worn an. then four months
pregnant, has led to the jailing
of three suspects by Fountain
Valley police. officers
announced today.
Detective Pat Coleman said two were arrested a week ago
today and the third was taken
mto custody last Wednesday.
The woman, 21, who was
dragged off Magnolia Street into
a clump or bushes beside the San
Diego Freeway in early April by
three men, gave birth to her
baby last Tuesday.
Detectives said the full -term
infant arrived healthy despite
the traumatic sex attacks that
occurred.
Investigators identified the
s uspects a s Allen Craig
Pennington, 24, of 5505 Como
Ave .. Santa Ana, William Craig
Sands, 18, of 13612 Briarcliff St.,
Westminster . and Johnny Buster
McDaniel. 20, of 17614 Santa
Maria St., Fountain Valley.
Pe nnington and McDaniel
remain in Orange County Jatl
pending preliminary hearings.
while Sands was a juvenile at
the time he was allegedly
involved in the rape.
Detective Coleman said
authorities are cu rrently
deciding whether he will be tried as a juvenile or an adult.
The victim involved in the
April rape was walking to her
Westminster home after a trip to
the store when she was jumped
and dragged into the bushes
near the city border. police said.
Officers said witnesses noticed
-~~bat-at first
did not realize aJU'(>ne bad been
hit.
display of northern ligbts Uf up condition today after being shot
p a r t s of the Nort h ern in the bead while visiting a
.ffeoHspbere-Nl'tY today. ~-.:home-ia... Tuati&~~~ ~
meteorologist described them as said.
the most dazzling in more than a The man's name and address
from our
=~-~· -·--·-· ...
Marcos Chides U.S.
MANILA. Philippines <AP) -
President. Ferdinand E. Marcos,
in a veiled slap at the United
States, chided developed nations
today for using the human rights
issue as a cover for a "new
moral imperj_alism."
• • 1t1zen
decade. were being withheld pending
•·waves of light were just notification of relatives. police
shooting up as high as )'OU could said.
gee with bands of tight, green The sbootinf occurred at the
and pink, about 20 to 30 degrees home of Jack T. Johnson, Z7 ,
over the northern horiion," said 1114 Bonita St., police said.
Stuart Soroka of Environmental Johnson is being held by police
Research and _Technology. for questioning:...
pnsmg
Kennedy Says V.S. Heal,th Care Failure
BOSTON <AP> -Sen. Edward
M. Kennedy warned the nation's
governors today that soaring
health costs will produce a
cltizem' upriaing that will make
the tupayen' revolt pale in
comparison.
"The current non-system of
medical care is a failure." tht?
Massachusetts Oemocral told
the National Gove rnors' As ·
sociation'a annual convention.
that will pale the current con-
cern over taxes," Kennedy said
in remarks prepared for de-
livery.
Kennedy, a leading con-
rressional champion of national
health care, renewed his attack
on President Carter's health
propouls. which he has called
inadequate
or absence of major strikes. or
oU embargoes.
"But human rights are not
conditional." he said. "And a
commitment to a conditional
human rights is no commitment
at all."
Kennedy remind&! the gov-
ernors that the burden or provld·
ing health care for uninsured
citizens falls chiefly on state and local governments and said it Is
adding to their tax revolt prob·
le ms .
DAILY PILOT A3
Car Bomb
Fails to ·
Explode
A "well-constructed'. pipe
bomb boOked to a Capistrano ,
Beach woman's car 11nltion 1 failed to go off early Friday
because It waa "improperly
grounded," Orange County
Sbertfrs officials said early this
momlnf .
A sheriff 's lieutenant, who
would not identify the intended
bombing vlctlm .. because it
would give us problems ln our
invest11ation" said there is no
apparent motive for the at-
tempted bombing.
The intended victim was
described as single and in her
mid 20s.
The bomb was placed under
the seat of the woman's car, ac-
cording to sheriff's deputies. It
was attached by wires to the
car's ignition system.
"It was well constructed and
put together by someone/ who
knew what be was doing," said
an investigator.
The wom an's car. parked in
her driveway, would not start at
about 10 a.m. Friday, the in-
vestigator said. She cbeclced un-
der the hood and discovered
"additional wiring."
The investigator said t he
woman's brother disconnected
the device and called the
sheriff's department
Garden Grove
Girl Killed
In Boat Fall
TAFT <APl -A Garden
Grove girl was killed when she
fell off the bow of a boat and was
run over by the propeller on
Lake Webb near here, the Kem
County coroner's oUict>
reported.
Christina Allen, 13, of 11451
Bowles Ave .• was riding on the
bow as her uncle. Jim Ed Jones
of Garden Grove, drove toward
the dock Sunday. When he
slowed. she pitched forward m
front of the boat. authorities said. ~
Jones tried to put the motor in
reverse but mistakenly hit full
throt.Ue. running the boat's bow ont.o the dock. a deputy coroner,.,. said.
The propeUer sliced off one
side of the girl's head and
severed ber right arm.
authorities said.
Umbrella
Kilh Boy
PENSACOLA , Fla .
<AP) -A beach umbrella
hurled throu~ the air by
a wind gust impaled a 2·
yea.r-old boy and killed
him, police reported.
Christo~r Ryan Cam-
pion of Pensacola was hit
by the umbrella Sunday
afternoon on Johnson
Beach. the Escambia
County sheriff's office
said.
Investigators said part
of the umbrel~ drove
through the child's chest
and pierced his heart.
Then another gust or wind
pulled the umbrella out of
the boy's body.
"U left unchecked, t~t failure
will become a disaster -a dls-
3sler that will destroy federal
and state budgets, seriously in·
Jure ibe economy. cause count-)~ss human tragedies, and In my
Opinion. create a citizens' revolt
Calling health care a basic
human right, Kennedy said.
"Some who espoused that right
want to condition It -to condi·
lion it on many things over
which the health care system
has no control -the general
state o( the economy, the size of
the budret deficit, the presence
The governors' association ts
on record as recognizing the na·
tional health problem but has
tailed to agree on a course of ac ti on
44 fahk>n illand, newport center 644·5070
'
'I •
• 4
. ' .
~"· ' ~· . -'•• !.~' ..... ~ .. ···-
Pat Nixon Saluted
GOING IJACS osn. You mJPt auaeect U\1t \bert
were maQ1 ~.abta &&Dday •• PNlklttal and 111"1. Nillon opened tlteti SU Cln:Mllte tnltAt to beHftl the tol·
ftn or \be Uruted Republlcaa 'P'lDanee Committee or
Orao1e County. For me. UM hllb'lcbt wu lln. Nhcon.
For a .,.,-.oa wbo oal.J ,...tl,y autrered a major Ul-
neu. Pat Nutoo k>okod deUCldfully flt u abe l""ted mort
lbao 400 at DOOla de on \be IJ"OUDdl . .
S11 at the J>rea'4ent•1 aide, lhe amilod. shook
hands and chatted with t.be party
faithful as ~1 moved lhrou&h the re·
~plton line. Some carried Mr. Nixon'•
book. aMina an autocr apb.
ONE GENTLEMAN even hauled
out an wance·colored vintqe Nixon
bumper sticker in asking that bis
signature be~Uted lbereto.
It ~Ill's. Nixon stuck it out in
that reception line ror well ovtt one
hour. She was rdieved briefly by her Mn.. • ._
son-in-law, David Eisenhower, and went into the house.
But soon she was back wit~the guests again.
The visit to the historic San Clemente estate was
somewhat of a nostalgia trip for your correspondent, since
1 grew up in that region when San Clemente was really a
village and the Nixons' La Casa Pacifica was the Hamilton
H. Cotton Estate.
Back in those early years, my grandfaUier had given
Ham Cotton an iron bell on a standard, which the Cottons
had kept in the circular drive out at' the entrance to the
estate. My wife and I toured the drive area on lhe chance
that the old bell might still be there. We finally asked Mrs.
Nixon if she knew about it.
"OH MY," SHE REPLIED, laughing. "Listen, when
they left, they took everything with them." That seemed to
solve the mystery of the old family bell.
As we toured the grounds, I was pleased to see the Col·
tons' gazebo still standing out on the blufftops. I guess J
told my wife the gazebo story for the 99th time.
You see, Mr. Nixon isn't the first president to step up.
on the grounds of the old H. H. Cotton estate. Ham Cotton
was a very large Democrat and a confidant of Franklin
Delano Roosevelt.
LOCAL LEGEND AND WRE had it that upon oc·
casion, FDR would sneak into San Clemente via the
railroad and join Ham Colton in a few rounds of poker in
the gazebo. .
In truth. my wife sometimes seemed less than con·
vinced when I told that story. So when we met this de-
lightful lady from the San Clemente Chamber of Com-
merce. who repeated the tale for our benefit, it was most
satisfying. There's nothing like having one of your fish stories
verified.
SO, IN ALL, it was a delightful day and most gracious
of the Nixons to invite so many guests. It is true that some
or the GOP leadership openly fretted that somebody "from
the media" might somehow find their way into the event.
But I don't think they really needed to worry about
that.
t
·Klan Increases •
·Racist Rallies
JACXSON, Miu. (AP> -Racial tension ii almmertnc 1n three
MlululDDl townt, wllh the Ku Klux Klan holclJq ever more strident
ralllH lii' reaction to well-organised black boycotta of white
merchant..
Tbla weekend, 12 picket.I ln a boycoU·connect.ed march were at·
reated, lncludioi to'-r Roman
Catholic nuus. At a Klan 1ather· THE On1C.Elt8 were demot-
ln1, rour Klansmen stripped off ed and transferred to the fire de-
the l r hoods and revealed partment. They eventually re-
tbemaelvea 11 a bulinessman signed, but by that time de·
and three local police orticers. mands ror their ouster had
"J'JIEllE~ NO SVCll thing as
the New South," says Allred
"Skip" Robinson. a contractor
and veteran civil rights leader
who heads lbe United League of
Mississippi.
"There's more racism in Mis·
slsslppl in im than there was in
1962."
Indeed, the situation is
reminiscent of Mississippi's
racial troubles in the 1960s.
A BOYCO'IT OF white-owned
businesses in Tupelo and
Okolona, spearheaded by the
United League and punctuated
by weekly League marches and
occasional Klan counter-rallies,
has spawned arrests and tense
confrontations.
The latest arrests came in
Lexington, a town of 2,700 people
about 150 miles from Tupelo in
the central part of the state,
where other groups are leading
the boycott, also against wbite-
owned stores.
The protests, which began in
February, stem from the Tupelo
police department's refusal to
dismiss two captains held
responsible by a federal judge
for beating a black inmate.
57 MPH Limit
For Trailways
Lauded, Hit
WASHINGTON <AP> -
Trailways says it will limit the
highway speed of its buses to 57
mph, an action being both
praised and condemned on safe·
ty grounds.
0 . Wayne Strout, a vice presi·
dent of Trailways, said the com·
pany is planning to install gov-
ernors on its buses to limit their
speed.
IN ADDmON, the firm has
petitioned the National Highway
Trame Safety Administration to
require similar governors on all
commercial vehicles
coupled with broader economic
demaOO., and the boycott began.
Lexington's boycott, also by
blacks upset over alleged police
brutality and inautrlcient
minority hlrina. ls in its third
month.
On Saturday, pollce claimed
the marching pickets were
blocking ped estrians on the
sidewalks and charged 10 peo-
ple, including the oun.s, with dis·
orderly conduct. Two men were
cbareed with threatening an of·
ricer and assaultine an officer.
THE NUNS, MEMBEas of a
Franciscan order that bas done
social woTk in the black com·
munity and actively supports
the boycott, have been sharply
criticized by some residents.
The nuns said last week that
men parked in cars outside their
house had insulted them and
eggs had been thrown at their
car. The harassment prompted
a rare news conference by the
Rev. Joseph Brunini, bishop of
the Diocese of Jackson.
The K}an bas reacted to the
new black activity with in-
creased action or its own.
KLANSMEN HAVE not ap-
peared in Lexington. but in
Okolona Saturday. some three
dozen robed Klansmen watched
silently from behind a row of
helmeted police as about 300
blacks marched downtown to de-
mand more public and private
sector jobs .
Later than night . the
Klanssnen reassembled for a
rally about 20 miles away in
Tupelo, a city of 25,000 residents
whose bustnesses have been
boycotted for six months.
A bout 70 Klansmen were
joined at the rally by some 200
sympathizers.
THE GRAND TITAN of the
Tupelo chapter unmasked
himself to reveal he is local
businessman Bill Howard. who
had remained hooded at all pre·
vious public appearances and
used an assumed name.
NATION /WEATHER
.... ..,....... STRIKING FIAEM!N JOIN IN INDIANA RESCUE.
Root Collepaea et Movie Theeter; Three lntured
Strikers Aid Rescue
Attempt at Theater
ANDERSON. Ind. <APl -About 2S striking firefighters joined
volunteers and supervisory personnel in rescuing patrons from a
busy movie theater whose roof collapsed under heavy rain,
authorities said.
Three people were injured when the roof of the Riviera Theater
caved in Sunday night, police
said . More than 100 other
patrons. given only moments·
warning when water began
pouring into the building, rushed
' for the exits to safety.
Fire Chief Ed Ballinger said
most of the firemen "arnved on
the scene like t knew they would
and did assist all through the
operation.
"l 'M SURE THEY'D be there
again if we had another
emergency. buN;till it is not a
good situation."
Fireman Don Taylor broke off
a negotiating session with
Mayor Rot>ert L. Rock to join
rescue workers at the theater .
"l decided that the disaster
was more important than they
l city officials) were ," said
Taylor.
••1 GOT T HERE and there
were other firemen already
there who had it under control."
The two sides remained at an
impasse today. as the 144 mem-
bers of Firefighters Local 1262
asked surrounding fire depart·
ments to honor tbeir picket lines
and said they would no longer
answer emergency calls or fire
runs. The city administration
said it would refuse to return to
the bargaining table until the
firemen go back to work.
Between 100 and 150 people
were inside the theater. built
shortly after World War I, when
water began pouring through the
ceiling as a summer storm with
torrential rains passed through
the city. Ballinger said.
Phony Bomb Threat
Diverts United Jet
SEATTLE (AP ) -A phony bomb threat diverted a United
Airlines DC-8 to Canada with 152 passengers and a crew of seven
aboard, authorities said.
But the Teamsters union,
which represents drivers,
claims it is an unsafe idea.
"It is basically unsafe to
restrict driver ability to pass a
vehicle in an emergency situa-
tion," commented Teamster
spokesman Bernie Hamilton.
HOW TO USE THE FOOD
In Vancouver, British Columbia, a spokesman £or the Royal
Canadian Mounted Police said an unidentified woman was being
beld in connection with the incident and charges would be filed.
· "They said something about her being upset about her
husband." said Naorrli Potach, a passenger from Boston.
United Flight 179 from Newark, N.J., and Denver, was ap·
proaching Seattle·Tacoma International Airport shortly before 11
p.m . PDT Sunday when a stewardess found a note that said the
plane would be blown up unless it were flown to Vancouver, airline
spokesman Ron Carlson reported.
After the plane landed, it was surrounded by police on the
runway while passengers left the craft and boarded buses. Wit·
nesses said the woman was caught when she tried lo run away.
Authorities said a search by the RCMP uncovered no bomb.
and the remruning 151 passengers and the flight crew then took orr
for Seattle. where they were greeted by about 150 cheering and ap-
plauding friends, relatives and onlookers early today. Crew mem-
bers were hustled away before they could be questioned by waiting
reporters.
•
BUT STROUT CITED "a
whole file of letters" from state
and local police departments
praising the plan. And he added
that the 57 mph limit would al-
1 ow a margin for passing
vehicles traveling below the na-
tion's 55 mph limit.
Joan Claybrook, ad -
ministrator of the highway traf-
fic agency, has told Strout her
agency is considering a require·
me nt for governors on com-
mercial vehicles.
Strout said the driver accept-
a n ce of the governors has
generally been good in the com-
pany's tests.
Rains Mainl m Plains
. N.eJ-D.~ryrJ.~1e~ratures T~ ~lf!JP~P~P. __ _
I
-----· ----------· -----~
T~~·••re•
Albu"'QIHI
Amarillo
Alltnte
B•lllmor•
e1rmtnonern
&Oise
Benton
llrowns•lllt
8ulfelo
Clllc-
Cu><llHWll
C.IUWio4
Otl Ft. Wtll
Denver
o.trott
H-'ulu
Hovston
Je<ln'vttte
Ken's City
UIS Vt911$
llltle Rock
loutsvltte
Mempflls
Mltml
Mllweullec
NIP"·SI. P. NUllVlllt
NtwOrle-
NtwYOrk
Olr.te. City
Om•ll•
HI Le '"'' " ~ ,7 14
.. 70 .ll IS 7l ... •> 70 71 jC)
72 60
.. 7S
11 u .02
n 11 01
• 70 .OI --'* lJ ti IS '° SJ .. " ... .. 14
'° 7• ., 13 ., 1•
10) ..
'7 '7 .a .., 7J .02 .., 1• •s eo 77 10 .IS
77 ., ·°' .., 72
" n ...
IO 11 .01
tot 70 .01
14 ..,
w, ..... .,.....,, h ..... .
Monooy rno.ov 11 "°" oo t\Ot ...,,.
yOu• -..., 5 :io 0"' cell t>e!ore 1 pm ano VOlJ! cocw "'" t>e .,.,,..,..,
S.tl>'O<t• -s.-... " ~ 00 ~
r«-e1wfl '°" ~ ~Y' Q '"'·""' btl<>n• 11 • m -~" "°"' ...,. Cle 0.•1¥91.-d
(
OfleMO .. 14
""""'""'• a n 2.a. "-"I• '°" n Plt1:1tMH'9!1 13 ..
P'llend, Ore. 11 S7
R-... ol.J
St. louls tt 14 .14
st. P. Tem1111 •• n
Sllll Uke ll S3
Slln 01990 71 ..
Slln Fren " S7 Setlllt IJ ff
Tuitt t01 70 .43
Wetlllnoton 17 I• »•
(At.I "°"Hf A 8eUrsflefO .. 67 ,,._ " .,
Unc:t\ttr U 51
N-IK 10S 7• 0..1-,. ,.
!llG81utf ....
'-'··-"-• ff a.nu~. 11 " TlltnMI 102 11 .. "'"' " ... •• _.... 71 .,
lllSlltP .., ,, ••rttie 10) .. c..t~lln• 16 .o •I IOI .. Ut ., .,
LAflt .. Kll ... U
..
Newl)0<18Ncl\ 74 6S
Ofthlrlo '° 60
Pelm S4H'lnos 100 •7
S.n llemenllno •4 "
S.nJ• " ~ 11.S. s ..... ,,,
5cettertd 111ower1 end tllun· oerslorm1 OCCllff'9CI Hrly IOCS.y from
the centrel lltlf of Ille Atlantic Cotst
ecrou the -1'*"1 ~en of
'"' Pltln&, H ..,.fl •• t1ono '"' -•tern •net CA!'trel Gulf CO.SI. A few ~ •Ito tell tlonQ ti-..
P11<tfk C:O.n In tllt Honflwesl
P•nty cloudy lllln cantlnueo to
OOmtntlt Int-PG<11Gf11 of much ot
'"' SovtllHit lllCI New t!not•no. " -11 es trom tM P~lfk Coelt to the
Y()(Jr
Dally Pilot can be
R.cyci.<1
0...,,. °"""co.to .,..-•Oitrd"f--.,c-,,. ..
!>~ ~9'11
Rockies.
Temperatures dipped shtrply
tllrouol! portions of Ntw Enol•nO. but
It wes un-sonebly warm owr much
of the nation.
Eerly mornl119 tempereluru eround II-.. "-lion rtnQed from 33 ti
Houllon, Mtlne to tM In F0<I won11
•nclW.co, Tens.
CaUtonefa
Felr MY' -cool niQlll ere tn
store 10r Sout..,,, c.llfomlens, '"' Wttlller Strvkt Pl'eclktl ~~-.c~wm
.... f<M'-td ..., mo<• of .... -
dVrlnlt-tfie-lltl!t f9w ~ llCCCH ding
HIOfll GUl'lllQ "'8 dty Wiit rtnot
from Ille -IOs In Los Anott•l
to arOlllld IOS In the oewrt -tl>t
hlofl 10t In tlle rnount.ln trHS.
c .... a1 lt'eatller
Petchy Hf'IY ~nlnO low clCMid1, OlhtrWIM fair~ Tuesdey.
Light verlebte win•" nlollt '"d
morn•no t>ours. HIQM Tut'ldtY from
10s •t llHdWI to IOs lnlenct. CoHltl temperatures will renoe
between 63 •nO '2. tnlend teme>erelllf9' wllt reno-btl_., u
encl 11. Tl>t ..,.,., t-r•turt will .,. ...
s -.Mooa,Tlcle•
MONDAY
S.cono •-11 S6 p,m 7 ) S.Cond 111911 7 01 p m. s J
TUllSOAY
Flrll •-1 04 • m 0 4
Fl"l lllQll I l3 e.m. 4 I
Seconct low 1.J1p m. tJ Second hlQll 1 .41 pm ) J
S..n rltH6;2l•.m ,MIS 7·U pm >
M4IOn rl-t .OS e.m .. stt1 4 Up m
S•rlReporl
Hwt111"9!0n 8H(I\ W-I to J
f ... Wiii\ -1 twtll GonditltM 9fed ~ 8Mct! Wtw\ I I• 1 ffft
•Ill! \Out""'"t twetl Co~lllont
""'""
TO SAVE MONEY.
-.1 4
Ualng the Dally Pflot food MCdon
wlHly, you c•n aave 15 to 110 on
your weetcty grocery blll. And, th•t's
• conaen•tlv• eatfmltte.
STUDY THE ADS. The D.U, Piiot
Wedneeday food Metlon 18 fuU of
aupef'IMfket end food eda which
fHluf9. every WHk. epec:I ... and °"'., .............. a prKtlce of
ec:Feening tMM lld• for t.Mbe91 ct.
al1. Keep In mind ttt.t atora which
are ..... lo put their prtcea In writ-
ing .,. moet l kety to keep their
pleclte to help you aave fMMY·
CLIP THE COUPONS. Cllp and aave
"centa off" coupons. They may
.. ,,. you only a dime "9re and a
nlcket tMre, but th• 1a¥tnge lldd up
qulcldy to dollars Helt time you
shop.
USE THE RECIPES. All kinda of ex-
citing recipe• Me preMnted In the
D•lly Plot foodMCtlon.Frotn cltHM
1110u'"" to .iuffwd ...,.-,.......a •
from diet deuerta to puff peetry.
You'H find many lntef9atlng •nd
..:--·---\10nl:Wf8.~na~~-~119111f==ti=~~i
•
menu.
BUY IN 8EA90N. In m any lnmnctts
the red.Pe• •r• keyed to thoae
food1 wNch are In Huon. Thie
mHU they wtll be In plentttul IUPI>'
ly •nd pttced low. .
PLAN AHEAD. Pfan for at lealt a
weak ahaed, •nd check the 1up-
----olfte-1f0t;r hnt-on tsa"d blhlrw
............ ~rwtvmlrtllllcan.bil
KEEP UP-TIM>ATE. World, netlonal
•ftd lblte .,,..... often can Impact
food pttcea. It may be the .. ether
In K•nea, 1hfpplng atrtne In New
York or polttec.I upheaval In a
foreign land "'*" la • key auppler
of aauple -ancan~hlghef'
prlcH hare along the Orange
Coaet. For COfftPl9'• ,. ... of tood
trends, your community •nd the
wol1d, Nly on the
DAILY PILOT
642-4321
..
.... ..,,. .... _ _.., . .,,,.. -,,--... --
Mondlly.Augutt 28. 197& • DAILY PILOT .45
WhO 's the Big Spender?
BrO~ You nger Ad Attacl'8 Cost the Sime
...
SACllAM CAPJ -00¥.
Edmund Brown Jr. and At·
tonNY Oeaeral Ev l.le Y--r
.,. •peindlnl ..... di to ti')'
I to ~ voters that UM au.-
la a bll .........
. TM ~raUc '°""'°"Pd s • b11 ReJ*bllcan cba»-ltf ban bOlh a.a.thed lateilU-.. eollly
Ind ~ llnsJlar rMio ad·
• nftlilnl cemDalea. ' . J.,.r, BfoOWa took of·
Oc:-t. pa emeel IDlrnG:IU
UK"Y'eded t .. fat .. the
coat of Uvtnt. •• Ute Youa1 r
commttd!1' a.y.
•• ILLS YOUNGEa tias a
loaa TeCOl'd -• toaa and conslt· tent rftOr'd ol bla pendlftl, at a
Um• wben C.liromiaaa want
less 1ovwnmenl 1pendlq, not
more.·· tht Brown commerdala
say.
"Jerry Browo'a poUcy ol C*et·
t.uat1on led lO t.be bqe budaet
aurphas,'' another Youncer radio
commerdal uya. "Now. wbeo
h •• nmniDC fOf' re-election. be
clahsH to for a tax cut. Who'•
:Jerry BroWn lrjinf lO kid."
•'Al attorney J•neral.
Younaer ftUtly \ripl hl1 olflc.
bud,Ctt, even lboulh the hlabty
respected le1l1latl9t analyst aaam and •aaln dlaputtd the
need for add.lUonal 1pendlnt.''
the Brown commerclala cou.oter.
TBE M DIO COll•Ea CIAl.S wlll be followed by a fall
tele.Uloa campalp that eould
coat up to t1 million on each
1lde.
OveraJJ. the Younser cam·
pal1n hopes to raJte S4 million
for the eampalp, and Brown S3
million, c1mpal1n 1pokeamen
said.
Both radio campal1n1 focus
almost n:clusJveJy on charaes
tl\at the other caodldate la a bil
1pender. 1be Y"OUnger ads also
accuae Brown of 1wftchln1 aides
oo Propolltlon u , tbe tax cut in·
itlatJve. •nd the Brown com·
mercialt raise such lasues as
taxpayer-financed llmousines,
Gay Vietory
Cop Team Given Beating
SAN FRANCISCO (A P > It was the day the gays gave the
cops a beating.
With a little help from some "straight" batters and fielders,
the predominantly gay Oil Can Harry's softball team trounced
San Francisco's police team 17-0 Sunday. •
Spurred by eight pom-pon guys in trim white shorts and
brown shirts, the Oilers bashed out 18 hits and humiliated the
city's finest with a mixture or pomp and parody.
"I DON'T KNOW I F I SHOULD GO to confession or get a
drink," groaned police lertfielder Greg Cloney. "They complete·
ly outclassed us."
The Oilers, who are headed for the Gay World Series in New
York in a week, are about to face their worst problem and the
team 's first encounter with discrimination.
SPONSORS OF THE TOURNA MENT have ruled that only
two team starters and four roster members can be straight or
heterosexual. The others must be homosexuals. '
But the Oilers. who have eight straight teammates, argue
that banning the extra straights is tantamount to admitting that
they are better players than gays.
"I'm straight myself, but I like the guys as much as J like
the straights," says Oiler hitting star George Hill.
~ ~
Gamblers' Wallets
Emptied by Gunmen
CROCKE'IT (AP> -Thirteen would-be gamblers Jost about $2,000
just before they reached the casinos when two passengers on their
Reno-bound bus pulled guns and demanded they empty their wallets.
Investigators said the gunmen fired s hots a~ve the passengers'
heads and pistol-whipped three male riders before dashing off with
their lool in the incident Satur·
day night. The gunmen are still
being sought.
THE MEN WER E AMONG
passengers who boarded the
"ga m bier's special" Trail ways
bus in Richmond, a San Fran-
cisco suburb, police said. A few
minutes later, they forced the
driver to pull over near a
freeway exit on Interstate 80,
where they robbed the driver
and all 13 passengers on board
of cash and charge cards, ac·
cording to police.
·The pair then apparently
j umped into a car driven by an
accomplice, police said, but lhat
s peeding vehicle missed a turn
on a nearby side road and
flipped into a ravine.
WHEN A WOMAN motorist
stopped to help, the crooks tried
to.force her to drive them away.
When she escaped with her 3·
year-old child, they drove off in
her 1978 Cbevette, abandoning it
about three miles later, police
said.
Contra Costa County Sheriff's
Lt. H. E. Van Orden said lhe
three injured bus passengers
were treated at local hospitals
and released . one with eight
stitches in his head.
Nixon Backs Cuts
To Curb Inflation
By Tbe Assoelated Preu
Former President Nixon says an across-the-board cutback in
_ -::--. ·-fedenthpending L!I "thc.-one me~·· th.at we'91d e1nt.inffa\ion:
"Agriculture and all the oldline agencies are overstaffed. The
whole government is overstaffed, including Congress. We've got to
grasp that nettle," the former president was quoted in Sunday's
~ Jose Mercury-News as telling a.. report.er in an interview at
San Clemente last week.
NIXON SAID THE DEPARTMENT OF Defense could make a
10 percent reduction in civilian employees.
Nixon, who resigned from office four years ago, reiterated that
b5 l>lan& include "ootbina in the .political -area st .au·• and denioo
re.ports be plans to visll Europe and China.
future oflfte rree world a11d western ctvtllntion, and in lhat I in·
elude Japan."
"THE CX>MMUNISTS LOOK FORW A.RD for a century, but we
Americans have no sense of history. We think ln terms of about five years," Nixon saJd. "So what I want to do ls take them
<readers) onto the mountain and look down the road to tbe end of
the century. "
"i want to llve In the next century." be mused. "I'll only be 87
yeart old. I have a fairly long Wetime on my mother's slde. My
grandmother lived to be 94. My great-grandmother lived to be 96."
,._, • A29 JI Hlliltlf crul• 1hfp ''C.Ullne Holld9V"
....,. 9:00 am deity ftom the lllboa hwtllon *\d
....... A.-on at 4:JO P"'• RCMlftd Ttlp. ••
111.00. Un«* 12 .. AIO. R~lont
• tnfanMtloft: Cn.t> 17M2'5.
•
kltct\fns and ahowera used by
Youn1'er.
ABN I E STEINB E R G,
Youn1er'1 media con.aultant,
aald the Youncer eampal1n
"took a m.ior 1•1J'lble. We put
all out' e1a In one basket " by
focusing exclusively on Brown ••
a bl&apender.
He aa d the radio commercials
were intended to "cefieet on
Brown's cred1blUty, or lack ot
lt ...
Gray Davis. Brown's cam·
palm manager, said the gov·
ernor's radio commercials
"respond to the fact that Evelle
Younger bas not spent one dime
to publlclie bis public record
over the past 30 years:
.. HE IS A BLANK SHEET to
most voters. Since he won't
publish his record, it falls to us
to publish relevant portions or
his record."
Asked how a commercial on
showers in Younger's state of·
fices was relevant to the cam·
paign, Davis replied th at "un·
Jess a candidate sets an example
or personal frugality. he . . .
lacks the political and moral
leverage necessary to resist un·
warranted government growth."
Oaeers for Equality
In celebration of the 58th anniversary of
women's ri~ht to vote was a fund-raising
dinner at Hugh Hefner's Playboy mansion
in Los Angeles. Cheering for their support
of NOW-ERA are. left to right. Gloria
Allred. Los Angeles chapter coordinator;
Christie Hefner. vice president of Playboy
Enterprises, Inc., and actresses Esther
Rolle, Angel Thompkins and Valerie
Harper.
Steinberg said attorney
general's radio advertising,
which started July 18, will have
cost "about $200,000" through
Labor Day. when the series is
scheduled to end.
Rector Slain by Robber
BERKELEY <AP> -The Rev. George Fabian
Tillman, 63, rector at St. Mark's Episcopal Church Senate Leader A ••afled
BY LABOR DAY , which tradi·
tionally is the start of general
election campaigns, Steinberg
said Younizer's six radio com-
mercials will have been aired
about 5,000 times over 40
differe nt radio s tations
statewide.
in Berkeley, and known for bis work with mis· FRESNO <AP>-The National Women's
sionaries. was shot and killed by a robber on a Political Caucus or California bas unanimously rec-
Berkeley street. om mended tbal state Sen. David Roberti be
Police said Tillman and his wife. Fran~. replaced as Senate majority leader because of his
were getting out of their car in lhe driveway of a role in restricting Medi-Cal abortion funding for friend's house at about 7:30 p.m. Saturday when a poor women.
man approached and demanded money. In a resolution approved by all 191 voting del-
The Titlmans s aid eg_ates at the caucus's annual conventidn. the Davis said Brown's radio com·
mercials, which started a round
July 30, will also conclude
around Labor Day.
they had none. Police("'" ________ ) Democratic Legislative Caucus was asked to
said Tillman was shot a s STATE replace the Los Angeles Democrat with someone
his wife rushed towards _ more sensitive to women's issues, particularly the home to seek help. abortion. By then. Brown will have
spent about $200.000 to $210,000
on five radio commercials -
four attacking Younger, and one
aired on black stations in which
the Rev. Martin Luther King Sr.
praises Brown's record of ap·
pointing blacks to state offices.
STEINBERG SAID after the
series or Younger radio com·
mercials is completed, a series
of television commercials is
planned, starting sometime in
September, to run continuously
until the Nov. 7 election.
He said the television com·
mercials would abandon the at·
tacking stance or the radio com·
mercials, but instead "wiH start
out affirmative and positive"
e mphasizing the "positive
values" of Younger as governor.
rather than the negative
criticism of Brown as governor.
Davis said it "would be pre·
mature" to discuss the Brown
campaign's television com·
mercials.
Brown Does
Turnabout for
Fund Raising
SOUTHAMPTON, N.Y. <AP>
California Gov. Jerry Brown
came East to campaign at an
elegant Long Island estate, ex·
plaining he was acting "in self
defense" because candidates
from all over the country come
to California.
The $1()().a.couple fund-raiser
Sunday was attended by about
200 people, including singer·
composer Paul Simon, actress
Gilda Radner of "Saturday
Night Live," television commen·
tator and author Shana Alex-
ander and local resident Lee
Radziwill, sister of Jacqueline
Onassis.
Slqfdf1'n" Drow11•
TAIT <AP> -A skydiver from Van .Nuys
landed in the Callfomla Aqueduct and drowned.
Kern C<1Unty sheriff's office reported.
Michael James Tulysewski. 33, jumped from
12,500 feet over a skydiving drop zone near here
Sunday. but his main chute failed to open, wit·
nesses said.
I
OCC to Register,
Starting Sept. 6
Open registration will begin Sept. 6 for fall
semester classes at Orange Coast College, Costa
Mesa.
Classes begin Sept. 11 and registration con·
tinues through Sept. 22. The admissions office is open Mondays
through Thursday from 8:30 a.m. to 7:45 p.m., and
on Fridays from 8:30 to 2:15 p.m. Persons may
drop by at any time during those hours and re·
gister ror classes.
Buy this one.
.......... .-=_
AT THE EVENT, arranged by
Manhattan Borough President Andt'ew-Sl~&-lfeUl:-oti~~ffe= :: -: , ..
·~•fr' Pe•• Ba11 Barked
SACRAMENTO <AP) -A bill making it il·
legal in most instances to keep lions, tigers and
other big cats as ~ts has passed the state Senate
by a 22 to 5 vote.
The upper house approved a bill that, with
some exceptions. would make it illegal to keep big
cats that had not been obtained before Jan. 1. 1979.
~ ralaoe Arrord Near?
SACRAMENTO <AP> -U.S. Sen. Alan
Cranston says California and Nevada have almost
concluded a compromise agreement on preserving
Lake Tahoe.
Cranston. a California Democrat. was quoted
in a SWlday story by The Sacramento Union's
Washington bureau.
NEW FA LL HAIR FASHIONS
by The Creative Staff at ...
LUZZETT A Bernard
240 Newport Center Dr .. Suite 200
NEWPORT SEA~23
Get this one free.
-· I
lawn atthehomeofStein's father, p
Jerry Finklestein, a local I
Democratic figure and publisher
oftheNewYorkLawJournal.~ I
Brown. who wa~-en route to
the Na lion al Gover nors Con· I
rerence in Boston, insisted, "I'm
not running for president. No, I
no." 2 MALIBU CHICKEN WNCHES 1M
I
I
I
lfg-8A(I) that in uwmltra11.i"'t -ilh;i:-"''lln-tS=--::-
his tor ic diCCicult moment~ . ,, . ..
difficult to be president ... I'm
glad l'm not in that job right I
now."
Brown noted that "candidates
from t he other 49 states all come
to Beverly Hills or San Fran·
cisco looking for funds for their
campaigns . New York
Democratic Sen. Pat Moynihan
was out there recently. And a lot
or former New Yorkers DOW live
ln California."
tndude.--tad:bcR~~~~-
and ~
,
• -• ··~-'II' ... --r. • .. --......... , .... •
ara"v•Coa•• o ,,v P11a1 Editorial . Page
-------------------------------------------
Monday, August 21. 197&
Robert N. Weed /PubllShef Thom•~ Keevil IEdOOt
Barbar• Krelbl(h /Edltorlal Pt<.iit Ednor
Brown fty_erDOws
:With Spirit of l _3
Gov. Brown, wh0-1e ent.hus um tor .-bat be c1Ut the
.. spirit ot 13'' now seerm to know no boundl.•arabbed
Umelli.ht qain tut ~ by end·rwmlnl the 1We
1tslature and um. an ttecutlve order ror voluntary
nding cuts by it.ate C!epart.,rnmU.
Tbls, h explained, wa1 to make up for the ~1lslature's failure to two propcJled 1pend!n1 Umlt
astnS. One by Republican Sen. George Deukmejlan
s unk by the Democrat.I and 1 rival OemocraUc easure bocked by Brown also fell by the ways,de.
So the a<>vemor fl.red off a letter to department headl
truct.ing th~m to li.m1t lhelr upcomJna budaeta to the
me rate o! incre e as the growth in perso.naf1ncome of •II Calllomians.
That growth has aver ed 9.19 percent over the past
years, while lhe average increase in atate budleta bas
n 12.~ percent.
The Jovernor added that meeUnf the desired
spending hmit wouJd take a "heroic effort. '
Frustratt.-d Sen. Oeukmejlan called the maneuver
"more re-eleetion cam~a1gn rhetoric."
While the horrendous state surplus indicates the
governor is not exactly a generous spender, we'd have to
agree that this gesture, lacking even the clout of
legislative action, much less the impact of the
constitutional amendment sought by Deukmejian, at
least border., on campaign chatter.
:Rightful Tax Breaks
The plight of older citizens who have substantial
equity in their homes but have proble ms keeping up with
taxes and inflated living expenses is receiving some
well -deserved a ttention from legislators.
One solution. which seems likely 'to win favorable
votes at both the state a nd federal level, would give
homeowners a once-in-a-lifetime exemption from capital
gains tax on profit of up to $100,000 from selling a
personal residence.
This would be especially be neficial to older
homeowners who t hen would be able to move to more
suitable smaller quarters without handing much of the
profit on their home sale over to the tax collector. At
present the capital gains tax can be escaped onJy if the
profit goc:, toward the purchase of a more expensive
home.
' An equally interesting proposal reported to be
gaining support in Congress is the so-called reverse
annuity mortgage c RAM ).
This a llows per:,ons beyond the age of 65 to draw the
~q uit y out o f their homes in tax-free monthly
insta llments.
A homeowner. for example. could obtain a 10-year.
$32.000 loan. representing all or part of his existing
~uity. at 9 percent interest. and receive it at the rate of
65 a month, tax free, since the money is technically a
an.
When the loan is repaid -on death of the borrower
•r earlier sale or refinancing of the home -the $12,000
paid in interest could be claimed as an income tax
,deduction.
Two savings a nd loan associations in the East
already are offering RAM loans. With congressional
.approval, federal savings and loan associations also will
be able to make them. 1 T his would be a nother valid way to enable pe rsons to
en.Joy the fruits of a lifetime investment in a home when
they really have need of the money.
Two's Too l\fany
Congress has a pproved a constitutional amendment
that would give residents of the District of Columbia full
voting representation in Congress and the drive is on to
,put Calif omia at the head of the list of 38 s lates that must
ratify the move.
While on the surface it may seem unfortunate that
'the 700.000 residents of the federal enclave lack a voice in
Congress. the idea of a uthorizing two senators -the
sam e number as any state in the union -to a city the
size of Washington seems a bit far.fetched.
The fact that the approval finally made its way
through a Democratic Congress in the final months of an
<.'lect ion year doubtless is significant. The district is
heavily Democratic. But its residents also are 70 percent
black and. insiders suggest, this may have generated
some votes from Republicans who a r e hoping to
capture more of the black vote in the next presidential
elections.
It mcty seem unfair that district residents lack
congressional voting power. but the fact of the m atter is
that Washingtonians have more immediate contact with
Congress and the res t of the federal government than
i:esid.e.nts_ oLany_.Jlt.he1: .. .eity irUhe country and definitel
are not lacking in influence. .... -
If they are to be given a voice. something less than
the two senators to which even the most populous stales
are limited, would be much more in order.
• Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Dally Pilot.
Other views expressed on this page are those or their authors and
artists Reader comment is invited. Address The Dally Pilot, P.O
Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone(714) S.2-4321 .
BoydfLoVJ
ByL. M.BOYO
Some writers of fiery love
tellers type said epistles in
the ribbonless stencil posl·
Dear
Gloon1y
Gus
t wonder if Ch ief
Justice Rose Bird has
ner been clo<1e<S In an
&.lae v a t o r w I l h a
mlniac?
M.B.
l
tion on blank s~ts backed
by reversed carbon paper.
The typed words then appear
backwards on the hindslde of
the bond. They're illegible
unless held up to the light to
be read through the paper.
Not as tricky as a code or in·
visible ink. But It serves to
sc reen th ose amor o us
passages from casual glanc·
ers. Years aeo· I spotted
such a note on my sister's
dressing table. so held It up
to a win<Sow pane. It read:
.. Pretty nosy. aren 'l you, kid')"
Thr old Romans conquered
a lot or territory all right
But not nearly so much as
did tM old Iroquois. Those
American tndlans took con·
trol or lend from Hudson Bay
to North Carolina, rrom Con·
neotlcut~ Mtss\sslppl.
Jaek Anderson
Pork Barrel Promotion Plan
WASHIN<rrON -For ,.an.
tbe Aml1 SDlloeen have'*" balldlns wa1erwa1a. dam• ud otMr Pit ~~ Pl"OJeda dear \o the tiearh of con·
INHmen. But now tbe eapr beaver EnatnMn have diPl>ed Into the fecltral ~ ban-el -for about $10 mllllon to promote
lbem1elws.
Thi• amount was slyly 1et
uld• for the coutructlcm or
11 vlslto.-
c eater 1 tbrouibout
the country IO
tbat t.be Corpe
could butter
up the tax·
payln•
public. Tb• autboruation
and money
for the tourist centers were concealed from
key congressional committees
by aome bureaucratic legerde·
main. ''It was sneaky," said a
congressional aide. ''The coo·
gressmen here like to know
about these things.·'
PREVIOUSLY, the Corps bad
operated information centers in
various projects on a modest
scale. 1be project engineer's of·
flee . usually offered basic in·
formation and material to vis·
itors. But Lt. Gen. J .W. Morris,
who became chief engineer or
the Corps two years ago, came up with a more grandiose
propaganda scheme.
He instructed division heads to
set up a tub-thumping operation
to lie the basically civilian pork
barrel projects .. to the Army
and the national defense."
Morris' subordinates quickly
responded with blueprints for
the 11 new information center
buildings. They were approved
by their bosses in Washington.
but still required congressional
approval.
The Engineer Corps wangled
this by submitting the ap·
propriations request in the fui.se
of operation and maintenance
expenses, which congressional
aides complain was a "sneaky
play." One-line, unexplained
items, intended for the centers,
were blanketed in with general
project expenditures.
THREE OF the centers have
already been built, yet have
Earl Waters
never been aeecmcaJly funded
by Coapea. COrpl officials are
va111e about ldentifJiDI pnclJe.
11 wbtch J)Oeket the money came
h'om.
One of the most red-faced and irau members of ConllJ'eSS over
lbe le«falatlve dupery ls Rep.
Tom Bevlll, chairman of a
House Public Works subcommlt·
tee whlch oversees the
Englneels. The Alabama
Democrat had never beard of
the expensive s elf
ag(randizement Pl'Of'ram until we inquired at bia ofltce.
He then demanded and got
from the Corps a sheepish ad·
minion that the centers were
beina built. One of BevUl's assi.s·
tanta aaid t.be Congressman was
incensed because "be likes to
fu&.1c
E11ff.0YttS
know about <esc lhlJlp. ••
A spokesman for the Corpe.
cont.acted by our reporter Peter
Grant, blustered tf\at simple
ovenllht was to bJanie for k~
ing the congresaional commit-
tees in the dark. "ln retroepect.
maybe we should have told
them." he awkwardly con·
ceded ... Sometimes you're
smarter alt.er these thiQ8s than
before."
WELFARE PARAOISE -The once-happy South Sea
islands of the Pacific are fast
becoming Paradise Lost. ff.
bomb tests contaminated such
atolls as Bikini and The Mar·
quesas. TahiU bas become a. Jet
tourist s top. Now placid
American Samoa. where Robert
'' I think we're trying to ripe~I c1 \4w of physics here."
Louis S&evensoo spent bia tut
peaceful years. la ln dancer ol
being smothered in a aecurit.y
btantet ol fOl'elOl aid from lbe
United Staie.. ·. The small American protec·
torate holds a total populaUoo of
about 30.600 natives. We are pres.
enlly pow1n& in $30 million· &
year ln assistance funds. This
totals out to an estimated $1.000
annually compared to the S300
average i.ncome or the Ulhabi·
tants of nearby independent
W~stem Samoa. U.S. aid pro·
vides 60 percent of Samoa ·s
grosa income.
Some of the specific programs
financed by Washington sh,Qw
t!>at the protectorate is an danger of becoming a welti.re
st.ate, with the Samoans ~m·
lng addicted to unrequested gov·
ernment services. For instance.
with the compliments of UnCle
Sam. elderly Samoans ~ive
free lunches regardless of n~.
An observer back from a recent
trip to the islands reported that
.high local omc1als. including
judges. stand in line to receive
the lunch handouts.
THE ELDERLY also are able
to be flown at government ex
pense from island to island for
health care and other free social
services .. Compounding the prob-
lem is the fact thal natives
from independent Samoa are in·
Creasingly coming to American
Samoa to get a share of the
latgesse.
Tbe' Interior Department's or.
fice of Territorial Affairs is
aware of the Interlopers, but a
spokesman said Jittle can be
done about it because the illegal
recipients look the same as the
American Samoans.
The pattern In Micronesia,
where the people recently voted
to place themselves under U.S.
aegis, is depressingly similar. A
veteran U.S. administrator
there comments: .. We 've
smothered them. and it will take
them a long lime to come out
from under this blanket.··
Meanwhile. a number of in·
habitants of the overprotective
U.S. regime are becoming in·
creasingly resentful because
their people are growing too de·
pendent on the paternalistic aid
from outside and the gradual
erosi-0n of wbat was once a
strong and independent people.
Many Bridges to Cross in Governor Race
Despite some surveys showing
Governor J erry Brown taking
the lead over Attorney General
Evelle J . Younger in the battle
for the state's top office, it is
been busy doing the spadework
of lining up organizational sup·
port for the forthcoming elec·
tion.
still way too early to predict the IT CAME as no surprise when
outcome of November's election. Cesar Chavez's farm labor union
The pools themselves are poor gathered in San Jose to sing
indicators even if the samplings Brown's praises. Neither was
were large the AFL·CIO convention en·
enough to be dorsement or Brown unexpect·
re p res en· ed. It was master minded by
t a t i v e f o r state labor chief John Henning
there are too whom Brown recently appointed
m a n y u n · to the prestigious board or re·
k n o w n gents of the Univer sity of
bridges to be California. Even so there was
c r o s s e d strong opposition t o that en·
before the dorsement and only the fast b a llots are gavel of the cbair prevented an
cast. open revolt.
Although traditionally cam-Jn any event neither endorse·
pa1gning doesn't start unlit after ment is figured to help Brown to
Labor Day, both candidates any great extent. Chavez's
have been spending large sums group is small in numbers and
for television and radio com· many or his members either
mercials designed to sow seeds can't or don't vote. As for the
of doubt in the public mind as to AFL·CIO endorsement it isn't
the other's character. These will worth much unless the rank and
probably be Jong forgotten when file members get out and work
the campaign develops some for their candidate.
pertinent issu.es. That they are not inclined to
Each candidate bow.e.v.e.r.. has -do, this-was evident nol onl~ by ,
Paul Harvey
the opposition at the convention
but by the subsequent actions of
labor groups acting in defiance
of the official endorsement.
MEETING with Younger in
Sacramento more than 60
Northern California labor of·
ficials not only pledged their
support to him but denounced
both Brown and Henning. San
Francisco labor leader J oe
Mazzola summed it up stating:
"'We don't think the governor is
looking out for the·best interests
of the working people."
Younger also has strong labor
support in Southern California
and there is small doubt that he
will receive the almost 100 per·
cent backing or public employee
groups. particularly the State
Employees Association. The UP·
shot of it all is that while Brown
will have the official labor en·
dorsement. the members will be
out working to elect Younger.
While there is little question
that farmers to a man wlll sup·
port Younger. the Attorney
General also seems to be
favored by business and in·
dustrial leaders and the con-
struction industry. It may be a
case or labor and business vot·
ing shoulder to shoulder. except.
ing for those of Chavez's mem·
bers who actually vote.
WHICH WOULD seem .to
leave Brown with support only
among the h a rd core o r
minorities. But some black
leaders have bitterly com·
plained about the governor say·
ing that while he has appointed
some blacks to office he has ig-
nored the real problems or the
black people
Still there is no denying Brown
has worked a miracle in turning
things a round following his
scathing opposition to Prop. l:t.
He did such a flip.flop it became
a joke to refer to the tax reform
as the Jerry Jar vis measure.
And apparently he is regaining
som e popularity by mak\nf:!
landlords the whipping boy
a lth ough 1t is yet to be
establis hed th at. gouging
landlords represent more than a
handful of the total
Regulations Even Crimp Old-fashioned Barbecue
My eyes, my nose and my
palate keep r e membering
barbecue the way it used to be.
Some. future generation sut·
vlving-on nutritious but sterile
ills mv not
slow·cookedovercharcoal. "open burning." The Environ·
Ralph Foster had a place mental Protection Agency has
staked out near Springfield, Mo.. decided there is something evil
..wher e the open-pit barbecue was and dangerous about the won-
dass1c. d«!l'fOl woud Tinoke which
And I recall a luau. in HawaJI c.aresse<l our lunis-fOi &enera·
Memorial Day when we have
our tradltionaJ backyard outing
at the Elmer Stamms. whatever
Is broiled is broiled over gas'
And gas barbecu.e Is like a
beleh in church 1
min . u
some scholar
or the future
researching
u s s hould
wonder about
the lost art of
barbecuing -
may I leave
this message
for hlm.
;:-~~,t~omt~as~t~lngffieU~k~e«bfta~r~be~c~u~e~s~h~ou~l~d$ ....... ..Qll~U~~:ed;;-;to::-ibei::""rr~c~o~u~ld:iij~og;:;-;p~a~s•t ~-,r-11ir-"l'ii~-ft---H~-+-...-·~~
But there has been none since. Russell's Barbecue on the edge Southerners ~urrept1tiousl y
Succulent, aromatic, juicy and
beautiful barbecue ls remem·
b ered from my childhood In
Tulsa. Okla.
Black men. seeking to make
cheap cuts or meat palat11blc.
created this art form
IT INVOLVED swa mp
l\ickory $moke and a sauce
m&dC of tomatoell, peppers. Con·
diments and magic
Also. the first rast·food plact
In Salina. Kan .. was a scml·
outdoor ~hack where ch\cken was
Now they lake cheap meat and of Thatcher Woods and inhale manage to gather and soak
shred it or marinate it or roast il that deliciousness with such bap-swamp hickory and that they
over hot rocks -and they drown py anticipation. Any mor e, the bootleg real barbecue sauce and
it with catsup. chimney is throttled. Russell 's lhus cook and baste brisket or
still calls it "barbecue" but rtbs the way we used to. But
MUCH OF the problem relates smokeless barbecue is like a they'll have to show me
to government restrictions on kiss on the forehead. I've auended big shindigs in
Puneh
West Texas where they bury
tons of meat wrapped In wet
burlap over coals and under·
ground overnight. but that '<1 only
because there are no ovens ade·
quate for such large portions It
does not taste Uke the barbecut:
of my youth.
==-------; -·-• r~ >-:>VI '--=---/
"I told you those lemmlng1 looked depreaed."
.. ·-.. ..,. --f •
Perhaps after our tupayer;
reassert their rlghta. our coun·
try boys wm seek llberat1on
from thawed and m1crowa\.ed
stuff and rediscover the 10111 art
of barbecuine.
Until we do , the rurure wll' be
that much less than th~ p811t
. .. , . .... ._.,,
..
NATION ..... Augutt 28. 1971 DAILY PfLOT 47
Personal War of Fo1·mer . Viet J!:OWs Goes On
a1 PSTSa AaNSIT ., ..... Ciiia: 0 ,. Nd YOllK -Al A.maka t.,..,...... oat to reeol~• poUtlcal dlftertDcel ~ vw..m ......... ~ridiac IOCDe of tM • ., •• furvi¥Grt "°"'
~1b.. a.ct to ~ of tnuon, • la , •
1ulcW. aDd coadmiiac IMIUy.
Tb• con.met l• bet•Hn twG. 1roup1 of
Amerieam l*d ~ta Nan.h V1Maam dW'lq
lb• war -tbole wbo rwllUd thel.r ea.-n and
tbot• wbo .tWnaty cooperated.
NEJ'niD IS t..uGI IN thll penooal
war. Both are coovl.Deed they are rtcbt· ADd \be attacks on tb• •ntl-war POW• bavt only
·atren"tbened their coovtctlons. • • lloa of the POW1 eelebnte the day they wu.
releued. But I celebl'at. the day I waa captured,"
uld Robert P. Chenoweth. a former U.S. armx
MflHDl takeo prl.aoner In i•. "It WU • red·
letter daJ tor me, the day I belan u.nclentandblt anolber r.e .••
" puce committee t.bat Q)enofttb betped form lldiftly opposed the war t.broulh taped
1utemmta and meettna• with naUq padftlta.
CBENOWBTB'8 GaOVP INFValATED
senior Air Force and N HY offtcen a1lo beld
priaorier. 'Ibey demanded that the primary luide
for resiltina their captors be the U.S. MWtary
Code ol Cooduct's requirement that only name,
rank and aerial number be liven. Two of these officers later filed cbar1es
a1ainst 10 in the anti·war group. Tbe cbar1ea were dropped on compassionate 1rounda after the
suicide of one of those named, Abel Kavanaugh of
Westminster. Colo. He left a note saying be could
not race imprisonment aaain. Tbe code of conduct bas since been reworded
to allow POWs greater latitude in reapondlnt to
questions from captors. The anU·war POWs aee this
~as one vindication of their actions.
HOWEVE~ SEVERAL BOOKS BY former
POWs and others have harshly critlciled
Chenoweth and the other anti·war prisonen. The
critics continue to speak out &1ainst them on talk
.shows and on the lecture circuit. On the other hand, at least four of the anti-war
prisoners are still convinced they were right and
continue to say $<> -also disputing the ieneral
view that torture was widespread in Vietnamese
prison camps. "The majority of POWs felt the same way I
did but were reluctant to assist us because or
possible reprisals at borne," said Michael Branch,
a former Army specialist 4th class who spent five
years in prison and admitted signing anti·war
statements. appearing on regular radio programs
in Hanoi and writing letters to President Nixon
and congressmen denouncing the war.
I'M ONLY SORRY I DIDN'T cooperate
, sooner,·• said Branch, a graduate student at Ohio
University at Athens. He is studying Southeast
Asian politics.
Moving Up?
Customer Complains
HARTFORD, Conn. CAP) -All bis life, Barry
S. Zltser has appeared at the end of lists. Zs do
that to a person.
Now. Zitser, the state consumer counsel, is do·
jng something about it. He's complained to the
Southern New England Telephone Co. that the
yellow pages discriminate by listing individuals
and firms in alphabetical order.
ZITSER ADMITS HIS LE'JTER IS not without humor, but he says the issue is legitimate.
He addressed bis complaint to telephone com·
pany vice president Robert Little who would ap.
pear in the middle or most lists and therefore
qualifies as "an alphabetically neutral person.''
FOLLOWING THIS LOGIC, ZITSER suggest·
ed that the phone company respond to Cbriatine
Matthews or Eugene Koss in bis office.
The telephone company said it would look into
Zitser's request.
Delegate Selected
U.S. Rep. Jerry Pat·
terson. D·Santa Ana,
has been selected as a
· delegate to the mid·term
Democratic ·convention
next December by the
House Democratic
<:aucus. ·
Patterson and
Northern California
Congressman Pete Stark
were the two California
representatives chosen
as delegates, a Pal·
terson aide said. The
convention will be held
in Memphis, Tenn .
J'onnw U.S. Mart.De U. Col. Ed MWer of
Oran1• Coum¥ uld be "ODenl.Y ortt.Scbed UM war, I ltlave alWQ8 laid wti.\ 1 · -tbb*. OUr COUDtry
tJu1y .. CID dilileat. '' H WU Ulot down lD October 118'1 ud Mid bo
aU.Dlptld to rt1llt l:lvina clMl1fMd lDfonnaUoD. Slnee comlna home, MIU..-b• ,.oua a law
cMll'ff and u.ya be la "a lawyer few tbe downtrod·
den."
Tbete prllonen also dlapute the otber POW1'
vlew1 on lcll'tuN.
''I DON'T BBUEVE THE NO&TH Viet·
nameH bad a ~yatematlc plan to torture
prison n," 11ld A.lfcmo Rlaw ol Ia Aqelee, 1
former Matlne muter aeraeant. lmJ)riloned ln
1987.
Ht aaJd be wu held ln eeveral camps, lnclud·
tna the notorious "Hanol Hilton." "To rallt wu to be punlabed, as I was after
two unautteatul escape attempts," IUate said.
"But overall I t.blnk they treated m ~well."
MWer 1ald, "I don't ~eve most of the
torture atoriea. I would say around 10 pereent were
tortured. One man I know WU placed ID aoUtary
after 1~ out of his way to give bis capton a
bard time.'
"To my knowledge," said Chenoweth, "30 or
35 POW1 were tortured, and they were the
hardliners who believed implacably in adhering to
every word ol the code of conduct. I mow torture
waa not a policy of the Vietnamese."
TUE FORMER POWS TALK OPENLY about
their experiences.
Riate, who works with dlsabled veterans in an
outreach program, said, "I tell them I suffer a
stigma Crom the war. Most of them are sym·
pathetic. They say I have done something few
have ever done, that I res~ted the war in prison.
As the years go by, I feel I am being vindicated."
Chenoweth, who works for a Washington, D.C.,
research firm, said ~ple continue to be surprised
when be talka of his treatment durin& imprison·
ment and when be says he was sorry to leave Viet·
nam.
"I knew there was no danger from our cap-
'Heal,th'
Studi,ed
. A series of cl:tsses,
.iHealth Care at Home,"
will be offered through
Saddleback Community
College's Emeritus
Institute Sept. S through
Oct. 10 at Saddleback
Community Hospital
Medical Center.
The classes, designed
to acquaint family mem-
bers with the principles
of caring for health
needs at home, are to be " held from 6 to 8 p.m. in
room S at the center,
23561 Paseo de Valencia,
Laguna Hills.
Registration may be made through the col·
leJe. a spokeswoman satd.
unt 11
We ..... _. I JJJ11t1wwwat ... _....,.. .. __ ... _
..... ne10••.._ ••••• ,..., ........ -........... ~L .... _ ............
SOUTH COAST A~S CO-OP
(714) 957-0ZU
J1D .. ra. ~ 9M<ll
BLACKWELL'S
APPUANCE
Spec ......
GARBAGE
DISPOSAL
Rtpalr&Wn
Slllce '"' ..........
·Al~
•C1 cW
•Dwalk
I 19 S. Bristol
Santa Ana
543-5005
• ....,. ....... ,amO.Pd.Jll:a.c:det will do more than make her
day.1t will make her happy. It will makelitt"smile
<or maybe cry just a little). Don't wait for an
occaston.-ut tlie diamond"tn"a~tet ttsett be the
occasion! Ideas from our collection in 14 karat
yellow gold: A. $350. B. $375. C. $250.
------
Something Beautiful for Everyone.®
SLAVICK'S
f1nrJ~nsSI~ IYl1
18 F.uJuon lalAnd • 644-1380
Ncwporc Beach
Laguna Hilb • Wncminscer
tbo
,, .... -~._....... ................ _._ ___ a....
EX·POWa OPPOSED WAR -At funeral of
Marine Sgt. Abel Larry Kavanaugh are.
from left, James Daly Jr., Frederick
Elbert, ~g Rayford, Robert ~henoweth .
tors." he said. "What I was most concerned about
was our reception back when we would get re·
leased.''
Branch is still bitter about the treatment be
received when be came home. He said be was ill
with dysentery and was placed alone in a room at
the Ireland Army Hospital at Fort Knox, Ky., with
two military policement outside bis door.
Nowadays; in bls classes, Br~cb argues with
.,__...
Alfonso Riate and James Young. All were
involved m anti-war activities while held
prisoners In North Vietnam.
professors who he thinks do not understand the sub·
lleties of Southeast Asian politics.
Miller, who said be had once hoped to be 1t
Marine Corps general. recently sued another
former POW who he believes slandered bim on a
radio talk show
Nearly 300 former prisoners of war bad a reu·
nion in Los Angeles last May and were invited to
former President Nixon's home at San Clemente.
None of the anti.war prisoners was invited.
.,,. ------= ., ·--
•
l.ONGllACH
T ... """" l"au HUNTIHOTON llM:H --s-c-. To.ANCI o.t,,_.._c .......
SANfA IA!leMA llH \01 • \< l..tnl o ri.u
1.AUWOOO CINTU MAU
MN011AMA an JHOPftHC CIHT1:1l
1.A"-llNTI ~· ... ~•"ti' "'"lJTKll -.,,,__.~~.,.'"
~
SOOl \ "6u h,.. """"''"' ,,.,.
.. . ...
lllDl.AHD& MAU.
SAN __,__NO , ....... "'' MU'IS....-S
-... ~~IC..."
U OM.YPil.Of
AnCestry !ntriguing PtJBUC N011CB P\18UC NOTICE
Many Vaeauonen Leaf Thro. Ristoey
I DIANAPOU9 (AP> -e MOD1e talie aumm• YatMiou to v t tbelr rt&.U¥1if':"Olheft
wouJd nitMr ... u.tr af'llNll&on
·To UMt wunYOlved1 ll ml.Pt not IHm llk•
nuacb ol a v ban -l ni • • book·tl.Md room • t.b• ..... Li .............. ~ .,..,...,
COWl\)' IU&oriel ...., nw..cs DUOnlcnl UOUI
While tbe IUn OU ... lde.
aUT 10 !'BS D VOTER& 1"11& ...... wbo
t.rav I tu•·• and MIHtill!flle \.boiul•nM ol mllel
&o set bse. Ulla Ubrary't sene...,. dM.aloll 11 aa
dole .. mon.ata cet lO ..,.rldlle.
"Hone;y, • tr 100 lD "'"·you'd forlel •t dolq tbla." Helen OrtMlof'tt .. w • lbe 1u.a4k!d a
ceGl'81 ncord.
TM Tl·nar-old owctu. A.rb . woman aald belan \rlrina tamUy hllUlries 15 y..,. aeo.
and toda,, lt II &D loft.
.. , MAD PEOPLB 'l'O TAKS CAU or. aod I
b.ad to bave eomelhina to Lake my m1Dd off t.ba1.
I'd set., fh.&5trated, •• l.bo aa.kt. "'lb: la o ol tM •
most tucin.atJnt bob It's iust 11.b putt.las
to1~tber a Jl.ttaw pual you could worlt on lt ror
days wltbout stoppinl, 100 &et so frantic about lt."
Mrs. Orndorlf hu tucked her l"OOU, and those or llve ot.Mr famUies. in Virginia, Ohio, Kentucky
and Illinois. but she cltim.JJ lndiana bas "the mo:st
astounding 1enealogy place I've ever seen."
·'That ·s because whUe most state libraries just
rarry geneaJog1cal ma~rial from Uutt slate. this
library has material from all states," prbfesslonal
genealogist Rebah Fraustein explained. "Indiana
is a different kind of state. When this area opened
up, it attracted colonial settlers looking for land.
People came here from everywhere."
,\ND THEY ARE STILL COMING -especial·
QUEENIE
~/
.... --~.----8·.l.9
"You're pretty rut wUb a badl. ~ to eee Old
GraJldcad' could meu ~."
Death No ... ,
ly d"'1ftl I.he 1umm1r montbl, wben mlftJ· make
uutla Out ol tbelr H•rdl fOf tbelr elualve pre.
tW'SOra, •lt1lanl head librarian Diane Sharp ta.kl.
I Jn &be put decade, Mn. Sharp hat aeen
tbo\a1aftdl ol a.natour s•~ paaa throulb the Ubr~'• doOrt, and tbi1 all.have at leut one Oriaf. lri l'OaUDQft, • ·nn are vet')' delermlMd,'" au aald. ''TMy
are u.U.07 pttpartd, wltb ~ papen and their
brt rcuea. aDd th y know what they want.··
IUT MYS THEY &\VB a multitude of motlveUOu. Some hope to Join eotleti .. that have
beredit.ar)' requJ.remtntl, Uke the Daqhten ot the
Am ricu Jlovolut.lon. Otben. ftke Mormons. have
r.U1loua rea10U. Persona with eerta.ln diseues
ml11't want to k:n(>w ll their lllnesaes ••re tnhedt· ed. OrpbaN ml1bt be hattbi.nl for thetr real parent&.
"'MOit people dOn 't rea&e that ll takes a &ot of
time, • lot ol palleti~." Mn. Sbarp aaJd. "They
tblnlt t.bey can come In here and find the answer.
Well, It'• not that easy."
So Frantts Allen tound out. The Monroeville,
Pe., woman wu on her way back from cautornJa
when ahe decided to look up one of her UK!eaton,
Henry Woll, who ls said lo have built some of the oldett bridges ln lndlan.o.
SHE CALLED HER HUSBAl'i,D TO SAY she'
would be a day or two late, "and ttfree years later.
I'm still at ll. I've picked up a lot ot pieces and got·
ten into a lot ot interesting speculation.•• Ms. Allen said.
"Now that our children are grown. my
husband and 1 just rattle around." the 58-year·old
woman said. "I'm not a floor scrubber. I never
was. But now I've turned into Sherlockia Holmes."
Patty Russell. 30. of Tuscola. IU., said she
began investigating her family history while still
in high school. She and her husband. Dan. 31, plan
to complete a family tree going back several
generatJons Cor their son, Toby.
PUBUC NOTICE
"CTmout a1111N•SI NAM• STATaMalfT
Tll• followlflt per-• •r• dol bllslneuM· G•tFFITH AHO ANTHONY, At•
tomeys •t &Aw, Jt$O Mew Vtrde EHi.
........ Pulllllslled Orenot C.O.st o.lly Piiot,
AUQ. 1. t•. 21, 2a, 1911
---'--------...:H5'-1'
PUBUC NOTICE
Slllle N. <Mia Mew, c.llfornle '2t2' C~1 "7
Al•n A. ~llfllll, AllorMV .tt Uw. NOTICll TOC•aDtTO•S
IS11 w .. 1 St. Anctrew. Seirt• Ane, su,••1oa COU•TM THI'
Celllornl• ""°' STA Ta Of' ~lf'OttlflA f'OA P•trkl.t L. Alltllofly, A~y • THI! COVNTY CW otlA.NOa L•w. UOll M.t9notle, Spece ., NO.~
W•"mlMll:r,c:.llfoml•'*3 Esl•I• of &ESSIE II. LAM&. Tiii• ~MH Is <OIHlll<IH by • o.c .. MO.
o•ner•I ~p. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to Ille
Petrkle L ~ tr.Oltors of ti.-. .........,CIK_t
Tiils s'""'-1 WM flleO wllll I ttlet •II pef'SOM "-"In., deilM ~Inst Covntv CleR of ()(-CotHltY IN seld daQdent .,.. ...caulreO to Ille A~t 14, lm !Mm, wl"' trw -Y "°"'llers, In OAlf'f'ITHAHDAlfTitOfjY Ille office of ttw <1«11 of tM etiow en-
Atw..yt at L.-w titted <OUl"t. or to --• tnem, with ------------llllM~V ....... st Ille MCHStry VOU<ller\. to Ille un-
D ha PUBUC NOTICE .. ':....,CelltwMeta» Ortlgneo •I Ill• ••w olllc• ot eat """' WILLIAM V. SCHMIOT, )M Sen
NOTICll TO caaotTO•S PUl>llslled 0r-. C.O.SI Dell Pilot Ml9ue1 Orlw, S..1111 JOO, N•wPOrl
SUl"•atOltCOUaTOf'THIE uoint21 ,.enclSel*mllet-4 l1 tm' 8"<ll, Ce!Homl• '2*, wlllc:ll 11 IN
STAT.,,.. ,,.u ·--NIA fJO• 'T ' ' Pl.c.t of bullMls of Ille uncllttsloneO In E , _ .L -TN• cOUNTYOPOllAMOa· .00.1' ell mMttn pemlnlnv to tlle ealat• Of iaell)1reret N0."'""516 WIO Ot<-. Wltllln lour mot1ll\'
ESl•I• of AOllEAT JAMES PVBUC NOTICE •II•• th• first pUbll<•llOft ot lllh
COLUMBIA S C MITCHELL ••• AOllEAT J . notice.
' ' • MITCHELL. Decffsed. O•l.OMIQusll, 197' ( A P ) Pa u I W • HOTtc& 1s HEAeev G•vEH 10111e • .._. BARBARA o•E!. BJ k •"'-k 65 er.Olton of IM ellov• NmeO OKedent NOTita TO Cll8DfT04tl Euwtrl• of tlle Wiii of ac •~ • • among 111e1•11..,_11ev1"!lc••lm•eoetns1 su,.aatOllCOU•T~TMa 111e-~~1 the first to translate the , ... sakl -.... requlr.tO to file STATE~CAUllCMlNIAf'Otl #IWAMV.SOIMIOT works of exited Soviet tllem,wltllh-WY-.Cller1.1n TMIECOUNTYMOCMO• JMS."Mitllel~ .• Ille Ollke of Ille clerk of Ille •bOve en· .... "'*II Wte • 8 u t h 0 r A 1 e x a n d e r '''""' coun. cw lo pr-• !Mm. wllll ,,, Ille Maner of ... EstMe of CECIL .............. ~· ,,...
S 01 .,. h e'n 1· ts y n . n t 0 th• ,,., .. wry YOU<hlirs. lo Ille Ull· A. GARRETT, OKMMd. tTet: 11141...atl
" 1 oersloMd .i 50$ Oty Per•w•y Wul, Notto Is "-414rt OIWft tcr er.Olton ""-' .., &Nallrfw English, died of an ap· <>renee. c:.tlfornY, wfllcfl 1, ,.,. p1.ce 11ev1no dAll-eeei• IN ..io <Mt•· PubU5t* 0renoe eoas1 09,,, Piiot. parent. heart attack dur· of ti.nlneu .. 111e ""*<'IJoneO '" .11 oen1 to 111e Yid < ... mt '".,,. ot1k• of •119. 14. 21. 21.,,., s.l)t • ... ,. rn•lters pe<Ulnl11910 Ille eal•I• 01 Mticl Ille cterti of ,,. ....,.,..Id COllf't or to ~· ing a trip to Colorado, c1ec.oent, w1t111n ,_"*'"''tit••,.,. Pf'-t 111em to.,,. _,..1gnec1 ., ,,,. -his family said. ""lpUbllcMklnoftlllsnotlce. office of ANDERSON. ADAMS & PUBLIC NOTICE D•ted Auoust 11. 1'711 BARNES, ..... corPGt•llon. 4100
c:eu.rilW E. Mllcllell Nor11t A~ 111""'-· P.O. Bo• o•. SANTA CRUi CAP)_ E~llll'l•oftMWlllot Rowm .. e1, CA t1no 12131 2*i·2tt1. •OTICIETOC•IDITOH l"9 ........ """*' OececMnt wflkll latter ofllc* I• Ille ~ of l>usl· • .... """'11 Rlcbard J.' Werner, 84, MIL.AN DOST"'--of t11e ~..., 1n e11 metw1 l~"/i"'°" COUATO,THIE r A,,.... ...... c:.r...-11.t<lelnlno to wkl Be.II:. S..Cll clelm• A •Of'CAUf'OllNIA ,011 ormer mayor or Santa lffCitY =.West •1111 Ille-\' vouc:llen must be THI! C04.INTYOPOllANGI Cruz and U.S. military °'""· .,... flteel ~~es Mor'eMIO within In Ill• M•ll•t Of Ill• Etl•I• Of
governor of Italy in T .. :us..na. fwrf!IOlltM.,..,.,,.11 ... 11ut>11ce1loft wesLeYM.H1He.0tc: .. seo A.......,llW._..,.,. oflllhnotlcle. NOTICE IS HEllE&Y GIVEN lo w 0 r) d war I I . died Putlllslted er.,..~ Delly Piiot. O.lff August 2, 1'11 <r.Ollor• Nvlni, cl .. ms °'9tlftll , ... Thursday. Auo1n121.•-~·. 11, "" C. KeftllOenett M id cle<eeltnt tofllt wkl clllll'M In·~ ~11 E~oflllewlll office of Ille cr.rti of tM etorea•IO -------------1 of se!O-.o.m court ot to ..-t llltfft to Ille un· LOS ANGELES <AP) PUBLIC NOTICE .l~Ctt ... Acwi. ... ~et the office of MATTHEW .....,..._ ...... & ...... S. AA!!", JR., Oer1ifto. H.111, R .. ~ -Los Angeles County ----,,----------•"'--Cle,..... Gvt•, »> \Oilltst S111t11 Street. ~a. S · C rt J d •..amt •• ...,_......,. ....._ Los Angetn, CA t0014, wllldl lottter of upenor ou u ge None• Tocaao11oa1 ... o ... aat 11ce ,, ,.,. plM» of 11US1n.tu of,.,. un· W I I I I a m A r t h u r NO. A...Stt •----. CAtml •••loMO '"•II tNtlwfs pertellWnQ 10 c • Idec 0 tt. 61, died SV,E•toa COUllT 0, nt• P'*41"'9d er.,. Cont Delly "'°'· UIO ....... Suell clelms will! the f'ETTIO lie• .. 1.u s-H .. oerel of Ln STATIE~CALl~IA~ ~119.1,14,21, .. tm nK•»•ry-'*"' must lie filed°'
VIRGINIA LOUISE F8JTIO, ... AIMlhos, c., ~ wlll be llelcl on Saturday after Suffering THIE COUNTYMOllMOI 2'P·1' pres.111.0 es •lorewld wltt>ln ICH>r U . rnl.,..,. ol Hufttlfttllall luc1\, C.,.. WMnetdey; AllgUlt JO, me •I IPM 1n apparent heart at. In Ille Melttt Of Ille Ett.ttt of -------------1,,_IM Mtw Ult first publlcetioft ol
PesMHI •••Y °" AUOUlt 21, tt11 It\ '•<Ille View Clt•pel. llurl•I ano k bil • . CLARENCE"-BUNNELL. DKHted. PUBUC NOTICE tniat10lk•.
NATION /081TUARIE$
PUBUC NOTICE
PUBUC NOTICE
UIM&. MOTICS NOflCI IS HIE•EaY GIVEN 11\tt
Ille fellow"'9 I-et fOllftlf cw 1.....,
P<'OfteflY llsw lleift MIO by tlle Police
Depart-ol tlle CllY of Oocte aMle tor._ .... In"'"' .. ftlnety , .. ,
~ f OOI Boll cMllllnlftct ....... *'-' cMVICM, IC.-.t Loe.II & Myttlk T.-, P•M•r·1 u Olen. Cll, J Sclllege
IC.noblL•ICll Door HellOI••· 2 lllue Tecllle Btocll Patft, SMrt G,_ 10
SpO. Blcycte. Boy's 11¥1111• 10 5""
f>evoeol lltcvcte. lloY• lllue Scltwl""
11 .. cll Crui-BkY<le. llo'('s --0.rby lllcyc:le, Glrl't Blue "'" Spltll Stl11qr•v Bteyc le, Boy'' Blue Motoc ton SIVI• Bio< It •nO Boy'•
Purple lll<Y<le NOTICE IS FVltTHEA GIVEN ltlel
11 no ow,., _, --hit
ow,.,.,.lpof Ille ~Y wit""' -< II O• Y\ IOll-1"9 Ille IMlbl ice'llon ol lllh Nollu. tile 1tt1• lleffto stwoll veil '"Ille II-. <I,...,.. be-· 0t ln Ille
City of C.0.te Mew. In Wllkh <-Ille
pr-rtY ,,,_II be tOIO at pUbllc •u<1lon
•t • tlrne-dele to lle-eo
Pt18UC NOTICE
· PtJBUC NOTICE
IOUTit COAST C:OUNn
WAT&a DflTatCT NCmc:a INVITIN9
IU~etOI
'O• TMI mMT•UCTtOM 0' zoeeav-• 1..-. lllUllaYOla Tiie 9-1' ol Dlrec'IOn of ,,. Sovlll
C-t ~--OIJIJ"k'I of Or-
C•Y"lf, c,.m ........ llerellleil•r In
-lftst-~Nd to et ''Dis trlct," oo-...., lnvlll: M•IM bldl 1or
tlle totlowlno llfterl-"*le wor11 Tiie Conttndloft of Z-V·B 7_.MG
Aewnolr, .....,.... "'""ell ._....
_. Wor1< ....... ti .,,_, "' .....
Mid dttc,.... 14\ tflt ~. proflln 0•-•nes. ,l«tlOftl, ...., tpllClfketlon~
Oft Ille 1,. tN office of Ille Olllrkt,
l1S'2 WHI Slrfft, South L•oune.
C.tlfornl• mn. -1t ctocunwnt1 ••• b¥ Hit• ,....,_ lncwperftld _,,
..... ·-Nf'llc:W¥1, ~IO(.t t\ llt••bv -to 5eid plem, profile ..
Orewlno•. MCllOM, elld \PKlllullon• for Ille ~rlbeO lmproyem.,11
entllleO ··eon.reel Oocum•nts •no
Co11•tructlon Specll•c•llon~ •nd
COn•tru< tlon PIM\S tor u. Owtllruc
tloll of 2-V·6 I •MG 11-ir
s.10 pl•"' --'lltut!Olls m•v k OOtelneo et Ille office of Ille Oiltrl<"
only for l20 00 -wrt, wtuc11 cletlo•ll
wlll be ref...., If INY .tfp retur""" V. oood c...O.tlon, n .,...,.,,,, ,,.., Of ttw
District Oleck• Midi be -pay• ble to 111e Soultl C.O.SI County W•ler
District.
O•leO August It, 1'71 A.E.NETH Chtef ol Pot Ice Publl111ed Or .. Cont D•1ly Ptlol.
Auo U, 1'71
Purauenl to Ille L•bor COCle of Iha
Stele ol c:.llfornte, Ille South c.o.,t ..,..,. '°""'" Weter OIS1tlct ,,. esc«ielnecl ---------..;:::;:.;..:.~ tlle prey.,11119 race of per cllem w..-
PUBUC NOTICE . ..,..
Nonca TO~•DITO!n "°·"'*'"' SU,IElllOll COUllTOf' TNE
STAT&~ CAl.lf'OaNIA ~· TMI CDUNTYoPOhNOa
In Ill• Metter of th• E•l•I• of FRANCES HARTMAN IC.ING, Oe
FRANCES H ICING, ae FRANCES
H. IC.ING. Oecff-
Notlc.e '' IWreby oiv.,, lo cr..rilort
hevlnq cteima -Inst Ille Wkl Clece·
dent lo Ille wlcl clelm. In Ille oflke ot
lhl! cler-of t!IP olorewlO court or 10
pr"4W>I them to ,,,. -rslOMd •I Ille
ollke ot JAO< " SM• TH ''""· 731' S P•1nter A-. W..illi~. C•llfom1•
~. Wiiiett IM~ otflce IS tlw PIKe of
1>usinen of trw unoenloneO 1n •II m•t·
t•" pert•ltWnq to M•O ••tel• S<Kll ctelml will! Ille necni.erv •OU<llers
mu•I Ille flied or onwit.O ~ .iorosetO
w1ttun rovr month'\ •tter the tlr'\t
ouDllcetlonot 11ws not1<e
D•loO AUQU1110. ttlt
ChOtles Horman He•n>WOr 111 IE •ecutor of t!M-w111
olwlCIOec-
JACIC A Sl•llYM 111'71
Atter,..yetuw
1JJ6S ... .._ .... .
of .,,. lo<ellty tfl """'" tnl• "'°"' ., to i.. !'ff formed lo be ., Cleta! lecl In t~
Southern C•lllornl• M•Sl•t L•llOt
AorH-111 llteO In Ille Offke of Ille 4 •
\OC 1•1•0 G•ll•••• Co"lr•CIOf\ ol .......... , •• 5ouUlenl Cell'°""' CIMcl4er
(Opie\ of Ille ....... -•lhnQ , •••
of per olern weoea •• e1eterm1neo DY ltlt OIHrkt -Oft Ille •I lb prlnc;lpal
pl.u ot """""" to wit l u., Wt)I StrMI, Soutll ~-Cellloml• A\ .--ir.o "" Section 111J of , ... Labor C-, Ille ConlTklOr to wllOftl Ille ~
trect llereior •S •w..-o.o lhtll Po>f •
copy 1,.ereot et .. ch lof>'lll•.
11 shell be .-corf 111*1 .,,Y Con,.
I rector to Whom• <onlr.ct is •••Nied
anO -.,.,., ~·•ct«-""" lo PO not IHS 11\M lhl! w•O -'"Mlf
rates to tll I-en -••rs, •t)d
"-"•1110 ~mc>IO~ oY tlMm In llofo UKuliorl of lite '°'9tre<t. TM penelly
tor l•llure lo c.ome>ly llentwlth I• ••
-111.0 •II Section 171~ of Ille ulllar
C-T lie Contr9Clor Vltll .,.., lrtvel •n0
WOS.'1enc;e PtYrnent\ lo H<ll wor1<•,.
-to eoecute Ille _.., .• , ''"" I••••• eno WllSlstence payments .,.
deftneo In Ille eptllieltl .. collectlv~
11M991n1no ~s tllecl "'"" Hie Oepert-ot l~lrlel Reletlon1 ,,.
ecc.ont.nc;e w1111 SKtton 1m • of IM
l•toorC-Att•nllon I\ Olrecteo to llW pro
vlSlons. ,,, SKtloM 1m.s eftCI 1177 .• of
lhe L•lllor Co<t• concernlno 111• -------~)06).=-'-"" .,,,PIOymeftl of -enllcea l>Y !fie Con tre<lor or env ..-.Contra<lcw .,,...
Wllllttter, c:.ai ......... ,.,
Pu1>115t* 0r-. C.O.s.I Dally Piiot,
AUO 1•. 21 •• -Sept. 4, 1971
PtJBUC NOTICE
f'ICTITIOUS IUSINIESS NAMIE STATIMIENT
T 1W lot lowlnQ per_, Is OOlflo llUJI.
llftl•\
tum.
S.<11on tm.5, • _._.,, req111r••
the Conlr•clor or •ulllcontr•clor employl119 Ir-In eny eppr.,
tlc.eelllle OCCuP.tllon to eppty to '"~ 1oinl •pprenllcu111p commlllt~
-· ... •Ill: of Ille ,....,,le -b Hunll119ton I~ ~~I. Interment. Peclflc View Mortuary l.3C W e V&CatlODtng Notice I•_..,., 9iWf'I 10 C1'11C11tort Oe1.0"41gust25, lf11. , .... _,,_ -,...Ollie .. P!ttce Olrec1on. lD Idaho. said a court llevtnv ctelms eo.tlfl•t tlle Mid '*-' 0-CO M. Hine.,,., • ero"'9o Sftolltlll' MOHu.tty. .IACKSOM k dtftl to Ille Mid Clelma In 'Ille ottic. of OTICS TO Cltl0f1'0tll Wlln'WI s. Pali.tll•
MARLIN COUNSELING. 304\lt E.
8tltio. BIYO .• S.lboe, Cellfonll• •Mt Pllyllll Jffn AUO.lcebe. »lllt E. 9••-lll'ld.. Belboe, C.llfomt• ,,.., T"" l>U"nes~ 1~ <-.cte<I Dy en I,,.
dlvlclu•I
projtct..,., """°' ............. Hie ff
-lk•'111p proor•m In 111•1 lr.O. lor
• Ctrllll<•le Of •PP•Ov•I. Tnt
c.ertlfk•I• will .iso Ila Ille retto of eo
prenllc.u lo ,_,..,men 11\et will b\"
us.o In ttw ~· of u. con. trocl. ,,.. ••l•O ol epprenliu\ te
journeymen In SUGll C•st$ "'911 not IM'
leas lh•" one tollv••1cep1·
wu.saL WILLIAM$. J ACKSON, rulclent of Spo eSm&n. Ille cltftl flf tlle ..,,_kl c-1 or to l~~~~CMl~=A':::.. E~of Ille will
0.WAVNE WESSEL. AMdenl of Co.st• Mesa, c.. Peueo llw•y on iw-t "*'"Otfle UftdeUJgned et Ille of...,__..,,.
Hewpor1 e..ctl, c.. PasMcl ew•Y on Auoust u . ~ SUNI-by his. wile LONG BEACH (AP) Office of CAAL E. WOf>SCHALL, S2:J THIE COUNTYOf'OllAM08 MAnM•ws. ua,Ja. Phytll\JHn llubel<-August V . 1'71. Surylve0 by hi• wtt. Lllllen JkklOn of Costa Mtse. C•.. Secwrlty 81"9., 114 EHi Colondo NO.~ A"-~
• hetyn, ""'4llbf ,,..,,, AM w-i ot -steP.IOll JOMPll Hutter of C.OSI• Georgia B. Browa, 85, Btvo .. P•sedeft•, C•lllornt• •1101; E•l•t• of SONIA c. WALLER. Darth•, Mell, ... & Gui•
:, •ewiiort l!INdl. c.. _, __ T.,. 11\Ha, c.. -..........,,.., Oe!orn said to be the tlrst telephone 12u1 7'6·71'4 or 12131 Oec••*· m ... tSllllll""*'
T"'' '1•1-t -~ lllecl Wll"\!lle Cou"IY Clork o1 Or•noe County 011
AUQU\I 10, t'71 .. 1. W•u•I of E l9ln. llllnolS, s Moor• Of Sen Oleeo. c a .• 1 41t..e73. wfllcll letl•r office II Ille NOTICEISHEREIYGIVeNtotlle ~~~ ,,.._. tref1Cklll""9ft GfWQ. Ooftalcl, Cindy, gr t n d <It 11 0 re" e "0 2 woman to parachute plMedbullfleuofttwwndenlootelln cffiftlor$ofU1ueow,_,,..,OKedeflt __ ,__,
LY"" •!Ids.._. WeMef, -brother e•••t·o••noc11ttoren. Memorl•t from a plane died Fri •II matters pertellllno lo 1t14 •stete. t!Mlt 111 -"-"',. ctalfN .,.IMt Pul>lt.,_. 0r-. C:O.ll 0.11, Piiot \'lrgll W-of llllnol• eno one •l•I•• aervlcu wllt be llelO on Tu•SO•y, • • Suell cre1ma wllll tlte ntceuery Ille N ld CIKtClent ere reqvrr.o 10 Ille M19. 21. Sept.4, 11. 11. 1m •IM·TI
f'8"H7
Publi\11.tO On-Co..i O•ilY PllOI.
A Wiien ~rntnt lft Ille ••••
of cove•~ by Ille 1o1m -enltenlllP
cornmlllte,,.. ••ceedecl 011 •we•-ol
IS' •n Ille tO 0.YS P<lot lo tlle requftl tor certll lc•te. or Mabel Gr9"1le of Aoc.•lord, llllnols. A119u.st 2', 1'11 et llAM el Ille Flrft day night Of pOeUmOni.& vouctlfts moat bt fllecl ,.:;::•::roes them, with 11w nece-.. -llera. In
'-tl<ft Wtell•~. August JO, 1'71 UnlteOMWocllitOlurellwltt>prlY•le at Mt. St. M'""" Hospital eloreMklW!tlllnl-••1••t11e tlleoflk•toftllecler1loftllee«IOwen-
•• 3PM Pec:Hk View ~I. '" llev of lnumtn•llt. ,,, II.tu .. f~ OONtloM On _, llrsl "'*~'°"of w. notlc.e. "'"' court. or to ,.,..,.. !Mm. wltll llowera contributions to Hoeo rney be tNCle to t"' f'lr•I United here. June 21, 1913, 0.'9111A..-IO.1971 Ille M<HMrY ~ to "'* .,,,_ ~ •• ...,. .... interment Pec:ttk IMlllOdlst Owrdl 0r..,, FIH!d. 11e11 Mrs. Brown parachuted ,,_,H,Wlltl"1 .,.,......., "'w Wlblllr• Bl'H., Los
,,._ ~· Parll. Peclllc view BrNCtwev 11111anu«y cttr.ctort. into G-'"'th Park from e-.... of.,,. Wiii ""9eles, c.t~ Wlll<ft Is.,,. p1.ce
I Mortveryctl.-.ctors. TONCRAY l&IU of Mid~ of '""''""of Ille wldlHl"led In •II
OOP'OlfTH SARAH V. TONCftAY, reslclent of an airplane flying at CA a&. a. WO'NC;:HALL matters Ptr1elnlno to INesc.i.of MIO
..
MILOltEO FRANCES GOFORTH, Coale Me .. , C. ..... ,.., •••Y on 2,()()() ,..... A......, at.._ deceOenl, wlo.in tour nlOfttlll effer tM •oielent rA s...ta AM, Ca. Peued A-I 26, 1'71. SM Is wrvlveO by !let """""' m ~ ...... flrtl publlcelden of t1111 Nike
•w•y _., IWtllat 2S. lf1I SurYIWO by 11..-Lee TOllUsy of Cost• Mesa, ------------IM L CMar ... MW., OetM AUQUM 11, 1911 -------------Ce. 0•""1tff-IOft-ln-lew CM"04•11d PUBUC NOTICE ,......_ ~'1M1 Oa,,..,G. Welle• DonalO E. Foll of OllM Point, Ca., P1141flllleel Or ..... Coest Deity l"llot, E..c-of Ille Wiii Of
,-----------... \Ol'l-ln-l•w U.RO'I W•tu of ~on.-------------Auo•"t14,1'l.2lends.,t.•,tm tt1eMI0¥9,,..,.,...0ececlen1 Tu ... ,,., two IM'Otllers of Arhon, lfOTial INYt~u•o ••DS • '°""" DAVID 0. WA.LUER P'lllCI •cmtas
$MRM'S MOltTVAIY
627 Main St.
Huntington Beech
536-6539
SH9'llt MORTUARY
976 So. Coast Hwy
Laguna Beach
494-1535
1533 N. EJ C.mtno Real
San Oemente 492-0100
,_,A.MILY
COlOMIAl fiUMllAl
'NOMI 7801 Boise Ave.
Weirnilnster -
893-3525
• PACNYW#
t•IOltlAL , ...
Cemetery MortuatY
Chapel
3500 Pacific View Drive
Newport Beach
844-2700
'
McCOl.MK:«
MOltTUA.AllS
Laguna Belci\
494-9415
LaQuna Hills 68-0933 -
San Juan..Capl&ttano
.G$1778
HADOll LAWN-
MOUNr OUYI
MOITUAIYmtll
t•lomAL,AU
~Cemetery Crematory
Hl25 Gillef Ave.
Coat• Meal! &4().665•
IALTI ••"-°" N•AA.HOMI 8484424
• CoetiMeM eJ3.8.Ceo
l&L IRO.\DW A y ...onu.a' 110 Brocldway
Coata Mesa
&42·9100
IMllM-1V1MIL&..f.A.MI MOITUAIY
WlnQ.9IP OfAlll
427 E 11th St
COltlMeN
8'M888
Fune••• Mrvlcn wlll be llelO dft On Auoust W... tm. IN lloero of -------------iu.Wlltltlnll•,...._Jl4
W.ClfteMMy, Auoo* JO, tm •t llAM e1 Trustu1 01 , .. C..lt community PUBUC NOTICE LM......,.. C81HenU.-tl e.11 eroeow., Olepel. 1ni.onent wlll College Olstrkt .........., the sub-,........,,.,.,.....,
lie et Peclflc View Memorllll Peril. l•UlllO of• llO"llGft of ht ~lein re•I -----...... --------1 Publlllled Ore1199 Olest Dally Piiot,
l'r1encls IN'f <•II .,, 8•11 llroac:twey enCI Ptr_. proptrty 0tnerelly r• ,U,IElllOllCOUftOflTN• AU8111121.21 ..... S.!lffmber4,11,lt11 ~ue;~.~oT'::':9',;:.:'°:~1o~d~~~ ~;:'1 ~:C::-.. ~~~~;.~ ","T~~!!",!~A .. ~.· 4044-1' ~~ .• ~01r~-. Sem• AN,Or ..... c-.ty,CelW-e H•wv..::•;..::::::,:--.._..,,. · • -·-· .... ---PUBUC NOTICE eunv Auoroino•y, -1• -Wm"*,.. fllOTIC8 Of' M8A•tN• OP M c. l llVDI BEATTY, resident of UIWO ,,, I.lie office of Jlle ""'CftMlllO Huntlnoton8"cll,C.. PHMClaweyon Aoenl up lo, 00 p.m. TUHC!ey, ~ ,ITITION "°" f'aoeAT8M WILL •onmTOC•IDITOttl
Auou•I :16, 1t71. SuNIWO by Ills wife !ember s. 1971, end_., •nO l>Ubll<· AND cootou, ,, ANY, AfllO POii. IU~•••Oll CIOUllT Of' T141
T ty reed •I 1"91 time. The property to be LITT•ltS T•ITAMl•TA•Y AND ITATaCWCAUf'OalflAf'Oll ........ , -.., o. of Huntlnoton wbl••S.O Is°"""".,• INUllOlcl by f'Oll AUTMO••ZATtON TO AO• TM•COUMTYOili04tANOIE lke<ll, Ca. encl Jim J . of Ventur•, Ca., _ ,. •• ,t ..._,_,,.. COii-Dlitrlct. M I N IS T •II U N 0 I II T flt • MO. AotUS1 elso 4 or-..1-. ~l<H wlll be , .... ..__ ..-···-·-. ..,,... INO•,aN--AOMINtn•AT'"""' llekl on T ...... Y. AUCIUfl 1'. 1'11 at S.10 pr-"f •NII only be lnH lor ..... , ,. ...,. l!Wlt of EVELYN W. FRANCIS,
IOAM Pe<lllc View °'-I wlllt Rev. eOucelfoNI purp01e\ .,.0 111• 1u<· Of' •STATlllACT. Oe<eewel. Oon•lcl E. AoCiem offlclltllng. Burtal c.euM bl-•ftell be requir.O loo· •ttele OI HAllOLO WILLIAM HOTICIE ISHIEltlE8Y GIVEN totlle
t • ~ 1.......... Kutt • IMW with C:Oa.I Cornmuntty Jo+4N5()N, OIK.ffMcl. crtdlt.rs OI tlW 4lbOW nem.tO Ot<ed4"'1t • .... " .. ...,.._ o .... Al Male!.._ Gollete l>IU..1(1 NOTICE IS HEAEllV GIVl!N tllat tMt .t!I 119f'MMfllllttno <lelm• ... Intl
Sfltlne, •or._ of USC Ill Clletnkel aitta wlll be COMl~ecl et ., _...,lc MILDllED JUNE JOHNSOH l\M flled tflt Y1C1 ~ -r-Jr.tO to 11 .. Enol-1"!1 -nwmbff of Piii ~I ......., I 1t1oA ,,,_ of Wiii .... -i=........,. _,, ___ • lltloll rneetk>o of tN1 Boero ott I oo p.m. °" llffe" •""' for tfltm • .,,.,,.,. _wy vouc'-"· '" f Wii'R\elQY, Slllf~mr,llrtlll" .... C..l&I ... If..,.,....._ .......-. .. 11-.dert.ef • ......_ me11u •<h1rlno <ompenr •nO BoerO Room al tlle Coest COmmunlt; 01 Letter. T•ll-nt.,.., .,,.. 10, lltMCI ~.or to pr-.....t -~wttlt
11.trdw•• In l!Mlfto, Ca., lie was • c:oueoe Olstrk'I --.1n1,1r.i1on eu11<1-A11111or11.tt1on to Aellnllll.-"'*' Ille .,,. ,,. ... rv "'°"'llert, to Ille un· ~~:::.':'::'.!:.~::!= lno •oc•teO •I 1210 Adern5 Avenue, lndtpendenlAdmlnl1~Mloftofl!tt.tt" Clersloneo et 11 Emtterceoero,
for Lock ..... ..., Deuialet~. Costa Me .. , C.llfomla, m». Tllh Act, ref-lo lllllldLls ~C:.WW ...... ~ll!MplaU
He lies._• NSldMt .. HWltJntpen lloenl --tlle r!Qllt to rejeet .,Y fur111er ~ .,.,-tMt ....,,_ Oflliall'IU"ef'11W •-=•••"' ett
IMKh. ca.. .. ""· .. ec:lllc Vf9w ... •II bid$ .,.., lo wltllclr-115 offer .,.., Pl.U of .... "'° 1lw -lies rnel'lers per1.elnlfte .. tflt ....... of ... 0 to leest Ille~. _,,Ml lot~ S, lm, '91 10:00 oec.o.nt, wtlllin ,_ ..-cM efter Ille
Mortu•ry Clll'9Ctor1. Bid PecllaoH conteinlng •II pertl· •.m ., In Ille ClOUl1rWnl of 0.1).trtmtftt first PMbllcMlon Of tltls notke.
fM!nl lnfor-INtloft elld __ ., b1c1-Ho. J of wlO court, et 100 Ovk O!ftltr Oet•O August t, lt7'
•pfl••lllllNI•-~---..... Cllno CIOCun.nh ... Oft Ille'" IN office Orlve West, "' Ille City of Sente A"•· Robert M. tranc:l1 M Ille Plwc:Mli .. Agllm, IJ10 MMtM C.tllfornla. EaecutoNl Ille Wiii of
FUNERAL
DIRECTORS
MORTVAft\'·CEMETER\'
CREMATORY
• Interment In
Any C.metery
. • Shipment
• Burial
tn1urance
• Cremetton
1255 oornptete
"Servtng All Faith1"
1825 Olater Ave. eo..a ......
540-5554
A'"41W, Ollt.a MIM, c:.tlfor?lla.-.; ~ ~ '6, ..,._ IM-Mlftld~
...., _., be WC:urecl bf .. ,....1, wrH· WIWAM •• IUO .. fll, •o•• •T T. MAA•AVOH ten, or te1ep11on• requ .. t (1141 c-wty0-11 u lltlMl'CMnw..t, tte 14•
"'-SI .SO. THOMAS M. MNK5 O.lll•M, calffenlle '4601 Ill HORMAN E. WATSOH W Wll .... .,.._ Tt41 l4lllMl•MSI
Seely. llMfO of Trwll:eS IMC• MtMca. CA .. , AtterMy fer ~lltH
Open: SQl....C.S, lfll-2.•P.m T .. : tzu1•.-t ,1111111"'90 Or•noe CHU D•lly
Bid No.: 1"' A......, ftn......... f>ltot, AUQ\ISI 14, 21, H-S.PI. •. 1t1e
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1STATIMaNT 0, WITHO•AWAL P.aM ,,AllTNaatHlf' 0,1.ATINe ""°*• PfCTITIOVlault ... SIMAM8
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Rec:yct9d.
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PUBUC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
AUOlnl 14. 21. 21""" Sepot •. 1911
'MU.rtt
PUBLIC NOTICE
..ueuc •at.LASE
Tiie ~-Mew UnlfleO ~ Dls1rlc1 todtY _.., lh POlkY for
free •nd AdYCtd prk • ..... is encl rnllk for dll-~to pay Ille lull prk•
of me•I• -mllll _.,,.., uncle• tM• Netlonal S<llool Luncll •nd ~ Bre•lllest ,.,,,.,_
Loc•I SClloOI offklets ,.,...,. eclopt.O Ow IOllowlni, femlly •lte Income
crtterl• tor drWmllllno ellglblllty
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CALIFORNIA I MUSIC I AT YOUR SERVICE
CALIFORNIA'S MANZANAR INTERNMENT CAMP DURING WORLD WAR II
Pftotogt'8pher Toyo Mlyatak• FltfMd ut. In Japanne Colony
Camp History Fibned
Japanese Internee Portrayed Manzanar Li/ e
LOS ANGELES <AP > Toyo Miyatake car·
rted contraband into the internment camp where
he spent most of World War IJ -a forbidden
camera lens and precious film
which would portray a Japanese
community that thrived despite
its barren desert surroundings.
Miyatake 's pictures were
the only diary or life inside
Manzana r. one of 10 camps
where some 110,000 West Coast
Japanese were confined by or·
der of President Franklin D.
Roosevelt. The camp also was
portrayed in a television special. MIYATAICa
A box camera 1s not for use on the run, and the
photographs -now at the University of California
-are not the stop-action shots of fast lenses and
high-speed shutters.
THEY ARE NOT ~ RECORD of a grim life,
and Miyatake is sometimes accused by younger
Japanese of shooting the camp through "rose-
colored glasses."
But that is not what he saw.
"In outside," said the now-fragile but alert
83-year-old, "most of the people a re feeling
against the Japanese and you don't know what's
going to happen.
A. For•tune
'Choo Choo' Selh City
CHATl'ANOOGA, Tenn. <AP> -Chattanoo1a?
The BruiUan cave bis American friend a blank look. then brightened. "Ob, yea, the choo
choo," be said.
Wherever you go, people have beard of the
Chatt&noota Choo Choo, immortalized 1n aong by
the late Gfenn Mlller and his swing band. For CB
radto fans throughout the' country, Qiattanooaa'a
handle is C'boo Choo City.
A FEW YEARS AGO. A GROUP or Chat·
tanooga businessmen Invested SlO million to
capitalize on the name.
B. Allen Casey, chairman of the Cbattanoo1a
Choo Choo Co .• said he got the idea from a visilinc
Russian who said he wanted to see tbe Chat·
tano01a Choo Choo.
Casey and fellow investors purchased the
Southern Railroad passenger terminal which had
been closed in 1970 when passenger service ended.
.:fhey renovated the station, put a 1,600-seat
restaurant in the concourse, turned the track area
into gardens with splashing fountains, sculptures
and gas lights and bought an 1880 Baldwin
locomotive -a replica of the original Cbattanooaa
Choo Choo.
W1111 111E ENGINE ARE 48 old Pullman
c ars whose plus h interiors would make
yesteryear's railroad barons envious. Tourists
spend the ni&bl in them for $48. There is alao the
Choo Choo Hilton Hotel. ·
According to Casey. a reporter in Cincinnati
coined the name Chattanooga Choo Choo in 1880
when passenaer service began between the two
cities on the old Cincinnati Southern Railroad.
The name got its fame in 1941 when Tin Pan
Alley composer Har ry Warren and lyricist Mack
Gordon wrote the song for Glenn Miller Cor use in
the movie. "Sun Valley Serenade."
Warren, now 83 and living in Beverly Hills, re·
called in a telephone interview that Mi.Iler wanted
a song about a train, not the city. He said Gordon
came up with the words which seemed to fit the
melody Warren composed.
WARREN, ALTHOUGH AN HONORARY
citizen of Chattanooga, has never been to the
southeast Tennessee city.
The song was nominated for an Academy
Award in 1941 but didn't win the Oscar. Other well
known Warren melodies are "You'll Never
DAILY PILOT U
.
PERFECT HAIR COLORING
OoneAt ...
LUZZETI A Bernard
24'0 NewPort Cen• Or .• Ste. 200
Nl:WPORT BEAOi-&40-6023
-
COME PRAY
WITH US ("
You are cordial IV Invited to Join us •
In morning and evening prayer at the
CATHOLIC CHURCH
OF SAINT JOHN~
THE BAPTIST
1015 BAKl!A STREET. COSTA MESA ;.. -...... ,,.,.., ,_,,,.
..._, ...,.,,.,, "1tt 11th• -, 1111'11 ,_,,I'll,_.
Particular People Sttect JOHNSON & SOt.
Home of the "Golden Touch"
"Follow through la very good. I've had
eleven years of satisfied service".
MRS. FLORENCE L. HALL
. Lagune Hiiia, Calll
ORANGE COUNTY'S OLDEST
LINCOLN MERCURY DEALER
dOHNSON & SON
I ~ l THE BLACK AND WHITE photographs, taken
with a box camera Miyatake made with the 150·
millimeter lens and wood from a willd apple tree,
show high school graduations, family scenes and
children at play.
"l was feeling kind of jittery and insecure.
"When I came to the camp, I see nothing but
Japanese .... Actually I enjoyed it. l felt very
comfortable." Know," "Lullaby of Broadway." "Sbufne Off to 2626 Harbor Blvd .• Costa Mesa . 540-5630
Buffalo,·· "On the Acheson. Topeka and Sant.a --------------------AFTER mE WAR. MIYATAKE returned to
Little Tokyo here, where his studio is the oldest of
its kind.
Fe." ''You. Wonderful You," and "I Found a
Million Dollar Baby in the 5 and 10 Cent Store."
Warren s aid he isn't writing much music In some. Japanese children stare solemnly
through barbed wi re fences : others catch the proud
poses of young Japanese-Ameri cans ready to leave
camp to fight for the government that imprisoned
them
Miyatake's work at the camp was eventually
discovered by authorities. but they allowed him to
continue -as long as he turned in the camera at
night and a Caucasian worker tripped the shutter.
anymore.
"Things are different today." he said ... The
kids don't want tbe same kind of music. Now it's
rock."
AT
WIT'S
END
Erma tell a it like it is.
In the DAILY PILOT
N.Ue Not ... Meta•
DEAR PAT: We are a retired cou·
pie and we eat out ever y night.
Consequently, we run into many
situations where untrained children
make dining out unpleasant. Grant·
ed. 'tur tolerance is lower now than
when we were younger , but does this
give a right to parents of noisy brats
to inflict their unrestrained unruli·
ness on others?
An obvious answer 1s to request
another table or booth, but this is not
practical when no other seating is
available. Are there any regulations
or laws that could help those of us
who would like to sit down to a
leisurely dinner without the screams
and other distur bances caused by
brats that possibly shouldn't be there
in the first place?
J .S., Costa Mesa
There are no laws designed to evict
noisy youngsters from restaurants.
Some restaurants cater ta family
service, and perhaps you should limit
yoar dining to more sedate establish·
me11t1 which attract customers who
prefer a quiet atmosphere. Checks
wl&b a number of restaurants ln·
dicate that the manage ment wlll be
happy to speak politely to customers
whose cblldtta are disturbing other
diners. U your eomplalnt is reasona·
ble, a restaurant representaUve can
handle this sit11atlon with tact, re·
duce the noise level and,. hopefully,
your blood p~ure too!
Mall .. ,..,,~ SolN!CI
" DEAR -READERS: -The Direct
Mail/Marke&lng Association wams
consumers that the growth ln bome
gardelllng as a bobby bas broupi an
lDuease in exaggerated advertlsln&
claims by diareputabJe m.all order
houses. 1be association's tarden sup·
ply member companies urce
gardeners to follow c e rtain
guideJlnes In orderlnJ seeds, house
plaau aad nursery prodQds sold by
m~. - -DMMA advtses ukbl1 the beat
~ff'4e-ttef" ... '"'e-eef.9.bef"lt&H
wbetlter ilie aifVt!rUsln& cl•lm souncls
leit&lma&e. Some dlarepatable flrrns
Cot a problem' Tlum u..nt\· I•' Pru Dunn Pot will cut red torw {lf'lhng th,. OM1t•f'rJ ond oct-Voll need
ro rolr• mtqljllU'< 111 l/l•tr rnm«'ftl oltd bwmur Moil
flOU' q""1IOIU tu Pot Hunn. Al Your Srruocr. Oronqe C"oair Dmly l'ilot P fl Ynr Jj61) Cn.tto ilftllJ CA
92626 .U ""111!1 lrllf'TI cu posnble i..111 M on11u"f'd
~ pliqnnl mqumr• "' lrtt,_.,.. nm 1ncludmg rhr
rf'Odn </ult 1111mP. odrlrn., and bwt111'At houri' p~ 11um~rcanoor bt ron.,dPrrd TllucolumnappearHkll
Ill rrerpt Soturdovs
claim that the home gardeDer can
save money on products such as cof·
fee by growing It at home. Reputable
mall order houses advertise Items as
coffee plants and orange trees for or·
namental llSe only, and they offer
customers a full warranty.
DMMA also urges gardeners to be
su1plcious if drawings are used in
print advertisements. This usually
means that the firm doesn't have
anything to photograph that matches
the appealing appearance of tbe
artwork. As ln any other purchue,
DMMA advises avoiding anythlllg
that ls too good to be beUeved..
The Mail Order Action Line,
sponsored by DMMA, can be c:ontact·
eel if Clll8atisfactory garden or other
mailed mercb~ndise Is received. or If
there Is another problem with a mall
order firm.
DMMA als o offers the Mall
Preference Service. initiated in 197Z.
This free service enables consumers
to be taken orr mailing lists or to be
added to lists for specific product
Jines. Both MOAL and MPS can be
contacted by wrltlnt to the Direct
Mall/Marketing Association, 6 E.
43rd St .• New York, N.Y. 10017.
Spring Water Distilled
DEAR PAT: Several months ago
one of your readers asked if water
from machines is really distilled. A
bottled wate r authority said that
-!.!distilled'' w-ateF-46 an-eb&olet&-term.
This hu made-me -wonder-tt
water I purchase from Sliver Springs
Water, which ts-identified ~-uDfs:
tilled Water" is, in fact, what Silver
Springs claims it to be or whether
this label is incorrect.
8 .H., Laguna Beach
A Silver Sprlags Wate r
spokeswoman told A VS tbal lts water
Is "distilled" as claimed, and that
tbl• firm ases the dlstillatlon rrocess
to remove sodium and al other
mlnerall from Its water. ~ notes
tbM eionlud water ... wb sulla·
blt fft most dla~ -wtU:r pvposes,
removes sodium froJ11-1rater ba&...al.
lOws lueeaor Oilier mfnerila JO re-
m ala.
We need a good
Commercial Insurance Rater
Your
Daily P1/ot
csnbe
1'ecycled
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Someom· may become so despondent she
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She explodes over trivial matters like the car not
starting. She can't carry on with he r family.
She needs help.
P-rof~ional help . Tht! only real hope for
regaining a normal. productive Hfe.
The kind of help avail able at the Problem
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At the Problem Ta lk Shop we care for
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Problem Talk Shop is a free service which
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tht! problems they thought were ton big to
Ji.and.le_ --------
If you know someoTie who ts experiencing an
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(714)997-1831
1110 East Ch1pm1n Avenue, Suite 109
,Oren~. Callfoml• 92666
f ...
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Laguna Hills, C.W:orn.1& 92653
-....---. ~ .......... .., l ~
--!-'-
r \
----~ ..... --~--~--
AI• DM.VPU.OT •
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confirm taste satisfaction of1ow tar MERIT.
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current MERIT smokers:
Kings: B mg"tar:' 0.6 mg nicotine-·
lOO's: 11 mg" tar;' 0.7mg nicotine av. percigarena, RtReponMay'78
Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined
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.
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Confirmed: 9 out of 10 MERIT smokers not
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FJ.rSt Major Alternative -~ · ----...
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.. • .IA -~ ..... -•• ·,.:
' ' i
• • •
INSIDE: •Stocks •Comics ' •Movies •Televlslon Mondlly,Augutt28, 1978
.
Allen W-a~ ~ost Fif!ed Sooner Tmnpa&y
No Match
For Cosmos It Was All Going Wrong-R.osenbfuorn
LOS ANGELES (AP> -"f came ctos
to nrtna Alltft eooner. r ~Id ... l waa au
aolq Wmu.1' Loe Aq Rama' Prest·
dent CUTOO'Rolcabloom aays o1 bts de·
clllOQ to ~ Gf!Ol'li AUen coac.b Juat
two weds tnto th National Football
Lea1ue preseaon cam
Roeenbloom. in an lnterview ftported br.
th Los An~I Time' today. aid that A . I n refused to acttpt opmiom from the
Ratn medical t am. and •PUt the coachJJ\f
tarr into ~ separate and bewilderiq
parta.
AU.EN'S "NO WAT Ea" obseaion dur
ing bot. humid pncticea al Cal State
Fullerton had alarmed the Rams· medical
staff . the Times said. addine that Allen
wouldn't listen lo su11eslJons be &ive
players reasonable water breab.
Seven ot the Rams collapsed and needed
Dodgers
Take On
Montreal
LOS ANGELFS CAP> -Are
th~ Philadelphia Phillies ready
to make their move?
Greg Luzins ki a nd Bake
McBride, who comblned for six
of the Phillies' 13 bits in a 9-3
vi~tory Sunday over Los
Angeles, thlnk so.
·:It's bard lo say why we're
noi further ahead at this point,"
sa\d McBride, who slugged his
sixth home run and singled three
times. "We just haven't put
anything together all year long.
"BUT IF WE play the way
we're capable of playing, we're
still going to win by six or seven
games."
The victory kept Philadelphia
2 12 games in front of the
Chicago Cubs in the National
Dodgen Slat~
Toni9hl MontrHl•ll.~~ 7 1S pm
-medical trutmenl when thelr body Uqu1<1s
were below tho da.n1er point, the Times re·
ported
148VILDING MENTAL touahness is one
thin1. deltroytn1 an athlete's health ls
another." Rosenbloom was quoted aa say·
ln1
"Sometimes he had staff meetings with
only the R d1kln coaches, lockin~
others out In the cold." Rosenbloo i •
rererrlna to asslsttnt coaches who ca e
with Allen rrom the Washington Redskins.
The Rams lost their two exhibition
games under Allen. and have won twice
under new coach Ray M alavasi Including
a 28·3 thrashing of Oakland Saturday
night.
"IF ALLEN HAD remained. we might
not have won a single game all year. It
was that bad and getting worse.··
Rosenbloom reportedly said.
"If J knew how Well lb.ls WQ all lolnl lo
work out. l mllbt have planned it exactly
this way:· Rosenbloo1D added. ••Tbe
players love Ray. Tbe ~ ln team
attitude ls total.
"It's the sort of thing we bad bl t.he
championship days al Baltimore,•• said
Rosenbloom, who wu the owner of lbe
Baltimore Colts before awapptn• that
franchise to obtain the Rams in 1972.
WHEN ALLEN WAS fired. Rosenbloom
did not give details but said he worried
that Allen's perfectionist altitude was
threatening the coach 's health.
Rosenbloom indicated Allen would fare
better if he were both coach and general
manager.
"I reel for the man. J wanted to do it as
gently as possible." Rosenbloom told the
Times. "But Allen won 'tleave it alone ...
GEORGE ALLEN
.... , ........
EAST RUTHERFORD. N.J .
'AP> -They come from so
many bact'1'0WJ<is and nations. speak so many languages and
earn so many dollars. They are
the players. the gears. that
make the Cosmos a cham-
pionship machine.
The machine worked to near
perfedioo Sunday before 74,901
al Giants Stadium Sunday.
pounding out a 3·1 victory over
lhe Tampa Bay Rowdies to 'win
its second consecutive North
American Soccer League title.
"C~ COUNTS in the end."
sa id Dennis Tueart. the
Englishman who scored twice
while ltaJy·s Giorgio Chinagha
scored once. "You can't penny.
pinch when you want to buy
class."
Team management knows
that. Jt bought world class
players the way a chef buys
gourmet groceries before cook·
ing a masterful meal.
There was Tueart. hampered
by tnJuries early in tbe season
and maddened by frustration.
but a six-goal scorer m the
playoffs.
THERE WAS GOALIE Jack
Brand. a benchwarmer most of
the year but a star in post·
season with a shutout strealc of
378 minutes. 50 seconds.
There was Steve Hunt. who set
up the first goaJ or his final
game with the team and cried
when it was over. He was to re·
tum to England today to fulfill
his lifelong ambition of playing
with Coventry City of the re·
nowned First Division.
And there was Eddie Firmani.
who coached Tampa Bay's \975
champions but ten 1ast season to
become foreman of the Cosmos·
wrecking crew.
T-a., MonlrHlall..os...,.IH 71Sp.m.
WtdMSCl•Y Montreal•IU>s ..... ln 7·25p.m FRED LYNN SOMERSAULTS INTO HOME PLATE AS BRIAN DOWNING AWAITS THROW IN 12TH INNING.
''ONCE YOU GET to live with
the clavers, you get lo know the
predictable ones; the unpredic·
table ones. the ones that can win
games for you." said Firman1.
who fielded a lineup so strong
Sunday that NASL Rookie of the
Year Gary Etherington was left
in street clothes. "It ·s my job to
put the right players on tht.>
field."
~~?~1~!~~:~·~~ Can T8n8na Revitalize Arigels?
three-game series with Montreal
with Burt Hooton <l4·8) facing •
the Expos' Steve Rogers <13·9>.
Luzinski. who doubled and
singled lo drive in three runs.
said. "We haven't hit a hot spell
.all year. Hopefully we will.
We're starting to score a few
more runs and certainly that's a
good sign."
THE PHILLIES opened a 4-2
lead against the Dodgers' rookie
right-hander Bob Welch after six
innings.
Mike Schmidt. who doubled
and singled twice, drove home
the first run with a third-inning
sacrifice Oy. An error by first
baseman Steve Garvey led to
two unearned runs in the fifth
and McBride homered in the
sixth.
Charlie Hough pitched the
eighth and ninth innings for the
Dodgers and was shelled for rive
runs.
STEVE Y EAGER. starting
behind the plate for the first
time since Aug. 2. doubled home
the Dodgers' first run in the
fifth. Reggie Smith singled home
Davey Lopes in the fifth and
Rick Monday drove home the
_final run..ilL ~Lb. ~oriDg
Ron Cey. who letll'ff with a dou·
ble.
From AP Dispatches
NEW YORK-<:oming off three straight losses lo
the Boston Red Sox. the California Angels try to re·
group tonight when they face the New York Yankees.
The 5 o'clock game will be televised live on Chan·
.nel 7. Frank Tanana <16·8> will start for the Halos,
opposing former teammate Ed Figueroa <12·9>.
Sunday's 4·3 Joss in 12 innings dropped the Angels
out of first place in the American League West.
Kansas City defeated Texas, 4·2, to take a half.game
lead in the standings.
DESPITE SOME misgivings from Manager Don
Zimmer, the series s weep left the Red Sox in an en-
viable position in their drive for the AL East flag. re·
ducing their magic number to 28.
Any combination of 28 victories by Boston and
losses by the runnerup New York Yankees would give
the Red Sox the division crown.
"I don't know what the magic figure ts, and r
don 't really care.·· Zimmer said Sunday after his Red
Sox' victory. "All I know is that we have 34 games to
go, a tough 34.' · Zimmer said .
JN COMPLETING a sweep of a three·game
series with the Angels.
the Red Sox boosted
their record to 81·47.
moving 34 ~ames over
On Tl' Toafglat
Oaaanel 7 at S
.500 for the second time ----------
this year. That enabled them to retain a 7~·game lead
over the defending champion Yankees.
Jn simple math. if the Red Sox go 19·15 the rest of
the way. New York will have to win 28 of its remain·
ing 35 games just to tie.
BO'nl TIIE RED SOX and the Angels left enough
runners in scoring position Sunday to test the pa·
tience or any trafCic cop. California ten the bases
loaded ln the eighth and ninth innings. So did Boston.
Tbe Angels tied the score 2·2 on Danny Goodwin's
pinch RBI double in the ninth. then went ahead J.2 on
Don Baylor's run·scoring single high off the left field
wall in the 12th.
However, the Red Sox rebounded with the help of
a cosUy throwing error by rookie third baseman
Camey Lansford in their half of the innJng.
Carl Yastrzemski, employed a~ the designated
hitter while sportmg a heavily taped nght wnst. led
off the Boston 12th with bis fourth sin gle and gave
way lo speedster J erry Remy, also nursing a wrist
inJUry.
ONE OUT LATER, Fred Lynn walked. Dwight
Evans flied deep to center. Then George Scott bit a
See ANGEl.S. Page 82
Ieuganis Wins
Polo is ts Qualify
·For '80 Olympics
From AP Dispa&cbes
-=~·-·-harry-Gb.risleA9'&fld &-i:!. -=-::-~~~
= ~LIN,_-O""'r .... a""n""f""'i!-cc~o:::'.a$='t area mums helped t e Uru£ed
Slates water poTo team clinch a berth in the 1980 Olympics as a
seeded team Sunday. --=""--· .:::-=-;-;;-;;;. --· C'aptaittOaty-Figl/eroa', a-graduate of UC Irvine. scored thr~
--!
I,
I
~
"
earned the victory with relief
help from Warren Brusstar and
Ron Reed. •
Monday joined a growing list
of nagging injuries among the
Dodgers when he came up lame
after sliding Into second base.
See DODGERS, Page 82
-AMERICfN !VINE
From AP Dispatcltes
PARMA. Italy -Former
University High and Saddleback
College star Tim Wallach hit a
two-run hom e run Sunday to
lead the United Slates lo a 2-0
shutout over Korea during lbe
World Amateur Baseball Cham·
pionships here.
Wallach, now attending Cal
State Fullerton, also bit a two·
run home run in Saturday's 5-3
decision over Japan, leaving the
U.S. team 2·0 for the touma·
ment.
Wallach's rlrst·innlne blast
Sunday followed a walk by Stan·
ford 's Mlke Codiroli with two
outs.
Texas A&M leflhander Mark
Thurmond hurled a four·hltter
and struck oul 10 Korean batters
as he ~t the distance for the
U.S. t'
GOLDEN DUO -Jesse Vassallo of Mission
Viejo < righ tl and Tracy Caulkins of
Nasbville have been the don)inant forces at
the World Swimming Championships in
Berlin. Vassallo has won two events, in~
.~ ..........
eluding a world record performance In the
400 individual medley, whlle Caulkins has
set two world marks en route to garnerlna
six medals.
-. . -,... -~· --... --. --.. ~ ..
goals as the U.S. defeated West Germany, 6·3. here in the World
Aquatic Championships. Newport Harbor High graduate Kevin
Robertson also scored a goal as the United States finished in fifth
place after the final round of Group 2 competition.
THE UNITED STATES failed to qualify for the last Olympics
held in Montreal and the team's performance here. which in·
eluded n victory over the Soviet Union, was an encouragmg one.
· Italy won the gold medal by tying European and Olympic
champion Hun_&!lr.Y-1·4 i.n Sunday·s finfil.,.-.Yugoslav1a deCeated tbc
Soviet Union, 6-4, to take tfie bronze medal.
_V.nitectSt.ates smmme~adxJQade.ci wlih 2.Lgntd-me4al$..
and efibt world records. stood a _good chance of ad~ to their
medaltreasureCbest today on the final day of competition.
GREG LOUGANIS of Mission Vie10 gave the United Slates its
21st gold medal in the meet today, winning the men's platform
diving after officials rejected a protest which would have lowered
his points going into the final competition.
Tbe Americans. who have claimed eight world records dunng
the lO·day championships. stood a good chance of addJng to their
medal treasure chest In night-time event$ on the final day of competition.
The 18-year-old Louganill finished with 844.11 points, taking the
title from East Germany's veteran Olympian Falk HofCmann, who
finished with 836.76.
The bronze medal went to Vladimir Alelnik or the Soviet Union.
Hoffmann and Louganis beean the finals with Just more than
270 points which each carried over from Sunday's qualitymg.
Before the competition began, the govemin& board of the
International Swimming Federation turned back a protest that
would have reduced by 12 the number or points credited to the
young ..American.
SeveraJ nations. Including Canada. protested a decision by
U.S Judee R. Jackson Smith in Sunday's preUm,nanes to allow
Lougan..15 and six other divers to repeat their dives 10 the ninth
round, which was interrupted by a storm.
-.. ... . 1r ~ .......... ,---i · ...
'
D OM.YP1LOT
Pi nalty
Kite's Elorwsty'
Gives Watson Win.
PIN HURST. NC l AP> -
Tom Wataan lt lhe )'t&r'a l ad·
lnl mOMY·Wlnn r 11aln, bol4tr or four 11?9 tournament ll\J • ln
PQ6'Uon en em anothit!l' Player
of lho Year Ullf and cloatn.a ln on torn• othtt amblUons auci u
the Vanton ~ and R)'der
Cup
At l '4>me of lhOIO iood
thin., can be attr1bUted to the
mstant. trOn t'lad and unhesttat·
tot adhel"f'ftff to the rul ol IC)lf
by Tom Kite. who C'alled a self-
1mposed penalty tor an infrac•
tJon no one else saw. a penalty
that ev~tually kn«ked ham out
of 1 playoff rolf' and let WallOn
l't-t'&JM' Ynlh lhe lltJf' In th Hall
of Fame C1aMIC'
''TH:\T COST ME the toun'la
ment, .. a dls<'ONOlate Kite said
Sunday, then responded to Ii
question: "You're damn r1ght It
hurts."
The 1nc1dent. which occurred
well out of the range or the na·
ttonal telev1slon camer as and
wasn't even ob.served by Kite's
playing partners, Hale Irwin
and Howard Twitty, took place
on the fifth hole of the final
round on the No. 2 course at the
Pinehurst Country Club.
KITE HAD MIS.SEO a 15·foot
b1rd1e putt. He had a tap-in of
Jess than a fool for a par. As he
set the club down, the ball
rolled. "about this much," he
said and held thumb and fore-
finger less than one·quarter incha
apart.
Under the rules. it was a one-
shot peutty. IDt. tmmtdSatelY atcp-9 b9ck from t.bt ball and
told ll..S. Irwin, OM of b.la plat•
lnt pan.Mn, "I'm ttllln• a .,.natty. My bt1l moftd."
N tl\ber lrwln 11or Howard
Twitty • .,., "" plQLq wtlh
Kite .aw lt.. TlloM UlNe 9"11·
tu1U1 t1ed ror aecood Mblnd
Wat.on -bJ the marlin of the
ooe·•trok• ~ltJ Kite caned on
himaeU. ....... -... _.,~-"•" .. ,,_ G9lt 0-" .. Git,..,..,.,., ~.,, .... _.. ................ ~
(.119 '-·~--n.,.,..n-rr. H ... lrwl''".m ,~
-· Tllflfty. tM.DI "'*JMl-411 1'-Kite. t M.= .......,.n-m 0-. ....... 1'9.29 ,..,.1"Hl-f" '*" ..... ---.,.,.,,.,._.. ... GI .... , flJ/11 n -11.Jl4t-m euntl ~ ..... '1M1 ,,.,....,,......,
Ml•• Mc~~ 1M1·1•11-atf Pfl11H....._""1D 1HU.1t_..
... 19fJ~M.nt , .. ,..~
11111 K••uwrt, _.._.,, 1 .. "'61·17--
0ofl l'ooi.r, '4.A> 1w.,..n-•
&Illy C..-. tol.&D 1~1l·1t-n-•
Cill*Y 01"°""' .,,31S '1 "*'~ ltu C&lo..ll, WJS 10-1HM+-IS1
"-Muntow. SUJS Pl·J0.74-Jt-97 Anl9Mt~;l3.J1t 1t-1.._,.,.._.,
TOM WATSON
Surprising
Victory
For Hallllin
Be41SM-.5U't 11·1'·,..._. P••"~-..tUJs 1 .. n.'°":=: ST. PAUL, Minn. <AP> -The ~:!!1~::,~~s ~:::;~,,....."celebrity attention. Shelley ""' $1,.,.,... u.u• 11-1•n·11--Hamlin received for winning her
.... er_,_,u,i5' ~~:=: first LPGA tournament was just CMrlft ~. U,15' rlsin h th . G,.. Pow«s. u, 1,. ... ,._11.n-• as aurp g to er as e v1c-~111a Ratel. \1,m n.n.71·n-., tory Itself GffY ICOdl. '1."2 7H .. JI0.7._.,. · .-ic-. s1.m 11.12.,..11-2'0 "Do you always have cbam·
Fr•"" e-o. '1.m 12·n·71•7S-2'0 pagne after every tournament " ~ M<L.etldon ti.Jn n .u.1•11-2'0 . •
Amotd Pa1,,...:t1.m 11.1~1s-2t0 s he asked, spying the winner's o. ... £1cN1-.w.•1.,,, 7,.,1-1..,1~"° libation on the tables. "I haven't CT•'9 SUOW tt.stt n.1 .. 1~ . Jim Dent. i1.iin n-11.1 .. 11-2'0 ever done this before, you know.
GeY II•-· s1.io1 n.7._n.72-291 In fact I've never gone Into a 8oO E. $mitt\. J I. IOI 10-7$-7~7l-2'1 • , ,
c;.cw .. c:.dl9. s1.101 1s.r1.1~10-m press tent. .
_,, P1e11.11.101 u.1J.n.n-m Hamlin's personahty reflected
Tom ~.\1,101 n-n·n~ d J1msi,,_Jt,to1 n .1 .. 11-14-m the champagne she rank -
0onJ•n.-y.i1.101 7 .. ,,.,..74-2'1 bubbly 1be 29-year-old former W.y ... L_ .. 'I IOI ~7 ..... 7.-2'' • · ...... · national collegiate champion
from Stanford bad just sunk a
Fro• Page BJ slx·foot birdie puU on the 18th
hole to claim a one·stroke vic-
tory over Kathy Whitworth in ANGELS FACE YANKEES. • • the Patty Berg Golf Classic at
Keller Golf Course. routine grounder to third.
Lansford's throw to first pulled
Joe Rudi off the bag. Remy,
never hesitating, sprinted home.
just beating Rudi 's throw to the
plate.
Fro•Pa~BI
DODGERS. • •
"My spikes hung up on the bag.
I felt two pops in my right knee
and a tremendous amount of
pain," said Monday.
Already ailing are Smith lleft
knee I. J oe Ferguson (left
shoulder>. Dusty Baker <pulled
ribcage muscle> and Bill North
1 bruised left band).
"HILADlll'NIA LOIAlfOELH
McBrlO<!rt
Bo••~~ $<1\mtOt lb
LUllM~I"
Morrl\on Pll
Rttdp
Hel>nftr lb
BOOM<
J M•rt1n cl
S11emor 7b
Chri\te"s~n o
OTuular II Mct.a,.er Pll
C..rcltnel II
allr II 1111
' •• 7
& 7 3 0
s ' l 2 • 0 2 3
0000
1 0 0 0 s 0 0 1
l 0 1 0
• 0 0 ' 2 I 0 0
? 0 0 0
0000 0 '0 0
1000
LO~\ 1b
Ru\S<!lln
R.Smllll rl
FerouM>n rt
Garvey lb
(.ey 311
0 B11-er II
Monday tt
Horii\ or
Yeager<
WtlChP
oavallolo Pll
HOUQllP
Lao pn
... rll 1111
4 I 7 0
4 0 I 0
• 0 1 ' 0 0 0 0
• 0 0 0
• ' , 0
• I 1 0
4 0 I I
0000 3 0 t I
7 0 0 0
'0 0 0
4 0 0 0
1 0 0 0
Tota" Yi 7 13 • Totals 3S 3 10 3 Plulaclelolll• 001 071 073-'I
Los AnoeoH 000 011 001-3 E-Ye-. Garvey LOB-Phll-IP'll• t•,
Los Ar>o•ln • 18 Bovw• 7, R Smltll, Y-r.
S<llmldl, Co HR-McBride !U. SB-L-t,
Soiemore S-OWlslenwn SF-H•-r. IP H It Elt 18 50
PHIL.ADELPHIA
Chrotlen,,.., IW IC>-l?l S· I 8 7 7 0 3
8ruular I • 0 0 0 I t
RHO 7 1 I I O 0
LOS ANGELE~
Wtl<" IL.HI I I 4 1 S J
HOUQh 7 S S S J 1
HBP Mct.afvt'r IBy HOUQl\I, Soremor• IB~ Hou<1fll WP Chrotlen~ T 1 so A 0.-S
Johnloll & Son , .........
Butch Hobson followed wtth a
line single to center, scoring
Lynn and lifting reliever Bob
Stanley to his 11th victory in 12
decisions. Dyar Miller, the fourth
California pitcher, took hls first
loss afte r four victories.
THE LOSS handed the Angels
another blow in their battle for
the AL West flag with Kansas
City.
"No loss is easy to take." said
Ca l ifor nia M a n ager Jim
F'regosi. who was ejected for
arguing too strenuously the safe
call on Remy's slide to1be plate
for the tying run in the 12th.
"I don't care about Kansas Ci-
ty." Fregosi said. "I just care
what we do. We can beat them
lthe Red Sox>, just the same as
any other team."
CALIFOltNIA
R.Mlllarcf
Lansford 3b Boslo<ll rt
8eylor dh
Rudi lb
Fairly lb
Landre.uall
Oownlnq t C"'11k 211
Groth 2b
Goo<lwl n Pll
J AnOerM>n~
•II r 11111
SI I 0
I> 0 7 0 s 0 I 0 s I 1 1
0020
3 0 l 0
2 1 0 0 s 0 I 0 sooo
3000
I 0 I I
I 0 0 0
BOSTON ar11'4
BurlHO<>U '0 I 0 Bre>Mmtr Jb S o o O Rte• If S I I 0
YaslrremsllH•• • o • O Remy pr 0 1 0 0
FlSll.C S071
Lynnet 4111
Ev•ni.rl S 0 0 0 G 5'oll lb S 0 2 0
Hot>wn 311 • 0 2 I
"I love to talk, too," s he
warned reporters. "You prob-
ably won't be able to shut me up
now."
Ha mlin fired a four-under-par
69 for a 10-under, 54-hole total of
208. Whitworth, who started the
day one shot behind second-round
leader Marlene Floyd, birdied the
first four holes, but suffered
through two double bogeys on the
back nine to finish with a 72. "I folded like a wet noodle,"
said Whitworth. the LPGA all·
time leading money winner and
a m ember of the ladies' Hall of
Fame. "I don't know how else to
put it. For 52 holes I held it
together. Maybe next time I can
hold it together for; 54 holes."
Whitworth was 13-under-pa.r al
one point and held as much as a
three·stroke lead through most
of the final round. But her first
double bogey came at the 14th
hole and she missed a five·foot
bogey putt on 17 for the other.
llam~while, was 11· under t h 16 holes.
Too ""'SM" v In""' P•ttv 8••11 LPGA 9011 tourNtNnt veci ort tM o,on.yaro, PM·1l
Keller Gott rw:
Toi.ls ., 1 t> 2 Tolels
Sh9t .. yH=Jlt,7SO ... 11·"'4111?:"~ 0 • 13 3 Kath'(Wh h,Jr,SOO • ,,_,V7
001 001-) Jerilyn 8rlU, $ot,100 6a.7Hl-210 C•Ulornla 010 000 -rleM FIOyO, ... 100 &Ul-14-210 OIO 002--.. Jene Bl•kKll, SJ, US 7Q.12-6.._2I I Pal M4tye~. '2,•10 6'·73-70-212
B~lon 000 100
Two ou1 when wlnnl"9 run tcored E -L•"'lord. OP-Calllornla I, Bo,ton I.
LOB-C•lltornl• 11, Bo\lon IS. 211-eeylor. Goodwin. R. MW .. , HoOM>n, FISll., G. Scott. HR -
Lynn (201 S8-£v-.S-8r~mer.
IP H R aR 88 to
Flltm<M'rl~
Grlttl" Lot Roche
0. Miiier IL, .. 11
CALIFOltNIA
7 '
0 ' l I
I~ l
1 1 , l
0 0 0 0 0 0 3 l
2 0 ' '
Holllt St.Kev. sUto •M&-IS-212 8etly 8urtelnel1, Sl.670 70...9-14-213
S.llClra Post, Jl,tSO 61-n.14--714 Gell O. Toushln, l l,9SO 71·10·73--214 Don,.. C. Young. t l,tSO •9-72·1'--21• Cor>nle 01lli.ml. tl,4'1 l•·n·I0-216 Mery Dwyer, ll,4'1 1~10-71-216 Joyce ICHmi.nltl, Jt.U7 71·12·72--21• ea,...,. *-U. ,,,..., •s.1 .. n-21•
-Y Lou Ctocller. "·°" 12·71>-?S-217
TlaM
90tTOH a •
~rleM H-oge, l l ,CJI? 12-12·7>-217 1 'l S S...CW• Palme<, ll,017 11·1i.72-217
I 2 I BelhSolomon Jl.Ol7 11·12-74-217 8 St•nlty IW. 11-11
T 4 14 A ls.Ji.
Bmeball Standi~s
AMERICAN LEAGUE
West Division W L Pct. GB
NATIONAL LEAGUE West Division
W L Pct. GB
Melirs
Scores
In Race
RIVERSIDE -Roger Mears
of Bakersfield captured three
races ln the weekend SCORE Off.
Road World ChamploMhtps at
Riverside Internati onal
Raceway. Mears captured two races
Seturday and the lZOOce dune buggy race Sunday. But he
crashed on the first lap of the
single.seater main event Sun-
day. won by Marty Letner of
Downey. Mears was not injured.
There w~re some other
crashes in a 15-mile celebrity
race won by singer-comedian Dick Smothers, 40 seconds
ahead of actor J ames Gamer.
Former heavyweight boxing
champion Ken Norton rolled
over at least three times ln an end-over~nd mishap, but be wu
unhurt.
Actor Martin Milner was a
late sub.stitute when former pro
basketball player Wilt Cham-
berlain was late ror a practice
run. Milner finished thtrd although his vehicle also rolled
over b efore landing o n its
wheels. Each of the celebrity
drivers were in identically pre-
pared jeeps.
s-Mv'•lt-lb 8•l• B1191 (moolllecl vw ...unsl -1. Ron
wa-11, AlwnlOt, no ~ re<oro.ct; 'l. Tom
Co(>Oer, Alolne: s. Ooneld Co•. P-ev. TWO·H•l•rs (1200<cl -I, lt094tr MHrs,
P•rkersfleld, """'° VW, no \OffCI tKorded; 1 Peul Oavls.. Or91199, Hl.Jl#nl)er VW; I. MIU
Lt!MI. "~ -..c-. ..... vw. ~odUCllOI\ ... """"1 dll,,. -I, Oen Rancl911.
MeM, Arll., ~ elJ~ mpft; 2. :>ten Gl!Mr1,
CY11"9H. f'«'d, l. Jim Jot<~. Sierra ~. Ford. Celebrlty Cllallen(1e IJups I -1. Olck
Smothers, J1. "' mp1>; 2 Jamal Gar ... r. J. MMlln Mii..,; •. OIM Welk .. ; s. Rutt> 8wn; •• KenNor1on;7.K.4lfltM<Corel;l.TrO'(~· U11llmllecl Sl"91e-•I -1 Merty L•IMt. OoWM'f, °""°"'8tl\ VW, ".tl7 ITIOf\; 2. 8oO Rodine, S... MMC.OS,) Fritz K,._, Rewda.
Moto" vdft 12S tee Md hlQl>er. llftOff I< 191 due to
pend I no ""*'51 I -I. Cher1M Welk, EI C.)ofl. Va~ha. no-a rKoreleCI; 2. Tom 8roob. Tor· ranee, v~; l. 8111 Ta<llno, C.IMdral Oty,
KTM. Molorcyeltt 12SOct I -I. Bobby Jones. Fiiimore. Hol\da, no s_.i rt<orded; 2. Maril Bonn, Fiiimore, Honda; J. Jett Kaplan,
Woodlal\d Hiiis. HUMJ11arne. MOtorcr<les (12~1 -I, Chris H-er'll. LH v..-s. SIAlUlll, no~ re<~; 2. Martin ONn
Miiiet. Fullerton, Su~Ul<l; l . Ron ElleftbutQ, LH
Ve11a1.Ye<neN.
Solomon,
Orantes
In Finals
From AP Dispatches
BROOKLINE. Mass.-Wily
Harold Solomon stormed back
from a 1·3 deficit in the second
set Sunday and outlasted third·
seeded Corrado Barauutti or
Italy. J.6. 6-4. 6·0, to advance lo
the finals of the Slst U.S. Pro
Tennis Championships.
Solomon will vie for the $32,000
top prize against defending
champion Manuel Orantes of
Sp~in, who neede d just 60
minutes to drub Arthur Ashe,
6·3, 6·2, in Sunday's other
semifinal match.
Wlcu Detaulis
SOMERS. N.Y. -Cliff Richey advanced to the finals when
Guillermo Vilas of Argentina de-
faulted a nd Peter Fleming
gained the other berth with a 6·1.
1·6 triumph over Ille Nastase or
Romania Sunday in the Lionel
Tennis Week round·robin tennis
championsrups.
Vilas. the defending cham-
pion. was unable to play Richey
because of a stomach virus.
ton Tiriac of Romania lost a
chance for a final berth when he
was upset by Mel Purcell, 4-6,
6·2. 6·3. In the final match, Vijay
Amritraj defeated Fritz Buehn-
ing 6·3, 6·4. USED CAR
SPECIALS Kansas City 69 59 .539
Angels 70 59 .534 lh
Texas 64 64 .500 5
Dodlen
San Francisco
ClncinnaU
~: ~ :~ lfi.i s.ltlt M11• TUle
f
'76 CADILLAC
SIVIW-Futl power. tilt wheel. cruise oontrol. AMI FM stereo tape. Leather
interior a moonroot.
33.000 mites. (502707),
S9888
'76 MAUIV
V-8. auto .. factOfY air. lull
power. AM'FM stereo tape, heater, wlw tires.
tinted glass. wheel
covers. Landau top. ~~nienor. aunroot
s9477
71MOtfll CAILO
V·8, IU!~, fldort air. f>(S, P'B. ArwFM rtdlO. tinted
glass. wheel covers.
Landau toP. (643SCA)
Oakland 62 70 .470 9 -.rnnesot.a sr--ri .435 IJ'h
Chicago SS 73 .430 14 Seattle 49 80 .380 201h
-East Dlvllloa
Boston
New York Milwaukee
Detroit
Baltimore
Cleveland Toronto
81 47 .633
73 54 .575 71h
73 56 .566 81h
72 57 .558 91h
70 58 .547 11 56 73 .434 251'2
53 78 .405 29112 __.,., Scef'M
Boston•.~ J, 11 IMlno; Mlnnuot.o3,'T-lo,, 111Mln9'
Detroit•. MllWMAk" 2
Ba Ill more•. SMtlle > H-Y-....0-1-1 Chlo90' o.wttMO K•ntat Ott 4, T.,.H 1 T9M.,.'•oe.& --a:a:i•u•1.-ncTr.w,,_.-._, "lit HIT-"l'ottl ~ n .. 1 ... SUlll• IAllllC!tt .. tO! M ee.-(T°'"t 1~11." Otttol•nd ,...,._.., Ml ac hllltnoA IP91,,_
IS·121. n Mllwa11'ff (AvtuUllMI 11 121 •I O.troll
(RonmeMl.n Ull<~ CICr-1~111 at IC.-. City "1111•
lottf IS.11l,n
TorOfllO llJl\dllrWtOd .. 101 ., Tau• IComH .. , ....
0111y o-td>Mu*'
_.San oteeo
Houston
Atlanta
71 59 .546 5 ATLANTA -Veteran Stan Ga. .6L...521.JJ..j•1aL-__ Sntlth-e-&ptured lhe-A"-nt.a-
61 69 .469 lS JoUTnal-Constttution Open In•
56 73 .434 19'h ternational tennis tournament
Eu& Division Sunday after unseeded-; l~yeal"--
Philadelphia 68 59 .535 old Elllot Teltscher was forced
Chicago 66 62 .516 2'h to withdraw from the third set of
Pittaburfh 64 64 .500 4'~ the final match becau~e of Ul -Montrea 61 69 .469 8'h St. Louis 57 73 .438 12'h ness.
New York 52 78 .400 171.1'.a Te ltscher. who turned pro-~Y'•SC«es resslonal three months ago after
P1111a•1p111a•. ~l a brilUant amateur career at c111,a90 P, Onc:ll\Ntl l s1 L..,1,u.A1i.n1a> UCLA. won the first set 6·4 ==.t=~•sco1-111F1rst.-.1o behind a strong backhand.
IMlllOI> Smith, the No. 3 seed, won the
s..i-oi..>.-NtwY«llt second set 6-1, and was ahead 2-J T ... Yt~ ,_....... ,...,_.JM) 14 ~ ,_ in the third .set when Teltscher
,.~ ~ .,,, .t ~· Nhllffe 1M41, withdrew becauH 'Of 5tom1R!h
" problems. ~ltt....,.. lf"MOet•rl• ""' •\ (lnclnMtl tlffnMll,.T>,11 Jn doubles. John Alexander
""41..._. tKMI .. ,1 01 '°" Dle9t ,,,.,... and Butch Walts defeated Mike IHll,11 °"1' a-tdlMlllM Cahill and Marcelo Lara 3·6, 6·4,
7 ·6 In the nnals.
1fadf!Trl .... p ..
Orange County's Oldest Llncoln-Mercury Oealer"Ship .
MAHWAH N.J . -Top-seeded
V\rglnla Wade rebounded to beat
Kerry Reid, 1-6, 6·1. 8·4 Sunday ln
the finals of the Ber1en County
Women's Tennis Classic at
Ramapo~Uege .
?7 MAii y
AMI FM Quadraphonic 1tert0 taoe. velour
Interior. full pow91'. crulae control,, !lit wheel
Auto held fight-. (743RSOJ
S9888
dOHNSON a SON
lift I
2626 Harbor Blvd • Costa Mesa • 540-5630
1'hlrd place wtnl to 15·year·
old Tuc:y Austin, who beat
R egi na Marslkova of
Ciechoslovaklo 7·6 In a single·
!let playolf
In the doubles final, the South
African teem of Ilana Kloss and
Marlse Kruger defnted Pam
Whytcross of Australia and
Barbarn Potter of Woodbury,
Conn . 8 1, 6·3
_ ..... --.-
GOLF ~BASEBALL I TENNIS
~[p)@IT'~~ IB5IT'®@llk\ . .
A Capaule Report From th• World of Sport•
Padres Coach Saves Man
In Fiery Auto Crash
From AP.,.....•
SAN DIEGO -San Dleao Padres bullpen
coach Whitey Wietelman bu been erediUld with
savln1 tbe life of a 19-year-old San Dte10 man ln a fiery, automoblle crub. .
Richard Ivan Clark's vehicle went out of control Fn·
day morning on Pacific Hi&bway and nipped over several
times, police said.
Wietelman. 59. an infielder with the Boston Braves and
the Pittsburgh Pirates in the 19408. said be had been
following the car for about three miles. trying to stop the
youth, wbom be said "was driving real erratically."
''I tinally got to hi m wben be stopped for a red liabt. 1
said, 'Son, you're not gonna drive anymore.' and as I was
reac~lng for the keys the Ugbt turned green and be drove
off,•• Wietelman said.
When Clark's car cau.gbt fire alt.er lt overtumed.
Wietelman was the only bystander wbo acted, police said.
"I saw that the names were coming out the other aide,"
Wietelman explained, "so I pulled blm through an open
window. got my bands under his arms and flipped him
back over my head."
Clark's clotbH were ln names, so Wietelmao said he
ripped off the man's pants and shirt.
Clarie was admitted to the University Hospital Bum
Center in critical condition with second-and third-degTee
burns over 40 percent of his body' a hospital spokes·
woman said.
Wietelman was treated by the Padre team doctor ror
minor burns on his bands and arms.
Sonei Sd....er Fafb Dopf119 Test
BERLIN -A Soviet swimmer has been dis-a
qualified al the World Swimming Cham·
pionsbips after failing a doping test , sources at
the International Swimming Federation said to-_
day. Sources identified the swimmer as Viktor Kusnetzov.
who won the bronze medal Tuesday in the men's 100-meter
backstroke. Tbe inddent is the first doping case to come to light in
lbe 10-day championships wtuch end today.
Maeada9da T .. .-..q: For N•• Oa ..
HONOKAA, Hawaii-It's not exactly a reg· !I
ulalion golf ball, but the macadamla nut ball
did just flne for the 42 finalists in the
Macadamia Nut Masters Golf Championship on
the island or Hawaii. The special ball consists of an uns helled macadamia
nut coated several limes tn orange latex. It ends up slight·
ly smaller than a regulation·sized golf ball.
"On putts it sometimes takes funny directions. even
though quite a few players had very good putts," says
tournament spokesman Dick Johnston.
The longest distance the nut ball traveled on one swing
was 130 yards, be said.
The five-day tournament ended Sunday with an 18·hole
final at the Hamakua Country Club.
Quote ot die dq
Gra.ig Nettles on the advantages of playing for the
New York Yankees: "Some kids want to be ballplayers.
Some want to run away with the circus. I was lucky-I got
to do both."
E&eldlere i• Sperts. ••
The principal parties in a pair of big trades •
by the. New York Mets a year ago met again
Sunday· with interesting results. Home run slug-
ger Dave KinJmu, now with the Chicago Cubs.
blasted his 22Dd round-tripper off of Tom Seaver, currently
the property of the Cincinnati Reds. Seaver lost, 7·1, as his
record dropped to 11-13 and Is now 3·9 since hurling a no-
bitter June 16. The Reds likewise continued their slump,
""fr"' losing for the 14th time in the last 20
games ... Dave Cash's tot.h inning
single lifted Montreal past San Fran·
cisco, 2·1, and enabled winning pitcher
Ross Grimsley 06·91 to tie loser Vida
Blue ( 16-7 > for the Na lion al League lead
in victories ... Baltimore won its sixth
str1light as EddJe Murray drilled his
25th homer to sink Seattle, 4·3 ..
Graig NeUles and Chris Cbambllss each
hit a pair Qf homers as the Yankees
dropped Oakland. 6·2 . . . Jim Slaton
won his 14th game for Detroit by stop-
ping Milwaukee. 4-2 . . . Kansas City, which ranks last in
the American League in home runs. rode a pair of solo
blasts by Darrell Porter and one by Amos Ot11 to beat the
Texas Rangers, 4·2, and regain first place in the AL West
by obe·haU game over the California Angels.
Leading in bis Lotus from start to finish, •
Mario AndreUJ won the Dutch Grand Prix and
virtually assured himself of the 1978 Formula l
world driving championship. Andretti covered the 196.9
miles in 1:41.04, averaging 117 miles per hour ... Cale
Yarbo~ won his third consecutive Volunteer 500 Grand
National stock car race al Bristol International Raceway
i
-in-'Penneeeee, run--at-nidt• for-the-llreHlme-tn-h,tl!' llDl"Y->....,-:::---lf---_..-1 Jaet leffrey of Wasbfngton won the NASCAft W on
West Coos Bay 100 ... Jim Busby of Laguna Beach,
~J."tft1vtllg-• Porsebe 935 With-BUI ~ cl:: Ft.
Lauderdale. won the premier event of the IMSA circuit in
Ohio.
The New England Patriots EiJ
-became the only NFL team to complete the pre· 4. t
season with a 4-0 r ecord after reserve
quarterback Tom Owen and USC graduate Mosl
Ta&upu sparked a 21·10 victory over the Cleveland Browns
. . Lineman Stan Johnson was traded from the Los
Angeles Rams to the Kansas City Chiefs for a future draft
choice . . . Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Ken Anderson --· underwent an examination wctey tu <te;o-
termlne lf the broken bone in his right
ttamt-wttt ~ ]Jin or be placed·-iac-a-
cast . . . Pete Baaaasak was waived by
the Oakland Ralders to make room for
MoDte Jaekaon, the cornerback ac·
quired from the Rams . . . . .. The St.
Louts Cardinals obtained Jim Thax&on
from the New Orleans Saints . . . Bob
Grle•e. Miami Dolphin quarterback.
wUl wear a cast on his left knee for
three weeks alter being injured Satur·
.... aNDHSOM day. Don Strock, who threw just rour
passes tn 197'7, wtll gel the starting nod this week . . . Bf.rt
.foaea, the Baltimore Coils' quarterback. sustained an In·
complete separation of hla right fthoulder Saturday, wall
also be out indefinitely, leavtng the starting Job to thlrd
stringer Mike Kirkland.
....... T~lft1ffto•
RADiO : Tonlght-Ba"ebalt-Angel!' at Ntw York
Yankees, KM PC <710>. 5 o'clock. Montreal •l Dodgers.
KABC t790>. 7·30.
TV: Tonlaht-Baseball-Angels at New York Yankees,
Channel 7, s o'clock. Tennls-U S Pro Championships,
Channel 28, 9:30.
l'f ,. ,-
=
. ~ I
.. ! .
Monday, Augu.t 28. 1978 DAILY PILOT ll:J
Southeastern Football Slate DelMar
Reslllts
'Bama•-Best · South • m
~-,. 11'\114M'f .. ~Y-••tl "Int race Pr•••nl Memot1••
IV•l•111uetal, 1 70. • 00. • 20 IC1nQ ot
\wl ... 10ei¥,.I UIO, •40, Mr
1'°'1191 (~I, .120, Se<-rac•-U~do (Mc(MrCIO'll
1 00, 3 ... 3.lO, S.!<IWIY'• Pi..wr~
ITorol. :uo. J10; ""'" -cc..t fell-I,• Ill. OllllY Oowllle 11·SI peoO
tl . .O Tl!lrCI rac-Tlltln Mll-.n tMcC.•
fOf\I, J , ... 2 40, 2 20, ... SIY PMil
IMcH .... I, ?AO, J,lO, H--
CMOrenol. till u E-.CI• ·~· MIO C'OO
.. 01irth ••c•-0"4•• 1he T ••~ lltamtrerl, I) 20, 72 40, II 60, TV
c ... ,,,,,,. ·~·· • 00, 140, Pl.-i "'i;,,\':<;:':"9c.;!2!u01t IM<C••
ronl. \.-.0, I.JO, J 00. Pottmar•
ICaolanad•I, 5 . .0. • 00. l..••~Oo •McH••9WI. l .40. '5 Eaecu 11.31
i>etO 7J j(I, Sl•lh rate-~ CTcwol, • • .O. l <IQ. 2 60. l(lel' l(lltso IMcCMr.,..1
9 00. J 60, Alwef• C.e1te"1
IC.sle-1, 310. !>"""''" ••U-c • .,, •. , •noel
f Pierce> ... 20, ._20, J.40, OU. 8onlU1
LSU, Kentucky Cludknge Crimson Tide t Toro1 ll 0(). •.00. £•1••••11•"' ICHl•Md411 JOO. U Ea.cl• 12·1• p;iics nano.
E lqhlh ••<•-Country Queen
I Toro I ••A.• ID •• 00. a TIOOuQftttvl
I Pler<el l '°· l 20, Oooona 1,..,
IM•nu 1020
ATLANTA <AP> -Alabama,
the most awesome machine in
Southern collegiate football thQ..
past seven years. again is the
area's most logical contender
for a national championship in
the 1978 season.
But. don't tell Paul William
Bryant.
The crusty Crimson Tide coach.
better known as "B ea r ,"
takes exception to the pre-
"~•"""'* season national forecasts that generally place his team among Pkkoff Return
Gerald Irons I right> of the Cleveland Browns runs back an in-
terception in the second quarter of Sunday's exhibition NFL game
against the New England Patriots. Horace Ivory <left) made the
stop. Despite the theft. the Patriots won, 21-10, for their fourth ex-
hibition victory mas many outmgs.
• Ute country's top three powers. •
His Goal: Shutout
ReynoldJJ Hm Low Key Approach
By ERNIE CASTILLO OI U. CUiiy ~llot St.ff
A goalie who s pecializes 1n
shutouts. Tom Reynolds looks. talks.
acts and-most importantly-plays
like a Scottish soccer player.
Only his birth certificate gives lhl'
native Californian away.
"I GREW UP PLAYING with a
family of brothers from Scotland and
I guess some of it wore ofC.,on me:·
says the netminder for the California
Sunshine in a sli~ht Scottish accent
"We'd kick the ball on the way to
school. kick the ball at recess and l
figure I spent more time with them
than with my own family," recalls
the 22-year-old third· year pro.
.. Of course. at first I 'd play
baseball, basketba ll and football with
the rest of the kids but I was just average. Then. when l started play-
ing soccer. I fell in love with it. There was nothing else I wanted to do
"AMF.RICANS didn 'T want to
shutouts and allowed just three goals
1n two conference seasons. An NCAA
Division ll team playing against
Division I competition. Hayward was
ranked as high as eighth nationally.
BREAKING INTO the pros was
another matter. After starting for the
1976 U.S. Olympic team. Reynolds
signed with the Dallas Tornado of the
North American Soccer League and
spent two seasons gathering splinters
on the bench. He was still in a reserve role when
he jumped leagues a nd signed with
the American Soccer Le ague's
Sunshine this spring. Jt wasn't until
the eighth game of the season that
Reynolds got a cMnce to play and
the Costa Mesa resident wasted Jillie
time in proving his worth. Jn his first start, he allowed one
goal as the Sunshine won 2·1 in over·
time. Four games later . in his next start, he scored a l ·O shutout that
earned the Sunshine a tie for first
place in the ASL West.
"I OON"r KNOW of anyone
that saw us practice in the
s pring that's picked us No. 1,'.
says Bryant. "But I sure saw us.
and I didn'tpick us No. 1."
Regardless of the national pic-
ture, Alabama is a solid favorite
to win its seventh Southeastern
Conferente crown in eight
years. with the strongest
challenges expected from Ken-
tucky and Louisiana State.
Defending champion North
Carolina and Clemson, returning
to power under Coach Charley
Pell, should battle for the title in
the Atlantic Coast Conference,
the two shared in 1977.
BOBBY BOWDEN, working
comeback miracles al Florida
State, has made Seminoles the
top independent in the South.
.ahead or perennially strong East
Carolina and Georgia Tech.
which has played just over .500
ball in four seasons under Pep-
per Rodgers.
Alabama finished second na-
tiona lly to Notre Dame last
season, completing a n 11-1 cam-
paign with a 35-6 thrashing of
Ohio State in the Sugar Bowl ,
the third straight post-season
triumph for the Tide.
mark over the PQSt seven years.
races one or its toughest in-
terseetional 'Schedules -meet-
ing Nebraska, Southern
California, Wasbingt.On and Mis-
souri.
With eight offensive starters
returning, LSU should boast one
l'ootllaU P~
of the nation's most potent at-
tacks, geared to the talents or
tailback Charles Alexander, who
finished third in the voting for
last year's Heisman Trophy .
Alexander was the nation's
second-leading rusher a year
ago with 1,686 yards. smashing
the SEC record or l ,312 set in
1949 by John Dottley of Mis·
sissippi.
KENTUCKY. DENIED a
share of the SEC crown last year
because it was on probation.
could give Alabama a run for
the league's automatic Sugar
Bowl bid. The Wildcats lost
quarterback Derrick Ramsey
and defensive end Art Still, but
a re loaded with talent as Fran
Curci enters his sixth season as
coach.
The darkhorse contenders in
the SEC are Auburn and Mis·
sissippi. Auburn has 16 starters
back from a team that was in-
consistent a year ago and Ole
Miss also returns 16 starters for
the only new coach in the
league, Steve Sloan.
Johnny Majors moves into bis
Nlnlh ra<e-O.OO•lllon CPl••<~I
1S JO, 8 '°· ~ 40, ~ INICH .. ouel •to. 6 ?!>, Noelle H_.o !Mor-•
4,00 \S E...:la ll·ll ~Ml '2\0 W
Altenelanc.~-19 . ..0
Grid Schedule
second year or re building Teo-H •r• I\ the .. IO" ~1e91 •oollNll nessee. The Vols should be bet· 1e-1•1ormi•_...,, "'*' ter. but likely will be fighting Peftn s•••., '-· ~
Mississippi State for the top spot HtDr•tu ~.o!m •• , e irm· in the second division. lr.gl'Mlm ''° m . Chelvwlll
Ten s-AtllnQton et Dr•• Georgia and FloMda appear w.u .... CMot-.c £e,1 c ... o1,,..,
headed for sub-par seasons and 11i~\t re.-s1.i. •'-M1u1H1pp1
Vanderbilt again is picked to St•t• •I Jacll-. nlQftt finish in the cellar. '•••'·E• P•"' •1 ....,,,,, , .. ,. St•te. n191>1 E.l\lern M1<hloen al NorllM<n The ACC. steadily improving MJ<1t•cwn its football image in a league SoutM•nM1sdss1P01•1R1Cl>mond long noted for its basketball --"-'"-•n_ws.......;sa-__ .. _r....:u_•s.....:._n...:;•oi._1 __
ability. sent four teams to bowl
games last year -N<lrth
Carolina, North Carolina State,
Clemson and Maryland.
THE TAR HEELS won the
league championship, succeed·
ing Maryland which had won the
title three years in a row. The
bowl foursome again figures to
provide the top powers in the
conference. but the other three
ACC members. Duke. Wake
Forest and Virginia. alJ expect
improved defensive umts.
1979 CARS
andTRUCKSe ....._. ... ... ..., ... ...,.
NFL Exhibition Standing
l'IMI lllltllbltklh StaMl"'9
AnwricMI ~....:· llHI
Htw Enqlaftd
M••mt Ht w YOf'll Jeh
W LT ~ct. f'P' PA
4 0 0 1.000 IO JI
4 1 0 .IOO '" al 1 1 0 .SCIO •1 •1
I J O .2SO SI 1>1 l~li~'l":'•
Clnconnell
Clnel•""
Plltsburon
Hou"°"
SHiii• Denver
Kenses City
O.tcleno
Sen O•eoo
Pltll..,.lllN•
Oellas
C.nlr•t
WHI
0 4 0 .IJ()IJ 10 101
2
2
1
'
1 0 .)CIC) lJA ..
1 0 ,)CIC) SI 61
70 SOOS4.,,
l 0 .2)0 S1 1~
J o .7SO to 4 1 0 .500 ,, 70
1 0 .500 ... '-l
2 O .SOO SS 76 , 1 0 ,)CIC) •3 .. NatloMl~e
EHi
Mlnnuot•
GrM!n B•y
(h•~•Qo
1 1 O .SOO IS 11
1 > 0 lj(I 6J II o•o ooova Wet I
Atlenl• , 0 .soo ... ,
I U S00 •I 41 lex AnoetPS N~w Ori._,,,,,
!wn Francos.c.o I J
'l ....... Y'\S<On
New EnoienO 71, Ctrvel.,.., to
oJ .~ SI 1S
U HO 61 105
EICIMbltlOA '--Ends
n
•EGUl..Alt SlllASON GAMES s..twuy
Hew vor11c:;....ne1 Te..-aev ,_..,
Pllltburvl\ •I Outtelo
Houston et All.nt•
l(•n'9\ Oly •I Clnctnne11
Los A~ -1 Phll-•Phl• CIO a.m .• ~I
ALL MAKES!
833-0555
know about the game so that·s why 1 TWO GAMES LATER. when reg-
_Aplayed With the Scots. That's all they ular goalie Alan Paterson departed
~ ,.... wanted to do and that's all I wanted to to try out for the Irish national team,
Jeff Rutledge returns at
quarterback and Tony Nathan
gives Alabama a breakaway
threat at hatrback, but the
Tide's strength should be on
defense where seven starters re·
turn. H•• Y Or'll Glilnts
SI LOUI\
Wulllngton
• 3
1
7
1
0 .IOO 'Cl ,.
0 .1SO '1 71
0 ,jOO '3 S7 o .~ 12 n 0 .)CIC) S7 St
Ml•ml •I Hew Vort J•I\ S.,. FreftCl.COal Oevel-
W.,ltlftqlon.tHewEnql-
MlnneM>U<tl -Orta•n•
SI loui< •I°'''-Grffft a.v •I Oo>troil
A*fotOur
WSE SPO:WJST at
HOWARD 0.Vrolet
do. It worked out pretty well." the JOb belonged to Reynolds. Since ALABAMA, WRICH has a 46-3
SEC record a nd a 74-10 overall Tampa 8..,
Detroit
Cafltral
3
2
0 .7SO 11 lit
0 .~ 5' SI
S.n 0 1-.i SHttl•
OOleno e1 o..wer II p.m .• c11.1nne1 o .,,.....,
Ba Ill mo,. et Dell•~ ,. pm .. Cl\eftnel 11
ea.-01 eo.. ono o.. ... 5"
NEWPORT BEACH Indeed he has. From his early then, the team has won six of nine
playing days in the Bay area With a games, four by shutout. Two of the --------------------------------------------------__;;
team ('ailed. oddly enough. the San losses were by 1·0 counts.
Francisco Scots, Reynolds has Statistics back up Reynolds' effec· blossomed into one of America's tiveness. In 11 games, he allowed
most promising goalkeepers. JUSt eight goals for an 0.72 goals-
Considcr his collc~iate career, for against average. Of the 143 shots instance In 36 games at Cal State taken by opposing teams during that
Hayward. RC'ynolds posted 22 s pan. Revnolds blocked 73ofthem.
Collegiate
Football Poll
Tn~ Top ,....,nty ,_ '" ,,,. A•· W<.•••l'<I Pr~\ .,,. &>r•·~Hon <OI
1"9t looll>ell poll, with lir\I pl.Ke
•OIJ• In P•••nll .. SH, lest ...... ' r~Os•nOtalelPOlnu.
1 Al•bamelltl 11.1.g 1,21S
2 Ar•anu•llll ti 1.0 1,111 l PennSI ISi tt l·O 1.ou
4 ()ltlehom.\11 I 11).J.O .. 1
S ~Ol•e O•m11fqf I I l·O '191 e. Nltth•ll'ln 10 7-0 'JOI
1 OflloSl q J.O ....
e reuse 11 11 1.0 1~ q USCl?I 1·4.0 141
10 Heb<Hkot q.).Q s.J
II W•\hlnQlOft I 4.() ~
11 UCLA 1 •.0 4'4
t3LSU ll•O 4 ..
u Pitt q 1·1 •3'
tS ICentU<•y 10 t.O ... ,. TeauAl.Mlll I~.() "0
...11.IUQI~ --1A"2dL.1 ti Cltm"°" a.i-1 1Sl
t9 Ho C.r011M f.J I 190
10 low•SI f.4'° UI
otlyen tftefrif'W .....,..., ~ .. ~
e1DtM1t1et1ceny •••-\tett, 8•11 Slate. Baylor, Br loh•m Youno,
C•llfornla, Cotor•Oo, Florida,
C.ee><gle, Geo<OI• Tecll, Houslo,.,
IC•n .. ., Mervt...O. Ml-I of Oftlo. MIChto•n Sl•t•. M IU1ulppl, Ml\
\IUlpp1 Slalt, Mluourl, Nortlt
carollne Stat•, North Tun Stet•.
Purou.. San OM9o State, $tenlooo.
Syr•cuH, T•,,,..•~. wesr.,noton
Stele.
:__ _____ ___;. _____________ ~
EARLYllRD
IOWLllNG
SHIRT SPECIAL
WIN A TRIP TO HAWAII!!
Place a .._. order for fa.-or _.. l(IMG
LOUIE bodag sWrh before ~· 3rcl ..cl
rec•I•• a ticket for a •crwt.g to 4• 1n1 t1tt wa...r of a FU£ trip to Hawaii. wwtll $400.
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• lt1111Q9< '"~ a.c:" ·• J. D.
ENTERPRISES
16061 Golcla WHt St. _, •tlayt• IHdt
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waxing your paint
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THE FULL CIRO.E
OF AUTO BEAUYY..
""'"= ..... n..s...
1;11 ..... w.,...
FROM Fash ion Island
Newport Beach STEREO SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR
, . \. . .
' ' '\ .
(
·~ DAil Y PILOT
I
Mazatlan Rae
'Who's ·Who'
·In Yachting
Huded b)' M"nn of the most famoua btue-
water OC&"&b r actcc yact\U In tbe wottd, the up.
comlq 10th bicrw&l L.oe An to lllautlan race
ls e~ to attract more at~ than any race
Ill the hlstOI') of UH> fV I, ~to Landon
Gray, gmeral chairman for the 1ponsor1n1 Lo•
A nae I Y acbt Club
BOA TING I BUSINESS
Blind Man Sees -Ways
Employers Can Help
\~
SEA1TLE (AP> -8'1Slnessmen
shouldn't turn a blind eye to hiring
the handicapped, aaya a 33-year-old
lawyer who didn't let their lack or
vlalon dim bis futute.
Because ne was blind, Harold
Krenta took his qualifications, which
include a Harvard law degree and a
year at Oxford. to 41 firms before
getting hired.
-ror handicapped employees.
BE SAYS THESE fears ot extra
expenses are ofteo wifounded.
In au interview while in Seattle to
talk to corporate leaders, Kftfttl ad·
vised ftnna to consult wtth experts,
including such groups u lbe N•tional
Federation of the Blind and the Na·
tlonal Association of Retard ed
Citizens.
Krents' blindness was caused by a
combination of events.
Tb~ se' ~ eoldptalcrs enttted ln the race
reada ll~ a "~ho's who" of yat-bt racln• They are
Jlm Kllroy'a 79-foot ketch K.ta>oa out of CaJlrornla
Yacht Club. Summf'r A 1Huey1 t.ona'a79-foo\ ketch
Ondine. New \ ortt Mark and l"'ritz Jotmson '1 13-
foot ketch Wmdwttd Passaae. Portland Yuht
Club, Bill Pa.squmi's 82 Coot sloop Raftlme, Long
Btach Yacht Club. 8111 Naemi's S7 foot aloop
Mcthn. Se~lUc Yacht Club. Harry MolOlhco'a 69·
root sloop t>rtfter. Lona Beach Yacht t1ub, and
t'red Preiss' 84·foot :sloop Chnstane, Pat'lflc
Martners Yacht Club, Marina del Rey.
IN 1115, kllENTS, of W uhington,
D.C.. founded Mainstream. a non-
profit organization that acts as a
bridge between business and han-dicapped people.
Sunset Flnl•la Krenta suggests some rules or
AS A P REMATUR E baby, be re-
ceived excessive oxyaen In an in·
cubator. His eyes were damaged but
he was left with partial sight in one.
S"'lors or Seattle's Corinthian Yacht Club approached the finish thumb for employers Interviewing
-
01 handicapped applicants: lme under spinnakers after one of many twilight r aces. Boats had _If you have questions. ask them,
When he was 9, that eye was burl
playing football and Krents com-
pletely lost his sight.
Mon! than 60 apphcaUons fof' entries have
been ~ved for the 1.032-mlle race and the
Mazatlan Harbor wall only accommodate about SO
boats. said Gray
to contend with gusting winds. rain and lightning. even If tbey'Ni awkward . --------=----=-------------------Flnd out lbe applicant's limita-But Krents says the most impor-
tant sense to have "is a sense of
humor."
"This may mean we will have to tum down
some applicants, but it s till looms as the larges\
race In the event's 20-year history," said Gray.
Oddly enough, Long's Ond1ne was entered by
none other than its traditional rival skipper Kilroy.
·'When I told Huey Kialoa wouJd be m the
Mazatlan race he told me to tell LA YC to count
him in. Huey thinJcs the MaiaUan race is one of the
best in the \\.orld and would be ideal to continue
our worldwide rivalry." said Kilroy.
In the recent Pam Am Clipper Series at
Honolulu the two yachts battled for line honors in
every race with Ondine edging Kialoa.
But neither Kilroy nor Long are overlooking
the fact that Windward Passage has undergone
some re-rigging and weight-shedding and couJd
give them a battle for first to inish.
Another bot rivalry in the Class A ranks will
be between the two ultra-light displacement yachts
Merlin and Drifter• which have swapped line
honors in virtually every race they have entered
since beiog launched just before the 1977 Honolulu
race. Meffin will be sailed in the Maiatlan race by
Bill Niemi, former owner of the C&C-61 Joli which
he campaigned successfully in many offshore
races.
Still trying to make a comeback is P asquini's
Ragtime which was a perpetual first-finhher until
the ULDBs came along. Ragtime herself is a light
displacement boat but not as light as Merlin and
Drifter -nor does she have the waterline length.
And a sleeper, of course, will be Christine
which has had several near misses for first to
finis h since he r debut in the San Diego to
M anzanillo race
Car Air Filters
Create 'Hazard'
Boat owners who have automotive type air filters
on their engines instead of the required backfire
control devices are courting not only danger to
themselves and their boats but a citation by the
Coast Guard as well.
Som e manufacturers
and owners have put
uulomotive type air
fillers on the open end of
.. velocity stack" in-
o.;ta llaislallations, ac-
t• or d 1 n g to
warns that these filters
wi ll not co ntrol
carburetor backfire. The
paper ele ments inside
will bum readily, crcat·
ing a greater hazard
than no device at all, it
was pointed out.
FURTHERMORE,
this sort of carburetor
intake arrangement as
installed on a gasoline
engine is In violation or
federal law and is
punishable by a fine or
up to $100
In order to be in com-
pliance with federal
regulations Coast Guard
approved flame ar-
restors or any attach-
ments which adequately
control backfire flame
must be made of metal
with n ame-tight connec-
tions. firmly secured to
withs tand vibration,
s hock and e n gi n e
backfire.
THE FLAME arrestor
is designed lo absorb the
e ne r gy a nd h eat of
carburetor backfire.
IOR Rule Dominates
Midget Ocean Race
The three class win·
ners 10 the Midget
Ocean R acing Fleet
<MORF> championship
at M a r i n a d e l Rey
Saturday and Sunday
were boats designed to
the International Off-
shore CIOR) Rule as OP·
posed to lhe Cruising
Club of America <CCA>
rule under which MORF
boats are rated.
Class A winner was
Outlaw. a Dou g
P eterson -designed 30·
foot half·tonner with a
tall rig, skippered by
Don Rosenkrans. Wind-
jammers Yacht Club.
THE CLASS 8 winner
w as Mad M a m a,
another Peterson half·
tonner with a standard
rig, saile d by B ea
Russell and Kom o
Worthington. South Bay
Yacht Racin~ Club, and
4 Classes
In Dana
Regatta
Four c l asses of
sailboats turned out
Saturday and Sunday
for Dana Point Yacht
Cl ub 's Small Boat
R egatta sail e d on
courses inside the bay .
Trophy winners:
LlD0·14 -1, Jim
Wehan. DPYC; 2, Irene
Ke nnedy, DPYC; 3,
DennisSesur. DPYC.
LASER-1 , L y nn
Malanosky, DPYC; 2,
Chuck Ayres. DPYC; 3,
Evan Malano s ky .
DPYC.
SABOT A -1, Ken
Krause, DPYC.
SABOT B -1, Karran
Toffelmier. DPYC; 2,
Bob Burns. DPYC; 3.
Steve Timons, DPYC.
the Class C winner was
Brer Rabbit, a Santana
25 quarter-tonner sailed
by Stuart and Carol
Robinson. SBYRC.
MORF yachts are 30
feet and under designed
to the CCA rule as op-
posed to Midget Ocean
Racing Association
yachts designed to the
JOR.
HOST CLUB for the
championship was South
Coast Corinthian Yacht
Club. Races both days
were sailed in light to
moderate breezes an
Santa Monica Bay.
Summary or classes:
CLASS A-1. Outlaw;
2. Demon , Byron
Nelson. WYC: 3, Sudy
111. Andy Lockt.on, CYC.
CLASS B -1. Mad
Mama; 2, Tempestuous,
Scott Tempesta, Ana
YC: 3, Aunt Maude's
Pantry, Tom Coles. eve.
CLASS C-1. Bre r
Rabbit. Stuart and Carol
Robinson, SBYRC; 2.
Assasin, Kas Kastner ,
SCCYC: 3, Carolyn,
Jules Rensen. SCCYC.
123 Boats Enter
Balboa Regatta
Warm weather and
moderate breezes drew
123 boats in 12 classes
out on bay and ocean
courses Saturday and
S und ay for Balboa
Yacht Club's Labor Day
Regatta. Trophy win-
ners:
LIDO·l4A 051 -l, Ty
Beach. BYC : 2, Tom
Willson, BYC: 3, Brian
Hench , BYC: 4. J ack
Mcclarty, BYC.
LID0-148 C23) -1,
Doug Cefali, BYC: 2,
Mary Karyl Thorne.
Vniflite
~aJing
Dealers
Uni fli te Ya c hts·
Newport Beach was the
leading dealership in the
United States during the
1978 model year, topping
more tha n 50 othe r
BYC: 3, Ted Hinshaw.
LIYC.
SNIPE C4l -1. Jim
Englis. Capo BYC; 2.
Arch H..i,gman , KHYC.
SABOT A 122) -I.
Sheryl Rados. NHVC; 2.
.fon Pincknev. BCYC: 3. Rod Turner, BCYC.
SABOT B <6> -1.
Sandy Ewing, NHYC: 2,
Bryan Haugner . BCYC.
SABOT C Cl6> -1.
Drew Tosh. BCYC ; 2.
Dan Smoot, BYC.
LASER A 18> 1.
Jerry Norman. BCYC ;
2. Karen Faber, BCYC.
LASER 30 Plus 15> -
1 Bruce Twichell. BYC; 2. Jack Malloy, PU~A:
3, Bill Guthrie, WCYC.
ETCHELLS-22 16> -
1. Mason Clark. BCYC.
SANTANA-20 00) -
t, Doug Teulie, BYC; 2,
Brad Wheeler. BYC; 3.
Jeff Allen, BYC.
THISTLE C8> -1, Bob
Ba ll, BYC.
PHRF CIO > -1. Lady,
Hank Thayer, NHYC: 2.
Sparkle. Alex Irving.
BYC.
dealers with a volume of --~-~-----------------~-------$2.7mi1Uonatretail,ac-
BapJJllCrew
cord~ng to_AI Hill. vice 1'.T~.,l.'VJ.111PJ~ president m charge or 1 ~bM11 ._, ~-(l.3
marketing for the Bell·
ingham. Wash firm IFJ.: D
Hill presented the rn?is win i•ace
achievement award to
co-owners Frank Cowley
a nd Claude Robert and
sales manager Tom
Pulliam during the 1979
Uniflile lnternational
dealer convention held
in Sarasota, Fla.
~-• Cowley a nd Robe rt
t f;:'t. \brou g ht the local
"' · • • 1 dealership from Robert
1--v -st:rnt?; in the summer
: q of 1977 and more than
• •• double d a ll previous ~ Unifllte records for the
dealership.
/ . Puget ~und Marina.
' Seattle, finished second
w ith sa les o r $1.8
m illion, closely followed
~ by two firms tied for
lhlrd -Cozy Marina,
Dania, na .. and Unillite
Lon_i 8!_ach. -
Powerboa t
Champ Told
COWES, Isle of Wight
<AP> -Powerboat rac-
lng's first woman world
champion. Betty Cook of
Newport Beach, romped
home first in the Isle of
Wight international
powerboat race Sunday.
Richard and Gretchen
Loufek from Newport
Beach were married
last week.
They took lime out
from their honeymoon to
w in t h e Prindle-16
catamaran national
champions h ip at
Treas ure Island. Tam·
pa. Fla:-Fride~ \(,'ft)l~o"
impressive low score of
9"'2 points.
It was a California
s weep in the nationals
with ~off and Dee
Prindle, Dana Point.
finishing second with 29
points and Mike Hinman
and Rita Trail. North
Hollywood, taking third
with 301i'l.
Fourth place went to
D11vtd and Dou-g
Dietrich, Fla. and fifth
was Menna de Doer and
P iet JanHollemaos,
Holland.
I n the consola tion
flight the winner was
Dan Basinski and Linda
Nannlui, Phoenix, Ari%.
9Y.t; second was Chris
and Debbie Schutte, Fla.
10"11, and third was Gus
and Janice Atwell, Loni
Beach, l2'h.
Suits Allowed
tions so there won't be confusion
later.
-B E REASONABLE. Many han-
dicapped people have defeatist at-
titudes.
-Ask the applicant how the dis·
ability occurred. Get it on the table.
This is also a way of showing lf the
disabled person has come to grips
with the handicap.
Krents said the corporate world's
greatest fear when it came to hiring
the handicapped was accessibility
a nd the expense of adapting facilities
-restrooms. cafeterias. equipment
H E RELATES ONE experience be
had when his wife was lll with nu and
"told me I wouJd have to take care of
our young son.
·'The boy woke up in the night
burning with fever. I held him and
gave him some ginger ale. The k.ld
went out cold. r was feeling like a
blind Or. Kildare. the great healer.
"But T found out the ne"t morning
that instead of giving him eight
ounces of ginger ale. l had given him
eight ounces of sauterne wine.
"He still has a grin on his face."
Albertson's Grows
44 Markets Switch
Albertson's Inc., headquartered in
Boise. has completed takeover of
over 44 Fazio food stores and three
Save-It units in Southern California
from Fisher Foods of Cleve land.
ALBERTSON'S HAS SAID there
will be no changes in store personner:
Most operating supervisors will join
Albertson's.
Conversion or the Fazio stores to
the Albertson's name is taking place.
Until permanent signs are available.
canvas banners have been installed
to signify the na me change. An in·
store sign program and distribution
of Albertson's pnvate label products
has been completed.
Marvin Robertson . Albertson's
Southern California vice president.
will be responsible for the new
d ivision. The division has 92 stores in
Southern California and Nevada.
Albertson's units in the 11 western
slates. texas, Louisiana, Florida and
Alabama is 355.
Meet fo11r of the
best reasons to
talk to
rt Home
Loan.
Cort Klok~ jack Barnes
These four men have earned the solid respect o f the Orange
County financial and business community. Even more im-
portantly, they have earned the fri endship of the hundreds
of people fo r whom they have not arranged loans. but
'>crved as trusted advisor<, in matters of real estate financing
and equity reinvestment.
Now, as the full-servke team of Newport H ome Loan, tney
bring this expertise and experie nce to an institution pur-
posely designed to cater to the money needs of Orange
County property owners. And, without the usual red tape,
run·around o r rigamarole associated with most institu-
tions.
If you haven't already met one of the four best reasons to
arrange your toan through Newport Home Loan, it 's time
you did. Large and small Joans, very _pe~nalized a~d
confidential service, and a degree of fleXJbility and creabv-
lty you just won't find with stra"r,ers. Don't be a stranger.
Call Newport Home Loan fot· more information.
Home Loan. Inc.
1; Corymraft• Pla;:a Nrw1x1rt 8l'11d1 C11l1fcm11n 92b60 714/640-9350
u !
z c 0 .> • 1 0 x
~ • 2
I .. "
Martin Finck, president of Cutty Sark, Inc. presents an obviously
thrilled Julie Gladson of Pasadena with the Cutty Sark trophy
after the vessel Dubloon, owned by her rather Jim Gladson Cleft>
won the last leg of the 1978 Pacific International Sail Training
Race from San Francisco to Long Beach. The 42-foot ketch won
out over the 96·foot ketch Astral, much to the delight of Dubloon 's
crew also pictured h ere. The awards ceremony took place aboard
the Queen P.fnry
Mrs. Cook, a 55-year·
old grandmother wbo
has been racing only
four years . won the
230 -mtle race from
Cowes to Torquay, on
England's southwest
coast, and back with a
time of 3 hours, l
mtnute, a record speed
or 77 mlles per hour.
SAN FRAN CSJC()
<AP) -By a 5-2 de-
cision, the California
S upreme Court has
ruled that a vehicle .
owner injured wblle a
passenger In his or her
own rar may sue the
driver (or ne11igence. L-----------------------------1 0
... If• •
. . . I .. . -. ·-··.._ ·--,-.... l ·.
STOCKS I BUSINESS
Monday'& NY~
Glo lng Price. -..t~ COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
... ,.,
t/N DAIL V PllOT •JS
$500 Million
Buys Anythi~g
By MlLTON MOSKOWll"Z
In the bu.sloess world thl5 bas been the year of the $$00
mill on offer you can't refuse.
Philip Mol'l"ls. the cigarette <Marlboro) and beer
<Mtller> produter. bought its way lm.o the .ott drink buai·
neas by acquiring the Seven Up Co. tor $Sl.S million.
BEATlllCE FOODS, A aDCAGO food.proceasln•
giant that's not hu>py unless it's d ..UOI another com· P~)'. paid $4.90 million to acquire the Tropitana Food Co.,
the bigaest squeezer or Florida oranan.
JC Industries, a railroad Cfllino1a Central> that crew
up to become a conglomerate <Dad's root beer. Midas
mufflers>. Is ~g about $410 million to absorb Pet lnc ..
rormerlY Pet Milk.
And R. J . Reynords
Industries. a cigarette
producer <Camel.
Wins ton. Salem> that
expanded into foods
<Chun King, Hawaiian
Punch> and con
tainerized freight ship-
Money
Tree
ping <Sea·Land>, made a fll'St pass al Del Monte Corp., the
nation's· largest canner of fruits and vegetables, offering
$4S6 million.
A half a billion doJJars is a fair amount ~r change, even
for a large corporation. and what made t.tiese offers im·
pressive is that they were. for the most part, cash deal!s
No promissory notes. Cash on the barrelhead
YOV MIGHT WONDEll WHEaE companies aet this
kind of loose change. Do they just have $500 million lying
around somewhere in a strongbox! Not exacUy. As a mat·
ter of fact, most companies, unless they are still maintain
ing slush funds to pay off politicians here and abroad, do
not have a lot of cash on hand. They're like you and me
heavHy in debt.
So how do they buy these S500 million baubles they fan·
cy? The same way you and I buy a house: They borrow ..
Company A wants to buy Company 8 . It goes to it*'
friendly banker and says, "We want to buy Company 8.
Lend us the money." The banker looks at the deal and
says, "Sure, "you ought to be able to handle that. Kere 's the money."
SOMETIMES, WHEN THE COMPANY being ac
quired has a lot of a cash in the till, the deal is even
sweeter. Then you buy the company with borrowed funds
and get quick access to money you can use to pay off your
debt. Jn effect you are using the company·s cash to buy il
out. Life can be sweet!
A small airline. Texas International Airlines, decided
it ought to buy a much bigger autine, National Airlines.
even though such a move seemed to be precluded by the
rules of the Civil Aeronautics Board.
It picked up 9.2 percent of National's outstanding
shares on the open market and announced it would borrow
$25 million in overseas markets to finance tbe purchase or
more shares.
So Ule next time you see a company you want to buy,
call up your bank to see if it will stake you. The magic
number this year is $500 million. And l don't think you can
charge that on your Visa or Master Charge card.
Market Backs Off
Despite V.S. Moves
... ~
NEW YORK CAP> -The stock market moved lower
today even though the government moved to ease two or
Wall Street's major worries, the weak dollar and inflation
Gambling-related stocks bucked the general market
trend, however, advancing in active trading.
The Dow Jones average of 30 industrial stocks was oft
10.65 points to884.88.
Declines led advances by better than 3·2 among New
Vork Stock Exchange.listed issues.
The Federal Reserve made it easier today for banks to
borrow funds in the Eurodollar market -dollars held out-
side the United States. Increased demand for Eurodollarc;
could push up interest rates and encourage holders of
foreign currencies to trade them for dollars they could
lend at attractive rates.
0! 1P\ftlt. -··-~ I fil 11 • '• llHOw I c 111, .._ ICTllA
I 1 10 .. ·~ , ... " ...... -a-Y . A
Doar.lonr•1I rrrage•
New YontlAPI F1...i ~J-•Yeraon STOCICS
JO Ind ~~IO~ iM'°,;_1~~ 10 T rn 1SO.n m.os 247.17 , .. 1t-l 31 IS Ull 10..,. lOUO IOS.n 10.-0" O.JO •1 Sit JDl.07 309 20 304 S.C )05 t i l.JI lndu~ • •• • ... •• • •• • • r,13'1,SOO Tr•11 13'.'IOO
Ullls • . . . . . . ••••• . •. • 4tO 100 !>S Stk l.035.100
NEW VOJIK (AP>
Adv•nt ed 0et11 .... d
Unell•n9fd Total 1nues
,.., ... 11191\• ,..,,. •ow~
SALE~
PY~~
TocS•v on ~14 11>1. IO()S ISJ
J4'1 •ll • .,. 1•11
IOI IS'I • •
Due to late transmission
today's listing will not
appear in the Dal Iv Pilot
WHAT AMfll 010
HEW 'YORK IAPI
NEW YORK CAP> Tiit New Yorlt. Stoo b t i..ll(le .....,... • .,_,. -10C ,,_
lions i.. twl11Cll*I dff'4f• 10r Fr10., Plor<fl•~ of IS0,110 •"••H. w in 01
337,30' •l\.ertJ ln<IUClllll) !,Solt Wlll'H SOid
•l'tof'I.
11)1( ... ~ ..
.. ~ S• .. _,,, • · i' Jla IS 1., ,. .... • I l!' • '°' ' ?:\ 1? t "~ .,,~ ..... • 1\1 ~ 1 • .,. IO 11 u •IAI •l Ina .. • ••1
. ' .. -
. .......
t. ·-.. ,
\
\
-~ ..
• OM.VPllOT
MARMADUKE by lrld Andtnon
"He was a GREA T mo scot, Mr.
BOOMER
MISSP£ACH
ART~uil.
a<. P'-'A>N~
Pot1T1cs
.I'
Winslow ... but our hot dog stand went
bankrupt I" ti.••· .... ,, •• ' , , ' . . ...
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
SHOE
MOON MULLINS
A WEEK! DO QOO
KNOO> WHAT 1HAT
MEANS~
~·
by Tom Batiuk
by Jtff MacNelly
GERIATRIX
IT AMA7..fE~ ME 'IC:A..J
~f:P 7MIL..IN6 P.T A
TIME: L.ll<e THI~!
Wr:'~ AT il-4£: A5'E:.
WHS<E 'THE roe ~'/$
QUIT 5'W)K\NG1 QUIT
DRINKING.H.~D N:lW
50Me .J~K IN
E:t.JGLANO H06 U~
,,,. TE:ST 'Ttl0e TO ~E:Pt..ACE 5E:.X 1
DENNIS THE MENACE
GORDO
JUDGE PARKER
As THE
llftJTENANT TAl<lS
GE01l61A KlH6STOH TO POLICE 14fAD-
QUARTEAS, THEY
ARE MET THERE
&Y SAM DRIVER!
TUMBLEWEEDS
HI , S06ARf'IE£ .. 1'M "fAKIN& MY
'M'.>Rbt'l.'{ POSSESSIONS~ ANP W, e
NANCY
SURE I COVER
~ING-.-
PLUMBER~-
WE HAVE A
BUSTED
PIPE IN OUR
CELLAR
by Wm. F. Brown and Me Casson
~ /JJ.AY YaJR @/,/C.C LOO~
WIJ.EN \f]u'ee WAt.~11116 AWAY.
by Mell
WEl..L., .I THINK
H& 6HOUl..D TAKE
.A 1.ITT1..S V~TION
~rt>M IT
I ,
"'
. , w:=il :: .... 1
l")1 fl-\._.. ""' 'J..,. tLU.f'.
DOOLEY'S WORLD
DR.SMOCK
H g Y, S MOCK , ~ HeAR YOLJ'R ES
NOW 651N' CON-
SIP f:RE:c:::> FO~
A N HONOR ARY
M EiM f?>f:RS H IP IN
"f"He AMISRIC AN ACAc>ESMY OF F AMI L,..Y
PHYSICIANS,
HUH?•
MOTLEY'S CREW
by Gus Arriola
TUSRE!
THI: ~PelZ
rta.Av
fo.l M" J<Eil)R"1
lf,5f:T/
.ALL 1~~~
l.EFiTO DO
~ A:Jf<l: "f'~f:~f etJT"rotJ.
{;NJJ /lt:t.fS/4
by Harold Le Doux
TELL ME All HE'!> TRYIH6 TO MAAE
A&OUT IT, 50.Y.ETMING OF THE
GEORGIA! FACT THAT I COOLDN'T
I LOVE
J0 .65 LIKE
THIS
IN THE
SUMMER
SLEEP LAST NK>HT ••. nw
WA5 OUT OIWIN6 AlDME _._.__ UH'Tll T14REf IH
THE MORNIN6 !
by Tom K. Ryan
by Ernie Bushmiller
--
PEANUTS
I CAN'T 6ET WHI< DON1T
iMAi LITTLE ~OU CALL
RED·HAIREO HER UP,
GIRL OVT OF CHA~UE ~ti< MINP.. BR~?
THAfS M 6EAUT'( OF
CALLING Hf:R ~ TuE Pt{ONE
COMICS I CROSSWORD
by Cftartes M. SChutt
l'M AFRAID SHE'D HANG
OP IN M'( FACE ~
I
J
, by Roger Bradfield
by George Lemont
e u-r YOU'Re S"f"I l-L-O N L..Y
"P OCI O R
OCCLJPAN"f"" -ro T H e A .M .A ., e:H?
by Templeton and Forman
TODAY'S CllSSIDID PUZZLE
ACROSS
I Uses POO•
11-dgmenc
') Pardon
me
9 Harsh 1n o
press1on
14 Come upon
15 · Mable .
S11ee1er
lllle
16 Knot again
17 Ruhng
2 words
19CrKlt
10 Fish
21 Ce<1a1n con
ra1ners.
2 words
23 Tram pies on
25 Cabbage
dishes
26 Hrgh nores
28 Singer Erhel
32 ConSlderon9
JLJi!rssr~rPPJ.
nvet. -
38 Endoog lor
man or ttn
39 Asian
wergllts
41 Free elec
tr on
42 leng1h uml
45 NASA fears.
2 words
48 Agreemenl
SO Change
Mus
51 Ma~ dnl
mals
5' Rim
SS Kind of ram
62 Anoint A•
chaic
63 looking
happv
64 Predicts
66 Coniractton
67 Tile mouth
Slang
68 Pnncer·s
1erm
69 Feudal lord
70 Half· Preto~
71 W11hout. Fr
DOWN
1 Sends lorch
2 Cap1ure
19aon
3 Righi hand
page
4 Was furious
5 Navy brass
Abbr
6.Will&n..
7 S.t bllfl~
8 Military
deoo1111111n-.
9 Ktnd ol en
uance
10 lnsrrument
11 Ntee sum
me rs
12 Breach
13 WagefS
18 ''The -Leal
Forever"
2f Rtvtn s cry
UNITED Feature Syndlcale
Salurdly"s Puui. Solvtd
24 Na1111e race
1n T url<escan
27 Thailand's
old name
29 Mr. Pon1J
JO hstnloal
-JI O~
J2 Cougar
. JUtuie,PtQd
i;ccs
J4 Fish ca1ch1ITT
lS New form
Preh'
36 Steal Stang
40 Scorn
CJ Tt~onq 11
easv
'4 Agreement
46 Weuet
~ -
47 Animal gear
49 and
'eatner
52 Prese111s
SJ Slertor
SS Gree1t 1t1•er
56 Feminine
name
57 Mustt WIT'
b01$ •
58 False god
Sil P•etil !or
culture
6C WOOdy
plant
61 Mass ind
wetghl unit
65 Slender
tin.al
I
I
TONIGHT'S 1.ATEST LlSTINGS Television DAILY PILOT • 7
\,' '"' 11 ' '
l'WM«I
....... 'LU cru ... .-..--. .... YcnY.,.._ .. , , -:IC'ra.
Dr ........ ..., ..... -.. ... .....
• *-A M.Dw.T A._.., 1a...,... to
t11•1 •• -....
.......... M ... , ..............
.IUMeDOWTMT
'"'~ ..,,_ 1111 TM*"-"'
ee1WllGl'UM
""1MCUe00 "~,..,....,a..
fr-I.co lrOtft tft.ir
..__ .... ,, ... A .. ..
IM ..... ell .... .....
o.itdle.-~~
.,, .. ,,..,..., aft ...
"""" • ~IAIY
~ ........ .......
--~ ... JMl:ydllt-
WM\'-.......... 8ftd ... _....~ ....... ,...... .....,, v-.....
~ .... (ff! let Sdters
• "'9CW.
'"fM °'9d Theft. "-ka. A
~at'f" E~
trom IN lt7t -W prem-
lllN °' tM oC*9 ..... O&ld
Ttwltl, A1nertCa." wntWI by
"°""~and con-
MWd Dy s.r... CeldW9ll
(I) CMNEWa
Kathryn Witt, Pal Klous and Connie
Sellecca <from left) star as a trio of
novice stewardesses in "Flying High,"
premiering tonight at 9 on CBS, Channel
2.
' <ti WOALD NEW9 TOMOHT Up. tl't 1l4AEa 80M8
• MICHAEl. JACK80H
Guest:' At1orney Harry
Fain.
Cl) TO TEU THE TMITH 0 u.aEUU
CincinnaU A.els .., .. PIUS·
burgh Plrllea
The OouglaMt m()ll9 to
C9'1fomla. where at fl"t
they -deor9'Md to find
the ~" -Cllllly .. lhe -.111« le-m. 7:00 I C88 NEWS NBC HEWS
0.IHlrf f..btlftfJS
8 KNXT CCBS) Los Angeles
D KNBC (NBq Los Angeles a KT\..A Clnd ) Los Angeles e KABC-l\' (ABC) Los Angele~
Cl) KFMB (C8S) San Diego G KHJ.. l\' (Ind.) Los Angeles
9 KCST (ABC} San Diego
I KTTV (Ind) Los Angeles
KCOP·l\' (Ind) Los Angeles
• KCET· l\' (PBS) LOS Angeles
G KOCE·l\' (PBS) Huntington Beach
BowzerBag
Longhair Digs Rock
By JAY SHAllBUTI'
HOLLYWOOD <APJ -John Bauman, ex-
Julliard man. degreed in music by Columbia U.,
can sing opera, play classical music and knows
from such things as the Lydian mode and the 12·
tone row.
What, then is a long-haired cal like him doing
singing ''yip-yip-yip-yip-mum-mum-mum-mum"
in bis role as Bowzer, the greasy-haired bass
vocalistoftbe '50s rock called Sha Na Na.
...
"Mainly having fun," he cheerfully replied.
'Tm enjoying myself. I'm communicating
something to everybody -I hope."
SHA NA NA, EVOLVED IN 1969 from a staid Columbia vocal group, The Kingsmeo, this fall
starts its second syndicated season on TV in a
weekly show seen on 130 stations, include the five
NBC owns.
Bauman, 30, a skinny, friendly guy, is the only
classically trained member of this rock-of·
Brooklyn tribe. He joined up in 1970 from a post as
mus ic director of a naked musicale, "Oh!
Calcutta!"
Didn't Sha Na Na's simple, repetitive sounds
initially grate on his educated ears?
"Well. yes and no," said the Brooklyn-born
singer, who with his wife, Mary, moved here last
December from Brooklyn Heights. "To me, music
is just a form of expression.
I LIARSCLU8
BOWLING FOR
OOLLAA8
• ILOVELUCY
Lucy trlea to teeeh Fl!Cky to
be neat aroond the ho4.llMI.
.. THE,.8.1.
Ttte son ot en 0<genllallon
man buoglea • lhootlng
end the lether le orde<&d
first to tum h11 son OYet ro
the F B I • then to kill lllm. 9 MACNEll J l.EHREA
RE.PORT ml THEOREAT
AMENCAH FOU< DANCE
The llostoty ot square
d anek>g 1n Ame<iea.
(I) JOKER'S WILD
7~ 8 '26.000 PYRAMID IH WHOSE IMAGE?
Sr~ Powers narrates
11115 tl9o<;umentary wlllch
uplores the grow111g
rebellion of modem worn-
en llQeltltl tM MllWe
1wertc.t10111 pliliOllcS llPOll
them w ltloUNnd• °' ' yelf• of JuOeo.OvtltlWI
\radlllon
I NIW\.VWID GAMA
~WILD
THIOOOOOUPU ,.... .,... to petdl INf1G9
11P .._, a fl'O hook~
pi.yet tllU Ole¥ Mid
.... ~ dlMllllOlllO the ...... '°. l»OlllnQ metdl. • lltoNIOHT
Ct•t• "oberta hoat•
tonlOht'• pciltlOllf de«>eta. -~()ttp
......... Loaf MlllqiM*''
~~ Cl) aM.000 NAMa THAT
TUNI t:OO 9 (I) TMI
MllMOHI
\.Olli.. beoOIMI ~
dout abOu' <Jeorol'• reg.
ulW \lielft to .,, Old nevy
Ndcfr.("I 8 um.f HOlMa OH TMIPMRI .. ,_,..,,. Me'' A terml-
N//ky ii widow (Patrida
NM!) MU CNriea end
C..ollne to 111'4! • hOIM for
._ three young c:Nktr.n.
; MCME
••••"CellMa~" ( 1953) Eltl8I Marrnarl, Ooti-
•ld O'Connor. A W9Shln0-
1on hoat... 1trengtheM
lnlernatlonal bonds
lhfough matc:hmeklng. (2
hrs.) 1J MOVIE ***'* "African OuMn" (19511 Humphrey eog.,t.
Kalhtrlne Hepburn. A
captalo. ~•tlog In the
Col1go during WOfld War I.
Is peRUeded by 8 lady
mlsslonaty to detl1roy a
e>.rman guoboat. ( 1 hr., 4S
mtn.) fJ THESAINT
The Saint tries to p<ellflnl
lhle¥el trom stealing the
neetclaee ot • IMeigo
~·· m HOT CrTY DISCO
Featured are Jef1 Kolash.
one ot the choreographers
lcw "Saturdey Night F-"
and the animated cnwac-
ter "Fire ··
8) MOVIE • * "81ac* PMeh" ( 1957)
George Mootgomery.
~~er. A lawman
Al'W........,._
TUBE TOPPERS
ABC D 5:00 -Monday Night
Baseball. The An&els go national again,
taking on the New York Yankees on the
latter's homo turf.
KTLA e 8:00 -"Call Me Madam."
Ethel Merman stars in this 1953 musical
about the lady ambassador to a tiny
country with Donald O'Connor.
ABC U 8:00 -"The African
Queen." Bogart at his best in hls Oscar·
winning 1951 role with Katharine Hep-
burn as they find wartime travel not
always smooth sailing.
flndt hlrnMlf eQCIMd of
muttfole cmn.. (2 Iva.) 83 E1JZA8!TH A
"l"-Merrlage Gerne"
Eli&lbetft'I r°"""°8 'Nitti a
married man. Iha Earl of
LeloMter 61> DANIE. irotm:A.
M.O •
•• Menlngitle''
U08 (I) M•A'l'H
Hawlt.,.. and B.J grow
annoyed wflll Cllerlet'
obnolllout hetllt ot toWff!g
their_,. 1tcwy. (A) ID OVIREAIY
Act ..... 8811'11nthe ~
and attOf 8141 Mecy dle-
cuu their marriage end
egedl~Med~:
Retired Senior Volllot-
Pr~. (RI
8:00 8 Cl) fl. VINO HIOH
(Pr9mlefe) Thrwe beautiful
g1tt1 (Katllfyn Witt, Pel
KIOtJI, Connie Selleca)
learn what belnO I 1tew-
ar6"s la really like.
CJ ISRAELIH
CElE&RATION
8111 se-n p<M«!te e 30-
yfJI/ anr>lvetury tpecial
tearuttng the miraclel or
God on thls llltld GJ MEJW ORlfflN
GuHIS: Joey Bishop.
AoHmuy Cloooey.
Mlct\MI Chellel, Wiiler
Egen. Mr. and Mra. Mark
GoodmM al> 04W> 8U88KIHO
9:30 m TENHl8
CoYerege of the final• or
the U S. Proteaionel Ten-
ni. ~from
Longwood C(IC:tel Club.
@ MERV OAIFAN
Ou•SI•: Joe)' Bishop,
Roaemery Clooney,
MlchMI Chellel. Watter
Egan. Mr. and Mt9. Milk
Goodmen.
l'.Aa8 MOVIE * *'h "In Broad Oeytlgllt"
(1971) Ak:hard Boone.
ScsUIVW Plethette. A bllnd man ~ to ldll hie errant
wile. coumlng on tll9 han-
dicap lo prove hll IMO-
oenoe. ( 1 hf., 15 min.)
10:00 0 QUINCY
"The Hot Dog Murder" A
elev« •windier deYla. a
bizarre WS'f to 1)(9'18f1t •
p<lton Inmate trom r-al-
1119 a nMlltMTlllNon dollar
l111Ud. (R)
·~IA:AVIEW
FAOM THE INSIOE
A rare look Is c><esenled of
a country wlle<e ltte goes
on dele>lte continuing ter-
rortsm from netglll>Oring
All1Can natlona 8fld strict
po1111ca1-econom1e sanc-
uons lmpoeed by member
ssate• ol the United
Nationa.
I LET'S MAKE A DEAL = i=«INlWS L(W£, AMEfUCAN
8TYlE
"lO\'e Alld Mr. Bonny"
EM! can·t 1111 U'8ep wm.-
out Mr. Bunny. "LO¥e And
The Slngl• Husband"
Myron rondt «it th t hit
D •wtl9 la aDOut '""ry QMOVW
•• ~ "8'lnl\owW" ( 1970)
Sophia LOl'en. Marcello
MMtrOllMI. The ..ite ol en
ltlllan SOid..,, reported
mlMlnQ °" the FMtl8o front, Mia out to find her
flUtband. (2 "'' I .THIODOCOUPLa
A.I a~ tor Otc.tf,
F.,lx red.coral•• ~nd
rllllmllhM the·~
• nMWOOO 2NIOH! _)
Qualle: Funwood'•
Alnbataldof a\ l,.Jrge Har-
Old Mlllap and U'll contro-
Y9tUal OJ. Osgood. flD MACHEL I LEHIUR
AEllOflT
11::30 9 Cl) C88 LA Tl MOVIE
• • • "Where Eagl ..
Oare" 111189) Rlc:llard
81J11on, Clint e.atwood.
Two aoent• are 8UlgMd
to tr• .,, Nn«lcen offtcat
held c.j)tlYI In .,, ~
c><OOf Ge<men loru.N
OlKlngWWll 0 BEST~ CAA80H
Hoet· Johnny Carson.
OUMtt· John Oevldton,
Dk* Clllell. Sue P919f'IOI\.
(R)
G TWILIGHT ZONE
Lil PO'#ell hh I' recutrlnQ
.,,...,., In wtllch She fOltowt
a oorM to Ille lloepllal
DO.POUCE STORY
''Wyatt Earp Syndrome" A
police offloel' lln<ts hi• m1t·
rlage dlslolvlng lo tavor ol
his wortc (R)
G) HOGAN'S HEROES
Hogen get1 Kllnk to
belleY9 lhat Schullt hu
not k>nO 10 11\'8
., GETSMART
Al • Vf8'19Ylrd rendez-
YOUI. e women ldenlll\es
henelt u Ano Femi. the
only wll""8 against •
KAOSegenl
MJRNING
12:00 9 TWILIGHT ZONE
"The long Morrow"
-~ Ralph's ldY1ce to Ed on
lio. lo gel 1 promo11on
bacithres. le1ving EO wllll-
oot. job
12:'° 8 MOVIE * * "Keep Rollkl' " Smiley 8o<'nett. Gene Autry. ( , !It )
I ::wns
**~ "Montana" (19~>
fnOI fl)'M. A-. SmM •
W..ettiy callla ~ l'1
lo stop • 11*'1> randW
lrom ITIO'llng 1111 hlfda 1n10 c.attte oaunuy. ( 1 ht.. 3Q
"""·' 12-.171 NlWI IM>Nlm
1:00· TOfilOMOW
Oueeta: alw Oe¥ls. ~
dent ol Anti• Alscotdll:
Richard Ptlt'ry, rec0td
produc.: lonner '""4dOI
~Cauldy. tJ MAVIJIC't
"The Money Mecl'tl,,..u
• CAPT10NEO WORlD
HEW8 TONIQHT 1~1 HEWS 2:00 NEWS
GIT SMART
To obteln a 11st of enemy
agenta, COMTAOt. male•
• ~ wltll the 1191'• ~. 2:171 NEWS 2J80 NEWS
2:42 MOVE ••'h ''W.ik A Crooked
Mlle" ( 1949) LOUIS
Hayward. Denn•• O'Keefe.
4;42. NEWSMAK£R8
Taw•dafl'•
Doyel•• /tlo.,I••
~RNING
11~. * * ~ .. A SOcllllem
Yenkee" (1~) Red Skel·
ton. Arler'lt Oehl. A bellhop
111111 ii\ iove While 1relllng a
spy. (2 llrs .. 20 min.)
AFTERNOON
12:00 U • • * "The Glcwy
Brigade'' (1953) VletOC'
Malut11. tee MWYin. A
combat ~ lo KMea
eacorts a Greek lntlllllry
ootflt Into enemy territory.
(tht .. 30mlnJ
3~ (!I • •,; "Before Winter
Comes" ( t969) David
Niven. T opol. Dill>laced
pertona •e repatriated
dt1S9ite their desire to
remain in Austria. ( 1 hr . 30
min)
3;80 a • • '" .. ~owt\e\len Ferm .. (19701 Hope Lange,
LIOyd Boc:nner. A womao
l1nds tetTor awaiting her
aft« the inhertt• a New
England tenn. ( 1 hr , 30
min )
Lou Scoops the Ratings
By BOB THOMAS
HOLLYWOOD <AP> -Among
the items tacked onto the wall of
Ed Asner's office at CBS Studio
Center are the Nielsen ratings
for the week of July 2. The show
attracting the larJ(est number of
viewers was·· Lou Grant.''
Asner can be excused any hint
of immodesty. He is entiUed to
pride in what "Lou Grant" has
accomplished: A climb from the
ratings cellar to the top in eight
months.
"The worst period came in
November," Asner recalled. "I
remember because my birthday
is in November (15). I don't re-
member what was our lowest
rating, but it was low."
IN FACT, "LOU Grant"
ranked 7oth out of 71 shows dur-
ing one heart-sinking week.
You'd think that Asner would
be able lo shrug off such ad·
versity. After all, isn't he the
personification or gruff, lovable,
stout-hearted Lou Grant? The
truth is that Asner is gruff, lova-
ble and subject to the same in-
securities lhat bedevil every ac-
lor.
season. For weeks it seemed
that bis 'tl.¥>Uld join the Betty
While and Ted Knight shows in
suffering defeat b)' the ratings.
Only Gavin McLeod in ''Love
Boat" was a clear winner.
.. IT'S PHENOMENAL that
'Lou Grant' survived," said the
strongly built actor. "The only
explanation I can suggest is that
perhaps thinking people ran into
other thinking people and said in
the face of shaking ratings
abysmal ratings! -'I sure hope
it can last.'
"U enough influential people
feel that way, I'm certain they
can influence events.·•
"Lou Grant" certainly seemed
like one of the most promising
series before its debut last Sept.
20. Most shows take time for
viewers to grow accustomed to
the characters. Lou Grant was
an indelible figure that had won
three Emmies for Asner.
Transferring bim to Los Angeles
as city editor of the Tribune
seemed a brilliant stroke.
gles or every new series," Asner
recalled. "We used glue, paste
and solder to patch a hole in the
radiator only to have another
l eak turn up elsewhere.
Meanwhile we were staving off
the wolves and getting a lot of
good advice -and bad ratings.
"It felt like being in a
quagmire. I'd get one fool out of .
the muck and the other one
would sink deeper.
•'The upturn started to coml'
in December. l could sense it in
people's words. I could feel it in
the grips of their handshakes, in
the emphasis of what they said
about the show. The week before
the ratings started to change I
realized it was going to happen.
The negativism diminished and
finally I could see a little light
way, way, way down there at the
end of the tun~el."
WHAT HAD GONE wron~ in
the beginning·?
"AND •ses ROCK 'N' roll to me is just as ex-
pressive, just in a difCerent way, as anything else.
Granted, it's not as musically complex, but social-
ly, what it meant in its time was complex."
Bauman, son of a dentist, said he started in
music at age 7, playing piano, first Hanon ex·
ercises, then classics, "but like any other kid I
started listening lo pop music early."
'YIP·YIP· YIP·MUM·MUM-SHA·NA·NA'
Jon Bauman as Greasy Rocker 'Bowzer'
Asner was one or the "Mary
Tyler Moore" show alumni to
try bis own show in the 1977-78
BUT VIEWERS seemed con-
fused by Lou's switch from the
fun-filled TV newsroom in Min·
neapolis to the drama-packed
city roomoftheTribune.
"We went through the strug-
Asner theorized that the shows
were a bit slow in getting to "the
hook" that would grab the au-
dience's interest. Als o the
balance between the multiple
plots was awry; "sometimes the
second story got in the way or
the primary one, or one story
needed alleviation of another
one ''
·'I reached kind or an early crossroads where l
liked both, and I'd be practicing my classical
mus ic and listening to the radio -with an
earphone -al the same time."
But now, after all those years of formal
studies. don't you feel strange lo be all greased up
and singing informal 1950s rock?
"WEU., l'VE LOOKED al my job mainly as a
theatrical one from the very beginning," said Joo,
-at110--a trained a¢Lor wb~ •t.wlie_cl wilil Lee..
Strasberg, among others, in New York.
"Musically, sure, it's limited, though it's great
-musi'C" t~tove and crew up with. But l always did
look al it froQ'l the very first as an acting job and act-
ing problem, sot created Bowzer." ·
He said be still practices classical works off·
duty, and "one thing I'd like to do would be lo have
Bowzer conduct a symphony for a young people's
concert, to try to cross over that line.
"0111ERS RA VE DONE it, and I think it's a
good thing. These musical tastes can co-exist in a
persoo. One needn't preclude the other."
A major question.: What with "Grease,·• "Hap.
py Days," "American Graffiti" and other forays
of tbe ~50s lieavil)r Wa.111nl the "'1&.r, shouldn't utn Clarkbaimpeac~ -
TfieUiss<J prOf\HRSO ~ N'l"'NB-~rmaed-~
and laughed.
"That's kind of a tough one, isn't it?"
rumbled. ~
'Swan Song' Studied
he
NEW FAIRFIELD, Conn. <AP> -Douglas
Fairbank.I Jr., who bu appeared in more than 75
movies, ls looking for a awan song, but not on fllm.
The act.or, renowned for roles in movies li.lce
"Gunga Din" and "Angela Over Broadway," la
welablng whether to make a 1001-postponed
Broadway debut with a new mUJlcal revue lbat ta
playi1:11 on the summer theater clrcuit, "Out on a
Umb."
"I won't make up m.y mind unW October
whether the abow ll stl"oq enough to t.ry to lake it
to Broadway," the ea.year-old actor said.
"I wu loold"' for • oo.man abow for my
swan IOlnl when Halle Stoddard spoke to me about
Utla," be explalm. "1 w1nl to do som«blna, then
atop wblM I'm ahead, Uke any rood 1ambler. ''
Crldel' N\'ien have been mixed about ''Out
on 1 Limb,'' end tbe play needs revl1Jon,
F•lrb1nbsald
( THE BOOKMAN )
• •
John
Travolta
Olivia
Newton -John
REVIEWS In the DAILY PILOT
.. /If -..... __ ..,.. --.. ,..
c:1nenome i: scAeen
631!255 3 gcomPLEX
Cft1orn1n An
&. S1nu An•
FrffW"'Y
MATINEES SATURDAY & SUNDAY /
"SGT. PEPPER'S LONEL V
HEARTS CLUB BAND" (PG)
"SMOKEY !,..-·1-l----~D THE BANDIT" (PG)
"ZAllDOZ" -7~00 & t0·30
"WIZAAOS" -1:00
... .. ..
"SOUND OF MUSIC"
"THE CHEAP DETECTIVE" (PG)
"MURDER BY DEATH"
"HEAVEN CAN WAIT" (
"FOUL PLAY" (PG)
ALL DIUV&•INS O H 6:lOPJo&.tMtfn.Y
c111i. Unffr t J ,.,... •n • Ki.ei. f\anro1111d
"' --. ., .
'
r
I
I'
-DNLVPflOT
'Swrvlvor' of Slxtle Writer
Tommy Roe Returns Again Making
Debut ly PET :a J . llO'f a
LOS ANO LES CAP> -The
rock ·n· roll carttr or Tom&n)' R~ VII certaloly 00 of t.be •
manor nu.rad ol lteOI Ke
waa siUy tn • ll ot -.Miftl.111
ne. , t1pttfic1aJ \n • d ede de-
d.lclted to Dte-s> Thousbt
It was a Ume • ru~ Bob
Dylan ltb'l'ed fires ln tbct breast or Amer\ca's Army·Jeckged,
sober·nunded JOUt.b *lth mOf'al·
ly upUfttn& of alitoatJon
and oppreuion. n was a Ume
wMn any k)d ~the palcbea
In his Jeans could Q\IOle liberally
from Mao'• "Utt.le Red Book"
and spent three a week
peoalvely contemplaunc the pre-
dicament or the modem human
C'Ol)SCleDCe
HAPPILY. rr WAS also lbe
heyday of social en.l'1lJa Tommy
Roe. the master ol lithtwei&ht.
bubblegum pop. Remember
"Hooray for Hnel." "Sheila,"
"Dizzy'"' And or course. the
memorable "Swed Pea":
WH the ex1ct oj)poalte or what
wu CotQI on In the '80t with bJp.
pl , veryono droppina out and au that."
aOE WAS A llJT macbtoc.
Tum him on and he'd chum out
a atrlnt of tbrw·minute•lonc.
refre1bln1ly mlndleu. bub·
blerum htta. He w11 the lnven· tot of formula pop.
"I UMd to t•l really uput
wh n they Hid the sonc• I made
were bubbl rum." he recan..
"But I re11lied I bad a knM!k for
wrltloc three·mlnute formula
son11. I admit that. ll wu llke
1emn1 a bar of soap. I wrote ror
lhe mart<et.
"Thal was my bu1loesa. I
made a lot of money doint
that."
In 1972, Roe had one of bis big·
1esl successes with "Jam Up
and Jelly Tight." Then the hit
machine began to sputter.
money writiD.I and runnlna my
publl1hlnc nrm ...
It was au nice and comforta·
ble ... and borlo1. Predictably.
It w11n't Iona before Roe was
1truck by that urge that even·
tuall..v hill all retired
performers.
"I wanted to perform acaln."
LAST YEA& BE usem bled a
band and be1an worldnt any
club that would have him.
"l found it very difficult to
start worldnJ again," he says.
"In this business, you're forgot·
ten overnight."
LOS ANGELES <AP>
-Leonard Stem makes
bia debut as a mm dlree·
tor wlth "Two or a
Kind," starring George
Burns.
Stem is a television
produc:er·writer·director
whose credits include
"Sgt. Bilko." "Th e
Honeymooners," "Get
Smart" and "Millan and
Wife."
He ls CO·&uthor or the
script With Tom Lazarus
and Oliver Halley.
Stan Told
LOS ANGELES <APl
-Lew Ayres and Joan
Bennett, who made their
movie debuts in 1929.
will stax in "Suddenly
Love .. as the in· laws or
Cindy Williams. Miss
COMING BACK Williams stars in the
"Oh, Sweet Pea, come on and
dance wtth me.
••1 WAS GETl'ING fed up," he
recalled. "I just didn't want to
be in show business any more. I
had accomplisbed a lot, and il
seemed that I bad nowhere eJse
to go. 1 was working Las Vegas
-you know, the sterotypical
thing . with t}le tux, patent
But Roe was lucky. He hooked
up with a man named Mike CUrb
who made a living by resunecl·
in& old pop careers, Curb
brought Sammy Davis his first
hit in years -"Candy Man."
Curb was a man heU·bent on
bringing his tastes In m usic to
the rest or the world -songs
like Roe's '60s bits, the Osmonds'
songs and Debby Boone's "You
Light Up My Life" -and he
promised Roe a hit it Tommy
would sign with Curb's suc·
cessful Warner·Curb label.
Tommy Roe 1950s romantic story to
----------aironNBC.
"Come on. come on. come on
and dance with me-ee·ee."
Roe was a manufacturer of
lyncal Junk food -you knew it
waan 't good for you. but it was
so hard to resist. leather shoes and all that -I'd
ust had it. ..
Roe agreed, and his first
single with Curb, appropriately
called "Dreamin' .Again." will
be r e leased this month. An
album follows. "Among all the protest songs
ahd psychedelic rock. I made hit
records." says Roe. now 36 and
more than a little proud or the
island or fun be carved out of
that somber decade. "Wbal I did
He awoke one morning and
discovered he bad turned into
Wayne Newton. He packed his
bags and went home to Georgia.
"I didn't work ror four years,"
he says. "1 was making good
"They'll all be Tommy Roe
songs," he says, with a laugh.
Wbat made him a success in the
tormented '60, he believes; will
work for him again.
,, _, .... _
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SENIOR CJTlZENS S2.00
SO COAST PLAZA
W.t.lT~
"HOTLliD •
COLD HIT'" IG) 1~111•1t:is
"RIAKY NIDAY" 111 ........ I
SO. COAST PLAZA
MtU rlrttlSt.141-%111 .. m 1111111
"HEAVEN
CAN WAIT ..
!:'i:.: (PG)
SO . COAST PLAZA
U$ Sufi .. 54t-Ull .. , ,MllllC
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"'Cl.OlllMCOUMTBS OF
1Ml1NllD1Hr' ~·-
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Ut4Se.llnlr ..... m.1111 flll-
'"SATOIDA Y HMiHT
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'"THI DtlYEA'" a.1...-..
He Keeps
Holly's
Name Alive
WETHERSFIELD.
Conn . <AP> -What
motivates a 37·year·old
man to devote $3,300 and
nearly all or his leisure
lime to running a group
"dedicated to the music
and memory" of the late
rock 'n' roll idol Buddy Holly? .
"In the 2~ years Bud·
dy was a star he gave
me so much with his
music. I wanted to do
this for him because no
one else was doing it,"
said Bill Griggs. presi·
dent of the Buddy Holly
Memorial Society.
Griggs' group tries to
"find out as much es we
can about the man,"
who is the subject of a
current movie, "The
Buddy Holly Story."
The group prints a
quarterly newsletter
featuring Interviews and
articles about 'the rock
'n' roll singer·composer
who died al 22 in a
Febr uary 1959 plane
crash.
"It's like a cull. The
mystique grows and
grows," said Griggs, a
discount department
store employee who has
640 Buddy Holly records
and 300 pictures or the
·Singer.
By Tbe-Assocla&ed Press
The ronowing are Billboard's bot record hits
for the week ending September 2 as they appear in
this week's issue of Billboard maaazine.
HOT SINGLES
1. "Grease" Frankie Valli <RSO>
2. "Three Times A Lady" Commodores
<Motown>
3. "Boogie Oogie Oogie" A Taste or Honey
<Capitol>
4. "Hot Blooded" Foreigner <Atlantic>
5. "Hopelessly Devoted To You" Olivia
Newton.J ohn <RSO>
6. "Miss You" Rolling Stones <Rolling
Stones)
7. "Kiss You All Over" Exile <Warner Curb>
8. "An Everlasting Love" Andy Gibb <RSOl
9. "Magnet And Steel" Walter Egan <Colum·
bia>
10. "Shame .. Evelyn "Champagne" King
<R CA>
EASY LISTENING
1. "Three Times A Lady" Commodores
<Motown>
2. "Fool If You Think It's Over" Chris Rea
<United Artists>
3. "You" Rita Coolidge CA&M>
4. "Talking In Your Sleep" Crystal Gayle
<United Artists)
5. "My Angel Baby" Toby Beau <RCAl
SOUL SINGERS
1. "Get Off" Foxy <Dash l
2. "Holding On" L.T .D. <A&M >
3. "Got To Get You Into My Life" Earth. Wind
& Fire <Columbia> ,
4. "Three Times A Lady" Commodores
<Motown>
5. "What You Waitin' For" Stargard <MCA >
COUNTRY SINGLES
1. "Blue Sk.ies" Willie Nelson <Columbia>
2. "I've Always Been Crazy" Waylon JeMings
<RCA>
3. "Rake And Ramblin • Man" Don Williams
CABC>
4. "Boogie Grass Band" Conway Twitty
<MCA >
5. "Talking In Your Sleep" Crystal Gayle
<United Artists l
-Vll'OH• ~.., OI wu• 1rc~o.Oll•
~joapclHYSUMOl 0""•-•••c_n.(ii). ------... --.... .--.. , NOW THE FORCE ISAT A THEATRE NEAR "°U
-~~~~~--·™1'~-IOWAllO. CIMCMA CfNn• SlADIUM OllM 4'0 00!'<>' ~ CO>IO ......., OJQ-4Ml ttlA l'l.AlA 8tll0 :;20 ~ HUNllNGTOM CWjlMA ..,..._ leoc:" ~OlM
• ll\IM OOUtY ••'6HN DOI.BY
~ 'lllO•~t<CA.l'IO"CI""'~ 'Mll"41S N MOST IMlAl11H
C>Kc ~ Dllt<'OINJ "09 ~~Cll'(."U l.MMM
PEIER FRAMPTON
THE BE!GEES
''SGT. PEPPER'S
LONEIY' HEARTS CWB BAND'•
NOW PLAYI NG
CHltllOMI •tel EDWARDS CHIEMA
Or•flOt 634 2553 Costa Meu 546 3102
Oololr•JO·l •~·600 0..1)'1 49"360400 I I~· •O )0 8 1~101a
.,. -
FOUNTAIN uun
Dlllff·ll
Fountain II~ 962-1481
ENTERTAINMEN I POP MUSIC
S.....er C1earaaee
Sale Mow In Pa~ ess
LA-Z-BOY .
... ,.., __
4tS.5t02 -...fln.11 .. 111t•t._n,...
''"• ll'O) 'WARLORDS of
ATLANTIS"
(JACK ANDERSON)
REVEALS In the DAILY PILOT
-.. 4 .... -. }' ..
,.
INSIDE: •Ann Landers •Horoscope
•Lifestyle · •Claulfled
Salling,.
Salling
More than 85 youngsters, ages 8
to 16, learned the basics and
Intricacies of sailing this summer in
an eight-week course at the Balboa
Yacht Club. Instruction was given in
both Sabots and Lasers. Besides
learning to right tipped-over boats,
participants learned racing, knot
tying and participated in regattas with
other yacht clubs.
In charge of the program were
Mrs. William Headden, Mrs .. Bob
Williamson and Mrs. Robert Wheeler.
Mondey, Augi.t 28. 1971
Sailing along is Rebecca Busby, 13, of Balboa.
DAILY f»tLOT
More than 85 youngsters participated in
Balboa Yacht Club sailing lessons.
Mike McKinnon. 10. of Corona def Mar --
watches the proceedings. above: David
Bonetti, 1 o. of Corona de/ Mar. left. with
boat
Daily Pi lot Photos
by
Richard Koehler
Geoff Clarkson, 10, of Newport Beach, leams to right a fallen craft and bail out the water.
··----~.
.,..,, .......... ., "" ......
Mltsuye Yamada, author of 'Camp Notes and Other Poems'.
Mitsuye Yamada
The Irvine poet recalls her days in a Japanese
war camp, reflected in her poetry.
By CHERYL ROMO
Of ... O.lly ..... Staff
·'It must~ odd to~ a minonty M waa sa111ng
I looked arotald oM lff(fft't~.
~~it::nmstfl!." ---man
Mitsuye Yamada oT Irvine ts a poet"" of whom were m m e IU!d'"'Slates=;= were
and a teacher. Now SS and the mother of four; talcen rrom ttrelritomes-with-the-rallonale that
Ms. Yamada was eventually forced lo see it was for their "own protection." herself as the mlnority the stranger was refer-"Because of a lack of information, you <the
ring to above. And she's spent a Wetime trying Japanese> sort of think this is something that Is
to understand why. necessary. as you do when something very trra·
Born in Japan of parents who had emigrat-lional ts happening to you ... ," sbe says.
ed to the United States years earlier and bad re-"Now you look back and wonder how you
turned to their homeland for a brief stay. could not rise up in wrath at these things that
Mltsuye Yamada spent her late teens during were happening lo you."
World War 11 ln a "relocation camp" to Idaho. tn March, UMl. Ms. Yamada, her mother.
There the petite, dark-haired woman who Yasutake, and three brothers were taken from
has since earned a master's degree ln Eqlish their home in Seattle to be relocated in
from the University of Chicago, lived with her Mlnadouka, Idaho. They were allowed lo take
mother and brothers surrounded by tower only what they could carry. Mttsuye Yamada,
1uarda and barbed·wlre fences. then 17, boarded the bus with a suitcase in each Her fath~, an interpreter with thedtmmi· arm.
gratlon and NaturalluUon Service. ba been While at Mlnadouka she worked as a
taken away earlier and spent his war years in a hospital aide tn the camp and remembers there
POW camp in New Mexico. Accord1n1 lo Ms. were dances for youne people which struck her
Yamada, he was never tormally char1ed with as "being very, very strange." •
anythlnl or bro\llhtto trial. There was little. If any, communlcaUon In Jookini back at her experi.ences today •
she says she feell a double-ed~ blttemesa. (See POET, Pate CZ>
. -..., .. --
I I
.. )
r
(2 DAU. Y PIL.OT ANN LANDERS/HOROSCOPE
("---B~o_ro_•_e_g_e __ __,) ~~~~~nd Wants '~~~~m~~~:ncomrortabl•
TUllDAY, AtJG. • deavon. Leo, Aquarllll uplott popu.llrity, dll· LANDERS: I pcked up worked there a little a bout the e xpeni:.ive
BJ IYDHST QllAaa per1001 flaure prom· play charlama. turn on a paperback •' the over a year and it was a farewell gift and think
i.ouU1. Sblirt lrtp. rel· charm, You're a win· airport r9Cefttly called Alla wrench to leave because perhaps I sbou!d reim· A~I Ularcb 11• a tt v • •, p • r tin• n l nerl Oemlnl. s.itttartus "Tb• Jewl•b Connec· I had made so many burse those lovely peo. ~!~~I.::; ~c~:.:;. mHHlel crowd your persona fl•ure pro· Uont~· __ by M. Hirsh £ .. •en friends. pie for what they spent.'
,,, JlMt.b be)'Oed the IC'narto. mlnentfy. Golducrs. In that book My co-workers sur-Do you think they would
tion. ft I You t OBMINI <May U · LBO <July H·Au1. lbere't a very funny bit pris ed me with a feel insulted? -THE ~:~~ ~~·coin~~.::. June 20): Count your H>: Look behind the that wu attributed to beautiful going-a\\lay HOMING PIGEON IN
1 d chance. check quality ol 1centt, obUJn lnforma· your column. I never gift. Il was completely HARRISBURG rpoespo111t.~bltolty•.;: 0~ mercbandlle. Vou don't tion whtch haa not been miH your part of the refused to drink hla milk I wouldn't llliJwt Ofle unexpected and I nearly 0 EAR PIG E·o N : rt.it, att what )'OU~ for un· '· v o I u.n t •or• d . '' paper and don't recall when meat wu served. n11ht a week• 1 Utlnk bawled. Don't attempt to reim· money. Key ta to b~v• Jt you loll.It. Know It aeeln1 lt. 'Ibe story ls so Some of the Rabbi's two nllhts la ou too MY new position burse yom eo·workers
baslc mat.rial ava •· and act 1ccordln1ly. VlaGO <Aus. 23·Sopt. Incredible I'd lfke lo friends were skeptical many. Besides. be turnedouttobeadisap-for tbe farewell 1m. bl~avaus (A"rll 20. CANC a (June 11 · 22>: SpotUlbt1lplf1cant hearcllreetlyfromyouif when be related stories usuallyeomesbomelate pointment. After some Afterall,youDIDleave.
.. .. July Z2) Lunar cycle cbanaee. mtere1Un• re-it's on the level. about his "kosher" cat. and dnmk. serious soul-searching, I
May IC» Accent on new bttb -divW1'lfy, experl-latlon1hlp1 Expreaa Accordina to tbe way so he brou1bt them We tried a trlal telephoned my boss and ~~er~'y' 'c:t9~~=~~';' e~~ ment. make contact.a, creative, Imprint your Klrsb Goldberg tells it, home. To their amaze-separation but it didn't asked if I could have my
Take them to lunch al a ··spedaJ'' place. Call
It your •• , lad to be
back·· ee ebraUon.
They'll love it and you
wW &et olf &o a IHely
Aart.
__ ;..__ ________________ own atyle. Member of you received a letter ment, the cat proved last loq. We love each old job back. He said
P!!!!!!l•9-!ll!!~P-----------· oppoalte •ex cares and about an Eftillsb setter that the rabbl bad not other so muc.h It almost "You bet! How soon can u.-jOll! you'll be aware of lt. named Leviticus who exaggerated one bit. drove us crazy. I'm -you come?" I told him I ~ LIBM (Sept. 23-0ct. kept kosher. The dog Tell me, Ann, did this DESPERATE IN N.C. would give two weeks·
A MMCe tNI .. 11 be ~ 11y alt 22); You &et chance to bad lived in a Jewish ever appear in your col· DEA& N.C.: ObTtea-notice at once.
tovwa of cteM. ~ ftoor oo....nnga can "reach" key people. Ac· household the first four umn? If so, when! -A ly you •bud waau -;;;;;;;;;;;mmmmmmmmmmiiiiiiiiiiil now bl h•Utaonoe~caruftons. cent on promotion. month! ot bis life. Not SKEPTIC Ute adnmpa et •at· I
Let '-9 41M1r~ ~ 'f04ll ruoa honors, accoladel from only did the do& refuse DEAR SKEP: Ya, la rta1~ ..., WU. &M hm and~lndedd~ofU9ef\ll...,to peera. Taurus. Scorpio to eat meal that wasn't September lt73. You ofbelUablgle. t~m penooa t11ure prom· kosher but bis muter mut bve beea oac of Yot1 ian two eWees: If~ WW\." will dMn them rtoht on lnently. bad to put a Yiddish &own. 1te1l111 yo.nelf to a :"~'°:din,:_.~ t; ';: = SCOaPIO <Oct. 23· newspaper under the D E A R A N N lifetime wltll a mu no
within a MwhOurt...., bel"9 cteened. Nov. 21): Accent on bowl. He tried both the LANDERS: I have been will 11eter s&op l'DlliD&
INDIVIDUAL HAIR STYLING
By Newport's Aneet
LUZZETT A Bernard 240 N9WP()ft Center Or .. Ste. 200
NEWPORT BEA~3
AU.Wom~ ... OIM travel, communication. Cbtcaeo Sun-Times and married Jess than a aro•11d, or aeparate
Th1t1difpi-nt9dbefor9 spiritual valuee. fan-the Wall Street Journal year. I wonder bow a1ata -and um lime -------------------
Oct t5.t87811QOOdforctMnlng tulH. Places, Virgo butLeviticuscouldn'tbe many other young atay apart aatll lie
any rug up to Id FREE One rue. onty, reraons tagure prom· fooled. He wouldn't eat brides have this prob· a1ree1 to take Ida mar·
from one.,.,_,,, or home Eltlrnet99 n en t 1 y . Aura of the meat. That letter I em . My husband rta1e YOWi aertoasly. I'd
chM<fulty Q1'4n on HotnM. lodQM. romance ls present. was signed, "Right Side seems to think he needs agree to -.e n1.w wl&b Churchee. Aoertmenta. Otf!CH. u " t h f f eed " ..-Hotels, Motel&. ThMtrM. etc . W h at seems gone p. two n g tao " r om &be uguys" (Do dolls>
1ust call 648-0183 forever may be just You responded by cit-every week, to enjoy every twp weeks, but
IO:& •-s~ ....... around the corner. ing a newspaper item himself with his single U.at •bould be tile Uml&.
--. ,.__.. SAGITFARIUS <Nov. published in the Toronto frien~. DEAR ANN: The cor-CUAt•• SllYICI 22.Dec. 21>: Emphasis Star about a kosher cat I have begged him to rect pronunciation of
on Investments, savings owned by Rabbi Lewis take me with him but be February is a tempest 10 _______ ..__ ___________ program, commitments Farrell. The cat seemed says the guys don't like a teapot. What really ir·
concerning money. to know the Jewish to have a wife taHing ritates me is people who
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Partner or mate is more dietary laws because be along. say ··abnvelope." No
involved than usual. one sayg "anclose" or
Capricorn, Cancer p t ··abnforce" or
figure prominently. The • oe "abndear." so why on number 8 also is in pie· e e earth do so many in·
ture. -------------------telligent people say C aPBICORN (Dec. ·'ah n · velope?" -" <From Page CU IRK ED N S 22-J an.19): Review pro-I ANTA
cedures, promises -BARBARA
draw back for purpose DEAR IRK: Maybe
of going forward at THE NIGHT BEFORE GOOD-BY& &lie reuoa ao muy ID·
stronger pace another Mama ii mending tel II gent people uy
d a y . A c c e n t o n my undnwtar "ahn·velope" Is because
legalities, rights and while my brothna sleep It I• Jut u correct H "ENvelope.'• permissions. ties of a Her hulband taken away by the FBI perm~nent nature. one son lured away by the Army T be Y don 't s a Y ''abncloae•• or AQUARIUS < Jan . now another son and datAghter 20-Feb. 18>: Glimmer of lusting for the tree world out~. ' ' a b n Io r c e • • or "abndear" beca•"1'• 'be hope replaces gloom. She mwt let them go. ~ •
Routine becomes more The war gotl on. proper pronandadoa of
of a channel for creative She will toke one still amaU aon t b e s e • o r d s I s • "ENclose," "ENfortt," enterprise. and join Popa m internment " and "ENdear." PISCES <Fe b . 19· tomakeafomuy.
March 20): Get going StillsftOing Your ld&er wtll be the
with creative changes -squinting m the dim light last about pet peeves
be a self-starter. Hunch ift room C barrock f block 4 pertalnlag lo pronanda·
1s on target. Know it and she ~· tlon. They are geutag lo ex hi bat confidence. ~~ be a pain in tile pbanay.
keep your undm.oear D E A R A N N m good rtpair L..,_NDERS: Five weeks
in ccue of accidfttt ago I left a position I
don't bring shanu! on ua. -Mitauye Yamada C.11642-5171.
"CampNotesandOtherPoems" Put• ,.,.,words Copyright 1971 to work for ou.
from the outside. Newspapers, radio and letters
were at a premium. Isolated from major cities,
the camp was surrounded by natural desert ter·
rain and ever-present barbed-wire fences. .
fl)r lht.. wholP f<Jm1ly i/ Did the Japanese Americans think they
were in jail?
LAGUNA BEACH
SCHOOL OF ART
FalQuarw
lept. 11-Now. 11
• Jewelry
• Art Hl&IOfY
• PM!tfno-Begllwung
&A«Mnced
• Df9Wlng &
Contpoeltton
• Sculptut•
• Ute DtllWlng
• WlletOQlot
• Co6o-& O..On
·~ • Cerllftlc»
• Ollldren'1 Art
• S10ne Carving
EVENING CLASSES
·~ • Omtme
• Jewllty
1n art school experience
with • unique environment
SKATING SCHOOL HOTLINE 979-6351 ,''Oh, yes," she says. "We knew we were in
a concentration camp. And you knew you
couldn't get out. I couldn't get out to go to col-
lege because I was an enemy alien."
fall ... ~l's country
ASK FOR MISS SANDY
BEGINNERS WELCOME
Call now tor advance registration and acld1tional 1nformation
ta CAPADESCHALET
Costa Mesa
2701 Harbor Blvd.
Harbor & Adams
979-8880
NEW CLASSES
START
WEF.K OF SEPT. 4th
HELP FIGHT MUSCULAR DYSTROPHY
WITH THIS SPECIAL OFFER
From August 28th thru September 4th, for every pound of BEEF STICK-SUMMER SAUSAGE sold, Hickory Farms of Ohl~ wlll
contribute 20C to the Muscular Dystrophy Association.
BUY AND ENJOY BEEF STICK® NOW.
SUMMER SAUSAGE
Buy a ·Cut piece tor Buy the whole stick and get the usual
30$ LB.Ol'F
the regular price
20•LB.OPP
addltfonel discount
COSTA
MESA 4f~(tk~!r1 f ,.rmz s -!·:·::
n f OHIO ,~ne S40-69tt
5outh Coast ?Iaza
~-c:.-•• eMlll M .... C..,0 ,_,
Watch the Jeny L'wl• Telethon Llbot Dey Weekend.
During this period, she recalls, people try-
ing to make the best of the situation were plant-
ing vegetable and flower gardens. Mitauye
Yamada remembers there being talk of Jews
being persecuted in Germany -but no one at
that time knew about the concentration camps
there.
Eventually with the help of the Quakers. the
young girl and one of her brothers were accept-
ed into colleges in Ohio. Her mother and
younger brother remained in the camp and her
father was not released from prison until 1945.
Ms. Yamada, now actively involved with
the Asian American center in Santa Ana and the
Orange County Arts Alliance, looks back at her
experience with sadness. Until recently, she did
not even talk of her confinement to the camp
and had not told her children about it.
It was her husband, Yosh, a research
chemist and artist who was bom in Hawaii and
served with U.S. forces in World War II, who
told one of their daughters about her mother's
confinement after seeing a television documen·
taq Oll"tbe' •
iUpresen, apanese Americans who were
• in ·camp5-during the war have taken action to
sue the government for reparation. Now a
citizen, Ms. Yamada views this as a "symbolic
act to make the Americans aware that the
deprivation of an American citizen's freedom is
a very serious thing."
There is no point in dwelling on what hap·
pened 30 years ago, she says, but she worries
that such a thing can happen again to Asian
Americans who she calls "highly visible."
Mitsuye Yamada. the author of "Camp
Notes and Other Poems" urtes fellow Asian
AmerioaM to SU,P.22!.t OM another beoaUM
e1 • ta f .. r that; there CoWd be anOU.r
backlash ~aimt U$..' I
~ Page School
· · I of Costa Mesa
• FOO'Nl>F.O ...
·'<-;.,; FALLTEllM BEGINSSBn. 11 ~ \ FOR BOYS Ii GIRLS AGES 1·11 1:30 A.M._· 6: 15 P.M.
GRADES PltE·SCBOOL TIUlU Ith-NON
SECTARIAN
Highest Standards· Modem New Equipment
2 Acre Campus
laclMdual lllltroctlon-No tbllcl Ne1lffted
•Remedial Readlftl·How To Study
•Pleld Tripi •Hot Lunches •lealOfl•ble Rates
•Dbcodt for llld or 3rd Chlld
<:Al.LOii PIT& .011
A J!I RllOCMUllS
'57 VICTORIA AVE.
COSTA MESA • MWMI
our blazer 1& an
al 1 wool plaid
with l!Ultkr
buttona.
t.h<t widtz. 'J.ldle
cordurcy trrueers,
all cotton blou.eq,,
cashmtz.nz. ~weata
rnakrz. lt a fall
claes1c.
1cz.ath~ purse.
m re.
;
f I
44 f81Hon island, newport center 844·5070
.. ,, ~ ,
r
I
NOT1CE
1101~ U ... lltOllOIW8'fWl1tl
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OtHtllCT effl<• ftcal.O •t IU1
Pltteftlle St,..I. C•te llll<t\A, CA
""11 ~ -... ---.. ft GWSt A «ll'J el ..... t-~II lie PO\IM et IN ICllt>Jte
T,,.f ........ ~of-olem
..... , " ... -• ..-....... y ot
t1Qllt Ill "'°"" nt. rate tor llOIOO•Y
-overtime --INl!I be •t te•s.t ....... '"'-..-.
II \11•11 .. -· ._. tllt C.ON f AACTOlt '° _, tht contr.ct b •••reed, --..-rt WIKontrac:-uNler 111m, to pay not ltn t"-llw
w1d \Pttll~ retH to all WO<'llmen
omptoyed 1>1 "'-"' '" Ille e<..:ullOft of
lllt~Olll•okl
No b•-""Y wllhelr-'"' bid '°' a --ol forty-llw IH I cleys •lier "'*NI• wt for Ille_..,,,. Ill btos A,...,.,..,, -IM• 11trlorm•1><•
_. will 119 """'rtd prior to eM<u-
t-of lllt ~ect nt. NYMenl -
>11•11 be 1n lllt form .. , fOtlfl 1n tllt
<onlre<t dO<umtnl$.
Goverftll\9 tloetd
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CPM,
PvfcNsil'!I 0.tector
PullllS!led ~,,,. C.O.>t O•lly Piiot A119 11, Sept. 4, 1'11 41U le
ltO'TICS 'JO C:.al»...,_I ... ....,.
~ltHll'toa CDUeTW TMI
n •T• -U&JNll ... A N• TM a CIOWITT 0# OllAIMC t11_..._ ...... .._ .. D£NA
DtHA.AN o.ela, 0.C....
NOTICI 1$ H•ttlY OIVCN te ,,...,_, ~ (_-..a61M4 "'9
Yt4 ~ te Ille wld Ci.1-111 lllt
effl(e Of ... Ulf1l M IN _...,. <_, ,,,, .. ,,..... ~ .. tlW -
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lie. 11 IN sNc;e el "'*-•of 111t -. ~le ... ~ ..,, .... 1"' 10 ~•Id Htllt. $11tll cte1m1 wllll ,,,. ,,.te\w,.., __ , ~• lie lllM or
IWtMnlM n ....,.,.,d wlllll" '°"' """''"' .ner IN firs• llUOll<eOOft of
tl'tt\ NUl.•
O•t..cl A ..... 24. 1911
Corne41 O.n 0. 81<
E .. tutor Of lllt w\11
ofwld~fll
GIOltGIJ ltOMltllt
An.. ... , .... u. ..
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t•U• CIMll Aw.
aellf-H,CA"7•
P\lbllslled Or .... C..JI CUiiy Pilot
A1>4 21, Sept.• II, II. 1911 •1 .... 11
PUBLIC NOTICE
C. .... 7Ut
SUPEltlDa COUltT
O~CAl.ll'OltNtA
COUNTY DI' OltANG~ , .. CIYk C....... orlw Weft s ... t ....... Galitentl• •mt
SUMMONS
CASE NUMaElt ~
PLAINTIFF· OLGA RIGA
NOTICE
lllC'Tlt'out l .W .. l\S NAMltTAT ... ltT
Tiit ftl-lllJI ..,....i .. •flt ""'" _,.,_,
IOVfM COtoll OUION OftOUll, ..-oi.r..a lf""'9.C:elli.lllet1l1•
••attl ArllUlf Wttkllll, OOJ
CNr...c11, ,,_., C-~ tOt•
"'""""""'"~ .. .,..,.. .........
~A wtllllftt """ ......... -""' "'"' .... c:...tllY lfOrtf!lllClllMV ... JutJ M.1.,t ...... 1 '"'*' .... °' .... C..tl OellJ ....... A..-.11, 1' JI •• ttlt
PUBU NOTICE
..a.
,. ............ CIOMMIUIOM
ltO'ftCI W •ITI .... llLATIYI
TO ... ll'Ol'T ,. ....... 1aM1UT10Nf
NOltCI It Hl.1tk8Y CifVIN IMI
tit• "''" ..,. 0•,.,. C•mmlutoft,
""-' .. Ille e-11• .... -w ""tt-.,,, ..... 111611-a.me ea.., will t'nMI Of\ O<llllW• •· me. ot •
• flll In 1111 A11•1tothl"' el lltt
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G•m• Commluton will "'eel 011
Dtctm!Mr I. 1m, •I • • m 111 R-..
I Ut ol tllt Sitt• llullt1i110. 101 s ''°"""''" Lot .,,..~ Ceill0tnl• to llt•r end, __ ...., OOlte•-• to Its
t.,.t•llve ~v .. s ln rel•tlon lo 11111.
tml)lllbft -rel)tllH for the 197' "'°''""'1119-En•ltO~ .. j>la<1• wltll t-1 lo ,,,. d•e>•rtment•s procioult will bt on
lilt 011d avetl.ole IOf' 11<1lllk rev .. w '" th• co,..mlulon office, 1•1• Ninth
SlrHl, $oter-to, Ctllf0tftle till•
•fter Oc-•• ""
TIM "''"' -G.lfM Comm1n1on 11e1 cteterml'*9 l!l.lt lht•e •••no Mw co.If
lo tool 90"'rntnent, pursuent to Sec·
hon U31 of tllt Atvt""' end T uetlon
Code. Dated July 21. •911
F 15" AND GAME
COMMISSION
LESl.IEF EDGERTON
E1tc.1A1ve S.ut1••1
PullllShtd Orenot C.0.U Dt1ly Piiot,
ir.119. n. mt •Oii 71
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE DEFENDANT: GLORIA PALONEN NOTIC~ INVITIHOllOS aftd OOES I INO\lgll x iftCluslw The Counly Sanlwtlon Olttrktl ot C,._7m
SIJPl•toa C:OUltT 01' TH£
STATI OP CAU~ltNIA PDlt
TH I COUNTY 01' OltAHGf.
Me.A<tMU
'4DTICE 01' SAi.iE 01' ltf.,.L
P•Dl'lltTV AT PlttVATE SALE tn ,,.. Melltr of IM c.on-vetor•~•P
of llw Per'°" and E\l•lt of ARTHUR
LE VA •ke ARTHUR C Lf VA, 6'•
ARfHUR LEV,,_, Conwrv•tee
NOTICE IS HEREOY GIVEN that
1 ... \lftde ... 1or..o. JAMES E HEIM,
Pubh< Guerclen. es c-rv•lor of '"*
person •nd Ht.,e ot ARTHUR LE VA,
•lso kllown .,. ARTHUR C LE VA,
elSO known ts ... RTHUA LE VA, <Oft·
w•v•tff, will sell at Pt•v•le ••HI lo 1rw
lllQhl!st »NI belt NI biO<ler alltr Cle·
ouc hon of .,, rtiQUiHtect broa.e,. 'c.otn·
m•nfon, voon the tetM\ •nd conchho,..i
ntteln•ller ,,..,.t-. •l>d WbJHt to
t onfirm•t-by ,,,. •bO•t ontllled
Superior Coutl on TftutMIO, S.p
1•mt>er 7, 1971. at t!W 110,,, or lwe•••
o'clOCk ,,_,, or t,..••.tt•• w1tn1n ,,,.
lime •llo-ti\' •-. •I "" ofhu cw t"41 Pubil< c;...rdien, tJOO South G••ftd
A ... ,, .. ~. !>¥11• AM, CellfOt"'"· 9270ll,
V •II rtQf'lt. t•t ... tl'ltt!re'\t -"' e\..l•l• o•
AATHUA LE VA, •lso 'now" ••
•FITHUA c LE VA, •''° 'nown •• ... ltTHUll LEVA. ~,,.i ... In and
10 lh•I t.eru1n ,.,el pr_.-ty s11ua1..c1
In the Stele of Celltornt•, CovntY or
Or•l\9•. cleKtibtd M fooows.
PAltCllL 1: Lot 111 es '"°"'" on ll>a1 terltln wbellvl\lon map entllt..s
Tr•<.t l4ll. llertl ... fttr ,.fHre<I IO H
lM meD," fifed '" ,,.. off•u of th<> County llKO<Cle• of Hid COUlllY. on
May 7, tttl In booll 111 01 Me11s. •t
NQe4,elWQ
T09tlhtt with lhll lollow1n9 •P
purtenant e.awmenh,
• A non-.•<•vs1.;e e•'f"f'nent tor
•norou 10 end eQf'eu from s••d parcel A 111rou911 tllt common aroa,
II An ••<luslw .... ,,..,., lo Plot<•
•l>d m••nteln utolllY """ ecross the common .., .. to provl<lt w•ter, ... c-
tnclly, 9a-. tel~ and MWH•ete
serv•ct tor tl!Ml•lemlly ttSldtnll•I
u•• lo teld Perul A, said eaw,.,.nt to
w a10119 '"" sllor1e11 and most c.onve
tuf"nt routf' bet....en uw \a•d P•rc~t A
and I,,. M••esl publl< ul•lily e.tttmtnt
\hown on the m,eo c • r\On·••< IUS•Y• •• ,~ment
1>urcien1nq Lot 11'" ihown on 1...-m•P
for Ille malnten.ft<e of ~rly walli on
or ••ono tht bOunes.•tes bttWMn Hid
tots •nd Parctl A
PAltCEL J : An ulld1vld4!cl lo()•• Ill·
ttrut •• ..,_, In common In and to
u ... common «N •1 Otf•Md tter••n Commonly known es :10 Rivi•••
NDTICll,Yw ttave -....... TI>e Dr•noe C.-ty, C.lltoml•, will ,.,
c"" m•y <IKI* -IMI yow wltllollt ulvt , .. ltd~ untll Trwr\Cl.ty, ~ .,.,., Itel"' ....,.. _, .,... r"""'4 teml>e• 7, t971. •I It 00 A.NI. &Ids must
wlllllft )I uyt. ..... tM .....,,,...lefo b• re<01•td •I the Olslrl<ll' Ad·
11111-. mlnl\lrellve offl<._ by 1tw &tit elld
AVISOI USlelll M tol .... ,.. ....... time llertlMbove Ml 10r1h, •I wht<.fl
Et Tr.._., _. dKldir c-• Ud. llmt l,,.y will m pul>titly Oll9M<I and
.i .. el>dlenct• • - -Utl. ~ u•mll\ecl ti IN off I<• of tlW Oittrl<ts. u .. ,.tre do • dlt1. Le• I• lnftrm•· 10944 ElllS Avenue. Fount•ln Velley,
,1 .. 11., • .i.-. C•llforn1a, for, .. foltow1no
t TO THE Of,ENOJINT A ""'I SALEOFSCAAPMETAL
compl•1nl l'l.t\ i-n llltd by the Pl•ol' SPECIFICATION NO
tiff -O•'"_. you 15" IOOll\Ole') S 020 I Ee•I~)
• 11 you wi\h 10 defend tht• B1~ must be S\lbmllt.., on'"" form
t•wtull, you~·· witlll1< 30 d•'!" all et suPOllMI ti\' 1'-°'""cu 1n eccord•n<• th•\ \vmmons h ..erwd on you. lllt wllll •II provl\ions of ,,,. "'9<111<•
wlfh 111" <-' • ,.,,tun Dl-•ne 1n llon• re\oon\e to the compt•int (If • !to•<\ftc•tlon,, b•O b••nll\ •nd
Ju\t1ce Courc. you mu\t fde-with tne furo-.er ,n,orrrMtlon m•v be ot>t•lnecl
rouri 4 wr111 ... plNcllftO., <•vw an •I tl'le •bo .. •ddre.s. 1e1ep11ono
or•I p1e..s1ne to Ill' entttecl 1n t~ S.O 1'100< "1-1411
doott 1 Unl.s• vou dO wi, your default J w.,,,., Sylvostet
.. ,11 Ill' tn"""' upon -h<allOft of 1114! Setrtl•rY lloerd\ or Dl••tll•tl -l"'S Lour1 may enltt • Olre<lots. COVtltY 1UC19men1 .t9<1in\I you tor 1~ reiltl .,. Sanlt41tlon 01st,,<ts ma<1d<!d 1n ,,,. 'omptelnl, •hi<h could NOS 1, J, 3, s. 6, I, •ftd 11,
r<sull 1n ~,,..,,.,_,of ,._., lakonq ol OrenQe County
of money or pr-r1y Ot oti...r rellet •• C•lllorni• que\lecl '" , ... CCllTll>latnl Publhhed Or•nee Coest Oe1ly PllOI,
b If .,.., whit .. -Ille .. vk e et AUCJ 11, ltll •n •llVMY I• 1111\ mettor, 1.., tlteul4
de S9 ,.,.,....ty .. ,,,.. Ytut wrlnt"
'"-· "-· .... , lte lllMett 11-0ATED "'-st 11, ttl1
WILLIAM E SI JOl1N.
''"" By KATHIE SI EMONS
~y
CSEALI
• Th• -d Come>l•lnl" lftCIUClet cros~-r;om114.,,.1, ' Pl.tll\1111' lnclUCle•
trou-tomPla•nant, "dllendant" In
tlud•s < rou-dtltndenl, sinoutar 1n
<luclt> ,,.. plurel -m•><uhne ,,,.
tlud415 ftm1t11ne •l>d neuter. A wt11tel\ Pl .. dlno, lftCludtllQ an enswtr. Otmur
rer. tlc .• rnust tie 1n t1'w form requir~d
bV tllt C•lltornl• Rules ot Co..rr Yo..t
0tlQ1nal PIMdinQ """' be fllod In tlll• cour1 wllll l>n>Clff l•hne INS •ncl PfOOf
th•I a copy llltreof wa~ ..er"e<I on .. ell pletmlff'1 attot,..y ana on uch pltln
1111 "°' ,_...,,,.., by •" •ttor11e1
Tiie ltmt -• WMMOn\ ls dffmed ser~..i on• ~tty mn vary dtO.ncllnc;i
on It. ~lhOd of wrvltl' For eum·
Pit, -CCP•l:I IOllwOUQft41S .0
l'ltANK V. CRUDO
,.., 1'11111 A-. S;ill•. s. .. o-. Cetttwoll• '210.J
1110™-
Alttrney ter: Plalfttltt
Publlshtel ~-Coa•I 0•1iv Piiot AUCJ 21, 71. Sepl 4, II, t•l8 4060-18
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE INVITING atOS
Tiie County Senll•tion Olstrkts of
O••noe C-.ty, C.lllorni•, will re
<ti,,. SNled -until fHUASOAY, SEPTEMBER 7, tt11, al 11:00 A.M.
Bldl must bt rtetlWcl ti ,,.. 01\lrlt II'
Admlft1Stt41tlw offkH by ,,.., Clel• •ftd
llmt lletel-"t Ml forth, •I WhlCh
tlmt Ille'!' #!II be pUb4ltly OPened •l>d
uemlnecl 411 Ille oflke of tht D11trku.
IOI« Elll• Awnut, Founla•n V•ll•y.
C.llforn1a, tor,,,. foll-lno,
SALE OF TWO (71 "6 ' INTEANATIOHAL t-V,.RO CEMENT
TRUCKS
SPECIFICATION NO. S.021
Bid• muil bt S.-.ltte<I on t"41 form
>UPOllttd I>'( Ille OIWltlS In e<<Of'del\Ce
with •II provlwans Of tht -<life.•·
tiOfU
Spec lfltellons, t>ICI bl•nU end
lurt"4tr lnlormellon ""'Y be' obl•lnod
•I Ille above eodross, lel•phof\e
SAO.JtlO or "t-2111
I sl J WtyM Sylvttter
s.<rtlerY
BO¥d5of 01rettotl,
County Sanitation
Otstrlcts NOs 1, 2. l.
), 6, 7 • .,,., "·of o • ..,.. County,
C.llfoml• Pub41shtcl 0r.,. C.O.st 041ty Piiot
0.-lve, Cott• Win•, C.lllO<n\<) -------Bt~ or otters •re tnviltd tor wld NOTICE 01' SALE 01' ltEAL Auoust 21, tt11 O)t-19
PfOll9tty -"1U\t bt In wtlllr>Q •l>d PllD,lltTY AT PRIVATE SALE
wlll bt recelvecl el tllt ofllCI' of '"'° Ne. SllP 5'U PUBLIC NOTICE -----------Put>llt G.,.tdl.,,, IJOO Soutll Gr•nd In the S\lpef'IO< Covrt of 11\e St•I•
A .. nut Sent• An•. Cellfom1•, 9210ll, Of Ca l1forn1a, In and tor the County ol CP·71• or mo bt Ille<! with Ille CMltk Of w1d LO\ !lnQtl~ NOTICI 01' TIU'111l'S SALE
Superior Cour1. or m•y De Cloll1't'tf!cl to '" llW Meller or Ille Estate of SP"· ........
PUBIJC NO'nCE
MOTIC& TOCtllOtTOal
ttJl'lalG.a C:OUl'f ~ nt•
HAT• Of' CAIJllOa .. IA llOa
TM a COUtfT\' oP Ott.A .... NO.,.......
lttel• ,_ HINIUIT'TA HYSKaU.
... MA•Y HfH.IUl.TTA HYJICILL.
Oe<Htrtcl. NOflC• II Hl•l•Y GlVl.N .. ,,_. ,,..,..,.. ..... ~ ....... ---... lllat elf .-lllWI"' tletm. to•1n11
.... t.M• _..... -,..,i<M .. fllt
·-·""''" .. ~-Nn ,,, I ... •HIC.t el llW Cltrtt .. IM eCIOWe en•
llllM ctW1. ., to _...-' •-w•tll
1111 ftftt\-Y _......, \0 tlM Ull
.. nltllH et •111 Helt~ tiff .
Htllyw9", C.ll!OMle, -"ltll It lllt ,. ............. """~'" ... .,.., ...... '*""""'"' .. "" .., ..... ••I• ft<~. wlll\lft '°"" ment"' titer 1110 llrtl "*4~11# •f lllll
... uce. D•lff A __ .. 1'1t
l'etr-1• ,.,..,,,
... e<llltl• et IN Wiil ot
llW ....... MmM 0.Ctdenl
JUSll Mil.Liit •111 ..... .,..... ........ ,.. ...
..... , ..... Olltttttll•.-tt
T•: UUl .... t ... A ...... ,..,~.
11 .. ltlNd Or~ (.Oet'I Dtlly PllOI.
Autu•• ••. ll. it ..... SetM •••• ,. *'"
PUBUC NOTICE
NOTICla TO cttaDIT'OH su111a1oa c:ou•T 011 THI
STATI Of'CAl.l~NIA !JOit
TMI COUNTY OP ottANGI
MO.A-t6t•
lsi.te el GCNE\/A G GARY ell•
GIENEV!.GlADYSGAltv, Dtu-4 .
NOTICE IS HERE8Y GtllEN to Ille
er.Olton of u.-... ~ oec.-.1
!Mt ell peNO<>t llWlllCI <l•lm<I 1t99lnst
the uld clKedtfrt .,. recwir..i 10 II••
llltm, wltl'I !tie .-.SMW''I' voucller' In
Ille etllce of l1W ci.n ol tllt ebow en
tilled couri, or to Pfesen\ tnem, wllll
the M<t»MY vo..c-s, lo IM un
de"19ned •• 6777 Hotly-lll•d • Hollywood. C.lltotnl•. wlll<ll It ,,,.
piece ot buSlnou of Ille unotrs'-0 In
•II m•ll•n o.rUift•IMI 10 the Hwle of
uld deceoent, w11t1ln tour montlls •ll~r Ille llrll oubll<•llon ol tllts
noliu
D•led AUQUtt I , 1'11
Pel rte.I• ft•"" EaKutth or tllt w 111 or
,,,. etiove Nmed O.c-nt
JISSll MILi.iil •T11 HelltweM ...... Stt St•
Hetlyw ... , Galfftnll• MOU
Ttt: 12111 .... tMt
At\tt'Mf '-•ucllltrll Pul>ll•-OrMIOe C.0.51 0•11¥ PL lot
AUCJ 14, 21, 2t•lld Sepl. 4, lt71
PUBLIC NOTICE
•·Mttt SUPElllOlt COURT 01' TH&
STATI OI' CALlf'OllNIA 1'011
THI COUNTY 01' GaANG£ _ __,
HOTltl 01' MEAltlMO 01'
l'ETITIOM ..att Plto.ATIE 01' WILL
ANO c.ootat.S. "'ANY, AND "°" LlfTIEltS TllTAMCMTARY AND
l'Olt AUTltOltlZATION TO AD·
MINISTalt UNDllt THE
tNOIPIENDCNT AOMINISTltATIOH
01' ES TATU ACT.
E\lalt of MAR fHA M
NOATHCOTE. •l\o ltnow" ••
MARTHA MARIE NORTHCOTE, o.c .. ...i
NOTICE l'.i HEAE8V Gii/EN INt
SAMUEL LOVO NORTHCOTE h•s
Ille<! 11.,e1n • pet111on tor Proo.le or
Wiii Mel Cod•W•. II any, .. na '°' let
tor\ hsl•,,_l¥Y M!C1 IO< AulhOrll•·
t•on to "'""""'"" .,,_,.r t'-INMoen dent Admlnlstratoon of E•t•IH Act, ,.
ftrettc~ to Whtcn I\ maoe '°' '"'',.., NrttC\.lt•ri. M\d 1n•t t~ ltmt ttno
pl•<• or t>earinc;i '"'° "'r"" ,,., !>Hn '"' for St!Pl•m!>e• s. 1'11, at 10·00 am on
the co..rtroom of Oe~rt,.,.nt No l 01
Wld tourt, •t 100 C1"1c Ce"tff Ortv•
West. '" In• City or Sanl• "'M C.lltorn<•
O•led AUCJU\I 17 t•ll WILLIAM a . St JOHN.
COUf'IYCI''' lllCHAltD 0 . THOllN
WAltD & WAltD & SANDEltS Ut ..... SlrMI, ~te 210
S•h Dk9o. CA nm Attorftef f.w• ,.cltloMr
P11bli\he<I Oren99 C.0.>1 Oa11y Piiot
AY4 11, 21. 2' 1'11 40t).18
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE TO CltlDI TORS ......... _,
SU PEltlDa COURT 01' THE
HATI OtJ CALll'OltNIA l'Olt
THE COUNTY 01' OltANGI
In Ill• M•llu 01 Ille E•l•I• ol DOROTHY I( PHILLIPS, 0ec .. s.e1
Notice '' l'le•eby Qlven to vedllOt\ l'leVt"ll ti••~ -IMI IM Wkl dK~
oent lo Ill• ..,d clal,.,. in Ille office ot
Ill<! clerk ol ti... alore,..id court or to
present tllem to ti... unden\~ at ti..
ot11<e ol ROBERT W OMER, 20 E•st
Ollve Ave .. Suite 400, Burllan•. CA
"502. wllkll letter office ts 1"41 !>le<• of
b\lstnus ot tlle .,,_,."'9Mcl "'all mat·
lers c>erta1nlr>Q to ••Kl o\111• Such
<l••m\ .with the nt"Ces.wry vouchers
must bt ht..s 0< ll'tM>nl«cl •• •f«-•d .. 11111n four monlhs .ofltt Ille first
put>llulion ot INS noll~e.
O•led Auo 11. "71 JOSEPH 0 PHILLIPS &
JAMES 0 PHILLt PS
E..eclllors of 1r. ••"II
OfW1d~nl
1tOaE1tTW.OMElt
tu IHI Ollw AW9
Swltt ...
lurtt•nlt, CA "502
Publislled Or•noe co .. 1 Dally Pilot Ju19u\l 2J. ~ S.pl S. 11 1'11
PUBLIC NOTICE
Wld Gu•rC!ten pe<~llY. ti any It~ O>n .. rv•torst11p Of IM PAUL EAWl'N Ito: Kl.IJWIYllt/WMITMAN
•Iler llrst puOtlullon of thl> ftoflU BATES M 0 ., •IW>ltnown as P ... Ul E Comm011 .. Ullh l•lld Tille Com CP..71J7
•l>d bttore met.lr>Qot W•O wle BATES.M 0 <Coni.etval .. ) ~ny, • C.llfomt• <orporeliOft H dUlt SUPEltlDa COUltT 0' THI
PUBLIC NOTICE
TEAMS OF SALE Cash. lawful Notice is,_,...., 9'ven that trw u11 -lntt<I Trustae unCIH the followln9 STATE OI' CALll'OltNIA l'Olt
mono ol IN Untied SltlH, ot uPOn Clerslgntd will Mil .t ptlv•le Hie, to :er·~m~ :u~~~:·~~ $l;~ THE COUNTYOl'OltANGE
wthttrm1•11d<onclitlonsetmaybe llleh1911eslalldlle1tt>IO<Mr,1u4>le<llO H IGHEST BIOOEA FOR CASH No.A.-r:;~~l!:~?.ir=:::~~5 ::;.·~:~~;!~ ~~ s;::;r-:~~ ~·~,==~t:?i~~;; ;:1~T~i~\0!di~i~=~~~=r~~
K<ompe"y Nell wrlll.,. bid 0t offer, THOMPSON, 1•1• P•lnter Avenue, llttd l)y 11 -wld o..o ol Trull In M 1 N 1 : T ll It U ~':~ T~ AOE wltll IM belan<t ot the DUr<-P't<e Wlllllttt, COUf'ty ol LAMI AnQeln. Sl•te tht Pf-t1y ...,..,,..,.., ClaKrllleCI IHOIPIENDeNT ADM H
10 bt pelO \ll)Oft (,Oflflnnetion Of sale .. Of C•llforftle, ... , ... rlgllt, till• end If'!· TRUSTOft. Ell• T. Kluvnt .... .., 01' •STATES ACT IHISTltATtON •PP"'-!ly wldS..O.tjor Court. ltre1t ot Uld <-v•IM, In end to •II unmorrl9d woman, and Jucly Ann EU•te ol FRANK G. LINDSEY, ~lnfds or OITtri1'AAf Iii w6iiiftteif --oeo.-s.. _ on-TTdmlllJm~tfllVflfl": ~of~ 5' ... et-QIU-&. -aMVIOA.IU'! U!rtutl A.·-· ltOTlCE IS HEAlilY GIVEN 11\el
TM rloltl to reject .,,Y _•II bids Is ~rllcutetty cMKrlbecl as follows, to lr>Q enct Edllt M. llr....nlno. llu1Nnd OON,.lD c WILSON ,,., lllld herein
her•b'I' ,__,...., wit -wife •s Joinl t-nb ~
OATEO·. &·--· .... 1•11. Loi JI' of Tr-1 ~. -o. In -Clty A -~--•n • Ottltlon '°' ~·-It ... Will •ncl .. _.._a... • -"" •• ,._ tcor ~~11 U, I H lmlt ln.,.nct of Lellen THl-ary to
JAMIES E. Hl!tM. of H unllnoto" euch, Count., 01 No. "~"In llOoll mo. Peoa r'l4 of Of· Ille Pet II loner -...tllorltatlOtt 10 eel• Pubfl< c;...ntl.,, Or•n~. Slate of C.lllornl•. a. .,., 11<1•1 RtCOf'dS In \ht olltce 01 t,,. minl\llr the Hlillt unoet 1,.. lftClePtn
tly N E. Joyner, m•P recorelad In 8ook l:l1P~4, ... Re<onter Of Or-County; wld dffd 0tnt Admln.\lretlon of estelH Atl, ••·
Oil .. Deputy and SO of Mlto<tll_, Mel>•· In Ille of ''"'' Clelerlbet lllt fo4-lllQ 11'0-'"''"<' 10 Wlli<h 1, m-for further Puellk Guet'dl.,. omce Of Ille CounlJ Ateordef Of Hid Ptr1Y' AOltlA" ICUYPClt, Co..nty EXCEPT lrom lMI Po<llOft Of Loi .. , ot Tratl 171J, lft Ille City ot perllcutan, and th•I Ille time •nd
COUNTY COUNS•L .... s•IO land lyi119 bet-e deptll of lJOO Costa MH•, al -on e mep re Ple<t of hterlr>Q IN -Ml bttn M1
OAVIO a.CHMtJll. Oll'UTY , .. , btnetlll lllt surf•• of \tld ·-· cortMd In lloolt '°· Paoe• 32 lo :It,... ::. ~!~= !:. '~i!!: ~:1 ~~ ., D•.W .. a...... •II ............. ltll"' tnCI OIMt <11111•• of MIKelleMOUS Me~. In .... Wld court, •I 100 Clvk Ce11t ... Otlv• Alt_,....,~ llydtocer-...t:t ell otlltr mi,,., .. , offkt of IN Olullty Recor-°' selcl wut. ,n lite Cit~ 01 "'•"t'e Ane,
Publls-0r.,. Coest Dell~ Pilot wh•tMt llmll.w or CllHlmll•• 10 lhott Ounoe Co\lnly C.lllOtlll•.
A119 tt. 2', 5itpC 4, 1'11 tt•?-11 =~~:=:::i.~i!~~W:i'....~'',.!~~ At~ ~tr~~~ :c:11:~1114' OeteG AUOlnl 16, t•ll.
be PtO<luced Of' .. 1t4Kltd °' l•lt•n "Ill. 11 .... 1 ecioress °'common de WtU.IAM I . St JONN,
from w ld •-wltllout Ille •!OM to u\t •IOn•llon 11 .-·-· no w•rr•"IY County Cl«• .,.Y partlon of w1<1 tM!CI tylno within ;, olwn H to Its compfeteneu or <or P'lKE, LOUGHltAH, Ml.1141.Y, lt~J SOO l•et mtt\ured vutl,•llY tKIMUI " TltaeLE•&WIL.ltlllSON, IF-t.~====::;~=~~~&ftl~ -nwa.-d rrom the "'"•ct of s .. d.. Tiit 11el>Oftc.ltry _, Hill 0..0 01 IA A_...._ ,.. ~;;~;:;~~~~~~;~~~· ~~~rt~•;u~-~ .. ~..-;-~«.«~dl;•au;ll~l~ltt;N, MalftlC., WM»A f 111. I TH• COUNTY OI' OftANG~ c0tdt<I J,;iy 11, tm In lloolt 107 ... P... lleretotor• tllKllfH -•llwred to 4™µ1163:~:,:,...--..::.:::__ NOTtCa':'t":4:~1ttNG OI' 41J. Olltcial Rt<-. Tltls .,._.,, lllt-r""""'*•wrltle.ftO..C.l&r•llon AtterM,..tw:l'MM'-
PllTITIOtt POil '°llOeATI OtJ WtLL m•de •"II ecc~ lll)Ofl ,,,. co,,.. of 0.f•ull -DHnend fOr Seit, •l>d ~-()-M191 Cotit 06111< Pllol ANO (OCMCIU. ,,. AMY, AND l'Olt nenl\, condition" re•trltllons, •"d wtlllt" notl<e of bttecll-of t+t<tton Auo Jt, 22. 111 .Off II
LITTllt$ TISTAM•M'TAIY ANO otllerm•l~<'OtllOl ..... lnlNtcert•ln to <•u~ Ille undtnlQned lo stll wld ----------
tJOa AVTMOlttlATIOM TO AO· *<'-'•llofl .. -•rktton\ rtJCOf'dtcl In Pfopttty to wtlstf Mid ollll9'11ons. C NOTICE lloolt ioclSJ p._. 1'11, Offkl•I Rt<ordt, -l .... NfW tllt _,IQnecl Cevttd M I N I • T • • u N 0 E • T H • ...., ... , -•u•otJ ~·•o encl be• Mid notice of br9Kll -of elec11on lo
tHQll'•NOCNT AOMIMlnll•TIOM 11111 '"'lllOMCll .,, ... lntttvmeftl ,.. bt ~ alfAftSAC'f. _._ 111e.ottIC'teP•11•. Offl<let ltec.,..,,,,,., "· mt .. lnslr No
E.,tlt of &DNA P. COONS, •Ito Jleconlt, etl ef .Md! -lflcortlOrelM OffMltc.Slet"t R8!!*..J.W1. 11199 1711, of Wld
k-u EDHA PAUllE• COONS. 1tJ ref-....... l#ttll t1M -_.,..
Ot<e-. ttrw and eftlC1 es "*""' tutly M1 s.lcl Nit will be rnedt, but wlniwt
NOTICIE IS HEAF8Y Gii/EN llltl lorUI 11trtt11 MCI"""'°'~ M't1 to-I ot WW.Mty, t~ ow Im·
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nATaMCAl.lllOllNIA ro• TM•COUNTYOrO.ANO• _ ...... , ..
"OTtC• 01' MIAltlNO 01'
l'•TITIOfl l"Oa AUTMOltlTY TO l•CVMel••SA~lllOPlltTY attelt Of NOltVAL CRAI O,
OKUNd.
NOTICE 1$ HER68Y OtVEH tlMt
IOGAR A. NATHAN lie\ lllM,._,.I,.
• oetlflon tor -'-llY to ll~r
RHI 1'r_.-t1, ftftr'tft<t lo Wllkll "
...... for fw1'ltr PO"IWl•I. .... 11\al , ... 1111\t -Pl•• .. 11Nirl"9 t ... _
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WILLIAMI MJOHN,
CINl!ty Cttrll
"SM•ltANOWM.L ... ••"°'""'* ..... ..Wlf'tyMllli.CA*ll
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OAILV,Pll.OT Cl
The Blggeat Marketp•ace on the Orange Coast
DAILY PILOT GLASSl~IED ADS
(842•5878]
••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
IJig Can'lon
''FIRST TIME OFFERED''
Broadrnoor H•e
A TRULY EXCEPTIONAL 4 BDRM.,
FAMILY RM., FORMAL DINING RM .•
SINGLE LEVEL HOME ON LUSH &
"MANICURED" GROUNDS. TOTALLY
DECORATED BY "NOTED DESIGNER'· •
BEAUTIFULLY MAINTAINED & HIGHLY
RESPECTED. ADULT OCCUPIED Ii IN
MODEL HOME CONDITION .
CERTAINLY THIS PRESTIGE COM·
MUNITY'S FINEST OFFERING AT
$370,000. EXCLUSIVELY OFFERED BY
31R +POOL
BRORS: Adnrtisen +HACH 5'1 .900
lhauld check their ads Spacious garden home.
.....ai.. _.... ___. ....._ large livm~ room w 1rf.1c. -·1 -•-...... • ,... -gourmet kitchen + d ne. ran 5-di~. Th. $2500 down or S'l6S per DAILY PILOT .. .....,, mo. assumable pay· ments. Call 963~767 llabllty for the flnt ui111o "'". ,. , 'L" ,, , •• ,
·cornct---·--. ...+i---°""-··1111,e R~Mf I
Hoeaes for Sale •••••••••••••••••••••••
1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••
HELP!
HACH PROIATE
Court says sell! Pnced
well under market' Ex
ecullve townhome liv
1ng! Walls of glass'
Brealbtakini< view' Once
in c1 life lime opportum
ty For details rail.
~
FORESTE
OLSON
-..< C•• ..,, t"(•I••
3YEARSOLD
l Block lo beach duplex.
I~ than 3 yrs old Each
unit has blln range. oven.
dishwasher. brick trpl<'
Also has hu1<e 4 t·ar
garage
IESTOFAU
RACq&JET CLUI
A 4 bdrm. 3 ba. highly UP·
graded home 1s 1n move-
tn condition A must see in trvtne•s top location
$124,750 759-LSOl
ENGLISH EST A TE
$59.900
S2500Total Down
Soanng ' sty. 1 br •
pool' A handy man '
paradise' Paint and pro
ht and you ha\ e yourself
an estate EKeell('nl
Tnhm ltvtnJ! Call qwck.
847 0010 •>1111
IN CORONA DEL MAR
CLASS OM sneLASS -Sgle sty 4
bdrm. European like patios, various
extra systems. view and lge storage
area. $345.000.
1051 GAIDIM WITH YllW
Beautiful, clean 4 bdrm wt th f am. rm
& pool on large lot in prime area. New
on market at $279.500
IEST PRICED CdM duplex. 2 bdrm-2
bdrm +guest quarters. great location
nr CYC. shops and tennis. 2nd TD
poss , S179.900
U~IVU~ t1()Ml:S
REAL TORS'
IH( NICUT PEOPU SH LINC THE NEATEST l-IOME.S
CORONA DEL MAR 675-6000
MESA VERDE. 646--5990 • CALL US
SPYGLASS ESTATE
WITH AN UNSURPASSm VIEW
Overlooking the harbor. ocean and
night lights of Corona del Mar &
Newport 5 Bdrms. tamlly room. bonus
room. decor to placate the most
discnmmatmg family. Landscaping
that complements the home and 1ts
location. Other amenities include
bu1ltm vacuum. security system. oak
panehnf?. pe~f!ed flooring. jacuzzi.
and much much more. Priced at
S58i .000 For a pnvalE! showing of th1~
on€ of a kmd home. call 675-3411
$186,500.
JACOIS REALTY
675-6670 4 ed-::.o.u~':c~elor SELLING 7 BUSY & NEEDING Ftplc .. built-ins. steps to • Uruqul' Hom~· of Mc::.a
beach. SI6S.OOO Including Verdt-1i. ·plugge<t into
la.od' J reloc-:.t1on relerral
MOHEYTREE
IACl<IAY
Owners wlll help finance
this <.'h arming
townhouse. 3 bdrms. 3
ba. many windows &
tugh vaulted ceilings ·
· Our aggress1vt' s ales ~ervtce that has creah'd OCE.ANRlOMT Corce has succeeded in a dem.ind ror mo• I"
3 Bdrm. + den home on depletJng a large part oC salespeople Wt> an~ bw.y
:.>xSS Cl. lot: frpl . bwlt our mventory oC resale and need help' E'
U\8, patio. beamed ce1I homes. why don't )Ou p~·ri t'nl't>d or nt'w
ings. $375.000 gtve them the opportun1 salespeopl<' ma) applv
673-3663 642-2253 Evei-ly lo help you get...; 1a1r & Altractl\.e 1unuque:.1 ol
reasonable pnc(' lor )Our rice & top qu11llty (pco·
P r o P I' r t }' ~ :? Ii pie 1 associates to work
Pr0Cess1onal li censee:-wtth Contact Sandy
wtlh c1 29 year old l·om· Orlowski or Jim Wood 111
puter1zed omce. We'll S46-5990
associated
BROKER ~-PEALTORS
Jr, 1 'I/ti loltoo ,. • b& 1 perform''' 1-~--~--~~~-
BAY& BEACH
450 NEWPORT CTR DR. 7594111
0CE.AtillREEll
Cool Newport Bea<'h
duplex JCr<M>s the 11treel
from beach Completely
furrushed 4 IRt' bdrms up
& 2 down. Seller will rt·
paint &.. Npl I 0 11UI t
buyer Call todJY 1u1
appt.~ 94111
End unit. Possible lease M a k e l h 0 , e j! 0 0 d
oP(IOl'I. $84.SOO 759-lSOl house.hold item" .)OU n·
Sell with EAS f' • not usmg :.tva1lable lo
some other family by ad
vcrt1sing them for ::.ale 1n
Classified. Call 642·50'78
A COf.OWIU. U... CO.
844-9060
2111 IAJtJO.AOUIN .. U&"O IN~COfTU
It<; J BREEZ1'-
ClaSb1f1ed Ad~ 642 56'i!I Real ~tate
SPACIOUS Ir GRACIOUS
Beautlf ul Peters-towntlome. ln:llru.v~
Park. 4 BRs. family rm. formal
dining + cent ral air cond .
Decorated w/plantation shutters &
thick. plush cpt. Pool & jacuzzrjust
.a few steps away. 1142.900 fee.
Madeline Cross 752-1414 <Q-129l
642-823S '°' &o-" Ottvt"
644-6200
H.erbOf v .. w Center
cae:
110111 BLlllf S CD.
OVER 50 YEARS Of SERVICE'
lltVINE TERR.AC& SPECIAL
2 Bedrm. 2 Bath Home In Corona
del Mar. Could Be "Oh So
Charming" Owner Sttys We can
Show This Home Before He Fixes It
Up. Do it. yourself .And Save
Money. On Fee Land Not Lease.
$188,000.
U I DOVlll DIJYI
__ --.. _.., . -.
llJuall\lll'O 0--CM9t 0..IV Pilot AQO •• tt, ..... ""9 Aue n,...,. • 11 lf7'1 Aut 11. n ... 1fll .,., ,. ,..,..,. P~tt,,... Or .... CINM Delly l'l!vt .... ,.~•...-..--.t•_._22.·~"';;...o1'11..;....,.., __ ...;.40t--.~.'';......i. ... .-.-.-,r.. ~~iiillllllllllllllllllllll!!!!!llllllllllllllllllll!!~~.lllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll~ -·
,..,.,-, ..
--# -l
I ...... ,_ w. Ho.let,.,. We • forW. ....... for Wt ........ ,.,.Wt ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
G_.1111 tOOZ GeMr• I OOZ Corw .. Ms I 022 C.W .. Mw I Oll C.... MeM t 024 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••• SSOOODOWN
---... ,
I
''l,/\ l, I ,()}~ ( ~().I
\,___ --11.J
-C1M TCWAll0t•l.11t.1M GoJI COUi ee vi • from um 1pec1oul s bedroom z~ balb Bl Dorado
model. Lart kfubea wllb utJna
area, formal dlnlnJ room, pmtJo.
Finl pbap. Lovely aru otrera
aecurlt)', t nnlll pool • JaciuuJ. Yoca'U lqye 1l!
WBUY M. TAYLOI CO.. IMl.10ltl
MIW~ ~ 0
:--:::....10
WHAnMIW LOWLOWDOWM ..... a,.,tHtl'tw y•
NEW ID~' Sefara'-""
~ COATS & WALLACE ~r,,:' RlAL lSTATE. INC.
. ' ' ""''I' I Ol\11·.,~. 't k~l~1.
If!,' Ii 'I',, il<l.1 \Ii.It l'll,•
WMT MOT 1NI ml'? -We have need for 2 quality Real Estat~ people. We
otter presuac address. extensive
advortl1ln1. private desk,
management aaalstance. liberal
commissions. C4 Mr., .... '4CMl61.
SPUSH lft.AIH -Row about a swlm !
3 Bdrm hom with hardwood floors, io
North Costa Mesa. Close to shops.
transportation & school s. A gr~al
potenU.al prtce at $7'1,960, includlng pool! c:.1146-4 I 4 t.
'1•''"''''ri 1. '·'·• M•·· .. t lrv11tt·
·t,, .. '., :'·" 11" ,, 11 N1 ·w111 J•I fl1 .tLll
~-·••btrnoomwb a 8-droom, 2 bath.
batlll +po o 1 + a 11 a f . ....-. 111-.y more to --------t un.soo. IUchl• T . cbooee ft'OQl. VA/FHA ~ IPCd&llat. QIU Ttrfl. ~RaibtaRall)' TALK TO RED
64M044 CAllP!T, WE USJ'EN!
II.ED c,A.1.PET 75t· 1J02
/Jn ~l(i[l.
nAll £ Y &.
AC..5UCll\1 ES
CHOOSE
&UfFSCOHDO
OI
WHTCUFF EST A TE
SOPHISTICATED 3 BR
tri level, many extras. ..,,.~,.~IN~,::-'.NIM(~::-::'fi:-::0:--1:-::u:-::,f~.s:-::IN~-,lr' ,rr-i1rs •rrilrs-' •11 oR
IHfSl $0\>AtfS • _ • -• • CHARMING 3 BR. Fam 6 UNSCtAMllf .r.eovt unus I I j I I j Rm, large yard, sun· 10 Gfl ~WU • • • . . . room, etc.
OCIAM .. OMT
Fine cTaftsmwbip lD maboa. trim &
oak floors, sets off tllJI laod01ark ; 4 BR. 3 ba. home ln finest locaUon.
EatabU.sbed trees & lawns. $475,000.
IAYSHOUS
French doors, pe1ged bdwd. fioors.
used brick & beamed ce1.Ungs in this
fine 4 bdrm., 3 bath home. $335,000.
MISA YHDI
REDUCED TO $89,000
Attractive 4 bdrm.. 2 ba. home ln
immac. condition. Xlnt loc.
IACI IAY
Fine 4 bdrm., 2'Aa bath family home on
quiet cul de sac. Oversized pool.
playhouse, extra storage $169,000.
IAYFROMT
Several flne bayfront homes
with pier & slip
BILL GRUNDY , REALTOR
l ' ~ • 1 y \, j It t) • " , "J !-\ Ct ,• '> ti I(") I
CHAIMIMG COHDO
Newport Beac:b condo
with 3 large bdrma. Ir 2
baths. Add a aec:luded
paUo & PoOl to make lb.is a great tiuy at $119,SOO
"°"""'°"'"'•tO .........
HEWUSTIHGI
ST4111•0UT
Ideal condo for that
young couple starting
their family. Close to
schools 4' shopping in
sce ni c San Juan
Capistrano. 3 Bdrma.
wilb clasalc early
California design. S62.000
Beautiful waterfront eor.. .. Mar I 022
bomedwithb boat hslip . & ••••••••••••••••••••••• san y eac , an
BALBOA COVES; 4 DUPLIXAXEI
bdrms. family rm .• 3i,, A beauUfuJ bome in dia·
baths, 2 (rplcs., 2 paUos. guase. Needs paint and
$327,SOOlncludlncland! aome minor main· lc6oa lay Ptop. teo.aoc:e, but underneath a.... a real beauty. Home plus * 67S.7060 * income al S197,SOO. Call
••( ••••• "' t t" •I• '4 •
JASMIHI CREEIC l'I I•• 'Ill' 'f I 11•t II
sca•..urs-... i. c1au111.-s 100 ~.Lil" ;ftCJM •
________
1
2 BR, den, 2 ba, popular
Plan II w /pvt yd & lrg TWO UNITS pat, beaut ocean vu loc
On R·2 lot. •"2 block Lo or Npt Cntr &-Big Ca·
beach in Newport. nyonC.C.Sec.,Pool.ten·
$139,500 lncludrng the _nis_._ $229_.soo_._559_·7_139 __
A CO%Y HEW HOME SlllC & FINlt SAIHTPAULIAS itdB111111i
C T P B A K C L K U R M X Y P Y I T J
S D M A R Y J P A Q I R Z A N L H Y H
D I 0 C I D A E J E U G U 8 A J C N R
H N D 1 R T U I A 0 E L E E l U E I E
L L A G H 0 R R N H A E A R L L M E T
E R R L S I X 0 N I I G A G X 1 T A 0
A Q 0 A Y N U A 0 G G E I W T A V H N
0 R L N V R Z Q H R P R Z Z I N D E E
U S 0 V H U A A 0 N E S I I Y H H J T
E l C D S l I M G H E U E V V E J Y P
A I l U J H A L $ Z N H A 0 0 H E A L Eels A INT p A~ LI A sjz c p RM
TDR•AMORSUZFJJAOEAE
K I C D R U l T W N E S E T 0 X I U N
V 0 B L 0 A P 0 H A N H S B E J J R D
Ont; ~ ••
WWII, 111>. dooM\ Of dJeeonely. Flftd Nd! end box It lt1. ~
Lucy 011111 flounnt :.:
Ari;,. Shtri Colorldo .;
.-lit Plul• VirwJnil ~
.. ttl &.titnnt Merylend
PM1t Stxt'Y Jullennt
Tomorrow: Klntucky
.....PLUSllG
WOUSHOP
Outst.anding 4 Bedroom,
2 bath home that's been
beautifully <fecorated.
1be owners have bought
another property out of
state and are willing to seule fo.r a lot leas. Great
Mesa Verde location.
Full price now only
S89,900. CALL 751·3191
CSELECT
TPROPERTIES
PENNY PINCHER ADS
FOR PEOPLE TO PEOPLE
ONLY $2.00
(for 3 llnea, 2 d•ys)
Call Today • • • Print Tomorrow!
Sell any item or combination of items totaling
S75 or less w ith a 3 line ad for 2 consecutive
days for only S2. Each additional line Is 60c for
the 2 days.
You may place your ad by phone, just dial
C714) 642-5678 and charge it.
Call Monday thru Friday 8:00 A .M . to 5:30
P .M . for next day's paper or call by noon on
Saturday for Sunday's paper.
-.-O&..~-use t~Htntt-~tow
and mall to: Orange Coast Dally Pilot P.O. Box
1560, 330 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa, CA 92626
·-• .A ·-"'"""~· ---
4 WORDS MAKE OHE LINE
PAYMENT ENCLOSED 0 SEND BILL D
BankAmertcard # ........... . Exp. Date ...... .
Master Charge # ............ . Exp. Date ..... .
Publish for ............ days. beginning ........ .
Classification .................................. .
Nania .............. · . . . .. · . · .•...... · · · · · · · · · · ·
Address ................................... .
City . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Phone ....... .
DAILY PILOT
842-5678
'·
+ iacOMI
land! Little Is lie)!!
6?3-366.1 642'2253 Classified Ads are really
ree land + new 2 BR
home + 2 units. nr.
center of town in Cd M .
Priced for quick sale at
$229.000.
associated
llllOl<tll'. •H Ill TORS
l JI , """ t nlt ..-'' t. • ' l 6 6 I
ATTENTION
BROKERS
U you have someone who
wants a bU1 home and
cannot afford Irvine,
Newport or C.M. prices.
please call me. l have
several Agt. 636-8802
SIT DOWN
View of bay &Lidobasin.
hke new small 2 BR 2 BA
home on large lot.
$159,500
Callownr/agt. ~11
$61,900.
Near ocean In Hunt·
lnaton Beach. Sharp 2
Br. Just t.S mi Lo beach.
In area of more ex·
penslve properties. 10%
Down. Ca 11962· 7788
KEY REAL TOIS
small "people to people"
sales calls with big re-
adership and big results!
To place your classified
ad. call today 642-!S678.
EVERS & ASSOC.
171 ~, 133-0200
Sell Idle Items
A C'ONVEN1£NT SHOPPING ANO
SEWING CUI()( FOii THE
CM.~ THE CO
Re-Do and Save!
9365 34-4
"" 1Tf M; ..... 1Tf~T .....
NIW SIAYllW HOWi WPM YllW
2103 YachtO~M
2 bedroom & den -2 bat.hs. fireplace -
Big kitchen with breaktast area -Side
yard. bas room ror pool or large paUo.
Priced below market at $239,000. Small
down payment & owner will asalat in
financtng. For appointment to see
CAU.671-1637 G.H.~ llALMI
Spotle11 4 br, ramlly t.omt. New plUlb c:rpt. lae earner le(. Doo 't mlu Ulla one. aat.SOO. Nr
OCC. Owner I A1tnl m.-e.
•BY OWNER• 48dnn
frplc. olc• yrd •• AV ttonce. btdWd fin. latb 6 plttr, DU rf. Dr tebll. ~~--.
~ble 8!14 FHA·VA
-. <SLUOO> rir1ce a BR c:on. .. ~ 102"1C4-.MtM 1024 home. beaut faml~.t.~: ·······cAMic;······ $6000 :::J ~r:1rcc1.~r.Ho. ... .._...DS M7-31190
Shady • sec:hxted noraJ llST IUY patio front entry. Black 0 N
llate Ooon. Big ocean 0 w WISTSIDI view living room hosts Reduced S5000. 3 Bdrm. 2
muaive atone fireplace. QuaUUffyl lD , 0 ba. r /A. fkl>lc. new cpta Spacious racnlly room No ~' I · wner & drlJs. Corner RV ac·
and open kitchen rombo. will · Stl8.000. ~ c:e11. Move 1n c:ond. :u~eac bednns Cove~ bedrooms. 2 baths· Bar&aln at 17UOO. 7~
paUo fUn length ol home T A L K T 0 R E D West Wilson. 131..cll54 6
wtth ocean view! Pnced CARPET! WE USfEN. 7»1734()im/A&t.
to aelJ faat! Call DOW, 754-1202 liiiiiiiiiiiiii•iiiilii•iiiiii
673-WO IAClllAY VII.LAGE IY 0WMB °""N"19 '"srUN108fNl(f• End unit. 2 1tory. 3 ~tllifiMi --·~ ...... ~~ .. ~~~~'!~! ,
--·-• • Bdrm. 2 ba. beautifully
' :!t• .....
'' • ' I
SOUTH la.ndlcaped. 541-~17 or I" I• O I t I' <»HIGHWAY fM4.«m
ln Corona del Mar. 2 BR.
l BA w /frplc. in front.
Ready to bid additional
unit ln rear. Owner anx·
ioua. Price reduced to
$160.000. 640-6828.
UMlllJIY AIU NICI
RID UC TI OH
6 mo's, new contem·
porary, 2 sl!J' home. Nr
bcb. 3 BR. 2 BA. rabuJoua
kitchen anclud l n&
nucrowave, lusn camel
carpeting, central A1C.
auto. sprtnltlen & a very
anxious seller. Prtce re·
duced to 182.900. 641Ml828.
Rreplaces!
Get re.ldy for fall In thb 3
bedroom home with din·
ln&. entry and deluxe
kitchen. P:itlo. SIM.SOC.
BKR.Qlll~l720
WXURIOUS
&LAYISH! Valley A T T E N T I 0 N
Luxury in Cameo Shores. 1"9r BUILDERS
Large secluded front 54t-m Large lot with good Z BR
patio, fountain & pool! ·-~:..="..:" home• room for 2 more
Spa.doua oceanview IJv. --------unita. Choice Eaataide
ing room Ir ramily room. llDUCID location. Sll0.000. ALSO,
Formal dining room 4 Br. 2 ba. formal dining. Ruat.an 3 BR. 2 BA home..
Owl's kitchen bas every brick rrplc. comer lot. 2 sauna, rll"tPlace. garage. convenience. Lavish car aar. 900 Dogwood. huae yard. 180.000.
master wing. Den or Phone 751-0774 eve.. Needs some lilting .
study. Sewing & laundry ---------1 3 BDRM 2 BA room. Includes pool la· 3Br, 2Ba. fresh paint, va. d bl t . ble, bltn stereo system. cant, lrg cov patio, Mesa ou e aarage, Pl 10•
fantastic storage too del Mar. fruit trees. sprinklers,
Private beaches-and $81,SOO 557-8470 :·~=.' ~v~~ much more! For private --------,
previewcal1673-8SSO. MESA VERDE 4 Br 2 Ba. only.
1·6'1Jlftt1•· =~~~~rn~ 1oy:_.-==·11tr ~: -·-•••, _, NEAR O.C.C. 4 Br. Newly
remodeled kitchen. Can't POOL HOMI --------•I do better ror this price. A quiet s Bdrm borne on S89,.500. Blu. 754-6262. a large lot. Located oa a HAUORVIEW
4 Bdrma., family rm ..
massive lot: crisp &
bright! Area's best
value. $210.000 Or offer
HASTrNGS&CO.
REAL TORS 640-s.560
2 Br R2 lot. Nr bch/ shops.
..... ,...,.._
3 edrms, with huge low
malatenance patio &
pool, frplc. "bonus or.
fice". Easy access to
frwy 4' beach. 1125.000
EBBTIDE REALTY
494.9456
euJ de aac. Family room.
pool, BBQ pit, ropper
plumbiJla. Poulble extra
room In garage. Call -
S46-.-> for more details.
.,~.e .. HERITAGE
. • REALTORS
p a t Io . d b I g a r . ;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~=~~~;;;;;;,1::====== =hings. $120,000 -567,SOO
3 Bedroom. pat.lo. qwet OCEAM VIEW tree hned street. Won ·t
Jasmine Creek Plan 6 last! Call 00-9161 Avail Nov. By Owner. ca II 640-2422
JASMIHI! CREEIC
2 BR. den, 2 ba, popular
Plan 11 w /pvt yd & lrg
: OPEN HOUSE
REAL TY
/
HIWPOIT HllGHTS
$60,000 Ea.
TWOONALOT
CALL:00-9.J.61
, OPEN HOUSE
REALTY /. pat.. beaut ocean vu loc ~~~~~~~~~!
nr Npt Cotr & Big Ca·.: ~~~~~~~~ nyon c.c. Sec .• pool, ten· CUSTOM HOM!S :.:
1118, $229.500. ssg.7139 OHH DAILY EASTSfDE
3 Bdrm .• 2 baths, with
low int.enlllt uaumabl~
loen. $75.900
Posh Spyglass h ome J.4SL2WSt.C.M.
w/super view. 4 Bdrms. Only 4 left of these 7 new
2~ ba, ram-rm, J car cl.ISWm homes on a qwet
gar. 25 Half Moon Bay cul-de·uc. Each w/4
Dr. $559.000. La Vera bdnns. 3 baths. wetbars. 4 Bdrms., family rm .•
Burns, Rltr. 644-6397 ~ Cplcs, & much more. 2·story &!ant on a corner
Come & see ror yourself kit. $1.24,900. call 646~
Costa Mesa t 024 what lovely homes they i! ! gi' '. ••••••••••••••••••••••• • O ner / agent · t!.L* ~ l IDRM + FAM RM ~~4894 :r 642-21114 orCef ~ Excellent home on large 67J.-0782. ____ _.;.... ___ _
comer lot-reduced for SOO 3 Bit .,_,.. 1026
fast sale. Reduced to B~er. f · led •••••••••••••••••••••••
$76,900. VA or FHA•· t'"oewPEYNP•Hmous'E"•er <"entral air , terms. RV access ... ou ..: .. 1 1 ta CalJ ·M&-2313 SAT/SUN 2 S. 186 Wells 11pn0& en. rg cov pa O.
°"'"'"19·"''u"'•o111MC1· P1 CoffOrange/C&bnllol new ext Pllllll. 33891 Big . . I 751.9999 Sur. 661-3351 a1ent. 1~11fillit ·~~:!'; .. E:::::'.•.J 9J~1.Jr~ .:::.: · -·~ -= a --lot. ~.000 dn. Will carry I of a kind view overlook· ••-SIDE paper 179 soo. 646-2087 lnl( Dana Pt. Harbor. 3 ~• . BR, 2 Ba, sellinl below fuer • 3 BR, 1 ba .• fam. MeSA VllDI! a ppr a 1 u d v a I u e .
rm. Lge. R·21ot. $74,SOO 1 YTfTT " SMOGOO. M51Gt Pri~ --sTUA:RTFINE QtJAL TY Bv11 .. , ,, on1' Realtor 631·5454 Bdrm 2 bath & ram1ly ...:.:.:::.:.1-· --~--=--:-:::-:-= room. nreplace, lots of H•tfilgt• .._.. I 040
extras. Now vacant and •••• ••••••••••••••••••• StSOO DOWN tn move· in condition 20 HEW HI HMS
Ir you are a vet.. you can Asking only $79,900 Call V1SfA DEL MAR buy this $96.000 3 br. I~ ~ Wl d I ba home oo the Eastside _, Now open aa Y
3Br. 38a, 2000sq ft fOf' the above down pay· 901.920 Delaware ment. Home has lots or used brick. ceramic me W of Beach N. or Adams
& 2 patios. Hayward· ~~~~~~~~~I PTe-Compleuon Pnce11 Watson Real Estate. = Troy Realty 848·9090
731.ssa1. MESA VBDE I 00/o DOWH
3000 sq ft customlied b F p dah h t BY OWNER. Price re· home nr golC course 4 br. 2 a, . • w r.
duced. 4Br. Roman pool. Owner will carry Znd. nu to bch. $79.900.
denJbu $95,000. 1 yr _jl~$40.n9G ICZ·S3Sl0f'9'1M!l0 ~-liU~m~~:=:i:::.J:;""~--.~,~~~~~=~~=-.t==:-:::= OWnercarry Drg "2"nif. m I026
548-7S30
MESA VERDE VILLAS
2 bdrm. condo; no
qualify for MOK FHA
loan, $25K to auume:
uptraded & newly de·
corated Ute 4 model: '65K: by owner. $57-3797
VA TERMS
••••••••••••••••••••••
'II~~
OCllAM & auFF YllWS
are yours from this elegant 2 bdrm,
2 bath & den unit. Pool and jacuzzi.
Lush grounds overlook Dana Point
Marina. Perfect for weekend or year round living. $125 ,000-,.
It. Cot.OWIU IN«• CO.
496-7222 831-0836
.... _I
• .. .
t
lh "f1w Sill ............ S. ........... S. ....... ..,. S. tto..t hrS. ........... 549 Mo!?dlt· Augu1t 2a. 1978 DAILY P11.0T f:5 ior;;;;·.;;·.-o.o ;;;; ............ ;o4• i:a·;·;w .... ·io4i ;; .. -·;oii ;:c.;;;;;· .... ;1·;; ;:.:;;.;;;· .... ;;;·~ OMt« .... b-.-.. -................ Othtf' ..... .;..."~ ... -.. -... -.-.----~;.;;.;:.;..;.;.:;;:;.;.._.:::::::.
...............................................................................................................................................................................................................
SIS ._. laU.tt. IY OWMM ...... tto.1 ..._,,..,.. 1, 2000 IHdl 1 169 S.• or I bdrm mod ta F..:1 llOIEL OCRAN vr_sw a.oo 14 ll Eitd .... s. 1100 ............................................. .
... u. Hm• w/poola lft Deetfleld. Mon·ln :WAit..~~bt'b cloH ~I~=· foll ................. ..,.... COSTAMISA N'PT. ffGTS. m AUIO~ 2
94ml caad.iUoca. I bH.room•. courH. Part.la ly .... ..-. .w br. prUy fum'd. ~ •
........ 00 Propertl ,...., room fotmal din· fuq~labtd. Wlll help L1·ngo •EXCITING• vuw-.... 8
•• l h e D call ; ""r..-mdf'lfttrala1r. /ll.~ nnance.•1'791 $69,000 2U-asl08l WADI to acbooll, parti J. lP' MIWPOIT "'-'CH Un!>elievable ~ trut, It
Ud900l.C,.t«u&er· Ii~ ....._Vltfo 1067 RIAl&un D&WIOIWXvtY duplex for sn.ooo to ...._uu.t.._&'9'illllblllillil.,. &.aWaa. Olll &odal 1r \t •••••••• .. •• •••••••• ••• _1 MOtifTH 1 .._ prh,.. Colta Mee• loc. • ......... •-•••••••••• lealfk....., W I -..,..., Call now before tL '1 G 111 t11 3202
. ,,,.. ~ Flu Ible nn.ncln1. tlS· 011 ..... L tmWlnston Manor. 2Br. cooe! S4AJ,6..6.. •••••••••••••••••••••••
...:;;;;;;;;;;.,... _____ -I (..,) ([. •ume VA loan, no credit ~ SUM RANCH HOME 2Ba. A beHUlul home. .. .. •HOMIFIMDHS•
RV OWND. • 2.b.a. -~ check or quallfy lna. -a.a.My n•~td to ••· Sl60.000.. tWt Re~=/t.cHk LOW RENTALS R~ ~ C'Ul&Oll\ Ill· Sp11c1ous Mlu lon Viejo 3 IMwtlM '--h bltMf ........ 0. 'I> ............... ....__ ._....__ Calrtoday·Movc\Oday ~...:.....'!:... . l r.n• REAL BSTATI! Bdrm. dinin& rm. fiam· Mn 1ot• ..... dtcor ............ , _.._ _. $$1·08U ---rm & 2 ~Hoe. Mature wffll lets of y 1-u II ----..... 2'TOllH.atbor.Ste208 olV lund•cape w lroom ror • _, W4'Df 1'· .._._ S40.StJ7 lOOO't acanciet1 pool. Quality buUl. ~ ,..._.,. ,..e far alllMllU I S2001>Kh ldda/peu/yard SBd.nA. IBa. ram rm.~ WOODS COVE! Certain· ~ Jwll P&IDl.ed la • ly tbe rnioA PoPQlar area
04.I\. l..oYelJ yard. RY ..... ..-Ha-••n tnlApna! 'l'bllaechaded
ape". Qwcll ucrow ~-tamlb' home bu ·~rlll· rn Ca11~_...~~~a.I;;;;;;;;;;';';' .J;;O-;OO;;;;;;I '01 v l • w or o t •an -UnuP wwenna p n"
.,..... t 044 ----tM oo qwtl atreet wltbln
·----.. •••••••••• _....... walkloa dl1tanc• to ~ .... ,,,,OUI ~• BJil 4 Ba borne ln beach an eaay atrolt. -~ --8&aiDld cedar ext4fnor. NASUm TIM Ruch. over 3.000 wrap-arouod UJ~ decu. ea to &a. lak ,,..[' aqft. Wk.h tardn room private patio la aur • lklnD. a~ . aau.. muter bclrm Call rounded by exlen•lve ~ .. C::.:. la 'wood __,forl'n«edetalla. plant.Ina • trees
bndp. ""11.nl I••>• Beamed cellin11 In Uvln& 5'rolhot.btpooldo1~ by room and d.lnl.nt room. Wm aot1tU&S.• Tab a family room. bl.lilt-In
"10be&llODyoar.-luded ~~~~~~~~~kitchen. z bedroom 2 redwood deck Tb11 ::; baths upstairs: lower
boaM b.u all lM nu ~ HIV1011E·. level Is Independent qv.a.llHa ol aa 565 built I~ 11n11 ' auut unit , double
home. H\lltRY ON J'* a abort walk to the caraae. separate laun· ONE!--. tcUJ'ta, pool and park.a dry & work room. walk· ~fwhhlls from UWI choice Colony in storage room · quality ,.._..7J I I Plan 300. 4 bedrooms. coostrucUon by lhla one
plus a family room and owner home . . . super
on a cul-de·sac. Priced tarie lol allows guest
right at '109.000. parlung or add on to pre·
WOODRIDCH
Popular Drift.wood
mod el . 2 Story , 3
bedrooms, 2.,., baths,
Need s s ome TL C
Motivat ed aeller a l
$108,000. Call 640·5112
Agent.
WHAnA
IAAGAIM!
RANCH REAi.TI
551 -2000
sent home, even room
enough ror pool!!!
Please call ror an ap·
polnlment today .....
$230.000
1104 So. Coast Hi way
497-2457
LAGUNA BEACH
t'h-down. 2 br, view. 12
mos. tJI loan required.
$124.900. 494-7084
SACRIFICE S DELUXE Un 1 ts
2 beaut. new 3 Brs, total· w/Whitewater views, blk
ly upgrade d . Agt. to beach & twn. Owner
673-4311 w/belp finance. Loads or
Price reduced twice-now
only SIUOO! 2 Story 3
bednns fr gigantic bonus
room. Lovely country
kitchen. Spacious master Sharp2600sq. ft. 4 bd. ram
wing. Covered p1Uo. Gas nn. lrg mstr st w/ frpk,
BBQ. TRANSFERRED Agt 613-5721
parkmg. $375,000.
''% .. IEALTOR
494-8611
SELLER MUST HAVE --"'---------two house+ stucho. Vic·
IMMEDIATE SALE! PRESCOTT toria Beach Ocean
BARGAIN HUNTERS Woodbridge Place I. views. Beam ceilings.
CAIJ..1S2·1700FAST! SBR. 3ba on cul-de-sac (ireplaces. $238.500.
(Jl1N 111 ~·•1 11u11110111 •;•'' next lo beach. 731 ·4484 Owner. C-OnSider trade. [ClllHI ···~mEROCk ::cottagoType · -= -HiCJhlands 4 br, ocean views, park·
FANTASTIC
lhat 's what you ·11 say
when you look al the
gor&eous 4 bedroom
home with formal dining.
huge family room. cor·
ner location & jusl steps
Beaut decorated lrg 4 like setting. Owner .
bdrm, 2"'1 ba. w /spec· $289.000. Consider trade.
tacuJar view. Top qua I 4!M·2m5 crpts. drps, landscaping 1---------
1 yr old Lusk home. Best Bluebird
Irvine loc Owner/Agt
833·0721 aft 6 Op en
Sat/Sun 1·5
Canyon
------to community pool, park ~HFORD in Woodbridge
& elementary schools. Croasing. Landscaped
1be asking price is only uparaded. near park &
$113,000. pool. $99,000. 552·0617.
BeautlfuJ canyon vus +
some ocean too from this
immaculale 3 BR home
in a tranqwl sell.Jng. A
super ramily hom e
w/large level play yard
and fruit trees. SlSS,000
RANCH REAL TI
551-2000
WOODIRJDGE
VILLAGE
Aspen Model. 3Br, 2Ba.
frpl c. owner (7 14 >
982·0152 o r 981·6148.
Courtesy to bk rs.
Posh Turtlerock Glen
Townhome, 2 BR. 21'2
bath. beaut. master suite
w/frplc. 6 Rocky Glen
Sl.3'7.900. La Vera Burns.
Rl tr. 644-6397
GRANADA
IN THE
RANCH
owner.
By ownr, I BR condo,
Oranget.ree. air . all
amenities, $49,500.
714/5.51·2176 ~--
NOTICE A reward has been of· •••••••••••••••••••••••
fered for a ready, wiJling
& able buyer for this top
notch San Miguel home
in The Ranch. To see if
youquaUry, Call
MewportC...t..-
640-5357
YA·FHATERMS
are available on this
great 4 Bdrm, ram rm
home which sets on a
premium fee lol provid·
ing privacy and ofr·
street RV parking.
$77,500
For Appt. Call
644-7211
/Jn NlriEL
01\ILEY &
ASSLICIAIES
THE GAME e to stroke. Leisure
World 2 BR. 2 ba manor.
ROOM Mostly rum. Incl sterllng
& Dresden China. $54,000
... you've always wanted! cash. 837·2153 Just meant for ram1ly 1----------
run. Come see this 215.5 Logwno Miguel I 052
sq. rt. 3 bdrm .. 21.A;r ba. ••••••••••••••••••••••• townhome. Located on
qwet. cuJ-de-sac street.
K>wner m1y couider 493-1112 6o/oDOWM Newduplexee4'4·plex$. SZUlbrklda/pets/appl
lu1e p11ymenl upplled Late model double wlde Buy direct from the fie· =~:~~ir.:~·
to down .. hurry' ln flne family " adult veloper. <7t4)639.6704 $2S02brlddspetyd
Mewportleedt 106' s-.a.. park.Bank repot.seasion. loo.toMld S300 Sbr 111trage/sr
••••••••••••••••••••••• C Id 1071 euy terms. Mobile EASTSIDE CM. 4 rt• c1timis ,, • rmo Home Store. 1062 N. aldences on a double $3954bropl. to buy
HarttcwY .. HMt• •••••'••••••••••••••••• State Colleae. Anaheim. wide R ·Z Lot. Ast. lfeelhenservi«is
Valley Br "" BY OWNER 956-4.500 875-a>O •FREE FOR UFE•
4 • -'R• nu crpu. xlnl MUST SACRIFICE-Goodln allZ31ocations ::f:s~~e:O-C::~:: = 4 b~:!aic!°!'n~· B. MOaO PAU das UNITSh• All areas ·All pnces
MC).UU. lion. &%at see. S88.800: 2 Bdrm. 24 'xll4 • with :::esu=i :J' ~~ ll6oo ,.._, 1206
It
Prime Peni.D location. t Openbse.496.2381. sweepinf view of ocean lion. Full secu~. ·bldg. •••••••••••••••••••••••
l m mac . S B R S a n bse from ocean. by ownr. l0% DOWN. 9.,.,% INT. from sundeck. EnJo.v the w /all amen1tiea. Seller For lse. lovely 3 BR. 2 ba
Velarde, funlly rm. new 2bdrm, dng rm. $11.5.000. no-··"fying, .. ..,..,. .,. ft 4 garden and a reeling of motivated. Coutal In· home. den. frpk. pat. """'• rot 1--.1-ped SQ.M46. 983-8613 ,...... .....,., y.. space. This Is an ex-vestment.a. 963--0875 Ref's req 'd. 1625/mo + c • .,.... P · ......,ca · br 3 ba 3 car garaae. 2 celleni opportunity. Call uuJ. For appt. 673-0191
&»-2011 IAYFIOMTS fireplaces. Sl59.000. Adrianfor det.ails. l.Clhfws.le J200
... .,......_. 1069 XTRALGEPIER e42llll IMltlTTlEALTY ....................... So. ~yfront. pier, 4 br. 3
••••••••••••••••••• ••• • & SLIP Detached twn.hs. Z bd. I VJ 642-5200 OfRCE ILD(i SITE ~dinmorm&7f.~0
pets. HIWPOlT ()penSal/SUn l·S baw/privpaUoA/C,gar. Hunt.ingtooBeach TRIPLEX 61.S Bayside Dr.. carport. comm. pool. rec 2:7.000 sq. Ct. lot near Lrg 3 BR. den. dtn rm.
Also. channlng4 BR area. Avail now. $425. Acn9gtfw Sale 1200 Pacifica Hospital. s new pa111t. new 1.Jle. No
Lovely Newport Triplex. 3 Ba, almost new w /pier 879-1359. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Point.a Shop. Cnlr & Civic pet.a. JlSO. 675-1442
(3) 2 Bed.rm units. Owner & li Welton & C will cooperate on Install· s p. 61~ o. s.ta AINI I OIO 5 ACUS FOR MOllLE Center. S13S.OOO. ec.ntr..o lncla l2 I 8
ment sale! AU leases. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Level area rei:ently de· David Bourke Rltr •••••••••••••••••••••••
Prime lnvestmenl. Ask· BWFFS BEST CONDO l Br . I 'll ba home In quiet veloped property. Xlnl 546-~ 3 BR duplex clean new
Ina only $21~·00?· Ex· BUY $149,500. Free pride or ownership area ~~rr:.°~t~~,~~I w?~; PRIME HUNTINGTON P8111l & crpts. 145C} mo. cell~~l~~alton. Call standing unit. 3Br. onlgelolatendofcuJ-de· mobile home or home. BCH lots. Some w /in· GJ-6349.581·2337 ~N 1119• ,, , llJ'-1 ,0 ,., N• 1• 2i.?Ba. by owner. Appt sac. 12 yrs. $70,500. USA Terms. come. Agt 642·3338. BR
[
\& I please 752·6470 or Realty, 646·0507 o r FARGO VIEWLOT watk~t!a~~o:..':~::1; ~ lflNt\! -:'Ac:UAY! :.:..... 1098 'b':':,"',;.' ~~;~,m:I''::'!'~~~ i_!_s1hop_14_-897_P_'"_.¥_im_S4_7_5_.•_9_3·_827_i
Grealfamily home local· ....................... 10 acres rarmland. $795 Harbor . 0 c ea n & r .... --.. Mer 3222
IY OWNER ed to one of Newport's EXTRA LARGE 4 Br. 2"" acre. Lo down. Hwy fron· Fashion lsland. located best areas. 4 Bdrms., 2 Ba, in popular area. Has tage. Gas & electric ln a most desirable rest·
Nwprt Hgts lrg comer baths. formal dl.n. rm. & lots or potential. Only level. Nr. lg rarms. denltal area. Las t gCanyonexechome.nr
lot, 2 bdr 2 ba, famlly rm rumpus rm. Sep. yard S99.900. Bkr. 754-6262. 714/524-3590 chance ror Uus type or iolf course. 48r. 2 .... Ba . + bonus rm. $119,500. ror boat or RV storage. property. formal dln. country kit.
645-7044. Opn Sunday. $11B,OOO Other a.al Estate 10 & 20 ACRES MEWPORT CEHTSt den. 2 rrplcs. covered patio. Ownr (71' l
DOVER SHORES IEST IUY! •••••••••• ••••••••• •••• FOR SUIDIVISIOM REAL TY 640.1812 728-5213
Ownr/BkrmWJt sell4Br. Newport Heights, 2 Hofrwl Xlnt~vestmentforcons· .._..aift,Dnert 1-'-".:;..;;.=------
3Ba, prof lndscpd. & de-bdrm. ol~er h?me on For Sale 1100 c1enuous buyers n~ar RltOri • 2400 ~ 2 ba. lrg ram rm.
corat.ed w /Jacuzzi & large lot with pnvate re· ••••••••••••••••••••••• maJOr town. ExrandUlg ·new crpts & paint. pool. Bltn microwave. ar yard. 3rd Bdrm . or area. Has a l util ••••••••••••••••••••••• SllOOpool serv 1grdnr tn·
many o t h e r x t r as hobby rm. with bath at· •EXCITING• w/paved roads. $120.000 cl. 640-l860
$229,500. Opn Sundays tached to garage. &$65.000.Terms. HAWAII osh Spyglass Home
12·5 1531 Highland Dr. $110.000. IUDS & PETS FARGO w1super view. 4 bdnns.
645-42216 or 833-1316. NEWPORT HACH "' or a mU• from the <114) 616-5717 2""1 ba. ram.rm. 3 car .... "' OR 522 """"' 27 acres on the Island of REALTY 675-1642 beach. run In the sun. .""""' gar. ~ Hall Moon Bay Kauw All or part. S17 ,000 3Br. 2Ba. too many xtras A GREAT per acre. Owner will Dr. $1575. p1mo La Vera SI S.000 DOWN
•BY OWNER •BEACH Fantastic view upper bay.
is Just 200 steps away. 3 bdrm. ram r m . 2
3Br. 2Ba. frplc, 2 car gar frplc's, 2an ba. 11• acre.
In a Carmel·like setting mny xtr as. Owne r
on a pvt sl. in Lido Sands $173.500. 645-8441
to mention. in most Miu• n.a.ucH carry with small down I-Bums __ . Rl_tr_._644_-6397 __ _
beautiful 5• Family "'"-" Park i n California. 1+i,; Acre W/house & Only 2 miles rrom beach arbor View Homes, 2
great rentals . 4 BR. &
ram. rm .. $700 mo. 3 BR .
fum. rm. S67S mo.
swiming pool. jac uzzi. gorgeous view in Mur· hotel.
saunas. enclosed roller rieta Valley. 2.BR house. 4?' f R€'TIG€
kt g · k · t outbldgs,ramtlyfrwt or -__ J ~,.!,inFa:~fon' 1~:~ e: chard. Only sss.ooo HOME~ $138,500 645·1262 ....;__....;__ _______ By Owner. Custom 2 br 2 Paul Martin
Real ~late 644-7383 Bayfront mobile home. ba. 2 fireplace. t,; blk to
Lido lsle Trlr Prk. Furn. ocean. $219,000. 7S4·ll24
$35,000. 615-8839 days. ~Sll9 eves.
h P 'Ill & t Terms. HURRY ' t e av1 on on Y FARG-0 3333W.CoastHwy. NB $33.500. <DL8346-7 I 64r.6646 br I ba house with
C.for_._ Pac>Mc (714)677-5691 :r -'" OR separate entrance to ad
Bayf rot\l condo + 45' slip. NEW LISTING Mobile Home Sales 522-0530 dit . lrg room & ba. S430 +
2708Harbor. Ste208 CucuuoarcJal CMofeo-ty ulll. See at 5l2 Jasmine Sec. guard. pool. sub· UOO ISLE. New listing.
garage, furn. Lse $950 3 Br, 2~ ba. South ex·
mo, sal e $250,000. posure. Pvt sundedt up, 61~ off master suite. Agt.
540.59 37 Pl operty 1600 Properly 25 50 St.1140-7896 or 494.4549 an ••••• •• • • • • • •• • • • •• • • • • • ......................... 6_:_30_. _______ _
$8500
TOTAL DOWN
673-L020
HOUSE
BEAUTIFUL
On estate sized 12.000 s.r. On lovely s tree t or
c u s tom h ome s.
Features, fml dine +
Rm RED?
Don't pay rent·buy thls
single wid e American
w/expando & encl rm.
Adlt Pk . SJ3 ,S00
<5308U4l Mobile Hofrw Store
848-889$
Fam Rm, w/used brick e e
Prime commerc. bldg. at
6306 W. Coast Hwy, Npt
Beach: can be used as J
Uldiv. offices or! Highly
successrut real estate business incl., same loc.
IS yrs. Owner wall
finance. $169,000. 548·1290
--~ 2000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• kitchen eating area. EXCITING
rplc: 3S' living rm has
Broadmoor Seaview
home. 6 mos old . 3Bdrm.
2Ba. community. Pool.
Jucuul, tennis. No credit
needed. lmmed occupan·
cy. Owner t o carry
balance. 714-640·7778. impressive fplc and open S 110 Pen R...+ 16 UNITS o u p L E x o N to lge covered patio & At l he be a c h , i n ORANGE CO.
PENINSULA in quiet 300 landscaped yard; sep ~aulifolly landscaped ONLY $380K. Cash to
block. Completely re · garden area. CaU lo ex· secluded adult park· new loan. Principals on·
modeled Inside & out. 3 plore its many custom gorgeous dbl wtde 1977 ly. Won't last long .
BR & 1 BR w/2 patios. & reatures! Ruth Laurie. Klllgstone top or the line, WORLDAgt.
2 car encl gar. $165.000. _Rl_tr_. 646-4380 ______ 2Br. 2Ba. ram rm & 541-0800
Own ouJd lik •~ 1 much more·lf you want 1---------er w e ""c ose ... ~RT HTS.? In January 1 97 9 . "'""'""' to live in this lap of IUX· •••••••
Courtesy to brokers. WE HAVE'EMI ury with a paupers purse
615-6349 ask for Mr. Dore
1
2. Bdrm. near Clilr Dr , this ls It. <KTl.207-8 ) · °' t r I t Calfonla Pacific
XlnL I . b &'an garage, rp c.: on y oc .• nr. pnv. ay IM.750 Mobile HomeSaJes
beach; 3 BR. den. frpl. 2706Harbor.Ste208
pabo. 2-sty. $195.000 2 Bdrm. split-level beau· 540.5937
Marshall Rlty. 67~ ty; board siding. shake 1---------
''U" must "C"
The best of Westcllrr.
NeaUy groomed 3 Bdrm
home with beautiful
yard Near Mariners
school. shopping. etc.
Appointment only. Call
540-1J51
~·~~HERITAGE
rool, beamed ce11. & tots EXCl!PTIOMA.L IUY
()(used &ricks. $124.500 Play gotr? Love lhe
3 Bdrm. with separate
guest unit; grooved oak
floors. wrought iron &
leaded glass. $142.600
beach? Super single wide
Accent w /new add-on.
upgraded drps /cpts.
$23.000. (8P8047-62)
Mobile Howw Store
848·8895
ARaheimfPrinw A...-a
Two 8-Pl«x Unfh
Bey I or both. Well main·
tained & occupied. Casa
Pacificia Realty 770-0882 •••••••
NEWPORT IEACH
6UNTTS
lh Blk. to beach. 2 lots
Improved w 1units + 2
IOlS vacant. Owner will
nnance. OnJy $400.000
Agent 615-6700
/('-r€HIG€ HOM€\
a.tail• •••••••••••••••••••••••
Winter. 3 BR. 2 Ba. formal
dtn·rm, $550 mo 12131
445-l219 art 6.
3224
~ 4 br. 2 ba. new
plush crpt. nr OCC
Con:.1d er l:H•1o pt1on ssso. mo 751 3696.
COf'OftCI cs.I Mc.-3 1 22 BR. 2 ba. Mesa Verde •••••••••••••••• •• • • • •• Pool & lawn tncl. $675
11,-, blks to bch 3bd. 1 ba, t-GM·5719 yrly S500 r---------
OOIS Tennis. J llCUZll
l()d~ Ok. 2Br. 2ba MW 673-~059
CLOSE TO IEACH 3Br. 3Ba $.S25. 631·2133 or
The most popular noor
plan built by Ay res .
Features 4 large
bedrooms, 21'i baths .
Truly an executive home
in one or Jrvine's most
prestigious areas. You own the land & there arc
no u10eiaUon dues. Call
Laguna Niguel
. • REALTORS
3 Bdrm. & ramlly rm.
with beams, s hingles.
bookcases. super rrpk .
sundeck & room for RV.
$149 ,900. Call th e
Ne wport Heights
specialists at 646-4463 Realty .. 1 ~~~~~
_EO_OIHl.Ll.r.t.Tl .. O Real Dstate Sales-Small
I Bdnn. 2 ba. shows like presl ge ore-. :1r.
• mode1. Many upgrades Personalized serv. w I l-----=-----
lbalcee for a. moel altrac· broker. exper'd in resid .. 1---------
COSTA MESA
Brand new' '78 Lancer.
2tx44 U1 adult park. Close
to shopping-low s pace
rent (3496 > $29.950.
American Mobile Home:;
842.3939
LAGUMA MILLS.
INVESTMENTS
Price slashed on this 490!1.UX!UMITS
Completely furnliihed. 642-6220 Ready for qualirled cou· ...._ _______ _
pie lo enjoy. 2 Bedrm. t Point 3226
bath. fireplace. sunny
• bte garage. hit
& last + secur1ty dep.
llOO/mo. Agt 673-8550.
tlve home. Covered apt.s & sbopplng ctrs to
patioe, front & rear with help you. Mr. Pussell.
7 C I jacuW. A.skin& $84.500. 631·5252.
2675..,......Dr
Sharp, immaculate and
beautiful 4 BR home in
prestigious Bayshores. s:m.ooo. 0pe:D SUn. l·S.
~h .n ,, . ..._..,~'------=---~-
•••••••••••••••••••••••
2Br, 2Ba. Es prit. All 2s . lBdrm 24. 2Bdrm
appls Incl d. Allowanc:e rqom to-b~ 20. more.:
on space renr-1or1 yr. Owner will carrY with
Onl)'$24.SOO. <J K9075·72) $260,000 down. Price MobHe HOIM Store fl.rm. $1,125,000. Magnificent beachfront -.5 3 AMPUSJ>l~ RVltfE 493-9494 495-5220 -------
496-2413 130.5050 ILUffS COMDO 848-8895 22 UMITS West Newport home. ~
Extra sharp! Only 6 yrs Bdr m. Z baths + dorm 1---------l900 Sq. ft. 3 Bdrm. 2''11
MEW!! MIW!! HIGH OM AHILL ba, qu i ck escrow. c---------" New paint on the inside . Feel the ocean brtties $1 29,900. Owner I Agt. 1---------
new paint oo the out.side· rrom this substantial 3 644-521.S MEWPORT CREST
RANCHIEALTY
551-2000
Obi wide Laguna Hills
AJC. Island kit. xtras.
8AM·lOPM 830-0919
B.EGANT
GREIHTREE HOME
UODAYS _
BEST BUY
new carpet all this being bedroom Laguna Niguel $12.000 Down Lowest price 4 plan.
a part or the livable seml-t'UStom home Nook Back Bay View. 2 story. Beautifully cpt'd 3 br. 3
Ed I n b u r g h M o d ~I ofr COUJltry kitchen plus 48drm, den. formal din-ba condo with a clear &
townhouse that r-eat ures Jarie family room. Ing, 3 frplc's, lrg lot. No unobstructed balcony
U\ra ~ · ~amil¥ J>livat~ ~•rd with rlsh quellfyiog. immed oc-bay view. Realladcally
room-a . a rnt-Q lt a l I l 1 ~J)1lney. Gw.ULilllll1+1('J1Nd~~::!at~$l~n;'JM~~=-G~ location · good .Delgbborhood, quality carry . Full price.
ldeallY h>cated on one or
tbe (ar1esl lots in
beautiful Greentree .
Thia fabulous h ome
feat.ara 4 to 5 bedrooms,
pnce. Aslung $102.500 built. A areat buy. .,.,., 000 B ~--~ ... _..., . y owner. 1nuit' .ll•lll•ftUI UfJt1
only. M0-7i78. As1lclltls rl" ..... by ....... r, mobile slg valley w/misslon vie· ""'" v-... jo581·9SOO By owner. Price reduced 0141 ~ hm, must aell, tOX50. Cls
$10,000. One of Bluffs tobch. xtru. 84'7·1021 red hill -.
552-7500
3 balbl, profualonally ~~~~~~~~ Janet.caped yards with =
loads o f frul t trees. &...,.... le9Ch I 041 railed veaetable garden •••••••••••••••••••••••
bed ts strawberry beds. *DUPLEX * Area al.so lncludea com· munlt)' pool Ir park. Alk-Ocean side of hwy, level
lftlonb' $109 850. Call lot., eaay access to beach. ' Needs paint, minor re·
WAL.IC 11&.()Q( beet "K" plans, 2 aty. 4 e~~~~~~~ TOllACH br, 2 ba $129,900. Lg I07' OWNERSAYS
Fabuloua executive• brigbl klcbn w/eatlng MAKEOFFER e.rea, pantry It bll·lns. Un8 20x.57 Somerset 28r.
townhouse . 3 big Lovely Liv r m w/dlnlng 2Ba, completely UP·
bedrooms, 2 nreptacea, 3 area. frpl, up-' ca,.....ts sraded. <082616 > t>.l.hs. country kitchen, ..... .,,.. u...&..U-u~ 5
community clubhouse " decor Uuvout. Back -.--*'-' with pool & Jacunl, pat.lo overlooka f°:' & i-----ho--2000--848-889$
oki. Tenants pay uuJ. 2 loft. Yrly lse. $1.500/mo.
BBQ. rec rm, pool 9X 1_956-_58Tl ______ _
grogs. Xlnt area. $550,000 2 Br -nr beach Sublet
13 UtollTS
J OH A LOT
East.side Costa Mesa. 3
separate houses on cor·
ntT" lot. SUper location.
SIS9.900.
20HALOT
Easlslde Coeta Mesa. 2
separate houses on R2
lot. 11.29.500.
Sept l to Oct 5. Rent.
nejlot1 :ib le
615-41 &4 : 833-6151
Oceanfront 2 BR winter
reotal.s. From 9-15·78 to
6-l.S-79, $450. John Va·
Dian Co. 631-0900
pain; Ideal for home "
Income. Hurry, only
SlSUOO
spacious exercise area. areenbell. Fron p1Uo ft, ~:::' fa:~jy r:,~ 1-r-r_a_d_e_w_l_n_d_s_T-ra-ll_e_r COUIG!TRIPLEX
Decorated like dream createa at.tractive entry fireplace between dinlng Village Sp. 68, 2191 All 2 bdrm units. t •OCEANFRONT·• Dr, bol'De rorooly $114,900. In (both b ve eaa)' care for fr living room. sundeck Harbor Blvd. Walk to w1frplc:. Encl aarages. areat view. Yrly only i;i;;;H.;;,------
prestlflious area. care!ree Uvtq>. Walk to off master br, 2 ba, 2'°' Sbopplnl & Bus. See Nur OCC. 2 to <'hoose SIM)O. eves 642~
IAMCMUAl.TY H t.JOOO
Ml.ulon Realty 494-0731 netpborhood shops. bua. car 1arar•. Beat buy In i-~~·-=a:..."!..·-----from. Full price S12UOO. schools ac churchu. ~ .~ 2 br, Sept J.5.June IS. 4591
LNvtq area, Must Sell. area. 980-4180. ~4• cu.NESS P'ORCESSALE 4?' f R€HIG€ Vista Or. Ba ys horu. Prlnonly. M4-&579 841-*9 Beautlllllly tum dbl wide HOM€' 981-2981 dys, 624·11819
More ramlUes are getUna antrooi lot+r.ciwood Newmoon, 1ho~u I Ike 1 t'vt.S. wkads 548"'°56
lhecampln.a "buf"lhla expandable bee . new. 8&20 encloaed
year If )'OU have a Whitewater YU, lut.all• p 0 t Ch • $ 3 3, 0 0 0
camPt"r tha\'1 not getting ment 1ale. 1215.000 firm. <PW+O .. ~-G l
uted. aeU It now with a K.R Propertia. !Mae Tate MoWle HOfll't Ston
Clua1fied Ad aall/4f'l..9'98 MU895
......
m:IW.COAST HWV.
NEWPORT BEACH
64S-.6'4'
.-
OCEANFRONT
LUXURY I br dllj>i«&.
winter Dlhwhr, f\"plc.
l600 mo •73·Mt9 or
~
.W H.B. 3 BR, 2 ba. RV
accaa. els to 1chls. shop
cntn, new drpe. crpts.
palJ\t In/out. yd main·
lained , $410 Eves ,
9S2Dl2 ------• 2Ba. enclosed patio.
rrptc, SH BBQ. <114>
845-121.9, Uta l 4»-0281
•••
-
-
I' ' __ ._.12".IMlf.; .. .......................
....... J B.R cmdo. ,.Uo. c ....... ,' JIOOI, ar Barbor View Won 10U 'P•'I .om•
ldlool. •ns na . .um a 1• • ~ t o r l • •
.._,.,...NAolft._.e " UJCA UND~'. C.~J REGNANT! Caring •
... ~~walkto ..... =:~~ ... ~~ ~·"°'*~'· • •• of ~an .... , dlq611I1Ave u .... IU ,_sral Aboltlon, !Mio])· ~..:~·u ... -·~·,.. cout•CtAL Uon•~ .
---......... £ •• • •&.11-•t1us HOUSI APCAJ\E 541.2513 N•ar new townhou... ----N.B .. non·•moker,38rm lrvlne Ind Coroplu . NMIJlll',lba.1ar.('rp ICIIJS.PSTIWILC'OllE ceater of l•W1'. lbr, New ad\alt dtlu•• apt.I 3BI condo. Frplc. pool carage1warehouse1or. for leaH, 1100 mo 6 LMAaYIClll
rDftS ,.t. Kadi• l*I o1c •• "'' l'4k. 1.,, ,... 14• •lr tum• amtum. ~arda, aoo.11wm1131.0133. lice 1400 sq n. w14.ooo toOCl\I + oftlce 1arar. Ollc•tc•• ::::..A•~~i fu, 0,.1datlf.t ..._""'IDO.M6t851. =J~.cuu1. aand Sinile female over 30 to S.F.tncdyd.SS&o1802 ~l to 1\llt. l at ,_..,,__,It!
or &UDOJ&C. I kJ 1 aa; a a.. w/eacl. 1ar. AUCtA VtUA•I sbue Bal boa Island Artist 1tudloto sbatt, 800 Tn·Harbor Realtors Servlnt.UOren&•Co .
per a br. 1 b.a. dQ •• lllipM~ :=,aar. no ... tootna lbrpart!) HU. No pet a. ltll 2UUStockoort home. Pvt bdrm & bath. tqft.trafocdy'al"d,nolae Mif.ms 83$-711)
,.._, f'ncd J4, K~. -~-f\lnL UUl pd ._mo Wallen H l ·J7H or Ml-tl5lor58l-6130 ~kttoben.642·52M. req'd.K.8.'31-4833 VJDEOMOVl£PAflLO R :-.a::.::-,.~i"° 'tar, 28a condo, Daya t4t·UU: evH fil'l.W CXflceo.,en9-1dail,y Relponslble F to •hare ttOO ICl ft Irv industrial Mort111110Trwt Fnd8mtnlntroduttory
f'rpk, ..,!dl')'r. M1'11 • .....,. 14Wts,IMl..a 2 Br. 2 ba townhouse. house, pool. w/ume area. 2000 sq ft office. Dtidli 5035 vialt, no purtbase r~. •Ill'. I be. ffllil", '4t01. Jen11l, I ur CHAIUU NO BEACK 1 Bdrm la den. frplc. Club.aspoolprivp.$400 S175. + uW. Nr bch HB 2900 aq ft warehouse.••••••••••••••••••••••• Also danct> • rap ~.!~~0 ,,,.~:: i•r..._L-!~~11 COTTAOE ~ blll t o ~bt. deck. u p . mc>.eau-...1oe. •192 OwnerwUJcooaideraale LOWEST MUiana • ..a·Grm.ztn Sift --OC:Hft, w&nttt rtntal. • Coun&r7 .wna. hm. 30 2 bd CdM New blda. 75l-083S or DAMCIOPfUN
eJWt..-w/boat IDS. l.Mablt f7HOlt o cblldren. no peU. 1_.....__. 3812 Walk o:"bdl'. ... 82:50+~ ~orM0-7898 Wcu ... a.... 805.Eurbd.Attuelm
vi .... ,..__, J ft: -~...aa or -.--.....,..... .. fltT.D "' ..,.__ E•t1tta1 recordin.i. ~ · ..--... aC'\llZJ, · •lap '" ba. frplc, ~ijo. lU Br from tatO "fly · • •••••••••••••• .. ••••••• ut11. P\" launct. 640-5245 or hxiust. Didi tor ~nt. 5000 • -. --543-t'2:2 Sbr.2~.., Smal fff dbl pr W/&ul.O open«, Muha ,\., • av-. Z BR condo nr aolf MM»L5afU:30 IQ ft . Sprinklen. 22/JV/ WT.O....... i---·-----
:UM a oum .._.mo ..... .,., _, am"° rin N~.:;: a Bt. a baU.. ffl)le. I ear eoune. sns ·Le~ •II S&ICTIVE• !~1~r\ o;;:~~e ::e~~ Fairelt Tenna aloce &949 MASSA•I
---1"' ba ~new ,..LIO.l ..,..Nroew.MSO. 98l-1489Evenmp Gainattllable Will rent all or part. S...Mft.Co. MUllMODll.S
Put k.kb la P9U m Ute -.dr119-.Parb•poo&a TSL M1mt.M2·ll03 316' roommate."5-1464 Corner Pullman It 64~2171 545-4611 ISCOlrJS ~r:6~ l ba. :::Sn.iohn Maraball '=.~!:r,2~~~ a,:. =·.=J· !~!~~~........ •SHAREAHOllE• Paularlno. adj to Mitedcouplehumoaey OUTCAUOM&.Y
*CONSUllER'SGUlOE ~-111•1. lnp.-mo 7Sl-9t30 • PAtllCMIWPOIT h81tt . Newport F r wy. Call tolend..bUt2ndTI>'s 0y9..,. ...... taae 3 _..uabom•1r· ...__._ br .. ---w--.. -' Bacbelou, 1 or 2 fw...., 4350 W.A.Do&ta.7l4/SO.t67l. Alent.l.&3'1-3744 WALK , 0 BEACH. Hee. 1~ ,_ -mo ra;uu. 2 DUI;'"'· .......... .31·2'40 near new i BR s e. " -;.,1 dryer, u.Lll mcl. AvaJJ. Bedrooma&rTownhouses •••0 ••••••••0 •0 ••0 • 5'mG91 4150 Sbortterm2:1)d'1. Get l.3% • "°'* ~ Ron.Mr eo10 Sept to June. $550. ~----ft'oms:M9.SO Sln,se. stora1e only. Safe ••••••••••••••••••••••• to zs~ yield on your COUNTRY Giil •3 81t, 2'11 ba. COftdo ~ ~ Spectacular spa. total 6 MC\U'e. $30. mo. 724 Storage yat'd. Approx. money teeund by Real
p R 1 v A T E nr . .verytJuq! ~Mo. lBtdrooms re~reatloo program. Ja1.ne1St.CM.673·7787. l00x130, rear 2484 Ea\.ate. 3 mo to l yr *ESCORTS * :::.~:~e Aaent"'-lW T=r3bre;~~2~~~;.~: ~:.-dtb~t :=!=.!°lt1J:>~o~ Wanted: garage/ CM . Newport Blvd. $200. mo. l«OQds. Betterthansav· 24hra 9$18474
Pool a Jacu111 S495 estcliff·2BR 2BA deluxe wsllr/dryr. t'75.AduU.a. M6-elll laland. Jamboree & San Quick. $20-$50. 848·2765 6'2·8490 Ina• and loan. S6.000.1---------
S0.93'1l gt condo (or leaae. New child OK. no peta. Avail. Joaquin Hills Road days. Bob. R...tah W..tecl 4600 Sl.2.000. 125.000. SSO.OOO. Vivian· Crew of Proe~·
a ............ ft1 " l Sept 9·June 9. 1979. l'714J64 ... 1900 Call Ray B~R ~7141 tor found your IO"'l I b -..--. ap..... new Y d 1 ..-OHie• R...td 4400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 834-1704 ned:lace. Wnte D~uly ave aeveral 3 br pamted. No children or 875-2647 1&~ Garden 11.ke apt.a, a u t Ni 2B D 1 t . ..••••••••••••••••••••• Zprofwomenw/refand 2 Piklt PO Box ~CM ~. upmg~·de':~~7Je~~ pets. $525.644·5524 Oceanfront, year around, ~~-oojapet.lcuu'•.218dr77 ~: feel rW/pDx ups a~n. IAYFltOMTOFRCES Bdrm w/gar. CdM. by lJ lat T.D.·s. S30.000 eu on WJJJZ1. Box.•333 --~~ec1 1 •• ......,. • • rp c, • gara'>e. 1011. $400 675-4088 Laguna lots. Seasoned 261---· ------ssso . Hunt 1 n Kt on ewport HeiJbts, 2 BR. l ~~"mo ..... ~ !.;,,,.,DO pe..,, 22ndSL C.K . 645-2498 adults, no pets, nr Lido ~Mel')' Village-New Of· ' mo 10 mo's due. t0% Int ABE KAIA.HU A Lo ~t Harbour area Joan. ba.lrtlot,$380. ,,,..,., •11'7'Vl>V• lsleabopping.Lse,credlt fices from 300 sq ft· ·atd l5%di :-
846-1371 or846·2S79 6'6-0505 oc• ...... -...-New 2 BR, 2 sty ~wn.hse, ref. $500mo.-'9t·6303 fantastic views. lg ...... s/ln•est/ prep ·673-731~ )'our number. please call ~rw"'" • w /encl gar & pauo, 1250 pat 10 s . p a r k 1 n a & A.•c• · back. 213-423-7S26. Love.
New. lge 3 Br, 2~ ba, Br. 2 ba. frpl, 2 car gar Lge. duplex. b lt ·lna. eq ft. Adlts only, no pets. Bachelor unit ~ block Janltotlal locluded. 2808 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Carol& Danny ramily rm. 2 rrplcs . w/opnr. Nr. Back Bay. frplcs,-'BR&3BRunits, Located at 2S6I Elden from beach. All ulil pd. Lafayette Ave .. N.B . ...._.. t.namici•llh/ ca..
range w/hood. garba&e FrmJ din rm, cpt/drps. Winter lease. $'700 & 9600 Ave. Dys. 714/827-8410; No kids. no~· 201 E. 873-1003 0,part.ity SOOS Ptnaa••/ 5400
displ. trash compactor, Focd ya.rd & sprinklers. per mo. month. A1eot aft.erS pmMS-9061. Balboa Blv . $250 per ... •••••••••••••••••••• Lod&,,_.. dsbwhr. rerr11 Laun· ts75. D&Ya 544--0614, eves 6J'5.1M2 ,._..,.GABLES" mo. +security dep. Call 25()..SOO sq. (t. dlx ore. W. •••••••••••••••••••••••
dry/aew101rm.l650.mo 548-381M ai:u:. &le556-1107 19th St, CM. from $150 TRAVB.AGEMCY + a•niw..ts 5IOO SIM4M.1?
GeauniReaJty.839-662l. ~er~~t~a~75~=~: ~~pC.s~ ~~~:e: BCH DPLX 3Br. 2Ba. mo. Tom540-2200 FRANCHISE ••••••••••••••••••••··~ Ca.II lNTROVIEWforlhe ·~~~::a·:e~g.n~~t~ ~~~:!~:!~ lse.Pb6?S-3609 =· ~P~~?.· ~0~: ~1t~·. 1~o:e::~·rl; THE EFFICIENT ~v~g~:~Y~~:i Acryli~~U:·:~ guar. ~!;'!!,'~&~s:i~~!!
d rps . d sh w s r , 9950/mo. ~ tw• 838-41201-5. 645-1682 ALTERNATIVE Networt.St.artyourown. $20. Haarcrart Plant. 111P~--~~~»t~e·~752~·S4l~l~. ~~~ microwave oven. 2 wks ON WATER. 2 Bdrms. U.fawl .. ld Br b •· bl•--r HE NEW p 0 RT Exp. not required. 549-1005 1-
rree rent. SSSO mo. Call boat slip, $'750/mo yrly. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 • l~ a, crp .... , ....... Mo. to mo. rent incl. Q>mplete support & long ---------11111-.,_
Sally.S36-8832 Fumisbedoruolum. ...,_,, •i •• 3107 U 7 5 . mo . Ca 11 MARINA. beaut newly R t term service provided. SCRAU IEJS
,._ .. __ New. 3 Bdrm. 2 ON .LI DO ISL E . (213)620.-C8307:30to 11:00 decorated 2 BR. 2 ba + ...!!..eauP_...,.; p3bone ! !.."v: Ca II Mr . Ch a r I e s. nn. ~JUU ••••••••••••••••••••••• am M·f. den, waterfront. sandy ..-·~ ..cu "' .... v 1······················· ba . ..., m1 to beach·lennis Beautiful 2 Bdrm, .den. Lovely lBr. l bl.k to bay or . beach, lovely garden. erage, conf rm. mail 11~9242· ANSWERS
court. S550 /mo. Call duun1 rm, pvt patio. 2 beach, atreet parking, 2 B~. 1ba,1ood location. Boat slip avail. No !erv .• parking & more m GYM
,.... ..
......... 7005 <213)395-5111or472·4518 balh.$800/mo. Si!Q5mo.,yrly.661·2333or qwet. Avail 9/5n8. $290 children. no pets. Newport. Best buy ll1 Orange Co. Waterftoltt HotMs otilS-5660 mo. 645-7876 67J.8414 THE EXECUTJVE for equipment & loca
Kismet -Hltch -
Paruc -Smalto -• ••••••••••••••••••••••
4 BR 2 BA, new appl . 631·1400 SUITE640-S470 uon. SJ0,000 full pnce. patio. nr Golden West•--------2Br, 1Ba clplx, cpts, drps, KJDSOK PltOMOMTOltY PT Owner. 997-8552, noon·
CHECK My brotber·in·law has c.
perverse sense of humor
His Idea of a good time 1s
bummmg work songs
while standing in line for
h11 unemploy mt-nl CHECK .
REALEST ATE
LICENSE
SCHOOL
OFFERS
Col. 842-4155 aft s PM . garage. yrly lse $475 mo. 2br, 1 ba, pool,$250. 1 BR. view or bay & DISCOUNT! 9pm. wkdays.
'
__.__ 32...... BR. 2 Ba, BIG CANYON 1213)193-0038 an 6PM 645-80&4 lOam to7pm ocean. $550/mo. S33-0200; ....,._ "'"' TOWNHOME. beaut up· 673-5206. IALIOA ISLAND ••••••••••••••••••••••• g rad e d . 1 0 8 d s 0 f Lg bayfront 2 br 2 ba Bachelor's dream. $190. Gift shop with 2nd noor
RENTALS amenities. No children, fireplace. lg garage. UUI pd. Prorated de· WESl'CLIFF 2br. H'2ba l2,0001qft office, Call fast for de· priv. beach, adults only. posit!! Small fee! wnh Adul I 1 BR, 1 Ba ........... $300 no~· 1750. 644·0509. y 1 1 673-2162 645-4900 to ouse. ts on y. tails. 640-Sl 12 agt.
3BR. 2 Ba.. .. . $5.251650 bd 2~ b d ear y ease. •CONSUMER'SGUlDE no pets. $395. 1728 Bed· Alie about ow free SBr.388 ..... . $875 g4 rm, .a. nrm. Grab this one quick ! S350. lordLn.548-7533
3 BR. 2 ba $525 fam rm, 2 patios. SlOOO. On bcb. Balcony, view. Large 2 Bdrm upper $250. M1ss1on v1e10 1-67_5'-_3268_______ s f 900 Quiet bui lding with VIA LID0·2B~ · 2Ba. .~~U~R'SGUIDE beautiful landscaping. waterfront. avail Sept I. EA VIEW 3 bdrm. 21/J
ba, + ram rm. ocean
view. pool/teorus $1200.
<213 ) 430-3629
Ideal ror adullll over 3.5. _sse.. __ um ______ _
eor-clllM• 3822 No pets. LEEWARD Lux,NWptHgt.s2Br28a, ••••••••••••••••••••••• APTS, 2020 Fullerton bltna, pool, patio. lplc.
Ave, n bl.k eaat Newport adults. $450631-2117
., Ave & l bile so. Bay>. ~ 631-0397. i., BLOCK TO BEACH
I " 3 BR 2 Ba. downstairs. '[},, l~r!.!.. DmaPolllt 3126 Bllns. fireplace, yrly
••••••••••••••••••••••• rental. $500. 540-1151 agt.
ech House. 2 Bdrm. I GARDEN APTS Sparkling clean 1 ~R. Plush bacb pad. Quiel -----------1 ba. till June 1st. $390/mo. CORONA DEL MAR bltns, gar, ocean view. prtv location. Gar. Ulll
2 Br lake condo. refng In· Ph64S..2635 2 Br Townhouse, frplc. No kJds or pets. $250. pd $34S.673-Q36.
rl . rent. air. lighted ten· Pool. tennis. Some ocean _.m. __ 723_1 ______ N rt"''"-3 BR ms. pool, s auna S385. LUSH 3 br. 2~ ba condo. & Catalina views. Close tW'rA• leodl 3140 ewpo .xavres,
Days 772-1000 ext 411 : Only steps from waler. to Fashion Island & fine •••••~••••••••••••••• 2 Bst3.~~~::.'5·
eves S40-7261. High.Ly upgraded. Avail. beach. 644·2611 Sharp, beach. 2 It 3 BR.
approx. Sept. 15th. S775. frplc .. dishwasher, S.C....nte 3876 WOODBRIDGE 558-8534or 675-lS3S 3 bdrm. 2~ ba. new cpts. garage & pal i os . •••••••••••••••••••••••
Estates, Lincoln Model, ewport Hts. 2 BR, frpl, dishwasher. patio & 960-2358. 2 bd apt. walk to bch,
3Bdrm. 38a. $635 /mo. $47Spermonth garage. $525 . Lae. clean&readynow.$.150.
MG-1271. Agent644·7383 873-7513 Agt Townbouse, lovely, spac. Also l bd $275. 498-1903 · · & home·like. 2 br with 646-0507
Deerfield Townhouse. 2S-Clemente 3276 3 BR, 2 ba, ram. rm. Sub. pvt, gated entrance+ 2 ---------BR. 2~ Ba. 1450 mo.••••••••••••••••••••••• children, 00 pets. S65(). patios. Some with alt. Rent luxurious condo nr
Avail. Aug. 29. 83J.C)929 SHORECLJFFS 4Br. 2Ba. Agent 673·5354 gara1e. Swimming pool. bch, 3 br, 2 ba, pool, gar.
Posh Turtlerock Glen on golf course. Pool, Jacuul. Tennis courts. 1 $395.492--0734 bltnSS600mo 496-8033 3 BR, 2 ba, Few bl.ks to blk to Huntington shop.. . Townhome, 2 BR. 2'h · ocean in quaint CdM. ptoa center mall. Adults. On beach •. great view. pvt
bath. beaut. master swt 5a11ta AINI 3210 Fplc, fam rm. 759-9526 No -peta. From S43S. decks. util pd. l BR $295, w/frplc. 6 Rocky Glen.••••••••••••••••••••••• Seawiod Vlllage, 15555 2BR $375. l""-92·3710
S67S p/mo. La Vera 3br, $475. mo Bay view, cul-de·aac, adj. Huntington. Village Lane,
Bums, Rllr. 644-6397 2431 Zenith. park, 3 BR 2 BA. 00 pets, H 8 (114)8118-9961 A I ..a-ir...-.1shed ~ 64Ul26 . . . rlfl_.?-,_=-ft"". d .. ,00 Beaut 2 Br Orangetre For more info 751-0671 · 2 Br, cb.ildren welcome, - - -~ ~e Coodo. AJl facil in 3 br 2 ba. 1 mi So. Coast Costa Mna lt24 no pets. StartJn1 at $270 ••••••••••••••••••••••• cl g l~no1s. Adil com Plua, new house. upgrd ••••••••••••••••••••••• mo. 846-8ll07. 11IE EXCITING
mun1ty . no pets. lbruout.$495.554-2023 I'm still here! S210. PALMMESAArTS.
. $395/mo. Opt to buy. Cheap! Kids, pets. Call lbJocktobeach.lbd,$270 MINUTESTONPT
551-6807 Apartmefth r..rftislMd now! Sml fee. ~900 . 2bd $350. Frplcs. No BCH.
1-leach 324 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •CONSUMER ·s GUIDE lcids·pela. 208 19th St. lsl Bach. 1&2 BR. --r--+ laat + $200. sec. from $230. & up. •••••••••••••••••••••• lcAoa Island 3706 Kids. pets. 2 br, 1 ba, nice 962-81MOJim. Adults, No Pets
Great view pnmc 3 br 2ba ••••••••••••••••••••••• view. $285. Ca II now. lS6l Mesa Dr.
patios frpl nr bch town.Lce4 br, 2 ba, bay view, Smallfee.~900 SUPER 2 br, pool, gar. <5BlksEastofNewport 494~ aft 4pm frplc, brown crpt. S62S. •CONSUMER'S GUIDE frplc. trees. '325. Adult.a. Blvd.>
So. r 0 "una. • bdrm home, 752-1978 IMU934; M2·52Sl 9am·5pm 546-9860
~Food Store How To
w 111 ving qua rte rs STOP SMOKING>
SlJ0.000 gross & climb· 964·2264
COINMrcePark Ing . I d y 11w1 Id . LMt&Fo.d 5300 Newport 813 .. 813 (714)659-2604evesait 7 ...................... .
capital needed to expand Lost or Found a pet:' Call CdM OFFtCIS proven commodity in· An 1 ma I Ass 1 s lance
•Crash Course available
•Matenals proV1ded.
•Small dasses for
personalized instruction.
•Choose own t.aste-day
& rught classes.
•Placement-up to 80'"r
comm.w1on. lriqhf Chffty "-* vestment business League53'7·22'73. no fee .
SUITES. So. or Coast 960-2S37 FOUND: Blk German Frtie3Week
Hwy Available Now ! ...__toL.o. 5025 Shepherd. female. nr ~~-
SEE to appreciate. $395. ~-, Califorrua & Mmnesota, -,..._. --· C.aJILinda675-2311 ••••••••••••••••••••••• C.M.~3342 131·1003 49),0442
CdM dlx swles. uul pd.
A IC. ample pkng. from
S165. No lse req. 675-6900
DO YOU NEED CASH'! Katella
(' 1.st.,2nd&3rd LostSbep.Husk pup Cfem1 Real asuteScbool
Homeownerloans gry/bm/blk. wh Up on 32031CanunoCapistrano
&JTanged fast. tail. Name·Summer Vic San J uan Capustrano Borrow $1000. Sl00.000 Mesa Woods. Reward Airport sgl ofc. secty flexible terms. past S46-0173 Wmttd. 7075
srvcs On premises. $125. credit DO problem. Cau 1---------•••••••••••••••••••••••
mo. 957·9331 usnoobtigation. Lost M, grey Poodl.e ap· Exp. aerty seeks fuU time
NEWPORT BEACH. SfERLINGFIN.svcs· prox S# anwera Pierre. employment. Types 70
MARINERS MILE 300 , __ 7_14_!955 __ ·1_6_10_C_b_kr_>__ vie Pomona & Vlctona wpm. ~h 80 Lvs. figure5 ,-IH2 Reward 646~ 768-3341 sq. ft. crpts, drps. pvt INTEQESTONLY 1---------bath, all ulll. incld. Am· REALESTATELOANS REWARD HMpW.-H 7100
pie irk 'g. 544-8678 Arranged In pnvacy of Los t m a I t' g r c y •••••••••••••••••••••••
Deluxe Coelta Mesa pro·
fess1onaJ office. 48'. 1500
sq rt. S48·2103.
your own home. . S<:hnauier Huntington
C tS-..S~Fuftd Harbor area. Ans. to OOI .. ..,.. 1 "Chips". Call d ays 95S-0073·B KR. 2 ll /944 ·8833. eves .
Deluxe ofrlce. 1200 sq. ft. ~.Trust !_7_1_.4!846-000 ______ _
Mission V1efo. A/C. SO" Deedi 5035 Lost: Long H .11 rt!d
sq. ft. Prufer Mgmt Co ••••••••••••••••••••••• Siamese. Orange Tree
(714)831-1444. I•---------Patio Homes a r ea . 1EH DONLON SAYS lrvine. Aug. 13th. Male. 3 RJUSHVICE
DB.UXE OFRCES
Personal telephone/ re·
ceptionlat, secretary.
conference room. corree
& hospitality services .
Excellent local.Ion. near freeways
IAKEtt CENTER
(1t4 )979-2161
Near 0 C. Airport. 2 sm
ofcs avail. reasonable
Doug 540-6402
Yrs okl. 640-2920
ACCMTG CLK/COST
for electrorucs manufar· lurer Must be fam11lar
w11tandard cost 11ystem
&data processtng. A/P & AIR expr belptu) Type
40 wpm. to key by touch
Salary rommensurate w1expr. Call for appl
Ber kcle)· Control~
Personnel Dept t7141
83:J..D>O. lrvme. E 0 E
--... .. s:!SOlgel brlower, patio& ---------
whitewater view. $750. Fu RN IS H E D l pool. Adults. No pets. NEWDELUXE APTS. aoo. 4000 NEAR THE WATER
Ph(93.5610 BEDROOM garage apt. 1887 Monrovia 548·7924. 2lr3 Br, famil)' rm, frplc. •••••• .. ••• .. ••••••••••
wi-.a lU $350 per _mo. S125 dep. 963·6908, 968-2720, ~ 1-----._-.."l •• "".-~........ Y'nrty:-UttHttelri . teS-9088. $60-week f&u p.
l'he Shores. Ocean Vu. :;:::l'non.smolrer.itulet & Baker. Family. no DelUJte 2 & 3 bd apts, 5'1Mr75S
--·--·---Guar~_.J.,!le,_wa lk l . ..:..-61.a.W.S---pet;!;~l.882. , _ frplc, eacl .a.ar.~ adoe.lDoLnC.0.U ... ~~&J 750Sqft ~.rec. ~ f~. . -' 3Bii:2~ Ba 1&00~q n = 2 OlltPl!aY990=439Z Mesa. 2Z11 Harbor. Cen-al retail
2 ba. all upgraded .tBr yrlymod.nice,partly sty,w/Wcpta,drps:rm. 3Bdrm,2 ba,yard,W/D t.rallylocated.235rooms. '° apac•: Acrtn1 Bkkpng
S750/yrly lse. 492.~ furn. Utll pd. S325· for W/D, Cull din rm, nr hookup, Jar. ltfrplc. sub-MANY with kitchen. 215 & 504 Sq Ft TIMPOIAltY
Lab Fornt 325 675--485'7. OCC. $375. 546-US.2 mil on k.lds It pets. $430. phone &: TV· Swimming ......... .. ... , Rq;llter Today to work
...................... lllMMIPe""'-la 3707 NSA 980-5376or675-6670 pool, jacuw. and rec. Udo O,pcwlMlty 5001 Oppadwlity SOOS oo.¥~g&
Delux condo over lh ••••••••••••••••••• .. ••• FOURSEASO PTS room. Daily & weekly ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• bo kk ep1ng
lake. Lake Forest 11. t br near beach & shops. ~ci~~.~rpt~t~~ ~a~~br::~~ft~f~l =•tarting from~ a MariftoVlllocJ-me0nt/ Work l'j~=~g~~
2Bdrm. $47S. 770.lSBl. afl S.100 mo. UUI pd. Adults Adults, no pets. $300. 7~ Smallfee.'45-4900 · 6'5-4840 Newport 67Ssa662 MO SB.I.ING NO EXPIRllHCI your home. f'itture
6'pm. only. 675-5810 ; 642·o.193 Joann St. 646-6483. -<X>NSUMER'SGUIDE NO IMVESTMINT Clerks to Sr. Ac:coun· -------------------·~room laundry & LalO Sq. ft. office space. GU .._RANTEED l.._.COME lants need\!d thruout Newport leeclt 1269 1 BR, otr at park'g. winter Mesa Pines bacb $230. l br New luxury 2 br. 2~ ba kitchen racU, S1SO uUJ In· PCH. Npt Deb. Good loc A " Orange Co
t 7M062 Outcall
I
•••••••••••••••••••••• $280, yrlr cf:· 1124 W · $286 Adults no .,.U 2650 t o w n b o m e a p t . chided. '840-2810 Robbie. &t8-0757 Jft~ 11,65t. YL Robeft'Haff's-
NO FEEi Houses, con~dos~,~BaJ~boa;;~B~vii,64~6-62.38~~Ji~~ia;;Awt~~·s.g.~ua__~;·:;;;:!~B.a;;n~le~J~crv;en..~~ttaab...~~co:·m,~.~~~~~~~~~~~~600::..,:aq~~~:rt-~!=-~~~~::;;;(;;;;~rr-.:._'~~~nME..~~:___j.~~gASccou~~n~te~m~ps~a:::==========~I t===-..:..~~ "--1""1r:: -vtliM.~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2~ ~-28~~ mooua. !v'i' diapl "retn1. 5'3(). mo. Pvt. wash/dry. Balb. Furnishes entirety new type of ultra modem No Tower, Unioo BanJt ...-.a....._ 1 .....,., ,.c, ,,,.... "' Oemi.nl Realt.y,839-6623. UW pd. Da11 S31-0C38, 1---------Ion lnTheCityolOrange at.. C-ro-T ~ Oceanfront 1 br, frp c, 911. 63l...t994 loam--.m. ..... ...... 1 k ro Bob 1 vending machines and toP quality locat a 714183S--'I03 2 bi'cten +wet bar. 2~ patio, gar. $375. Winter. _______ .... _ .. _ •-.... 3848 eves_.. ... ,u r Hice !pace 0 pre· plus all suppliee. Insurance. ll<*ISlng. tra1n1no ~ Y '" ..... ......, ••-... ICI ...,... s I f k stlgious Newport Center and ca1>1tal for expansi()n after 90 oays. Vou ba, Iott ol stoniie "ex· -· ry . .,,.,,., •o• eve _..._" ••••••• .. •••••••••••••• n1 em, noo·smo er Wells Fargo btd1. tslh nr will be shown documented proof that the
tras, mirrored doors, eo.t.Mna 3724 •Loctect1ar.w/ll1tor. Ckeat \t acre •Unr. 1 pref., no child. Prvt w/view. I.oclude.s desk, average loclltlon has 8,112 cutt°"*'8 per
n:mtr aulte, lrpl "cable, ••••••••••••••••••••••• •D/W. patio, lndry rm. Br, trpl, la•, private, rm/beth.. JCil/lnd.ry priv. copy machine, fllespece. year and we atert you With 10 loc*tona. aecvrl1.Y1 pool. teMJ.s. St·--•-lb ..... • •Special cabinet apace ~t, chOd/pet ok. Sl.50. Refreq. NBMU586 •150 pr mo. 644·7181. 1Ml..,,._..tT DtSPIMllS: Jae. Aault1 no pets. wuw•I r , .... en ap., G .. __ • au __....lnl b. ...,._ --• ...,.. $'770/tome hexlblllly. POOi, rec area, sass. 710 * u -.. """" • -·--...... ,._.. 4300 .,_Mlk __ •______ SMIClm Ml M't ST....ST m.~. W. tlUISt. ~-:::ri.~:O~~.rree. l Bdrm. Walk to beacbi .......... ••••••••••••• m.olfice Bank of Costa 3 wusatms • wnMYWAY
--TH1WATER l62bdrmapts$Z35.&up. 1BrSZ70,2brS310 ror·~·~moRy~ e.tcloWll t M•aPlu•.'125.mo.No BUBBLE YUM vn Adlll only. Open 8:30-S. Moathtomonlh ~c · orn on 'I u.-,..,_... ltaM.$56-3800,
Luxury 1 BR, baylront, S.t's &-1. 548-4968. 2110 2323EldeoAve,C.M. .o300 Sharoaboft\eoraptment Formally Insur. olc 3 AmJCA~
view condo. Avall now. Newport Blvd, CM. '42·1• a br 2 ba, no cblldren or ~-OJ.Ans lJNuMmD nm. ba It kit, citidrps. Must be able to devote 30 hours a montl'I to =~._opt Sl.59.ooo.•2·-Br--'.'""coiy--be-a_m_s-.-p-ati-.o-...... .._.,._. Ptll, t450 tat• last ~<4«~~· S325 mo. 567 . t9th. ~'!!~bb"~~=-~~f:U":':h~~~~~=:
Nr lhopl+ocean. $320. Lr& 2Bdrm, %8a clec 49HTL5 a>~ Wl.le!MO C.M. Call Jack Saun· adequate ~no captlll Preler.ooe will be
KVR Portofino. 4 BR, 3~ C..118'5-1223, 8U-8$40 kltch. da.bwshr. Brand sT-t 83:Ml34 Sinc-e lint denon 54f.22n shown to ll'IOM lndlvlduall w1lllng to 1tert on 8 ba. pool + spa, 1.rdnr.i....;.0--;.....;..-.;..;....;;.___;;.;._;.....;.._ nu! Sl2S. 372 W. Bay SL _..., II pert time beels. at '-51 \lnt11 they oemonetrate
upcraded, 9800.980-1326 Eastaldet Bach apt. prtv &tMSJ1/83HU4 T• Ume to r~lu and Male will share KB houn rm awte, Sl45 mo. ut tl'lt ~llty W9 requtr9. Not lffiheteo -"----------•entrance Ulll pd, 1---------abopatbome. ltaslmpl• with non . I IJ\Ok tr, paid. A1C. IOI aq Ct. am with M&M MaraCotD or L1fuavera Inc. !BRCOUqe. P'rplc. ~ 112.5/mo. ~. S. Coat Plua area. dlx 3 w l l h D a I I 'I pl Io t -...ioyed, slnile. Oloet pie parkiJlt, adjac4!nt to
clDc:b. It pstio, )'d. ~ lluela4• lea 17 40 br 2 be 4-plu. blt·lnt. CIU1lfitd Ada. And lf t'~'t''o c e a n • n 1 a r ~!· N~~~~. cC~~s J:i ~T! =ON
. llate. Pb~ •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• carpel. drape•, enclo. you have tomedllnl to Broolhunt. You lf•l 2 &42-4.2lORoxle. t1i411174)60 81"11. lra 4 BR condo. ~on Paclllc bacb f:,,,:95· C.ll aft $, Hll. call • friendly ~ ptt bath. 1bart •--'---------
$750. Rud1 to 10 ._ oa wtle.f', nr pool. .L CIU1lfied Ad·YllOt at r9t 'lJ house 4c 1•raae Have aorMthln& to sell• s-., . .:1~~&,':c~Oltr
.....aoorl44-1157 l300 Srpt 1·7 148-11112. Claultled AWi 842·Sl'71 MUl1I $2.10 • ...-ievts Cl~lned eds do It well
• • f • -.. • •
ADMIN ASSIST
For rrowtna imPort rlrm ln Newport Center. Good
opportu.n1t1 for bri1ht. ambltloua peraon who
hu an anal)'Ucal crund
and erU<>Y$ worktn1 wl&.b
le. Poeitlon involves
. compu~r opera-
• lots of telephone
cont•('t P1lor ex·
penence help(ul, bul not
required. Stan around
$800 Conl•('l Turi
SwartJt Ill Tr•nsmark.
&M-7342
........... s,.c.
Wn
For 2 tstab'I fut 1row·
lnl lnda Pll*'· a111c or rem Exp•r prel'd.
Careeroppor. w..aao
•
.. *I I 111 ' I '••11f'RI P 1M1/P p... nzrtl I NlrtiMj ....................... ········•············•· ........................................................................................... .
11ura1saml'1 Qardeolna. OOCatudent. ~Toe truck. t .11.S.-Rot~. Sod or ffovMOc\lia.in1 t.it., Ex· Any plumbln1. water ~ Pi&llO lnatrucUo
a.M·us>•malnt Mbn. Truh, trM trtm, Ron Seeded Lawna . ·c..r.:rr.eeet.JohnBeck. aerv iw. bathrmtocl Stud w n.
llNUl.HocM ... lNl IO-S70l,"3-Sl'M ~=-~~~~~ntln1. Sll.-Sor~3111 ceram•c 'tt1e. a ... : aJJ r~r:!°!:~ .;,.;;;;:;..=;:;;..;....,....~--.~""'6-.--~-~~--::I;~=~~!::=~ J..,_.. 11lide1Mr. frtO CHEAPEST hautia1 ln &Synpalnttn10rJ.Cnty, ma.e8 I0-3003
o.cD •eo..t R.tmod•I n1. addlUOH, •• t ' m a t. . c I I I town ...... ett.. CHEAP! EurooMn lAndK•per top quality St Uct33G50. DRAINS CLEA.RED. P1at ~in In)' home. $10
.......... _.......... all IV . ntwd ~• ...... new CJU...,am9ftlf· .-orM.S-lJIO ~ ::!nt~:~:• •a.Pee. rate. SUJ.~O. ll•lnt, br. Cert. eltm tucbt-r .
.S.v.llftMy• ,.~~ ..tr.Utd . ..-1 Oattla .. Qardeolnl Co. PldNp\llllClformovtncor ' !· '4otfocullwallpaper.it $24.:50. No &lrnmlcka. Cdll·Ntwport aru.
OrtvnQl•ParlllAI lot -..... a.u1.1~ _,., -4' lnt/gat tudacape Is b.aulin1.cleJD·QP8.Steve LudleaPina. Tree trim· ... do the. baollns Tbe Rootenmn,d-.:!. ,_s..OMS ______ _ •..,..in ,...,C'Oatia ......... •••• .. ••••••• ---· nnlNI, ·-· -•-t7•Ml7 Wa1Jin.751-6ld' mint. t lw -up. 1 YTt Han&men.m~ •L•c. NB , CM • 0iws ltalM. fedial, etc. comm . Fru Ht.1. m .... ~. op. Ji'tee eat. Nobonl: PERRY'S PLUMBING ~CS. ' I ~.....,,. Ouanaa\nd. Rafnbow ~SDI • pl141• I.Jc. t11rr .. ~ Collea• atudent.a need• 111-111aor&W7·*2 ~ • Papertn1. 22 Com plete p l umbln1 ..................... ..
&rtktm•l'T9 _. .... .,.... .................. -•••• wol'lf, yud Cr 1arace , 1r1 •ap . Lr•• •st. Mr'Yices. Drain• ttwer 'red'•WbMSowCare. Prof.
,.__.. • ..:...:..a.-_ ~-_. HANDYllAN:Ca~ltf •. cleanup1. b aullne. •••n Y AnYWbereloCo.U8-$361 cltan l n1 . Pree window clean.int at re· -..... ~ ~-~ •-Is ---1 .. ••••••••••••••••••••• .um.tee. 2' braerv\c.. ason . rat~•. Refs.
-··················· ....................... eJectncal. plum ml --· D-'~ ~ s JI J b a.tom wort t'UllOfttble ll'1Wl8.1 MZ-78113 I ft ft ft ~ • .......,. Rrl lf1·1'7f1 ~ C •--t-unl!OaWOra. ma 0 I . ....i f • W.OlreCarpttQeanert.• .. •• eerM · • -..._ .. _...._. ~.Cotta Mesa" ., .. ces. ree eatltnat• .... ..
-daaa At.o up UcllTUI 16S-11'74 HANDYMAN. Hoen• • ....................... lrvioe.875-317Sevea. Bruno.170o10'3 ... .:= ............... ~t Window "Cleaning . ..=:::..:..:..::;;:;.;;::;;;...;.;.;.~~ ......,., All woril 1uar. EL£C'TRJCIAN·Pri~ apu. Conaclentlous Profe11or /Handyman ~ Palutlnt Htih quality REPAIR• Bl'!ROOF All tJ!.1 10 :,si~rv f;DM 1'nlck ..-it. P'r eat. ,... rt•.. r 1 craftsman. cau 14$·0302 avail for bou.aetltUnf. .._ • ..., ~ wWt_ It: ........ ,_ t b 1 1 · use c en say .. r..._ ~t• ... l· re. ffl mau oe Sep&.June Or•nce Co ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~... ma..:na.... Y P • • • • n 1 e • · ao. Free est. eau '42·5668 __ ............... . lU'll••maUjobt. • 1111 I .,. beadl area. Xl.nt ref, .. ~: MOVING IJHAULlNG Uc:m&OO. Esta. 142.3792 rocuhaltes-compo-tar. ---------
O••ont/ laokr.plc) C-. c!.epiq &.o yCN:r Ueftwed f720358 ....................... Oh. PO Bo• 202 , .. Move anythioc . E:XCELLENT P AINT· ~·eee1t.sn.58IO
lrwa ft181tafta.al11$. .._ ot e1:-ol b\DI ~11 he Haul. akt~loader dump Nlmoo.Cl82DZ M)'Wbereat9nYUmt!.. ING Reuonable rat.ea. McDANEL Act.~ 1..etal T'f '"' ._ ~!.. oe Schrader -••••••••••••!'•••••••• trt. iradinl. tree writ. It + , l&hrl 7 dys "\"-Ul-Sl802 treeeetimata. 548-2'706. Roptlna It Repaln $1.62 per DAY
llts.tl9, '41·"4 aft *J ... -medlod P'ree T'"YLOR-... C.,... deaditioaae.tc.831·12.:57 -.nu-•• I Lie 3SoS448 1/9919339 tPll TPM -.Call$94JG. m..or70 " ,r.n c.o -••••••••••••• .. •••••• Prat service with At1u PtllHot · · That '1 ALL you pay
fora -a,· .• .. D N B b w_..53f..-~ I ,_.. ......~,,..... Want a REALLY CLEAN Vulineecaltlnomore! ....................... Re-Roof For Less -· ·-,.., ecor,. npt c uuu ........ nLoUJ& •••••••• .. ••••••••••••• HOOS.ET Cail Glntham Fret eat. tor locala, Patio coven. concrete It CallAftyt.lme
:;:::;:.·-.... 0 -••• ~.:C,: .•!::!."~In a. •et 1 ~ .. aham.lnum aeamless Girl. Free est. &U-5123 1tora1•. It: Ions dlat. wrou1ht &ton . Free &M-OUl
30cS.y ad
in the
~·...,_ ~ c~ _ _. m.it · c.-••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ w /baited on moves. Stat. Uc. Tlll015. eaUmates. ~e Richey. ,.,....._ 1--a... • ~VJlf. _. leu·upa k 11 • enamel. Calm blt on Job. So. American 1irl will Pb$3'7-8l.60 __.,or'75'-0366 ...,.-DAILY PILOT
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
---...;...;. ~...;...;..;. __ ~c-•JC11 c ... Landacapl~I· ~::im~d: TheGuttenJMft.542-12'2 c~ your home. Ref'•· ..................... ..
,.,__._ __ --....... --·••••••••••••••• aervic1-ft 142.9807 111 ..... 1 llana.64CM929 PMk1/P•UMg ......,.Jlep* Carryln4ssa~e$$$S. Motl ..__ r•--.. ...... H .,, I ....................... ....................... color repair $22.50 +
1iat .. <:all All.an F01mdatlon1. relainln1 P'1lf I J>ft I ••••••••••••••••••••••• Walls, ceillnes. rJoon PETERS PAINTING Neat patches fr textures parts. Frea est. #16710
,._,.... •all•. bl"ts. paUoa. ~ Inc~·~ ma~ Geo'I Handyman. Paint· &windowscleaned. Expr'd. Reas Rates. flam. lt3-l4lt Caltrooica84C)..2620
CarpeDters. finish &&Ml. Lic'd. haulioi. Ll~~l~~u~n· In&. carpentry. rooting, 648-6W Free Eat. Call Gene TrteS..lce
ro11tb. Comm ft res All Phases or concrete sured " llc'd. Comm/ muonry · Any ho~e "At~our Service" by ~ PA1CH PLASTERING •••••••••••••••••••••••
,..i..;. w.az or W•'"'e work. Block walls. plan· R e a V E R V malnt. or remodehng La (Jfi bo •· A 11 t Y P e s . F re e -,.. •-.brick.U,.•·"'--.. ed. RaoaanN ... 0 LE RATES. proj.J .Waugh,631·2233 e -"' ce, a .... Painting. Ext.r/Intr. Ex· l 5'7.at uan .... uuuu ~ AD etc.)845-4164. d h estimata.Ca IS40-6825 Removals. Pruning.
DO IT NOW!
642-5678
642..Ql!M Larry '1 Lawn Care. •HANDYMAN• pr' • onest. neat. reaa. People who are seeking Trimming, Uc. Ins. Free ~~~~c~~~~or Custom cement work. 9155-l18S General repairs. big or lfyou'relooklngforabet· Uc'dll64·l045Dave an apartment look first estimates. 494·6221.I=========
751H•7 Patios, walkways . •VERYLOWPRICES• sml.Ron.631·1060 terjob,youwon'twanllo Prol paint.lnJ . Ext & int. in Classified. WIU your.__&42-_2624 ______ _ 'The fastest draw in the
West. . .a Dally Pilot
Ouslfied Ad. 642-5678.
driveways. Free est. OnGardeoingMalnt. SELL Idle Items with a miss the employment Low rates. Refs. Free ad be there? To place Have somet.hiog to seU'.' <luaifl~ Adi M2~ ~1M2. 5'3-7601 Gecqe 549-2015 Dally Pilot Clasaified Ad. colwno.s in Classified. est. 538-4780, S3S-"383 Your ad. call 64.2·5678 Classified ads doll welt.
HllpW-.d 710 HllpW-.d 7100 HefpW..tecl 7100 HtlpW..W 7100 HtfpW..ted 7100 HttpW..+ed 7100 HefpW..e.d 7100 HetpW..ted 7100 HtlpW..ted 710Ct •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
Air Conditioain&/Comm/ Assembler Auto mechanic. ex· BOOKKEEPER F /C. CodlNllW ....... a Deliveryman. early DISfGM Bldromcs
Raid. H!n'ice mechanic Mecbanical or machinist ~~· 412 N. Coast BankiDI building material or con· 5ct.oo1 morning, Times route. apreq.548·5541 background. Able to U · ~L,_ Lacuna Bch. TILLER 5tnletion exp. pref. Sal. F.am up to $300 per wk Must have dependable DltAFTSPBSOM Teclllldm
A 1 R D E F E N S E / s em .b I e g rap h ! c s _.,,_, For our Costa Mesa ore. commensurate w /ex per. , -~ ..... ,_ Pl t' car. 546-4481 lltctt o Medt1 Electronic checkout &
BALLJSTJC MISSILE machinery. No smoking. Automobile Painters F /time w /totaling & ability. Sta.rt immed. ...,... ""....... acemen p .---. troubleshooting of
CR....., U'l""'" hn. 1 Xlnt bene&s & salary. u...1 p rdin to Saturda Miol Ml i VI j usist.T5l·tUM. Deliverymen. f /time oc ~ macrowave components ""'"· • .......,.tee aca Inquire : Rima En· °"'~· ayacco g ya. per mo. II oo e o area. re Manur.oleledro-mecb'I tramin1. Teamwork. out-t er Pr
1
• s es 15 3 9 5 abUit,y. 642-9373. Exper. pref'd. Call Mr. 581·2300 COMBAT ARMS: Men on· needed or party rental products req's an ind.iv. & fillers. Req'a back-
door ~ w S1llva at 546·2300. .., Tr-'-•-email unit store. Must be 18, tood to PC 1round in microwave """•· omen/men. Cb . 1 L 8 • _ _._,_....._ v · ILUJ w prepare accurate Call AnnyRecruitJng for em1ca n. . B . Automobile ~nglne California Federal Sav· ---·~ tactics. Rueged outdoor drlver&neal. Apply 2025 Board layouts from component testings.
del.ajla: ~. Tuneup Mechanic. Will inp, 2700 Harbor Blvd. Person. Paste. display & won. Tanks. Artillery. Newport Blvd, Costa sc:bemaUcs. Will alao do Trade school or military
Costa Mesa 540-1026 Assembly, lite. perma-train ror wheel allan· Costa Mesa, Ca 92626. reader ad copy onto lnfanlr)'. Cash bonuses Mesa. pasteup, final detail & trauuna in basic elec· H:unUniloo Bch 962-8821 nent work. company menl. Sal + comm. App. Equal Oppor Employer. flats. 2 Days a wk. Moo for 4-year enlistment. Dental Aas 't, chairside. assembly drawmgs. We tnlolcs area helpful. Call
I ......... Hil'-7,,.. c:"cl be r· s I ly, 3000 E Coast Hwy llam-9pm. Tues lOam · Call for details. Army --. rt for •Pill· Berkeley Con· -.-"" ....--... neats. aary com· cdM . • -m.ApplyPenn""aver, n~rutu.... 4"'-days,noSat.Salary uueracompetJlavesta . trots. 714/833·3300 --=--------mensurate w /exp. Call .,,.. J~ """' .... ,.. CM 546-3000 lng wage, xlnl benefit AirNat.ionaJGuard 962-6648,8-5PM. AlFl'O Banldnl ~PlacentiaAve.C.M. CostaMeaa 540-1026 open. . pkg&adesirableOrange Penoonel Dept. Irvine ~~oe:~~i~~~~: USB> CAR TELLERS IUSjHOSTISS ~°:untlnf~a:ch =-~~ . •DENTAL Co. locat.aon. Call Scien· ._ro_E,_. _____ _
ministration. Com · ElecAtSro~Mel~hanS1·,.a1 . MECHAMIC Weare presently seeking Openlnga In C.M. & N.B. Periodontist needs l55U71c90D5ril llinkg Cf onlDrols B.ICTROMICS-rnw\icat.lons or Weather ' ' 1 Op m · 3 a m shirt . COMPAHIOM p/tlme asst to work front · as or on TECHMICIAM
Forecasting. No ex· ~ ~~~~~r~':Je,skj~~~ OPPORTUNITY! ~C:t'!c:1es~~:}f::. in Charlie's Chili Corp, for older woman in love· ~ back. Exper. ,3re~dj Swanson. lmmed openings & op·
perience required. We schematics. Min 1 yr ex-u you are looking for a 549-0351 ly CDM home. Pri v. ray cert req · a Desirable opportunity portwuties m an estab.
will send you to the best ~r. Good pay & benefits. job w /a gQOd future, in· Good figure aptitude and C~a Assist. r o Om I b a t b · L it e open. H.B. 842-6631 available to learn the co. in the Orange Co.
schooLt. Meals & board EquaJ OpporEmployer vestigate lhJs great OP· customer relations a _ _._ •·--housekeeping & cooking. Delltal ctlainide ham Cr deli business. airport area. Applicants
provided+ $397.50 per DECC portw\ity! we are look· must. .--__......-640-l<k>9 Contact Bruce at totroubleshool.repaar& month to start. Call Irvine ing for a good used car Some photographic ._...._. 673-9000. Hooey Baked tett electroruc sytems. California Air Naliona11 _______ 54_&_-4 ... 73~1 mechanic, with a Class We offer a good starting know'l helpful. Apply, CONSTRUCT1~N 1hedvy, Experneeded.S48·5S88. Hams,CDM. Rec.-ent analog & digital
Guard (714) 979-7363 or ••A"smogllcense. You'll salary, complemented Pennysaver. 1660 carpenters w ow ge exper. req'd. Interview
m.1343 for information . like the best of company by a pleasant working at· Placentia Ave, C.M. ol coocret.e for mlni & DENTAL A.5SlST ANT DISHW ASHElt by appt only. 557.9051 ask
ANIMAL
HOSPITAL
ASSISTANT
Batblng, cleaning. asslst
Or. Variable hours Incl
~ Apply ooon-2Pm
mlly, 1333 Avocado.
behind Edwards
Cinema, Newport
Ce:nlet'.
AM XTaA l)«:OME
High comm w /prestige
Income Tax Service
Complete Training
Tax Corp. of America
s.52-9600, 848.3898 9.9
An. MANAGER
Maturew/exper. 7 Units.
MO-735.5. 645-7300
ASSEMBLERS benefits, the pleasant mo11>bere . Excellent pouring <714> 846-2630 or F\ill·time cbrslde usis· P /time. Mesa Verde tor Busch. working conditions. Why company-paid benefil.s CAIE:Elt SALES (213) 592·2630 tant needed for Pedodon· Conv Holp, 661 Center St. 1---------PACIAGERS * not come in and check packqe.Applyinperson Orange Co. Commission Cook tic ore. C.M. area. 1_CM _______ _
60NeededNow! what we have to offer. between 9:00 a.m. and plus training allowance. DldsCltwch .. Rest HJ..5588 Doc Groomer. exper. pt· ESCROW
MALE & FEMALE
•TEMPO CARES•
We offer you:
FltEIJOIS
VACAT10MPAY
SICIC PAY
IOMUSPAY
No experience needed
6~
TlMPU~lARX HE.LP
1 802 y
Suit.elOO
lrYine 540-4455
Equal Oppor Employer
Apply to Paul Caine. 3:00p.m. at: Seod resume to: John C. Wi ll t al min • ENTAL RECEPT. ex· ••me. San Juan Capo. . WILSON FORD. 18255 Pinto 1360 S. Anaheim r ~ exp "' .... SECUT•RY Blvd ""·' 05 An h i _ _,..,,_. Ptrame per full t.ime. top salary. ""'"S.11-0TOUorappt. "' Beach Blvd. HB . 2970HarborBlvd ...... tel a em, ~. · 8-1355 ...... 64U6U SU.ite20.5 Costa Mesa CA92805 Apply in person 1---------. 97M200 28911 Newport Bl. CM
Babysllter. my home. CASHCAID
Drapery Assistant. with DefTAL-OltTHO OFC some expenence, call
Mon. tbru Fri. 7 to 8:30 COMES TO
A.M .. 2:15 to4:30PM.S3S CITIZENS BANK CAUFODUA!
Cook, exp Day shift. 508
Paclfc Coast Hwy. HB.
536-3012
Fu II time position 1_4!M-a __ l_._L_B_area __ . __ _
available-Cbairside Lab. DRAPERY WORKROOM
Newport Center . WORKER. Will tram.
644-l405. Must be at leatt 18. Per week. Call 548-8348
OF
COSTA MESA
Babysitter, 2 nights/wk lO
watch 9 yr old In my
home. 5pm-8am. CdM
area. Call Barbara
Thompkans, 833-0570. Equal Opportunity
Babys itter needed by l•-•E•m•p•l•o11ye•r•M-/F--
t eacher. 7:30·9:30AM , ---------
Beauty 3:J5.4 :30PM . My home.
$00/wk. Ref's. 962·4914. Manicuring/ Sculptured
Babysitter needed, close Nail Stations for rent.
to Newport High. Call _642_-_N_Al_L_. ____ _
646-3488 aft 5 PM .
We need 10 toP sales peo.
pie immediately. Call
965-CASH
COOK
for Hwat.lngton Terrace Assistant
Retirement Home. Some Do you like people'!
Ca .. , A I l knowledge req. Will Would you like the Sauer. PP Y n person. train. Call 848-Mll challenge or creating a Crown Hardware 3107 E. Newport Beach prac· Coast Hwy. CdM ,........_ · ---------"""""· Perm. part Ume, lice? We need a willing mature for small retire· teammate for front desk
642-UM:J
Driver & generaJ heavy wortt. F-Ume. Over 21.
Local ref's. good driving
record. SSOO mo start.
645-0093 Debra Childcare wanted after
school, 9 yr girl, Wilson
School area. 646-01.45.
ment home in Laguna with some c halrside Drivers extra income.
Beach, exp In lnslilu· variety. Call 642· l 058 $300 mo + bonus. Steady
lional cooking helpful. days. Ask for Becky. part tJme, 3-6AM, Hun·
Childcare arter school. For appl. 494-9458 49U403eves. tintDn Bcb. Deliver LA wanted for boy, 5, near Tl 8912-8422 callfomia School. Gisler Coordinator for Spanish Dental office receptionist. 1 __ m_es_. _____ _
An excellent 09porturuty
is avulahle in the
Bayside olfice of a grow· ing savings & loan. Sel«ted applicant wall
have one year escrow
secretarial experience
and typing akillll of 45
wpm. An excellent
salary. outstanding
benefit.a and ideal work·
ing conditions comple-
ment this opportunlt y.
Please apply at:
MARINERS
SAVINGS APT MANAGER. ex·
per"d, Ute maint. Refs re·
q 'd. 22 Units w /pool.
Adult bldg, Costa Mesa.---------Apt + sat. 642·6996
Beauty salon In CM needs & California Sts. CM Alcoholism program. frootofficeexper. Salary
Babysitter for 9 mo boy, hair slyliats. Guam+ 55'7-729'7afterSPM. · Mustbebi·llngual&exp open. Costa Mesa.
Mon, Wed, Fri A.M .. comm.548·3446. in conduct.Ing alcoholism 542.1300
Driver·Gen 'I Gardener
w/good driving r ec.
Perm. F /time job. Irvine
1.515 Westcliff Drive
Newport Beach 642·4000 Equal Oppty Employer
Sturley.
Architecture or Construe· lion Engineering
graduate. Growth posi·
lion lo energy consulUng
firm working for re· gistered professionals. computer experience de-
sirable. Call 714/768-6911 Laguna Bch
Architect 's Office ·
Blueprint & errand
person req'd. Must be
resp. Good transp. a
must. 8-5. S3 Hr. 631-1700.
Armed Security Officer.
exper'd. F /time daya.
Perm poe. Call 54~3281.
Assemblers
RECTRICAL
~SEMBLERS
Exper'd lo PC Boards
Wire Wrapping •
SO Needed Now!
•TEMPO OHBS•
RlEIJOIS
VACAT10HPAy
SICIC PAY
IOMUSPAY
No experience needed
G.te111 .Jo
8:30-12:30. mot.her/child Beauty Operator Clerical education classes & •---------OK. 646-6238 Two positions open for Wanted: JeneraJ ofrlce, counseling w /Spanish DENTAL ASST-Chrside,
LUYSfTTB
NewPorl Beach area.
1 :J(M) Mon. · Fri. Own
car. $90. p/mo. 644-1035
Barbara.
BABYSITI'ER my home. Laguna Hills. 2 yr old
boy, 770.5285 eves
fashion conscious assis· typing, filing, 10.key. or· speaking clients. Will Ftr. Sal open. Fringe
tants. Excellent training der desk. in a pleasant wortt closely w /court.a & benefits. bch area. Call
G d atmosphere. Hours 8·5. attome~. Send resume • .:..84:....7_·2.:im.;.__· ____ _ progr am. oo OP· Call 7800 A 2 o E ls '" ·-rt I r d 54o. . to: 11 . t O><.. DENTAL po un \)' or a vance-&lite 117 S.A. 92705 Dental receptionist with ment. Also need one shampoo Clerical Counter girl , dry experience for. office person , wed.Sat . cleaners. 40 hrs in 6 days. manager position for
Rlch&rd Ouellette Salon. fllf CLERKS MIN. WAGE TO START. very ~usy lwo doctor
200 Newport Center Dr. Ho ---' No exp. nee. Clown practice. Saddleback NB. e..,.... ,ence Cleaners, 1056 Bayside valley area. 714 /830-1395
area. Call 552-8200 for Exp. drapery cutter exp. appt. only nd to apply. CM
area, 546-6110 Driver. bght deUvery in'-_.....;:_;__..... ____ _
Harbot area. ~IJ lime
S1 hr. neat appearance.
gd dnving record. Apply
at Master Bluepnnl Z34
l'Ucher CM 540-9373
DIJVHS
,.,,...Sales
Prefer femal e
w/decorator expr. ~II
tune job. good benefits.
Xlnl working oond. Call
645-61.51 for intervtew.
,....Nd Ori ve, Nwpl Bch 673-5385 Men or women 25 yrs or ~rniture Movers. p/
Banking BEAUTY Hair Cutte r Dental Assistant . older. Know the coast time.lmmed.openings.
Career oppor. for bank w/some following . Immediate full-time Counter help Sandwich Newport Beach. Some cit.ies.Net$180aweelt or Call536-2098 exper'd Manicures. Assistant. openings at our Costa Shop. Nr Orange Co. experience. 646·4801. more. Orange Coast •---------
TELLERS Will leach Sassoon Mesa omce for File Airport 9:30 . 2:30 M·F. Penny. Yellow Cab, 17300 Mt. Gardener.Leadman to as· · methods. Call 21st Cen· Clerks. No experience re· Ant hony• Deli Maid --.;.--------Herrmann, Fountain sisl roreman. Ex per
Must be outgoin1 & peo-lury Hair. 642·5381 quired, we will train you. \7881 Skypark Blvd. #A DBCTALASSIST. Va lley. (No of Slater w 1 mowing equi P &
j>le oriented. Xlnt lrvine55&--0670 CIWRSIDE. be l wn Newbope & sprinklers helpful. Perm
oeneflCI ii plEUlflt\ ,,..91MC9(YWORI< Excellentworklngcondi· COUNTER & YARD ~~~ave X·Ray lie. 1~Euc~li~d~>~~~~~~ Job. Irvine area. ~-8200
ASSEMBLER working aurroundlngs. Wiiling to train in· tions, con genial co· PERSONNEL wanted ....,._ 1: ,_ror_a..:.p.:..J>l _____ _
Openings at T ustin & dustrloua, mature lndlv. workers, good salary and ... ~t6-l o ·col late lesson nuanv outstanding com for equip rental center. DIMTAL/ICPT DRIVER Gw••r"...a.-pr
TRAINEE 'SAMT.'l'io IAMIC materials. Xlnt working p;;y'benefits. . starting P(l>' $3.00 & up. for lfOWinl Newport of· Wanted for '.;;;-hours
11 MP<lll/111~ HE IP
l'1802Sky .Park Cr _
SuitelOO
Personnel Dept 2nd Fir cooda & bens. 40 Hr wk. Apply Huntington Beach flee. Aasisting expr & X· WANTED ln Mission Viejo. Exper .
lmmed.late lit sblft re· 535 E. lstSt, Tustin Apply betwn 8 & 3. Na-Apply ln person between Equipment Renta.l 7614 ray pref. 631'3733 w/comm. equip. nee.
ui r II 832 """" EOE t.lonal Education. 4401 9·00a m ·3·""p m at· Warner Ave .. H.B. SIJ DAY O Call Lynn or Randy q rement orsma part . ......,, · · · · . .., · · · DENTAL Cbalnide Asst. N NlY SS'l-01.50
.,.. 540.4455
Equal OFpor Employer
mechanical assembly. ASSEMILEI =~Y ~!pl~~:l Op· Couple to manage 65 unit N. B. P leasant group 1...;..;.._::.:..:..; _____ _
DesireH.S.tradw/local B.ICTROHICS CIJIZ£HS DAN.K apt complex in Costa prac. Eaper pref'd. To d ellver DAILY G841RALOFC work blstory. Company 1 Ba-"'-i loatMkler P Mesa. Husband may 64().1122. PILOT buodles to car· Accurate typist. resp for
paid medical. LTD &c bfe 2 Yrs min exper . e ec· ......... OF COSTA MESA have part lime job. rien in Laguna Beach receptionist. transcrib· insurance. Modern air tronl c directional Cmtom yard needs lead . Grou•.mo.631·2950. DINTALLAI area. Requires van or '"" & collection dulle:.. ~~~1'.!l .. facll It: ample ~ems, oil Industry. PARJ·TIM( ~~~C:~:-1lbo:~:f~~ Wa n ted exper'd or· large statJon wagon and Bkkpnfl related exper _........ benefits. Orange Co. carpenters. P·Squared thodont.ic appliance wire a good dnvmg record. helpful. Must enjoy
Dm11•81ctr_,ca abport area. Call Ry --HIJ.CH Boats;5tM873 lle.n.d~._FJtlme. Loni C.U. 64•43•1 worklne w /peo pl e ~ ml Ol.t-G_Um_an....;._ssi..._a>S_l_~ __ -1--IUJ.Ul~ term em_plO)'JneDL{food w-• PleaH call Appliance r~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~==~::::;.J---==n~~~~~:_~Dt1Cit~~~~a~an;~~·~a~10-~•~~~~~~..::.....:::...:~I Adand)E.O.E. HairDesl&nNB We have 2 openin&s at acctsreceivable&accta 8·10am, Mon · fr . Office
955-2110 ~ N<ve,·Wllarfdo>ee. 20achHou<>f.: payable, payroll, typin~ L11"rilco Lab~ ... 2148 DISIGHll EquaJ~rtunlty EJ--~·-r:·m seeiks
~SEMBl.ERS
l!Qerienc~
10 Needed lmmod.
Lone " abort urm a•· 1lpme11ta. Holiday It: vaca t ion pay .
ffoapltalhatloo plan avallable.
VOLT
H ,.,f\1• I'' • ''
.. OampuaDrtve
MM74l (ACl'Oll Ji'tom Onna•Co. Airport)
F.q\&al Oppor Em.ployer
,......, • • fl 10.key, to work In offc CLERK p/t Th··-.. Sun. ,.,_Blvd CM E-p O"er .,.. .. avw.... u AUTOll011VE per week. Ll&ht typln1 w /youna personnel. ror book at.ore in ... Laiuna • .....,....,... • ' . to ass1st eftlineeta ll\ de· ... # bl.Iyer w1generaJ office
MICHAMIC JIAIHll requl red. Experitoce 631-5100 Sch. Student pref'd. APP· CUSTODIAN P.+tllw alp "docwnentatlon ol Drul Clerk p/time. Will u per. Sbou Id have
Excellent opportunity to p refer red. Excellent ly, 387 s . Coast Hwy, ~ 673-1880 Pre cl s Ion e l e c • tnln. Must be 18 or ovu. atronf communicative
learn f rom muter benenta and Sood work· lo1.,111perF/CIMJ Lasun•Bcb. . tromechanlcal equip · Forappt8'7..rn1H.B. s kll s. Establish
mechanic. s da1 worJt ~environment. Pleut Fub. lalt Investment DATAPIOCISSOI DMDl. lluat have pre·•--..:.:..------material reqw,.ments.
week. To)'ota/Volvo de-1 llr. Ryman for ap. firm. Xlnt oppor. Ex per 1--------• !!!!!:tcll"f!!_ec'·• 'wort t1.Pcolnm1 •• l':; y~~~l,:1'; ~~~ sifta & cards. ~=ce ~=:::::..: aler In Mission Viejo, ~Int m • o t. C 714 > It maturtl)' req'd. Call CLERKS ....,.._ a • .. It l lfl "' """'" Bill , 1..... 3•'"" ._,..123 Nlnv .......... -•••• ..,, -"'" exper. Call Sc ent c &40-7373. 1.... Uon.s. Call Valor "'911 ...,...tat (714) ~. .._.., · ..-..... ~ ... _,..,.,_ D llll C t I •--------...,.
83t _ r n I on r o s • .._...... __.~ Elect.roolca, 540-aa64.
·-· 1u-1•L Bookke p F fC hg DILi 557.9051 ask for Don www1-s..;;...=~~;.;..:...~;:......-_.._ ~ e er UJOTEM $nnloo. TecWca. GBtBAL OfftCI ~:~~TMIMI SAYIMCl>S lrLOAH C~e~C~xr:t~d. asrrr:~~ lldpWanted. 548·7983 Electronic cbockout 11: Electronics manufac · 642-~ Openhtp Now Available ffr7 man ror parts troubletboolln& of RF 4t turer need• full -time
°'9V)' dealer olfen fu..11· F,qual OpportunJty fOf' fuU or p/tlme clerkt co. Costa Meu area. 1--------· microwave teal equip. 1 pel"IOI\ for 1eoeral office time permenent poal· Emplo)'erM/F/H Bookkeeper/Receivable on 2nd & 8rd tlllfta. No ....... ..... ....... vr aper' understand· work,1wtu:bt.o.rdrellef . tiotll to YoUtha to aaallt •--------Mature person Cull & ex per neceuary -we i-:.r.=.u.u.;;;t.l;.;.;m:.:e:.:..·.:..-'~·-;..:..;..;..'__ Ina ol IOlld •tale II: DC Ii i.luetc. Mu.tb.ave1ood
new car " se r vice permanent reaponalblU· train. Advanctmttll op-D&IVllYfllASOM OfflOITUHITY RF' clrcl.lllr)' detlrabl . n,utea.JltitudtlslfpeSO mana1eu In varied nk lyDanaPolrtt.arH Star\ PQrtunJUot to lboee who .. 2 .. 242 knocltt often when you Technical or military wpm. Xlnt oppty to taek1 contrlbutln1 \o m LIR talary $1000 mo+ frtn1e qualll1. For lnformaUcm FrH••Y "uto, v UM result·a•Ulnl Dall1 tralnlna helpful. Call for ltarft. Call for appt. Ir now 1 e d I e or the <Hunt Bch Branc h ) bentflta. Send daatltd so to our oeareat market Aftl'f. Parkway at S.O. Pilot ClualOed Ada lo •Pill-Berkeley Con Btrkll.-y Control 1
aut.omoblle bualneu. Op· P/Ume Apply lo /:.raon retume &: work llhtory or c:ootact th• penonntJ l:f;.:.tW7.:.;.:.:•:...;M.;.;lul.:::.:.:on~V~le.;::J.:..;o._-:--~b the Oran1 Coast 71'/W·UOO P1raonnel n•/IU.-3300. lnduatrial ::,~~ ::_ :8!!~ =~~':Ir.·~~:!: :l°tf'1!~~e:~ ~:,O:-ds!!8'1~? g:.l:! ome.u:!iLamPIOftSt ~v:::si!:'tn•c.'~ nwtt~SG~ °'IJt,IMD•&OE. NIAUonalrvilM. E.o.g
to chedl UM many autoe HOWARD Chevrolet, San•• Bank 10230 s . Meaa821821 GardenGrove$3'7-4MO Pwm p/\. Mutt have de-Trade your old attdf IOI OeneraJolflc.betp.
-4verUMd for ula In Do•• • Quall u ., Ptral'1)oun\'-Downey.•---------Equal()ppor .Employer ~bJt car• be ,..u •. •-------•1 new tAoodlea with a fl\lllOm• CM.,.... ~a~atGtled.::::;;;::=-=;;;;;;;;;==:=L~,..::;W1*~rt~Be~a~c~~====~~2U~~:=:;:;=:~1~.!~02!E~ . ._.:.._~Sell~ldle~~1u~ma~==~6U~-56'7~au::=:=~:=:~~::~~t:llO-~~SS3:50~~mo~.'4f.~594o4~~·:=.J.::::::::::::::=:=::J.~Cl~au;;;.;~ed,;,;.;ad.;.;;...6'2-;...;._58'7l ____ ..._ _____ 54-....,$.$43 ______ _
.. -,---1 -
~~.!!~ ..•.. ?~!'! ~~~ ..... ?!!«? ~~.~~ ..... ?!.~~ ~ ~~ ..••• ?~!~ ~!!~ .. -?!!! ,.,,.,,,_., tm 1100
I.
PRJNTINO APPR N· a.allla&a&.eSala a.&.aurant·cou.ntcr/au't esperprtlin nCE le# 1r1 W.._ food prep. Elcp. pref. dailliDI ttore. bu& will
NOWlllll ...,..~
PBX OPD.ATOR. SPM· Newport kb law f\rm ln
1JP1I, Seeut\U' Guards. tbe airport anta leeka ln · ... JOIS all 1 Uta. Aul1taat telllt•ct ucretary ~Maasen au "'mlA 1 yr cMI llUt•· MOflll'Wa 1btrt1. n ouekHpina Uca. 7'3-llU. llow WC*ad )-OU Ilk• lo M PoNn all lhiAa Pleue ---------a "Permaacnt Tein tllll'or~ .u.sooo~xt Uve·ill bou1ekeeper to
porary .. 6 ~th• door Sll.ManLhru •'Hl.30-5. eook. clean • car• for
to a nrw fr ucltlna IALIOAIAYCLUI tG-yrold daU1b1erlnJ.aJ tareer. Our ~clon Bch. Must be 1'91pomi·
tan pride ill f\:Dcbnt w ~ Tues-Frt, ble. mature (arouod
n&bt alal1ninvits Co 1-3PM. Call Janice's 40'a), non·•mkr. Amer.
YO&A Comcln •fill out u ftaa«t1Ann'•·645-llOO Cltlsen w /own trans.
applicauon & tel IAS Imo Salary, Room & board lo·
your 1kJ1b • persoaal ttouHcleaaers. Sot hr. cl. 213/97A·SM1
quallfkations. Daya A P /T . car neceuary . houn of your choice. Top Gl.nibam Girt. 64S-M23 Uve-Jn Colle1e &irl 'to MAT U R E W QM A N Painter, industrial & com-
P•Y · Must have re help w/H.S. strl. Xlnt p /tlme to welcome merclal, qualified only.
ferences lilcar. Housekeeper , English N.8. aurroundinaa. Pvt newcomers & contact 891·1001
WestcliffTemporary apkinc. mature, rm & rm & b¥. board & sat. m.erchanta. F1exlble bn. ---------
Services board.F/l'.646-6135. Good drlvlog rec. Days Need car. lite typing. PART TIME
1617 WestcUCf Dr. HOUSEkEIPEtl Moo-Fri 833-9410. _54_7_·~--· -----
~~~ ~~~~l8 Aide. live-in for f/lime Uve in housekeeper, priv Mbubp/deve l /{und · EVENINGS ~~~~~~~~~I working parents w /2 rm & ba, Spanish spkng raalog. Salary "comm. = school children in H.B. ck. "93-5756 ReplY lo Box 319 C/O Dai· G•-.. Office Own rm & ba, English ly Pilot. P.O. Box 1560. ftAIMH speaking drivers lie LVN. Allerg>" NB. Bek " Costa Mesa Ca. 921626 M l l ' hild Sai fmt ofc duties. 'dll)' wit. ____ .;...• ----
Entry level position us ~~ Bar;:· 645-33749M-6SSO Mechanic & Mechanics
grading examinations open. · · helper lmmed opening
for ~art education firm Housekeeper, mature LVN'1 l·l I sata,Y baaed on exp:
Adults with out.st.anding.
attractive personalities wbo enjoy working with
kids. Start at $3.50 per
hour. Pbone642-4321 Ext.
2:50, BETWEEN 4 :00-S:OO
PM. Re<J s ne~t handwnting girl, lite cleaning, Mesa Verde Conv. Hosp. ~5054Jobn
& lite typtng. ApplY Na-babysitting 8 yr old. 661 Center St. C.M. Ask For Jim li!'llaJ Education, 4401 49&-360S eves, 552.1813 548-5.585 Medical: Busy G.P. need& Equal Opportunity
Birch Sl. N.B. tNear OC dys. Debbi. experienced. mature E love Airport) Equal Op· Macblnisl womao, front office. __ __;;;.;;m;;;.:p~oy~er;__ __
portunity Employer Hsewrk, CM . Retired M/C Experience Must be proficient with PAln'TIME lady. Steady p/t. $276mo. Sel·up & operate Moog, all types ol insurance. GEHEAALOFFICE 6dys. Nd car. no smoke. Bridgeport, Slo·Syn & Xlot benefits. Salary WEBC·EHDS WOU 642-849' CinlimaUc. Also lathe open. 96M73T. Every Sunday and Every machining center. No _,;. ________ other Saturday and SUn-
Woman n_eeded for Hsltpr Uve-in, care for smoking. Xlnt benefits. MeclcaljFrOfttOfc.. day mornings. Driver to
general omce work 10 lady in whlcbr. Must Inquire at: Rima En· L 0 0 k I n c f o r drop bundles of Dally ~Y shop. Must have drive. 962-5224. H.B. t er pr I s es. l S 3 9 5 EXCELLENCE in all Pl.lot to carriers. Must
light typing experience. Chem i ca I Ln, H .B. facets of bltpng, billing &c have van or large station
Body shop office ex-Insurance 893-4.534. U t t N t + good driving record. perience preferable. Call COftlMtrciol ---------pa en rappor · wp Call 642-4321, ask for Mickey al • L 1~ a...11 "'IDS Bch area. Send resume Harry Seeley or Don (7l4)83l-2040 rOC•OC)e u"" ~ . to: Ad. No. 332, Daily Req 2 yrs exper, xlnt [)ays. Apply m person Pilot. PO Box 1560, Costa1_Wl_l_li_a_ms_. -----
GM Machinist working cond & location ·Sheraton Newport Hotel, Mesa, Ca. 92626
E 1ectr0 n 1 cs m an u r. in our · Fountain Vall~y 4545 MacArthur Bl, N 8
needs t 0 p n 0 t ch offi~e. Call Mr. Hargis,
machinist w/exper in Un1gard I nsurance MAIDWAMTED
milling machines. turr Group al 714·963-6782. Permanent position.
lathes etc. Must do own _EO_E_:._M_;/_F_. _____ Lido Shores Hotel.
setuPS & have own tools. I NT E R R 0 G AT 0 R : _67_3-8IM>O _______ _
Top rate or pay com· Special training. Securi·
measurate w /exper. Call ty clearance required. MAIL CLERICS
ror appt. Berkeley Con Cash bonus with 4.year Dependable conscien·
t rol s, 714 /8 33 -330 enlistmenL Call for more tiou:s person for data pro·
Personnel Dept. Irvine information Army cessing mallroom .
~=e1~!~re-PART-TIME
ad water meters w /abiU· TELLER ly to deal effectively w/pubUc. Some record ,Savings & Loan In
keepin4 exper helpful. Newport Beach
Apply m person Santa (NewportCent.er)
Margarita Water Dist. Ute typing. Experience
25511 Marguerite Pkwy, preferred. 26 hours per
M. V. week. Excellent benelits
Good future for en· II!---3 w~~ Ftr. tt t11 0¥•. Yocurt tnift..Sala17opm;"APP11 tbUIUUc. Joyal penon ~ ~ ~NB fTS.tl.30 lapenma.DSSW.aan.o& = = :.J:~C:m~ TRAINING .m.amall 1pm. ._aa..;;.......;Yd.;:..;N;..,s;..,._...-..;o.;..._ = .. trtnr. bentflta. ... w c....,. . Restaurant • Rt9 M fP'. We ha••
,._. .. ~ .. L BEL CO. Ml'wPrHflrttr .._ ~!!\at~F ,._ Ptr ::..:at~n~!::,..a: ~-84$-2'1'71 •AbtohatelJ no prior ._... .... _ -• eellaf --N bir.:. t.railllnf or upcrteact opeatn1a. Ideal •uP· c: .__. ~t.a rr1 * "-/1Mpp•1 ...,......... plesontal lncom• tor Mp.a Newport Be'-area. ~ ---.. ~ . ..._._ u ..... a .. revtoua sala ex~r . .__. •Personalised lnltruc· _ .... u.t -1 • .St N • • d m at u re , u . uoa OY•· N10IY aft1time. pnr~ APCllY. Buch •· oertenced penon now. •Prolelli0oa1 on the ......, n• w. Oceanfront &oen. 4oaGCampw Dr, Oood P\lblic rclat.IOns a tn.iDtn£ "'"' Newport Beach ,_N_._e. ______ _
mu1t. Some typhit. •Upto~commiasion. fn.1*. SI.lea
Heavy e-per work. Call •Cbolce of top office SDort1nl Good Mra. to-
21Sllll-880l •xt 14. locaUont. Rml'AURA.NT 1fde 1ala For appoint· Be your own bou with • ment call Ciod.y, m.oeo1
ProductionAaa't topootebpn,ileulonalor· *C I' Part Ume, nexlble hn. p.olz&Uon. ar $ ~ mt1. HB area. Katell Realtv
Tom. ......:..-~ Jr.*
131·1003 49J.0442 It wow ~ ..
SAUSWOMIM
Exper, a MUST ror blfb
fuhloa 1peelal&.y shop.
Salary + comm. Call
'44·2152 or apply lo
penon.
. PIODUCTIOM
COMTl:OL
Small fut irowina plasdc vacuum fonnlo1
mft. company requiref
self 1tarter who cari
coordloate productlor
ICbedules, work tn pro
ceaa aod ablpplnl. Ne truck drlving or typin(
required. Mlnlmum :
years abippln1 ex
perieoce a must. Houri>
rate baaed up or
qualiflcationl
MODULAR FIXTURES
638 W. 17th St, COili
Mesa.
PIOD'ICI PH SOM
Exper'd needed to work
(/time at our la rge
health food store. Must
be exper'd & able to or·
der. prepare, trim & dis·
play produce tast.eluJly.
No Sunday work .
Medical & hosp beneClls.
Apply Lindberg Nutri-
tion, bet.wn Carousel & Bullocks. lower level In
So. Coast Plaza Shopping
Center. Costa Mesa. Ask
for manager.
P tr office girl 4-6 hrs day.
Exp. nee. Convalescent
home. 2619 Orange Ave.
CM
PURCHASING AID
to asai1t In Inventory
control & various other
duties. Good opportuni·
ty, will t.ralo enthusiulk
penon. Apply in person
8·S, m·f. Customweave
Carpets. 18480 Pacific St.
Fountain Valley
Real tlltate
GREAT
Con'lllllssloft Split
P rofessional, proven
salespersons wanted ror
outstanding orrice in
prime area or Orange
County. No charge for
desk + great 70/30%
commission split. Call
for app't.
IREH/lAff#Or Corp
646-7782 556-66T1, eve
Real Eat.ate
IAIMllGSSS
Top profess. R.E. people
waoted. Top profess.
coauninloo 1pllt pay •
80/20. Eaatbluff Shop-
ping Center. very attrac·
Uve office. Bring good work habit-. Confidential
inquiries. 64<>4020
R 1olllst Grea~ine Credit
Unlcn bas openinl for re·
ceptiooiat Heavy phones.
busy lobby, full benefits
pactaae. Call 556-1492.
Receptiollist
N.B. area. Must have
phone exper & gd typing
11dlls. Varied duties. fast paced ofc. Call Terry for
~for •llflay. .....
COOKS &
COUNTER
PERSONNEL
Maleorh•ll•
AU llllfta a•ai ...... .
,_.. .... , f•U-tl .. . .,. .............. .
O'IW for dol.,
29F~.NB
Salldwleh Shop: <2 > Rella-'
ble, ma\Ure firil/womeo
for 1aodwlcb COWlter.
Stead)' won. for rtpt
party. Moo·Fri. No oJpta. Hoac ~pital
atta.~1.
Seaelwy
Greater Jrvla. Credit
Union bas immediate
openlft4 for a aetretal'Y.
reportaoc directly to
LrU1urer1 Profld ency in ~ .. ~ ,.... tninl • lborthand de-., ........ Salwckt. aim!. C.ll Mr. Byrne. Z.S,.at: ,_556-__ 1492_. ____ _
app·~:;.;,,.st •CARL'S
Mature. experienced.
Secr«ary. Min 2 yrs ex·
per. type 65+. gd
benefits. Alde-de·Office. l7865-F Skypaik. Irv.
54().21M)().
t)'J)e 5Swpm,. Avail now JR * or mid · Se Pt. Ca 11 • Secretary ror NB sales of.
213/321-8809ext 14. 21002 LAKE FOi.EST flee w /1lrong tfplng
RecepUooist, p /time. LAGUMAHIUS skills to per orm
eves/Sundays. Regis secretarial duties for 2
HairStyling540-8888 EQUALOPPTY managers. E.O.E. For
• EMPLYRM/F app'tcall752-6300.
UCIPT10HIST Orange Co. airport area Secntsy flecepf firm needs recept. k1r RETIREE '600/mo. Must type. re·
cordleu s witchboard. Wraparoundyoursocial quiresfi.ling ltanawering
Must have attractive security. 30 brs wk. in phones. Will train In in· persooality. typing skills side. Mesa Verde area. surance. Contact Don & good phone manner Call 847·9QJS. Mon-Fr1.1_Miru __ um __ a_t549-__ 17_18'--. __
Xlnt benes & at-_9-_12_or_1_·5_. _____ ECRETARY wanted.
ID06phere. $600-$650. Call --------typmg d.Jctaphooe fr good Personnel for appt telephone skills. needed
Western Growers As· RN'S ror l\eat Estate Co. Call
sociation, 833--8384 Julie 64G-8250
Recept/T rainee
Nice co. m new ore. seeks
attractive personable in·
d iv . to handle
switchboard & greet
cUenlll while relieving
receptionist. Balance or
day doing variety typing
& gen1 ofc duties. Start·
lng sal $550. Call Sally.
540-6055, Coastal Person·
nel Agency, 2790 Harbor.
CM ALL JOBS FREE
R.E. SALES
Needed for hospital stare •---------
relier. ICU/Med Surg SECRETARY
All ahiJ'ls avail. Must be Good typing sltills. lite
dependable & have refs. shorthand. call Mr. Gut-
Skill assessment tests tenberg. 714·540-9074.
are given. Group in· also available. clerical
surance avail. TOP posiUon.sometyping.
WAGES. Allk about other
benefits. Come in !Jam· SECRETARY
5pm Mon-Fri. E t" t WesldifCNurses xecu 1ve secr e ary with all sltllls to train for Registry executive administrator
1617 WestclifC Ste 209 position. Must be well or.
Newport Beach ganized. Start Sl.000 mo
631-0810 or 752-9118 + benefits. call Barbara
!710955-C~H.
R..,_'• 1419 & Mop CASH CAID EOE. Recruiting: P/time Tues t.bru Sal. MiddJe-aged responsible 8am-12 noon. Must be I h GIRL AUDAY Costa Mesa S4().l02G able to do siJnple addl· coup e to manage ome Huotingtoo Bcb 962-8821 in Nwprt area. Chaw·
and good working en·
vironment. Please call Mrs. Croxon ror appoint· Real tl!tate
ment. <714 > 644-1461. EARNING
Women needed for CoaPOUTIOM Pres tigious Laguna Housecleaning Serv.1----------
Niguel firm interviewing St8-07S7 Secretary-Hote l Front ofc appearance. Laguna Hllls 768-525l tion manually. label & reur. houseman, woman PR firm. Hvy typing weigh envelopes. lnle· to do Ille housekeeping &
phones. Gen'l ofc resp. Janitorial worker in ore & grated Data. 2283 cookmg. Resume wirer's IMPERIAL SAVINGS
AskCorDonna645-7217. plant w/some truck driv· Fairview Rd. Costa required. Reply lo Box &LOAN ing. $3.50 hr. 8·4: 30 . Mesa. #227 c /o The Dn;ly Pilot An Equal Opportunity Girl Friday ror stoc EOE.549-3281. ---------· ... · EmployerM/F/H market investment co _;__ _______ Maintenance mon, full 330 W. Bay SL. Costu ~~~~~~~~~
Musl be gd w/numbers. Janlton/Janitreu lime. experienced in _M_es_a_. Ca __ 92626 __ . __ _
Ughtboollkeep1ng,typ· P/time & l/time. Irvine general repair, elec· Mlddle aged woman w/ Pf~swerl n g ser vice
mg & gen ofc. NB airpo area. Will train. Ideal for trical, cleanlog, etc. for cashier exp. Apply in operator full & Ptr. Call
_a_re_a_540-__ 923_7 ___ --1 housewives, students & athletic club. Newport person Don J ose Rest O'>c:3561
cpls. Must have own Beach Sporting House 9093 E . Ad a ms H B -°"""--------
Girls <J\ -.anted by photo· transp & phone. Ca II 752·0565 962·7911 grapber for a London PIX OperatOf'
based Man's Magazine. ~~~5. 3-5pm, (7l4 ) Maintenance Mechanic. MILITA_R_Y_P_O_L_IC-.E-. 1-a-w for telephone answerin11
21·3S. Attractive. $25 hr. ---------7am·3:30pm, $.5.50 hr lo enforcement training service. Exper or wil
640-8746. Mr. Erickson J .P. Macs start. EOE. 549-3281. and assignment. No ex-train. F & P tr. Day & · d d F evening shifts open. Dinner House Maintenance man for lite perience nee c · or maint. Perfect for re· more details call Army _835-_3562 __ . _____ _ GUARDS • Now interviewing for
EHOUGH INCOME?
Join an exciting com·
pany with unlimited in-
tome potential. Free
s t anding bui lding in
milUon dollar location.
Immediate operung for
highly motivated ex·
perienced or in e x -
perienced people. Tratn·
ing program TuiUon as-
s 1st an c e. 1''u II l1 me
manager. call manager now for
confidential Interview.
963-5671
professionally trained ---------Todlr.afsales. Mawrelt
salespeople. Inquiries SALES Costa Mesa. well groomed. Dic-
confideolial. P .OBox Fabric e x per. r e q . taphooe or sh. Hvy typ-
21m, Mission Viejo, CA Salary. Call Susan. log & admin ability.
92m3 646-4040 Leading N.8 . hotei.
644-1700 ext 536. Sara.
EOE. RESINMlXER
Color matcbmg or relat·
ed exper .. working with
polyester resin. Depen-
dable worker. wtability
to work with ratios &
percentages. Apply in
person . btwn
lOAM~PM
CAMBROMFG
7601 CLAY, Hntg Bch.
W. of Beach. So. of
Garfield.
SALES DO YOU PLAY
THIORGAM7
lf so, there may be a
career for you at Organ
Exchange. Openings now
available. Previous sales
experience useful. but we will train you. Call
Mrs. Jett at The Laguna
fills Mall. (714 I 586-1302
SECRETARY
Data Processing orient·
ed to assist systems/pro·
gramrrung personnel in
preparation & malnt. or
tecbmcaJ D. P. dO<'umen·
talion. Word processing
exper. heipfuJ. An oppor
lo be part or a nat 1 data
processing co. Xlnl co
benefits. Phone Ad · tiree. Apply Travelodge. Recruiting: 2 positions avail. Ship·
62Cll W. Coast Hwy. N.B. Cos~ Mesa 540.1026 ping/Receiving clerk. In·•---------
HunungtO!l Bcb 962-8821 voice/Typist. must be SECURITY Day Waitress positions. 5
Days a wk. 15-20 hrs. Ap-
EOE A large new expanding minislrative Services
r.rm nd ambitious sales Manager ror appt. lnte·
distributors. Women or g rated Data, Costa Due lo our recent ex-~~~~ 3Pm & 5Pm · Maint./Gardener Laguna Hilla 768-5251 conscientious & good
Ofc bldg In Costa Mesa MOTEL MANAGERS w/matb.951-1292 panslon program, Wells 10142AdamsAve. HB Fargo Guard Services is Call 820 needs someone who will wanted. Expcr. couple
take personal pnde 1n pref 22 Units, pool. App·
0 u r b 1 d g · F / t t me ly Ad. no 328 The Daily
res ponsibilities are, Pilol. P .O Box 1560.
Maintain la ndscaped Costa Mesa. CA 92626
hinng security guards ____ 963-_7 ___ _
for: Kennel help, primarily
lrYiM/ ... wport lch mlWlt.. some assistance.
s-taAno/AMMim SmaJI arumal hospital,
fullrt•fl-ttaPk morning hrs .. some
CostaMesolrTM 1 ~e~~~!:da ~~-~:./'.
areas. empty waste
bas ke t s & provide Mother nds !>Omeone to
back.up s upport for supervlse2g1rlsages8&
cleaning se.rv ·•. handle 10 aft school in Irv me
mmor repairs in ~ldg. M·F 2·6 PM. Mst love Whittier Ar.a weekdays 673-1050
IMME DIATE
OPENJNG S f or
supervisory \evelsecuri·
l.Y officers who want TOP
PAY with a respect
company.
ApplY in person Monday
to Friday, SAM lo 5PM
at:
WB.LSFARGO
GUARD
SERVICES
1532W.
Co •wealth
........ CA
OR
Monday, Tuesday, Wed
newtay, Thursday, lOAM
to SPM, CLOSED Friday
at:
2JOW.W.-..r
a..211
5-laAlla. CA ~
Equal Opp EmplyT M /f'
Handyman, 1eoeral
malntm.aoce, 30 bra wk· ly. Apply 7pm-tpm,
Warner Drive·ID, 7311
WanMll' Ave., HB.
HOSTESS
Apply dally In puson
between 10·11AM. NI
Cua Re1taurant1 105
Maio St. Balooa .
fl1MIOO, ........ ,c ........
Appl1 In penoo, The
Warehoule R•taurant. 3450 Via 0poc1.o, r-rs.
KEYPUNCH Pald hol, vac, xlnt rnr~ge children. be r esponsible
benefits. Phone for in· & buve own trans. Aft 6 tervw appt. Inle~rated 552.3744
OPERATORS Data Corp. 2283 Fa1rv1ew ---------
Rd. C<ista Mesa. 546-6080. MOVIE EXTUS
Immediate openings lsl
& 2nd shifll. All jobs --------1 N E E D E D B Y
f . HOLLYWOOD free. Excellent nnge Manager CASTING COMPANY
benefits. Top pay. FOR MAJOR FILMS &
Weofferyou OPPORTUNITY TV COMMERJCALS FllEEJOIS
V ... c ... TI~P"'Y KNOCKS '25-Sl.OO per day If ac· "' "' "" "' cepted. YearlY fee. (TI4)
SICK PAY National Company look· _7_61_·1244 __ E_x_t94.._ __ _
IOMUS PAY mg for clean cut reliable , , manager trainees. Wlll-Nite auditor, exr d pref d.
ing to work 40 hours per ApplY Mon·Fr 9~. Mrs.
week, make $2SO up per Presley. San Clemente
week to start. Opportum· Inn. 125 W. Ave Es plan· o~ t.y lo reach Cor the moon. 1_di_an_. ______ _
Cell Mr. Ramsey, (714 ) Nurse
5.5'7·3000 between 9 a.m 'I t.•l'OHA HV •4f I I'
17102 Sky, .. Cr
S.ite 100
Im. 54M455
Equal OsiJa' Employer
and5p.m.
Placing a ClassU1ed ad is
as easy as dialing your
~-Gtve us • ~all.
Loan Service Counselor
S•nisor Rapidly growirig savings & loan has
immediate openings for
experienced loan service
representative & supervisor with
knowledge of all loan service
functions. Key opportunities for
people oriented person. Excellent
b e nefit s & a dvan cemen t
opportunities. Contact ·Jan Hess1 Pers onnel Dept. Stale Mutua
Savings & Loan Association.
400 I MocArtt.-IMI.
LVN
Nune f\&U Ume or part
thne for PM 1blft. Above
avera1e salary . Xlnt
beoeflta. Appl)' FJaaabip
Coov . Cen ter. 466 Jii l\«I N:ll.
MUOM
MUISIS AIDIS
Earn w~ou learn. Jmmed. DP Oil the
7-3 lh1tl " S.11 ahU\. C.11 IM7-9871, Oarfleld C.re
Coov. Hosp. HB.
MUlSIS AIDIS Opening oo AM fl PM ablft.I~ per pref'd, will
train qualified peraon-
nel. Claues start Sept
lit. Apply, Flatablp
Conv. Ceoter, 488 ~blp Rd. N .B .
HUUa'SAIDU
Presser combination, exp
P /T . Contine nt a l
Cleaners El T 768-3266
Pressman: Exp. on A.B.
Dick. Chief 15 or
Heidelberg KORD. Sm shop in N.B .. Call
S48-ll64
Press Operator-rubber.
Will train. 1st shift. Com-
pany beoems. Salary
commensurate w texper
Call 962~. 8-5PM.
Classified Ads. your one·
stop shopping center.
Real Estate
WeU known real estate
trairung co. bas an open·
Ing ror a real estate
edutator trainee. Em·
phasis on ('()UfSe ma In·
tenance, wntmg & an
overall research o' real
estate curriculum. Appb·
cant should have at least
a bachelors degree in
business or related field.
Real Es t a te li e &
teaching cxper helpCuL
()ppor for personal & cor·
porale growth. Send re·
sume to Personnel Oirec·
tor. PO Box 2820.
Newport Beach. Ca 92663
llotel, trout deek clerk. 1
1'all time • 1 Part Ume pas~· Colle student .._ EJr.p. or will tnln.
He~ IMCll. Ca '2660
17141133-1313
P • Ptr. 7-l:IOahlfl. l-11
lblf\. Pre cel'\lficaUOf\
cl...-atrend. HB COn·
valHceot Ho1pltal.
Nf.a515 DAILY PILOT \
Equal ()ppor Emplo1er m/f t'!"arZP~ Mr· J Want Ad Help!
(
...... -.
~ .
BOB'S men. NB area. Aloe Vera Mesa, 546-6080 HolM Of T1'e Products. 642-9008 or .__.._~;_;_El'"_R;_ET_A_R_Y __
•IA lo i59-02111, 5CS-9850 -
"'ll 'I GEHBALOFFtCE lmmed openings in our Sales. exclusive jewelry Our co is looking for a
family restaurants at boutique. Full time secretary w/exper. in
nearby locations. We re· Some nights. Apply in gen'l ore-work. Can-
qwre no previous exper. person Ciro al South d.Jdate must have some
Join our friendly team. _Co_as_t_P_la_za _____ knowledge of filing
Come see us t od ay Saleslady for listing systems & must be able
between 2·4Pm • mobUe homes for s1Jlc. to c o m m u n • c a t t! CoollT~ Lagona-Cap111trano El w1customers & vendors
23952 Averuda de la Toro area. f\111 trainin~ by telephone Must type
C&rlolta,LagunaHalls program. High t·om nun 60 wpm. No sh nee.
154 E. 17th Costa Mesa rrussion. ~o regular of· Typing accuracy very WaltNuel/Wafhn flee hours. Be your own 1mportaot Position re·
Cook TralMH boss. Call Cor info. ports dJrectly to V.Pres.
73U Edinger, Hunt Bch _956-4500 ________ wfopportunity to grow -1&--..-~/W • Into supervison. Co. w~ ait1n SALISMAH beoefits. sal open. can or
CoolcTl'Glinees Retail hardware store. apply in person Mrs. Cashlen Knowledge ol plumbing BeverlyGoodman.
.SOI Campus, Irvine IUPPlles helpful. 48 Hrs ProcJr-Data htc.
Equal Opp Emplyrm1r per wk.Sat/Sun a must. U!632HaieAve IClf"iil tiuula Harctw.-. lrvine 114/54i-0335
RESI'AURANT
COOKS &
COUNTER
PERSONNEL
Maleorh••
Pa.f..tla• ••Y~~
l••clltl•• llo•r•
11 :30AM to Z:OOPM.
,.., .. NcJMs; du-
........... o .. r.
Jr,,""'1 .. per1-. T...,.
dlly 1111 a• SaMdly.
Z.UtMat:
•Carl's
Jr.* • 16031 loha CMu
HUM1'1MGTOM
MACH
F.qual Opp Emptyr N / F'
WANT ACTION!
Clasailed Alh 6'2-5811
2666Harbor Bl. CM ~~~~~~~~
SELL Idle items with a tbve aomethtna to sell ?
Dally Pilot Classified Ad. CIMSlfied ads do it well .
SALESClERll
Retail marine hardware s tore,
beach location. seeks s alesclerk
with minimum 2 years exper. in
marine hardware. National co.
w Lall major benefits. Including life inswaace,heal~ plan vacatfon._L
retirement. Call B. Morrison. Mon
~ru Fri for appl. (714) 645--1711
Equal Opportunity Employer
Sales Personnel w..tect.,... sa1 • .,...,.. ....... .,..... ......
·several rull " part-lime positions
Immediately available In our aal ..
department. Eitperlence deslrable, but ao)
sales aptitude wlll be con1idered. For an
Interview please contact our st.ore manaier
ot
11141 u.-.so10
.-,,
r
I
mpus Drive
546-4741
<Across From
Orange Co. Airport
F.qual Oppor Employer
*Secretaries* F /Chg Bookkeeper with
construe exp $18K yr.
Employers Pay All Fees
LU Reinders Agency
4020 Birch St, Ste 104
Newport Beach 833·8190
Ca.II for Appt/E.~tab '64
SbeltMetal
tte~tt•c.• M1tded
1 Yr or reecnt metal ex· per. Able to UM all ahttt metal macb lnery .
1mmad openln1. ........
1171 W. MacArthur
Cal&aMsa ~l
EQul Oppor £inpl0yer
•., t • • • r • •
W..t.4 7100twltW..tH 7100 l'9 It e 1110 ... 0 . ••••••••••••••••••••• •••"T ................................................................. .
...... "''"!l\l1'j1 I'
~· Augult 28. 1978 DAILY PfLOT C9
The l111ploy111e•t Ir Tral•l•g ...............
of ..... ~-hoc• Announces opening for the PoSltl0"3 ol
Program Manager
$18,SOO Annually
Job Preparation Instructor
$1S,540 Annually
J ob Preparation Specialist
$11 400 Annually
Appllcauona wlu be accepted untll IPM,
Sept. 7th at The Employment • ~ Cent r, S38 Maln St. HunUntton Beacll
WOM AT MOMI
Pr. ~per modem chrome lounae ch.rs $250/bat. l new Qn u bed S'lOO/bA olr. Call 752-0742
~· contemporary sofa
from model homo. a 1or
beltolfer. "4·51.60.
What's YOW'Trlde!
SU:ZJ'll'o.y
11* '1 UttJe to P'f
(Of' '° ed In the Dal~ Pl.lot
Senb Dlrtetcry that can
lltabllsh 10ID' prolesakln.al
ldemit)'. f'or more lo· ronr.Uon call 842-5178
**llUY•* Good &.Md l\tmlture ..
Anlianc•-Olt I wlll M1f cit SEU. for You.
MASTllS AUCTION
646 HH A IJM621
SEE YOUR
i\DIN PRINT
IN24HOURS
service.
Stop by our office or
call 642-5678 and a
friendly ad-visor will
help you place your ad.
You can charge your ad
or use BankAmerlcard
or Master Charge.
DAILY PILOT
642-5678
I·, • ..
221h' Searay. Loaded,
xlnt, lo hrs, trlr. $8000.
Ca.II Pat, dys, 973-1212.
Eves, 492-5897.
18' ftSbing boat, I /0, bait
tank, trlr. $1200.
496-6905
ent a 1977 Executive
Motorbome or M 1n1
motorbome from Herb
Friedlander. Call any of
these numbers
898-6777
537-7777
128-8181
RENT 23' Fireball. self.
COSTA MESA
AMC/JEEP
#I IN CALIF.
I 971 CHEROKEE
$6995
(J8A16NNL31166l
1978 J ·20 PICKUP
$6995
(J8A46PN140439 l
FREE 100
GALLONS GAS
with purchase of any
jeep with this coupon
WEWIUIEAT
AHY WRITTEN OE.AL
OM ANY HEW
JEEP
WEARE
OVERSTOCKED
contaJ.ned. Lots of xtras. 252.4 Harbor Blvd
645-2283 Costa Mesa
RENT. new 78 22' Motor ,_7_14~/_5_4_9_-8_0_2_3_
Home. I o ad e d , '74 BRONCO. Clean
day/wk/mo 675-5832 Xtras. $5200. Work
For Rent '78 Pace Arrow, 91S1·5141, home546-3168
2S', loaded' MIC Brand L977 CJ-7, 4·spd. 6-cyl.
new! .,.,.,3060 Many xtras. Like nu.
....,.,.. lSM ma 's. 673-2682
Classic Chris XX 28'. i--------• Twn, lo hrs ovhJ, VHF. '52 Willys Wagon w/JfJi
fathom, full canvas new. BUY HOWi. Chevy, tru trac lire~. head galley. 646-6606 or run-. good. clean cond
6'4--0732. CONSIGN NOW! ,_646-4_134---
11· Sleekcraft 1973. 150 Net $170-S200 per week. Tt11eb 9560
h .p . Mercury. Real We have t 1 million •••••••••••••••••••••••
c r eampuff! $4100 . dollar contractual re 1976TOYOTA
1157-0332. 20312 Sant.a Ana servations backing wrth PICKUP WITH
Ave.Apt8,C.M. AAA U.S./Celnada & the CAMPER SHELL
18• TRI-HULL f /0 Volvo. following airlines: Unit· 4 speed, radio, heater & ed. De lta. Western onJ Xlnl Bay or ofrshore. Gd Hughes Air West, Con· Y 27.000 miles. Like
cond. $2250. 675-3545 ~ tinental, KLM "Dutch... =~·Lie. 1066054 Stk.
20' Dory Skiff, 55HP. Swias Air. Lufthansa. $3979 Jobn.so'D OB. Xlnt cond, •10% investment tax
/trlr $1.,.,,.. ,:u,. """" credit depreciation de w · ~ ...... ..,....,... ferments.
15.3 Boston Whaler. l yr
old, 70HP Mere, trlr,
many xtras. Bat ofr.
M0-7117, Rick.
9060 •••••••••••••••••••••••
•We have 158 '78 's in
fleet; need 30 additional
by August 30.
•Sellini 4 Star 22 minis at factory lnvw.ce.
100% financing or IQ
voice. sales tax a nd
license thru CROCK ER.
BJ.2..0 APR, 1 year note.
THEODORE
ROBINS
FORD
7060 HARBOR BLVD
COSTA MESA 642·0010
'76 Toyota SR5 longbed.
w shell, stereo. + more
Lake new. $3695 556-7458 16' HOllE CAT
Clean witb trailer.
'1$-4753.
36'KETCH
53 Cbevy 2 T step-van.
2 fac1ht1es currently new eng, electncal, bat·
opecatioaal lrvwe, Cahr. l.eQ'. &ures..l200QJOBO.
Oolondo,Spnoss, Colo. s.11-8179 aft SPM. ~m>rolk' .i.9913
r opeolng Of 3rd
-facility-Sarr Pt1111risco.
Callf. March '79
"WESI'ERN GOLDEN
TRIANGLE"
For further info, contAlct
Nr.Llasner .,. ........... htc.
1714)559-4446
Outside Ca. 1~-0399
(Telex> Dale's
1R1N 89·2378 Allowing 1 way
rentals to L.A.
le Cat 14' · deluu CarclioaJ 14'. like new,
rtcK.&IP TRUClhr
4 s pd, mags, rear
bumper, mirror:;
CC14784>
•Sla95•
4 Scout Convert, stereo
AM/FM. cust whls. lo
mi, S1800cuh. 645-6162
Toyota long bed P U
All xtras + custom ma,. s:uoo. $46-3536.
962-7019
"11 FlOO runs good, looks
1ood CaU aft~r 9PM
15HM model. 1ocluda trailer. Hll ·co.ntalned. 1 u r1e Ill~ C&tbox • m111t braku Su to •P· lell • Pt l"GNJJ2 predate tSHm ,_W_a_l'lt_A_ds __ Ca_l_l 542--56-18
--
n -
..
('Jf DAii. Y PfLOT
1111 F'brd Pickup, m . 4 -apd, eltt aeat.s, ma
xtru, S1950 « bat otr
96).9356 '12 Ford oric owner.
ad cooct 1650. 9570 ___ 17WS75 ____ _
•••••••••••••••••••••••
IRA.MO NIW 1911
llOODOOGIYAM
(170228) (41034)
ONLY$4195
llVIMI DODGI
40 Auto Center Dr.
IRVINE
130.llll
Must sell '74 Ford V-8
t'Slm ant/ext, new Ures
etc. SM-5171. 13700/orr.
66 Dodge Van, cust mter.
lt74FOID
1-IOOYAM
Automatic, pwr. steer· in&, mags &: wide oval Urea, radlo &: heater. Lie.
1BOWO Stk. l.M2AT.
SWBSNCIAL
THISWIRAT
$3179
THEODORE
ROBINS
FORD
WE BUY
CLIAMCARS
&TRUCKS
CONNELL
CHEVROLET
2828 Harbor Blvd.
WANTED!
Lite model Toyotaa,
Volvoe, Pickups Is Vans.
Call Ill today!
Alllol.l .. 1rhcl ••••••••••••••••••••••• 9705 •••••••••••••••••••••••
•DRIVIA• * Ll1TLE. •• *
SAVE A LOT
SHOP &COMPARE
BARWICK DATSUN
I ' '
8 Jl-IJ7'l 4 9J-JJ7S
1978DATSUM
CLEARAMCE!
''FREE''
Ol'tbecub equivalent.
ol$239.00
MIRACLE MADA
2150 Barbor Blvd .
COSTA MESA
645-5700
•••••••••••••••••••••••
Needs some body work.
Bestotr. 75l·oo.&8
Autos.Mew
:rnoo H ARBOR l!l\10
CO!>TA ME SA C.-12 0010
COSTA MESA
546-1200 ''l5 Spider red. Blaun·
punkt stereo cau, just
9100 S¥Viced 642· 7387
1972 MR 250C
Automatic, pwr. steer-
ini, air cond. & extra low
$25 miles. (929FV0).
$74'5
HOWARD CIM•rolet •••••••••••••••••••••• ~ 9707 OVER FACTORY Dove &Quail SlS.
HEADQUARTERS
OYER125NEW
1978 Hondas
Ready For
•••••••••••••••••••••••
•AUDI
SUP& SPECIALS•
'78 Audi~. 4 dr, auto,
cassette, air, PS, PB,
15,000 miles (01197)
$1995
'76 AudJ 100~ 4 dr, auto,
stereo tape, air cond,
M,OOOmiles <326NJE)
$4795
lln3 100 LS. ori~. owner.
Blue w /blue int. 'Low
milea. Super maintained
by school teacher.
$1995/offer. 644-2389
IMVOICEI <Near MacArthur.
Plus tax. license & de· Jamboree & Bristol).
aler added equipment. NEWPORT BEACH
Good until 48 hours after 133-0555
publication. i.---------i6 MB300D. tan. immac.,
MIWPORTDATSUM s tereo cass , $12,900.
888 DOVE STREET 499-l7S3
<Near MacArthur Blvd. * 1970 MERCEDES
& Jamboree Road> 250C *
NEWPORT BEACH Auto, air, elect windows. 833-1300 60,000 mi C922BTW >
'fB 510. Runs, needs some
work. $375. Must sell.
548-6338 aft 5.
* 197 6 DATSUN 13631 ...,,l>Of Bl•o
280% * Gatclen G10¥tt "' .,.._2Sl3
Copper. 4-spd, air, stereo l.!:=======::!.
c assette, 21 ,000 mi 4MBZ2110lmmaccond.
(497PPK ) 50.000 mi's. $9600. call $7195 eves 552-0790
'70 Datsun P. U.
•FOXY FOX IUYS• SlOOOor Best Offer
'76 Audi Fox Blue, 4 dr, 957-1377
auto, stereo tape, air , cond, 31,000 miles . fB Datsun Roadster 2000, l299NWC) 5-spd conv. hardtop,
41L11495 good shape & runs out
-good. 496-6884
'74 Audi Fox Yellow, Back lo school transp .
auto, 2dr, stereo, 8 track, Classic 10 Datsun 2000
44,000 miles ((l63LGT> Ro ads t er. C I e a n . $3395 $2600/ofr. 673-3364
eves. /wlmds.
•WOW!•
1977MGB
Green. mags. s t er eo
tape, lugg rack, 19,000
miles.
Hurry for tbjs one!
$5195.
'76 8210, 4 dr Sedan. mint
cond 18,700 mi. auto. radio $2300. 968-2546 i--------9-7_4_6
IUY OR LEASE
YOUR 19711MW
MOWI
•BMW•
•RESALES•
'74 3>02 4 sp. (373LPF l
i5530ia air (560MML)
'76 2002 4 sp. CS89PQM >
'77mS/R <583SPN)
'77 m 4 sp. <?.SJSPI >
"l'1320la air (0940 >
Ferrcsi 9723 •••••••••••••••••••••••
i6308GTB. prisllne
$27,900/ofrs. Dir
MS-5980 or 642-0696
GETTOPSS
FOR YOUR
EXOTIC CARI!!
We Will Consign
Your Porsche,
Ferrari, MBZ,
Rolls Royce or
Sports Car
in saleable cond.
Ask for Frank or Tom
842-4435
We may have your next HARBOUR VW
car In our inventory. can Under New Ownership
usloday!
131·2040 49M949 Rat 9725 ---------...................... .
CREVIER llDIJJl:i
GT. sacrifice. Must
sell Uus week. Bl!ul re-
d /orange, xlnt cond.
$1995. 642..().161.
4 Opel Manta Coupe gd.
trans., auto tra ns. vinyl
I.op, reasonable, 581·3610
dys, 497·2362evs. Becky.
9750 ••••••••••••••••••••••
5 Porsche 1.8, Ute blue,
30.000 mi's, appeJlrance
IJ'OUP, xlnt cond, $5800.
848-9912 aft 6pm
Ill Van
•PORSCHE 914'S•
Several lo choo6e from.
l.7's, 1.8'1, 2.0's
Ford Collvert\ble,
&mtiner, ·~ ..... orit IT '. 't. Ali1 reamtJc
dfec c:oolider'ed. locM.ed
'71 Hornet Sportabout ._ln.;.;.;.N.;.;..B.;;.;.... n~•.;.;Jl'15-3ZIZ..;;....;;...;;..;.;..;_ __
wqoo, P /8, P /8 , Cndff •• Ford wqon. CoOcl 1st
caat.rol. A/C. lo ml. lua. car. needs mlllOI' .-on.
rack. lop cond. $3SOO. MQ0.875-a53eves.
13531 Herbof 8lllCI ,_75..;;,.;.1·.;:..9582;;.;; _____ _
o..oen G«Mt '"-.ma Mdr ff I 0 "n,G&luy' ll1lll e.d ....
pd ••••••••••••••••••••••• firm. Call~ ·67. 912. 5 s , orange, Buick •82 Special &ood 1---~~.;._ ___ _
ount cond. $5900. cond, runs well, sai>o. '76 LTD. • dr. P /W, P ts.
6'4-4887 S51-1087 P tB. air, aood cond.
•llLL YAM MuatHll. aa.MT.-..
_II!. • ... •ORD •y 9t IS ask fOI' Bart. r~ ._ ••••••••••••••••••••••• be . SPECIAL* '70 Ford Rane ro, sml
..,g Porsche 9USC Coupe. NABERS shell top. new tires.
Black. All leather in-~ Cr acer 1'heel1, new ...... all tte paint, m mtr. S189S. ..... or. oys, casse • 840-87'6
air. electric windows, a..---------
sun roof. 15,000 miles LTDlL Brouabm.4dr.
IBUMX> ti Cbampqne clr. loeded SZ 3, 90 0 all elec xtraa. 1611 aal. Xlnt cond. Orig O'#De1'.
~ ·-~~~
9755 •••••••••••••••••••••••
TEST DRIVE OUR
'UCAR
OF THE YEAR"
Good inventory in stock.
Hurry while they last!
MIRACLE
MAmA,11tEMAULT
21.SO Harbor Blvd.
COSTA MESA
645-5700
Rolh Royce 9756 ••••••••••••••••••••••• #l DEALER IN U.S.A.
~~~VER
ROUS·ROYCE
t 540 J• mllo<ee ,_w_..e..,lt
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CLOSED SUNDAYS
Oyota 9765 ••••••••••••••••••••••
IEFOREYOU
SELL.YOUR
TOYOTA,
SEE US!
MARQUIS TOYOTA
MISSION VIEJO
131-2180 495-1210
•
•
DEMO CLliliMCI
1971 CADIUACS
Coupes&: Sedans
Sevilles
IXTUM&Y
LOWMIUAG!f
Excellent Savings
•
NABERS ~
2600 Hart>or Blvd. C~ Me.\. 54().QIOO
ff 45
UMCOU4'71
TOWMCOUPI
Lolded. UDdel' soo miles.
contact John Turo.
<2J3>t88-MJ1 blwia Sam·
5pmM-F.
ff SO
ORANGE COUNTY'S
MIWl5T
LINCOLN-MERCURY
Dealenhip is now OPEN
RAYR.ADIJOI
I.JNCOLN-MERCUR.¥
16-18 Auto Centu De.
SDFwy·Lalte Forest exit
IRVINE
'76Seville. Very clean. All 130.7000 extras . $8900. Wkdys ..._ _______ _
975--0484, eves67S.7172
972 Cadillac Se dan
DeVUJe. Loaded. Clean.
Sl975. 646-5732
•llLLYAM
PIM•loaDAY
SPECIAL• • Burgandy, fuel injection,
Cull power, ail leather in·
terior, AM/FM s tereo (450PKD), 33.288 miles
Stl95
72 Mercury Marquis
Brougham. f~ loacled.
lo mi, dot cond. Best9'· _
feT over 11675. 846-8070,
53&e74
HS2 ......................
N Mustang 289. V·I .
Highest bid gets it. Ruru;
IOOd, needs some bod)<
work up fronL 11\aat sell
I00054'1-3182
N Must. 6·cyl. aato.
class ic car. $1415 .
'4S8614
'811 MU8Wll. kYL .kpd.
very gd coad. $695.
MJ.1017. """'
'78 Cellca, real wire whls. '74 Camaro, autumn gold, IQ~.ellilt
AM/FM stereo, air. rear new tires, new battery.
wind. wiper, Spee. Edit. vinyl roof, all xtras in-
model. lo mi, must sell. eluding air. Mint. can
Dys S48-7767. S48-0971 finance548-3364
5~~e.2
dr, Burgundy vloyl
hrdtp., silver/ burgw:tdy,
eves. A/C, AM/ AM. P/S, A/C, 9920 p /B, suoo. MS-38 ••••••••••••••••••••••• i...:..~...:.;;..:...;..; ____ _ •AIEAUTY!•
1977 Toyota Celie a
S.spd. stereo, mags. air
(lllOSXH)
1962 CHEV. Impala '5VlStaCnnter.power.9
Sedan. lmmac .. classic seat. $950/or bstofr.
coodlUoo. 42,000 original 7S8-M48/&M-87!2,
•$4995• miles. IBSO. 673-3858 Cut1asa ·•. 2 Dr. Air.
'77 Monza. lo mi 's, p/s. radio. $800. Call
AM/FM 8-lrk. Gd cond. a...830-;;.;..;.._;7861 _____ _
i---Cai-'--_16'2_-826 __ 7__ '78 Olds 98 Rege nc Y
'60Cbevy 348 Super Olide, Coupe. lo mi'i;, loMecl,
runs good. ssooorbestof· mint cood. muat sell. rer.'93-8406 ~499-..:..:..:.._;U.;.;:_154 ______ _
197 3 Co r on a St a · '68 Mall bu Wagon, wtlite,
tionwagon, auto, air. runs good, $595.
$1100. 4912-2828
'73 Monte Carlo , air.
1.976 Mark 11 6-cyl wagon. clean. PS & PB. '-andau
loaded, xlnt cond. New top. $2100. Dys, 7S1·32ll. stJ belt radials. $3800/or Evessse-5584.
best. 581-7334 ...;..;.. _______ '61 CorvalrCpe, PO, radio
'78 Bl.k Celica Utbck, Ltd. & aas beater. reblt, xlnt
F.d., CuJJy loaded, lo mi's. cobd. $650/offer646-7016
7547310-'72 Monte Carlo Trf....,e. 9767 S2300orbestoffer. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 847-5419
H57
4 AM/FM 8 trk stereo
new cJutcll..-ltlnt corul. Sl~-nist sell 536-1896
4 Pinto. AM /PM tape,
new tires Ir batt. Runs-
locm d. $1500, 549-1735
SA VE 10' GALLON
1974 Pinto Runabout,
mes ~ .. &IS. new paint, new m-u;es, under 42K
mi, $1650. 645-0130, ~ Del Ivery Over 200 Flats to
choose rrom plus an
outat.a.ndina select ion
()(Sports cars at
DICK MILLER
fR-250 1968, a classic. I.!=======::!.. Stored 4 yrs. 58K ml. '64 Impala, 1 owner, 4-dr, S1900.644-9040 92M, P /S, P /B. $375.
'
• • n1vers1 .y
SALES & SERVICE
OLDSM•U • IMC • -DA
2850 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA
540-9640
MS-Ml6
'
\
j
I c.
I
Huntington Beaeh
Fe1111Ull• Vallev
EOl'TION el:~
esa
• * * * * *
Witnesses Cite
~No Warning'
BJ AaTBtJa .. VINSEL
Ot-o.My"-llllff
Joe Quintana, 40, a painter who lives at 2140 Federal
Ave., in the older Republic Homes tract of Costa Mesa,
tbou1ht it was the waler healer exploding when the plane hit his house about 9:30 Sunday night.
A liWe later, Quintana sat in the back seat of a police
car in nightclothes, watching bis home burning.
He bad rescued his exotic birds after getting wife
Bertha, 28, and daughters c;;ecma, 5, and Marisa, 3, to
safety, but the plane hurtling out of the sky into the
carport destroyed the 1939 Cadillac he was restoring.
,',"I~re ~as no waryiing. We were just able to jump
out, said Quj~tana as bis family huddled in the police car.
Other residents of the area lined Victona Street express~ no hope for anyone who was in the plane. '
"This makes four planes that have bit in our city " remar~ed Costa M~a Police Capt. Ed Glasgow. '
TAIL SECTION WASBIGGEST PIECE LEFT OF BE£CHCRAFT BARON AFTER CRASH ..... .,_
Twtn .. nglne Craft Tom to Bit• by Impact Sunday Night In Coate Meu ..
Brian McDaniel, 16, of 21996 Summerwind Lane
Huntington Beach, and his buddy Larry Mosquita 18 of
Reseda. just missed being killed in the crash. ' '
. "The plane hit over there and we were right under it "
said McDaniel. pointing to a gouge in Victoria Street. '
"Hey, it missed our car by 15 feet. .. It made a
touchdown there and then slammed into the house."
. Sue. Ratltoski, 816 Victoria St., did have warning of the
impending crash
Trembling with emotion, her arms folded as though to
keep herself warm, Mrs . Ratkoski recalled it in a streetside interview.
."Those damn motorcyclists are racing along the street
again," she remembers thinking, as she put her two little
boys to bed.
. "Then I realized It wasn't motorcycles ... that the
n01st; was above the house and I knew it was a plane and il
was m trouble.
"My husband had just come in from the store and
came to tell the boys good night. We both knew it was a
plane ...
"I nm into ':}le kitchen and looked out the window and
beard an explosion and saw the tail end sticking out of the
house all on fire.'• she continued.
··My husband called the fire department and I ran out
and started directing tr affic because at the time it needed
to be done. Some cars were stopped in front of our house.
She had never performed as a traffic cop before
"I just did it because I had to," she said, still shaking
as the blaze caused by the crash began to die down.
·:It's ha~d to believe there were no cars hit with all the
traffic ~ this street," said her husband, Paul.
Qwntana and his brother-in-Jaw, Rudy Sanchez, 19,
started to atta~k what they thought was an exploding
water beater with a garden hose before realizing it was a plane crash.
Sitting, watch~g .~is home burning, Quintana said he nev~~ gave the·poss1b1hty any thought before.
But ~hen you read the paper, you worry," he said, befo~e leav1.ng to make a telephone call to an aunt. She might be worried ... , "he said.
In San Elemente
Nixon Plays Host
At GOP Event
By JOANNE REYNOLDS granddaughter or his memories Ot•o.llY~l•Ut.ff ore l d . 0 C Former President Richard ar Y ays m range ounty N' as Nixon and his wife greeted 1xon opened his San Clemente party goers in a receiving line.
Estate Sunday to more than 400 A party spokesman estimated
o r t h e 0 r a n g e C o u n t y th t th · ed Republican faithful who pa1·d a e event rats more than • .,.," $100.000 which will be used to ~ each lo shake his hand and bolster the campaign coffers of tour his house. Th candidates such a s Robert e event, staged by the Badham, seeking re·elect1on to co unty 's GOP finance committee, marked the first the 40th Congressional District,
time Nixon has participated in a John Schmitz, running in the
politically-oriented affair since 36Mth . State Senate District ~nd
his resignation from office four an~ B~son. ~ s-econd-llme
years ago. c Related st<;>ry AS) c~d1~ate m the 74th Assembly
It attracted a handful -0 , ... D1stnct. Alt three-nrrd!1fates
county Republican candidates were on han~ Sunday everung.
for what turned out to be a ~ r · N~xo n w~s mos t
nearly apolitical evening. animated rn g.reet1n g Mrs.
The former president in a Bergesor:i. claspi.ng her hands
brief speech discussed only one several times dunn~ their chat.
issue -Proposition 13 and what ~he former .President and his
i t m e ans gen e r a l J Y t o w1.re spent a bWe more than 90 Republicans. minutes at the thr~·hour event
Other than that the talk co·~osted by a hst of local
covered baseball' his ne ~usines~ an~ political leaders, . • w rnc ludrng . indus trialis ts J .
R-0-bert .Fluor and Arnold
CAR MO"fES FASI'
IN PILOT AD
"I sold my car raster than I
ever drove it, and I got exactly
what I asked for it."
That's the story told by a suc-
cessful one-time car salesman
who put tbls ad in the Daily
Pilot:
'71 LTD 4 door. Gd tires,
brks. Gd trans. S600/ofrr
XXJHC.XlCC
U yc*.a have a car you want to
sell, call 642·5678. You don't
even have to write the ad
becauae our friendly ad-vt.acn
will help you wrt~ a best aeller
The D&U,y Pilot is a plac~
where puU.ina in your two cents
can mean cash returns.
Bectman;-
c or ayne, one o t e
co•hosts, at 1 ived with 'the
Nixons. but stayed Jess than a
half hour, departing the former
Western White House in one of
Fluor's corporate helicopters.
Part)'goers were invited
through mailed invitations
restricted to county residents
that finance co mmittee
members felt could pay the $2:50
per person ticket price to
support the Republican cause.
Guests met in Irvine for the
40-minute bus ride to Casa
Pacifica. Guests from the south
county were bused to the party
from Concordia . School in San Clemente.
All were greeted at the
Spanish-style home by mariachi
music, margaritas and Mexican
food from Nixon's favorite
restaurant, El Adobe in San
<See NIXON. Pa1e AZ>
I
Huntington
Oil Suit
May Close
By ROBERT BARKER
Ot tlMI Dalty ...... Staff
A lawsuit against the city or
Huntington Beach apparently
has been headed off after n e gotiator s reached a
compromise on new oil taxes to
be charged by the city.
C.arl Weaver, a spokesman for
the independent oil producers,
said that litigation will be
dropped if the compromise rates
are formally approved by the
City Council.
City negotiators agreed to
discard previously approved
increases in oil barrel taxes for
small wells in talks Friday with
representatives of the oil
industry.
The City Council previously
approved an increase in oil
barrel taxes from eight to JO
cents. But negotiators Friday
agreed to rescind that increase
for wells producing less than 10
gallons daily because or
economic hardships.
The city negotiators-Council
members Ruth Baile). Ron
Pattin s on and Don
MacAllister-a lso agreed to
drop an annual base fee of $100 if
the small wells contribute that
much revenue to the city in oil
barrel taxes.
A base a nnual fee of $200
originally was adopted.
The oil tax increase still will
climb to 10 cents per barrel for
major producers. Further rate
increases also will be based on
cost of living increases.
A drilling fee or $500, a
redrillin~ fee or $500 and a $50
inspection permit fee was
a pproved by both sides.
A $500 tax on above-ground oil,
water and miscellaneous tanks
was s crapped in previous
negotiations.
Weaver. an official with the
independent oil producers, said
that the tank tax "would have
broken us."
He said that the compr-0mise
reached Friday appeared to be
1~ir. -
Whe n the independent
producers filed suit July 28, they
claim ed that the new city
charges were unconstitutional.
An attorney said that the new taxes were a violation of the
Jarvis-Gann amendment
b ecause they we re raised
without two-thirds or the popular
vote.
(See OIL TAX, Pa1e AZ>
A 9-year-old Huntington
Harbour boy playing with
matches has been blamed for a
Sunday fire that caused $10,000
in damage to a two-story house
under construction, officials
&aid.
The youth apparently found
some matches a nd began
lighting them at the site of the
new house, 16281 Spartan Circle.
The matchel lpted a pile of
building debris, said police
anon tnvesticator Bob Russell.
No one was hurt. The dama1e
to the unoccupied structure wu
confined mainly to the
entryway. The youth was
apprehended by police and
released to b1t father's custody.
OllllY ~leC ~ .. Gary.,,.,....
ENGINE IN FOREGROUND MARKS PATH OF PLANE
Tall Section Sticks Out of Garage (Background)
VICTOFUA ~ ST ... Q ~ • ~ C[
~ ~ rtJ g ~ 0: w
~ ~ .$ 0:
~ ~ ! 19th ST
• --ilelly ,............_,....
CROSS INDICATES SITE OF PLANE CRASH IN MESA
At the Comer of Federal Avenue anc1 Victoria Street
3 _ Suspects Held
In Multiple Rape
A TeniCbY nvestigationmti> --ttur farclbl• pn a t a --. .... ~......-....
t
wom110 , n our mon s
pregnant, hu-led to-the-jailing
of three suspects by Fountain
Valley police , officers
announced today.
DetJtive Pat Coleman said
two were arrested a week ago
today and the third was taken
into custo<l.v last Wednesday.
The woman, 21, wbo was
dragged off MagnoUa Street lnto
a clump or bushes beside the San
Dleso Freeway in early April by
three men, gave birth to her
baby last Tuesday.
Detectives said the fUll·term
infant arrived healthy despite
the traumatic sex attacks that
occur~.
Investigators Identified the
su 1 pec\I as Allen Craig
Pennlngtoo, 24, of 5505 Como
Ave., Santa Ana, Wllliam Crali
Sanda. 18, of 13812 BriarclJff Sl.,
• (•
Terrorists Kill 3
MADRID, Spain (APl
Police atiy terrorilta shot and
ktlled three policemen ln ahnolt
simultaneous attacks today in northern and western Spain.
Altera .. •
N.'Y. Steeb
TEN CENTS
4
Family '
In House
R escued
By MICHAEL PASKEVICH Ot .. o.lty ...........
Investigators today studied
charred wreckage from ~
Sunday night plane crash in
Cost a Mesa that killed twq
Oxnard couplies, but said they
had few clues to the cause of the
crash.
Identities of the four dead
people were being withheld
today by Orange County
Coroners until all family
members were notified. The plane slammed into the
garage of a home al 2140
Federal Ave., Costa Mesa al
about 9:40 p.m .. but all five
members of the Joe Quintana
family were able to escape
without ij\jury.
The two couples apparently
fle w out of Orange County
airport at 9:30 p.m. Sunday after
attending a wedding.
Scores of people told police
they saw and heard the twin
engine Beechcraft Baron in
distress over the west side Costa
Mesa neighborhood. An off-duty Irvine police
omcer, Pat Rogers. saw the
plane bank sharply right. its
rig ht wing engine afire and
lights out, and then curve into
the ground, exploding in a ball
of fire
However, other witnesses said
the light plane was not on fire when it plummeted toward the
Quintana home, narrowly
missing a home on the north side
of Victoria.
A Huntin~ Beach man wbo .
was driving by said be "could
reel the beat" of tbe explosion.
"We an MMqniDI they were
headed home to Oxnard," said
Guy Moshier, investigator for
the N ationaa Transportation
Safety Board CNTSB >.
He said the pilot did not me a
flight plan with Orange County
Air port. Tower officials today
said they heard no warnings of
trouble from the aircraft before
It went down.
"A ll th e important
instruments were destroyed by
impact or the fire," Moshier
said today.
He said the joint NTSB and
<See PLANE, Page A?)
Sky Display
'Dazzling'
CONCORD. Mass.CAP > -A
display or northern lights lit up
parts o f th e Northern
Hemisphere early today. One
meteorologist described them as
the most dazzling in more than a
decade.
"Waves of light were just
shooting up as high as you could
see with bands of light. green
and pink, about 20 to 30 degrees
over the northern horizon," said
Stuart Soroka of Environmental
Research a nd Technology, a
private weather forecasting
firm here.
Weather stations throughout
much of Canada reported seeing--·
the lights, as well as stations In
Pierre. S.D., Bangor, Maine,
and Mfnneapolis, Soroka said.
Coast
low clouds, otherwise fair
through Tuesday. A little
warmer Tuesday with
h ighs ranging from
mld·70s at the beaches to
upper 80s inland. Lows
tonight 65 to 75.
INSIDE TODA~
Youngstera I to 16 learn
about aatUng m a Balboa
Yacht Club program. See
photo1,~CI.
• .... x
AtY~leftk9 A•~ Q ... ..-.~ a L.M, ....... .._....U
................... aM CC o~ :-'..._ .:;
~ .. ._. .......... ~ .. ,.....,,.... ., 0..-....._ ........ .,,. .......... ,_. M.......r M • ............... IM ..... .._ M ~ CH
,
I
17
--'t
JlJ DAii. V P1 OT H*
In ••• , •• ,, ••
·Budget Hike Postal
Sirike
Looms To Get Study
WASHINGTON <AP> -Wtth
1 •trike deadline of tonlcbt,
federal medlatora met today
with representatlves of the
Poatal Service and la unions tn
an effort to avert the threatened
walkout.
Hu.nUnston cl\ CU,y eoetu
m•artbera will Ider a ll'Jl.'lt
ctty budeet lOftiPt lllat calla b'
an inc an f.PWC"nl ol about ml.1 .. ftom ... , .....
The overall cft.7 bvdaet ta
A bout '5t.4 mllllon Cit)'
Admlnt tra\or Bud B~l•ito la
reeommt'ndtn1 that tbe City
Council apprott a total of '11.3
melhoo in lb• a•neral fud
bud&t't
The icneral fund reties mainly
on focal tut£ and provides
FVHunt
For Naked
Man Ended
A naked manhunt has been
called off by Fountain Valley
police , who called In the
Huntington Beach department's
canine dog to assist In a
burglary probe Saturday ni&ht.
Officers had been dispatched
to the industrial area near
Euclid Street and the San Diego
Freeway to check a suspicious
car
Once they pulled up, all
pandemonium broke loose,
investigators said today.
The car started to speed away.
but crashed into a chain link
fence. destroying about 100 feet
of it before the vehicle came to a
bait.
Suddenly. a naked man sprang
rrom the auto and fled into the
night as patrolmen raced up to
confront the auto's driver, who
was hastily adjusting his own clothing.
H e was questioned and
released without being arrested.
Garden Grove
Girl Killed
In Boat Fall
TAFT <AP ) -A Garden
Grove girl was killed when she
fell off the bow of a boat and was
run over by tbe propeller on
Lake Webb near here, the Kem
County coron er's office
reported.
Christina Allen , 13, of 11451
Bowles Ave., was riding on the
bow as her uncle, Jim Ed Jones
or Garden Grove, drove toward
the dock Sunday. When he
slowed. she pitched forward in
front of the boat, authorities
said.
Jones tried to put the motor in
reverse but mistakenly hit full
throttle, running the boat's bow
onto the dock, a deputy coroner
said.
The propeller sliced o(f one
s ide or the girl's head and
se vered her right arm.
authorities sajd.
Caner Fights
For Program
direct HrVtce. to eltl1 na.
On ~ 11. the City Co.co 1••• tnt.atJvo approval to a
f,12.5 mUlioft1eneraUund,buUwo
C1ay1 lawcan.ctfor moNatud)'ot
th•budaet.
8 el1tfo 1aJd that tbe ctt.y II In
line to receive M.213,hl ln
property tax revenUfJI. He 1akl
tbe fi1ure was up abo\lt S2
mUllon from earlier eaUmalel.
He aaid 1l10 that tb• city
••~a to 1et about a .a mlllloD la atate 1urph11 tundl.
Behlto said that the
fffOmmended budpt will result
In tb• tUminaUon of aome
permanent po&IUons ln varioul
departmentl aod reduce certain
PT01rama.
He aaid that there are
pretently 57 permanent
vacancies aod eltbt more are
antictpated.
The City Council b11 been
operatln1 under an interim
aeneral fund bud1et of $27
milUOJl. A freeze bu been tn
effect <in all hirings and la)'Olfa.
Budget deliberations will
begin at 7 p.m. in City Council
cbamben.
fe're• Pflfle A J
PLANE •••
Federal Aviation Administration
investigation could take as Ion& as three months.
Moshier said interviews with
witnesses would continue to
establish "what attracted their
attention to what was happening
in the air."
He said it was not uncommon
for conflicting reports to be filed
by witnesses to a plane craab.
The plane struck the garage of
the Qumtana home, destroytna a
vintage 1939 Cadillac and
causing heavy damage to a
hedge and palm tree.
However. Costa Mesa firemen
had the blaze out before serious
structure damage resulted.
The four occupants or the
plane apparently died within
seconds after the collision.
One young witness to the crash said the plane·came in at
full throttle, the pilot apparenUy
unable to ease the plane into an
emergency landing on Victoria
Street.
StamonCops
Seek Driver
Of Death Car
Stanton police today are
seeking a hit and run driver who
allegedly struck and kUled a
pedestrian early Sunday, police
reported.
M ustara Mohammad Musa,
However, no Procresa was re·
ported while the meetlnp were
under way and Postmaster
General Wllllam F . Bol1er
restated bla bard-tine position
that union leaders have said
leavu them no alternative to a
atrlke. Bol.ler said be believes a
walkout wtlJ not matertallle.
Chief federal mediator Wayne
Horvtta met with the two sides
both separately and together,
1po11esman John Rosers said.
But Rosen said there was no break~toreport.
Wblle the meetin11 were be1na
held at the mediation service,
Bol1er made a speech elsewhere
ln W aablnstoo repeatlJ11 bls de-
termination not to sweeten a ten·
tatlve contract lllat the unions
consider inadequate.
''Havln1 turned down that
contract. the unions now want us
to return to the bargaining table.
But, aa far u I'm concerned, we
did our barsalnina. We gave in
on some thinga we wanted, and
the unions gave in on some they
wanted," Bolger told the con-
vention of the National League
of Postmasters.
The postmasters, who general·
ly are al lower-level manage-
ment ranks, gave him several
standing ovations.
Questioned after bis speech
about tbe s trike. possibility,
Bolger again predicted one
would not matenallze.
"I SP,ailed my telephone bill to·
day.· be said.
Bolger, as be bas frequently in
the put. pressed for pursuing
the legal steps when a contract
la rejected. These steps include
binding arbitration if the two
sides cannot fl.nd an agreement.
Bolger said that be doesn't
think that most of his employees
want an illegal strike.
"They realize that a strike
would do permanent damage to
the Postal Service."
He said the diversion of much
mail to other means of delivery ~ould hurt the unions by reduc·
mg the need for manpower in
the Postal Service.
"A strike would be the worst
possible thing that could happen
to the Postal Service," Bolger
said.
One union president is man-
dated by members to call a
strike by midnight EDT tonight
if there is no resumption of
bargaining. Another union presi·
dent. under similar mandate
has a midnight Wednesday deadline.
fe'rowaPageAJ
NIXON. • •
27. of Hawaiian Gardens, was Juan Capistrano.
pronounced dead on arrival al A bout half an hour after
Stanton Community Hospital at guests were ushered into the
2:13a.m.,policesaid. s wimming pool area and
He was struck by a car as be g a r d e n s , t h e N i x o n s
walked along a curb on Beach accompanied by Wayne, strolled Boulevard near Hopi Road, police in from the house.
said. The former president. trim
Officers said t hey have and tanned, was dressed in gray
impounded a car matching the slacks and a navy blue jacket.
description of one witnesses Mrs. Nixon wore a pink, floor
reported spotting at the scene length gown set off by a double
and are conducting tests on the strand of pearls.
GRAND TETON NATIONAL auto today. The~ were introduced by
PARK. Wyo. <AP>_ President Officers said witnesses noticed Repultbcan activist Victor
Carter, determined to win the the car on the curb but at first Andrews who assured the
congressional fight over his em· did not realize anyone had been Nixons they had the "love and
battled energy legislation, is hit. admiration of not only the
ending his vacation two days people here, but millions or
ea r l Y and returning to citizens in this great nation or
Washington on Wednesday. Home Blaze ours.·· Andrews' introduction
White House press secretary was punctuated by applause from the crowd.
Jody Powell announced Sunday Kil'"" ._6 an ;R Nixon spoke for about 10 that Carter would shave two 13 iri1 .,
days from his two·week western ~i:ul:& li:~in:~id:JP~bli~n
.....,,,..... .......
JOE ANO HAZEL COURREGES 088ERVE FAMILY'S 100TH YEAR IN FOUNTAIN VALLEY
COntlnutng the Ways of PlonHr Fo.refathera WI .the Mldat of Urban Sprawt
Deseeadants Celebrate
300 Guests Gather for Fountain V tdley F ete
By RAYMOND ESTllADA a. °' .. ......, ...........
Joe and Hazel Courreces still
live the life of one of the pioneer
fammes that settled the area
around their Fountain Valley
home 100 years ago.
Courreges still farms several
acres of his land and bis wife
sells their crops from a road5ide
stand near the corner of Talbert
Avenue and Newland Street.
The Courreges decided to have
a few friend5 -about 300 guests
arrived -at their home Sunday
in honor of the 1878 arrival of
Joe's grandfather in the
Fountain Valley area.
Roch Courreges, of Basque
heritage, came from France to
the area to raise sheep but also
farmed potat oes, corn.
pumpkins, alfalfa, sugar beets
and lima beans.
The pioneer settler built the
oldest existing structure in
Fountain Valley , a red
tankhouse next to his bluff
home. in 1898. Roch Courreges
died at his home in 1923.
Joe and Hazel Courreges say
they must, fight to hold onto
their unique property because of
high taxes.
Courrges said he had to sell
two acres of his land three years
ago just to pay back taxes. The
sale of crops from the family
vegetable stand accounts for
most of their income.
But the couple. their children
and grandchildren remain a
happy bunch despite problems
through the years.
As a local politician presented'
the eldest Courreges a plaque
to hang on his wall. the
patriarch joked, "If I get any
older, they are going to have to hang me up."
As his guests enjoyed a
home ·cooked meal Sunday,
Courreges spun a few of the
yarns for which he is famous.
The guest log read like a list or
local street and school names.
Gisler, Oka, Tamura, Nlishi,
Callens, Wardlow and Fulton
were written on guest name
tags.
Courreges said he felt lucky to
be with all these people. lf not
for a twist or fate, he said, there
may have been oo celebration Sunday.
Twenty.two months before the
1933 Long Beach earthquake.
Courreges was bed·ridden with a
list of diseases that began with pneumonia.
Courreges received bedside
grammar school instruction
from a tutor but missed his
lessons at Huntington Beach
Elementary School for almost
two years. It was a blessing.
Courreges said.
"When 1933 earthquake hit,
the grade school fell down on my
classmates."
·'But eve"n after all the
shaking and trembling, my
grandfather's house stood up."
Courreges said with pride.
A 1911 fire destroyed the original Courreges house . The
family has maintained the
present structure with much care.
But it is the land around the
home that has required the most
attention. While the value of the
property spirals, Courreges san
he rema1ns committed to
keeping as much or the farm
acreage as possible. ·
But soon, 2""1 acres will gi~
way to a shopping center and
help pay the taxes.
Yes. Courreges admits. hut
attempt to keep that p1oneet
way of life has been a struggle.
But honest and simple.
good · natured and trusting. Courreges believes that is the
way it should be.
Heart Attack Kills
Actor Robert Shaw
NEW YORK CAP) -Robert
Shaw, the actor known for
portrayals of rugged adven·
turers in such movies as "Jaws"
and "The Deep, .. died of an ap·
parent heart attack near his
home in Tourmakeady Island
near Dublin. bis New York press
agent reported today.
The 51 ·year·old actor. who
also wrote several books and
plays, was driving with his wife
Virginia and H~·year-old son
Thomas at about 5 p.m. Sunday
when he suffered the attack,
said publicist Myrna Post. He died al home, she said.
Born in Lancashire, England,
Shaw started his acting career
as a member of the Old Vic
drama company in the 1950s and
performed in numerous produc·
lions in England.
The brown.haired, blue-eyed
Shaw came to the attention or
the American movie.going
oublic as a villain in the James Bond movie, "From Russia
With Love,·· He went on to ap
pear in such film s as "Robin
and Marian," "The Sting·· and
"'Black Sunday." bul found his
greatest acclaim as a fisherman
in the thrillers. "Jaws" and
"The Deep."
Two films made before bis
death, "Force T e o from
Navarone" and "Avalanche Ex ·
press." have not been released
In addition, Shaw made a
name for himself as a writer
His first book. "The Hiding
Place," was published in 1959 lt
was about wartime Germany.
and recently was made into a
rull·length motion picture. He
wrote four other novels.
Shaw also wrote three plays.
among them "The Mao In The
APWI .........
SUCCUMBS AT 51
Actor Robert Shaw
Glass Bootb, ·· a docu·drama
about the tnal of Nazi Adolf
Eichmann.
Shaw. whose hrst wife. ac·
tress Mary Ure, died several
years ago. is survived by tus
wife and 10 children.
Flights Delayed
PARIS <AP> -French airports reported delays or up to
five hours in flights today as air
tra Hie controlle rs continued
their work·lO·rule slowdown to back demands for more pay,
more help aod better equipment.
......... _ • .....,;"S ••
holiday to work on "some very ~iticaJ b' pee ic
J'r11 .. i11l .1-rn-ot1-...... L, ...... o.-l IF/~~4•er-su .,ects, except when
' -r --Ulh~...,u;.. v~ ,_.., ,,._ -"~-.. , • ....,,~ 0
-~ t!flWJrio •M-dptnsttiUU •i.f""Sn'Q -are bef~re Congr<:ss. . the taxpayers' revolt.
Heading the hst i~ deh~ate Westminster Fire Department He said the l ong .held ~atural g~ compromise ~egu;la· investigators today were Republican belief in limiting
t1on t~at 1s the centerpiece of probing the cause of a 2 a.m. government spending "is a
Carters enersy plan. house _fire that killed on• man cause worth alvina to and
and senously injured another. working for." .
OAANOE COMT H1F Identity of the dead man, aged He took a verbal swipe at two
50, was withheld pe nding of his favorite targets -east.em
notification of next-of·km. Uber ala and the rnedia, blaming DAILY PILOT Dean Dugan, 19, one of four in them for not recognizing the ''""°'-eon1 0.1tot~• • .,._..Ii<....,. the ~esidence at tsaoa Gle--te imnortance of Proposition 13, -.... ---.: f\~ .. IN0r""90 LU'°'U f" o-t -"'~ ~NI.--.-at ,• WbH lJl4-..(ile W1l~ Wt1iC_b ~ ~~~~-r~~~..;;:;::;t~"'....._t!ml!laft~ ....... ~-~~"~~c.ai. ....... -t-~.v.611C~o~v••~~tr-WiWaa-:admil~l!L~......_.a.1-.a.1~~~a:1--:i-'1Htit'f!~~~~ ::~·:~rt·;;~~~~~= UC ~...Medical. Cente.r Bum nationwide Y.JJ8L __
('
'""' ,, M1r•-w ~•~•dm...,... -f' 'f"" -Urut. ''Tiley said il was j ust t!::.,.~~~~"L~:.::..~~ uo """' e... s o m e t h i n c t h e k o o k y ._,, .. _ .......... , ........... _
Jee-II~ Vt<~ Pf .. lclo"I aftd o.MfolMltn•9tt<
"'"""'"" ......... ... ...... , .... ,., ..
a.. ....... u. ltk-~ ....
AUO'•"' Ml~lf'IO COll10t\ ._,, .......
Wnt0t•-C4-•€ctllor
Hunt1nato11 .. _Office
tltlJl .. <11-.. .... """"'"'"dd .... ~ 0 ... "' ._ Offlo.e l.~= ;;:'~";';~~~· ~· .. ..c-Yolln UJ011..ehrll-tt..,.0t•''......,
'"""'"(114)~ CtanMecl AMnlllnt....,_
"--"'°'·-c.-.c-o, ... ~12IO
~n: .=. ~ '1:"'...!t.=:"~ ~;~':; .. ~:.-:r..:.:.~·=·.~."9~=.::e. ~ <••·•·-· 5«-<IOU Mtt ... H id •t a,va l•IU~
C•lll•rftl• $vii"''"'"" "' tarrier U H ::-..::~·z, ;~~ -Illy "lllllHY
<
His staff physician there Hid
he suffered s ubstantial
respiratory damage but is listed
in stable ~ndltion today.
Identit1ea or tbe other two
persons involved and an
estimate of the fire loaa wa•
unavallable.
750 Deaths Listed
JOHANNESBURG. South
Africa <AP> -South African
troops who crossed into Zambia
lut week killed ao e1Umated 600
to 750 1uerrlllas or the
Soutb·West Afrtc1 People'•
Orcanization ln retaliation for •
SWAPO abelllnt that kWed 10 South AfTlcan troopa and
wou.nded nlM, a Johannesbur1
newapaper reported toda1.
Calllom.lans bad done," Nixon
said. He told the crowd similar
ballot issues would be appearing
in other parts of the country.
F ..... P.,,eAJ
OILTAX •••
Councilwoman Ruth Bailey
said today that tbe new
ag re ement la a "good
compromise."
· 'Tt\e oU lnduat.ry should be
taxed fairly," ahe said. She
added that the ortsinal charges
would have cauatd too areal a hardahlp.
Tbe talu IHt Friday also
were 1tlended by
reprHent1tlvt1 of Amlnoll,
Ctievron, Unton and the
HunUntton Beach Company.
44 feeNon Isa.net, newport center 644·5070
• \ ·'
' I
17
~ ..
a, AJ1'111ua a. WNISL ....... -
aoe ~···· ~ .• ~ .... wtlo liWI tt ZHO FeftfaJ Ave .• l:n older llepUUe ltom. trKt of Colta ..... tboubt lt WM llM water beat.er uplocttnc wheo tbe plane
bit bI1 boule about t: IO SaadQ alitit.
A tlttle later. QWDt&na aat ta the baek Mtt of a police
car ln nliblc~. watcblna bia bome ~.
He iad reecued b1a eJDOtic birds after 1ettin1 wlf e
Bertha, a ud daqbters Cedll•. 5, and lfarlla, 3, to
safety, but tbe plane burtlina out of the sky lnto the
carport destroyed the um Cadillac be wu reatonna. "'lbere wu no wamina. We were Juat able to jump
out," said Quintana a.s bla famlly huddled in the l>dlice car.
Other n!Sidenls of the area lined Victoria Street,
eJtprusinl no hope fOI' anyone who was in the plane.
"'Ibis makes four planes that bave hit in our city,"
remarked Costa Mesa Police Capt. Ed Glaseow.
Brian McDanlel. 16, of 21996 Summerwind Lane.
'
TOday'• £lo l•I
N.~. Stoek8
••1 ran into the kitchen and looked out the window and
heard an expJosioo and saw the tall end sticking otlt. of the
boule all on.lire." she continued. · .. My husband caUed tbe fire department and I ran out'
and started di.rect1nt traffic because at the time it needed
to be dc>De. Some cars were stopped in front of our house.
Sbe bad never performed as a traffic cop before.
"I Just did it because I had to," she said, still shakln& aa the blaae caused by the crash began to die down.
"It's bard to believe there were no cars hit with all the
traffic oo tbla street," said her husband, Paul.
Quintana and bla brotber·in·law, Rudy Sanc:hez, 19,
started to attack what they thought waa an explodin&
water beater with a garden hose before realizing it was a
plane crash.
Sitting, watching his home burning, Quintana said he
never gave the possibility any thought before.
"But when you read the paper, you worry," he said.
before leav~ to make a telephODe cail to an aunt.
''Sbe might be wonied .•. , " he said.
Mesa Plane Four
Opens Bonae
Nixon Is Host
To Republicans
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
OI-o.Mr ...._.St.ft Former President Richard
Nixon opened bis San Clemente
Estate Sunday to more than 400
of the Orange Count y
Republican faithful who paid
$250 each to shake his hand and
tour his house.
The event , staged by the
• county's GOP financ e
committee, marked the first
time Nixon has participated in a
politically-oriented affair since
his resignation from office four
years ago. <Related story, AS>
I l attracted a handful of
county Republic~ candidates
for what turned out to be a
nearly apolitical evening.
The former president in a
~masked
Bandi,i Hits
Irvine Eatery
A brown-haired gunman with
a ski mask pulled over his face
held up the Village Pantry
Restaurant in Irvine at 8:55 p.m.
Sunday and escaped with an
estimated Sl,500.
Police said the man robbed
the cashier of the restaurant at
5301 University Drive, then
marched him at gunpoint to a
back office and forced the
restaurant manager to open the safe.
The suspect ran from the
ress .lurant toward the nearby
Parlrwood Apartments, police
~aid, and eluded a search of the
area Police said they were at
the seem:: within two minutes of
his esca~ from the restaurant.
The robber was described as
in bis early 20s, five-10, and of
medium build.
Irvine investigators were com· • panng notes tOday with Costa
Mesa police about two similar
robberies Sundav in Costa Mesa.
Coast
low clouds,. otbenvise lair
through Tuesday. A Jillie
warmer Tuesday with
highs ranging fro m
mid-70s at the beaches to
upper 80s inland. Lows
tonight 65 to 75.
INSIDE TOD4 \'
YoamglUra 8 to 16 learn
about aailing in a Balboa
Yacht Club program. See
photo&, PogsCJ. •••• "' •-...._ "' I• c._. a ...-. .. ,...w..n a LM..... M ................. 91 ......... ., .. . "'E ..... M °'" .,., ......... ., OM••• .. T........_ a1 ............ ,......,. ., .. .............. ,........_ M
..... lllb I 111'4 ._...._ M
.......... CN
brief speech discussed only one
issue -Proposition 13 and what
it means gen eral l y t o
Republicans.
Other than that, the talk
covered baseball, his new
granddaughter or his memories
of early days in Orange County
as Nixon and his wife greeted
party goers in a receiving line.
A party spokesman estimated
that the event raiited more than
$100,000 which will be used to
bolster the campaign coffers of
candidates s uch as Robe rt
Badham, seeking re-election to
the 40t.h Congressional District,
John Schmitz, running in the
36th State Senate District and Marian Bergeson, a second-time
candidate in the 74th Assembly
District. All three candidates
were on hand Sunday evening.
Mr . Nixon was most
a nimated in g r eeting Mrs.
Bergeson. clasping her hands
several times during their chat.
The former president and his
wife spent a little more than 90
minutes at the three-hour event
co-hosted by a list or local
business and political leaders.
including indu~trialists J .
Robert F l uor and Arnold
Beckman.
Actor John Wayne. one of the co-h osts. arrived with the
Nixons, but stayed less than a
half hour, departing the former
Western White House in one of
Fluor's corporate helicopters.
Partygoers were invited
through mailed invitations
restricted to county residents
that finan ce committee
members felt could pay the $250
per person ticket price to
support the Republican cause.
Guests met in Irvine for the
40 ·minute bus ride to Casa
Pacifica. Guests from the south
county were bused to the party
from Concordia School in San
Clemente.
A II were greeted-at the
Spanish-style home by mariachi
musie, mar.garilas ~ ... MeJtioon
food from Nix on' s fa vori le
restaurant, El Adobe in San
Juan Capistrano.
About half an hour after
guests were ushered into the
swimming pool area a nd
ga rd e n s, the Nixons,
accompanied by Wayne, strolled
in from the house.
<See NIXON. Page A%)
Geu. $15, 780
]&mlry Box
An Irvine businesswoman
guarded her large diamond,
which she valued at $14.000,
against theft by taping it to the
bottom of her Jewelry box.
Saturday, a burglar broke into
her home and stole the jewelry
box.
Also taken, Harlene Vogler
told pc>lice, were tbree smaller
diamonds, a jade bracelet. a
Jade medallion, several rings,
and a gold charm bracelet. She
valued the total loss at $1S, 780.
Police said the burglar forced
open a sliding glaaa door to 1et
inside the home.
Swale Rescue
Cost Set at
$12 Million
To save a n eye-pleasin g
natural swale across from UC
Irvine, and still build the
University Town Center. would
swell construction costs by $12
million. the Irvine Co. said lo·
day.
Though the City of Irvine
already has given the company
permission to begin gl"ading-
comp any plans call for the
bulldozing of almost the whole
site-Councilman Larry Agran
wanted lo Imo~ how much it
would cost not to do it.
Grading is scheduled to begin
next month.
Douglas Ford, director of the
Irvine Co. 's residential division,
said in a memo to the council
that it would cost upwards of $8
million to design just the com·
mercial core of the development
to preserve the grassy hollow.
A five-acre low and moderate
income housing project planned
would have its costs increased
by $750,000 for special grading,
retaining walls, splil sfruc ures,
plumbing and such, Ford said. ·costs fOT other pTOpOSed '-t'e8-
iden U al areas· of the center.
located on Campus Drive. also
would increase by more than $3
million, Ford estimated.
''As you can see," Ford said,
"these are now small numbers.
They are costs that the low and
moderate income buyer and the
commercial core can ill affont."
To Meet Tonight
The Irvine Trans portation
Commission is to meet at 7:30
tonight to hear status reports on
various transportation projects
in the city.
Commissioners meet in city
council chambers at city ball,
17200 Jamboree Blvd.
7,000 Aid Search
A YLESBEARE, En&land
<AP > -About 7,000 volunteers
helped police search Sunday for
13-year-old Oenetle Tate who
vanished while dellverin&
newspapers et1ht days ago.
They round no •lcn of the
missin1 airl. but the pOlice laid
they haa never seen such a
display ot aood wUI.
Dllty lllNt ""'-_., o.r ~
ENGINE IN FOREGROUND MARKS PATH OF PLANE
Tall Section Stlcka Out of Garage (Background)
CANNES, France (AP ) -
Three months ago, thieves
robbed American millionairess
Florence Gould of her art
treasures. Sunday. a trio got
away with her jewels, worth
millions ot dollars, police said.
Mrs. Gould, widow of an heir
of the American railroad tycoon,
,._, visiting friends elsewhere ln
Cannes when three youn1
masked, armed men broke lnto
her 42·1'00m villa El Patio dur· int the day, tJed her Bruilhm
maid to a Lou.la XVI chair llOd
11Hed her, and spent haU an
bour coUectin1 th~ jewels ln her
bedroom aQd w~at cash they
could find, the police reported.
Another member of the
household staff found the maid
and called the police. The
thieves were described as highly
professional, and no lead.a were
reported.
The theft ol her art collection,
which included painUnes by
Renoir and BoMard, ls still UD·
solved.
Mrs. Gould Is the widow of
Fiank Jay Gould, who dled ln
l9se alter they bad been married
for 13 years. She has been a
leadtn1 member of Riviera
1oclety for years.
.. ----,
Family
Escapes
Injuries
By MICHAEL PASKEVICB
Ot•o.l'Y"*"lt.Mt
Investigators today studied
c harred wreckage from a
Sunday night plane crash in
Costa Mesa that killed two ,.,.
Oxnard couples, but said they
had few clues to the cause of the
crash.
Identities of the four dead people were being withheld
today by Or ange County
Coroners until a ll family
members were notified.
The plane slammed into the
garage of a home at 2140
Federal Ave .. Costa Mesa at
about 9:30 p.m .. but a ll five
MORE CRASH PHOTOS
APPEAR ON PAGE 3
members of the Joe Quintana
family were able to escape
without injury.
The two couples apparently
flew out of Orange County
airport at 9:30 p.m. Sunday after
attending a wedding.
Scores of people told police
they saw and beard the twin
engine Beechcraft Baron in
distress over the west side Costa
Mesa neighborhood.
An off-duty Irvine police
officer, Pat Rogers, s aw the
plane bank sharply right, its
right wing engine afire and
lights out. and then curve into
the ground, exploding in a ball
of fire.
However. other witnesses said
the light plane was not on fire
when it plummeted toward the
Quintana home. narrowly
missing a home on the north side
of Victoria.
A Huntington Beach man who
was driving by said he "could
feel the heat" of the explosion.
"We are assuming they were
headed home to Oxnard ... said
Guy Moshier, investigator for
the National Transportation
Safety Board <NTSB >.
He said the pilot did not flle a
llialiLplan with Orange Coun~ ·Airport. Tower Officials today
said they heard no warnings of
' troObl~ from the aircraft before
it went down. "A ll th e important
Instruments were destroyed by
impact or the fire," Moshier
said today.
He sai4 Ule joint NTSB and
Federal Aviation Administration
invesUgation could take as long
as three months.
<See PLANE. Page A2)
CAR MOYES
IN PILUr AD
'I sold my car faster than I
e9er drove lt, and I got exactly
what I asked for it."
That's the story told by a suc·
ceasful one·Ume car salesman
who put th.Ls ad in the Daily
Pilot:
'71 LTD 4 door. Gd Urea.
brks. Gd trans $600/offr
XXX·XXXX
1' you have a car you want lo
sell, cail 642-5678. You don't
even have to write the ad •
because our frtendly ad·vlso"
will help you write a best seller.
The Dally Pilot is a place
where putt.Ina in your two cents
can mean cash returns.
I
I
Al OAl '!PLOT
Pontiff
Retains
•
Officials
VATICAN CITY (AP> -Pope
Jon.n P•uJ l d monst.ratM lOd•Y
b dedlcabOft to the polk: • al
Pope Paul VI by conUau1na lD
Offsl'e tho thi r otnclaJs ol lbt
Roman Catholk awttb•a cen
tral dmi~ 8"0lnted by bl~. The ·..-.POiltllf rea~
Fr nCb Cardln.1 J• mot
St>cretary of State. tbe
equivalent of Ule Vatlcaa'a
prime ~r. and t.be beldl of
the nlne creel CoGare11uons.
th4? mal.D departmen\I or the
Vatlean Curia.
Amq tbe latter · Cardinal
John Wrl1ht or tbe United
Slates, who heads the ~I•·
lion for the Clero and did not
participate 10 th~ elecUosa of
Pope John P1ul Saturday
because be was recuperatiq
from eye aur1ery ln Boat.on.
ln another affirmation or Pope
Paul's policy. the pope recort·
firmed Archbishop A1osUno
Casaroll as Secretary or the
Council for Public Affairs, the
Vatican's foreign minister.
The Vatican announcement
said all the beads of congrega-
tions would serve the remainder
or the five-year terms to which
they were appointed by Pope
Paul. However, this five-year
period does DOl apply to Villot,
Cas aroli, or Archbishop
Giuseppe Caprio, the substitute
secretary of state, who are the
pope's personal choices.
In addition w Cardinal Wright,
the congregation heads are
Cardinal Franjo Seper of
Yugoslavia. the Congregation
for the Doctrine of the Faith, the
former Holy Office; Cardinal
Sebastiano Baggio, Congrega.
lion of Bishops; Cardinal James
P Knox, Australia, Sacraments
and Divine Worship; Cardinal
Eduardo Pironio. Argentina ,
Congregation for the Religious:
Cardinal Agnelo Rossi ,
Evangelization of the Peoples;
Cardinal Corrado Bafile, Italy,
Causes of the Saints; Cardinal
Gabriel Marie Garrone, France,
Catholic Education ; Cardinal
Pierre Paul Philippe, France,
Oriental Churches.
Vatican sources said the pope
may call a consistory this year
to appoint new cardinals.
Several cities which traditional·
ly have cardinals presently are
headed by bishops. They include
.. Tokyo, Dublin and Turin. Also,
the pope is said to have prom-
ised a cardinal's red hat to
Bishop Ernesto Civardi,
secretary of the conclave which
elected him.
T he pope dug into the business
of church administration after
pledging to overcome "internal
tension" within the church and
to continue the work of his two
predecessors whose names he
took.
All executive appointments in
the Curia. the church's central
bureau c racy , expired
au•omatically with the death of
Pope Paul on Aug. 6.
Toro Marine
Hurt; Lucky
In Accide nt
An El Toro Marine suffered
manor injuries Saturday in an
accident police said could have
been much worse. He crashed
his motorcycle through a
.railroad crossing gate in I rvine
seconds berore a freight train
passed.
Steven Chumey, 23, told police
that after snapping the gate in
ha Ir and Calling from his
damaged cycle, he looked back
toward the tracks. across Sand
Canyon Avenue near Burt Lane,
to see the t.r.ainllurtle throu&h_.
He told officers he had been
traveling 40 w 50 miles per hour
and noticed the downed crossing
gate loo late to stop.
He was treated at the El Toro
base dispens ary for cuts and
brulses.
ORANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
OMfy .......... "'* NIXONS OPEN ESTATE TO COUNTY REPUBLICANS
Former Prealdent and Flrat Lady In Earlier PoH
f're91P.,,eAJ
NIXON RECEPTION. • •
The former president. trim
and tanned, was dressed in gray
slacks and a navy blue Jacket.
Mrs. Nixon wore a pink, floor
length gown set ort by a double
strand or pearls.
T h ey were introduced by
Republican activist Victor
f'ro• Page A l
PLANE •••
Moshier said interviews with
witnesses would continue to
establish "what attracted their
attention to what was happening
in the air."
He said it was not uncommon
for conflicting reports to be filed
by witnesses to a plane crash.
The plane struck the garage of
the Quintana home, destroying a
vintage 1939 Cadillac and
causing heavy damage to a
hedge and palm tree.
However. Costa Mesa Firemen
had the blaze out before serious
s tructure damage resulted.
The four occupants of the
plane apparently died within
seconds after the collision.
One young witness to the
crash said the plane came in at
full throttle, the pilot apparently
unable to ease the plane into an
emergency landing on Victoria
Street
2Join Soviet
Space Station
MOSCOW <AP > -East
Germany's first cosmonaut and
his Soviet flight commander
began helping the crew or the
.orbiting Salyut 6 space station
with scientific and mechanical
experiments today. All four
were reported in good spirits.
Andrews who assured the
Nixons they had the "love and
admiration of not only the
people here, but millions of
citlzens in this great nation or
ours." Andrews' introduction
was punctuated by applause
from the crowd.
Nixon spoke for about 10
minutes. givinfl a Republican
pep talk that avoided specific
polltical subjects, except when
he came w Proposition 13 and
the taxpayers' revolt.
H e said the long -h e ld
Republican belief in limiting
government spending ·'is a
cause worth giving to and
working for."
He took a verbal swipe at two
of his favorite targets -eastern
liberals and the media, blaming
them for not recognizing the
importance of Proposition 13,
which he predicted would be the
most si gnificant issue
nationwide by 1980.
·'They said it was just
so mething the kooky
Californians had done," Nixon
said. He told the crowd similar
ballot issues would be appearing
in other parts of the country.
After his talk, the ex-president
and bis wife were joined by
son-in-law David Eisenhower to
receive their guests.
Nixon autographed copies of
his memoirs brough t b y
partygoesrs and chatted
a miably, pausing from time to
lime to pose for photographs.
Guests were invited to tour the
Nixon home, which has not been
opened to the public since it was
purchased as the Western White
House in 1969.
The home's living room and
dining room, decorated with
oriental art objects. were viewed
by partygoers who were told
that all the flower arrangements
were prepared by Mrs . Nixon.
Tile second-floor study used by
Nixon and his ground-floor
bedroom were also opened to
guests who admired needlework
by daughter Julle Eisenhower
that decorated both rooms.
The home was closed to tours
at about 6 p.m . when the Nlxons
left the party.
* * *
Sigmund Jaehn of East
Germany and Soviet Valery
Bykovsky were fired into space
Saturday aboard the Sor.uz 31
capsule and linked up with the
space station Sunday night, the
Soviet news agency Tass
reported.
J aehn and Bykovsky. the third ~; N-n.n Plans
international t ea m or , .. ~
'
Postal
Strike
Delayed?
BULLETIN
W ~SJDNGTON <AP> -TIM
...... lel'W:e •t'l'eed tldl after.
MOD co reepea aiecoUatiou wMta
ualoo1 tlaal hd dareateaed co
strike, dlU.Jlaa for 15 d•1• uy po111We .... , ........... ,.,.rted. .
WASHINGTON (AP> -Hours
from a deadline for a national
mall strike, the po1t 1t1aater
general urged bis employees to-
day not w .. take any illegal or
rash actions." But he again re-
fused to return to the bargaining
table.
Postmaster General William
F . Boleer•s warnint came as
chief federal medJator Wayne
Horvitz met with represen-
tatives of the Postal Service and
the three unions that recently re-
jected a tentative settlement.
The rejections set the stage
for a possible walkout as early
as tonight, despite a federal
court order probibltill8 a work
stoppage or slowdown.
The Postal Service for weeks
has been developing contingency
plans which would include the
use of federal troops to help sort
and deliver the mails . But
Bolger conceded that a strike
would cause widespread
economic problems and, lf pro·
longed, could threaten the rutw-e
of the Postal Service itself.
President Carter. vacationing
in Wyoming, told reporters he
bas been in touch with Labor
Secretary Ray Marshall about
the postal dispute, but would not
com ment further.
The unions have maintained
that formal contract negotia-
tions m ust be reopened to avoid
a strike, but Bolger today re-
peated his opposition to such a
move. Bolger has said the issue
can be resolved through fact·
find ing and arbitration and
doubted that a walkout would
take place.
"I mailed my telephone bill tA>·
day," be said.
John Rogers, a spqkesman for
the Federal Mediatldn and Con·
ciliation Service, desc.Qbed the
meeting by union leaders with
mediators as "exploratory
talks." The mediation service
said no formal contract talks
were scheduled.
Bolger said, "There is a
peaceful, and I emphasize,
lawful way w settle this dis pute.
and I sincerely hope that the
workers who have rejected the
negotiated contract will also re-
ject any call to rash and illegal
action." Bolger said.
He ro Remains
Anonymous
MIAMI <AP > -About 150
bystanders ignored the shouts of
a policeman being struck and
kicked by attackers before a
ma n stopped his dump truck,
rus hed through the onlookers
a nd chased the attackers from
the officer.
"He was Just a little guy. real·
ly. '' said Metro Police Officer
Milan Pilat.
Pilat 's rescuer disappeared
without identifying himself and
police are searching for him in
hopes of citing him for bravery.
"I just want to get a hold of
the guy and thank him personal·
ly. '• said Pilat, who suffered a
sprained finger, c uts, bruises
and a battered face when he was
struck by a foot-long chain.
cosmonauts sent into space by F==.:::.H~~=~=:!~E!£=t -V1~~'"K~:!~:Uo\01::~ -NE Visit? --_
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o.w:.:·.,L-~"""" "'"" ........ _. .. -.
Otftce• t.M••Mow JlOW.\l .. ~Sr,.., ~ .. Kl\ 11 .. 6-.... S•-t _,......., ....... .,,,s_,, __
_ .._. ll••rev JSJfl u ,.., -·'-~"·Teleptlofte (114)14M»1
C1Hl!n.cl Adwert1""9 M2-A1I
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have been board the orbitint NEW YORK <AP> -Former
laboratory since June 16. President Nixo~, who five
Carter Fights
For Program
GRAND TETON NATIONAL
PARK. Wyo. <AP> -President
Carter, determined to win the
con11ressional fight over his em-
battled energy legislation, Is
ending bis vacation two days
ea rly and returning to
Washington on Wednesday .
White House press secretary
Jody Powell announced Sunday
that Camr would sbave two
days from ha two-week western
hollday to work on "some very
crucial domestic matters that
are before Con"reas."
-·
months a10 proclatmed his love
of New York City, reportedly
plans a return visit to the Bif
Apple.
Newsweek magazine says that
Nlxon ii expected to deliver a
eulogy at a Sept. 13 memorial
service for E lmer Bobst, a
pharmaceutical executive,
philanthropist Ind Nixon backer
who died recently at age 93.
The ma1ailne said the two
knew one another tor 25 years
and grew so close that Nlxon
viewed Bobst as "a father ft1ure ."
Nixon wu in New York for the rtnt time ln sht years last April.
He llvld tn the clty between 1162
and 1868 -the years between
hl1 unauccestuJ bld to become
rovernor of CaUrornJa and hJs
election a president.
•
Boning A round
When Patti Coburn·s pal. Blaze. lost his winning smile.
she took the matter into her own hands by attempting to
clean up the horse ·s choppers. Patti. 15. of Ocala. Fla ..
bas been brushing the nag's teeth for a month now.
Fire Engines Face
Problem of Drivers
By REBECCA HELM
Of tM 0.111 .-t ... llflt
With lights flashing and siren
scr eaming, the red Orange
County paramedic van sped
down El TorORoad.
Attracted by the excitement of
the emergency, a teen-age boy
gunned his car and chased the
medics.
The van crossed into an on-
coming traffic lane as tne medic
driver wove a path thro&1gh thick
afternoon traffic along the six
lane street, quickly cutting back
to the right.
Too close to stop. the pursuing
car broadsided the fire vehicle.
which flipped to its roof and slid
to a stop .
Unhurt, the three m edics
crawled out and the teen-age
boy. unscratched. stepped from
his damaged car.
A few minutes away, a man
s uffering a heart attack lay
waiting.
In this 1976 accident, the heart
attack victim eventually
reached the hospital. And he s ur-
vived in spite of the follow-
the-leader teen-ager possessed
by what fire officials called the
"isn 'l·tt-neat-to-chase-the.fire·
truck." syndrome.
California law s tipulates that
all vehicles mus t pull to the
right and yield the right-of-way
to any emergency vehicle sound
ing a siren and exhibiting a red
light. But the simple directive is
rare ly followed, according to
fire officials.
"We expect people to do every·
thing but what they should do ...
Lag una Hills Captain Terry
Carson said.
Unlike the curious teen-ager.
most people just panic and don't
seem lo know what to do when
they see a fire engine.
"I've had them come from the
right hand lane and stop in front
of me." Carson said. "I've had
them just stop, period.
"We don't like to pass on the
right," he added. .rif the guy
then gives us the right-of-way
by pulling to the right and hits
us. the fire department is in the
wrong··
The fire captain described
some people's reactions as
particularly "stupid.'·
An example. he said. is the
person who is driving down a
four-lane freeway and stops in
front of the emergency vehicle
whe n three other lanes are
clear.
Frustrated firemen become
explicit tn describing the an·
cestry of s uch drlVers, Carson
said
But ·he admits that in today's
complicated roadway system,
yielding the right-of-way by
s imply pulling to the right is not
~ys possible or practical.
· 'lf people would just stop and
think for a second, 'OK, I have
to find a way w get out or this
fire engine's way,· that would
help us more than anything,"
Carson said.
On an emergency run, firemen
watch traffic closely and know
when someone cannot pull to the
right. according to Carson.
He described a few complex
s ituations and recommended the
appropriate action by drivers:
-If you are stopped at the in-
tersection. remain stopped. Do
not make any drastic moves,
-If you're in the left-hand
lane. all other lanes are blocked
and the traffic light is red. and
you see a fire truck coming up
behind you. if it is safe to do so
pull on through the intersection
and stop on the other side. If it is
not safe. stay there and the fire
engine will wait behind you witil
it is safe.
-If you are sitting in the mid·
die of the intersection when the
emergency vehicle approaches,
wait until 1t is safe and then
complete your turn and pull to
the right.
d
hawaiian ...
44 feahk>n ta&Md, newport center &44·5070
I ,
t I
ane
o.ilyl'lltlMMf ......
NIXONS OPEN ESTATE TO COUNTY REPUBLICANS
Former Prealdent and Flrat L•dY In Earlier Poae
Woman Spared
Bomb-wired Car
: Fails to Explode
A "well-constructed" pipe
bomb. hooked to a Capistrano
Beach woman's car ignitiOI\
failed to go off early Friday
because it was "improperly
•rounded," Orange County
Sheriff's officials said early this
~ornwa;--
A sheriff's lieutenant, wlM> wa@d' not .identify the intend•
bombioti victim "because it
would give us problems in our
investigation" said there is no
apparent motive for the at·
tempted bombing.
Tbe intended victim was
described as single and in her
mid 20s.
The bomb was placed under
the aeat of the woman's car, ac· c.ard1na" to Wtift'11 depllttes. lt ---aa. auaow bN' wla:ea to tbe
.
C4R MOJIES F ASl'
IN PILOT AD .
"I sold my car raster than 1 ever drove it, and I rot exactly
9hat I asked ror it."
. 'thaf I the ltory told by a SUC·
ceuflal one-Ume car salesman
wbo put thil ad iD the Daily
Pilot:
r
car's ignition system.
"It was well constructed and
put together by someone who
knew what he was doing," said
an investigator.
The woman's car, parked in
her-lfrivewar,woutd-net--st&rt at
about 10 a .m. Friday, the in·
vmlgamr. sattt. :Sbe...ebecked::un.-
der the hood and discovered
"addltionaJ wiring."
The investigator said the
woman's brother disconnected
the device and called the
sheriff's department
NixonPlam
NEW YORK <AP> -Former
President Nixon, who five
months ago proclaimed his love
or New York City, reportedly
plans a return visit to the Big
Apple.
Newsweek magazine says that
Nixon ia expected to deliver a
eulogy at a Sept. 13 memoriaJ
service for Elmer Bobst, a
pharmaceutical executive,
philanthropist and Nixon backer
who died recently at age 93.
The magazine said the two
knew one another for 25 years
and grew ao close that Nixon
viewed Bobst 11 ''a father
fl1ure." Nl•on was In New York for the
first lime in six yean lut April.
He llved ln the city between 1962
ud ltel -the years bet~
his unsuccestul bid to become
1overnor of California and his
election aa president.
I \
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of .. Deity"'-' ...... Former President Richard
Nixon opened his San Clemente
Estate Sunday to moi:e than 400
of the Orange County
Republican faithful who paid
$250 each to shake his hand and
lour his house.
The event. staged by the
county's GOP finance
committee, marked the first
time Nixon has participated in a
politically-oriented affair since
his resignation from office four
years ago. <Relatedstory,AS>
ll attracted a handful of
county Republican candidates
for what turned out lo be a
nearly apolitical evening.
The former president in a
brief speech discussed only one
issue -Proposition 13 and what
it means generally to
Republicans.
Other than that. the talk
covered baseball. his new
granddaughter or his memories
of early days in Orange County
as Nixon and his wife greeted
party goers in a receiving line.
A party spokesman estimated
that the event raised more than
$100,000 which will be used to
bolster the campaign coffers of
candidates such as Robert
Badham, seeking re-election to,
the 40th Congressional District, John Schmitz, running in the
36th State Senate District and
Marian Bergeson, a second-lime
candidate in the 74th Assembly
Di strict. All three candidates
were on hand Sunday evening.
Mr . Nixon was most
animated in 1reetine Mrs.
Dergeson, clasping her hands
several limes during their chat.
The former president and his
wife spent a little more than 90
minutes al the three·hour event
co·hos ted by a list of local
business and political leaders,
including industrialists J . Robert Fluor anct Arnold
Beckman.
Actor John Wayne, one of the
co-hosts. arrived with the
Nixons. but stayed less than a
half hour, departing the former
Western White House in one of
Fluor's corporate helicopters.
Partygoers were invited
through mailed invitations
restricted to county residents
that finance committee
members felt couJd pay the $250
per person ticket price to
support the Republican cause.
Guests met in Irvine for the
40·minute bus ride to Casa Pacifica. Guests from the soutb
county were bused to the party
from Concordia School in San
Clemente. A II were greeted at the
Spanisb·style home by mariachi
music, margaritas and Mexican
food from Nixon's favorite
restaurant, El Adobe in San
<See NIXON, Page A2>
$45,000 Fire
... ., ........... ..,o.,~
ENGINE IN FOREGROUND MARKS PATH OF PLANE
Tatl Section Stick• Out of Garage (Background)
Witnesses Cite
'~T IFJ' • ' ~-·-L~~.a "anu;pg
Joe Quintana, 40, a painter who lives at 2140 Federal
Ave., in the older Republic Homes tract of Costa Mesa.
thoueht It was the water heater exploding when the plane
bit his house about 9: 30 Sunday hight.
A little later, Quintana sat in the back seat or a police
car in nightclothes, watching his home burning.
He had rescued his exotic birds after getting wife Bertha, 28, and daughters Cecilia. S, and Marisa, 3, to
safety, but the plane hurtling out or the sky into the
carport destroyed the 1939 Cadillac he was restoring.
"There was no warning. We were Just able to jump out,'· said Quintana as his family huddled in the police car.
Other residents of the area lined Victoria Street.
expressing no hope for anyone who was in the plane.
"This makes four planes that have hit in our city."
remarked Costa Mesa Police Capt. Ed Glasgow.
· Brian McDaniel, 16, of 21996 Summerwind Lane,
Huntington Beach, and his buddy Larry Mosquita, 18, of
Reseda. just missed being killed in the crash.
"The plane hit over there and we were right under it."
said McDaniel, pointing to a gouge in Victoria Street.
"He)', It missed our car by 1S feet ... lt made a
touchdown there iand then slammed into the house."
Sue Ratkoski, 816 Victoria St .• did have warning of the
impending crash.
Trembling with emotion, her arms folded as though to
keep berseU warm, Mrs. Ratkoski recalled it in a
streetside interview.
·'Thole damn motorcyclists are racing along the street again." she remembers thinking, as she put her two little
boys to bed.
"Then I realized it wasn't motorcycles ... that the
noise was above the house and I knew it was a plane and it
was to trouble.
"My husband had just come in from the store and
came to tell the boys good night. We both knew it was a
plane ...
Hazes Home __ ~
-OFDocm ·-
"I ran into the kitchen and looked out the window and
as:d an explosion..and..saw the tail end sticking out of the
house all on fire," she continued. ·-.:!JI.}'. tnasbaDd c~ledth~fia:e.d~\..an4 I..i-aa...o\&&. ... -·and start.e<rdifecliiig fraffic oecause-al llie tfme it neeae:a--
to be done. Some cars were stopped ln front of our house.
A two·alarm fire damaged one
side and the roof of the Dr. Dar·
rell Burnett residence in Laguna
Niguel early today, Orange
County firemen reported.
An estimated $30,000 damage
was done to the home and
$15.000 worth of contents were
destroyed, firemen said. Tbe
house and it& filrn11blaa..were. u1lL cf al a roxtmalff
$250,000. Fire ofnctala said Dr. Burnett,
his wlfe and his two children
escaped the blazing house at
23872 Shady Tree Lane without
injury
Cause or the 1:27 a.m. fire ia
under investigation, a depart·
ment spokesman said.
Artifacts Sought
QUINCYi Mass. (AP) -
Artlfacts sto en this month from
the historic home of John and
Abiaall Adams ha~ been
recovered in woods about 500
yards from tbe house. Two boys
discovered two swords while
playint in the area and took
them home. The f atber of one ol
the boya called police, who on
Sunday found other ltema,
includina muskets, a Powdel"
horn and tbe 'tt'eddina vest of tho
nation's second president.
She had never performed as a traffic cop before.
"I Just did it because I bad to," she sllid, still shaking
as the blaze caused by the crash began to die down.
••n•1 hard to tibbe\llfthere-were no cars hit wttlnll the
traffic on this street," said her husband, Paul.
Quintana and his brother-in-law. Rudy Sanchez, 19,
started to attack what they tboqht was an exploding
water beater with a 1anlen bole before realising it was a
plane crash.
SiWae. watchi.Da his home bumint. I~~ -never v.U.jlOllibil aayUiaulbtii°ef4
Fed·Eases Limits
M 0 .
Oii ·Eurodollar Use
WASHINGTON <AP> -In
another action to h~lp support
ttM doUv, the Fedefal Reserve
Board took steps today to en·
couraae borrowiDI of fore\8ft·
held dOUan by American banltl.
About $$00 bllllon In U.S.
dollars •re held oveneu. ~Y are called "Eurodollara"
beHUM tbeJ are ouutde the
coatrol ot. U.S . banklo1 auta.orttMI. •
TM all'OU!lt of roret.cn·beld
doUan tiM arowa 1barp1J,ln re·
t
cent years, In part because ,of
the U.S. trade deficit that Mnda
dQUan abroatt, and tbey have
frequefttly beeh used by
speculators to drive down the
overall value of the dollar.
To eocouraie U1e of t.M ao-
called £Urodollan by American
banlta, tbe Fedtr•I Reserve
BOard today removed the re-
qulrement tb.iat u.s. baw must
maintain reserves equal ~-4
percent of wbat they bOm>w
abroad.
t
Eamily
ID House
Rescued
By MICHAEL PASKEVICH °'_.,..., ...........
Investigators today studied
charred wreckage from a
Sunday night plane crash in
Costa Mesa that killed two
Oxnard couplies, but sa-d they
had' rew clues to the cause of the
crash.
Identities of the four dead
people were being withheld
today by Orange County
Coroners until all family
members were notifled.
The plane slammed into the
garage of a home at 2140
Federal Ave., Costa Mesa at
about 9:40 p.m .. but all five
members of the Joe Quintana
family were able to escape
without htjury.
The two couples apparentJy
Clew out of Orange County
airport at 9:30 p.m. Sunday after
attending a wedding.
Scores of people told police
they saw and heard the twin
engine Beechcraet Baron in
distress over the west side Costa
Mesa neifhborhood.
An of -duty Irvine police
officer, Pat Rogers, saw the
plane bank sharply right. its
right wing engine afire and
lights out. and then curve Into
the ground. exploding in a ball of fire.
However, other witnesses said
the light plane was not on fire
when it plummeted toward the
Quintana home. narrowly
missing a home on the north side
of Victoria.
A Huntinlton Beach man who was driving by said he "couJd
feel the beat" of the explosion.
"We are assuming they were
headed home to Oxnard," said
Guy Moshier, investigator for the National Transportation
Safety Board <NTSB>.
He said the pilot did not file a
flight plan with Orange County
Airport. Tower officials today
said they heard no warnings of
trouble from the aircraft before
it went down. ·'All the important
instruments were destroyed by
impact or the fire." Moshier
said today.
He said the joint NTSB and
<See PLANE, Pa1e A21
Sky Display
'Dazzling'
CONCORD, Mass.<APl -A
display of northern hghts lit up
parts or the Northern
Hemisphere early today. One
meteorologist described them as
the most dazzling in more than a
decade.
•• j
"Waves or light were just
shoo"1:11 up as high as you could
see with bands of light, green
and pink, about 20 to 30 degrees
over the northern horizon," said
Stuart Soroka of Environmental
Reseatch and Technology, a
private.. w•ather (~F~ting'
firm here. --wu.i.lcer · ¥tationr '..t111>~11r.wt.:=.:. ~--·L -
much of Canada reported seeing
the lights, as weJI as stations In
Pierre, S.D .• Bangor, Maine,
and ldlMeapolis, Soroka said.
Coast
eatber
Patchy early morning
low clouds, otherwise f'ir
through Tuesday. A little
warmer Tuesday with
highs ranging from
mld-708 at the beaches to
upper IOs inland. Lows
tonight 65 to 75 .
INSIDE TODA~
Yo~• I to 16 learn
about IQUjng in o Balboa
Vache Club program. See
pholo1,l'oQfCI.
•••ex
11
J
I •
L§C
, ...... _ ....
NIXON RECEPTION. • •
Pontiff
Retains
Officials
. . . ...
.. .
VATICAN CITY (AP) -Pope •
John Paul I demonstrated todC)t
his dedication to the policies (11
Pope Paul VI by eontiDulJll •
office the chief omct ... ol ..
Roman Catholic Cbu.rcb'a cea·
tral administratioo q.polna.ed b)'
bl• predeceslor.
Juar.C~
Aboul"beU an boor after
gue1ta re ushered into the
swimm1n1 pool ar~a ind
g1 rd ens , tht Nlxons ,
arcompamed by Wayne. st.rolled
1n froro the house.
Repullbean .ctlvlat Victor
Aadrewa who auured the
Nlxooa t.bey bad UM "love and admiration of not oaly the
people here, but mllllon1 of cilium lo th.la s,reat nation of oun." Andrewa' lntroductlon
was punctuated by applauae ~m the crowd.
..........
TAIL SECTION WA881GGEST PIECE LEFT OFBEECHCAAFT BARON AFTER CRASH
TWlft.engine Cnlft Torn to 81t• by lmp•ct Sund•y Night In Co1ta Meu
The new pontiff reappointed
French Cardinal Jean Villot a
Secretary of Stale, tbe
equlvalent of the Vatican's
prime minister. and the beadt ol
the l1iDe Sacred Congregations,
the main departments of u.e
VaUcan CUrla.
Among the latter is Cardinal
John Wright of the United
States. wbo beads the Conereaa-
tton for the Clergy and did not
participate in the election or
Pope J ohn P a ul Saturday
because he was recuperating
from eye aureery in Bolton.
Tbe form r president, trim
and tanned. was dressed 10 gray
slacks and a navy blue Jacket.
Mrs. Nixon wore 1 pink, floor
length gown set off by a double
:strand of pearls.
They were introduced by
Thieves Rob
Rich Widow
Of Jewelry
CANNES, France CAP>
Three months ago, thieves
robbed American millionairess
Florence Gould or her art
treasures. Sunday, a trio got
away with her jewels, worth
millions of dollars, police said.
Mrs . Gould, widow of an heir
of the American railroad tycoon,
was visiting friends elsewhere in
Cannes when three young
masked, armed men broke into
her 42-room villa El Patio dur-
ing the day, tied her Brazilian
maid to a Louis XVI chair and
gagged her, and spent half an
hour collecting the jewels in her
bedroom and what cash they
could find, the police reported.
Another member of the
household staff found the maid
a nd called the police. The
thieves were described as highly
professional. and no leads were
reported.
The theft. of her art collection.
which included paintings by
Renoir and Bonnard, is still un-
solved.
Mrs. Gould is the widow of
Frank Jay Gould, who died in
1956 art.er they had been married
for 33 years. She has been a
leading member of Riviera
society for years.
Garden Grove
Girl Killed
In Boat Fall
TAFT <AP> -A Garden
Grove girl was killed when she
fell off the bow of a boat and was
run over by the propeller on
Lake Webb near here, the Kem
County coroner 's office
reported.
Christina Allen, 13, of 11451
Bowles Ave .. was riding on the
bow as her uncle. Jim Ed Jones
of Garden Grove. drove toward
the dock Sunday. When he
slowed, she pitched forward in
front of the boat, authorities
said. Jones tried to put the motor in
reverse but mistakenly bit full
throttle, running the boat's bow
onto the dock, a deputy c6roner
said.
The propeller sliced off one
side of the girl's head and
sev e r e d h er right arm.
authorities said.
Nixon spoke for about 10
minutes. JCivi~ a Republican pep talk that avoided 1pecllic
political subjects, except when
be came to Propoaitlon 13 and
the taxpayers' revolt.
Be said the long-held Republican belief lo llmiUn1
government spending ''is a
cause worth ctvlng to and workinc for."
He toQk a verbal swipe at two
of bis tavorite tarcets -eastern
liberals and the media, blamlog
them tor not recognizing the
importance of Proposition 13,
which be rired.icted would be the
most s enificaot issue
nationwide by 1980.
·'They said it was just
something the kooky
Californians had done." Nixon
said. He told the crowd similar
ballot issues would be appearing
in other parts of the country.
After his talk, the ex-president
and bis wife were joined by
son -in-law David Eisenhower to
receive their guests.
Nixon autographed copies of
his memoirs brought by
pa r tygoesrs a nd c hatted
amiably, pausing from time to
time to pose for photographs.
Guests were invited to tour the Nixon home, which has not been
opened to the public since it was
purchased as the Western White
House in 1969.
The home's living room and
dining room, decorated with
oriental art objects, were viewed
by partygoers who were told
that all the flower arrangements
were prepared by Mrs. Nixon.
The second-floor study used by
Nixon and his ground-fl oor
bedroom were also opened to
guests who admired needlework
by daughter Julie Eisenhower
that decorated both rooms.
The home was closed to tours
at about 6 p.m . when the Nixons left the party.
PLANE •••
Federal Aviation Administration investigation could take as long
u three months. Moshier said interviews with
witnesses would continue to
establish "what attracted their
attention to what was happening
lo the air."
He saJd it was not uncommon
for confiicting reports to be filed
by witnesses to a plane crash.
The plane struck the garage of
the Quintana home, destroying a
vintage 1939 Cadillac and
causing heavy damage to a
hedge and palm tree.
However. Costa Mesa firemen
had the blaze out before serious
structure damage resulted.
The four occupants of the
plane apparently died within
seconds after the collision. One young witness to the
crash said the plane came in at
full throtUe, the pilot apparently
unable to ease the plane into an
emergency landing on Victoria
Street.
Burglars Hit
Laguna Area
·Two weekend breakins at
Laguna Beach homes netted
burglars patio furniture and
cash. police said today.
Terry Heagney. of 432 Park
Ave., reported the loss of $35 in
cash from his home sometime
over the weekend. The thieves
broke a $500 window to gain en-
trance to the home where they
discovered the cash and fled.
In a second incident. Joanne
Sadler told police someone en-
tered her back yard and took
patio furniture and plants
val ued at $445 during the weekend.
A.ir ·Cleared
Outhouse Skunk Removed
BUTTE, Mont. <AP> -Smoke bombs didn't work. Neither did dumping the daily proceeds of a
portable toilet on his head.
But after six days, Forest Service officials
finally shooed an unwelcome guest from their
outhouse by dropping a noose around his neck and yanking him upward.
Ranger Dean Reed said the invader of the only
outhouse at Highland Mountain ·s fire-lookout station was a skunk.
It apparently crawled under the outhouse and
fell into the hole, Reed said.
Mediators Attempt
Postal Compromise
~-WASHINGTON (AP> -With
a ·strike deadline of tonight,
federal mediators met today
with representatives of the
Postal Service and its unions in
an effort to avert the threatened
walkout.
menl ranks, gaYe him -64Weral-
standing ovations. MADRID, Spain <AP>
Police say terrorists shot and
killed three poUcemen In almost
simultaneous attacks today in
northern and west.em Spain.
'
OAANOE COAST
DAILY PILOT
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However, no progress was re-
ported while the meetings were
under way and Postmaster
General William F. Bolger
restated bis hard-line position
that.. unimr -leadera ha~ uid ~-ucJ aketuaUve:&.o a . ger
walkout will not materialize.
Chief federal mediator Wayne
·Horvitz met with the two sides
both separate ly and together,
spokesman John Rogers said.
But Rogers said there was no
breakthrough to r eport.
Whlle the meetings were being
held at the mediation service,
Bolger made a speech elaewbere
In W ashlngton repeatlna his de·
term.lnation not to sweeten a Len·
taUve contract that tbe unions
consider inadequate.
"Havine turned down that
contract, the unions now want us
to return to lbe bar&ainin& table.
But, 81 far u I'm coacemed, we
dld our bar1alnin1. We eave ln
on some thlnga we wanted, and
the uniom gave lo on IOIDe they
wanted," Bolger told the con·
venUon of the NaUonaJ lAatue
of Postmuters.
The postma~ers, who 1eneral-
ly are at lower-level mana1e·
'·
Questioned after his speech
about the strike possibility,
Bolger again pr edicted one would not materialize.
·1 mailed my telephone bill to·
day.'• he said.
Bolger. as be bas frequently in
the past, pressed for pursuing
the legal steps when a contract
is rejected. These steps include
binding arbitration.. .if the two
aldee cannot flnd-llllll ~
1e said that e doesn't
think that most of his employees
want an illegal at.rite.
·'They reaUze that a strike
would do permanent damage to
the Postal Service."
He said the diversion ot much
mail to other means of delivery
would hurt the unions by reduc-
ing the need for manpower In
the Post.al Service.
"A strike would be the worst
posslbJe Wng that could happen
to the Poatal Service," Botier
Hid.
One union president ts man-
dated by members to call a
atrtke by mldnl&bt EDT tonight lr there is no reaumpUon or
baraalning. Another unJon presi-
dent, under similar mandate.
has a midnl1bt Wednesday dead~ne.
....
Heart Attack Kills
Actor Robert Shaw
NEW YORK CAP) -Robert
Sha w . the actor known for
portrayals or rugged adven-
turers in such movies as "Jaws"
and "The Deep." died or an ap-
parent heart attack near his
home In Tourmakeady Island
near Dublin, hls New York press
agent reported today.
The 51-year-old actor, who
also wrote several books and
plays. was driving with his wife
Virginia and 1 '12-year-old son
Thomas at about S p.m. Sunday
when he suffered the attack.
said publicist Myrna Post. He died at home, she said.
Born in Lancashire, England,
Shaw started his acting career
as a member of the Old Vic
drama company in the 1950s and
performed In numerous produc-
tions in England.
The brown-haired, blue-eyed
Shaw came to the attention of
the American movie -going
oublic as a villain in the James
Bond movie, "From Russia
With Love," He went on to ap·
pear in such films as ''Robin
and-Marian," "The Sting" and
"'Black Sunday," but found his
greatest-acclaim as a fisherman
in the thrillers, "Jaws" and
"The Deep."
Two films made before his
death, "Force Ten from
Navarone" and "Avalanche Ex·
press." have not been released.
lo addition. Shaw made a
name for himself as a writer
His first book. "The Hiding
Place." was published in 1959. It
was about wartime Germany,
and recently was made into a
full-length motion picture. He
wrote four other novels.
Shaw aJso wrote three plays,
among them "The Man In The
Glass Booth," a docu-drama
about the trial of Nazi Adolf
Eichmann.
Shaw, whose first wife. ac-
tress Mary Ure. died several
years ago, is survived by his
wife and 10 children.
750 Deaths Listed
JOHANNESBURG. South
Africa <AP> -South African
troops who crossed into Zambia
last week killed an estimated 600
to 750 guerrillas of the
South -West Africa People's
Organization in retaliation for a SW A PO shelling that killed 10
South African troops and
wounded nine. a Johannesburg
newspaper reported today.
.... ,,........
SUCCUMBS AT 51
Actor Robert Shaw
Genesis Says
Pot's Fine?
Judge Differs
OLATHE, Kan. CAP> -Herb
Overton says God's word in
Genesis 1:29 gave hlm the right
to smoke pot. Judge Earl Jones
of Johnson County District Court
disagreed, but said Overton
could "appeal to a higher authority.··
Overton. 31, of Olathe, was
charged with possession of marl·
juana.
After a lengthy search for a
Bible containing the Old Testa·
ml!nt -one was finally found in
the county jail -the judge read
the biblical verse: "And God
said, Behold. I have given you
every herb bearing seed. which
is upon the face of all the earth.
and every tree yielding seed. lo
you it shall be for meat."
The judge told Overton. "As a
mere mortal. I am going to find
you guilty or possession of mari·
juana. If you want to appeal to a
higher authority. that's fine with
me."
Sentencing was scheduled for Oct. 19.
In another affirmation of Pope
Paul's policy. the pope recon-
firmed Archbishop A1ostlno
Casaroli as Secretary of the
Council for Public Aff alrs, tile
Vatican's foreign minister. .
The Vatican announcement
said all the beads of conares•· lions would serve tbe remainder
of the flve-year terms to wbicb
they were appointed by Pope
Paul. However, this five-year
period does not apply to Vlllot.
Casaroli. or Arebbbhop
Giuseppe Caprlo, the substitute
secretary of state. who are tbe
pope·~ penional choices.
ln addition to Cardinal Wright.
the congregation beads are
Cardinal Franjo Seper of
Yugoslavia. the Congregation
for tbe Doctrine or the Faith, the
former Holy Office ; Cardinal
Sebastiano Baggio. Congrega-
tion of Bi.shops: Cardinal James
P . Knox, Australia, Sacraments
and Divine Worship; Cardinal
Eduardo Pironio, Argentina,
Congregation for the Religious;
Ca rdina l Agnelo Rossi.
Evangeli.zation of the Peoples:
Cardinal Corrado Baftle, Italy.
Causes of the Saints; Cardinat
Gabriel Marie Garrone, France,
Catholic Education; Cardinal
Pierre Paul Philippe, France,
Oriental Churches.
Vatican sources said the pope
may caJJ a consistory this year
to appoin t ne w cardinals.
Several cities which traditional-
ly have cardinals presently are
headed by bishops. They include
Tokyo. Dublin and Turin. Also,
the pope is said to have prom--
ised a cardinal's red bat to
Bishop Ernesto Civardi,
secretary or th.e conclave which
elected blm.
Sea Collision
Investigated
LE HAVRE. France
<AP> -M ari tim e
authorities opened an in·
vestigation into the col-
lision between a British
coaster and a 16,000 -ton
freighter that left at least
one dead and four miss-ing.
Rescuers saw virtually
no hope that the missing
men. trapped underwater
when their 850-ton vessel
Mary Weston capsized.
might still be alive.
"All hope for their sur-
vival must now be con-
sidered very remote."
said the Mary Weston ·s
owners.
d
hawa1ian ...
•
,,,
7
• I
VOL. 11, NO. Z40. S SECTIONS, 21 PAGES
a, AaTlllla a." VINIA ..............
Joe ~an•, •. a pahUr wt.o UYet et n• l'ederal Av... iD oWer lt.eDublle Homel tract ot Cotta ll•a, tboubl ll ... tbe water beaWf esplodlnC wbetl UM plane
bit w.· ......... t :• SUndQ n10t. .
A. tittle latec, QulDUma nt tn tbe back 1eat ol a ponce·
Hf la~ Watcbiq Ida bolfte tiQmJna,
Be ild · ~ k1I emk b6rda after~ 1ettlal wlfe lertAa. a Mid dnPten c.cwa. 5, ud Marisa, 3, to aaf~. bat UM· ,plane bu.rtlial ~ ot the ally lDto tbe
carport deltroJed the t• Cadlllac he wu restortna. .. ,,_.. wu DO wamlq. We were Juat able to jump
out, .. Mid Quh•teu as bis family baMldled 1n the Pollee car. OU.-,_.,._ ol u.e area lined Victoria Street,
HPreatnc ao hope for anyone who was in tbe plane.
''Tbil makes four planes that have bit In our city,"
remarked Oosta Mesa Police Capt. Ed Glasgow.
Brian McDaniel, 16, of %1996 Summerwlnd Lane,
Mesa
Opens Bmne
Nixon Is Host
To Republicans
By JOANNE REYNOLDS OI .. DMty ...... Sutt
Former President Richard
Nixon opened his San Clemente
Estate Sunday to more than 400
of the Orange County
Republican faithful who paid
$250 each to shake bis hand and
tour his house.
The event, s taged by the
county's GOP finance
committee. marked the first time Nixon has participated in a
politically-oriented affair since
his resignation from office four
years ago. c Related story, AS>
. Laun.watering
Cutback A8ked
For Bluffs
It attracted a handful of
county Rep .. blican candidates
for what turned out to be a
nearly apolitical evening.
The former president in a
brief speech discussed only one
issue -Proposition 13 and what
it means generally lo
Republicans.
Other than that, the talk
cover ed baseball, his new
granddaughter or his memories
of early days in Orange County
as Nixon and his wife greeted
party goers in a receiving line.
Residents of The Bluffs may
be asked to atain reduce the
amount of water they put on
their lawns in an attempt to rid
the area of groundwater that is
erpding the bluffline and en·
dangering a sewer line.
The landscaping irrigation cut·
back is one of three staff
recommendations to be discussed
at tonight's Newport Neach City
Council meeting.
Councilmen, earlier this sum·
mer. were told by a consultant
that the water flowing through
the ground under The Bluffs
came from outside the area, to
the east of Easlbluff Drive.
Consulting engineers from
James Montgomery and As·
sociates estimated that a total of
250 acre feet flowed through the
area annually, of which 200 acre
feet came from east of Eastbluff
Drive.
But those findings proved to
be erroneous. A new report,
given councilmen at their after-
noon study session today listed a
total of 60 acre feet flowing
through the ground each year,
with about 38 acre feet CO\hlJlg
from outside The Bluffs.
Based on those new findings,
st PH members recommended
three projects to reduce the
problem:.
-lnstallation of drains
(Se~ CUTBACK, Page AZ>
Coast
INSIDE TOD" '1
Yowtgstns I to 16 lccm
about lailing an a Balboc
Yocht Club program. See
phoC01,PageCl. , .•.
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l__..11 F 111• ......... M ......... ,,.,
,
I \
A party spokesman estimated
that the event raised more than
$100,000 which will be used to
bolster the campaign coffers of
candidates such as Robert
Badham, seeking re-election to
· the 40th Congressional District,
John Schmitz, running in the
36th State Senate District and
Marian Bergeson. a second-time
candidate in the 74th Assembly
District. All three candidates
were on band Sunday evening.
Mr . Nixon was most
animated in greeting Mrs.
Bergeson, clasping her hands
several limes during their chat.
The former president and his
wife spent a little more than 90
minutes at the three-hour event
CO·hosted by a list of local
business and poHlical leaders,
including industrialists J .
Robert Fluor and Arnold
Beckman.
Actor John Wayne, one of the
co-hosts. arrived with the
Nixons, but stayed less than a
haJf hour, departing the former
Western White House In one of
Fluor's corporate helicopters.
Partygoers were invited
through mailed invitations
restricted to county residents
<See NIXON, Pw&w1uf
Mrs. Phillips
FimdRites
Set Tuesday
Gladys Hoffman Phillips, a resi·
dent of Costa Mesa for more
Uian 50 years who died Saturday
at Costa Mesa Memorial
Hospital. She WU 82.
Servi~ will begin at 10:30
a.m . at Westminster Memorial
Park, Westmlnster.
Mrs. Phillips, a native of
Norwalk, first came to the
Orange Cout area in 1912, living
briefly in Westminster before
"'ovln1 to what later became
Cos•a Mesa.
She was an avid gardener at
ber home at2441 Elden Ave.
Mn. PbilUPI ls survived by
her husband, Bentley: a
dauabter t Ella Brown of Costa Meaa ana a 1ia&er, Frances Hay
of Orecon. Mn. Phillips also
leaves seven grandchildren and
181reat-graadchildren.
t
l ~!'-----'!1!11~--~--.-----........ lallll! .... __ ............................. ______ ,,
Huntlnat.On Be~b. and bis buddy La!'r)t ll~ta. 11, of
Reaeda, Jmt milled belna killed ID the crash .
•'The plane bit over there and we wen rltht uiMler lt, ••
Hid Kct>enlel, pointing to a c~ la Victoria stnet. "Hey, it milled our car by 11 feet. .. It made a
touchdown there and then slammed into the house."
Sue Ratkoskl, ate Victoria St •• did have wamtna of the
·impen=r;ruh. • Trem with emotl0n, her arms folded u to
keep Mnel warm, Mrs. R•tkoeld recalled~ a
streetaide interview.
''Thole damn motorcycllltl are ~ alone the street
again," abe remembers thlnldq, u ehi put ber two little
boys tobed.
"Then I realized it wasn't motorC)'elel ••. tbat tbe
noise was above tbe house and l b9w It was a ,a-llDd it
was tn trouble.
"My husband bad just come 1D from tbe store and
came to tell the boys good ntCbt. We bcKh knew it wu a
plane ...
Mesa Eateries,
Night Club
Report TM/ts
Two Costa Mesa restaurants
and a comedy club In Santa Ana
Heights fell victim to armed rob·
bers in separate Incidents Sun-
day. police said today.
Investigators believe the ski
masked man who robbed Love's
Wood Pit Barbeque diner in
Costa Mesa at 9:30 p.m . Sunday
may be the same man who
pulled off a similar heist in
Irvine 35 mlnutes earlier.
The masked bandit, armed
with a .45 caliber handgun.
leaped over the bar at the Love's
restaurant, 10346 Bristol St., and
cleaned out two cash registers of
an unknown amount of cash.
There were no injuries.
In the Irvine robbery, a
masked man fitting the same
description escaped with $1,500
from the Village Pantry, 5301
University Drive, Irvine.
'Orange County Sheriff's dep·
uties said $70 was taken Sun·
day evening from the Laff Stop
club by a man wllo dldn"t utter
....one w.1>!}llr01n.Jhe time be en·
term! ffie premises to the mo·
ment he Jen.
••1 ran bito the kiuheli and looked out tbe Wt.ndo'N and
heard a eXDlolioo and aaw the tall end aticJdna out of the
boUle all on lire," she continued. ·
.. lly buiblDd called the fire department and I ran out
and •tarted dtrecttq traffic because at the time it needed
to be dODe. Some can were stopped ln front of our bouH. Sbe bad never performed as a traffic cop before.
"I Just cl.kt it becau.e I had to." ahe said., sWl shakiq
u the blue caused by the crash becan to die Clown. uu•a bard to believe there were no cars bit with all the
traffic oa this street," said ber husband. Paul.
Quintana and bil brotber·in·law, Rudy Sanchez, 19,
started to attack what they tboqbt wu an expJocliq
water hea~ with a sarden hose before realiliq it wu a plane crash. .
SllUQs, waublng his bome burninc. Quintana said be never pve tbe possil>Wty any thouaht before. "But wben you read the paper, you wom." he said. ~fore feavtnc to make a telephOne call to an aunt.
''Sbe might be worried. • . , " be said.
Family
Escapes
Injuries
By MlatAEL PASKEVICH OI •Delly l'tlM SUtt
Investigators today studied
charred wreckage from a
Sunday night plane crash in
Costa Mesa that killed two
Oxnard couples. but said they
had rew clues to the cause or the
crash.
Identities of the four dead
people were being withheld
today by Orange County
Coroners until all family
members were notified .
The plane slammed into the
garage or • home at 2140
Federal Ave., Costa Mesa at
about 9:IO p.m .J b\# all five
MORE CRASH PHOTOS
APPEAR ON PAGE 3
members of the Joe Quintana
fam lly were able to escape
without injury.
The two couples apparently
flew out of Orange County
airport at 9:30 p.m. Sunday after
attending a wedding.
Scores of people told police
they saw and heard the twin
engine Beechcraft Baron in
distress over the west side Co6ta
Mesa neighborhood.
An off.duty Irvine police
officer. Pat Rogers. saw the
plane bank sharply right, its
right wing engine afire and
lights out. and then curve into
the ground. exploding in a ball
of fire.
However. other witnesses said
the light plane was not on fire
when It plummeted toward the
Quintana home. narrowly
missing a home on the north side
or Victoria.
A HunlinJ{ton Beach man who
was driving by said be ··could
feel the heat .. or the explosion.
"We are assuming they were
headed borne to Oxnard ... said
Guy Moshier, investigator for
the National Transportation
Safety Board <NTSBL
He said the pilot did not file a
flight plan with Orange County
Airport. Tower officials today
aid they heard no warnings of
trouble from the aircraft before
-it went doWn: ~ • · · -· · --• -·-~·"
The robbery at the Santa Ana
Heights area club, 2122 S.E.
Bristol St., occurred when the
intruder jumped lQto the
cashier's area and revealed a
blue steel automatic weapon.
....., ..... ,....,..., .........
ENGINE IN FOREOROUND'MARKS PATH OF PLANE
"A ll the important
instruments were destroyed by
impact or the fire," Moshier
said today.
. He said the joint NTSB and
Federal A-vtat.lon Admlnistratton
invesUgation could take as long
as three mootbs. The string or armed robberies
began at 3:35 a.m. Sunday when
a man with a handgun made his
wa_)' thro~b the-. ldtcben door -and· ~mJ>lojeesjif'a .... nOllJer
over an estimated $4,000.
Police said the robbery at the
Reuben's Restaurant at 1555
Adams Ave. occurred as the
restaurant was closin1 for the
evening.
Newport Police
Probe Jewel Theft
Newport Beach police today
investieat.ed the theft of Jewelry
valued at more than n.eoo from
a home In The Bh11fa.
Resident Richard K. Menkin
said be dilcovered the theft Fri·
day morn.ina.
Police laid the bur1Jar pried
open a sUdina window to 1et into
the bowie.
• ..
Teti s.ctton 8tlcka OUt of Garage (Bact(gfound)
BUU.ETIN
WASHINGTON (AP) -fte
Poltal Ser'fke alfetd &Illa after·
...... reepee Mpdatlou wtdt
........ tbl bad ~.... to
a&rlke, delaJtq for tS day1 QY ,....we Mrtb. a ..... IOUee
npertM.
F . Bolge.r's warning came as
cbief federal mediator Wayne
Horvttz met wlth represen·
tativea of the Postal Servlce and
tbe three un1oa.s that recently re·
jected a tentative settlement.
The rejectiom set the st.ace
for a poNible walkout as early
as toftlaht. deaplte a federal
eour.t order prohlblting a work
lto.J>PJP or alowdown.
Tbe PoAal Service for fieeks
hu Men developiftf conUn1ency
plan• whlCb wo~d include the
ute of teideral troops to help aort
and · deJlver the malls. But
Bol1er ~ that a strike wo~td cause widespread
(8" IUJL. P~e Al>
CSee PLANE. Page A%)
IN PILOT AD
"I sold my car faster than-r
ever drove it, and t got exactly
what I asked for It."
That's the story told by a sue·
cess(uJ one-time car salesman
who put this ad in the Dally
Pilot:
'71 LTD 4 doOr. Gd tires.
brks. Gd trans. S6001offr
XlUMtXXX
tf you bave 1 car you want to
sell, call 6'2·5818. You don't
even have lo write the ad,
because our friendly ad-vlson
wlll help you wrttJ a best seller
The Daily PUot i5 a place
wh1re puttinJ in your two cent!
can mean cuh returns
• It .. I
r
,ti ~y PtlOT N&
Chained
Woman
Killed
YUMA. Area. <A.P l -A
cha•r.ed ..amaa mptoyee ttied, ,.. ... , by ~w,.,, 1DO&.Mr
WAI &hat and wounded and M\ttn
otben chained b)' a robber wwbo
took m holtqe u the1 ar·
rtV'9d for ..or\ • a aupermamit
today pollcie 8*.
f>o!tee ul"l'GG8ded the bulklnC
-oae fll \he laracst Saleway
Marl..eta in UW area -and INlde
4 1una.a•necl)' Mareh ol tbe
bo>.·laden attic but wd the rob-
ber •pparanlly eecaped with a.be
contenta ol Ule aaf
Jesse Gard.a. m•llqer ot the
Sleat department, uld tb•
'ltrOtr. all wbio died -ide:cltified •
Laur a Bohannon -had not re-
atsled wbm dWIK!ld bul became
upset wbeo a later-arrtviJl1
~om an resisted and wu shot.
Ke said Mn. ~•anon eilber
•lipped "' bad IOllM 50l't fll • aeiaure, possibly a heart aU.ack.
and reu forward qainst a cb.ain
which was around ber oeek and
a pipe.
"I yelled. 'She's dying, she's
dying.· but the man just cussed
at her. and said, 'If she wants to die, let her go ahead and die',"
Garcia told a reporter.
The dead woman's husband.
Jack. who reportedly had heart
surgery recenUy, collapsed in
the market's parking lot and
was taken to a bospllal by am·
bulance. He was discharged
several hours later.
Garcia said when he arrived
at 5 a .m. two men already were
chained to the pipes of a com-
pressor. He said employees
were taken hostage at gunpoint
Deity ...............
the robber had a handgun -
as they arrived over tbe eext
three hours. Some men had to
remove their trousers.
Police said the robber was
described as a youna man wear·
ing a mask, dark pants and dark
shirt. For several hours, he was
believed in the building.
NlXONS OPEN ESTATE TO COUNTY REPUBLICANS
Former Pre9'dent •nd First Lady In E•rtler PoM
F,....P-AJ
Fire Department trucks
raised ladders to the roof of the
one-story building so police
could reach it.
NIXON RECEPTION. • •
He is believed to have fled
arter rorcing a woman employee
t.o open the store safe. Garcia
said he took ··a large bag of
money."
The dead woman was found
still chained to a wall, police
said. An employee reporting for
" work noticed her and called
police, officers said.
The wounded employee, iden-
tified as Flora Burks, was shot
in th~ stomach and thigh. Her
condition was regarded as
serious. police said. Ambulance
attendants said she had ''lost a
lot of blood."
The robber apparently gained
entrance by lowering himself by
a rope after breaking a hole in
the roof. The building is on the
north side of town on Fourth
Avenue, the main commercial
street.
Newport Bay
Span Funded
The allocation of funds for a
new Pacific Coast Highway
bridge over Upper Newport Bay
has been approved by the state
Transportation Commission. The $3.6 million allocation was
part of a $4.20 million package
recommended by CalTrans
Director Adriana Gianturco.
City officials in Newport
Beach said the construction
timetable for the bridge calls for
its completion by mid·l981.
750 Deaths Listed
that finance committee
members felt could pay the $250
per person ticket price to
support the Republican cause.
Gue'Sts met in Irvine for the
40-minute bus ride to Casa
Pacifica. Guests from the south
county were bused to the party
from Concordia School in San
Clemente.
A 11 were greeted at the
Spanish·style home by mariachi music, margaritas and Mexican
food from Nixon's favorite
restaurant. El Adobe in San
Juan Capistrano.
A bout half an hour alter
guests were ushered into the
swimming pool area and
gardens . the Nixons ,
accompanied by Wayne. strolled
in from the house.
The former president. trim
and tanned. was dressed in gray slacks and a navy blue jacket.
Mrs. Nixon wore a pink, floor
length gown set off by a double
strand of pearls.
They were introduced by
Republican activist Victor
Andrews who assured the
Nixons they had the "love and
admiration of not only the
people here, but millions of
citizens in this great nation of
ours." Andrews' introduction
was punctuated by applause
E'ro• Page A I
PLANE ...
Moshier said interviews with
witnesses would continue to
establish ''what attracted their
attention to what was happening
in the air.'' ·
He said it was not uncommon
JOHANNESBURG, South for conllicting reports to be filed
Africa <AP> -South African by wit.Pesses to a plane crash.
troops who crossed lnt.o Zambia The plane struck the 1uage of
last week killed an estimated 600 fbe Qubifiha riome.~smrymca
•.. ,. J.D ~lA.O . .c"eLrillas o( the vintage 1939 Cadillac and ~CJuttr-West-AH-foia "Peopk•&-eau&in~ee¥y damage to a
Organization in retaliation for a hedge and palm tree.
SW A PO shelling that killed 10 frowever, Costa Mesa firemen
South African troops and had the blaze out before serious
wounded nine, a Johannesburg structure damage resulted.
'
newspaper reported todey. The four occupant& of the plane apparently died within
seconds after the collision. O"ANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
.. _ .. _ ......... ~-
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t!Oltor
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Tetep1tone en•)~
Cla .. lfhtd AdYer11elftt IOa7' -· ... , ... -°" ... 111~• .,_,....,_ . .........,
--"'°'-~.~ ... 144).1220
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er.-.. ,. Or._ c.tl ~.. • ........ c-,.. -....-.. II--· .. _ •• •• "~''' .. -•• ,..,.,ft "'n .,, ~:.;..~::.:"'"' -lat .. ft'lllM1911 ..
l:,r;:, .. W'\!:'.!~.:. ... : ,~::. ~~ =r...."n ::::..J~,:o -MV 11tllltt •Y
One young witness to the
crash sa>d the plane came in at full throttle. the pilot apparently
unable to ease the plane into an
emei: ency l•nding on.. Victoria.
Carter Fights
For Program
GRAND TETON NATIONAL
PARK, Wyo. <AP> -President
Carter, determined to win the
rongressional fight over his em-
b:-ttled energy legislation, is
ending his vacation two days ~urlv an d returnina to
Washlngior1 on Wednesday.
White House press secretary
Jody Powell announced Sunday
that Carter would shave two
daya rrom hla two-weelt western
holiday to work on "some v ry
crucial domestic matter& that
are before Con.cress."
Heading the list is delicate
natural gas compromise lelisla·
lion that la the centerpiece of
Carter's ener1y plan.
,,..._.. --
from the crowd.
Nixon spoke for about 10
minutes. jlivin" a Republican pep lalJc that avoided spect!ic
political subjects, except when
he came to Proposition 13 and
the taxpayers' revolt.
He said the long-held
Republican belief in limiting
government spending "is a
cause wOTth giving to and working for."
He took a verbal swipe at two
of his favorite targets -eastern
liberals and the media, blaming
them for not recognizing the
importarice of Proposition 13,
which he rredicted would be the
most s gnlficant issu e nationwide by 1980.
"They said it was just
somet hing the kook y
Californians had done." Nixon
said. He told the crowd similar
ballot issues would be appearing
in other parts of the country.
After his taJk, the ex.president
and his wife were joined by
son·in·law David Eisenhower to
receive their guests.
Nixon autographed copies of
his m emoirs brought by
partygoesrs and chatted
amiably, pausing from time to
time to pose for photographs.
Guests were invited to tour the
Nixon home. which has not been
opened to the public since lt was
purchased as the Western White
House in 1969.
The home's living room and
dining room. decorated with
oriental art objects.. were viewed
by partygoers who were told
that all the nower arrangements
were prepared by Mrs. Nixon.
The secood·noor study used by
Nixon and hls ground-floor
bedroom were also opened to
guests who admired needlework
by daughter Julie Eisenhower
that decorated both rooms.
The home was closed to tours
at about 6 ~m.-wnen me NIXOns left the party . * * - -NixonPlmu
NY Visit?
NEW. YORK (AP) -Former
President Nixon, who five
months ago proclaimed bis love
of New York City, reportedly
plans a return visit to the Big
A l
Nixon ls expected to de Iver a
eulogy at a Sept. J3 memorial
service for Elm r Bobst, a
pharmaceutical executive,
philanthropist and Nixon backer
who died recently at age 93.
The maeutne saJd the two
knew one another for 25 years
and pew so close that Nixon
viewed Bobst as "a father
01ure."
Nixon wu In New York ror the
first time in six year$ last April.
He Uved in the clty between 1962
and 1968 ._ the years between
his unauc:cesful bid to become
governor of Callfornta and his
election as president.
Terrori8t8 Kill 3
MADRID, Spain tAP )' -
Pollce s~ terrorists shot 1and
kUled three pollcemen in almost
simultaneous attacks today in
oortbem and western Spain.
....... ep.4J
economic problem.a and, lf pro-
looeed. could Una&eP UM Mure GI t1M ..._. a..tee Klell.
Pr Ult I t C..., Yac:atioai9c
ID W,_... tOlil ~rten be
b• Nm tn ~ with Labol'
Secret&r)' Ray Marshall about
the J)Olta1 =· but would not t'Omma •
Tbe umons bave maintained
tbat formal eontract ne1oua.
UGlll mUlt bl :: to avoid a atrike, but er today re.
pealed his oppoal tA) IUdl a
move. Bolier h., ea.kl the wue
can be NI01ved thrcNab fact:
ftndtna and arbltratfoa and
doubted that a walkout would
take place.
"I mailed my telephone bUJ to-
day, .. he said.
John Rocera, a apokesman ror
the Federal Mediation and Con·
clliation Service, described the
meetin1 by union leaders with
mediatora as "exploratory
talks." Tbe mediation service
aald no formal contract talk.a
were acbeduled.
Bolter aald, "There is a
peaceful, and I emphasize,
lawful way to settle thla dispute,
and I sincerely hope that the
workera who have rejected the
negotiated contract will also re-
ject any call to rash and illegal
action," Bolger said.
All three unions representing
the postal workers have rejected
a three-year contract tentatively
agreed upon July 21.
Rebeh Fight,
In Nicaragua
MANAGUA, Nicaragua <AP>
-Nicaraguans seeking the
ouster of President Anastasio
Somoza clashed with national
guardsmen in major towns
across the country as a general
strike gathered momentum and
reports circulated or rebellious
talk in the army.
National guard sources said
there have been open dis ·
cussions of revolt broadcast
over guard radio stations. But
foreign diplomats said they
believe Somoza will be able to
retain control of the guard.
Nicaragua's 7,500·man army.
Officers or the guard are re-
ported upset over Somoza's
capitulation to the 25 Sandinista
LiberaUon Front guerrillas wbo
seized the National Palace and
more than 1,000 hostages la.st
week and forced the president to
let them and 59 imprisoned San·
dinistas go to Panama.
Jury Resumes
Deliberation
On Jet Suit
A jury that bas been asked to
award 98 Orange Coast residents
at least $1.4 mUlion in damages
for the alleged disruption of
their lives by jet aircraft based
at Orange County Airport, re-
sumed deliberations today.
The seven women and five
men took their seats behind
locked doors in Superior Court
Judge Walter E . Smith's
courtroom today after a three·
da y weekend break that
followed two days of delibera·
tsons.
Lawyers for both sides expect
a long deliberation. The jury is
being asked to return S4
separate verdicts, one ror each
home aJlegedJy affected by jet
noise in the Newport Beach and
Santa Ana Heights areas.
--~··
•
Board Boo• Bo ... d
Crane lifts board of directors table toward opening <up.
per left) in the 8th floor of Downey Savings corporate
headquarters near South Coast Plaza in Costa Mesa.
Four-hundred pound slab of oak has built in microphone.
telephone and tape recording facilities, not to mention a
digital clock.
Pope John Paul I
To Keep Officials
VATICAN CITY <AP > -Pope John Paul I demonstrated today
his dedication to the policies of
Pope Paul VI by continuing in
office the chief officials of the
Roman Catholic Church's cen·
tral administration appointed by
his predecessor.
The new pontiff reappointed
French cardinal Jean Villot as
Secretary of 'State, th e
equivalent of the Vatican's
E'...., P,,.e Al
CUTBACK. •
around the endangered sewer
line.
-R eduction in the
homeowners' watering pro·
1zram.
-A joint city-homeowner proj·
ect to correct drainage along
the blufnine through the tract.
Homeowners have contended
that the groundwater problem
existed when city councilmen
approved initial development
plans in the late 1960s and
therefore the cost of correcting
it should be borne by the city
and the Irvine Co., the original
landowner.
Holstein Industries, developer
of The Bluffs . is seeking city
council approval for construe·
tion of two final projects of
seven units each in the tract.
Action by city councilmen on
Holstein's request was delayed
while the Montgomery report
was corrected.
Councilmen are expected to
act on the development plans
tonight. City staff members are
recommending a series of sub-
surface drains be included in the
project to take ground water out
of the area and dump in it into
an existing storm drain.
prime minister. and the heads or
the nine Sacred Congregations.
the main departments of Ole
Vatican Curia.
Among the latter is Cardinal
John Wright of the United
States. who heads the Congrega.
tion for the Clergy and did not
participate in the election of
Pope John Paul Saturday
because he was recuperating
from eye surgery ln Boston.
In another affirmation or Pope
Paul's policy. the pope recon-
firmed Archbishop Agostino
Casaroli as Secretary of the
Council for Public Affairs. the
Vatican's roreig.n minister.
Trio Nabbed
In Newport
Home Entry
Three San Bernardino resi·
dents were arrested this
weekend by Newport Beach
police after they aJlegedly tried
to burglarize a Peninsula Point
home.
The trio, two juveniles and
Robert Collins, 24, were taken
into custody by Officer Gary
Milius and Sgt. Darryl Youle at
18th Street and Bay A venue ~
they allegedly ned the scene of
the crime.
According to police reports,
Robert Davidson of 1540 Ocean
Blvd. awoke shortly after S a.m.
Saturday morning to find three
people in his home.
He chased them out and
phoned police who stopped their
car. omcers alleged they found
a loaded .22·caliber handgun in
the car as well as four Items aJ.
legedly stole n from th e
Davidson home.
-4 hawaiian ...
44 f..tion llland, newport center 844·5010
.. )
,,
• * * • * •
Witnesses Cite ...
'No Wurning'
8y All'l'll11a a. YINSEL ... ..., ...... -
Joe Quintana, 40. a painter who lives at 2140 Federal
A'fe •• In tbe older Republic Homes tract of Costa Mesa, tbouPl it wu tbe water beater exploding when the plane
bit bfe house about 9 :30 Sunday nlghl.
A little later, Quintana sat in the back seat of a police
car in ~~. watcb.illg bis home burning.
He 6.t ftllCUed his exotic birds after getting wife
Bertha. 28, and daughters Cecilia, S, and Marisa, 3, to safety. but the plane hurtling out of the sky into the
carport destroyed the 19.W Cadillac be was restoring.
''Tbere was no warning. We were just able to jump
OIJt. '' laid Quintana as his family huddled in the police car
Otbel' residents of the' area lined Victona Street,
expresstni no hope for anyone who ~as in the plane.
"This makes four planes that have hit in our city."
remarked Costa Mesa Police capt. Ed Glasgow.
Brian McDaniel, 16, of 21996 Summerwind Lane
HunUngtoo Beach, and bis buddy Larry Mosquita, 18 of
Reseda. just missed being tilled in the crash. '
"The plane hit over there and we were right \Dlder it "
said McDaniel, pointing to a gou~ in Victoria Street. '
"Hey, it missed our car by 15 feet ... It made a
touchdown there and then slammed into the house."
Sue Ratkosld, 816 Victoria St., did have warning of the
impending crash.
Trembling with emotion, her arms folded as though to
keep herself warm, Mrs. Ratkoski recalled it in a
streetside interview.
"Those damn motorcyclists are racing along the street
again," she remembers thinking, as she put her two little
boys to bed.
. ''Then I realized it wasn't motorcycles ... that the
noise was above the house and I knew it was a plane and it
was in trouble.
"My husband had just come in from the store and
came to tell lbe boys good night. We both knew it was a plane ...
"I ran into the kitchen and looked out the window and
beard an explosion and saw the tail end sticking out of the hous~ 411 on fire," sbe cootinued. .. My busb8ricf called the fire department and I ran out
and starte4 directing traffic ~use at the time it needed
to be 4ooe· Some ean were stopped in front of our house.
She bad never performed as a traffic cop before.
"I just did it because I bad to," 9he said, still shaking
as the blaze caused by the crash began to die down.
"It's bard to believe there were no cars hit with all the
traffic on this street." said her husband, Paul.
Quintana and his brother·in-law, Rudy Sane~. 19.
started to attack what they lbougbt was an exploding
water beater with a garden hose before realizing it was a
plane crash.
Sitting. watching his home burning, Quintana said he
never gave the possibility any thought before.
"But when you read the paper, you worry," he said,
before leaving to make a telephone call to an aunt.
"She might be worried ... ,"be said.
In San Cl.ewaente
Nixon Plays Host
At GOP Event
81 JOANNE aETIIOLDS .... 0..., ..........
Former -President Richard
Nixon opened bis San Clemente
Estate Sunday to more than 400
granddaughter or his memories
of early days in Orange County
as Nixon and his wife greeted
party goers in a receiving line.
A party spokesman estimated
o f t b e 0 r a n g e C o u n t. Y that the event raised more than
Republican faithful. who paid $100,000 which will be used to
$250 each to sha)te hts hand and bolster the campaign coffers of
tour his house. candidates s uc h as R obert
The event. staged by t he Badham seeking re-election to c o u n t y ' s G 0 P f i n a n c e h .. ""'· 'r,..... · I · committee, mulled th~ ftrst t e ..,,"" ~ressiona D~strict,
time Nixon bas parti~i ated tn a John Schmtt.2, running in the
1!filifl ·--nn-~._·.l•J.• jr_.n..: -.18tk ~-=--~~1'1• aftd. C~rvncnu:iu 1 •nnce' -'Yarian Bergeson, a second-time
s resignation from office four candidate in the 74th Assembly
yearsago. <Relatedstory,AS) District All three candidates lt attracted a bandful of ·bands d county Republican candidate were on . un ay evening.
f h·--..a s M r . Na x on w a s m o s t or what uu.IU.2oL Oll;t 1o be .a anitmrt-ed i n gnettn,-Mrs.
nearly apolitical evemng. Bergesoo clasping her hands
· ~he former prealdent in a <See' NttON Pa""e A2) bnef speech discussed ool)' one • e
issue -Proposjtion 13 and what * * *
it means gene rall y to Jll.l• P''---Republicana. i -.IXLJn UUUJ Other th8JlJ.ha~Lta
C4R MOYES FAST
· IN PllDI' AD
"I ~d my .car faster than I
ever drove it, and I got exactly
what I uted for it."
That'• tbe atory told by • SUC·
ceaaf-.I one-time car salesman
·wbo put this ad lD the Dally
Pilot:
"11 LTD 4 doof'. Gd Urea,
brks. Gd trans. seoo1o1rr
XXlMlXXX
If )'OU laa.e a car )'OU want to
seU, call ~. You don't
even bne to wl'lte tbe ad,
became our fri(lddl,y ad·vison
wlU btilp YoU write a belt seller.
The Dally Pilot It a place wbe.re ~ ln your two cents l!an mean cuti Nt.W'nl.
NEW.YORK CAP> -Former
President Nixon, who five
months ago proclaimed bis love
of New York City, reportedly
plans a mum visit to the Bif
Apple.
Newsweek ma1aztne says that
. Nixon 11 expecUd to deliver a
eulon at a Sept. 13 memorial
service for Elmer Bobst, a
pharmace utical executive,
pbilantbroplst and Nixon backer
who died recently at ate 93.
The magazine said the two
knew one another for 25 years
and arew to close that Nixon
Ylewed Bobet aa ••a father
ftitire."
Nixon •as I.ft New York for the
flrtt time ln alx yean last April.
He li•ed tn tbe clty between 1882
and 1988 -the years between
Ma \lDIUtcesf\ll bld to bec»rne
aovernor ol California and bis
election as president.
J
t
................... TAIL SECTION WAS BIGG£8T PIECE LEFT OF BEECHCRAFT BARON AFTER CRASH
Twtn .. nglne Craft Tom to Bltl by Impact Sunday Night In Coate Mese
Pipe Bomb
Fails on
Capo Car
A "we ll·constructed" pipe
bomb hooked to a Capistrano
Beach woman's car ignition
falled to go off early Friday
because it was "improperly
g rounded," Orange County
Sheriff's officials said early this
morning.
A sheriff's lieutenant, who
would not identify the intended
bombing vtcthn ·~eeause lt
would give us problems in our
investigation" said there is no
apparent motive for the at·
tempted bombing.
The intended victim was
descrltJd as single and in her
mid 20s.
The bomb was placed under
the seat of the woman's car. ac·
cording to sheriff's deputies. It
was attached by wires to the
car's ignition system.
"It was well constructed and
put together by someone who
kne w what he was doing,·• said
an investigator.
The woman's car. parked in
her driveway. would not start at
about 10 a .m. Friday, the in·
vestigator said. She checked un·
der the hood and djscovered
"additional wiring."
The investigator said the
woman's brother disconneded
the device and called the
sheriff's department
845,000 Fire
Razes Home
Of Doctor
o.ltf ............ .., ., ~
ENGINE IN FOREGROUND MARKS PATH OF PLANE
Tell Section Stick• Out of Garage (Background)
Mediators Attempt
·" Postal Compromise
BULLETIN of Postmasters.
WASIDNGTON (AP> -The The postmasters. who general·
A two·alarm Cire damaged one Postal Service agreed Ws after. ly are at lower·level manage.
side and the roof or the Dr. Dar· noee to reopen negotta&loos wttb ment ranks, gave him several
rell Burnett residence in Laguna .Jllllul that bad threatened Jo siand~ovations...
Niguel early today. Or ange 1trtke, delaytac for 15 days any Questioned after tus speech
_County n,.rnm reJ)Ol1ed.__ _-:...~•Ihle.ad~ .. -I! ..,.._ .~a~Ube. str!Ice ~2SsJbllilY.
An estimated $30,000 damage repOiiee lfoijer again predicted one
was done to the home and would not materialize.
$15,000 worth of contents were WASHINGTON CAP> -With "I malled my telephone bill to.
destroyed, firemen said. The a strike deadline of tonight, day," he.said:
house and its furni~.hi1!1s were. __ federal medi.a\ors met today Bolg~r!_as he has fre~!!ntly In
valuea at a pproximately with representatrves of the t.De past, pressecrtor pursUlng
$250,000. Postal Service and its unions tn the le1al steps when a contract
Fire officials said Dr. Burnett. an effort to avert the threatened is rejected. These steps include
bil wife and bis two children walkout. binding arbitration if the two
escaped the blazing house at However, no progress was re-sides cannot find an agreement
23872 Shady Tree Lane without ported while the meetlngs were Bolger s.¢d that be doesn't
injury. wt4u ~~ and.. Poat.muter tbini thatlJIGll.ol-~ yees-
E WUUam
' m ent spokesman said.
U.S. Dollar
Fluctuates
LONDON <AP> -The dollar
rose sU1btly on some money
markets today, sUpped 1llghtly
on otller!t . and trading was
subdued. ·1110 price of 1old went
up a lltUe.
The U.S. currency closed tn !
Tokyo al 192.475 yen, up from
192.05 at the end Of tndlna last week.
Morntna dollar rates ln major ,
l!uropean financial ceaters were:
~reMfl.lrt -t 0tm _.._., tr~1111e1ew ..,....,.,.. ... ~ ..... .. hrkll t .., ..... lrll'< ... ,,..... ,..,.,.
,..,,. -... ~ frl!Q,; ....... ., .....
·---~· """' _.., ,,,,,.. .... ._"1•· ~-2 !90tul~• ...... ''"''·"" tu1*1't
•
s a · ne po!ition
that union leaders have said
leaves them no alternative ·to a
strike. Bolger said he believes a
walkout will not materialize.
Chief federal mediator Wayne
Horvitz met with the two sides
both separately and toaethet.
spokesman Jobo Rogers saici.
But Rogers said there was no
breakttiro.Jgfl to report.
ey realize Uiaf a strike
would do permanent damage to
the Postal Service."
He said the diversion of much
mail to other means of delivery
would hurt the unions by reduc·
ins the need for manpower in
the Postal Service.
"A strike would be the worat
poaatble thin" that could h~pen <See MAIL. Page Al> While the meetings were being
held at the Mediation service.
Bolger made a speech elsewhere 2 Gunmen Rob
ip W aahincton repealing hJs de·
mrninltlon not to sweeten •ten-7-Ele~en Market t.aUve ecnnct that the unions ,.
COdstder IMdequate.
"Havlna turned down that
contract, the unions now want u.a
to return to the barl•lnlnl table.
But, n far •• I'm concerned, we
dld our bitieainlnt. We 1ave ln
on aom. Wno we wanted, and
the uruou .&ave In on 10me W.y
wanted." Bol1er told the con-
ventlon ot the National t.eaaue
'
Two men anned with a blue·
steel 1'evo1ver took between '100
and l150 ln a robbery al the 7·
Eleven market at 25158 La Paz
Road, Lafuna Hilb, early thla
momll\I. sberlff's deputies re·
ported.
The two men entered the
amaU market at about I a.m •
clerk told deputies.
,,
"' Alte ... eoa
N.Y. Steeb
~EN CENTS
~amily
In House
Rescued
By lllCllAEL PASKEVJCB Ot•DlillY .........
Investigators today studied
charred wreckage from e
Sunday night plane crash in
Costa Mesa that killed two
Oxnard couplles. but said they
had few clues to the cause of the
crash.
Identities of the four dead
people were being withheld
today by Orange County
Coroners until all family
members were notified.
The plane slammed into the
garage or a home at 2140
Federal Ave .. Costa Mesa at
about 9:40 p.m .. but all five
members ol the Joe Quintana
family were a ble to escape
without htjury.
The two couples apparently
flew out or Orange County
airport at 9:30 p.m. Sunday after
attending a wedding.
Scores of people told police
they saw· and heard the twin
engine Beecbcraft Baron in
distress over the west side Costa
Mesa neighborhood.
An off-duty Irvine police
officer, Pat Rogers. saw the
plane bank sha rply right. its
right wing engine afire and
lights out, and then curve into
the ground, exploding in a ball
of fire.
However, other witnesses said
the light plane was not on fire
when it plummeted toward the
Quintan a hom e. narrowly
missing a home on the north side
or Victori~. _
A HuntinJ(ton Beach man who
wu driving by said be "could
feel the heat" of the explosion.
"We are assuming they were
headed home to Oxnard," said
Guy Moshier, Investigator for the National Transportation
Safety Board <NTSBI.
" He said the pilot did not file a
flight plan with Orange County
Airport. Tower officials today
said they heard no warnings of
trouble from the aircraft before
it went down.
"All the important
instruments were destroyed by
Impact or the fire.·· Moshier
said today.
He said the joint NTSB and
Federal Aviation Administration
investigation could take as long
as three months.
Moshier said interviews with
<See PIA.NE, Page A2)
Viejo Home
Burglarized
A Mission Viejo home was
burglarized of an estimated
$8,500 in jewelry Friday,
sheriff's omcers said today.
Neighbors of the Lagarto Street
r estdence discove red the
burglary at approximately 5:30
p.m. They told officers they
became suspicious when they
spotted the victims' dog running
loose. __ ·--_ ~ ...-.-·--~--
Burglars gained entry to the
house through an unlocked
garage side door while the occu-
pants were away, according to
deputies.
Coast
Patchy early morning
low clouds, otherw\Se fair
through Tuesday. A little
warmer Tuesday with
h ighs rangi n g from
mld·70s at the beaches to
upper 80s inland. Lows
tonitht 6S to 75.
INSIDE TOD#\\'.
YoWIQltn• R to l6 learn
about aadtng In o Balboa
Yacht Club prog~m. See
photOf.Po(/ICJ.
l•ll•x ,.,.,_..,.,.. •• ~ a ... -. ...... ~ a LM.hl"f M ............... es ..... ...,....... ~ ..
oeetlf* °'" aw c......... .. =~ .......
C-.Ct .............. ... OWi••• .. .......... ., .,... ......... ,........ .,..
.............. ....... M • ...,._ ...... 914 .......... M
....... C1.J
I I •
Action
To Boost
Dollar?
WASttlNGTON tA P > -In
eolb r GC'Uon to b ~Ip 1upport
\he dollar. the fed ral R rve
Board took t~ tod•J to ...
coura borrowU\,I ol tonlo
h ld cSoU b,y Americu bank&.
About t.500 billion la U,9,
dollars 1tt held ov • 1llit1
au ulled ··Eurodollar•"
because th 1y are ou~id• the
control of U S b1nlttn1
•ulhora~
The amount of rorellD·beld
dollars hu arvtm arply ln ,.
cent yean. in part btt•u:se ol
the U S lr~ dellett lhat 5eDdl
dollan abroad. aDd they ban
freq uenlly bee a used by
speculator.I lo drive down lhe
overall value of the dollar
1'o encoura.ae use of the to-
e ailed J!.'w"odc>Uars by American
banks. the Fetleral Reserve
Board today removed the re-
quirement that U.S. banks m~t
ma1otam reserves equal to 4
percent of what they borrow
abroad.
"The effect of the reserve re-
duclion is tntended to encourage
member banks lo substitute
Eurodollar borrowings for
domestic borrowings as a source
of funds." the board said.
If the action bas the intended
effed, it would mean some or
the foreign.held dollars would be
returned lo this country for use
in domestic lending. This would
reduce the amount of dollars
held abroad, contributing to
overall strength of the American
currency The action is the third taken in
recent weeks by U.S. financial
authorities lo help strengthen
the dollar on world money
markets
Robert Shaw,
Actor, Dies
In Ireland
NEW YORK <APl Robert
Sh aw. the actor known for
portrayals or rugged adven-
turers in such movies as "Jaws"
and ·'The Deep,·· died of an ap·
parent heart attack near his
home in Tourmakeady Island
near Dublin, his New York press
agent reported today.
The 51-year-old actor. who
also wrote several books and
plays, was driving with his wife
Virginia and 1 1~.1-year-old son
Thomas al about 5 p.m. Sunday
when he suffered the attack.
said pubUcist Myrna Post. He
died at home, she said.
Born in Lancashire, England,
Shaw started his acting career
as a member of the Old Vic
drama company In the 1950s and
performed in numerous produc·
lions in England.
The brown·haired. blue-eyed
Shaw came lo the attention of
the . American movie-going
oubhc as a vi llain in the James
Bond movie, ''From Russia
With ~ve," He went on to ap.
pear m such films as "Robin
and Marian." "The Sting" and
"Black Sunday," but found his
greatest accla1m as a fisherman
in the thrillers. "Jaws" and ··The Dt'ep:·
Two Cilms made before bis
d eath , ''Force Ten from
Navarone" and "Avalanche Ex·
press." have not been released.
In addition. Shaw made a
name for himself as a writer.
His rirst book, "The Hiding
Place." was published in 1959. It
was about wartime Germany,
and recently was made into a
full-length motion picture. He
wrote four other novels.
Shaw also wrote three plays,
among them "The Man In The
Glass Booth.'' a docu-drama
about the trial of Nazi Adolf
Eichmann.
Shaw, whose rirsl wife, ac·
tress Mary Ure. died several
years ago. is survived by his
wife and 10 children.
ORANGE COMT Ml
DAILY PILOT
~;::"~~V./i::.::e:,. JJO """ an __ ,._ ... "_, ___ ,
,K •• CWtft
Viet l'rftl*"t •"" C..-el ""'-
-.1 ltM"'4
lClll•
n::..:.~,..~
°"""""·'----~ ... " .. WM••t ""4114111 ... fdflo<\
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J DIM'I ............
NIXONS OPEN ESTATE TO COUNTY REPUBLICANS
Former President •nd Rrst Lady In Earlier PoM
f'ro•P~AJ
NIXON RECEPTION. • •
several times during their chat.
The former president and his
wife spent a little more than 90
minutes at the three·hour event
co.hosted by a list or local
business and political leaders, including industrialists J .
Robert Fluor and Arnold
Beckman.
Actor John Wayne, one of the
co-hosts. arrived with the
Nixons, but stayed Less than a
half hour, departing the former
West em White House in one of Fluor's corporate helicopters.
Partygoers were invited
through mailed invitations
restricted to county residents
that finance committee
members felt could pay the $250
per person ticket price to
support the RepubUcan cause.
Guests met in Irvine for the
40·minute bus ride to Casa
Pacifica. Guests from the south
county were bused to the party
from Concordia School in San
Clemente.
A II were greeted at the
Spanish·style home by mariachi
music. margaritas and Mexican
food from Nixon's favorite
restaurant. El Adobe in San
Juan Capistrano.
A bout half an hour after
guests were ushered into the
s wimming pool area and
ga rden s, the Nixon s.
accompanied by Wayne, strolled
in from the house.
The former president. trim
and tanned, was dressed in gray
slacks and a navy blue jacket.
Mrs. Nixon wore a pink, floor
length gown set off by a double
strand of pearls.
They were introduced by
Repulibcan activist Victor
Andrews who assured the
Nixons they had the "love and
admiration of not only the
people here, but millions of
citizens in this great nation of
ours.'' Andrews' introduction
was punctuated by applause
from-the •owd. -·
Nixon spoke tor -about 10
minutes. iivini a Republican
pep talk that avoided specific
political subjects, except when
he came to Proposition 13 and
the taxpayers' revolt.
He said the long-held
Republican belier in limiting
government spending "is a
cause worth givio1 to and
working for.•·
He took_a yerbal swipe at two
_otm£famrtte weem =-9Stem_
them tor not recognlzlng the
importance of Propositloo 13,
which be predicted would be the
most sig nifi cant Issue
nationwide by 1980.
''They said tt was just
something the kooky
Californians bad done," Nixon
said. He told the crowd similar
~allot issues would be appearing an other parts of the country.
Arter his talk, the ex-president
and his wife were jolned by
son-in.Jaw David Eisenhower to
receive their guests.
Nixon autographed copies or
his memoirs brought by
partygoesrs and chatted
amiably, pausing from time lo
time to pose ror photographs.
Guest.a were invited lo tour the
Nlxon home, whJch has not been
opened to the public since it waa
purcb1sed as Ule Western White
House in 1969.
Tbe home's llviu room and
dining room, decorated with
oriental art objects, were viewed
by partygoers who were told
that all the flower arrangements
were prepared by Mrs. Nixon.
The second-flJ>or study used by
Nixon and his ground-floor
bedroom wete also opened to
guests who admired needlework
by daughter Julie Eisenhower
that decorated both rooms.
The home was closed to tours
at about 6 p.m . when the Nixons
left the party.
f',....PageAJ
MAIL •..
to the Postal Service." Bolger said.
One union president is man·
dated by members to call a
strike by midnight EDT tonight
if there is no resumption of
bargaining. Another union presi-
dent, under similar mandate.
has a midnight Wednesday
deadline.
Bolger said plans ror moving
the mail include possibly asking
President Carter to call out
troops to handle mail. forbidding
some types of mail and allowing
private companies to deliver
first.class letters. In normal
limes. the Postal Service bas a
legal monopoly on first class.
Under "Operation Graphic
Hand•• prepared by the Pen·
ta~on , up to 90,000 or more
troops could be used to help
process mail in 68 critical cities
across the country.
In addition, BOiger could sus·
pend delivery or certain types of
mail deemed to be "nonessen-
tiai." It ls believed third-class
advertising circulars would be
the first to be suspended in a crisis.
__ T.he 7~'Z. mililon..recipienw -05· ..
Social Security and other federal
benefit progra m s whose
monthly checks normally go
directly lo their banks will not be
affected by a postal strike
because their checks are
transported either by courier or
electronically. However. more
than 26 million other
beneficiaries who rely on the
mails to receive their checks
couldfacedelays.
f'.Aner Fights
For Program
GRAND TETON NATIONAL
PARK, Wyo. <AP> -President
Carter, determined to win the
congressional fight over his em-
battled eneray legislation, is
endina his vacation two days
early and returning to
Washlnston on Wednesday.
While House press secretary
Jody Powell announced Sunday
that Carter would shave two
days rrom hia two·week western
holiday to work on "some very
crucial domestic matters that
are be(ore Con,reas."
Heading the list is delicate
natural 1u comproml1e le,Ula·
lion that ta the centerpiece of
Carter's eneru plan.
•
Pontiff
Retains
Officials
VATICAN CJTY <AP> -Pope
John Paul I demonstrated today
h1s dedication to the policies of
Pope Paul VJ by conttnwa, ln
office the dtlef ortlclala of the
Roman Catholic Church's cen-
tral adminilttation appointed by
his predecetSOr.
The · new pontiff reappointed
French Cardinal Jean Villot as
Secretary of State , the
equivalent of the Vatican's
prime rnlnlster. and the beads of
the nine Sacred Conaretatioos.
the main departments of the
Vatican CUria.
Among the latter ls Cardinal
John Wright of tbe United
States. Who heads the Con•reta·
tion ror the Clern and did not
participate in tbe election or
Pope Jehn Paul Saturday
because be was recuperating
from eye surgery in Boston.
In another affirmation of Pope
Paul's policy, the pope recon·
firmed Archbishop Agostino
Casaroll as Secretary of the
Council for Public Affairs, the
Vatican's foreign mlniat.er.
The Vatican announcement
said all the beads of congrega.
lions would serve the remainder
of the five-year terms to which
they were appointed by Pope
Paul. However. this five-year
period does not apply lo Villot.
Casaroli. or Archbishop
Giuseppe Caprio, the substitute
secretary of slate. who are the
pope's personal choices.
In addition to Cardinal Wright,
the congregation heads are
Cardinal Franjo Seper of
Yugoslavia, the Congregation
for the Dpctrine of the Faith, the
former Holy Office; Cardinal
Sebastiano Baggio, Congrega.
tion of Bishops; Cardinal James
P. Knox. Australia. Sacraments
and Divine Worship; Cardinal
Eduardo Pironio. Argentina.
Congregation for the Religious;
Cardinal Agnelo Rossi .
Evangelizalion of the Peoples;
Cardinal Corrado Bafile. Italy,
Causes of the Saints; Cardinal
Gabriel Marie Garrone. France.
Catholic Education; Cardinal
Pierre Paul Philippe, France,
Oriental Churches.
Vatican sources said the pope
may call a consistory this year
to appoint new cardinals .
Several cities which traditional·
ly have cardinals presently are
headed by bishops. They include
Tokyo. Dublin and Turin. Also.
the pope is said to have prom-
ised a cardinal's red hat to
Bishop Ernes to Civa rdi.
secretary of the conclave wtuch
elected him.
The pope dug into the business
of church administration after
pledging to overcome ·'internal
tension" within the church and
to continue the work of his two
predecessors whose names he
took.
All executive appointments in
the Curia. the church's central
bureaucracy. expired
automatically with the death of
Pope Paul on Aug. 6. But John
Paul had been expected to reap.
point most or all or them both
because of his commitment lo
carry on Pope Paul's policies
and because of his own lack of
Curia experience.
His only experience at the
Vatican was as a member of the
exec utive board of the
Congregation for Sacraments
and Divine Cult He has spent
nearly all bis life in the Venice
area. as a priest in his native
diocese in the Alps, as bishop or
Vittorio Veneto and the past nine
years as Cardinal Albino Lu-
ciani, patriarch of Venice
:<I. ..... :-::::.--• .. .. • ~ • -
l
1 th ST -------..w------.... --~~--------------............
.....,,.._ ...
CROSS INDICATES SITE OF PLANE CRASH IN MaA •
At the Comer of F..,_, Avenue •nd Vlctortil atre.t :
Fro• Pa~ A J
PLANE CRASH •••
witnesses would continue to
establi&b ''what attracted their attention to what was happening
in the air."
He sajd it was not uncommon
ror conflicting reports to be filed
by witnesses to a piano crash.
The plane struck the garage or
Garden Grove
Girl Killed
In Boat Fall
TAFT <AP> -A Garden
Grove girl was killed when she
fell off the bow of a boat and was
run over by the propeller on
Lake Webb near here. the Kem
County coroner 's office reported.
Christina Allen. 13. of 11451
Bowles Ave .. was riding on the
bow as her uncle, Jim Ed Jones
of Garden Grove. drove toward
the dock Sunday. When he
slowed . she pitched forward in
front of the boat. authorities said.
Jones tried to put the motor in
reverse but mistakenly hit full
throttle. running the boat's bow
onto the dock. a deputy coroner
said.
The propeller sliced off one
side or the girl's head and
seve red her right arm.
authorities said.
Hero Remains
Anonymous ..
MIAMI <AP> -About 150
bystanders ignored the shouts or
a policeman being struck and
kicked by attackers before a
man stopped his dump truck.
rushed through the onlookers
and chased the attackers from
the officer.
"He was just a little guy. real-
ly." said Metro Police Officer
Milan Pilat.
Pilat's rescuer disappeared
without identifying himself and
police are searching for him in
hopes of citing him for bravery.
"I just want to get a hold or
the guy and thank him personal·
ly. ·• said Pilat, who suffered a
sprained finger. cuts. bruises
and a battered face when he was
struck by a foot.Jong chain.
750 Deaths Listed
JOHANNESBURG. South
Africa <AP> -South African troops who crossed into Zambia
last week killed an estimated 600
lo 750 guerrillas of the
South-West Africa People's
Organization in retaliation for a
SWAPO shelling that killed 10
So uth African troops and
wounded nine. a Johannesburg
newspaper reported today.
the Quintana home. desll"Oyi.ng a
vintage 1939 Cadillac and
causing bea\ry damage to ~
hedge and palm tree.
However. Costa Mesa firemen
bad the blaze out before se~
structure damage resulted.
The four occupants of the
plane apparently died within
seconds after the collision.
One young witness to the
crash said the plane came in at
run throttle. the pilot apparently
unable to ease the plane into ~
emergency landing oo Victoria Street.
Thieves Rob
Rich Widow
Of Jewelry
CANNES. France <APl
Three months ago, thieves
robbed American miWooairess
Florence Gould of her art
treasures. Sunday, a trio got
away with her jewels, worth
millions ol dollars. police sajd.
Mrs. Gould, widow of an heir
of the American railroad tycoon.
was visiting friends elsewhere in
Cannes when three young
masked. armed men broke into
her 42-room villa El Patio dur-
ing the day. tied her Brazili;.n
maid to a Louis XVI chair llnd
~agged her. and spent half an
hour collecting the jewels in her
bedroom and what cash thev
could find. the police reported. ·
Another member of the
household staff found the maid
and called the police. The
thieves were described as highly
professional, and no leads were
reported.
The theft or her art collection, -
which included paintings by
Renoir and Bonnard, is still un.
solved.
Mrs . Gould is the widow of
Frank Jay Gould, who died in
1956 after they had been married
for 33 years. She has been a
leading member of Riviera
society for years.
Sky Display
'Dazzling'
CONCORD. Mass.<AP> -A
display of northern lights lit up
parts of the Northern
Hemis phere early today. One
meteorologist described them as
lbe most dazzling in more than a
decade.
"Waves of light were just
shooting up as high as you could see with bands or light, green
and pink, about 20 to 30 degrees
over the northern horizon," said
Stuart Soroka or Environmental
Research and Technology, a
pr1 vale weather forecasting
firm here.
rd,
hawaiian ...
em rte; eoli~ and
~ms in lw;tt,le
cloth,as only
'tt1" •pocwter can do.
\
s DAILYPILQT
·u .S. Uprising Due?··
1 I
D.ity PMet l&lff ......
WHEN SIRENS WA~ DRIVERS llUIT PULL TO THE RIGHT AND YIELD
Firemen s.y They Haft OlftlcUly e.cau.. ~tta Don't Know Law, or Become Confused
Don't Panie U.mtington
Road Work
Continues
Fire Engines Face Probkms
Workmen on Beach Boulevard
in Huntington Beach are com-
pleting a $993,669 traffic signal
coordlnation and improvement
system at 13 major intersections
designed to improve vehicular
now and basic road safety.
Crossings affected run from
Beach Boulevard and Pacific
Coast Highway to Beach
BOulevard and Edinger Avenue,
!ust south of the San Diego
Freeway.
"It's not a large computer·
type synchronization system,"
City Trame Engineer Ralph
Leyva says of the signal system
revamp.
"The signals will be coordinat·
ed," he explains.
He said changes In the exist-
ing system of traffic light control
or vehicle traffic on the major
traffic artery which is often
clogged with summer beach
traffic will be simple at first.
"Later when we get more ex-
perience, it will get more com-
plicated," Leyva added.
He said the red and green light
· intervals will be alternated .by a
timer. thus smoothing traffic
flow depending upop the day of
the week and time of day to
facilitate travel.
' Workmen for the Paul
Gardner Corporation of Ontano
are currently working at or
between virtually every in-
tersection along the route. lay-
ing conduits and installing
equipment.
Leyva says the job will be
finished in February or next
year, give or take a few days'
work lost due to winter rains.
He predicts the new signaliza·
tion system largely financed by
Caltrans funds with some con-
tribution in city money will
greatly reduce the incidence of
rea r -end collisions or the
boulevard.
E x pansion
At Taco B e ll
Withdrawn
By REBECCA HELM
Of tllll D9lty PtM4 SUH
With lights nashing and siren
screaming. the red Orange
County paramedic van sped
down El Toro Road.
Attracted by the excitement or
the emergency. a teen-age boy gunned his car and chased the
medics.
The van crossed into an on-
coming traffic lane as the me<lic
driver wove a path through thick
afternoon traffic along the six-
lane street. quickly cutting back
to the right.
Too close to stop, the pursuing
car broadsided the fire vehicle.
which rupped to its roof and slid
to a stop.
Unhurt, tbe three medics
crawled out and the teen-age
boy. unscratched. stepped Crom
his damaged car.
A few minutes away. a man
suffering a heart attack lay
waiting.
In this 1976 accident, the heart
attack victim eventually
reached the hospital. And he sur·
vived in spite of the follow-
tbe-leader teen-ager possessed
by what fire officials called the
··isn't-it-neat-to-chase-the-fire·
truck," syndrome.
California law stipulates that
all vehicles must pull to the right and yield the right-of-way
to any emergency vehicle sound·
ing a siren and exhibiting a red
light. But the simple directive is
rarely followed. according to
fire officials.
"We expect people to do every·
thing but what they should do."
Laguna Hills Captain Terry
Carson said.
Unlike the curious teen-ager,
most people just panic and don't
seem to know what to do when
they see a fire engine.
"I've had them come from the
right hand lane and stop in front
or me," Carson said. "I've had
them just stop, period.
"We don't like to pass on the
right," he added. "If the guy
then gives us the right-of-way
by pulling to the right and hits
us, the fire department is in the
wrong."
The fire captain described
some people's reactions as
'I'm Fed llp '
particularly "stupid."
An example, he said. is the
person who Is driving down a
four-lane freeway and stops in
front or the emergency vehicle
when three other lanes are
clear.
Frush:ated firemen become
explicit m describing the an·
cestry of such drivers. Carson
said.
But he admits that in today's
complicated roadway system. yielding the right-of-way by
simply pulling to the right is not
always possible or practical.
"If people would just stop and
think for a second. 'OK, I have
to find a way to get out or this
fire engine's way,' that would help us more than anything,"
Carson said.
On an emergency run. firemen
watch traffic closely and know
when someone cannot pull to the
right, according to Carson.
He described a few complex
situations and recommended the
appropriate action by drivers:
If you are stopped at the in·
tersection, remain stopped. Do
not make any drastic moves,
-H you 're In the left-band
lane. all other lanes are blocked
and the traffic light is red, and
you see a Cire truck coming up
behind you. if it is safe to do so
pull on through the intersection
and stop on the other side. If it is
not safe. stay there and the fire
engine will wait behind you until
1t 1s sarc.
If you are sitting in the mid·
die or the intersection when the
emergency vehicle approaches.
wait until it is safe and then
complete your turn and pull to
the right.
Carson offered two more
points of advice: People can
he lp themselves anticipate
which way the emergency vehi·
cle is going by watching its
directional signals.
Also. he said, drivers should
remember that fire engines
carry about 4,000 pounds of
water plus equipment and can·
not stop as easily or in the same
s hort distance as a car.
"People should just be a little
more alert when they are driv-ing ..
lf it's a rainy winter. you may
have to take an umbrella to
lunch at lhc Taco Bell takeout in
Laguna Beach's Sleepy Hollow
region.
Operators or the food service
ttave in<Mlfinltely withdrawn an
appJication submitted to the
South Coast Regional Com-
mission for a $35.000 expansion
Huntington Cop
Quits, Cites BQard
project.
Originally they asked the
panel which oversees all coastal
Huntington ,Beach police.. Sgt.
Gary Kircher is trad ing his
badge and gun for a new Ute as
a d8'ry farm~r in Buffalo, Mo.
buildl,ng and development for Why would a 11>-year Hunt-
permlsaion to roof an outdoor i n g t on B e a ch v e t e r a n
porch seating area. p01iceman. a narcotics squad
Increased service to the Taco leader, pull up stakes and bead
Bell at 699 S. Coast Highway for a 140-acre Osark farm'!
would therefore increase its . parking needs and currenUy lt ls K1rcber. 34, said there are
b rin f """'--u.. many reasoos: lack of respect ~t~~ ~ ~C'~-r~r ~Hee~ ltAl•nt Judges.
-lak ---:pro I "Hlmi-ington Beach
Tustin Shoot
Vretim, 24,
SaiJ, Critical
An unldentlried 24-year-old
man waa reported lo critical
condition today after bein1 abot
ln the bead wblle visllin1 a
home ln TUsUn Sunday, police
said.
Tbe man'e name and addre8s
were beina withheld pendln1
noUfkatioo of reJalivca, police
said.
Tbe aboot1ni occ\.lM"Cd 1t the
home ot Jack T. Johnson. 27,
111' Bonita St., police aald.
Johnaoo la belna bold by police
ror questtoolna.
"It <the City Council> ls not
the No. 1 deciding factor -but
lt doesn't help things," said
Kircher who lives ln Huntington
,,. Beach with his wife and 6-year-
old daughter ..
r
Kircher satd be and his co-
wor kers someUmea wonder,
"Am I going to be backed up"
by the City Council?
Kircher said Councilman John
Tbomas's actions slnce his April
11 elections are the "obvious"
reasons police have so little con-
fidence tn the City Council.
Kircher said he was amazed
when Thomas told Mayor Ron
Shenkman "to sbut your god-
d1mn mouth" twice at a June 12
public City Council meeUQ&.
"I'm not comtna back here
even 11 the farm bums down."
KJrcber sald. "I'd rather d1a
. ' I •
ditches or coach footb'"l," he
added.
"I'm fed up with law enforce-
ment as a career. There's not as
many rights for police as there
are for the average citizen,"
Kircher said.
Kircher said he bas received
phone calls from complaining
citizens wbo threatened to go to
the City Council before the
police seraeant could respond to
the eDmplainL_ - -
forward to his tut day on the
job, Sept. lS. He admitted it's a
drastic step to sell his Hunt-
ineton Beach home and lnvest
his savings into a farm.
But Kircher said the
"crushed" Southern California
urestyJe, wtth trafric snarls and
diminlsbin& open space, bas got
him down.
Living near a 2,000 population
town like Buffalo, Mo.. wlll be
different from Klrcher•s life as a
policeman in Huntington Beach.
Kircher said he has also
worked as a special enforcement
detail undercover officer,
motorcycle cop and patrolman
with a police dog In his 10 years
in HunUngton Beach.
Orl1lnally from Michigan.
Kircher said he is confident he
has round the new life for hia
family lD Missouri.
Kennedy €ites Health Care Need!
BOSTON CAP) -Sen. Edward
M. Kennedy warned tM oatlon'I
governors today that 101rln1
health costs will produce a
citizene' uprlslni that wtu make
the taxpayers• revolt pale ln
comparison.
·'The current non·aystem or
medical care ls a failure." the
Massachusetts Democrat told
the National Governors' As·
soclatlon'a annual convention.
"If left Wlchecked, that failure
will become a disaster -a dis·
aster that will destroy federal
and state bud~ts. seriously in·
jure the economy, cause count-
less human tragedies, and in my
opinion. create a citlzeos' revolt
that will pale the current con-
cern over taxes." Kennedy said.
Kennedy. a leading con-
uessional champion of national health care, renewed bJs attack
on President Carter's health
proposals, which be bas called
inadequate.
Calling health care a basic
human rigbt. Kennedy said.
.. Some who espoused that right
want to coodit.ion it -to condi·
tion it on many tblnts over
which the health care system
has no control -the general
state of the economy. the size of
the budget deficit, the presence
or absence ot major strikes, or
oil embargoes.
"But human rights are not
conditional," he said. "And a
commitment to a conditional
human rights is no commitment
at all."
Dana Point
Lighthouse
H e aring Set
A public hearing for a $2
million Dana Point restaurant
has been set for Sept. 18 by the
South Coast Regional Com-
mission, which supervises all
coastal development and build-
ing.
The Crown Point Restaurant
would be located on 2.3 acres at
24701 Dana Drive near the west
basin of the Dana Point Marina.
Orange County Planning Com-
missioo members approved the
combination restaurant and con-
vention facility Monday in Santa
Ana.
The South Coast Reeional
Commission discussed it the
same day at its bi-weekly meet·
ing in the Huntington Beach
Civic Center. but ruled It should
have a full public bearing.
A total of 13.000 square feet in·
eluding a 4.000 square foot din·
ing area would leave the com-
plex deficient or 27 of the 178
parking spaces it must have un-
der the law.
Plans for the facility also in-
c lude 15 boat slips which are not
calculated among required
parking places.
Cops P r obe T he ft
Of Rest aurant
Orange County Sheriff's of.
ficers continued today to in-
vestigate the theft of a bank bag
containing more than $3,600
from an El Toro restaurant.
Officers said the bag was
taken from the manager's desk
at th e Sizzler Family
Steakhouse. 23501 El Toro Road,
while be was away from his of·
fice.
Kennedy reminded tbci aov·
emon that Uie bw'den ol provtd-
lnr healtb care for uninsured
~ltizens falls chiefly on st.te pd
loca&.covenunents and sUd It la
addtna to their tu r&VOlt prob-
lem1. Tbe eovemon• usoetatJoo Is
on reeord aa recognhing the na·
tlon1l health problem but h~
failed io agree on a course of ac· lion. 11
..
Pe1•Hdt Oppe•ed ti
Rock Theater Plan
Stirs Up Discord
By RAYMOND ESTRADA .JR. oe • Dlltr Nit,.... H untlngton Beach Surf
Theater owner Hush L. Thomas
says be doesn't .. want to make
any waves."
·But local police and residents
who live near the theater. at 121
5th St., want to wipe out live
rock concerta the.re.
A battle between rock music
fans, police and some dowatown
residents is expected at a Sept. 5
public beariq before tbe City
Council to consider Thomas' ap-
plication for a live music
permit.
Police Capt. Bill Payne said
local lawmen opposed tbe live
entertainment permit for
Thomas because nearby resi-
dents have telephoned. com-
plaints of noise on Friday night
in July and August.
Blanche Woods. a downtown
apartment manager since lMS,
said she and many of her ten·
ants were rudely awakened just before midnight several
weeks ago by a commotion com-
ing from t.be Surf Theater.
"We've never heard anything
like this before . . . it was just a
racket." Mrs. Woods said.
Another elderly resident, who
feared retaliation from "young
people." said the streets were
filled with "hundreds" of youths
and the noise sounded like · a
"loud airplane."
The resident said, "The boys
were swearing and the girls
were screaming," as they con-
gregated in a nearby alley.
"It makes you nervous," the
elderly tenant added.
But theater owner Thomas
said be has held several rock
concerts every summer for the
past 16 years with few com-
plaints from police or residents.
Thomas refuted police claims
that his theater's "location is DOl
suitable or proper" for live rock
concerts.
·'The cops believe rock n · roll
is entwined with sex and dope,"
Thomas said. "The present
police administration is a lot
more concerned with controlling
us . . . they lean more toward
the· Huntington Harbour types
than serving all people," he
added.
Thomas said be would take
measures to alleviate sound prob·
lems and has hired his own
security patrol to lessen loiter-
ing and litter problems after
rock shows.
The 400-seat theater. built in
1922 as a vaudeville show house,
was raided in 1972 by Huntington
Beach police vice officers for
screening an "X" rated comedy
film by Woody Allen.
Thomas said he was cleared or
all charges of showang pornog-
raphy and contributing to the
delinquency of minors.
He said police intimidated him
and his wife by raiding the
theater for showing a film that
has since appeared on
television.
Thomas and bis attorney plan
to confront what be calls
"vague" charges by police tbat
stem from the live rock concerts
when both sides meet Sept. 5.
Police officials said residents
who oppose tbe rock concerts
are gathering signatures on peti-
tions to bring before the City
Council.
The theater continues to show
rock coneert and surfing films,
but live entertainment bas been
banned lDltll the Sept. 5 hearing.
officials said.
Members of a rock band, who
lost their job at t he theater when
the concerts were suspended
1ast week. held a mock funeral
for "rock music" in front or the
theater recently.
The members or the group
"Facellft" drove a hearse carry-
ing a coffin that contained a
guitar.
Gt1nman Robs
Dana Eatery
Employees
Three employees at a Dana
Point restaurant were held up at
gunpoint Sunday as they pre-
pared to close the premises for
the night.
Orange County Sheriff's of-
ficers said the three employees
or the Quiet Cannon , 34344
Street of the Green Lantern.
were then ordered by a man
armed with a .45-caliber
automatic to go upstairs to the
office where the intruder ap-
parenUy knew the safe was kepL
Officers said the gunman's -
robbery plana ended al that
point. He found tbe safe locked
and none or the three employees
knew the combination.
They said the gunman, who
wore a ski mask. described the
locked safe ln colorful terms and
then fled from the restaurant.
'High Role r '
In Accident
The 46-foot sloop High Roler
escaped serious damage Sunday
when Its mast struck a high
tension wire while entering Ven-
tura Harbor on a cruise from
Newport Beach to San Fran-
cisco.
Sk1pper Kirk Elliott of the
Newport Harbor Yacht Club;
who has the boat under charter,
said damaJte to the boat's elec-
tronic gear was minor and there
were no lrtjuries to the crew.
The boat was scheduled to
continue to San Francisco today
where it will compete in St.
Francis Yacht Club's Big Boat
Series in September
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
from our
boys dttpt.
.J
• ..
It
, . ,
'
•' ,• . _,, ·-• ..
·-·
,• •'
OAtLVPILOT
Pat Nixon Saluted.
GOING BACK DE".-You mlJbt au.peel that there were many b.i&blllhts Su8*y .,._, Pnlldent and Mn.
Nbcoa opened tI.eir San mma.. ..uw to btMllt tM cot·
fen of the Ua1ltd Republican '1nanc:• Committee ot
Oraap County. for me. the MJNl&ht wu Mn. Nlxoo.
For a penoe .-., aDIJ '...e.itly •uff red a major w.
'Pat Nina looked dellptt\1111 nt u lhe rreet.id'more
than 400 fUUU at poolside°" the cround•·
Stand.inc at tbe PNlldieat'a 1 cSe. the a.mlled, 1book b1tnda and chatted wlUI I.be party talthl\d u they mowct Utrouah u.e ....
c:eptlon line. Some camfld M.r. Nhloo'1
book. aeeklna an autocrapb.
ONE GENTLEMAN even bauJed
out an orange-colored vinta1e Nixon
bumper sticker ln asking tbat hla
s11nalure be affixed thereto.
ll seemed Mrs. Nixon stuck it out in
that reception line for well over one • "'-.:.""''"""""._,_........,
hour. She was relieved briefly by her Mn. .. ._
SOD·in·law, David Eisenhower. and went into the house.
But soon she was back with the l\leSls aiain.
The visit to the historic San Clemente estate was
somewhat ol a nostalgia trip for your correspondent, since
I grew up in that region when San Clemente was really a
village and the Nixons • La Casa Pacifica was the Hamilton H. Cotton Estate.
Back in those early years, my grandfather bad given
Ham Cotton an iron bell on a standard, which the Cottons
bad kept in the circular drive out at the entrance to the
estate. My wife and I toured the drive area on the chance
that the old bell might still be there. We finally asked Mrs.
Nixon if she knew about it.
"OH MY," SHE REPLIED, laughing. "Listen, when
they left, they took everything with them." Thal seemed to
solve the mystery of the old family bell.
As we toured the grounds. I was pleased to see the Col·
tons' gazebo still standing out on the blufftops. I guess I
told my wife the gazebo story for the 99tb time.
You see, Mr. Nixon isn't the first president to step UP·
on the grounds of the old H. H. Cotton estate. Ham Cotton
was a very large Democrat and a confidant of Franklin
Delano Roosevelt.
LOCAL LEGEND AND LORE had it that upon OC ·
casion. FDR would sneak into San Clemente via the
railroad and join Ham Cotton in a few rounds of poker in
the gazebo.
In truth. my wife sometimes seemed less than con·
vinced when I told that story. So when we met this de·
lightful lady from the San Clemente Chamber or Com·
merce, who repeated the tale for our benefit, it was most
s atisfying. There'snothinglikehavingoneofyourfishstories verified.
SO, IN AU, it was a delightful day and most gracious
of the Nixons to invite so many guests. It is true that some
of the GOP leadership openly fretted that somebody "from
the media" might somehow find their way into the event.
But I don't think they really needed to worry about
that.
..!
llOOd.~ed
Klan Increases
Racist Rallies
JACKSON. Mi!a. <AP> -.Racial tension is simmertn1 In three
Ml11l1a1DOI towm, With the Ku Kluk Klan bold.Joa ever mo ... atriclent
ralll•• ln" reaet1on tO well-ort•ftlaed black boycotts of white merchant..
Thia weekend, 1Z pickets In a boycott-coonected march were ar-
re1ted, tncludJns four Roman
Catholic nuns. At a Klan ialher· THE OPPICEas were demot·
tn1, four Klansmen strtpi>ed off ed and transferred to the fire de·
their bood1 and revealed partment. They event\lelly re·
themselves as a businessman 1t1ned. but by that time de-
and three local police officers. mands lo.r their ouster had coupled Wltb broader economic
0 THD£•s NO SUCH thin& as deman~ and the boycott began.
the New South," says Allred Lexington's boycott, alao by
"Skip" RobinJon, a contractor blacks upset over alleged police
and veteran civil rlibts leader brutality and lnsufftclent
who beads the United Lea1ue of minority hiring, ls "in ill third
Mississippi. month.
"There's more racism in Mis· On Saturday, pal.ice claimed
sisslppl in 1978 than there was in the marching pickets were
1962." blocking pedestrians on the
Indeed, the situation is side~alks and charged 10 peo-
rem lniscent of Mississippi's pie, mcluding the nuns, with dis·
racialtroublesinthel960s orderly conduct. Two men were · charged with threatening an of-
A BOYCO'IT OF white-owned ficer and assaulting an officer.
businesses in Tupelo and
Okolona, spearheaded by the
United League and punctuated
by weekly League marches and
occasional Klan counter-rallies,
has spawned arrests and tense
conlrontations.
The latest arrests came in
Lexington, a town of 2,700 people
about 150 miles from Tupelo in
the central part of the state.
where other groups are leading
the boycott, also against white·
owned stores.
The protests, which began in
February, stem from the Tupelo
police department's refusal to
dismiss two captains held
responsible by a federal judge
for beating a black inmate.
57 MPH Limit
For Trailways
Lauded, Hit
WASHINGTON <AP l
Trailways says it will limit the
highway speed of its buses to 57
mph , an action being both
praised and condemned on safe·
ty grounds.
D. Wayne Strout, a vice presi·
dent or Trallways, said the com·
pany is planning to install gov·
ernors on its buses to limit their
speed.
THE NUNS, MEMBERS of a
Franciacan order that bas done
social work in the black com·
munity and actively supports
the bOycott, have been sharply
criticized by some residents.
The nuns said last week that
men parked in cars outside their
house had insulted them and
eggs had been thrown at their
car. The harassment prompted
a rare news conference by the
Rev. Joseph Brunini, bishop of
the Diocese of Jackson.
The Klan bas reacted to the
new black activity with in·
creased action of its own.
KLANSMEN HAVE not ap·
peared in Lexington, but in
Okolona Saturday, some three
dozen robed Klansmen watched
silently from behind a row or
helmeted police as about 300
blacks marched downtown to de·
mand more public and private
sector jobs.
Later than night . the
Klansmen reassembled for a
rally about 20 miles away in
Tupelo, a city of 25.000 residents
whose bus inesses have been
boycotted for six months.
About 70 Klans men were
joined at the rally by some 200
sympathizers.
THE GRAND TITAN of the
Tupelo chapter unmasked
himself to reveal be is local
businessman Bill Howard, who
had remained hooded at all pre·
vious public appearances and
used an assumed name .
NATION I WEATHER
-~ ...... STRIKING FIREMEN JOIN IN INDIANA RESCUE
Roof CollapM1 at Movie Theater; Three lnlured
Strikers Ai~ Rest;ue
Attempt at Theater
ANDERSON, Ind. <AP > -About 25 strikapg firefighters joined
volunteers and supervisory personnel in rescuing patrons from a
busy movie theater whose roof collapsed under heavy rain.
authorities said.
Three people were injured when the roof of the Riviera Theater
caved in Sunday night, police
said. More than 100 other
patrons, given only moments'
warning when water began
pouring into the building. rushed
for the exits to safety.
Fire Chief Ed Ballinger said
most of the firemen "arrived on
the scene like I knew they would
and did assist all through the
operation.
.. I'M SUllE THEY'D be there
again if we had another
emergency, but still it is not a
good situation."
Fireman Don Taylor broke off
a n egotiating session with
Mayor Robert L. Rock to join
rescue workers at the theater.
"I decided that the disaster
was more important than they
<city officials> were." said
Taylor.
••1 GOT THERE and there
were other firemen already
there who bad it under control."
The two sides remained at an
impasse today. as the 144 mem·
bers of Firefighters Local 1262
asked surrounding fire depart·
ments to honor their picket lines
a nd said they would no longer
answer emergency calls or fire
runs. The city administration
said it wouJd refuse to return to
the bargaining table until the
firemen go back to work.
Between 100 and 150 people
were inside the theater, built
shortly after World War I. when
water began pouring through the
ceiling as a summer storm with
torrential rains passed through
the city, Ballinger said.
Plwny Bomb Threat
Diverts United Jet
SEATTLE IAP> -A phony bomb threat diverted a United
Airlines DC·8 to Canada with 152 passengers and a crew of seven
aboard, authorities said.
IN ADDmON, the firm has
petitioned the National Highway
Traffic Safety Administration to
require similar governors on all
commercial vehicles.
But the Teamsters union.
which represents drivers.
claims it is an unsafe idea.
"l t is basically unsafe to
restrict driver ability to pass a
vehicle in an emergency situa·
lion." commented Teamster
spokesman Bernie Hamilton.
HOW TO USE THE FOOD SECTION I
In Vancouver, British Columbia, a spokesman for the Royal
Canadian Mounted Police said an unidentified woman was being
held in connection with the incident and charges would be filed.
"They said something about her being upset about her
husband," said Naomi Potacb, a passenger from Boston.
United Flight 179 from Newark, N.J ., and Denver, was ap·
proaching Seattle-Tacoma International Airport shortly before 11
p.m. PDT Sunday when a stewardess found a note that s aid the
plane would be blown up unless it were flown to Vancouver, airline
spokesman Ron Carlson reported.
BUT STROUT CITED "a
whole file of letters" from state
and local police departments
praising the plan. And be added
that the 57 mph limit would al·
low a margin for passing
vehicles.traveling below the na·
lion's 55 mph limit.
After the plane landed, it was surrounded by police on the
runway while passengers left the craft and boarded buses. Wit·
nesses said the woman was caught when she tried to run away.
Joan C laybrook , ad ·
ministrat.or of the highway traf·
fie agency. has told Strout her
agency is considering a require·
ment for governors on com-
mercial vehicles.
Authorities said a search by the RCMP uncovered no bomb.
and the remaining 151 passengers and the flight crew then took off
for Seattle, where they were greeted by about 150 cheering and ap·
plauding friends. relatives and onlookers early today. Crew mem·
bers were hustled away before they could be questioned by waiting
reporters.
Strout said the driver atcept-
a n c e of the governors has
generally been good in the com·
pany's tests.
Plains Rains Mainly • m
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S.Conct lllOfl 7 .01 p.m. U TUHDAY
Fl,.1 ltw 2·0. e.m. 0 A
Finl 111911 t ·b e.m • t
SKOMiew 1.17 pm t I
SKOllO ~'911 NI p.m. U Svn rl-•:U e.m .. Mta 7.24 pm
Mtofl'11Ht.05•.m .• M1H lt p.fl'I,
8ttrlR.-n
HllflllflltOn IMcl! We-I i. I
f .. I wllll _, twtll, Cl!Mlllolll ~I
HtwpWt llNcll. Wawt I to I -•1111 IOVl .... st , ...... , c.NlllltM
ttmli.,.
TO SM: MONEY.
..
Ualng the DaHy Pilot food HCtlon
wlaefy, you can eave $5 to 110 on
your WMtdy grocery btll. And, that'•
a coneervetlve ••tlmate.
STUDY THE ADS. The DIMiy Pflot
Wedneeday food MCtlon la fun ot
aupennerttet and food Ilda wNch
feature, every •Mk, aped ... and
othef berg81u. Mak• • prectk:e ot
acrHNng thff• ed• for the but de-
als. Keep In mtnd that stOtH "'*"
are wtllng to put their prtc:ea In wrtt·
Ing .,. moat lkety to keep their
pledge to help you uve money.
CLIP THE COUPONS. CRp and Mve
"cent• off'' coupons. They may
aave you· only • dime hent and • nlckal there, but Ute aavlnga add up
qulcllly to dolan HCh time you
•hop.
USE THE RECIPES. All kinda ot ••· citing redpea .,. pteMnted In the
D•llyPlolfoodMCtJon.FromCIMMM
aouffle to atuffed green peppers;
from diet AIUUfta"'-.ID putt pncry.
You'I find many lnterelting •ncJ
novel waya to Nven up your ... kly
------1Afttt,
BUY IN SEASON. In many IMtencea
th• redpn are keyed to tho••
fooda -wNdl are In aeaaon. Thia ...... ...,. ...... ""' .. " ..... ~ ty •nd priced low.
PLAN AHEAD. Plan for at ... at•
... k ..._., and check the aup-
pllH JOU have on hand before lfto...,..CMUy mum~be
prevented by ftrat malling out •
atlopplng lat.
KEEP UP·TCM>AT£. Wortd, natlOnal
and ltlrt• nenn often can lmpect
food pttcn. It m•J be the .. ...,.,
In K ...... af'llppfftO etrtk .. In New
York or polltfcal uptlea.al In •
foreign land #Nch •• • key eupplef
ot a ...... -... Cllft fon:e ..........
price• here along th• Orange
Coeet. f4W __, .... ...._.Of lood
trenda, your OOMftlUftlly and the
woftd,Ntyonthe
DAILY PILOT
642-4321
STOCKS I BUSlNESS I Monday, Auguat 28. 1171 s
By MILTO~ Mos&Owrl'Z
ln tbe busin world tbla bu bee tho year of tbe SD
millloc offer )'OU can't refu:M.
PhlHp Monil, t.be dpmte <Marlboro> aod beer
<Miller) prOdueel', boqllt Its w~ lnto the left drink bust.
neas by acqulriq the Seven-Up CO. tor $$15 mUlion.
BEAT&JCE FOODS. A CBlcAGo food·proceaaiJl&
1tant that's not happy unless lt'1 dlseatlna another eom·
pany. paid $480 mtWon to acquire tlHt Troptcana Food Co.~
the bl&1est squeezer ol Florida oranges.
IC lod\lltries. a rallroad <DUnots Central( that srew
up to become a eouJomerate <Dad 's root beer, Midu
mufflers>. la paytna about "10 million to abeorb Pet Inc .• f ormerlY Pet Mille.
Money
Tree
And R. J. Reynolds
Jnduatrles. a cigarette
producer <Camel.
Winston, Salem> that
expanded lnto foods
<Chun King, Hawaiian
Punch> and con ·
t.ainerued freight ship-
pin& <Sea·Land), made a first pus at Del Monte Coci> .. tM
nation 'a lareest canner of fruits and veptables. otterma "58 million.
A ball a bUIJon dollars is a fair amount of chance. even
fol' a large corporation, and what made these offers lm·
presaive la that they were. for the molt part. cub dem.
No prom.l.slory notes. Casb on the barrelhead.
YOU MIGln WONDER WHERE companies set this
kind or Jooee change. Do they Just have $500 million lying
around somewhere in a sb'ooabox! Not exactly. As a mat.
ter or fact. most' companies. unless they 81"4' still maintain·
tng s luah ~di to pay off politicians bere and abroad. do
not have a lot or cash on hand. They're like you and me~
heavily in debt.
So bow do they buy tbese $500 million baubles they fan-
cy? The same way you and I buy a house· Tbey borrow.
Company A wants to buy Company B. lt goes to its
friendly banker and says, "We want to buy Company 8.
Lend us the money." The banker loon at the deal and says, "Sure, "you ought to be able to band.le that. Here's the money."
SOIWETllllES, WHEN THE COMPANY bem1 ac·
quired has a lot of a cash ln the till, the deal is even
sweeter. Then you buy the company with borrowed funds
and get quick access to money you can use to pay off your
debt. ln effect you are using the company's casb to buy it
out. Llfe can be sweet!
A small airline, Texas Inlemational Ai rlines, decided
it ought to buy a much bigger airline, National Airlines.
even though such a move seemed to be precluded by the
rules or t.be Civil Aeronautics Board.
It picked up 9.2 percent of National 's outat.anding
shares on the open market and announced it would bOrrow
S2S mUUoo in overseas markets to finance the purchase of
rnore shares.
So the next lime you see a company you want to bu)'.
call up your bank to see if lt will stake you. Tbe mqic
number this year ls $500 mllllon. And I don't think you can
charge that on your Visa or Master Cbar1e card.
Stang Earnings
Show Increase
For the nine months ended Jtme 30, Stang Hydron..lcs
lnc .. San Clemente, bas reported net income of $321,197
from revenues of $12,518,814, compared with net income of
$235.292 from revenues of $10,480,545 for the same period in
1977.
This represents 42 cents a share for the nine months on
760.980 shares outstanding, compared with 31 cents for the
same period in lf1T7 on total shares outst.andJng or 760,760.
For the third quarter ended June 30. Stang reported
net income of $295,886 from revenues of $5,015.957, com-
pared with net income or $83,159 from revenues or
$3,594,974 for the same period in 1977.
Eammas per share were 39 cents for the current third
quarter, baaed upon 160,980 outst.and.lng shares, compared
with 11 cents on total shares outat.andJng o( 760, 760 for the
same period iJl 1977.
Fl .. reee ..... SpUu Stock
Direct.ors of Fluorocarbon Co., Anaheim, have an-
nounced a two.for-one spilt lo the shares or the company's
common stock.
Owners or common stock will receive one addiUonal
share or common stock on Oct. 21 for each share they own
o( record on Oct. 15.
At the same time, directors increased the quarterly
dividend from 3~ cents to 4 cents after giving effect to the
stock split (6lf.t cents to 8 cents on the pre.split buiJ), an
increase of 28 percent.
The dividend will
)
be payable Oct. 31 to
(
T1 • II') NG at.ockboiden-of record ~ on Oct. 15. This is the
STOCK company's 11th con-
---------~ secutive quarte rly ,. ...,.. ·1J1Vfcte1RJ."'-- -
The board of direc-
tors also approved an amendment to the company's
articles of incorporation increasing the authorized number
o( shares from 2 million to 4 mlllioo.
Peter Churm, president, aaJd the decision to ratse the
quarterly dividend and to spUt the stock Is the result of the
company's record performance in the nscat year ending
Jan. 31 and for the first half of this year.
Fluo~arbon manulactura non-metallic products
made of Cluoroplaatlc compounds and other bl&h
performance materials. The company operates u
manufacturing plants ln the lfnlted States and sells to tbe
aircraft. valve, petrochemical electronics. constructloa.
medical and other Industries.
SllNttre•t Sa~ £H•f»
Sllvercrest lndustries Inc . 8uena Park manufacturer
and marketer ot manutactured homes, bu reported record
sale• and e...run,s for the year eiided June 30.
Sales climbed S8 percel\t to $86,883,000 from 562,928,000
the prevtoua year, while earn.inp rose ~ percent to
'3.039.000, or S2.32 &bare, from 12.023.ooo, or St.SS. in flseal
1977.
Fourth quarter aales lncreaMd 16 perunt to •.m .OOb
from $18,908,000 for the llke period tut Y'J•r. Howeve.,.. earrilnp were $5'70,000, or 43 cents share, compared with
$886,000, or69~nta, for lbe Uke Quarter oil.be prlor year
The net lncome for fiscal 1978 ahd tho (ou.rth quart~r
renect an accountlnf chan1e The prevtous queners ol 1978
end fiscal 197'7 wer~ restated to rflect the acoou.oUng
chan&e.
Sa• I-.,..lldlt ......
Olbralt.a.r Savlnaa hu opened an office at 31811 Del
Ob la po St.. San Juan Ca ptJtrano.
·. -...
• DAil Y fllllOT
"He wo1 o GREAT moscot, Mr.
Winslow ... but our hot dog sta nd went
bonkruptl"
FUNKY WINKER BEAN
OUR FIRST MALFTIME
90A> f5 A WE.EiC
ffJWJ, PEOPLE !
~
SHOE
MOON MULLINS
GERIATRIX
IT AMA 7.e'S MC 'l'Ol.J
K~P ~MILING AT A
TIME: 1..IKE iHI~ l
DENNIS THE MENACE
' I
ARr~u~ 6tPL-A>N~
Pot1T1CS
I "''· ...... 'I I &,, ' I ,, .....
GORDO
JUDGE PARKER
ASTliE
UfUTEHANT TAKES
6roltUIA KIH65TOH TO l'OUCE 14EAD-
OUAATE"5, TliEY
AREMETTHEU r,y 5AM DRIVER!
NANCY
PLUMBER?--
WE HAVE A
BUSTED
PIPE IN OUR
CELL.AR
by Tom Batiuk
by Jeff MacNelly
Dy Wm. F. Brown and Mel Casson
1U£ IJJAY YOU2 COllJIAC~ U>oict;
WAEN 'ft.lo'~ ~tM AJJJAY.
DOOLEY'S WORLD
DR.SMOCK ..
HESY. SMOCK, ~ HE!AR ~'R6
NOW ee1N' CON-StPeRec::> FOR AN HONORARY
.MSM.e.SRSHIP IN
"T"H8 AME!RICAN ACAPf;MY OF FAM.I L--Y
PHYSICIANS, HUH~·
THeRE!
~e
.-wv:-"1 PkOPVl ~"' fQZM'/ ~
f{ieET/
AJ..L. nl~~
U:FTTOOO
~~
TMe Q!Of evnt>tJ.
b#;/;afij4
by Mell
by Harold Le Doux
TEUMEAU HE'S TRYIHG TO MAKE
A&OOT n; 50~1HG Of THE
GEOltGIA! F~T ~ t COUlDH'T
Sl.fEP ~T NIGHT ":nw
WAS Ol1T Pft1VIH6 ALONE
UNTIL TliREfl'4
THE MORNING!
by Ernie Busflmiller
COMICS I CROSSWORD
PEANUTS
eu1"' Y'OU'RI!! STIL.t,.. ONC..Y "c::>oC1"'0R OCCUPAN1"' II 1"'0 "T"HE! A .M .A ., eH ?'
by Roger Bradfield
by George Lemont
TODAY'S CllSSRID PUllLI
ACROSS
1 Uses poor
111dgment
5 "Pardon
me"
9 Hirsh 1n e~
Pfl!SSIOn
t4 Come uoon
15 •• -Mable'
Streeter
lllle
16 Knot aga•n
11 Ruling
2 words
t9 Crect
20 FISh
21 Cerwm con· ,_,:
2 word'
23 Tr1mples on
2S Cabblge
drsnes
26 High notes
28 Singer Ethel
32 Considering
37 M"8inrppr
1111er
38 Ending lor
manor t~
39 Asi,n
weights
41 Free elK
tr on
42 ltngtlt unt1
45 NASA furs·
2 WO<ds
48Agreement
50 C,,,nge
Mus
51 Mete an•·
mals
SC Rrm
58 Kind ol ram
62 Ano•nl Ar
ch ate
63 Loolung
ha POV
&C Predtets
66 Conlrac:tion
67 Tl>e mouth
Slang
811 Pnn1er s
1trm
69 Feudal lold
70 Half Pretrx
71 Wtlttout Fr
DOWN
I Sends 1011h
2 C101ure
1911n
3 Right·hand
PIQI
4 Wes lunous
5 Navy brass
Abbr
!Warm
1 Sea buds
8 M1f111rv
deGOr8110rt
9 Kmd ol en •
trance
10 l11S1rument
11 Nice sum
m•rs
12 Bre.clt
tJ Wlgtfs
18 "'The -leaf
Focevei" 'If Arlen's cry
UNITED Fe1tufe Syndicate
SlfUfdly'a Puule So!Yed:
24 Natrvt race
fl T urkeatan
27 Thaillnd"s
old name
29 M1. P1rua
30 Essen1111
Piii
•7 A11111'11I QNr
49 -and
leather
52 Pres.nts
53 Sttrt0<
,. 55 Greek letter
!i6 ftlll4fltlle-
3 I Otfsprings name
J2 Coug11 57 MuStc svm
3J Mine prod· • bols
uc!S • 58 FtllSe go(f
34 F11h catchers 59 Prefix for
JS New form
Prett.
36 Sttal. Slang
.0 SC'Ofn
()Ta-mg it
easy
44Agreement
~w .....
culture
60 Woody
plant
61 Mau and
weigl'll unn
lS Slender
lin..i