HomeMy WebLinkAbout1978-08-30 - Orange Coast Pilott
an es ua
Friends Queried
Flight C--rashes;
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OfCdMMan IO Aboard Die J
·,DAILY PILO.T··:·
. -.• ... . -: ' :-;, ...• , * * * 10< * * . * ~·
W EDNESDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUST 30, 1978
VOL. 71, MO. Ml. 4 HCTI~ 4' ~AO«S
A~ .......
MASKED CIVILIAN YOUTHS OPPOSE SOMOZA REGIME
Liberation Sign Says, 'No Prisoners by Christmas'
Tiro Planes Bomb
Nicaraguan City
MANAGUA. Nicaragua lt'\P)
-Air force planes bombed
Nicaragua's third largest city
and c1v1hans battled President
Anastasio Somoza's soldiers in
other towns as a general strike
to drive the Somoza dynasty
from power gained new support.
Two plant's bombed
Mataa$1lpa_. 100 miles north of
M anagua. for two hours
Tuesday. killing at least four
people and wounding many
others. a Red Cross official
there s aid . The military
garrison m the city or 40,000
people had been under siege for
FOli RENT SIGN
lXJES IN HURRY "·My expectatiorB. were 'tar ex-
ceeded by the response to my
ad. The very first people who
called rented the condo, and
they have treated it as if it were
theirs.··
That's the advertising success
story of the woman who placed
this ad in the Daily Pilot:
lmm11c. 2 Bdrm Condo Bll1ni.. W 0 . patio. Pool. $340/mo XXX·XXXX
If you have an apartment,
condominium or home to rent.
call 642·5678. A friendly Daily
Pilot ad-viser will help you
word your ad for greatest im·
pact. I
Our market ls a great pJace
to put just a rew words to use,
making the Daily Pilot your
market.
three days with the civilian
population in virtual control of
the streets.
The Red Cross source said it
was impossible to determine the
number of casualties because
many victims were taken home
by friends and relatives who
feared the national guard.
Nicaragua's 7,500-man army.
would raid the hospitals.
He said 80 soldiers had been
rushed in as reinforcements, the
town had been blacked out by a
power failure, the Red Cross
appealed to Managua for
desperately needed blood and
plasma. and the people appealed
to the archbishop of Managua,
Miguel. Obando y ~ravo, tQ
intercede with the government
for them. The archbishop was
the chief mediator between the
government and the leftist
gu-errillait who seittd the
National Palace last week.
In Managua. a bomb killed
riv e national guardsmen
patrolling in a jeep, a doctor in
the military hospital reported.
Frequent street battles were
reported in Leon, a city or 50,000
residents, and a Red Cross
source there said the general
strike had paralyzed business.
<See SOMOZA, Page A2>
Baa, Shah Confer
TEHRAN, Iran <AP)-
Chinese 0-ainnan Hua Kuo-feng
and Shah Mohammed Reu
Pahlavi began tbelr first round
of talks today aimed at re·
juvenating a 2,000-year-old rela-
tionship and reachin1 common
ground on the aensiUve issue of
security. ,
Beaded for County
Plane Crash
Fatal to 10
A twin·engine Las Vegas
Airlines plane bound for Orange
County Airport plunged to the
ground shortly after taking off
from the North Las Vegas Air
Terminal today. killing all 10
persons aboard. authorities said.
The identities of the victims
were not available this morning.
but a spokesman for the airline
said none of the passengers were
from California or Nevada.
Orange County
"The pilot took off on schedule
this morning. but he never got
outside the airport boundary.
We cun't tell what happened."
Donahue said
Richard J a m e!:>o n. a Las
Vegas Contractor and private
pilot. was landing at the airport
and said he saw the plane go
down. <See PLANE. Page A2>
Mule Clips
Pat Brown
YOSEMITE NATIONAL
PARK cAPI -A mule
clipped former Gov. Ed
mund G. Pat Brown on the
right ankle during a camp·
ing trip here, but no bones
were broke n . a park
s pokesman said today
Brown was taken on
horseback to a camp-
ground after the accident
Tuesday. then flown by
helicopter to the park
hos pital in Yosemite
Valley.
He was treated for a
bruise and swelling. then
released. said He rbie
Sansum. park 1nformat1on
officer.
They were apparently part of
a tour en route to the Los
Angeles area after a brief stop
in Las Ve~as. The airline
s pokesman would not say where
the victims were from.
Friends Queried
The Piper NavaJo crashed
about 7.50 a.m . just moments
after it left the general aviation
terminal northeast o f Las
Vellas.
The plane carried nine
passengers and a pilot. There
were no s urvivors.
Airline s pokes man Don
Donahue said the airline has no
scheduled flights but flies on an
on -call charter basis between
Las Vegas and other Nevada
and California points, includmg
Bikinis Gone
In NB Theft
Newport Beach police today
sought the burglars who took 45
bikinis and a sewing machine
from a central Newport swim
suit shop.
'l'he items, valued at $1,350
were reported missing Tu,esdpy
from the Barefoot Contessa, 2811
Newport Blvd.
Police said the thieves broke
into the s hop by r e moving
louvered window panes.
Police Seek Clues
In CdM Slaying
Newport Beach pol ice today
continued interviewing friends
of the Corona del Mar man who
was bludgeoned to death late
Sunday night.
The body of 40·year-old Ruben
Martinez was discovered Mon·
day night in the blood·spattercd
wreckage of his bedroom.
Investigator Sam Amburgey
s aid today it appeared that
Martinez died at about midnight
Sunday. He said Martinez' move·
mencs J)l'tortcr tris death led-de·
tecti ves to a group of friends
with which the dead man went
to a Laguna Beach restaurant
Sundaynight. . _
He said Martinez apparently
lefl the night spot about an hour
before his murder ''We're still
talking to the people he was
wiUt, ''·Amburgey said today.
Police are still hunting
Martinez' car. a white 1976
Datsun 8 ·210. California license
plate. 627SMR, that bas been
m1ssmg smce the murder was
discovered.
Martinez had h ved alone in
the two-bedroom home at 411
Iris Ave. for 12 years He wai-a
real estate salesman with a San·
ta Fe Springs firm owned by his
brother·m·law.
His boss became concerned
about Martinez when he failed to
show up for work Monday and
called an acquaintance who was
sent to check on Martinez'
welfare.
Police said the deaCI man's
(See SLAYING, Page A2)
Five Held Guilty
SAN FRANCISCO (AP>
Contempt convictions agains t
five Plumas County supervisors
who defied, then obeyed a court
order regarding we lfare pay·
ments were upheld Tuesday by
the Ninth U.S. Court of Appeal.
Nader Attacks Detroit
Government Aho Blamed for Fuel Tank Fires
WASHINGTON IAP> ._
Consumer advocate Ralph
Nader strongly criticized the
federal government and the auto
Industry today for faillne to
ensure that cars can survive
rear-end colllsions without
possibly fatal Orea. •
Nader expanded hls crlticlam
from the Ford Pinto, which ls
subject to a massive recall over
the problem, to the General
Motors Veea and said other cans
probably have the same
problem.
The recall ordered by Ford
Motor Co. of 1.S million Pintos
and 30,000 Mercury Bobcats
stemmed from allegations that
when the cars were hit from the
rear the fuel tank could be
punctured, leading to a fiery
explosion.
Nader appeared at a press
conference with auto safety
consultant Byron Bloch of Los
Angeles, who showed slides and
released documents that he said
showed Ford knew how lo build
a safe fuel tank In the early
1970s but chose not to do so to .
save money.
··Ford has known and tested r
the exact remedy we are urgln@:
today;• Bloch said.
Ford announced a recall of thE·
cars June 9 and offered free
corrections. However. Nader
(See NADER, Page A2)
'
Clemente
Smash-up
Ends R11n
One person was killed and rive
others injured Tuesday morning
when their car crashed in San
Clemente a s it was being
pursued by federal border patrol
officers. California Highway
Patrolmen said today.
The name or the dead man
was being withheld pe nding
notification or relatives. officers
said. but he is believed lo be a
22 year-old National City resi-
dent.
Investigators s aid the car had
been halted at the San Onofre
border patrol checkpoint when
the driver sped away from ques·
t1oning officers
It wa:. being pursued by patrol
officers when it went out or con·
trol on the San Diego 'Freeway
and hat a guard rail at Avenida
Paco. officers said.
A II sax passengers were hurt
rn the 10:45 a .m. crash, officers
s aid. and were taken lo San
Clemente Hospital, where one
man died late Tuesday night.
Identified by the U.S. Border
Patrol were .Johnny Lopez. 23,
and a l4 ·year old youth. both
from National City.
Both Lor>cz and the teen-ager
arl' believed to be U.S citizens.
the Border Patrol spokesman
said. They were riding in the
front of the car when it crashed.
The juvenile was treated in
the hospital's emergency room
!See CHASE, Page A2>
Co ast
Weathe r
Night and morning low
cloudiness with mostly
s unny afternoon Thurs-
day. but only partial clear·
1ng at beaches. Lows
tonight in 60s. Highs
Thurs day near 70 at
bea_!.!hes to mid to upper
10s 1nland:----~~ •
I NSIDE TODt\ \'
A Palo Alto high schoot
football coach found being a
homemaker and mother was
tougher than fourth down and
30 yard& to go. See story, BJ.
lnde"'
,.
.
c
'
A.! OAll v ptLOT s Wedn!ld!Y· !UAWI ao. 1111
Pritne Rate lliked
Major Banks Increase l/4Percenl
8 fte .w«lated Preu
Se\•er I ol nation·, m~
bank~. rf"Spe>ndln1 \.0 F ral
Bti-.t' r"'e Board attempt• to
tl&ht\'n crt'dtl. today lncreak"d
Ule•r prlnw kndin• rat~ from 8
l)f rcl'nt to 91 • 1' w lhl' txth
~H tlw. ¥ r.
l\n .. ly:..a had bt> .. n pnod1rtinc
lht> rt; ... 111 tht' rat<• the b'l
te rti t d\a.r&ed oa loaNo lo t
b Jlk 'll most credHworthy CU4tom ra It left th prtmtt at
tu M point In mor. than
thtM years
N w York·, Chuso Menbauan
8ank. ~ natioo '• lhlrd·llrl l,
took th k d in the lncrt-M.Se. Its
~<'Uon w~ followed by other
maJor hitnk11. tncludln8
CbC!mtt'al Bank. firisl Penn·
1ylnn1a Bank l"lrsl National
Flight to Freedom?
German 'Skyjacker
Seeking Asylum
BERUN •AP> A wunma.n
h1Jarked a Pofl~h aurhner with
71 persons aboard today and
forced it lo a U.S. 11r base in
West Berlin. w~re tht• hijacker
and nine other passengers asked
for asylum an the West. an Air
Force spok~man said.
The spokesman. information
officer Lt Col Gerald R Roys,
said seven of those seeking
a!-.vlum were East German and
that he presumed the other three
tht: h11acker and a woman and
child who accompanied hjm -
were <.tlso East German.
The 10 stayed behind at Tem·
r~lhof Airport after the jetliner
took off again for East Bertin.
i\n llth passenger. a West
Bt.irliner. also remained behind.
Thirty-four passengers were
bused to East Berlin and the re-
maining 18 rode back aboard the
plane.
•·The h1J~cker i.urrendere<t
peacefully as soon u~ this thing
landed," Roys said. gestunng
toward the TU·l.34 twin-engine
jel of the Pohsb airline LOT.
The hi Jacker. who was not
further described, had put a
pistol in the face of the pilot and
told him to land in West Berlin
in s tead or East Berlin as
scheduled on the (light from
Warsaw and Gdansk. Poland.
Roys said.
The first person off the plane.
a man carrying a brown bag,
was escorted peacefully away,
witnesses said.
The blue-and-white plane.
which carried a crew or eight.
took off after West Berlin police
interrogated passengers. Roys
said the questioning was
necessary for the drawing up of
an air piracy charge against the
hijacker
'Off-beat 8ustiee'
Judge to Hooker:
Go Back to Fresno
FORT WORTH. Texas <AP>
··Fort Worth has enou~h pros·
titute:. without importing any
from Califom1a."
With those words ringing in
her ears. Deborah Elder. 21.
found herself bound back for
Fresno.' the graying, grizzled
visage of County Court Judge
F,..,.. Page A J
PLANE •••
"The take-off ~cemed
normal." Jameson said ··rt was
climbing. but 1l shook violently
and suddenly pitche<t to the right
and crashed."
Tht•re were no skid mark~. in-
d1cat 1ng the plane dropped
stra1ght down.
The back of the craft wa~ broken, but the plan was rel·
<ttively intact. It did not catch
fire. authorities said.
SLAYING ••.
bedroom showed signs of "one
hell of a struggle." but that the
rest of the home appeared un-
disturbed. They said they have
not ruled out robbery or
burglary as a motive in the slay-
ing.
'Foul' Claimed
MANlLA. Philippines <APl -
Soviet defector Viktor Korchnoi
threatened today to quit the
world c hess championship
match witll titleholder Anatoly
Karpov unle!'s a Soviet
parapsychologist hP. claims is
~pookmg him is barred from the
playing area and one-way glass
is installed to separate the
players from the spectators
ORANGE COAST ~
DAILY PILOT
J C. Duvall stamped on her soul.
The 80-year-old judge, known
for h1!-. sometimes off-beat brand
of justice, told the woman he
would not fine her if she prom-
ised to go home.
"You be back in court by 2
p.m .. " Duvall croaked in a voice
that has been compared lo a
parrot with strep throat. ''I'll
have your plane reservations
ready."
Miss Elder gladly paid her
plane fare and vanished.
But four others. called "local
talent" by Duvall, didn't do as
well. Each hooker got a $250 fine
and 120 days as guests of the
county.
Ouvall's actions. while un·
usual, set no precedtnts. lie
used lo have bailiffs escort un-
desirables to the county line
where they were told not to
come back.
~Payoff
Leads Checked
WASHINGTON IAP>
Federal agents are tracking
"big. big money" to Swlss
banks, where they believe
General Services Administra·
lion emp)oyees channeled it
after demanding payoffs from
contractors. a source close to
-.., n e investigation says.
"They're O\ler in Switzerland
working on it through FBJ
liaison people," said the source.
who asked not to be identified.
The Swiss connection is part of
a larger investigation by Justice
Department _prosecutors and
other federal invl?stigators lnto
alleged corruption lnvo)ving
millions of dollars In the GSA.
which oversees construction and
maintenance of federal build·
ings.
Judge to Rak
Bonk of Sl t,oujs, the Dank of
St Loui · and Ohio Nallonul
B•nk. Analyats said they cxl)f'Ct·
ed all of the natlon'11 bunk!. to
,., ... tbulr prime rates by
wet'k 's l'nd
The/rtml' rute i~ not directly
tinke lo the mortaa&e or
l>t.mmnal loam murkets, but can
ha"'c 11 psycholoJical etrect on
interest rates in those areas.
The Federal Reserve, in an al·
tempt to slow the economy and
make the sl\lmplng U.S dollar
more uttractivc to foreign cur·
rency traderi .. has been pushing
up lht! 1nter~l ratei it charges
member banks; thus making it
mort expensive for them to ob·
tarn money.
Meanwhile. word of the huge
U.S. trade deficit in Ju)y drove
th~ dollar down nearly six yen at
tht-s tart or trading on the Tokyo
foreign excban~e today. It re·
covered less than a yen to close
at 189.725, 2.4 percent lower than
Tuesday's closing rate.
The drop, the biggest since the
1973 re valuation of the yen.
came after similar action Tues-
day on the European and New
York markets following the an-
nouncement that the trade def· ~cit was $2.99 billion, nearly
double the June amount. The
dollar lost more ground today on
all European foreign exchange
markets.
The dollar fell 1.4 percent
against the West German mark
in Europe Tuesday, 2.4 percent
against the Swiss franc and 1
percent against the French
franc, and continued its steep
fall in later New York trading.
Trading in Tokyo ended Tues·
day before the Wa s hington an·
nounce ment, and the dollar
closed on the Japanese foreign
exchange market al 194.30 yen.
10 yen above its record low.
Trading opened today at 188.50.
and dealers said importers
began buying, which pushed the
U S. currency al one point back
above 190. Then there was
another slippage. and this con·
tinued to 189.35 in trading with
other Asian market:; after the
Tokyo market clo~ed.
Uncertainty over the dollur
ke pt trading in gold fairly
steady in London and Zurich, the
two major bullion markets The
price rose in London from
S204 .125 an ounce Tut'sday night
to S206.50 and in Zurich from
$202 75 to $206. 75.
"The trade deficit wiped out
all the gain.'> from American cf·
forts to defend t h e dollar
earlier." one trader in Tokyo
said.
f'ro• Page A I
NADER •.•
and Bloch said the corrections
will fix only part of the problem
and there should be a second
recall for more extensive
repairs.
Bloch s aid the Vega has
almos t exact l y the sa me
problem with the fuel tank that
the Pinto has and added that the
National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration is investigating
it.
"This is only the tip or the
iceberg. the Ford Maverick and
Me r cury Comet also have
notorious problems," Bloch
said.
Bloch said European
carmakers ror years have put
the fuel tank in a position wh.ere
it is unlikely lo be punctured
during a collision and that
American carmakers could have
don e the same.
"The United States makes the
worst cars in the world in terms
of safety during rear -end
collisions," said Bloch, who
has testified as an expert in a
number of auto liahihly cases.
H"e sata that presidents of
Detroit car manufacturers could
order their engineers to make a
safe fuel tank and it could be
done quickly under current
technology
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Death for Slayer
An Oranae County Superior
Court jury said Tuesday that
convicted murderer Maurice
Thompson s hould die in San
Quentin's aas chamber.
Thompson showed no emotion
as the same jury that round him
guilty of the Nov. 14 , 1977,
murder of Michael Whalen ln La
Habra said he should be put to
death.
The five-man. seven-woman
jury could ha\le decided that the
33·year·old convicted killer
should be sent to prison for the
rest of his Ufe without possibility or parole.
Instead, after about five houn
dellberaUon. the Jury decided
that the slaying or Whalen and
f
the senous wounding of June
Felice last fall warranted the ul-
timate penalty .
The man and woman were
gunned down in Whalen •s home
during an early morning rob·
bery attempt.
Mrs. Felice later identified
Thompson as the assailant.
Deputy Public Defender Ron
Butler said be will move to have
Thompson given a new trial.
The death penalty assigned by
the jury came as a recommen·
dalion lo the judge and is not
blndlna on him when• he sen·
tences Thompson. That pro·
nouncement is expected to be
made Thursday unless an appeal
by Butler for added Ume is
granted.
•
., .......
MABEL SHEEHAN. LEFT, ANOS HOME CROWDED
Wldow Stays In Convent Whtie "umor• Abound
Cae•e Denied
But Rumors Surround Widow
PHll.ADELPHIA <AP>-From the size of tbe crowds out·
side the Widow Sheehan's house. one mlaht think she wu
glvlng money away.
And that's just the idea hund~ or people got in their
heads. As a result, police have been posted around the clock to
keep out people poking arowld for money supposedly stashed In
the house.
MABEL SHEEHAN, MEANWIDLE, HAS gone to live at a
con"'enl to get away from burglars and curiosity seekers, police
said.
The money-sniffing crowd outside the old row house. a
modest two-story brick affair in a lower middle-class
neighborhood, swelled to some 300 Monday night. So 100 police
officers -some on horses. some wearing riot gear -went to
the scene.
Rumors of the cash supposedly kept inside by the 72-year·
old widow had grown by that time to $45 million from an initial
estimate of $35,000.
The fuss began when stories circulated that Mrs. Sheehan.
who lives alone with her sheep dog, bought a car for a friend
and paid for several trips to Puerto Rico for other friends.
POLICE SAID THERE WAS NOTHING to the story. But it
was not until Tuesday that the scene returned to normal. By
then, police said, they had arrested 19 people who tried to break
in.
omcers were posted overnight at the front and back doors.
Mrs. Sheehan insists her only income is a $247 monthly
Social Security payment. police inspector Paul Frankenfield
said.
But a neighborhood youth wasn't having any of that.
··If there is no money in there, then why are all these police
gu ~~mg the house'!"
'Neurosis' Told in Trial
BOWLING GREEN. Ky . CAPl
-Maria Elaine Pitchford was
s uffering from h ysterical
neurosis when s he aborted her
20 to 24-week-old fetus with a
knitting needle. a psycbiatrist
has testified
believed to be the first woman to
stand trial on cha rges of
performing a self-induced abor·
tion. was expected to take the
stand in her own defense today.
The slender, red·h~ired
former psychology major.
Mi ss Pitchford. 22, i.s charged
with performing an illegal abor·
tion on herself with a knitting
needle. Her mother also was ex·
pected to testify.
SALE ENDS
TffiSWEEKEND
' I . .
-~ I '
Don't w ait any longer.
Substantial savings now
during the finat days of our
summer sate.
TORRANCE
23649 Hawthorn• Blvd.
um 37e.121q
COSTA MESA
t59S NewPQft Blvd.
C7t4) f>4MOSO
-
............ ,
SOMOZA •••
E~teli. 90 miles north of
Managua. was tense, a Red
Cross orncial there said. bµl Lbo
national guard was reported
occupying the heart ot the city
and keeping it. under cont.rot
· Meanwhile. the country's mOlt
powerluJ business or1annation,
tbe Nlcar11uan Development
Institute. declered lts aupp<>rt
Jor the anti-Somou strike that
began Friday and urged Its 700
members to join in tbt
"polltical·labor" protest.
.. Tbe government is
extremely weak when compared to tbe morellty or the Nl~araguan people and that fact
along with the honor of the
people wiU finally bring an end
to this long travesty of liberty in
Nicaragua," said Manuel Jose
Torres Barrios. the president of
the institute, which supported
another antl·Somoza strike in
January that lasted two weeks.
Somoza defied foes. telling
reporters his resignation would
lnvite "chaos and anarchy" and
would "betray the aspirations of
Nicaraguans who want to livt: an
a free society.
.. The i.aSue in Nicaragua today
ls the survival of democratic
government." he declared.
"Nicaragua is far from perfect,
but it is moving toward a
deJnocratic government. I
intend to fulfill my constitutional
duties and remain as president
until my term expires in 1981."
P ... P.,,eAJ
CHASE •••
and released to his parents.
Lopez was reported to be in sta·
ble condition today in the
hospital's intensive care unit.
Also treated in the hospital's
emergency room and released
was Feliciana del Ram06. 25. of
Guatemala. -The Border Patrol
said s he was in the trunk or the
car along with three men when
the auto crashed.
Admitted lo the hospital were
Raul Alfaro. 22. or GuatemaJa,
and another man whose name
was not a\lailable today. Alfaro
was in the hospital ·s intensive
care unit. Both were reported in
stable condition.
Strike Attacked
LIMA. Peru IAP> -Peru's
ruling military regime declared
a state of e mergency and
suspended constitutional
guarantees in five of the_
country's 23 states Tuesday in
e n apparent mo\le to end a
crippling strike by the nation's
45,000 miners.
LAGUNA BEACH
US North eo.1t Hwy.
(71') .... ,,,
I
I
7
" orange £east
EDIT10N
~ VOL. 11, NO. 142, 4 SECTtONS, • PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
Today' £1081~
N.Y. StoekS
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 30, 1978 c TEN CENTS
Totnt Burns as Strikers BkJck Aid
ANDERSON. lnd I APl -
nre r•~ throuth • \>1ock-\on1
area of downtown today • mo&t
of Andersoo·s trdnn• httmcn
ref\l.Sed to pond and volun· teen rmhina to the a«nM 'fttt
delayed by picket lines.
autboriU u.ld.
Flre Chi t Ed 8alhn1er
wbo re:spcmdtd to the alum ~th
el4ht probationary om~rs -
said the blue wu te>ntroll~ by
mldmomina
Belliaaer said the flttfi&bt
union l-"'9d pleaa for htlp.
but aboal lb ltribrs how~ up
1nyway ead ~ unUl volWl·
tur Crom neltbborloc com·
muni G'rivecf.
No iJ\jl1ri8 were reported. At
lea t row btllldlnt•. tocludlna the county proeecutor'1 omce.
wue deatJooy-S aero.a the atreet
from the lladiloo County aov·
ernment complex. u wti the second emer1ency
•n thla c ntral IndJana city or
11 .000 the state's el1hth
laraest since the 1'4 firemen
w nl on ltrik.e Saturday night in
a pay d pute.
The fl.re lJ believed to have
tarted ln t.h• Courthouse Lounge,
" tavern that had closed for the
ru1tht There was no immediate
and•cat\on wb t caused the blue.
Chesterfield Volunteer Fire Chief
Larry Musser said lhere was no
evidence ol arson.
About 3~ hours after the fire.
Superior Court Judae WUllam T.
Clifford issued a temporary
restrairuog order directing the
firefighters lo return to work.
There was no immediate ln·
dication bow the strikers would
respond.
Musser ~aJd he and rive vo1un·
leers waited 10 minutes at Ute
edge of the city until striking
firefighters received approval
fr-0m their union leaders to let
the volunteers through the
picket line.
"I guess we'd still be standing
there watching the block bum 1r
they hadn't let us through."
Musser said. "At an emergency
meeting Monday. we a1reed not
to cross picket lines set up by
the strikers."
On Sunday night. about 25
strikmg firefighters res ponded
after the roof on a busy
downtown movie theater col·
lapsed under the weight of
heavy rams Three persons were
mJured. one crthcaUy. and 80
o ther patrons s crambled
through exits to safety.
The firemen. however. set up
picket ltnes Monday e1nd vowed
to ig nore future emergency
calls Supervisory personnel.
who had helped answer calls the
first three davs. Joined strikers
on picket Imes Tuesday
10 Die • m Vegas Plane Crash
Police
Find Car
. In Death
J
BULLETIN i Laguna Beacb police today
1 found &be missing auto or a
· Corona def Mar man wbo was
· -.1adgeoned to death Sunday
• nJ1ht.
: Officers said tbe car was
• found parked on Brooks Street
· near the Intersection or Catalina
Stl'fft shortly before noon by In·
. vestigator Gene Brooks.
Laguna Beach officers were
: 1aardlng tM car .belonglna to the slain man, Ruben Martinez,
41, or 41 I Iris Ave., until
Newport Beacb deteetlves who
laave been investigating tbe
marder coold arrive to iAsped
tile auto and its contents.
• Newport Beach police today
continued interviewing friends
of the Corona del Mar man who
} was bludgeoned lo death late ! Sunday night.
The body of 40-year·old Ruben
1 Martinez was discovered Mon·
t day night In the blood-spattered
: ..-recl<age of his bedroom.
lnvest1~ator Sam Amburgey
said today it appeared that
Martinez died at about midnight
Sunday. He said Martinez· move·
i:nents prior to his death led de·
teclives to a group of friends
with which the dead man went to a Laguna Beach restaurant
Sunday night.
He said Martinez apparently
left the night spot about an hour
before his murder. "We're still
talking to the people he was
with." Amburgey said today.
Police are s till hunting
Martinez· car. a white 1976
Datsun B-210. California license
plate 627SMR. that has been
mis!>mg :-.mce the murder wa5
discovered
M arlJOC'Z had hved alone in
the two·bcdroom hom e at 411
Iris Ave for 12 years. He was a
real estate salesman with a San·
ta Fe Spnn~s firm owned by his
brother-in-law.
His boss became concerned
about Martinez when he failed to
show up for work Monday and
~ailed an acquaintance who was
sent to check on Martinez'
welfare.
Police said the dead man's
bedroom showed signs of "one
bell of a struggle ... but ti18t the
rest or the home appeared un-
dis turbed. They said they have
not ruled out robb&ry or
f>.urglary as a motive in the slay.
i{ag.
FOR RENT SIGN
C,OES IN .Hl!RRY
"My expectations were far ex· ~ded by the response to my
-ad. The very first i>e<>R~ who
'.called rented the condo, and
tbey have treated it as if il were
theirs.··
That's the advertising s~cess
·story of the woman who placed
this ad in the Daily Pilot: .
Jmmac. 2 Bdrm Condo
BIUns. W 10. patio. Poot.
$340/mo xxx xxxx
If you have an apartment,
condominium or home lo rent,
nil 6'2·5678. A friendly Dally
Pilot ad-vlser wlll help you
word your ad for greatest im·
pact.
Our .market is a 1reat place
to put just a few words to use.
miking the Dally Pilot your
market.
APWlra.,._'IO
TWIN·ENGINE LAS VEGAS AIRLINES PIPER NAVAJO PLUNGED TO GROUND SHORTLY AFTER TAKEOFF AT LAS VEGAS
Piiot, All 9 Paesengers, ~,.Route to Orange County Airport. Perished in Crash
Noi,se Woes
Not Solvable
By Airlines?
Orange County supervisors
s h ouldn 't depend upon the
airlines to solve jet noise prof>.
lems around Oran'g-e County
Airport, county officials report
ed Tuesday.
Executives of both Hughes
Airwest and Air California re-
ported by letter lhal they will
meet new Federal Aviation Ad·
ministration requirements call·
ing for quieter planes to be
phased into operation between
1981 and 1985.
But airport officials warned
the quieter planes by themselves
won 'l be enough to bring the
airport into compliance with
.slate jet noise standards re·
quired by 1986.
The new regulations will re·
quire airlines to equip half their
fleets with noi se muffling
equipment by 1981 and the re-
mainder by 1983. a report to
supe r visors said.
If they c hoose to replace
'\iircraft with quieler planes the ~deral deadline is extended to
1985.
The airfines have yet to sub-
mit timetables for converting
planes, county officials said.
County officials reported
larger but quieter aircraft arc
available that could be used at
Orange County Airport.
The-larger plan~s probably
would be able to carry enough
passengers lo meet the airport's
1985 passenger demand, the re·
port said.
Rhodesia Vi8ited
SALISBURY. Rhodesia <APl
-Former Texas Gov. John Con·
nally meets Rhodesian Prime
Minister Ian Smith and other
leaders today before addressing
a business group.
'Derogatory'
Flight Aides R~p
TV's 'Flying High'
W ASHlNGTON I AP> -The
"coffee, tea or me" mentality or
the new televis ion program
.. Flying High" 1s an ins ult to the
intelligence and morality of
~very night attendant. the presi·
dent of the Association of Flight
Attendants has charged.
·'The show concentrates more
on bosoms than brains, and on
sex more than safety." said
Patricia D Robertson after
view in~ Monday night's TV pres·
entation of a pilot film for the
series. which will be on CBS this
season.
The pilot depicted the swing.
ing life o f three novice
stewardesses. a portrayal which
Robertson said Tuesday was in·
accurate and demeaning.
"[ can only say that the script
used every stereotype and cliche
that has ever been used in a de·
rogatory manner toward flight
attendants." she said. ··we have
worked for many years to dispel
the mistaken image of flight al·
Bikinis Gone
In NB Theft
Newport Beach police today
sought the burglars who took 45
bikinis and a sewing machine
from a central Newport swim
suit shop.
The tt.ems, valued at $1,350
were reported missing Tuesday
from the Barefoot Contessa. 2811
Newport Blvd.
Police said the thieves broke
into the shop by removing
louvered window panes.
tendants as sex goddesses. and
this program is a real setback in
those efforts.
"Flight attendants a re on
board planes not to be sexy
stewardesses. but for the safety
of the passengers.'· Robertson
said. "If this first script is in·
dicative of the rest of the series.
we can only expect a remforce·
ment of the already negative im·
age or flight attendants as
brainless sex goddesses. Safety
is our business not sex "
A s pokesman forCBS. asking
not to be identified publicly.
said. "It certainJy is not our m·
tention to put night attendants in
a poor light or to downgrade
them or embarrass them m any
way.
"We would hope that they will
keep in mind that this 1s really
only the pilot for the series and
we ask them to look at the next
two or three episode~. and they
mightfind:;omethingtoenjoy"
Tanks Derailed
McEWEN. Tenn. I A P l
Crews laboring today to drain
two derailed tank ea~ full of a
flammable gas worked with
special care. remembering the
deaths of 16 people in February
when a derailed car exploded 10
mites west of here The two
pressurized tank cars. loaded
witll fl am m able propylene
oxide. were pulled off the tracks
when a three-locomoltve. 99-car
Louisville & Nastu41~ ff'ein-
derailed in a remote timbered
area.
Stitdent 'AdvaneeS'
Kinderganener Spen& Day in Third Grade ·
MINNEAPOLIS <APl -Kindergartener
Jason Sims says his second day of school was
no match for the first.
Jason rode off on a school b12s Monday.
but didn't return at noon . His mother called
Barton School and the principal checked with
the kinder.art.en teacher, only to find that
Jason never arrived.
11\SON. WHO IS TALL FOR HIS age,
had contentedly spent the day tn a third·
grade classroom.
"I asked hlm what he did with those big
kids all day." his mother. Loretta. saJd Tues·
day "He !!aJd he had to reud about autumn
and draw a picture. He doesn't read much.
and sometimes he makes an ·s· backward.
the way a 5-year-old does. How he lasted all
day in third grade is beyond me ...
THE THIRD-GRADE TEACHER dis·
covered the mistake shortly before the prtn·
cipal found the boy. She realized he was not
as mature or learned as the other children
a'ld asked him what school he was In las t
year.
··Nursery school," Jason replied
•Mrs Sims said Jason wasn't much 1m
pressed with kindergaM~n Tuesday
"Hf was upset becaustt he couldn't stay
for lunch like he did Monday and he had to go
home at noon.·· she said
Mesa Pioneer
' Dead at 94;
Funerol Set
Funeral service s artc
scheduled Thursday for Lettae
May Dudek. one of Costa Mesa·s
earliest resident c; and
merchants. who died Monday
She was 94.
Services will begin at 2 p m at
Bell Broadway Chapel in Costa
Mesa with private entombment
services to follow Friends may
call at the mortuary until 8.30
tonight.
In 1927. Mrs Dudek and her
husband. Albert. started thl
"Red & White" grocery store
near the corner of 18th Street
and Newport Boulevard tn CO!;ta
Mesa. The Oudeks sold tht: store
in 1944.
Mrs . Dudek also spent many
year s as a Sunday School
t e acher at the Community
Church. later to becom(: First
United Methodist Church
Mrs . Dudek 1s survived by ?
son-in·law. Or Horace W Leer
ing of Santa Ana. two nephew!'
two grandchildren, a nd four
great· grandchildren.
Brown Signs
Tax Cut Bill
SACRAMENTO <AP ' -A S!
billion slate income tax cut. WJJF
sent to Gov. Edmund Brown J r
today and he quickly signed tl
<Earlier story. AS'
The bill won tmal legislative
passage on a ~5·0 Assembly
vote On Monday. 1t won una•
Senate approval on a 39-0 vote
In a floor debate of les~ thar
.l.O.. mt.n~tes...-Asse m.W.) mun
Lawrence Ka piloff . D S:in
Diego, author or the tax cut pro
posal called the bill 'tru!l' .1
non-parti san b1p arl•"-3n
measu~.··
YoW1ger Probe
Ckars Briggs
SACRAMENTO t AP 1 St::te
Sen John \ Briggt-did not
violate a stale l:iw by transfer
ring 5250 .00C r:11,.<·d by h1'
gubernatorial <':1mp:>1,zn <'OO'
m illf't-to comm•llE'<'~ tt't a t
s~earheaded two ba llot 111
lt\attves. tht' !l•:>•t' a ttornt-)
generalannounce<!Tuesday
Attorney Generni EHll<' J
Younger said ar. 10\le!lltf!at1on
~howed the money rPtsed :or tht>
two 1nit1Jl!\•e' -concun1njt
homo!"~xua! teacht!r ~ '.lna tht"
death penalty -not u~ea tor
Brtggs · gub€rnJtorta. cwmpa1gn
Aircraft
Enroute
To O.C .
A twin e ngine L as Ve gas
Airlines plane bound for Orangt.•
County Airport plunged to the
ground shortly after taking off
from North Las Vegas Air
Terminal today . k1lhng the pilot
and nine passengers. authorities
~CJ Id
There were no s urvivors. The
victims were apparently part of
a n Australian vacation tour
group en route to the Los
Angeles area after 3 stop in Las
Ve~a~
The Piper Navajo crashed
a bout 7 50 a m. JUSl moments
after 1t lcf\ the general aviation
term 1nal northeast of Las
Vega!>
A1rl1ne "-POkes m a n Don
Donohue said the atrhne has no
-.cheduled 01ghts bul fl1e~ Oil an
on.call charter basi~ between
Las Ve~as and other Nevada
.rnd California points. including
Orange County
.. The pilot took off on schedule
this morning. but he never got
outside· the airport boundary
We canl tell whar happened."
Donohue said
R•<'ha rd J a mecoon , a La!i
Vega!' contractor and private
pilot. wa.." landing at the airport
a nd <.atd he ~aw the plane go
down ·
· The take o ff ~t·e m ~d
normal." Jameson said ··tt wa~
chmb1n1?. but 11 shook violently
and "uddenly p1t<'.hed to the nght
and crashed ··
1'htt e wer<' no skid marks. m
d•ca t1n1? lht' plant> dropped
!'tra1j'!hl down
Tht> bac!< of the craH wa~
brok t n. but tht• plant: was re
lal1H ;.,, intact I• did not catch
on I ire~ author 1tses said
Two Boys, 3,
Burn to Death
~lOOE~TO 1AP1 Two 3.
\.NH o:d bo}'-burned to death
h(. rl' alter •• c<1n of 1?asohne they
!'>ad bllr. p:.1} ir.g with in a
i:?<1r a11.e <'xpiodcd into flames. ct·
I} fin• otf1c1ali: "aid
Tht· boyc; wen• 1dent1fied as
R) an Let· Carver. son of Mrs
Cn•h) Can·t·r. and Jason
Rodm·~ Pcll tlohn. son of Mr.
u nd :'d r!> Ralph Pettuohn
Coast
6-=
_. \l'eather
Night and morning low
C'loudrnes:.. with mo.stly
• unn" nftPrnoon Thurs-
da} but only partial clear-
' n,.; a l bPaches Lows
ton:~ht 1n 60s Highs
ThPr:..rta\. near V9 at
bt •~< he<; to mid to upper
70!> 1nh1nd
l~SIDE T ODA t'
A T'al<· Al:o high •choot
/1mtbo1/ rooc·h found being a
h1:memnl.<'1 ana motht'r wa~
:cH1ghe1 1hon fotAT1h doum nl'ld
.ilJ 110 rd., le: go See story. 8 I
lade~
•• .... , \W¥o<• en H .. •\<-Cll te.••t1q M AM le~ (II l M l oy• A• M •ll.., M __ , It
""''".'' ..,, -....,., eu.u C.t•IOrftt• llt ..-vt~I ,........ .. Cl••l·•IH 01 lt Nal-al N~ M
Co"' o '"' Or•"9• C-t'f 4111 Cr•o,._ A•t Slierh II .. 0 ... 111 "•to<~ 11•1 Stec',_,.,,_, It l••l .. ••I ,,_ A6 Ttl..,1>1.-i ltt
'ntHI••"_..' 1 1• 1t Thealtt• 111 IJ 't•lvtl~. c·~ WMUMt M ,_ C•" w .. MNeW\ AA
1n
n
'· 8
0
-.
-
..
-
Hija~ker
Requests
Asylum
BERUN cAPl A 1unman
h\jacked a Pon h 1JrUnn walh
71 perM>Dt aboard today and
forced it to a U.S. air bu to
Wet.t Berlin, wbeN t.M 1'1\jat"lliewr
and rune C!Lber p ae~ wet! ror •y)um m ~ W t , an Air
Force Poke man aa1d
The apojc man. mformaU°" off1c~r U Col Gerald R Roys.
uad uven of tho t1 srekln1
J:sylum wett East G~rman and
that he presumt-d th oth r ~
lbt hijacker and a woman llnd
child who ittcompanied him
w~re also East German
Tb 10 stay<'Cl bet1lnd It Tem
pelhot Airport aft~r the j Ulntt
took olf a&ain for East lk'rUn
An llth pas1en1er. a Wut
lkrhntir. u1so remwne-d behmd
Th1rl) four pa,, cnJ{ers w~re
bust!d to Ea.st S..-rltn and th~ ~·.
mainmg l8 rode bark ~board the
plunc.
·'The h11aclter sutrt!ndered
peacefully as soon as Uus thing
landed." Roys said, Resturing
toward the TU·l34 twin.engine
Jt!t or tbe PoUsh airline LOT.
The hijacker, who was not
further described, had put a
pistol in the face of the pilot and
. told hipl to land in West Berlin
~d of East Berlin as
scheduled on the flight from
• I
i
i
Warsaw and Gdansk, Poland,
Rovs said. The flrst person off the plane.
a man carrying a brown bag,
was escorted peaceruUy away
witnesses said.
The blue-and-white plane
which carried a crew of eight.
took off after West Berlin police
interrogated passengers. Roys
s aid lbe questioning was
necessary for the drawing up of
an air piracy charge against the
hijacker.
Hooker Told:
Go Back Home
To California
FORT WORTH, Texas <AP>
-.. Fort Worth bas enough pros
titutes without importing any
from California."
With those words ringing in
her ears, Det>qrab Elder. 21,
found bersell bound back for
Fresno. the graying, grizzled
visage or County Court Judge
J .C. DuvaJJ stamped on her soul
The ~year-old judge. known
for his sometimes off-beat brand
of justice, told the woman he
would not fine her if she prom·
1sed to go home.
.. You be back in court by 2
p.m .. " Duvall croaked in a voice
that has been compared to a
parrot with strep throat. "I'll
have your plane reservations
ready."
Miss Elder gladly paid her
plane fare and vanished.
But four others, called "local
talent .. by Duvall, didn't do as
well. Each hooker got a $250 fine
and 120 days as guests of the
county.
Duvall's actions. while un-
usual. set no precedents He
used Lo have bailiffs escort un·
desirables lo the county line
where they were told not to
come back.
Carters End
Western Trip
GRAND TETON NATIONAL
PARK. Wyo. <AP> -President
Carter wrapped up his Western
vacation today and prepared to
return lo Washington for some
or the biggest political battles of
his presidency.
No. l on lhe list is a last-ditch
fil!hl against formidable Senate
opposition to his natural gas
prtcing bill -a major portion of
Carter 's energy plan, which has
been stalled in Congress for 16
months
OAANOECOASf e
DAILY PILOT
·-"-Pn·'\t0t"' •..S ~·,.._.
Jot-"' c......, ........ , .. de<\,_ CO._ .. __ -···-'"''"' T-•AM .......... ... _.~E.·-
CM<ttt .. I.eh llll<Mnl~ -A\'4,litf'I' ... .,.,,.,.blttan
.... ~
MABl!L SHllHAN. l!FT, FINDS HOME CROWDED
Widow Slaya In Co.went WhUe Rumore ~bound
~aehe Denied
But Rumors SWTOund Widow
PHILADELPHIA IAP>-From the size of the crowds out·
side the Widow Sbeehan's house, one might think she was
gaving money away.
And that's just the Idea hundreds of people got in their
heads. As a result, police have been posted around the clock to
keep out people poking around for money supposedly stashed in
the house.
MABEL SHEEHAN, MEANWIDLE. HAS gone to Uve at a
convent to eel away from burglars and curiosity seekers, police
said.
The money-sniffing crowd out.aide lbe old row house, a
modest two-story brick affair in a lower middle-class
neighborhood. swelled to some 300 Monday night. So 100 police
officers -some oo horses, some wearing riot gear -went to
the scene.
Rumors of the cash supposedly kept inside by the 72-year·
old widow had grown by that time to $45 million from an initial estimate of S35,000.
The fuss began When stories circulated that Mn: Sheehan.
who lives alone with her s heep dog. bought a car for a friend
and paid for several trips to Puerto Rico for other friends.
POUCE SAID THERE WAS NOTHING to the story. But it
was not until Tuesday that the scene returned to normal. By
then. police said, they bad arrested 19 people who tried to break
in.
Officers were posted overnight at the front and back doors.
Mrs. Sheehan insists her only income is a $247 monthly
Social Security payment, police inspector Paul Frankenfield
said.
But a neighborhood youth wasn't having any or that.
''II there is no money in there, then why are aJI these police
gu3s:_~ing the house?"
Pope Asks Help
In Administration
VATICAN CITY CAP) -Pope
John Paul I told the cardinals or
the Roman Catholic Church to-
day that he will be the humble
"pupil" of experienced church
off1c1al s and asked the
cardinals' advice on how lo
..carry the cross" of administer-
ing the church.
John Paul, in a speech to
about 80 cardinals. said it was
"no problem" for him to rec-
ognize his lack of experi~nce in
dealing with the Roman Curia.
the administrative backbone of
the church.
Bloodmobil,e
In Newport
A special bloodmobile
will be set up at Hoag
Memorial Hospital Friday
afternoon to take dona-
tions to meet the county's
s hortage of blood , a
hospital spokesman said .
The donations will be
taken from 12:45 p.m . to
5: 15 p.m. in the Grace
Hoag Conference Center.
Appointments to donate
blood may be made
through the public rela-
tions office at the hospital,
64S.8600.
Red Cross officials said
there is a sho~age of all
types or blood, particular-
ly type 0 and they are
seeking donors so that
s upplies can b e
replenished prior lo the
three-day Labor Day
weekend.
CArter Death •
'lhreat CalW-
Maid's Hoax
IDAHO fALLS, Idaho CAP> -
The Secret Service said today it
believes a men•ge on a motel
room mirror threatening death
to President Carter was a hoax
carried out by the maid who re·
r>Orted finding it.
· Kathi Lynn Wagner. 23, who
police say reported she found
the threat in a Ramada Inn room and was hit over the bead
by a man in the room, waa beina
beld ln protective custody, aaia
Secret Service spolteaman Tony
Sherman ln Sall Lue City.
"We and the Idaho Falla
Pol\ce Department believe tbe
actions she described actually
were done by her." Sherman
said
Departing from the text of his
formal address, the ne w pontiff.
elected by the conclave of
cardinals Saturday, joked that
he knew "only the pontifical
yearbook ... the Who 's Who list·
ing of church offi cials.
John Paul, who spent his re·
ligious career as a local-level
priest, educator and bishop. is
the first pope elected in 75 years
without specialized training as a
m e mber of the c hurc h 's
diplomatic corps or a s a
member of the Curia.
As a result, he said. he will
have to count on the expertise or
the veteran Curia administra-
tion. in particular those he re-
instated Monday to the ex-
ecutive jobs that expired upon
the death or Pope Paul VI.
"We plan, therefore, to hold as
precious the suggestions that
will come to us from so valuable
advisers, becoming, so to say. a
pupil of those who well deserve
our full confidence and our
grateful appreciation for the
merits acquired in a service of
such a great importance ...
Among the cardinals ad·
dressed by the pope were some
who. be<:ause of the 80-year age
limit imposed by Paul VI . had
not taken part in the conclave
that elected him.
According to Vatican officials.
the former Cardinal Albino Lu.
ciani of Venice won election as
pope with many more votes than
the minimum 75 out of 111 re-
quired.
John Paul said tbal the elec-
toral support be drew "still sur-
prises and confounds us."
H e said he e nvie d the
cardinals who would be able to
go back to their dioceses "and
look forward to the joy of en-
countering so many children.
already well-known and tenderly
-leved.
"This is a joy that has not
been granted to us. The Lord
knows the sadness that this re-
iumclation raises.Jn. our heart.
However, ln His 16ve, He kaows
how to mitigate the bitterness of
parting with the prospect of a
broader fatherhood.··
On Thursday the pope will
meet the diplomatic corps and
on Friday he is scheduled to re-
ceive journalists and photog-
raphers who covered his elec·
tion. He will be formally in-
stalled in a Mass on Sunday
consecraUn1 his pontificate.
Strike Attacked
LIMA. Peru CAP> -Peru's
ruling milltary regime declared
a state of emergency and
s u s p ended consllt.1qtional
g uarantees in rive ot the
country's 23 states Tuesday in
an <)J>parcnt move to end a
crippling strike by the nation's
4S,000 mine~
By fte ~lated ......
Sev rat or the naU01f5 m•Jor
bank•, tespondln1 to Federal
Reaerve Board attempts to
tt1hteo credit. today 'nc:reaMd
their prime lendln1 rate from 9 ~r~ent to 914. It was tlte •bah
increaae this fear.
Analysta had been predlctina
the rile in the rate the tn·
terest cbar&ed on loans to the
banlE's most creditworthy
customenJ. ll left the prime at
it.a highest Point In more than three yean.
•P .......
New York's Chase Manhattan
Bank. the nation's tblrd·largest,
took the lead lo the Increase. Its
action was followed by other
major banks, lncludin&
Che mical Bank. FJrs t Penn·
sylvania Bank. First National
Bank of St. Lollis, the Bank of
St. Louis and Ohio National
Bank. Analysts sa1d they expect-
ed all of the nation's banks to
raise their prime rates by
week's end.
MASkED CIVILIAN YOUTHS OPPOSE SOMOZA REGIME
Liberation Sign S.r•. 'No Prteoners by Chrt•tmH'
The prime rate is not directly
Jinked to the mortgage or
personal loan markets. but can
have a psychological effect on
interest rat.es in those areas.
Tbe Federal Reserve. in an at-
tempt to slow the economy and
make the slumping U.S. dollar
more attractive to foreign cur-
rency traders, bas been pushing
up the interest rat.es it charges
member banks. thus making it
more expensive tor them. to ob-
tain money.
Nicaragua Strife
Escalates; 4 Dead
Meanwhile, word of the huge
U.S. trade deficit in July drove
the dollar down Dearly she yen at
the start of trading OD the Tokyo
foreign exchange today. It re-
covered less than a yen to close
at 189.725. 2.4 percent lower than
Tuesday's closiDJ( rate.
The drop, the biggest since the
1973 revaluation of the yen,
came after simUar action Tues-
day on the European and New
York markets following the an-
nouncement that the trade def·
icit was $2.99 billion. nearly
double the June amount. The
dollar lost more ground today on
all European foreign exchange
markets.
The dollar fell l.4 pe rcent
against the West German mark
in Europe Tuesday, 2.4 percent
~gainst the Swiss franc and 1
percent against the French
franc. and continued its steep
fall in later New York trading.
MANAGUA, Nlcarasua <AP> -Gu.nftahts broke out ID several
major Cities and 2,000 pel'llOQS
took over tbe offices of
Nicaragua's largest bank today
as t.be nationwide protest
against President Anastasio
Somoza escalated.
Air force planea bombed
Matagalpa. Nlcaragua•s third
largest city, for two bouts Tues-
day and killed at least tour
persons -two men and two
women, all unidentified -and
"'founded many' others. a Red
Cross official there said.
"There must be more dead,
but we•re not sure. There are
hundreds of inj~" the of-
ficial said.
Since Friday. eight persons
have been reported killed in the
violence in the city of 40,000,
about 100 miles north of the
capital. In Managua, five soldiers
were reported tilled in a bomb
blast Tuesday.
Eight otbers were reported
!tilled in the towns of Jinotepe
and Esteli the past few days.
briQglns the death toll to at le~l 21 .
The .military garrison in
Don't wait any longer.
Substantial savings now
during the final days of our
summer sate.
TORRANCE
23M9 Hawthorne Blvd.
1213> 378·1279
-?I.Ml,~
,.., ,.,.,.... .~ ,.,.. Dtitp
COSTA MESA
159S Newport 81vd.
I 71•1 642-lOSO
MatagaJpa bas been under siege
ror three days with the civilian
popuiation in virtual control or
lbe streets.
The Red Cross source said it
was impossible to determine the
number or casualties because
many victims were taken home
by friends and relatives who
feared the national guard.
Nicaragua·s 1.500-man army,
would raid lbe hospitals.
He said 80 soldiers had been
rushed in as reinforcements, the
town had been blacked out by a
power failure, the Red Cross
appealed to Managua for
desperately needed blood and
plasm a, and the people appealed
to the archbishop of Managua.
Miguel Obando y Bravo. to
intercede with the government
for them. The archbishop was
the chief mediator between the
government and the lertist
guerrillas who seized the
National Palace last week.
In Managua. a bomb killed
fiv e na tiona l g uards m e n
patrolling in a jeep. a doctor in
the military hospital reported.
1..AGUNA BEACH
34S North CoHt Hwy.
<7W ,9' .. SS1
4ll I TQaU ONJt lllONOA't TMllU IA""'°"'• -e /411 fO t to -
.,
l •
• "
.
~
l Dea~ 5 Hu1·t
In Auto &ash 1awrz-a uW U.. w W ... It ..... Ollllre ......... ....,... ........ ...
.... 41rt ........... ., tr...-:-.... n. cime.a. n •• ....._..,.....,.Nlftlt
alnH.n .... Ii ..... -. ii CM-
t.rol .. ua. ... ~ ,......&1 .... lall • ....,.. nil .. ,. .....
Pko ............ Ail i.a r: ,,...,.. .... burl
la &M lit: • 1111. cn1ta. otftcen aaW, Md WIN. t.akn to Saa ~
o.ltyf'lllClc.tff,....
ON\.. y PllqT ""
Murderer
To Get
Death?
An Oranse County Superior
Court Jury said Tue&ft)' that
convicted murderer Maurice
Thompson should die in San
Quent(n"s aas chamber .
Thompson showed no emotion
as the same Jury that round him
guilty or the Nov. l4. 19'11.
murder of Michael Whalen in i...
Habra said he should be pul to
death.
a..-.. ~w1Mt9 ODii maa died L1ite ..... lcs.t'Nid bJ ... , .a. Bcrier'
~ _.. ~ IApet, D ,
Ud a •• ,.. .... y08ib, bolb
ltwm Nldoul Q&1.
JUWNIU! HALL COUNSELORS ATTACK SUPERVISORY POLICIES
They Ale (from e.tt). AlfNd Ski .. •. Robert Au1mu1. the Rev. Cllf Marquis
The five·man. seven.woman
jury c:ould have decided that the
33·year-old convicted kille r
should be sent to prison ror the
rest of bis life wit.bout possibility or parole.
Instead. atler about rive houri
deliberation. tbe jury decided
that t.be slaying of Whalen and
the serious wounding or June
Felice last fall warranted the ul·
Umate penalty.
Gates Had
'No Fear'
Of Probe
8c6 LClf8a .. tM i....qer
.,. WIWll •a.. u.&:~
tM 8-WI' PMnl lpN~m~
aald. 1'1117 ..,. ~ IA the
froat of tbe car.._ it crMbld.
Juvenile Hall. Violent? The man and woman were
gunned down in Whalen's home
during an early morning rob-
bery attempt. Tbe Juwnlle waa tnated ln
the bospiU)'a emer1eacy room
a.ad released to bl1 pareota.
Lopes Wal reported to be in Sta·
ble condltlon today Jn tbe
boapltal'a lDtemlve care wUt.
Pair All.ege Bre~ Poor Supervision Mrs . Felice later identified
Thompson as the assailant. Oraqe C-ounty Sberiff 8nd
Gates said Tuesday that be
never doubted that an FBI probe
into bis affairs would clear him
of any alleged wronadoin&.
In a statemeot lssued a few
hours earlier. U.S. Attorney
David Hinden said the
nve-mooth Gates investigation
was at an end aad tbat no
evidenc~ of wron1doing bad
been uncovered.
As Gat~ basked in the clean
biU of health given him by the
FBI, be said he atlll does not
know who bis anonymous
accusers are or what be was
accused ol doing.
He did know, however, that be
bad been gone over with a
fine-tooth comb and been
subject to the same scrutiny
.. normally done only for a
nominee for U.S. Attorney
General or FBI director.••
Gates did not fault the FBI for
spending five months poring
over his affairs. "When a
complaint is made against a
public official, it s hould and
must be investigated," Gates
said as he refused to fault the
FBI for delving into his personal
and official conduct.
He noted that the probe bad
been deep and thorough.
.. They have reviewed every
aspect of 111.Y penoaal finances
since I was 18 years old,
Including every check written by
me since 1970 and my personal
income tax returns from 1J74
on." Gates said.
"They've talked to everyone
who has been a friend or mine
ror 20 years or Jess and they
certainly have bad unlimited
ability to examine anything they
wanted to."
The 39-year-old sheriff blamed
the inves ti galion and its
resultant publicity on his failure
to win re-election in the June 6
primary election.
While Gales finished on top
of a s ix-candidate field with
roughtly 41 percent or the vote,
be was C~ into a November
general election runoff with
Lauren Rusk.
"It has appeared to me from
the beginning that this
investigation was politically
motivated." Gates said as be
assessed the damage done bis
primary election campaign.
Enroy's Wife
Reports Theft
LOS ANGELES <AP> -The
wife or Abdalla Saleh Ashta.1,
Yemen ambassador to the Unit·
eel Nations, reported that her
purse containing $39.140 in cash
and jewelry was stolen as she
ate dinner at the Bonaventure
Hotel, police said.
Sgt. Alan Yankee said Vivian
Ashtal, 30. told police she bad
placed her purse on the Ooor by
her table as sbe ate al the. hotel's
sidewalk cate Tuesday evening
Abo treated la the hospital's
emergency room ud released
was Felidana del Ramos, 25. of
GuatemalL Tbe Border Patrol
said a.be w-., in the trunk ol lbe
car along with three men when
the auto crashed.
Admttted to tbe hospital were
Raul Alfaro. 22, of Guatemala,
and another man wbo6e name
was not available today. AUaro
was lo tbe hospital's lnteosive
care unit. Both were reported in
stable coodll.ion.
Refusees Refused?
BANGKOK, Thalland IAPl -
Hanoi today accused Cblna of
trying to drive back to Vietnam
tens or thousands or ethnic
Chinese who have fled to China
in recent months..
By GABY GRANVILLE Of ...............
Robert Ausmus and Alfred
Skiles are couoselors at Orange
County Juvenile Hall who don't
like tbe way the ball is being
run.
Tuesday, Ausmus and stiles
joined r~ with a chaplain at
juvenile hall to make their
sentiments public.
At a press conlerence ln the
home of The Rev. Cllf Marquis
in Orange, the two 31-year-old
counselon unleasbed a scathing
et.tack on the ball and those who
operate it.
Cornerstone of the assault was
a 163-page term paper Ausmus
and Skiles completed last
spring, a term paper they said
earned them an A in an
undergraduate class at the
University of Redlands.
W itbln minutes of their press
conlerence, the term paper had
Flood Control Projeet
Bird Protection
Doubling Costs?
Eighty paln of least tem, tiny
blrds wbo feed along the Santa
Aoa River ln Hunllogtoo Beach.
were blamed Tuesday ior doubling' the cost of wbat baa
been a $1.S million flood control
project.
Orange County government
officials faulted "extreme
restrictions" by s tate and
federal a&eocies prot.eetin& the
endangered birds for
discouraging contractors from
the project amt escalating costs.
The birds already have flown
south for the winter and weren't
commenting.
But state ftsb and game
blologlsu said they doubted
their restrictions would cause a
drastic hike in project costs,
saytng the problem may rest
with contractor labor costs and
other expenses.
••1 am surprised the problem
has come up," said Paul Kelly.
a wildlife biologist with the
California Department of Fish
and Game.
Kelly said be had met with
county Rood control engineers
and asked that construction not
begin until September and be
completed before lbe birds
return to nest in the spring.
"We bad arrived at conditJons
that both felt would be
workable," he said. "I would
question whether the increased
cost is due to the shortened work
period or increased labor costs
or just high bids.''
George Osborne, director of
the county Environmental
Management Agency, said la a
report to supervhon coun~
engineers had figured the
shortened work period would
add about $."J00,000 to lbe cost of
the project.
Yet only one bid was received.
and J'atber than the $1.5 million
cost expected the price had
~umped to $3.1 million.
"Assuming lbe extra cost to
defer construct.ibn until after the
least tern nesting season is S2
D)illioo," tbe report said, "the
extra cost is $12,500 per least
tern based on M pair."
Supervisors Tuesday rejected
the $3. l million bid and asked
county officials to negotiate
further with fish and game
experts. They also asked county
Counsel Adrian Kuyper to
ex pl ore possible "legal
remedies."
The flood control project calls
for widening 3,000 feet of
channel north of Pacific Coast
Highway as an "interim ''
measure lo protect the area
until a long.delayed rederal
flood project is carried out.
Osborne's report said the
construct.ion wouldo 'l threaten
the shoreline bird colony .. but
will merely force the birds to
forage in other than their
favorite location for the duration
of tbe construction."
But Kelly argued, "It isn't as
simple as telling a bird to go
elsewhere.··
He said the M-pair Huntington
Beach colony ls the most
s uccessful ln the state and
limiting one feedint llround
would force birds to compete
for limj\~d food sup.Jill~
elSewbere
Supervisors Irked
State Usurping brtul, Use Puwer?
. . .. B)'~~cy ~ -
Orange County Supervlson agreed~ to remind st.ate
and federal afeDcles that con·
trol of Imel use ln UDlncorporat-
. ed south county communll\es
. rests with k>cal, oot state. 1ov·
emment.
Tbe board ulted state
authorities to tell them wbat ruJes
. will be followed ln perm1ttinc
some new bome bulldi.na tn tbe
south county area Impacted by an
18-monlb-old~ restric:tlcn
Supervl.9ors Chairman Tbomas
Riley sald he wants an
"acltnowted1ment" from tbe
state Water Resources Control
Board and federal Environmen-
tal Protect.ion Apecy that land
u se dechlona res t wllb
11upeni1son by state law.
Supervisors have been an·
noyed because the &tate~ll'
mont.ba ago lmp()Hd a five-year
moratorium on new sewer
raciUUes ln the area served by
tbe Loi Allaos. El Toro and
Moulton Nlcuel Water Dlatrtcta.
Thole agendes bad been sedl· lns state approval for a $10
mlllloa federal 1rant to con·
struct new sewer f acllities to
serve some 1.S,000 future Sad·
dleback Valley ud IOU\h county bom". Meanwhile, one developet' bu
won ptnn\11lon from •tale
autbor\Uea to obtain sewer
service r« up to 2,000 future
homet ln return for a pledte to
price a POl1lon lD the so-called
affordable price ranie.
N6ither aupervlaon nor coun·
ty plannen were a party to that
•1reement.
Riley said he }YOuld ask state
iJfftelals'for a list ofc~ria that
would be applied to other de-
velopments lo the restricted
agency, but said be dldn 't know
wbat kind ol response be would
receive.
Supervisor Ralph Diedrich
said the request "is really going
to put them on notice that we
want to know exacUy what the
game plan is."
The five -y ear se wer
moratorium was tmpoffd based
on the contenUon that more
bouslng would lead to more air
pollution.
Local sewer a1ency ~metal$,
however, cont~ that limluna
new home constructlon leads to
lncreased pollullon because
commuters must drive farther
to their Jobs.
become a report and county
officials were being asked
questions about a study they
have never seen.
That study concludes that
there is $1 million worth of rat in
juvenile hall's annual budget.
fat chiefly in the form of
supervisorial persoMel who do
little or nothing to earn their
pay.
As bad, Ausmus and Skiles
asserted. policies at the 310-bed
Juvenile facility have resulted l.n
a breakdown of inmate
discipline.
And part of that breakdown is
an increasing danger of
violence, inmate-to-inmate and
inmate-to-counselor, the two
counselors said.
They also charged that the
failure to enforce discipline has
resulte d in Juvenile HalJ
becoming "little more than
Orange County's s econd
Disneyland."
Furthermore. Ausmus and
Skiles insisted, less serious
offenders are housed with heavy
offenders at the hall.
As a result, according to the
term paper. the hall tends to be
a breeding ground for crime~ a
crim~ school with street-wise
toug'ft's acting as school masters.
The two counselors charged
that aclminlstrators at Juvenile
Hall are isolated from their
cbaraea and bave placed an
unneeded layer of supervisors
between themselves and reality.
To all of that, county officials
had UWe to say. if tor no other
reason than few or them have
seen the report or beard the
charges.
"I'm a little perturbed by the
fact that no one in a position to
correct any situation that might
exist was first given a chance to
respond." Supervisor Thomas Riley said.
"They IAusmus. Skiles and
Marquisl appear not to have
pe rmitted those or u~ vitally
concerned with such problems to
do anything about them." Riley
added.
Acting Chief Probation Officer
Nancy Nelson was also at a loss
to answer the allegations the trio
leveled at the hall and its
operation.
Mlss Nelson had not seen the
report or heard the charges until
they were repeated to her by
newsmen.
··We're having a meeting
today to try to gain some insight
into what all this is about," Miss
Nelson said today.
She pointed out that policies ln
Juvenile Hall follow legal
•
Gem
Talk
FOREVER AMBER
... even after 50 million l/C'QTS
mandates and that those in her
department. "will always hsten
to constructive criticism and
suggestions for improvement.··
Meanwhile. Ausmus. Skiles
and M~rquis said they have
appointments to meet with the
county Grand Jury's justice
committee Tuesday.
Simultaneously, Riley said he
is pla nntn g to meet with
Juvenile Court Presiding Judgt
William Murray and Supervisor
Philip Anthony later this week.
Riley said he so rar does not
have a measure to weigh the
validity or the trio's allegations
and as likely to favor having an
independent committee study
thE:m.
Ausmus was suspended from
his $16.000 a year counselor·s job
Friday after allegations of
misconduct were lodged against
him.
He said he does not know what
he is charged with and has not
been told why he was suspended
with pay.
But Miss Nelson said the
allegations have been sent to the
di st ract attorney for
investigation.
Both Ausmus and Skiles
predicted Tuesday night that
their up.front criticism of the
hall will eventually cost them
their jobs, a job Ausmus has
held for eight years and Skiles
for six years.
Both men insisted their work
records a t th e h a ll are
unblem ished.
They also said it was an
assault on a counselor at lhe hall
last Saturday that touched off
their public explosion.
Miss Nelson said the assault
was reported . charges filed
against the juveniles involved
and that three or them hav('
been sent from the hall to the
s pecial juvenile sect ion in
Orange Cc>unty Jail.
"We acted as promptly and
responsibly as possible,·· Miss
Nelson said as she began her
own inquiry into the chari::es
aired by two counselors and a
priest who acts as a volunteer
chaplain at Juvenile Hall.
Suspect Gives Up
SAN FRANCISCO tAPI -An
intern~tional financier sought
for bank fraud involving mor('
than $1.3 million surrendered to
federal authorities Tuesday.
Amos Dawe. 44. was taken into
custody by lhe FBI as he arrived
at San Francisco International
Airport rrom Taiwan.
Deputy Public Defender Ron
Butler said he will move to have
Thompson given a new tnal.
The death penalty aS'Signed by
the jury came as a recommen-
dation to the judge and is not
binding on him when he sen·
tences Thompson. That pro·
nouncement is expected to be
made Thursday unless an appeal
by Butler for added time is
granted.
Burglars Hit
• Laguna Home
Second Time
Burglars ransacked James
and J an Hall"s Temple Hills
Dnve home Tuesday afternoon
for the second time in less than
three months and lhe day before
the Laguna Beach couple was
scheduled to host a burglary
prevention seminar.
The Halls have been preparing
for the community meeting
since early June when their
home was fir$t broken into by
burglars. They'll go ahead with
tonight's meeting.
The second burglary was
thwarted Tuesday whe n two
young thieves were surprised in
the act by lhe couple.
The Halls entered their home
to find belongings stacked up
and ready to carry off. Mr. Hall
looked out a window and saw
two young men scrambling up a
nearby hillside.
"They've agreed to go ahead
with tonight"s meetin~ anyway:·
said police Crime Prevention
Team member David Rocco this
morning.
Police said burglar~ removed
a screen and louvered wmdoW!'
to gain entrance to the Hall
home Tuesday.
Rocco said the Crime Preven·
tion Team inspected the home
following the fi rst burgfary in
June and advised the couple to
replace the louvered windows.
While only Temple Hills resi·
dents were formally invited to
tonighrs meeting, other Laguna
residents also are urged to at·
tend the 7.JC p.m. session
Police Crime Prevention
Team members say they"ll have
lots or a nti-burglary hps for
those who show up at the Hall
home. 1155 Temple Hills Dnve
RKon:fs-·datlnO' bettt tcf the Bronte and Stone Aoes show that ancient peo.
pte appreciated the beauty of amber.
What Is amber? Scientific researchers
te.tl us that Uris mysterious rock was first formed about SO mllllon years a9Q by the tosslllzlng of the resin of pine
trees. If you have ol>Served the color of
pine resin, It Isn't hard to lmagloe hOw
this substance could harden, turn to
rock. and produce a beautiful gem.
Most fine amber 1s mlne<I 'lon<J' the coastlines of the Baltic States of Latvia and Lithuania, which are now a part of
Soviet Russia. Historians tell us that amber has been mined there since the
13th century. Amber Is also found In
Romania, the Dominican Republic and
Burma. tt has a wide range of us.s In • Jewelry, lncludlnQ rl"9Sf necklaet~1 ptndants. earrings end p ns. After >U
mllllon years, we stllf 1dmlre the beau· ty of this plr.produced example of
nature'' beauty. tts color ls used to
detcrlbe sueh cl•sslc loveliness H the "amber waves of grain" In the sonQ
Diamonds.
"America the Beautiful." AQeln motMr nature creates her btouty for •II to behofd ..
an investment in lasting joy
No gift m this world can match diamond for beauty.
durnh1lity und ljo;tin~ value. But how cnn you be
certntn of gem quulity when huyins;t? Our member·
~hip in the American Ccm Soc1r ty a~urcs you we
11re dependable nod ~emolog.icully tramed to s('rve.
And wt· eonst.mtly .1dcl to our knowledge
tlirou~h ACS l')<' om e\pNti'il' to vouch ~
for your p~rd1il\e-11ow .ind for the future. ~ 1
J. C. .J.lump~rie~ Jewet,.d
MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOC.!fTY ®
t823 NEWPORT BLVD COSTA MESA
CONVENIENT TERMS B•nkAmen<:ard-M..Cer C'*'13e
32 YEARS IN THE SAME LOCATION PHONE 54~1
CWLYPILOT
PSOPI.& DO NOT own cata Cata own people. 'nMY
have the whol t.hlnl backward ri1ht from I.be atart. Du.r· tna a ftl)O(ted OM-boar debate on Lbe t•t l 1uc Jua& t.be other .Utbt, 041 co\u\cllman waa reported to have
cballeacecs aootMr witb tM quc:sUcm, "Do you think • cat
bu th• rlaht t.o come over Into your 1en?"
Asam. ben'a proof lbat cetUJD Sell Buch council
persona mow nathtq about the breed P'elll Catus . .4 You aee, lt doesn't matt.tr a hoot whether or not YOU
lblnk the cat ha \be n1bt to wander over lnto a neiahbor's
yard
What matt«a ls wbetber or aot the cat thlnll• be bu
the richt. And be thinks ht does. The Seal Bucb clt.Y brul realb' ouabt to do eomo
feline research. They would discover tbal cata neat were
Cat.catcher on Nighl Patrol~ Seal Btach
recorded to be wanderinC from one yard to another on our
globe in the Pliocene Epoch.
That would put lhe first yowl on a backyard fence
about seven million yean ago.
TRIS WOULD ~ suggeet that the cat bas been
around even longer than some members of the Seal Beach
City Council. Cata finally ~ame domesticated in ancient Egypt.
That was about 3,500 years ago. This meant that the cat
had a wider selection of fences upon wbicb to yowl. Even a
pyramid or two. The Seal Beach council might also take some note of
feline characterlstlcs that have remained e88entlally un·
changed down through tbe ages:
--On bis feet, faster than a speeding bullet.
-Moves silently across all kinds of terrain.
-X-ray vision al night. Excellent bearing.
-~Uy upset by abrupt changes in routine <Be sure
to underline thiJ one, Seal Beach Councill.
-Independent personality.
AND FOR THE BENEFIT of the municipal fathers.
one final note from feline history: "The cat bas never
yielded readily to subjugation and is able to revert to com·
plete self-reliance . . . "
As one Seal Beach councilman who opposed the cat
leash Jaw suggested. "our city will become famous. With
this law. we have just changed the nature or cats."
They might want to check with the Egyptians on that
point.
Worsening Inflation
p~'!!~?i~ /.!!. !2!2 ....
Uon's troubles with inflation, a member of the Federal Reserve
Boar.d said today that inflation might be worse next year than the 8
percent rate so far tbia year.
"lnf)ation baa clearly accelerated, from the 6 percent area in·
to the 8 percent area. and threatens to accelerate further next
year," said board member Henry C. Wallich.
Walllch urged that the aovernment consider a tax incentive
program to penalize or reward businns and labor for tbelr price
and wage behavior, depen~ on whether it conforms with gov·
ernment anti-inflation goals.
A new approach is needed, be said, because the government's
traditional ways of controlling inflation through spend1n1 and ln·
terest rate policies are not working. ·
Such a tax incentive plan is "tough," Walllcb sald, "but we
have run out or pleasant options."
3 Balloonists
Filming Flight
Die in Crash
FISHERS. Ind. <AP> -Three
balloonists filming the maiden
voyage of another hot air
balloon were killed when their
craft crashed and burned after it
swung into a power line. state
police said.
State Trooper Don Schoeff ten·
taUvely identified the victims as
Elizabeth J. Domont, 31, of In·
dianapolis, the pilot; Michael A.
Kelly, 30. of Bloomington. and
James E . Kohls. 44, of In·
dianapolis. Schoeff said
autopsies were ordered.
As the craft piloted by Mrs.
Domont headed for power lines.
burners were turned on to make
the balloon rise, Schoerf said.
But the balloon hit the lines,
tipped and the propane-fired
burners apparently set fire to
the gondola, he said.
Tbe trooper said one of the
men either jumped or fell from
tbe!ondola at about 300 feet. He sai the craft continued rising
and Mrs. Domont, her clothing
on fire, either jumped or fell.
The other man stayed with the
balloon, which continued about a
mile unli1 the gondola, at an
estimated 500 to 1,000 feet,
burned free from the bag.
Tornado ·Rips Memphis
P~r_Cut, Cars Flipped, No Fakdi~ Luted
Albu·~
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NATION I WEATHER
BHnap Damaged in Sto.-.
The Goodyear blimp "Mayflower." valued
at about $1 million, was severely damaged
Tuesday when lt broke away from its
moorings during a thunderstorm at
Augusta, Ga. One crewmember, w!lo had
been standing outside the blimp, was
treated for minor lllJUries. A Goodyear
spokesman said that. after an inspection,
its parts probably will be taken to
Houston, base of another of the company's
fleet of blimps.
Arsenal Rated Adequate
Warnk.eSays Study Repudiates 'Alarmists'
WASHINGTON <AP) -The
Carter administration's arms
control agency says America's
nuclear arsenal will be more
than adequate through the
mid-19805.
Right now. said an agency
study released Tuesday. the
United States could take a Soviet
first strike and still destroy 58
percent of the potential targets
within the Soviet Union.
BY THE MIJ>.19808, the study
said. the Soviets' missile de·
velopment campaign will make
them the equal of U.S. strategic
forces. But even then. the study con·
eluded. American forces could
retaliate after a Soviet first
strike and destroy 82 percent of
potential Russian targets.
The stU<ly bases tilts mcreasea
ability to retaliate on the as·
sumption that the United States
would have both more numerous
and more accurate warheads
than it does now and would Have
deployed the cruise missile.
which resembles a small. un·
manned airplane.
THE STUDY, which as1umes
both sides will soon be under the
now·tentative SALT II strategic
arms limitation treaty. does not
a llow for possible American de-
velopment of the improved -X
mobile rniasile. which the treaty
would allow.
"The public is entitled to know
that some or the alarmista' com-
ments are incorrect." said Paul
Warnke. director of the Arms
Control and Disarmament Agen·
cy. which made the study.
Warnke. while not identifying
the "alarmists." was clearly re·
ferring to groups such as the
Committee on the Present
Danger.
IN FREQUENT studies and
reports. that group has main·
tained the adminis tration·_, arms control policies. par·
ticularly the SALT II treaty,
would leave the United St.ates
dangerously vulnerable to a So-
viet fi rat strike by the l980s.
The study confirmed 'wo m•·
jor points made by arms control
critics.
-ll acknowledged that lbe
Sovtets. at the rate they are im·
proving their missiles. could
destroy 90 percent or land·based
U.S. missiles by the mid·1980s.
-IT SAID THE Russians,
gaining on the United States in
numbers of warheads. accuracy
and other measures, will
achieve parity by the mid·lBs.
But Warnke said neither de·
velopmenl is as dangerous as
the critics claim.
He said even a successful pre-
emptive Soviet strike against
land-based missiles would still
s ubject the RUS5iana to deltntc·
tioo by Amertcan submarine·
based and air· launched cruise
missiles.
·NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
~,...,..._"-'.,._...,,...._v..,.. .......... tM:~C' ...... ~om.t .... 0.......,...,.....-• ... ~ ........................... ~·~ ..._..,,..., ·~~ ......... -,
... . ..
'
~y.August30, 1978 DAIL y PILOT A5
QUEENIE f73 For Eaeh C'allloraia11 FIH"9
$1 Billion Tax Cut Vote Today
1927 ,008 Error
Suspect Says
He'll Return
LOS ANGELES <AP> -When 52-year-old ac·
countanl Arne Ristol discovered that $927,000 bad
been erroneously·transferred lo tus bank account.
he took off. He now wants lo retum and "clear his
name," according'lo a lawyer friend.
The Los Angeles Times on Tuesday quoted ~ Santa Ana attorney Daryl D Hansen as saying
that Risto) "has expressed a desire to return and
clear his name, but he wants to do it under
circumstances that are Cair "
Hansen would not reveal the West Covina
bookkeeper's whereabouts. i>aymg Rislol wanted
assurances of a bail reduction from the district at·
torney. ··He doesn't want to sit in the can for
$100,000 bail because I don't think he can post it,"
Hansen added.
Edttcational Funding Flayed
SANTA MONICA r AP) Although billions or
federal dollars have been spent to improve educa-
tion, return on the investment has been Jow
mainly because teachers and local school offi cials
were never taught how to improve on their own. a
Rand Corp. study says.
The four-year study commissioned by the U.S.
Department of Health, Education and Wel!are ex-
amined 293 federally funded projects, Including
some to eliminc1te illiteracy and others to improve
vocational and bilingual
education ( ) The net return to the ST ATE
federal investment, the
researchers s aid, "was '---------
the adoption of many in-
oovations. tbe successful implementation of few
and the long-run continuation of still fewer.··
3 Sentera~~d 111 N~ Prot~•t
SAN LUIS OBISPO IAPl -·Three of 10 defen· dants facing trespassing char~es in connection
with a Diablo Canyon anti-nuclear power dem-
onstration have been sentenced to six months in
Jail after pleading no contest.
Municipal Court Judge Harold Johnson said
Tuesday he imposed the maximum sentence for
the misdemeanor because they had refused to
abide by all laws during a 24-month probation
period.
The three defendants. Peter Klotz-Chamberl in
and Christy Lanzi. both of Santa Cruz, and Samuel
R. Tyson of Waterford, also were fined $500 each.
Battl.e Seen In Welfare Bib
SACRAMENTO <AP l -The stage is set for a
major battle in the Legisluture's closing days over
whether cost-Of-living grant increases should be
reinstated for nearly 2.2 million welfare recipients
The Assembly Revenue and Taxation Commit·
tee· voted l<> do that Tuesday, but refused to ex-
empt county hospital nurses from the s tate wage
freeze.
The battle 1s certain to focus on whether
welfare recipients can get grant increases while
government employees' wages are frozen
lloMJety Smpett Surrftlde,..
MARTINEZ (AP> -One of three gunmen who
allegedly robbed 13 would -be gamblers of $2,000 in
a Reno-bound bus Saturday night has surrendered
to the Contra Costa County sheriff's department.
Oarril Terry, 26, who was booked for in·
vestigation of kidnapping and robbery Tuesday,
said he turned himself in after telling his family he
was joining the Air Force.
Terry said he met two strangers at a bar in
Richmond, where they hatched the plot to rob the
Trailways "gambler's special" bus Saturday.
After robbing tbe 13 passengers. the two strangers
ran off with the entire loot, he said.
,
6.\CRAMENTO <AP> -I\ a1 bllllon atate ln· ccn:ne lmc cut wu h aded today ror 1 nnal As·
embly vote that would send lt to Oov . Edmund
brown Jr, ror h I promlted aJ&nature.
Tb plan would 11vo a one·tlme $75 atate ln·
co me i." cut tor 1018 to each Cantornlan nllos •
uparatt ttturo, and a SI~ tu cut to each couple
f1Un1 1 jotol retum.
AN EMBLY VOTE scheduled for today
•11 llttl more than • formality, because the Al·
atmbly lut w k approved the majOI' features of
Mayor Wt
Remoml Requeated
VERNON (AP> -A retired fireflabter
bu accused Vernon's mulli-JnUUonaire
mayor of iUe1ally living out.aide the city he
pretides over.
The acl,\P6 filed Tuesday against Leonis
C. Malburg. 50. is tbe same charge his
wealthy grandfather was indicted on 35 years
ago.
Filed with the state Attorney General's
Office. the action seeks to oust Malburg u
mayor . a position he has held for seven
•years . It also requests his removal from the
City Cowicil seat he has occupied for 22
years.
The charge was riled by Carlton E.
Claunch. 41 , a retired Vernon firefighter who
was an unsuccessful Cily Council candidate
last spring.
Claunch claims Malburg controls the
city's voting because most of its 2AO residents
are either municipal employees or live In low
cost city-owned housing.
Judge Attacks
lawyer's Attire
SAN DIEGO CAP> -No one would have
blamed James Kinder for feeling he had taken his
s uit to the wrong court after a judge pronounced
the attorney guilty of "vulgarity" for his casual at·
tire, but Kinder says he'll do it again.
Superior Court Judge Edward T. Butler said
he was "appalled" Monday by Kinder 's brown
plaid suit. rust-colored sweater and open collar -
no necktie -as lhe attorney's client pleaded inno·
cent to a felony.
.. Are you an attorney ? Are you admitted to
practice in the courts of this state?" Butler asked.
KINDER SAID HE WAS.
Butler said there was nothing he could do
<Jbout a lawyer ·s attire because appellate courts
have ruled it's not a judge's concern, but he had
plenty to say about it.
"Manners of dress tend lo portray how a
person feels about himself and his profession." the
judge intoned. "Adherence to a code of conduct.
standard of dress. symbolizes the hallmark of
educated. cultured people."
"Bit by bit the waves of vuJgarity are eroding
our standards.·· he added.
KINDER S.\10 T U ESDAV that he will
challenge the judge for cause in the current case
because Butler 's "emotional barrage" left his
client. a 2l·yt.•ar-old woman accused of attempted
murder , "with the impression that the hostility his
honor was releasing on me would be also released
upon her because she was my client ... She did
express grave concern over whether there would
be a bleed-over of the judge's feelings about me
onto her own case."
The attornt-y said the issue of neckties is
similar to many court reforms that have occurred
over the years
"If it weren •t for the courage of attorneys to
promulgate change. we'd probably all still be
wearing white wigs." he said. "l am sure there
will be many occasions in future when 1 appear in
San Diego courts without a tie."
Besides, he added: "Ties give me a rash."
Vets Unit Talk Set
Medical care for
Orange County veterans
will be discussed Sept.
13 at a meeting of the
Orange County Veterans
Advisory Cowicil.
The meeting will
begin at 7:30 p.m . al the
St a te Mutual Savings
and Loan Building, 625
E. First St., Tustin.
The meeting is open to
the public. Information
can be obtained by call·
ing Adm. Phil Niekum,
USN <rel.) at 586-6926,
or Ben de Leon al
834-2042.
First, you'll enjoy a marvelous soup du jour or crispy
tossed green salad Then we proudly serve you a generous
portion of succulent Prime Rib, the king of beef, plus a
piping hot baked potato with all the trimmings, fresh sour·
dough bread and butter. For the finishing touch, it's coffee
or tea and a tantalizing dessert. All this for only $5 .95.
Monday ... Saturday 5 to 7:00 PM. Sunday 4 to 6:00 PM.
Charley Browns
HUNTINGTON BEACH-16160 Beach Blvd
ReaervatioM Accepted-( 714) 842 -6602
,,
,,,
the Hln• blll on a bS·partl.aan 73-0 vott>.
The meaaure -sponsored by Brown and
Democratic leaders or the Legislature -ls a com.
blnatlon ot earlier tax cut proposals authored by
Republlcans. g,
GOP LEADERS In both house6 have com-
plained that the Democraw are stealing their pro·
oosals ln an election year p0lltJcal maneuver. But
Republican lawmakers have nonetheless unan·
imously supported the bill, AB 3802 by As·
semblyman Lawrence Kapilorr. D·San Diego, an a
series of committee and floor votes over the past
two weeks.
The Senate -graveyard ol other tax cut pro-
posals this year -voted 39--0 for the tax cut on
Monday. clearing the greatest potential threat to
passage.
THE COMBINED EPFECI' of the proposed in·
come tax cut and Proposition 13's property tax
cuts would reduce the average homeowner's an·
nual tax bills by S750 to $1,000.
Renters. who got nothing from Proposition 13's
voter ·mandated 57 percent property tax cul. would
get S75 each tn income tax cuts from tbe bill
SENIOR C ITIZENS, both renters and
homeowners. would get up to $375 each in addi·
tional tax cuts under the income tax cut bill.
In additJon to the one-time tax credits. the
Kapiloff bill would adjust state income tax
brackets annually with inflation so that most
workers receiving only cost-of-living increases
would not move l<> higher state tax brackets.
That so·called "indexing" has been a top
priority of Republicans in recent years. and it was
opposed vigorously by m ost Democratic leaders
until this summer. when the tax cut fever of
110,000 Plot
Man Charged
In Extortion
SAN DI EGO t AP l -A 26·year·old Phoenix
man was arrested m Phoenix Monday and charged
with attempting to extort Sl0.000 from San Diego
radio personality Bill Ballance.
Charles Steven Sawyer. a tree trimmer. was
arraigned Tuesday in Phoenix on charges of extor-
tion and booked in Maricopa
County Jail on $10.000 bond.
An FBI spokesman said
Sawyer cont acted Ballance
more than a week ago and
threatened to mail him an ex-
plosive device at San Diego
radio station KF'MB unless
Ballance paid the Sl0,000.
Sawyer was arrested at his
home while making final ar·
rangements on the telephone
with Ballance.
FBI officials dedined to reveal how Sawyer
became aware of Ballance. who formerly conduct·
ed a raclio talk show at station KABC '" Los
Angeles.
Proposition l3's passage swtpt throu1h
Legislature.
THE INCOME TAX ClJT would be financed
from the state's budeet surplus, now esUmated at ~P to SS billion annually for the next few years.
The rest of that surplus Is tentatively earmarked
to continue to help local e<m~mment.6 whose rev-
enues were slahed by Proposition 13.
Brown. who predicted a i tatewide buslne8$ re-
cession and eventual state tax bikes if Ptoposilion
13 passed. now says California can afford more tax
cuts because the state is receiving excess income. 1
business and sales l.4lx r evenues from "the 1 greatest peacetime boom In our history."
The Democratic governor says, and oon·
partisan analysts agree. that California can cut in·
come wes this extra $1 billion and contlnue to
give schools. cities and counties $3 billion to $4
billion annually In Proposition 13 aid.
BUT REPUBUCANS have accused Brown of
deliberately deceiving voters about the erowing
budget surplus -now estimated at $5.8 billion
compared to a state budget of $15 billion -in an '
attempt t.o defeat Proposition 13.
Attorney General Evelle Younger. Brown's
GOP foe ror governor In the Nov. 7 general elec·
tion. has charged that Brown ts "playing games"
with the budget surplus figures.
"The numbers change almost overnight to suit
the governor's political purposes. When he was •
against Proposition 13, we had only S3.S billion.
When 13 passed. he suddenly bad more than S6
b11Uon :· Younger says.
ACTUALLY. THOSE TWO budget surplus
figures do not contradict each other as sharply as
Younger suggests in a statewide barrage of radio •
commercials.
First of all. the state itself has been the bla·
gest single property taxpayer in California for the
past decade because of a pre-Proposition 13 $1
billion annual .. bomeowner·s exe mption'· tax re-
lier program under which the state rays property
taxes on the first S7 .000 in value o each owner-
occupied home.
PROPOSmON lJ's tax cuts therefore gave
the s tate an immediate $600 million annual cut ln •
the cost or that tax relief program.
In addition to that. the reduced property tax
bills ror business and homeowners reduced tax de-
ductions on state income tax and business taxes.
raising estimated revenues from those taxes by up
to $250 million annually.
AND IN RESPONSE to what Brown called
"the spirit or 13:· the Legislature and Brown have
made $850 million m cuts in the state budget. in
e luding a rr~e on welfare grants and state
salaries and a freeze on hirings.
Finally. estimates of state income. sales and
business tax revenues are being revised upward
by about $300 million because of updated estimates '
of the California economy. now in a fourth year of
robust expansion instead of the downturn predict-
ed by economists.
PERFECT HAIR COLORING
Done At ...
LUZZETTA Bernard
240 Newport Center Or . Ste. 200
NEWPORT BEAOi~3
••
'
-------,.,_.
If you have $10,000 or more In
a 5% bank passbook, we
can Increase your interest
rate by at least 50%.
you can defer interest pay·
ment untll 1979.Thls option
may provide special income
tax benefits.
Important too. our now·
famous Savmgs Loan is
available should you need
funds prior to maturity since
federal regulations require All you do Is switch your
funds Into one of our Six·
Month Money Market Certi·
flcate Accounts.
MUTUAL
SAVINGS
a substantial penalty for
early withdrawal
Call us for ,...._---. --.
details at the fSIJC 1
office most con----tnterest will be credited
quarterly or, at your option, AN EOUAl HOVllHO U!N0£ ..
AN EOUAl ~TUNITY EMl"\.O\'f:,. venlent to you: ........ _... ......
Pasadena tMain Ollicc) (213) 449·23A51Arcadla (213) 06·0166/Can~a P;uk 1213) 884·44221Cap1'\trnno San Clemen IP
(714) 493·5651 tCerritos (213l 926·13781Corona Del Mar f714) 815·50101Cov1na 1213) 339 ~76/Fallt>rook (114) 728·57241
Foun111n Valley f714) 9e3·839elOi.ndale (213) 242·414lillake 5.ln Marcos 17141 744 2771/Pott Hueneme <~l 985 2323'
Santa Ana 17141S47·9741 1Tllousand Oalea (8051497·2787/Upl;md 17141981 28211 V1<ola (7141 726·8585
I
~ 1~· -
-
j
I
A8 ~·
State to T:ackle
Mesa Traffic Woe
P rsev •Nnce and pollt a1 pre ure In an election
ye r hav led to th . t ~ about th~ Co ta Mesu
Frecwuy cRoute ~> ln qu te some ume.
11.t ~rtmcnt Of TransPortaUon neitt month
will tw&tin \\ rk on • long overduf' 1:nv1ronmcntal study of
the trunsportuUon corndor Ii .. bollltncck > bet w~ n the.'
pre enl end or the freeway r Mc a Drive l and Newport
lk·uch. 1'hii, ~n 't me n u r~way 1 uarunlttd when th<-'
:,tuh' fmi~ n t1ludy In l\\>"O to three yeur~ lndct d.
operuttonal lmprovemenb or n w ttpprooch<.'b to thl' prob
h.•ms ur Rout~ SS moy t.•m rg..-o the recommended solu
lton
Whut '~ tml)Ortanl ts that Costa l\tesu hus bct>n r·t•c u~niwd a11<.l lh4.' st tt must now make rt u mutter or n.•cord
It hru.n·t bet.•n an t>..ru,y ftRht State l'ransP<?rtatton
D1rectur druma G1antuf"l'O wus •ll set lo rescind thl'
tret'WU} routt> until ssembl)•man [}(1Mi1> M~naers. 0
lturnu*ton &-Heh. lnforn\t'd Gov. Edmund G Brown Jr
that thl~ mll{hl not ~ the best pohc> in an clt•ctaon yl'ar
t ll•r mind chan~t>d bUddenly.
~umeroul> others hu\•e pluyed muJor roles in k~epJng
I he pre ·sure <>n u~ain l increasing odds. They indud..-
Costu Me a c.·1ty officaals and council members. local
l'llmmi, and bU.'iUlCS~men und Onmge County Transporla
lion Comm1sstoners
Costu Me!:la hus ~Otten its due Now il 's up to the state
lo C.'Onll' up \\Ith U '4<3V Of ~olvmg a difficult trafric
Ol'Oblt.•m
Sunshine Clouded
Clouds in the form of pubhc protest have formed over
Costa Mesa 's Sunshine Studio.
And council members. responding to public concerns
o\'cr <! business tbaLoffers nude p})otography and .. rap
sessions," wasted no lime an directing City Attorney
Ro~rt Campagna to try and put a padlock on the build
ing that once housed the Chamber of Commerce.
However. when the city goes to court. it will not be
:-up1>ort1ng the moral protests of citizens. The legal issue
is Ont' thut involves a conditional use permit for the
~tudio .
Thi.· pl:rnning commission rejected the use permit but
the studio opened anyway. Its operators claimed a city
business permit would suffice.
An attorney representing the studio has told the city
to gC'l rc<!dy for a long a nd costly legal battle.
But this is certainly a battle in which the cily should
push full f orcc.
As residents of nearby Bethel Towers a develop·
mcnt for Cost<i Mesans over 62 years old pointed out.
thl' ar('a <.1long 19th Street hardly needs ~uch ''" added en·
tt•rpnsc
The:. fed :.i nude studio 1s one step too far <Jnd wt.·
agret•
'Share' Out of Line
Little reason can be seen for the Newport·Mes:.i
lJnified School District to seek a 10 percent cut from the
revenues Coastline Community College could receive by
subleasing facilities al Bay View School in Santa Anc.J
I lcights
Such a suggestion came up al liJSl week's school
board mct'tmg and ended m a 3·3 split vote
The truste<'s deadlock effectively c<incellcd a
sublease agreement between Coastline and Tcmpll' Bat
Yahm of Newport Beach which planned to use soml'
~lassrooms on a limited basis for Sl0,000 pe r year.
Perhaps some school trustees were upset at the
thought that Coastline might benefit to an excessiv<.•
<h.•grce by subleasing facilities once operated by the
:'\cwpott·Mesa district
Howl'\·er. Coastline already is paying the district
S82.000 a ~ear for Bay View. And, this revenue. like the
ill·conc:ic•\'cd 10 p('rcent s ublease proposal. is money that
must bl• returned to the state to pay off old Newport-Mesa
bond dt•bb
Thl' proposal seems more like a casc of sour grapes
th<.in :..in d'fort to improve the distritl·~ diminishing
financial sl i.ttu-;
• Opinions expressed in the space above are those ol the Datly Pilot
Other 111ews expressed on this page are those of their authors and
artists Reader comment 1s invited Address The Daily Pilot. P.O
Box 1560 Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321 .
I
Boyd/RR Names
ByL.M. BOVD
l'kaSt.' Md to Chat list of
o ddball nirknames for
railroads: Southern Pacirir
was the .. su rrerin'
Pathetir ·· The Lehigh and
New England was the "Late
und Never Early." The
Northampton and Bath was
the '"Nuts and Bolts.·· The
Delaware and Hudson was
the .. Delay and Hesitate."
The Chicago. Burlington
and Quincy wa s the
Oear
Gloomy
Gus
City ortlcials try to
rorce a $300,000 str~t
oo North Costa Mesa
re!iidcnts who don "t
want lt. while the heart
of our d ty suffers and
waits for realignment
of 18th Street so that
clrcul1Uon may be im·
proved ln the most con·
gcated part or town.
Why ?
T.N.T.
·'C heapest . Best and
Quickest.•·
Some men of sc1cnce
claim they·ve proved their
beards grow mos t on
Wednesdays and least on
Sundays. What explains 1t.
they sayl is the contention.that
weekena pursuits-drinking,
dining out. romance ..:.. inhibit
beard growth s lightly
Fascinating. if factual.
How do you account for the
fact that far more men than
women.-fell -out of h<>epital -t>eds?
Am still trying to figure
out what you send to a sick
florist.
Q. "Have any or the free·
love communes been sue·
cessful?"
A. ll"s debatable. Ther~
may still be quite a rew of
the households functioning
here or there. Most. though.
have come apart. Couples
tend to pair off, c&oosin8 to
devote themselves to each
other to the exclusion of the
rest. Quarrels crop up over
shared work. Money •rau·
ments seem tncvlt.able. Some
theorisu who've looked into
tile matter now think the un.
Auccesaful commune experi·
ments tend to prove that
monoaamy Is lnsllncttvo,
aalthough others disaaree.
f
Rob4trt N. Weect/Publlsher
Barbar• l(relblc.h/EdltOfttl Pa19t Editor
NiCk Thimmesch (
Kennedy Savors Senator Role
WASHINGTON Sen
Edward Ktnnedy •don't cull him
.. Ttddy"t ll
hot ucaln .
lust as he was
lh 1068. 1972
ud 1976. A
crowd or
gues~cr~
fiaJures ht.• 1.s
runn1n~ for
President
thOUJlh th('
1980 St'UliOfl is
18 monthts uway. Those panting
for u pollticul saviour freely tell
pollsters that Kennedy is the
111dvatton. the salve. the cure·all
ror what 1t-ils us.
Or Gallup proclaims that
Democrats h1vor ham over Mr.
Cuter to be the 1980 nominee by
11 44·20 score. and that all voters
wunt him over Gerald Ford by a
whopping 59·41 margin.
THE OOPESTERS who see ull
events as crafted. and ignore the
powt-r of the prosaic. mutter. uh
Mailbox
huh. and note that. a new p0ll
shows the pubUc foralving Ken-
nedy tor Chappaquiddick: Joan
Kennedy's confession on
alcoholism is compassionately
recelved; Kennedy has a busy
political schedule this fall. one
which will put even more
Democrats In his debt
All this pleases. even amu.11es.
Kennedy. He loves his populari·
ty and the knowledge that. given
his personal setbacks. he re·
covere~ and made his own way.
lie doesn't plot or make moves
to run. nor will ht . He actually
doesn't want to. and could only
be persuaded it Carter pulls an
LBJ and quits. or is humiliated
In the l980 primaries. or if a nil·
uon ·Shaking issue develops.
F or years. even aforemen·
ltoned factors or this sort
wouldn't have been enough to
persuade h.im. The trauma or all
the Kennedy tragedies was too
murh with him, and he was too
involved in being ratber lo the
children or his dead brothers.
Jn recunt years. the prob·
lema or hla wife, and his '°''· teddy. who lo.t a leg to cancer,
oc:c:upied him more than any
presidential thoughts. Always.
there were the wishes of hl.s sis.-
ten and mother -cautloui for
the safety of the last son.
Besides, Kennedy retlsheg his
role as a senior senator. ··1 have
new opportunitiell in the next
Congress. as chairman of the
Judiciary Committ"." he told
me last week. "Think of the
enormous impact on the system
Of JUSlice, t-e Safety Of OUf
citizens find the prot_.ttti.on •pf
libettles-. We'll be pes111na on 140
new judges -t>ne·firth of the
Judiciary -in one year ....
ONCE, Ken,nedy someUmes
m o u t h e <t. w b.a t w a ~ J u at
whiapered in his ear bt a brtRlit
staffer. Today. he knows hJs
stuff down to oitty.grltty. Re ud
Sen. Howard Cannon . D·Nev ..
pushed for airline deregulation
to the point that the airlines
drastically tf<lu«d far._ ln self.
defense. Now Kell.Mdy arg_ues
for deregulation or motor car·
riurs. and ror reform of exlllin1
re1utatloos ao that new drugs
can be brouaht on the market
qulcker.
Ask about tax revolt and blg!
inefficient government, and
Kennedy orters liberal rebuttal I
"We can save SS9 billlon by 1984,
if we vote for national health ln·
surance. l think the biggest tax
spendent a~ those who want to
grant tax credits aultion aldl
without applying the samf
criteria we do fo,. atraiaht ap.
proprlations. In oil and gas. why
don·t we give tax incentives to
wildcat1'rs i.m;iead o( to dentists
seek ilt1 tax shelters?
.. Prop. 13 was also a cry
against bianess in all {otms. H
Howard Jarvis had packawed hi4i
proposition in a way to cut the
size of big business instead of
big government. t he voter~
would have approved that, too.··
P EOPLE warm to Kennedy,
d espite his liberal rhetoric.
because. like his brothers before
ham, he holds out hope and prom·
1se. He will chair hearin~s th1~
fall on his national health bill.
one we really don·t need. and
will get big media exposure.
Kennedy will s tu mp for
Democrats everywhere. and
more comparisons will be made
between the enthusiasm for him
and the turning away from
Cart er
It 1l-; hee1dy stuff. but Kennedy
has seen •t before and will see 1t
again He s aid. ..Thal·?-. about
nght. .. when l asked him if the
presidential goal was less im-
portant lo him than it was to his
brothers.
ft ·s obvious that the Kennedy
fam ily has been through so
much.·· he told me .. and 1t con·
tinue~ to be u maJor factor in my
life But grandchildren grow up
and Aet settled down. Times
rhiinge. and In a period of future
years. thm~~ may change ror
mt• But my position is that I do
not want to run. that I s upport
Pres ident Carter. and that he
will be reelerted ·
Police Have Right to Express Views
To the Editor
Your Aug 18 cditorntl entitled
.. Police in New l\rena .. r<'flerts
a s urprisingly narrow view of
A meriran democracy Why
would you choose to discourage
any individual or group from
politiral activism. particularly
when most would agree that one
of the most serious lhreats to the
great American experiment is
political apathy" How can the
expression of political views by
any citizen or group of citizens
be equaled with an attempt by
the police to no longer answer to
civilian authority?
THE REALITY police officers
must deal with. though many of
us would prerer to ignore.
represents an important aspert
of our society. Their persper -
ti ve. even 1r we fin~ it un-
pleasant. should be as much a
part of the body politic as the
views and expressions o f
bankers. teachers, lawyers.
farmers. laborers, and yes. even
newspaper publishers. l applaud
anyone or any group who plays
an active role in the democratic
process and see no reason to dis·
courage police officers from be·
ing good citizens
Paraphrasing a famou s
patriot, ..... we may not
always agree with someone's
\ITE'Wpolnff>ul e-snoutd r>e pre.
pared to fight for their right to
express that viewpoint ... Police
officers during their off ·duty
hours. have, and should be en·
couraged to exercise. the same
First Amendment rights that al·
low you to publish your opinions
in your newspaper.
RUSSELL A. BOSTROM
President. Newpon
Harbor Bar Assn.
pas t they have had expJOSIVl'
harpoons fired ovt'r their heads
into surfaced \\hale:-. This year
they also had high pressure rirt•
hoses turned on them. yet they
stayed. with their lives on the
hne. They continued lo prevent
mass killings .
Our heartfelt thanks go out to
these 26 brave people. I'm proud
to be a member of the same or
ganizat1on. and I hope you all
join me m support of surh at
tivilies
Wt•lromt• home Greenpeact-
t•rcw Job we ll done.
MICHAEL GREENIA
Not Wf>rth It
To the Editor
A friend of mine was killed
last night My sadness and rage
at the unfairness of her untimely
death was increased today when
1t proved to be a polire chase
that prem<tturely snuffed out
this vibrant. raring human be
1ng
Was catching a punk with a
toy gun worth the death of a
young mother who left behind a
husband. two small children.
parents and many grieving
friends·•
lt seems we're always reading
about pohcc rhases ending with
the-de;ltlrof an. annocenL but UH&
wasn't JUSt a slatistir; this was
a talented, giving woman whose
loss is incalculable
There must be a be a better
way This should not have hap· pcned
MARGIT MOTIA
'Broker' daritled
To the Editor :
Your editorial on the number
of brokers in California was •In Qtdet ll'ar _ error and created a misleading
To the Editoi : _, t~r~i-Ofi el the-::i'eat ea4m·
On Aug. 24 1 had the privilege P.roress1on. There . are 400.000
to be part of a welcoming com· licensees In Califor~la not
mlttee for a ship returning from brokers. Thu; number includes
ar a war where this aggressor both brokers and sales persons. ~ad · no weapons. The 'Ship was You further showed your l~ck
the Peacoclc, out of Wilmington, of knowledge of our profession
8 Green eace vessel; the by. stating that a. J>t;rson c~uld
cnem t~e Russian whaling ·pick up a broker s license. To n t y. p1ck up this license a person e~reenpeace. a non.prom roun musl have certain licensed sal~s
dation had once again gone to experience or college degr~ !"
sea to prevent the killing of help-add1t1on to 12 college credits 1n
less whales. whose numbers are real estate law. finance .
dwin.dllng fast. They launched appraisal and. practice After
Inflatable bo11ts from the · · P 1 ck l n g u P the se
Peacock and placed themselves qualt£icalions he must then tab
between the Russian kill ships a 20().quesuon state exam that
and the whales. Twenty.six peo. takes over thre<' hours
ple, with nothing bul coura.ae. W F' l.OWANCE.
compassion and deterlninatlon Realtor
disrupted the harpoon·carryina
Russ tans. Satper Sleat ...
THIS IS the fourth year such To the Editor.
voyages have taken place. Jn lhe Your super-sleuth journallsu
\
are to be complimented ror an·
forming the voling public that
.. a capital gums tax cul favored
bv 60 or the 100 .. enalors
1 • .. and to ~ voted yea or nay
in the Senate before the October
recess 1 would allow 110 an·
dividuals who cam more than
$200.000 a year to rompletely
escape fedt'ral income taxes."
This quote is attributed lo the
Tax Reform Research Group's
Robert M. Branon. director of
consumer advocate Ralph
Nader's tax·researrh organiza.
tion. This is responsible report·
in~. and much apprecialed by
readers .
which wouldn't be needed if the
threat were real.
CHILDREN can then be taught
with the phonics system. This is
accomplished through repetition
and drills. There is no easy way.
Children should not be passed
from the s~ond grade until they
have ma5tered phonics and can
construct words. They s hould
never be passed into lhe fourth
grade until they can read and un·
derstand the questions on a test.
How can a non.reader possibly
answer those questions right?
()iscipline, phonics. repetition
these-are the three e lements
that go into teaching children to
read in two years. Arter that,
berause they can read. they can
be taught other thmgs much
easier Doesn 'tlhis make sense')
JAMESW. BOLDING
A CONCLUSION necessary
for voter action will perhaps rise
in protest that the same pro·
posed bill would ~1vc a O 2 per.
cent tax rut to those in the
St00 ,000·$200,000 lt'vt>I while
those earning the $10.000 a year Bffu-~lght•
income would gel a 1.9 percent To the Editor.
increase in taxes. According to a recent article
Whatever happend to Robin in your paper. the Newport
Hood's theory. or better yet, the Beach Bicycle Trails Citizen Ad·
American ideal s tated in the visory Comrrtittee has proposed
poem on the Statue of Liberty -that traffic light pus h -button
"Give me your tired, your poor. controls be 1pslalled for
your restless ma~~es yearning to bicyclists. .
breathe free. . The oost is to be $21 ,000 to the
. Ta?x the poor and gave .lo the city, plus matching runds rrom
nch . ~ !~ free enterprise en· .tl\e state in the form or gas lax rre~ltHe-rtm-sel'ff"~ ~new-pustr·bttttol'r1>are -=
ly their o~ cause. or should to apparently be duplicates or
they. contn~ute to a free re· existing eQuipment and would be
pbbhc. bearing a proportionate probably only about five feet
s hare or democ racy ? away
FAITH BEIRLE I CA. N SEE . t·r· t · , no 1us 1 1ca io n 1or
d e)(t>endttures of our runds ror a R~a Ing Cop-oai project of s uch limited use. The
To~he F4Ji_!o.r: pt!Uosopby th11t "we would get It
The tead\ers are coppfng out-Che~ause-tlt~-sle* payg
when they blame TV ~ause half" is completely wrong
children can't read. Ir ehilcll'en because we end up pa)'1.o& the
were taught to read 40 ,years uo state:s share ii) gas taxes ~
befottthcttbltd graclrjhea u.tY .or-later: -__::._ =--
can be taughtto read today before "Tfie o\Rrpl"OJJGSllt'fOl'"a btey.
the thirdgrade. cle bridge over the Del.bi Ft~
lf children can't read. it's Co'ntrdl Channel sounds like 1t
becausethe rightsystem isootbe-might be a.good Idea, dependinJ
Ing us~. on where It would be placed.
In the first place. there should W~t really .gets me Is that
be strict discipline, with the tl\e c1ty. co~c1l has approved
threat of corporal punishment -the apphcatton for funds for the
·n " o .,.,_
w'b q le ball of wax. Mayor
Ryc'ltotr. who opp0sed the but-
tons, says tl'ley ure inconsistent
with cit.Y Lratflc policies. Good
for him.
DOUOLAS PARMENTIER JR.
• l.ttttr• /rom rtodtra art welcome.
Tht right to condtnie letters to /ti
rpact or tlimrnatt> lt~I fa rtsnwd.
Ul'lttt'! of 300 word.t or~" wUl bt
giom prtf ~ef!Ct AU lettn1 "'"" in·
cltlM 1'gnoJMrt end m~ addrtta
but nomea mou be WUMdd on ,,.
qual tj 111//jCffnl MUOn it~
Poef'l/ will not ~ publllhtd.
I
1.
• .. ·: .. .. :·
~ON/WORCD
.. • ..
i;oNDON <AP, Thole
r.,..ou encl of&.-r•t::duud pMtonal aceaera of rOl 1reu
hUIJ and luab meado•• ln
En11i h eounh')'t de w re pa nt·
ed by O:Ntablt. all rt1ht, but
•J>PatenllY not 1U by John .
TWO L&ADING 81JTl.Sff a.rt
ticperta hive ronel'4ded lh•l
1n1ay worka attritNUid to the
1reet 11th eeQtury En1I '" f1nd11c1po palnter Wtte rHllY
from the bruah ol hJ IOO. UOMl. tnd othrrs mlahl have been
aint~ by variou,s CoNlabkt ol· 1prln1. London's Dally 'Tel
1rapb ttl)Ortf'd Tuesday
, The rarnlly. 'the perti: •ay.
(
Grin* rs
Repairing
launched
' WASHING TON <AP I The
.Consumer Product Safety Com·
mlsslon reports that lbe Porta·
ble Appliance and Tool Group,
McGraw-Edison Co., Columbia.
Mo.. ls launching a repair pro·
sram for 16,000 Six·lncb bench
trindera wblch may pose a
shock hazard.
On some units a protective
sleeve insulating a lead wire
·may wear through, possibly re.
suiting in a shock if the machine
is not grounded. the agency said.
THE MACHINES WE&E
manufactured from April to July
1973 and for limited periods
between February 1971 and
January 1978
The repair program covers
tbe rouowing six-inch grinders
pbrchased after June 1973 and
not showing any three-digit code
e mbossed in the nameplate:
Manning Bowman model 715100.
Toastmaster model 5577. Power
House model 711100. J .C. Penney
model 3040, Western Auto
Wizzard model POE 6203A,
Ward's Power Kraft model
TG B·5102A and K-Mart model
30-09Tl.
ALSO I NVOLVED ARE K·
Mart model 30·90Tl s howing
date code 778, 77D, 77E or 77F,
a"d Ward's Power Kraft model
TGB S102A with the 77F date
code. U tools with these date
codes have an orange inspection
sticker on the carton or the unit
tbey have already been inspected
and are not involved in the repair
program.
Owners or the grinders should
stop using them and write to:
Bench Grinder Repair Program.
National Service Manager,
Portable Appliance and Tool
Group. McGraw-Edison Co .• 2nd
and Vine St.. Boonville, Mo ..
65223 for instructions on having
the tool inspected and repaired
free of charge.
exh,bll ;;t the A1bmoleao
Mu1teum ut Oxford, the-Mellon
Center ot 8rttl11h Art at Yale
Ualveralty and e lsewhere on
both tides ot the Atlantic
TH B £XP£1tTI SAID tho
.. Brida on th Mole," one ot
two C tabl wor'lu dlsplay.t
in the Pblladelphla Museum of
Art. wua painted not by John,
but by Uonel. the Tele1rapb re-
ported.,
Oonuld Ro»cnthal. a n u&ll·
tant curator In the Philadelphia
museum's department of Euro-
pean J>alntlnc. utd he was un·
Mware or the study and was
checking on It. Of the two
Pondering lnjustif!e
Sister Immaculate Commet of Oklahoma City listens to
a personal account of social injustice in Cleveland. More
· than 1,000 religious leaders attended the leadership con·
ference of Women Religious and Conference of Major
Superiors to Men. They are discussing whether to exert
pressure on government an<t corporations to combat
social injustice.
1
Con1tabl on dJ1play. ho &ld:
"I ,.-ould really be surprlNd it
lhey turned oul to be 1omeooe
·•IJI 'a work. Sul lhere'1 atwaya
that PoUlbUlty in H't."
Three at.hen bel.DC attrlbuted
to Llonel are "The Old Sam."
''Looltlo1 Over to Harrow" and
"Brook. Treea and Meadows."
oUt In the Mellon Center ot
8rlU1b Art at Yale Univeralty.
AN ASSISTANT CURATOR
there. Sw;an Casteras. said the
works had been s uspect. for
IOD\• time. but she sald of such tuni·•rounds in the art world,
"ln many of these cases, those
painlin11 are no les1
diminished" by discoverle1'1 that
the artlat was reoUy someone
else.
The two British experts are
dccllnil\I comment until lhe Ml
report of their sle-uthln1 is
published Sept. ~ ln the Burl·
,,, ington Magaa.ine. a respected
art periodical.
CRITICS AND DEALERS sit.if Parris and. Flernlqg.WUUam&
have proved that at least 20 oll
paintings. drawings and sketches
attributed to Constable are the
work or Lionel. his fourth and
youngest son. who was 9 y~ars
old when bis father dled in 1837.
Many canvases were not
DAIL y PfLOT A 7
Substance Halts' Virus
Tests Planned for Advance Cancer Patients
• · NEW YORK CAP> The
American Cancer Society has
a nnounced plans ror a clinical
test of a substance made from
human blood cells to determine
its value in treating advanced
cancer.
· The substance. leukocyte in-
terferon. has reduced the size of
tumors in animal experiments
and in a few scattered appllca·
tions with human cancer pa·
tients. the society said Tuesday.
IT IS PRODUCED by extract·
ing white blood cells from whole
blood and exposing them to a
virus . The result is a cellular
protein that acts to inhibit viral
growth.
Leukocyte interferon has been
used against the herpes strains
of virus Utat produce shingles
and chicken pox. but it cannot
generally be used against them
because of the extreme scarcity
of the substance and its high
cost.
The cancer society said it
plans to spend up to $2 million
on the test. The scar city or the
material will probably limit the
trials to 150 advanced cancer pa.
tients.
SO FAR LEUKOCYTE in·
terferon has been produced only
in Finland, where the blood is
obtained by the Finnish Red
Cross and processed at Red
Cross laboratories in Helsinki.
Most clinical testing with in·
'terferon on cancer has been
done in Swede n . At the
Karolinska Institute in
Stockholm, researchers have re·
ported promising results in the
treatment of children and young
adults with osteogenic sarcoma.
a bone cancer. after the use or
high doses of the substance
In the United States. 15 breast
cancer patients have been treat-
ed with interferon at M D. An·
de{'son Hospital a nd Tumor
Clinic in Houston and six pa·
lients with lymph tissue cancer
have been treated at Stanford
University Medical center In
Palo Alto.
"EARLY INDICATIONS sug.
gest that interferon Rlay have
the capacity to bring about ob·
jeclive tumor reduction." the
society said.
The ins titutes that will
participate have not been select·
ed. Dr. R. Wayne Rundles of
Durham, N.C .. president or tlu:
society. s aid a committee or
scientists will meet in about a
month at ACS headquarters in
New York to work out details.
Co-chairmen of the committee
will be Dr. Jordan Gutterman of
the M.O. Anderson a nd Dr.
Thom as C. Merigan Jr. of Stan·
rotd.
Dr. Rundles said the cancer
society's role in the project will
be limited to purchasing the in·
terferon. monitoring the trial.9'
and reporting the results .
Father Bitter
· Retarded Son Found Dead
MANKATO. Minn. IAP l -Roger Heller !o;ays he will do all
he can to prevent a family tragedy such as his own from hap.
pening to someone else.
Heller's 19-year-old son. David, mentaJly retarded and s ub-
ject to seizures. is dead. The body was found 43 days after David
disappeared Feb. 26 from a Mankato home for the mentally re-
tarded.
HE APPARENTLV DIED OF exposure : there was no
evidence of foul play.
Heller devoted a frantic. exhausting search for the boy -in
ravines. farm sheds, snow ban.ks and hospitals . A clairvoyant
went to David's room to touch his belongings in an attempt to
track the youth. Aircraft and snowmobiles were used.
Heller says he is convinced his only son would not have
walked aimlessly through the snow northeast of Mankato if
more precautions had been taken. Heller. who was out of state
the day David disappear,:ed. also says he should have bttn
notified sooner of his son's disappearance
BUT MAlllON MAERTENS, DIRECTOR of REM·Lll. a
private institution. says residents have the right to live a~
normally as possible. Most work. earn their own money and
contribute to daily living demands, she said. The staff members
did not neglect their duty in allowmg David to leave that night.
she says.
David left his residence around 10 p.m. that Sunday. He was
seen at 11 p.m. at a gas station. buying soda.
Particular People Select JOHNSON & SON
Home of the "Golden Touch"
Trip Called Flop Imprisoned
SAN FRANCfSCO
CAP) -John Forslund.
known as the "Brown
Bag Bandit," was sen·
tenced to 15 years in
prison after pleading
guilty to 44 counts of
ar m ed robbery. He
earned his name by pro-
viding brown paper bags
into which he ordered
victims to deposit their
cash.
COME PRAY
WITH US
You are cordially Invited to Join u!.
in morning and evening prayer at the
:
"Best advertising. and. you had
more to show".
ALLAN H. ANDERSON
S1nw An1, C.tll.
ANOTHER SATISIFIED CUSTOMER
Ll "4C01 114
COUGAR (:APHI
2626 Harbor Blvd. • Costa Mesa • 540-5630
Belly Dancer's Dream 'Nightmare'
CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. <APl -
According to lawsuits filed by three
dancing teachers who bought tours to
Egypt to learn first-hand the exotic
undulations of the belly dance. the
trip was a flop
various reasons. On one occasion they
"'simply did some dancing on their own ... the suits say
CATHOLIC CHURCH
OF SAINT JOHN,
THE BAPTIST
1015 BAKER STREET. COSTA MESA
Mon,tftt ,,.,_ ............. ,_ ......... , "'"',,..,,. 11 t •·11-_., ..... ,,_,., .,, •• Rose Marie Park and Lavina Live-
ly of Chattanooga and Ellen Giles of
Atlanta went lo Cairo last September
for what was proclaimed "a belly
dancer's dream come true" and "a
glorious opportunity to be exposed to
the Middle Eastern culture" on a
The suits name two California·
based travel agencies. Touring Ex·
press Inc. and Trio Travel and Tours
and Dalilah Bristow who is Identifi ed
in the actions as "an experienced belly dancer who matntains her----------------------------
lO·day tour
WHEN THEY ARRIVED, on a
plane six hours late. the suits filed in
Circuit Court say. they learned that
their instructor. Nagwa Foad, was in
London and had been for some lime.
studio in Las Vegas. Nev."
LAWYER HAREV BERKE filed
the three separate but identical suits
on behalf of the women. Each seeks
$25,000 in damages.
Berke said in an interview Tuesday
that each of the women 1s a dancer
and dancing teacher and that they
signed up for the tour lo improve
their techniques and teaching
abilities Another teacher. Tania Carioca. was
not available for the promised
seminars, the suits said. He said the firms were answerable
• Spiral sliced for easy serving
• Honey 'n Spice Glaze • Cooked 30 hours
ti Olt. · fl. • Nationwide shipping service H ate tglJtQ~ · · · •Full service Delicatessen 6'DJey . 01d world cheese shop W' ;' ~ •Sandwiches to go
~ g!!~~n!~!!lS
Further, the women said that in· under Tennessee Jaw because their our Last 3 Day Weekend Before School
stead of "excellent, first-class" ac-advertisements for the lours were ORDER YOUR HOLIDAY
commodatlons at Jolie Villa Hotel publishm_Jn periodicals with Ten· ONEY BAKED HAM -+-t=--<~n&f ~ fOrced ro a~cepnr ~to'""W""---:n;;;-,e=s=see clfcUlaCuffi. tit----.:..-~==~~r'ir'in;;:.,.,;;.~ ----
class inferior hotel known as the The women sajd that as they were
Hotel Cleopatra." leaving for home they were told "the
They said they • howed up at the as· memories or the exciting days past
signed sites for lessons for several will accompany you for the rest or
days but no lessons were given for your lives."
J700 I. COAST HWY • C...... .. ._, • PHOMI '7J.t000
M.,_.m El Toro (Now Ooe<ll. o..ng., "-"" Sot1no9. l8 Hlln °'*""II Soon'" HUflbnQIO<>
Beecl\. BMCll' o..1*c1 A*> San 0oeoo' Toiuca l-
Carry Dental Insurance? AUCl'ION SAl1E -'let it carry you awhile -
I
ORWttAJ;CARPEiS & ROOS ~
We ha<e )JSt receMd a large kwentOf}' of exquisite
hMd made NGS from Eastern Europe. Asia and the
Ortf.rlt met wll sell in strlQle pieces the entire lot
by pubic aK:llon. The s~ consists of rugs
from lrM. ~China. Afgenlstan. Turkf:J, lndla.
Romlnla and Plldmn. They vwy in size from
2' X 3' to 18' X 12'. Alf rugs are guaranteed l7)t a
ful ecd\ange ~·
Human Rights
PrOhe Urged
WASHING TON CAP l -The United States
is ur&ing an international in,•estigalion of
human rights violations in Cambodia
After ait---tt.tm_about:i~ fetr UTl:llY.-:----•----1
Let Dr. Flanzer show you how far
1lfE ALJC'T10N WRl. TAKE Pl.ACE AT
HUNTINGTON 81ACH INN
21112 PectflcCoeM HwJ,
HufttlntfOlt h.ch
Tmnday, A ... l1tt
At 1 lt.M .. View 7 P.M.
.. -
HOLIDAY INN
28205 Le PH "d' ugvna Hlll1
Oft ,.,,.y, hpt•tnber 11t
At I P.M., View 1 P.M.
The State Department delivered a lengthy
indictment of the Khmer Rouge government
to the United Nations Human Rights Com·
mission in Geneva this week. It alleged that
the Khmer Rouge have instituted one of the
most brutal dictatorships in world history
There was no mention, however, of a re·
cent suggestion by Sen. George McGovern, D·
S 0 . that an international armed force.
drawn from smaJler natjons. intervene In
Cambodia to end the bloodshed there
NEW FALL HAIR FASHIONS
by l'he Creative Staff at ..
LUZZETT A Bernard
240 Newport Center Dr • Sult• 200 NEWPORT BEAOi~3
} I
your dental insurance will carry your
dental needs
Wno knows -you could get all the
way home -free
ActT-..,
C9ilfwAft .. 111ll._.llf
642-0112
Dr. Arnold H. Flanzer, 1
DDS
170 L '?Mt Strwt
Costa Mesa
LOCAL I CALIFORNIA I NATION
CADIUAC Ml!AT lttm.De DIVILONO TO IUMINATe '9RlS IN ASH TRAYS ~a.re....., DeNe It hly to ln•.U aua Dea&ere Wiii Do tt ''" .
Heat Shields Mailed . .
390,000 Cadillae Owners to Get 'Quick FiX'
DETROIT tAP> Cadllla~
says il ls mllll,aq bbtray be.at
shields to about ll0,000 owners
of 1977 and 1978 models becao.w
at least a doien people have
been sUPUy burned lo small
fires in their ashtrays.
The ftrm will mail lhe small
metal shields directly to owners
because they are easy to install,
but owners may have dealers do
it free If they wish, Cadillac
said.
ALL 11'17 CA-UWAC De Vdles
and Fleetwoods and some early
1978 models of the same cars are
affected, the General Motors
division said.
Cadillac s pokes man Norb
Bartos said tho company had re·
ports of 12 persons suffering
band or other burns, appantnUy when they noticed smoke and
trled to remove the ashtray.
None required bospilaliaatlon,
and the cars were DOt extenaive-
ly damaged, Bartos said.
He said the problem arises
only if the ashtray is pulled partly
out, if it contains combustible
materials such as tissue paper
and if cigarettes or cigars are nol
completely putout.
WHEN THE ASHTRAY is
pushed in flush with the
dashboard there is no problem,
even with burning ashes and
combustible materials, Bartos
said.
The potential for fire does not
exist in other Cadillacs because
of their different instrument
panel design. Io the Fleetwoods
and De Villes. a fire could ex-
tend upward behind the instru·
menl panel, Bartos said, but be
added that it would be contained
within the instrument panel.
THE SHIELD GOES just
above the ashtray and can be
easily snapped into place
without tools, Cadillac said.
Mailings have already begun.
Cadillac said it bad no
estimate of how much the mall-
ing program would cost.
'Stoogis•' Moeked
But Satirist Might Get tire Next Laugh
SACRAMENTO (AP> -Paul
Fericano , the poet of
.. Stoogism,'' is thinking of writ·.
ing a new poem.
It 'II be about the scene in the
California Senate Jasl week
when Sen. Bob Wilson stood up
and read Fericano's poem about
a Hollywood party.
.. THE THREE Stooges get an
invitation to a big party at John
Wayne's house.
.. But besides the Three
Stooges, the only people who
show up are Randolph Scott.
GlalfCampbell and Stuart Whit·
mac, who all drop acid and beat
the ... out of John Wayne just
for the bell of iL
.. John Wayne looks to the
Three Stooges for help, but
they're too busy melting down
his Oscar."
WILSON SAID THE poem
"doesn't exactly compare with
Shakespeare." He cited it as a
horrible example of bow be
believes the California Arts
Council is wasting taxpayer
money by granting money to
ridiculous non-artists.
Actually, Fericano didn't get a
nickel directJy from the council.
It gave $5,000 lo the Second
Coming Press of San Francisco.
which published a half dozen
books of poetry, including one by
Fericano including the Three
Stooges poem.
"I never have taken any
grant. I don't believe in grants. I
believe a truly independent
press is independent of all govern-
ment agencies," Fericano, 27.
said 1n a telephone interview from
his home in Millbrae.
HE SAID THE publisher gave
him 300 copies of his book. He
gave half of them away and sold
some for $2.50 each.
''This isn't a money-making
thing," said Fericano.
He said he is able to devote
full time to writing now because
his wife works at a credit union.
Fericano said he attended 20
Fall Registration
Deadline Nearing
Registration is available until college office in Fountain
Sept. 8 by mail for tall classes at Valley.
CoastllneCommunltyCoJlege. All ages ate eligible to
Courses are held at 193 loca-participate in the classes on 675
tions in Newport Beach, Costa subjects, including occupational
colleges; but never got a degree.
.. I WAS A MJGRA,NT student.
I'd go to a college wherever I
could get a job and study writing
and literature.
"l am a satirist. That poem is
about Wayne's conservatism,
and how maybe we don't need it.
and it's against this whole scene
down there in Hollywood."
Fericano said he published an
anthology of "Stoogism" poems
by 45 poets. He said the mock
literary movement was taken up
by writers all across the coun-
try.
"STOOGISM IS throwing
the pie in somebody's face.
Some of us think we're above
somebody else. but we're not.
We're all on the same level.
·'The whole point of 'Stoogism •
is to make people laugh and to
get an emotional response. My
whole thing is to give poetry
back to the people."
As for Sen. Wilson's mocking
reading of his poem. Fericano
said:
"I DON'T HOLD any grudge
against him. Most people do feel
that way. It's hard to educate
the people.
"Maybe I'll write a poem. It
will start:
" 'The senator stood up and
read the poem.' "
Goodwill's
Container
Just Moved Mesa, Fountain Valley, Hunt- specialties such as real estate,
lngton Beach, Westminster, Seal marketing, business manage-Whatever happened to Costa
Beach andGardenGrove. ment, personnel, sal es, Mesa's Goodwill Collection F----.... r-i,...,t1ege cablltnogrr,:-t?etrnltr1itt11:tedm---1sH1·8"~etKa11ri~ala&r, ...&1ioiu1uiu~rh1&1nc:icee-~awnd1HL.cro01n11:-=ce-ntl!r?"'--
.. Passport," can be obtained at struction inspection. The answer is fairly simple.
markets, banks, civic buildings Information can be obtained As part of Costa Mesa's overall
and fire stations as welt as at the by calling 963-0811. beautific a U on program,
Goodwill bas moved ita collec·
lion box to the rear of the Alpha Free Appr&isals Offered ~~t:t:"e~t:;e~~~ Street and
Nearly 1,500 bags of clothing, --"' _Antiques, glassware. jewelry and other...:.:COllectlbles .. will be ap· _mi§cellaneous items and pieces praised free of charge from t to 5 p.m. 5epf. 9'at the Am-mcanPatr --or fumI~are ona «ft.Ile -
AntiqueShowandSaleatFasbionJsland,NewportCenter. Costa Mesa center each week,
The appraisal service is part of a four-day show of furniture, making it one of the most pro-
--lK>OKa, S11.\rer;jmvehy andothetitems..They willhel®wn ductive pickup points In the
under a tent tntlre ~urt &re• aft:bes r ---fl~.Jl --
The collection boX fonnerty This show and sale are free to the public durint regular shop was located at the front of t.be
boursfromSept. 7-10. market.
Srlaedtde Changes
N-M Schools Open Sept. 11
Schools in tbe NU'port-Mesa
Unified District wlll reopen
Monday, Sept. 11, minus school
buses for hiab school students
and with aome cban1es tn dally
class starting limes.
All five high schools will belin cluses at 8 a.m. tb1a fall. Tbefe
will be no bus transportation.
CHANGES ALSO RAVE been
made 1n middle and elementary
..
school opening Umes to cut dis-
trict busing costs.
Davia, Kaiaer, Lincoln and
Rea middle schools will all
bealn at 8 a.m. Ensi1n and
Te Winkle will beain at 8: 15 a.m.
A mon1 the elementary
scboola, Victoria staru at 8:31 ;
Andersen, California,'
Llndberth, Pomona and WUson
at 8:30; Colleae Park, Harbor
View and Klllybrooke at 8:35,
and Whittier at 8:40 a. m .
CORONA DEL MAR, Newport
Hel1hts and Sonora will start at
8 :45; Adams, Bear Street,
Eaatbluff, Mariners, Newport
Elementary, Paularino Ind
Woodland at 8:55, and Meta
Verde and Monte Vtata ai 94'.m.
Information about bus stops
and dally schedules ta anilable
11.'om tho Individual achool.
,.. .
19121 Beach Blvd. ehone: (714) 847-9833
Brings You ... -
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LEE OIL FILTERS
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Beauty Prescription
for troubled hair
I ~-···-.. •
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Towels WASH 99C CLOTH
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Mattress
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~~ 4.00 FULL & 00 FLAT •
SHARP 8-Df Sf T
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> NORELCO \ Curling Curly Q \ wand
NOR ELCO
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100'4 Shredded Foam F1lled
17"rl3" 2 i $ 5
PoL vesrER Bed Pillow
ST ANOARO SIZE
20"x 26"
KING SIZE
20"•36"
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100 "" Polyester Fiiied
STANDARD SIZE KING SIZE 20" x 26" 20" x 36"
2 i s7 5.00
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Vacuum
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For Hot or Cold Beverages. ·t ~,.:
u Utw 9.95 '~·
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mplexion Plu
Versalllt ... wlth mist to '\· help ·set" a style. ..... -.
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_ -Cordless "1-~,.. · 4 Manicure Machine I' I ..... -~ -~10.88
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llt500
10.88
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Samuel E. Webster .
Kmiav WHISKEY& 991
•PIJW usum •
Popov
VODKA .,.. ... 2.99
Chivas Regal
SCOTCH w.my 10 49· ..... 111a. •
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Nail Slicks
Conditioning Nill Color
Protects and conditions 7 7 c tor lono nail life' Assort~ Shades.
Color-Matics
Automltlc Cream-on
Assorted Shades
SHADOW 1.39
METAL
Picture Frames
D~ 'I' ,•. ' ~x; 'f •1 I" ' I
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Cactus Plants
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Our Phannaeists art highly trained m thtlr PfOfmlon Lei them help
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aboui mtdicatlont.
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Assorted Variety
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Lights Fast & Easy
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ra r . t'lt"'• tr
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DENNIS THE MENACE
•
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WMAT ~ 60
AU.-~'ll)D
IM=~ -~ :~
~
·''''''····
by Tom Batiuk
MR. DINKLE ! /
by Jeff MacNelly
by Ferd and Tom Johnson
JUDGE PARKER
TUMBLEWEEDS
.. HUSMNO HUNTfR'S HAN0900K
It H.e ~interest, Future
Bride p Ms:ylie yotm not inter-
esting enough. Ee intriguing, be
. mysterious 1
NANCY
LETS GO OVER lO
ROLLO THE RICH
KIP'S HOUSE
\
DOOLEY'S WORLD
DR.SMOCK
MOTLEY'S CREW
~660TilW 64~SY "116 ~~HI& Wl~'5 NO'T~LOU6 !!
rs TMAT 'tbv, CHUCK? IT~ LIKE &/OOR
VQCE ... IF fT ~HOW AAVE '(OU ?
by Roger Bradfield
by Geqrge Lemont .
AWSRT' THI! e>OUNCE!R A."f"
CROWt,eY'S e>A.R THAT IROU&t..E!'S ON
ITS WAY.'
TDDAT'S CIDSSlllD PUllLI
ACROSS tf9d ground
1 Suitt IOUnd M Hell qulft
S Himtlllt 46 T tmpc>fary
9 Precipice strvcl\Ht
14 Army dlM-41 CMtlon
fictlion ptOduet
15 Gtntrll 48 Judicitf
Robt. - -body meet·
16 Grut PfM-"II
1eot 52 T eue or
17 o...g,_ Ahru
rntnl firm:
It Short 'lillt 2 words
19 Bendlelder 58 Tu pro
-S"-w 57 CMfKt
20 Pronoun 58 Svri1'1
21 'flit Pltlnl of Migtlbof:
Abflhlm, Vtt.
•·II· S!I Ptr -
23 Uhl 60 Aloof Ptf·
25 Lact of: Suf • IOl'I
Ila 11 Indigo
28 """1t tOUmJ
'D f1>otbtll 12 In the c.e
tllld of: 2 wordt
29 Htbrtw let· 83 llY't1
1tf S4 Boot Pl'1
32 'flit lltavens 16 Mild Olth
35 Narrow ~I DOWN
uNITED F•tin Syndlcar.
Tueedey't Puzzle SoMcf;
9 lrritfttd by :u ~
rvbbing flatu19
10 Alien llmuf l5 Avoid
II HIVing no 38 Stin ""°"'
wil 38 RtCOrd
12 Thin met.II 42. long
"'"' Pointed 13 Mr. M1c:Mur· too!fl
rsy 44 Puntt11
.,._,. __ c.Dwidt ' fOl'lll9t
11 MOf1glge, T~ 1itt1
2t South Afri-45 Bldger
CID 47 f11f·l>Mnlt
by Tom K, Ryan
•·II· 2 Elpectant
38 Sniwf one
39 On die Ctel1 3 Otpitw of
of
~S....1\11
4t Whlit .....
C2om.fo
rMr
C3~
22 'flit V9f'f 48 Frtneh def.-
best C1CY
24 Mir ro-49 SW91t glaze =
gtther 50 St1gt M
27 Sparille S 1 K llOMI •
28 Pttl 62 Welshmen
30 Soon 53 Mll'lt: Ft
31 8ewllild S. Crttb •
32 Juiubtt 515 Eur. !Mr
33 8tg1nntr. !i9 Mldllnl Vflw _ tool __ _..
~,_..,11!--i_
1
•
"Why does 'qucirW to' rMaft flfT!EN fftift.
ut.t? l thought o quar19r w0& TWfNTY..flVE
~··
""~·· ' OOtlOTMY 1..-i!E llllOE$.5'.Ea. ,_ • -..e9f t..lcltlao,CA ...._.._ell
: A~IUI 1', lt1t •I IM 6919 ol ,.
I ...._ ,...... ........ Mc~tll
• .. S.ttt• ...,._._ Ca .• Fr""1 tl-.....r
el Co'" llMH, C..., l'r• .. rtO, J .__,,., ol --1 a..c ... CA at'°
\ lllNI"" II># 4 1.s...-. tlla M.,,,,ncan .. ,._. Je•1aY. NM Fff'9'dM ol ,.......,..
: -..Cr., Ca , Lilly 8'09M a# .. ,..,,,
; Hllh. Ca .. ano Emmy ~rton> of
r '"'•'"'· Ca c;,--vi<~ will be ·' Mle Oft 5at-y, Sip!-J, 197' •t ·: '°""' ., "··~-~I ,.... '" '. S,,ftl• AM, Ca .wftll Or Ger-hsll
' ._ Ille Flr11 OWltl-Olurch ott1<i.1 "'9 ,,.,er,.,... will De al Fan·,..-
..._,,., ...... Stnl .. Tllll\111 1..am11 .., ... ,., dlrerun.. _..._
-1 ~nae
" kA11E C OEETEA."' .. ;rHI ... , tf HUllfl""'°" 8Nctl, Ce. I'-• .... ., on Au9US1 21, 1911 a tM H""'·
fnvtllfl 8"cll c-~ ~ .. ,
Siie ,, MlrVI-by lltr brG!llet Fr-
...,,,Kllel o1 H1H>tlft9\on, BeKll. ea ..
"Sltlt r Gr•Ct AOlllftlOfl of Ottawa. • IC•"~'· Fr~ mo cau at Plarca 9rotr.er~ Smltl>S' Mo<'tue<y on FrlO.y,
September I, 1'71 from 12 "°"" lo
•PM Fune<al wrV1C.es will .. tonclllCI·
ed °" s..1uro.v. Seof-z. W1I at 1PM •t Pleru 8rolhtl'"l Smllhl' ¥on ... ry, .....,tll\Dlon IM.ch. Ca with
Ot ••lrtl'l<lf' A-ol U. Fl,.1 Owlsllaft
OluH" OI ......... ,n Valley offltla111>9-
,,.... ,.,..,., 'llrlfl 0. In lhe Odd Ftl-l
Cemetery, Los Angelel. C.. Plerte • 9rotr.to SmUM' _...,.,r cllrecaon.
• S»-4Slt
9ALTH1$
I FAANK SPENCER 8ALTHI$, r11I·
• ""'' of !.outh ~. ea. -RantllO Mir~ Pn--•r on A11g1n1 n.
tt1t. bor11 HunHvlllt. MIH~.rl Oft
AU9U•I 12. 1'112 SurvllHld by "'' wife HOiiy Hal1\ecl 8allhlt ol ... YNFS. '°"
: ~ f',...nk SPt<•<t• 8althll. Jr. -his "'M• Judy, --WUif-H .. ,.,.,,
09 Meul , •nd n i t<• 8attltrt ~J t1pat,,ca ot CoroMclo. GI BA
\/nlYer\lly ol C..t•t°'nla et 1..0S Ange'-' 1'06. J 0 H ...... arcl i..n. Sc-1'2'
<:.11m l•uclt member of z.tta Pl!
Frelt rftily, Blue Slllt lcl, Cl'lanury
Clllb. former me-ol ltw tlrm
sr.epllt•d. Mullin, Alclller a nd
Hampton JIJ09t ~lor Cour1 -
J11s11u reun1<1, Coun of A111»al, State
of C..llfor"'4 -Ptit --Boerd #II Go .. ,,_.. al Sl•rt Bar. Mtmot"lal
wrvlct' tor Fr-!>. a.111>11 Frldey,
September I, ?'78 tt 12:00 -el \ Pttlllc VI-MOrt..ary 0.-1. Inter· ..,.,., Pat llk View Memorl•I P•n
Newport Bt•<ll. Pac Hlc View
Moft11•'l' cllrte1or1.
DUDEK
l.£TTI E M DUDEK, reslclent of
C•1ta Mt:wi, C. Pus.cl away Oft A~U\I ti, 191'1. Sur.i...., by a .-1 .... "l.f# Hortct w l.e«ll'IQ MO. of SMlt•
, AN. Ce • two ~ El,,,.r Ouc»ll
•qi Santa Arw C... anct E0w¥d Ollcltll
.. McC-. ~•ll\JO 2 9'~,..,._..,
prpf~wr W•ldefl A l.ee<t"Q of $tn ~>imon. C• a n o Ann•tltllt
.. w.s .. •m.,."' San A•'""'· Gt.,' orut· • or•ncl<lllktrtf\, Jeffrey, 8n ... t..eeclng,
of r..n Aa...--Saoah -Jaicn waue•"'tn ot ~ R•t•t. ea. '" 1n1 Lettie Ol>dek and lltr r...lbancl Alber1
oitart~ • Mom /S. Pop Aed /S. Wllllt
"GrP<erv Stor~ tt ttth -Newport In •c:oila Mew, C Wiiien they ,.., lor
tn4ny year\ Slit Wes tor ....,.v YHrl a
wnd•V Scllool TNCller •I lhe Com·
mul\lly Cllurcll, now Finl United Mt'll>Odl\I Cllurcr. Atberl Dudek
pH>11d •w•v In "" -he< dtUQllter I.tone 8 Le.ting paue<t •-Y In 1'73
Funeral -vkM Wiii be held on Thuo
Ga y Au9ust ll, 1'71 ti 2PM Bell
8roeowav c:Mpet wllll Or Got•••d a.s11 ofllclttl"9 Priv•te ,.,,,llv en
I04'1Dmtnt S~lc-. Wiii be lleld ••
¥elrose ,._, Friends ,.,., call al
~II 8roadWay Mortuwy on ~ on AU9U'OI JO. 1'11 from l PM to
Ptact aontas
SMITH'S MOltTUAIY
627 Main St.
Huntington Beach
538-6539
SHEffll MOll'U.t.H
976 So. Coast Hwy
Laguna Beach
.C9+t535
1533 N El Camino Real
San aemente 492-0100
PmFAMILY
CO&.OMIAL fUI RIAL
NOMI
7801 f3olaa Ave
Westmit1$ler 893-3525
'ACW'fC YllW
t41UOIUAL 'All
Cemetery Mortuary
Chapel
3500 ~~ V-iew Onve
Newport Beach
6«-2700
-McCOINICI
MOal'UMllS
Laguna Beach
.CiM--9-415
Laguna Hiiis
7880933
San Juan "Clolstrano
~1776
HAllOI LAWM-
tiDlfr OUQ
MOl'NAIT ..
t•ICWMPAU
Monurr c.m.tery
O'ernstory
1825 Gisler Ave eo.i. Mesa 640-55&4
IALn..a .. ON
All •AL HOMI
e.&-2•2• Costa Meaa
673-G460
m&. llOADWAT
MOllTUdY
110 BroldoMy
C<*•Meee 642-9150
...,....~
NOl'IUMT WISTQlllP at.APa
427 E. 11th St. CoetaMtM M6-.a88 •
... ~-.... ~ ..,.._.,
~· COMITO ~DAHN CIOMITO, ~ ol 9Nch. c.. ...... ...,, ...
.-....... 11, 1'11. '" 0---''" ca. ..
ll>t ... II •S fie!ol.«I ClilUQlllltr tf
l'r•l\k •ftf Aurel!• ~-of New Yer~. 1owi~ mot,,.r of Clttrlolle
Comito of ColU Mese, CA., Ar1 Comito
of Co•t• ~. Ca .. Sal Comito tf
fllt•potl 9Ntll. c.... liste< of Jt•ft
.\mttrou OI -....,, 8HCll, C.. eiWI Ao lier I MHOfl ol Wllilll•• Mr~
Comito wu • StrQeant tor tlle
T-1\aol Meft'\ PYI-.. ---lnvolvecl wltll IN Catiton\la C.O.ret·
llOl\41 C...ter\ for ,,_ PMt IJ "9tn.
"-•• ~ wlll be MM on T-• Gay, A"9U11 JI. l'11 at ~PllOI at the
Smith Tuthill~ Wencilltf Owlprl, or E 11111 Sl.. ~ Mls6. ,.,,_,
Wl>t Will\ lo ... y tMir ~ _,
ull et""~ ... ,,..,..,. 1..-.,, tAM lo !PM. S...hl\ 'rull\llf Unlb
Mor1u.ry Cllrecton. ~
MA•TZ AHH s MAATl. reslclont of
Newp0rl 9Mch, C.. Pau.d -•v on
AllQUSI 21, lt11. Survived by ltor
llulbeNI L.anv. lier 90M &•'9 -Brian all ol Ntwll0'1 8"<11. CA .. lier
P4rfl'lll Mr & Mn. PIM.II $m"9' of
$an Gellriel. CA • brot,,_, llk l\arO
Smv-ot ""'"'lnoron aeacll. CA .• ~ her sbltr J-1 W1>11e4ey of Temple
City, c. Memoriel tarvl<a$ T'hunday.
AU91i\t )1, 1979 • IPM OWiSI 0...•<lt
er ,,,. S.• Vnli.ct Motfloellst o.urc11.
111 •• _, llMch, Ga ,...,,,. .. 9"•¥ffid9
-v•ces Tilundty. Auollst JI, 1'11 et
l PM, Pa<ltle View ~ltl P•l'll
VlsllttlOft W-y -nl"ll ftOf!>
s-tPM encl Tllurtday mcw1'11119 .. 10AM.
In lieu ol r~ c.ontrflNtloM INIY be ~ to Olrltt <Nwdt • .., Ille Set
United Melllodlll Olurclt ~Sc-. earu 11er9H'0" ,,_, .. Home Coslt
MHacllrt<IDr'-
LAMKIM
FRANCES I. LAMIC IN. paotd
ewer on Auvust 21. 1'11. 5"" ll sw "'Wei .. , ..... hUSllend ...,..., -,,., dtUQllttr c;,ace PeMock o1 Oregon
Service\ wlll be lltld on ""'"4av at
ZPllll ., H.,_ u-llMmorlal Peri.
w ltll Rev Jamtt Sc.ott offkfahl\Q
Herllor Lawn-Moul\\ Oll"t Coslt
llMW 5'*lSS4 a.t.eKRe
MEAAILL G 9ARKER. res>Otnt o1
NtWPOr1 a.tc;ll, CA. P-away IN> AUQU'I , .. 1'79. W,,I...., by !Ill wile
AuqUtlt, Of ,..._port 8Ncll, lllS IOI\ Ed 8••••• ol C.oalt ~ Ce. -"'' O.uotiter Oafi y Dietl of Tuts and •
Qf'tndc.lltldrel\. Ser.lcn _,.held to.
clay, we-.iev. AUQU51 30, '"' at ~PM at 8.ttll 8erw0tt Flint• al +fome
ClltPtl lnttrmeftl private &altr
8tr9jtron Funeral Home Costa Meu
t l..ctoo. In lieu ot •-"· l>ltaM m•kt clonatloM lo cherlty.
LOS ANGELES <AP)-
Dorls W•rner Vidor,
eldest daughter or the
late Harry M. Warner,
rounder of Warner Bros.
Inc .. died Monday in
New York City of com·
plications following sur-
gery She was the widow
of motion picture dire<:·
tor Charles Vidor and
the first wi fe of pro-
ducer-director Mervyn
Leroy. S he had also
b een the wife o f showman Bill y Rose.
PHILADELPH I A
<A P ) -Donald W .
Thornburgh, 84, a re ·
tired vice president or
the Bulletin Co. and a
pioneer in broadcasting,
died Monday.
Neptune Society
CtlENIA TIOH euR""iil•T SEA
646-7431 ..,_-lat satortty .._ llitMflt
-y -·-<---l«'llt• CMlltrftW .......
Min. CMI./..,.
• Interment In
Any Cemetery
• Shipment
• Burl•)
1n1urance
• Cremlllon
~-~·
1al~A.,.. c... ......
54MS54
\
•
MoFe Judges Endorsed
Cowity ID :4dd'T1ro. to ~rior Court IJerreh?
''KATHY CLANCY .... o.uy ..........
Pl'CJPQMd I ,...!•lion that would Md tw.> new
uat• lo Oran1e Counly'a 40-mombtr &up.nor COUit w.eh wu codoned oa a 3-2 wt.e by ~ ~T\Mda,. Prtiilidbll Jua. Wtlt.r c:Mramaa as.cl~ .Bar AllOd•1k>o l>resldent Jadr TroUet · urted
1uperiteon' 1upport loT Ute letlalaUoa. lt wtU be
1DOUC!ftd bJ AaMmblyman RJchud lloblnaoa. f>.
Cardetf Grove.
COUNTY ADll.IN1.9'l'&ATIVE Offlcer Robert
Tbocnu .. ld ll would coat the county •bout aoo.ooo a year to aup~rt each new Juctae wb.Ue I.he
ltatt contributes only $60,000 a year per 1uctao.
Suptrvlaor lhlpb Clark. wbo Joined
Supervllor Lauren(e Schmit lo voUna a1alnll the
endorsement. '8id, "That la a 1luble chunk tn O\U'
now-depleted property tax kitty."
CLARK HAS LONG CONTENDED tba.t tbe
eosl of court.II should be a state responalbUlty and
not fMIJ upon local taxpayers.
"I know there is a shortage of Juda .. down
here," Clark said. ··sut untU they get t.be meaaage
up lhtre m Sacramento that \.be ball ii in their
court. I still maintain my position tbat this ls
not an equitable charge."
Cbaramza told supervisors that, unleas
Roblnson's legislation is passed now, it would be
19'19 before additional Judaes would be approved
and 1980 before new jud&es would be on the job.
WBILE THE CURRENT courthouse lacks
space for the new judges. he saJd. they could be
Hayakawa Worried
Senator Eyes
'2nd Culture'
By O.C. HUSTINGS
OlllleO.Uyf't ... Maotf
U .S. Senator S.l. Hayakawa or California. a
semanticist by profession, says be is tro\lbled by
the definition fed eral bureaucrats have bung on
the term "bilingual education."
In an Aug. 23 statement on the Senate floor
concerning the bilingual education aapec\ of the
Elementary and Secondary Education Act, the
C•llfonUa Republican said be is worried that ". . .
we are opening the door to a federally-sponsored
maintenance or a second culture.''
HAYAKAWA QUOTED from a U.S. Office of
Education definition of the term:
"Bilingual education does more than simply
teach a child English so that be can then be as-
similated into the Anglo school. Rather, it at·
tempts to present and preserve certain aspects of
the student's native culture as well as to introduce
him lo the English lapguage and its culture."
• * •
MIKE CURB, Republican candidate for lieute-
nant governor, will be lhe speaker Thursday at a
luncheon sponsored by the Newport Harbor Area
Chamber of Commerce.
The luncheon will be held at 11:30 a.m. at the
Balboa Bay Club. Organizers say Curb isn't plan·
ning a formal speech. He will answer questions
from the aud1ence.
Luncheon tickets are S7.50. Reservation may
be made through the chamber. 644·8211.
The luncheon is the first in a series with stale
and local candidates prior to the November elec·
lion.
Big Brothers
Seeking Help
As of ~ember 10, 1978, schedule changes will
go Into effect on several Park-N·Rtde Express
and local Fixed Routes. And fares wdl be
Increased on all C:Xange County 1i'anslt Dlstr1ct
bus routes
The new fares are listed below along with
the routes that have been deleted. PleaSe
remember to carry the exact fare since our
drivers cannot give change.
Thn have also been changes on services
rd ftsted below and we win be revtslng our
9Chec1Jles. For new schedules or route Worma-tion call 5tt7·3311 or toll..free ZENITH 7-.3311 from 6 NA to 10 PM weekda~ 7 NA to 5 PM
Selurdays. and 8 AM to S PM Sundays.
acceaunodated ID court.rooms ~ vacaUonlnc or W
Judlea. · U ~be. r.. said. they could use courtrooms
ln the old county tourthouse.
Trotter told supervlsort he ..,..ea the atate
atiould IHIY more of the tab fOl' couru.
HOWEVER, AT P&ESEN'I'. he aald , ,,eople in·
volved ln lawsult.s aren't belna served and some Ukely 6('e forced to resort to welfare and other
publlc proerams as a result.
Provfdlng welfare to someone aeeldnt
damages in a lawsuit that can't be tried because of
court backlogs may be more expensive ln ~ lOftC
run than expanding the courts. Trotter said.
Cbaramza told supervisors the new judges
would need clerical and balliff support.
He noted that tbe court has reduced the
number or baillcrs needed recently by arranslnt to
bne some courts share one. In tbe put Judces
each bad their own bailiff. be said.
Dumping Site
Will Remain
A group or Hrea residents and city officials have
failed In tbetr bid to have Oran1e County
Supervisors reconsider continued operation of a
local trash dumping site.
Brea resident Norma Hicks complalned that
lhe existing Olinda landfill "is an ugly scar on an
otherwise beauWuJ landscape" and poses a noise
and health threat to nearby canyon dwellers .
Members of an environmental aroup, Hills for
Everyone. said tbe canyon proposed for landfill ex-
pansion is the home ror deer. raccoons and rare
birds and other wildlife.
"Ir we have got tQ move into this canyon let's
make sure there are no alternatives." said group
spokesman David Myers during Tuesday's dis·
cussion before county supervisors.
Ron Bales. an assistant director or the county
General Services Agency. called the canyon "very
attractive" just as are many other natural can·
yons still untouched in Orange County.
But the canyon has been identified as a dump-
ing site on county plans since 1959. he said. five
years before residents moved into nearby areas.
He also said there have been no health
problems caused by the landrill.
" ...,., 8.
CbrtstlllR, D.D.S.
New OCTD bu8 ,.,._ ~ecnve SIOI.,._ '° t9781
New New Senior Cittzen
Service Reg!Mr Fare & Handicapped Fare
local Fixed
Route&
EasyRlder 3~ 1~
Park·N-Ride
Express &
°'81-A·Rlde 7CYI. ~
[>tm.A·Ut 7CN!' ~
~orty
DleoOi•ttlwed ........ The followlng Park-N·Ride
Express fb.rtes have been~ 207: 260;
271. (Other Park·NwRlde Express ano Local Axed
Routes have been chang,ed as well. so please
calf for new route fntormetion.)
....
PVBUC NOTICB
PUBUC NOTICE
PVBUC NOTJCE
I
PVIWC NOTICB
PUBUC NOTJCE .,...
lllOTIC. TOC•IOtTOa HO.A....a ~U .. lltlOR COURT O" Titll
IT A Ta Oft CAU flOeMtA POtl
TN• CICMHffY O~ CHIANOI
I• IN Mllttlr af'ltle Ei\tte of RUTH aRl!MEe 9AK!ftl. OecffMd.
Noll<• 1$ ~ 111...,. to <reclltcws
llavl119 c111,,,. eoal"" Ille uld dt<:4-
'
--
• t
save on these and
many other great
back-to-school items
for your children
MER N'S
BACK-TO-.SCHOOL
ell our back-to-school dresses for girls
20%off
&a.94CX. Reg. .... 14. SALE Ul-11.11
SlziM 7. 14. Reg. •1CM11. SALE 7Jll.12.1a
One and two1>iece df 11 111 inwnock
stv*, pear iwrt looks, jumpen. more.
FuU or ti8fed skins; au with ribbon,
18ce end embroidery detail. Fiona,
90licf colors, plaidl. Polyester I cotton.
children's leather casuals
by Buster Brown•
Ow !veryd8y Pricee
19.99-22.99
OlOice d ltylea In brulhed leather
or leethef'. Sizes 8 ~ to 12.
12~ to3and3~ to6.
StlD8 Oepettment
cotton or nylon
panties for girls
5 PR. 3.50 RE0.89CPA.
Choice of Enkalura9 prints;
~ eolidl in 100% nyk>n. Or
chooee floral prints in IOft, cotton
puff knit. Sizee4to14.
a. b,oys' bomber style jacket
25.99 REG. ta.
Front enep patch pocket whh2.waventrv.
zipper penciJ pocket on sleeve and zipper
front. Aaytic pile collar, nyton lhefl and
..,._.~ ~qulMdJinioo, N!vv, inllze88to 18.
-~-. -·
big looks In woven tops
5.99 8lzea 7·14. REG. t7 ---In dde Ind printl Of blou111 8nd llhkta with ruffle end
b. Decro.,. Hollof11T• Jacketa
22.99REG.m
Filled wfth Hollofll'• II, epedettv made for
c:okt-weether weer. 100% nylon shell wtth
wann, quilted pockets end fuM zipper IMP
front. Solid colora. Sizel S-M-L..)(L
Shortllalw
~;zip or
biltten~.
tnPGtL;11w/
canon bllrMf.
Slal8to18.
save on Mervyn's Dura-Jeans•
for active boye ---~-~
2 t13 ..... 7 .. pr .. SALEl.•PA. PR. o.Wft or twtl: .._ 8-12 reg.; aim
Conltructlld with _potw.-/cottonfnyfOlrtii-blend for extra
••tg1h; eewn whh paty.., ttned and reinfolced at ltn!llll
points. Denim end twit wfth doable kneel. Permanent pre11.
... 4-7 reg.: aim. reg. 8.49 pr ........ 2 PR. t11, 1.71 PR.
~ Sizim4-7 reg.; -reg. 7.60 pr., 2 PR. t13. .... PR.
Slma8-t2 reg.; tlm, reg. t8 pr ••••••••• 2 PR. t18. 7.a PA. Hulky.__.. .... twll or oorduroy: *-28 to 34,
reg. t10 PR •••••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 ~ tte. 8.0 PA.
•
.·
. . . .
, . . • . .
disco Jeana for school
8.99 8lzee 7·14. REG. •10
In,_.,., denim or f8ll cokH'I with
cdorfUI trtmL COtlDn 01 ~I
cotton ..... end"""·
.... 41)(. reg. •1 ........ I.II
a.cetrtm. ~/ootton.
8DM4e)(.reg.te ........ 4 .. PrtoM effectlw through Sundlly. Sept. 3rd Shop ~Fttdly 9:30-8:30 ••• th9 ~ N •.• Sundly 1o.t . • ,
'
. ' J ..
. . .
' ' 4_.._,,;•MilL+
(: . •
........
•Movies
Peteni lust CoUIJn't Hack Homemaking Duties
0-Jor-road Trip
Fregosilgnoring
Panic Button
NEW YORK (AP> -Paul
Blair bas been ther& before as a
member of world championship
teams with both the Baltimore
Orioles and the New York
Yankees.
Tuesday night, bis one-out
400-foot single into center field
scored Graig Nettles with the
winning nm in the 11th inning as
t h e Yankees d efeated the
. California Angels 4-3.
0 1 WAS TRYING to get the
ball into the outfield for a
s acrifice fly," said Blair. "Dave
A_,,.i. Slatr
A"O.-MICM~C'JMI
T0<0lght fclle
T)lvrsdey •di• f'"rto.y GlllfONllaat Toninto •:SS•.m.
LaRocbe is a high fastball
pitcher. I was afraid I might pop
the ball up."
Instead Blair s l ammed
La Roche's pitch over the head of
current slump, though.
"Blair iS_a ~ QYt, especial·
ly against left-banded pitchers,"
said LaRocfte. "He bas beaten
me two or three times before -
and I have gotten him out at
other times. He knows bow to
play this game."
Blair bad demonstrated that
in the eighth i.naing when, with
the score tied at 2-2, be helped
engineer the go-ahead run.
BLAIR OPENED mE frame
with a walk and Mickey Rivers
laid down a perfect sacrifice
bunt on which Blalt galloped all
the way to third when third
baseman Dave Chalk was, drawn
away from the bag .
.. The sh ortstop <J im An
derson) tried to get to third
and wu running near me. but it
would have been a tough play
for him. He would have had to
grab the ball on the run and
make the tag," said Blair. A mo-
ment later Randolph tripled,
scoring Blair and &htlna the
Yanks a 3-2 lead.
But with two out in the top of
the ninth, New York reliever
Sparky Lyle gave up a aame-
tying homer to Joe Rudi, bis 14th
of the season. It was the only hit
in three innings off Lyle, who re-
lieved starter Jim Beattie, who
or importance of o~tcome relative to the ruture
success of the world. •
At a newa conference, Peters admitted his
fall tiff to live up to terms ot the contract which
celled for him to switch roles with b1a wile for 70
days and nights. With two days to ao. be couldn't
back it any more.
"I BELIEVE MY failure as a mother could be consU'Ued by many mothers es tbe1r «reatest sue·
cess since Adam took a bite out of Eve ·s apple!" he
said. .. P~ said that alter be becan the well· "
publlclzed experiment be decided to write a book
Rout it-and now be'a seeking a publlsber.
"The ldea for a book came about one day when .
I was cleaning house," be said. "The lclds were
fighting over a TV staUon, smearina their Ups and
ruigerprinta on the windows, my baclt was sore
from vacuuming, and 1 Just came out and said -
'Wait unW your mother iets home!•
.. THEN I SAT back end tbouaht: 'What the
bell did l Just sayf• 1 decided to make it the title of
my book."
Peters' wife, Pat., .her husband's hiab school
sweetheart before their man1qe 18 years ago,
worked as a secretary to the principal at her
husband's high school while Peters wu home slav-
ing over a bot stove.
They've agreed that sbe should continue work·
ing part-time and that they will split the household
See MOTff Elt, Page B3
Dally ............ ., Gary....,_
-; Angel center fielder Ken Lan-
dreaux for the game-wlnnlng
hiL Nettles bad opened the in·
oing with a double. Chris
Chambliss sacrificed h im to
third. LaRocbe, 9-6, then walked
both Lou Piniella and Cliff
Johnson intentionally to load the
bases and bring up Blair.
See ANGELS, Page 8% THE LAZERS' RILDO DOES A DOUBLE KICK. HITTING THE BA.LL (LEFT) THEN THE CHIN·OF THE SUNSHINE'S JOHN LOWEY.
DESPITE THE LOSS,
California Manager J im Fregosi
is still pointing to the fact that JS
o f b is team's remaining 29
games are against American
League West divisional rivals
Kansas City and Texas.
"We're onlY a game and a h alf
out, .. said FregosL "111 take it.
Joe Rudi has been carrying our
hitting of late, but If we come
out or the slump we'll be all
right."
Blair kept tbe Angels in their
Ongais
Favored
At Ontario
By llOWAllD L BANDY Of .. DlllfY,... Staff
ONT ARIO -Danny Ongais of
Costa Mesa will be among the
f.a voritea. to capture-the pole
-position for Sunday's Califomi
500-mile USAC championship
car race at Ontario Motor
Speedway when qualifying runs
start Thursday.
Ongals bas bad the pole posi-
tion in six of 12 champ car races
this season and bas won four
times including the Ontario 200
in March this year.
He also won the last race in
Milwaukee over 200 mUea and
was the fast qualifier with a
track record speed or 134.933
.
Sunshine Survives Lazers' Rough Tactics
By ERNIE CASTILLO Of_.,...., ..........
An impartial jury would have had a hard time
deciding who actually deserved lo win Tuesday
night's American Soccer Leque game between the
California Sunshine and the Southern California
Lazers.
Surely the Luers, with rough tacUcs bordering
on the realm of cheap shots, wouldn't impress
anybody with tbe1r sportsmanship.
Likewise~ the Sumhtne-with 26 missed shots at a
crippled goalie, an endless number of missed op-
portunities and the inability to cash ln on a two-man
advantage-wouldn't wow anybody with their of·
fense, either.
AS IT WAS, AFTER 110 minutes of action that
saw two players ejected <another deserved to be>.
half a d<>7.en players injured, and 35 fouls called while
probably as many went unnoticed, the Sunshine pre·
vailed, 2·1, iD a sudden death kickoff.
The victory at Orange Coast College Stadium al·
lowed the SUnsbine to gain the second round of the
playoffs, where they will host J.he Los Angeles
Skyhawks Thursday night <8> before the two teams
move on to Pierce College in Woodland Hills Satur·
day to decide the West Division entry in the ASL
championship game.
Officials announced Tuesday's crowd at 3,714.
After watching his team's offense blow numerous
opportunities to win the game in regulation and then
stumble through a pair of scoreless 10.minute over-
time periods, Sunshine goalie Tom Reynolds blocked
a penalty kick by Paul Cahill to end a six.round
kickoff and give bis team only its second victory over
the Lazers.
REYNOLDS HARDLY got a chance to work up a
sweat since the Lazers took just four shots on goal
See SOCCER, Page 83
Ferguson Makes Change
Dodger Star Regains Power of 1973 ---.....
-LOS ANGELES <AP> -
There's no realistic chance for
Joe Ferguson to escape from his
.218 batting average thJs year.
But ttke Los Angeles catcher·
outfielder is recapturing the
power he generated for the
Dod gers In 1973, when he
slugged 25 homers and drove in
88 runs.
the traCle that brought Reggte an unearned run-i~ the-seeondr
Smith to the Dodgers. He came the result of the first or two er·
back tO Los Angeles in a deal rors by second baseman Lee
with Houston two months ago. Lacy.
INJURIES TO Dodger THE DODGERS started their
catchers Steve Yeager and winning raUy in the fourth
Jer r y Grote have &iven against loser Hal Oues. 5-6,
Ferguson more chances to play when Reggie Smith drew a lately, and Use Dodgers also walk.
Steve Garvey forced Smith.
Ron Cey singled and, after Lacy
popped out. Ferguson homered _
to left. It was his 13th of the year
..
~~~· -~runs will be or two
laps instead ol four this year.
The fastest ot the two laps will
be used to determine placement
on the grid Sunday imtead of the
aver-aespeedforfourlaps.
It was his tbree·run homer
Tuesday night that propelled the
Dodllers and Tommy John to a
4· l victory over the Montreal
Exposat~StadJum:-
.. l 'VE CHANGED everytbin~
about my approach to bittlll(,
said Ferguson. who ls back wtth
the Dodgers after two years with
other N"ational League teams.
"Everything is beginning to fall
ln place."
~ ~tt1.111A1111M 1:tsp.m. and sixth since returning to Lo,,
f'rlclay -YOfilaU.osAfttillft J:tsp.m. '!(ng~. -~---.. The Dodgers added a tourtb
run a n i~ later wben Dave
Lopes singled. stole second, and
eventualll scored on Garvey's
sacrifice lly.
..
ONGAIS DIUVES for Newport
Beach's Ted Field and the In·
terscope Racing group of Costa
Mesa.
Also in the field• from the
Orange Coast ar ea are Dick
Simon of San Juan Capistrano,
Steve Krtsiloff of Dana Point
and Marina High 1raduate
Duane "Pancho" Carter.
Bobby Unser, winner of the
SOO in 1974 and 1976, ls driving
for Corona del Mar's Dan
Gurney in the Arco1raphite
Eaile. This ls his second IUnt
witb Gurney.
Rofer Mears, a one-tlme resi.
dent of CmU Mesa, will be drtv-
inl ln hls flnt champion.ship car
See ONGAIS, Pase Bl _ .... ~
~--UPSIDE DOWN CATCH -Lyman Bostock of the
California Angels made this spectacular catch on a low
line drive by the Yankees' Lou Pintella Tuesday night in
New York. Despite the play, the Angels lost in 11 in-
nings • ..a.
Their second straight victory
over Montreal kept the Dodgers
' one game in front of San Fran.
cisco in the NL West. In the con.
eluding game or the three-game
series tonight the Dodger
pitcher will be Don Sutton, 12·10,
opposing Montreal rookie Dan
Schatzeder, 6-4.
t
)
JOHN aECAME the fourth NL
pitcher co win 18 11mea. He bas Jost nine. He scattered six Mon-
treal blta but lllo walked fout, "I WU jut trying to m.te
good INtcbel, but I WU mJM.
in1." lobn laid ot the sixth ll\·
nin1, when be walked t.he bUeS
loaded.
FerfQIOn wu traded to St.
Loul1 by .Los Anaelea ID 1'78 in
----.--.,...Al -- - --
have been injury prone an the
outfield.
Ferguson has responded to the
opportunity by bitting safely in
13 of bis last 16 games and nine
of bis last 10. During that time
he has driven home eight runs.
"He was taking too many
pitches," analyzed Manager
Tom Lasorda. "J want hlm
I winging the bat."
FERGVSON AGREES: ''The
talk I bad with Tommy really
nailed it down. Now I'm swing.
in& at any pitcb that looks like a
strike-."
Ferguson was playing left
field in place of ailing Dusty '
Baker.
"I don't really feel comforta·
ble ln left f\eld," said Feriuson.
"l know I haven't missed any
yet. but it's Just a matter of time
before they ltnd me out there."
The ~ sewed llrat. with
MOHTllUL LOS AltO«LU
•rlllll nri.M
Caslltb S 0 1 0 LopeS2b 4 1 I 0
Mell•• If 4 0 2 0 Rlluell SS 4 0 0 0
Dewson cf 4 O O O R.5mltll rf 2 O t O
E.Va .. lltlMrf 4 1 1 0 Garwy lb 3 1 11
Cromel11elb a o O o C.yib J 1 1 o
Carttr~ 4 0 1 0 T.Mar11Ml3b 00011
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5"faf'H 7000 l'efv,,_C Jl)J ~p 2000 0.tH< 301 0
TWllC'-11 I* 0 0 O 0 HOt'th Cf 1 0 0 0
"-' '"' 1 0 0 0 '°"" p .. 0 • 0 Oennen11 0000
f'rias lilfl I 0 0 0
Toutt aa 1 • t Totals JO 4 7 •
-.w..1 ''° .. 000-1 Los Met• 000 '10 .,.._. ·~ 1. er-tie. OP-LAii A ..... I LOe IMMIMI It, LM ,.,..... I. '9-Mel ....
Oan•'t· tUt-~•'1111ton CUI. 59-SPtlff. a--t ... ~..._..llas.S~y.
Owl CL.U>
Twltd1ell o.r-
IP M a la USO
MOMTllUL
411\ S 4 • 4 I lo'J•oo•o
'IOOt2 L.OIAl'OaL.11 ...... cw. 'Ml ' • ' • ., • T-a:at. A-11,11'.
•
.. IUTllS HVSIM' a
blister on ... toe." .......W...,
Lt-moa. Ulie Yanllee man.,....
''H• p{td.ed a tifftt of • aame.
bul u \Dul wt dWn 't 1-' ....
any nms to won wttb ''
Rieb O<Mut•. ..10, pltdMil
i t,he Ut.b ud plCked uP the
The Anlels Md lUea a cme-nan lMd In t.be 8*Clftd OD Dan
I 8.e.)'Jor'I rn.b bom• l'\dl, 1'bay
~ qaiD ln the lbJrd OD a
lrtple by Bobby Ori.ch aad a
aLncl b1 Lanclreaux.
Jacltlcla Ued tbe ICOt'e wtt.b a
trem encbl:s two-nm bocn tar
up Into lbe rint field bleadlien
lD lbe aeventb. ll was bb llth
homer ol tM eeason and 132.bd
ea,_r tHM, J)UltUlf ltim OM
ahead ol former °"""t n,er-
Hw Gl'fttlber1. and ~ on
the all·Ume U&t.
Ult....._ •r•" ~t;I Sttt c::Mllla '•s• ..._.,. Stlt
.. ,lowH 1 It I
a.-1a Silt
o.Mwlft• a••• Mt-..-.._. •••• oew.Mtc 4 • t •
0r1etta •••• J.~ •••••
........
ltl~cf .. ~. .......... ,.._, .. ......._,. ....... a ..... -. ........ " ~C.1•11-• """'• a1a1ro
•r• .. , ... • ••• $I I I , . '. I 111 . ... •••• •••• , .. . ' .. . 1ttt
I I I I
T•Wt 41 J 7 J TotM at 4 7 •
Celffilnll• tn • I01 9-4 ..... v..... .., ..........
Ofte °"' ......... nin--. •-tJ.stMMor. L.Ot-Cti""1ole CN, ... v.-lltl. H-4WtCMI m. ~. ,~ "......._ Hit__,,_ cm. -...JadllM ,..,, ltMI IW. $9 ...-W . ._..,--., ... .....,, o'"'"" .. ... " ......
CA4J "CMttltA ·~ )\loo s J J •• ._.__,.IL.M l J I 1 I ' t
*
M .. YOltK
*
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a'''"'' I I t t t l
* Playoff Plans
Set by Halos
The California Angels an-
nounced Tuesday that appUca-
t ion a for American League
Cbampioasbip Series and World
Series tickets are being mailed
to their season ticket holders.
Notification of a public sale
for tickets wUI be announced at
a later date. Mail orders from
other than season tlcket
CU6tomera currently will not be
accepted, tbe club said.
Jn the event the Angels sbou.ld
win the AL West, the first game
of the Ownpionsbip Series will
be plaJed at Anaheim Stadium
on Tueeday, Oct. 3 starting at
5:30 p.m. Pacific Time with tbe
second on Wednesday, Oct. 4,
starting at 12:30 p.m.
Pet; GB
·-----,538" -I
63 .526 11h
:
..,
I 4 6 I 7 8 8 ~·'-..... ._.._ .......... _...'"Cl!._. ICCot..,_ ICCot .... o.ii'lllf•IC C•~ .C•~ C•~ ICCldlt QI
tO 11 12 13 14 16 1e I((...... =.· .. ~ &-.'2 az=r .. ~ &cfot';c .... at ICC .... Of II(
,...,. Pep •J
ONGAIS FA V:OftED. • •
race for D6c.k BetUl. Re np1aieee
lniDe'IJobn llartlnlD the CU'.
QuaUftcadae IW ..Ul be held
1'1nandu .... .,.. from l to e
and ••• ~ mondq from
10:30 to 12:30. CarbureUon test.a
are from t to 3 Prid11 afternoon
before the Minl·lndy cars take
over.
TOM SNEVA, tbe USAC
champ car point leader wbo also
has taiDed the poJe alx dines
thia seUCJD makinl It a moaopo-
ly with Ongall, bad tbe fastest
time in practice Tuesday.
Sneva abook down bis
Cosworth-powered Pen1lre at
better tban 198 muea per hour.
Second fastest lap Tuesday was
posted by Johnny Rutherford at
193.4 mph with 'Bobb)' Umer
third at 192.4 mpb end Onaalll
fourth at 191.8 mph.
None of the other 18 cars
whlcb practiced Tuesday topped
the 190 mpb mark. As of Tues·
day night, there were 32 cars at
tbe speedway, with 28 having
completed technical inspection.
Sunday's field calls for 33 cars
but it could be short of that
mark.
THE MINl·INDY series bu
been a popular sidelitbt to the
cbampionabJp car races this
season. Mean is moving up
from Uda series to the champ
ean but will also drive oa Satur·
day to tbe t.ui 100-kUometer
raca
Field\.. the owner of <>n,ail'
champ car. wt,J1 also drive in tbe
Mi.DI-Indy races as will Dave
Brun• ol &mUngton Beach and
probably SUIMm.
Mario ADdntti, in the thlct of
tbe battle for the Formula One
cbamplooablp. remained in
Europe to prepare for the Italian
race and turned his car over to'
Rick Mears, the younger brother
of Roter. Rick ts a leading can·
didate for rookie of the year
honors.
AL UNSER will be seeking the
fint triple crown of auto racing
in the nlatb running of the
Callf omla SOO. He woo at In-
di anapolls and Pocono earlier
this year and needs only the On·
tarlo race to make it.
In addition to Unser, five other
former Cal 500 winners are also
in the field including. A. J . Foyt,
Wally Dallenba~b. 'Rctger
McCluskey, Jim McElreatb add
B<?bby Unser.
Meanwhile, Mario Andretti
has decided to rem"ain tn Europe
In bls quest of th,e World
Formula I championship and
will not race at Ontario.
Stars Not Playoff Sharp
Rick Mears, who dld t.'ell in
quaUfylng tor the Ontario 200 In
March by cracking the 200-mph
barrier, will take over Andretti's
car.
The Orange County Stars
ended their regular season on a
dismal note Tuesday night los·
ing to the Santa Barbara Spikers
in three sets-12·7, 13·11, 12-3-
before 2,049 at Fountain Valley High.
What made the game even
more discouraging was the fact
the two teams will meet Friday
in the first round of the lntema·
tional Volleyball Assn. 's
Western Division playoff. and
the Stars don't seem ready for
the contest.
"We can't play much better
than we did tonight." said Santa
Barbara's player-coach Bebeto
de Freitas, whose team owns the
best record in the IVA CZ7·8>.
"This was our best match of the
season."
Whereas the Spikers are hot,
tbe Stars aren't shining.
"Ever since we made the
plar.otts, we haven't played wel , " commented Stars player.
coach Dodge Parker.
"I'm st.ill not worried about the
playoffs though." he said. "The
key forusistbe fa ct we'reanemo-
tional team. We'll find out a lot
about bur team Friday night."
If the Stars should beat the
Spikers at home c Fountain
Valley High, 7:30 p.m. > on Fri-
day, they still have to win one of
two matches played in Santa
Barbara Sunday.
Mears is the third member or
the Roger Penske racing stable
that also includes Sneva. When
Sneva's car broke down in
March. Mears was taken out of
the backup car and watched the
race from the sidelines.
TH IS Wlll('SSCMa DUL a:
TMUltSCNIY
t •.m. to H-. -PYktic..
I lo• p.m.-Gellfomle SOO-llfylng.
flltlDAY
10' JO•·"'-to 12 :30 P.m. -Fine I quellf,lftO.
I lo J p.rn. -~-lftt"'9, •lo• p.rn. -Mlni-llMIY precllc:e.
IATUltDAY
10 to IO:U a.m. -Mi....lllCly predlce.
11 •.m. lo I p m. -Mlnl·lfler-tltJIN.
2 P m. -l'lrst ot two IOCMtl~ Mlnl-lncty rec.ot.
l ;JO pm. -SllcOlld 100-ltm Mlftl·ll\Clv rece.
IUMDAY
11 e.m. -c.tlfomle JOO USAC ~' cerrK•.
r....-... Baseball StanJings
USED CAR
SPECIALS
'7'C...1 4C
SIV&U Fun power, tilt wheet.
cruise control, AMIFM
stereo tape. leather
Interior & moonroof.
33,000 miles. (502707). $9888
.,, .......
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Wes& Dlrilloa
Kansas City
Angela
Texas
Oakland
Minnesota Chicago
Seattle
W L Pt&. GB
70 60 .538
70 63 .526 l 'h
65 65 .500 5
62 72 .463 10
S1 l5-...432 14
S6 74 .431 14
49 82 .374 21 ltli
East DIYblon
Boston 83 47 .838
New York 75 54 .581 7'h
Milwaukee 75 56 .573 8~
Detroit 73 58 .S57 lOlh
Baltimore 72 58 5S4 u
Cleveland 56 74 .431 Z7
Toronto 54 79 .406.-»~ -
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Wes& Dlvlaloft
Dod1en
San Francisco
Cincinnati
San Diego
Houston
AU an ta
W L Pct. GB
78 54 .591
77 55 .583 l
71 61 .538 7
69 64 .St9 9lh
62 69 .473 151h
58 73 .443 19'h
Easl Division
PblladelpbJa 70 59 .543 -
Chicago 66 64 .508 4 ~
Pittsburgh 66 64 .508 4'h
Montreal 61 71 ,j62 lOlh
St. Louis 57 74 .435 14
New York 52 79 .397 l9 ~.sc..... ~ ~ Mofttl'ffl I •
Allt!llU, Olkefo3
'
President
Posliing
Ff-Games
LAUSANNE, Swlherland
<AP> -Presldent Carter tocla.y
Joined to the bld to c•t the 198'
l>ummw Ol.Ymplc Game1 •tared in Loa AftCelea.
As the executive board ol the
lDleroaUO(lal Olympic CoipmJt·
tee sal down to consider a new
plan for taldna tbe financial
burden of the 1asn~ off Loi
Anselea t.a.xp11cn. IOC Prell' de.nt Lord KiUuJ.n received a
cable from the White House.
PRESIDENT CAaTEa
messaged: ''On behalf of the
American people, I utend sln-
cere hopes that the lnternatlonaJ
Olympfc Committee wUI act
favorably on Los An1eles' bld
for the 1984 Olympic Games.
Best re1ards. Sincerely, Jimmy
Carter."
Los Anaelea wants to depart
from tradition by slpina two
separate contract.a for •lallna
the Games. One, between the cf.
ty and the JOC, would pledle
that Loe Anaeles would Obey tbe
rules ol the Olymplc chart.er.
Tbe other would be a ffnancial
a1reemeot between -1.os
Angeles, t.be U.S. Olympic Com-
mittee and the Loa An,eles
Organlztnc committee o the
Games. The USOC bas offered to
guarantee any loaa on tbe
Games 1'ttb Industrial help, and
thus relieve city taxpa.yen of
financial respomibllity.
ROBERT MNB, president Of r
the usoc. hu araued that this
ii in the spirit of the Olympic
rulea, which say the eit.y and the
national Olympic committee of
the host country must Jointly un-(
dertake fananclaJ responsibility for the Games.
Many IOC members are reluc-
tant to agree to any deviation tn
the Olympic charter, which was
drawn up originally to protect
the Games from commercial
and political pressures.
Klllanin presided over a two.
day meeting of the nine-man ex-
ecutive board . Monique
Berliowc, director of the IOC,
said a decision will be reached
Thursday, then will probably re-
quire ratification via the mail,
by the 89 members of the full
IOC. I
EARLIER TODAY, two
American members of the IOC
joined in a last-ditch attempt to
win approval or Los Angeles as
the 198' host.
"It will be catastrophic for the
Olympic movement if Los
Angeles gets a slap in the face at
t.his stage," said Doug Roby
80-year-old industrial executive
who baa represented the IOC in
the United States for 26 years.
Ju~ian K. Roosevelt. 53-year-
old rnvestm ent banker. said:
·'Los Angeles is the best equipped
city in the world for staging the
Olympics. l believe the Los
Angeles formula for 1984 can be
made to succeed. It has got to sue· ceed."
Gompf Hurt
In Utah Drill
SALT LAKE CITY-Bill
Gompf, a two-way starter for
three years at Lacuna Beach
High, suffered a alieht shoulder
separation in the University of
Utah's football practice Monday
and wiU be sidelined for a couple
ot weeks. -
The injury, reports a Utah
spokesman, was not serious
enough to warrant surgery and
coaches are OJKhnutic the 6-2,
215-pound linebacker can return
to action early ln the aeuon.
Coaches were reportedly btgb
on Gompf who wu playtnc well
in early practices. He was one of
three freshman linebackers on the .squad.
Injury also sJdellned another
South Coast League product on
the Utah roster. Corky Calvert. a
8-3, 2lJO.pound sophomore of·
fensive guard from San
Clemente, was forced to give up
football because 'of recurring
back probfema.
V-8, auto.. t.ctol'Y air, full power. AMIFM stereo ~------41-t_., heater_ww. Uc:M.-d . >,,....,.._~ • -~ ,,~.._ ...... ,, 11 IMl"IS ..... '°' 5Ht"9 j hll'-96.~1
Ml,._t,. 0.WC-SO
O.t'94tt.---.2 ~·.~atya TOl'Oft'94 TtMIS t
Pl~ S. OnclftftellO ..__ .... l.Mlll 2 Uarrias Nabs
Surfing Title
tl n t e d orau. wheel covers, Landau top,
leather Interior. sunroof.
(866PUXT
s9477
77MOMTI CAaO
V-8. a~l fmotY w. Pt'S, Pf8. AIW'FM F*tlo. tinted
glass. wheel covere.
Landau top. (&43SCR)
~ca-.. TOf'eMt llUA:_. J.1 Md 0-lrt ~nl .e ....... c~ ts.JelldW""91 .. u.2, wi
Mew Y•rti !Gv14ry 11·2> et •••U-• (Fl1M9Mt.,.1'l,11
~ ......... ·~ ... ,at~ c ..... -t-11,11
Chk-.. C..,,_ •11> at 1(-OfY IOw• ""'·" °"'' ...... ~ .,.,.,_,,._..
HowYMlll~ft Ml ... Meelt~,A Ml,.._tt.,.....,.,ft
Oftly ...............
flflllecltl!INJ '· 5111 Ot.91>' S.11 '•antiac. t. Now von: o T......... ~ M°"''"' ISdlwt&Ltit'M> .. ___. CSuftM
u .101,11 •
..._ Yon 15-1\ J.S) et .... -tllldlee ~ tafvtco .. S)
Olk ... llwrll Ml It~~ Ml,11 ~·~ (~ ... , .. ClllcMMtl IMolUll ,_..),II
SI. uw ll'Wldt .. IJ> at NocllNll IHMMt
1MOI," 1"'111 ....... lt#'Cll .. 7) ., 9"" Oleft ,...,.,., ,,...,, ... nw .. , .. ..._
Cl"'llllW!ll at ... LA1v1t.. " MofttrMI et S... 0141Qo, n °"'" tJfNt ICflldulalf
Orange County's Oldest Unooln·Mercury 0Hlerahlp .
77MAllY AMI FM quadn1phontc stereo ,..,., velour
lnteriof. full powtt, on'6M control. "" wt!MI. Auto held NgihCs. (743RSO).
SCJ888
.JOHNSON a SOM . l* ,, • 2626 Harbor Blvd. • Costa Mese • 540-5630
Bud LJamH of Huntinaton
Beach fflP Scbooi flnlsbed first
· lD the Nadonal Scholastic Surf.
tna Aaoclatioo •ummer cbam-
ploDJhJPI in HunUa,ton Beath
recentl7.
Wava from 10 to 12 feet h1lb
were eenerated by a storm off
the coast of New Zealand with a
total of '2 surfers rrom blgb
achools and colleges In Southern
Calif omla competing.
Roy Goma.les of San Clemenc. HJ.sh and Ruben Chapplna of Cal
State Northrlde• were aelected
to th• natloul cbamplonaMp aurf team. ..... ,.....
...,!:_ ._ U..., t, N"'4 1te11t. a. ltUllll 0...
,...... '-DIM o.11111. .: ..... ~ L *-*""llMel· .........
Moel t-1. ~ l.1-1. "'-.' lton1, .....
"'9wen. ..... 1-1 . .,... Qvl""" "*" ~ M ........... .
ll~ .....
I, D..,t Ill .... ~. t , Ptl Cet'9e, J, ltty G9flu ... 4 T_ ._...,, J, Ml•t f'efMMP. ._. ......
I. ,,_,.. Hlff, 2 LIM ~. ~ l'-JJM-.
BASEBALL/MOTORSPORTS/OLY.MPtCS
Stingley Could Be Paid
$1,000 a Month for Life
From AP l>llpMc ...
NEW YORK -Darryl SUnaJty ol the New Ill ::l=:i:~a.t:~-!~~~.~~w~ ~ •
tban $1 ~month for life crom the Natlonal Foot~ If he neveT plQI uotber' came.
Ttie n Wide recetvtt wu lnJured when be and
Raiden •~ety Jack 'Tatum collided la mld·air. He has
been In Eden TQW!iship Hospital ln Cutro Valley. near
Oakland, since t.be acddent
Under the collectJve barca.inina
agreement between the lea~ and. the NFL Players Aasoelatlon, 5UD1ley, if
be ls unable to play. will aet:
-Sl,000 a montb tor life.
-$50 ' month for each ol bis two dependent children.
-hi1 1978 contract fn tuJI. about US,000,
-about m.ooo In 1979. tM option year of bis contr$Ct, and.
DAn't'1. 'n"*"" -au medical bills paid for under the NFL lnauranc. plan. .
Sti.ngley would abo rffeive Workmen's Compensation
and Social ~urlty disablllty benefits. The amounts would
be determined by where he tiles for them -in
Manaehusetta. where be Is empJoyed, or in Califonlia.
where the injury occurred.
Jack Sanda. Stlnlley'a lawyer in Bolton, said the
Massachusetts Workmen's CompensaUon benefits. based
on a permanent disability. would be $146 a week for life.
plus S6 per child until each reaches the age of 21.
California Workmen's Comperuatlon benefits. Sands said. were ant much different.
Also, Sands said, "based up the extent or the Injury.
there would also be a lump-sum settlement figure for the
loss of the use of limbs which. al the present time. cannot
be determined.··
as,_ _ _,. C.reer ·--·-
TOKYO -Sadaharu Oh of the Yomiuri Ill Giants, who surp. assed Hank Aaron·s American
record of 755 hOme runs last Sept. 3 hit the 800tb homer of his 20-year baseball career Wednesday night.
Before 55,000 roaring spectators at Tokyo's korakuen
Stadium, the 38-year-old left-handed alugger connected for
the historic homer in the bottom of the sixth inning.
The 800th homer came in the 2.562nd game of his
career -· on bis 8,330th trip to the plate. It was his 34th home nm this season.
......... ""°"'"~ OAKLAND -Even the players were in the EIJ
dark as the Oakland Raiders went through the 4 • •
final stages Tuesday or settling on their 45-man. • opening.game roster.
''We'll have a placekicker on Sunday," promised Al
LoCasale. assistant to Managing Partner Al Davis. the
man making the personnel moves for the team which sent
its only plaeekicker. veteran Errol Mann. to the Buffalo Bills Monday.
The program printers in Denver, where the Raiders
open the NatJoaal Football League season against the
Broncos Sunday. would like to know, as well as Oakland
reserve quarterbaek Dave Humm who bolds for kicks. ~t was oomtdered unlikely that Ray Guy, tbe NFL's
leading punter. would double up and handle placekicking too, as be did in college. ·
,,_,~ ol 1~ D ..
Wbo says winning isn't everythlng? Says Atlanta
Falcons bead coach Leeman Bennett on why he chose un-
known Jaae Joae1 DI over third-year veteran &eve
Bartkowski for the startlng quarterback position after both
were rated even during the exhibition campaign: "He
!Jones> made basically the same mlatates as Bartkowski but we won."
.. ......... Cla•atftf .. Oeiroft
Wide receiver Gene WasbJng&on, whose nine EIJ
years of service was the longest ot any San •II• Francisco 49er when he was placed on Injured
waivers, says he has been claimed by Detroit
and will report to the Lions . . . Veteran defensive end
Carl Eller of Minnesota is in the Vikings· doghouse after
missing practice Sunday ... Tom Dempsey. the former
Ram placekicker. has been placed on waivers by New
England. He holds the league record for
a 63-yard field goal made in 1970 for
New Orleans ... The Washington
Redskins placed veteran center Lett
Hauss, president of the NFL players as-
sociation. on waivers ... Cincinnati
quarterback Ken Anderson has un-
dergone surgery on his right band and
will be s1delmed for s1x week.s . . .
Quarterback hrt Jones was listed as
questionable for Baltimore's opener
against Dallas Monday ... Detroit's
TOM OCMPSIY Jobn Brocklng1on been waived by the
Lions . .
Bltte SlfllU SU-llftir C..trad
\'Jda...llhae..bu si1ned D new siJt·year con· • tract with the San Francisco Grants etrecllve al
the start of the 1979 season . . . The FBI said it
has <:ompleted an lnvestlgation into a shooting
Incident involving Royals first baseman Pe«e LaCock and
forwarded its findings to the civil rights division of the
U.S. Justice Department . . Among baseball rans attend·
Ing the San Francisco Giants' last haU-price 1ame of the
year was basketball mlUlonaire BIR
Waltoa. who spent St to sit In a S2 seat
. . . Outfielder Dwight Evaas of the
Boston Red Sox was in stable condiUon
after being beaned Monday night by
Seattle Mariners' raght·hander MUre
Parrou . . . Bob &Aepper pitched bis
(()Uftb shutout oc \he season u tbe
Giants beat the New York Mets--Y.-0 on a "<1r.
four.hitter . . ~rt Blyleve11 pitched a
four-bit shutout and Willie Slar1e11
viDA ....,, drove ln three runs. one coming on hls 20th homer of the season, u the Pttu-
burgh Pirates posted 1 5·0 victory over tbt slldin1 Ctn·
cinnau Reds . . . Chicago WhJte Sox pitcher Miile Pr-oly
suffered a hairline fracture of bis right thumb when a one·
hop drive b.y Kansas City's Durell Porter CIJ"Omed off his
pitching band. Proly was immediately taken to the
hospital alter the lncldent, wblch occurred in the seventh
innJng of a game eventuall~ won by the White Sox 9.3, l
tt'MC~ IA•• AP.•Can
Paal Wettpllal of Phoenix sc:oftd 34 polnls m· to lead a group of NBA all·llars In a 12$-122
benefit exblbttlon victory over Athletes ln Ac·
tJon at the San Diego Sporu Arena. It was alao
the return to aetion ror Rody TomJa...tee. of the Houston
Rockets, who suffered several fac1al tnjunes when punched
during a aame in Loi An1e1ea tut wtnter .
Ratlte.T~
aADIO: Tontaht -Baseball -Montrnl at Dodaen. 7:30, KABC 1190).
TV: T~• -Tonl1hl -US O\)en Cbamplonahlp H.11bJ1pts. u:ao. Channel 2
FOOTBAU: I BOXING I MS!BAtt:
Delly"" ........ O.., AIMrwe
DEEP CONCENTRATION Players from the California
Sunshine <right> and Southern California Lazers, battle
for possession of the ball in Tuesday's American Soccer
League playoffs. The Sunshine advanced to the second
round with a 2-1 sudden-death penalty kickoff victory.
The Sunshine hosts the Los Angeles Skyhawks Thursday
night at 8 on the Orange Coast College field in the firsl
of a two-game playoff series.
SOCCER .•.
and non e in the second
half. But after Tony Douglas'
roller" into the net forced Cahill
into a do-or-die situation,
Reynolds guessed right on the
play and blocked the final shot
cleanly wtth both arms folded In
front of his chest.
"He <Cahill) lined up at an
angle and when you do that, the
tendency is to knock the ball to
the left," Reynolds said. "I was
cheating to that side a little bit
and just dove to knock it away. I
had gotten a hand on two other
penalty kicks but not enough to
stop them so I wanted to be sure
on this one.''
Lazers goalie John Granville,
who played a courageous game,
wasn't so lucky. Playing with an
injured right knee, Granville
didn't have much lateral move-
ment guarding an eight-yard
wide goal mouth against a
kicker 12 yards away.
SADLY ENOUGH. it was
Granville, the ASL's top-ranked
goalie, who kept the Lazers in
the game after the Torrance-
based team was forced to play
the last 36:30 two players short.
It was also Granville who turned
a 1-4-1 expansion team into one
that won 14 of its last 18 games.
The 22-year-old leaper from
Trinidad had nine saves, eight
amt-h11lftime, but was little
more than a sitting duck when
the game boiled down to penalty
kicks.
* * *
Plat1• lor Ba"'arcf
Costa Mesa's Ron McConnbb
will be one of 104 varsity can-
didates on band when Harvard
University opens its pre-season
football camp today in Cam-
bridge. The 5-10, 195-poond
linebacker, who formerly played
at Servile High, will be seeking
a varsity berth after an out-
standing season on the Junior
varsity in 1977.
Prep Practice
With Pads Set -' Practice-in-full pad~ begins
Saturday for high school football
teams throughout Orange Coun-
ty. Teams have been conducting
pre-conditioning drills since Fri-
day.
Schools are gearing for their
first scrimmages on Sept. 1>16
and the season opener for most
schools will fall either on Thurs-
day, Sept. 21 or Friday, Sept 2Z
BJ JORN 8BVANO ..... ....., ..........
Tht lt'l'8 Golden We.i College football
team ta Coini to be bard prtteed to come up
wtlh an enrore performance equal to Jta
1bowln1lnitr1.
After a slow be1lnnlng <2·2), the RuaO~rs ended the aeaso" with the best
reeord lh t.be 1chool's U-year blttory. To
aec°"'pllJb tbe feat, \he,y woo their lut
seven IU* leeludln& dramatic wiDI over
Santa Monica <~28) to capture tbe
Southern CaUfornla Conference, end
Fullerton <l0·1) ln the po1t-1eaaon
Avocado Bowl.
AS A &EWAJtD for their efforts, the
RuaUers have attained the No. 2 position in
this year's pre-season Soutbland JC foot-
ball poll.
It's the kind of ranking coach Ray
Sbackleford claims t. mlsleadinl.
''The writers tend to build those rank·
Inga on what a team bas done the past two
or three years," says Shackleford, who
has been the only coach in the school's hJs. e. "They <writers) uaually live those
lions to schools used to having good
ams.
. "WE'LL BE GOOD," be says, "but just
bow good ls hard to justify at tb1s time.
1t 's still too early and there are too many
people to tell yet."
Shackleford and bis staff welcomed 113
athletes at rhyalcal examinations last week. Of tha number. 38 were returning
lettermen.
"OFFENSIVELY l'M PLEASED with
the T\l.Dl\ing, but not witb_ tbe paaaiq. Of
course, we stress the runnin8 game early
ln practice so this iB to be expected.
. "Defensively we'll be fine. The only
thlng bothering us now is some of our de·
fenstve players have been bothered by
nagging injuries and haven't been able to
suit up."
Here's a look at how the Rushers shape up
for the coming season:
Quarterbacks: As coach Shackleford pot Jt.
"We have four good athletes with oobody taking a clear-cut advantage toward the No. 1 posi-
tion.·· The leading candidate appeurs to be Steve
Rakhs hani. a transfer Crom San Jose who
prepped at Edison. Right behind him though is
Marco Paganelli from Huntington Beach.
Sophomores Tim OeMase and Gar\' C.Oleman round out the position. ·
..... ..., backa: "We have the most numbel"I
at that poelUon w1th ~he only standout belnc
Steve toiel," says Shackleford. Fogel was the
Southern Cal Conference's leadina rusher last
year with 792 yards. Sophomore Jim Judd wUI
bat lie treshmen 'tony ,l\barca 'La Quint111.
Leonard Altavilla '5ervltel and Oa~id Gontalez
I Mater Del I ror t~ other starting becth. Three
transfers Nathan Ching and Erik and Kurt
Flowers atve Golden West depth in the backfield.
Wfde receivers: Golden West has five
sophOmOf'eS returnine in Tim Wiimore. Jaime
Dick1on, Sleve Beeuwsaert, Bill Kelly and Scott
Sherard. The Rustlers have also added
freabmen Scott Brummett I Huntington Beach 1
and Pat Riee IBolsa Grande> to the already im-
pressive list. "It's a solid position ror us ... says
Shackleford.
• Offeftllw U.e; The line wlll be the bl"est In
the history of the school. but also one of the
youngest. "They're young, but they're food."
says Shackleford. "All they need is some game, experience." Spearheading the Of/ens.Ive unit
wlJl be center Jerry Stablein 16-6, 250 pounds>.
with sophs <Eric Huth 16-3, 2351 and Steve
Bolton •6-4. 240> in lhe tackle slots. Lettermen
RAY SHACKLEFORD
John Orkish and Bob Tiezz1 will battle freshman
·Ken Felker <Santiago> for the guard spotS.
Derenslve Une: "We're short In numbers at
this i.pot. ·· comments Shilcklt'ford. ··our
:;trength is Bill Gritz." Grllz will probably be
stationed at the middle guard spot with transfer
John Naut and letterman Mark Scavo the lead-
ing candidates for the tackle jobs.
Linebackers: "Our most outstanding position
and the best we have in terms of athletes and
depth, .. says Shackeford. Inside. the Rustlers
have two players returning who started in last
year's Avocado Bowl in PauJ CarroJJ and Jerry
Crutch<'r Outside, they'r<' equaJly as strong
with sophomores Don Fielder, Tim Arguello and
Pat Collins
~cond1ry: "ll"s our most improved position.
We"ll havt> beUer speed but not as much ex·
perlence. Stilt. we're a hundred times better ~t
the position now then we were at the same time
last year.·· says Shackleford. Golden West has
three sophomores returning but two or them
Gary Brown and Mark Messner are coming off
knee injunes Jeff Smith also returns with three
outstandm1t frt'Shmcn m Gr~~ Lin1.Tenrc• •Hun.
tlngton Beach I, Bill Mc Nerney 1 Pacifica I and
Jerr Hyder tEdison>.
Kicking game: "I feel very good about our
kicking game," says Shackleford ··1t 's definite-
ly another position we've Improved in.·· Two
former Westminster gradi; will handle the kick·
ing chores with Ron Crouch 1punting1 and
Terry Lairson tplaceklcklng >.
Palomino to Def end Title Major
~ague
~aders
HB Fighter to Ftree Green in Mo~o
By BOWAJID L. BANDY Ot•Delfr .........
Carlos Palomino of Huntinlton Beach will defend his World
Boxing Council welterweight cbampioblbJp in Monaco in October
against David Green of England, accordine to hb manager Jackie
McCoy of El Toro.
A definite date for the bout will be set in the next few days,
probably Qct. 7 or 14.
AFTER THAT IT WILL BE a mandatory defense of the title
against Wil fredo Benitez, the No. 1 contender for the crown.
"We are aup~ed to fight the No. 1 contender once each
year," McCoy says. "But in JUhe, Benites was sick and the fight
was delayed. He is tbe former junior welterweight champion and
he knocked out Randy Shields in New York recently.
"l believe he is undefeated as a welterweight. No definite date
or site bas been set for the match."
P AWMINO BROKE A BONE in his left hand behind the
knuckle in his last bout against Mando Muniz at the Olympic
Auditorium in Los Angeles in May.
"Carlos has been working out in the gym regularly," McCoy
says. "And there is no sign of It bothering him now."
Palomino has broken bones in each band. He bad a knuckle in
bis right hand chipped before bis first fight wtlb Muniz in ig-r7_
THE MONACO MATCH will be the ~d meeting between
the two fighters. Palomino returned to England, where he wrested
the crown from John Stracey in Jwne, Jg'16, to score an 11th round
knockout victory over Green.
In that fight, Palomino used a ten. book to KO bis opponent who
was out for 45 minutes.
"It was a tremendous left hook," McCoy said after the fight.
"I've never seen him <Palomino> throw a better punch. They
claimed Green bad never been knocked down in 109 amateur fights and in 24 pro fights.
"GJlEEN IS STRONG and he ju.st keeps oomlna in. He is
rough, I hits hard and is busier than almost anyone Carlos has
faced."
Palomino took the day off Tuesday to f1y to Colorado to tape a
b"eer-comm1'rd1rl-but-was baek-ia ·R•inhtC tod~ iar tne
Westminster Boxing Club.
McCoy also revealed that nothing bad been done about a possi-
ble bout wtth WBA champion Jose Cuevas.
"WE'VE T~ED a couple of times about a fight with
Roberto Duran bulnothing bas come of it yet," McCoy says.
Palomino bas successfully defended b1a title aeven times since
taking it from Stracey. His pro record is rr · 1-3 with 15 knockouts" --
CARLOS PALOMINO
GAUCHOS TO PUY
AFFERNOON TIL'IS
Saddleback College has an-
nounced that its football team
will play all its home games dur-
ing the day on campus, includ-
ing the school's opener Sept. 16
against Cypress.
All games wtll be played on
Saturdays at 1: 30 ..the.. times
are Wl>,iecl. io_change it ~he
stadium light installation stays on
schedule.
"The first two games at home
wtll definitely be played during
the day," says Saddleback
publicist Dennis Farrell. "After
that we're-walldng a fine line de-
pending on whetlier the llgbts
are ready or not."
AMaltlCAN LlfAOUlf aATTIHO 1325 el IMtlsl -Cer.._, Mu,, .m .
Ale•. 8 sn, .JU, A 011,...r, Tu, .J", P•n~U•. NY, lOt. ROllert .. Sea. J04
ltUNS -LeFI-. Del, 107. Al<~. 8sn. t 1;
kyler, C.t, "; Thcwn\on, Cle, ll, Hosle, Mtl, 81
ltUNS IATTl!O IN -A•<•. 8sn, "'· s1 .... c. 0.1, ICM; Hl~e. Mii, U ; Thornton, Cle. 15; J.
Thonll>'Of\, Oet.111
HITS -Ric•. 8sn. 176; LAFiore, 0.1, 1•1; c ....... Min, 151; SC.W. 0.t. IS4; M-. "y· , ... .
OOUILIS -Fisk, 8sn, :i.; G. 8,..tt, KC. :i.;
Mc Ree, KC,»; FO<d, Min, JI, De Cine.es. Bal,
28, E MUrr/ly, Bal, 79.
Tltlf'LES -Rice, 8sn, tS; Yount, Mil, 8, c-en1, KC, 8; C¥ew, Min, I. Fore!. Min. I. •87
HOME ltUHS -Rice. 8wi, 1', Hisle, MU."·
G Thomes, MU, :tel, a.ytw, C.I, %1; TllOrnC9fl,
Cle, n.
STOLEN IASl!S -LIFlor., Oet. S9; J. Cnll
Su . o. Dlk>ne. O.k. 44. Wiiis, Tea, 47; Wiison,
KC,3S. •
f'll'CHINO 07 Oedslo<>sl -8. St.tnln, BSll.
U I, 7 ••. Oulory, NY, 11-1. 1 n. Ec1<ers1ev. lbn.
IS.S. l .. ; G<lte, KC. II~. 7 97, 8llllft9'Wm. Oltt,
1.-.. , ... Hunltr, NY,~.' II. Torre•. BSll, IS.I,
4 OS, C:.ldWell, Mii, IH. 7 47
STllllCIOUTS -ay.io, C.I, JtS; G<11dry, HY.
lff; Leonerd, KC, 14J, Fl•n•oan, 8•1. ll'I,
IC re•e<, <:lit, 124
HATIOflAL. LEAGUE aATTIHO ll2S•t C.\sl -BurrOU(lhs, AU •• 314,
P•r-er. f'9tt, 314, Maclloo. SF •• Jn; It. ~. LA,.lft; Budlnff,Qlj, 30'
ltUNS -ROM, Cln .... OeJflUj. °"· eo. l'o"~'· Clll, '"· SCllmldl, Piil, "·I(, H~r. SIL. I•, Griffey, Cln. 7•; Ltfoft, LA, 76; It. Mptli.
L.A, 7'
ltUHS aAT'tED IN -Fosltr, Cir>, t6; ~y,
LA, tt; Pt(ller, P9n. •; Oar1o;, SF.•; ... lfl!lttl, L.A, IJ.
HITS -Rote, Cln, IM; llowa, Pill, 15'; C..11,
Hin. IU; T~~eon. SIL, I»; Ge"'9y, LA, 1a.
OOUIL.l!S -ROM, Cifl, 47; Cieri<, SF, 2'.
,..,..,, Mii, U ; Simmons. StL. l4; H-9, Hiii, n.
Tltlf'LES -Rleharft., SO, 10; Templeton, $(1...,
'· Herndon. SF. t ; s. "'--·NY. 8; Geffler. P9n. •• R11vsw. AlU~ a..rw-. U..L-_
HOMt: ltUHJ -F0$1tt', Cln. ac>; Llllinslll. fill. 7': lf. Smltll. LA, V ; O.wson, Mtl, 23; Pt,;.er, Pon. 23. •
STOLEN llASE$ -..-. P91t, SC: U,.S. LA, 21; Ai<Nl'Os, SO, 31; 0 . Smltfl, SO, ·32,
T e•eraa, ptl\,ll.
ltlTCHINO 117 Oecl"'°"'I -Ptrry, SO, IS.,
3 06, Slue, SF, 1 .. 7, 2.SI; Botlham. Cln, ,_., >.S..
0. Robinson. "911, l~S. l.ll; K Fonc:fl, Htn.1-4.
2 t2, Mollllt. SI'. kl 30; "-'-•LA, IM. J.1';
Montttut<.o, SF,'"'· l .71.
STltllCt:C>Un -Richard, Htn, U'; P. Ni.tlro.
All, tCM; SMwr, Cln, I ... MonttfUKO. SF, 146, e1r1ew11, ~ 14$; e1ue. SF. 14J.
--E'ro.. r~ •1
MOTHER •••
V088 Services
~ToCJay
Classic Soddl• for Mert
HUGGINS OWN chores, including care of their four children.
TO PROMOTE RESPECT, eratilude, admira·
tion and love for mothers everywhere, Peters pro-
poses tbe foUowtni:
-that employers give priority consideration to
any woman who lists her previous experience as
"housewife" or "mother."
-that husbands who can afford them should
hire cleaning &f.encles to do housework, and for
those who can t, Congress abould appropriate
"blJUons and billions of dollars."
Funeral services were
held today in
Westmlnster for Lowell
Voss, 40, a v~ran U.S.
Racing Club midget car
driver from Fountain
Valley wbo died of
maasive bead injuries
from a racing accident
Au1. 19 in Belleville, Kan.
Voss leaves b.ia wife
Linda, two sons and a
daughter. -that the president appoint a naUonu com·
ml11lon to help promote the renaissance of ---------
mothel"bood, and finally,
-that every buabaad au1at b1a wife with din· ner, cliabes and the children and ''that on occasion,
be personally seta bis wife her 1Uppera,
newspaper, and altboulh I do DOt advocate 1mot·
lDI, a pipe lf lhe IO~ GOO!"
( LM.80YD )
tNFOAMI In tlttt
DAILY PILOT
' •
-.__ -. .
8(f0.f2& 13 C/8~12& 1B DIN-12 & 13
A trodltioftol foo.ori .. co-I
9'0W11 a !Id WJ.I i.
Jt.tl
MeNSNp ~
,.._ __ •9•9•Fllh_lon_ .JMi::o~ ... 7&M551
LONG 8£ACH CAP>
-H• baa manv ua· anawend q....UO.. yet
coeclll :s::al•vul ot UHi la Ram• alM L-aoma 0.......a-N-.al
\hC)tbell I.-.. ......
• Undeft1t1t1Atwopn. '-----------------------..--..-.-llllli.-..._ _ _.._9'11!1---" IMIOO ~ llftw .e~
lrish--B~t • m ~eedlq t.be ftroed ~
Allen, UM new fOach l•n't sure ace run.
nlDI baet L••f Dee
McCutcMae wW bie •bJ• to pl11 Sundal at r.~~ aaalMt u. Ohio State, Michigan Powerful, Again
ANO TR& COACB B•'nllA.leoetec.4 Pl'Ma told neWlmeo 1'aeldaY •• , that he wasn •t t'9re Somewhere, durln1 tb•
w)lether he would stm CCM&ne ol the aeason. wffther
Cullen Bryant or Wen· ll'a at Notre Dame. at Southern
· ~•U Tyler tn the event CaU!onlia or wberever, someone
McCutcheon remains is IOUaa to bave to take that llUe
sidelined with bis thlih awa1 6om us on the field. It'a
11)ilacle b\jury. not lmpcmlble but it'a 101n1 to
H will bsU bl be very bard to do."
nan:inc t>!:a ~-:.i,: So said Coach Dan ~vine ol
'9ut atUl doesn't bow bl& N4tre Dame naUonal football
Ule exact makeup or tbe cbaanplom, and ..the nm major
tandems. It's for sure test appears to ·be SepL D at
"John Cappellettl will be South Bend where Notte Dame
·tbe atart.lni fuJlbaclt. and lllctqan meet for tbe ftnt · tlme in 35 yurs.
Aaked what hia ~•m Notre Dame and lllchl1an ~ea capable o1 doln1. rank 1·2 In tbe Midwest col· a:lt :1':v:l ~:.:!~ legiate acene, with Ohio State a
•·win the Super Bowl. I close third.
.don't think there is a AS TREY HAVE for every
teal?' lna ~ league we seuon since 116'1, M.icblpn and
cant be L Ohlo State again figure to
'AFTER THE Rams dominate the B.ig Ten Con·
fost preseason openers ference . Poaasble stronc
l4· 1 to New Ena land and challenges mlebt be offered by
'17.0 to San Diego, owner Michlaan State and Purdue. •
Carroll Rosenbloom Indiana and Iowa might not be
fired Geor~e Allen and too Car behind. Minnesota~
replaced him with the have trouble repeating lts Sbc·
v e t e r a n ass I s t a n t cesses of last season which in·
,Malavasi. The Rams eluded a stunning upset of
promptly scored 26·7 Michi9an. Illinois still ls rebuild·
and 28-3 victories over 1 n g a n d W js c o n s r n a n d
Seattle and Oakland. Northwestern have hired new
··1 think our special
teams are better lhls
year than last because
we've been cooceatrat·
ing on them," the newest coach said. •'The
offense also should be
better."
THE DEFENSE has
returned to the ·terminology used during
the five-year tenure of
Chuck Knox. who bad
Malavasi as bis de·
fensive coordinator.
coaches.
MIAMI OF OIDO is favored lo
repeat as champion in the Mid-
American Conference, with Ball
Stale and Western Michigan
considered strong contenders.
Heated interest in the
Midwest, however, will center
around th~ Micblgan-Notre
Dame game, which could turn
into a baWe of olfenaes.
MICBIG-'N BAS ITS entire
backfield returning, '\ritb Rick
Leach at quarterbeck and
Harlan Huckleby and Rusaell
l>avla at the runnJ.nc alota. Notre
Dame also bu ttl tm bactlleJd
iniact. wlth quarterback Joe
Montana and runnlns backs
Jerome Heavens and Vagas
FetlUIOD.
Ndtre 0,Jlme baa worked
f evetr~ til tryiq ta.rebuild lts
lr9tit (OPT· ; Bcotaclna Ross
Browner Uld W'IWe Fry ls not easy . ·
. Mlcb.l&an cOech 8cf Sebem· beebler laid, .. Defense la our
problem. U the defeme comes
throu1h, we'll be flDe. U not, no
offense can make up.for the de-
fense."
WOODY BA YES eCJ!Dtd do a
turnabout ln tl1a tldnklq ~ Ohio
State, wbere the Bu.tkey'es
landed freshman paaalq aensa·
lion ·Art Schlichter. Ohio State
opens the a.>aaon a1ainlt Penn
State and Hayes is not about to
throw tbe younpter to ~ Nil·
tany Llonk. Chances an veteran
Rod Gerald will direct the at·
tack in that same. Gerald then
will gradually work ln u a wide
receiver, with Schlichter easing
in at quarterback.
"We feel we're going to have
an awfully good team this
year," satd Hayes.
With the record-breaking
Leach at Michigan and
Schlichter at Ohio State, the Big
Ten appears destined to do more .
passing this season than in the
past.
CERTAINLY THEY'LL be
throwing the ball at Michigan
State. where Eddie Smith
operates, and at Purdue, where
Mark Herrmann will have a
year or expertence after passing
for 2 ,453 yards and 18
Area Tennis Roundup
toucbdownt u • freabman.
llicb.lta State. like 1n4i&M,
baa an advanta1e over tbe
adlen bosl'Da to breat uP tbe fatcbl&an-Obk> a.. monopob.
lllcbl&an State doesn't play
Oblo Stale ud Jnctlen• doeln't
play Michigan. Every otber
team plays both Of Ule perennial
pe>WedMM•
Lee Corio eontinu. to make
pro1re11 at Indiana. Tbe
Hoosiers lost elibt ccd~
1ame1 bit flrlt year in im.
They cut tbe fiiure to tbree lalt
year. lndJana bu one ol Ute
strongest runnlnJ games ln the
Bil Tep, with Darrick Burnett,
·Mik& Harkrater and To•y
D'Oralio. 'lbe Booalen allo pl~
toulbdlf-..
COACll 808 COM•INGS ts
in his ftftb aeuoa at Iowa ud
aald. >•For the Brat time under
two.platoon footbaU, .,. bave
epough players to win .. Nobody
i>lay• toucher than we do. We
are a contender.·•
Mlnnelota UPI« Micbiean 1M
tut year, then went to tbe Hall
or Fame Bowl and Joat to
Maryland 17·7.
The Gophers acaln have
fullback Kent Kltzmapn, wbo Ml
NCAA records with 57 carries
and 266 yards against llllnola.
The Gopben lost linebaeken
Mike HwU. and Steve St•ward
and end Mark Merrill -all of
whom were' aelec\ed tn the
second round ol the JTO draft.
ILLINOIS IS IN the second
year of a rebuUdinC program un·
der Gary Moeller who has 29 re-
turning lettermen plus several
jWlior cojJele transff)rs inch.ad·
tag quarterback Lawrence
M"tOullou1h. Lillebacker Jobn
Sullivan la back u are receivers
Tom Schooley and bic' Rouse.
Ana WBIPPING Amtralla. the
J9'17 cballeapr, u lut auauner,
Turner annoUnted that k w6Dted to
buy eourueoua and ~~ br\na
the two·tlm• deftndu back to
Newport ID ~. . -
Turner Piled tM 1aeht UD4@r' ..,
a1reemtQ\ with tbe l(t"'' Potnt Fund, wblch ·•u IMa .. by Lee
Loomis, a New York bl¥tn111man
wbo wu at oddl with die AU...
Braves' owner all aumlftet.
The Kini'• J>omt 1'WMl. • • non· profit ortanizatJoit afft)tated wtUI Ule
U .s. Merchant M•i'lae A~my. tried last wtnter to sell Independence tor $2.50,000.
ROWEVEa. NO 8\JYEU were
found for lndeDendence. a 1acbt de-slcned by Mar&l~ad sailmaker Ted
Hood that flnl1hed third behind eo5urageous and Enterprt1e in the u .. trials. .
Boat Ownera . .
'
Planning to lend ;Our boat to a
friend or relative for • day'• eM.te. water skilJll session -or what have you?
If so, better tbeck on a rew boat
laws. FOl'imtance:
Seniors To111·ney BegiQ.s
Hollypark
Results ._,T....., , ..... ,.._.._ ..........
"'''•' ,..c-L••.,Wrf L ••r IGoudtMlll..-0,MO,~~;.,.,.._.
Di~ 1~u know that you are
respoilslble for-U. safety ol t'Y'efYoM
aboard YoUI' boat -even if you are
not aboard! 1be Coast Guard re·
minds you'that you are. I
One of Ora.nae County's biggest tournaments
for this time of year begins today as the Racquet
Club of Irvine hosts the California State Seniors
Cbamplomblps.
The state's fin~st players ln two a1e
dlvislons-35-and-over and 45-and-over-will com·
pet.e in atng.les and doubles. Tbe competition runs
, through Sept. 4.
of the Diamond Bar Del Taco.
Taking home •the second place trophies were
Jack Roberts and Gail Gilliam. both of the
Yucalpa Del Taco.
~a9m1e, BB l'o•r11ep ~lwle
o.itt , • .,.., tl.20. UO; "''~·· WHEN mv COAS'I' Guard ob· .,_. ILJtiMNHI 4.JO. St batW tt.., lllf w
""Id uuo. serves a boat belna operated in an s.co"d ,.u-J ,.~ htt•t1 uosafe manner or not ln compliance ~:f~, 54~. :::f ~ with safety equipment requirements
•~4<~~'.;'!'.,,, .. ••h the vessel la oo.rded and. a citJUon
u.1t11tt11111 a.-. uo. uo: o..'1 issued to the operator.
BOATING.
(
PL IV Still
Undefeated
Defender
NORWALK, cOnn. fAPI -Patient
Lady IV. the favored American
clua-C catamaran to defend the Lit-
tle America's Cup against the Italian
cballeneer, remained undefeated in
defender elimination races Tuesday.
Patient Lady IV. skippered by
Duncan MacLane of the host Roton
Point SaJUng Association, beat de-
fendin1 champion Patient Lady Ill.
also a local boat. by 2 minutes and 34
seconds at the finish, and Hawtc or
San Francisco, by s minutes and lS seconds.
TUESDAY'S RACE. a three-boat
contest or the fast 2S -loot
catamarans, represe..nted the only
three American boats able to sail.
Carbon C.Opy of Los Angeles broke
apfrt before the start of what was to
be tbe first race for the W'lproven
craft on Monday. Repairs on that •
boat w~re expected to be completed Wednesday.
The Italian challenger Miu Lancia
will meet the American def ender for
the beat-of-seven series in races which begin Sept. 15.
Franco Pivoli, the skipper of Miss
Lancia, wbo starred in the 19'16 Olym-
pics, bas been tbe ltaJlaa Tomado-
c_lass catamaran champion three times.
Newpe>rt Women
To Compete
In Kona Races Host club mana1er Dick Leacb, a restaent of
' ' Laguna Beach, ts seeded No. l in the 35-and-over
1 divlsioas for both slnlles and
doubles. He teams with Horst
Ritter of Newport Beach ln
doubles.
Two long-standing traditions conclude their
1978 chapter thls weekend as the !lat annual
Laguna Beach tennis tournament and the 17th an·
nual Huntington Beach Open wrap up their final matches.
Over 800 entries were in the chase when Hunt·
lngton Beach's tourney opened last weekend.
Finals 1n open, B, C and D divisions will be held at
the Pacific Sands Tennis Club.
~111ln~-;9~~is·~ ~ The operator ts ~ited even though '*:]~ rece-•111n ,..,... the unsafe eoodltloa may Involve a <LA<••''' u.eo, 1uo. 1.io; o..i1·1 passenger who i1 boW·ridlns or a The women members or the lmua
Meet< ey"' <Scll'iws> "·40. 11.20; skier wbo swerves ~b a awim· Outrlgger Club. Newport Beach. are ~~:~!~~ Lt••• ming area. slated to leave for Hawaii this week
Challenging Leach wiU be
Blll Frantz of Irvine, Peter
Berwick of Newport Beach, Bob
Duesler of Costa Mesa and Bill
Harader of Newport Beach.
In the "5-and-older division,
Hu1b Stewart of Coroaa del
.. DUnua Mar ls ranked No. 1. Picked to
win the doubles are Ed Kauder and Dick Metteer,
a Newport Beadl tandem. -·
Other top candJdateJ 1n the older age· bTacket
include Kida Lambert of Irvine, Jim Calderwood
of Laguna Beach and Tim Peralta of Newport
Beach.
~.wed•• lt'nc Fl11.i. BeW
Gall Glas1ow and Jerry Van Li.nae successful·
ly defended thelr UUe lr.a the open dlv1$ion of the
Wimbledon West mixed doubles championships
Sunday at tbe John Wayne Tennis Club.
' Glasgow and Van Linge defeated Dan Roiers
and Ellen Bryant 6-1, M . Other dlvislonaJ results:
·· A-Sue Marta and Irv Goldberc stopped
Rogers and Bryant M, 7·5. 8-<:a:ro!yn Evan.a and
, Bob Wrfght downed" t;estre Mlbordin and David
Ault 6-3, M . C-Mlcbele Gravely and Victor
Strau11 disposed or Robert Davenport and
• 'Barbara Davenport 6-3, a..«. D-Cbarbe Davis and
Earle Davis defeated Marion Mlll'J)by and MJchael
Murpby8-3, M .
,.,, ...... a. nv1e .. ra •••811
WW the next Jimmy Coanon or Cllril Evert
1'e diacotend in Southern California? ""•P9 ID
Orange Coal)'? Tbla summer a effort to Mek out
young talent wu conducted by the Soutbem
, Calilomla Tennis Aun.
Area sltes for the UJNlertaldna, caUed th6
'"J"uture Cbamplona Pro1ram, Included tbe
CaplJtrano ~cq~. Club and the IJ.ndbcq Bae· ·
quet Club tn mdlDllOG Beach.
Tho top 100 boJW 'aDd *'-wen lntit.ed to •
cllnlc at the Bl& Beat 'him& 8'meb Voeday. Aaes
ransed from a"'9 ~ ,14. ftU several ~,abowed tbe potential of~ top at.an, pro-
.aram coordinatof' Jlln Hillman ..,. Ollly tJme will
tell If a b&add1al ~ w Bvert •u tralned
then. I • ...._r.-... ,-. ... 1. ,.:a. caballenle aacqoet P4.sc.ta a_.Jao1t. •' 'a ..... .,.... tMmJ ~;m Ult~
• "anDUal Del Ta.co tcJUtnam~ Wlnidill t.be tbam ~blp ~ Did.le Ort.eta and bCW ~Cd.Dini
__ , f
1 ooomort ••·'°· 1.00, •1•_!: B al•....._•.,h th to compete in the Labor Day outrig-Hon;.,...... ,,._ ut.llftWl 1.10. ~: ut ... .,.... e operator ls clted · K ,.~""°'""'!flt> u11. u e..a. ior fail ..... to-mple'.Yilth '~-ral -1· eer races an ona. , ... ,, ..... ,.. -~ -·~ '"' The women. who won the senior
s111111 '°'-c." c.n 1111yt\i,,, • ulations, the owner of the vessel • t t i.. • h' · Laguna Beach's tourney, open only to real·
dents or that city's school district or members of
the Laguna Beach Tennis Assn., wUI conclude Sun· day at the high school courts.
cu"'"""' u1, s.211, 3.ao; J • ~ may ultimately hav~ to pay the fine. women a s a e c11amp1ons IP in a
11t•tc111oro1 ....... "20: 8111't-MYk• series of races staged along the
tGcM1c1r..u12.111. California coast thls summer, were '~~t~.:..~= ~~ FIRST, THE OWNEa may be able to attend after rounding up
""''"' <Allelftl uo, MO: .... -.. directly responsible for some viola· seven sponsors who paid their way.
11111111" Ratcllford> uo. u EaktA lion such as inadequate safety equip-According to club spokeswoman 'S.-:.:;,~'!c_fO.:...Tom "''• cA111>1 .. 1 ment. Second. the vessel lt!ell may toni Kahan, the sponsors are: Borg, Austin Win
In Open Net Play -
, oo. ~-• "°°' TIWncltntotm A also be subject to the penalty and the Avco Financia' Services. Bill r:,--1 uo. a.'?: F .. • <SMn> owners required to pay the penalty to Hamilton of the Cannery Restaurant,
"'""' , __ flylll9LHA111.oe1191 avoid seizure ol lhe vessel. Bob McK.11.ight of Quick Silver Board a.oo. •.oo. JAO; Recttlou Rod 1~ "'-'"" ' ' Shorts J Fl le th Corri" tw;ut;-Uwwt<WC•*•, .... -So w.-uer nmJO' loanine. = . erry ns r. e .an T•"'" ~-., ... ...,, ... h" · · Meal Co.. Jim Porter of Cannery
tl.M .. IOI .... MD. S.20; Sii~ ~~~:~~~MdWel.IOOJ!.@.!!~~~~...i~-,..~1~---~ cc11m ...... 1.eo: T1uNi ·tion yourself. the safety of tbo9i an o arn~cs
1wcLW> ...._ u baN , ... , .,... aboard your boat' 1bo\lld be a much Corp.
From AP Dtspatdtes
NEW YORK--Wimbledon champion BJom
Borg and JS.year·old Tracy Austin sipped tbrouab
'*-•· t . Th r •twi• -10.•S'-o aconcemtoyouaaYQurown. e race pits teams rom
their flnt·round matches Tuesday maht.. as the Area SUrf en U.S. Open tennis championships unfolded for the
first time ln the new Natlc\naJ Tennis Center.
Borg, despite hJs complaintl that the 1ynthetJc Will Corppete
courts were too fast, easily defeated Bob Hewitt of H N .. ~ Sou\b Africa, 6-0, 6-2. enry . oppen~rger
Austin. wbo wa a quan.flAali&t. m t.b& Open._ of Fo~tain VaUef and
last year and is seeded fifth this Ume, beat-Trllb .Fraacme Hill-.._.
Bostrom 6-0, 6-1. The pint·slze bue'UDe battler la Jn•ton Beacb. wlll be
viewed by m8;nY , as a likely I~ lo Cbrit r,.mr:: J~ er~~
Evert as Amenca s premier pl~. ' vltattooal open aurfJq
"l wouldn't put my money on lb~." •IM ~d. cbams»onablpa at tbe
tbou1b. of ber chancea here, addina !bat ~ UUMs Cardiff Reef in C&rdUf
Evert and Wl.mbleddn champ Marfina NavraWova <near Del Mar> Satur·
are tbe main contenders. · day •.
Bostrom. another American, made It 'Into tile 80th .,. AU·Amertcan
draw as an alternate wben AUIUD'1 ortllDU_oppo-1urfen and will be ~m·
nent, Fl-ancolle Durr. defaulted with an WU17 peUn1 .ion, with Olller
from a bicycllq accldt1nt. top 1tar1 from the
Paid atteodance lot the oPen1nl wu e,116 OD a W eatern COllf erence of
warm, humid evenln1. "I dOn't think Ibey wen the American Surfln*
roottna for me as bard u they d.ld lut. Jtat.'' A1aoctadon In It.a ftllal
Austin aald. "Then I wu ~new kid." meet ol the sum met
O....in C•p••res TICle aer::· HCOD.d anaual
BROOKLlNE. Mus. -lluuel <>ra.ota of ASA all·Amertcan n•·
Spain won the U.S. Pro TeMll °':r'J:*blp tor U9nal cbamp&on1blp1
the second year ln a row~ DICbt, cl"Ulblnl will tall• place a\
Harold Solomon, 6·4, 4.a. on ~·· clar Htrmota h•cb Off
courts. · . a.•. Or~. 1eeded fourtb lD cW.a.. ot bla UU., neededJust(M)ebourand34~to....._.Olllt ltm Brown, wllo
Solomon, a loa,Um• rival OG tbe,PtOUlllllil dreutt! 1 tar r e·4 for t b •
Balazs Tarocz;y of Hunc•tJ'"and Victor htd Cltvelan4 lrowna. ••
of Parll'&Q won the cloubl• dwn,plioetbip Wb • tbe aJJ.Ume pro football e.a 3-6, 8-1 vlctory ovw Halm .Gun~ardt Of ru1btna ltadtr wJt" sWhiettand and Van W1nttak10l.La-...ut, Pia. u.w Yardl.
•
This practice can save time,
money. and maybe a Ille.
California. Hawaii, Tahiti and Samoa
In races between Kona Harbor and
the City ot Refuge, 20 miles south.
Visual Distress Aids-. }
Aske,d bi Coast Guaid ~
WASHINGTON f AP> -If you opeuw a small boat •Iona u.. na-
Uoa'• couta. tbe Cout OIMU'd W..U
you to take • .._ visual dilt.ress
slpall ift cue ot emerae~y.
Offleial1 Hid tlte Coa1t~u rd res~ to about 50,~ sear
rescue operat'°'1a In a year via·
ual dlltress alanata would -. rec.
live ID many ol tbae caaea.r )
80 A aULE requlrlnVbe sllDall
hll been Pf'OPOIE£.4 tbt Coul Gu.rel bopea co ba it In effect b) the 1971,;boatJDC • About 1.t
mlllkMI bMta -.aid b9 attected, ol· flclllsuld.
'l1te tult would require the CUT)'~ I~ of vtaual ~ tltnala at all Umea la boata cenytu up to 1tx
pasMllflR and recreallO"nal boaU •• feet ot,IOalel' la awtal wateta.
Boat& ol ltU than 16 , ...... be
requlrtd to Cll'JY apeelal a&pala
when operaUn1 in coastal waters at
ni1ht. Thil cateSorY includes kayaks,
canoes and rowboats.
BOATERS WOULD RAVE a
cbolce of which 1lenal• to carry, In·
eluding:
-Da)' only: hand.held oranee
smoke; flaUng orange smoke, or JS.
Inch by 36·1nch orange na1 with
black diB<l and square.
-Nlabt only: white electric dis·
treas Ulht. automatic or manually
operatecJ; red autal nare or tneteo('.
-Day and nl.lbt: band·beld red
ftare; haod nare-1moke combination, or red parachute nare .
I
PURSUANT TO SECTIONS
3381 THROUGH 3315"' REVENUE
AND TAX~TION \..ODE THE
PUBLISHED DELINQUENT l.IST
IN AND FOR THE COUNF<. OF
ORANGE STATE OF
CALIFORNIA, HAS BEEN
DIVIDED AND DISTRIBUTED
TO VARtOUS NEWSPAPERS OF
GENERAL CIRCULATION
PUBLISHED IN SAID COUNTY
FOR PUBLICATION OF A
PORTION THEREOF IN EACH
OF SAID NEWSPAPERS.
DELINQUENT TAX .
NOTICE
CERTlFICATE OF REAL PROPERTIES
SOLO TO THE STATE
..
1¥VI, AP
Mat--. lt-G-.. •I IMVl,A,.
11M11.0S. u.m •
FIMly-. "-1 M.. ~ IJTI, A,.
t,.MMI, Sl,4l.4i.
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US. Ill~. M0SA. ltlc,..,d,, Petet E. IJTI, AP
~ID-OI, Sl, ... t1
Helll•. ltoberl R . IJTI. AP
14S.1& 1S, $1,od.PO.
Honuy, A•'""' I.. ICPI, AP
PAOPERTVIN
NEWPORT BEACM C1TY .
CJTI, AP T~llATl .. UP ...
...
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St•:laO;U.tl.-..., Sle--, Korry L. ICPI, AP Jl·•H.M.W.a. T~ I!.•. CMSI, AP Sl-i42°U, St,Sl).40.
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411-121-02. M.OU-n.
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PROPER I 't IN
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SCHOOL DISTRICT
ICll!Wllel, .. un, AP f19.S1M•.
'561.IO.
Cof>I>, ..... W. •t ... fJT>, AP
',. s "'"°'· \1,.710.00. Re ndell, Heltf £. <Wiit I. AP
l,.Sls-o2, 11.-.11.
A••lt, Cllffout o . UTI, AP ,,.U2~1. •• ,,,. .... APl,.U'Mlt. ......
Wlleeler, Leon M . (JTI, AP ,,.m-u. U.M.M.
UM, Olnlel o. CMS!, AP 1Jt.UM2,
171).0S.
Cot>O, Mea W. el •I, CJTI, AP 1~·14. llA..00.
AP 1,."2-IS. SI .....
H<llhetl, ~--l.. et ... INOI. AP 1jll.SQ.2f. ""4
ltylltl, l!lllott Y. et ... IJTI, AP 1,.s.w.o1. "'° n. RubillO, IC_.,. J ., AP 1,.~~. , •. u. ...
H..mer, ...,_.., L... AP 171-~1.
11,601.st
PROPERIYIN
OCEAN VIEW
SCHOOL DISTRICT
c .. son. Pltlltlp M . IJTI, AP toT·J11-0., '4ol6.1 S Pon<•. R~ 0. et et. IJT), AP
toM74.0., 1Ate.•. Teller, Jof\n £,, AP 101·31S.1f, 11tt.i..
PROPERIYIN
IRVINE UNIFIED
SCHOOL DISTRICT
DELINQUENT LIST
PROPERTIES SOLO TO THE STATE .EQR THE TAXES, ASSESSMENTS AND ~ CHARGES LEVIED FOR THE
YEAR 1226 FOR THE FISCAL YEAR 1976-1,,,..,-
PROPERTY IN NEWPORT BEACH
CITY
CODE AREA 7-001 ...... .... "· •-1. ·~ ., ... ""' ...s.n. ~ ...... °' .... Cliett o.ltT ........ a:a. .. ""
PUBUCNarlCE
....
•I
,.
.,
••
81 JmY Q.A1J8tN ... ~ ....... ScMltb BW'• branch lit a
Toro •• l"NC...._ toward U. Dk hd ~ a pelfarmw. cwn In . J....,., ..... .,,.. dllecl·
lftl UCI MvtQll ~ tMD k plDtd Ndl aiGMb..
Flv• mo1uu urU•r, that
brancb ud two oUaert wen hov.<o u Millloft BaM, "Ibey
.. ,.. ~ by Vllta~
Southwell~-move lN.o Ora.nae .
Tll"" belle Co.ti• were de-flned arnoea emptoye11 and tbetrm...-.•• TMJ waukt :wott on ~
cOllrtellJ. ,_., da1 '• .. ncl e• ln1 prHedurtt and betlu ~rf~ bJ ioc:re11inf U.. number at Uan1 act on•
perfonned ad! DIOOth.
CRA&T8 DB•ICTING pro·
1re11 ••re po1ted in the emploree eOlfH room. £acb
emplo)'toe'• puformanc• wu
1a.ted "pabikty'' a1oa1 •tth a
'1'•.Pb abowtaa total team lm· 1 ~ ....... Pitta la)'I. Sacb em.ploy meettn1. or
COWllt. t.Uers h.av• decreilied
erron ln t.ranaacUoa c~ 'Y
1$ percent. Pltll aald. and
••ploy•• turnover Ila•
deerHMd ti1nmeantl1. t'OID·
pared wlUI tumover at dldlei'
branebM la the 111tem.
1'11• l)l"Oll'tm bu been so ii· reeuw; laid• benk 1potesman.
that It ,.tU be lntroduced .sbortly
1D three more branches.
A 11.uo& POIN'I'. aatd Pitts. ii that when coq\IDOD ~is
carried beyond Up Hl'VIC9 Md
advtrtl&IQ8, It Ii a 'lnak>r lqre· dJent to suecealUJ .nice.
·•And lt'• conl.q1ous once It
stem.'
Lethal transmission defects may exist in mllllons of Ford cars and light trucks, the
National Highway Traffic Safety Ad·
ministration says. Owners of 9 mUUon
Ford vehicles were warned they should
make sure the engine is shut off and the
gear selector is firmly in the "park .. posi·
lion before leavlng tbear vehicles. Th@ '
agency is testing transmissions on 1970
through 1978 vehicles because of 771 re·
poned accidents, involving 23 fa tall ti~.
A •non OP awo banka is
dlmcw Gettll.:'I t1110 anterm to
ope.rate as one uaua.U.y \s costly
atld traumatic f~ customers. bu-penouel. 1toelbold n
and admlnlstralan. ..,.. Carl
Pltu • paycbo&cclat •bo auu
ecratcbu his head over bow
easily El Tun> branch tellers and support people turned a
loter into a wlnner.
nearly meetlna. t.be 1oat Heb moot.la · receives a bocr~ Pitta s.,.. rew rau to etwn tbe IOala and Ole etrort hu bw'aeonec1.
Buically, Pitts aaid, the pro-
1r•m ls a MU·moaltortna effort
at courteay lo wbicb tbe
employee atrives to call a
cuuomer by name durlng
transactk>as. treat the customet
as a special person and improve
telepbcae eourtesy.
Pensions Hold Key to Glamor
The El Toro branch was a
loser. In Januar)' 10 aceounlS
were closed wbl1e only 10 were
opened, resultiq lD a net km of
60 accoums. PiUs &aid.
BJ QIETCURRID . ......... ......,
The reeord wu lhe wont of
a II 11 branches.
LAST MONTH. the branch's
28 employees lead ~ league, endJn• July wfth a net o! 140 new
accounts.
Pitts ot Carl Pitts Associates,
Del Mar. notes that the move
was not unexpected -Just bet·
ter than expected.
B&ANCll MANAGER Rudy
Pelleritl. bank vice president,
says he's pn>ud or the program
and its accomplishments. He
said, though, that he believe&
"these girls would do what
they're dolnc without reim·
bursement or an award."
The leadl.n& role taken by the
bif·name growth stock's glamor
mitbt asaln be coming lnto
f u~on oo Wall Street.
U that happens. it would mark a dramatic change. Over the
past five years, the once-elite
group of glamor stocks bas en~
JOyed about as much vogue as
tail fins or the Nehru Jacket.
The July peek was the result
of a steady climb following
February initiation or a pilot
program based -of all things -oo common courtesy.
Reim~ent fol' total goal
attainment in $20, Pitts aa~ a
token of apprecnlion for an in.
tense effort that has been gain-
ing new customers and resulting
in fewer errors.
PO& THE MOST part. the companies -houMhold names
like IBM. Xerox, Kodak. Johnson & Johnson, ~a-Cola,
McDonald'• and Avon P.rs>ducts
-have continued to compile im·
presalve earn1ngs reeords. "At first, the girls may have
been a little teary or the whole
program," said Pelleriti. Anthooy Tabell. an analyst at
the Princeton, N .J ., firm of
Delafield, Harvey. Tabell. re-
ported that a statistical com·
J>C)!lte of a dozen of these com·
panies has shown steady earn·
ings rrowth at a compound
annua rate of bet~r than 12 per·
cent since Ule mid·l960s·
THE PSYCHOLOGIST and
bank manager s met during
J anuary with branch employees,
wbo outlined what they thought
were problem areas in the bank
and recommended ways lo im·
prove methods.
"BUT 11IEY cooperated real·
ly well. Now they see the sue·
cess of the program and the
branch and are even more cons·
cienllous and enthusiastic ... "
In addiUoo to increasing ac·
.]l.SIJCE DEPAKFMENT DROPS
PROBE OF FLUOR PURCHASE
Yet an index of their stock
prices cMculated by Tabell fell
from 117 to 1972 to 44 around the
bottom of tbe 1973· 74 bear
market, and bad recovered only
to 55 by tbe end of 1977.
Fluor Corp., Irvine, has announced that the antitrust division
of the Department of Justice has informed Fluor that it has closed
ats investigation on Fluor's acqaisition of Daniel International
Corp.
.
THE PRICE.EARNINGS ratio
of the stocks in the inde~. a
widely used measure of in·
vestors' enthusiasm for a given
issue or group of issues, tumbled
from 52 at the end of 1972 to 13
five years lat.er.
Daniel, an industrial contractor based in Grttnville, S.C., was
acquired b)' Fluor May 31, 1m, through a cash tender offer.
Fluor Corp. provides engineering, construction. procurement
and project management services lo energy. natural resource and
industrial clients.
PUBUC NOTICE
.__,
lfOTIQ TO at•OtTOllS -~ Sul'eltt(llt ClOUltT Of' THIE
ST ATIE Of' CALI '°"MIA POtt
THIE CIOUtfTYOf'CMAHH
111 tlle llUll.,. ot Ille Ettel• ot
SI ONEY f', HILL. o.c..ed. NOTICE IS HEREIY GIVEN lo crecmoo llevlrtt cMllms eoel~ Ille wlcl dKedent to flle Mkl c1.ims 111 the
offl<e Of IN <leR Of «lie efof-141
c-i cw to ~ tMm to the ~
WE NEED A
RECESSION!!
How would o rece~soon ellect
onlloll()l't, tntere\I ~~ ond t+.e
\!Od morilll? Mr::iJ IOI free •epor!.
der&l9'*1 et Irle office of WIU.IAM S. .a.~ 1r ............
J°"NSTOl'IE.JR.,...._,&Kelwl.Slllte s~ ~"
Tabell noted that this slide
was partly the result of general
market weakness. Tbe price-
eamings ratio of Standard &
Poor's 500-stock composite index
fell during the same time span
from 18 to eigbL
""'· •• E. eotor.oo e1...s.. Pe....,., Investment (;oUftselor
cA •1101. """<" 1-office 1' 111e ... 141 L ......... st. Rofc How, of Huntin«f..-Beach. purchasing piece of --'411 tne ~M9Md In • -&'"'" •" mett•" pefttlnlr19 10 w1c1 ....... "-I IMdt. CA. toal4 agent or the city of Huntington Bea~h. has been
S\1(11 clel"'' wltll IM M <••Hty ,._ _________ -'! elected president of the Parcbasln• Mana•ement ..-lie"'""" lilt flied CW ~et 19 D D
etwewid w1tt11r1 ._ ~ et'4W the Assodatlon of Orange Coanty.
""1P111111uitloftetw1,..1ce. ----------He ls a certl!ied purchasing manager and has 091
" =:.~Ill PUBLIC NOTICE been active in the association for seven y~rs.
£-..An•• SUl'HIOltCOUltTOf'TNIE Other officers are AUen mggtas, C.P.M., Vice ,,._. .. .,,,_. STATWOf'CAU.-cNINIAN!t p 'd l n-L ,, .. _._. C p M .,._.._ ~ TNeCOUWTYOPCHlAMOIE res1 en , _,., _....,., . . .. secretary ao::-•&11 w1u.1uu.~1E.,•. _ _,_ Beldelman, treasurer. Ted Martin, C.P.M., direc· :::!:=:-..... ..~~T~~~~:•:.,o.~ tor of national affairs, and directors ltolaald Yaf· •u.c.111r......... AlllO ""....,..,.'" TaT.... fee. C.P.M .. Pamela McGowan, Davie Irwin and
lllfte• TAltY AMO'°" AUTM01uu'10tt Karl Pa•-C P M .......... CAttttt TO ADMllUSTalt UNOIER TNa .. , • • •
P\ltllltNd 0r-. eo.t1 o.ttr PllOt ... o•P•1toalfT ADMUllSTltATIOtl ~ •uo JO. Seslt.6. u.10. l'11 •• ,. 0" •STATUACT •
PUBUC NOTICE E\le .. OfDAHIElPElf'.O.C..-.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
tllet lt\1111 V. 1'911 ltM llted lwreln e
• ..._. pelltloft '-Probjtte of Wiit -tw i.
llOTICll TOUIEDITOM wen<• Of""""' T___., to Ult ..0.,...... petll~ ..ci for Auttlorlutlon to Mo
SUl'.ltlOltCIOURTOf'nta ml"htff lllldM' tr1e ......... It Ad· STAT• Of' CAUPOIUOA f'Ott mlnlttretlclfl Of &tftetAct. ,.,.,_.
TMa COUNTY Of'otlAMOa 10 wlllcll It med• tor f\lrtller 111 tlle Me~ ot lM Ellete of ,ertl<UI.,.._ 411"' ~ tile tin. ...
HILLa M. GltUNOY, .. HeU.1E .,._ofe,..lfW0.-"'911M11Mt
M. Oltu.tOY, ~ ,., ~---It. t9M, ~ tt:• a.I'll.,
Hotlc.e h ......., Ol*I to <tedlton 111 IM c-"-" ot o..i,INf'll -3
... 111119 Cllllma ~ the Mid deu-Of Mid C-1.. <It 100 0111< c.tlter Of'f ...
dW!t to Ille Mid <lelms In t1W Offk• Of •••t 4n the City ot 5ente An•. ,.,. c1.n of ,,. ...,...Id~ cw .. OllMla. , .,._.,, "*"'°ti• 111111tnionect •t tM OttM~tA. m-.
oftlce of "'*" M., "'"'-'1 s.&191 WILLlAML .. JOMM ~eA11enw,~ •
. ,~,.
PtJBUC NOTICE
C.llMl-M1t. Put ..... otd.
toworkfor
Compmer Aatomalloa, Inc., Irvine, has an.
nounced the appointments of Dr. Earl D. Jacobs,
Tustin, to the new post or corporate staff vice pre-
sident and DoagJu L CaUfottb. Costa Mesa, to
general manager of the firm's industrial products
division.
Jacobs. who headed the division ror the past
three years. is responsible for planning and ·
coordinating the company~pansion progtams.
Cutsforth has been wit1"he cvmpany for se:ven yeats. a nd most recently was director of the .
division's tn·clrcult tester group, with responsibUi· •
automatic test equipment market, •
Lyrm A. ~Y has been promoted to opera·
tions officer or Americu <.lty Bank's Newport
Beach regional office .
She joined the bank 3~ years ago as cb.ief
teller of the Long Beach .office and subsequentl)
was pronyited to assistant operations officer.
. . .. .-
Charles T ... Tim" Slede. Newport Beach, has
been named a sales manager in the Newi>ort
Beach office of Coldwell Bauer ColDmenlaJ
Brokerage Co.
* Cl1fford 0 Klp" Kotson, El Toro, hu jolned
Parker Freacb Properties. lrvine as vice preal·
dent.
He spent eleven yeara with Bank ol America
and was vice president at lts Newport Center branch.
• Allatitte Savtn11 abd Loan Aaoelat.loa bu
named CaroUne Grnea, Newport Beach, regional
savfnJ• manager.
She most r~ently served 11 office m1n•1er at
the Enclno office and h" held a variety of lllOli·
Uona at Uie Westchester, Rancho Part. Van Nuya
and Pacotma brancbes.
ti
Viet« I. a.,.11. Oran11. b11 bffn name.t U• •• 1l1tanl vtce pr aldent at Bau of N••P9'tt
Newport Beacb. He wUI serve aa a co~merc1u
lqan omcer et the bank'• Dover office.
H• hu tMitn a banker for 3> 1ea.n, moe\. re-
cently Mrvtq u tM muater of Crocker Bank'• Boach·~tt ~· in Huntlaaton 8Uch for three yeara. • •
Big-name Stocks May Return
To Favor Along Wall Street
But be also noted that tbe
growth stocks suffered dis·
proportionately because of a
shift in the investing pattern of
such institutions as, pension
funds , which once were the
glamors' biaest fans.
WOllKING Wl'IU data collect·
ed by t.be Securities and Ex·
ehange Commission. Tabell ob-
served that pension fb.nds in um
poured 95 percent of the money
they received tnto &tocks.
By um. that-percentage had
fallen to 21 percent. And in the-..
first quarter of 1978, pension
funds sold more stock than they
bought for the first time on
record.
"The stocks ~ are discussing
are, by and large. among the
largest institutional holdings
and have in the past <occasional·
ly to excess) been among their
largest purchases.·· Tabell said
"(l is. ultimately. mslitutional
buying pattema which will de·
term ine the course of prices for
these stocks.
• "Private, non:insured pen·
sion funds are the largest
single category of investors
1$181 billion or assets 1. the
fastest growing <they have more
than doubled their assets in 10
yearsl. and relatively the most
flexible in terms of percentage
of common stocks held.·· he
said.
"lt is demonstrable that
s'wings in c<>mmon st~k activity
by these fundS can. by their
sheer massiveness. have pro·
found effects on the e quity
market.•;
The now or money into pe •
sion funds. in the form or
contributions by both corporA·
lions and employees, reac6ea ii
record of $21 billion io urn.
TABELL NOTED that th~
was equivalent lo 2.7 percen~ the total market value of a l
stocks listed on the New ~
Stock Exchange. and 11.59 pe ·
cent of the value of all stoc
traded during the year.
U pedsion funds were to
locate money to stocks the wa
they did in 1972·13. Tabe l
calculated, it would mean an
jection of almost S14 billion ·
the stock market -a sum th
would go a long way tow~ restoring the glamor stoe ·
faded luster.
.. The key question." he sai .
··ts whether the funds' relati
aversion to equities will cooti
or whether it will reverse i:J in the near future."
Next: New role1 o/ the mwaf
game. j
............................................................ 1
I Over The Counter
HASO Ustiftcjs
MUTUAL FUNDS.
INVESTING OtYICI t ... .1.tt f'our E II.SI..... Trtt JI\ II 07 12 10 MIO 14 4'I IS S7 ti 11.10 D.OE $Win GI 6.U 1.Al9J
COMP.\fftlS I'" 13'tlS 2' Hllcm ,,..,, U.31 TrPeSll 2 'It ... MFO 14.q7 14.14 Pt•n '"" 1211 ll."I ~.,., 1np 12.M !,l1:i01J Nfw YO..IC IAP) I s ,., it'n MonM I 00 Nl llldullry 4.06 . MCO "·" 71.J:I Pltorth u.n 1!.JI ctra unn .. -The fOllOllWlllG ' "" ,.:.. '91 MMM 1:00 Nl lnlcltp I.OD Hl MFB 14 ,, i.m p lfrnd 12.11 IJ.X s "~·-e~, s 10 tel ~*l 11nd 1017 I 1S ()pt" 11)4 14,SI lnl lnvst 11 ~ IUI MMB '23 U• Price Fund\ ......,., .
t ~t1:1' Aili ~I'll .:,,. .:1s hFt• 12.2' Nl '"• Guld 10.'14 NL l'Mtntrs ., S' Nl Grwll• 12 1• NL Dpl~ F~ ss.ll' Ss:!f .. j NL M<trt111 lyn<ll. tncorn '·'q NL roq ·u Nl
\
'
---------- --VN DAit. Y ALOT ..
8J MILTON JllOS&OWITZ The De'W'I ~ out ot China tbJa aummer !las beeat
atartlm,. Wbetblt lt 1 1ood or bad dependa. J auppose. oo
your vtewpoint. bat lt'• clear that it.'1 dlUerut.
Fliit came the report that t.be Cb1.nae Communllt
leadera have McWed ll'a OK lat the country to 10 1m.o
debt. JU&t a few reara ••o China toot apee\al pride in bei-
lnl able to NY tbat lt bad 1"0l.lther taterua.l nor external debts.'·
TllE aoNBSE oe BXPBCl'BD TO repudiate that
Polley and leek dlrect loam from banb outalch ot China.
It'• a.•= tbat tbe Ch.lnae want to step up tbe pace of ln· duatrl• ti®. And ii they loot at the UnJted states or Japan,~ lmow bow t.bb ii done: wtth borrowed l\md.s.
Ac to a dbpateb ftled by Wall Street Jou:m-1
nporter Frank Chins from Hon& Kon1. banter• ·~ champlna at tbe blt, anxious to cet a pteee ot tbe Cbinele acUon. Cfdna .. comidered. good ttnanclat mk.
Money
Tree
N•st caine the re· port that adnete bub
in Bona Koaa. bad re· celved lb1trucUons
from Peklo1 sayln1
they would b e
permitted to do
anytbtna that the other
banks iri Hone Kong are do1ng. lnclodi.llg web a.,eculaUve
activities as ~ and aelllng stocks or tradlna ln foreign curreodet.
The directive from Peking warned the banks that they were ~ted to mate profits, but lt said: "Altbough our
banks tiave a sodallst character. we can use capitalist
methods." •
CHINA MAINTAINS A NETWORK of 13 bank.a ln
Hong Koq. tncJudlng more than 130 branch omcea. 'Ibey
control one.third of the Britiab colony's $12.$ billion ib baok deposits.
These report.a were followed by the 10DOW1cement that
Cttlna ta importing more goods. In the first baU of 1978..
China •s exports rose 29 percent while lmports were up 60
percent from tbe levels of a year ago. Helping to swell the
imports were farm machinery. chemical fertilizers. cattle.
w:itches, lnsedlcldes and whole industrial pJ1nt.a.
Not far bebiAd this news was tbe visit to Cbina ol John
B. Ricker J1 •• chairman of New York·baaed CoftttnentaJ Corp .• and aeveral of bis top executives. Continental ts one
of the larsest property and casualty insuren lD the tJnJted Statts, and It also owns the Diners Club operaUon.
ONE OP THE DEALS DISCUSSED by the Continental
executives with Chinese officials was the introduction of the Diners Club card In China.
You know tbinp are changing In China when they
start talking about accepting the Dioen Club card. Are
McDonald's and Coca·Cola next?
What was next was the report that Hitachi Ltd., one of
the Japanese electronics giants, la 1oina to ship to China a
$78 million plant to produce color television picture tubes. The Hitachi plant, to be Installed at Stan in northeast
China. will be able to turn out about one million TV tubes a year.
That must be the beginning of the end for those who
expected China to become a Marxist model unlike any the ~orld bas ~n previously. With that many TV sets moving
mt.o the Chinese marketplace. can "Kojak .. and bis
cohorts be far behind?
St,ocks Post Gain
Despite Rate Hike
NEW YORK <AP> -The stock market rallied today
desplt.e a "-·point Jump in the prime rate and In the race of
more discouraaina news afJout iQflatioa and foreip trade.
Tbe Dow Jones average of 30 industrials was ahead
0.52poinl:ato880.12.
Advances outnumbered cfe(:lines 3-2 among New York
Stock Excbaoge-listed issues.
Chase ll~ttan Banlt started the round of prime rate
boosu by increasing charge oo loans to top-rated bor· row~n from 9 to 9~ percent. Several major banks
followed suit.
St~la I• Tlw s,,.,,,.,., Ht9 Yott.(API A fllll ~ .... ,-0-S
STOCltS
30 Ind 'lf:47 =r.1 M':1 ~ • ~ 10 TNI 10_.. 151.IS 14' )4 l t9.l1,. I.SJ 1S Ull ~ i..c IOS.'2 10..d .. 0.27 6S Snt l04.14 JG1.11 J02 U JOs.JI + 0.7S llldtl' .. .. •.• ..... .. .. 1,4S1.IOO ,, .,. 1,216, too
Ulll' ...... .... . . JIUOO ..S $tll .. • • . . • .. • • . . . . . •.Ost.300
I
..
'•
IWM«J
.. llL:a. ............ In"""""" .,,.... '°' l*••.-C \f.... lftd tllt ION
,..,., a... ..... "--....... •-.o.~ .. , .......... ·-"*' lft ...... DfOWla If\ lft ......... ., ~ ..... ..... ~ ..... ..... ,..,......""" ... • llUAM D0tn &AT '"'~ "J11et Wlllle YO\I r t ...,...
• 81WllOIJIAH ~
..... ~to.,. old
trl9NS _.,. ...,. ~ .. ...
• OVDIAA'f
Ma~ d--.... liOllf MCI .ct""9 ~
-.... Or w-.m i..--.
eaplat11e Ill• -·•~•• 'Hmpa '~,IM .,,.... °' ei.•c.e b *""
PtnOllS. IU1 ""'~ Eddie Dutan MOI cornfOn
"'*-(fl) • OTTO: zoo GOflUA
0M;ego • Llneolll Pn
Zoo le Ille MfTlllO tor a
loolc al the tlel\elll()f of r:illoeplMfy c.e..wa
WOfW)HEWS
TOMGHT
&.'JO. MY TltAEE 80til8
~oec>ee1tv. groom Robbie
undergoee a compt111e
inepectlOn by his ltancee s
family and eor°"ty .,...,.
• MICHAEL JACKSON
Gu.et Or Wtltlem A
Nolen, IM.lthOf ol Baby In
A bOtlle "
()) TO TEU. THE~ 9 MERY GAIF'RN
~ .. Rober1 l<eltn. Bel-
IWhM. lley St#Y
~ CllSHEWS
NBC HEWS
UARSCLUB
WORl.DNEWS
TOMOHT
RoftlClnee
D•ck Shoberg and Susan Lucci play a
romantic couple facing obstacles to their
marriage on "All My Children." which airs
at noon weekdays on Channel 7.
G BOWUNOFOA
DOUAAS
• ILOVELUCY
Ridl)I brinQt llome a mink
eoet, 8"d Lucy thlnb that
it's tor lie<.
• THEF.IU.
• ~or Etskine mounta
• maior F.B.I. attack on a
planned mult>-milllon dOI·
lar robbery
• MACHEll I U!HAEA
REPORT D 8PEaA1.
"Rocic Sonata F« PlenO
And Arnpll1*I c..io~ .,.,_
lormeclby~
er Paul sa-,liald and
cellist Peter Howard. (fl)
CJ) JOKER'S WllO
7:30 I TATTlETAl.18
8HANANA
Gutet. Mitton Berle.
I NIWlYWU> GAME
MATCH GAME P.M.
JOf<Pt'I WILD
THE 000 COU9Ui <>.car and ,_.,. c:on~lre
to bfMk up • pOker geine
In their apanment eo they
can go OUI with tM Pigeon •r.• fl) 21 TONIGHT
Ho.I; Clete floOetts.
Cl) 8TAMOAAD
''TlleEnd~··
(() CANDID CAMERA 0 FAMILVnuD
TM drlfMttO atwy ..
~-~ ... . °" .,. 2.000.root feoe of
OM ol VOMll'Me'I "'°'* ~,,._ .. St•· nno: Pettie* o· ...... ....,.
lette~ ..... ~. .. ....,..
IHOUIH
"floOr UtUe Aid\ Girt" Tt,e
Uuglttlr at a p omlneflt
contf9Ct0r ~ Oevtd '*'"' ~ gifts In ... ~ to !>Uy '"' •'*" non (Al
• T"91MNT
"T"'OOOd~"
• CAAOl. IORNBTT AHO,,_.,,.
Olllle "The 8U•lneH
Lundi." "TM Vending MtcNne.. ''The lutcNr
Shoe>" • YICTOfW Af MA
•• Flft#n Ot Tiie Allee'' Tiie
orOIN flOhdnQ for LulOn.
11141 ptlnelpel ~
i.&end. lfldld with the
~· reconquea of the Phlllppll•.
• WZAM'THA
"Honlble ~eciee"
EllUbettl llgr'9 the ~
tor Mety'a eiiecutlon etw
htlll.ng '* hight from
Sc:ottend. GD ntEQAEAT
AMEAIOAN FOLK DANCE
The history of-squire
CSatlClng In America.
uo I CA081-wrr8 VICTORY AT SEA
"Full Fathom ~.. Thi
tremtndOus des1rvctlon on
Jepane11e lhlpplng clOeM
off communication•
betWeen Jepaneee ~
ltleods and outpoete ovw· -G OVEREASY
Fritz Feld dlecuMe9 hie
long and active actJno
care.: Or. Wiiiiam L.-.
eicpleln• th• Hrvlc:H
• "HOaplce" ptovldee; Ille
velue of u.Clee for cMcler
peraon•: jazz mueiclen
Eddie Duran finds comfort
In hie mollc. (RI ' 9:00. ()) MOVtE
C'ho1111el Listings
1.-00 8 Cl) FRED AHO BUNNI
Fred Trevalena llOet• e
~thcJWcom
btlllllg live perl~
and alllma11on. wltll guat•
Sendy Ounun, Pat Harr-
ington, end Vlc:kl
Lawr~.
••• "The Amazing How-
erd~" ( 19n) T~
my L .. J-. Ed FIMd-
ers. The • end cwear of one of tfie v.otld'• rnoet
wealthy end eccentne men
11 treoed. f Pan 2 of 2) <FU
• 8PECAl
• KNXT (CBS) LOS Angeles
• KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles
I KTLA (Ind) Los Angeles
KABC· TV (ABC) Los Angeles
()) KFMB (CBS) San Diego fJ KHJ-TV (Ind) Los Angeles
Q'I KCST (ABC) San Diego m KTIV (Ind ) Los Angeles
G N8CMOVI£
CD KCOP·TV (Ind I Los Angeles 8 KCET-TV (PBS) Los Angeles
'9 KOCE·TV (PBS) Hunltngton Beach
* *'..\ "The Dey Ot Tiii Oolpllln'' (1973) George c .
Scott, Trtati Van Oe\lefe. A
eclentt1t 'e effort• to com-
munlClele with dolplllh1 are
JeopardWld by • group
plennlng to use the dol·
plllne In a polttlcal plOt. (Al 9 CAUOWAY'8CUMB
"Caught!" Three dattng
20th<ent\lfY cnm..: the
$2.75 mllJlon Brinks rob-
befY that OOC14<red on
Jenuary. l7 1t59 In
Boston; the tlalf-mltllon
dollal benlc truck hold-up
al St. Anthony'• Churetl In
Palflrlon, N.J.; lhe $l0
milhon tooting of the
Actor Signs
Consent Fonn
In Stock Rap
WASHINGTON tAP> -The
Securities and Exchange Com-
miss ion has ch a rged actor
George Hamilton with violating
securities laws in the purchase
and sale of stock two years ago,
the SEC announced.
Hamilton, who lives in Los
Angeles, agreed in a consent or-
der filed in U.S. District Court in
New York not lo resume such
activities. although he did not
admit or deny the allegations.
the government agency said
Tuesday.
THE SEC COMPLAINT al-
leged that Hamilton violated the
anti-fraud provisions or the
securities laws when he bought
stock in IPM Technology, Inc.,
of Sarasota, Fla , and Pulte
Home Corporation in 1976.
The complaint charged that
Hamilton artificially inflated the
price of IPM Technology stock
m April 1976. The SEC said he
bought the stock and then urged
his accountant and an uniden-
ttfied female acquaintance to
purchase stock in the company
while at the same time entering
orders to sell his stock.
Sad Bonaet!oming
Richard Thomas consoles Verdie Foster when he returns
to Walton's Mountain, only to find the rural community is
suffering from dismal economic conditions. The two-hour
episode of "The Waltons'' will be broadcast Thursday at 8
p.m. on Channel 2.
___ omeback for Actress
Edie Adams Starring in NBC-TJ? Movie
By IA V SHARBUTT
LOS ANGELES <AP) -Edie
Adams said she's just bought a
nut farm. "It's realJy a nut
farm. an aJmond farm up near
Bakersfield.''
That ls not all the blonde ac-tress-singer bas done lately. She
also is returning, with great
vigor, to what some cont'· I
another kind of nut farm -TV"
acting -af\er a leave of some
15 years.-
SUE SAID SHE'S spent those
years mainly on the road, play-
ing summer stock and working
clubs in Las Vegas and
elsewhere with her second
husband. Pete Candoll, the jau
trumpeter.
But this fall she stars in an
NBC movie. "Fast Friends," playing a
once ·blg
singer whose
career faded
on account of
drink -ahe
aet.a ·~ chance when
she's booked
OD • TV talk
show. Sbe 'll also •o.w. M aiihted u a 11os.sJp quttn In ~ ot NBC'a new ''Eddie Capra" 1U&n1boe 1erte1, as 1
numerololtlt on CBS' new "Fly-
ing High" and as a voyager on
ABC's "Love Boat."
••1 ALWAYS WANT to be on
television," said Miss A .• widow
of Ernie Kovacs, considered one of TV's most original funnymen.
"But -what am I now, an old
new race? -I've been on the
rA.Wl..so lQJJ&.__ ·.or ;_.~CJttUr~
more. 1be agent.a wbo book '°6
on the road don't want you to
stay home because they don't
make as much money if you're
sitting comfortably wit.b your
ramily in your own house.
''I said, 'l don't care, I'll sell
shoes, I'm not leaving,"' added
the lady, whose last concentra-
tion of TV work was in the
season o{ '63, when she starred
in an ABC variety series.
MISS ADAMS, WHO laughs
easily and exhlbita a fine sense
of the absurd, notes that if a
performer doean 't keep
performing in Hollywood, the in·
mates tend to think of you u
deadorwone.
The attractive former Julllard
opera. student recalled one year
in wblcb, aft.er three moot.bl ol
1ln1lna opera lo three clUes, abe
returned to Tinleltown to appear In a benefit show.
"I'll never fortet when Lorne
Greene ln&toduced me by •11·
ing, 'And now, here's a lady who
after many, many years is re-
turning to her first love -sing-
ing,"' she sighed ln mock sor-
row.
WREN SHE DECIDED this
year to make an industrial-
strength return to acting, she
said, she did tg \!"~~ new aiennunt a · edly-
llreryone Jt">QeW BlJe'S Off Uie road now. • • -
Acting offers ensued. In the
old days, s~ wryly recalled, sbe
usuaJly got aging ingenue roles.
Later she was known as the
Prostitute with a Heart of Gold.
But no more.
"Now I'm getting character
parta, mainly bitchy part.a, and I
love it,'' she said. "Wonder what
that means? Well, they're eur
to play. And that scares the bell
out or me."
SHE ONLY WAS kidding, but
she dJd recently take 1 cou..-e to
fight 1 different fear -ol writ·
in1. A wise Idea, u sbe'1 writina a book -"Everyone t1," the
ahruga -about her Uf e In lbow bll. •
"They want that nrat chapter
ind I'm ~ed lo death," Abe
H)'I.
The book'• ttUe: •·vou Can Do
It, EdJe."
,
KTLA • 8:00 · .. Calloway's
Climb." Patl'Tck O'Neal and Mariette
Hartley tell of drama on a dangerous
peak In Yosemite. -
KTLA e 9: 00-··caught!·· Three
daring robberies that occurred during
the 20th century are profiled.. ~
KCET @ 9:30 · .. Sarah.'' Zoe
Caldwell depicts the French actress
Sarah Bernhart on .. Great
Performances.··
8odltl 0..-. In Hlol. eOCHANJl'I
ANOIU
"Ullll Angata Ot The
Hight'' The At9* -Into a brothll to lrwtll~
O-IN~dNthe
of NfO °' "-l'ftOll ~ ten.nt..(RI G IUYORAHAM
CN$De
• .-v °"""" Guettt: Robert Kelln. Bit-
ty White. Key 8tatr. Tlppl
Hechn, Noel Manhell.
• VtOT'ORV AT SIA
"The F11e Of Europe" Tiie
deltructlOn of the Allie '°"* 1n e.irooe 11\d 1t1e conapea of Hitler'• ww
rntlCNM fs dtpictld. GD EYENINQ AT POPI cc.-.. gu1ean.1 Angel
Aorllefo perlorm• Vivaldi'•
"Concerto de Arenjuez."
t'.IO. ORAL "°8ER1'
INCW.
aOMAT
PIRFOAMAHCU .. Sarah.. The tl#bullnt lite
~ 1empee1uoue moods
of French ectraee Saren
Bemtlardt 1re por1ra)ltd t11. Zoe caldwel.
10:00 9 POUCS WOMAN ··a... K.athleen'' P9PI*
Md 811 .,. pl.IDied by 1fle
c:ontnO!ctory ·•-ts of !hi only two ~
to a robbery (R) IR:.CV,
HUTCH
"Hutc:hlnson -Murder
One" Hlltctl'• ••·wlf•'• Yi9lt .._.. him with •
stolen diamond end• mur-
d8f wanent tor Ille arratt.
i llU MOYERS'
~
"The Ve<y Remarkable
Yemato Famll)I" Modem
Jep911 end Its people are
examined. (Pen 2 ot 21 (RI
10:30 •• Nl!W8 WUB.M.DER
Fow of ThemtOll Wllder't
Ml'ly plays on rellglOw I
motal .,..,,_ -pt'telftl·
ad 11~·~·(1)0 N!WI ~ UM.AM!NCAN
"l.oYe And Deer Old MOfll
And Oed'' Ew Md 811 .,.
htW19 !Mfltal ~.
"love And Th•
Playwright" 8111 IUbtletS
his wife to unuwai eltua.-
tion.. G MOVIE
•• Vt "fhfro" 11"') BatTy
811Ulven. Martha Hyer.
After IOllng Illa wlf9 and
child In • fire. • dilllgunld
man plOU to evenoe "*' deaths. (2 In.I
• THE OCID COUPU
Fell• untibeetledty !We-
i*• to dance the lead rOle In a bellat perform.
-wn.n the teed CSatic.er doeln'I thow up.
• FENM0002NIGHT
au.It: .... Rutt\ Dunbw
and hef diecowry. Kevin
McCormick. Herold a.men.. .... \.Man Lam.
mom. • DIC*CAVETT
Guett: l(~h Tynen,
crttlc. authCW. and former
literary direct« of ttle
National Tll•atr• in
~· ('"-1 2 ol 21 (R) G MACHEL I L.B4RER
A90RT 11~ G ()) u.a. OPEN
TENNI
H~ of Ille da)l's
actlvttl6e In lllia tourna-
ment from RulhfnO Mead-
ow Per1< In Corona. New
Yorlc.
8 Bl!8T OF CAA80N
Moll: Johnny Car•on.
Quest•: Tom Snider,
Suztme F'leellelte. Kelly
Genett, Or. Paul Ehrlic:h.
TONIGHT'S LATEST tlSTINGS
; lWUIHT ll)NI
A ..,_. lr111411r tlllde M
..,,,..... c:ilvlllMllln the
.. olarda. •O~ITOfW
"Olllf" ,. ~.,.,, --
Vfli!M an t11 m 1 l9tlon ~
and polltloel oarn-In
OfCllr to ..,._ .i an
r~~~
...-tftc*• «llnlc Into ar~ a French pilot'• ,...,,.. .
•:MT~
Ma. IAd " mi.c ,...... • dMdl)' kllfMHlc "*'Y
~KAOS.
-~WON.D ..waTOMOHT
'1:46•(1) HAWAIPMS.0
"Tiie FlnllNftO fOllGfl"
McOarrett ~ • IOtolrY ftng dallllnO In Po -""*"' ......... (A)
MOANING ta:00e TWIUGHf ZOM
A pjenO, GI'*' M • 1#"1-
dll( ~ ...... ettangl
power O\llr thoM .wtlo ... ten'°" 1:=...
flalptl and Ed try to g9I on
the fOOd eide °' • ._
COl'IC*'Y .-aithle
12:*). MOV9I * * * "T"-· ACCllMd" ( 19411 Loretta Young.
AOOlrt Oummlnp. A PllY·
dlOloV1 ptoMMol comae
under~ of murder
( t hr .• 25 min.I
• MOVll * *"' "Woll lerHn''
( l9811) Berry Sulllven. ,,_,., Oleviee. A bMal ...
captain "°"" ~oac:hlng bllndlle8e enct mutJny ( 1
hr • 30 min I
• MOYll • * "lmc>ac:1" (19491 en....
Donle¥y. Ella flainee A
-·· plot to mwder her llulband bedlflr•. ( t
llr .. 301'*1 I
12:17. QI LEOEC> OF THE
11.ACKHANO
In the 1890' 1. • rnurderoua
Slcllan noCJteman en.
larlQ89 • member of the
8llCf9t MCI 111 a QWllarllen-
1 aiy ,_ (PWI 4 of SI
11M 8 ()) C88 LATE MOW! • * ··n.e LMI e.cape"
( 19701 Stuart Whitman,
JOfW\ Collin. An Amerlean
spya~llO~a
roellet expert OU1 of WW II
Germany.
1:00 G TOMOMOW
Ouael: Tlleodofe White,
autllor of "In 8-'ch Of
History."
fJ M-'VPICK "Aac:ordlng To HOyte ..
1:45• NEWS
Tla•nda11'•
Dog,1-.. Ma.,ln
MORNING
11:IO. * *'~ "lrl A lonety Ptace" ( lt50) Hul'nClfWey
Bogan, Gloria Ontlame. A.
~,...lnble
with. nelthbOr..., ....... ...._ an allbl ..._ tl9 le
aco.ed of -cs.. (2 lwL.
201'*1.)
N=TERNOON
12:00 D • • • "Slttlno "-'Y"' t 19411 Clfton w.ot>. Aoe>-
ert Young. An enooty,
m1delle·~ed "genius"
provee to be M ~
~.(t hr., 30"'1n.t a:oo a * •• "Loving" 11t1°' Geotoe Segal. Eva Mar1a
s.nt.A ~--ot>eer\led by ou-ta .. •
swingtng party as lie
ma11 .. love to e ~
batore ctosed-clrc:utt
~. (I llr., 30 mlrt.J
S:30 •••• "Ole. Ole -..,,
Derting" ( t96$1 Tallllah
Bankhead. Stelante
P--.. A demented-..
en imprtsOns the '°"'*'
tiancee of her deed eon.
planntng 10 ldll her. (l (Ir.,
30mln.1
Early Wilder Filmed
TV ~resents Plays 'Impossible' to Stage
By JAY SHARBUTI'
LOS ANGELES f AP> -The
dramas you see on public TV
1.1sually are made in New York.
here and London. But now. the
Midwest will be checking In with
a half-hour work from WRA-TV
in Madison, Wls.
lt 's "Wilder Wilder." consi!>t-
ing of four short plays by a
Madison lad who made good -
the late Thornton Wilder. author
of such classics as "Our Town"
and "By the Skin of Our Teeth."
IT WILL BE shown tonight at
10:30 p.m. and Monday al 9:30
p.m. on Channel 28 and Is a pilot
for a possible series of dramas
by Midwest playwrights. It will
be rPpeated al 3 p.m. on Tues-
day.
The program's wee plays
aren't too well-known. They're
"The FliRht into Ellv1>t." "Now The Servant's Name Wai-
Malcbus." "The Penny That
Beauty Spent" and "And the Sea
Shall Give Up Its Dead."
Performed by members or the
Milwaukee Repertory Theater,
the dramas come from a collec-
tion of Wilder's early writings,
"The Angel That Troubled The
Waters," published In 1928.
TOE PLAYLETS ALWAYS were thought imp()sslble to put
on , a
Rudi ldman, because not only
were they brief but also each "had a Hberal dose of out-
rageously demanding requin!-
ments."
These include, be noted, a
lavish personal jewelry store
owned by a French king in
"Penny," a talJdng donkey In
"Egypt" and lastf but nl>t· least,
the end or the wor d in "Sea."
·~ ........... IN THORNTON WILDER PLAYLET FOR PUBLIC TV
John Manafleld (Front), Jim Pickering
Then, he said, John Dillon.
artistic director of the
Milwaukee Rep, perused the
.. Angel" collection, picked four
of the boo~'s 16 plays, and sum-
hearsals.
Filming started last August
and ended in January. The total
cost. Goldman said, was $90,000
-a sum that wowd buy a 30-
second prime time commercial
on net work TV. •
Goldman, a former Air Force
C-130 transport pilot whose ac-
claimed aviation documentary,
"Affair in the Air." was on PBS
this summer. said the world·
ending "Sea" segment was bis
hardest task.
depict the grand flnaJe with an
explosion instead or a big bang,
much electronic wizardry, and
many consultations with the un-
iversity's chemistry depart-
ment.
Prior to all that, h~ laughed.
"I almost went nuts. I sat
around in bars asking people,
'How does one d estroy the
Earth?'"
. ,,
-llt. T~~i:t~:--8lr0ntnnel 5
of Wtsconsln, that TV mi1bt be
ablP"t1r1k ... wi•\..th~.-vlsuaJ de-'Phe Da • Ga " ' manda made lJ\ these ~·
TV plays of Wilder, be said. fZllg 1fl.e
RE SAID THE show began
takinS form with class exercises
ln reading Wilder's early plays.
The classes were run by Esther
Jackson, a Wilder expert and a
member of the university's
theater department.
•·Before we produced
anythlnl. they (studenta> tried
them out ln claues and
workshops, tried pla)'ina some
of ttmn " Goldman sald by
phone lrorn bls offtce at
WHA·TV.
"And they reallied the7, the
plays ln Wilder'• • An1el' collec-
tion1 were very ctnemaUcl could be aone on tel9Vlaton. So tb1nk
tt wu a dlacovery proceu
throuah •cad rnla."
. Returning Momlay
Last year the 'Newlywed Game" made a successful retClm to Los
Ansetes televtsion vla KTLA. This fall, another staple of the 1980s,
"Tbe DaUng Game,'' debuu weeknights at 11 on Channel 5 beginning
Monday.
Jim Lange, host of the ortctnat series, which aired from 1965 to
1973, rejoins "The Dating
Game .. show •• chlef
matchmaker.
On "The Dattn1 Game,"
sln1tes from 18 to '11 •et 1
chance ta select an ldoal date by
quesUonina three members of
the oppoaite 1ex hidden beblnd 1
partition. Winnlnt couples are
sent on "dream dates" ranlini
from intimate dtnners to
weekends at romantie resorts.
"The Datln1 Game" l\11 beg~n taptnt at Golden West
Videotape Dlvl alon ID
Hollywood.~ lnterested ln
beeomln• contestants 1bould
pbon• '1be Dattna Game" of·
flee C213> 48'7·13'15from lOa.m. to6 p.m.
-
' MOVIES I MUSIC I ENTERTAINMENT
!Lois -Lane' Keeps_Hnnging In There
,
81 IOB TllOJLU
HOLLYWOOD CAP> -CUedlan.bonl Marcot JCldd•r II ftaaJty 1tttlnc do..-n to earth after a wild,
wild •~lnthe movie world. · ·
• ••1 spent tbNti months ttytq ~ llanbat·
t1n1" •be eommtata. "It'• a 'very dllftcuh thlnt. maaln, one •hot a day. tl")inl to remember what
you dld the pHvlOUI day atrtvtni to ctve an actl.Qe
performance when you lf9 h•"'1na ln apac. by
wlret. Ooopt, we're not 1uppolid toll>' tbat we
UMd•lnil."
TBt: nLll WM .. &tJPEUU.N," and Marsot
Kidd r at.an 11 Lola LaM to am.::r.er Reeves'
Clark &Gt. The Alexander Saiki production,
which wtu reach th• nation's theaters lo December. turned Into mlni-eareera for both
performers.
4'1 wu ortstnalty told the flha would lfll ~ix
moatha," the bruneti. actrea aald. "J want to tell
)'OU, lt't a shock WMD they briq I CUe OD lbe set
and ll reads, 'Happy ,,rat Anniversary'!
"I worked 14 months on the picture. Poor
Cbrla WOl'ked evea lonaer. I thlnk be f1n1abed last week."
THE COST OF "SUPEBJIAN" BAS been re-
ported from $80 million to $60 mUUon, with
somewhere in between tbe most likely amount. Of COUHe, the budcet wu inflated by fees of $3
million to Marlon Brando and S2 million to Gene
........... Hackman, but production coats of the long
FLYINGHIOHASLOISLAHE schedule were the mlJor item. Kklder said at one
C.MdllinActr•••M•rgotKldder time abe and Reeves were rushing from one· to
-------------------another of six unlta which were filming simultaneously.
I Fiihn P Actually they were filming one and a hall uts Town ~~~~~s. Half the "Superman" sequel has been
"The second film concerns tbe love story of • Jn Bad J ·g1i q Superman and Lois; this time they will finally 'do i, 8 A l f it,· " aa.1d Kidder. "What remains to be rumed is
mostly with Chris and me. plus some speeial ef·
: fecta. We're told tt will take only two months. But I
doubt that, after my experience with the f'lrst
film." : HADLEY, Mass. <AP> -Tbe Hadley His· i torical Society wants to prevent Springfield's
1 public television station WGBY from broadcast.in~ MARGOT <NEE MARG,\RET) KIDDER WAS • a 28-minute film about the town, claiming it de· born 29 years ago in Yellow v -"e. Northwest T ... r. : picts Hadley in a bad light. n.uu' "' f The film was made as part or the community's ritories, went to school in Vancouver, was dis·
• American Bicentennial celebration and the covered in television by fellow Canadian Norman
: copyright on the film was handed over to the town Jewlson. He caal her with Beau Bridges in "Gaily,
: after the Bicentennial Commission disbanded. Gally." Her other credits: "Quaker Fortune"
t Historical society member Margaret Dwyer <Gene Wilder>; "Nichols" <James Gamer's TV
: said her panel objects 10 the mm because Jt in· series> ; "Sisters" <as Siamese twins); "The Great ! eludes footaie of traffic congestion and gaudy Waldo Pepper" <Robert Redford>' "The Rein· ial I carnation or Peter Proud." : commerc eve opment. Then she met a nd marrJed writer Tom . --~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~--~ McGuane C"Tbe Missouri Breaks">. They lived on
a Montana ranch, where daughter Margaret was
born. ! r.mr1t"
LAIWlll--Wit~· "Except ror one movie, I played the role of
ranch wife and mother," Margot said. "I dis·
covered I wasn't cut out for iL
"I was in the process of getting a divorce when
the role of Lois Lane came up. I had no precon·
ceived idea about it, because I had grown up in the
wilds of Canada and bad never read the comic books.
••1 n..EW 10 LONDON for the teat and three
days later f started work In the picture. It was
aood for me to be occupied durtn1 that upeet
period iq my ll!e.
·~we came to be a family. Chris ind I •er~
Uke brother and sister: we Coutht like brother and slater and hugged Uke brotherand sbter."
Bataated Ilg Ar.use
Singer Fights
To Help Kids
NASHVILLE. Tenn. <AP> -A successful
career in country music and more than a half
century separate Hank Snow from his days as an
abused child. but be says be sllll recalls the
anguish.
"I was the victim ot a bro1cen home at the age
of 8 and inherited a very cruel stepfather." Snow.
a 64-year·old nallve of Canada. said in an
interview in the Nashville Tennessean. "I never
had a child's Ille -my steprather caused me to go
out fighting my own way at age 12."
ON 111URSDAY, A STA.R..sTtJDDED concert
will be held at Nashville's Grand Ole Opry House
to raise funds for an organization Snow founded to
fight child abuse. Among those scheduled to attend
are Loretta Lynn. Conway Twitty, Boots
Randolph, Skeeter Davis and Ernest Tubb.
The veteran country crooner founded the'Hank
Snow Jntemational Foundation for Pn!vention of
Child Abuse and Neglect or ChHdren Inc. two
years ago following the mucb·publlclzed beating
death of 4-year-old Melisha Gibson of Cleveland.
SNOW
T e nn . Ronald and
Wanda Maddux. the
girl's stepfather and
mother. were later
convicted ln connection
with the case and
sentenced to prison.
The foundation's
aim. Snow said, is to
train workers who
would enter tiomes ot
abused children and
h elp parents try to
overcome t h eir
problems. His ultimate
goal, he said, is to build
the Hank Snow Rescue
Mission, which would
harbor abused children
until courts determined whether they should be
allowed to return to their parents or be sent to
foster homes.
Snow said he never reported his stepfather
because he was afraid it would break up the ramlly.
Jazz Film Shooti~g Slated
ALL D tl!D AHO Ill fll.MS lllEC£1VE
'IHE llAL OI NE MOTIOM l'ICTURi
CODE 0. MU' ACGULATIOH
n.e....__....,.._
Filming on the Charlie Parker
feature "Bird Lives!" will begin
in 1979, according to Bob
Krasnow, vice president talent
at Warner Bros. Records.
TUE MUSIC •ill incorporate Pa rker's original performances.
plus some newer interpreta·
tions.
A budget of $4.5 million bas --------~~~~~~~~~ been projected for the picture, -------------~-----...., which will star comic Richard
KRASNOW, VETERAN music
industry executive, took an op-
tion on Ute property. a biog-
raphy of the great Jazz im·
mortal by Ross Russell, who had
been a producer at Dial Records
in the '40s, when Parker re-
corded for that Jabel. Several labels are repackag-
ing the Parker works. be having
been a major influence on the
jazz scene Jn the '40s.
Pryor.
Warner Bros. will handle the mm. which is being coproduced
by Pryor, Krasnow, Stewart
Levine and Raymond Loraro.
Screenplay Is bein' written by .,_ _____ ....._. ___ __... ___ _..._,...__.._,. Richard Wesley (' Let's Do It
Again").
Levine, record producer who
came ln to transfer the original
mother discs to tape, now stays
on to coproduce the film. and
also will produce the double
album soundtrack for Warner
Bros. R~rds.
Known as "Bird," the
jazzman died in 1955 at age 34.
Throughout his life he bad been
plagued by drugs and other
personal problems.
J1rrr R11d and Pater Foada
lam faaad ••ltlllag mara Fan
tllan 1rac•ta'
' •
--------
,__
I :.INtV.flttlA&. ltTUDtDtl TOUR ~.aiMCA COftll'llll• OlfUa>W 1&al IOU118a>l'M
llil' 2 I •t ..,.. ......... ,eeliqf•
-m111:~1-1tf..ac." .............
, ..... ~
John
Travolta
011f;M
Newton ·John
OAtl Y PILOT' • J J
INQAl MICIMOHY....,., "'IOAY~TUftOAY4AJl#OAY OM. Y
EDWAAD8QHEMA .... , .................... ~OI
......., lit AcNIM. Coll!• .....
lDWAflDI UDO CllCMA .. .. • • .. • .. • . . .. . .ln4380
~ 8tVl• Udo,......,.. 9"ctl
lOWARDIUOOl.DACtC~ ......... -.-
llT-8t~,llTOf9
IMXl_.IUD
MAIX cm*'9 ~IJJ
YOUR DAILY PILOT
CAN BE RECYCLED!
Or1nge Coast College
Opermtes m. offrcJal
recycling center tor Costa M ....
556-5981
llJ• ~VPtlOT
'HfJt Lead, Cold Feet'
Disney'• Slapetiek \V estern Fun /or All
Time Out For Terror
Actress Kristy McNichol, who loves
rollercoasters. practices her scream, eyes
crossed, before riding Magic Mountain
Amusement Park's white-knuckler "The
Colossus" billed as the world's "highest
and longest coaster. Kristy visited the
Valencia park for a taping of CBS's new
fall program "People ...
-.OUL PlA Y-INt
VJSit
Barbra
and owr 200 otheT &at Stan
at World Famous
The 8Jggftt Gathering
of Stars in the World.
MATINEES SATURDAY & SUNDAY
"SGT. PEPPER'S LONELY
HEARTS CLUB BAND" (PG)
"SOUND OF MUSIC"
"THE CHEAP DETECTIVE" f PGJ
.. THE LAST REMAKE OF BEAU GESTE"
''HEAVEN CAN WAIT" (PG)
"Cl"\t ....... A U!! 'PG'~--=--------···•f"'WVL:' ,-~~ \ 1 .
.. FOUL PlA r (PG)
"FUN WITH DICK & JANE ..
"CORVETTE SUMMER ..
.. JOY RIDE~ {PG)
"STAR WARS"
"LOGAN'S RUN" (PO)
"HEAVEN CAN WAtl
"AMERICAN HOT WAX" (PO)
"SMOKEY & THE BANDIT" (PG)
"STUNTS"
AU. o.-1VS•IN50f'S" 6;JOPM.'9Nr\Y
Cflltd U .. llf ti ,,.. Ull .. U e l(lctd .. ""'91'JfOll"d
whleh bl been pulllnl kidt loto matlneet for
yun aad Ulls Ume around the boxottlc. nt.PODH
-wlthln Ollney'a Juvenlle market -should be 1ood.
The rum Wal made undu the tltle
"Bloodah)i," tbe famlly name of tbrn maln
cbara~ tn tbO ltof'Y, all played by Jlm Dale;
it'• also the name of the wlld and woolly 014 West
town wbero U.. main thrutt ol actJon takes place.
Tbo UlrM related Bloodab.Ya are Wild Billy
<the me&Mlt dude lb1I tide ol Billy the Kid). £11
thll mlld·mlUUMred Bibl•totlQ twin brother)
and Old Juper ttheir crusty rather>. Aided by a
fallhful manterVaDt <John Williama>. Old Juper
fakehla own dea~. then banp around Un tr.es. oo root topl, under bulldlnP> to "ateh tbe twins
compete in a wlnner-take-afl contest for their pa's
conalderablo tale. .
NEEDLE88 TO SAY. TRE contest doesn't ex·
actly shape up fairly. Most of the rouatmeck ma.
Jorlty in town aldea with Wild Billy, includina the
crooked mayor <Darren McGavin), wbo plans to
DEA& &EADE&S: lalonutlla • water eon-•••fUOil II•--Dew fad.I tU& wUI be made avallallle ao~n.,........,. ... cWMa wua..n-. a ..W ~-wide ree.• .. •lle• labellq~ HHUrid b)' tM ~ ol Home,~ MiHlaetaren. . .
Material for ue lD belplac bayen mike model
comp•"-' may be placed GD tap. tddten or
prbded .-&erlala provJdH wMr9 appllqeee are
told.
ID addltloe to bnad, model ucl type. tile re· commellded la.bell will alve dlmeulou ol ap-
pllaaees, to&al water eoaaamptloa ..,ormadoa.
eleeirlcaJ req.tremeau, lalonnatloll Oii matertall
or fla1lbel med la epeaUal parg taeb u tabs,
aad II tb•i,;=•ace bH re"tved &be tJD· derwrtten' &ones tafety approval. cet both brothers ________________ ,
bumped off ISO he can col-( MOVIE ] Waaber label• alto •W ove water eoaamp-1 e ct the family in· tloa for maxlmam aad mbWnam nu; water tem-
heritance. _ REVIEW _ pera&ure choices; a•mber, type ud ...-. of The iood brother bad waab and •pin eyeJes1 HdIf&be11111& pnrwklel de·
the help ol two Juvenile ter1eat, bleada dd fabrte IOftner dltf ewra. wards <Michael Sharrett and Debbie Lytton>. a pretty school marm <Karen Valentine) plus the Dllbw..MT laMb wW ..._ u.e tMal noraal
Disney scripters <Joe McEveety, Arthur Alsbera cycle Umet ud I.ale& wa&er preuare require·
and Don Nellon>. who aren't about to let evil wln meat.I. Labell on pertable medell wW lDdkate lf
at the finish line. &bey an provldelf w1tb a tbree-proq poaadla1
The picture was obviously desi1ned as a tour pla1 od If tbe1 eaa be eoaverted &o IMdlt·la opera·
de force caper for the talented Dale to cash ln on UoQ.
the actor's anticipated success ln Disney's "Pete'• The labellai pJdellaes bave been~ by
Dragon." which, unfortunately, never qulte AUAM member tosnpalllea wbkb man.tac&ues lJ
materialized. He's fine in his three-sided asatgn. braad1 of waaben ucl H dllbwuben.
ment.
BUT ntE BEST SELUNG point now for ex-
hibitors will be the presence or third-billed Don
Knotts as the town's dim-witted and totally lneffec·
tual deputy sheriff. Knotts is always a joy to
watch, particularly in supporting roles. and he
adds considerable spunk to "Hot Lead," especially
in a running gag with Jack Elam.
Elam, as a gunslinger named Rattlesnake, is a
long·time adversary or Knotts, and tbe two are
forever trying to complete a man-to-man shoot-out
<always to the tune of "High Noon"> but never get
to finish.
Everytbing's pla~ed for fun, divertingly
directed by Robert Butler and given a full-shot by
the cast, which includes fine work by McGavin,
Elam, Williams and the two kids.
VALENTINE DESERVES A SPECIAL nod.
She doesn't have much to do -it's one of those
very stock Country Miss roles -but she makes all
her minutes count. and never sluf/s a scene, or
tries to take one which isn't hers. That's a pro for
you.
AU the technical contributions ar.e crisp and
functional. with special credit <and some Band-
Aids) due the stunt players, coordinated by Buddy
Joe Hooker. Last, but not least, songwriters Al
Kasha and Joel Hinlcbbom also deserve a hand.
They bad to come up with a title song for the open·
ing credits, and it couldn't have been easy to write
a melody about hot lead and cold feet.
IWll'S "HEAVEN SO.C~WA CAN WAIT" (PG)
J411tmw !;'::aJ 12:45-2:3M:3M:25 •vn -- -8:20-10:15
MAU'S .CllQAUID Mlf S....,.., ..... .....
. ~
Pa•C .. w P...we. lle•el1'ftl
DEAR PAT: I ordered several pain Of silk
stocking pantyhose from StarCrest of California
ENTERTAINMENT I AT YOUR SERVICE
'"Cot o probl~~ ThcTI wnle to Pot Dtmn. Pat Will
cut rtd tape. getting the ~.-and octWJi JIOU "fed
10 sol~ bwqtdtM'• '" 901N'nt'"~' and ~ a Motl
JIOUr qi.ct"'°"' ro Pat Dunn, Al Your Sntnct. ~
Cocut DoUy Pilot. P 0 Boz ISliO. Costa Mtta. CA m2e. As man11 letters as pos11bk will ~ a~.
but pltoMd mqumn or Lectm noi ancl1'd:iriu tlw
rtolkr'a /Wl name. addreu and buas>wu houri' pltoM
numhrc:OMOt ~corutdfred T#Uf colu"'"CIPPfO''dcai· l11~~SalurdaJI• ..
lut April. but never recelved my order. I aent two
letters ol lnqulry and abo phoned. l was told that 1
would ~ contacted,. but I haven't heard frorn anyone. I've never had a problem with tbia com-
paQ)' before.
E.C .• LalUJla Beach
AYS broupc WI maUer to~ attadla ol
Star.cn.t'loperaUou maaapr, ucl Y• repen a
refud c:beek ••• luaed promptly.
P .. I Se.re. Ill' Pe1NP9 lfl-.
DEAR PAT: We recenUy bought a home with
a awimmin& pool. Do you have any suuestloas ro.-
savlng energy 1n the pool operation?
J .E .• Costa Mesa
As ,oa are probably rlDd1q CMll. • swtmmlai
pool .. a lq eaeray ater. For example. a pool wKft
• OM ud W ·balf taonepower pvap operated lZ
laovs a daJ will 9le appronmatel.Y tAtl tllowtU· botln ol eledrlelty every two monl.bs -alMMI& Sit
wortll. OpenUag the ruter pa.mp la &be monla&
aad ev-.. llelPI cat power ua1e 4arilli pelk
eleetrleal me boml. Spllt·sldft pump opentloa
eaa be a•m•tleally coatrolled wttla Uipper
••lklles auadw:id to die pamp time clock. Tripper
lutalla&lo9 II free of elaarp. Comae& Yo•r local
Edlton oll'lee or write t.o Comenatloa Corner.
P .o. Box 811, Boeemead, Calif. ttno.
Otber nero aaven lllelade: reducing ruter-llli Ume to foar or ftve ltoan ptt day dariag the
1wlmmtq .euun and two or three boun dariag
the olf-9eUOD; eoveriDg die PoOI wbea it lsa't be-
ing ased &o help redllce ftlterln1 &bne, eut evapon·
&Ion and maintain pool temperature; ••d main· talDJnl yoar pool properly to belp the IMllllP
operate efftdenUy and economleally.
tUIT .,.,_. e MlLY na8
MOOPlatNt -ODI 10 Ml. T JOIC'OI _.... MolotaW
,.,.. mUllMI MCJQ
lllVINOI °' .... "*PANTMatNt .............
tocl! NUDIOlll • -..... AVMAHCMICNt -M10M UlllN'tNt
--.. ~~1 ··==~=::-
-_..CMAia--...MAWM r
'"fOUL PLAY ..
wa.n-••~~· "'',_. __
···~·--,_,_ -..-.-Tn "14UV-.
CAM W AJT"' INt
WDA'n--6-7 .. ----.1 SAT/SUWMOM-h lWil .... l~?tl-1)
.......... , •• ,•\&W t" .,.._ ........ ..,._
IMPORTANT NOTICE! cttllDROI UNDER 12 fWU!
l ..... ._.A.t .,,, ..... c..... .. 1···--· ....
dllil .~~1
11•~:1
-IOIOn'S ....... ¥M.INnNI
HOf UAD A COlD fll'f ... ~ ,,..., OUlMl'S TIAVILlfOI
aun ~ • """',... HOOl'laC"I
""' OOl 10 acu Y '°''"'
.. ~=, ..... ~~
,.,.atm .... _ .... ._ llV. Of ... ,..PM«Mll ....
m 1Ul.-JI .,._.TIOMM VllVITIMt
INSIDE: I •Slim Gourmet •Club C:.IHClllr
•Special Dim .
If Food
Sherry can be the inexpensive ingredient in Labor Day _entertaining. j
• BY 10• HOGE marinated mushroom~. plclded beets sherry or the beavy·J>odled cream tbat i .,,.., ,,.., •"'*' and onions. Tb1a woUld go well witb the some people PC>W over lee to olfaet U.. l
Many ol us will end the Jut bl& lltbteat of sherries. tbe tanay sweetness. ' ~
weekend ot the summer seucn with an manunilJa which i,S best served chilled. To eive your tapu aDd •al• a ti.ft. t
outdoor bash, combi.Dlnc swlaunlD1. Some pre/er it over a few cubes o1 ice. try this recipe: f tennla or t0me such healthful pursuit eapedally oo • bot day. PESTO VINA.IG&EnE SAUCE
w1tb aome muncblnc and a little imbib-Next you could serve gazpacho. that 1 cup well·wasbed. dried basal
ins. refreshint cold Spanish soup made le av~~ cu olive 0.1 One suuestioo that doesn't have to be from fl1!Sb tomatoes. green peppers, 74 P 1 l
too expensive 11 a aberry buffet, exploit· garlic, olive oll. lemon juice and a ~ cup freshly 1r1ted Parmesan • •
lnl the veraaUllty of that wine to wub sprinkllD8 of spices. With this you can cheese
down an assortment of warm weather serve the next sherry in the spectrum, 1 clove garUc. minced
delicacies from tapaa. as the Spanish the pale. fragrant lino which also ts pref· 1 V.. cups simple oll and vlneg.,. l erablecbilled. dressing ~ c1U •l>l>ftilen, to chilled soup, salad Press basil leaves into cup to
and cOld cuu and a few sweets or Now tum to the main course -a measure. Place in blender. adding oU
cheese to round out the feaat. chicken or abeWisb salad and an array and garlic. Puree. addin1 c:bees.
True Spanish sherry comes in five of cold cut.a such aa sliced ham, spicy eradually. to a coarse arain. A table.
flavor levels from the crisp, dry salami. prosciutto·wrapped melon spoon or two more oil may be required:
mamanilla to the heavy-bodied cream. chunks and perhaps some smoked Blend6to8tablespoonsoftblsmixtureln.
Given this taste and body ranae sherry. salmon. With this you drink amon· tolbeoil-vi.oegardressingaadstirweU.lt
although a fortified wine. can be con· tillado. the aolden sherry that can be you want to keep. place lhe sauce in a
sumed at any stage_of the meal. taken eitber chilled or at room tem· plastic container. cap and store in
Let's say we lead off the spread with perature. refrigerator or freezer. 1l ls excellent
a tray of salted nuts. green stuffed Top offtbe buffet with some pastry or with potatosaJad. cold salmon and white
Spanish olives and assorted tapu such bland cheese. This can be accompanied fish like turbot or sole. Jt'a also eood on as cold mussels. artichoke hearts. by either the medium-rich oloroao shellfish,withlemonwedges.
Big Burgers
Ground steak makes these a meal in themselves.
Double-decker hamburgers.
CornSouffte
Food fads may come and go, but one item
that remains a constant for Americans -and
an ideal food for outdoor eating -is the bum-
ble hamburger. Fortunately, tbe hamburger
can still pack a surprise for its eaters when the
middle contains a taste treat, aa these Double.
Decker Hamburgers do.
Equally appealing is the freshness of these
burgers, made with round steak, chopped on the
spot with the cutting/chopping component of a
food preparation machine. These burgers are
hearty fare -each boaaliJ\g lfJ pound of beef.
So simply add a salad and you've got a com·
plete meal quickly and effortlessly.
Serve it with ham for Labor Day.
The souffle has been called the
ultimate test of the cook's skill.
Few culinary achievements can
surpass th~ higb·rise or the stately
soum e, baked to perfection.
Various ingredients have been
added from time to time to aug-
ment the souffle's prestige; one or
the tastier, to date, is the addition
or cr eam style corn a nd Corn
Bread Stuffin •.
Breaded Com Souffle is a novel
and exciting side-dish which is at
its best when sharing the same
menu with glazed baked ham -a
com bi nation perfect for a Labor
Day gathering.
BREADED CORN SOUFFLE
1 bag CS.Ounce> Corn Bread
Stuffin'
I can Cl pound, 1-ounce)
cream style com
1/4 cup finely chopped onion
lf4 cup finely chopped parsley
4 egg:yolb
3 cups milk
14 cup melted butter or
margarine
4 egg whites, sUffly beaten
Combine dressing, corn, onion,
parsley, egg yolks, milk and but-
ter. Beat well. Fold in egg whites.
Pour mixture into a heavily but-
tered 2V.. quart casserole. Bake in
a preheated moderate oven <350
degrees) for 1 hour or until puffed
and brown. Serve with a glazed
baked ham, cut into thick slices.
Makes 6 to 8 servinn.
_,
Skewered Steak and Vegetables is much
more special than ordinary cookout fare. yet no
more difficult to prepare than boU or bur1ers.
Threacr CUbeS-'1>htrtotn or-chuck-ateatt-ora--· -
separate skewers from the vegetables. Meat
takes longer to do on the grllJ than the ---vegetabl-....~ au be!$~ ~en just heaUtd
through and sun tender crisp: The special trICk
to this recipe is the succulent butina sauce
which you quic kly stir together with
Worcestershire sauce for added zip.
Quick and Easy Potato Salad is a sreat ac·
companiment ror the skewered steak and
vegetables. An envelope or Idaho mashed potato
granules combines with celery ud onion for a
modem twist on this old favorite. Bits of cheese
add a new taste treat.
Hot rolls, fresh peach shortcake, lemonade
or Iced tea complete your patio perfect menu
for Labor Day.
S&BWE&ED STEAK AND VEGETABLF.S
V. ~Worcestershire Sauce v. cup catchup
\(;cup vinegar
2 tablespoons brown 1ugar
2 pounds sirloin or chuck steak
Green ;eppen and cherry tomatoes
Stlr toaether Worceatenbire sauce,
catchup, vtneear, and brown 1uiar. CUt 1teat
into cubes: arran,e on 11cewen aDd bnaall wttb
sauce. Grill over hot coals, turnlni frequently
and brushinl .tth aauce until done. Alternate
peppers and tomatoes on akewel"I, bruab with
(SeeSKEWE•. PaaeCI).
DOUBLE·DECKEll BAMBURGEllS
2 pounds round steak
~ teaspoon salt
Mi teaspoon black pepper
1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce
2 ounces sharp Cheddar cheese, shredded
1 Jar <2'1'l ounces I sliced mushrooms
4 hamburger buns
Chop the fresh round steak by placing 1-inch
chunks in processor. Combine meat, salt, pep·
per and Worcestershire sauce. Shape into 8 thin
patties. Divide cheese and mushrooms evenly
on 4 or the patties. Top with remaining patties;
seal edges to enclose filling. Grill patties about
5 inches from medium-hot coals for 5 to 8
minutes on each side. Serve in buns. Serves 4.
Breaded Com Souffle.
Best Buys
With Labor Day approaching, coosumers ·
will be planning their last summer holiday
feast. Most picnic and barbecue favorites will
be available, however, consumers will note a
normal seasonal decline on many items.
VEGETABLES
Most or the leafy vegetables continue to be
reasonable in price. Iceberg lettuce prices are
up some.
Caullf1ower and broccoli are both up in
price due to heavy demand. Variable quality ls
reported. Supplies are rwminl short for both
zucchini and cucumbers. causing prices to
climb a bit. Quality continues to be good.
Sweet corn. a holiday favorite, will be
available for the weekend. Prices, while not
dropping, will at least remain the same. Celery
supplies are increasing and prices are edging
downward as a result.
Bell peppers are in good supply and of ex·
cellent quality with a good dark green color.
Prices are holding steady.
FRUIT
Tomatoes are plentiful again this week
making them a key buy. Quality is good.
...
I
.... ""* .. 1111
AWttel Med a~lal dlet conalderatlan to
pnveDt fatlcuo ana to mainlalft optimum
eDfl'l1 aewls duriAC oom,.uuve ~ la a
ttol acldteM al a nutriUon educaUGD werbMp
sponaond by the Amencu Home &cWCllln
AuodaUon tn New Ortean • Dr. RoMrt Serf_., ~late prof INOI" ot play teal Mucatlon al lbe
Unlver<y or II uuot•. 1tat.4 tbal cood
balanC..S ldrldoa waa ti Wnol& l-.ortaace to
athlet• aDd tbat'debydraUOe mUlt be eaNlb.Uy
av:. He cauUoaecl U..t aUaletel wllo met.be m otstaru**a Ud ~. toC9t rtd ot Hteel body ftlPt a ...,.,, AN lDvh!q
dalllen>UI reartklm. Tbe .ecret ot NPIK._ bod1 nWda ts to
drlnk c:ool wa&.er, &t aa.oibl tuter In the pt than warm wat • AblOrptJon of fhdd la rm.
peded by aalt and cubob.Jclrate • so ofaln watel'
ii tbt drink lo ward off deb,rdratlon.
When the bumu body aw ts, It lOHt
sodlum chlorid • but not a much u we mlfbt
think. It's 1tMralb Wtn~ to lake Hit
tablets -a few 11>ons abates ol the salt shaker
into the athlete's food shoWd be enouab lt'a Im·
portant to eail foodl that are rtcb in potualum, if the sport produces a ll'Ul amount or sweat·
Ina. Somo blah potassJum foods are bananas.
ftttb or drieU apricot&, dalel. ralslns. can·
taloupe. watermelon, oruae. craoefruit. prune
juice. tomato, 8ru sela sprouta, beer. and
turkey.
When plannini a menu for an athJet.e, serve
1.s grams of protein ror each ktlo&ram of body
wei1ht per day. Thal meam that an athlete
wei&hinl 160 pounds would multil>b 70 kilo·
grams by u e:rams. and plan to eat 105 grams
or protein per day. A 230 pound football pla1er
would require lSO grams a day. Some coaches
believe thal extra muscular athletes should
figure protein at 2 lf'ams per ldloeram or body
welgbt.
During training, damaged muscle tissue
and bruising may temporarily require extra
protein for body repair, but lt's important to
know that fuel for muscular work comes from
carbohydrates and fat. and that too mucb pro-
tein might decrease physical efficiency ror
;. athletes.
lnlalSe exercise requires a high level of
carb<>Qydrates, which explains the popularity or
0 carbohydrate loading" practiced by so~e
.athletes, especially in endurance sports hke
aralhon running. Eating large quantities of
spaghetti and pastry before hard running helps
to prolong depleUon of carbohydrates -the
..-unner may reel sluggish al the beginning of a
Jnaratboo run, but feel better and have more
~ finishing energy as they deplete the stored
._.:. carbohydrates.
. ,.,ub Calendar nm& each Wednftday in the Dmly
."i Pilot and contaim noticea of wmrmi'a and seroiu club
"; -meetmgs and events for the /ollowi1lg week -Thurs·
day through Wednesday . Send nohces to Club Calen-
,"i dar. Daily Pilot, PO Bo:r lSflJ, Costa Mesa, C.4 92626
• "'· Be sure to include your name and phone number
Notices must be in our hand$ two weeb in advance
• To request a picture. wnu or caU the Features ?-Department, 642-4321. Pictures are fimited to /und-t:. rauers open to the public.
~
llOSTB OI UCJ(Y fAIMS
FRYING CHICKEN
UCIY PAIMS HIMS
FRESH TURKEYS
LOMDOM IROll THtcl
10
TO
IJLIS.
TOP ROUND STEAK
IAIMSMOUD
BONELESS HAM
IAI MIUU
SMOKED BACON
HOllM ..
TURBOT FILLETS ......
BllJ(
&1-.... ~-
PAPIR
PLATES
.11'
lff CT • ....
..,.,~-
14 OI.
I011\I CATSUP
RnOS
DORITOS
ZEE
PAPB
TOWB.S
ALL
RAYOIS .....
JU...O IOU.
59~
Moderate exercl .. n require extra Cat ln the
dltt. r.U. than e:ictra carboll)'dratea. Tb• trou·
b.. with carbohydrate loadl.q la that It can
cause water retendon, 1tutrition1I ln8dequacy,
faUaue durtna t.ho &tpletloo pb,aae, and a poul-
ble broakdowu of muacle fibers. Somt&lmea it
can cat.me ECG abnorma1lU•, ao it sb&Uld only
be trled a few tlm a year. l( at all. A better
plan la to have a well balanced diet wltb only u
many calories aa will be burned off by the day's
acUvltlea. lt'• a wlle idea to reduce the number
of calort11 otf.1ea.1on, lf the athlete only
parUclpate1 ln 1 aeuooat sport. Otherwise
there wUI be an unwanted wei&bl gain.
A well·balanced 31000 calorie daily menu for
athletes would lncluae 4 cupe milk, 1 ounces
meal, ~ cup dark areen or yellow vegetable, lh
cup tltrus fruit, 1 ~ cups other vegetables and
rrulta. and the remaining calories in bread,
cereal, or potatoes.
Dr. Servass emphasized, "Caloric balance
is an important concept ror athletes both off
season and posl·competitioo. Close attention
should be paid to dietary intake."
U you have a special diet problem, write to
June Roth, c/o the Daily Pilot. Enclose a
stamped, self.addressed envelope ror a personal reply.
Here are two high carbohydrate/high
potaaaium fruit desserts that would be helpful to
an athlete's diet:
HOT DRIED FRUIT COMPOl'E
(HJgb Potassium)
1 'r:I pounds dried apricots, dates, and
raisins
Cold water
1A cup honey
2 tablespoons grated lemon rind
1 teaspoon cinnamon
v~ teaspoon nutmeg
1 tablespoon cornstarch
Cover dried fruits with cold water and let
stand at room temperature for several hours.
Drain off water into a measuring cup; pour 1
cup or this water into a saucepan. Add honey,
lemon rind, cinnamon, and nutmeg. Bring to a
boil and cook for 10 minutes. Mix cornstarch
with a Utt.le water until a smooth thin paste
forms; stir into sauce. Add drained fruits. Cook
and stir for several minutes, until fruit ls bot
and sauce bas thickened. Serve bot or cold.
Makes 8 servings .
MELON SALAD BOWL
'h cantaloupe melon
t banana
'-'a cup pitted dates
4 large pitted prunes
1~ cup pineapple juice
Remove seeds or melon and scoop out fruit
into balls; place in a small bowl. Add sliced
banana, dates, and prunes. Toss with pineapple
juice. Fill the ball melon with this mixture and
serve. Makes 1 serving.
~'---
ttot~:.::'.:' IOto7
Thurs., Aug . 30 thru Wed. s.pt. 7
Mc..w+tcf telW•~'W ...... ~ ........ We'-111ellflltf•U.. .......
._,. ...... S.T• ..... AM WW'Ml'IM9•'"n.
PLUMS
39!
SWEET
NECTARINES
39~
FRESH
STRING
BEANS
6 PAC«
IZ OLCAHS + Ta
SPllMeftR.D
PEANUT
BUTTER
HUNTS
WHOLE
TOMATOES
SPllMMB.D IMT.
I I.I.
JAi
MAYONNAISE ''· Jil
11•
. \
FOOD
Debi ~obnSon. ffunUnaton Beach. reports lllat her mOtlter'. Kay Herald of Clnctnnatl.
oblo, wcie the -.ooo •rand prbe ln UM lt78
"You Have A Way With Campbell's" contest/.
'4 tenapoon celery sef!d
~ teaspoon marjoram leaves, crushed Dash Worceatenblre
Here la the prile·wlnnlna recipe:
SPINACH SALA_D Wl11I
C8 &\MY IH18HROOM DaESSING
al•d on.ma:
SaJad: .
l packa1e c 10 ouncets > tresh spanach,
cleaned and torn in btte·siu pieces
4 bard·cooked eggs. sliced
1 can < 10~ ounces> coodenled cr~alD of muabroom soup
, 1 medium onion. sliced
l2 sUcea bacon. cooked and crumbled
14 cup water v. cup tarracoo vinegar
l '-"' tablespoons sugar
1 teaspoon mustard
Cooler
Than
Cokes
Cucumber Cooler is a
delicious way to start a
paUo supper.
CUCUMBER COOLER
2 cups diced peeled
cucumbers ·
Y.t cup r inely
chopped green onions
1 tablespoon
chopped parsley
1A. teaspoon dried
dill weed
~ teaspoon ground
mace
IAI teaspoon sugar
3 tablespoons butler
or maraartne
1 can nM-4 ounces>
condensed chicken broth
2 tabl~ flour
'h cup light cream
Jn saucepan. combine salad drealn1 tncre·
dlents. Heat; stir occasionally. Chill. In larse
bowl arran1e alternate layers of salad inare·
dlentS. Serve wttb salad dn!saina. Season with salt and pepper. Makes 6 servinp.
Friski~
Dry
Dinners
·for Dogs
has rolled
back prices*
to 1975!
ALL FLAVORS
ALL SIZES
*At ~rticipating
dealers.
In saucepan, cook
cucumber and onion
with parsley, dill. mace
and sugar in butter until
t e nder. Meanwhile.
gradually stir broth into
flour until smooth; add
to cucumber mixture.
Bring to boil; reduce
heat . Simmer lS
mlnutea ; stir OC·
c asionally. Pour into
blender; blend until
smooth. Cool; stir in
cream. Chill 6 hours or
more. Thin to desired
consistency with addi· tional cream. Garnish
with cucumber slices.
Makes about 3~ cups, 4
servings. L-------------------------~~
' "--Clll&W Big ~d Gum-
the clean tallte makes
waur mouth 1ea1111 eat.
r·---------------------------------1 I Buy a pack of Big Red 20¢ I I Get a second pack free VALUE :
II Mr • ...-u.ri wm. Wrlgley Jr. Company will redMm lhl• coupon tor 20C plua 5' tor flandllng provld.i II
that you and the contumer have complled wtth the termt of this couoon offer lnvolcn proving your I curtenl purch ... of tufflcllni atoeka to cover coupon1 pr111111ed mutt be 1h0wn upon request. Failure I I to dO eo lftlY 11 our option VOld 111 ooupone presented for tedeniptlon Coupons will 1101 be lloN>red
Ind wlll 1t our Ol)llon be voldabll If PNl•nted through out1ld1 agenci ... b~•ra or others wtlo ere not I I ratall dl1trlbu1ora ot ow products uni•• apec1t10111y 1uth0rlzed by u1 10 I I preeent coupont tor redempllon. This coupon 11 not u1lgn1ble end la void I
where prohibited, 1ued, Of r•tt1ated. Contu!MR mutt P•r •"Y "'" &IJt, I '•llure to enforce 1"-11 terms tn<Mlld !IOI be dHIMd 1 waiver o1 any of the
c:ondlllona. C..11val11e1/~. Otflf lllPlt• Merell a1 . 1979. CouC)Onl thOUld I
be malled to: Wm Wrigley Jr. Co~ny. P.O. Bo11 1687, Cl.INTON. tOWA I I 62734. U.t other than the terme 1t1tld herein oontlllut" lrauct. I I ~ L••••••••••••••-•••••••••••••••••••~
FOOD
3 Flavors
In a Salad
Shrimp.-p, ar and A voe ado Salad coqtJJ
thrM deiltloua aummer favori Ill a eoo1; ua1·
lY pr pared ono-d11b me1l. Crisp and colorfu.J.
t.bls aal.cl ot mUu\ led abrlmp •UJTOUOded by
aweet ...t ~uJcy crete nu ol ,,...,. Callfomfa
Bartlett pears and CGOl, veen avocado ls ao
relr hlnc. you'll be tempted Co terve it often.
No need lo turn on the oven tor dhmer. Jwit
suve Shrimp. ~ar ,,.nd Avocado Salad wtlh
MNtrdC>Qcb or French bread and chilled white
.ine. You'll llav• an atlraeUve aod aaUsfytn1 warm· tMr meal.
Ll'"bt and refre hlna. ummer Bartletu
have a naturally •Wffl navor, yet a medium.
ata~ ~ar tonlaim only •bom 100 c1Jor1es. and
they're virtually fat frtt Bartl~ts al.lo CC>IMln
lmportam nutrim&a. plus are blah in ftbtt and
natural tn&it 5U1an, so ~y·re a lood cbo!ce for
· people who are watcbln1 t.betr wellbt or who
want to ht-ca....rul about their diet.
SHllJMP, PEA& -'ND AVOCADO SALAD
~ .. cup while v1ne1ar
\.,. cup uU-purpose 011 1-., tablesl)OOOS Worcestersture
l tea.spoon susar
~teaspoon saJt
!.;. teaspooo lemon pepper
._ teaspoon bull. crumbled
\"I te•poon oregano. crumbled
"• teaspoon pepper
lf._. pound fresh shrimp meat <shelled>
1 fresh California Bartlett pear
1 California avocado Lemon juice
1 large head iceberg lettuce, well crisped
In saucepan, combine vinegar, oil,
Worcestershire, sugar, salt and other season-
ings. Bring to boll; add shrimp and remove
from heat. Cover and refrigerate for at least 4 hours.
Halve, core and slice pear; slice avocado
crosswise into crescents. Coat both with lemon
juice to prevent browning. Finely shred crisp
leaves of lettuce and put into center of salad
plat.es lined with large outer leaves. Arrange
shrimp, pears and avocado over the lettuce.
Reheat remaining marinade and serve with
salads. Makes 4 servings
••• Skewer
(From Page CU
sauce. and grtU a few mlnutes, unW bot. 6 serv·
in gs
QUICK AND EASY POTATO SALAD
t envelope <S servings> mashed pol.ato
granules
v.a cup mayonnaise
l cup chopped celery
2 or 3 slices processed Amerl(lan cheese,
diced
2 tablespoons minced onloo
Lettuce
Prepare mashed potatoes following di.rec·
lions oo package, except ~uce water to 1 cup;
cool Stir in mayonnaise, celery, cheese. and
onion. Chill. Serve on lettuce. 6 servings.
SAUCY KABOB SVRPIUSE
1 can <about 8 ounces> pineapple chunks in heavy syrup
l can no~ ounces> mushroom gravy
1 tablespoon soy sauce ·
l teaspoon CWTY powder
1 medium clove garlic, minced
Generous dash ground ginger
1 pound lamb cubes for kabobs 01h inch)
1h pound cooked ham, cut in 1-incb cubes
1 small apple, cut in 8 wedges
Drain pineapple, reserving syrup. To make
marinade, in shallow baking dish, combine re-
served pineapple syrup, gravy, soy, curry,
garlic and ginger. Add l amb and ham;
marinate 4 hours or overnight. On 4 skewers,
arrange alternately lamb and ham. On 2
separate skewers, arrange alternately pineap-
ple chunks and apple slices. Place meal kabobs
on broiler pan. Broil 4 inches from beat 10
minutes, turning and brushing with marinade.
Add fruit kabobs. Cook 5 minutes more or until
lamb is desired doneness, turning and brushing
with marinade. Heat remaining marinade;
serve with kabobs. Makes 4 servings.
Ttina
Salad
Plus
MUSHROOM TUNA
SALAD
VJ pound fresh
mushrooms or 1 can C6
to 8 oz .> sliced
mushrooms
'h cup thinly s liced celery lf.t cup coarsely
chopped walnuts
2 tablespoons
chopped onion
2 tablespoons i>i ·
mlento
1 can (7 en.> tuna,
drained and flaked v. cup salad oil
3 tablespoons lemon
juice
112 teaspoon sugar
VJ teaspoon salt
~ teaspoon ground
black pepper
Rinse, pat dry and
slice fresh mushrooms
cmakes about 2i,..; cups> ,
or d r ain canned
mushrooms. In a large
bowl combi n e
mushrooms. celery,
walnuts, onion and pi-
miento. Add tuna; toss
with a forlc. In a small
bowl combine oil, lemon
juice, sugar, salt and
black pepper; mix well.
Pour over salad; toss
gently. Serve on lettuce
leaves, if desired.
Friski~
Dry
nners -
for Dogs
has rolled
back prices*
to1975!
ALL FLAVORS
ALLSIZES
-At rticipating .:81ers.
z Save
I when you buy
llilU
~g::, mlllDClllAWI
• .. r• • , ..
.
Wheat Germ Is
Inexpensive Fitter
Hall the f\m ol maillot t&l,P milk T 0 F R 1t Z '!
your own pula ls the Baute onion, 1arllc RAV JOLI : Seal un·
•ense of 1ccompU1h· and thyme n buUer 3 cooked nlleid ravioli In meat. 1be other ~Y· mlnutea over tnedlum mol1tur proof wrap· ment, of toUne, la tbe htlt aumna Otta tonal· pins. f'rtoae u.ntll ready
superior freah flavor \)', Remove trom beat lo uae. DJ'OO ravioli lnto
u n d text u r • o t and 1Ur la wh at ,erm bolllns 11lted water. homemade paata.' .,1nac1', cbeeae •nd Return to boll and boil Tender ravloU enrlc.becl ..;m;;.;.;;.U ..;.· ______ ....;l:.;tn;.;.....;.Uy=--S to ___ 7_m_ln_u_t _. ___
wllb wheM C"1'.ft 11 the ulUmate lD t\lOd eaU
iand nutrlUOft. CatttullY worked out In the
Kretacbmer consumer
servlce kitchen thl1
streamlined new rttlpe
takes • UWe Um• but la.
run to do. lD fact, It Is
eaaleat to prepa,,. In
~l•&ea If you wlab.
make the pasta doucb
one day. Fill and ~
the next, or 1111 and
rreeae uncooked for
another day.·
WllEATGEaM
llAVIOLI
1 to 1 '4 cups flour
~ cup vacuum
packed wheat germ. re· gu lar
'~ teaspoon salt 2 eggs, s lightly
beaten
1 tablespoon milk
Wheat Germ Filllng
4 quarts boilln1 salt· ed water
1 <15·ounce) jar
spaghetti or marinara
sauce
Grated parmesan
cheese
Combine 1 cup flour.
wheat 1erm and salt.
Mix in eggs and milk un·
UI dough forms a ball.
Work ln extra flour if
sticky. Turn out onto
board. Knead 3 to S
minutes until smooth
and elastic. F1our hands
and board only if
necessary. Enclose
doufh in plastic wrap
Chi I v, hour. Dough
may be refrigerated
overnllht.
Prepare Wheat Germ
Filling. Divide past a
dough in hall. Cover one
half with plastic wrap
Roll out other half on
lightly noured surface to
15·inch square. Loosen
dough and stretch gently
as you roll. Cut into 3
tS.lnch) strips. Cover 2
strips with plastic wrap.
Lengthen one strip to lS
inches with rolling pin
Place 8 rounded teas-
poonfuls Wh eat Germ
Filling along center or
s trip leaving even
spaces between mounds
of rilling. Fold dough
over to enclose. Press
d ough tightly a r ound
filling. working from
r namt --.uai ,
IM.IAlml • eeaun m&n ..........
t¥t•• .... f• 01 ........ ._,QMIMJfl .. tt f GYU .. tlll1
.,, ........ ftrU .,. ''"* ..,.., ... ,
\..._ ............. "' ........... _,J
deli.
c
LB.
SM•LL
PORK
SPARERIBS
FROZEN & DEF,.OSTED
s 1 1 •L8 ....
RIB
ROAST
SMAU END S2.09 LB. •
LARGE END
Ravioli
ff/led wftti ·
wheat(JfJnn
Is nUtrltfous.
.....
BUUC:
WlllllRS
OR SUCED BOLOGNA
99cLa. ....
CHUCK
ROAST
BLADE-CUT
folded edge to force out AID CRYSTALS ~~~fli::h:~!:£:~~[ l iiMOllADE .... ..... ... ... ,.,,,, s_l 75 WESSON OIL ! ·~ 551! r cANTALOUPE -·'"; '<
t e r . Cut bet w e e n . DEL MONTE 16 APPLESAUCE 4"\tTllol( 9 •t-01 34 ~~ LAROE· swEE' • v1Ht-A1Pt ~· • .,, 11/ ~a0v~~fi~ ~o::~a~T:~ !TOMATO SAUCE ......... e-oz. C A·l STEAK SAUCE ! .. ·~L 98c '.: .. }.: I SC Le. · ... ~~~ .. 'ft19. plastic wrap. Re peat 6 · ~
with remaining dou gh 'HAMBURG.EA.HOTOOG.tNOIA.ORSWEET 43 MAZOlA OIL '5 S2.37 :::: S . .,
and rilling . To cook. HEINZ RELISH C .......... · ... .. · ~z. .iJ NECTARINE I .~='f" • ~' EK~~G~:E~1~ 1~wESSON OIL .... · . . . ·:.::s 1,3 fll~. rn • •• -·-83c l: mu•39~~~-~"(\_. ;f.: .• )
minutes. Drain In col· JACO SAUCE I 55c :;adgehrett~esra~~e w~~~ :l ;RMJ8•1BECEFE aa•x 42c KnTrll CHOW~-..o ........... ..oz &le :·:: ll 15 '
cheese. Makes 4 dozen -. . .. .. .. .. . .. .. . . .. . .. .. . &-OZ 11 IUI -•.......... ... '"°1 39c
ravioli. PRiil V1•11m S') 14
FOOD
WH~11.';.~RM . ·-. fis'SiiNT COFFEE s4ss . " ...... ! ........... n~z ·1.. :: 19 4
•,'l cu P c h o PP e d i; .. · · .. a-0z. GAllS BURGERS cau1 ... I ... n~z ~47
green onion NUCOA •SOFT • rues 6 ==================ii m;n+~::.::.::::~~ I MARGARlllE HU u HU '8-0Z sc i -~ ... •k• $3041 SHHOEUFSFELEPRALA~INP!GPHOTT
leaves, crushed SCHIRMER'S •POTATO SALAD 32-0Z.11.27 •OR POTATO OR 6S cDftlnftll~ jftc v ;.t~~~~un:.::~!~~~d MACARONI SALAD ... 16-0Z. c ftUUIUIN ~J:,.. ...... 1. ....... aoz •fir ~.~.~G~~~~~~~n~G~f~a;:-~ .. ;;;;.==~~====~=~
wheal germ, regular CHI SYRUP I 7nc . JC •Ht '-"<IO.Ounce) package .....----------
1
____ ___, •MCAlll••Mna ..... a·~z _,-fro~en chopped& s~iD...:-'-~ee...h du..-il!il-l-C-H11Aaila..LE•N~G_E_1-• ·= ~::~ : .. : TOMATO 8UJ1ER £~:..",L $1J1_. KITCJDSUCED 34Hc IHl--1~-"':::::
parmesan cheese =i 63 4 8 7 4 _, 5 9 4 -10 USS ..... u u I .... 0 •"" 'UI mr.mr •W• ~· PU!llS i=.-•M• zw
GAi. ..
4
l '.ol CLOROX II •uH111M: lll•c" ... ! ·oo~z $2.35 11011• SWEET 34c =US cut ':: r.: -;f/cat~ & ~tot ~ S--,1. PEAS ... "~ coa :=.rn.a .oi. z4c
YAPOIEm SIPEl 11 SYYU CHARCOAL $145 75c :rs ~31c ~mm-.... ·.:::= REsPec1~AT-~~---t--·-9fc ~~ ! 82c ~I PLATES .. ~~_:!~. :11.~ L-.&. -;r...u:: ::-... . . -zf
ft I cw10L •a & AIM 1 r:u:.J utt.M ci.OllOCT • • DINNERS ~~"'TfM°"~"' '1
IOUR CREAM HEMllB
for appetizers ...
In your market's
delicatessen department
EASY • SJ 99 ,_,.ASTE 92c MOUNTAIN DEW ! .,u~z c•"' $1.33 ••1CA112HS-OL·OHUTUIN • .... •MIL $ '
MO."'G. • .... oz. 1llET Rill OllllOYAl.CllO•NCOlA • 98c DELUXE PIZZA ~~~1: • • 1M>l 2'
scon IAIY FIESH IAID-AID® PLAsnc ~.-us .. · ···~z BREAST PORTIONS .IAHOUIT ... I .2~ $2''
WIPES ! 99c !,~'!!~ I 99c .v .. ~z ""~ $279 THIGHS & DRUMSTICKS ••HOOET .. 21-0Z. $1 ''
•o-<:r »o~so-cr K LA ... 10. 11N1wum1m .. s 11c FRIED CHICKEN ••HOUET ... ! .......... I04l. $419
IAYEI CHILDIEl'S PHILLIPS' MILK OF • AUPLAYOllUIA~"30llAllf$ -0 MORTOfl
ASPIRIN f 35c ~-SIA ! s 121 KOOL-AID =.~ •• ~ .• _ ....... 11.79 CREAM PIES ="~~ ...... ! ...... 654
LEMONADE ~c:~-. I U~l Sl.85 WAFFLES =~::~EMllU(. . I ................ 104Z.63 4
CRISCO SHOR1Ulfli ... I k~ $1.89 ORANGE JUICE =~ ........... 1 ......... 1t« 794
111son ,_IOmlCJI .1 .. ~z st451 i ·· •un 1-
F-LA 409 CLEANER e 77c · MARSHMAUOWS ::..=-..:.:::.: :-'-:::::.:.::" ~
" noi 49• ... -.......... ":l--.... ~I lft BA.,S • jftc .:=.. .. =:=.:;::· . ...::-.-.=.::I .,.., a ~m1 ••• -..... tt<'..., •..oi ,__. __ ~ __ ____.
PRICESEFFEC.
7 FULL DAYS,
AUG. 31 •
SEPT. 6, 1971
..... t............ . .................. ==-*:.....~ i1W ,... a...:=:-.. ==== .... -~ ... =r=-~---..... ---.•. i:;:::_..... • .t
... "...... ·-·-:-i:-~ =·=---, ... .,.._, .... c.._ ,... o.i. .. _....._. ,.... ..... ....... ._ ~.... .. ..... ......... =:-=-=---~---... --,_ .. _., ""---····--~ --------11::1=:--:::.
•'
. . . •
.
# . '
, .
-~
FOOD
Youngsters naturally swalTTI arot11d Honeybee Oatmeal Cookies.
Cookies That Go Bzzzz
Let the kids swarm al'OWld Honeybee Oat·
meal Cookies. Served with milk, they're a anack
lhat makes complete nutritional seose!
Flrst of all, they are classified a1 a whole·
grain treat. Wholegrain oats, just as the name
implleis, contain the "wbole" of what nature put
into each oat nake -the orlgmal bran. germ
and endosperm. Quick or old fashioned oats are
a source of fiber as well as protein, B vitamins
and some minerals. Add the lron from raisins,
some protein from nuts, and the naturaJ sweet-
ness of hooey, and you have a special treat on
your hands
But not for long! The kids will really make
a beeline for Honeybee Oatmeal Cookies. And
by the way, busy little bees will want lo help in
the ma king. Do let them lend a hand. There are
projects galore for small helping hands.
'Honeybee Oatmeal Cookies -they're
.. honeys" all the way around. these tasty.
-chewy treats'
HONEYBEE
OATMEAL COOKIES
~cup margarinf'
%cuphoney
2eggs
l teaspoon vanilla
cooked
2 cups quick or old fashioned oats. un·
~ cup all-purpose flour
lh cup chopped nuts
lh cup raisins
lh teaspoon salt
14 teaspoon soda
Beat together margarine. honey, eggs and
vanilla al medium speed on eleetrlc mixer until
well blended. Add combined remaining ingre-
dient&: mix well. Drop by rounded tablespoons
onto ungreased cookie sheet. Bake in preheated
moderate oven C375°F.) 9 lo 10 minutes or until
golden brow;n. Cool: store in tightly covered
container. Makes about. 2 dozen cookies.
Wedding and engagement announcem~ts nm on
Sunday tn the Daily Pilot. Pcmm are available al all
Dculy Pilot of/ices or by caU1ng the Peaturea Depart-
ment. 642-4321.
To a001d daaappointmnt. pro~hve bridts ore
remind«l to have their wedding 1torie1, with a blaek·
and-white glossy of the bride OT of~ couple, to the
fo'eaturea Deportment one wttlc before the~·
Engagement announcement•. with block-and·
white gloasy of the future bride OT the couple. mwt be
received by the l''eaturn Deparlmenl nr ~eka before
the wedding date.
Introducing:
-.
Deliciously rich and mild.
·••··•······•······•··••················•••···············•••·•·····•···· . . : CPNAS-206
==:· sa~e CIONSINEA ()llM-IO-CCll.lllCJl'Pll~ Ooodllllii'I°"
i CPNBt-206
P'-to 5'. ll'OC* °" ~ oA MA ~fi.. °'°""° CClllee oot... .... ~ ltaud t.-.: ,__., • 25 a. tf?l.G~ P*-l'90Hll> .. CDuPCl"el t.i...-°" • or>e °"'al MJ8 ~ Yo.i .. be NilltlurMd • .. *-...... Put ::~. . e ~i~~~--~ .. ...
terred 1>y ~ou We •Ill no1 -'*"*"""..,... ""°"91'1 °"'-~· ... b<Olt .... ·"-~-~ ,,,.., -Ip Coupon .old
• --pONlllilo Of ... : on 13 oz. size ='~-; :=
: MJB Premium :=.'°-.-.~.:
be """' Oii -· c-: Fl ..., G d ..,."10 °'--'"' : .I\. roun prO,,.pl teOempuon maot
:save ISOe
• . . • . .
• Coffee C:.r"~~·~.,. : .
on 39 oz. size
MJB Premium
Flake Ground ·••········••••••••········ ..•.....................••••.•.•.............
OFFER LIMIT£D TO USE OF CHE COUPON ONl V STORE COUPON • Coffee
Wtdl....-y, August 30, 1971
· Putting on the Spread
Summer l5 the time for carefree eatin& and
eaay eotmaJnlng. When you plan your next party
here aresomedlfterentdipldeas ...
caEAMV MUSllJlOOM 'N' CHEESE SPREAD
1 packaee (8 ounces> cream cheese. sof.
tened .
3 cupe <about ~ pound) shredded sharp
Cheddar cheese
1 can < 1~ ounces> condensed cream of
pot•to chi.PS or crackers. Makes about 2 cup .
ROSY DEVIL SPUAD
soup
tened
l can < 10~ ounces> coodenaed tomato
I
1 packn&e C8 ounces) cream cheese. sof·
2 cans <41~ ounces each) devU~ ham
'I• cup finely chopped cucumber
mushroom soup
1 teaspoon dry mustard
lh teaspoon onion powder
11, cup chopped peanuts
Wllh electric mixer or rotary beater. blend
cream cheese and Cheddar cheese; gradually
add soup, mustard and onion powder. Beal until
smooth. Chill. Stir in peanuts before serving.
Serve as spread on crackers. Makes about 3\h
2 teaspoons finely chopped green onJoo
1 small clove garlic, minced
With rotary beater or electric mixer.
gradually blend soup into cream cheese unUl
smooth. Stir ln remaining lncredients. Chill. '
Serve as a dip or spread with crackers and
chlpa. Makes about 2 cups.
cups.
HERBED CREESE LOGS
1 can <lH'.t ounces> condensed bean with
bacon soup
4 cups < 1 pound) shredded sharp Cheddar
cheese
1,~ cup finely chopped onion
2 tablespoons Worchestershire
1 teaspoon basil leaves. crushed
1 medium clove garlic, minced
'h teaspoon hot pepper sauce
Chopped walnuts and parsley
In large bowl of electric mixer, combine all
ingredients except walnuts and parsley. Beat on
low speed until s mooth. Chill overnight; divide
m ixture in half. On waxed paper. shape each
ha lf into a log C8xl'11 inches >; roll one Jog in
walnuts ; the other in parsley. Chill. Serve as a
spared for breads or crackers. Makes 2 logs.
TANGY BLUE CHEESE DIP
1 can < 10~ ounces) condensed cream of
celery soup
1 package <8 ounces ) cream cheese, sof·
tened
1" cup crumbled blue cheese
2 tablespoons minced onion .
Gradually blend soup into cream cheese.
Add remaining ingredients. Chill. Serve with
Beef Kabobs
BEEF STEAK KA.BO~
2 pounds beef chuck steak. bone In
·~ cup chunk style peanut butter
2 lablespoons olive oil
14 teaspoon salt
1,~ teaspoon cayenne
2 oranees. pared and cut into chunks
~11 large fresh pineapple, pared and cut into
chunks
Slivered almonds, coconut, chutney, diced
1reen pepper
RlcePilaf
Cut bee( from bones into 1-inch cubes. Mix
peanut butter with oil, salt and cayenne. Combine
with beef tossing to coat. Thread beef cubes alternately with or ange and pineapple on
skewers. Place on grill 4 Inches above medium hot
coals basting often.
Cook7to8 minutes, turning once or twice, un-
til beef is done as desired. Serve with rice tossed
with tumeric a nd chopped green onion, with
slivered aJmonds, coconut, diced green pepper or
other desired condiments lo pass. Makes 4 serv·
ings.
RICE PILAF: Toss hot cooked rice with
turmeric to taste. Mix in chopped green onion.
t ' n
"has_~ kinds of pretty
and ? kind of soft!'
Fill in the blanks on the entry form
and get a FREE package of
Soft'n'Pretty Bathroom Tissue.
BLUE PASTEL BLUE PRINrS GREEN PASTEL
GREEN PRINTS YEUOW PASTEL l YELLOW PRINTS
WHITE PINK PRINTS PINK PASTEL
HERE ARE SOME HINTS in case you're stuck. Soft'n'Pretty has as many kinds of pretty as
th~orr-<r ~ team:-And as many.. kinds Qt p_retty as a cat has llves.
Soft'n'Pretty has as many kinds of soft as the riii5Smg word In ''==if--••
And it's the number right before t\.vo. Wasn't that easy? We didn't even have to tell you NINE
KINDS OF PRETIY. AND ONE KJND OF SOFT. Oops!
TO OU YOUR FRE.E PACKAGE OF
SOFT'N'PRETTY: Flinn the entry form
at right an<f send your answer with two
"Seals of Quality" from Sott'n'Pretty
-tno M:stmlles. please~i. 9end you
a coupon gooo for a free package of
Soft' n ·Pretty.
Regardless of your answer. we·n send
you a coupon when you return 'the
en try form and two Soft' n ·Pretty
"Seals ol Quality "
..... -·· ~.--
r .
.
-.
' I
f
f
.
i
l
! I
---
QI DAILY PtLOT FOOD
Peanut Butter Lunches
Afltr bearin.a all the
alarmln& tatlallca
about American heiltl\
and 11ulnUOo babita nd
lallt'nan1 to the
d aperate pl of nutrt· tionls~ and part"nlA lo
aet the schools into th•
lssue of lbJt 11UnJ, Coner p ed a bill
1ra.nt Ill fed ral ld to
state-a interested m sel· uni up chool proarama
to ltach t nutritional
ulue of foods and the
relauon1h1p amon•
f o od. nutrition ind
health Slnu llr time
t.>ullna pattema are pret·
ty well e tabllsbed ln
chaldhood and alou.
once arow;C!d, chlld~n
have a way ol commtt·
ting thems elves to a
cause with a~at zeal.
specaah!its are con
v1nced that a nutriuon
program in lb~ urly
grade level ca n havl'
reul mearune
Y1>u may find yourself
faced ~•th a new kmd of
lunchbox ch ent if th~
government 1s ngbt and
the nutrition proaram
works. Instead of de
mands for "More sweet
snacks" you may hear
"More nutritiou s
lunches." And should
that occur, 11·~ nice to
know that some of your
old favorite lunchbox
foods were good for the
children all along.
You may not want lo
s top with an old·hat
good for· you m enu.
however, if vou are
blessed with a child who
has really become in·
te rested in good food
and canng for his body.
You may, for instance,
want to try making
some of the following re·
cipes with your child.
Thev were developed in
peanut butter kitchens
a nd have been child·
tested for easy fixing and
good eating.
NUTRl110US PEANUT
BU1TER COOKIES
1-i cup corn oil
·~ cup super chunk
peanut butter
I egg :i:. cu p f I r m I y
packed brown s ugar
I cup old fashioned
oats
J .. cup unsifted nour
1 i cup ins tant nonfat
dry milk powder
1 2 teaspoon salt
1 2 teaspoon ground
cinnamon
• 2 teas poon baking
powder
1 cup shredded car·
rot
1 :? cup raisins
In s ma ll bowl stir
togethe r corn oil, peanut
butter and egg until
s mooth In large bowl
:.tir together brown sug.
a r. oats, nour, dry milk.
salt. cinnamon and bak·
ing powde r . Stir in
, peanut butter mixture
JUSt until moistened. Stir
in carrots and raisins.
Drop batter by heaping
teaspoons 2 inches apart
onto ungreascd cookie
• s heet. Bake in 350 F
~oven 15 minutes or until
lightly browned. Makel>
4 dozen.
QUICK PEANUT
BU1TER SOUP
Empty l can ooa, oz)
condens ed c ream o r
~• ry eoup Into med um murrtn CUP'. Prepare 1 baklnc mutrlna. Coot.
pachp I 14 oz ) banana Makes l2 muffl . uceJ)a!l <or use cttam
of m""'1'oom. cream or c.-tu~cfi; tomato bl&que,
condenaed beef or
chicken broth' Fiil
emptied can with mllk
and pour lnto 1aucep1n
Add \4 CUJ> super chunk
peanut butt r. Cook over
medium heat, 1Urrlnc
occaalonaUy. Just until
mhcture bolla. Mttea 2"1
tup .
qulcll bread mb accord· QUICK PEANUT
ln1 to packa1• direc BVTl'ER DIP tlona Spoon l heapln1 N utrttloua veaetable
tableapoon batter Into sticks and peanut butter
each murtln cup Top can be teamed up ror a
uch with I heapln11 lunch box dip.
Peanut b'Utter
fnjjf Juice.
dip for
school lll7ch.
QUICK P ANUT
BlfTTE& 11\JrnN
Grease 12 f2~·lnch >
te111poon 1upor chunk In small contalner stlr
p anut butter. Cover to1ether ~ cup super
each with anolh r heap· chunk peanut butter and
1n1 tabl spoon batter. 2 tnblcapoons fruit Julct
Bake In 376 ft' ovc:n 15 to <orenae. apple. plneap·
20 mlnutoa or until ceke pie> until smooth. Use
1prln11 back when U1ht· carrot and celery stickE
ly touched, or follow as dlppors. Makes J
packaa dtr•c:Uona for 1ervlna.
How to feed so much
to so many •..
for so little. "i .... __ g, ___ ,
~~I 1~~' (/j) ( \ \·"'· \ ;;-;.\)~ ""~~ '~~ ' ' ~ ' . ) ~.
All LUCKY STORES Will DE
CLOSED
LADORDAY
MO NDAY. SEPTEMDER 4th, 1978
·-~ . .::-~ .&-~-~-~~~ ~, ..
I
t
Hail, hail,
the gang's all here.
If you've got a lot of people to feed and a budget that needs some careful
watching over. then come on in to Lucky for our great big Labor Day
savings spectacular. Everybody is doing their shopping at Lucky.
and top sirloin. And all at prices to help you reduce your entire food totai
And don't forget that all our beef is Bonded. So not only is it your
assurance of quality, but it's your guarantee that every tender, juicy cut w1!!
cook up to your complete satisfaction or your money back .
You 'II have no beef with our beef.
because everybody knows Lucky has terrific low prices on all your
holiday cookout needs. You'll find everything from hot dog and hamburger
buns. to relish. potato salad. soft drinks. potato chips and paper plates. At
Lucky we make everyday a holiday for your budget.
Not only is our Bonded beef guaranteed. but it's also the safJ}e beef thdt
meets the strict standards set by one of the world's foremost cooking
authorities ... the Cordon Bleu Cookiog School of Paris. France. A!
Lucky. you 'II find whatever you need to make this Labor Day a treat
Here's what we've got cooki n'.
We carry all your favorite cuts of beef. From ground beef and filet to t-bone
for both you and your budget. Come in today and see for yourself. You'll
soon find out we're what discount is all about.
Fresh Meats Fresh Meats
LAP.GE ENO P.ID STEAK ~(4[ 0111 10 1 . 79
SMOKED SAUSAGE
.. .... •I A \I'• '''O~ !) 1 . 7 8
WILSON DONELESS HAM
':::::'"t•~',.',;''<U ()AWAlJ tG 2 • 96
HOP.MEL CURE 61 HAM OONlll~~ l\/u•CQO'l{O tO 2.59
DUTT POP.TION Of HAM
IW•Coo-JO tO 1.09
Canned & Packaged Dairy & F rozen
LADY LEE ~!?u~~.YOGUln,~.!~~ 1.29 ~~~?~~~~[JAR e 99 b W>Yl££C~~C~~~ACG .8 3
P' fP.UIT PUNCH DASE 1 99 b OP.E·I~~ TATEP. TO~o1 ""c. .89
0 .J'OnH ,,.Ol Oii ' P' MINUTE MAIO LEMQHADE
,. HAP.VEST DAY DUNS "9 b (()N((Nll\Art "'""OANC.. •101 (AN.45
0 ~R()'\M()JOO(. llCI POC. ·" b BROCCOLI CUTS b LADY LEE PP.ETZELS "9 PC"wt11 . 1001 ""c; • 63
•V4"'(1o£' OQ{ ""G .\J
Liquor
SAVE 10%-BUYACASE
A tO ... Ol~OUNI l~GIV[NQN
ruu CA~ PUl\OiA~~Of ~IN[(, ~lf\li\
1!!.[Y OUY l f (M~ (a(lUOf Ot
• J 6 0 SCOTCH WHISKY 1 5 45 b 1 /)llA 011 ,
r LAMOP.USCO \VINE
0 N""''I 1•01 011 2 . 29
L LUCKY DEEP. 1 89 111" 01 Oil\ •
,. KAAFTMAIUHMALLOWS Delicatessen Canned & Packaged 0 "'Mno . •001 """ .49 Produce L ~~YLEE RAISINS QOl """ • 5 7 p LADY LEE
p STRAWOERRY .!: HA.P.VBTO~YSYP.U~OO/ Oii .56 !:>FRANKS 99 RIPE 15
OPRESERVES 99 LOGCADINPANCAKEMIX ~~r.~.~~~!ooz PKC.e ~~~T~~?U~o • ~~.~~cs~.~~;OUAJ\e bcOMl\11£ ..• ~~ ••••••. no1 oo •• 69 ! JU.M.tPOTATO S~~"' ,~.e9 FRESH
DEVERAGE 79 L OTTEP. POPS. . 1'0l OO• • 79 ! ~~r..~E~.~~~ ... &OlCIJP.37 ()Al\Q((U{(Af\S .
-!~~SH~A~S~T~A~C~O~lAr=r=======--~~i~~~~~S-IN~C<X~O.~\M~~~x,1rr19n-~---~~~~~-~-~-u.ie:.~~-~U--~~c~o~R~N...-~~
S1JlPA(Kll2 0z (ANS • ;,WISHDONE DRESSl~G01
Pll.C. .59 J: ~!~~..!!;; ~1~!£1 .69 HOIJEYDEW ~·~'"'"QI\-89 "' 000..0ll•CllO.J(l •• , on . !:POTATO ,,..,,.N\Ai>O 1101 011 . r HOP.MEL wAANGLru MELONS
CP.OSS P.ID P.OAST CHlnc. r SKIPPY PEANUT DUTTER 06 o . . . . •oOl-. 1 .69 llOl"11wooNOrt>ncr•~ to 1.48 r " 69 ° CllV-M•OAC"V'<.. •&01,....1. r VlASIC KOSHEP. PICKLES DEUC•~ · · ·
LAP.GE END RID ROAST LAURA ~U00£1U T ASTEP."S CHOICE COFFEE 4 66 b ""'°'1 OA-Vf\ .»01 ~-. 89 FRESH ~~~~"?AST ·: ~~~~ !~:;~;::,~ :OIC•"·89 t~~~~-UPDE\IE~:tr:1 ~35 !~~~~~w~sc~-~~~Ol-.C. .85 M~SH.ROC:o~PKG .69
. I
t
t
; .
fil:!Po~~U! CHOCK R.f>AST-16~. -,,~9'#-_ _.~..)!.gj::g~!~ qt1L~ s~~ .. --=H=:e::.ae.lt1:..h ... &.:__.;.Be_a_u_t_:y;__A_id_s __ .. H .. o_u...,..~-e-=h=o=ld=-&-=P=e=t ==-R
7·DONECHUCKP.OAST 99 r HAMDUP.GERSAUCE SIGNALMOUTHWASH
97
HEFTYTMSHDAGS pQ.,...T,..A ... T0.__E5 _____________ _
OQfoO!rDll' lO • o °"'l.,AAH,"•" tllOl ,...1\,85 • •101 01\ • I. lul'lll""'°"1 •••• t){I °"" 1.99 19
YOUR
DAILY PILOT CAN
BE RECYCLED.'
Orange Coast Col/t>o6
oper11tcs me ofhcitll
cantor lot
Cos11t MestJ
556-5981
POP.TEP.HOUSE STEAK2 49 r O£l MONTE PICKL.ES aOSE·UP TOOTHPASTE 57 r Vll.lA FOAM. cu. PS_ ., ~ _,_ .... Q us NO ' OO't()C.C)OllllQlt lO • 0 Dou. lVAMl•ll • 120l li'A o69 '101 t>JO( • 0 , v ~ .. ()AK(R~ LO e
7 -OOHE CHUCK STEAK r MOREHOUSE MUSTARO 49 ,. HEAD 6 SHOULOEP.S VILLA PAPfP. P\ATES 99 Oo:>NCllOOfl~ • _ tll 1.09 0 )•011111\• 0 •Ol IU11<0A"Ol l0JoQtt I• 1.97 •000 """ • ~""'-~ .. .,.,.,'°"~~,......_. °''•' •o c.-..,..,. ,,.... lrt(Jf'ft ..,,,..,...,."'°" • . . \j JCl. .._ ~'\1·"°'3¥~,.,.. •• ,e. TOP P.OUNO STEAK r EAP.L Y CALIF. OLIVES 1 2 9 b LILT MCIAL 9 7 PAPEP. NA~NS
QOHCll).)l)OWO{OO(ll 0 ''V'IH;""'"IAH"O •OOl !AA • I• , ••O•lll XlOCI ""G ,99
•••••••••• iG 1,88
•ANAHaltl
720 W. LA 'AU.A AVINUE •AN4"1SM
110 IO. ITATI c;ou.«OI I LVD.
f'UL.lHTON Ill NO. IUCL.ID AVE.
•IUINA ,ARK
etat I.A 'ALMA AVINUI •COIT.A MH A
2110 HA .. I Oll ILVD.
tfUNTlltOTON H ACH •LAGUNA HILLI tto50 l ltOOKHU"IT ITltH"T um CAIOT "OAD AT LA ltU
... what discount is all about.
*PULU'"ON 120 HO. ftAYOMOtlD
•QAJllOP OMJW 11011 MAOHOU A A VI.
•WHTMINITI ..
( "n '4.]N •fll&'~f'lvt••'ll-0..,.""" a f\ f''•"-""""....,, r-, ... ,H•tit'IY.~ f'"11 .. a.t•..,,i""~ ..._..._(Ol"IO-"t'lt.
'"'"'". ~·"-·l''•"""W'"Wi'd9"(~¥)11""'
•QAMtlf QfllOVI
1I01S IUCUD AV..
•HUNTINGTON H ACH tott ATLANTA AVINUI
•tTAftfON • TOITlflt
1'lt KATiu.t AVI. 1J211 N!W'O'" AVDCUI!
•WHITTII .. , •LA Ml .. AOA •ORANO! •IANTA ANA
----------' LA Ml .. ADA IHO,,INO ClNT!" M20 !. CHA,MAlf AV•NUI UH 10. afUITOL ITIIHT
ITORH OPI N
DAILY t A.M. IMO WllTMINITU AVINUI , .... I MUL.IOl!'f 0 ...
..
I· . ' : J
:J
FOOD Wtdnelday. August 30, 1978
lndlanSummeriathe wbltea and ult In an Slmmernectarmanun-sklmmJlk maxture with s ltced thawed (or 2 cups
Ideal tirn COii' lamb on ib t lectrlc mhdna bowl and covered sauce pan unut l c up cottage peaches ln 8 stemmed rupbemes, whole. un-
1rm. Onre eonsidered a but stlfl. Pour the reduced by ha I!. cheese. low-tat parfait classes. Chill un• sweetened. if froaeo -t ·
&Prin• speclllt.J, lamb ls chee11• mixture lnto egg. Remove from heal and 4 -serving. envetop-e 1tt-semq time. Makes part Ir thawed) L
now avallabl all year whites and cenUy but allow to cool. Stir peach lnat.ant vanilla pUddlng ei1ht servuigs. about 100 Stir sliced peaches )on•. So alter a aum-tboroUlblY fold together. slices with lemon Julee. mix calories each. with brandy or rum. if ,
m•rful of b ee fy poon mixture into a 9-Arrange peach sllces ln 4 rlpe peaches. PEOIESAtJX deaired , and divide • barbec~.lamb laa h 1>· Inch round cake pan or the center of the pltted,peeledandsllced · Fa.utBOISES among 6 stemmed>J
pychanae. 1prin1fonnpan.Bakei1i cheesecake, overJap· <Peaches with 1lasses. Pureeraspber·
, It's a l a tattenln1 a preheated S5()...decree pine. Coat wllb fruit Combine milk and cot· raspberry sauce> r ies in blender: spoon on
oa , too! BeeaUH lamb rlllla•: Opt.lonaJ: few dro1>1 oven 4$ minute s . nectar. Return to tage cheese ln covered 3 peaches , lar1e. top ot peaches. Serve "ean Ill rat on lb~ out· l cup P••eh or hon y totata Remove from oven and refrigerator and cblll blender: blend smooth. r i pe, sweet. peeled, immediately. Makes six
"l d e , It · a ea a '1 >' 1pricot ~ ··-y cool, then chill. Cake tborouahJy. Makes nine Add pudding mix; blend pitted and sJked servings, a bout '10 •
trammed ; ltlf' m ett l la....., •on Combtn cheue, 1tnk1 In the middle to s ervJncs. about 110 smooth. Chill in Optional: 1 table-calorteseachwithbran-1•
'UHlf I alway lean. Jule• 01urt, aweetener and form a depression for calorteseach. refrige rator until spoonbrandyorrum d y and sweeten ed
tender and flavorful 4 ••Mt peaclaH, •11 yolk1 In covered fruit tuUng. Remove 'CH EE SEC AK E ' thickened. -lO·ounce package berries. or 45 calories 'f'orlh~~~uons, lamb \'tr)'rlJ)e.Jlltted.peelod, b!e nder and blend frompanbeforeftllln1. PEAOIPARFAITS raspberries. frozen. each without sugar or as u 11ually lower in allc-.cl 1mooth. Comblne en To prepare filling: 1 and ~ cups cold Layer cheese-pudding s weetened. partially brandy. calorie• than al mtlar..-~~~~--___,__,.._ ...... .._~~~--~--...;;...;....~~......;.~.;_.,~~~..;;..~~~~~~--"~~~~ ..... ~~~.......;;.._~..;;..~~~~~~~~--:;___~~~~~~~~--
:~~~ lalphS has the tdiday· spirils
t ~ lamb. cut ., ~i1~~1ii; super sel • n cl law· ·prices
1 tablespoon lemon
Julee or vinegar
1,. teas poon cin · ;P~~o n or apple p ie ..... hs ... -Labor Day
Salt and pepper lo _.,
taate .... Sept 4 Cut lamb into 1 and y
one-h alf-inch chunks. •
Thread on s kewers,
a lternating with pineap-
ple. Broil or barbecue
tw~ inches from beat
sou")lce, turning fre-
quently. about 15 lo 20
minutes. Meanwhile,
co mbine reserved
pineapple juice with
lemon juice and spice in
a small saucepan. Sim-
mer down to a thick
glaze, uncovered. Spoon
over kebobs just before
serving. Makes four
s ervings, about 215
calories each.
OIL· F REE BBQ SAUCE
FOR LAMB
8-ounce can tomato
sauce, plain
1 tablespoon lemon
JUice
2 teaspoons honey
1 tablespoon
Wor<.•estershire sauce
J c love garlic,
minced <or pinch of in·
stant)
1 2 teaspoon dried
mint . ore gano or
rosemary
Stir together
<Marinate lean fat·
trimmed lamb chops in
the mixture all day or
over ni ght in the
refngerator. Or use as a
harbecue baste for lean
lamb burgers. or lamb
"spareribs" -fat·
trimmed breast of lamb cut into ri~.)
Sauce makes six serv·
ings, 2Q calories each.
GREEK FETA
CH EF.sEBURG ERS
IN PITA POCKETS
1 pound lamb, lean,
fat-trimmed, ground
Garlic salt and pep-
per
PLAIN WRAP '· Liquor
Anollaer Rrst frOm Ralphs
Up to 51% I0\¥81' thSI national brands
and 350/o lows than private label brands•
'
Pl.AJNWllAP IO Proof7501T1L
KanblCky Whiskey
Pl.AINWBAP . 90 Proof 750 ml.
Scotch Whisky
Pl.AINWllP IO Proof 150 ml. Gold Tequila
PIAINWBAP IO Proof 750 ml.
LightR11n
Your
choice
only
C1lttornl1 Orown·ZICll~ or
Foster Finns
Whole Fry.a ,
$
750 ml
JllAIN\VUP 90 Proof 750 ml.
Straight Bourbon
PLAINWRAP 10 Proof Sihtr 750 ml.
Sllw Tequila
PLAINWRAP IO Proof 750 ml.
Dark Rum
PIAINWRAP -10 Proof 750 ml.
Gin or Vodka
MutorBtef
Fna John Winn Coors
Baer
Vine Ripened
~ Tomatoes
I r ,
.
f
\
J
' t
Cinnamon, nutmeg,
mint and oregano
2 m eaium pita
breads, split in half
2 oun ces feta
cheese, crumbled
Llm1tlw0
percutlo!Mt
white ""'91J i.ta.
per II lb.
1 lb.
pkg. II 12 oz.cana
I pack
49
:.'II J
1 small onion, sliced
thin
1 s m a ll tomato,
sliced thin
12 dill pickle chips
Season ground lamb
with salt, pepper, spices
a nd herbs; shape into
f our ova l pat -
ties. . .longer than they
a re round ... to fit into
pita pockets.
Beef Rlb-Llttlf' Aemoftd
Rib
Staak
per
lb.
99
Aegul•, Hot or Hlc:tuwy
Cllrls ' Piiis BBQ Sauce
14 01.11 btl.
PIAINWRAP
Potato
Chips
8oz.
pkg. II
~ ...
w .......
lcela'g
lettuce
HCh-
Cook la mb p atties
over coals or unde r
broiler, turning once, to
desired doneness (best
cooked medium, not
ra re or well-done>. Slice r----PWL.baiads in half .!Q '-------IMllldiftllumlllrs-1z_•_F_ro_z•_n-_o_er_roa_ttd-
form half-moons. They '
will split open to form
pockets. Fill each
pocket with a lamb-
burger , crumbled feta
cheese, sliced onions,
tomato and p1ckles.
--· ·-Mak...!;!Jour servinl!L2SO caToraes eaCli.
The delicious taste of
fresh peaches deserves
to• be* ae""9d with&vt
cooking ... so, if you're
keen on peaches, you
won't want. to waste
them by baking a peach
pie. (If you're a
waistline-watcher, you
certainly won't want to
waste the calories,
either !>
Today, we're sharing
s ome favorite low.
ca lorie peach sweets
that retain that 0-esh fruit
flavor:
FRESH PEACH· FILLED CHEF.SECAKE
12-ounce container
cottage cheese, low-rat
~ cup yogurt, low-
fat, vanilla
3 tablespoons honey
<or sugar subl!IUtule to
equal 2tablespoons)
3 egg yolks
4 egg whites
Plnch or salt
': . per I lb. ,.._.. 99 --··Oldfllhiontd 99 Morehouse 49 ~~~_...2tdlas ........ ~ __ 100
cl . Ice c•~r.·1 Mustmd 2:1~~ I ..-------=-----------.....-~,,,_....._ ___ ---·::---......:.a
·supe• Fo• Holliliy Coollouts
nm
Weefi's
lpedal
Offer!
(..........•.· ........... " .,... ..a.ua I
#471 I I "•lpht I I Regular·I ,.. ... •• 27 WIUI Coupof\ 18 I
I HllllllllW' or I
1 Hal Dog: a.-. 11 oz. 1 1 I 111118 i*G· wltl'I coupon I I f
I I I I 1.lmlt Ont ,..,,. n On. Coupon ,., Cuelonltr. I
l COUlpOft lf'9ctM Aut. 11 thru Sept. I. 1171. I
TMCo.p911V•ON1.\'-.. ,_...........,°"'CllAICll'll •••••••••CCiiiON••••••••··"
Prlcea Efftc:tivt Aug. 31 thru Sept. 6, 1971
"'I UAMS an. MllST• IUCll
411 If. llAH. WHOM 841 1•11(1. ~· EC1t
. . . "
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STPI HOUIS. 911 Illy, U s.y
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Q DAILY PILOT
Deel> purple! If tbat'a
your favorite color, Olen
purple plums lbould be
your favorite fnlJL tAt 91111 11 calories apiece,
purple plums are a
· favorite no matter what
color you Uk ' >
Alao known as Italian
~ prune plums. purple
uma are • av. t treat or eatlns out of hand.
But lhe1 offer a colorf\ll
and navorlul -bonu.
wben used ln cookinc.
The aatw-al ''d1•" ol
their atlDI dlllo&vea into
a rlcb rut>y.red bue .
Mother N aturt"'s
natural and nutritious
non-chemical food color
ing.
Orientals have known
about thas pJum-cood
coloring aient. tor years.
If you're lookana for
another way to make
lean low -calorie
chicken. try at Oriental
style with our Orienlal-
1 os pired self-making
plum sauce. For a pret-
t y dessert. try plums
poached in fruit juice or
wine . . . or our ruby
apple cobbler. tinted to
a rosy tone by the addi-
tion or fresh unpeeled
purple plums.
CHINmE aDCKEN
WITH SELF-llAKJNG
PWllSAUCE
2 chicken breasts,
split 6 purple plums, ripe,
fresh, unpeeled. pitted,
sliced thin
1 onion. peeled,
halved, sliced thin
1 clove ga rlic ,
minced
2 tablespoons lemon
juice
2 tables poons soy
sauce
1 tablespoon honey
<or equivalent s ugar
substitute)
3 tablespoons water
Brown chicken pieces
skin-side down in a non-
stick skillet or chicken
fryer with no fat added.
Drain and discard melt·
ed fat. Blot chicken a nd
place akin-side up. Add
remaiding ingredients.
Cover and simmer, stir·
ring occasionally, until
chicken is tender, about
40 to 45 minutes. Un-
cover and simmer until
s auce is thick. Makes
four servings, about 215
calories each with honey
1200 with s ugar s ub-
stitutP ).
PLUMS POACHED IN P INEAPPLESAUCE
1 pound purple plums,
ripe. fresh (about 14 or 15)
l c up uns wee tened
pineapple Juice
• ~ teaspoon cinnamon.
or m ixed apple pie spice
Optional: few drops
h o n ey, or liquid
sweetener, to taste
Slash each plum on
one side <along the? "sea m .. > to the p1l
Co mbine plums, juice
and spice in a sauce pan
and heat to boiling. Sim·
mer uncovered just until
plums begin lo soften
Remove from heal and
allow to cool. <Sweeten
to taste.) Chill seve ral
hours. Makes four serv-
ings. about 115 calories
each.
PLUMS IN PORT
SAU CE Substitute
port wine for pineapple
juice (alcohol calories
evaporate.>
RUBY APPLE
COBBLER A bottomless "pie"
wtttronty:-une-crust-. . .
e opone.
Single piecrust. 8 in·
ches. defrosted
4 purple plums. un·
peeled, pitted, slic~d
thin
20-ounce can apples.
unsweetened, pie-sliced
tnot pie fa,lling)
6 tablespoons w~1te
raisins
6 tablespoons brown
sugar <or low-calorie
substitute)
Pinch of salt
11;;i teaspoons cin·
namon, or apple pie
spice
14 cup rum <the
alco h o l ca l o ri es
evaporate!)
1 cup c rus h ed
pineapple, juice-pack,
undrained
3 tabl esp oo n s
cornstarch
Defrost pie crust. Roll
thin. Combine fillina In -
gredients and spoon into
a 9-inch non-stick layer
cake pan. Arrange crust
on top (stretching gently
to rit. if necessary) and
pressing edges to the
sides ol t.be pan. Make 6
ca n tu-wa. ftut • ,.,, word•
to work for
•
FOO~~
Try Zesty Italian Bread
Five mUUon Italian 2 packa1e1 acUve l ~ tablespoons with plastic wnp. Let plaatic wrap. Let riae
lmmlfranta can't be dry yeut melted~ dough nse an a warm until almost doubled.
wron•. !. favorite from 1 'M CUPI bot water l n a ~aa mlxloi place. Cree from drafts. Bake at 40CrF. tor 2:5 tAi
the land of puta and 4 1Ucea bacon bowl, dluolve yeast in until doubled ln bulk. 30 minutes, untU &oav•
1 ... ,na. ltallan Pepper 3 tablespoons aucar hot water. Meanwhile, Sprtnlde ~ cup cheese are 1olden and sound'
Bread comb lnu a 2V• te11poon1 cook bacon unW crisp. on a nat surface. Tum hollow when tapped.I
special blend of bacon, aeaaonlngblend Crumble the bacon and out dough onto cheese. Brush tops of loaves
Parmesan cbeeae and l;;i teupoon sweet add to yeut. Stir In 2 Knead until ~eese ls with melted butter.'
aea1onln1 blend. A basil "'•bleapoons bacon drip· distributed evenly Sprinkle with remalnina
1u1ranteed crowd l;;iteaspoon1alt clnas. auiar. seasoning throufbdou~h -about2 cheese. Let loaves cool'
pleaser with ita .. VOfY • j e1t11.d::rten bo lend, baaU and salt. mlnu es. S ape dou1h ln pans for s mlnuta:
aroma! :,.u:ft!I <a ut) Add e1p. Beat ln flour into 2 loaves. Place in Then remove from pans
or 7 11it1 ln tho el'USl with the top of a pointed
knife. Bake ln a preheat-
ed .U-<Sec:ree oven 30 to
40 mlnute1, unW crust ll
&olden. Serve warm or
c hllled. llakea nine
servin11, 190 calori 1 ~•eh w\t.h brown sugar
I UIO with aubatrtut.e >. Ital/an Pepper Bread. ITAUAN Par me~:: ~~:!:: b0arl:~~ \~:'noogiea\tifl gl'eased 9xS·inch loaf and cook ~n wire racks.
PEPPEa BaEAD Cdtvlded) minutes by band. Cover pans. Cove~ pans wlth Makes 29-mch loaves.
a BEVERAGES
~4JI
LARGE "AA" EGGS
Lucerne 591a Fresh y
1-cllrz c.tan
_Chris & Pitts Bar BO
Sauce
"'(': • POTATO CHIPS
11,, Party 691a Pride ¥
~~
HAMBURGER OR
TDOGBUNS
Mrs. Wright's
Pkg. of 8
TROPHY
CHARCOAL
Charcoal
Briquets
~~ 10-lb. Bag.
KEG O' KETCHUP
c
c
~::: 7tc Lt?
1ott1t "'8fl· LIGHT CHUNK ~:t:5W ~Mayonnaisa NuMade 0:::9SC TUNA
BuvAnExtra 39 c Com::.Cob So~~~~!:'" ~790 ~TufN'Raady r:~;.w.n.::5gc S•• E519 c· ~,, ~,Alumlnumfoil3~=~t=.&9°~Padre Beer 6'i:-99c Trader
c::.,..,_;24-oz. Kraft 61.lzca-onz.
Jar :i-i Fruit Drinks Lucerne = 59° ~Marshmallows wJh~!e 1~:·490 ------
SMOK·A·ROMA
BONELESS HAM
Fully SJ98 Cooked.
Water
Added.
)0~ lb.
Satewav Ham .... '12'' Qualtty and' Goodness8 c.n .
FARMER JOHN
MEAT
FRANKS
1·1b. "II·
Safeway ... The Leader in Low Liquor Prices!
WINNER'S CUP
VODKA
... ~~· ........ l_,....,..._. w-.-... \t .. ,..,,.OCJlllt. ........ l~ ., ........ ,.,c. .. ("-C.1..-"'L~W"'•" ""-0 5",,._rftr• • ,_ \.)..,_ ,_,.......,_~
U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEF.
CHUCK STEAK
orlollt
U.S.O.A.
Choice
Beef.
Blade Cut
Variety Values and More!
THE ORGANIZER DATA CENTER
6 PookOI•. ""'"' Pad Bwll· i T~ SeOlooood Note Kaepmg ~~~' to Ctts o2•<d• '4i"° \ : . :. S '2om Me4a
.... I ·~ .1 ....
~.Head r:::::;;;;:;; Each
:ssu11=:J~~::::=~~:AJflll:311DSuuge~~----~-
GREEN ONIONS
OR RED RADISHES
each
Potatoes white Rose lb. 25°
Green Cabbage Fresh lb. 15°
Crisp Celery Fresh lluncft 39c
~ICE CREAM ... and this isn't all!
~ 5s~~~99c More Saleway Speelals
-a:=n . In your store!
SAFEWAY ,,
............. "•·· .... a. 1171
'" ~ CaHftinlll lh• Catlllfl&. "".,. -......... ~~
a..111~o--a
W1 A00111t UIH ,_. 1-. C..-
• 1000 leystde Of •• Newport a.ec" • IH No. Co111 .. gltwey, LJt9un1 leech • I01 E. Cemlno Reel, len Cle1Mnte • 24 Mon•rc" ley Ptaze. South ugune •Senti Ane l'r•-•Y 91 le PH. Ml111lon Viejo
• 211 E 11th It .. Colt• Meu • Ad1m1 et Megno41a, Hufttlftgton IHch • 14417 Cul-.r Or. et Welnut. lrvtne • • 38&1 So 8rl1tol lent• An•
Ill.
;
I
I ..
J
. .. . . .. ... ··----................. _ ...... . -.
\
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•
J
FOOD DAILY PtLOT (W ...
Garden Patch· Rice
Sumi:oer meals ue ~ . ~up ~ ~ Sllr broteolt, tomatoes bean•. thawed. drained
s1nooymous wilb run, onlO!'• Wlt.b topa and onion into bot, ~ eup chopped
• and •* NUD~ cooked rtee. If akea e drained pimiento
rbecue1 are • na· Brtnc water \0 • boll Mrvlftil. Sa\!le 1reen oeppet
al putjme, and for In medlum aaucepan. IA&ll9CVSD aJCS and onion ln butter ln
ae cu ual. r Jax.cl SUr in rice, butter. ~ eup chopped 10.lnch aktllet unUl onion outdoor mula. serve packet Of aa1..s dnlalnl 1reen pepper l• tender. Add water; temptlni r ite diabea 01Jz and Hit. CoHr \.\ cup chopped brtni to a boll. Add rice
a parked with froab ucbtly ud llmmer IO onlon and aalt. Reduce heat:
"e1etables aod aplcy manatee. Remove from I tabl .. poona butter cover Lightly and slm· • aaonlnp. b at. lAt ltad covUtct or marprtne m e r a o m J o u tea .
Abundant fresh broc· u n t ll a lJ watt r h I~ cus-wat. Remove from heat. Stlr coll and brl1bt t•d absorbed. about 5 lelf&)COftvertedrico In barbecueaauce, lima
cherry toma are a rnlnutee. ())c>k ~~U 1 \etlpoon aan bean• and plmlent.o. Let
brllllant comblnatlon U1'covued In amall ~ cup bottled ataod covered until ll·
fou ed into GHd•n •mount boilln• aalted barbecueuuce quid I• absorbed, abouts
Patch Rice. Th re's no water )Ult until tender, 1 pack•&• ( 10 mlnutes. Mailes 6 aerv·
1ueuwort about IUSOD· abOut • mlnutee: dratn. ouncH) rroaen llma tn1a.
lna In tbls ctlab -a ---------------------------
pack.t °'Wad dreu1Da
GtJ.rden
patch rice
Is great
with summer
barbecue.
mix MIWll to •Plew up tbe tNlb navon. Tb
cotorfW veptables and
lhe aalbdYlna. sreat eat· ms quallU. °' lbe nee mu .. tbll • feltlv. ad·
dltloa to aaJ 0'2tdoor
reast.
---------------------
For plaln broiled
meats and poultry,
.serve Barbecued Rlee,
eully flavored with a
ravorite bottled
barbecue uuce mixed
into the rice ltaelf. Saute
green pepper and onion,
then add water and rice
and cook for 20 minutes
or untU the Uquid is
absorbed. Stir ln thawed
frozen lima beans ,
barbecue sauce and pi·
miento, and the special
S·mlnute "setting" time
or rice allowa flavors to
blend and develop
without overcooking. An
added benefit to this
dish is the valuable and
e conomical complete
protein supplied by the
c om binalion or the
beans and rice.
GARDEN PATCH llJCE
21At cups water
1 cup converted rice
l tablespoon butter
or margarine
1 package c .0 4
ounces) orisinal -
flavored salad dressing
mix. buttermilk recipe
1 teaspoon salt
2 cups small broc-
coli nowerettes
I cup halved cherry
Veg
Dish
Ideal
HERBED SUMMER
VEGETABLE SKILLET
3 tablespoons onion
Ciak es
• ~ teaspoon instant
minced garlic
3 tablespoons water
4 large carroLc;
14 pound gree n
beans
4 ta bl es poon s
vegetable oil, divided
11>11 teaspoons basil
leaves. crushed
111. teaspoons salt
1 e teaspoon ground
black pepper
2 c ups c h e rr y
tom atoes
l tablespoon freeze.
d ried chives
R e hydrate onio n
flakes and minced garlic
in water for 10 minutes.
Cut carrots into V•·inch
thick diagonal slices .
Cut beans into 1-inch
dia gonal pieces; set
aside. In a large skillet
heat 3 tablespoons or the
o i I. Add r e hydrated
onion and garlic, car.
rots. beans, basil, salt
and black pepper. Cook
and stir over moderate
heat., until .vegetables
al>OuC 1:5' minutes, acfd:
ing more oil if
neces s ary . Add
tomatoes; sur.fry for s
minutes. Sprinkle wilt.
chives. Serve at once.
----------~ --------------
~°'!_F.,. GnMtt 'A' 11111•0--• F~lng II -Cli1cliens .......... .Lb.
Albertaon• Own
3-5-Lb. Chub Fresh Ground
Beef Not To ExCMd ~flt
•••••••••••••••••••••• .lb.
~=181H e •' . $ 28 Pork ·
Spareribs ....... .Lb. •
==;.ii~ .s 88
Hams ................... Lb.
• Albert9onl 1..,.,. h9f Loin (Whol9 'UI lb.) $
• Top Sirloin Steak ~ ........................ Lb. 22•
• R•th. :I.Id! Hntr s 12• • Sliced Bacon .... 3t· ............................ ,.,b. Pkg.
Manager's
Frozen Specials
Friec1 s1sa Chicken .. 2~,.
Coinon 79c Ille Cob ..... ':t::
99° .......... ,,....Let Ice Aaf~
C ,..,._ ream ........ 1t-o.L
Deli
Manager's Specials
=~ ...... s71a
iiiaican~99c CbllSl ~u-
Juft.bo 1ee1 99c Wieners ... 1.u..
Low Low
Variety Prices
'
roduc e Manager's Specials
I • ':O ~.~~... Vine Ripe
~ .. Vine Ripe
Tomatoes · ·~_;.Cantaloupe
19
. Crisp
Lettuce
Romaine ·25c Redl11t
Ee.
Fresh Casaba
Melons
1oc
==·3~1
Crisp
Cucumbers
EKh19c
White Rose
Potatoes ~
~1
JanetLM a.Pk. 12-oz. Cant Large •AA' Eggs Coca Cola or Tab
-•&30 ·-$111
N1bftco Albertson• H1mburger or
~nack Crackers Hot Dog Buns _ .. f! 79c '!29C
_____ i~1!~
$149
...,.,.,c.. ..... ,
Coors
Beer ... l-ft.,11-.c-
PrtcaEftlc:lln
Aug. 3Mtpt. s. 1171
They're Jo1 llbert1on'1
Supermarketa, and ~ , Now One·ot Them's ~· ~~l'I
Right N• You.
IVAWllTY
h en ol 1nese .own~
~tm\ '' ·equoreo 10 llt re.io.iy •vatlfbl-IOI ~ II 01 l>e10•
int .OV1:nist0 c11cr 111 r1tn
A.f>enMln s SIOlt tactPI ~
\Ptc11•c.11iy no1eo"' 1nos 40
IWNCHECI
Wp W111t 10 n1tt on n.Hio
SYft1Cien1 s1oc1 ol 4Clven1st0 me1cnan11<st 11 IO• .oy •ea·
son *' Alf our of sroc• ,
RAIN CHE CK "~' bf l\Sutd
et140linQ 'IOU Irr OU) fllf '''Ill Albe~ons ... '"' <IG''"'''o Cll(f ., I l'3 _ SOOllH •tl>teomuh,.~'t
Dir law Prices bring you in.Our People bring you back •
l
l
.j
CJ• CWl y PtLOT
~oils with Frozen Dough
Add old faahioned
wholesome navor and
variety w hectJc baC't·
to·1chool brukfaata
~·ltb freshly baked dn·
namon roll • tnnola
squar . and cinnamon
twlsts'
Bnllb tope wtth rema n· tn1 butter. To rroat. mhc ~ cup pow'9ered Qar
wttb l 'teal~ water.
Spoon on to ro.llt. ne
warm or wrap tn foll
and Mr'ft et later dat
GllAMOIA 8QVAaE
I pound k>al frozen
bftad dousb
I C\IP &ranola
"-cup ralalns
\t cup honey
~ te11poon ctn· nalbOD
I t PoOnS m It~
butter
Let douab thaw to room temperature. On
..... ~ fkMlncl board roll
dou.1b out to U" x 12" rechnsle. Spread l
tablupoon meltt'd but·
tu over halt tbe doutb
l •n1thwhe. Mlll to1ethor 1ranola,
rat1lna, honey and cln·
namon. Fo&d rematntn1
douah over mun1 and
IHI edfet. Bru1h top
wU.h butt• and sprinkle
wUb l t.abl•poon 1u1ar
and ~ teaapoon cin-
namon. mixed toaetber.
Place dough on ll1bUy
1re11ed cookie ahett.
Bak• ln preheat.eel ns-
oven 15-20 mlnutet. or
until ioJden brown. Remove from pan and
cool 1U1bt1y on absc>r·
bent paper. Cut Into 8
tc1uarea and aerve.
CINNAMON TWl8T8
l pound loaf · fro1en
breaddouah w. cup 1u1ar
2 tab&espooo.s melt·
ed butter
2 teaapoons cln · namon
Let loaf thaw to room
temper•tw-e. Roll dou1b
into a 10" x... .U." rec.·
tan1le. Spread dou1h
with melted butter. Mix
au1ar and cinnamon and
aprinkle over butter. Cut
lnto lo.inch Ion& strips. ~ Inch wide. Twist
atrlps. Bring the two
ends ~et.Mr and twist.
Place on llihtly ~reued
cookie sheet. 1' apart.
Do not let rtse. Bake Jn
375• oven 10.12 minutes.
or untU lightly brown.
Yield 28 twists.
All It taltes
Js ready-make
dough and
patience.
FOOD
Economical and easy
lo prepare usint froien
bread douib. lhMe rf'· ripes are P'ffl to a..acb
the "UWe chefa" in>'°"''
house buk ~ltchen and
b1kln1 tttbnlques. 1\11
you will netd att a !~
kitch~n utenalb. rttlpe inaredl • Wld a lltUe~~~~~----~--~------~~------------~----------------------~------....;..-::------:-----------~,_;.......;._ ________________ ~------~
PATIENCE' Oftf'r your family a
reul na~tttat and "Let
Them Bab Breads"!
CINN.ulON aoLLS
l pound loaf froaen
bread douab
4 tablespoons melt·
t.'d butter or marsartne
2 te11pooos cln·
namon
1, cup sugar
l~ cup raisl& Cop
t1ooal>
Let frozen dough thaw
at room tempef'alure for
2~-3 hours or overnJeht
in ref~eralor. On Ugbt·
ly floured board roll
douab out to an 8"xl2"
rectangle. (II dough
shrinks back after roU·
ine. let rest 15·20
seconds and roll again.>
Spread dough wilb 2
tablespoons melted but.
ler. Mix cinnamon, sug.
ar and raisins, set aside
2 tablespoons for tater
use. Sprinkle mixture
over dough. Beginning
with 12" side roll tightly
in jelly-roll fashion. Cut
dough roll into 12 equal
s lices. Place slices in
lightl y butlered
JO-~ "x7" cake pan or 9"
pie pan. leaving ...., "· 1"
bet ween slices. Brush
tops with 1 tablespoon
melted butter and
sprinkle with remaining
cinnamon mixture.
Let rise until doubled
in size. Bake in preheat-
ed 375 oven 20.25
minutes, or until golden
brown. Tum out or pan
immediately to cool.
Raisin.
Bread
Ribbon
Keeping the kitchen
cool when the weather is
s till hot can be a
challenging task for
busy summer cooks who
have lo meet the de·
mands or hungry BP·
petites. Wholesome.
flavor-full sandwiches
can solve this dilemma
for the hungry crowd at
lunch, dinner or those
"times-in·betwcen."
It's never loo late to
start a collection of sum-
m e rli me sandwiches
that are generous in
good t aste and balanced
in nutrition. Begin with
today's sandwich idea,
San Joaquin Bologna
Ribbons. Skewered rib
hons of bologna, cream
cheese, and crisp lettuce
leaves are s tacked
between moist slices or
raisin bread.
No matter how you
slice it, spread it or
s tack il, raisin bread
makes s uper
sandwiches. Use ralsin
bread ... or raisin
Endish..tnu.ffin.'l. ·-· . to turn the s implest
sandwich int.o something
special.
SAN JOAQUIN
BOLOGNA Jl.IBBONS
12 s lices raisin
bread
•,.cz cup mayonnaise
1 package (8
ourtceS.) cream cheese,
softened
I/• cup sweet pickle
relisiir rueU drained • s • ces 60'l<rgna -•
Lettuce leaves
Olives, chili peppers
or pickles (optional>
Spread raisin bread
with mayonnaise. Set
uside. Blend cream
cheese and pickle relish.
Spread evenly on 12 or
the bologn a slices:
dividing equally. For
t•ach sandwich, stack
two cream cheese·
bologna slices; cover
with reserved slice of
bologna Sandwich meat
stack and lettuce leaf
between two slices or
bread. Cut Into four
triangles. If desired,
thread three or four
triangles on wooden
skewers and tarnish
with olives, chili pep·
pers or pickles. Makes 6
to 8 servings.
Sflf 921 6"
1" IO P1IOOf E & J Brandy 01
Seagram's Crown Royal Silt 1291 10" 1"
IO l'tOOf I TS ll" 3ss GOfdon's Gin Ul 8''
llQtl I TS Caballero Rum 8" 711 111 lTI
• SAvt
.)..,_ 2u
CllllAll IS 2" 21t .60 Zinfandel lll
CllllMI
Vin Rosso l-l!J 3 .. 2" 100
'It' ll!SUIK Oii llllf~ 2•• .70 Almaden Wtne STll 1"
• SAYl
12-PO 11-0l 81\S
lltPOCftO fllOll MOlWIQ 6 411 3" .66 Heinekens 11-oi an.s
Michelob 6 2" 1u .24 12 Ol 8TlS
Oii CAllS
•---------------------·--1951·---.. ----. MAHRIASU11 I ••• lllAll "AA" I .. , wasews Cllt~ I I I
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I Vir; --~ : ffFr> .. !!e'Cl•,•,• .. , ........... EP-~ .. i!lilo-----l
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I ,,.., Cllll IMI ':" 'fl(Wtlll eM-'fll l ,,..t(loll IHI ... ~;-OIOI _ ... , 1 11•1! 0111 l(I '°" .,,_ OOI ""'°" "'' ··-· -··"" ·-"""•"''"'I ....... 1111(110! "'' "".,_1\11111" \""I • ·-· llll(111IOIO 114 ·-""' ,.,. \''"I ••• IQ.I C4MIPM ••• ••• •ID-I COIPCMI ••• ••• llD-1 <OUPH •••
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ANN LANDERS I HOROSCOPE w.dlieldly, Augutt 30. 1978 DAIL y PtLDT CJ J
~a_ ... _c_.1en_d_•r__.) ~~~~for P~~~~
.. __,,~-LANDERS: A long time Uareal.I eo drop oat o1 SWING l'O& KIOS: UCl lledlcal Cemer •&"O you printed some tcboot or &eave flOme
Ted Barlcer and Mrs. Glenn Nalcaguchl get In th6 spirit for
Disco-Caslf>O Night.
Casino Night
The Juruor £bell Club
of lrvaoe w\U bold • Dis-
oo Casino Nlaht rund· raiser rrom 8 p m to I
¥.m . SMlurday, Sept. 8,
at the Mo otaooso
Rttreation Center. Mb·
sion Vie.JO. Admission is
$12.50 and t.Jcket.s must
be purchased by Sept. 1
b)' contacting Mts Glen
Nakaguchl ot Turtle
Rock or Mrs . John
Wakeham of the Rac-
quel Club.
Museum Sale
Newport Harbor Art
Museum will bold an an-
tique s how and sale
from 11 a .m. to 9 p.m .
Friday and Saturday,
Sept. 8 and 9, and 11
a.m. to S p.m. Sunday,
Sept 10 at the museum.
Adm1ss1on is $3, $1.50
ror museum members.
Madelyn Gonzalez, left. and Peggy
Lucas with antiques for museum sale.
LABOR DAY
SPECIAL SALE
I I
STARTS 1HURSDAY, AUG. 31
Selections of Women's Separates
Blouses, Tops, Dresses and Casual Shoes
REDUCED 50°/o to 75°/o
ALL 57'' OR LESS
BUY NOW ANO SAVE
OE~AftTMeNT 8TO•U~
1816 NEWPORT BLVD.
COSTA MESA, CALIF.
......
t:lOto
6:00
C'-d .....,
PAM c::oMYINl1MT\ Y AT OW llAl tMTUMCt-IMD Of MAGttOL.IA
Stretch & Sew' s
September Saturday Specials
/
I
i .
I '
\
10:30 a.m.
Sept. 2 Dolman Blouse
Sept. 9 Dirndle Skirt
.
-Sept. 16 ·Cowl Neck Top
Sept. 23 ~String Pants
•
Sept. 30 Dolman Dress
, .......... ...
.............. 'fOlllr ........ 1:•••• ... ., ........
Stretch &Sew Fabricse
In ° ... ..._ HUMTIM&TOM llACH
964~2746 l ............. .....
. I
wilt bold-1 •olf tournament. 1\ will be played rule1 for paref\f.I to live Stand ftrm. It )'OU eo1:
(tom Sept. 1 tbrou1b 30 oo 27 area &oil couraea. by. They were wrlllen lapge we .in no. we
For Jnform1tJon. call 634-6706. by boys who were in a beat yoa dowft and ~
reform .school and I su~e wtJJ aot be bappy about ASSISTANCE LEAGOE OF LAGUNA
8 £ACH: The Turnabout Thrift Shop opens Its doora for •notber rear at 10 a.m. Tuesday, Sept.
5. The Sbo.P. 6218 Glenneyre St., Latuna Beach,
ha1 been closed for a month t.o re-stock.
NEWPORT BEACH JUNIOR EBELLS:
G rrl Shapiro. membership chairman, will 1lve
a '°eclpe eltchange luncheon at 11 a.m. Tuesday.
Sc>pt s. at the home of Conn.it Ihrke. Women
between 18 and 35 who wish lo join, call Gerri at
673-3800. ~
NEWPORT HARBO& PANBELLENIC:
The Cl'OUl> wlll bold a membership-luncheon
meeting at 10 a.m. Wednesday, Sept. 6. at Glen-
dale Federal Savinis Community Room . Elaine
Schlup wtll exhibit her Jewelry.
INSURANCE WOMEN OF ORANGE
COUNTY! 1be group will bold a panel dis·
c ussion on Sept. 6 at the Revere House
restaurant l.n Tustin. Dinner is at 6:30 Cocktails
are at 6:30 p.m. with dipner at 7 p.m. Cost is
$8.75 per person. Make reservations with Karen
Tallbere or Val Mastin of the Atlantic Com·
panies l.n Irvine.
B&PW: The Fountain Valley Club will hold
a dinner meeting at 7 p.m . Wednesday, Sept. 6,
at the Crossl'Oads Restaurant. Fountain Valley.
Mary Mosby, will be speaker. Reservations
deadline is Sept. 4 and the fee is $16. Contact Helen
Ark for reservations.
NEW NEIGHBOR JUNIORS: A tea will be
held at 7:30 p.m . Wednesday, Sept. 6, at the
home of Mrs. Alan Smitb, San Juan Capistrano.
FOUNTAIN VALLEY NEWCOMERS
CLUB: A fashion show will be held at 11 a.m.
Wednesday, Sept. 6, at the Registry Hotel.
Irvine. For reservations. contact Mrs. Gary
Harper of Fountain Valley before Sept. 1.
WELCOME WAGON NEWCOMERS
CLUB: The Newport Beach group will meet at
11:30 a.m. Wednesday, Sept. 6. at the Velvet
Turtle Restaurant, Fashion Island. Speaker will
be Pat Powell. For reservations, caJI Beverlee
Kelley, 675-9615.
CLASS REUNION: The Newport Harbor
High School Class of 1958 will hold a 20th re·
union on Oct. 14 at Balboa Bay Club. Class mem·
bers are asked to contact the high school office
for details.
would like to see lht;m m U1e ••victory.•• Kids
your column again. I doa't want everytlllng
can't remember tb~m A•• Cbey all for. anymore but I hope you
can. Tbanka for Trying. Lataders 8. Be bo9e9' ..ttll u. D U K E I N Tell t.be trut.b DO matter'
WATERTOWN, S.O. wb•I. And be atralglat·
DEA& DUKE: Yoa at row ab o • t l t. are referring to tbe SilowusUlewa.y.TelJus Lukewarm aaawera
Reverend C. Galea. w"° God Js •ot dead, or make as measy. We tH waa asslped to Gaelpll sleepl.Dg. or oa ne1tloa. smell ~rtain&y a ml.le
CorrecdauJ Cater. Be We need to belM!ve In away. Tb.ls meua betq
aued .. boy1 to tlllnk 1oaetMJ11 bl11e~ and generous with pnl8e. u
a boat tlaetr lives aad stronger Uau Ollnetwa. you give us kJda a few
fl1ure oat why they 6• Scare the MU&:.:' compUmeau GeCe la • ended ap In an lmtJtv-wbtle we wtll be able to tlon for delinquents. It us. If you catdt m • aeceot crlttcbm aore
was tlte boys wbo drew stealing, or beiq C reaclily. We waM JOU to
ap a Code tor Pareats. WBYget '°~.:.tl..etwe u.sdld -u tellltllbltlt..-ROMA
Here it is: "'-.. &EADEJl WHO LOVES t. Keep cool. Do1t't wrong. Impress on us IUDS
lose yoar tempe1' In the tlte lmponance ot not re·
crunch. Keep &he Ud oa peatlng such bebavior.
when tbbtga 10 wrong. Wilen we need paatab-
Chllclretl are great Im-ment, dish It out.
llators. Bu& let us know you
2. Don't get strung out still love us, e\len lltoagb we have let you down. from too much booze or It'll make us think twice
too many pills. When we before we make &be
see our parents reaching same move again.
for those cnrtcbes we 1. Call our bluff. Make
gel the Idea that it's It clear that you mean perfectly OK to go for a b in..-• be bottle or a capsule when w at yoa say· uvu t
things get heavy. We wishy washy. Don't
lose respect fast for compromise. And don't
DEA& READE&:
Tbank you for your
generoas eoatrlbatioft to
thts 1pace. The young •
lawbreakers who pat.
together tbis guide for
parents did a splendid
Job. And my warm re-
gards to llA!v. Galea. I
can see why tbe kids
Ion and respect him.
Obviously he bu a way
of bringing oat the bes&
In them.
parents who tell as Co -------------------behave one way while
they are behaving
another way.
3. Bug us a UWe. Be
strict and coosis&ent in
dishing oat dJsclpUne.
Show us who's boss. U
gives us a feeling of
security to know we've
got some s trong sup·
ports under us.
4. Don't blow your
class. Keep tbe dlgnUy
of parenthood. Stay on
that pedestal. Your
children have pat you
there because they need
someone to look ap to.
Don't try to dress, dance
or talk like your kids.
You embarrass us and
i ~ Page School ,'9
.kl) of Costa Mesa ~m ~ ~:' '°'11110£0... • •
·;;., FALL TERM BEGINSSEPT.11 ' ~\FOR BOYS Ii GJIU.S AGES 2·1Z YRS.
6:31 A.M. · t : IS P.M. •
GRADES PRE·SCffOOL THRU 5th GRADE "\, /
NON SECTARIAN \.:,::;/
Highest Standards-Modern New Equipment
2 Acre Campus
Individual lmtru~tlon-No Child NeaSectecl
•Remedial lleadlQg.ffow To Study
•Field Trips •Hot LuoclJes
•Reasonable R.ates
•Discount for 2nd or :lrd Child
,, '"' ' .... ,,, ,\ """
.._ '"'
' 1 i
( ]
you look ridiculous.
5. Light a candle. Horoscope P" _ ~
____ T_HURS __ D_A_Y_, A_U_G_U_Sf-31____ f R ANCI Q ORR
• 111, Iii"' 11~ t I' 657 VICTORIA AVE .
COSTA MESA• 143-0WI
ARIES ~~:~~N2~~::r~~: Accent on eJ-
creative changes, special relationships, deal-
ings with Taurus, Libra affecting personal
finances. Build for security, but don't be held
back bv tradition. Shake off anv excess timidi-
ty. Family members will prove loyalty.
TAURUS CApril 20-May 20>: Study Anes
message. Diversify. prove that you can adapt to
changing conditions. Expand horizons. Money
wiJJ be less of a problem than anticipated. Ac·
cent on oom1cile. security, bringing joy within
family circle.
GEMINI <May 21 .June 20): You may be
trying too much in too many places Obviously,
you are scattering forces. spreading efforts too
thin. Key now is to consolidate. Admit past mis·
takes. Correct them. Lunar aspect shows that
gloom will be transformed to joy .
CANCER CJune 21-July 22>: Count your
change. Be wary of one who talks around issues
and doesn't respond to direct questions
Analyze, deduce reasons. Welcome variety,
challenge. Refuse to settle for status quo. Open
dialogue with one who expresses desire to come
over to "your side."
LEO !July 23-Aug 22>: Popularity in-
creases -where it counts most. Wlthm family.
You have golden opportunity to correct recent
statements. actions. Cycle high -your Judg-
ment ts on target. Know it and act accordingly.
Taurus is m picture.
VIRGO <Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Be discreet.
Think before speaking -a rule that applies
more this day than in past. Pisces 1s m picture.
Hospital, secret meeting, film. illusion are all
part of scenario. If you expect complete
cooperation, wake up and make presence felt.
. LIBRA ~5!?~· 23-0ct. .22 >: A.ccent on accept.
mg . responsibility for friendship, relationship
Business move works in your favor -investment
begins to kick and come to life. Exciting time, de·
sires fulfilled, friendship is spotlighted and your
feelings are reciprocated.
Sl:ORPIO <Oct. 23-Nov. 21>: Your mtluence
is felt -more so than originally anticipated.
Suggestions are accepted, superiors are recep-
tive. You could be promoted, asked to join in
important civic project. Aries, Libra persons
are in pi cture -so is the number 9. Long dis·
tBnce call clarifies mystery.
SAGITTA.IUtJS <Noy. 22-Dec. 21): Obtain
hint from Scorpio message. Strive for lndepen
. dence, creativity -and be open to love. Self·
esteem is oh upswing. You receive strokes that
are long overdue. Accent on distance, com-
munication, education. spiritual insight. Leo,
Aquari~ figure prominent!)'.
CAPRICORN <Dec. 22-Jan. 19). You're in-
volved. Money and emotions rush pell-mell into
scene . Wbat had been a relatively sedate rela-
tions hip could become explosive. Cancer in-
dividuaJ figures prominently. Protecl assets.
Keep cards face down until you're more
fa miliar with ••game."
AQUARIUS <Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Accent on
special relatlonsbtp, cooperation, joint efforts.
public relations and marriage. Gemim, Sag1t·
larius and Leo persons are part of your personal
scenario. Key Is to be flexible, to leave details
for another time, to grasp overall view .
PISCF.S <Feb. 19-Marcb 20): Employment
prospects, basic issues and services are
spotlighted. Aquarius, Taurus. Leo persons
figure prominently -so does the number 4. Op·
portuniUes exist. but some persons want you to
10 through maze or red tape, a sort of test.
Humor them! I
INDIVJDUAL HAIR STYLING Sy Newport.Finest
LUZZETTA Bernard
240 Newport Center Dr .. Ste 200
Nl!WPORT BEA0i-e40«>23
...
. ' . .. . .
fire stationery corona del rrar
fall. .. gel's country
.m brmge back
1ll R1ciote m da.mm wrl:h thl..1r qreat f\t
and style. a1l coUon
ve.lour Wlth button
front and round
co1 lar<Ui plald blaJ5<Z.
distm ctlvely ot·e.aoc.
f61l .
44 f8lhion Island, newport center 644·5070
SHASTA.99c DmKSg.:
~ or diet -a.is peck or individual
cana . . . choice ol favored navon
Zee Napkins ••• 29c
Aeaorted colon -package of sixty
Buns ~ .:c ..... 35c
Packap of eight ... Springfield
Hot, Regular Or Hickory -14 oz btle
Party Crackers 79c
Nabisco -ch006C the favorites! pkg
Imo Dressing • • 39c
All the usea of 110ur cream -16 oz
Macaroni ~': ...... 49c
Reg or Lge Elbows, Salad or Shells
Del Monte S5c Relishes
Hamburger, Hot Dog, Sweet -12 oz
Catsup 14 oz nu ••••• 29C
Springfield -for flavor and value
Dill Spears • • • • • &9c
Heinz -Koeher or Poliah -24 oz
Schlitz Beer 12HC1 5279
The one with gusto! 12 ounce cans
POTATO 79c CHIPS:
Reg. Barhecue or Sour Cream
& Onion Flavor· Laura Scudder' a
Read's Salads • 59c
Choice of four kinds! 15 oz jar
Paper Plates • • • ggc
Springfield Pkg of 100 ... sv. inch
A·l Sauce ••••• 99c
For more than jUBt ateab! 10 oz
Baked Beans ••• &9c
S & W ... Oven Baked fiavor! 28 oz ·
. Charcoal s 129
Brlquets
Sprincfield 10 lb bag! They bum long
Dog Food • • • • • • 49c
lilt.Kan .M.e.S... Chur\kl • .. • 23 'h .oi. cao -
Woolite Liquid • 79c
Cold Water Soap -8 oance aize
Palmolive L9 ••• 1179
For diabee -48 0% aize (30t off)
Bath Tissue •••• 49c
Lady Brott . . . two roll pack
=~=' 89~ Happy Lep In u8ort.ed ahad•
Whole Ham •••• s12t
El Rancho'• own quality! (water edded)
Sliced Bacon ••• s 14t Ham . Slices •••• s21~ Cure 81 Ham •• s21t
El Rancho's thicker "ranch 1tyle" Center cut from our own ham (wat.r adc;led) Hormel's -bonelell -whole or ball
Fr111h T11rlt111 :. m
Turkey Breast • s1 •t
Sweet white meat -Freeh (with rib cage)
Split Broilers • • 6,.
Larie Meaty Gr "A" chicken (with giblet.a)
Turkey _.. ••• 59~
El Rancho's Fresh quality!
Beef Roast :rans s21t
Chuck cut Choice shoulder clod
Tap Birlain Si1alt I
,. t.m. Cllt " w.l .............. ...
. ... t!Mrfll ..• -~ ...... lh.., .. ..... hit! lM u .... iltllt ...
GROUllt BEEF snu s1 1!
Leaneet iuind -doee not exceed 16%
fat! Steaks are three per pound
U.S.D.A. CHOICE IEEF •••••••••
Top Sirloin':' •• s31!
Loin cut -U.S.D.A. Choice beef
Chuck Steak ••• 51°~
Center cut •.. U.S .D.A. Choice beef
Ground $159 Beef J:I~ •
Lean -does not exceed 22% rat
Delicatessen
7 Bone Roast •• s1 •t
Chuck cut -U.S.D.A. Choice beef
0 Bone Roast •• 51 ·~
Chuck cut -U.S.D.A. Choice beef
CUtOWI
lrALWI STYLE $ 159 Sausage . •
OR BRA1WURST! We make it -
and with no nitrites!
Franlt1FA .. , •.......... ll!
Chooee Meat or Beef -either way, you'll be well rewarded! 16 oz pkg
Wrangler Fr•kss11! CheeseBars .... s111 Mozzarella ••••. '111
Hormel'• -the goodneB11 of Beef! 16 oz -Pepper. Smokey, Godde88, Bacon -9 oz Precious (12 •••• Sl.St) (I • •.. SUI)
CANNED s549 HAM ua
Dubuque (PUA PCl.11 UI ... UI)
:r,T~ 39c
Pen & Quill (AVDIO If ... 4to)
Super Fresh Produce
Claussen's 99c
Plddes
Whole « Halvee -32 oz jar
1110no11 I ~·· 41
,,., •• SB!SS ........... •
Ertra Fancy • . emerald globee ol goodneee ••• eee the difference! Sweet, juicy, aatlafying!
POTATOES STRAWBERRIES =.., 19! 59c
Pticet in ~ect 7'wt9dqy AUf. 31 thtoufh W«i. &pt. 6
Open ®ily 9 to 9 Sunday 10 to 7-C/.olttl Mond.~ &pt 4·Labcw /)Qy
PllEAPPU
25~
·--UllMY •••• SEPT t
IY aoml
.
FRESH
TROUT
Mountain trout -average 1 to 2 Iba
Catfllh fl1£ll ••••• S2'!
Euy to pr;epare -and to eajoy
Mahi Mahi ••••• s15t
Ah·h·h· thOlle memories of Hawaii!
C'.ooked Shrimp '3't
The right aiie for ahrimp cocktail
Fillet of Cod ••• s21t
Fresh! True Cod for full value
Liquor Dep 't.
Bottled for El Rancho! 1.75 liter
Tanqueray Gin s15•1
For THE martini! Save 2.60! 1. 75 ltr
Old Crow •••••• s 19•
Straight whiskey reduced 3.00! 1.75 ltr
Rum or Tequila s31•
El Rancho'• own! Save 70e -fifth _
I · I s411 mpena ••••••••
Blended Whiskey reduced I.~! Qu~ _
El Rancho s5M
SCOTCH
Bottled in Scotland -eave 1.49 Qt.
Frozen Food
Springfield in favored flaV01"8
Orange Juice ••• g3c
Treeaweet c:oocentzate -12 O% can
Sweet Peas •••• 35c
Bildleye prden goodnea-10 en pkg
Chicken Pie • • • • 39c
Van de Kamp'• -7 ~ en of goodneM!
Pizza Rolls... • •• &9c
Pepperoni or Sauaage 'w/cheese--6 o:i
LmOllDr ::::... 2oc (ll•lill ..... ,
' ARCADIA PASADENA SOUTH PASADENA HUNTINGTON BEACH NEWPORT Rf ACU EASTBLUFF . IAVINE LAGUNA HILLS .
').,n .. rl and .... unl1rua1 I,, 1JO w Colorndo Dlvd J '"mont •nd ttuntlnqton w.unPr •"•' Al4onc1111n ••. 'N• W1""' It~ I ..... •, f ..... 111111tt 1>1 l1•1llf'I•!• "1 ) .111.t M11 ,,,. '\pf1 ... .,., Moul•on r•nr'1.w.\y
f 1H.1n(~l Crnlrr f otOrangrqro\'t"' Soulh•n.-,t,o•nttr u--rf,,1ur M.tll fin''",., 'II'' t 1·ttdu''"1ll.1qt•(t•f\IC'' f'.tr•V1•'"'-' ,.,,,,., '-'1tH1lt<1r1 ,91fkWt1yPIA1I
CUDS mt• .......... 29c Cftlf Fl£ IAISllllu.ows ... 49c • PDftl•,.,. ........... St.31 -mu 111 ••••.•••••.• 11o
With that eplQY btown ...U'*'l 8 01 Rtmtraber bow aood they an? 18 oz plif Cbcae Rl(ular or Suiar Free ••• 12 OI. cam CrMm Deodorant rcw MCUrlty' 1 ounc.
P• •Y FIY •.•...••...•.... 99c
Fooda won't llkk -pane cl•n Mtily' 9 oz
FIEICll FIB a.IS ........ 490
0 6 C makee them CTlll), nevor{ulf 3 Ot
... TAil.ET'" ........... 99C AllSIVE ltcllACES ......... 69c
Olvw n..t i.llaf ~ minor J>9ln -38 ct yuchi.. Curadl -bonua bos o( 80 (20t off')
. . . . ... . ... . . .. . . l ..
lltC11TtOllS~
...... ll .. TSMllJIT nw......,. __ .. ...,...i
~·' •IHt" •ltCUC. .. VIMA ....._ ... ..,..,~~ .... """"~ ....... ,.,"" c Non..., Mt Vlt ........... ....._, hK",c..-.e '"'·-.. --.., ... ~ dl•-1 .....,..~·-™·~-.. ---c-t• C*1I ., o.-.. c-. ..... ........,., ....
~Oil""" Or ... CM\& °'9111' .....
A"'9 a """ .. U, • ltJt HQ 19
PUBUC NOTICE .....
lll01'1Q Off IA4..
-'~" ...... HOTICl IS. HE•EIY GIVIN t...t
111<1 -~Wiii, MIO.• m , ell
IN !.ti\ NY Oii ~. 1911. .C ~t
... ~ .... , Dr .... l'-City Oii -lnV'Ofl
IH<ll, CoulttY at Or41n9t. $1•1• «
C..llt0<1'1' Mii .t ll'lb!IC .uc11oo\. -19-1\l~'I -tor c-., h tol-lflt OHcrll>M~ ,,,_.,,
lt?•~PIJ Mri .. •CIC V'UIZI 11)tn
We re-"'°' rlQl!t to bid on ll'te
Pf~rty
GENERAL MOTORS ACCEPTANCE
• CORPORATIC>ft PulMl\MO Or .. Co.t\t °'611Y Pllol
A119"St >O. 1'1'1t 004·71
PVBUC NOTICE
ep..nn su .. 1•10. C:OUIJT Off THI
ST A Tl Off CAU .0.Nll• ll'O•
TMI COUNTY Off 04'Aft01
-A-4'1919 NOt"ICI Off HIAltlNO 011
PITlt"ION l'04' ~H Off WILL
ANO ffO• L.E~aS Tl!STAMEN·
TA•Y ANO AUTNOltlZATION TO
AOMlllllSTl!a UNOl!a TME
tMOIPINOINT AOMIMISTltATION
011 ESTATHACT
Est.le Oii Eu.A R MILLER, ·-· Ell.A RHODA MILLER. •k• ELLA • FltAZER, ~ MR$ MIE(.VIN A.
STRATIS, •H MRS. JOE DYAR,
0e<H~. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN llWll
SHIRLEY CARLENE CASH -flt.cl
... ,.,,, • Pt"lllon IOf ProlMta at Wiii
•no tor luu.w"• o1 u1 .. rs T .. ,_...
tarv to t'-Petit'-....s •utnoril•·
!Ion to •dmlnlstw llW ftl•ta .-r 11111
1r.oe.,....,.,rit A«!llrttw.iton o1 E'1•t"
,.cl, reter'""9 10 wl>•<ll I$ m-for
lurtller l>M1k.Ws. ~ IMI tr.. !Im.
.. nc1 pl•<At o1 t.Hrlno Ille wm. !Wis
o..n "t for 5ei14....ii.r tt. 1911, at
10 00 • m., In llW (°'"11r-.. of 0.11¥1·
rnent No. 3 ol Mid c.ourt. al 700 Cl•IC C.nler Ori .. w.st, In Ille CllY of S4nt•
Aft•, C.lilorlll•.
O•led A119'SI lS. 197t
WILLIAM E. SI JOMN,
COUnty a.r1I
STAlllPO•O •·SHAW 11'1 -INNI Sl. S411t.tta
s..ta Au. CA '21ll Tel: C1'41 50411'1 ... ~-=~ P,.1>1'-Or-CNst 0.11y Pilot
""'· >O. 31, 5"IC. •• tm •tol·ll
PUBUC NOTICE
fflCT1TIOUS IUSIMl!SS NAMIE5TAT~NT
Tiie loll-Inv per'°"s ••• d01"9
bu~··,,.,~.,
LIOU·A·PLATE, lllJO W•rd
Street, F-l•ln V•Oey. C.lllorrtl• mo. AACHER'S PROOUCTS. l"'C .. a
{.•lllornt• c.or...,..•tlon, lll'IO werd
$tr..,I. FOUfttal" VllltY. C.lilo•n••
9270I
Tiii\ l>\IMMU I• c.O'IOU( tad l>Y • co,.
oor•llon Arellltt"• PrOdvcls, 111<
ROl>el1 0. Arc.her
Pr415ieltftl
T111s sl•t-t was flied w1tt1 tl'te
cou1tlY Cler-of Orart~ Counly on
"'"'"'' 11, 1978 F ... MS
Publls/led 0r""OI' Co.tu D•1ly PllOI.
,.1111,.•t 23. 311 end SePtemiwr •· 13, 1•11 .. 02.11
PVBUC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS IUSINUS
NAME STATEMENT
The fotlowl"9 ~"°" It -"9 !>\Isl n.uu
l("'LY, 177 22nd SI, •71, Cotta io¥W, CA'm11
---~,.
PVBUC NOTICE
lllCTIT10US IUSlltESS
ltAMa STATEMaHT
Tl\e 1011-1119 119r-.s .,. doi"O
l>USIMUM:
ANNATE AGENCY, 16091 0.vls
une, w .. n11naton e..c". C.. 926.ft EY•IYfl AklY•, 160l1 Davis lAne,
H11nllnvton 6eecfl, CA,~ I \aac ,.klv•, 164111 O•vls lane.
Huntlnglon SNGh, C... '2M9
Tllh l>uslness 11 conducted by • ve-••• 11ertnerviip • E.,.1.,,,..lv•
Tl\ls si..1-t was flied wlltl tM County Cl-of Or•nge County on
A119 .. \t u. 1'71.
ff'""7 P,.bllslled Or-Co.st o.lly Piiot
AllQ. JQ. $lttlt-•• 13, to. 1'71 QIMI
PVBUC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS •USUIEU
M-E STATllMENT Tiie lollowl1>9 ,,.rson Is doing
t>uslness n .
THE FLOWER CART, 11731
hiKll 81'"'-, HIMlhllQIOn BNcll, CA ,,..,
Jolln Georoe 8•nlcll, 11141
ha<ll 81vG., Huntin!llOn S..CI!, CA
'2fo41
This ~ Is CONIUCted l>y .,,
1na1.,ld ... 1. Jonn G. Batrictl Tllh si.-..1 .... lllH wllll 'll'le
eourtty a-o1 Or-County°" July
10, ""· Ftfnt7
Pu1>1l1nea 0r""9t eo.sc Dally Pllol,
A119, '· ,., 23, lO, "71 ~,.
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS IUSINt:SS NAME STATl!MENT
Thi! tollowl"9 .,.rsorl5 •re dolnQ
busine'I& a•:
KING PRINTING CENTER, 1201 Mart11t, lrvlne, CA '2115
T ll•oaore Lorandos, ISi ii lu Solan.s. ~ml-. CA 91683
Ol•n• c;.lolr, Wll So. R• .. nna ,..,. .• C•rson. CA 9074S
Thh 1>uslneu b conducted by •
~,,.,., p«trwrs/lip.
TlleodQre lM oWldoS
Tiii• sl•l-1 w•s llle<I wltl'o 1M co .. nty Clerll of 0.-Courtly on
411QuSI 1•, 1971.
ft8"llt
Put>llslled Orainge eo.n Dally Pilot
A1111. 16. 2l, 311, Sepe. 6, 1'11 ~11
JOM SIMlley l(lnH>y, 111 nno SI., ·-----------
1121, Cosl• Mew. CA m11 Tllh 1>11\lneu h <ondl>cll'd l>'r Ml 111· PUBUC NOTICE
dlYidual. J-----------
JOfWI$ IClnley
Tritt tl.i....-•n h ied wottl the
County Cf~-ol o..,.oe County on
AllQUSI H, "71. ...,, ..
Put>lltned Or1119 Coos! O•lly Pilot
A119. 1', 2', 311, Se-pt.'· 197* 30ll·11
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS I USINEU
HAIU s::zMENT Tt>t> tollow\119 Js dolft9 ~
MU•S;
SECOHO AVEHUI!!, ~ Peclfk Awe., Apt. e, Cost• 111\eM, C.. nf'17 Kelly J . ~ .... 72'4 Peclllc Ave.,
Apt. E, Cosi..Mew, C.. 91611
Tiiis llv."-U Is conouc1..:l l>y an 1,.. dl.,ldu•I.
KellyJ.SNts
lnh si..tement •n t11..:1 w1111 t~ County Clent of 0.•"99 Ce>vnly on AIOQ,.SI, 14, 1'11..
ft"'2SS ,~ul>llslled Orlfl99 eo.u o.1111 Pll« Ail9 ll, 23, •• s.o. ..... ,. :io.1.11
""PUBUCNOTICE .. ,...
l"ICTITIOUS IU'SINaSS NAMaSTATllMaNT
ti.. fOllOWlnt pef"toM e-. ffl"9
~, .. ,
CUMMIN' £ WHITE ANO
• ~llHS()H £ R081NSON, 1600 Oow
"St ., 9'iile G , H--' S.Kll, C..
• 92'60 JoM011 H. ~ '141 N VIiia
He\911tt ..... ,........, c:... •1101
J-0. -·· 1120 0... c;n ... ,.......,., Sal\ flo\WlnO, CA. •1 to1
M•rll P. AoOIMOfl, tOI F,_ Pl-•· LCK ,.,,....,_ Cit fOOOS Merk P. Rolllnion Jr., No. >
1umnKJt, 1n11M, c.. ~ns
L•"Y Nl Arnold. 701 C.Wnellon, Coroow Oel MM', C.. mt>
Scott C. °"""""" 17 Urd Avenue. Ven•u.C.
w 1111 .. n c. HltthCO<k. 1111
Amlle,.lt A .... Wftt LOI Angtlel, C..
'GOU Wllll.m W. Hun, IOO WMI ffll'lt 5,,...,, • 70I, Los~ c... '°°"
Jo• L.•wrertce, IS7U Calle
GardlM, s.tt J-c:.t>lltr-, Ca. .,.u
JM\'I~ 0. Otta,•1$ ~•JP, mm-ow flN<11. ca._,.,
M l<-E. White, 46$1 Cerri~
Of .. weodl9fld ~tit, c. ., ...
Thi• lluM-• I• ~Ofldvetff IJy • ..-.1.,...,~
.>-fJ/11 H Q.tnwnlra
fhlt ii•--11*9 -'"' , ..
C.euf't1 o.n .. ~-'-"'on A119V't 10, ""' ""'"'t
R.MtJ NOTICE TO CltEOl"TOlltS
NO.~
SUf'IEltlOll ClOUltT OF T"E
ST A TE OP CAUl"OltNIA FOa
TM E CIDUMTY Off OltANGE lfl t ... IMttw ol (fie Estate at JOAN lEE WHITE, aa JOAN LEE WHITE.
K•JOANWHtn,o.ce.-o.
Mollee ls _.., g1_, to creditors
~Vlft9 ctelms ~1"5t the said Mee. den! to Ille Mid claims In tN off lee of
Ille <l•rti Of the aforesaid court or to PHMnt them to 'll'le uncle~ •I tne
offl<eof RAYMOffOJ. ROSTAN, l2S70
8roollhurst St,...t, Suite I, In tne Clly
of CO.ro.A Gto~ In Ute atorewla
COVl\ty, Wllleh lattw office It the P1ec;e
ot 1>\1$111HS Of , .. unders!QnH '" •II l'Nltlers perta11>1r19 to Mid est.le. S<Klt
clelms wltll tht _., -~
must tie fllsf or -led .. •tonMl<I wltl\ln tour montl\s .,,._....,.
t I rsl pUl>l lutlcn of Utlsnotke.
Oat.O AUllllSI U, 1911
R-LMartln Admlnlstralrf11 Of Ille
Estateot s.ict Decedent
ltAYMON0.1. llOSTAll
-~y atL.aw ~ 1
0-, ca. t.264'
PUl>lltlled Or-..ge Coast O.lly Pilot, AUQllSI ,.,2:3,311-~6, lt71
*2·11
PU#uc NO'l1CE .. .,..,
ttOT'lta TOCUOf TOM ..........
su ..... °" ClOU•T ()ti THE
lt"AT•WCM.ll"<HtNIA l'Oa
TH a C0UWTY OI' MANOI
lrt Ille ~el ti» El~OI F 0 .
STEPHl!NSOH ... ~ k"°""' n FER·
ltAl.D DANIEi. STEPHENSON, •nd n OAH ST"g"PHENSON, Oec.N9ed.
HOT ICE 1$ HElfE8Y GIVEN to c...ctlton havl119 cl•trm .gainat ,,,.
.. Id dK9deftt to flle 5ltid C141fmt '" tN ottke ot IN clerll of Ille tlf~ld coun .,.. to ~ tNm to Ille .,,..
denlgftect •t the omc~ ol LLOYDS
BANK CAUFORNIA, 1'22 N Main St., Sant• AM. CA 92102. wl\lcll 191t#
Office .. lhel)leee Of 11\aiMH of Ille Uf)o
Oenl9Md Ill .ct me~ Pt<UlftlllQ to ..,Id •tt•I• Suell cl•lmt wll" tfle
nec:•-ry ~~ rnvst be !Ilea or
Pf•Mnted •,1 •foreMld •1111111 t-
moftlll\ •ltw IN "'°'' lll*lulletl Of !!Ill Mike.
O•ted ~ 14, t'7a.
Ll.OVOSMHIC (All~NIA 1422 Mtlll H. Maill 5t
~AM.~ '210'1
&llllCllMr .. h Wftt ............
VlltTUI • ICMIClt, INC. .,,...,.,~
tJCW,. ....... Dr. ... 0. ... ,.. .....,.,--..,c:.,,...
~-Cit ... ONt1 Deity f'llot Alli "·ta. .. ~ .•. 1')1 .... ,.
6
4
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The 81gge•t Marketplace Ont'th• Orange Coast
DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS
You Can Sell It, Find It, ( .:tAft •5878 } One Call Service Ttlidi fi Wtlh a W11tt Ad U!96 Faat Cridlt Approval
.fi1~ COATS & WALLACE
'T:T' REAL ESTATE. INC.
' l (11 :'II I~ llWN I () CO M l'AN~ '>I ~VI NL
I flt \1111 I H f'llA'll AHi ,, \INLl 1% I
IASY UVIM6 -4 big bdnm -DO yard
maintenance -back yard living with
big bltn BBQ & nice p oo l
w/sllde ... finished boo~ room, could
be a child's heaven away from adults.
Enjoy th.ls N. Costa Mesa easy living
at $87,900. VA, too. al 14Ml41.
00 IT IKMfT -We know that you want
your home to be ever ything you
always dreamed or. With this in mind
we off er solidly built 3 Bdrm "with
home beautiful" atmosphere. Shaded
patio. Your dream home deserves the
hPc;t 1117.000. CG164CMl61.
Serv1nq Costa M esa-Irvine
ti .1ntingtun Beach -Newport Beach ........ •••••••••••••••••••••••
l:OUAI.. HOUSING
Of'f'OATUNlfY
RIDUCB) S 1,900
TOVA
APPRAISAL
Only $63.000 for btn 3
bdrm townhouse over-
Mliw's Moffu: looting pooJ & greenbelt.
All real estate advertu;ed Great location near So.
in this newspaper is sub-~ Plaza; Call today · t:; to the Federal Fair stwonllast. 54s-949i
~~i~k:Sc~t ifi~g~~! {~1~$113§1$faj
adver tise "an1 pre-Real Es ference, limitat1on, or late
d.lscrimination. b.ased on SELL YOUR OWN HOME race, color, religion. sex, $895 FEE-Assist mads ~ national origin, or an fin, sales, escrow etc.
intention to make any REALTY FREE such preference, 1Jm1ta· HOMF.S
tion. or discnmination." R.E. Advisory Service
5.»2224 This newspaper will not ---------knowln,ly accept any POOL! VA
advertising for real TERMS, TOO!
estate which is tn viol.a· Only $74,900 for s harp 4
tionoflhe law. bdrm w/xtra lge lot &
RV access. Remodeled
kitchen w /nf?W cabmets
& sinks. Call soon for it
won't last! 54.5-9491 e= Walker & Lee
&RORS: Act.erii-cn ....... cMdl....,. ads
cWly .ct nport .,...
ron 5-diahty. The DAILY PILOT ass..s ___ R_eal_Es_ta_te __
l.mty for .... fint ..
cornet lastrtloft owly.
. ..................... .
Cil IF .. 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••
EMERALD IA Y!
HELP! PROIATE!
Reduced thousands. ex·
ecuUve estate. steps to
ocean! Breathtaking
view. Low price wilJ sur·
prise you! Hurry! CaJI
today rordetails. 645-0303
FOR ESTE
OLSON
NI Htlt&f ,,.. ••
MESAYERDE
Over 2000 sq. ft. of
spacious living on ;:i
lavishly landscaped lot. s
Bdrms. 2 frplcs. and re·
ady to move in. Sl.26,500.
COSTA MESA
3 Bdrm. 2 ba home In
Easts1de C.M. on Alva
Ln. Qwet & secluded.
Just reduced to $95.750.
~·iP.: Bal~,i~~~IY
(t73-1700
IACKIAY
The quiet serenity or the OCEAN VIEW country w /the conve
3 Bedroom. 3 bath. glass nience oC the city. See
atrium. model home. this 3 bdrm charmer w /a
Linoo Rul&TATl
NEWPORT BEACH
I
IALIOA ISLAND
FUHCH REGENCY
TW1 lualuw fl•• .,.._.. .._ with e ---.&rooftop•ll•t' ut .... tt. bett of ttM .._ w1 Werlor
9'i-Dttalled wood tr,.. mt, FrwJt
fir•plmc•. tile wort& cmd ............ ""*• tW1 ... tNy tpedal Tiiis Is a ~
111 a lfetlMt oppot twlty for ..,_. wt.o desJ,.._......., Uvilwj. $395.000.
NEWPORT ILUFFS
1 ...... ac ..... fhrft bedl-oofft "'G .. Pim. M
... 1t wltll 111IRf lack lay •lew, tte ..
c•Hfwgs Cllld wood floon lihlaftd Oft a
fo•ely greelbeft. Close to c-'ty pool
An excel.t .,..,. at S 156.000.
ILUFFS CONDO
&Joy .... priYacy md ............ flMJ
wr~ tW1 dww&g lllffs C..SO..
Tllree ~ two cmd °"' ldf......., ::r~~c~
a spedal offeri119 at S 15 7. 500.
MEW DUPLEX
CMOftCI .. Mar OWMf''S .... COll!plet.ty
nl90dMd iftc:Wng .-a tub with Wdtt
lft llMldtl-bedrooa M•w cspet.,_ tile,
wallpaper CMd fireplaces ht bottll mlih.
Spoci0111 rental _. has oceaa •n. Low
..... ~ P"operfy wftlt COR'f.-.CH
...-by. $205,000.
LAGUNA BEACH
MYSTIC HIU.S
RolHng Cf""!' hiHa and canyon Yi•ws tr..
this Mwty decorated ffllne ~ two
bath ......... LCIC)mO leoc9'. Pm•......,.
deck md patf o, ,.rtec:t for CMltcloor
Hterhl 1..., A. hotM fofo tt. ~
tcn.lty •• .$149.900.
SPECTACULAR OCEAN &
CAMYOM VIEWS
Mewly COM11 acted .,alitr built .._ with
•fews, slh1ated in a prestli:.= ~ .... hillg,..... dWncJ ,..... ... bcr, l ........... l
full batltroo .. u. M•st se• to
appndah .•. SZ98,SOO.
SOUTH LAGUNA
OCEAMRlONT MOBILE HOXE
A ran oppol"fwtity to li•e riC)ht at the
oc.-in T,..._.. Island. Watch ... WCIYff
sprar O.er the rods below, iusf steps to
tfte beoch. Mow Giiiy $16,000.
64~7020
2123 SAN JOA1i)UIN HILLS ROAD
NEWPORT IEACH
Huge master s uite, parldi.ke ~g for your ---------·1~
w/fplc +sliding door to outdoor entertairung m SIJ DOWN *VETS * pavlWon. Breathtaking beautiful Newport Beach
view of surf & Catalina location . SU7,000. OOOWN-OCLOSING
lsland. Try $12,SOOdown. 646-ml ~~~b:~ft:J>~s;A Homesinallareasof
For preview of this unt· homeon Jarae lot ORANGE COUNTY quebome.call963-6761 • ., VET AGT. ~Nllt~•//\11.JN•OH#N<I• $159,500 Cal541.0800 I 9111111 -·oc-·EA-M•RtO-•MT--lcaliii
1
iownriii
1
i
8
gtii.
64
ii
6
i.ssi
1
i
1
iilli,...iiii_i-iiii_iii_i_i ____ i_ii.__i__.iii
Choice oceanfront cae: MESSY MANSION duplex. on the sand!
Spacious 4 BR fi xer in Huge upstairs bdrm ..
Newport Beach! Large lge. kitchen. On large R-2
lot! Remodel & profit! lot. $:J75,000! DIDBll ILllNS CD, Can't last! HUJTY! Call lalboolayProp.
660303 Redtors
F OREST E
OLSON
..... I lU A •ttf•'
* 675-7060 *
41DRM
$79,900
lU +POOL Shortwalktoelementary + IEACH $61 900 school from this 1 m • maculate 4 bdrm, 2 ba Spac~ garden home, pJ~fmlyrmhome. ldcal
large livtng room w /fplc. ·north Costa Mesa re·
gourmet lr.itcben + dine. sldential area. Just tn·
S2500 down or S265 per troduced to the market·
mo. \ISUDlable pay· •hnuLtt ...,,fasi1 Mg.jil menta. Oall~llt" ___.,, 7 • -,:.. ,.
()Ffl'trt19•1f\IV/>#10MNCI rc.;;:1rr!'1 • r:;;;;;:;-.~~P.l!i!!Nii C:::..J.~ ,j1H I_:_.\!
1 e1i11tll ~==-~
SAYE SSS
Spartling 3 bedroom in
prime nelgbborhood with
new carpeting & paint.
Priced (or quick sale at
only S81.900. CALL
751-3191
CSELECT
T'PROPE~IES
WITHVIEW
Lvly Trina model condo
In the Bluffs. 3 bdrm, 2~
ba, splH·level & a
breathtaking view of
Back Bay. 759-1501
~ Walker & lee
Real Esi.te
9UALIRID IUYa
W_..lkJC..y•
DO YOU Versalllea « Deauvillo OFFEJ\ASERVJCE~ wfpool or pooL 11.u! lot.
Let lhe public know with A41l64().052IS l
an .ct in the Dally PllotWb _...;;•_t_a_W_ood_f:ff __ u_I -W-o-rld-
Senice Dlrectory. ll can of Sbo9pln1. ri&bt at
cmt. 10'1 u Ultlt u St.SS ~our nosertlpt every.
pet day f"pr more ln· d a y ! D a 11 y P l I o \
fonnadon and complete Clustfied Ada. To place
rai. call SU.5871t. your ad, call M2·~1l ond
~~~~~~~~1 let a Clautll~ Ad-Visor -belp.)'OU.
..
OVER 50 YEARS OF SERVICE
BLUFFS JEWEL
Beautiful Dolores End Unit On A
Choice Greenbelt Setting. Large
Wraparound Patio W/Fountain &
Exotic Plush Planting. Decorated
In Warm Neutral Tones. New
Cu s'lom Kitche{l-. Fully Air
Conditioned. Flexible Financing.
Shown By Appt. Sli9,SOO ... A Joy Of
NeyqK)rt Lis~'.
II t DOYEi DRIVE &3milo
'II~.!~~
TUR1lEROCK
HIGHLANDS-VIEW
Super 4 bedroom MacGregor Model
in P h ase 2. Available now.
Cul-de-sac street and pool size lot .
Beautiful canyon view. Separate
family and dining rooms, 3 baths.
$209,()()(). ••
• CGUr#IU. ..... co.
844-9060
FtT FOi A l•NG
Beautiful 4 Bdrm home m Clict Haven
with elegance thruout. Its 3800 sq.ft .
features panoramic bay & ocean view.
beam ceilings. used brick wine cellar.
gourmet kitchen. game room and
master suite w/fireplace. It's fit for a
kmg and truly UNIQUE at $429.000!
IJ~IC>Ut: liVMt:§
REAL TORS'. €75-6000
2443 Easr Coasr H1qhwav. Corond del Mar
ctlso m Mcs.i Verd~. JI 546 5990
OCEANFRONT
Fine craftsmanship in mahog. trim &.
oak floors. sets off this landmark: 4
BR. 3 ba. home in finest location.
Established trees &. lawns. $475,000.
MESA VERDE
REDUCED TO $89.000
Attractive 4 bdrm.. 2 ba. home in
immac. condition. Xlnt toe.
IACK IAY
Fine 4 bdrm .• 2'h bath family home on
quiet cul de sac. Oversized pool.
playhouse. extra storage $169.000
IAYFROMT
Several f me bay front homes
w1th pier & slip
Bl LL GRUNDY. REALTOR
341 Boy \IU•' o, .. ,, .. N B blS bi ol
IEST OF ALI. CHOOSE! RACQUET CLUI A 4 bdrm. 3 ba. highly up-ILUFFS CONDO
graded home 1s in move OR
m l'OOdttJon. A must see WlSTCLIFfESTA.TE
111 frvlllt!0S lop location. SOPHISTICATED 3 BR
SI2i.1SO. 759-l!iOl • tri level. many extras.
OR
CHARMING 3 BR. Fam
Rm. large yard. sun
----------• room.etc.
COOL POOL 400E.lr~f01Ull
w/4 Br. RV access on C.M. MUS
tree h ned ~treet No ~~~.,.~~·~'·;;· .. ~-~·;:~-~-~-~~~ down VA, low dn FHA • • _ ,. •
Hurry. you'll be m the
sun by the pool
w1ownersb1p peact" of ---------•
mind. Offered at S63.SOO. 5
540-3666 Single famlJy houses.
llfllelc-.11
REAL ESTATE
MONEY TREE
8ACICIAY
Owners will help finance
$195,000. Gross IOCOml'
Sl.32.5 per mo. Close to
sboppmg. Call 64>9161
~. OPEN HOUSE
.:.;. REALTY z ,,
th i s c h a rm1n l(~~~~~~~~~~
townhouse. J bdrms. :; ---------ba. many windows &
high vaulted ce1lm~s •
End urul. Possible lease· owon. $84.SOO. 759-1501
VA TRIPLEX
C.M. super cond • or sell
contract no quahfymJt
Sl.S0.000.,$930. mo. in· come. Owner/Agent
548-Sm
WATERFRONT /SLIP
$265,000
Tastefully decorated and
immaculate 3 bedroom
home wtth paltO ror year
·round enll!rta1n in/it.
Spacious, open & bnght
A fine VALVE ON THf':
WATERFRONT•
-
WATERFRONT
HO~£.<;
REAL ESTATE
631·1400
PLEASE IE ADVISED THAT OUR l
LISTl"6S AT IAYSIDE COVE ARE
STILL AVA.IL.AILE. DESPITE WHAT
THE M.LS. COMPUTER SAYS!
I 012 IA. YSIDE COVE EAST
Sll9,SOO -FE£
I 030 IA YSIDE COVE EAST
S219,SOO UASBtOLO
~Ii~~ ~iUCl~TH INC Newpo~e er Onve • 640-6500
macnab / Irvine
realty
EXCWstVa y TU•n1 llOCk
If you are considering making a
move, you mus t see this most
spacious 2 BR home w/fplc in
master s uite & private balcony
w/lovely view of Irvine hills & night
lights . Decorated in the finest of
taste. this residence exudes warmth
& sophistication. $152.000. Appt.
only Holly Markas 644-6200. <Q·1311
642-123S '°' Oovtr Ori~ 644~200
HarbOr V1tw Ct'nter
' ... DAl\.YPlLOT • w.dt~.A"O~». 1m ~!.~.~ ....... ~.~;'!'!' ........
.......... s. ....... ,...s. .......... s. .... ,.. t002••••tl 1001 HcMnet tier We JHouM• fOf' S... HowsH For Sdt Hovff• fot' Sak ................................................................................................................ •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~.~~~ .. !~!:~ ~~~ ... ~~~~ ~~ ....... !~.~~ ~!.~ .......• ~~!~ ltol ··-· I ••woilll IOOJ ....................... -----s·ml.W---······~····1•• .-·~-·-·.·.-.·.·.··.·.·.··.,··-1oor· ..
WllH AN utlSUIPASSO VIEW DOWN!
Overlooklna the harbor. ocean and No Quallf1tn1t Owner
night U1hts of Corona del Mar " wtU ltnanee! 'Why P•1
Newport s Bd,rms. ramily room, bonus ~t:1 ~~ ='T~ room. d cot lo placate the mo t TO REP CARPET. WE
d1l'iC'rtminntlna r m1ly. Land1capin& LlSTt:N 714.uoa
that compJ menta the hom and It.a ---
locat&on. Other amenUi include·
bu1 llin vacuum, U<iurity sygtem. o k
puneltna. peaeed noonna. J cu11i.
and much much mott. Prked al
1581.000 1-w a private howana of thts
COUMftY ...Ultt
Somltblial soectal ln Ult•
bom• wltlt J lar1
bedroom•. two batti•. thru• hut• brick
flrttpl•cc•. ta vern
lutcht·n wll.h all modern
appllanc•• Brick
courly ard Eacellen l
ft.nancina Prtced nahl
atSUUOO
un~ of u bnd hom~. call 615 34U
ST~OUT
lde•I condo (or that
youna <'Ouple startma
U1e1r family Cl~e to
1chool1 &: sbopp1n1t in
sce nic San ~uan
<.:ap1Straoo 3 Bdrm.ft
with t'lass1c ear ly
Olllfornta dtit&.n $02,000
67).4400
HARBOR
luu.DAILE
'hACULOT
Make an offer. owner
HY5 "sell'" Located ll1 dealra~ Easuute Costa
Mesa. bu 3 houses for in-
rome now & room ror3or
4 more wuu. Or you can
tear dov.-n & build l'On·
dos Owner may help
COU OP MIWPOIT
l\l!ALTORS '7Mllt
OCIA.MflROMT
3 Bdrm. + dci> home on
:IOJllS f\. lot; frpl • built
ins. peUo. t>.amed cell·
~ 1375,000
673-3663 642·22S3
associated
U~i)•ff.l', Uf/\l,.,.,.,
l •J I' "" ii i1t., (.. r • ! 111 t. I
finan1ce, Call before its Assume 9'J",. loan. 6 BR.
llone · CALL 556-2660 pool home on cul·de-sac C SELECT 3 ear gar. Beat buy-T' PROPERTIES pnce reduced to $104.900. ----=--------• Bia. 754-6262
Wou tdn•t It be run to represent one ot
the old l & besl known agencies. ln
th 1re1-BAY le BEACH REALTY?
Our bul1n h 1 arown to where we
h ve openings for 2 or 3 qualified
111 SptlOPlo. Our fac11ltlea are tops &
our Lnl' nUve pl an ts one ol the beat!
Call Lt'<Nlurd Smllh or Walter Haase
for aS>Q't.
vtlLUU4__. tM MIWPOn HACH "as' TIMI orrllllD Exqui~ltc Colon1al in Dover Shores:
Terrace steps lead to private white
sundy beach. Cannell & Chaffin
elegance in decor and custom-crafted
furniture for authentic c lassic
atmosphere. Two master BR suites
plus 2 ramily bdrms. 4 baths & den.
See any time. Call now. Incl. furniture
and furnishings. $795,000.
WISUY M. TAYLOI CO •• RIALTOIS
1111 S-JoalfUha Hlls Road
MEW PORT CIHTH. H.I. 644-49 I 0
MIW SbvtlW HOMI WITH VllW 2103 Yacht Oa phM
2 bedroom & den 2 balhs. fireplace -
Big kitchen with breakrast area -Side
yard. has room ror pool or large patio.
Priced below market at $239,000. Small
down payment & owner will assist in
financing. For appointment to see
CALL '75·3637
G.H. IOlllnOM, UALTOI
IYOWNH
SAVE SSS~
E'SJDE BAa< BAY
OD qui•t C\ll•de•UC. 3 Bdrm. 2 ba, t>.auUrully
landacaped. 5"48·Ml7 or
6"-0211
RINTTOIUY
All rent appli to down
.-,yrnent. 3 Bdrm. den. z~ bl TW'bhome 1Jomc ocean vi•w. r..e 9 mOIS •t MSO-$1200 opt mon~y
and >'0'1 will have SSOOCl
towardl your down P•Y·
ment. 191.500. t<m. call
John 493-9381or493·1400
A T T 'II' N T l 0 N Must Sacnfice-t BR. 4 ~ B• Beach house or
Larse :'!!;~~ 2 BR ~~ SU0.000. Owner.
home It room for 2 more
,._ .. M 1022 units. Choice Eastslde IJ..POllll~""'••v~ 1034 -.. CodoMno 1024 •~•••-. Sllc0,000. ALSO. •••••••••••••••••••••••
••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ....,.,;. uuu RutUn 3 BR. 2 BA home. OklTymeValue DUPLIX "Xllt ________ _, sauna, fireplace, 1arage, F.V. home In prime area.
A beauUlul home in dls· llSTIUY huae yard. sao.ooo . Take over someone's
.We. Needs paint and OMEASTSIDE Needssomeflxing pride & Joy. 4 BR. 2 ba.
some minor main· Super remodeled 4 JBDRMZBA on a huge lot. Sharp & t.eriaMe. bill underneath Bdrm. 2 bath family clean, also has a few ex· a~ buuty. Home plus borne IJ\ choice area. On· double 1ara1e. pallo, traa, for 192.SOO. Call
tncorne at SllrJ,500. Call ly$19,SIOO.Call548-5880 fruit trees. s prinklers, Villa Assoc .. M&-5S36 or 640-5W S'79,SIOO. ALSO. R·2 LOT. a&t 95.W.347
.. .... . . . ' ..
it•, ' • I I. I, •1'1
CAMEO
HIGHLAMDS
Shady & seduded noral
patio froat entry. Black
slate noora. Big ocean
view Uvin& room hosts
mualve atone fireplace.
Spacious fitmily room and open kitchen combo
3 Spac. bedrms. Covered
patio full length of home
with ocean v[ew' Priced
to sell fast! Call now.
673-8550
(\('! N 111 9 • II ~ I UN tt'l•I N~ I '
__...~ HERITAGE
• • REALTORS
76S Hamilton. Dnve by --=~';..._;..._ ____ _
only. . • .............. 1040 ltor McCtrdle. IUtr •••••••••••••••••••••• •
~~~~~~;11~~~5 .... ~7~7~2;·~~ -... T'MCLEAM
is this 4 bdrm. 2 bath
family home! Tiled en·
try. fireplace. double
garage. large fenced
yard and close to11choo
and s ho pping ! Only
$87.500. Call 752-1920
'
QUAIL
PLACE
PRon.tlTI!S"'
EAST SIDE
3 Bdrm., 2 baths. with
low Ulterest assumable
loan. S7S,900
Resale Specialists.
3,4 or s lltdrm models
avail. some w /pools .
968-4602. Pennington Properties
co,. TH t:lO UU Mesa Venle 20 MEW HI HMS
BACXIAY VIL.LAGE V&.w Estate VISTA DEL MAR
End unit. 2 s tory. 3 Big&beaullful.J177,500 Nowopendally
bedroom. 21,4z baths. in a ~:~~~app't. By 3Br,3Ba.2000sqfl \ l>n 1'1nn 111
llJrhrn lnH·~lmt•nt Co
!S! 1!!E!1ttt ~-~~~~ 1 e eau1
WHAT'S MEW SHOtrTDOWM?7 Verde ls "pluued into" Stepg to beach. 38drm. · == 11111•
1-= ,
In Me= Heigllts AruUous owner ~Ill help • relocation referral 2Ba. Priced to sell. Firm SOUTH
very desirable area Call ---------901·920 Delaware tosee640-Sll2 MESA VYDE W of Beach N. of Adams
2 STORY Pre.COmpleuon Prices
T11UROM you finance this sharp service that bas created at $199,500. ~3 ext Of HIG~ •y NEWPORTER NEW JD A! Separate llB. 3 BR, l story. Huge a demand ror mor e 2112. ""~ ~ t: 11\• ~ ()R l .Jl\l"ll~ •• r,..
s::.ll l\l T ("ti''• { 't 'l • I ""' '.~,
Troy Really 848·9090
4 bedroom. family rm. 3 bath + redwood tub spa BY OWNER. 3bdr. 2bu. guestorhobbyroomw1tbj family rm. Full price salespeople.Wearebusy ---------
18232 Cabrlllo Court. batb+pool.+alley. $79.900. Hurry take ad· and need help! Ex· ACOIYMEWHOME
Fountaul Valley. Open $127.500. Michele T . vantagecall982-7788 perlenced or new + incORa
~ns~;m decorated 4 ~~~~Heights Realty KEY REALTORS salespeople may apply. fee land + new 2 BR
Bdrm, 2~ ba remodell"d 645-5044 Attractive <antiques> oC· home + 2 units. nr.
lo enlarge dmang area. ~~~~~~~~~1---------1 fice" top qua!Jty <peo· center of town in CdM added kitchen 1sland,ex· 1.:: XI.MT SECURITY pie) associates lo work Priced for quick sale at
tracabinets+trash com· Peoplewhoneedpeople $215,000 with. Contact Sandy $229,000.
pactor. $86,000 should always check the In Jasmine Creeks Orlowslu or Jim Wood at EVERS & ASSOC.
CRAWFORD&ASSOC. ServiceDirectoryinlhe "guarded gate" com· _546-5990 _________ 1 17141833 0200
967-070lforappl. D/\lLVPILOT munity. Dramatic 2 PANORAMIC VIEW •
in Corona del Mar. 2 BR.
1 BA W/frplc. tn front.
Ready to bid additional
wut in rear. Owner anx-
ious. Price reduced to
$160,000. 64().6828.
in secluded yard. Only RV access, custom m·
$109.900. David Bourke la'tor. S9l.OOO. 1 m1 to
AH Of'PORTUMrTY Realtor. 546-9950 _bc_b_. 962_·_9449 ____ _
to do your own thing with Fu 1 Bdrm, 2Ba. fam rm, cov
Ous 3 bedrm home on a ssy. pal.lo Ju.st painted in &
tree lined street. $69.500. p d Pl h out. Lovely yard. RV
Cal1646-7l71 rou , US space. Quick e sl'row.
•n" ' "' •ut> II~· 1 Exec. $77,500. Call 536-4595.
____ ;;;._;~;;;;;;.l.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiliiii-1 bedroom, den, dining • rm. Manlcured greenery A home as Individual as
and large yard. Owner you are · iB selectively
bought another so submit located in prestigious
your lease/oplioR for Cowan Heights. This 4
$10,000 cash, $900 mo lse bdrm. 3 ba home w /3
for l yr and buy with frplcs has an unmatched
leverage for $225.000. panoramic view. Open
Shown by appl because House Sut & Sun. 1671
Valley
ltealty
TRIPLEX 5*!908 SO.OFHWY .. ,.,_..., _ ....
[ ~ lfl$1ij11 ~.!~r:~.:." .!:• ~:.· ! ~;;,~~~~~f.E:
bedroom and family sac. Price reduced lo
room. Fruit trees. Call $139,900. Bkr. 754-6262 ELEGANT TOWNHOUSE
This lovely home has 2 bdrms., a
study, 21h baths & a beautiful view
of the Big Canyon Golf Course.
Profession a lly d ecorated in
exquisite taste. $235,000
180 DEGREE
VIEW •• VIEW-VIEW!
Terms. Installment sale, owner will
carry with 29"k down payment. 3
Bdrms .. 3 baths, you own the land.
$235.000
ohuper security. Sirrine. 759-1501
WA=Jm (Qt1wtmrn1,faa
REAL ESTATE Real Estate
631-1400
FOR LEASE
Just listed 2 br, 2 ba each __ c ... _-__ 0•_eo._~_ ... _ ... _...., __
wlil. $255,000.
DUPLEX
Cozy 3 br. 2 b a. re·
modeled front unit. 8
year old 2 br loft conlem ·
porary rear unit.
$1~.000. Bernita Eilertsen. Rltr
675-2373
LUXURIOUS
&LAVISH!
UHtalEVAILE
PRICE
RB>UCTIOM
for de ta 1 Is ! B K R . "lne I 044
540-1720
6 mo's. new contem· TAARl!U. pora.ry. 2 sty home. Nr ftlati
bch. 3 BR. 2 BA. fabulous •'*I ln c-.a-I ,, lt1lchen 1nl'lud1ng w _..._...a microwave. lush came11 ________ _
carpeting, central A tC.
aut.o. spnnklers & a very
anxious seller. Price re·
duced to $92.900. 64(H;828.
VA
$69.900
Sharp 3 Bedrm. ltke new.
well marucured for fussy
b"l)'ers. Call 64.5-9161
• ••••••••••••••••••••••
WOODBRIDGE
Popular Drirtwood
mod e l . 2 Stor y. 3
bedrooms. 21,4z baths,
Needs some TLC
Mot1vuted seller al
Sl08.000. Call 640·51ll
Agent.
WHAnA
BARG AIM!
Cozy 3 BR 2 Ba, fplc,
fenced yard, Harbor.
Mariners & Ensign scl>ool di3tri ct. plus of·
fice garage. S600 mo. im-
med occpy. 1724 Tuslln CM. We Try Harder at
Tri Harbor
A CONVt:NIENT SHOPPINC AHl.l!.Ql•
SEWING CIJIOE FOR lHE
Luxury ln Cameo Shores.
Large secluded front
patio, fountain & pool!
Spacious oceanvlew hv·
ing room & family room.
Formal d1n1ng r oom .
Olef's lotchen bas every
convenience. Lavish
master wing Den or
study. Sewtng & laundry
room Includes pool ta-
ble, bltn stereo system.
fantastic s torage too
Private beaches-and
much more' For private
preview call 673.SSSO.
! OPEN HOUSE
REALTY
/'
Pnce reduced twice·now
only $89,900! 2 Story 3
bednns & g1gaotic bonus
room Lovely country
lutcben. Spacious master
wing. Covered patio. ca~
BBQ. TRANSFERRED
SELLER MUSf HAVF.
lMMEDIATE SALE'
BARGAIN HUNTERS
CALL 752-1 ';00 FAST'
LIDO REALTY
673-7300
A D1v1s1on ot Red Hill Realty
400Lll" ~ RJR All C.M AIW idttf1"tz
PENNY PINCHER ADS
FOR PEOPLE TO PEOPLE
ONLY $2.00
(for 3 lines, 2 days)
Call Today • • • Print Tomorrow!
Sell any item or combination of items totaling
$75 or less with a 3 line ad for 2 consecutive
days for only $2. Each additional line is 60c for
the 2 days.
You may place your ad by phone, just dial
( 714) 642-5678 and charge it.
Call M onday 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.
Or you may use the handy order blank below
and mall to: Or ange Coast Daily Pilot P .O. Box
1560, 330 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa, CA 92626
4 WORDS MAKE ONE LIME
$2.60
$3.20
$3.IO
PAYMENT ENCLOSED 0 SEND BILL O
BankAmericard # .......... .
Mast~r Charge # . . . . ....... .
Exp. Date
Exp. Date
Publish for . . ........ days, beginning ........ .
Class1f 1cation .................................. .
Name ........................................ .
Address ........................••.......... -.•..
City . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Phone ....... .
DAILY PILOT
642-5678
CAL ON THE CO
Biider lntrigte
9472 10Y,.18Y2
i,,, 1lT Mi._ 1ff ~-r .....
No wll\l sa"m-myt Pd 111
ttotic l)t!Slty bordef p11nt
for th" peasant 1~11!d dress. Cathel'td s.1ac1111y SCOOQed n«~·
hne NS V cut°"l Prlnttd Petmn 94 72: Half Sues 10~. 12~. 14~. 16~ 18~ S11t 14~ (bvst 37) t•"' 3
,els. 45 lll(h border Pfitll
S...$1JO .... ....... Mil ........ ..
ftnkjm ..... ......
S...•:
llM1M MAmll
rattern Dept 44?
Deily Piiot
U2 Wiit 111:11 St, .. ,_.,
l'f 10011. ,,. ...... =._nr, sm • tnu
I.et' s be pnct1Cel-fOll ttt
mart tor less S •* J011 w ! Stnd IOI MW fAU ~NTER
FASKIOMS TO-SEW CATALOG. H1$ SI~ cowpo11 tor IT• Pit· In d JOWf clloa. 75f
lt1411bMSIWl .... i·· 1 ...... ,...... .... ..
~-.. JI 12AoCi11ta ... o......-ue
"'''"'If ·J •ti\ 1'.J,.... HIN 11.l"f •
2 omerent Squares [ ~ lfi*ll
-~
RB> UC ED
4 Br. 2 ba. formal dining.
bnck frplc. corner lot. 2
t'ar gar 900 Dogwood.
Phone751·0774 eves.
NEW
PUD
A'~~ '*
tiff"' flt'l•ll\lttN h)M "'"°''
. HOME+ IMCOME [~lfl&IHI
Watch TV while you crocMt the squares for llus afghan
One squa1e IOI bOldtr d1ffei
ent ooe IOI center Ctochel easy
squares tn hvely four colOI com
bulatlOll ol a -. lw.U 2 gly llle(l1um weight spo<t yatn Pat
ttin 7179 al&11an duecbons
S\.50 for each 'pattern ~d 4ot exh patte<n for f1111 class
111ma1l and handhni Send to: .....
Needlecraft Dept. 10s
Daily PilOl
IOI 163, Old CW.. St&., lttw
YCIG. llY 10011. rnnt MIN,
Melfa. Zip. Pltttn1 MumMI.
N£Wt NOW' Our 1979 NHOH
CRAFT CATAl.00-0'ltf 200 POOu
lai de$1&ns 3 lrtt paneins
punted tnSldt, Senel 75t
ln.Qllek/bsy TltlMfen Sl.50 \~atdtwol\ Otlitts ... su o 127..\f~ '•' Olilits ... $1.50 l2"tlfb f1lwtn..... . .$UO
lzs..htl& 9':lltl.... . .. $1.50
l Z4"Cifb '11 °'1lalMllta . 11·50 12 cll'n' ratt11 Qu11ts. .2s tn~ '11'P1ff Quilts ... 1.U
121·Plllow Sllow-Ofh SUO
\l7-bly "'""'°'"' . .$1.00 11 .. ltiltJ RftJ 0.ilts , fl.00 l lS..Rlfflt CiodMt l.00
lU·lftitalt '"" Sl.00 110.16 JllfJ .... . • • .75'
lOW.W & Klllt ... Sl~ ................ $1.00 106-tlltaM ,..,. . St.00 1~ er.Mt Sl.00 l'4-lllltllt ....., $1.00
fUlS Qlilts tef f..., 75'
lOZ·.._Quitb 15'
I 01-Qllilt Cellectiell 75'
Price Reduced 3Br. 288. fresh paint. va
to $269,000 cant, lrg cov pauo. Mesa
South of Bayside. A rare del Mar. Eastslde Coi.ta Me!>ll
u n d s u r pri s in g I y $81,500 557-8470 Pool. jacuz:z.1 $6!1,5011
s {> a c i o u s 3 Talk to RED CA RPfo:T
beproom+den. 2 story MF.5AVERDE4Br28a. WELISTEN754·1202
home. PLUS a never va. xlnt CQnd .. $92.500. Open . cant roomy rental. Pvt House Daily l-5. 2972 An· By owner. Condo 2 hd. H•
financing provided at drosSt .. 5464478 . ba, 2 car gar. clb hse. 2
substantial savings to pools 546-5169 buyer. S.... Family Homr CaQ f« detallJ 3 Bdrms. with hul{e low OH 112 ACRE
6 .. ,._7211 maintenance patio & 2 br house. horse proper .. pool, frplc, "bonus of ty, ruce locale Ownt·r
/JD.NIGEL
BAILEY lie
ASSIJCIA fES
1014 •••••••••••••••••••••••
BY OWNER. Price re·
duced. 4Br. RA>man pool.
den/bar $95,000. l yr
lsetopt OK. S600 t mo
Owner carry big 2nd
548-7530
hce" Easy access to wtll carry Isl Pnn only
frwy & beach. $125.000 CA" 1177
EBBTIOE REALTY '"""'
494·9456
CUSTOM HOMES
OPEN DAILY
345 E. 23rd St. C.M.
Only 4 left of these 7 new
custom homes on a qwet
cul-de· sac Each w /4
bdrms, J baths. wetbars,
2 fplcs. & much more
Come & see ror yourself
what lovely homes they
are! Owner /agent
552·4894 or 642·2164 or
673-0782
EASTSID E
IEAUTY
Near Westcllff shopping
Remodeled 3 Bdrm &
huge family room. Bllns.
Cpk. outside guec;t bdrm
w/~4 bath Over:.1Led
pool .All1·v entrance.
many extras Owner
transferred and ask ang
S00,900. Call 540 1151
.. ~. HERITAGE
• • REALTORS
GRANADA
IN THE
RANCH
The most popular floor
pl1tn butll by Ayres.
Features 4 lar j!e
bedrooms. 21'2 bath,,.
Truly an executive home ..
m one of lrvme's mo:.t
prestigious areas. You own lhe land & there an·
no assoc1auon dues. Call
u.-.cH REAL TY
551.2000
LIVE AT THE
MESA VERDE VILLAS
2 bdrm. condo; no
qualify for S40K FHA
loan, S25K lo assume. upgraded & newly de
coraled like a model.
$8SK~-owner_SS1·~91.
BY OWNER. EasLc;ide 2 LAKE
bdrm, garage, w /den. R2 OClllCI Point I 026 Come relax & enjoy 2
SSOOODOWH
Spotless 4 br. family
home. New plush crpt.
lge comer lot. Don't miss
this one. $89,500 Nr
OCC, Owner/Agent
751-3696.t
MESAVetDE
3000 sq ft c ustomized b~ Ge. _aolf. course Owner wtll carry 2nd
$17S,000. 540-7196
~lot; SS;OO& dlt:-Wi-1~ r.nm.-.-..-...-. ....... bdi-m.,..2 bath drJtmaLic
paper. $79.500. 646-2087 4 8 r . cent r a 1 8 i r . townhome .. Many up
sprinklers. lrg cov pauo. grades. Pril'ed below
$9500 DOWM new ext patnl. 33001 Big market at $116.000. Sur, 661·3351 al(ent NEWPORT CENTER If you are a vet. you can REAL TY 640· I 8 I 2
bizy tJus $96,000 3 br. P• By owner 1 wc-ek only• 1---------
ba home on the Easts1de Harbor bluff front home. WOODIRIDGE
for tbe above down l>BY· 1 of a kind view overlook· VILLAGE
menL Home has lots of Ing Dana Pt Harhor 3 Aspe Model 38r 28 ~ brt~k. ceramic tile BR. 2 Ba. selling below frpl~. o w~er (714
3
j
& 2 patios. Hayward· &J>1!Lt1 s~d ~uue . ·01$2 Clf-.981·61411
Wafaon 1u11r E'ftllte, $340.000. 496-5109 ''Prine. nytob"i"rs --· -
731·5581. only ~-=-------~ Sell Uungs fast with Daily Sell Oungs fast with Daily
Pilol Want Ads PilOl Want Ads. s~~c4l}A-L££trs ·
That Intriguing Word Game wi#h a Chuclcfe
U-"' CU.Y I P0UAN
0:'::'°::..i.~""" ...,,~. ~ ----~-
low .., '""" '°"' o;mple WOfd•
I MUSNE1'
'1'1'111
I RYNl8 I
I r I I J I
I N A P G A I ! It w• rNllY cold In Florld•
I I l I I' ~ tut wtnttl' It trV•" enowll<I in • M leml. TM llrat blr<lt to et·
,..----------. rlvt f« IM winter w9'e
NEBGIN I 1---1,--1-1-1-·-1-o , ....... -~ ....... -.. o-ecl • -• by t llff'tO H\ tkt lifl,t&t,nQ •Ofd .___._..Ao.__..__. __ ..__. '°" o....ioe 1,.,,.. ·-No .l be.,.
• ;PINI NUM6U(0 i' \(11(0 IN '-OV4t[S
I I I I I I ~I
SCRAM-I.ITS Aasw.n ln Clostiflcoffoll I OIO
'
~.~~.: ..... 6.~~ ....... .
...... 10&...... I
....... ,...We ........... w. •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• H111nPWW. MMMtPwW. ............... I0'9 ... .,.,..._.. 106' ;w·····i· ;.::.:····· .. ;;;; ....................... ······7···············
......................
1Ul'1lm>CI .. ,,,.
.... ~•led Ira Wrm.. I\\ • II ~ vlinr. Top .qu,1
upta. ..... ltadic.1ptl\&
1 rr old 1tU bamo.
lnllle loe Own r I Al\
UJ-tllT aft e Ope sa a.a
Pocb T11rtlerock Cle
Townhome. 2 BR. a~ ...
Uruv Park 5 Br Chan ~ model •itb lal1Cl
SlJl,000. Call~-
··-·············· •• -················-·· "U" mmt 't " S8500
Tbe bat of w tclJtr. TOTAL BOWN
Lingo
Rul&lm
LOYW.Y J AICH IAY HOMI -c-,, .............. ..... t'• ... ce••••lty I• L•.-• leeclil. ........... ,.. ............ ...... ..... ..-tr ....... , ..... ... ... , .................... to,,. .. ......_...,..._...,,.._,,.,,,.ctd
..... SJtt.100. ...... Mr .......
4tt-4551
Lingo
Ru.l&T.UI
NNU11roomed 3 Bdrm Broadmoor Suvtew
home with bHuUful bomt. t IDOi old. 3Bdrm, yard. Nur lhrlaen ma. communi~. Poot.
1cbool. 1hoppln1. etc. J.IC\mi, tenn.la. o credit Appolntroent only. Call o.ded. lmmed OC:~UP&n·
M>-11.51 cy. Own•r to carry balance. 7U.e4C). ma.
· '.»· HERITAGE
lffAllORS
...... v ......
4Br. FR, nu crpts. xlril
cood. Quick posMUlon .
1181,$00, tee. Owner •
MG-lHL
Prime Peoln JocaUon. 1
DUPLEX ON
PENINSULA in quiet 300
block. Completely re·
modeled lmlde & out. 3
BR & 1 BR w ta petjog, &
2 car encl aar. $185,000 .
Owner would like to cloM
t o Jan u ary 1979.
Courtesy to brokera.
m&'M9 ult for llr. r>or.
hie from ocean. by ownr, BLUFFS BEST CONDO 2~dn&rm, $11$,000. BUY $149,500. Free ~..,..._ 981-8813 1tandlo1 unit. 3Br.
IAYROMTS !YaBa. by owner. Appt
XTRALGE PIER please 752·6'70 or
•SUP -~-~1-~----
()pen Sat/SUn 1-5 Fantastic view upper bay.
WBayaldeDr. 3 bdrm. tam rm. 2
Also. cbamling 4 BR frplc '1, 2Ya ba. 11. acre.
3 Ba. almost new w/pler mn y xtra1. Owner
&slip. WeltonllCo. $163.500.645-8441
675-a>O
$12,000Doww S.Cle•• 1076
Back Bay View. 2 story. •••••••••••••••••••••••
4Bdrm. den, formal din· New Iott-ocean view
badl. be&llt maaterswt By ownr. 1 BR condo.
wtfrpk. t ~CK'ky Glt>D O.ranaetree, air. all
$1S7,ll00. La V.-ra Bum~ 1u'Aen1Hes. $49,500
Rltr. M4"387 TI4/S.\1·21'16
UMCIO HAS LOTS TO
OFFiii IN LAGUNA IEACH
......... ......., of Iott .... prtces.
497-3331
ing, 3 frplc's, lrg lot. No custom homes.
qualifying, immed oc· Halen R.E. 661-6404
cupancy. Owner will
carry. Fu II price, S...._ 1232'.<:;_~~:wner,Princ C•l•lrmo 1071
NEAR U.C.I
AD executive bome In l.he
p.....01loua Culverdale
area ol Irvine. Features
1nchade 4 bedrooms. forual dining room and
family room Ideal loca·
tion on a cul·de-sac
strea. Call to see.
only ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~•••••~~~ L4111-1Hdt I 041 M1gma........ I 052 By Owner. Cust.om 2 br 2 BY OWNER
....:..=...:..:..:.::..:...:..;_..;._~--~
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ba, 2 fireplace,~ blk to MUST SACR IFICE-THE S 1,000 R•ward IY OWHH ocean. $219,000. 754-1124 Large 4 br. 2 ba, cor lot.
BIG STEAL 3 bdrm. 2 ba condo. End days, 645-!>119 eves. To many xtru too men·
For brlnr.ng or sending tion. Must Sff -800 .__ of '>UVl> f unit on El Niguel golf NEW LISTING · ....,, . ... """YOU DON'T HAVE .,...,,..,r arge, _,., aq l ,_n bse 496-2381 "'"u f il f l I co u r a e . Part 1 a II y UDO ISLE. New lisliog. 'VJ"'· • • TO BE A TlllEF TO SEE am Y or pro ess ooa
THE VALUE I h. home. Beamed ceilings, furnished. Will help 3 Br. 2i.; ba. South ex· 0 t is •"'uligbt.s, 4 Bdrm + den finance. 496-7'796 posure. Pvt sundeck up, stnklng contemporary -v CC t ult A ... BDRM .. 2 ~ BATH + studio. See il and o l'D9S er s e. a•·
HOME. Imposing tw makeofferl Multipleli.sL· MhtlonVl-fo 1067 _673-_1_020 _____ _
story archatectur tog. $1'19,500. Open Sat & •••••••••••••••••••••••
W I D E T A I L E D Sun, 0000-4. 1284 Starlit 41:---'fi r.-111 Drive. Paul Westbrook. ~~ tt.s~'"" • EXTERIOR OF WOOD. Owner/Brkr. (714) Flexible Cmancmg. a~·
HEAVY .:HALK WHIT 287.5575. swne VA loan. oo credit
PLASTER & HIG ---------•check or qualifying.
PEAKED ROOFLINES. Spacious Mission Viejo 3 Located high up o •--Hlls 1050 Bdrm di · f
Laguna's famed Rivier ~•••••••••••••••• · • nlllg rm. am·
HOUSE
BEAUTIFUL
SACRIFICE
$1,000 under market
price. Owner must· sell
this stunning townhouse
on Captain's Hill. 3 BR,
den 2~ BA. courtyard
patio. Only $lot,.t00.
SHOWCASE
HOME
Coastline with a rm & 2 patios. Mature RANCH IEAL TY landscape w /room ror OUTSTANDING VIE YA-FHATBMS pool. Quality built.
On estate sized 12.000 s.r.
On lovely street of
custom homes .
Features. fml dine +
kitchen eating area
Fam Rm. w /used bnck
fplc; 35' living rm has
impressive fplc and open
to lge covered pat.io &
landscaped yard; sep
garden area. Call lo e)(·
plore its many custom
features! Ruth Laurie. Rltr.646-4380
Uke new 4 BR. den. 21h
BA. 80x140 Lot w/fruil
trees & lush plantings
Storage area for RV
vehicles. Ocean view.
$144,500. 55 I ·2000 0 F T H E S E A ---------•VILLAGE BELOW. are available on this Owner may consider
NOTICE
A reward has been of·
fered for a ready, wllllng
& able beyer for this top
notch San Miguel home
in The Ranch. To see 1f
you qualily. Ca II
~21.
M a s t e r s u i t areal 4 Bdrm. Cam rm lease payment applled to
WNAULTED BEAME home which sets on a down ... hurry!
CEI G & premium ree lot provid· LIN separat 1ng p rivacy and orr.
bath. is next t street RV parking. PRJVATE SUNPORCH. $77,SOO
SkyUgbt.ed kitchen has For APPf. Call
B t LT · l N RANGE, 64 .. 7~ I I OVEN. DISHWASHER ..,.. ..
utility room. Be neath all
this you ·u find partially
finished BONUS RM.
W/PRJV. ENTRANCE.
We th.ink it's "A REAL SfEAL" for only CASA DEL SOL
$116 500 ir.....1 ..._. 3 BR. 2 ba, super view.
/JD.NIGH
UAILEY lie
ASSl:lCIATES
• "' r-nce Due to stroke. Leasure rec ~enter close, 2-car MISSIOHRli.LTY WorJd2BR,2bamanor. gar . Adil commun.
985 S. Cst Hwy. Laguna Mostly furn. loci sterling _m--'._900_. 581_·_9565 ___ _
,.._. 494-0731 & Dresden China. $54,000 ---------1 cash. 837·2153
QUIET
COMFORT
and close.in convenience
Ya bloclt to beach. 2 Bed.,
---------• 2 Ba. adult apt. SSS.950
Heritage Park. 2 bdrm.
2Ya ba. upgraded .
landscaped. & draped
Nr pool & teruus $76,500
551~
RICH!!!
You don't have to be to
live tn Irvine. Look al
this!
2 Br Plan 100 S69.500
3Br Plan 102A/C $71.90-0
3 Br Plan 102 $73,950
3Br Plan 102 A/C $75,500
For details, just call
RANCH IE.AL TY
551 -2000
SPACI
ATANtCi
Four bedroo·ma • 3~
bat.bl · famlly room wttb ft.replace · central air .
p rofe11lonally
landleeped • upgraded
carpel • C'Ol'MT' lot loca·
don • ceramic Ute entry •
priced $10,000 below
marbl. Call ror detail.I.
red hill_
'i .., 2 -; :i !) 0
HORINS REALTY
494-8057
SECURE
COMFORT
3 BR w /total privacy for
entertaining Ir outdoor
living. 2 Lge. decka w /·
ocean V\11 surrounded by
treea. DramaUc 40 ft. llv· ln& room w/hl cellln1.
$212.000
. . . .. -~ ... .. . -
A CO&.DWIU IANICB CO.
496-7222 831-0836
n.r... .... dt.., .... ....... ~
.~ ...... .. . .
MEWPORT HTS.?
WEHAYE'EM!
2 Bdrm. near Cliff Or ..
giant garage, frplc ; only
$94,750
2 ~m. split-level beau-t~ board siding, shake
roof. beamed ceil. & lots
~used bricks. $124 ,SOO
~gewater <lREAL ESTATE .
1350 S. Coast Hwy.
494-8536
s-to Ana I 080 •••••••••••••••••••••••
OCEAN VIEW
NEWPOIT IEACH
3 Bedroom Bar Harbor Model.
Draperies Landscaping, Sprinklers,
Patio ~ Atrium Covers. View Of
Catatirla, Ocean & Night Lights.
Lovely Decor Thru·Out. A Pleasure
To Show. $289,500.
HI DOYB DI.In 631-1800
f.1.di..say. Augutl 30. 1878 * DAILY PILOT
~~.~!!!! ..... i~~.~~ ......
--~ 200 ,....,.rtv 2000
othei'l•ai lshth ...........•.•.....• .;. s.
farW. UJO . ............................................ . .................... , ..
A THE SYMBOL OF
~ "KNOW HOW"
OMCI 11.N Siii
Jluntinaton Bea.ch
2'7.000 sq. ft . lot near
Paclllca Hotpital. ~
~Shop, Cntr 6 C\VIC
Cemcr. $13$.000.
David Bou.rke 1Utr
544-9950
EXPDIENCE-ACTION-IESULTS Leauna Bch Lot 13.000 sq.ft, onf of a kind
~/cnyn vu sus.ooo. am Bernard Ct. 841•5881.
c ....... tce_..,.,,.....,., ....... .
for t0Hd prof .. alo••I c .... 11., I• ....................................
ffw ,.. Wt ......... .., ....... z. J. J,
two J'I. 4. 4-fin 4-._ S. 6, 6, 10, 16J 32,
32, 32. 34, 71+..ct 100+ .........
co I cW pi op1rty. e.t wlllt .. "'lHOW How·...,.. ....
o.tofe..ty ,......, is so • ••••••••••••••••••••••
CHOICE
PROPERTIES
QUAIL Pl.ACE · PROPERTIES ~Valey
I I \'t acre horse pro·
pert.ieii. Ready to bw Id . sa> w /tttmS.
17141' 752-1920
IJOO
u 1 ~ •~· FaaQatlc
view le utilities to proper·
ty 1.Lne. $7650 w /terms.
./I 2"1 acres HOl"Ml pro·
petty in the beaquru1 • EXCITING. Unit Multiple Dwell. M a r 1 a n n a s • n SO o
New a pl s . G . G . w/lerms.
$1.280.000. Prine. ooJy. , , 20 a"res Nr ,..___ •· KIDS&._.S 67"'2173675·7900 •• ... . ...,,... "' r-s;1 ., schools. Sl466 per acre.
14 ~ a ~ from lhf c:.-ht Lots/ N DUPLEX. Outstand·
beach, run m the sun. ,..__;/ I SOO 111g btzy for the investor.
3Brt, 2Ba.t~ ~ny xtr~, •• ;:".!~=•••••••••••••• Only $27,500. o men ion, in mos . CGI 973-4626 llOW! beautiful 5• Fa mil> Pacific View lot. section .... us..&..1-R.E. I-
Park in California <keaoVlew.$300. ,._ -swiming ~acuui 754-1336 1531 E. 17th St. S.A.
aakun&1ll g' erio ... irollter Ca ssrclcl c.tOl9 Ranclwtte s a n ~... m nu ef rrap.rty 1600 Sell or trade for suitable from Fashion Island ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• property. SlOOK equity.
the Pavillion & onl)l•--------1 oo 1 v.. acres. 3Bdrm. $33.SOO. <Dta46-7 > hi hJ ded I CGlfol Illa Pacific ~y VILLAGE . g Y upgra • poo . .._...._...RTIEACH spa & buge cust om Mobile Home Sales ~nr-v patios. Giant old oaks.
2705 Harbor. Ste 208 Three commercial lots. shaded pasture. tr.ape
54AS937 2822-24 -26 Newport hard 1 t.ed -Blvd .• each lot is 25')(90'. ore · rnga easy· care natural gardens. UDO ISLE One lot with bwlding. fully fenced. Must~ to
J.9'T7 Dbl wide Lancer store or office. $325,000. a p Pre c 1 a t e ~ t 7 14 •
water close. fully up Cal.154&-58&0 925-'151l/9'l7·3578.
1raded. Pet park OutofSfate. ... ~~~HERITAGE <SF?ZIO) Proparty 2600 . • REALTORS ~Hom Store •••••••••••••••••••••••
848-8895
•EXCITING•
$110Pnl...t
At t h e beach, in
beautifully landscaped
secluded adult park
gorgeous dbl wide 197i
Kinptone top of the line
2Br. 2Ba. fam rm &
much more-if you waol
to live in lhis lap of lux·
ury with a paupers purst
this is it. (KT1207-8).
Calfonla Pacific
Mobile Home Sales
2706 Harbor. Ste 208
540..5937
--rro,.n, 2000
Grand Bahama Lot
$8,000
644-0687 ....................... ---------
GRAI A IRUSH a-.
AND RAKE! •••••••••••••••••••••••
Si" un1ts-Ea s l s1d e Hc.MshmidMd
Calta Mesa! ldeaJ Cor a •••••••••••••••••••••••
builder or a flxer. Older lalaoo PtMlalla 3107
buildings in excellent. •••••••••••••••••••••••
upgraded area. close to 2 Bdrm, $275/mo Winter.
schools. transportation 593-1243 or see at 203 E .
and sho~pmg. Can add Bay,Sun9/3btwnl0.2. one urut. Only $210.000. ---------.---
Ca11752-1920. Corona del Mar 312 2
'
P~~"'c'~ ...................... . T ~ n<z blks to bcb 3bd. t ba.
yrly $500.
673-4059
PROPHTIES"' Hwatiwq•a.och 3140
10,.. T1I t !JO P .M.I •••••••••• •••••••• •••••
IOCMn to laild OCEAMFROMT
EASTSIOE CM. 4 re CONDO
s1deoces on a double OM SAHD-¥1EW
wade R ·2 Lot. Agl.
675-ellOO
T&IHOUSES?
Pool-sauna~xetcise
room. Cum. studio or 1 -
BR winter rates. 96:J..8296
or96tr3014
RHETT JY
142-6200
You got 1t ! 1n Easts1de 1 -leach 3148 ~ Mesa.rlwell thma an· ~•••••••••••••••• ....... ""' prope y Wl new . roob and owner will help 2Br. split level overk>ok·
finance! Call 752·1920. ang Blue Bird Canyon.
'
QUAIL
PLACE
PROPHTIES""
VIEW
2 br. 2 ba Sea view home.
larae lot. Will trade for 2
or 3 unit Newport Beach
or Costa Mesa. Agent.
deck. frplc, 1 i,.;Ba, 3 blks
lo beach. Sept-Ju.oe $42.'>
mo.494-8240
Mawporl a.adl 3169 •••••••••••••••••••••••
U..fwwfaflad
3202 •••••••••••••••••••••••
•HOMERMDEllS *
LOW RENTALS
Call today·Move today.
557-0824
lOOO's of Vacancies
$200 bach kids/pets/yard
$2151 br kJds/pets/appl
. ~~~~~~~~~I 675-0562. ~vcs 675 3637
4-Plex Costa Mesa . Lge
units w /good rents
Owner moved north &
will se.11 ror $149,500
$195 2br kids pets gar .
S2402+dine lclds pets
A811AT
MIMl-IANCH
1 +"' Acre w /house & IOf'leou& view ln Mur
rieU Valley. 2 BR house.
out bld11, lamll,y fl"uit or·
chard . Only 165,000
Twms. HURRY I
FA"ROO
(714 ) 677-5891
ORS22-0630
USA Really
4-Ple Covington type In
nice Anaheim loc.llnn
Lie 3 br unit .t 13l 2 br
unlt.S. Should be llM.000
Pnce Sl65.000
USA Rcnlty
6*-0507 or SS I 5986
S2:IO 2br kids pet yd
1300 3br A•rage/sr
CltiWU SJ95 4br opt to buy
l fee then service is
•FREE FOR LIFE•
Good in all 23 locations
All areas · All prices
The rastal draw in the
West. . .a Dally Pilot
Clft!etried Ad 642·5878.
I ,.
·~ r .• . ,
i1r
r ... ,.
\
t · g.
~ ..
al
"" • ! t:·
ff DM.YJ-tt.OT Wiclrl11d1; __. .. 1171 J .. I ti• ~-·-··· ......... -· '=" -..__ ............... ····················1,, ...... _.._....i .. .... •MLW • Vil ''I tWss ro I th•uU.b '•nit t+!f'!t ..... D6t C:..Mete jj .......... ,~~ 40QO Offke....... 4400 ................... ...................... ....................... ....................... ... ....................... . ..................................................................... .
.... .._.. JIM .... ._ -.... ••••••••••••• ~IMdt lt41 Btauu:oom.aleeJoc. ML•YICI ' ................. --••• .. ••• SUP9NICa ........................ lorWOJDeD •UlfOMCIS . ":-':.·=~~~ brl~~==~ !~,!tr::~~'::· 0.:,a,~a~.~c~ a-· se.ae . •Penloul t~~I re-.,.. ,... • ._ /.o + .... ol Otua, ... , a.dicaa..-Pier •~eablatapace quuat~tt. cbOd/ptt 0~ ~•oalf,eoeookcfor optloel•t. eeeretuy.
•PW ·fTMlll otlMr alnftill•. tllO. M JH£ WAl'rll PNf•wre~· •C1aa beat.,., cioollioa. ---:tuo.-.zas . olCfer tm pl"d noa. cmfetenca l"OOll!, eoffff -;;.:::.:.:::.::Jrz::•..;:.;.:;.;;-..._. CID)81.~ u;a ..,,..., aubal wa&.er aUlttt. dmb'1amtr. •· mo. Ja 'fl llMISpltaUt; aenlc• •
. "'llll·wf'N•i. •L• ._., J l>Oct vail•b , new 2 9t«y custom ,._,um. · •AdvJta...OpN. l 8*'la: Wilk to beach. "lMt. \SGOraftle.CM. ~t ~.near :.:.:Ai..,... ~·:·=rr~':: bom • 4 6 5 bclima, 3 • 4 baths, 1f~2~10 r:'e'r.·~~:08V~ BedJoom •/1Wt t.eth to ,.'7:fite1NT11 _;;;;;~=_;...;._,....__-t SOI All no 1.. fol"'mtl dining and breatlut nook, 3 zszU.:rcseaA•t,C.I(. lh-49 ~~td 10Wll lady. f71•"7WltI co' t _._.Jiii ..-• .r...n · car aarasee. Jarae cloeeta, j)llltry. 3 ~·?a __,,, ,~, .. -..... ..,..... nreplM , l&rl8 deck.I OI\ the Water. 2 bt 2 be, DO children or Mttmlbe Npt I>.., view· Neat 0.C. ~rt. Z •CP
••--· tlea.e....., 911*' 1 "'· 1 N , daa. Upgrades thrU-oul Owncr/Bldr. For .... .._~ peia, MIO lit• l•st 1Jae1Mibl or t•1 oles av.it. ~•IOllable. =:. ~-mo. i~ ......... ~ ~.:. •~u only. ~~b~8tW.b~a~: ~ f4S.W · DoucS4NG
.. • m.atn C4111~Hmr.UWlll J:U.1l $.125.l1IW.Ba1St. IBA.A:'~Beac.h ............ 4300Prest11.Soe1Uon ln ws
C 11 • ...... W1 ......_, .._,_1 •-;:.~· ~T/831-54M. ~ PAlll Ill erptl. -· .. ••••••• .. ••••••• 8da. 805 aq tl. aeD/mo. ~ ---., .... ., •••ltt ' _.mo.-.1055 ••S&ICTIYI• Leue.41M4$l • .....,. .. , •• _ ........ Sbr,lba,-. I S.ODMtPlu:etrea.dlal •-... 3150 0-•-a-ia ... a.. ~--lilD!!l't...lll' ...-OC'EANJl9Qrft\Ctcbs br 2 ba "'"°' ~\.baa, --..-..., • .._...... Formally Insur. ote 3 ~ . ..,., a~.,.. eCONlltlllU'IOUIDlt lbr, W. Jtlpt. ... can»et. drapea, encloe ....................... roocnmat.. MS-7414 nm. ba It lltt. crpt/drps. cla. CGllllUJ kit. Ma...,..._ IUt ..,__..._.. SUt ~ car. *31$. QIU an s. ~HIU.I •SHAR~AHOME• ms mo. 111 w. 19tb. du. I fr1>k't . ~f'l"wd P9l ta. • ,.._ la UM -"-• .. •••• .. ••••••• •••••••• .... ••••-••••• 'lS-7138 Hew tdult d lute pts C.Jil. CaJt Jack Satan·
e.tlo. Owar UUI = ... , -~ l ... c .......... NOP'CCl ..... caadoe, l 81' ~ Nft'pClrt apt. lvmlumurn~ Blllia~. c.tdewlt dehon-.zm. ~ ll~ -..... bdwe yoa f!' Hm• d•pluu. AeaUJ 2'!d=>°'&'-Jt ~!,Ba)'. Cle:e_zeabr1·1 pool, Jacuni, und LM.t ... •1ttl 2 rm •uit.e, l14S mo. wl
.coNSUMe•'IOUit>I ale o cl or tho PaVWcla.~ltr. ; rnnopeta. -· wolle)tball. ShaNabopMorapC.&nent paid. AIC. •tca ft. •m· > D. I ba. b't faam 1'1111 p a I V A T £ .. UNA ROUND". Call .. C .....____ ALICIA YIU.A• "--··0'.2uu ~ ~-..Mr:. ... ,a~nt to ~-• crp&a -.-... ..-IR OOllSUlfD"S OUIDE _ _,.,_ -"'---et.....J..... ~ ro-1>~ ...._.._./pdar ... D .. ..--.up .. _.. •. 1 · Iii bav. ud •1 ... a br den+ w.t bar, z~ ..._ lucllt Avail Sept. l. TuwUQVUlte -..1._....,rt Uk-~~~ . Pk . ...,.,, t'rou a.•-dlD · J bl.a..., •rn1 . tkf~l !Savur:.~ be. la&folltorqe au. x;U 1 r fJul 2 br. 1~ ba. aa.r. frplc. !ll.CUlwJll~ a.>.,,_~ st'• Ntw:siort1t'ltb. c .M .
• ..;;;;;..-.;....;.;; _____ -i Pool ti JacaaL Ma. •~•roe aru. mirrored doors. ·--.. •••-•••••••• Ptlol &s Jacuui. Adult.. CJalceopeal-7dailY ISM134Sloeelf7t N-CDeoo..
HarW va...~ eGmlqa. 1000\ef.... cmtrw~•cable ..... ..._.. 3106 ·'37S.63l-4814. Br. 2 ba townhouse. llB.Zoranoomceswte r.:'~mo 38 r lla'fe H•tral a br JO.DS.Pt.:TSWll.cOME ~. ru.·1tennia, 6 _ ................... QW«.ftftlydttarated2 aub.•JIOOIPrivis.s.oo Female. room mate w/patlo. SS25 utll pd.
l.tat.nn.tmmo ' lOWii••u• ,_.., ta>-'4MtH !!~01:0dmutttite°a~bftr~: Cute JBr, Ula, atove, bd, l ba. s-Uo. fura kit, mo.CaJJ516-11• employed to a.bare ex· Goodpartma,8'2-0311
Pmlllartut llb, 'IPtradea SfH tc o,.7c1a.r91-7 •• $.US ,, refri1. deck. 1arage, closed pr, laundry tac. penses In CdM. refs.
a.lb.Lale '64-UH. Ra•tl•Jtoa m · !Dd'?S375d)O.ctf..3:223 1970 Wall1ee, adlts. 1 ... ..,...._.. 1169 $CZ4'11. CPA Deedl compuy tn
Harbour er.a. Ola, PUJSH,. !Br. %8a condo, OMTHIWAT8 P I I• 3107 teebqer OK. no pets, ....................... llaJewWsbareHBbouse beaut .• MW office bldg.
2 br 1 ba ~oue •ll ... <l«Ml-Zll. "1*. Wlhr/dryr, rerrt1. •·--n1> !:r:t .... "25.&M-J.aO,MU\55 'AIKMIWPOIT with aon ·amoker Sl.tlll to bay "beach. ~lo " pool, J1cu1&1 z car ......._., 1 -• ....................... BacJuJora. 1 or 2 •
5
e. Close Prfvate show~rs for "*D•ba.tuo UDt.l~ba. brandoew.• cuqe nr bcb avail v.ew coodo. Av DOW. Le bi1fa.t z br 2 ba New duplex. 2 br upper. Bldrooms•TOW'Ohouses employed lnsl auuet.Jc execqU\'ea; op
at ll1J :ta tram bn:a, erpt, Septl.S-mo.~ Ml5, lN op& 1159.000. fireplace, II tara1e. nr. lrw)'a. Drpi, crpta, rromtMt.'4> ~~:.: "vouo ;eta~ premlileapvldftc.400To
St.•'Zaor41N-45e r P •. d • • • r • ft0.8:1 Jldv. beach. adult. only. range, d1hwhr. iar. Spectacular spa, total bdrma ....,. · batb bare 1.<100 aq. ft .• profett
I .JO. microwav. oveo. 2 :!.._~ Bltlf&IBR,2~ba.coodo HVHPortA>fioo 488 ~ \'em17leale.173-2182 Adull1. $330. mo. ret'realion program. rest oi rw;.:;,.. Ir •
1
!,.8• ctlentelt; preferred. fi'ee rent • mo. '-llU .... everyt1a1Q11 llOO Mo. • • S48·1A25. IOclal 1 pools 8 .e MZ-4823 I BR. J be, frpk, s.u,. S3MllZ ApaltM-1.W ba. pooi + spa, cntnr. Grab this ooe q\lict! $S50. t.enab ~t Fuhiicio '210. t84-33119\'ea. _ ____; _____ _
Av!t'::i. ::-na a.ldo New. I Bdrm, ~ w.tcliff·ZBll 2BA delwie ..,...aded, ~. 981).Ja Otl ~ Bakony, Vfew. Bach, !i• yard+&~ u:f1 Jal.and. Jambone fl San wrge airy ran In CM ~ olc. furn. Opposite
_...;.;.....;;::..;-.:... ___ __.be. "'mitobNieMennil -do for lease. New 2BRccu.aee.ft'ple.ndwd ~~ER'S.GUIDE pd.EaKldl•d·"'!_O·a •-2 ,_r JoaquiDHilllRoad. w/fuJJ bae & kit prtv. --~rpoct, oionth·bY·
SIAYllW court. 1550/mo. Call ~. appl., Ir newly dedla. Ii JJlllio. yd.~ •vunou-f:O· J...a1r.., oa, 17141644-ltOO Q.ua et. P oo I . N r u--.15Um.
New otean view 2 br, OU~1nor~ pUnted. No cblldren or lla.-S.Pbl4HS2$. Needre11>adhormarried -820(. freeways. bt'h, OCC. MrlD a·
ba.Leaaeorleaseopdon. peta.$SZ5.MHSM cpl to mana1e 7 re· 2 BR. l ba, amd noor. Nice 2Br Dplx upstairs. Non·amoker, mod . ..,. JllE W11TEI Annt 175·0$62. eve BR 2 BA..r.. new aPDl.. EXECUTIVE HOllE. modeled umt.a. Pymt to $250. Adulta only. rfo ZlJc• W l'D. eart!l; drinbr.empl male. refs. Dilmie h"rtr m-31131 Plttio. ar uoldea .Vest 3 Br. 2 ba, frpl, 2 car gar WATER VIEW. Avail be credit toward rent of peta.631·21T1 ta,~ pets. or SW.S.~ •••--~
•--.;ea.;....:.;;..;_1_ .. -.--.... --h--4 Oil. ICM1$5a1U PM. •toper. Nr. Back Bay. unf&a"D or furn. <Fum lu· o n e o f u n i t s . . laJeaboppin&. l.ae, credit 6ll & 1710 $4t ff
• .... IU' udc Pnnl dbl rm cpt/drps cl maid &1ard·luxurtous 875--1Q511&lJ..1te>o ut toe NICE 1 BR. relriS iacld, rel. a.we> mo. ctc..&103 Male ..uJ share 2brd ft.am *"'·'mo'• new. old Yail5-t7.3Bdrm,1rg ibcd_1ardlsapri.nklen° fura.> 3Bdrm. 3Ba, Bill • patio. $28S mo. Avail . b .. alllwtthfemate.S25wk. .,.....
Cdll c~arm . S4U ram nn. fned Y~ 1575. .v.y.~14 evea library, bQCe playnn, ~ 1. S.5880, ask for ~~-~1~n"" • ....i,locpcta ...:CM:.:..;..*-;;;;..;...:.Z.;..;7'1..:.2 _____
1
& ..-.:
f75GI Rmforprdec. _.. ' pool WOO Wllum, $UOO C:...cWMcr JIU Bill Nowukida~ :;
1
E. 215 504Sqft a...... 1224 OK. a!: ~-::0'':: turn.7»15171848-1118.. ....................... 85nruRJN Biibo• ·Brvd. s2so pe~ ROOMMATES ' u.
-................. :.. ~ ty PROMO!ft'ORY 2 Bdrm Bl\lfa, J.rc 4 BR coodo, New Is k>vely Z BR 2 Ba. mo. + att<ity dep. CalJ , ...... 5-Ye ....... ...
S!t,JV.bacoodo.Frplc, wttbloftPentbouseApt. S7SO. Read)' to go . bltm.fplc,pr,pvtpatio, SUe556-7707 v..'~more.Paylessl .......... 67M662
~fri1. SSOO mo. Vr!y graded 3 br w fbeavy -mo. 6"-03SOOl'MC·l7S7 I 0 ry · 0 r-s. · Va blk to beach. 3 BR 2 BA, All Ages" Ll.fest,yles hb I...... 4450
crpt/drps, wub /dry, sharp, higbly up. _,,.1 ~ .... .,... I d N .... t S3SO -VV.J
'----h .. I b i h ON WATER. 2 Bdr~. 'Tl Avail9/1S.~ WeCbeckRefereucn ... -.•••••••••-•••••• .__.112-3Ml. ~b~aeert:f kitrc~e'~ boat alip, $7SO/mo yrly. OCEANVIEW,2BR,den, Z.~~-c".. =~~ab~~e~?~'. C454M212
VU.COvet"ed rude-away. wtdsbwhr. L&e liv rm. FUrn&sbedorWlfurn. apadouaJasmineCreek. GARDENAPTS Dmla,oW 312~ ~.lZ744tbSl.6'0-6140 Lovely furn . Park ~~~.._/mo. prol. lndspd. U7S. mo. ~ N ~~ ~ ~ Ld E . 'S850. 6"·1667 nS&-9286 CORONA DEL MAR ••••••••••••••••••••~• WESTCLIFF 2br, 1 ~ba Newport I br apt to rent • . 8C7·1622or848-9MO. a • en, .. BR. • ... _.di .. ; .. .., room. Z Br ...._ .. _·--. frplc. 2 Br. small lned ~Uo. "d I M
..H..; .. ~ ....,,. pvt patio 2 " " °'" ,...,.. &UWUUUWK: V _....,. gara•e I•-· townhouse. Adults ooly, Weea ays OD r· OD· $250 lg 2 be kids pets .,..._ ·-I On Perunsula. 1 boua Pool teon1s Someocean co en:u .. • ..... ~. hcd yd. 'smaJ' •=:..i"'f:-1142 bath.$lll0/mo. from beach. Yearly. & C~talina 0v1ews. Close ~.mo.498-{)3l8eves. :..f:!·~5.J128 Bed· ~a~":;:2~17~=
fee.Call6'S-4900 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Wul•6!•1~1410H-.0 1 963-8613 to Fashion Island le floe Hwitlaq•leach 3840 , ... 1>.,,.,..,TOB"'"CH da.ys.213/820.291Seves. *OONSUMER 'S GUIDE F 0 r J e a 1 e , 4 B R • beach. MC-21811 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..., ~n. &ion
COMMllCfAL
HOUSE
for leaae. $600 mo. ~
~ + office carage. can remodel to suit. 113t
Tustin.CM.
Tri·Harbor Realtors Nice 2 bdrm. new paint, waterfront home. 40· S.Cle•• 1276 Sliarp, beach, 2 Ir 3 BR. 3 BR 2 Ba. clownst.ain. M/F to abr CM hou11e.
i&r, fenced )'T'd, $290.2544 boat dock, new carpets & BR, 2 Ba, BIG CANYON ••••••••••••••••••••••• frplc., dishwasher. Bltn11, fireplace, yrly laeuni. frpl. ao peta.~~~~~~~~~
or.nge,fC. paint thruout. Walle to TOWNHOME,beautup. Oceuview,enraalce2 3BR..2ba,fam.rm.Sub. garage 4t patioa . rentaJ.$500.540-1151agt. =:,;::r. $.175 + util.
l46-325S
548-2778 beacbes,acbools&shop· graded, loads of br· condo, own golf children, no pets. $650. 960-2.358. Plush bach pad. Quiet
___ ;....;;...;._..;._ __ .... ping. $1300 mo. LOOK amenities. No children, course, $395. ~col· Agent673-S354 priv location on bay. Mellow 3 bdrm condo. ~i!; :m~t~ 4:1~: r:i~: PROPERTJES.846-3336 nopets.f150.644-0509. Jed.eves, 714 mf..&171 Unusual bachelor apt. Seawind Village Gar. Utll pd. $3'5. pool" jac. walk to bchl--......;;"-------
lftany xtru, N.Eaat, lrYiae 324'4 Lidolsle Lr 4 bdrm 2o/4 5-taAN 3210 $18S. New 1"2 bdrm luxury 673«136. 1175. mo493-2060
Non·smokers. 1595. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ba, dn rm~ lam ~. 2 ••••··~··•••••••••••••• 673.5586 aduJt a.,U in 1' plans Balboa Oceanfrot\t. t Br, Need rmmale, Y or F. ~-3181 IBfT ALS patios, SlOOO. filS-3268 3 br 2 ba, l =· Coast Avail now, 2 bd, new cpt; ~~!:rt~~~;:; $275 & $.125. 2Bdrm, 28a HB apt. 116.1.
Spotless 4 br, z ba. new 1 BR..lBa ........... $300 Bi Ca b 2 b ~~~.,..,. ~Crd ocean aide hwy, no pets, From San Die•o Frwy PhM2·3338 UUI pd. Desmia. 84H103.
1
________ _ b Occ J BR. 2 Ba ....... SS2S/6:>0 g l nyoo twn me, r ..... _ -· -.--. $32$. 6'1s.ou3 .. 8-.\. plus crpt, or. . 58r,3Ba .......... S87f 2~. fireplace, wet bar. . drive North on Beach to I.GE 4 BR 2V. Ba. de· ---------~N41!11U' i:a~~~~pUoo . 38R,2ba$S25 ~_r~~~~~e.._putoilouJl, Af tw.tsFwzl1•1d ~~ ...... ~.~~ =:~=~::~,:: ~:.~-~.!!...~~. ~m~2;Z8!ptt~
.. Pools Tennis, J acun&.
KJdl Ot. 2Br, 2ba $450. m-. 388 S.US. '31·2133 or tGC!20
Mission v6ejo J..._-.<6U, K;UHl.O, """'a ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• ...._. _ _..... _ ,, • ..., 1--:...........;.~-~---
view. Avail Sept. 9. $700 . ..._...._. 1706 l.AMAMCHAAn'S Village. C7m893-sl98 ~2507 li'b:smeoesaetottable. . Bldg for rent. 5000
7S&-01B7 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Larte 1,2.tr.3 bedl'oom ~. loftty, spae. W~lilf 2 BR. 2 ba. de· 55&-T121. sq ft. Spnllk.lers. 220V I
COUNTRY CHARM in FU R N l SH E D 1 garden apts. Dsbwbr, & home-like. 2 br wttb twi condo. New crpts, Lovely tri-lnel home UOV, lrg outside fncd
Harbor Vu, 'Br. 3i,.,ea, BEDROOM 1arage apt. bltna.eod.gar,gubbq. pvt, gat.ed~ce + 2 newly painted.~ mo. near bea~b . Huot. storage" prbg area
brick patios, wood llrs. S3SO per mo. St.ZS dep. Pool Gas ~ m Scotl patios. Some with att. ~ Beacll. szoo mo. 536-8090. Will rent all or part.
lattice $795 mo. lse. Yearly. UliliUes incl! Pl.M2.:i073 ea.rage. Swimming pool. CornH Pu ti man & 673-8W eves/Wlmds Prefer DOO·amoker, qael ...__ 2 .... 2 ba all bl'-· Jacuzzi. Tenn.la courts. 1 Newport Hts. 2 alry. 3 Pa u I a r 1 no. adj Io 1-=-~=.;:__;.::.:.........;..:...;_ __ , male. ,....,..., .,. • ' .....,, bUt to HunUagtoa sbop. bdnn. 2 ba, $560. mo 3205 4350 Newport Fr w y Ca II
IREATHTA.KIMGl m-61166 frplc, encl. gar, patio, pine cen1ef' mall. Adult.a. ClaySt. 640-7175 ••••••••••••••••••••••• WA. Oosta, 714/549-9671 3~1-~a. carportb • wf.side. view of Newport Harbor. lc6oa , .. , ... a no1 ~ .... r;;,.F· 64.2·1603 No pets. From $435. I ·-N~ u-~ 'lD-• • 1tora1e only. Safe .............. _ W-"'-.. .. .. 00 rrc:~om ome, enc. tt573Cufn.i..ft..,i-..... e 4 DA--2~ ba coodo tn Seawind VlUage. lSSS.S .._.., ., .... s ,.....,.., & secure $35 mo 724 ---...-. -
Y•rd. children It peu '""~Mll:tfl.Ylfll u..uw. ....................... Near ne• townhouse, HuntiagtonVillageLane, \lpP,er. tm. ·patio, Ja.messt,'CM.mm. • ..................... .
OK. sa:;o~. 6'4-4882 VillAge m, 3 BR+ bonm ~7e2~';°r!~. cce.:1\· ~k~~ 1 br near beach• shops. center or town. Zbr. H.B. (714)898-9961. fplc, ad.lts, MS0.63l·2lTI ~women •!refs nd 2
MF.SA VERDE rm., 2V. ba., din. rm .. 6JJ.l6SO ::0 r:;;'s ~:1: ~~Its 1"2ba, gar, fncd yd, ail 2 Br cblJdren welcome 2Bdrm, 188 w/frplc. Office..._. 4400 lO/l ~/~~M , by
3 BR. 2 BA.~. dbl. gar. Nr. shopping THE llUFfS y. · ; cond. SMS. mo. 645-4655. 00 Pet,.. Starting at '270 ~ ~ w~snporc\, ·~.;;;;;~(;ff;C'i$' · ·
__ ..... c ..... ai_l_MS-_9-.16 ..... 1 __ , scboo~·~Jia-°3&63 Ce11•fvHU•I-lBR,offstpark'l,winter 3Br Zbat.hs frplc 2car mo.~. •·-:nup&ll1B g.a~:Yl' CanneryVWa1e·Newof· llllant/111•ett/ gen ··"7 S280. yri.y $300. 1U4 W. gar' Nroew ·MSO ' ._, Balboa Jvd"' Utb Mesa Verde 4 Br. 2 ba, AYA.ILNOW! BalboaBlvd,646-Q38 TsLM•ait.642.1603 lblocktobeach. lbd,$270 St.2J.U65.2542. fices from 300 sq rt· ~.
ram.rm. frpl.c, close to WOODBRIDGE M .. . 2bd $350. Frplcs. No <It-fantastic views. lg ••••••••••••••••••••••• aebls, topne1gbborbood. "'"' Li 1 Mod 1 JBR,l 'hba.S48S 0· Vearlybacbelorapt.furn. kids·pets.208t9thSt.lat -aa11w.te 3176 pat1os·park1ng & .......
1585.mo.tomo.OK.Call 1:.elates, neon e · 38R..2'hba.$6SOMo. util patd, working + last + $200. sec. ••••••••••••••••••••••• janitorial included. 2808 Op•a,.._.,., SOOS
Pt&e, Select Properties, 3Bdrm, 3Ba. $635/mo. 48 •~BR,3 b~.dS7$700SOMMo. mature person. 1st & meatiBAU 962-8840Jlm. Oh beach, gnat view, pvt Lafayette Ave .• N B •••••!"••••••••••••••••• 7ct ••n1 640-1271. ' I e o. ,_ ... ..,... ,,.," ,._.. ,. __ ,__ util pd 1 BR -..,.,..,1003 ,...._,, INGS&CO. """~·-·0•........,.. lBedrooms """""· · -· _v_ .... _____ ..... .&va .&l!!.ea..cy Deerfeld To nhouse 2 1>.:>.or ·TORS .....,,.S:i60 ,. ___ ...L.JIMcr -•2 Ad··'t.s SUPER 2 br. pool. gar. 2BR$375.1~·3'110 _,...,,.. ft dJ r W •~•a.,..,~ E.,tde Jg 3 br 2 foll baths 1
w • ~ '""" -_.. .. , ' "' •DO pets, frplc, trees. $325. Adults. ...__ SQ. • x o c. FIAMC .. SE range cpl closed gar BR, 2Ya Ba, $450 mo. Bhtfscoodo,3 BR,2 ba, ••••••••••••••••••••••• l31E.18tbStreet 842-4834;8'2·~1 2br.wa.llttobeach.Clean 19th St. CM . rrom $150
$380.MS-9536 Avail.Aug.29.831-0929 ........i newc_,..,....ts paint· Sml Bach, noo smkr, 640-6816 & ready now. SJSO. l br mo.TomS40-Z200 'The new way to own"
KIDSJPETSOll Posh Turtlerock Glen :;t"thruout.lYr.' lease. mature persoo, S210/lucl N"EWDELUXEAPTS. S27S. rno. 4911-1903 or ~.;:!n~~::{y~:;~1
F.ASl'SIDE 2 BR. ~ Townbome. 2 BR, 2'h No children or pets. util.6'J5.SZ05.675-3824 Garden like apts, adult ~~9~88~~·2f~~: 646-0507 JHE EmCIEHT Exp. not requ&red
. &46-C&C8, 675-&258 bath. beaut. master suite Avail. now! SS3S Mo. Coefa Mesa 7124 living, no pets. 2 Bdrm. 963-8088. TrDU CompJde support & long
w/frptc. 6 Rocky Glen. Agent~ ••-••••••••••••••••••• pool &c Jacuzzi. 111 E. Salt..._ AJ.u;anATIVE term service provided 2BR.l~baduplex,lease. $675. p /mo. La Vera Jbr 2 ba W/D BBQ Stuminglbrcardenapt, 22bdSt.C.M.&1$.~98 DeJuxe 2 Ir 3.bd •pts, C•hkw 3171 M.o, ll> mo. rent lncl Call Mr . Charles
S2llS mo. No pets. Dave, Bums, Rltr.144.fi397 • · gas · ........i rec area. 1285-710 frplc. encl gar. paUo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 714-838-93f2. Agl. 644-nu auwdr opnr, or bch. S45C WOOSt New 2 BR., 2 sty twnhse, Call Peggy980-4382 2 DD 1 ba ..... ..1-Rec e pt . s e r \' .. 1_....:..;;.:.:._ _____ _ .-:~---------l Beaut 2 Br Oraoretree mo. SlSO secur & clean · · w/encl gar le paUo. l2SO ~ • c_., "".,.· penoaal1ud phone COY· GYM
D.e'oW 3226 ~ec.ciqdo.AJltacilin· l .l.T. Bob Marcel. 1&2bdrmaptsS235.&up. sqft.Adltaonly,nopets. Beacbbat'belonCoforit' t,t:~~/~:r.r~~i Ye~rd : erage, t'onf. rm, mall Best buy in Orange Co •N•••••••••••••••••••• cl 1 tennis. Adil com-957-2666 Adlt.s only. ()pen 8:31).5, Located at 2SA EJden 1 br, l ba, patio $225! ~ 9 O • es, serv., parking&: more in for eqwpment & toca
2BR.1Ba,oceanview,no munil)', no pets. UDOISLEHOME JBR2 Sat'• t-1. ~ 2110 Ave. Dys. 714/827-8410; Smlllfee.645--4900 NNport. lion. $10.000 full pnce 'rN' •rt, brkk patio S39S/mo. Opl to buy. 1>-. 1., bvln ' II l NewportBlvd.CM. afterSpm&CS-90Cl. .c<>NSUMER'SGUIDE Al ..,....._. __ ,,. 111EEXECtrl'IVE Owner. 997-8S52, noon. /bbq S3l!l5 /981-6286 ss1.-n u.. .. e g rm. w Pc. ....-= ,......_ SUITEMO-sno 9p kd r itcll ·1 or bltm,dblgar,paUo,yr· $23S t Br mobile home 2BR,lba,goodlocaUon, 2bdrm,2ba,privpaUo.~ oru.tw.islled 3'00 m,w ays.
_,.. 2 be 2 ba lwnbse, Univ. ly. Avl now. $89S mo. Mature adlta only. N~ quiet. Avail 9/S/78, $290 mi fnn bch, 2202 F!ortd ••••••••••••••••••••••• CcM OFFICIS ea,.tat needed Lo expand
Otarmint 2 br, l ba bse. Park. common ~or&U·6822 pets. Quiet, secure. 1.991 mo.667816 $315. mo Days 536-66631 THE EXCITING ...,C ... "'1'fMeW proven commodity in
Mature adults, no pets. pool\'JJarks,$450.M9-5147 BAYSHORES. Charming NwptBJvd.846-3373. l.arge2Bdrmupper~. ~~Eves 962·0'113. 'ALMMISA.A.nS. SUJTts. So. of Coast vestment bus1ne.ss
S3SO. Furnished S37
5
. ~IHdt 3248 2BR.bomew/den 2ba, ..... ._. leoclll 3740 Quiel building wltb MINUTESTONPT Hw7. AvaUable Now!1..:.:96()..Z33'1;.;..;..~·-----
.._.or6'7&.alll ....................... xtra Jge SlmDy patk;, dbl :::.':'!!~............ beauUful landscaping. Ba b~ BR SEE to apprec:late. 1395. Art you looking for a
, llNt' TO IUY Great view prime 3 br 2ba gar, !pie, bltns ref rig. No ffl.IDt.in810n Pacitlc bacb Ide.al for adulb over 35. c $23o. · Call Linda 6'1S·Z'Ul di\'eralfied Income &
Alhllll applies-&odown Uos 'TA-or bch to~ . Pvt area w /sec. & ..._ No pel11. LEEWARD from &up. ~tum security from r .. )'ment.
3
Bdrm, den, 4&4-6 Cpm Martha McNab 87$-3S68 $300. Sept M. 646-7782. Ave, ci bit east Newport 1561 MC!3a Dr. AIC. ample ~ •. ~ n-· ~',~tr tbOWiewnno~I
7t4. ba Townhome . Small 2 Bdrm 2 b th b • .__.__ ••4 (S Blb Ea.st ofN rt $1"" No·--s""""' -...... IUU • .,_ ~view.LH9mosat • a vo~se. ON BEACH-Balboa...,...._.. 3741 Ave •·1 blk ao. Bay>.~ -4 ewpo ..., . .....,req 67 ·"""" largelnvestmtnl? Look
$49&-$1200 o~~ money ~~~~cl:,e~ J:O: Pen.in best location, im· ••••••••••••••••••••••• 631'87. •••••• .. •••••••-'•• .. ••• 9am.s1;~sk..98llO Airport sgl ofc. secty mg ror distributors. By
and JOU will -ve SlllOOO 4!H-728'1 494-4212 maculate4BR2Ba, f~, Elegantly turniabed, 2 KIDSOK *BRAND NEW• arvcs on preQlises. Sl25 appt.541-761781\S 30. =~=r~ ':Mi _,.uni · _,..1 81 CJltbedral beamQ: c • ~2~wb• ~ ~ 2br,lba,pool,szso. a-4000 mo.9157·9331 IALIOA.ISLAMD
-~'··-urn. ue. sec. ·~tem. et re· -."""" u. v ' 6t.5-80Ml.Oamto7pm •••••••••••• .... •••••••Deluxe Qifta Met• pro-Gtll thot> with 2nd noor Jobn'93-93llorm.1400. La«oon Villa, ocn!mt on sidential area; close to patio. ·oeean view, 2 llVM-SMIWIST Roomwt kltcbenetle fessional altlce. •. uoo dftce. C.JI raat for de· 81.. JJlZ pvt bcb. 714/499·3.217, school. library. YrJy pools. a. tennis crts, Bacbdor'a dream. $190. AnCOMMUNJTY '60weelc•up. uoft.S.-2l03. \al.la.64().Sll2Agent.
••••••••••••••••••••••• 213/10S-02:30 $11'° monthly, winter ~ or C!M~ aft Utll pd. Prorated dt· 97SS ....
• _ ... ...._ ....,.~ &:---.&. ""'..--H.llt.'l~ also L~un .• f;li!utforSteve. ~a~! Small fee ! IBIJASE POlftT 541-Deluxe otrlce, uoo sq. n . ....,to&.oc. 50%5
frt>Jc, dsbwhr, kids 6 ••••••••••••••••••••••• n4-673-0898 Oceanfront 2 br 2 ba, ~ER'SGUJDE wn"' ---nr.o1 _. A ,_.,, """" • ... .,. u.a, -~••• neg o ti• b I e . ""R er 1 . : -• • ...,_,'eM-_.__,___.,~ 11o. tL" c.n. ·~··· •••••••• ••••• ••••
JMUok. MTS. Aft. No fee. SEA VIEW 3 bdrm. 2.,.. . deck. ~eplace, tar. new • Mesa. rm Harbor. Cen· sq. ft, Prufer Mamt Co. \..K C~!H ~;m.2111. ba + lam rm ocean 3br,2baduplawitbvlew carpeuq, winter sns. J m still berel J210. ~ioc!:~i;~::b':!· =·~· _ __..._ ~ pool~ $1200 of ocean. Cpta, drpe, No children or pets, Cheap! Kids, peg, Call Ari •p~ community de. Jlhone k.'N...S !.~ wou are ...--.ws w. &: Ind Tr.isl Deed =.~!,beylrp~d!~ (213).430-3629 · bltns, aanaae •tall. SS2S *'51W nowf-.Smlfee.1'5 t800 slped with >'OU ID mlnd ......a, Jacuul, I.ltd rec. an apartment Jookltnt Joana arranted for any ~ ot. M4.$. Aft, oo fee. yrty, A# 875-9111. ... ..,.. leach J16t *<X>NSUMER 'S GUIDE ~.t~'°":rn=. ~. Dally &s weeklJ In ClaaaiOM. Will your reuori. Credit no pro. ~orfn.3971 3:,1:mt'~~8:;!7~ dBdrm,~Batwnba•. "••••••••••••••••••••• 1Qda,pet.a,.2 br,lba,nfce harnlsbed l 2 ai 3 rates startin&froatl54a ad I» ther-.! To place blem.Bonowontbeln·
, ';. Sept.I ' Nrnew~wrllonbuae W Br from $240. 1'tJ. Yi.w. S28S. Call now. bedroom atta. Im· week. )'OW'ad,call&&a""87S hoc~j!_.~~:vf~r~!~t. t. • I'•~ 1240 trVtneMeadowa prlv park. D11hwsbr, Adulta, no pets. Fum or Smallfee.~ medlatf0cc&U)&Qcf. ~ • ...., ....uwu~ •••••••••••• .. ••••••••• 50-GlllW so.mt frplc, gar, carport, pool, uni. Mil E. letb N. Rta .coNSUll£R'SGUIDE c:owteoua lntormauon.
3-.1 .. -lld ,...._......,._ etc. No pets. $475. •1.IOl FIATURIMG $162 DAY ~·" u--e L••ns
car l•l'•I• • patio ba. tW June lat. $390/mo. ' · Beacon !"8ot 2 br apt. yrl)' OOQI. AduJta. No pet.a. •Park like ..wo,. ' LI natd Ho mt Loon ~. -•-·--· .. ..., n ..... 2 Bdrm 1 .....,. . .....,,..,,. .,..,.,,,...._, .. "°• 1¥11 per u ....,.. .,.
Cleaoltablrp,new Pblt$.atm RVHhm,beaUlMonaco,3 lse. Te court. 14'75. lmMonrovtaMS-7924. :~t;:1J:'!'t~;~.. 1bat'1ALLyoupay Broken urvlng So. c:overtn1 tbroucbout. SR, lrt bactyd, or schl/· 631-3841. ror
8
C.Uf. tor 17 yrs. Call our
$4U. mo. No pets. TowabouH. nr. Hoa1 gmblt, $900. 844-MtO a Br, S ba, tnhle, bltn., •Pool &J~UUI N-30do.y ad neare~t office. t'7J41 ~ Hosp 3 BR 2'1't ba DW. Penlo.2brhome. Waaber, crpla, drpe, or. Fairview .Ou BBQ '"" th l37.J74"4 , __;_;.__ _____ ,carp .• d~ps, 2' ca; ....._VlewlMll dryer, ulil incl. Avall. C. Baker. F1zptly, no *Sp&rkUoc clean lau.n· BU81NEssMEN In • S:.!.br,..!~·r'rp·~J~; carport;f•ceapool.$&50. Coty Rockport Model !!P!:,,_to June. SHO. plll.56-1'12. dr')' Contact ttl• DAl\.Y n••tY PILOT DOYOUNEEDCASH'
bar, 3000 Ma rt, .~. Adlllt cple. only. Rltr w /pane wlnclo'tt'I & New .,,,,,.._ Maa PiMI batb szao. l br •Garden paUo kitchen PILOT '°' Information UfU lit. 2nd a. 3rd
No pets $750 '9S-t4al au.5333 Enaland ehU"ln: 2 Br, Oceaalrmt, r;•r arwad 1215.Adulta.nopett.2840 ~l>Y~~Ungs renardl"9 ~ countr SERVICE Homeowner loans
"V..••-.-ev•. PLUS1Ubr,2~bacoado. lookln1 1retnbelt :SOmo.~oo pc-• .w-.. Avt . •LatiewaJ.k.lftc.loHt.t raqu rement• or Borrow 11000, 1100.000 "'-• • den. Zba, fncd patJO 0Vf'r• &tried •• • u --t-~ ·~ .-&IVUllUI W l t &rraqed fa•t.
a,k 2 Ila. famlb nn, ~ Onl,y It.pl ltom water. •1mo New lBr. n at BHr Ir •PrivatedreuJn1areu utlnt a Flctltlout OIR£CTORY tlulble t~rcr1 1. pot ~.le Jard. "75 lflPJ.y ~Am~· IMIPr1p1rtlta OCIAMAOMT ,.utartno, Ui·p\u, encl •Ac'*ltldwalia. lualnea Heme. credit oo problem Call
... =:.orm.tm · 11J.Ull 644-ll42 Lie. d':filu, blt·lna. •ar,$Z9>mo.6"-5623 NearcomerolWalftut• 142..a21 DO rT NOW! • ~~.SVCS
o 81·.1' • .:... a BR •. r trp1ca,t_~-·~.~1ta, Jea~ otr s. A. rtwy. l!XT.m ..... 1,71 n•--it.lt10<bkrJ 1Uidl ,_..old It~(« Newport fft.t, 2 8~ frpl, ... 1, ...... • am. winl4r--, ••vv • '800 1'11 faattat draw In lbe (114>W•1000, IOCry DO _.,. ,_,.. ~-1oodltt wJth a $t1$permoatb &per cond. • loc. '150 per mo. month. A1ent Welt. .. a DaUy Pllol ..._ l\alt.aJ ctoter ope
a..an.dad.MZ-5171 AaeaU44-ftlS Mo..A&attu-LW 171-l.MI aaaatn.dAd.IOa'?I daU1tamto7pln.
• • # .. . . . --. ._ ...
DAILY PILOT
========I P'lnd what you 'Hat ln Dal11 PUOl Clualn.eda
7
twpW..... 7tOOHtflpW..-. 1100 MlfpW..W 1100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1111 ,. •• IHI A1'IDld llNrt\1 C:Wntw. labJtltt•r nttdid bf •-................ ••••••• ............. ,,, ~·d. Flt.ha• d•71· it1th•r. T·30·1:30AM. llAl'IXJNO
i.....,llllMJUt c.r..• ww• .. , ..,.,,_.c.u•••M 1:1.M:aoP11. My bomt.
117ltftlllk 1lla .... • •le.&aCaadno~al . 9)/Wk.Jtal ... ..,.l4. lDJ.O
&ML Nn •mwVlt. SMa.mtot1. rGUYllc. Asllcnbty, Ull, peortna· IAIYS1111a llllla Wooda.. h•ar• rora •1* aent wor11, romp••>' ...._ __ ..... 1•1 Apt. 111roJ1ct, CoJl .-.otTJ beftelilJI. $.llaJ')' com· .,_ -""'"'u• ..... iny _....._.M.kL~..U...JD PBSONANT? Carina. a.iawalA wtap. C.11 home. 1Wld.a11. CdM ,..... mzk prQJttt lAit •. elflMlllblA ..... a.s.P.M-arM. 8ellned Oldtr lady
Droftt.; kart Ill .. 4al'& P"* It uwm PMrN. flfernJ Abortloe, Mop-iliilrecl. ~. tv .
in. ......... avalt fa yte PauDN • Vlc\GM Uai•~.tpln• All•••S sm.• na1t1 "' U'ade .. O ... anl~ APCAll& Ml·Z5a Eltc\to·•hcbanleal. BABVSJTTER. Airline ... _ ... f I ...0.6UJ Good aokkrta1 1klllt. tlfta.rdeu nda lovtn1. ,_ or °"· &Alt: Lt._ Coc.b8DOI. LMAaYtclt .. .c.... coao. COIM. read rap1">m&ntocareforJ
..._ .. ", .., collar. \1 k : 0.-• M atMciMUcs 111n l yr a · yr o&d cblld In my home.
Uwkri ... .,... N.a D1•~•H ·llH. --.:...~~~· eer-~"1•bmefit.a. 14 '*-· 7 ct.11 per mo . . .,... M &~•:,,....... ..._._,__,'" EqQa.JOpforCmploJer Reft. Salary o~eo. ___ ............ LOST Off aa llrvlnlallOraa,.eo. DICC JI0.5'1M,m.ll~ Foe more tnrormlt.lon.
: •H •P ... 11U tntne ~l a&.v....-piqlecaUC'briaDecker. I.MST ...., -a..-... JI .,...., ... ,, .....
H.tta area. "h~ •• IMWCll!llit 1400 &1pen1M2t1oya.a,ea• ll•woadSft... IUS~mss ..... •s,~-........ =~l~IOll • , .... •••••••••••••••H• 1•f'rU9I l'.H 10, Moo·Wtd·~t. 2Nto & &...Ana. ODtniDli LD C.11. Ii N.8
--· ~~ 6:10.MJ~ .... o. lOpm-·3am s haft . MT&'--" IAlt: ._. ~ ~. M•IU? l!lperinnd Teeoa1er or adlt. SIZIEdiquAve. Charlie'• Chili Corp.
,...,.,.._ IN male, ataaulla 6 OllllNTROVIPfortli. 10Neededlauned. ..;s.me..;;....;=------• H~Beacb ~l ---------i_;,,;;;~....;.;.....;..;;..;.~--..--' ....,._,Ce. Ad•••· lleward . lnt«IUIMl • dlacNot Loac • •bort term U · Babya!Wir ln my bomt (~•,.=, Cook·Houaekffper. ltve 1irable oppe>rturnti
641-Jt71 l'4 .... I I 111'911. WI!)' LO aM9l new 11D.1 .. 1tp111tot.a. Holiday Ii fNfll7 Wed all day. Own CARTll.IA in, Enc. 1peakfng, room. available to leam t~
'
d ....... ' !Mil, "a c • t Ion Pa 'I · ....... $6Wll0 EQuaJOpportunity lN005rRJAL beth. TV, pnv. entrHt•· ham It dell bu11a.,., .. ~~bM"*M'7 Loll: P•"· aold Ill• H°Jt'a:.:bullon plan ... _. EmployerM/F Refs.$ da1 week. Top Contact Brute a;.t
toa-1 i.ai•andTD' 0-. f U.t. loll• av . Babysitter for I mo okl ~~~~~~~~I 0 r i 11. •a I ads. aalary.Mt-i716 f'l3·9000. Hooey a. '!I ~ l..as7.J7ff ''TEI". S."Um•ntal uu1 lntrod' uc&l1oaJl ror boy, Ptr. my home or :: ,.ndwlcbn. all 1blfts ~-&... u.a-. Hams.COM. • ,
v.me.. 8"'ud.~ H •ct •• • e1 ••· --)'OUl'l.Hrtnex.556-1488 a11all. Full or part time. -~
C.erlll llld'S. Get U9: Pw11111alh11d .. T7MCK$ ~ AJao reUer help. mileate P /tlme. Sal/SUn attn. DllTARY AIDISi , .. ,,
to 2S11t yletd ea 10Qr L0.o.U>at:~p Rep:::i: Babysitter needed. Ben1rtn1 pay.C.U'9M·23Sl ~-At conv. t>Qspn.al. o.1 •
allODe1 MC'llnd b, aul ,...Y/tilk • mature. for toddler. pu-Shift• Wiii tr·~ ..
Eata&e. I ..o to J 'Ir Udo laJe. 2U La Jur.ar I «:JW• & .. mpu1 Driv• wtdya, my home. own SECRETARY CARIB SALIS ~metlcs ~ble employment. X~ ~Brtttrt.haataV· CllllrrMm ~..... 14MT41 trw. Non .. moker, Ute Orange Co. Commission 40peopleoeededto.leam benefl\a. Apply. 144l
llP and loaa. 11.000. , -__.... ....... .-..1 .-.-............... (ACtON Ftom hekpc,147-6820. = trainlnl allowance & teach professional &!.,.."'°" NB -. IU.! • "50 Ole .._ --.,._ Immediate opentni for a resume to: John c. make· UP techniques. .,..... · · ' • "
Cat1'9Ray .BKR Cll41 Jade I"' llnh. Sn fi'uh~ 7001 ~~~~ Babyslttermybome.Mon willinlworkerlnourAd Pinto 1380 S. Anaheim f\.IU /part time. LAURA DISHWAStm
D-l'l'Ot Umeoul. Reward. I , ,.... tbru Fri. 2Pll·$PM. mlnlstrative Dlvlalon. Blvd.SultelOSAnabe1m. LYNNCOS
173
ME:ICS. For P /tlme. MHa Ve,...
141-JSU Newport Elem. School Dictation and good typ. CAtmOS appt.cal l· ....... l ConvHoep.661CentAarla.
Bl!!..6.1 EST•TE AISB•• area. Star\ Sept. 11th. iDIUillsrequlred. CM WDOM.OM SAYS l'OUND: Cbampepe M ~ --m -TIO.,...,.S 541-Ut1. Carpenten &.Helpers. ex· Cosmetic Sales. ALOE . , po!~e. Vic La1uo uc~sE -"""'-...... ,_ ,_ ._,1.. -uae -r ror remodeling con· VERA PRODUCTS. Br-=-~ 2 Yn alba nper. •lee· BABYSITTER. Mature uw• "" .. ~ a p.... t;8Cto,. 133-8833 per re ct Job for Doi Groomer. eq»er. 11t·
1:,;u'lT~S
Z.-.&~
SwtNGS ff REFl'S
CONSTRUCTlON
-APT•OOMMERCIAL
MIGUR
MOIT'9AGE CO
ll1·7lll 661-Jll I
OPEH IVBYDAY
4'M·2531. SCHOOL uon I c d I re ct i o na I woman. Approx 3 dya wk and diversified poaWoa. · · housewives. 962-0841 an llme. San Juan Capo
1yatem1. oil industry. (Ot 2~ 11: 1 yr okl. Vic. CASH CARD 12:30 Call 661-070Uor app\. FOUND : Golde OFFERS Xlotbeoeftts.Oran&eCo. Brookburat/Hamiltoo. Foranint.erview. COMESTO
cockapoo, neudtered. airport area. C.11 Ray HB.645-6384 ~~M~dll c•••fO• .... a•t c-t• HelDtf' DonG ut1 NSlJol>, PltlmeAAM Well-mannere . VI --..._.......__...___ Gtlman,55'7·9051. NkaOI'-. ... 1uu ,_. "'"_. Xlntp/limeJob.Noonto tr . oexperoec. PP·
WHsoo/Pomona, CM. ------~ Bab)'aitter needed. close ~ WeoeedlOtopaaJetpeo· 5:30.479 E.17thSt.Coeta ly,l.3SE.l7thSt,C.M,.:._
_MU3l __ o_. ------t .cnahCouneavailable 1-ASS-E•M•BL_Y ____ lo Newport Higb. Call ;:;Bank pie Immediately. Call Mesa. DRAFT'a
-.._.. ., __ ,1 •u-•--i-•-~ . ..1~-... 646-3488aft5PM. 95S-CASH 1 r ......... : ..... ~ pu:ppy t.er ......,.._ """"" :i5 f ---------Counter g i r I d r y Orange Co. based in' rier. blktwbt wearing •Small c asses for Babysitter for 9 mo boy, 0 Child care. housekeeper, cleaoers.40hrsinSdays. leader in medical de·
colars. Rlvendaell penooaJl.zedlnstructJon. TRAINEES Mon, Wed, Fri A.M.. J\le\vport Uve in Irvine w/pnv rm. MIN. WAGE TO START. vices 1s 1et-k1n1 • •
Gerooomo788-072S. *Oloole own lute-day 8::J0..12:30, moc.ber/cbUd Mature woman to care No up. nee . Clown drafter. ,
ak •uU,htclaaaea. <Or Experienced> OK.646-6238 EQIA&!Opportwuty for 2 girls 1 & 8. Salary Cleaners. l~ Bayside 2--4 Yrs e:icper. in m.ffb t F~N~_!1~~Uanee •Placement-up to 80% Micro Bectr•u ------~---------EmployerM/F open. Mary Poppins Drive.Nwpt8ch673-~ drafung. Prepar~1 ~t..... commluloo. We are aeeklnc in· IAIY ... , •~ ·~~~~~~~~~ whettareyou!833-l357 . engi.neerinc drawing&. Ir HB$36-20'18 dlvid··-•-, r•-t bift Newport Beach area.1: r...-i ... to mana11e SS umt u·•· r -iR-'"'D'" ......,. aor u" 1 l ·.'""" Mon .• Fri. Own Bankinp Fee Paid -"'~ """' rom eti5 ''""""''' .. FoundNB Lhasa Free3Week PQSitiona In our Produc ...,..., ---... Qliklcare/Housekeeper apt romplu u\ Costa notes. sketches, lay°"'1l' Apso~S.21 SalelTralniog. UonDepartment. Wewili car. SlllO. p /mo. 6'4-103.5 T ..... TnMto $650 lO::J0..6:30. S days week. Mesa. Husband may & instructions neceas.
54&-7841 C~ForDetallt train the rlghl in· Barbara. Ftlendly branch offers 640-7404 have part time job. Trade or t~h'I school ----------t 131·1003 49).0442 dividuals in the micro-·-------• PR pos. to rndiv. OroastBSO.mo.631·2950. backcround pref'd. If REWARD!! Lost lg bl eJectrooics industry. w /casbierin& back· Childcare. live·ln. l small OU Ur le"•'"' "tfl Kat.eUa eau1 1 L 1 child ok H B area Rm CIOSSIHG GUARD Y qua y P _... ' neutered M. Lab, Tem Real DtateSchoolng...u • ~ ground. Ca 1 es ie. b d. . . . . for an interview or svt1
pie Hls vie, Lag Bch. 32031 Camino Capistrano Comprehen11ve com· 1s;w.a1 1133-2700. Also Fee Jobs. oar • s m w a I e • City al F. Vly. 12.85 hr. llUt resume to Personnel
8/25. Call 494·5818 Sao Juan Capistrano pany benefits incluchng For our Costa Mesa ore. Dennis & Dennis Person-840-3046. Apply immed Penonnel , Administrator. Shtle.r
3 tst T.D.'s, $30.000 ea on _«.......:...·_2918........:...--------t major medical and den· F /time w /rotating ne!ServiceoUrvlne, 2082 CHILD CARE Tue & Dept. 10200 Slater· I Scienufic Corp, PO 8o'f
LapDa ~ Seaaooed.26 Found: Vn• Maltese Bl 7075 tal. Call or apply in Saturdays. Min l per mo. _Ml_c_be_Json ___ ._________ Thurs a.Iler acbl ror boy 963-8321, E.O E. C19S03. Irvin~. C• mo. 10 mo 8 due lOC'k ant -person, 3952 Campus Exper. pref'd. Call Mr. 7 ..-......... 979-0500 · . tomcat on Grand Canal ••••••••••••••••••••••• Drive, Newport Beach. Szilva at 546·2300. Bank .,.,.._,,, DAYCARETEACHER . prepald.~%73d.isc.u.I!! ._.173-_7916 _____ --11l'-. ·-y -~1.-full time ,,..,. -Eq I Op y ... , ER I-"'-18 Id E ... ,,.. _ ._.. ~ ..._.. <TI4) _,...,.,.,.,. ua · California Federal Sav· a Cleaning lady ~ired 5 • •u1e. or o er. xpr Oraft.sman. bwldina. bt
Found: Fem Germ• employment. Types 70 portunlty Employer Inga, 2'700 Harbor Blvd. <Hunt Bch Branch l Hrs pr wk. S3.b0 hr. pref.552·7494 ing & power dH1an
Swillga.o.s Shep, 3 lO 4 mos~AtJan wpm, ab ao.. Lva. ficures M/F/H. Costa Mesa, Ca 926216. Fttune Apply in person 962-3257 DB.I HB.P Electn·Planner1' Int :
WT.D. Lo.I & Beach Sat. 960-49 '168-334l JRANSMASK F.qual Oppor EmploYer. Mon· Fri 1oam·l2 Person· So. Santa Ana. 540-4944
el i'Wfi G Id t t Cleaning girl wanted for Exper"d, over 18. P /lime 1-------------Low Rat.es. EZ Terms Call to Identify. EUROPEAN Esthetician. n VI ce 0 ens a e furmlure store. P tr 12 wkDda 644-5619. Drapery Assistant. wtth s .... U L09 --------'--------t Faclallal & make up Sanwa Bank 10230 S. hrs. flexible. S3 Per hr. some experience. call
__.__• 5 .. 1.4197. Found: Long hatred Dox· artist. Uc'd. 8'2-~ CORP. Hankin" Paramount. Downey. Apply tn person. 1931 DELI HELP. Full·tlme. 494~1. LB area. ,' __ __. ____ .. _____ -! ie fem. Approx 2 yrs. Aug,__________ • 213/923-9461 EOE Trade ds Dell 67 ow
19. Garden Grove/ orking Mothers. A·l Career p]>pol'. for bank . . NewportBlvd.CM win , l 1-D-o--.. P-E_R_V_W_O_R_K_RO_O__," • --...a../ W t . t '"'a .. ___ --------· exper'd 1"'9'IPll!a..IDER ...;,,_;__:... __________ , CoastHwy.N.B. ""' "" --=&Cwn es m1ns er a~ .. · rJUUM: cleaning lady best _,_.. Clerical ---. -------------WORKER. Will trattl
'-non•/ 960-4952 o1 references. Wish day AsstwantedDeCut TELLERS Acrepting appllcations. Wanted: general office. Delivery man for paru Must bt-at least tis
Lost&"°"'9d F 0 u N D . G er m work, work by the job. Hair Design NB Must be outgoing & peo. exper'd bartender. Day typing. riling, l().key, or· co. Costa Mesa uea 642-Ul43
•••••••••••••••••••••• h d p . t Must be s teady every ~2110 pie oriented. Xlnt shift. Apply In person, der desk. in a pleasant fu1lt1me.S48·3443. ---------•nr•n•lth 5100 Wire aire 0 'f. Td· week 54l·:M34 r & l t 3·5pm, J . P . Macs atmosphett. Hours s..~ DRIVERS
••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~~~}~~~ •·1---· -------Auto mechanic. ex· ~~~:l~~s surr~u:~r:g~. Rest.aura.ot, 10142Adams Call 540-7800. DBJVERY for dmt.al lab. Good }()r
pt>rienced. 412 N. Coast Openings at Tustin & Ave, Hunt. Bch. TV Dept. Ful_l·llme hrs housewives & studeats
PDINY
PllCHEI
ADS
ONLY S2
Sell any Item or com-
blnallon of llems for 175
or IHI with a Penny
Pincher Ad. 3 hnes for 2 consecutive days. Each
additional Une is 6& for
tbe 2 days. Charge at'
, Nocommen:aal ads.
For more Information
and to place your ad call
642·5678
How To
STOP SMOICING
964-2264
Found Shepherd cocke
mix, M, beige aprox 1·
7100
yrs645-l508 aft.s&eves ACCOUNTANT
Found: Parake<t. Kings Shirt sleeve type for 75
Rd, Newporl Beach. employee fll"D'I, marine
&11~1 exper or knowledge pre-
ferred. The Willard Com· Found: Pel pigeon. vie. y .... "5211 E 0 E San Miguel. NB. Ph pan _.,.. · · · · 759-~ll
1
_M_l_F ____________ __
5350 Acctng Bkkpng
••••••••••••••••••••••• TEMPORARY
VIDEO MOVIE PARLOR Register Today lO work
Free 20 min introductory on various accounting &
vi.sit, no purchase req. bookkeeping assign·
Also dance & rap ments. Work close to
sessions. your home. Figure
DAHCEOFFUH Clerks to Sr. Accoun·
2060S. EucUd, Anaheim tants nuded thruout
Exciting recording, OrangeCo.
543-1422. Robert Half's
MASSAGE
RGURE MODELS
ESCORTS
OUTCAU. OHL Y
Dys ..........
631-2140.
Accountemps
SOOS. Main, Sle 501
No. Tower, Union Bank
1n 1be City of Orange
714 /835-4103
cdng to $I 0.400
Hwy, Laguna Bcb. Newport()( Eqll&.l()ppol'Empk>yer l2-8pm,ParH1mehrsar· ~or549-2002
4.96-7935 ca. Clerical ranged. Neal appear &
....... ...-..6•ve p~.!1 GODept!_AMd F1Kr Beauty salon in CM needs good driving record. Delivery extra lntonf8.
nuwuouu ~............ "' hair &tybsts. Guam + SHIPPING • .,.. 11-t Hardwcre S3ClO mo + bonus. Steady LotAHud.t/ 535E.1stSt,TusUn oomm.548-3446. 21666HarborBl.CM part lime, 3-0AM. Hun· Senke Driver 832-5200. EOE. CLERK tint.on Bch. Dehver LA
S dy week. immed open· ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ ~Y~~: open ror Excellent opportunity Delivery pos. ror young Tunes 892-8422
ing, xln\ working cond· I•--------fashion conscious assis· for entry level. Part· man physically able m _____ _..;.. ___ _
Salary open. Mission Banldng tant.s. Excellent trainmg time. No experience warehouse & delivery. DRIVER
Viejo. call Bill Light, TfllERS program. Good OP· necessary,wew11ltrain. S3.2S hr start. Must be Exper 'd help '"
831·2880. portwlity tor advance· neat appeanng & bonda· housebold goods for ~at WearepreseoUy seeking EJCcelleot company ble. Clean dnving rec & furniture moving C'o. Automobile Painter s experienced Tellers m ment. h benefits iocludtog maJor Calif be 835-8422 Class 1 dnver pref'd. Helper. Pay according to our Costa Mesa orr1ce. Also need one s ampoo medical and dental. Call -----------768-064.1
ability. 642-9373. person ' Wed . Sat . or apply m person: ~2 DELIVERY PERSON ,_,;..;___..;..· _____ ~-
Good figure aptitude and ~chard Ouellette Salon. Campus Onve, Newport Freeway Auto. 2624<:
Automobile En&lne custome r relations a 200 Newport Center Dr. Beach, (714 1 540·6080. Avery Parkway at SD Tuneup Mechanic. Will NB. M i V train ror wheel align· mu.st. Equal opport unit y frwy. &SSon 1e10
DRIVER
SlOck Boy Full or p11
pos. W Lee & Associates. S70 Clenneyre Sr ,
Laguna Buch 494-0767
t Sal A BEAUTY Hair Cutter employer m /f/h. •---"'----------men · + comm. PP· We offer a good starting .... •...,SM .a.51( Deliverymen for. early
ly, 3000 E. Coast Hwy, salary, complemented w /some following. '"""" ~ AMne..,,.,.,pa•"'rmC.M. CdM Manieures. Assistant COR• -,..... ,... byapleasantworkmgat· Will teach Sassoon r . Perm pit. Must have de Dnver. light delivery 1a
A.tolnDff••
SalnCWfft'
Experience
Not Necessary
But Here's What ls:
.ffjg.b School F.ducalion
.(Preferably 2 yrs. col·
lege)
mosphere. Excellent methods. Call 21st Cen· pendable car & be rella Harbor area. f\111 tunlf company-paid benefits tury Hair. 642.5381 S300-S350 mo 646·5844. $3. hr. neat appearanc-~.
1 package. Apply in person ---------------CLERK-Liquor store. gd dnvmg rec:ord Apply
between 9:00 a.m. and llHDEltYWORIC uper. not nee. Sr . Deliverymen. f t tame at Mast.er Bluepnnt 234•
3.00 p.m. at: WI 11 . . citizen, college student needed ror party rental Fischer CM S40-93'7J 1ng to train in ok.893-3Cm store. Must be 18. good1------------
2970Harbor Blvd dustrious, mature indiv. dnver & neat. Apply~ 1---------Suite20S CostaMesa to collat e lesson---------Newport Blvd, Costa
,..,... .. .....,. mat.uials. Xint work1ng CLERKS Mes .,,..........,., conds & bens. 40 Hr wk . a.
Appty betwn ft & 3. Na DEMONSTRATORS.
DRIVERS
&.ost&Fo.d uoo COUNTRY GIRL
Exciting new client war·
rants expansion for co
seeking figure oriented
indlv. Call Donna,
1133-2700, Dennis & Den·
nis Personnel Sen>ice of
Irvine. 2082 Michelson.
-WeU Groomed
· PoslUve AUitude
·Ability To Learn
CITIZENS BANK
OF
COSTA MESA
tional Education, 4401 Demo exc1tmg prodU('~
Birch St, N.8 . Equal Op UTQJ£M in ma,1or stores. for well
~en or women 2S yrs or
older Know the coa•\
c1lles. Net Sl80 a week or
more. Orange Cou1
Yellow Cab. 17300 Mt.
Herrmann. Fount1un
Valley <No or Sl<tt~
bet wn Newhop• A
Euclid I
....................... * ESCORTS *
Lost or Found a pet? Call
Animal Assis tance 2Ahrs 957-8474
LeagueS.17·2273. no fee. Vivian: Crew of Prosptt·
FOUND: Blk German tor found y~ur l~s t Shepherd, female, nr n~cklace. Wnte Daily
California & Minnesota, Pilot, P .O. Box 1560 CM
C.M. 5'5-3'42 921627, Box #333
Get GREEN cash
fOf' WHITE elephants
with a Classified Ad
Call 642-5678
ABE KAlAHUA. Lost
your number, please call
back. 213-42S-7526. Love,
Carol ff Danny.
HAVE YOU
--bOS-T
642-LOST
and let a frtendly ad-visor assist you
In placing a "Lost" ad. 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 peper.
642-5678
DAILY PILOT
Ac11M1 Asst to SI 21<
Fee Paid
Business leader offers
corporate pos. to depen·
dable indiv. Call Kay,
lm-2700. Also Fee Jobs.
Dennis & Deools Person·
nel Service ol lrvine, 2082
Michelson.
A/PAYAAI
CLMITIAIMll
Gf'Ol'IWlftl co. ln Newport
Beach bu OHd for lndlv.
w /1en'I accounting
tnowled1e for trainee
po1. Ute lypln,. 10 key
addln1 mach oe etc. S&a.rtiftl aaJ rroo mo. can
fOC' appt. SclenUfic Drill·
Ins Controls. SS7·9051.
Aak roe AUce. .......
X1nt tfllOC'. ln VWa Park
for IDdlv. w /appralaal
aper. Bmeflta Include co. car, flalty paid life,
med~dan&.aJ lm. pro(lt ab • boQu1. C.11
Rlv 0 > '86-8060.
u\ 111, Equal Oppor
Em~
. -. . ..... ...... . . ....
portwlity Employer known housewares mfg.
Openings Now Available Top salary, w 1tra1n
for full or p/tune clerks Send bner hu;tory to PO
on 2nd & 3rd shirts . No Box 1241 Pac Pal. Ca exper necessary we 90272
ILUfJEAH JOIS
Most ol all-Strong desire
for an outs tanding
career with a sucessful.
enthusiastic growing
corporation
·Top company benefits
.F,qual Opportunity
Employer MI F
If you have a car &
phone, we have the Jobs.
Must be reliable & will
ing lO work long & short
term a ssignments .
E.O. E. Victor Tem·
porarles, 556--8S20
tram. Advancement op· --------------1~~~~~~~~~~ porturuttes to those who Denta.£ Ass 't, cham11de. . "·
Call Doug Wisdom
For complete ioforma· 1---------qualify. For mlormation 4""1 days. no Sat Salary DRIVER go to our nearest market open CM. 546 3000 :-a:"~ct the personnel ~o.tal---C-haini-.-.• --WANTED ,
~ Lampson St AuistClllf
Uoo at
BAUER IUICK
..
21125 Harbor Blvd
Coeta. Meu PART-TIME
TEILERS
Blueprint person for
arch1tect 's ofc. Do er
rands. Must be resp.
GardenOroveS37-4840 Experneeded. S48·M88. SUNDAY ONLY
Equal Oppor Employer T d J D A 1 L V
979-2500
. a must. 8-S.
ur. . .
We have 2 openings at _ _. •.....1•~ ing tramee for acct dept
our Newport Beach Of. --_ _.... Perm pos. Lite typln~
fice(ViaLido>.20Hours Customyardneed.slead Sal SSOO . Good co.
per week. Light typing lamlnator. Sailboat deck benefits. 833·8450. required. Experience h ardware & finish _____ ......_ _____ _
preferred. Excellent carpenters : P-Squared CodrfaH Waffress
benefits and good work· Boats, 541·2873 Schoot
ing environmenL Plea..e Eam up w S300 per wlt call Mr. Ryman for ap· BOOKKEEPER Low tuition. Placement
I t • 7 t 4 • Im med opening, P tr. po n t men . ' • Ap lY . M awlst. 751 -9194. 673-3130 p 1n person, on· -------------. Frt, 9-10, 3-S. Gulliver's COLLECTOR I~ ~· 18'82 MacArthur ~cy wants bright &
-UVIMWf&"tOA'-" ..... ~,. r--ecnbjtiol11,DP.-,pn to ban·
Bookkeeper 1Recefv able die medf~at irctts. Ont
Equal Opportun1ty Mature person rull & agaimt comm. to com·
EmployerM/F/H permanent respoosiblli· menaurate w1ab1Uty &
OP--POITU .... ITYf tyDanaPointarea.Start uper. Contact Mr . " salary 11000 mo+ rrtn1e Dawson, 994-1.880.
u you are look.in• for a --------benerlts. Send detailed c~· ... 10 ... job w1a cood future. in· Baokiog resume & work history --~ " vflltipte th.ls great op· TELLER to: 2626 S. Pullman #125. for older woman m love·
portunity l We are look· For uvlnl• & Loan. SantaAna,CA92'705 ly COM home. Prlv .
Ing for a 1ood \&led car Newport Beach Branch r o o m I b a l h L 1 t e
mechanic. wtth a Cius Vta Lido). Light lYPina Bookkeeper , F 1Chll housekeepina&cooklng.
"A" amog license. You'll required. Experience c/thne. Exper d. Small _640-__ 1059 _________ _
llkethebettolcompany pref•rred. Excellent us . C M/NB area. ConaultanlTmee
benefits. the pleaaaot beoef1U and rood work· 842-12Se Our natlon's nncst emp ~:ie ~dl~':5c~~ ~environment. Pleaae BookJuaeptn• . serv. has expanded &
w"-t we have to otrer. c Mr. Ryman for •P· POmMG C&.HIC w 111 tr a In career ·
ApplJ to Paul Caine, polnmant C7141 8l"3130 ParMlm• 10.2PM for oriented lndlv. w~le
WILSON FORD. 11265 ••-~s·•Lo•... Nwpt Bch Co .. to key by aper. and1or ab lY A Beach Blvd . KB . ~·u•~ • ~"' &ouch, 1ooct flau~ •P· prcstlalous future
'4W611 AnElq~Opport/Fw\1/Hty Utude. varied outlet· w/lucratJve lnc is pro· · mp ... ,,erM/f ll A p AR vlded for all our
Bebysltter. 2 lliahU/Wk to ' ~~~ 7Sa·7~1 · emptoyea. Call Marlt'. watch II yr old in my SS'7·7183 fouppt
home. ~pm·8am. CdM Haveaomet.bin1 )'OU want BOOKKEEPER.Part·
area . Call Barbara to tell? Clualfied ads do time. Balboa Isle, on SELL idll' Items with a
OENTALASSISTANT· o e 1 ver
OWRSIDE. Exper on PILOT bundles to <'W·
ty. Pleasant ofc. Some ners ad' Laauni. Bei1td\ " t'_.,,........__.._ Req111res ya" ..,.
.. large stauon wagon~ Wes tmins/ H B area. 8 good dnvtng record,
894-3151. Call.
DENTAL RECEPT. eit·
per full lime, top salary
49!).WS
•42-021 ........
O-WI•-'
Dental Assistant Equal Opportunity "·~ Do you like peopl~'> Eml>loyer .••
Would you lakl' lhl' --------'----
challenge or creating a DRIVERS . 1 Newport Bea<'h proc-Roy Carver Roi~ Roye.
tice" We need a wilUn1 ~ t.aJu~ appllcat100&.f0f'
teammate for front desk quail fled d r1 ver11 ror
wtth 1.ome t ha1rs 1de 21ckup_" delivery ol• v ~.,.: Cati · lfotfi 'ROy . Xp()I)' f.o-
days Ask for Becky Darrell Sickle 111 a_,.
4.!M-3403 eves Carver Rolls Roy~ Ir
. BMW. 15-60 Ji.mbore~ Dental om~ rereptk>nlst. Rd . Newport Be~•
front office exper. Saldy ~ ,
open . Co1ta Mesa 1------------
642·1.300 Drug Clerk p/llme. Wtl r
tram Must be lti or ollef D8CT AL-ORTHO OfC For appt 847 ·fml H B.
Male or rem. interested
tn ·•on the Job training·· Dru& Clerks
for lobortory work Qiemeocs, tllls "catda Gren. oppor. to earn & 1_640-___ m_3 _______ ~
learn Newi>ort Ctr B.ICTllOMtC$ , ,
M-1405. TICHHIC..... '"
For Cluaitied Ad
ACl'f~
Callo
Daily Pilot
AD \ttSOR
"2 5678
Thompldn.s, 833470. it well. &a-5678. bayfront ! 175-2992 DaJl,y Pilot Class1f1ed Ad. ':==~~====
lmmed apeaiftp " 00-porturuua ln an •t.t..
co In the Oranae C~.
airport area. AppliCMll
to troutw.boot. ,..,.1r ~
tat "lertron1c •Yt•m.t ~nt anato1 • dllltal
9"J)U req cl. lrlt.en'fW
by •s>PtonJy, 557. 1..-
f(K Busch
. . . . . . .. . . .. . ...
U 0 I ttllll1•7 ...... J' .. elMJ T••lil••..,. .......................................................................................................................................................................................
~ .......... A.Q .. ...., • m elun. lt.m'llJCIAH·PrtNd ..... lllXl'f. ..'f.truck.prac•h•rd Bnekwork. Small Jobe EXCELLENT PAINT· lnlruvdtallo.i
... Jobi. CllJ Allan OI' Co6or brt1...-n: wbt =~ ~~\.t °" Palott .. •elut rl ~· C)tlftlDJ (Jatdtnlftt). ~m.I~ ..... lHG Beaonabfe-fftft, CO\or .ttll&i1 ltt.50 + Toio-..... qglO.lllib&Mch mnn oucn ,._. ~. ~ .... ,. ..... aa..ni..~.ua • eva. r.._.UmaW..~·270I. pu1&. P'fw-. 111110
liv. rm, hall Ill. A~I m-mm 1111"1 In.,.... M-1752 ...... -C.ltroaia MO-.. Cupute ra, fl ala .. 6 ,. tr IQ. ~b ao ebr · Utt ba~. boueeltan· ,.._ 'ct Pl 11•• roucll. C Ir n• a. Ou.rtllcn ,.t Odor.••::... •1•1 lftlordrtVinJ, Preef!lt ............................................... '"lw•lee
__ ............. Jolln. llJ.-cw ••JD ~,..,.., 11 1,.. QJH' .............................................. 6-'1 Hau.llGC Servlct MOVIN06ffAUlJNG PMio coven ~cme • •••••-••••••••••u•u•
... ....,. ~_. Do WCll1l ~ .....,.· TAVLORn:NC!S tla•l aklploadtr ducnp .....,,, · ' Move •n1thin1. wrou1ht iron Fro ~m~r_•I•. Pru.101. l}ttWWQ1•Parkiq 1114101 ' m.tlS'J trk • lldlo t k ~re at an)'Ume! " CllUJnat.. &.ve Riebe)' mm•wua. Llc. Ina. rte.
...... rt •S..kNll ,.......i.um1.aN4t~too WoodaCbalnLink U'I, ~u...-~-':,.U$7 • HD11tcl11'' 3'1\n'ldys 631·9802 __.,or7~ • eatlm•tu. •H·UZl.
•LI•. NB . CM S• amaAI. Uo. CGDLnldor. Cllltlrllt clemoUl-.--••• .. •••••••,,.......... &0-ISM ..... -.ct. ... .......................... ... .................. Want. REALLY CLEAN Pr'Olv ~ce With Atlu ....... ~ 'c·-.. -, .-.-~"_T_R_E_""_. __ G __ _ -.;;....-------1 ,;r.~ •• ~I HOOS.,.• Call 01 .. ab an~CG9taoomore• ••••••••••••••••••••••• """""'_,. .-.. • E<• ... ,.. Car at•r • ceblntt llTCHCN KAPER8 ............................... , .. ,, ......... .-... ..._.am Pt t t I I . LEE'S Tl\!ESetv who
_ ...... \........... ~•O\JJobl6NPein.. KAT~R lHO . Qull Clu1Hap1, Haulln1. ':'...!!!'!'~m !!!~lttl Olrt.ftoete1t.tU-5m 1to~~.:~ i. Y!n,_oc/i,t ~~,,..~~~t4lt " re~! ror tbe wind r..-..n .nu bab PNe-.11w11aht}'I beefla. lenuc• cook. Land1up1a1. lmmed. ;:.,-~,~~ wau..~.noon mav•.stu.Uc. T1uou. • "R.U .. Vntorrettable Ill,_~ b'CllD II "--tOa1S. aervklq.IG·90'7 -._0 . ..:.._ ~.r::· 4iwindoncleaned. PhS314180 PATCHPLASfERINC trtmmtn1. Remoul.
_... ......... ..... ~ IUI' -meis.-·..... etl-Cl45 A 1 l sr.am,, IUJ'ltfy,tptay· _.._ rr .. •-Dikb6c:owwt. C1 .. ~ Prof. luubcapt m•in· ....;.;;;.;..;.;;.;.;...;;;,.....;....;..._..;..;... lype1'. Free Ina. 1tump 1rlnclln1 l•il. CM .,. •. Cat su..-.... _., ................. ~loci. ct anup 6 II t; Bl "At~our Service" bv ,. .... ,. .. ,1119 esUmat.es.C.11~ SALES ft PLANTING
--
,._,_.. I I "' II LI bllll t ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• ' • rvu.ou.at oa1 retain n1 ua\I n1. a Y n· IA e -totfice boala H••• ..... •••••• .. •••• .... , iPEClM EN TREES .
...._. ,._0 avail• Ouerat c arpt•1t1 • wall•. bloc~•. path• Aured 6 Uc'd Cocn01/ Oen1 HadJma.11. Palnt· eec >6&Ml&C ' ' PETEBSPAlNTING 111 ng Inst'd,. 25 yra ext m s. r :JMU for aar.se 6 5151-1Ml Uc'd R e ' . V. !: R Y lftl carpentry l'OOflnl . . E 'd R R l ••••••••••••••••••••••• CD Iii llllr ~ .. partOta 11tlUlY room• H1tom · a&A&ONABL& RATL\'S. miaonry. A~J home Houaedeanlng Service. ~:: iet. •c:u Gee:e DRA1NS CLEARED. nat · 6 • 0 • T EE ·
... ~eocb • ••lnck made .... tlM. AU Ph ... ot ~crete Larry 'a Lawn Car•. inalot. or remodello1 Reaaonable. refa. Call ~ re&e, 113.50. Maln1. 111AN'KS. -d--Driw.. al:at l"&b ..en. 81oc.k walll. plan• 1115-llll proj.J. W1111ta.a1.2233 Chert•.640-189'7 12.4.SO. No gimm1ck1. T.....,.
.... ~~ 1.en,brict.Uclrbooded. iu ........ u-u...... Paintina. Extr/lntr. Ex· Rootennan,838·2682. ••••• .. •••••••••••••••• lelh.•1161 / ..... u•••••••••••••••• ao... •\tgRYLOWPRJCES• •Qn.4 .. .,a......... EXCEL L ENT pr'd honest neat r
...... • I OW-llalm. fadlna. •. CMGIU"den.lnaMalnt. General ~In. bll Of HOUSECLEANING. Lic'd964-100Dave ea.a. PERRY'S PLUMBING ':" ~·=-uon .
........... _.......... Guanotff'd. R•f11bow CmudllP Geotle M9·20U 1ml. Roa. MOSO Faat·N·Throu1h. Exp. Complete plumbing an l w ..... °!~rd.
Oll.m man. woodwork ~~ • .-................. refs4'itr&n1.$5&-13U Prof painUna. Ext & int. services. Dra1n 4' aewer No::;-·""'"''° ... vc
-.._.lftll11a. m.bl ,..~S.nk:e R.J.HutfmanlsSoa. Murakami'• Gardenina. H •11 ·~-1111 Low rates. Refs. Free clean 1 n g . Free--------•~ __ ---• --..... ··--•••-••••• ~6addi&loe1. Cleen-uptrmalnLMbn. ••••••••................. I est.538-t780.536-4383 estimates. 3' hr aervace. Tua.orin" ln mu....__ .. 0 -·---··--....or~l. 131).1111 Home831-1531 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 6'1S-3lll .. ''""'""• .. WeOl.nCa.rpete\eaoen. u~•Bonded.. . OCCStudaat.1 Tonttuclr. L MS -Roto Sod or HousepalnUna. hlL Ex· hr <Mt elem t.e~r
Steam cl .. IL Alao llP· JapeneM aatdener, free Traab. tree trim, Ron Seeded L'awns . ter.Freeest.JobnBeck. hcfleag CdM·Newport area
bobUrJ. All ~ 1u.ar. Remodelin1. addltion1, •at i mat. e , c a l I MZ-S1'03.&G-mt Sprinklers. Plaouna. '31-3383or64$-216l •••• .. ••••••••••• .. •••• _S48-o:M3 _______ _ ~:.:S:'~~n~:ftc 'l'nlck moum. Fr. at. re-rdwd deeb • apu. new nn~amonly. CHEAPEST baulinl .ln Xlntre&.6'75-7833. LSyrapalnUn& Org, Cnty. REPAIR 4l RE.ROOP. All w da• ca. ' 1 -
AdMe Let•t Typlft1 a ra&a..14$-3'1ll cama.r. I.Jed. S5&-UI 1 Garcla '• Gardenina Co. town. Fr· est.a. CHEAP! tDp quality St Uc•334950. t 1 P e 1 • 1 h 1 n 1 1 e 1 · ••••••••••••••••••• ••• • -.... l. • ... J<U ( 642-._QI' ...... 1390 Europeanl..andacaper ............. n-.-rocksbakts·COmpo•tar _,, an ......... ,,.._ n-..1 _.._ • -· .. t • c.p.t clean.Ult in your Addhloos. remdl, r.. le Jnt/Ext landscape & -_. Top work. Fair price. --,......., Free est. 541.s830 -• ..... _,... "'9re. "'""·
_IP_M._TPM. _____ --4 home or place ol bu.ti· comm. Free eat 11. malotenaoce. 6'7S.3417 Pickup used for moving or Rell. fM&.4111 day or eve. v. olf 00 all wallpaper. if wtndow Clanin& at rt>·
Allt'JlMI ~.O:~ ~b.r~!! ~~lao.t. Lie. G•a:afStrvlc" ;!m!17~~:f.9"P1·Steve Lanclscapin&. Tree lrim· we do the banging The ~~~~~~airs ~o~ r•t•• Refs.
a:::'e est.CaJllWl.ol63. m-08'70 8tdrtc411 ••••••••••••••••••••••• · mlna. Clean-up. 8 yrs Hangmen.S37·2004 Uc.3$3446 l/991·9339 Coast Window Cleaning.
----------'Ay Decor, Npt Bcb .... ••••••••••••••••••••HANDYMAN: Carpentry. College students nffda :;f.8t:i:S:.~oboru. Custom work. reasonable Re-Roof For Less No I an NB/Irv/COM Carpet & linoleum In tWi•••Utedrtc electrical, plumblq & work. yard & gara1e prices. free esUmates. Can Anytime because our clienl.I say Sf.~uaum ••ales Pric flrs.847-2787, 545-3820 cleanups baultn •· . Sn.mo. 77CHOU 894-04.2l 80. Free at. C.llNZ-*8 · Uc 3:lJl3I 64S-tl974 538-8377 Selling anything with a
quoted. f73.-0&UI HANDYMAN. Homes " Daily Pilot Cluailied Ad
Rave eometbinl to aell . Have tomethlnl to aell? apta. Conacseotlou WANT ACTJON! is a sirnple matter ...
Oul1fied ads dolt well. a .asslfaed ads do it well. Cl'aftaman. Call 645-0302 Cluslfed Ada M2·56'78 Just call 642-5878.
PainLinc. High QUJ!lilY Mate your shopping WlndowCleaningServlt'f'
Pfd work. & ma ten ala. easier by using the Daily Re .. rat.es. Free est. Call Llc~. Dts.842·3'79'l PUotOaaalfledAds. 4'7·198$ --------
HalpW..._.. 7100MllpW...._. 7100 HllpWcmhcl 7100 twpWmled 7100 HtlpW..ted 7100 MllpW.W 7100 ------•1HtlpW..e.d 7100 W..ted 7100 ....................... ....................... .......•........•...... ....................... ....................... ....................... . ............................................ .
--•-S Gc.-cll•r,lllldlcpr Gftaeral Ofnce 8·5 M·F. Help wanted In Laguna Haewrk, CM. Retired Landscape Mainteoan~ MACHINISTS l MAMAGtllftMH Wanted for euly bou.ra type SO wpm, no Beach. Sales etc. for 3 lady.&eadyp/t.Sl76mo. work io Newport ~ MACHINlSTS Nationwide jewelry t'O er._.. Co. ba$ed inl'I lo Mission Viejo. Eitper. shorthand, tele phone atorea. Responsible & 6d)'s. Nd c.v. oo•moke. Irvine areas. Moo·Fra. Immediate openinp for will t each you the
leader ln medical de W/comm. equip. nee. ~ np ~elpful. Sport· well groomed. Full time 64U494 Call8"-4894af\6pm experienced machinists TOOL ROOM jewtiry t>u.. mo •k &
flees la ueting un Call Lynn or Randy mg goods field. 1700./mo or ooon to S. Male oo)y. Jhkpr llve·in. care for ..... Sea etary who have the ability and comm. No ex per. nec.-
cldaea tn t!w followln 557-0150 9Si·l431 for Interview Richard Yeakel Antiques J•d" Jo wblchr. Mutt ..,__..._. n-b I f' In desl--1~ tow grow with a WW tram For appt. ull
d...tficatioas· G4--S526 J ·'"'-"'"" &X: aw trm ........,., e are proud ol MACHINISTS 642 5163 · GacstAL SHOP Girl Friday. lite typing, drive. 982-~. H.B. the airport area seek.a In· the fact that our CWTenl 1--·-------.... trW bookkeeping, full time, t e lllaeot secre tary employees enJOY a MA.MA.~IMT • gll IW LA.IOI Sails by Schock. 501 29th HOSTESS INSTALLER w/mi.o l yr civil UtJ&a· lonaevtty far and above lmmedi.ate operung.s for M•,.ue .,,..,. own d .. lr ~••ail ror a can 833--0033 St. NB. 6'75-18Z3 Apply daily In person Shower door maoufac· tion. 752-1211. the (odustrv standard. experienced macb111usts --J~ '"-r __ ..,.,_ exper a• •J wa'th n h d t I consullcn° bu11ness dklate •/knowledge o between lO·llAM. Mi """' ~ · .,.. due In part to our con· ow an 00 s . w1unhm1ted income for methods engineering GBUllAL OFC GIRi. MIDA.Y Casa Restaur ant, lOS sembler or installer. full ~Secretary tin~ and progressive Cheek out the following 3 securto future Start
plultfadlitieslcdes' Accurat.e typlat.respfor Front ofc appearance. Main St. Balboa. time. Salary open. NB.mm3yrsexper.Gen grqwtb. We have im· <>pporturutiea : span time wtthoul 10.
It eaatrGI determinaU receptionist, transcrib·' PR firm. ~vy typing, tm-9600. 548-3500or548-6382 practice background. mediate openings In the vestme!l\.S3l·S008.
req 'd, B.S . I.E. o ing le co!JectJon dutia. phones. Gen l ofc reap. Insurance Fee Paid x1nt skilla, sbthnd pref. following m1as: Tool & Die
8.S.LT. •i.syrs rela Bkkpng related exn.r AakforDoo.na~7217. UMOERWllTH Salary commens wtex· ~INE LATHE .._. ...... _ u.-.1---'1t aper-ii neceu. ...~ Hos.feu/Days per. 752·2518. ~..... ~ "od:lct~Hr helpful. Must enjoy Girl Friday for •lock Applylnpersoa Co.seekaindivw/Uteln· LEGAL 2Mt&MdSMft WSWft For~:;-lon.
Padiaa req 'a 2--4 yrs P ;,or kt n g llw A/Pel'? PI e . market inveatment co. After 3PM aur exposure w /personal SEC"' .. "'""'"""ANT lllp to $7 .6 7 ftr. Must be Cully qualified. in•----~~---
......... _ _._ 81A~ ease ca PP 1ance Must be gd w/nwobers. -.....J>. __ 1 ........ .-1---lines. Top oppty. here. a l~• all 85...-. o1 tool room ..____._.__ -_...
·-.,,..,,~ en..-:".· Dultributon, 5»-S800. ' ...... booltkeeping. lyp.. •--· ......_... Call Candace. M · 1288. Bright. dJllgent person II"-....... -----~ inl .... p•r wor .. '11 ,....u --w "'---tHwy NB f--&• ..........._ work, small dies, jags Manuf En"r S22K .... "' · •' ..... 4' "en olc NB alrpo __,, ·""""" • · · Dennis &r DeftlUs Person· as office administrator .-nn .....-and n -~--" w!plastics&.na~lnJ GeneralOffice . ;;_540-9237 . nelServiceofHuntmgton in Newport Center law 2ad&MdSWft imures. v•n toois StatTyptSt Sl2K
ber. A BS., an en~eer Electrorucs r1rm seeks Hotel night auditor. Full Beach.16168Beacb. offc. Legalexper. preC'd. to S7 67 ftr required. Wage&Sal
mg ta pn!f d. C.ndida buyer w 1genera1 office time exp prlrd or wall minimal typing. Testmg lllp • • Tool R ~l Clerk T=e: w'lllberesp~Cort!wcom exper Should have GUARDS train aomeone w/front JAMITORJAL & ref's req'd. Sa lary Gri:-.lo-OOftt pWe tecbnieal manq atroog communicative ~·d wax-on•u part ,,._, .......... "" ll'fllliR"f IDeVl.nJ &-1.uaguaJ saoo+ meatof2productlinea. skllla . E11tabli1h SECURITY desk exp. Forappt.call ._....., "' Y• ..,.......~. -7 Des1gnerJ1g/FiitS18K+ We ofter a competitiv material requl.-.ments. Mr.J .Ma.u.ola540-2300 ~~time. top wages. LlVElNCARE U.0..0.0.t Mocllilti1f TravelAgt $675+
salar7 fr lllnt benefit pk Place purchase orders & Due to our recent ex· Hotel, front deak clerk. 1 ror ambulatory elderly MocWnish z.. SWft General Ofc to 8>0 indudilli profit sharing Collowup. Pleasant work· panslon program, Wells Full time & 1 Part Ume Janitorial worker in ofc & male. 645-009.2. NB Zlld SWft Experience on p & w jig IRVINE
med/dental & opti~a ingoond.J.tlon.s.callVaJor FargoGuardServicesis posopen.Collegeatudent plantw/10metruckdriv· Li l ho lt •toS7.67ftr. bore required. K&T PERSONNELAGENCV
cownge. JI you qualif Electrooica. 540-9264. hinna security guards des. Exp. or will train. ing: $3.50 hr. 8-4:30. ve· n use eeper to DeVUeg desirable. Make 488 E 17th.Costa Mesa please submit resum for· F t 11 M J EOE 549-3281 cook, clean & care for Suue224 642· 1470 t o: Personnel Ad ...:...i.....n.a or app · ca r. · · 10.yrolddaughterm!.ag JlcJlore own setups-loot room.
m1nl1trator, Shile General WY_, ... wporiact. Manola540-2300 Jaliton/Jcmftnss Bch. Must be resp0ns1· 2"dDe= prototype work. Owne~~~~~~~~
Scientific Corp PO Bo Recepti.ORIS. t s.toAM/A11a••hn Hotel Pltime & #!time. Irvine ble. mature 1around toolsreqwred. MARINE MECHANIC· ,.. __ lrv!M. Ca 92714. ,......_/a....o Pk M5gllt "".....au~" area. Will train. Ideal for 40's >. non·smkr. Amer. eitper'd. waterfront yd. "~ _,., C ti t ..._ •• ..116 ..._ Royal lndu.stnes oCfers a top I
ESCROW
SECRETARY
An excellent opp0rtunlt
is •vaUable in th
Bayside olfice of a grow
ing savings & loan
Selected applicant wil have one year escro
aet'ttt•nal eitpenenc
and typlog sltilb or 4 wpm. An excellen
salarJ. outs tandin
benef1ts and ideal work
ing condJtions comple
meal lhia opportunity
P\ease apply at:
MARINERS
SAVINGS
151.S West.clirr Drive
NewllOl"l Beach 642-4000
Equal 0ppty Empk>yer
Elc:p. aeamatresa to wor
an •ml lhop p rr Sew10
& c:uUiJl&. M2·2921
FUeC\el1l
...._,..Office
&rMl-~~ bWoUI indlv. to bt"eak in to lep.l world. Call Mary mnoo. Dennis • Den
.. Penorme.l Service Irvine. 2082 Mlcbet.on. .. a.ti,,,..
Famou• co. w /train
eager lnctiv. Top bens.
Call Carol &e-1281. Den
nia Is Dennis Penoonel
Service or Hu.ntiogton
Btac.b. lllBI Beach.
to CostaWMttlet-Mno & TM Exper'd. Prestigious housewives, students & ' zen w town rans. •"" -· .. ,_. generous hourly wage. sa ary. company "'--NB bot.et cpla. Must have own Salary. Room & board I.JI· Above rat.es an starting benerats. 1mmed open· Laborers .._..._ . . . 644·1700. ext cl. 2131924.5551 I •-In lud ... :.~ dlf complete compaJly paid '"" &lat ~~1ah.sts 243:9 516 Rick. EOE. tran1p & phone · Ca II ---------eve... c mg'""'• · beoefits package includ· ..... """"" IMM ED I AT E betwn 3-6pm , (7 14 > Llve·in housekeeper . ferential and premium. ing medical and life in · W Coast Hwy. N 8
..--JOIS 0 p E N J N G S f o r H<Yl'EL 833-7015. i;-R .. "•h s--"'1'ng. Muat Many other benefits are I 64.5-0901 rwur;s ,-.;OA I I . ....._ .,....,. available including cost surance, pus a n ex·---------
HORIEYEA s...,... •• ....,ry eve secun· NOW HIRING J ewelry /Accessory lovecbildren.~~ of living. 13 paid ceUentworking environ· MATERIAL
How would Uk be ty officens who want TOPI Designer seeks p/t asst. holidays, retirement and ment with room ror your COMTIOL
P you eTto PAY with a respected PBX OPERATOR. SPM· itrlnga·ng a•sembty Uve·ln College girl lo vacali'on. Take advan· growth ~nd develop· M l 1 1 a .. er mane nt em· company. 12PM. Seeurity Guards. " help w/H.S. girl. Xlnt ment. Please contact 8 eraa contro ~Jt
port ary" & ope& o the. dt~r all shifts. Aulstanl !!!!·...!'.~£.end ab I e N.B. surroundings. Pvt tpoartgurue _to1esf ttodh easve. Coopn: Employment0ff1ce. IJOnpedlteMr Entry IJevel poscc· •·
0 8 new eitca ing AJll>4t In person Mooday Restaurant Managers all .,...~·-·--rm & ba, board & sal " · · tmmum yro ice
career. Our counselors '° f)iday, SAM to SPM s hifts. Hou1elleeplng J p Moes Good dnving rec. Days tact EmploymentOf'fice. ROYAL re q Ab1h ly to work
take pride In finding the at: Porters all shift.a. Please I · • Mon-Fri 833-94JO. R 1 w1f1gures and detailed
right assignments ror WB.LS F ~RGO call ror appl. &&s-5000 ext ~Home oya INDUSTRIES mro a must Ca II ror you. Come In & fill out an "' 520. Mon thru Fri 8:3().S. Now Interviewing for Live in housekeeper. pnv appt. 540-7639 E 0 E
application & let. us knd.v GUARD IALIOA. IA y CLUI Day Waitress positions. S rm & ba. Spanish spkng .... tries Energy Products • . ..u TEAuL CO......,,.L
your skilla & personal SERVICES Days a wk. 15-20 hra. AP· ok. 493-5756 Energy Products DlvulOf'I ....,.., 5IUA "' "" qualifications. Days & Hou.secleaners. Tues-Fri. ply betwn 3pm le Spm ---------Division U.0-~· a.e CLEO
P
boursay. oM{yuour•t cbhoaivcee.~roe~ 15l2W. S.3PM. Apply Tues·Frl Mon101·!;iA·d A HB LO"'u a...~.htc. San~AnHill&Cayer .. ~~a32d Mpinimumb I hyr expr Cw-•w.atth U-2alJanice's Rattgedy ...-. ams ve, "" RedHill&Dyer ... a. ..-· 10 ost1ng, ate ing. ac·
ferences & car. Fa•:iOft. CA. AMA •11C.M1770 #D Orange ___ Ca_l_l 963-__ 7820___ COUMS&OR Santa Ana C.a 540-J2lO curate w 1f1gures & de· WeatcliffTemporary ve A ·u · ·1 f EqualOpportunity tads. Heavy work load. Services OR --· --· -----IOtdlln M..a..-poei on as avaa · or 8 Employer M/F Call for appt. 540-7639. •..,..... per&on who has lhe de· EQual Opportunity l617WestcliffDr. Monday, Tuelday, Wed· Houseclunera, $oC hr. P/Lime. Hrs 8·2 dally. siretojoinanaggresaive i!:mployerM/F --------•!__E_O_._E _____ _ :i.:ro:;:.~~:18 oeaday,'Ibunday,lOAM P/T, car necessary. _CaJ_l_S4_9-_340t __ . ____ mortgageloanco.dolng ~~~~~~~~~! MAIDS MATURE WO MAN ~~~~~~~~~ to6PM,CLOSED Friday GingbamGlrl.&U-Sl23 Lag\maBeacb bual.ness in So. Orang Da p!lamt-to welcomf> = Co. Calif. Real estat Y'S· Apply an person al: ffOU<R:-~ MOTOR ROUTE Ma-"''-'-•-"''--~•-N rt ff"' 1 newcomers & coDtact ••ow W ;n;aSlll:lr"'"" la cen s e r equi r ed. uWW>.. ~.......... ewpo ""e . -• .._... For mature family. Noa· Daily Pilot route In Preference will be give 4S45 MacArthur Bl. NB mttehants Fteittble hl"S.
G ..... J---IM.217. smoker. Live-in/drive. '_,.. __ Be h "South Tool Room Need car. lite typing. • """-5-ht.AM. CA &&5-6:i03. ~-ac to collere gradual Maintenance Me<'han1c. 547~. TUIMEE •---------Laguna. Afternoons, w/J)rior exper In the field 7am-J :30pm, SS.50 hr to•---------
Entry level position State Uc No. c~ ...__.._ Monda)' through Friday ol finance. real est. 1n M . start. EOE.549-3281 .
grading eumtnallons F.qual()ppEmplyrM/F •---rw/ plus Saturday and Sun· surance or accounUng ach1n1•sts ·--------!Mechanic
ror nat'l education firm. ---------a.Id Care day mornings. $450 per Xlnt saJ/comm schedul MA.IHT!MA.HCE :1!t~ ~~~~.~ HAM> llWllS i~!.li:~ck M.~~~.F ~~p ~th d~p.c~'~r:. =~~ 5 g~~~ °l' \~d y~~=~are Maintenance Needed f~~:,;,e multi· Uonal Education, 4401 Im med or,enlnga ror wages. 9:SS-3036. Call t-42·4321 Hk for med income. Send re apprecUlted at ROYAL
Bin:h St. N.8 . (Near oc abmaandll ~.ncala OdP_~Slc!.". -...::H:;.;._OU_<R: ___________ Cittulatioodd. Leave your sume&oG. KaUfman.6 INDUSTRIES. L.S.l. We Mach1·n1·st ~~n::~· :u~~rhp~~': Airport> Equal Op· nn:ui .. "" ~~'""' Name, A n!ISI, Phone Newport Center Dr. St are Industry leaders In .. portunit.y Employer Good eyesight a must. At conv. hospital. Day Number and Make of 211 Newport Beach, Ca the production and de· try, electnral. plumbing Xlnt work raclllty & shift. Will train. Stable car. Good ror student or 92al() velopment oC precision Cllallenging opportunity & other rel ated trade
GIHIERA.LOFC benellt.I. Jf )'OU can do employment. Xln.t bens. ttt.lredpersoo. ~~~~~~~~~ control devices. located ror expertl•nced 1n duUes Appllan« repair
National ~uutioo ..-... am11l embroidery work Apply. 1'45 Su pen or in the Irvine IJ>duatrtal d I vb•I du a J 'n l he exper. pn!f'd Sal nego
.. _-..wt-avaU ln~~atu"· or crocbd we can teach _A_v_e..;.._N_.B_._____ Lube M~ 2Pm-6pm, Complex. Our conUnu~ troo eshootlnf· repair Apply ln pe1"SOnorcall ,._...,.....,.. ..... , -"-tu tn re= or days a wk. Apply In and genera m11in · THEl•v ..... •co dent services dept. Typ-,.,.., nt't'Y MOWIS THET1MI .... rson, canale Foods. srowth •n~ traditional tenance or our full line o< ,._ 1
"
5
• ln(I ., tome letter writ· call 979-0500.. enoonel HOUSBllPIR for job aeekera to check r~ longevity of present 11111 ...... melback.
ing. Customer aer\'IC Admlnlatrator, Sblley, Aide. live-In for f ttlme the Dally Piiot He lp 17S7S Morgan Ln. HD emploYees has made our ~~;.: ~~~;n~o l~:S Newport Beach
eitper. helpful. Good ~-:7600 Gillette Ave, working parents w /2 w--•..,. .. , .... lfication. lf LVN. '""e~, NB. Bell & companyagrealplueto bl h d 644~ ""'"iUoo for ...,....,.n re· anu1e. school children In H.B. ......,.. ... ..... nu work. ucprints. own an Equal Oppor. Employer ::;:,,".. ~·..., Own rm & ba, F..oallah the Job YC>U want Is not fmt ofc du es. • day wk. tools and knowledge and ... ..ilar .... ~.aomee11.· --~to,.,., rnltt. Hrs Handyman, general ipeakin", drivers lie. tbereyouml1htconalder MS-3374994-6550 W .. , Id 1 use ol vanous mach.lnt •---------, pwP"l'd. ..,.-m-t:~,.Jrb. ;..J/ly, -rH•H""lt30 ~· v •••• 1 ... • hlld.ui Sal offering your tervlces eseek an lnwv ua ex· loolR and related equip· ectteai· Busy G.P. n~ ~
983-0739 North American Cor· ly. Apply 'tpm·ipm , -·~ 'B'lrf'~l:. -.&.b~~ ... \~Jn the Job SELL Idle Items with a pertenced on P&W Jig t u perlenced, mature re1pondence Scboola, Warner Drive·ln, 7361 open.&n· • Wanteo categ0if,9i'tl ~~. boreft&T DeVUeg ell· men · woman. front oHice
lllOMJDESICQ.K 44018lttbSt.N.B. tNear WamerAve .. H8. Houaekeeper. mature 642-5678 6C2$78. ptrl~ ct It d4!'J~ 1'Ml'POMien oa.,...a Ku&.Jae..Qa>(iCJtot w1
Exper.prd'd. Wllitralo. OC Al.rpon) Equ.a.J 0p. alrl, lite cleanlnf. Should be able to make excellent hourly wage. all types ot wunnce.
Vsiedlblft.a. Newport.e portunilyEmployer HAIDWAU baby1lutn1 8 yr old. own aet.ups. Involves pleasant workin& rondi· Xlnt be nefits. Salary
INI HGUl. ut-1700. Call GeDeralOfflce Expr'd p/llme retail 499.J60$ eve.1, 5$2-1113 tool room. prototype lions. and a &enerou.s open 96&-r.37.
Mary Carboo or Jllllo a.c.,tT,.. toS700 uluclerk. L•1un• _ct.va...._._Debbl __ .____ L• Service COUnsel&r :,<>"~"!~~opening pac ka1e o f fr1nce Pfrel.. E.O.E. .,._ • ., i Ill Beach 4'7-4t03 .... --" "'-·-I benefits Including cost of Medical p tr ~isl, ._...ua aam w open HOUSEPLANT S • IVI ex ... ~ent ,..,... Y waae bving. dJfferenual, shift girl rnday. Cd oppor for
Furalture retail. Pff. doors to •ucce11ful Knowled1uble People UpefYISOr and an uceptlonal pre mium 13 pli t d right 11ppllcant Mst
Lad)'w/eocneexplnfUnl future w/1rowlo1 co. HeJper' P/\lme ror route min· RapidJygrowingsavlngs&loanhas benefits package are hohdays, v~cauon end type. Hours 1.7 JO M-f· ..a..ndrcwaalel6ge:n CaUKay833-2'700.Dennb C...Stlldtlh t e naoce po1ltloo1. i d available-includlllg ahUt retirement Please con· Call 640·6000 Ask for won a eoupt. ot d.&11 Is Dennl1 Penoonel Perm. ptilme Janltorlal· 751_..,60 mm e I ate 0 pen i n·I s t 0 r differential and prtt· tac:t Employment Office .• _MatY__."'"·------w:t. Salary Is comm. 8erviee ot lrvtne. 2082 tmalnt«lance po.alllons __ ...;..._______ ex per i enc e d Io a n service m.lum, plus cOBt of Uvlna.
Scandinavian contem· MJcbelaon. •v=at marinu. Hra HaPWAMTm representative & supervisor wlth Ple.aae contact Employ.
porary furn Mobilia---------•.,. •· UMdcar1alesmenwant· knowledge of all loan servlce mmtOfftce.
1421·25 N. Mala SA Gen OfC $1000 or~n_l.)lnpel"IOQ edttperlenceneeesaary. functions. Kev opportunltle• tor 50-ll11 TMI laYIMI CO. Preferably In 1tral1bt I ,, ..
•.. -Al.I adtinl ~ w11row· umCalQtlbaclt houac acllina. EaceJlent peop e oriented person. Excellent
--tn• liquor. wine ~Bdl -compeDf benellu. c..u benefits & advancement
Fl'llme. No aper nee. n»~t0. ffandleall ·~;__i:\n Mtp1o-:;" NdukfarOatth. ~portunlt!et. Contact Jan Heu,
APP 17 In r. er• o o . faMt ol a.mall branch -_... 1 MO-H30 l Newporter nn. 1101 etc• qJe to deal wico erson,e Dept. State Mutual
JUl!borM Rd, N.8. 9M praidenll 6 VIP'1. SH• Help wam.t p/Ume, over Savinp & Loan AMoclaUon.
Lenday, bdwn t ·S. typlnantt6anab1l1l)'t.o ll,da,y6evubil\l.Ktn· 4001 M~lhd.
Jt.0.1. work oo own. Call tuck)' Fried Cblc.ken.aa 2829 HARBOit BlVO ... ..,....... le•c•, Co t2660
• "" 54MOl5S, Cdaltal Pu.on· S. Cout Hwy, LalUba cosra u•aa 1r-• •a• your 1bop8ln n4ilA&ency,2790Harbor, Beacb. " ""~ C714113W313 ..... ~alftlebe •l CM --------P1nd •bat 10\I want In EqualOpporltmplO)'l't'm/f
Roial
ROYAL Ene~~~ts
01V1Alon INDUSTRIES ~.~~:":d
.EoerlY Ptoducta SAnU Ana. C. S.0-3210 Dtvbion
LHr S&tder. "9c F..qua.1 ()poonu.olt~
Red Hill f. b yer Rd. Employer M / F
Santa M*i C&\ 540-1110 I~~~~~~~ Equal Opportwllt)'
For Ad Action
Call a
Daily Pilot
AB-VISOR
642-5678
ruc.auam.ctAda. ALLJODVRl!lt Want Ad Help? 642-5'18 Dally PllotCluall\eda. £m»Joyer M /P' Cl...uted Adi. )'OUr one· •toc>•hopptn• ~nt.er. 1--------
I
'
..... _. ... .. . -.
7
-.4 7100 He«pW..t.ct 7100 IWllW.tM 71 ~.AUIJ•30. tm -tr OAILVPILOT •7 ... ! ......... ••••••• ... •••••••••••••••••••• e..:.-....... -..... MllaW_.... 7100 w.a..w..-.4 7llO W-..1 7111 ...... Staetar)' for NB ...... of. ---------~ ........ --.. ••••• .;;;::-.................................. I ...... . flu w Jatrons \lpina
1k11J1 10 ptt orm MCteUrlal du&.i. r0t 2
i:nanacers. ~.o.z. Por
app't call 15UJOO.
8lll.OCIS
WILSlllE
•Secrlblies* ------•1:r1re t. Automotl,,• ~
F.O., ~ wtt.b I DI S.W. Sa*. 'nr. Mll-I I fl.JI .... ",,.,. ,....,._..man~r ccmtJ'UeapSISXyr. STOCK C ~ lnt «lPll' '*· Ap&MJ, <Pan.1\JM Day Sbift>.
Ell:lllic'ft'lr'I pav All p... JDOO S. Colit lbry • Obi. Esce ti en t eo mp a DY • pd tnlat till lor
amall ma1a1loe
..., Our Irvine otnce bas a ....,,.,., Alli*' btlwteo •a Stcr•••1/l.cept .,~~':: Wll1 &venrn.GPol™ TITLE CO. • ~ •• ~..11. ~ ~tblna co our Or &; •lret!'l· Mature
....... 8&W>' lO •.
Olal1 fot aPfil 'JO.ln4
I _,...._ Mu.at t ...... re· =rt ..... a"'b •vaUabt. t.o • ~'° D•·• •o eapaaal"'•. tbna l'r~ay. A.-I• A lea IOI fUb 01' -~ ,.,.., • .;Allll9_;1.,.,_b...., _.._ __. ...... '" • vu P l W I'd D Id ..,.....,':.~.~··. =~•u-:i":tb,~ '"" rr ....... '" :::;,~.;;uvlnet~ Stewart TlUt oeedf ~ or ..,
Olulty b ..._.. ... ..,look auance. Contact Don ~clellveite1.1beJv· c\lltomiurrice,...aa-Ol.ILMllCOAST
l111sAJanillt·Accu Pa¥• ~'!t!u~"t::~"f!i KlAlumatMt-mt. SICTYJUC.-r. :!..~~~:. !r~~os.:. ::~r~lt~',.~~r J~'~: DAILYN.OT
ble cleric. Nffd u1er ln ecnploymient t.bll faU . Secntary.Qlrl f'rlday. Balboa hland, for aocf~ uibt ft:ic~ bmcfta. Free partb\I. eo• =HltaUoua ~·uon u ..... •anamotivatedla· a-•-ur••t d'"'·I-e"· ••• ,,., • devtloper. l w ff Bonua plan Salary open 330W. Bey St .• _.... ,_ ,.._... ... -·-.. Sbortband & typing dut 81· e 0 er ••· Call Joe Mendes,' ColtaM•• 11 ...-Wit au.m· dMdual Jootf.ltl tor •n r::cnced typtat, book· altllla. Prime office ln cellnt worktol eondl· .... J=n!ly -.. hr rut ~ coo eullln1 ureer In r. Is halt.I. 0p. heart ot activity, wtth Uooe. a rooct 1tartltl1 _1158o....;...ll_l4_.-'"&._o_._E.___ -~ tr
---"-"c......;; ____ , ~co P\IU onw. fubian mercbaodlalna. portunlt)' t.o learn au -·t ___ .. --•·'· aalary and sreat .. ....._M='lil.. •---"'--------=IOWPM Salary .... COE!,udaee ut Our Upedl " bualneu. Call 67i"sJ'v ..... ...,_.._. befteflt.1. Pie... apply s vn''""":=?..':':::... ~
oe nptttenu bmlftta u"' • an f" Mr. HupeaUM&-3381 ---------• at: ·--.. -.-· vwn .. .._ .. , wUI lra1ll lbe r1ctrt c.lleat compen11tlon S.C'y/Bkkpr. Ptr. 10-2. ~. ~ ~ ~· , .... ...., .......
----------"'41 ,..._, C.U tor •J>pt. procram Also. • liberal SICU'f AaY lifoa·PYI. 1 «trl otnce. MA1fteS UVIM&S r:;-_.~·-----· ....,. '-..u d 11c0 u n l 0 n It 0 re NON SMOKER. AlrpC>rt Ute P9yroU rettlvabla. 115115 Watcliff on .........
mettbandlM. Pleue ap area Real Estate & payablH. Must tJpe. New Be chlC2.:0., ' I Air
• Atats&an& p/Ume. Call 756-lall
,an.TIM£ -.nc>MasT Sib' in persoo Moo Yrl Developme.ot Co. office Pleaaant atmospbere.~pon a 1671 w. MaeArtlnar aitral. fut food eJt~ •t' an. Co. a1rvort •re• a.&pm needs (;b'J Friday. S/H. Needed lmmed 545-l.185 F.qual Oppty Employer ec.ta llco $d-03U nee. Call Mn. Bentley al m 1 ra nno ICedl reeepc.. for ll,_Waal.a.d some typin1. R.E lie · Equal()ppor£mpjoyer 1.1e1 __ Dl _____ _
HI.LUI eordleu ••ltcbboard Mu~t .._.. belp(ul.~2960 SecyCooatruc lo$8llO Stock Men wanted tull or .,_.A<&-.,1 dnu. e:xper'd needed
Maa&er. Some e:ap • Snln11 • Loao 1 ... ,, bav. altnctlve Equal()ppEmpzyrM/F SICllT ..... Y .._..,,... p/Ume. Advancement •-1.-.:&4 I Apply I.ls H ·
dri1la Na> lil\lill lfC&' rleii\1'5*\ Bud Dal"IODalb. tniOaakUb ~~~~~~~~I -Fee Paid po1. w/n· OJlP)ftuD!Uea. APPlY \n De 1, • Kone ~;, e ':'~ ,.... _..,. S:UO '°"' tNewpoitQeatcr) A IOOd Pbooe meMe :: Good typ(n& skllla, lite posure to contract• & penon, Standaid Shoe ~:1 upandlnt Relt.aurut. 1110 Baka
dll7 tnllllat per1od ua. t:rras. Sll)ler1 Xlnt be• .. 6 a\ SALES Cost• Meu. sborJha;nd. call Mr. Gut· blueprints. POs dul Store. !077 s. Bristol. device 1naauf. S&.C.M
Tak• ad to HUH ~ • bDan ....._._~'8SC).Call Pabrlc uper. nq tenberg" 714·540·9074 . dJrttt w/vendor here. C.M. flnnbuapositJonavall.1----·------
!! m 1 I o '1 m • • _., lacellmt --1111• Penoanel ror appt Salary. Call Suun. aJso available. cleric•! C.U Candace 848•1288. fot a machine designer. altre9I
Deil•tfW'lll o.,t. ud cood wro..-ma ea W•t~n Growen A• ~ paaiboo,aometyplJlg. A1ao Fee Jobs. Dennia & STOQC IMCLK ~ req's i-a yn de· Dk*a-dt'ilftt.
lU.U'T. Ad paid b vu.menL PleaM ul aoci.UOO,m.m4 ~-m,,..•y Denoia Peuonnel Knowledae ol electronic lllJ' exper .. familiarity Ji\all fs P/time UUJe or ~er. ..... CroxOD ror appo&nt llCB'TIOMIST ~·· rr ~ -Service or HunUncton part.I, rect1ivlng "Sh!P· W/pneum, atic lobll i~ ,, no dpet' needed ... ~.-... r lnll'll 17l0'4t·l46l l MLW Exet'utlve secretary Beacll. l61688eacb. pi.ag procedure req d. automat c mac n1n1. Newport Bl CM _,, __ ,_ Will train outgo ng DOYOU"-AY wtthalhkillstotraiDCor Good P9Y· Co. benents. Candidate wiU desi&n • : g t Lo yr. WO 0 ~ y 1MPE1\1AL SA VTNGS :u~~ee:':1 a:;~~ THI Olt~AH 1 =~eM::n~~~~~ Secy~ ~a-Equal°Tlc~ployer :=cc:c:~~~ WAITllSS
CA.STING COMPAN 6LOAN rneotc:ooawUnaanCO.ta U ao, there may be a gani.zed.Slart$1,000mo it'-... l.rvtne 3 " I t F/time for retirement l'OR MAJOR FTLMS AaEqual()ppor\un.&ty Mma penoaael office career for you at Organ +benefits. Call Barbara Manager in educaliooaJ $47-47 1 1~!..,!~enprodnew bome.CalJ...,.11.
TV COMllERICAL Employu"Jf /H Should bave people ex Excbange.Operungsnow <n4>955-CASH. delJt.aeeksll'ticulatein· TEACHER TYPING mac._J mto UC·•--------
--per da,y lf ac !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!per. and/or ability. available. Previous sales CASHCARD div. Call Mary,833-2700. Deereed tea.cber req'd ~~~lnt~.beaeflu WAITllSSlS
eepted. Yearb ftt m• PBX Lucratlve income. Call experience use(ul. but ORPORATIOH Also Fee Jobe. Dennil Ii hnmed. for mornings at lnc:l\ldingcomprebenaive Opeoinaa in C.M. It N.8 .
711-laME:atN Aruwer1n1 servic Mn. Deoey, 557·7193 for we will train you. Call C ~~sol1~:.n~ Irvine Colleg~ or Busl· med/dental & op\lcal Sllo'scoffeesbopexpeJ;.
operator full & P(f. Cal apPl Mrs. Jett at The LagW1a Secretary-Hotel Aficbe1'oo. ocu. Call 5:5f.8890 NOW coverqe. Send resume Xlnt refs. We provl t
MAMMY...,._ m-3561 a.c.,t. to $700 Hills Mall. <no 586-7302 Todir. or sales. Mature & • for lmmed lnterview. or apply ln person Shiley ~:'=:~. l;.~ ~ w.=:t.f.~to~-f!J:1n -----e-~---L--1 FeePaid Sales. exclusive jewelry well groomed. Die · Servic~dSFuta.llAtteo,~nt. TICHMCIA14S Sco,,'•!.~~lfAle l~~:inle78CaOO 54f.0351. ~.. ~-• ..,....,._ Vivadoul person SOQght bouUq~e. Full time. tapbone or sh. Hvy lYP· exper · or.P .. me. ..__. ve. u.. • 1---------=· ~!~'sdaau:ek· ~~~sb~~ rorPRposw/winningco. Some nlghts. Apply In ing & admln ability. Appl~.~Stauon.i7th ~nm~~P1 ~ :s>~ 9'l714.m-OSOO.
babysiltillorTpm. Mus in& ,,o;;;phealth. App Call Tiffany, 833-2700. person Ciro at South Le ading N.B. hotel. &Irvine. utabU.hed co ln tbe Tow Truck Driven ex·
be avail to oceaalonally ly s.12. interviewing Fri A1ao Fee Jobs. Dennis" Coast Plua 644·1700 ext 536, Sara. Service Station Allen· Orange Co. ~rt area. per'd. Top pay. Apply
t..., him or my over· day morn, 979.6021 Dennis Personnel SALES EOE. dant, exper 'd. Day & APP 1 i c 8 n \a l 0 G4'W Towing. 1408
WANTED:
Mat-WOMEN
niOt-SaLary open. cau Uoyd Pest Control. Service of Irvine, 2082 Eves. Full & ptUme. Ap· troubleshoot. repair & Obma Way, C.M. M2·1.252
KNhJe-..551•1.days. Michelson. tmmed full time/part SECIETARY ply, Shell SlaUoa, 17th & tat elec:lt'onic systems. ALLDEPTS.
P~ SA--n~..--Fee 1">8l'd time sales & cashier Data Processing orient· lrvlne. NB. 551·9051 ask ror Busch. Nile auditor. up'd pref'd. C'"l ~ ~r •1"" ,,. pogiUons avail. Apply an ed to assist sy&\ema/pro-Al'Pb' Moo-Fri M . lln. Fulltlme Sw .. Secy person Ward & Har· gramming penonnel in ServiceStaUoo
Praley. Su Clement 642-MZ2 Sought by progressive rlngton Lumber 1275 preparation & maiDL ol Profess. exper, serv sb·
TYPIST. Accurate 40 llerm.odiltna. display.
wpm, general office domes lac appliances.
Call 5&3!M2 Sales and service. 8-IC --------1 PM Ir half-day SaL No TYPIST expr. needed in somt TECHNICIAN Inn. l2S W. Ave Esplan ---------1 corp. Call Candace Bristol CM EOE technicalD. P. documen· lion mgr. Must have
dian. l'fZZA Help bper'd 848·12.88, Also Fee Jobs. ---------talion. Word processing ter•s. Paid wkly, moo·
Call S48-7863 Dennis & Dennis Person· Saleslady for listing exper. helpful. An oppor thJy, yrly. Salary. com· Nurse ----------1 nel Service of Huntington mobile homes for sale. to be part of a oat 'I data mia.s + %. Dealer bas 20 LYN Pressman: E;XP· on A.B. Beach, 16168Beach t..aguna·Capistrano ·El processing co. Xlnt co yrs aame location. Nune Full time or part Dick. Chief 15 o Toro area. Full training benefits. Phone Ad· 673-3320.
We are in need of a fut & areas. Top wases. profit
TEST accur. typist. Exper. as a aha.rinl program and in·
repro typist. publication. ceotive pay plan. For in·
statistical, transcript.Ion. terview call aft l PM
TECHNICIAN charts, tables. etc _m.31162 _______ _
time for PM abUl. Above Heidelt~rg KORD. Sm1 ReceptTme No Fee proaram. High com· minlstrative Services --. -------
averaae salary. Xlnt shop in N · B · • Ca I Ofc 0.. n.. Lalle mission. No regular of· Manager for appl. lnte· Service~· Attendaat &
bme£Jt.1. Apply FJagshi S48-l164 We an seelt1ng a friend· lice hours. Be your own grated Data. Costa ~cs Helper. l.st &
helpful. Will train on WANTED: No. Laguna 2Rd & 3rd SWft Word Ma~ter System Beach. Older lady or
Poaltlon requirements Xlnt workmif conds & mother or young chikS tc
include an AA degl'ff In ~<~cal. dent.J care ror & tend my 1.yr. e!ectroruca or engineer· I& lite ms., paid holtvac 1· old lovely. well behaved
lag or equivalent ex· Apply, ~ Sky Park daughter to El More
Conv . Center• 46 Press Operatot·rubber. ly person for ourofc. We boss. Call for info. Mesa.~. ~r~·cA~yp~lsco&
Flapbip Rd. N B · Will train. 1st shift. Com· wttrain you in allofc pro-9SM500 SECRETARY MacArthur. Airport Tex· sa.-.. pany benefits. Salary cedbe ~ Sobeyou toofcan Saleslady, experienced. Sales •. mar .. eUng dept aoo, 4678 Campus Dr.
u.1•1t-.... 'DES commensurate w /exper. P•vuu to part o our well ed ( hi .,. .. NB "v~.., Call 962·6648, 8-SPM. dynamic growth that is .groom 1 • . as dona· has outstanding oppor _._. -------perience in precision or Blvd, Irvine. 540-38l 4 school. Your home or
test. Selected applican1 TYPIST mine. 497·2362/eves. & OROBUES ---------• made o( one o( the ble, for exc usive ress for self starter !n grow· Service Sta. Attendant.
Xlnt beoerJt.1.. All shifts ProductlonAss't largest agencies In So. shop 1803 Westcliff Dr. ingdatapr~ssmghrm. FulJ-time. USA Gasoline. muat be DOE aad DOD Reis. required.
clearab&e. Overtime as Wtll train good typist for:.:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; avail. Apply, 144 Part Ume. nexible hrs. callf. Call Pat. 848-1288, NBS48·l007 Xlnt potential for right ~Harbor.CM
Superior, N.B.&e.2-2410 giftware mtg, HB area. Dennis & Dennis Person· SALESMAH person w/good exper & ---------rAnnlred. type setting, 20-30 hn pr'" ·-.-week. Must be able to WAa!HOUSI/
BSl-7321. Tom. nelServiceoCHW1tington Retail hardware store s k 1 l Is inc I JI ding Service Sta Attendants. MUISl'S AIDES ---------• Beach. 16168 Beach. Knowledge of phunbing shorthand. can person ptt.Jme. exper·d. Lite Royal lndustries orre.rw a t Y Pe 5 5 W P M • Ca ti OllVB
generous hourly wage, ~ Orange Co. ba1ed co. FltP(f. 7·3:30shitt,3-ll supplies helpful. 48 His nelforapptint.ervw. mech1 knowledge. App·
s.bil\. Pre certlrication LI nl , per wk. Sat/Sun a must. Integrated Data Corp lY. 2590 Newport Bl, CM complete company paid needs auressive indiv.
beodits package includ· TYPISTF;nt. to as11ame resp. of cluaes offered. HD Con· R. E. Sales " c. 0 y• 2283 Fairview Rd .
valescent Hospital. THINKING Kft'1ftRhnaHcrdware CostaMesa MS-6080 Service Sta. Island OFA CAREER 2686Harbor Bl CM Salesman. Sal +comm.
847-351.S ------· --1 SF.cRETARY. Pflime for in El Toro. 768-9843. NUISUAIDES IMRIALESTAT£7 Sales person. perm/full Orthodontist. wm train. Servi Sta M h .
in& medical and llle In· Mon·Fri. Pleasant work· warehousln4, pickup, de·
surance, plus an ex· Ing conds. Good co livery It masc. errands.
celleot working environ· benellts. Apply. Pen· Call for appt. 557·~1.
meat with room for your nyaaver. 1660 Placentia. Scientific t>rilling Coo·
growth and develop· _c_._M_. _______ trols. a&k for Dave Mos· AJJ shlft.s. RN's Day re· Free training i( you time RM Abrams 1819 5'4-S345 ce t.aoo ec aruc
• lief. Boulek-ri. App. qWlli!y. Newport Blvd. CM w/tools. know align· ~..-Cal 1714t991.0660 SECUTARY jRcpt meot. Other jobs avalla·
ly. Newport Con v · ·~~~~~~~~~~~I Salesperson. aggressive. for Newport Beach Law ble. 21302 Pacific Coast
ment. Please conlact ·--m::~~~--·1.i:Q\:iaed:a:.·------Employment Office. TYPISTS
Center, 1555 Superior "' positive attitude. Full or Firm. Good skills. Rwy. H.B.
Ave.NB M=:-u!u~~~~l~!in. ~:p1~\rir.~rr:C:~ ~:~~: ~mum 2 yrs gen'I of· Serv--i-ce-Sla-.-A-tt_e_nd-.-Fu-1-1· Roval HUllSISAJDlS Day hrs Mon·F r i. dard Shoe Store, CM, licee~pr.60wpm.Good time. Exper'd, lite
Earn while you learn. ___ ...;;_ ____ -1 Newporler Inn Hotel. :m?S Bristol benefits. Salary open. mech·I knowledge. App· 11'4DU,TRIES
lmmed. openinp oo the C II Cb . . . 7S2-SS22Jan ty,2590NewportBl,CM
7-3ahift &3-11 shll'l. Call s44 ·l 700. a an Sales ·retail. Office sup·
Energy Products
01\'ISIOO
8'1·9611, Garfield Care Crosby or Julio Pere~. ply /stationary /printmg SECRET ARY Serv Sta Help needed im·
Conv. Hosp. HD. E.O.E. Full & Part time post· Immediate opening for med. Full or p/t. Apply
Lew SIMer, t.c
Red Hill & Oyer Road
Santa Ana. Ca S4G-3210 t«JISISAIDES
Openings on AM & PM
shills. Erper prerd. will
train qualified person·
net. Classes start Sept lit. Apply. Flagship
Conv. Center, 466 Flagship Rd . N 8 .
64UOM
OfffCE/ Ac.arts Rn
hlblc Relaffom
Carttr consultant. No
prior exper. nee. If
career oriented and have
ability to sell self to
public. Full training
w/fucrative income &
prestigious future. can
Mrs. Denny, 557.7193 for
appt.
PURCHASING .AID
RESIN MIXER
Color matching or rel&l·
ed ex per .. working with
polyester resin. Depen·
dable worker, w /abillty
to work with ratios &
percentages. Apply In
per s on , blwo
lOAM-2PM
CAtotBRO MFG
7601 CLAY, Hntg Bch.
W. or Beach. So. of
Garlield, 8 to 4:30. Weges com· to assist in Inventory
mensurate, benefits. cootrol & various other1_EO_E _______ ,
Typing 40 wpm. Neill duti~. Good oppo!1U~· Restaurant
Neon, lac. Santa Ana. ty. will train eo~us1asuc Straw Hat Pizza has full
_S31_-_33'1_4_·r_o_r ....;ap'-'pt"--. ---• person. Appl)' m pers~n & p/time day & night
Offl« Manager. Inside S.S. m·f. CuslOm~_ea\e positions avail. Over 17
aalea. No e:aperience Ca.rpe~. 18480 Pacific St. pref'd. Apply at 24402
necessary. will train. Fountain Valley Rockfield Blvd, El Toro
pref. 2S yrs or older. Real Estate 557~ or '774-6090. GREAT ~~~o·s PIZZA
~Desk SI 2JC COlmllstloft Spit c;ooics. ~enders & . de·
Degreed careerist Professional, proven livery drivel'li, part-lime
sought by prominent salespersons wanted for openings . for men. &
electronics firm to outstanding office in women w.1th outgoing
groom for a c&n!er m prime area or Orange pers«>!'slll1es and take
ootalde sales. Call Amy. County. No charge for pnde m their wo~. Able
848-1288, Deania It Den· desk + great 70/30% lo work evenings.
ru.s Penoonel Service of commission split. Call S'l.70.$3.00 to start. Ask
ffuntiaatm Beach..16168 forapp-'\, for Matt or Jean aft SPM
Beach. IREH /LAJWDr Corp daily 410 E. 17th St .. C.M.
OUTDRIVE MECHANIC· 64&-7782 ~6677,eve , RETIREE
exper'd, mere, OMC, Real Estate Wrap around your social
Volvo-Pent., 1cb00Ung security, 30 hrs wk. in·
avail lor updating. EARHIMG side, Meaa Verde area.
salary commensurate B«>UGH INCOME? Ca.II 847·9696, Mon·Fr1,
witb exper. Company Join 111 exciting com· !H2or 1·5. beoefi1a. .immed open· .pan)' with unllm.lled ill~•--------
Ing. Boal Speclalilts 2439 come potential. Free IH & L VM w. Coast Hwy, N.B. standing building in R.._. & LV.._. ~l million dollar location. " " Immediate operung for Licensed, P /T, 7·3:30 PACKAGING bigbli motivated ~ll· shift. HB Convalescent
Espr'd. VenacoUQt & perlenced or Inell· Hosp:841~lS.
Labelette opuator. perienced people. Tram· RallWl'tRCMJ&~ F/Ume '1 to S:30pm. CM. Ing program.1\dUoo as· W d d
lions avail. For appt fund raising /develop. 990 E. Cst Hwy, N.8 .
557.9212 Ask for Mr. West ment office secretary.
Newport Stationers Lnc. Skills to include typing SEWING 70/81) wpm. shorthand. Top $ steady. exper'd
Sales Rep$12K Fee Pd strong grammar skills & o v e r I o c k o p r .
COMUmtr Products expr. in bookkeeping de· _642._34_72C_M_. ___ _
._. + Ccr +Comm ~reaasebles.enSda~aesr~m~P:~d Sheet Metal One ol the most highly u-L--t ... ~ respected firms in the references to J Barker ~cs r4«1~
world is seeking a P.0 .23, Corona del Mar. 1 Yr or recent metal ex·
degreed candidate for 92625 per. Able to use all sheet
extraordinary caus e metal machinery .
Call Amy, 848·1288. Also SECRETARY lmmedopening.
Fee Jobs. Denn.is & Den· RECEPTIONIST
nls Personnel Service or We are looking for sharp PCllMl-Alr
Equal Opp Emplyr M /F
Telephone Sales Reps
wanted. lmmed pt·time
work avail. 2 shifts.
6·10am or 10am·2pm
m-3347 for appt. ask for
Susan.
TELEPHONE IPBX I
ANS SERV. Exper'd ,
days. SG-301..5
Huntington Beach. 16168 person to answer phones 1571 W. MacArthur TELEPHONE
Beach. a. type for our saJesmen. Costa Mesa .54~11 OU ITORS --------• Office experience helpful S C
Sales but not necessary . EquaJOpporEmployer E.xp.Only.SelltheDaity
SALES PStSOH
FULLTlME
Unique retail nursery
looking for individual
with indoor plant
knowledge, exper pre
ferred. Apply in person
Minimunm typing 45 Pilot. Earn $160 · S200 a
wpm, shorthand helpful week Highes t com· Major med1t"al, paid --·SH-•IP-PIM_G __ •I miaslon paid. Your
vacation. small office phooe at home Over 21 . benefits. Salary starts at Production control, l.D. card. CaJl 835-6453. l
1600. or commensurate Small fast ~rowing to3PMonly.
w/experieoce. Call Mrs plastic vacuum forming -----"------
Turner 963-456'7. M·F, e.-5 mfg. company requires 11llokol O,..aclMm
or s end res ume to self s tarter who t"an We're expanding again.
Village Real Estate. In· coordinate production &offer xlnt opportunities
ROGH'S GARDENS vestment Division. 10082 schedules, work In pro-to the applicant with the
2301SanJoaquin Garfield Ave, Hunt· cess and ab.ipping. No qualifications nece.isary Hills Rd ington Beach. 92646. truck dnving or typing for : reqwred. Minimum 5 C"'--I-fftl" __ __::::!C!J!~M~'= ........ --..-1•--------•J-:y.ea-r-r. r.Mppil\>tJ.-ex· __.. ,,.._
SECRETARIES perience a must. Hourly Vlnimum years llf. SALESWOMAN rate bu s ed upon dus lriul ana l ytical
For quality antique shop (With & Without Sil > q u a I i f 1 c a t i 0 n s . cbenustry & iruitrumen·
w/knowledge & interest T MODULAR FIXTURES. t.al analysis metbod.s ex· In antiques . P /T TYPIS S 638 w. l7lh St. Costa pertencerequired.
&42·'11M.S. PIX Mesa. 01•caf r.glneer
Sandwich Shop: (2) Rella· LonR & short term as· --------•! Experien~ in batch pro· ble, matore girls/women slgnmentt. -Holiday & ~esstng of 1H'gtrti<'
for sandwich t"ounte r. v a cat ion pa y . SMpplR,..cl chemicals & polymers
Steady work. for right Hospitalization plan ':II process development &
party. Mon. Fr I. No avail. Recei•llMJ scale upl 'planning of
nights. Hoag Hospital Some 11sembly work, facilities« equipment +
area.645-640l. woodworkers. and producUon 0( ultra high
finishers.. SA location. p~ty material•· re· SEAMSTRESS $4<M623. qua mt. Canvas products & yachts _h_t_p_p_i n_g_&_r_e_c_e_1 v_l_n_g, 2 Tec:Wc•
~ent need. Great de· WlrMouse $10,400 mands for exper·d & in· ,.,..._.~•Tr.
experienced ore help. Major trut'ktng Cirm
High hourly rate + seeks take charge indiv.
bonus. N~ ftt. Victor Cor rapid sal.ry ad·
Temporanea, $56·852C vances. Call Van,
F.OE. 833-2700. Dennis & Den·
TYPIST/
SWITCHBOARD
OPERATOR
PART-TIME
Will train you on ou1
switchboard. Must haYf
good grammar. spellin@
and typing. Approx·
imately 80 wpm re
quired. It's a permanent
flexible part·time posl·
uon. May won into full
time poaitioo if desired
Call for information and
appointment.
EB~CO
nis Penoonet Service oC
Irvine. 2082 Michelson.
----cf Whsle Supply bU8 needs
P /t people oriented
person. Ownr 63l·MBS
Wig Stylist. I /time lnclud ·
Ing Sata. So. Coast Pina
area. Sal + comm.
5&8670.
WOOD SHOP
Small , growing
manufactuer needs 2
young men (one part
tame·one full time I.
Packaging and shipping
It woodworker with
mechanical aptitude
1w11l teach ambitious
hardworkers >. Call for
appt. 645·6777 Walton
Corltwood. 934 w. 17th St.
Costa Mesa.
WOBATHOMI '--SM•...,,.. Pbooesales. Ught buJbs
121> Newport Center Dr Call 530-5220
Newport Beach. CA 926eC (714'7~7222 Workers In Chemical
Refinery. S3.SO to start.
F.qual Opporturuty H.S. Cbemistry or work
£mployer M /F exp w /chemic ab helpful.
7·3:30pm. EOE. S49-3281.
uphol .. .., eompa., • 'J'8Ca.a\!'•D.,..._..,...._.,,.'* uo--~o s.dahts
Costa Mesa has perma 548-4711 perience necessary. Ca 1 ~pertenceo 11t...-.:R1.-. ..
nent lull time po&lllon (AcrossFrom Barbara for appt. hnlshlng, electrol~as
-3280 ais=e. Full time omen nee e or ~;-.,;.;;;;.;.. __ ...... _.....;or:r;dlR . HOUH6W'"lting S•f•"
Pabltw. lDdusbiaJ •com· Call manager now for ~
Sales Fff Pal available. Ex pr. pref Orange Co. AirJ>Ort 540-3280 copper & printed circU1l ~ y,,.. to $1 l 200 "'-..... --11•· salary com F.qual Oppor Employer ---------proceaaing a must. Elt·
F;..fune 500 co ~ffen ~":te""~rexpr. Cali --------shJPPING/RECEIVING teoalvetravelrequired. P AHTRY degreed ind Iv. growth ~2:M7 for appt. OPPORTUNITY TICWdcm
PERS0111..15 oppor. In electronlca ---__;~---..___._ ... es -1 E rt d 1 1 " .,_, .. n..-.. •--u ~~RET•RY """''<:WI>' rv xpe ence n t' ear •&CJU· v..,.u to re""'a on. ~ ~ •AV•....,......,.__. coaling 1&1or Inks. Molt baV'I ap lD fine leap .. •st Call BW, 833-Z700. Oen ale, lite tvnln• & bk TYPISTS ,,.., ~"""..,....,.... 1 -.--hie art a plu. 2 or 4 cWtnen•• cold rood pre-N s M t h .......... J-.... n--•-.. n.-",. .. e-111 1~41 ........ n••atiOll. Sal•-opeo · . area. us ave ,.._ U\19, UQWJll • ,,,_,. kpln1. Xlnt company -• ~ ye a r de c re e I n
_. -" phone uper fl gd lyplng nil Penonnel Service bme:flts. Call 645-019\ for. & SECRETARIES ~ ._ 201 ORGANIC CHEMISTRY pendlDJ exp. Apply ...,,._ y--edd U f t •-.t--_ _..,_ .. _,__ " • ..,....
......_ ,..._ ..., , ano: ....... s........ •n u es, 811 -"~·"""'m:·iii-iiiiiiiii•iiiiigmn::...,..;;;· ~iia~pp~·~t.ii;Aa~k~fo;iiirM~r~.~Siiie~aieli. (2A ours Per Day> lnatead or wltb ex per ~·· AU.I. ---.. paced ore. Call Terry for 1 Do you need extra money OK.
_St.._..;.,.N_._& ______ 1..:•:!:PP:!:.'t..!!.~844:::..:·'1::540~.----I & enjoy variety. Let lho Weare•fortwwaoollrm , ..... --...... SALESC.LER" freedom & flexibility of SHOPTIAJNll offerln• dnt beneflt1. -, • -llCIPT10MIST I\ WOl"ldni temporary u · lmmed open1n& iD C.M. .,.,, modern offices It W.-IMDS ToworiESat/Sun. R t ii 1 h d llp11nent.1 or your chol~ manut. co. Xlnt beneftts. equipment ln the trvlP• £wir'1~ad!:Yftl' Newport Beach Sporting c a marine ar ware store, wort for you. Call Im· WiU train ritbt person, ~omplex • worltlnl
o&bs Salunla.Y a.nd Son· Houte.1'S'i-056S. beach location, seeks salesclerk mediately. ~ boun ol 7:30 to c. u you
daJ moroiap. Dn"' to•-1-tlC-.,,--OM--l-ST-wlth minimum 2 years exper. in ~O~ office • SportSboeSal•.••s>er'd. bave U>• upertcnc:e r•· =: :""~. 1::~~ Law nrm neecta recep. marine hardware. National co. O overload r1ume. call $48·3W, :'!:S. P~A 'ft~ ~vaaorlatpsta ~w/aecto1oper• w1all major benefits. Including life I Oolt&Meaa. ,HISroBYlO:
+ 9IOd c11t.1aa NCOl'd tJ'l'l&nc. c:au ~ ask insurance. health plan. vacation & 557..006 I -. .. 1 ~oo
Call MMDl. ult t~ I« Dawn. ' retlrell)eJ'lt. Ca.ll B. Morrison, Moo • 37%3 Bl.rc?b St. N e. ~ ~t:&/~J; ~An!. c~ m 11 Ham SMl•Y °" Don -RECEPT----'l'YP--lST--1 thru FtHor appt. C714) ~17ll EquaJ()ppor Rmploytr atCISE. l7thCM. A.Hor Anl:quaJ()ppty Emplyr ...,Wl.;.;;;;;111;.;;;''U.~-----t Mature, acCIJJ'Wte typlat, Larry or Paul xlnt beneflu. Call Equal Opportunity Employer nnd what you •ant ln Ftod what you want In
S.Uldleit-. tu._,• ..,17'7 1>a1J7PllotClaullledt. WantAdHelp? ~78 Dail>'PUotCtaulfieda .
cn.relal. qualified onb. confidential interview.
881-1001 963-S671
DAILY PILOT \
-.... ...... . . ,.. ........ ---
-· ·: . . ..
. . ...
.·
••211111111 wo "-AO.a•• '°'° ..-..w t0•0 I ....................... ....................... ..... .•.......•.........
HAMMOND Omeca 1•. ll'aller. covfr, ,,.... H60fndl tl60 Sf'lllf Ol•AM •alls. s HP O/B. Q40C), ............................................. .
fh d t • L • U 2 w Ith 75Mn4 or8'11«l1 --------• R.EVEltB. Owned by a 23' RANGER. Ftxad keel
orof-'onal musician ' aloop. Head. VHP radio. la 6lCcellent. condiUoJ\. dinette. e bp 0 18 . other ~ ~°liF°~~::· exttu. tmCI P!t4U181
....,.,._ ..... .._ __ ;..;.... __ , lnl• • wuken~•: Hoblo Cat 14' • deluu
1041 LUeeA .. TA•S T==-~:::..~ 641·J1U daya <Mon .. mode.I. includes traUer . ........ -............. =::~?.t'i'O: :':.; 1Pau11-1• · ~.•, :!lJ~t>= · muat
btU t /Collle, I r.r"' tu pfua .,. ..,.,.. Wt &pedal~ U Kohler Campbell spinet ~om• tnlMd•m-e'dm. • .... ~. rtla&rD permap10U7 ......... -&"..i..Tc.11 pluo, walnut flnlsb. ••••----' -.. ... .. "' ...... .unc.1•• la& Ii rv.p . . llnUIOO.~. 14 (t LEHMAN f /G llAMD..W lt71 •MC '/iTOMPICIUP
---------• at.raf, ....uac afrUne · TY._.... Sallboa>t. suo. C•ll i-•C"f4 ..... ~~.
"
II .. _.. d Ptm•lt 10. -~~. p-. ""-"' f ft .,, --•rot• :,_ ..__ IOtt m.1440.'73-1.320 .......,,_ .. -..-.-..-.o,.,a ~=~• cnl , ., ftDt ii* ,. thel\I rora t;:."ft sao. 8;'~ '10. •• ::':::.':!':.":••••••••• i-1111.-..i
IDOlllb, 1aou tbl'Otu pw111, uPilid La.I ----, Toaater a . 8llrt $30. 161.at aeU 2 mo old JSL 11' Hobie C.t W/trlr GOOD SELECTION ~9"1 wal paper. falJr c or ~ 3.000HAM/Ala~rt
w.n . ..und. ne1ue. "O.y._!;"!'Jr. ·~ s.a.: Klna rur •Pt'Hd 2 ceivtr w 1cat1eue re: ~~~ke:~~. m::::: '/2 TOM 4x4•s. JIMMYS ~~~~~~~~ ma Je 1 1 ear o Id • LlP Or ltJ two cards matcblnC lampe, btncb corder /pla)'er.are~~ for dya. A.MD YAN COMYIEASIOMS LA..,,..... ~ roba. l4$ o 4o ban to bit M lolftt. ~-=:.:aze:s~ ~J~!: a· Sabot, custom boi u AU. AT IMW SA YIMeS
AM119UIS • f,.IUCIS: •Utfelmet. VMtanoom cord chanser UU complete. xlnt cond. 0,.hwyhJ
•-o.& r·-·-1-.. -....__ ~ .. L•b.e-.ter/ MOI• •• tltcttOllle fluh 6 t4WITS Sl~su..8962 1 14 ... -~ • -... n-"""" ,...... 4'1LapSl.90H klnt 11 matt r eaa. 1.-.. ck1 c~ aaJ AUi ~er. le. 6 boU ,,....._.IO•• Mf.lGalal\SPll Mapavox stereo lumta· Part Interest 32' Ericson.
SJ• t>Ol\tiftutnt It ,.... '°'119 lOorcnona . .c>e•. ble. two speakers. Good ~8eacb1Up. Pvtpty.
Thurs. tors man da)'t Couelll a 11pt1ol cbaar. Salea1'Hlnchaded ~machine. roll·fed. cooditlon. It'll model. ~
n-1.s.i 68"n 0-.C'Olletll aa&aMe 1« r'ftO""'"f NO CARD? h'om bootutc. ln· Needs only duatlni $25. up to SO'C-. 'ftlla Is smtlMyv\twA\'t.&.AI Draw )'OUr own or tend cl •111upplies; cW'ftnt t44-1742 Hobie 11 ' C•tamaran ~to&daorMofou name, addreu, pbone" mal. Priced or qulck -~-'--------w/\rlr. Xlnl cond. Must
bcaut.i.h.IUy rdinlsbfd •n we1l rnalte OM card per ..i.. 9111-21&3 Stereo Syatem. Pioneer. aell. $750/bat. Karen.
1lquo f~!" ·~. t>..re ~J'OU-dil ut&lutt tq.Addll'4tach. ua.a-............. balr ... "'·, ma· SX sss tuner. trdanks ~!y1s7,,6897·25U. eves prt~. na uau .. ft-\ Terrace La111na Bch Smid dledr or mooey or· ,_ _,.. _., audio.~ casaeue ec .,_. "
tlft' . ..................... .
WIWU.IUY
Y°"9 DATSUN
PAID JOR OR"M' TOPDOLUI
flOITOr CAIS
ISAR "°'IC i< ~ :. ". :J "'i
8 j I I ; .' ', ·\ 'r , • · I '.
• r
•••••••••••••••••••••••
1118 Shelby coavertJble.
tan w/ehoc llereedes
canv., t.op1 Ulr.e new. &o
mi's, roU Dar, air ... t» stet t.tpe. f1000. 675-78.:
~ 75
PGOWMe ..
~a&IMPOITS
toCHOOSI AO~t .
See Our Ftne Lin• at ""'"'VVI 11711 llACH k. ..... ._ .....
142-4435
Alfoao.o 9705 a ll>Od ldectioD ol ....-. derto pie end teble l'l5; maple w/dolby, 2 Jennin411 re· --------tot> dtllta. Swlttl chn. ----------OTf'll~........ colfee table sis: lamp MWCh speakers. b1c 940 loafs. sa•-1 •••••••••••••••••••••••
balll,.,_, filecabineu Beaut lnab S.Uu M • n. """..,, sis: QYlon br•lded rug turntbl. Pioneer bead Decks...-9070 Miio ~. ,_... Tn1eb 9560 '15 Spider red, BIHIJ ·
rodnqdlra wdl maftae1'ed nds &d P 0 . Boa l5IO ~; m•ple love seat $35. pbola. All items perfect ••••••••••••••••••••••• &Acceuorfn 9400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• pwikl stereo caas, Jual
S4JfltoQtlhty, bomeat-21Ut\ ec.t,IMesa.C. a2I •1"2 CODd.IS2S.751·3410afl.6. SuPSAV•n •tLE ••••••••••••••••••••••• aerviced642·7387 Dana P\ PHONE.M .. TE ""'-NEED· 4 Wied radials no "70 El C&m.ulo, restored. ---------49 ... 9486 Be.aulllul Siamese kitten. " Mltc•-w 11.arant.s 50 watt receiver. YACNewport646-0551 more ihan 30,000 mi'~ to new enfme. tires. FM 8 Audi 9707 ---------1 3 m09. Free to lood Telepboue auwerlnl w·~ IOll d _ _. ---.a, like new, will lrksta'eO 645-9473 .... .....__ M0-1030 machlAes w/Vtarr, $79. --•• ~ ....... call Ste REWARD $300·$500. ror fit ts" rims IDatsun 510 · •••••••••••••••--••••••• • •c" .........,. · wtremote. Q'9. .. .................... ,. ~1&5· ve at r~ a slip for my 30' wgn>. Ed, 661-6261, art v 9570 LAltGllMYBfTORY
FRG HT DAMAGED ......... 1050 ftoler, 750-3791. Wl•e,_d&a~eetr,"!' ... r/encovte2r·wbl 21" Adm1'ral color TV. 9Jefi/l"/es78. MCsatlbl av(e7 l~y> 5:30pm. •~•••••••••••••••••• t oll Utaedl HOI'POINT SALE. • •••••••••••••••••••••• c A R p E T M I L L -• IT.. • .. • .. RARE OPPORTUNITY I ....... D 97 . .. 4'•
W. Warner nr Harbor, a,QSEOUTS From $2.50 962·7379. wor1ts.,.:~rt. w/legs, 688·4302 Dan Pau I Experient.'ed AUTO -" MEW I I AUDl"I. lllTll'•
SantAAna.979-2921 ••I BUY•* sqyd.549-8181549-1181 Wanted heavy duty _Sl25_. _ _._.__.,_, ____ llSH607wkends/eves. BODY REPAlRS. at llOODODGIYAM VWIUSlS
..i""tlifU ui --6..&M-'--30• A J ri J SUPER DISCOUNTS (170228) 14UXM > ltOT11111MP0aTS CASH PAID Good used ""mlture ~CB base antenna. best of· w-~~ p. -..,,_';;.... rroot~~ari"?:°and~~i~ Call Earl.960-5286. ONLY $4895 ~~~·~:.a~I 1 :f'!~ii.t~~o!.. will ~eat of drawers ·~·•••··~~::•••••••••• area. $26.000. 673·5099. 4 whl drive parts. .74 IRVINE DODGE
t-...1 ~.... Dod p w · 40/\utoCenter Or.
••MOVING•• MASTIUAUCTIOM NEW KIRBY VAC w/aU Musk. ,_... 9030 $1000 cl tr~f~;'~~se.a~n~o~. IRVINE
Usedrefricwtfreez.er. 646-1616&1lJ.t625 attachments. Must sell .•• ~~ ..... ~~,!~ ....................... ~orfiNmder'afee8for40d'~1liP auto tram & rear end. ___ 1_3_0._l_l_1_8 __ _
White. run.seacellnUy. Alao new RAJNBOWS. 1 MEii> AM AMP! 4·cyl. Graymarine, runs in ewport. ·5 a1 Y • 642 2492
$50. S6l.Q6l,aft6. CASBPAID CaUafterlPM.979-3&60. Preferably an old ~.cyl.bead.$200, ~~~~~f\e;tp~~ '72 °Pinto. ALL PARTS ~=g:o~a:·~t:~~k:
FW Cd used. furn. anti· Pina Irons. 2 lhru S/W. Fender Baseman, but . 91RMK06 FOR SALE. Call 67S.8195 Best ofr 751.()248
ques 4'clrTV s 957-8133 New f'ripe, Iliff $200. C.11 anything in good working loafs. Power t040 --------• aft 6 pm.
968-9398 DOUBLE mattress & box SS2-4789aft6. condition for around $100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Slip needed ror new 32' ----"-------'62 Ford orig owner.
. Lik $75 . will do. Call 661-6261 aft PACEMAKEA Ketch. Newport Beach AlltosfOf'Sah gdcondS650. Used appliances, great !~,?D1~~ bef e n11ew. · Movmg sale, items pnced 5:30pm. 44 FT rnu.,. area. 631-0499. 67J.3S75
bargaU\S, best for less. .,.... • ...., ore to sell: Refrig, king size • ~~" ••••••••••••••• ••• •••• • IMW 97
BestAppliaoces536-0911 JO' sofa gold SlOO Youth bed. Fieldcrest Trusseau KilloSuzukl cello. vintage Private partf s invest· Transportation ~ 9S20 ·~e!J>srds::~o'!,t 6~: .................... .'~
. dbl d;esser matching lacespread,twinbdsw/ 1973 J4, Beat offer. m~nl comml_ment re·••••••••••••••••••••••• be l ff 8319333 Refrig, Admiral Jmpenal desk yellow'/white $40 cmr gme tbl, dsk, Imps, 548-8063anytime. quares immeciL~le sale. ••••••••••••••••••••••• or s o er. ·
Duplex 25. Side-by.side. each' Exec desk $45· clay pols, wire bskls Can arrange financing. 9120 1957 Mercury Monterey. days, 837-11S8eves.
(27 x 41) No defrosting. ~~.. . . &44-SS76 GUITARS:Conn6&12,& Has just been pro· . 10,000mi'sonnueng. "70 Ford Van otr road
StOO. 754·1227. ......,.._. . bl k S . h small nylon fessionally decorated ••••••••••••••••••••••• Restorable quality. whJ.s wtsnow t;res. newly
---------•Simmons Beautyrest x. Fountain, ac PlllUll 540-2356 and re -powere d by Older camper 4-sale. wto Xlnl transp car. $900/or painted ext. capt seats.
Frast·free refng. $100/of· firm ktng bed. Like new. style, 3 tiers, comp w / Offk.f; ltt & Newport's finest tecbni· truck. $150. Stove & bstof'r. 645-1627. eng ms great. Xlnt buy fer. Good cond1t1on. Pd $5SO uking $275. pwnp. $:54>. 963-1448 &...& __.. 8085 ciaos. Total or $45.000 refng. 640-2700
64.S-2893 546-9089 Dish ash rtabl GE _,..,...... apeotin last 9 months on ILACICHAWK VI at S2000/or bs l ofr
like ~w :iiC° bookl:i $65'. ••••••••••••••••••••••• thia '67 model. Brand Btdric Cars 9130 Beautiful silver body. blk _673-897 __ o_. _____ _ Refrigerator. apt size
S30. s:u ·3808
Aller6PM Only.
MAPLE 64i-U25 Ofc furniture ; desk, new twin Chevy 454 ••••••••••••••••••••••• lealb mtr. cstm stereo '62 Greenbriar corvaar
Double Bed; Ortbo Box ---------chairs, divans, decorator "-·-ade eng1·nes with M-.... eto b t · system, 13M m1, 1mmac. van. Motor completely items. reasonabl e ""'"" r ...... ur,oew a tenes. Springs And Mattress. Remington elect r l c new traosrrussioM. All SSOOfirm. 213/~l overhauled. $850. See al
Wards gas dryer, runs UkeNewCondiUon$150. shaver $10; Norelco $8; ~or645-3022 equipment includtng 54S-~ 1131 Back Bay Dr. N.B
perfect S30. 962-8437 tire pump Sl ; bicycle UPGRADING OUR OF· 13VJ' Zodiac with 40 hp 1962 CH EV . 1 m pa I a 640-4081 saddl nn1s Sedan. Jmac.. classic ---------22032 Islander Ln, HB. 91,;• contem~rary sofa e$2;le racquet FICE-FOR SALE: 2 Mercury engine on • oondition.42.000ongmal Dodge "61.cleanins 1de&
f mod I $95/ S2; electric steam Irons secretarial chairs S2S ea. davits. Radar, auto-pilot, Motorbecl llkn 9 I 40 miles . ..,<1\673.-..... out. n ew paint. v Int Re/rig, 2·dr. freezer on rom e me. or S6 •. -I •-bl 1-•.. 7 ... 0 t ~ "......., .. bestolf 644 150 ... .,.; ace ... e c ""'' APECO bood copier 1 yr n nan genera or, ••••••••••••••••••••••• h bottom, looks & runs er. ·5 . SlS; wickerhamper$19; oktw/3$99.95maint.kits VHF. depth -find er MOPEDS 1946 Ford Woody. ong •-m_ec_._Sl200 __ ._640_·124_3 __
-'g'-ood. __ S7_5_. 645--__ 1_100 ___ ,contemporary walnut Timex watch. self wind· incl., $2100. C&ll 646·5727. Bim.lnl top around bndge New & used sales & engine. V-8 flat head. rns
Kenmore washer&dryer. dining Sf't, 6 chrs, 2 ing,21jewelSlS.962·8010 8:3IM:30.Mon·Fri. deck, stereo, color TV, service 2470 Nwpt Blvd. gd. Nu tires. whls. roof.
Ukenu.4washsettings,4 leaves. pads. Xlnl cond. ,_... 8087 s leeps 9, kar:ig .s a ~e 642-7910 . slats in sides. paint.
dryer settings. S19s. eer sioo. 536-03SJ. sen au •EtS .... s1eeper11ounge m main ---------brakes. ss.0001or ofr ---------IUUft"L ••••••••••••••••••••••• salon, run galley with 1978 Moped, used only 4 644-57361213·283·7081. '76 Ford 351 V-8. auto, air. 3pm,5Sl~ Dbl bed, frame, head· ANSWERS Young yellow·beaded microwave oven, trash months. Xlnl running Mustsell.
'6S VW Bus
$800
675·9507
Admiral dual temp frost board. $:54>. End tables 2 Amazon Parrot. Hand compactor. big refrig. cond. MustselJ. 751·3929 Jaguar 1948 Mark V, 3Vr 675-SS69
free while, clean, SSS. for $20. 645-2893 Sunken -Briny -trained w /cage $250. wtrreezer. dbl. stainless liter sedan. sunroof. xlnt ---------644-9806 Pagan -Benign -M8..Q91 sink' butch er block '78 FoXJ Moped. 2 months cond. Spar e e ngine "73 Dodge BlOO. btk. 6·cyl. · 2 Desks and small record ,A l I old like new sharp cstm int/ext PENGUINS coun ... r op, upper sa on • · TI4/S48·2852eves ·
IUYORLEASE
YOUR 1'711MW
MOW!
•BMW•
•USA.LES•
"74 20al 4 sp. 1373LPF)
'75S30ia air CS60MML>
'7620024sp. <~PQM l
'77 320i SIR (S83SPN I
'77 320i 4 sp. (283SPI >
'Ti 320ia air (0940 >
We may have your next
car in our inventory. Call
us today!
lll-2040 495-4949
CREVIER lkydn 1020 cabine t. $75 for all It was really cold in PlcMos & OrcJ-s 8090 bar area W/Wet bar. new 846-7124 ~. 645-7048
....................... s.48-8598 Florida last winter. It ••••••••••••••••••••••• ref rig. & freezer. fresh h c· Classic '51 Plymouth Con· ··--w----..1 9590 & I St • t ltOADWAY
IACIC TO SCHOOL MUSTSELLTHISWEEK eve·n snowed ln Miami. Contemp Walnut Electric water Sparklett, built·in MOPED·1977 w t iao, vertible. Semi-restored -_.._ brand new only lSO ml P>CJ\I\ ,,.., A11AJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• a5"3"5'".3"1"1"1 I SALE Nr new quaJ sofa $180. The first blrcb to arrive Player Piano. 60 rolls. blender. $79,900. Cal I · ' ' _,.,., . .,......,.,.,
MewlrUaecl Newsora&loveseat$450. for the winter were A·l cond. $1350, (213 > (714) 871-4224 (bus.> or SJ:iOftrm.493·3991 Recreatf~ '"~umuArHAtVINO NAet<•HE
Cruisers3,5&10spds QualallwdcoUee&end _P_EN_G_U_lN_S_. ----4.13-S812aft6. <2l3>69'7.Sl05<res.>. ~/ YthldH 9530 •USEDIMW1•
MX bikes mopeds re lbls Sl60. SolJd wd 5.pc 1--..---.e~-.pi==iq.-i==-..,:::==a 'f8 SKIP JACK 20 OMC 9 I SO ••••••••••••••••••••••• "75530I Auto C916MTV >
pair & ~ervices' ali din'g/game set $425. outdrlve. completely ••••••••••••••••••••••• '73 Dodge m axi van. '762002,4spS/RCS49PHZ>
makes,buy,sell,trade. Decorator lamps . overhauled. U~ly but 1976 Honda MT 250 Deluxe lop.w/windows. '76S30l :S/RIS81RCS>
2470 NEWPORT BL, CM 770-2881. Cu net ion al trailer in E~slnore Enduro· Low Sink. stove. e lec / gas '763.0si S/R (029RKM I
642·7910 eluded. Dependable nules&,veryt cu.lean.!_:ed refng. crpt.s, insulated. '77630cs14spl!l62TRS> ---------tSofa, like new, 7'. camel Chevy V·8 eng. good money ior w on ....... or 57,000ml.968·9610 ClosedO.. c..-........,
Mens lOspeect SSO. clipped corduroy. loose Catalina or fishing boat best orrer. CAii Paul al -----------r
Call between 7.9 PM. pillows, Scotchgarded. $S500. 675-4870 or 644·7211 842·7982. 4 Wheel Drins 9550 ORANGE COUMTY'S
8J0.2604 ~1897 bus. i2 Suzuki 550. Xlnl cond. ••••••••••••••••••••••• OLDEST
WldincJ Mcihrioli I02S 10· tufted velvet sofa. like
•••••••••••• ••••••••••• new. orig. $1400, sell $350. CEMENT 673-9589 eves.
For sale. Thompson Bldg White & gold dinette set. 6
Materials637·7373 Cbrs, xtra leaf. $75.
---------•Decorator Joveseat gold,
Qean dirt rm avail 875
yrd<;, will delJver ·
675-3428
brn. blk $85. Child's
white S drawer dresser.
$20. Jumbo bean bag.
---------• maroon. $25. 847-6319
c-naslr E:qulplntllf 8030 Roll-top desk. teak. $SSO.
•••••••••••••• ••••••• •• Walnut rm divider , $100.
Co I d-~ et Sofa bed, xlnt cond. $150. mp . .. a room 11 up. 645-9737
Vivilar VI enlarger ---·------
w/75mm lens, Omega 2 &-unit bdrm sets, solid
E99 electronic timer, Oak p ortable bar,
J6X2:0 adj. easel, 5 tlxl4 Brunswick pool table.
trays, Safelile. Also GE stereo/phono. GE
Kodak carousel 600 slid refrig, Kenmore elec
proj. Brad. 731-1710 dryer, 2 cane/velvet OC· ---cu. ch.rs. 645-2418
DoCJI -104 Sofasleeper, qn sz, l 'h Yl'll
••••••••••••••••••••••• old, perf. cond. $195.
Golden Retriever pup· 644-1673
pies. AKC Field & show ---------
pet. Shots. wormf'd. Antique bdrm aet. anUq
raisedwtrLC. Xlntd1Sp . kitchen hutch, water
(213l~lS6l. cooler. Beatolr. 968-6321
AKC German Shepherd Lovese.l & sora. bel'e
pups. Show background. naug, 3 mo new, ong
Top bloodlines. Black $2 .000 sell r /$900.
i.nd tan. 638·9308 Werliuer pl•no sooo.
· 7S2-1094 AKC Springer Spaniel. 101-----------
mo·s. female. champion Antique oak table & 6
lines. best offer. Dys; carved back chairs. 9x18
536-7987. eves; 848·9523 Oriental nag , Fruit de· bydrator, all xlnt.
. )
SEE YOUR
ADIN PRINT
IN-24-HOURS-
Place your Daily Pilot
cla ssifie d ad before
5 :30 p.m. a nd it will run
in the next day's issue.
Th~ Daily Pilot is the
only afternoon Orange
Boat. Wood hull. flying of'fet. 5S8-8S34 or 675· 1938
28' Power Sportfisbmg Low nules. Extras. Best COST A MESA &
brid.ge, newly rebuilt 76 Yamaha 6SO. Reduced AMC/ JEEP
engtne. Needs sor:iie Cor quick sale. $700 #I IN CALIF.
work. Overall condition 64&3672 1978 CHEROKEE excellent. Brand new ---------
directional finder and Custom 75 Kawasaki 900 $6995
FM 2·way radio. $6000 or Many extras. Beautiful (J8Al&NNl3ll&6 l beat offer. Evenings must see Aft. 6
645-93'76 l 71H7S.1B38
31' Chris Craft Com ·
mander. All fbrgls. Long
equipt list + a ll nu elec·
lrncs. Cond must be
seen ' $22 ,500. P .P .
67J.42ZO.
*SEA RAYS*
BOAT SHOW
PRICES
Al71Model1 Mustp
Makina room for 1979
mode1a now on display.
HARRISON'S
SURAYIOATS
'76 VZ 175 mono. cherry•
con. SSSO/or best offer I
Afl4PM. SS7-0247
Yamaha 1977 XS7S0·2D.
Cully dressed , cruise
cntrl. Goodyear Eagl
AT's, Lockh art oil
cooler. 2 helmetsy{iding
suit, 493-1454
MotorHomts, Sale/ ..... /Stor. 916 ..........................
Rent a 1977 Executive
Motorbome or M ini
motorbome Crom Herb
Friedlander. Call any of
these numbers
191-6777
537-7777
121-1111
1978 J.20 PICKUP
$6995
IJ8M6PN140439 >
FREE 100
GAU.OMS GAS
with purchase of any
jeep with Uus coupon
WEWIUIEAT
AMY WRITI'EH DEAL
OHAM-~W..
JEEP
WEARE
OVERSTOCKED
2524 Harbor Blvd
Costa Mesa
714/ 5,9-8023
3101Coastffwy, NB.
631-2547 RENT 23' Fireball, self. '74 BRONCO. Clean
contained. Lotsofxtras. Xtras. SS200. Work
WE BUY
CUAHCARS
&TRUCKS
CONN Ell
CHEVROLET
2828 Harbor Blvd
COSTA MESA
546-1200
WE PAY TOP DOLLAR
FORTOPUSEOCARS
FOREIGN. DOMESTIC
or CLASSICS
H your car is extra clean
~us-Om.-
IAUER IUICIC
2925 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa 979.2500
WE BUY
USED CARS
CALL GARTH
Used Car Mgr
540-5630
Sales-&lrvtce·Leaamg
Roy Carver.Inc.
Rolls Royce BMW
~Jamboree
Newport Beach 640-6444
'73 2002, 4s pd, A JC,
AM /FM. 1 owner. vry
clean. its a steal al $4895j
586-4107
IOI McLAREN'S
SALE
OAHO's!
633'1 IH STOCIC!
8SO No. Beach Blvd.
La Habra
(Comer Beach
& Whillil'r I
714/522-5333
Closed Sundays
Lyman 18'. Lovel y
clusical Bay Cruiser. 2
steer ing positions.
645·2283 9S7.S141, home~·3168 1976 BMW saol, 4 spd . .tr;, 1011\SO\ ,\ ~O\
RENT. new 78 22' Motor Trsb 9560 ~~~-~1e.:!J: :000; • LINCOLN· M ERCURY
H o m e . I o a d e d • ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2826 HARBOR Bl VO
•
.. ~AKC'i~--~ rrm'i+wft.oa.. ,_. -
shot.a. lllO. G.apW. 1051
County news paper to
offeT"" 100--t!tis ~!\I.
service.
daytwk/mo.675-5832 1916.I.Q.~OTA C 9115
81CKU' W.-......--t=~~~~~~~~-"""·Jh•• .. ,., ... ~-~ For Rent '7B Pace Arrow. n • ' " 25'. loaded! MtC. Brand CAMPll SHEU WEIUY "74 Capn 4 cyl. 4:r· new
~ & cover. ~_!00.
Call 645-2116. ---------· ...................... .
1-· Doing Bualn;-"Ll
I. Under A
! ~ Flctlttoua ! Name? j ~J
jAll 1tt• .,.,....._. ue1ft1 e
flclltloue 11.,..., 111v91 lty
le• ... fl.. .. """" ...
Cov11ty CW11. Tiie OAIU lttLOT ~ h fofllll
•114 ...... _,.., fof -
Glll lOM•ll. It J•V er•
IHl11111 e MW ~.in.11
.... tM DAI\.' ltlU>T ._, lftfwlft•tloft Md..,.,...
141-4321 •. wrnu.a
1
!stat.Sale!
38lt0cean Blvd, CdM.
Fri/Sat. 9-5. Antiques.
old wicker. baebold
hamla.binp, · bric·•·brac,
dliabea " lamps.
Tbun I& Fri. Disbwaaber.
couch. LoU of misc .• an·
tlque beadbo•rds .
912-2298/9G-'1'921.
MOVING SALE Two O.U, 1 wood, l
metal. Otesi ol drawera.
Coffee .l•bl•. 2 e nd
tabl... Jronlns board.
ArUllcial planll (6 n.
tall), Yard planll. Pie·
tUNt. Crock pot, Porta·
bit ber. Wall nclll (....,.), z.tth tape r.·
=~complete wltb UICI qieaken. m Z . 18tb llB, CM.
"5-GT
, .. _~-=
Stop by ou r office or
call 642·5678 and a
frie ndly ad-vis or will
help you place your ad.
You can charge your ad
or use BankAmerlcard
or Master Charge.
DAILY PILOT
642-5678
18' TRI·HULL 110 Volvo
XlDt Bay or offshore. Gd
~ mso. 67s.3545
new! 4 speed, r•dio. heater & USB> CARChS!
1
r::.t·r:~r s~~l. ·sr~~:
558-3060. only 21.000 mlles. Like We're the new evro et 67S-03IM
tH7 Chris Crart. day
cruiser. eng. nds .
manifold, Sl50. 613-4730.
ho II NEW! Uc. 1066054 Stk dealer81\lp ln the lrvlne ---------Reul 23' motor me. a UllllSAT. Auto Center. We need '76 Capri U Black Cat:
extras. $225 per week. 6" $3979 )'OW' used car! snrl. decor grp, 4·spd,
Per mlle. 846-7255. JOE AM /P'M cHs. xtra cleatt.
14' Olfl'BOARD. Recond
ena.«dlrlr. $395/Qfr.
675-8153.
THEODORE ..,A.., ota Chin-'-A/C $3TSO /OBO. 752·8\61
.. •oY ....,. • MACPHERSON <da->.548.-S854faft5>. 23 mp11, xlnt cond. $3995. J V ROBINS 1-544-aec>e. 544-6280 CHEVROLET FORD ,,..,..,'TNT .. tt70 JUfoU ltlliHIOR Rl VO
CO~TI\ MISll b42 0010 1.5.3 Bolton Whaler. One ••••••••••••••••••••••• Y~ old. ?OHP Mercury, "18 Cardinal 14' Uke new triller Ind many extras. · • bed e.t offer. 640.1117. Ask self ·Contained. surge '76 Toyota SRS Iona •
for Rick brakes. See to ap· w/ahell, stereo. +more
· predate. 751-1727 Llkeoew 13595. ~7458
IHh.WI 9060 TENT T RLR . Mont· '76 FlOO. runs good. looks •••••••••••r••••••••••• tomery Ward. Pulls Jood. Call after 6PM S=nt 20 lull rtce, easy. $275. 544·3608. _n_1_._1me ______ _
21 Auto Center Drive
lRVlNE
761-7222
WANTED!
Late model Toyotu.
VolvOI, Ptcku111 & Vans. C.JI US today I
· "5-18115 _MU280________ 'tO Dod&e P.U. truck step·
You don't nMd •IUD to side, lood liNI •body, ~Mill~IB
31' ••Uboat • Newport "draw fast" wb n you 311 V·I ena . nds ena ~-~,;;.;--~--t moor1n1. tt1' Clipper place an ad ln the Dally work. wdn camper shl.
1ZHP outboard. tandem Pilot Want Ada! Call now tsOO. '31·5294 arter s.
trlr. 18,710. 61S-ll063 -MW678. Glenn. ~-~~-~~~-·
\
'76 Capri 11. auto, air,
AM/FM stereo. itlnl
cood. Must sell. $3400 I
b8t of'r 645-"'71 Day1
t720 • ••••••••••••••••••••••
'tl8 5l°"•pd. nu tires, ad
~.siaoo. 5'1'8.-n>. •ft 'pm.
o.laun no, 2000cc ens. 1s
-. okt. AM/Fii. 14.000 ml. '3150C). m.-o.
"74 .az. xlnt cood. 48,000
mi 's, ~100. 752.270'7
7
COSTAMt~A
OA T'>UN
* DIUYIA '*
•LITTLL. *
SAVI A LOT
SKOP 6 COM PAR r.
llARWIC K DA T'\UN
' '
ll JI 117'.HI )11"'
lf71DATSUM
CLEAliMCI
1008210.. Pl0..11510.)
~ 3'0Z, classic. Isl yr of
prod. $3000. 631 5501
days, 673-7ID eves
GETTor ss
FOR YOUR
EXOTIC CAR!!!
We Will C<>nstRO
Your Porsche.
f'erran, MBZ.
Rolla Royce or
Sports Car
In saleable cond
Ask for Frank or Tom
842-4435
HARBOURVW
• Under New Ownership
Rot 9725 •••••••••••••••••••••••
•: :1 :rA_~~~
• • :"'~ ... Jlllto""•
it HERB .-
«FRIEDLANDER« .., IMPORTS -tr « 11' ~ \Kf~(; it
: ~lff~" : « OJLCHA~CF.S « « ,, , ........... ,ct '" • ._ .. .
_..1 ><1•4° , .. "" ............ -· .... ........ •• , 01\. ...
« 50 f;AtJt ~ • «-m· GA.8 it it n1111w .. i.111""'"'-~., •
-~... . ... . • • • • i! • • • • • • • • • « SI-" OIEGOf~ «
lr ~. :. ......... ;
assy Autos
Advertised
,in t he
DAILY PILOT
or the cub equi valeol
of $239. 00 MIRACLE ._.At.DA
2150 II arbor Blvd.
COSTA MESA
645-5700
1B11 Volvo 1425, blk, 70K
ml, oew auto trans.
AM t FM, runs great.
Must sell. $2995/or bsl of.
fer. 675-9626
i5 Volvo 4·dr. aoto, air, ---------.,.-· ---------1!ltl"f. JUJTFM ran;. to '14aMratl 9739 IEFORE YOU ml. Orig owner. 673-6522 .....•......•..•..••... ~~·
'7 MASERATI I d ., '67 912, s s pd. orange. ~YOUR .a..-. U--.. 1 n Y • .. mint con<L S5900. TOYOT>.. --._ seater. lthr, aJr, full pwr, 644-4887 •••••••••••••••••••••••
mint coad. Overseas Im· SEE US! AMC 9'05
PoCts6'5-5980or64Z..Q6'96 '68 912 5·tpd, sunroof. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~ •--9740 casa, bra, id cond. S7000 MARc;>UIS TOYOTA '76 Hornet Sportabout _... _ _..... 556-1639 lllLJU 3684 MISSION VIEJO ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,._... · ll 1·2110 495-1210 wagon, p tS. p 18' cruise
1972 MIZ 250C ,4914 1.8. ortg owner, im· contkrolt. A!C. lodm~ .. ~ug00. AuU>matlc. pwr. steer· mac, muat sell, $5000. 1i77 Toyota Cellca GT rac · op coo · _., · ing, aircood. &extralow 836-0315 P.P. Llftback-Silver with1_7_5_1·_9582 ______ _
miles. (929FVO>. b I a ck t n t er I o r ... cir 991 O • S74tJ. 7lt¥1N=.ne, 5-apd, ..A11•9w-•',?,,, alr ~d., •.......--•-..........
HOWAaD C ~t offer o~!~<=: AMIP'M stereo with B • 1972 IUICl ~ •QuaU . _ _ track tape. alloy wheels. RJYi••..,,
tu M cArth v,....,,_ abadow lit & ooJy 19 000 .,...,... ,.,ear a ur, mlJea. Beat,, offer. Pri. F\lU power, fadory air Jambone & Bri11t.0l). '77 9118 Tara a, fully pty. C.ll &47·'1"56. cond., tilt wheel, split
NEWPORTBEACH loaded, Xlnt cond. seats.paddedtop&rally
l l J..0555 Sl6,llOO. 771·3767 1973 Corona, air, AM /FM w h e e I s . S h a r p ! radio. PS,.PB, auto, rear (577FNE). '76MB300D. tan. lmmac.,
stereo caaa. $12,900.
499-178.1
,, MBZ 280 lmmac cond.
50.000 ml... '9800. Call
eveam-0790
'611 • 230 4-dr. wbt w Ired
Int, rad.. auto, sharp,
cln, Ill mi. 1 ownr. P.P.
SM50.873-&467
,, aoc cSrt blii. tthr, 11111·
r1, beaut. cond. 98800. m.'190. ns.w:a
. . .
--------• wiod defroster, new $2499 tires. A1klo1 $1 ,500.
A "•tltlowe l11tl11t .. Nelftt IC....,._flt flied
--.... CilullCy Qeftl .. • ..w -"" ,.... ...., wfrlctll "-~...-. llltttlM .......... ~. '"'" ... " ........ ~ Ofllf It lllUt trt
dlt lt9ff, c.. ... L....s
D •ti ert 11t•t1t at tit•
DA ILY "LO Y lot ,,.,., ......... t lld ..... ...,, .........
~
..
6"-8511.
'74 Celie• ST. 4 apd, rbll
q, A/C, 8 track. $3100.
Pb!M.2.80a2
NA8EH5 CJ\DtlLAC.
AUTO CENTER ' .
• "*' . 11 ... " ••• , ... ""'''' 1973 Corona Sta ·•=;;;;;;;;-.-_____ _
tlonwagon, auto. air, suoo. '15Skylark, V-6. air. PS &
PB, tinted glim. Ult whl
29.800 rru's Xlnl cond.
Nu car arrtved. save
1171 Martt 11 kyl wacon. siooo. Im med Hie for
&oeded, xll'lt eood. New SUH. Or I a own r ,
It.I belt radial.a. PIOOtor llfl2.P761.
h.i.511-7334 ---~r-----------'77 Elt•t• Wan. fully "11 Rik C.Uca Lftbck, Ltd. Jotded, lo ml, 6fi0.0840,
Ed.Lt\&11.Y loaded, lo ml'•· TTNlllMevee II wknda.
75l·T.Jl0 • --------"73 Apollo, 2dr, 11nt cond. "12ToyotaCon>Ua wa1on Arr. PS/PB. AM radio.
1800. •· Or1f owner 11395. C.U
Ph 538-0130 alU pm, $51'1275
#
. --
NABERS CAOCl.1..AL AlJlU CENTER . .. .. ~' . "' ... . . . . .. , .... ~
9
Newlywed mult sell "72 1980 Ford Convertible, Pinto. clea.o, nan.a well. amuner. 1 owner. 44.000 SJ.OllO 644-291.M.-
, • ocil mi's. Any reallaUc --·------7$ El Dorado. Fully atrercomidered,loutectiawaaoo&6l:l,lua1aae ~d. $6000. Call lDN.B. 714/6'1S-.3ZIZ ratll, rlean. Sl.'50.
--------is LTD. 4 dr. P/W. PIS. F\'akMMal a..1•t 'tJO P IB. air. tood cond. ·14 Ruubout. suoo NABERS ••••••••••••••••••••••• MUl\sell.SZ99i$.1147_... 657·1909 aft l :IO PM. or
1982 CHEV Impala aakforBart. 8C7.a&490t....,..3 ~ . Sedan. Im mac • cfaaslc ---------1..:::..:.::..:::.;:.;:.;,..:;.;.;..::.:.;:;:.._ __
cood.ition. 42.000 ori1ln1l Tl LTD U. Brouahm. 4dr. '74 Pinto wp.. to ml. ad
miles.•· 673·3858 Champagne clr. loaded coad.auU>SllDO.
all elec xtrea. lUI ml. 961· TOOIS Z600 H.vbor BM! Cost~ Mesa. S4(>Cll00 'al Malibu Wagon. wtute. nmagood.~.
492·2828
78 VW Diesel Rabbrt Includes
metallic paint, heavy duty rachalor.
tinted glass. leatherette. AM/FM
stereo cassette. coco mats.
polyglycoat and olher exlras.
USS:CAAS. ..
"76YW ... r ~ • _.i . .., ""CDO""'IClll..,IOl_.,_IO
/Wo/Jl.t'11 -"--aa.aaa --IOllflOll
$AVE
'76YWae11Mt
' Ooor • -.., lttaa7 J lo ~,,_
• .............. 00
~. '2995
'74 C-4
4 tD""· "" oondillo.i,.,t , AW"'". ti-. IOw -a..,."""'-.. on -l.JllL>I,, oua NICI '2799·
13731 Harbor Blvd.
Garden Grove -834-41
Sa l•• Ope n
7 Daya A Week
-, . -
'71 Plnlo. &lnt cond.
Bestolfer
Xlnt cond.. Orii owner.
~-1
"T1 Granada Gbla. 2 dr. Mom.lqam.58t'S
A/C. AM/FM. Vinyl lop. rt. A "'0 map w /MN/ tires. xlnt -r-au
cond. 552·4242 wkdya ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~1917 eveolnp Mil '70 RoedrUDner .
.,,.., • f&a on bck aoc>
631.Q281 Gd eoed
NABERS CADILLAC
AUTO CENTER
"• •••t jll I I. 1(111• \6 • -., ... .,...,.
THEODORE
ROBINS
FORD
1060 HARBQq 8lll'O
COSTA MESA b4'2 · 0010
LEASE
TERMS
s121 23 per month 38
months. cap reduction
•ncludeo; seeu11ry
deposit, tax & license
a!'d f ttsl paymA nt
S966.23. 36 month open
end lease Aes1aual
S3052 88 Cap cosr
s s 106 Total periodic
po1yrrients S•36C 28
Ser. #89217
HARD TO
FIND BUGS .
·11 s ... oof. • cs.. #41041
2·76'sTocr.o..~
75 Cow•et tlblt, •IS.... # 14201
2·"75-11 To c-.. "'-
2·'74 .. To C-...
172 '-J 122tGAJJ
. . .._.
-
I ' r~ •• -•
FABULOUS .
YEAR-END VALUES ON
ALL BRAND NEW 1978 MODEL
CHRYSLER$ AN6 PL YMOUTHS ..•
DON'T MISS •r
ON GIANT YEAR-END SAVINGS .
llOWI
FOR FLEET
SALE OR LEASE
INFORMATION,
CALL BR y AN YEAR-END
CLOSEOUT
ON ALL FINE
HESKETH.
546-1934
EW 1978 CHRYSLER LE BARON
BDRAOORNC DO~PE Wl1H FACTORY AIR CONDmot;'~':!_
2 I t ml..,on -•'""no,"°"" 8 cyt engine torquefhte autorn11t c rans er door loeka sunroof. AM/FM stereo
""'"-;.........seat woth tum •eot. OOW to .. tic .;_, con1'ol, alumooum
w*3 tT80k tape, tilt Wheel. H.D. ~spens;:; !rndow defroster, cornering fights & =~:::c::~'.(~~~:~rrlDlcSCOUNIED List Price-$9786.05
Your Price-$8186 05 ~ 51600
iiiiiiiiili~ USED CARS~--
'10 CHEVROLET ••&ON '76 DODGE S~WAGON va. au1-.,., '"'"""•soon, oo..., va. automa1..,, ""-.... ,.no.
steenng.-. """'""· "" cono.. Powe' b'>kes ••• heate, radio. I~ 'lfk. heater & W/Sfrv (001641) tires. C6608L.T).
'13 FORD ""'°••&ON
s4495
4 cyl. engine. automatic
transmission. luggage rack. air
cond1hon1ng. radio and heater (513JEP) Automatic transmission. oower
brakes. air 00f'ld1tion1ng, root rack,.
radio & heater (423HTK)
s1495
'10 CHRYSLER
NEWPotT SEDAN
s1295
vs. automat1:: trans .. power
steering. i>ower brakes. air COnd ..
v1ny1 top, radio & heater. (230BIMJ.
'13 FORD
llDCOUPE
VS. automa11c transm1ss1on. t111
wheet. Power steering. Power
brakes. v1ny1 top. air conct . ract10.
heater & WlsJw tlfes. (275HUL) s1195
'11 CHRYSLER
COU<>U COUPE
VB. automatic trans.. heater.
POwer steenng & brakes. w/stw
tires. air conci . POwer windows.
leather 1nter10r. split POwer seat.
AM/FM radio & v1nyt top (63SSCNJ
s5395
'70 CADILLAC
COUPE
$1695
'78 CHRYSLER IL° IAION WAGON
V8. auromar1c trans. SPiii Pwr
sear. pWr winctows. Pwr sreering,
Pwr brakes. AMI FM srereo
w' tape. cruise control air
cond1llon1ng. wlstw trres & heater. (461TXR)
$7695
'73 MAZDA
WAGON
.......__ Automatic transmission. Power va ........ le ·-........ --....... a, COOdotoomng, , .. , 'acl< steering, POwer brakes. air cond.. radio & heater (038JSF). radio. heater & wtslw tires. (205450).
s1095
ATLAS
RYSLER/PLYM~
CH SERVICE HOUIS:
MONDAY 1HRU FRIDA y
7:00 A.M. TO 5:30 P;M.; SA TURD A y 1:00 A.M.
TO 5:00 P.M.
·' '!
,
Huntington Beaeh
Foantal• Valley
VOL 71, NO. 2•2, 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNtA WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 30, 1978
Afte r• .. •
N.'Y. Steeb
,,
TE N CENTS r
Fl~od Job Hike Blamed on Tern
.
87 llAT1ft' Ct.A v Of ...........
t a1hl>' pain of l t tem. tiny
blfd .. bo re loo.a the Santa
Ana Riv r \n lhmtinctoo B acb.
wue bla m d Tuesday ror
doublina tho COit ol wllat had
been 1 Sl 5 million flood~
prOJttl .
Or a na ounty IO\ltrnmenl
ort1chtl ruu ll ed "ext reme
res t r achon " by t ale and
rederal ugenc:a prolecu na tbe
tndan1•r•d btrd a for
dJ ~ouraJiAI fOlttractora rrun
lhe PTO.ied and eteal1tln1 COili.
The birds already have flown
lb for the wln1er ud wettn't
~mmmUna.
But state flab and same
btoloaista satd they doubted
th ir restrictioda would cause a
drastic hike in proJ ct coeu.
ayhaa the problem may ~t
w1th contractor tabor cosu aod
Olher e1q1enses.
"I am 1urpri.sed the problem
ha com• up," said Paul Kelly.
1 wildlife btolo~lst with the
California Department of Fi.sh
and Ga me
Kelly said he had met with
county nood control engineers
aand asked that construction not
begin until September and be
completed before the birds
return to nest in the spring.
"We had arrived at conditions
t h at bot h f e Jt would be
workable," he said. "I would
question whether the increased
cost is due to the shortened work
period or increased labor costs
or just high bids." George Osborne. director of
the co unty Environmental
Management Agency. sa1d in a
re port to s upervisors county
e ngineer s ha d fig ured the
sbortened work period would
add about $500,000 to the cost of
the project.
• "'w~ • • TWIN-ENGINE LAS VEGAS AIRLINES PIPER NAVAJO PLUNGED TO GROUND SHORTLY AFTER TAKEOFF AT LAS VEGAS . All 10 Passengers, En Route to Orange County Airport, Perished In Crash
.
t
f Vegas Plane Crtish Kil/,S 10
7 l A twin enll in<' Las Vegas
Airline~ plant• hound for Orange
County Airport plun~ed to the
• ground shortly afte r laking off
rrom the North Las Vegas Air
Term inal today, killing a ll 10
persons aboard. authorities s ai d.
The 1denllt1es of the victims
were not available this morning,
> but a spokesman for the airline l said none or the passengers were
from Cahfornw or Nevada f They "'ere apparently part of
• a to ur en rout<· to the Los
; T rio Facing
H untington
Rob b e r y Rap
H u ntington Rl•ac h police
· arresled a Long Beach couple
and their ma le friend after a
wild a uto cha~e from the scene
of a n alleged armed robbery at
a drive-in photo store Tuesday
afternoon
P o lice Dl'lec t 1ve 0 D .
Lockhart said he observed the
alleged holdup at the Photo West
store . 5934 Wa rner Ave. at 4:55
pm
Lockhart. who h&d noticed the
\\Om a n ;rnd t wo m<.'n acting
s usp1 c1ou.!.I) while passing by,
purs ued tht• tno·s auto into a
nearby rl:'s1denl 1<1 1 arelJ where
thl• :-.uspecl vehicle Jumped a
curb and rapped out a small tree.
Angeles area after a brief stop
i n Las Veg as. T he a i rline
spokesman would not say where
the victims were from.
The Piper Navajo crashed
about 7:50 a.m .• just moments
after it left the general a viation
t e rminal northe ast of Las
Ve~as.
T he plane carried nine
passengers and a pilot. There
were no survivors.
Airline s p o kesman Do n
Donahue said the airline has no
scheduled flights but m es on an
on·call charter basis between
Las Vegas and other Nevada
and California points, including
Ora nli(e County.
"The pilot took off on schedule
this morning. but he never g..:>t
outs ide the airport boundary.
We can't tell what ha ppened,"
Donahue said
R ic hard J a meson . a Las
Vegas Contractor and private
u1lot. was landing al the a irport
and said he saw the plane go
down.
"Th e_ t a ke-off s ee m e d
normal ... J ameson said ... It was
climbing, but it shook violently
and suddenly patch~ lo the right
and e rashed."
There were no skid marks. in-
dicating the plane dropped
straight down .
T he back of the cr aft was
broken, but the plan was reJ .
atively intact. It did not catch
fire. authorities said.
. -DAllyl'i ... SWtt"MIM
.Joi ned by a pu l rol car,
Lockhart finally stopped the
n eeing uuto near the corner of
Sum merclo\ltt Lane an<t-eamith!-
JUVENILE HALL COUNSELORS ATTACK SUPERVISORY POLICIES
They Are (from left), Alfred Skiles, Robert Ausmus, the Rev. Cllf Marquis
0 rive . No •nJuries were J ii H 11 reported
Dennis Brune, 29, his wife . uven e a Ca r r ie. 27, a nd Gregor y
Sch.Qegcl,,Z?. a ll or Long Beach~ "\l
en
were booked .. on <'H'aT)t~ l'Ff • .. ·"7WT ...... ,,...... • , -:~~:,~ robbery and r esis ting rmr Alleg~"'B'/18~ ·Paort-Saperviaio ,
FOR. RENT SI GN
GOES I N HVRRY
"My expectations were far ex•
ceeded by the response to my
ad. The very first people who
called rented the condo, and
they have treated 1t as if it were
theirs."
That 's the advertising success
story of the woman who placed
this ad in the Daily Pilot .
tm moc 2 Bdrm Condo
Blllnll. WtO, patm. Pool
$3401m o xxx xx xx
If you have an apartment,
condominium or home to rent,
call 642 5678 A friendly Daily
P ilol ad viser will help you
word your ad for greatest im-
pact
Our market 1a a great place
to put Just a few wor<b Lo use,
m a king the Daily Pilot your
market
• .,
By GARY GllANVILLE • c. Of• Deify ~ St.lff Robert' Aus·mus atttt· A)fred
Skiles are counselors at Orange
County J uvenile Hall who don't
hke the way the hall is being
run..
Tuesday, Ausmus and Skiles
joined forces with a chaplain at
1uvenile ha ll to m a ke their
sentiments public-.
At a press conference in the
home of The Re v. Clif Marqujs
in Orange, the two 3l·year-old
counselors unleashed a scathJng
attack on the ball and those who
operate it.
Cornerstone of the assault was
a 163·page term paper Ausmus
an d Skiles completed last
s pring, a term paper they said
earne d t h e n a n A in an
undergraduate class at the
University of Redlands.
Within minutes ot their p~s
conference, the term paper had
become a re port and county
orti~lals wer e b ein 1 asked
quesllons a bout a study they
have never ~n.
• I
That study concludes lh1t
there Is $1 million worth of fat in
juve nile hall's 8J\J)ual budget.
(a t t bie tty tn the form oJ
supervisotial personnel who do
little or nothing to earn their
pay.
A!t bad, Awimua and Skiles
asserted, policies at the 310·bed
juvenile facility have resulted in
a b r eakd o wn o f in m a t e
discipline.
And part of that breakdown is
a n inc r easin g d a n ger o f
violence, inmate-to·inmate and
lnm ate·lO·counselor. the two
JCounselors said.
They also charged that the
failure to enforce discipline has
r es ulte d in Juve ni le Hall
b ecoming "little more than
O r a n ge County 's second
Disneyland."
F'urthermore. Aus mus and
Skiles insist ed. less serious
offenders are housed w\tb heavy
offenders at the hall.
As a result, according to the
term paper, the hall tends to be
a breedinl 1 round for crime, a
crime !lchool with street·wise
toughs acting as school masters.
The two counselors cbaraed
that administralOrs at JuveAile..
Hall are isolated from their
c harges and have placed an
unneeded layer of supervtsors
between themselves and reality
To all or that. county omctaJs
had little to say. if for no other
reason than few of them have
seen the report or heard the
charges.
"I'm a liUle perturbed by the
fact that no one in a position to
correct any situation that might
exist was first given a chance to
respond," Supervisor T homas
Riley said.
"They <Ausmus, Skiles and
Ma rquis> appear not to have
permitted those of us vitally
concerned with such problems to
do anything about them ," Riley
added.
Acting Chief Probation Officer
Nancy Nelson was also at a loss
to answer the alleaallona the trio
leveled at the ha JI and its
operation
<See YOUTH, Pace AU
Yet only one bid was received.
and rather than the $1.S million
cos t expected the price bad
jumped to s:u million.
"Assuming the extra cost to
defer construction until after the
least tem nesting season ls $2
milJion." the report said. "the
extra cost is 112.500 per least
tern based on 80 pair."
Supervisors Tuesday rejected
the $3. l million bid and asked
county officials to ne1ottate
further with fi s h and game
experts. They aleo asked CO\Ulty
Counsel Adrian Kuyper to
e xplore possible ''l egal
remedies."
The fiood control project calls
for widening 3.000 feet of
channel north of Pacific Coast
Haghwa y a s an "interim"
measure to protect the area
until a Iona-delayed federal
flood project Is carried out.
But WJao Aee•ed Bi•"!
FBI Clearance
Pleases Gates 1
Orange County Sheriff Brad
Gates said Tuesday that he
never doubted that an FBI probe
into his affairs would clear him
or any alleged wronl{doing .
In a statement issued a few
hours earlier. U.S. Attorney
David Hind e n s aid th e
fi ve-month Gates investigation
was at an e nd and t hat no
e vidence of wrongdoing had
been uncovered.
As Gates basked in the clean
bill of health given him by the
FB l . he said he still does not
kno w who b is ano nymo us
accusers are or what he was
accused of doing.
He did know. however. t hat he
h ad been gone over with a
fi ne -t ooth c omb a nd b een
subject to the same scrutiny
, ''no rmally don e only for a
n ominee for U.S. Attorne y
General or FBI director."
Gates did not fault the FBI for
spending five months poring
o ver bis affairs. "Wben a
complaint is made against a
p ublic official. il should and
must be investigated." Gales
said as be refused to rault the
FBI ror delving into his personal
and officiaJ conduct.
He noted that the probe had
been deep and thorough.
"They have reviewed every
aspect of my personal rinances
s ince I was 18 year s old,
including every check written by
me s ince 1970 and my personal
income tax returns from 1974
on.'' Gates said.
·'They've talked to e veryone
who has been a friend or mine
for 20 years or Jess and they
certainly have had unlimited
ability to examine anything they
Jol>s Freeze
In Huntington
Schoo& Emls
Trustees of the Huntington
Beach City I elementary 1 School
District ended a hiring freeze
Tuesday and reinstated more
than 100 non·teaching employees
for the coming school year.
Those who we re hired back at
a s pecial 7 a.m. meeting include
clerks. teaching aides, library
aides and custodians .
About 200 of the district's
non ·t eaching e mployees
received layoff notices in July
becaus e or the financ i a l
unc e rtaintie s po sed by
Proposition 13.
A hirlng freeze a lso was
imposed.
District Personnel Director
. ~}'.Hi~t.-abol.\f,. so noon·time supervisors a~ ~i(~
peeled to be rehired at a future
da te .
He said tha t with future
rehirings. · a~l 80 percw.,QL. o
those previously laid oft will be
reinstated.
Most or those who have been
Te ins tate d a r e p a rt·lime
wo rkers buC some work full
time.
Their positions already are
accounted for in a proposed S12.6
mlllion budget that will come up
for adoption next Tuesday night.
The district received about
$3. 7 million In slate surplus
funds but orlgina l budge t
projections still wer e cut by
more than $900,000.
Those rehired Tuesday Include
t1 clerks, 9 library aides, 19
special education aides, 10 Title
I aides, 45 Early Childhood
Education aides. one custodian
and 12 night sweepers.
Supt. S.A. Moffett said the
special meeting was caned ror
th e reblrlngs becau se tht-
se r v lc:es o f so m e o f the
employees are needed before the
openlna of school Sept. u .
wanted to."
The 39.year-old sheriff blamed
the inves tigation and its
resultant publicity on his failure
to win re-election in tbe June &
primary election.
While Gates finished on top
of a six·candidate fie ld with
roughtly 41 percent of the vote,
he was forced into a November
gene r al election runoff with
Lauren Rusk.
·'It has appeared to me from
th e b egi nni n g that this
investigation was politically
motivated." Gates said as he
assessed the damage done his
prima ry election campaign .
Hard Times
Hit Schools,
Stop Gifts
8 1 ROBEllT BA.BKER Ol • IMllT ...... ,....
Ha rd times apparently are
settling in on the Huntingtoo
Beach City felementaryt School
District.
For the first time in yean. it
appears that teachers and at.her
e mpl oyt'e s ce l e brati n g
landmark anniversaries in the
district will be doing so without
expensive mementos.
Trustees have been giving all
e mployees me mentos "as a
token of their apprec iation"
when they celebrate Stb, tOth,
15th. 20th and 25th annive rsaries
of service to the district.
T~ mementos in the case of a
wo man e mployee who has
logged 25 years in the district is
an item cost.mg $185.34. It is a
lO·kara t gold bracelet with a
sm all diamond.
A male employee putting in
the same amount of time would
be in line lo get a tie tack that
costs $127.10 lt. too, would have
a small diamond.
But after several discussions
concern i n g the wi~dom of
continuing the gifts . trustees put
a tern porary stop to purchases.
A final decision is slated Sept. 5.
B oard P re1'i d e nt Da\le
Sonksen termed the prices
ridiculous.
"Have you ever heard of a
5127 .10 lie tack," he marveled.
<See GIFTS, P age i\2)
f.':!':r.in • We~Ul~~~r. ~ , .. ,.~"%1".
Night and morning low
cloudiness with mos tly
a.wutl' afternoon Thurs-
day. but only parttafCreir.
mg at b ea ches. Lows
to n ight in 60s . Hig h s
Thu rsda y ne ar 70 at
beaehes lO mid to upper
70s Inland.
I NSIDE TODA~
A Palo Alto high school
football coach fotmd being a
homt malon' and motM'r wcia
tougher than fourth down and
30 11ara to go. ~ ft"'1/. Bl.
&I DAtL Y PILOT Hf W9dil !••·MVM•ftll
Studeat '.*dvanees'
MfNNEAPOl~IS tAP> -Kl~
Jason Sims . CIYh hi ~nd day of ¥Cll001 Wll
no m1atcb for tht• fu-at
1nd lomttlm• IM m1ke1 u ·s· batkward.
the wuy 1 &-year.old doo . How ha lasted all
day In third arade la beyond me."
Jason rodtt orr on • school b\.m Monda1.
but didn't rt-turn al noon. Ills mottM'r called
Rarton Scllool •md th~ >rlnc1pal chttked with
thl' klndcll& rtl'n l ae r. only to find that
Ja~on never arn' ~.
~ TH TR180.0aAO£ TBACHI& dis·
covered th. ml toke "horUy betore the prtn·
clpal found the boy • he rnll&ed he was not
ill malure or I arned 1u1 the other childffn
1t'ld ask~ him wh1&t 1chool hti wu In l11t
year li\SON, WHO IS TA.LL roa •I•·
had cont tl"dl) pc-nt lbt dtt)' In • third· "Nunery school." JHon replied.
arade l'l m
··1 ui.kl'<l htm ~1\at he did Wlth ~ b11
._Id!> i..11 1.hty. • hii. mnttwr. lAttlta. -.aid Tut>&
d y · H~ ~&Jd bf had to read about autumn
1tnd druw ii p•cturc II dofw.n 't read much.
Mrt. SJnu Hid Juon wun't much lm·
preaacd wllb klnderaarten T~ay "14 was upis l becuuse h" couldn't stay
for lu.och Ukc be d d Monday and be hlld t.o JiO
home at noon." sho Wtld.
p,....p ... AJ
YOUTH •••
MISS NtlM)n hod not $ffn the
rt>porl or heard tht< ehar1t~ until
they "'ere ~~ttled lo her by
Ill'"' i-mt.tn
"Wt"n.· h•n 1ng a meeting
llldd} to tr} to giun ~omc 1~1ght
into "'hat .111 th1~ 1s Mboul.'' Mi~
Nt•b on bctad today
She pomh-d out thlill pohci~ m
.IU\.Cntlt.' Hall follo w legal
mandatt.~ and that those in her
department "will alwa.ys listen
to constructive criticism and ~uggest1ons for improvement "
McJnwh1fc. Ausmus, Skiles
crnd M arciu1s said they have
<.1ppointmems to meet wltb the
county Grand Jury's justice
committee Tul'sday.
Simultan('()usly, Riley said he
1s planning t o m e et with
Juvenile Court Presiding Judge
Wtlliam Murray and Supervisor
Philip Anthony later this week.
Riley said he so far does not
have a measure to weigh the
vahd1ty of the trio's allegations
and 1s likely to favor having an
inde'pendent committee study
the m
Aus mus was ~uspended from
has Slti,000 a year counselor's Job
F'rid ay after allegations or
misconduct were lodged againbl
him
lie said he docs not know what
he· I!> chargt.'<.l with and has not
bt·en told why he was Sul.pended
"'1th pa)'
Rut Ma ss Nc•lson said the
allegatmru. have been sent to the
district attorney for
tnve~tigation
Both Aus mus and Skiles
predicted Tuesday night that
their up-front criticism or the
hall will eventually cost them
their JObs, a job Ausmus has
held for eight years and Skiles
for "ix years.
Both men insa!>led their work
rl'cords at the hall arc
unble mished
They ali.o s:ud it was cin
cissault on a counselor cit the h11ll
last Saturday that touched off
lhl'lr public explosion.
Mis:. Nelson said the assault
was reported, charges filed
against the juveniles involved
and that three or them have
been sent from the hall to the
i-.tH'C 1 al j uvenile section an
Orange County Jail.
··w e acted as promptly and
responsibly as possible," Miss
Nelson s aid as she began her
own inquiry into the charges
aired by two counselors and a
priest who <.icts as a volunte<:r
chaplain al Juvenile Hall.
Carters End
Western Trip
GRAND TETON NATIONAL
PARK, Wyo <AP> -President
Carter wrapped up his Western
vacation todciy and prepared to
return lo Washington for some
of the biggest pollhcal battles of his presidency.
No. t on the list is a last·dllch
ri"ht against formidable Senate
opposition to his natural gas
pricing bill a major portion of
Carter's eneFjff-plan which bas
heen stalled in Congress for 16
months
Supervisors
~pt U.S.
Beach Fund
Agrt:ements for ¥ $3.8 million
federal program to replace
eroded beach sand from Sunset
Beach to Newport Harbor were
approved unanimously Tuesday
by Orange County supervisors.
The program calls for
pumping 1.3 million cubic yards
or s and onto eroded beach areas
this fall and winter as well as
monit.oring erosion problems, a
report to supervisors said.
The U.S Army Corps or
Engineers will handle the work
and pay $2.6 million of the
program's cost.
The state Department or
Parks and Recreation will pay
another $950,400, while the
county will spend $174,140,
Newport Beach Sl02,960.
Huntington Beach $23,760 and
the Surfside Colony Storm Water
Protection District SlS,840.
County officials s aid recent
declines in the sandy beach in
the Surfside·Sunset Beach area
prompted the county's request
for the federal program.
The sand replenishment will
begin 1n October and be
completed by early next
summer, officials said.
Teachers Strike
NEW ORLEANS <AP) -With
class~s due to open for 90,000
public school students, New
Orleans teachers voted to strike
today after union leaders called
a proposal for a 4 percent salary
increase an insult. About 3.000
members of the United Teachers
of New Orleans gathered for the
vote instead of going to first day
of classes.
l',...P.,,eAl
GIFfS ••.
.. I would support memtnt06 in
appreclaUon of the employeet.'
11ervlce. but QOl at this price
tag," he said
rt would cos t di s trict
lnxparers $3,319.SO if trustees
s hou d continue In their
genero1nty.
Jewelry includes emeralds
and rubies. Diamonds go to
2S·year workers.
Here is a list of what the
district would have to purchase
for women employees if the
practice continues:
-26 5-year bracelets al $27.TI
each.
-11 10-year bracelets al $27.71
each.
-14 15-year bracelets at S64.29
each.
-1 20-year bracelet at $99.87.
-2 25-year bracelets at $185.43
each.
Price range for men's gifts
would be:
-13 5-year tie tacks al $18.36
each.
-4 lS·year tie tacks at $55.94
each.
-2 20-year lie tacks. $91.52
each.
-1 25-year tie tack. $127 10.
Trustees Brian Garland and
Roy How previously agreed to
go along with the girt-giving 1f
the price wasn't too high.
Paula Huls e and Norma
Vander Molen JOint'd Sonksen in
favor of breaking with the
tradition.
Mrs Vander Molden s aid that
s he was appa ll ed that the
dis trict would even consider
such an expenditure in light or
Proposallon 13 cutbacks.
Sonksen said that h<' is in
favor of continuing gifts if costs
don't exceed $1 ,000.
Other trustees said that some
employees have e xpressed
embarrassment over the whole
thing and aren't in favor of it.
'Horror' Acted
Humington V~ Distu1ter
By ARTIIUR R. VINSEL Of,,. Delly ....... 1\lff
You might feel sorry for her.
the child lying in the roadway
with fake blood trickling down
the gutter. amid scattered,
shattered wreckage of eight
vehicles. radioactive materials
and leaking gasoline.
A s lip or paper was pinned to
her blouse with a blunt ballpoint
pen message: DOA -Dead On
Arrival.
"Stephanie Bisset." she said,
opening one eye impishly when
asked her name as a participant
in Tuesday's disaster drill
engineered by Huntington Beach
E m ergency Service ~
Coordinat.or George Thyden.
A total of 17 agencies that deal
with emergencies participated
in the exercise which will be
critiqued by trained observers in
mid-September.
Assistant Emergency Services
Coordinator Marcia Fleet said
coordination appeared to be
esd 's main problem. .. a ,
Avenue from the top of Edwards
Street hill was only talcum
powder.
Teen-agers recruited from
Huntington Beach and Fountain
Valley lay sprawled amid the
debris at the top or the hill.
"It's not going good ... They
lost control of the radioactive
nea too quickly.'' Th yd en
snapped as he darted about.
overseeing the civil defense
operation.
The drill was conducted under
au1pices or the west county'll
Nel Six mutual aid system
involving Huntington Beach.
Fountain Valley, Westminster.
Seal Beach, Orange County Fire
Department and the State
Division of Forestry firefighters.
Police and other agencies
Crom cities and counties were
included.
Five hospitals were involved
and contributed $60 each for
makeup and props to simulate
wound~.
we probably would have had
three times as many people Seal Beach there." she said.
The grisly scen~rj~ould be a
Murderer
~oGet
• Death?
An Orange County Superiol'
Cott,rt jury said Tuesday that
convicted mur~rer Maurice
Thompson shou.ld die in San
Quentln's aa.s chamber.
Tbompeon &bowed no emotion
ais the same Jury tbal fouod him
guilty or tfle Nov. 14. 1977,
murder or Michael Whalen in La
Habra Haid he should be put to
death.
The rive·man •. seven·woman
Jury could have decided that the
33·)'e8r·old convicted killer
should be sent to prison ror the
rest or hls ure without possibllily
of parole.
Instead, after about five hours
deliberation. the Jury decided
that the ala,yloa or Whalen and
the serious woundlne or June
.F'elice lul fall warranted the ul·
tim ate penalty.
The man and woman were
gunned down In Whalen's home
during an early morning rob-
bery attempt.
Mrs. Felice later identified
Thompson u the assailant.
Deputy Public Defender Ron
Butler said he will move t.o have
Thompson j?iven a new trial.
The death penalty assigned by
the jury came as a recommen·
dation lb the judge and Is not
binding on him when he sen-
tences Thompson. That pro·
nouncement is expected to be
made Thursday unless an appeal
by Buller for added lime is
granted.
'Neurosis'
Told in Trial
BOWLING GREEN. Ky. <AP)
-Maria Elaine Pitchford was
s uffering from hysterical
neurosis when she aborted her
20 to 24-week·old fetus with a
knitting needle, a psychiatrist
has testified.
T h e s lender, red -haired
fo rmer psychology major.
oelieved lo be lhe first woman to
stand trial on charges of
performing a self-Induced abor-
tion, was expected to take the
stand in her own defense today.
Miss Pitchford. 22. is charged
with performini an Uletal abor·
lion on herself with a knitting
needle. Her mother also was ex-
pected to tesury.
." ......... MASKED CIVILIAN YOUTHS OPPOSE SOMOZA REGIME
Uberatlon Sign Se ya. 'No Prttonera by Chrt1tma1 •
Tiro Planes Bomb
Nicamguan City
MANAGUA. Nicaragua IAPl
-Air force planes bombed
Nicaragua's third largest city
and civilians battled President
Anastasio Somoza's soldiers in
other towns as a general strike
to drive the Somoza dynasty
from power gained new support.
Two planes bombed
Malggalpa, 100 miles north of
Managua. for two hours
Tuesday. killing al least four
people and wounding many
others . a Red Cross official
there said . T he military
garrison in the city of 40,000
people had bei?n under siege for
three days with the civilian
population in virtual control or
the streets.
The Red Cross source said it
was impossible to determine the
number of casualties because
many victims were taken home
by friends and relatives who
feared the national guard.
Nicaragua's 7,500-man army,
would raid the hospitals.
He said 80 soldiers had been
rushed in as reinforcements. the
town had been blacked out bl a
power rallure, the Red Cr6Ss
appealed lo Managua for
desperately needed blOod and
plasma, and the people appealed
lo the archbishop of Managua,
Miguel Obando y Bravo, to
Intercede with the government
for them. The archbishop was
the chief mediator bet wttn the
government and the leftist
guerrillas who seized the
NationaJ PaJace last week.
In Managua, a bomb killed
five nation a I guardsmen
patrolling in a jeep. a doctor in
the military hospital reported.
Frequent street balUes were
reported in Leon. a city of 50.000
res idents. and a Red Cross
source there said the general
strike had paralyzt..>d business.
Es teli, 90 miles north of
Managua. was tense. a Red
Cross official there said. but the
national guard was reported
occupying the heart of the c1ly
and keeping it under control.
Meanwhile, the country's most
powerful business organization.
the Nicaraguan Development
Institute, declared its support •
for the anti-Somoza strike that
began Friday and urged its 700
m e mbers to join in the
"political-labor" protest.
SALE ENDS
TIHS WEEKEND
To ~ave the falterin" natural
ga::. t·ompromise. Carter plans
intensive lobbying with political ~~~-,>.conn-.b.tlr-bidUSlitll:U~CiJJ of
naturnl ~a~ and other groups -hon:Qr fWfY if r~~ Il Ii • -Si cars scatteredflat>out;;;;;;-r;tn;--:JJ?~JOOJlleeee·~HMh""::~~ ... ::::.o:.~-~,,~. b~~'""'Jj
ORANGE COAST ""
AILY rttOT
a multiple 'collision at the
long-treacherous intersection of
Edwards Street and Garfield
Avenue in »1est HuaU01ton
Beach. a spot where many
drivers come to grief.
-An Orange County Translt
District &us loaded wllh
youngsters.
-Leaking gasoline from a
tanker truck caught up in the
mass crash at the L·sbaped
deadend intersection.
-Radioactive m aterial
spllled from a transport truck.
-Sixty casualties of the mass
pileup, some hon'lbly multllated
althou1h only by makeup and
phony props slmulatJna wounda.
The radioactive dUAt scattered
down the paved slo.,. of Garfield
Strike Attacked
LIMA, Ptru <AP) -Peru's
rulln11 mllltary regime dtcla,.ed
a state of emar1ency and
suspended con stltullooal
11uar1nteea ln flve or tht
country'• 23 1tatea Tu•day in
81\ apparent movt to tnd a
crippling strike by the nation's
45.000 mlne?"I
Dedication
Cltlzena or Seaf Beach are
Invited to visit the city's new
Pollce Department. In happier
circumstances than some do, on
Saturday, Sept. 9, when formal
dedleauon ceremonies occur.
Mayor Frank J . Laszlo. City
Manager Dennis Courtemarche
and Police Chief Edward L.
Clbbarelll will preside al the
noon rites at 911 Seal Beach
Blvd .. directly across from the
U.S. Naval Weapons Station
The modern, 1ow·pron1e
factlity that replaces the
outdated but quaint and
towering tile -roofed
Sponllh·st)'le structure
downtown waa occupied about
two montbs ago.
Site 1electlon for the
tn1tallatlon deal1ned by
Robinson-Thompson Assoct1tes'
arcbltecta was partly baaed on
ltl relatively central location
wlthln the city. •
Tht older downtown
headquartel'fi was bulll wben the
city llmit.e. lar1•1.Y tncl01ed only
the Old Town region near thti
M•ch nnci olc-r
Don 't wait any longer.
Substantial savings now
during the final days of our
summer sale.
,.
TORAANCI!
236-49 Hewthornt Blvd.
(213) 371-1279
COSTAMl!SA
1S95 Newport Btvd.
f1W 642·2050
LAGUNA llACH .
3'S Nor1h CO.st Hwy.
(71') •""5J 1
7
DAILY PILOT
175 For Eaela CaUlonaiaa FIBl!lfl .. .
$1 Billion Tax Cut Vote Today
the 11me blU on a bi·partlaan 73-0 vote. BACJlA.ll!N'TO IAP> -'A $1 bllllon st•te in· ~ome tu cul wu headed today for a final A1-
1tm bly \otC that would aend It to Gov. Edmund
Brown Jr ror hla proml ~ atinetw-49.
The measure -spon&<>red by Brown and Democratic lcader!'I of the Legislature -l:s a com-
bJ nation or earlier tax cut proposals authored by
Republicans.
ProposlUon lO's passaie 5Wept throu1h tbe
L••l•lature. •
99217,-Errer
Suspect Says
He'll Return
LOS ANGELES <AP> -When S2-year·old ac-
countant Arne Ristol discovered that $927,000 had
been erroneously·transferred to his bank account,
be took off. He now wants to return and "dear his
name," according to a lawyer friend.
The Los Angeles Times on Tuesday quoted
~ Santa Ana attorney Daryl D. Hansen as saying
that Ristol ''has expressed a desire to return and
clear his name, but he wants to do it under
circumstances that are fair "
Hansen would not reveal the W~t Covina
bookkeeper's whereabouts. saying Risto! wanted
assurances or a bail reduction from the district al·
torney. "He doesn't want to sit in the can for
$100.000 bail because 1 don't think he can post it."
Hansen added.
Edlleatleaol F-dlag Fla11ed
SANTA MONICA cAPl -Although billions of
federal dollars have been spent lo improve educa·
tion, return on the investment has been low
m ainly because teachers and local school officials
were never taught how to improve on their own, a
Rand Corp. study says.
The four-year study commissioned by the U.S.
Department of Health, Education and Welfare ex-
a mined 293 federally funded projects, including
some to eliminate illiteracy and others to improve
vocational and bilingual --------
education. ( J The net return to the .'-,TATE rederal investment, the researchers said, "was ..__ ______ _.J
the adoption of many in-
oovatians, lhe s uccessful implementation or few
and the long-run continuation of still fewer."
3 Sftat~ fn Nuke Prot••t
SAN LUIS OBISPO I A Pl -Three of 10 defen-
d ants facing trespassinJ! charges in connection
with a Oiablo Canyon anti-nuclear power dem-
onstration have been sentenced to six months in
Jail after pleading no contest.
Municipal Court Judge Harold Johnson said
Tuesday he imposed the maximum sentence for
lhe misdemeanor because they had refused to
abide by all laws during a 24 month probation
period.
The three defendants. Peter Klotz-Chamberlin
and Chnsty Lanzi. both of Santa Crui. and Samuel
R. Tyson of Waterford, also were fined $500 each.
Battle Seen in Welfare Bike
SACRAMENTO 'AP> -The stage is set for a
major battle in the Legislature's closing days over
whether cost-Of-living grant increases should be
reinstated for nearly 2.2 milhon wel fare recipients
The Assembly Revenue and Taxation Commit-
tee voted to do that Tuesday. but refused to ex-
empt county hospital nurses from the state wage
freeze.
The battle as certain to focus on whether
welfare recipients can get grant mcreases while
government employees' wages arc frozen.
~ S~n Sarrneder•
MARTINEZ (AP> One of three gunmen who
allegedly robbed 13 would-be gamblers of $2,000 in
a Reno-bound bus Saturday night has surrendered
toJ.he Contra Costa County sheriff's department
Darril Terry. 26, who was booked for in-
vestigation of kidnapping and robbery Tuesday,
said he turned himself in after telling his family he
was joining the Air Force.
Terry said he m et two strangers at a bar in
Richmond, where they hatched the plot to rob the
Trailways "gambler's speeial" bus Saturday.
After robbing the 13 passengers. the two strangers
ran off with the entire loot, he said.
Tb plan would l'n a one·Ume .$76 state ln-tcme tax cut Cor 19'7 to ach Cehfornlan filing a
Hparat return, and u tUO tax cut to each couple
tlllnc a JO nt retum
AN AS8SM81..V VOTE scheduled for today
WH llttJ more than • formality, becau e the Aa-
umbly lw.t week approved the mlJor features ot
Mayor Bit
Removal, Requested
VERNON (API A. retired firefighter
haa uccu11ed Vernon's multi-millionaire
m•yor or iUegally livlng outside the city be
presides over.
T he action filt.'d Tuesday against Leonls
C. Mal burg, 50, is the same charge his
wealthy grandfather was indicted on 35 years
ago
Filed with the state Attorney General's
Office. the action seeks to oust MaJburg as
mayor, a position he has held for seven
•years It also requests his removal from the
City Council seat he has occupied for 22
years
The charge was filed by Carlton E .
Claunch. 41. a retired Vernon firefighter who
was an unsuccessful City Council candidate
last spring.
Claunch claims Malburg controls the
city's voting because most of Its 240 residents
are either municipal employees or live in low
cost city-owned housing
Judge Attacks
lawyer's Attire
SAN DIEGO <APl No one would have
blamed James Kinder for feeling he had taken his
suit to the wrong court after a Judge pronounced
the attorney guilty or "vulgarity" for his casual al·
tire, but Kinder says he'll do it again.
Superior Court Judge Edward T. Buller said
he was "appalled" Mond"y by Kinder's brown
plaid suit. rust-colored sweater and open collar -
no necktie -as the attorney's client pleaded inno-cent lo a felony
"Are you an attorney? Are you admitted to
practice in the courts of this state?" Butler asked.
KINDER SAJD HE WAS.
Butler said there was nothing he could do
about a lawyer's attire because appellate courts
have rul<'d it's not a Judge's concern. but he had
plenty to say about it.
"Mannt•rs of dress tend to portray how a
person fc<.'ls about himscH and his profession," the
judge intoned. "Adherence to a code of conduct.
standard of dress. symbolizes the hallmark of
educated. cultured people "
"Bil by bat the waves or vulgarity arc eroding
our standards." he added.
KINDER SAID TUESDAY that he will
challenge the judge for cause in the current case
because Butler's "emotional barrage" left his
client. a 21 year-old woman accused of attempted
murder. "walh the impression that the hostility his
honor was releasing on me would be also released
upon her because she was my client ... She did
express grave concern over whether there would
be a bleed·ovcr of the judge's feelings about me
onto her O'-'TI case."
The attornev said the issue of neckties is
similar to many ·court reforms that have occurred
over the yC'ars
"If it wcren 't for the courage of attorneys lo
promulgate change. we'd probably all still be
wearing white "igs ... he said. "I am sure there
will be many occasions an future when J appear in
San Diego courts without a tie ...
Besides. he added : "Ties give me a rash ··
Vets Unit Talk Set
Medical care for
Orange County veterans
will be discussed Sept.
13 al a meeting or the
Orange County Veterans
Advisory Council.
The meeting will
begin at 7:30 p.m. at the
Stale Mutual Savings
and Loan Building, 625
E. First St., Tustin.
The meeting is open to
the public. Information
can be obtained by call-
ing Adm. Phil Niekum,
USN Crel.i) at 586-6926,
or Ben de Leon at
834·2042.
Firs~ you'll enjoy a maivelous soup dujour or crispy
tossed green salad. Then we proudly serve you a generous
portion of succulent Prime Rib, the king of beef, plus a
piping hot baked potato willi all the trimmings, fresh sour·
dough bread and butter. For the finishing touch, it's coffee
or tea and a tantalizing desserl All this for only $5.95.
Monday-Saturday 5 to 7:00 PM. Sunday 4 to 6:00 PM .
Charley 8rowt\s
HUNTINGTON BEACH-16160 Beach Blvd.
Reservations Accepted-(714) 842-6602
• I
GOP LEADERS in both houses have com·
plained that the Democrats are stealing their pro·
t>08&la In an election year politlcaJ maneuver. But
Republican lawmakers have nonetheless unan·
lmous ly supported the bill, AB 3802 by As·
semblyman Lawrence Kapiloff. 0 -San Diego, m a
series of c.mnmlttee and floor votes over the p13t
l wo weel(s7""
The Senate -graveyard of other tax cut pro-
posals thls year -voted 39-0 for the tax cut on
Monday, clearing the greatest potential threat to
passage.
THE COMBINED EFFECT of the proposed In· come tax cut and PrQposltJoo 13's property tax
cuts would reduce the average homeowner's an·
nual tax bills by $750 to $1 ,000.
Renters. who got nothing from Proposition 13's
voter-mandated 57 percent property tax cut, would
get $75 each in income tax cuts from the bill.
SENIOR CITIZENS, both renters a nd
homeowners. would get up to $375 each in addi-
tional tax cuts under the income tax cut bill.
In addition to the one-time tax credits, the
Kapiloff bill would adjust state income tax
brackets annually with inflation so that most
workers receiving only cost-of-living increases
would not move to higher state tax brackets.
That so-called "indexing" has been a top
priority of Republicans in recent years. and It was
opposed vigorously by most Democratic leaders
until this summer. when the tax cut fever of
SI0,000 Plot
Man Charged
In Extortion
SAN DIEGO <A P J A 26-year-old Phoenix
man was arrested in Phoenix Monday and charged
with attempting to extort $10,000 from San Diego
radio personality Bill Ballance.
Charles Steven Sawyer. a tree trimmer. was
arraigned Tuesday in Phoenix on charges or extor·
lion and booked in Maricopa
County Jail on $10.000 bond.
An FBI spokesman said
Sawyer contacted Ball ance
more than a week ago and
threatened to mail bim an ex·
plosive device at San Diego
radio s tation K F M B unless
Ballance paid the $10.000
Sawyer was arrested at his
home while making final ar-
rangements on the telephone
with Ballance llAU.ANCE
FBI off1c1als declined to reveal how Sawyer
became aware of Ballance. who formerly conduct·
cd a radio talk show at station KABC in Los
Angeles.
THE INCOME TAX Ctn would be financed
rrom the state's budget surplus. now estimated at
up to $5 billion annually for the next few years.
The rest ot that s urplus Is tentaUvety earmarked
to continue to help local governments whose rev-
enues wer eslahed by l>t-oposttion 13.
Brown. who predicted a statewide business re-
cession and eventual state tax hikes tf Proposition
13 passed. now says CaJiforrua can afford more tax
cuts because the state is receivin.g excess income.
business and sales tax r evenues from "the
greatest peacetime boom in our history."
The Democratic governor says, and non-
partisan analysts agree. that California can cut in·
come taxes this extra St billion and conUnue to give schools. cities and counties $3 billion to $4
billion annually in Proposition 13 aid.
BUT REPUBLICANS have accused Brown of deUberately dece1v1ng voters about the growing
budget surplus _,_ now estimated at $5.8 billion
compared to a state budget of Sl5 billion -In an
attempt to defeat Proposition 13.
Attorney General Evelle Younger. Brown's
GOP foe for governor in the Nov. 7 general elec·
lion, has charged that Brown is "playing games"
with the budget surplus figures.
"The numbers change almost overnight to swt
the governor's poUtical purposes. When he was
against Proposition 13. we had only $3.S bi11 ion.
When 13 passed. he s uddenly had more than S6 billion." Younger says.
ACTUALLY. THOSE TWO budget surplus
figures do not contradict each other as sharply as
Younger suggests in a statewide barrage of radio
commercials.
First of all . the state itself has been the big-
gest single property taxpayer in California for the
past decade because or a pre-Proposition 13 St
billion annual "homeowner's exemption" tax re·
lief program under which the state pays property
taxes on the first $7 .000 in value of each owner-occupied home.
PROPOSITION 13's tax cuts therefore gave
rhc state an immediate $600 million annual cut in
the cost of that tax relief program.
In addition to that. the reduced property tax
bills for busioess and homeowners reduc,ed tax de·
ductions on state income tax and busin~ taxes.
raising estimated revenues from those taxes by up
to $250 million annually.
ANO IN RESPONSE to what Brown called
"the spirit of 13 ... the Legislature and Brown have
made S850 million in cuts in the state budget. in-
cluding a freeze on wetrare grants a nd state
salaries and a freeze on hirings.
Finally. estimates of state income. sales and
business tax revenues are being revised upward
by about $300 million because of updated estimates
of the California economy. now in a fourth year of
robust expansion instead of the downturn predict-
ed by economists.
PERFECT HAIR COtORING
Done At ...
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you can defer interest pay·
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MUTUAL
SAVINGS
Important too, our now·
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~IOt'I t•Wl(:•lttOI\
AN IOUAL HO\!l!l'IO L&NOUI
AN EQUAL Of't'Of\TUNIT'f EMl't.OYIE ..
Pasa<jena (Mam Olllce) (213) 449-23'5/Arcadle (213J ...e·018fl1Cenoga Park (213l 884·••221Cap1streno ~n Clemrnl<'
171'\ 493·5651 /Cerritos (213)926·1376/Corona Del Mar f71'*1875·5010tCovlntt (213l 339·S.781Fallbfool( (714) 728·57241
Foun111n Valley (714) 1163·839e/Gtendate (213) 242·4146/Lake San t.111rcos (114\ 744·2771 /Port Hueneme (805) ~·23231
S11nte Ana (1'4) 5"7·9741 /Thousand Oaks (9051 497·2787/Upfand (714l981·282ttV1sUl (1141 729-~
• 8 /f'
Towawa! m asse
Needs a SOiution
Two "om •n itnd l\\O chi1drt'n v. re caU1hl up In a
dMM~it mlpus1>\' reeentb t u downlown lluntlnaton
Ucach purkmg lol
When th • womt>n r lurnro rrom hoppin1 visit.
1 ht.·~ found thut lhc'tr cor w 1 hooked up to a tow truck
und m tht· pl"OC' s~ or bem.q hauled away rrom th • El Don
l.lquor ~rkma lot .. , f'\f\h Street cAnd Pacific Coaal
lltl(hw u~
TM-) aad the) \\ere told they \\Ould h ve to pay lo
~cl thl' uuto unhooked but th y dtdn't have cnouah
mont•\'
Tht• to\\ truck operator v.ouldn't budge and neither
"ould the \\tH1wn ond the ampa ~ rontanued for nearly
l1H' houri. Ttun~' t>\'entu ti} roo1cd down and the women
ltnulh \H•n.• allu\\t'd to drh'~ awey.
It •~not known "h<> \\a. at h1utt ror the ron(tontaUon.
,\ numlx'r or drtH'r ha\e eomplaJned that their cars
"1.•n • to\\t"d u" u~ urter :t \hort tay al the busmcss
Tht•rc uho url' 1nt.t.ince~ or violations "'hen motorists
1ll1.·~..ill~ u-.1.· the lot und g<> to tht> beach or s hop
t·bl'wlwn·
Tht.t muttt•r h,1:-. b<.'<!n turned o'er to a svccaal fact·
11nd1ng c·ommntt•t•
Som<.• nw11~un• !'iihoutd be taken to resolve the prob
h·m. ~m·h as luf'~l·r warning Mgns and hghling forth~m.
Tht•n· huv<.• been too man> compla ints to let the situa
t 1on cont 111ut• •
Stor01 Warnings
Report~ have rumbled through Huntington Beach
City flall concerning unn•M a nd disconte nt on the p art
of c·1ty employee!:.
Tht' concern ~eem~ lo have gamed momentum in re·
n~nt w~k~ Officials s ay res ignations are being tendered
,1t the rate of about one per day which is m ore than
normal
Grumbling among workers both m and out of C ity Hall
1-. to bl' expected.
But Deputy City Attorney Mark Travis a nnounced his
n·~1gnation last week with critical remarks that s hould
t·atch the attention of o fficials.
Travis said that som e council members have in·
terfered with personnel m atters a nd have ignored legal
..1dv1<:e lie s aid he a lso believed that the City Counc il is
inept.
There ccrlumly arc r easons for e mployees resigning
their jobs other than poor relations with City Council
m<.•mbcrs
Hut Trav1 ~ paints a pretty accurate picture or City
fl<.111 conditions . judgin~ from comments of many others .
Wht>n qua rre ls , indecision <:1nd bickering have such a
nc,gativt· effect on morale that key employees quit with
s pecifi c complaints. it is lime for the City Counc il to
n•s pond to the storm warnings.
Walkout Justified
Huntington Beach City Coun cil members h uve hit on
a new way to break up a council meet ing .
Last week Counc ilme n Ron Pattinso n and Don
'1acAllister walked out on their colleagues when the
m <.·etmg drngged into early mornmg hours.
The d<.•partur<.: kft the council with only three s itting
nw mbt•rs and the m eeting hurl to be concluded for lack
of <.1quorum
Ord1mmly. a "'alkout by officials 1s 1rrcspons ibh.>
But that w<.is n 't the tasc this time.
Al issue was a tontrovcrsial sewer line designed to
attommodatc future d evelopment in the Mtiin Street-
Bt.'til'h Boulevard area.
The line was previous ly approved by the ('Ounc il b y a
1.:1 vote. It was reconsidered last week.
If Pattinson a nd MacAlliste r hadn't wa lked out. there
"as :.i very ~ood chance that the line would have been rt"
1<.·c·ted by a council minority.
The same three persons who voted against it prc-
,·1ou ~ly would have beco me a m ajority because of the
:.i h~l'l\t't' ot two oth<.•r m embers.
Tht.•re un• man\' ramifications on the sewer line. deal·
tnJ.! \\.JI h I utun• i.:n~wlh in the city. There are also sound
;1rg uml1nh. hoth pro and con.
But a m1nonl) of the City Council shouldn't be in the
po..,1t 1on lo dt.•c1dt· ::in import.ant issue. And this 1s wh t1t
''ould haH· happened had there been no walkout.
• Op1rnons expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot
Other views expressed o n this page are those of their authors and
ar11s1s Reader comment Is 1nv1ted. Address The Daily Piiot. P.O.
Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321 .
Boyd/RR Names
WASH I NGTON Sen.
Edward Kennedy <don't call hlm .. Teddy"> la
hot •••In , Jul\ 11 he was
ln 1968. una
nd 1976. A
cro wd ot IJUtaaer•
flaures h Ii.
runnln& for
Pruldent.
thou1h the
1990 ltB&OO I
18 months away. Tho e panting
for • poUtkal aaviour freely tell
potltters th1t Kennedy la the
11ilvaUon. the salve. the cure-all
ror what alls us.
Or. Gallup proclaims that
Democrats favor hlm over Mr.
Citrter to be the 1980 nominee by
u 44·20 acore. and that all voters
want him over Gt!rald Ford by a
whopping ~41 margin
THE DOP EST ERS who see all
events as crafted. and ignore the
power of the prosaic. mutter. uJi
Mailbox
Robert N. WMd/Pub01htr
y Savors Sen ator Role
huh. ind nolt thal a new poll show~ the public forf(Mna Ken·
ncdy tor Chappaquiddick: Joan
K e nn edy 11 conreulon on
alcoholl~m Is compa$slonately
received: Kennedy htu1 a busy
polltlcal schedule this foll. one
whl ch will put even more
Democrats In his debt.
All lhia pleases. f'ven amuses.
KeM edy He loves his popular!·
ty a nd the knowtedce \hat. given
his peraonal •etbacka. he re·
covered and made his own way
Ue doesn't plot or make moves
to run. nor will he. He actually
doean 't want lO. aod cowd only
be fersuaded if Carter pulls an
LB and quits. or us humiliated
in the 1980 primaries, or 1r a na·
tion·shaking issue develops.
For years. even aroremen-
11oned factor s of thi s sort
wouldn 'l have been enough to
persuade him. The trauma of all
the Kennedy tragedies was loo
much with him. and he was too
involved in beUlg father lo th~
children or his dead brothers.
ln recent yedrs. the prob·
lems of his wife. ind his son.
Teddy. who lost a tea to cancer,
occupied him more than any
presidential thoughts. Always,
there w re the wlsheta of his sis-
ters and mother -cautious for
the safety of the lust son.
Besides. Kennedy rtlishes hi5
role as a senior senator "I have
new opportunities In the next
Congreu . as chairman of the
Judiciary Committee." he told
me last week. "Thtnk or the
enormous impact on the systtim or Justice. the earety or our
citizens aod Ule protection ~ot
liberties. We'll be passJng on 14o
new Jud&ee --one-fifth ot the
Judiciary -in one year."
• I ONC£, Kennedy aometJmei
mouthe d what wa s Ju•t
whispered in his e1i1r by a bright
staffe r . T-0day. he knows h1
stuff down to nltty.grilty. He and
Sen. Howard Canoon. D·Nev .
pushed for airline deregulation
to the point that the alrllpes
•.
drust1cally reduced fares In self·
defense. Now Kennedy ar1ues
for dere1ulaOon of moter car·
riera. ond ror reform of eJClstina
reguJauons ao that new drup
can be btoUJrht on the rnarket
qult1ker.
Ask about tax revolt and ble.
inef(lclent government. aad
Kennedy oCfen llberal rebuttal:
"We can save SS8 bUllon by ISM.
if we vote tor maUonaJ health in·
s urance. l think the bljgest tax
s penders Are those who want lO
grant tax credit.s <tu1tio}\ aid>
without appfylnJ thf iNme
('riteria we -do (or straignl ai>-
propriations. In oil and gas. why
don't we give tax incentives to
wildcatters instead of lO den.Usu
seeklnttax shelters~
.. Prop 13 was also a cry
aga 1n~t bigness tn all rorma. tr
Howard Jarvis had packaged his
proposition in a way to cut the
s1z<' of big business Instead of
h1 g government. the voters
would have approved that. too ..
P EOPLE warm to Kennedy.
despite his libe ral rhetoric.
because. like his brothers before
him. he holds out hope and prom-
ise. He will chair hearin~s this
fall on his national health bill.
one we really don't need, and
will J'let big media exposure
Kennedy will stump for
Democr ats everywhere. and
more compan sons wilt be made
between the enthusiasm for him
and the turning away from
Carter
It 1s heady stuff. but Kenne(fy
has seen it before and will see it
again He s~ud. "That's about
nghl ... when I asked him if the
presidential goal was less im·
portant to him than 1l was to his
brothers
"It's obvious that the Kennedy
fam il y has been through so
much ... he told ml'. "a nd it con-
tmuc.•s to be a maJOr fa ('tor in my
hfo Rut grandchildren grQw up
~nd gt't settled down Times
change . and in a period of future
yt•ars. than~s may t'hange ror
me But my position is that I do
not want to run. that I support
Prei.1dent Carter. and that ht•
will be reelected ·
Police Have Right to Express Views
To the Editor· past they have had explosive• Beach in 1975. we have been so quests for work to determine
Your Aug. 18 editorial entitled harpoons fired over their heads opt imistic and enthus iastic whether purchase and replace-
"Police in New Arena" renects into surfaced whcilcs Th1i. year <1bout the Huntington Be ach mt• n I a r e cost s av in R
a surprisingly narrow view of they a lso had hi)o(h pressure f1rl• Elementary School 01s t r1C't , altt•rnat1ves lo o;hop fabrica·
American de mocracy. Why hoses turned on tht•m. yet they particularly tht' special c,duca tum." Many of their facts and
would you choose to discourage stayed . with their lives on the tion program I have twin boys conclusions are incorrect or mis·
any individual or group from line. They continued to prevent who have benefited greatly the leading.
political activism. particularly mass killings last two years from this pro
when most would agree that one Our heartfelt thanks go out lo gram •'OR EXAMPLE, the report
of the most serious threats lo the these 26 brave people. I'm proud However. my enthus ias m 1s indicated $937 and 60 staff hours
great American experiment is to be a member or the same or dampened. to say the least. with were used to repair legs on 10
political apathy? How can the ganization, and I hope you all the firing of the aides in the ping pong tables for the Parks
expression of poutical views by join me in support of such ac special education classes and Recreation Department. In
any citizen or group or citizens tivities Our teachers 1n this program ract, the total cost for materials
be equated with an attempt by Welc·ome home Greenpeace arc excellent. their ab1lit1es and was only $114.44. This expen-
the ~lice to no longer answer lo cn•w. Job well done efforts enhanced by the help of d1ture and 60 starr hours paid for
clvi ianauthorily? MICllAELGREENIA qualified and very dedicated replacement or the original
TH E REA.LJTY police officers aides. With increased enroll flimsy metal tubular legs with
mut1t deal wtth, tt\Ougb many of N of Wort h I t ment ut the "-Pt'C•al education s t urdy wooden legs. thereby
U" would pr .. fer to ignor e. 'f h Ed t (·lasses this year. I do not sec ellminat.mg the need to Junk the 0
"'
0 t (' 1 or how 1t will be possible for thest' tables or replace them at a cost reprea~ntl an i~rtanl aspect A friend of mine wa') killed children to reach the goals set of approximately $1,7SO. This
or our society. heir pers~c-last night. My sadness and raR e forth by their teachers. without represented a savings of approx tive. even if we find it un· t the f n r he u t mel a un air css o r n I Y the benefit of the aides imately S920 to the taxpayers. pleasant. should be as much a death was increased today when ~ly has the very i.pecial
part of the body politic as the 1t proved to be a police chase i ndiv idual attention the s e A reported utilization of 93 views a nd expressions or that prematurely snufrcd out hours Qt a cost of Sl,192 to re·
bankers. teacher s , la wyer s. this vibrant. caring human be· children need desperately. been fmsh 20 wooden benches is fac·
farmers. laborers, and yes. even ing taken from them. il 1s further tua lly correct 1 ss 9 .60 per
news paper publishers. I applaud Was catching a punk with a compounded by the increase of bench). However. the auditors
anyone or any group who plays toy gun worth the death of a class attendance. and your paper railed to note
an active role in the democratic young mother who left behind a Were I not working full time that the benche$ had 10 be re·
process and see no reason to dis-nus band. two small children. 1 by financial need I. I would mo ved from the s ite to be
courage police officers from be· pare nts a nd m any grieving q uickly vo lunteer to he lp strapped. and.refinished. Pr,iyate
Ing good citizens. friends? wherever I would beneech!d. quotes obtained by the city's
Paraphras ing a famous tt secmswc'realwaysreadlng AVlSE.RICHARDS paint ·foreman revealed that it patriot, " ... we may not bo 1. h d' . h Id t · l 1 .->Ch By L.M. BOYD. You've seen that football always a ree with someone's a ut po ice c ases en mg wit wou cos approx1ma e Y _.... ~aweoiLAL:~L.'l~~~~le:J~-=---t;;,h;.;e:,,;d;e:;ath of an innocent. but this per bench or a· total or $.S,000 to Ple~c~d~~utllst~ ~ k h' r ? ~r to~hlfur~~rrighl~ ~~~~~~·~~·~~·~~~olt;en~1~r~·~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~b~-~8~d~o=i=~~--~ O d dba ll nicknam es f or oxygen mas over is ace. th t . ...1 l p 1· a lalent"ed , giving woman whose _,, the '"'bin house le 1 , . . . Except maybe f or lhc expre.11 a ".ewpo nt." o ice Your July 27. article. litloriu .. ~ 1 railroads ~u.lhem Pactf1~ pflychological upHft. he's not officer• d urinl their off-duty loss is Incalculable "Tires. Fixture:s Up Huntington M-...tenance Division of Publ c
was .th.~ ,su r~cr1n he lping himself much. hours, have. and should be en· There must be a be a better Cost", reported the findings of Works saved the taxpay4ft"s ap-
Pathellc The ~h1g~. and Medical researche rs now couraged to exercise, the same way. Thls should not have hap· Booz. Allen & Hamilton. Inc., ln' proximately $3,800. N~ EnjJlan..d~~Late~ ~e~tbat .bU\Rtl!in~ First Amendment rights t~a~ al· pened a management audit or the Hun· our message is simply this: l::l:i~~s:.. rut llAlv ~-gen betore Or aftf!r ~x~rcise-~t-~JW""J'fJIA"P~'9h,,iilP!~jnMNWe:;-""""'!'-~ABGJT M()'I:l:J.1.-~A~--u,_n&tari:=:Bachoc hbliccWeO.S.... We:o-wo _. ~p&J~kt-.~o.--~
Northampton and ath was has no effect o n 1)eff0mrance in your newspaper. llep~rtment: Our members are vitally concerned about the cost
the "Nuts and Bolts." Thr RUSSELL A. BOSTROM •Brolcer' Clorftfed concerned Uiat 4;rroo~us fatt~ of governrnent. Theie ~ oq
Delaware and Hudson was or recovery. President. Newport To the Editor. contained in the report 81ld doubt. art!!as where inanag~
the "Delay and Hesitate." Row do JOU .ccount for the Harbor Bar Assn. Your editonal on the number your anJcle may uuse your ment can be Ullproved. We sup.
The Chicatto. Burlington fact that far more men than or brokers In Californ.ia ~.l\ders _to draw~ wrona con· port thue elfol'lts . But th~
""n d Qui ° C.>' w ~us the women fall out of ho&pil1l Q•t lt'ar error and created a misleading Clu!'fonr. · ,. ... --·'IOll'-11t•a11••at ~. nd...¥0u(
· ·C he a Pest . Best and beds ., To the Edltoa : i~storr of the real e&tat.e. The report cited facts reaud· artlcle have, b)!ta;pll'cat.lon. at.
Quickest " d h · ·i proresston ...,here are 400,000 ing repalr ol Pili~ Podlr "tablu, t~ed ttnr mratttv-and --anu~ II i fl On Aug. 24 I ha t e pr1V1 ege l ood h """~-~ ,_ Am su try n• to aure to be part of a welcoming com· li censees In Califo rnia not refinishing or w en benc es or the employees' work. To th
out what you send to a sick mittee for a shlp returning from brokers. This number mcludes and replacement or light bulbs we object. The record sbou)d
o~ar
Gloomy
Gus
l 'm tired of hearina
landlord11 complain
a bout ncflnllve cHh
now and low proflt.I. In
this country. no one la
FORCED to own lncomc
pro~rty c.c.
l '
florist. war. a war where this aggressor both brokers and sales persons to support the con('Jusions that reflect lhat the workers in the
had no weapons. The ship W&A You further s howed your lack "statr utilization practices City or Huntlnaton Beach ee effi· Q "Have any or the free.
love communes been suc-
ce1111ful?"
A. It ·s debatable. There
may stlll be quite a few of
the hou!leholds functionlna
here or there. Most, though.
have come apart. Couples
tend to pair off, ohoosln1 lO
devote themaelvH to each
other to the exclusion or the
rest. Quarrels crop up ov~r
l\hored work. Money 1r11.a·
menu seem inevitable, Some
theorista who've looked Into
the matter now th1nJt the un·
succeur\ll commune expert.
ments tend to prove tbat
monoaamy i• lnattncllve.
althouah othera dJH.lfff
the Peacock. out or Wilmington. of knowledge of our profes11lon are not cost efficient" and .. the cient. har'd·worltlng e m loy~
a Greenpeace veuel; tht by Mating that a person coutd Division does not review re· and conceroed cltltens, e will
enemy. the Russian whaling .. pick up a broker 's license." To continue to take pride in «>Ur wo~
fleet. pick up this license a person and w""t the co"'munity tb shar•
Greenpeace. a non.profit roun· must have certain licensed sales In thut prt~.
datlon. had once again aone to uperience or college degree In Wle1" JJ:RRV ELLSTRO~
sea to prevent the killlng or help. addition to 12 college credits in 'Prel'lldent, Huntlnglon rJeacb
IH8 9thales. whose numbers are real e st ate l aw . finance . MunlclpalEmployeesAsso. dwlndllnC fut. They launched appruisol ·ind practice. After
infJatablt boats fro m the ··PI c k in g · · u P the 11 e
Peac~k and placed themselves qualHlcataons he must then take ~tween the Rua Ian ktu 1hlP1 a 200-questlon stute exam that
and the whale!\. Twenty.six peo· takes over three hours
pie, wlth nothing but courage. W F LOWA NCE.
compasaion and dcterfnlnauon Realtor
disrupted tho harpaon-carryina
llu11lans.
THI IS the fowtb yur such
voyaaes hive t1ken place Jn tht
S~daf N~tla
To the Editor
Sk'tce our move to Hunllncton
,.
~ ..
(
1'
ioNDON CAP) -Those
ra.-oua aDd ort·u~~ducied
J)taiotal ~ of tol ~
hllla ud J .,Ndowa ft lite
E1t1U b c:ountryalde w re paint·
ect by COGStabl• l an rtt \, bu\
apPa'""Y Dall al by Johft.
TWO LSADINC •mnsa art ~1perl1 haYe concluded \hat
mall)' ~ atlnbuted to the
1r•al tetb centu ry BncU1h
larKt cape paiater •tre really ''°f &M «wih o1" • uaMl . an oJhtr ml&ht hue bnn
Paiattd by var~ Coutabl ol·
tsl)f'ln1. London'• Dall)' T It·
lf8'h rfl)Orted ~Q. ,,_ runny. the xperts ~&)'.
Gri~rs
-,,_epairing .
Launched
WASJUNOTON CAP> -The
~nsumer Product Safety Com·
million reports that lhe Porta-
ble AppUance and Tool Group,
McGraw·Edison Co .• Columbia,
Mo., ts la\lllcblng a repair i>ro-41am for 16,000 six-inch bench
grJnders which may pose a
shock haz.ard.
'On some unit.I a protective s~eeve insulalfna a lead wire
may wear throueh. possibly re-
sulting in a shock if the machine t~not grounded, the agency said.
·T HE MACHINES WEa E
manufactured from April to July
1973 and for limited periods
between February 1977 and
January 1978
The repair program covers
the following six-inch grinders
purchased after June 1973 and
not showing any three-digit code
e m bossed tn the nameplate:
Manning Bowman model 715100,
Toastmaster model 5577, Power
House model 711100, J .C. Penney
model 3040, Western Auto
Whzard model POE 6203A,
Ward 's Power Kr art model
TGB·5102A and K·Mart model
30·09Tl.
ALSO INVOLVED ARE K·
Mar t model 30·90T1 showing
date code 778, 77D, 77E or 17F,
rutd Ward's PQwer Kraft model
TGB 5102A with the 77F dale
code. If tools with these dale
codes have an orange inspection
stieker on the carton or the unit
they have already been inspeded
and are not involved in the repair
program.
Owners of the grinders should
stop using them and write to:
Bench Grinder Repair Program.
N alional Service Man ager,
Jfprtable Appliance and Tool
Group. McGraw-Edison Co .. 2nd
and Vine St.. Boonville. Mo ..
65223 for imtruclions on having
tile tool inspedcd and repaired
free of charge.
was aMpt at mlmleklna &ht
ma ler. wbott> atyle onr the yeara bee. ld4!ly lft\ltated
by ottlen ud 1.otMt•mn copied ~lHtly nou1h to rool and
d fraud art lonn
Several years of roaearch by
L.nlle Panis, deputy k ePor of
London'• prt1Ualou1 Tate
Gallery. and Ian Flemlna· WlUlasna. the Tate'a hl1lclrtan.
mt' tullldNMb of ConaUblcs
wUI have to ~ ,..evalu1ted to
d termlnt Identity of the
paint.er, the ~lqrapb Hld
Tb Tat.. whkb contlrmed tbo
Dally Televapb account. h••
room1ful ol Const.ables. aand
~ Mlrtbuted to h m l alao on
uhlbll at th<: Ashmolean
Mus um at Oxtord. the Mellon
Centtr ot 8r1t11h Art at Yale
University and el1ewhere on
both. 1ld of tht> Atlantic
TH£ l-.:XPERTS SAID the
"Oridtrt on the Mole." one of
two Constuble works displayed
In the Philadelphia Museum of
Art, wa11 painted not by John,
but by L.loncl. the Tflegraph re-
ported
Donald Hosenlhnl. an assis·
tunt curutor in lht.> Philadelphia
museum's department or Euro-
pean Puinling, aa1d he was un-
a war<' or the fltudy and was
(•heck1ng on 1t or the two
Pondering Injustice
Sister Immaculate Com met of Oklahoma Cit v listens to
a personal account of social inJustace in Cleveland More
than 1,000 religious leaders attended the leadership con·
f erence of Women Religious and Conference of Major
Superiors to Men. They are discussing whether to exert
pressure on government anrl corporations to combat
social injustice.
f
Constables on dl play. h• sald:
'·1 would really be surpri~ if
they turned out to be someone
else's work. But tbere's aJways
that possibility In art "
Three otheriJ being attributed
to Lionel are "The Old Barn,"
"Looking Over to Harrow" and
''Brook, Trees and Meadows,"
oils In the Mellon Center of
Brltlsh Art at Yale University.
AN ASSISTANT CURATOR
there, Suaan Casteras. said the
works had been sus pect ~r
some Ume. but s he said of such
turn-arounds in the art world.
"In many of these cases, those
paintings are no less
diminished" by disc9veries that
the artist was really ~omeone
else.
The two British. experts #re
<tecllning comment until the full
report of their s leuthing 1s
f\ublished Sept. s In the Burl·
1ngton Magazine. a rest>ected
art periodical.
CRl11CS AND DEALERS said
Parris and Fleming-Williams
have proved that at least 20 oil
paintings. drawings and sketcbes
attributed J.o Constable are the
work of Lionel. his fourth and
youngest son. who was 9 years
old when his rather died in 1837 .
Many canvases were not
DAILY PILOT
• I •
si1ntd. and as dealer Huah Leg·
gatt explained·
"Tbret other sons painted ~
John Chatles. Charles Gold.mg
and Alfred. His daughter Isabel
painted flower pictures. th~
grandson H\Jgh pa.anted marine
and c:ountry scenes. It is clearly
possible that some of their work'
ls m asquerading as that or
John."
Parris and Fleming·Williams
say the Tale's ramous "The
Haywain" was Indeed painted 1 by John, but that the well-known'
"Near Stoke by Nayland." aJso
in the Tate. was painted by
Lionel. according to the Tele-
graph.
Substance Halts Virus
T ests Planned for Advance Cancer Patie nts
NEW YORK <AP) The
American Cancer Society tias
announced plans for a clinical
test of a substance made from
human blood cells to determine
its value in treating advanced
cancer.
The substance. leukocyte in·
terferon, has reduced the size of
tumors in animal experiments
and in a few scattered applica·
lions with human cancer pa·
tients. the society said Tuesday.
IT IS PRODUCED by extract·
ing white blood cells rrom whole
blood and exposing them to a
virus. The result is a cellular
protein that acts lo inhibit viraJ
growth. •
Leukocyte interferon has been
used against the herpes strains
of virus that produce s hingles
and chicken pox. but it cannot
generally be used against them
because o( the extreme scarcity
of the substance and its high
cost.
The cancer society said it
plans to spend up to $2 million
on the tet;t The scarcity or the
material will probably limit the
trials to 150 advanced cancer pa-
tients
SO f'AR LEUKOCYTE in·
terferon has been produced only
in Finland. where the blood is
obtained by the Finnish Red
Cross and processed at Red
Cross laboratories m Helsinki.
Most clinical tes ting with in
tcrfcron on c:,ancer has been
done in Sweden At the
Kar ol 1n s ka I nst itut e 1n
Stockholm. researchers have re·
ported promising results in the
treatment of ctuldren and young
adults with osteogenic sarcoma.
a bone cancer, after the use of
high doses of the substance
In the United States. 15 breast
cancer patients have been treat·
ed with interferon at M D An
derson Hospital and Tumor
Clinic in Houston and six pa-
tients with lymph tissue cancer
have been treate4 at Stanford
University Medical center in
Palo Alto.
society, said a committee or
scientists will meet in about a
month at ACS headquarters in
New York to work out details.
Co-chairmen of the committee
wlll be Dr. Jordan Gutterman o(
the M.D. Anderson and Dr.
Thomas C. Mengan J r. of Stan-
"EARLY INDICATIONS sug·
gest that interferon may have
the capacity to bring about ob-
jective tumor reduction,". the ford,-..J
Dr.· Rundles said the cancer '
society's role in the project will be limited to purchasing the in·
terferon. monitonng the trials
and reporting the resuJts
society said. ·
The institutes that will
participate have not been select·
ed. Dr. R. Wayne Rundles or
Durham, N.C .. president of the
,
Father Bitter
Retarded Son Found Dead
MANKATO. Minn. <AP> -Roger Heller says be will do all
he can to prevent a family tragedy such as his own from hap·
pening to someone else.
Heller's 19-year-old son. David. mentally retarded and sub-
ject to seizures. is dead. The body was found 43 days after David
disappeared Feb. 26 from a Mankato home for the mentally re·
tarded.
HE APPARENTLY DIED OF exposure: there was no
evidence offoul play.
Heller devoted a frantic. el(bausting search for the boy -in
r avines. farm sheds, snow banks and bosp1tals. A clairvoyant
went to David·s room to touch his belongings in an attempt to
track the youth. Aircraft and snowmobiles were used.
Heller says he is convinced his only son would not have
walked aimlessly through the snow northeast of Mankato if
more precautions had been taken. Heller. who was out or stale
the day David disappeared. also says he should have been
notified sooner of his son's disappearance
BUT MARION MAERTENS, DIRECTOR of REM·lll. a
private institution. says residents have the right lo live as
normally as possible. Most work. earn their own money and
contribute to daily living demands. she said. The staff members
did not neglect their duty in allowing David to leave that night.
she says.
David left his residence around 10 p.m that Sunday. He was
seen at 11 p.m. at a gas station. buying soda
Im p riso ned
Particular People Select JOHNSON & SON
Home of the "Golden Touch"
Trip Called Flop
Belly Dancer's Dream 'Nightmare'
SAN FRANCISCO
! AP I -John Forslund,
known as the "Brown
Ba~ Bandit." was sen-
tenced to 15 years in
COME PRAY
WITH US
You are cordially invited to join us
in morni09 and evening prayer at the
··aeat advertising. and. you had
more to a how··.
ALLAN H. ANDERSON
S•nt• Ana. C•fff.
ANOTHER SATISIFIEO CUSTOMER
.JOHNSON a SON ·rit I
CHATIANOOGA. Tenn. 1AP1
According to lawsuits nlcd by thret-
dancing teachers who bought tours to
Egypt to learn firsl·hand the exotic
undulations of the belly dance. the
trip was a flop.
Rose Marie Park and Lavina Live
ly or Chattanooga and Ellen Giles of
Atlanta went to Cairo last September
for what was proclaimed "a belly
dancer's dream come true" and "a
glorious opportunity to be exposed to
the Middle Eastern culture" on a
10-day lour
WHEN THEV ARRIVED, on a
plane six hours late. the suits filed in
Circuit Court say. they learned that
their instructor. Nagwa Foad. was in
London and had been for some time.
Another teacher. Tania Canoca. was
not available for the promised
various reasons. On one occasion they prison after pleading
"simply did some dancing on their guilty lo 44 counts of
o\.\n,"thcsuitssay armed robbery. He
CATHOLIC CHURCH
OF SAINT JOHN,
THE BAPTIST
1015 BAKER STREET. COSTA MESA
Momlftt ~ • ..,..-Moodoy lltho ,_,, t •O it 10 .,.
The s uits name two California· earned hls name by pro-
based travel agencies. Tounng Ex viding brown paper bags
press Inc. and Tno Travel and Tours into which he ordered
and Dalilah Bristow who is identified victims to deposit their
in the actions as .. an experienced _c_a_s_h __________ __: _______________ _
belly dancer who maintains her
!>lud10 in Las Vegas. Nev ..
LA WYER HAR EV BERKE filed
the three separate but identical s wts
on behalf of the women. Each seeks
$25.000 in damages.
Berke said in an interv1ew Tuesday
that each of the women is a dancer
and dancing teacher and that they
signed up for the tour to improve
their techniques and t eaching
abilities
• Sp.ral shced for easy serving
• Honey ·n Spice Glaze • Cooked 30 hours t.( ". -f': • Nationwide shipping service H l te 01ltgmat · · · • Full service Delicatessen ~D~tey . 01d world cheese shop ~a liif •Sandwiches to go
seminars, the suits said. He said the firms were answerable ·
Jlg!~~,,!~oo~S
Further, the women said that in· under Tennessee law because their o ur Last 3 o ay Weekend Before School
stead of "excellent. first·class" ac-advertisements for the tours were ORDER YOUR HOLIDAY
commodalions at Jolie Villa Hotel published in periodicals with Ten· HONEY BAKED HAM
"they were forced to accept a low-nessee circulation. TODAY!
class inferior hotel known as the 'fhe women said that as they were
Hotel Cleopatra.·· leaving for home they were told "the l700 E. COAST HWY • c....-w.. • "40HI '7l-9000
'/
They said they .howed up at the ll~· memories of the ettiting days past ;:·~~~s'!ZTr~uH11n 0oenrios-... Hun1ng,on
signed sites for lessons roo1r~s~c~ve~r:a~I --~w~i~ll~ac~c~o~m~a~n~.¥gJILJllt..J.ba...i~iro~~-~~~-----~---~~~~11!1!1~7 ... .w.~'=il!Siia1~~~-;::-;;-~ ut no lesso cu ....
. .
We have )JSt recehd a large Wwa1tory of exquisite
hind made rugs from EasWm Europe. Asia and the
Ortn Ind wll sell In single pieces the entire lot
by pubic: ~ The shrpment consists of rugs
tomltM.Ruaia.Chlna.Afganlstal, Turkey. India.
RonwU Md PMdstat. They V1J1Y In size from
2 ' X 3' to 18' X 12'. N I rugs~ gunninteed ~a
ful exchange wemny.
1llE MJC110N Will. TAKE Pl.ACE AT
ff
nmnan ·mglirs
ProbeiJrged
WASHINGTON IA P > -TheUn1tedStates
1!J urging an international investtgat1on of
hum an rights violalions in Cambodia.
The State Department delivered a lengthy
indictment or the Khmer Rouge government
to the United Nations Human Rights Com
mission in Geneva this week. It alleged that
tht> Khmer Rouge have instituted one of the
most brutal d1ctatorships Jn worlrlhistory
Tliere was no mention. however, of a re
cent suggestion by Sen. George McGovern, D·
S D . that an international armed force.
drawn from smaller nations. intervene in
Cambodia to end the bloodshed there
NEW FALL HAIR FASHIONS
by 1he Creative Staff at ..
LUZZETI A Bernard
2.0 Newport Center Or . Suite 200
NEWPORT BEAOi~23
. ,.
I
..
Carry Dental lnsurance7
Let 1t carry you awhile
After au-turnabout IS fair play.
Let Dr. Ftanzer snow yau hOw-far
your dental insurance will carry your
dental needs.
Wno knows -you could get all the
way home -free
642-0112
Dr. Arnold H. Flanzer, .
i DDS
170 1. ., ... s ......
Costa Mesa
I
(
f I
J\a DAIL.'( Pit.OT s• ' HEALTH I LOCAL
Routine Check by Home Appliance S1Jggeated
\
a, oa. a1 caOON and nervous wh n In the ornce have hl&h•r presaurea
1lmply because they are upset A reasonable, rouUn.
checkup at hornc perhaps 1lvea the more normal Dear Or. Std.Krob: I Ulte to cooperate wlth
my doctor I 've Iott welcht when vcir he ha ad
vi.Md me to 1 t . l'vC' quit 1molllJla f drink l'Quch
lest. too So you ee. I am lhe kind ot paUent who
likes to be part of the medical team.
1llm aUon ol how the pre11uro la behavlna.
VOU CAN Rt.:POa T the lower bome-readlnp to
your doctor. lie ma1 rtallzt-that the blood
pr auro readlna11 obtained ln hit office are not the
real lndlcaUon of what' a wronc. 1' may help tilm ad·
Juatth dolaa of dr~heprescribes.
But a rffent 1u11.-
t1on hu me confused and r
•n:llous He has round that DOCTOR IN
my blood pre . ur• 111 THE HOUSE h1&her than normal Ht' 1o.....__ ______ _
Some paUenll can't seem to tJke their own
pressura without beeomtn1 even more t.enae than
thoy art In th doctor'• omce. I auuest that fami-1~ membfra be lnatructed on how to take blood
preHUN!. Then you can relax, sit back and have
the prouu.re 'aken by someone else and aet an
even more accurate readmg.
has also suu tt'd that I lt'arn to takt" my own pressure at bomt In between
Vl51ll Whut do you thtnk or lh1S ? Don tt pay to buy a
blood pres.-.ure mactune to check on my pressure
Jl home• Besides. I think I'll be loo tense tak1n1
my own ~llrt' Mn. B.
Some physicians do not recommend home
blood press ure readings by their paLlents.
Perhap1, arr-..d or malun1 them too introspective.
Contrarhriae, I beUeve the paient who ca.n take
home pressures contrtbutea greatly to the success
of the treatment
Dear Mn. a.: I think you sbould be able to
bu) a simple blood pre s ure apparatus and
!>lethosrope for about ~ to 30 dollars It will prove
to be u &ood investment because you may not have
to v1s1t your doctor bO often And it is a good way to
check on yourself
I have round that many paUents who are tense
(JACK ANOE•SOlllf)
R!VE.ALS In the DAILY PILOT
Scottish
Dancing
Offered
Classes in the social
dancing of Scolland will
be offered m Huntington
Beach and Westminster
in connection with the
Royal Scottish Country
Dances Society
For children 8 and
over, the Huntington
Beach Park s and
Recreation Department
will ofCer classes .. ror
eight weeks beginning
Oct. 6 at the Edison
Comm unity Cente r ,
21377 Magnolia St. Cost
is S8 and the times are
3:30 to S p.m. Fridays .
1Clnd1rywt•t1n• .... .....,dmML
FAll SEMESTER STARTS TUESDAY, SEPT. 5
* * Recno•allle Tllitloll * *
TransPortallon avallabkt door to door Children of all faiths are welcome -
high scholastic standards -teaoh1ng the 4R s. reading (with phonQ).
wnttng, arithmetic and readiness. Before •nd after school care available for
children of wonong parents
FOUNTAIN VAllEY
16835 Brookhurst Street
(714) 962-3312
For beginners and in-
termediate dancers in
the ninth grade and up,
including adul~. cl~sses -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~1111 will be offered by the
Westminster Parks and
Recreation Department.
The classes will begin
Sept. 27 and be held
from 7 to 9 p m. Wed·
nesdays al Sigler Com -
munity Center, 720
Plaza St. Cost is $17 for
12 weeks.
Registration 1s availa-
ble through the ap-
propriate city parks de·
partment or at the first
class session
Coastline
R e gist e r s
For Fall
Registration is availa·
ble until Sept. 8 by mail
ror f a ll c lasses a t
Coastline Community
College
Cour5<'S arc held at
193 locations in Newport
Be ach. Co!. ta Mes a ,
Fountain Valley, llunt-
1 n gt o n Beach.
Wes tmins t er. Se<1 I
Beach and Ga rde n
Grove.
The college catalog,
i'nlitled "Passport," can
be obtained at markets.
banks, civic buildings
and fire stations as well
as at the college office in
f ountain Valley.
All ages are eligible to
participate in the
classes on 675 subjects,
including occupational
specialties s uch as real
estate, marketing, busl·
ness managem e nt ,
personne l . s ales ,
secretarial, insurance
lion.
Information can be ob·
tain e d by calling
963·0811
CANYON
MAPPED
WASRlNOTON <AP>
-The National Geo·
graphic Society says it
produced the m06t de·
talfed mq e•et of t.ba
-Grand Canyon after
seven years of research
and meas uring with
lasers, helicopters and
mountain climbers.
The society said the
map, s howing 104
square miles in detailed
relief and earth Lones,
was produced by Its
cartographic division
and Boston's Museum of
Science with the
cooperation of the Na·
tlonal Park Service.
Even a ltttle discomfort from tooth
decay can ruin the most tempting
dish Why put up with 1t? Call for a
checkup, and let Dr. Schoen put you
on the path to a healthy mouth. Your
cook will love you for 1t -even if
you·re the cook
Rick Schoen D.D.S.
I 0221 Slater Ave., Fountain Valley
--962-2461 VISA. I StNor CffbeR'1 Diacomh : ---:I D...tal ..... Giie.,....
INTRODUCTORY OFFER!
SPECIMEN ALOE VERA
lwilllM.glmt
I lie• pot. 11 to
2oa.c~ .. 111g1a.
50% OFF
Regulcr $ 11. 95 s5ts
COME IN TODAY!
Offer good thru Fri., Sept. 8th
llbllE VERB
CENTER ~~t:"·
171._A Brookhu,.t, Pounbiln Veller ~blOdl-"'of°""°°lftctw~ ....
Nl-2111 <MmrttoOuy,... ~,
-
,
DRUG STORE
·CENTER
.
HUNTINGTON BEACH
19121 Beach Blvd. Phone: (714) 847 -9833
Brings YQu ...
EYEIEAR
IND
JUST BRING US YOUR PRESCRIPTION FROM YOUR EYE DOCTOR.
STARTING WITH YOUR BASIC PRESCRIPTION
YOU CAN PURCHASE EYEWEAR AT ...
FRAME LENSES FRAME LfNSES
FOR SINGLE VISION FOR BASIC 81-FOCALS
(OVER SIZED AND TIHT£D LENSES ARE EXTIIAI
THINKING OF
SOFT CONTACT LENSES?
~~~U:~,~~ AA!S~"'~~15tt10.110 f are
We Can Help You Join The Millions Of Other
Satisfie·d Soft Lens Wearers.
TINCT/VE "FA$1fffJN EYEWEA
ALSO AVAILABLE AT A
SAVINGS TO YOU!
•Pierre Carclln •Slorla Vanderbilt •Yves It. Laurent
•Oscar De la Renta •AND MANY OTHERS
len11t1on11 fr1mea...dl1tlnctlveJy d11l11ned for your f1cll You ca11
111t bl1uty A 11 ... nc:e In 1 frame with 1 comton.-11 flt. lee our
wtd1 ulectton of f111tlon 1yewear at a trem1nlloert uvl111 ta yotd
OTHER SAY-ON O"TICAL CENTDS LOCATED AT:
• NORTH HOLLYWOOD 13021 Victory Blvd. Phone (213) 760-1242
• SMTA CUil 3707 ti C.fno Real Phone (408) 984·2254
• SM DtlGO l331 ltoucrlM Str.et Phone (714) m.&77t
• SIMI VAUl'Y 2825 Ent CedlrM sn.t ,lloM (805) 522.ao4
• RIVERSIDE 3563 RlvtrtMt Plau PlloM (714) ~905
.. ' ~
•'
f
ORANGE COUNTY, CACIFORNIA TEN CENTS I
:Sa~dlehack to Train Santa An& Cops
~ Wlllo 1()¥ent laota AM
Ca0te1t ;l!lrft1 refUMtd lO Nim· bcanil·'·'tledllebaek the a.ooo to
~= Wilton for servinc tbe .........
Saftta An:a ~ hat lta "'1
P«>llce trainln& l(ademy and the San&a AM omcen could enroll the,., FUmcbo s.atlqo lrUl&MI
said.
Under the community col-
lep ·a lntetdiltriet alteftdance
" •creemeirat. di.trtcts reimburse •ach Other wt.en students choose to attend a campws out.side their
own dlst.rtct ot residence.
In 1P.1t.e ol .Rancho S.ntiago's
reruul, Saddleback trustees
Monday nl&ht agreed to accept
tbe Santa Ana offlcers.
Saddleback colleae chief
Robert Lombardi told the board
the officen could enroll in the
pro1ram without creating any
additional c:ostl, and previously
enrolled offlcen would be al-
lowed to complete the cur
rlculum.
Trustees Norrisa Brandt and
Larry Taylor crltlcl&ed tbeir
neighboring board ror rerusing
reimbursement. Rancho San-
tia10 trusUtes have complained
or lack of cooperaUon between
the community college districts,
Mrs. Brandl s aid. Now, she
,., ..........
TWIN-ENGINE LAS VEGAS AIAUNES PIPER NAVAJO PLUNGED TO GROUND SHORTLY AFTER TAKEOFF AT LAS VEGAS
Piiot, All 9 Pa ... ngera, Ett Route to Orange County Airport, Perished In Crash
----------------------~ ~--------------------~
. Nicaragua
,:Civil War
Beaded for County
10 Die as Plane
added, tbty don't eeem willlna
to practice tMlr own Pbiloeopby.
The Santa Ana Pollce Depart·
ment prefers tbe Saddleback
police se.ience program because
Santa Ana officers are instruc-
tors in the program and have
belped tailor u to the needs or
policing a small multi-ethnic ci-
ty, Santa Ana police Capt.
Robert H. Stebbins said.
Santa Ana College's police
'llglat Credit
science prosram Is afflllated
with the Orange Courrt.1 SberUrs
Department, be said. and
aeared more to the sberlff's
needs, wblc:b are quite different
from those of tbe S.nta Ana Police.
Tom Adams, chairman of San-
ta Ana CoUqe's administratioo
of juatice proiram. disagreed
with Stebbins.
<See POLICE, Page A%>
Prime Rate
Raised Again
By 1be Associated Pttss
Several ot the nation's major
banks. responding to FederaJ
Reserve Board attempts to
tighten credit, today increased
their prime leading rate from 9
percent to 914. It was the aixtb
increase this year.
Analysts had been preditting
the rise in the rate -the in-
terest charged on Joans to the
bank·s most creditworthy
customers. lt left the prime at
its highest point in more than
three years.
nounce ment, and the dollar-
closed on the Japanese foreign
exchange market al 194.30 yen,
10 yen above its record low.
Trading opened today at 188.SO.
a nd dealers said importers
began buying, which pushed the
U.S. currency at one point back
a bove 190. The n there was
another slippage, and this con-
tinued to 189.3.5 in trading wida
other Asian markets after the , Tokyo market closed. 'i
Uncertainty over the dollar
kept trading in gold fairly .
steady in London and Zurich. the ~
two major bullion markets.
111 : ·fMcalates ..
Probing
Of Murder
C:Ontinues
New York's Chase Manhattan
Bank, the nation's third-largest,
took the lead in the increase. Its
action was followed by other
major banks , including
Chemical 8aqk. First Penn-
sylvania Bank. First National
Bank of St. Louis. the Bank or
St. Louis and Ohio National
Bank. Analysts said they expect-
ed an or the nation·s banks to
raise their prime rates by
week's end.
Airlines
Deny They .
I
' Solve Woes ·
.. .
...
MANAGUA. Nicaragua tAP>
-Air rorce planes bombed
.Nlcaragua's third largest city
•d civilians battled President
AJOtstask> Somoza's soldiers in
other towns as a general strike
to drive tbe Somoza dynasty
from power gained new support.
· Two planes bombed ! · 'MatagaJpa, JOO miles nortb of
' Managu8' for two hours
i Tuesday. killing at least four
people and wounding many
· otbers, a Red Cross official
tbere said. The military
carrison in the city or 40,000
people had been under siege for
three days with the civilian
population in virtual control of
the streets.
The Red Cross source said it
was impossible to determine the
oum ber of casualties because
many victims were taken home
by friends and relatives who
fea.,red the national guard,
Nicaragua's 7,500-man army.
would raid the hospitals
<See SOMO'LA, Page A2>
Tax Cut Bill
Sent to Brown
SACRAMENTO CAP> -A $1
' billion state income tax cul was
sent to Gov. Edmund Brown Jr
today and he quickly signed it.
<Earlierstory, AS)
The bill won tmal legislative
passage on a 75-0 Assembly
vote. On Monday, it won fmal
.Senate approval on a 39·0 vote.
,. ln a floor debate of Jess than .to minutes, Assemblyman
t.awrence Kapiloff. D-San 'Diego. author of the tax cut pro-
posal called the bill "truly a
no.n -p a rtis an bipartisan
sure.''
FOR RENT SIGN
:~IN HlJRRY
"My expectations were rar ex-
ceeded by the response to my . TM ..,-flnr-pe._,,...._..,
1 called rented the condo, and
• tbey have t?eated it as if it were
. t.tlelta."
. That's the advertising success
~ry of the woman who placed
. ~ ad in the Daily Pilot:
Jmmao. 2 Bdrm Condo
•. . · 81tlnit. W /0, pallo. Pool. $340/mo. xxx-xxxx
I JI you have an apartment.
condomlnlum or home to rent.
qall 642-5878. A friendly Dally
'P.l1ot ad-viser will help you
~ord your ad for lfeatest im-
P'l,Ct.
Our market Is a great place to put Ju.st a Cew words to use, ~•kin1 the Dally Pilot your
IJIUkel.
...
., . :\ :· .•
A twin·engine Las Vegas
Airlines plane bound for Orange
County AirPOrt plunged to the
ground shortly after taking orr
from North Las Vegas Air
Terminal today, killing the pilot
and nine passengers, authorities
said.
There were no survivors. The
victims were apparently part of
an Australian vacation tour
group en route lo the Los
Angeles area after a stop in Las
Vegas.
The Piper Navajo crashed
about 7:50 a.m. just moments
after it left tbe general aviation
terminal northeast of Las
Vegas.
Airline spokesm an Don
Donohue said the airline bas no
scheduled Bights but mes on an
oo·call charter basis between
Las Vegas and other Nevada
and Calitornia points, including
Orange County.
"The pilot took off on schedule
this morning, but he never got
outside the airport boundary.
We can't tell what happened,"
Donohue said. Richard J ameson , a Las
Vegas contractor and private
pilot, was landing at the airport
and said be saw the plane go
down.
''The take-orf seem ed
normal," Jameson said. "It was
climbing, but it shook violently
and s uddenly pitched lo the right
and crashed."
There wer-9-no skid marks, in·
dicating the plane dropped
straight down,
The back of lhe craft Wat
broken, but the plane was re-
latively intact. It did not catch
on fire. authorities said.
Hooker Told:
Go Back Home
To California
Newport Beach police today
cont.ioued interviewing friends
QI the Corona del Mar ~n who
was btudgeoo~ ~ cteath late
Sunday rugbt.
"'11le body or 40-year-old Ruben
Martinez was discovered Mon-
day nigbt in the blood·spattered wreckage of his bedroom.
Investigator Sam Amburgey
said today It a ppeared that
M,rtinez died at about midnight
Sunday. He said Martinez' move-
ments prior to his death led de-
tectives to a group of friends
with which the dead man went
to a Laguna Beach restaurant
Sunday night. . _
He said Martinez a pparently
left the night spot about an hour
before his murder. "We're still
talking to the people he was
FORT WORTH, Texas <APl with," Amburgey said today.
-"Fort Worth has enough pros-Police are still hunting
tltutes without imeorting any Martinez' car. a white 1976
from California." Datsun B·210. California license
With those words ringing in plate 627SMR. that has been
he r ears. Deborah Elder, 21, missing slnce the murder was
fo und herself bound back for discovered.
Fresno. the graying, grizzled Martinez had lived alone m
visage of County Court J udge the two-bedroom home at 411
J.C Duvall stamped on her soul. Iris Ave. for l2 years. He was a
The 80-year-old judge. known real estate salesman with a San·
for his sometimes off.beat brand ta Fe Springs firm owned by his
of justice, told the woman he brotber-in·law.
would not fine her 1r she prom· His boss became concerned
ised to go home. about Martinez when he failed to
"You be back in court by 2 show up for work Monday and
p.m .• " Duvall croaked in a voice called an acquaintance who was
rW'anks Derailed that has been compared to a sweenlftarteo. check on Martinez' .a'---parrot with strep throat. 'Tll
McEWEN, Tenn. CAP> have your plane r eservations Police <;aid the dead man·s
'the prime rate is not dire<:Uy
linked to the mortgage or
personal loan markets, but can
have a ~ychological effect on
interest tales in those areak.
Tie Federal Reserve, in an at-
tempt to slow the economy and
make the slumping U.S. dolJar
more auractlve to foreign cur-
rency traders. bas been pushing
up the interest rates it charges
member banks. thus making 1t
more expensive for them to ob-
tain money.
Meanwhile. word of the huge
U.S. trade deficit in July drove
the dollar down nearly six yen at
the start of trading on the Tokyo
foreign exchange today. lt re-
covered less than a yen to close
at 189. 725, 2.4 percent lower than
Tuesday's closing rate.
The drop. the biggest since the
1973 revaluation of the yen,
came after similar action Tues-
day on the European and New
York markets rollowing the an-
nouncement that the trade def-
icit was $2.99 billion. nearly
double the June amount. The
dollar loot more ground today on
all European foreign exchange
markets.
The dollar fell 1.4 percent
against the West German mark
an Europe Tuesday. 2.4 percent
against the Swiss franc and 1
percent against the French
franc. and continued its steep
fall in later New York trading.
Trading in Tokyo ended Tues-
day before the Washington an-
C I bo · tod t d · ready." bedroom showed signs of "one rews a nng ay o ram 11 r $980 m· Plywood two derailed tank cars full of a Miss Elder gladly paid her he o a struggle,'' but that the
flammable gas worked with plane fare and vanished. rest of the home appeared un-
special care, remembering the But four others. called "locaJ disturbed. Stolen at Irvine deaths of 16 people in February talent" by Duvall, didn't do as
when aderailedcarexplodedlO well . Eachhookergota $250 fine T U E d Ninety-eight s he e t s of
miles west or here. The two and 120 days as guests of the roop 8e ye plywood. valued at $10 a sheet.
pressurized tank cars, loaded county. WASHINGTON <APl _ The were stolen from a storage yard
with flammable propylene Duvall's actions, while un-use or U.S. troops to guarantee a o f Se vi 11 e Mc Adams
· e were pulled ofr the tracks us ual, set no precedents. He peace agreement may be dis· Construction. 2111 Bus iness
when a ve, ... -~=~~:'~~-~·~c~~~~?:"-~~~~~r~~· ~~~~~i<!d_ Center Drive. Irvine. employee Louis ville & Nashvllle train detltdbles 10..-croonty line M'id ast tea at theirs -;Bf!l•SHio&UehlfOlic~
derailed in a remote timbered where they were told not to next week, State Department 0 r. The los5 W'as dis~d'vie~· 8f 6
area. come back. ficials say. a m.
'Custom, Lo.t' .. O~ers W ariied
By PIDLIPROSMARIN
Of .. o.lly ............
People who buy so -called
"custom lots" in Irvine to build
dream houses are being wamed
about local customs called de-
velopmentstandards.
Tlie sale last June or 88
custom lots in the housin1 tract
of Northwood caused const.rna-
tlon atnOftl some city coun-cilmen, lncludlng the mayor
Bill Vardoulla, wbo feared
buyers might think they could
build whatever they want.
On the ~acUcal side, such
auctions of individual residential
parcels 1ncreue the workload or
city plannina staff. Rather than
revl•w one overall plan ror a
housing development, as is
usually the case, the city is be-
ing faced with, in the Northwood
example, a pprovals for 88
separate plans.
Vardoulis, with council ap-
proval, ordered city officials tD
prepare a pamphlet advising lot
buyers of the host of city land-
use regulations and develop-
ment standards.
The pamphlet is now ready
and is belng mailed to lot
purchasers.
Eight pages of st:E·n le-space advisory tell people ust how
hard lt b to build an · g they want.
Just to accept • project for re-
view. buyers are lorewamed,
•
the plans must be stamped with
the approval of the
neighborhood homeowners as-
sociation.
F iling a s ite p1an for
municipal review carries with It
a $250 deposit.
Five copies of a site plan must
be riled, each s howing 15
separate categories of informa-
tion. The homeowner also may
be required to submit render-
ings or b1s dream howte. Then, be mwtl submit to stand-
ards eovernlng building set-
backs, gara1e and carport
placement. rencu and walls,
trelU. e:omtnaction, palk> COV·
era, nolN cootrolt ol mecbankal
devices aucb u air condit.loniQI,
building site coverage and max-
imum building height.
Arter that, there are de-
terminations to be made about
envlronm&ntal impact under
terms or the Callromia Environ-
mental Quality Act. ·
There's planning commission
approval to be faced. Other
steps: Submission of construc-
li oh drawings; plan check ;
grading review; land use check;
issuance ot buildJng permlta;
partial inspections; final irupec-
tlon; lsauance of certificate of
uae and occupancy; utlllty hook~p.
The lut step Is the euJeat:
Move-ln.
--·
Orange County supervisors
s houldn't depend upC11\ the
airlines to solve jet noise prob-
le m s around Orange Count)'
Alrport. county officials report-
ed Tuesday.
Eucutives of both Hughes
Airwest aod Air CaJifornia re·
ported by letter that they will
meet new Fedt:ral Aviation Ad-
ministration requirements caJl-
ing for quieter planes to be
phased mto operation between
1981 and 1985.
But airport officials warned
the quieter planes by themselves
won 't be enough to bring the
airport into compliance with
state jet noise standards re-
quired by 1986.
The new regulations will re·
quire airlines to equip half their
fl eets with noise muffling
equipment by 1981 and the re-
mainder by 1983, a report to
supervisors said.
If they choose to replace
aircraft with quieter planes the
federal deadline is extended to
1985
The airlines have yet to sub-
mit timetables for converting
planes. county officials said.
County officials reported
larger but quieter aircraft are
available that could be used at
Orange County Airport.
The larger planes probably
would be able to carry enough
passengers to meet the airport's
1985 passenger demand, the re-
port s aid.
Coast
c ou ine'Ss 'At\t · tn y
sunny afternoon Thurs-
day, but ohly partial clear-
ing at beaches. Lows
tonight in 60s. High s
Thursday near 70 at
beaches to mid to upper
70s inland.
INSIDE TODA\'
A Paw Alto high sclwot
football coach found being o
homem.,. and mother 1.0QS
tougher than fourth down and
3fJ yard8 to go. Stt story, 81.
I ,
ANDERSON. Ind. CAP> -
Ftr. r.ced ~ a block·• atH of downtown today as M06
ol Andenon'6 trikJnc llremeo
ttfustd to r pond and \Ohan
tttra rustuna to ~ ~ net
delayed by picket HaH.
autborttJ aid
Fare Chief Ed Balhnat-r -
who respoodt-d to &.be alarm wtlb •f ht pf0bat1001ry ott\c n
said Ole blue was eootrot'-<1 b)'
m•dmornlni
Hijacke r
Request s
Asylum
ff£RLIN IAP• A 1unmiln
htJackt'd u Puhsh ulrllncr with
71 peri-on~ uboud loduy and
forced 1l to a t i S air tM* an
West lktlm. where the htJacker
und ntnt• oth\lr passengPrs Wed
for asylum in tbe West. an Air
Fon•e ~pok.esman aald
The s pokesman. information
officer U Col. Gerald R. Roys,
!ta1d seven of those seeking
asylum were East German and
that be presumed the other three
lhe hijacker and a woman and
<'hlld who accompanied him -
were also East German.
The 10 stayed bebind al Tem·
pelhof Airport after the jetliner
took orf again for East Berlin.
An 1 Uh passenger, a West
Berliner. also remained behind.
Thirty-four passengers were
bused to East Berlin and the re-
m ammg 18 rode back aboard the
plane.
"The hiJacker surrendered
peacefully as soon as this thing
landed," Roys said. gesturing
toward lhe TU-134 twin-engine
Jet of the Polish airline LOT.
The hijacker, who was not
further described, had put a
pistol in the race of the pilot and
told him to land in West Berlin
ins tead of East Berlin as
scheduled On the flight from
Warsaw and Gdansk. Poland,
Roys said.
The first person off the plane,
a man carrying a brown bag,
was escorted peacefully away,
witnesses said.
The blue-and-white plane.
which carried a crew of eight.
took off after West Berlin police
interrogated passengers. Roys
said tbe questionin& was
necessary for the drawing up of
an air piracy charge against the
hijacker.
Two Boys, 3 ,
Burn to Death
MODESTO <AP> -Two 3·
year -old boys burned to death
here after a can of gasoline they
had been playing with in a
garage exploded into flames, ci·
ty fire officials said.
The boys were identified as
Ryan Lee Carver, son of Mrs.
Cathy Carver, and Jason
Rodney Pettijohn. son of Mr
and Mrs. Ralph Pettijohn.
Fi re Mars hal Thurman
Norton said Georgia Pettijohn
ran into the burning shed in the
backyard of her Colorado
A venue home when she heard
the explosion Tuesday and
pulled her son outside.
Bikin is Gone
In NB Theft
Newport Beach police today
sought the burglars who took 45
bikinis and a sewinR machine
from a central Newport swim
suit shop.
The items. valued at Sl,350
were reported missing Tuesday
from the Barefoot Contessa. 2811
Newport BlvA.
Police said the thieves broke
into the s hop by removing
louvered window panes.
DAILY PILOT
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trilcers Bleek Aid
PIAGW •
A .. W ........
MAP LOCATES AI RLINER
Aboard HljltQed Jet
f',....P a.,eAJ
SOM OZA •••
He said 80 soldiers had been
rustled in as reinforcements, the
town had been blacked out by a
power failure, the Red Cross
appealed lo Managua for
desperately needed blood and
plasma. and the people appealed
to the archbishop of Managua,
Miguel Obando y Bravo, to
intercede with the government
for them. The archbishop was
the chief mediator between the
government and the leftist
guerrillas who seized the
National Palace last week.
In Managua, a bomb kllled
five national guardsmen
patrolling .iJi a jeep. a doctor in
the military hospital reported.
,.,.... Pflfle A I
POLICE •••
In 1971, the Santa Ana Police
Department asked Santa Ana
College officials to help set up a
training program for the city's
police, be said. College officials
eventually refused because they
believed setting up a separate
training academy for Santa Ana
would conflict with the college's
existing affiliation with the
sheriff's department.
flll' Santa Ana police helped set up
the Saddleback program primari·
ly because they wanted a pro-
gram alltheirown,Adamssaid.
Hero Trucker
To Be Cii,ed
MIAMI <AP> -GratefuJ of·
ficers prepared a citation of
bravery for a heroic truck
driver who rescued a policeman
from an angry crowd and then
disappeared.
Police finally learned tbe iden-
tity of the trucker when Paul
Becker. 56, of Homestead
stopped a Dade County offi~r
and said, •·t think one of your of-
ficers is looking for me."
He was rlghL Since Friday,
patrolman Milan Pilat had been
trying to find the truck driver
who interceded when an angry
mob surrounded Pilat as he
tried to arrest an alleged
narcotics user.
tn tlia ctntnt hMU1n1 ctty ot
7J ,000 -Ulo 1t1t1:1 el1btb
1ar1•• -.-. f:l\t * nr.men wpl 00 mtke ~ allbt tD
a P•YdlllU• The flre I ~ bet evod to have
started in the COUrlhWI• Loun1e.
a t1vcm that hid dcised for the
nlahl. 'l'Mt• w no lromt-diate
Indication what oau ed the blau.
Cheaterfi Id Volunteer Fire Chief
Larry M Hid th ... Wal no
evCde nceaf anf>n.
Collisio n
Safe t y
Assaile d
WASHINGTON <AP> -
Consumer advocate Ralph
Nader strongly criUcized the
federal government and the auto
industry today for failing to
ensure that cars ran survive
rear-end collisions without
poutbly fatal fires.
Nader expanded bis criticism
from the Ford Pinto. which la
subject to a massive recall over
the problem, to tbe General
Motors Vega and said other cars
probably have the same
problem.
the recall ordered by Ford
Motor Co. of 1.5 million Pintos
and 30,000 Mercury Bobcats
stem med from allegations that
when the cars were hit from the
rear tbe fuel tank could be
punctured, leading to a fiery
explosion.
Nader appeared at a press
conference with auto safety
consultant Byron Bloch of Los
Angeles, who showed slides and
released documents that be said
showed Ford knew how to build
a safe fuel lank in the early
1970s but chose not to do so to
save money.
"Ford has known and tested
the exact remedy we are urginf!
today." Bloch said.
Ford announced a recall of the
cars June 9 and offered free
corrections. However, Nade,.
and Bloch said the corrections
will fix only part of the problem
and there should be a second
r ec a 11 for more extensive
repairs.
Bloch said the Vega has
almost exactly the sam e
problem with the fuel tank that
the Pinto has and added that the
National Highway Traffic Safely
AdministraUon is investigating
it.
·'This is only the tip of the
iceberg, the Ford Maverick and
Mercury Comet also have
notorious problems." Bloch
said.
Bloch said Europea n
carmakers for years have put
the fuel tank in a position where
it is unlikely to be punctured
during a collision and that
American carmakers could have
done the same.
"The United States makes the
worst cars in the world in termJ
of safety during rear -end
collisions." ·said Bloch. who
has testified as an expert in a
number of auto liabilitv cases.
He said that pres idents of
Detroit car manufacturers could
order their engineers to make a
safe fuel tank and it could be
done quickly under current
technology.
'Foul' Claimed
MANILA, Philippines <AP) -
Soviet defector Viktor Korchnol
threatened today to quit the
world chess champions hip
match with titleholder Anatoly
Karpov unless a Soviet
parapsychologist he claims is
spooking him is barred from the
playing area and one·way glass
is installed to separate the
players from the spectators.
TV Insulting?
WASHINGTON <A P> -The thoseefforts.
"cof(ee. • m.e" mentality of "Flight attendants are on
the new televf'ston ~oa.tnn·.,. board planes not to be sexy
''Flying High" is an insult to the-• stewardesses. bur-;-;-.~.Jet.Y
intelligence and morality of of the passengers, Robe~n ev~ry flight attendant, the presl· said .. "If this first script la ln·
dent of tbe Association of Flight dicallve of the rest of the series .
Attendants has charged. we can only expect a rei!'ror:ce·
"The show concentrates more menl of lh«: already negahve 1m·
on bosoms than brains and on age of lhjht attendants as
sex more than safety." said brainless .sex goddesses .. ~afety
Patricia D. Robertson after is our business -not sex. . vtewlng Monday night's TV pres-A spokesman for CBS. ask111g
entalion of a eilot film for the not lo be identified publicly.
series, which will be on CBS tblJ said, "It certainly is not our ln·
season. tenllon to put night attendanta fn
The pilot depicted the swine· a poor light or lo down,8Tade
101 life ol tbre~ novice them or embarrass them many
stewardesses, a portrayal which way·
Robertson aaid Tuotday waa in· "We would hope that they will
accurate and demeanlnJ. keep ln mind that tbls Is really
"I can oo\y 1-.y that the •c:rtpt only the pUot ror the series and
used every IWNOtype and cllcbe we &1k them to look at the next
that bu ever been uaed In a de· two or three episodes, and thoy
ro1atory m•nner toward nJ&bt ml1htflnchometb1.nttot'nJoy." attendanta." she •ald. ''Wt have worked for many years to dltpel If not, tho spoktaman 11ld
the mlttaken tmaae of Dtih1 et· "W• would be dellahUMI to ail
tendanll as sex 1oddo1se1, a.nd down with them and liaten ~
thJ• Protratn ls a real setback In any criUrtam they mliht have.
I
AIM>u\ 3~ ..... after t fire.
Superior Coalt JUiQI WlWam T.
Clifford t11ue4 a tempor•ry ratralDlnl orclll' direcUna the n~teretumtowork.
There was no immediate in-
dlcatlon how the striken would respond.
Muuet" said be and ftve volun-
teers waJted lO mJnute1 al the ectae of the dt)' u.ntU atrikin1
flreftcbters reulved approval
from tbelr uNc>o lHdera to let
tbe ~olunl••rs tbrouab tbe
picket Une. ,
.. ( 1uess we'd stilt be atondin&
there watchln, the block bum if they hadn't et us through,"
Musser sa\d. "At an emeraency meetlne Monday, we afreed not
to c~ plck set up by
the strikers
On Sun ay ni about 2S
&triking f reOghters ponded
a ft er the root on 1 bu1y
downtown mOYle tbealer col -
lap d under the wei•ht ol
heavy rains. Tbree person• were
lnJurtid, one critieaUy, and 80
other patron1 scrambled
tbrouah exJw w safety.
The firemen, hoy.'ever. set up picket lines Monday and vowed
to tinore future emeraency
calla. Supervisory per1011nel,
who had heJped answer calls tbe
first three days, Joined 1trtftrs oo picket lines Tuasday.
.Stadeat '1'.dvaaees'
~rgartener Spenda Day in Third Grade
MINNEAPOLIS <APl -Kinderiartener Jason Sims says bia second day ol sehool wu
no match for the first.
and soqietlmes he makes an ·s· backward, the way a 5-year-old does. How he lasted all
day in third grade is beyond me."
JaM>O rode off on a school bus Monday.
but dldn't return at noon. His~ called
Barton School and the principal checked with
the kindergarten teacher. only to find that
Jason never arrived.
IASON. WHO IS TALL FOR BIS a1e,
ball contentedly spent the day in a third·
grade classroom.
~HE THIRD·GRADE TEACREa dis·
covered the mistake shortly before the prin·
cipal found the boy. She reallied he was not
as mature or learned as the other children
atJd asked him what school he was in last
year.
"Nursery school," Jason replied.
Mrs. Sims said Jason wasn't mucb im·
pressed with kindergarten ~ay. "I asked him wbat be did with those big
kids all day." his mother. Loretta, said Tues·
day. ..He said he had to read about autQmn
and draw a picture. He doesn't read much,
'"He was upset because be couldn't stay
for lunch like he did Monday and he bad to 10
home at noon," she sald.
Pontiff Asks for Help
John Paul I Adndi. Curia Inexperience
VATICAN CITY <AP> -Pope
John Paul I told the cardinals of
the Roman Catholic Church to-
day that be wtll be the bumble
"pupil'' of experienced church
officials and asked the
cardinals' advice on how to
"carry the'cross" of administer·
Ing the church.
John Paul, in a speech to
about ~ cardinals. said it was
"no problem" for him to rec.
ognize his lack of experience in
dealing with the Roman Curia,
the administrative backbone of
the church.
Departing from the text of his
formal address, the new pontiff.
elected by the conclave or
cardinals Saturday, joked that
he knew "only the pontifical
yearbook," the Who's Who llsl·
ing of church officials.
John Paul, who spent his re-
ligious career as a local-level
priest. educator and bishop, is
the first pope elected in 75 years
without specialized training as a
member of the church's
diplomatic corps or as a
memberoftheCUria.
As a result, be said. be will
have to count on the experttse «
the veteran Curia administra·
tion, ln P{lf'Ucular lbo6e be re-
instated Monday lo the ex·
ecutive jobs that expired upon
the death of Pope Paul VI.
"We plan. therefore. to hold as
precious the suggestions that
will come to us from so valuable
advisers. becoming, so to say, a
pupil of those who well deserve
our full confidence and our
grateful appreciation for the
merits acquired in a service of
such a great importance."
Among the cardinals ad·
dressed by the pope were some
who, because of the ~-year age
limit imposed by Paul VI. had
not t.Bken part in the conclave
that elected him.
According to Vatican officials.
the former Cardinal Albino Lu·
cianJ of VenJce won election as
pope with many more votes than
SAI,E ENDS
TlllSWEEKEND
' ,.
I
.. -------=-----·-, . -;-. __
Don 't wait any longer.
Substantial savings now
during the final days pt our
summer sale .
TORRANCE
2lMt HewthorM Blvd.
(213) )78· 1179
COSTA MESA
1S9S NewPOrt Blvd.
,, ,., 642-20$0
the minimum 75 out of Ill re·
quired.
John Paul said that the elec-
toral support be drew "still sur-prises and confounds us."
He said he envied the
cardinals who wouJd be able to
go back to thelr dioceses '"and
look forward lo the joy of en-
countering so many children.
already well· known and tenderly
loved.
''This is a joy that has not
been granted lo us. The Lord
knows the sadness that this re-
nunciation raises In our heart.
However. in His love, He knows
how to mitigate the bitterness of
parting with lhe prospect or a
broader fatherhood."
On Thursday the pope will
meet the diplomatic corps and
on Friday be is scheduled to re-
ceive journalists and photog· •
raphers who covered his elec·
tion. He will be formally in·
stalled in a Mass on Sunday
consecrating bis pontificate.
LAGUNA 8!ACH
US Norttl Co11t Hwy. en•> ·~st
'
Aftera .. a ~
N.Y.Steeu
r
ECTIONS, ~ PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 30, 1978
•
ursUit n • m eat
Lagunam
Burgled
Again
Burglars ransacked James
and Jan Hall's Temple Hills
Drive home Tuesday afternoon
tor the second time in less than
tbree months and the day before
1 the Laguna Beach couple was
scheduled to host a burglary
prevention seminar.
The Halls have been preparing
for the community meeting
since early June when tbeir
home was first broken into by
bvclars. They'll go ahead with
., tonight's meeting. t The second burglary was
t thwarted Tuesday when two
f young thieves were surprised iD
, the act by the couple.
f The Halls entered their home ~ to find belongings stacked up
and ready to carry off. Mr. Hall
looked out a window and uw
two young men scrambling up a
• nearby hillside.
f .. They've agreed to go abead
with tonight's meeting anyway,"
1 said police Crime Prevention
:-Team member David Rocco this
f
morning.
Police said burglars removed
a screen and louvered windows .
7 r
to gain entrance to the Hall
home Tuesday.
Rocco said the Crime Preven·
tion Team inspected the home
following the first burglary in
June and advised the couple to
replace the louvered windows.
While only Temple Hills resi·
dents were for\llally invited to
1 tonight's meetittr. other Laguna'
J residents also are urged to •
' tend the 7:39 p.m. session. 1 Police Crime Prevention I Team members say they'll have
lots of anti-burglary Ups for
those who show up al the Hall
I bome, 1155 Temple Hills Drive.
~ ~ Younger Probe
Ckars Briggs
SACRAMENTO (AP> -State
Sen. John V. Briggs did not
:Violate a state law by transfer-ri o g $250,000 raised by bis
subernatorial campaign com-
mittee to committees that
speartieaded two ballot in·
lliatives, the state attorney
general announced Tuesday.
Attorney General Evelle J.
Younger said an investigation
showed the money raised for the
two initiatives -concerning
homosexual teachers and the
death penalty not used for
Briggs· gubernatorial campaign.
Briggs. R Fulle rton, who
dropped out of the Republican
gubernatorial primary election
won by Younger. was closely as-
sociated with movements to
place the initiatives on the £all
ballot.
J!J ' .......... lWIN·ENGINE LAS VEGAS AIRLINES PIPER NAVAJO PLUNGED TG GROUND SHOftTtY-AFTER TAKEOFF AT.LAS VEGAS
All 10 Paa1engera, En Route to Orange County Alrport,Perlthed In Crash
~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~
Oernente
mder
.Resigning
Charles Mitchell today an·
nounced his resignation as presi·
dent of the San Clemente
Homeowners Association,
sponsors of a recall campaign
against Mayor William Walker
a nd Councilwoman Donna
Wilkinson.
Mitcbell said be notified the assoeletioft .. s di.rectors ot his de·
cision to~ last Wednesday,
the daJ aft.er the re-call petition
was subblltted to the city clerk.
.. We got the recall on the
ballot, and now I want to toss the
ball to someone else," he said.
"I saw the org,WZation through
a tough period. Now I need more
time for my family and my busi·
ness."
Mitchell, who runs an in·
s urance business in San
Clemente. was elected president
of the homeowners' association
in March. He succeeded Howard
Mushett, wbo resigned when he
was elected to the City Council
last March.
Mitchell, who also ran for City
Council in March, placed sixth
in a field of 14 candidates.
Tanks Derailed
McEWEN, Tenn. (AP>
Crews laboring today to drain
two derailed tank cars fuU of a
flammable gas worked with
special care, remembering the
deaths of 16 people in February
when a derailed car exploded 10
miles west of here. The two
pressurized tank cars. loaded
with flammable propylene
oxide, were pulled off the tracks
when a three-locomotive, 99-car
Louisville & Nashville train
derailed in a remote timbered area.
Vegas Plane C1ias~ . .
Kills 10·on.Bo4rd . '. . . .
A twin-engine Las Vegas
Airlines plane bound for Orange
County Airport plu~ed to. the
ground shortly aft.er taking. off
from the North L'as Vegas Air
Terminal today, killing all 10
persons aboard, authorities said.
The identities or' the victims
were not available tflis morning,
but a spokesman for the airline
said none of the pass~gers were
from California oc Nevada.
They were apparently part of
a tour en route to the Los
I agi1na Seeks
2 Attackers
Of Visitor
A visitor to Laguna Beach,
who said he refused an offer to
share some wine with two
trans ients, was struck on the
head with a bottle this morning,
police said.
Luke Charbonneau, of Quebec,
was walking with his girlfriend
near the Viet.er Hugo Inn early
this morning when the couple
was approached by two men
carrying a bottle of wine.
The pair offered Charbonneau
a drink and when be refused,
one or the men ran up behind the
victim and struck him in the head.
Charbonneau s uffered a badly
cut right ear in the incident, and
was transported to South Coast
Community Hospital.
Hospital officials said he was
treated and transported to UCI
Medical Centef 'in stable condi-
tion.
Police said today they are
seeking the two men believed in·
volved in the 5:15 a.m . incident
'
Aftgeles1 ,aree _.fu!~. a • .bi:le~ stop iJ!, Ltas. Vegia.s 1 <'11¥ ~rlin1!.
spokesJl)an wol.!ld 11otts~y· .where
the victimS:we11e'from~ Th~: Piper> .~a.va9o ~rash~ci
about 7:50 a!m.1 Just moments
art.er it left' the generai aviatian
terminal northeast of Las
Ve~as.
The plane carrie d nine passenge~ and , a prlot. There
were noswvivors.
Airline sp~kesman Don
Donahue said• the-airJine• has no
scheduled flights but' flies on an
on-call obart.er1 basis between
Las V~ga> !llna <0theri. J'levada
and Galifomia.pointS. including
OrangeCo~tJ1.1 ~ ''.Tile pUo(~oU nn•sciiectwe
this momin~ .bur ~ never got outsid~ lt'(e . aiJJpQrt )boundary.
We can't tell wlrat • happened,"
Donahue6ajd.
Rich.ard .l·ameson. a Las
Ve'gas Contractor and private
pilot. was landing at the airport
and said he saw the plane go
down.
"The take-off s eemed
normal." Jameson said. "lt was
climbing, but it shook violently
and suddenly pitched to the right and-crashed."
Stereo Equipment
Stolen in Capo
Stereo equipment valued by
the victims al $1,000 was taken
from a Capistrano Beach home
while the family wa s
vacationing in Mexico.
Orange County s he riff's
officers said the break-in was
r eported by mechanic Flavio
Garcia. 23, of 26345 Via
California. Th e intrude r
removed a louver from a window
to gain entry.
Saddle back
To Educate
SA ·Officers
ByREBECCA HELM .Ot-.Oe'ty l"IMitSqtt
W.itb · Saddleback Community
CeUeg'e's permission, the Santa
~na Police Department is send·
ing about 40. of its reserve of·
ricers· to the police science pro-
gram at the sot.ith county col·
lege because the department
p~r~fen it to the one offered at
Santa Ana College.
Rancho Santiago District
trustees, who govern Santa Ana
College, have refused to reim-
burse Saddlebact the $2,000 to
$3,000 tuition tor serving the
police student.&.
Santa Ana CoLlege has lts own
police training academy and the
Santa Ana officers could enroll there., Ranctho Santiago trustees
said.
Under the community col·
lege 's interdistrict attendance
agreement. districts reimburse
each other when students choose
to attend a campus outside their
own district of residence.
In spite of Rancho Santiago's
refusal, Saddleback trus tees
Monday night agreed to accept
the Santa Ana officers.
Saddleback college chief
Robert Lombardi told the board
the officers could enroll in the
program without creating any
additional costs, and previously
enrolled officers would be al-
lowed to complete the cur-
riculum.
Trustees Norrisa Brandt and
Larry Taylor criticized their
neighboring board for refusing
reimbursement. Rancho San-
tiago trustees have complained
or lack or cooperation between
the community college distncts.
Mrs . Brandt said. Now, she
added. they don't seem willing
to practice their own philosophy.
Tourist Booster Funds-Opposed
The Santa Ana Police Depart·
ment prefers the Saddlebaclt
police science program because
Santa Ana officers are instruc-
tors in the program and have
helped tailor it to the needs of
pollcing a small multi-ethnic ci·
ty, Santa Ana police Capt.
By STEVE MJTCllELL
CM t11e Dally l"!Mit Slaff
Robert H. Stebbins said. greater transient population," Santa. ~a College's police
Dawsonsaid. science program is affiliated
Oemente
Smash-up
Hurts5
One person was killed and five
others injured Tuesday morning
when their car crashed in San
Clem~nte as it was being
pursued by federal border patrol
officerts. California Highway
P.atrolmen said today.
The name of the dead man
was being withheld pending
n<>tification of relatives, officers ·~
Sl\id, but he is believed to be a '
22-year-old National City reai· ·
dent. r
Investigators said the car bacl
been halted at the San Onofre
border patrol cbeckp<>int when
the driver sped away from ques-
tioning officers.
It was being pursued by patrol t
officers wben it went out of coo-
trol on the San Diego Freeway
and hit a guard rail at Avenida
Pico. officers said.
All six passengers were hurt
in the \0:45 a .m. crash, officers
s aid, and were taken to San
Cle mente Hospital. where one
man died late Tuesday night.
Identified by the U.S. Border
Patrol were Johnny Lopez, 23.
and a 14-year-old youth, both
from National City.
Both Lo~ and the teen-ager
are believed to be ll.S. citizens,
the Border Patrol spokesman
s aid. They were riding in the
front of the car when it crashed.
The juvenile was treated in
the hospital's emergency room
and r eleased to his parents.
Lopez was reported to be in sta·
bl e condition today in the
hospital's intensive care unit.
Also treated In the bospilal'a
emergency room and released
was Feliciana del Ramos, 25, of
Guatemala. The Border Patrol
said she was In tbe trunk of the
car along with three men when
the auto crashed.
Admitted to the hospital were
Raul Alfaro, 22, of Guatemala,
and another man whose name
was not available today. Alfaro
was in the hospital's intensive
care unit. Both were reported in
~table condition.
Two Gunmen Rob
Oemente Jeweler
Two armed men held up a
downtown San Clemente jeweler
al 10:30 a.m. today. escaping
with an undetermined amount of
Jewelry.
A s pokesman tor Phillips'
Jewelers. 157 Ave. del Mar, said
two men entered the shop with
shotguns, demanding jewelry.
The men took the jewelry and
left the store on foot.
Rhodesia Visited
SALISBURY. Rhodesia <APl
-Former Texas Gov. John Con·
nally meets Rhodesian Prime
Minister tan Smith and other
leaders today before addressing
a business group.
Coast
. · ~~~-~*~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---~~ .~es~~~m~oom~ey c~roucE,h~M>
thinks Laguna Behcfi ~ res1denl€;.; t2,t "" 1~1;~~;~-=~~~~~11-~?::::::::::~~~=::!~s;r,;;::::~-~trJ~~~~~~:-r.Q'rl~~'ff1:d shouldn't have to subsidize the 12 66 020 4% who w1ll stay a wte at a tJme . .. otel:mote1 touri9l tnde 1n the · • ·c · · · · .. · "· · · · .... •500 · ' He said the promotion Is ..w t966..S7 ••••.•......•..•..•• 3S,OOO 76,~10 4% d' ed · h ill Art Colony.. 11674_ ................... ~OOO 82,610 4% 1rect attounsts w ow stay Baghn said he11 oppose a ., .. 000 111612 5az. a week in Laguna and leave
proposed $30,000 promotional ~~-6910 · ·: · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ~·l{,IV\ ·~·228 5% their tourist dollars at local
fund sought by the Chamber of-_._. -· · · · · · · '' ·~...,. · · · · · · · ._.. ' ~"="'~~• ~tA•lc;M\$ and shops.
Commerce tn the new budget. 19"70-n:. · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · 34•·292 ,OT8 ~ "The lo...-._ot to get~more
1971·72 ·• · · • · · · · • · · · · · · · · · • 38,408 137 ,609 5"' touris•· into town," Da-son e .... "That's an area that needs .,,,,,.. 73 20 ooo 1 .... -" 6% .., ,,. " ~·"· · .. · · · · · • · • · · · · · · · · · • -.~ plained. "It's to restore the trimming,'' Baglln said ln a 1.,,,"'14 20 ooo 174178 6"'· .,,.,.. .................... • • IO balance of tourists and telephone interview today. "The 19'1.4·75 .................... 18,SOO 180,412 6% transients. Chamber and hotel operaton 1.,,," 76 18 l<N\ 210 1-6% ,,,.,. ... •• •• ... .. .. .. .. .. .~ • v1. "It's much more desirable to should pay for promotion 1.,,,;;71 -ooo ""• -6% •nr •••••••••..••..•••• o<N, -.~ have someone from far ·&:r.· themselves. They are the one3 t-78 30 ooo ....., 311 6% ,,,,. · • · .... · · · · · · · · · · · · · • -· • visit here than a van full of • who benefit from It. I don't believe in a resident subsidy for CHAMBER PROMOTION EXPENSES OVER THE YEARS dieback residents who use the
the tourtst trade." Councilman BenHn OppoMa Expendtture of Funds facilities and leave," Dawson • said. But fellow council member He said the hotel Industry ~
Howard Dawson says the hotel brought in nearly $300,000 in bed ~
industry in Laguna Beach •llocated budget funds ranging shows a steady increase In bed to it ff th I f' already picks up the lab for from $12,500 to $42,SOO for taxes -no matter what the taxes c Y 00 ers e aal •5•
tourists ln the form of a six prom·otlooal purposes. promotional fund. ~~:/·~d~':!r~~l ~~irhe:;~
percenlbedtax. That fund has been set at However. fund advocate re·investintodri.sm."
The chamber-administered $30,000 UM! past two years, and Dawson says that, In reality, the But Bulin said £be bed tu
ta x do 11 a r s a re used r or the chamber is seeking another percentage spent on promotion money, wliich totalled 1291,311 in
promotional advertising ln $30,000 for next year 's has declined when compared to \971-78, abould be used to ollset
magazines, much of it in Br1Usb promotional effot1S. rent increases. the tmpact or tourilm on tbe
Columbia where much or But 1 comparilon of "We've apent less on communily,
La 1 u n a· s tour ls l trade community promotion C\lnds and promotion as a percentage of Ba1lln dllputes a claim by ortgina~. the bed tu brouabt ln by le><:al bed ta.x and that hu resulted iD DawlOD that. tbe boUl/motel ln·
Since 1984, the city baa hotel and motel operators, fewer tourtsta In town and a <SeeTOUU. P••• A2)
I
•
·-
FOR RENT SIGN
GOES IN HlJRRY
*1...-~·,.-,_..r ex·
ceeded by the-resl16'bse to my
ad. Tbe very first people who
called rented the condo, and
they have treated it as if it were
theirs."
Tb at 's the advertising success
story of the woman who plaeild
this ad in the Daily Pilot:
Tmmac. 2 Bdrm Condo
Bil ins. W /D, patio. Pool.
$340/mo. XXX·XXXX
If you have an apartment,
condominium or home to rent,
call 642-5678. A friendly Daily
Ptlot ad-viser will help you
word your ad for greatest im·
pact.
Our market is a great plate
to put just a few words to use,
maktne the Daily Piiot your
mark.et.
INSIDIE TODA"
A Polo Alto high school
football coach /aund being a
homemaker and mother was
tougher than /ourlh down arid
30 yard3 to go. See story. Bl.
h1de1'C
,
'
JUVENILE HAU COUNIE.ORS ATTACK IUPeRvt80AY POLICIES
They Are (ffom left). Atfrwd Skin, Robert AUlil'Nl8, the Aev. CIH Marqula
Juvenile Hall Violent?
Pair Allege Bre~ Poor Superviaion
By GARY GRANVILLE
OI • o.lt'I' ._ SUit Robert Aui.mus and Allred
SJule:> are counselors at Orange
County Juvenile Hall who don't
hke the way the ball is being
run.
Tuesday. Ausmus and Skiles
joined rorces with a chaplain at
1uven1le hatl to make their
sentiments public.
At a ~ conference in the
home of The Rev. CUI Marquis
m Orange, the two 31-year~ld
counselon; unleashed a scathing
attack on the hall and those who
operate it.
Cornerstone of the assault was
a 163-page term paper Ausmus
and Skiles completed last
Gates Clear,
Not Angry
About Probe
sprin1. a term paper tb~y said earned them an A fn an
undergraduate class at the
University of Redlands.
Within minutes of their press
conference. the term paper bad
become a report and county
officials were being asked
questions about a study they
have never seen.
That study concludes that
there is $1 million worth of fat in
juvenile hall's annual budget,
fat chiefly in the form of
s upervisorial personnel who do
little or nothing to earn their
pay.
As bad, Ausmus and Skiles
asserted, policies at the 310-bed
Juvenile facility have resulted in
· ,,,.... Pa,,e A J
TOURS •••
a br eakdown of inmate
discipline.
And part of that breakdown is
an increasing danger of
violence, inmate-to-inmate and
inmate-to-counselor, the two
counselors said.
They also charged that the
failure to enforce discipline has
resulted in Juvenile Hall
becoming "little more than
Orange County's second
Disneyland."
Furthermore. Ausmus and
Skiles insisted, less serious
offenders are housed with heavy
offenders at the hall.
As a result. according to the
term paper, the hall tends to be
a breeding ground for crime. a
crime school with street-wise
toughs acting as schooi masters.
The two counselors charged
that administrators at Juvenile
Hall are isolated from their
charges and have placed an
dustry "Pays its own freight 10 unneeded layer of supervisors
times over." between themselves and reality.
"They ctourists> place a To all of that, county officials
liability on the residents or had little to say, if for no other
Laguna that normal com-reason than few of them have
Orange County Sheriff Brad munities don't have to face," seen the report or heard the
Gates said Tuesday that he Baglin said, citing added police charges. •
never doubted that an FBI probe patrols, lifeguard protection and "I'm a little perturbed by the
mto his affairs would clear him beach cleanup as examples. fact that no one In a position to
of any alleged wrongdoing. He said that when the city first correct any situation that might
In a statement issued a few administered funds to the exist was first given a chance to
bours earlier, U.S. Attorney Chamber and hotel industry, "il respond," Supervisor Thomas o a v i d H i n de n s a i d th e was seed money to get them Riley said.
five·monlh Gates investigation started. "They <Ausmus. Skiles and
was at an end and that no "We have seeded the clouds Marquis> appear not to have
evidence of wrongdoing had and now we have tourists rain· permitted those of us vitally
been uncovered. in~ down on us year-round," he concerned with such problems to said. "The hotels are already do anything about them," Riley
As Gates basked in the clean full and I can't believe our ad· added.
bill of health given him by the vertising has a substantial im· Aeling Chief Probation Officer
FBI, he said he still does not pact." Nancy Nelson was also at a loss
know who hi s anonymous He said that by improving and to answer the allegations the trio
accusers are or what he was renovating existing hotels, and leveled at the halt and its
accused of doing. perhaps by adding, "one or two operation. '
He did know, however. that he other modern hotels," Laguna Miss Nelson had not seen the
had been gone over with a Beach's tourist industry could report or heard the charges untll
fine-tooth comb and been improve. they were repeated to her by
h t. "But I just don't see the s ub1 ect to t e s ame scru my benefit of continuing this ad· newsmen. "'normally done only for a "We're having a m eeting
f U S A vertising campaign at the ex· nominee or . ttorney 1 h 1 todaytotrytogain somemsight GeneraJ or F'BI director." pense of the peop e w 0 ive into what all this is about." Miss here," Baglln said.
Gates did not fault the FBI for Chamber of Commerce of· Nelson said today. spend mg five months poring ficials could not be reached ror She pointed out that policies in
h . ff · ''Wh comment on the proposed pro-Juvenile Hall follow legal over is a airs. en a motional funds. The issue will be mandates and that those in her
complaint is made against a raised during budget hearings department "wtll always listen
public official, it s hould and early next month. lo constructive crilici:.m and
must be investigated," Gates suggestions for improvement ... said as he refused to fault the FBI for delving into his personal Servi.Ce Held Meanwhile, Ausmus. Skiles and Marquis said they have and official conduct. appointments lo meet with the
He noted that the probe had county Grand Jury's justice
beendeepandthorough. For San Juan's committeeTuesdav.
"'They have reviewed every Simultaneously. ·Riley said he
aspect of my personal finances J bn F Bl d is planning to meet with
s inc e I was 18 years old, 0 • 8 eS Juvenile Court Presiding Judge
including every check written by William Murray and Supervisor
me since 1970 and my personal Mass of Christian Burial was Philip Anthony later this week.
income tax returns from 1974 conducted this morning at Serra Riley said he so far does not.
on, .. Gates said. Chapel in the Old Mission San have a measure to weigh the
Juan Capistrano for John Fran· validity of the trio's allegations
"They've talked to everyone cis Blades, 67, a San Juan resi· and is likely to favor having an
who has been a friend of mine dent wbo died Monday. independent commltlee study
for 20 years or less and they Blades died at the Beverly them.
certainly have had unlimited Manor Convalescent Hospital in Ausmus was sus pended from
ability to examine anything they Capistrano Beach, where he bad his $16,000 a year counselor's job
wanted to." been a patient for some tlme, a Friday after allegations of
The 39-year·old sheriff blamed L e s n e s k i M o r t u fl r Y miscondu-ct were lodged ag-ainSt
the investigation and its spokeswomansaid. him.
resultant publicity on his failure A restaurateur, Blades owned He said he does not know what
to win re·eleclion in the June 6 the Panther Room in Laguna he ts charged with and has not
1mmary election. Beach and the Red Lion in Dana been told why he was suspended
Student '&dVanees'
Kiridergaruner Spenda Doy in Third 6mtle
llIN'NBAPQUS fAP> -Kindercartener
Ja11on Stms 18)'1 bls serond day of school wu
no match for the first.
and 1ometimes he maket an ·s· backward.
the way a 5-year·old does. How be lasted all
da,y ln tbtrd grade h1 beYond me ...
Juon n>de oU on a school bus Monday.
but didn't return at noon. Ht. mot.bet called
Barton School and the principal checked with
the kinder1arten teacher. only to find that
Jason never arrived.
TSE TBJRD·O&ADE TEAcBEa dls·
covered the mistake shortly befoc~ t.be prin·
cl pal found tbe boy. She reallatd be was not
as mature or learned as the other children
a11d asked him what school be wu ln lat
year. .JASON, WHO 18 TALL FOa 1118 aae.
had contentedly spent the day in a third·
srade clasaroom.
"l uked hlm what be did w\Ua t.boM big
!deb alt dllY.'' b1t mother. Loretta, said Tuel·
day. "He said he had to read about autumn
and draw a picture. He doesn't read much.
"Nunery school," Juon re,,lied. Mrs. Sima sald Ja~ wun't much lm·
preued wttb ki.ndes'tarten Tutlday.
P,.... P.,,e AJ
POUCE •••
with the Orance County Sberlff'•
Department, be nld, and
geared more-to the sbertff'a
needs, which are quite dltrereet
from thole of the Santa Au
Police.
Tom ~. cbalrman ol San· ta Ana College's admlniltratloft
of justice program, disa,reed
with Stebbins.
In 1.977. the Santa Ana Police
Department asked Santa Alla
College officials to help set up a
training program for the city's
police. he said. College omctals
eventually refused because they
believed setting up a separate
training academ)' for Santa Ana
would conflict with the collece's existing affiliation with the
sheriff's department.
Pedestrian
Hit by Truck
In Lag11na
A Huntington Beach woman
was struck in a crosswalk in
Laguna Beach Tuesday by a
pickup truck driven by a San
Juan Capistrano man.
Colleen Brower, 25, of 8400 Ed·
inger Ave .. suffered an injW'ed
right bip in the 10:15 a.m . inci·
dent at the corner of Aster
Street and North Coast
Highway.
The woman was taken by am·
bulance to South Coast Com· munity Hospital where she was
treated ror her injuries and later
released.
Police said they are seeking
charges of failure to yield to a
pedestrian in a crosswalk, and
driving with a revoked license
against Todd Matthew Atwood,
30. of 25681 Vla Del Rey, San Juan Capistrano.
"He wa upset becauae he couldn't stay
for lunch Uke be dld Monday and he bad to so
home at noon." she said.
Tuv Planes Bomb
Nicaraguan City
MANAGUA. Nlcaraeua <AP,
-Alr force plane• bombed Nlcarqua'a third larJ:! etty
and clvWam battled \dent
Anutuio Somou'1 toldlen ln
other towns as a 1eneral IU'Utt1 to drive the Somoza dynut)'
from power gaioed new support.
Two planes bombed
Matagalpa, 100 miles north of
Managua, for two hours
Tuesday, killinJ at least four
people and wounding many
others, a Red Cross official
there said. The military
garrison ln the clty of 40,000
people bad been under sieae for
three days with tbe civilian
population in virtual control of
the streets.
The Red Cto6S source said it
was jplpossible to determine the
number of casualties because
many victims were taken home
by friends and relatives who
feared the national guard.
Nicaragua's 7,SOO·man army,
would raid the hospitals.
He said 80 soldiers had been
rus hed in as reinforcements. the
town had been blacked out by a
power failure, the Red Cross
appealed to Managua for
desperately needed blood and
plasm a, and the people appealed
to the archbishop of Managua,
Miguel Obando y Bravo, to
intercede with the govemme.nt
ror them. The archbishop was
the chief mediator between the
government and the leftist
guerrillas who seized the
NationaJ Palace last week.
In Managua, a bomb killed
five national guardsmen
patrolling ln a Jeep, a doctor in
the military hospital reported.
Frequent stnet battles ...-e
reported in Leon, a city of isopoo
residents, and a Red Cross
source there said the general
strike had paralyzed business.
Estell. 90 miles north of
Managua, was tense. a Red
Cross officlal there said, but the
national guard was reported
occupying the heart of the city
and keeping It unCier control.
Meanwhile, the country's most
powerful business organization.
the N lcaraguan Development
Institute. declared its support
for the anti·Somcna strike that
began Friday and urged its '100
members to Join in the
"political-labor" protest.
Bites Slated
Thur8day for
Civic Leader
Funeral services will be held
at 10 a .m. Thursday for retired
business executive Wendall E.
Faulk, a longtime San Clemente
dvtc leader. who dled Saturday. He was Tl.
Mr. Faulk was a past presi·
dent of the San Clemente Rotary
Club. He also bad served as dis·
trict governor for the Rotary
Club.
Mr. Faulk was president of the
San Clemente Chamber of Com·
merce in 1957·58. He had lived in
San Clemente since 1955.
Thursday's services are
planned at the San Clemente
Presbytarian Church.
Point, family sources said. He ~~~;;:-';°:;f;..,,,.~illlifiliiNGEC'OAITllllll!l~~rt~~w~sfrianm~eim~be~r~ofiritithiiPe~Mi?tie~n~·s~lin~·7"""1'~w~i~th~p~a~y~.~~~~~~~~~,.,.....,...'"""e""!~iji1 8 • ~ ·:tt{l 1 • t · ~~ beeW'se!Wt ~
~Or-C..\10.lly ll'\)04 '"'"'-·"·-~"f'd -Ne .... .,..,.,, l\~~ttwOr.,...
~.'.::''Q~:T.:o~4y°'l'!~t!
......., .... 00n ""'"'• liUflll-..... ,~-'"•"' V•tt•v. ttvlftf' ~•tMltblic• V•ll•Y Mid L-8H<•·s-...lhC...\I ................ , .... ''°" I\ pubOtllit'<t '•twrN-v' Mtd ~ n. ~~tekt~~~'l..~,·~z.:.U>-.. .. ., ........ _.
"'"'"""' •nd ,.,,.,._ , .. _. c .....
Vlo(~Prlt''\tdfirtteN!~ .. ~ ._.. ...... , ....
f_ ... _.....,.
"""'""''"' f;ditor CllffMtMi.--~.lid
... >1'1 .... Ml"""'9 s-.
~ .. edlOlloe ··n•o-.,._ ......... _.. .. "0 ....... tlll'lt
OHien °""'"'°w J10W.•t8'W~ ,...,.,"0!..,8'>o<11 111n-•-.. o \Hlcti.cr.<t Yete..r fUltU"-tlltNd ··~o.-.,._
T~11e(114)~
CIH.itlM Aclve ....... IO-M7t
L.lllUft• .. l!Gft Alf.,..,.,...,..:
TefepfloM .......
~--a.-......
'"'''lt .. ,. °'= 911." "'*·~= i::r ••. o:•:; ... -;r. ..... ~t':'':~ .... ':' .. ror~wt .. .,,_, •-1•1 ,.,..,,.,,... M , .... ,. .... .....,,
~.r.:.:.':'\!:!!~ •• :. .. ,: •• ~::,~'ti :="..:t....1> =~~.~-.. ...i11t-.
and a former vaude Ile ancer. d i s t r l c l a t t 0 r n e y f 0 r He ia survived by a wife. Vicki; two sons, Ban')' of Santa investigation.
Barbara, and Briim of L"llsuna so-in AUsmus and Stcttn
Beach; four daughters, Sally predicted Tuesday night tbal
Blades and Sheila Bre\l(er, both their up-front criticism of the
of Los Angeles, Susan Adams or ball will eventually cost them
Idaho. and Sharon Criftnan of -UuJi.r jobs... job_ Ausmus bas Haw aH; • step-daughter anct held for eight years and Skiles
son-in-law, Susan and Don Watta ror six years.
of San Juan Caplltrano. Both men insisted their work
He is also survived by nine ucords at the hall are
grandcbildreo. unblemished.
Bikinis Gone
In NB Theft
Newport Beach police today
sou1ht the burglars who took 45
bikinis and a sewing machine
from a central Newport swim
suit shop.
The items. valued at SI.~
were reported missing Tuead•Y
from th() Barefoot Contessa, 28U
Newport Blvd.
Poltce said the thieves bf'Ok()
Into the shop by removing
louvered wlnd<>w panes
They also said it was an
assault on a counselor at the ball
last Saturday that touched off
their public exploslon.
Miss Nelson said the assault
was r eported. charges flied
against the juveniles involved
and that three or them have
been sent from the hall to the
special juvenile section in
Orange County Jail.
"We acted 111 promptly and
responsibly as possible," Mias
Nelson said u she beaan her
own lnqulry lnto the cbar1es
alred by two counselors and a
priest who acta aa a volunteer
chaplain at Juvenile Hall.
I
..
oon •t watf any longer ..
Substantial savings now
during the final days of our
summer sale.
TORRA,,CE
23"'9 H.wtl'lorne Blvd.
C21 :u 371· 1279
(
COSTA MESA
tS9S NewPCWt BIVd.
(714) 642-2050
t..AGUNA llACH
345 Hort,, Coast HWY.
(714) •9US51
.,
DAii. v PILOT A5 .
• QUEENIE 175 For Eaelt C'alttorntan Ffllftfl l .. . . ... .. r •
$1 Billion Tax Cut Vote Today .
1127,900 Error
Suspect Says
He'll Return
LOS ANGELES IAP) When 52·year·old ac·
countant Arne Ristol discovered that $927,000 had
been erroneously·transferred to his bank account,
he took orr. He now wants to return and "clear bis
name," according to a lawyer friend.
The Los Angeles Times on Tuesday quoted ~ Santa Ana attorney Daryl D. Hansen as saying
that Ristol "bas expressed a desire to return and
dear bis name, but he wants to do it under
circumstances that are fair ··
Hansen would not reveal the West Covina
bookkeeper's whereabouts, saying Ristol wanted
assurances or a bail reduction from the district at·
tomey. "He doesn't want to s it in the can for
Sl00.000 bail because I don't think he can post it."
Hansen added.
Ec19ratfonal Funding Flawed
SANTA MONICA 1 AP) Although billions o(
federal dollars have been spent to improve educa·
tion. return on the investment has been low
mainly because teachers and local school officials
were never taught how to improve on their own, a
Rand Corp. study says.
The four-year s tudy commissioned by the U.S.
Department of Health. Education and Welfare ex-
amined 293 federally funded projects, including
some to eliminate illiteracy and othenfto improve
vocational and bilingual --------
education. ( ) The net return to the Sf ATE
federal investment. th~
researchers said. "was '---------
the adoption or m any in·
novations. the successful implementation of few
and the long-run continuation of still fewer."
3 Sfttt~ I• N~ Protnt
~ SAN LUIS OBISPO IAP> -Three of 10 de!en·
dants faci~ trespassing charges in connection
with a Oiablo Canyon anti-nuclear power dem·
onstralion have been sentenced to six months in
Jail after pleading no contest
M wticipaJ Court Judge Harold Johnson said
Tuesday be imposed the maximum sentence for
the misdemeanor because they had refused to
abide by all laws during a 24-month probation
period.
The three defendants. Peter Klotz-Chamberlin
and Christy Lanzi, both of Santa Cruz. and Samuel
R. Tyson of Waterford. also were fined $500 each.
Battle Seftl fn Well are Bike
SACRAMENTO <APl -The stage is set for a
major battle in the Legislature's closing days over
whether cosL-of-living grant increases should be
reinstated for nearly 2.2 million welfare re<:ipients.
The Assembly Revenue and Taxation Commit·
tee voted to do that Tuesday, but refused to ex·
empt county hospital nurses from the state wage
freeze.
The battle is certain to focus on whether
welfare recipients can get grant increases while
government employees· wages are frozen.
lloM»el"fl Sapect Surrnaun
MARTINEZ <A Pl One of three gunmen who
a ll egedly robbed 13 would-be gamblers of S2,000 in
a Reno-bound bus Saturday night has surrendered
to the Contra Costa County sheriff's department.
Darril Terry. 26, who was booked for in-
vestigation of kidnapping and robbery Tuesday.
said he turned himself in after telling his family he
was joirung the Air Force
Terry said he met two strangers at a bar in
Richmond, where they hatched the plot to rob the
Trallways "gambler's special" bus Saturday.
Arter robbing the 13 passengers, the two strangers
ran off with the entire loot. he said.
ACRAM NTO <AP> -A $1 b Ilion state ln rome tu cut wu h adod today for a final Al·
tembly vote that wo\lld aend ll to Gov. l!!dmW\d
Bro n Jr for hJ1 promlitd '1ana\utt.
Tho plan would 1lve a one.time f1S state lo·
coma tax cul tor 1978 ~ ctach Californian fillnt a
at para tr ttlurn. and Q tue> tax cut to each couple nun.a • joint return
AN EMBLY VOTE scheduled for today
wa1 Jlttl more lhan a lormaltly. because the As-
sembly hut week approved the major featurea of
Mayor Wt
Removal, Requea~
VERNON <AP> -A retired firerigbter
baa accused Vernon's multi·aillllonaire
mayor ol U1ecally livll'li outalde the city be
presides over
The action rued Tuesday tsaln.st Leonis
C. Malburg, so. is the same charge his
wealthy grandfather was indicted on 35 years
ago
Filed with the state Att.omey General's
Office. the action seeks to oust MaJburg as
mayor. a position he has held for seven
'years ll also requests his removal from the
City Council scat he has occupied for 22
years.
The charge was filed by Carlton E.
Cla unch. 41. a retired Vernon firefighter who
was a n unsuccessful City Council candidate
last spring
Claunch claims Malburg controls the
city's voling because most of its 240 residents
are either munlcipal employees or Hve in low
cost city-owned housing.
Judge Attacks
lawyer's Attire
SAN DIEGO <AP> No one would have
blamed James Kinder for feeling he had taken his
suit to the wrong court after a judge pronounced
the attorney guilty of "vulgarity" for his casual at·
tire, but Kinder says he'll do it again. .
Superior Court Judge Edward T. Butler said
he was "appalled" Monday by Kinder's brown
plaid suit, rust-colored sweater and open collar -
no necktie -as the attorney's client pleaded inno·
cent to a felony.
"Are you an attorney? Are you 'admitted to
practice in the courts of this state?"' Butler asked.
KINDER Si\ID HE WAS.
&tier said there was nollung he could do
about a lawyer's attire because appellate courts
have ruled it's not a judge's concern. but he had
plenty to say about it
··Manners of dress tend to portray how a
person reels about himself and his profession ... the
Judge intoned ··Adherence to a code of conduct.
standard or dress, sym bolizes the hallmark of
educated. cultured people "
··Bit by bit the waves of vulgarity are eroding
our standards ... he added
KINDER SAID TUESDAY that he will
challenge the Judge for cause m the current case
because Butler'-; "emotional barrage" left his
client. a 21 year-old woman accused of attempted
murder. "with the impression that the hostility his
honor was releasing on me would be also released
upon her because she was my client ... She did
express grave concern over whether there would
be a bleed-over of the judge·s feelings about me
onto her own case."
The attorney said the issue of neckties Is
similar to m <Jny court reforms that have occurred
over the years
"If it weren't for the courage of attorneys lo
promulgate change, we'd probably all still be
wearing white wi gs,·· he said. "l am sure there
will be many occasions in future when I appear in
San Diego courts without a tie."
Besides. he added : "Ties give me a ras h."
Vets Unit Talk Set
M e dical care fo r
Orange County veterans
will be discussed Sept.
13 at a meeting of the
Orange County Veterans
Advisory Council.
The meeting will
begin at 7:30 p.m. at the
Stale Mutua l Savings
and Loan Building, 625
E First St .. Tustin.
The meeting is open to
the public. Information
can be obtained by call·
ing Adm. Phil Niekum.
USN (rel.) at 586-6926,
o r Ben de Leon at
834-2042.
Firs~ you'll enjoy a marvelous soup du jour or crispy
tossed green salad Then we proudly serve you a generous
portion of succulent Prime Rib, the king of beef, plus a
piping hot baked potato with all the trimmings, fresh sour-
dough bread and butter. For the finishing touch, it's coffee
or tea and a tantalizing dessert All this for only $5 .95.
Mondny-Snturday 5 to 1:00 PM. Sunday 4 to 6:00 PM .
Charley Browns
HUNTINGTON BEACH -16160 Beach Btvd.
Reservations Acccpted -(714) 842-6602
)
the same bUl on a bi·p•rti11can 73'-0 vote.
The measure -spon1ored by Brown and
Oe mocrallc leaders of the Le1l1lature -la a com·
blnalion of earlier lax cul proposals authored by
Republlcana.
GOP LEADERS ln both holqeS have com·
plained that the Democrat.a are stealing their pro·
POSal1 In an election year political maneuver. But
Republican lawmakers have nonetheless unan-
imou1ly supported tbe bill. AB 3802 by As·
sembtyman Lawrence Kapiloff, D-San Dleeo. tn a
series of committee and floor votes over the past
two weeks.
The Senate -graveyard of other tax cut pro-
posals this year -rot 39-0 for the tax cut on
Monday, clearing the realest potential threat to
passage
THE COMBINED £f FECI' of the proposed ln·
come tax cut and Proposition 13's property tax
cuts would reduce the average bomeowner's an·
nual tax bills by $750 to Sl.000.
Renters. who got notJling from Proposition 13's
voter-mandated 57 percent property tax cut. would
get $75 each in income tax cuts from the bill.
SENIOR CITIZENS, both renters and
homeowners. wouJd gel up to S315 each in addi·
t1onal tax cuts under the Income tax cut bill.
In addition to the one-time tax credits. the
Kapiloff bill would adjust state income tax
brackets annually with inflation so that most
workers receiving only cost-Of-living increases
would not move to higher state tax brackets.
That so-called "indexing" has been a top
prior ity or Republicans in recent years. and it was
opposed vigorously by most Democratic leaders
until this summer. when the tax cut fever of
SIO,-Plot
Man Charged
In Extortion
SAN DIEGO </\P l A 26-year·old Phoenix
man was arrested in Phoenix Monday and charged
with attempting to extort Sl0.000 from San Diego
radio personality Bill Ballance
Charles Steven Sawyer. a tree trimmer. was
arraigned Tuesday in Phoenix on charges of extor-
tion and booked in Maricopa
County Jail on $10,000 bond.
An FBI spokesman said
Sawyer contacted Ballance
more than a week ago and
threatened to mail him an ex·
plosive device at San Diego
radio station KFMB unless
Ballance paid the Sl0.000.
Sawyer was arrested at his
home while making final ar·
rangements on the te lephone
with Ballance.
FBI officials declined to reveal how Sawyer
became aware or Ballance. who formerly conduct-
ed a r adio talk show at station KABC in Los
Angeles.
Proposition l3's passas e ewept throu1h
Legislature.
THE INCOME TAX CUT would be financed
from the ~tate'!J budget surplus. now estimated at
up to $S bUUon annually for the next few years. •
The rest of that surplus 11 tentatively earmartced to continue to help Jocal government.a whose rev·
enues were slahed by Proposition 13.
Brown. who predicted • statewide business re·
cesalol\ and eventual state tax hikes tr ProposltJon
13 passed. now says CaJifornia can afford more tax
cuts because the state ls recelvlna ~xcess lncome.
business and s ales tax revenues from ·'the
greatest peacetime boom In our history ...
The Democratic governor says. and non·
partisan analysts agree. that Callfomla can eut ln· come laxes this extra Sl blllion and continue to
glve schools. cities and counties $3 billion to $4
blHion annually in Prop05ttlon 13 aid.
BUT REPUBLICANS have accused Brown or
deliberately dece1V1ng voters about the growing
budget surplus -now estimated at $5.8 billion
compared to a state budget or $15 billion -In an
attempt to defeat Proposition 13.
Attorney General Evelle Younger. Brown's
GOP foe for eovernor In the Nov. 7 reneral elec·
lion. has charged that Brown is "playing games"
with the budget surplus figures.
"The numbers change almo6l ovemight to suit
the governor 's political purposes. When he was
against Proposition 13. we bad onJy S3.S billion.
When U passed. he suddenJy had more than S6
billion ... Younger says.
ACTUALLY. THOSE TWO budget surplus
figures do not contradict each other as sharply as
Younaer suggests in a statewide barrage of radio
commercials. '
First of aJI. the state it.setr has been the big-
gest single property taxpayer in California for the
past d~ade because of a pre-Proposition 13 $1
billion annual "bomeowner's exemption" tax re·
lief program under which the state fays property
taxes on lbe first $7.000 in value o each owner.
occupied home.
PROPOSITION ll's tax cuts therefore gave
the state an immediate $600 million annual cut in
the cost of that tax relief program.
In addition to that. the reduced, property tax
bills ror business and homeowners reduced tax de-
ductions on state income tax and business taxes.
raising estimated re venues from those taxes by up
to $250 million annually
AND IN RESPONSE to what Brown called
·'the spirit of 13." the Legislature and Brown have
made $850 miUion in cuts In the state budget. in·
eluding a freeze on we lfare grants and state
s alaries and a freeze on hirings.
Finally. estimates of state income. sales and
business tax revenues are being revised upward
by about $300 mUlion because of updated estimates
of the California economy. now in a fourth year of
robust expansion instead of the downturn predict·
ed by economists.
PERFECT HAIR COLORING
Done At. ..
LUZZETT A Bernard
240 Newport Center Or .• Ste, 200 NEWPORT BEAC>-4~23
•••
-----:;
and defer the-·
•••
If you have$10,000ormore In
a 5% bank passbook, we
can Increase your interest
rate by at least 50%.
you can defer interest pay· Important too.our now·
fa mo us Savings Loan Is
available should you need
funds prior to maturity since
federal regulations require All you do Is switch your
funds Into one of our Six·
Month Money Market Certi·
f lt:ate Accounts.
Interest will be credited
quarterJy or, at your option,
ment until 1979.This option
may provide special income
tax benefits.
~ ,, ' ' ~ ' :i THt BIG M
'
MUTUAL
SAVINGS
AN EOUAl H04'!1NO UENOEf'
a substantial penalty for
early withdrawal.
Call us tor .--------.
details at the fSIJC
office most con-l::==::J
venlenttoyou: .....................
Pasadena IMatn Qt heel (213) U9·2~51 Arc ad II (213) «6.01661Cano0a Pone 1213\ 81µ . .«22/C.plstrano San Clemel'tP
17141 493 56511Cermos 1213) 928· 1376/Corona Del Ma11714) 675·5010/Covina c213) 339·5'1&1 FallbtOOlc (714) 726 ~n"
Fountain valley (71'J 963·83961Glendale 1213) 2•2·• 1461Lake San Marcos 171•1 744 27711 Port Muel'eme t805l 98!> 23231
Santa An• (11415'79741 I Thousand Oaks 1806)497·2787/Upt.and (7141961 26211V15c.117141 728·8585
Tl\omH K~v11 Edltot
' Fire Protection
For Hills Timely Kennedy Savors Senator Role
L ww Be ch J in the p t armin lt ctr
uguanst u polcnllol holocaust In lh An:h Beach Helahta
commun t)' ln the w~ke or 10 !'M>n a In thut crowded
hilltop residential ur a
To dot the City Council ,h ppnwed 1t resolution
mak1nt one·hour rare wat bet"cen nructures m n·
datory for" w home a<>Jna up tn th ure .
An O~n-ended buitdmg ban WUI l\IUre \lrOrkabJe
i.pec1hc plan.for th rommunJt)', and the cUy I currently ~cekin• bJ for n mil ·k>na n~ road to connect Art'h
Bench lf \j;ht!\ with the Top of the World communlty fire
station.
1\nd lust W k tM C'tly look d llv~ry ot o nfolW nrc
truck thut h th caa>Dblllly or maneuverina over t~
routth lcn-ain hn1ttnR the two hjllstde communities.
'
Thal $\9,000 pumper truck can also fight brush fire
" h1 ~ on the muve
City omc1ab t•re finally movlna In rapid ra hion to
1rnplr~nt fire Jfety m usu i.n the •re41, and their ef·
forts to duh~ should bl' uppreciat~ by the re11dent.s
whw.c proteclton ha~ bct'n improved
TV Rate Hearing
Luguna Be~ch cable televi ion viewers will have an ...
opportunity to pnuse or condemn their TV service next
Tue~day l•vEmmg when ttw City Councal holds a public
h~aring on proposed rate hikes by Storer CabJe TV.
'l'he city·~ ('ttbh.• tl•lev1sion committee is suggesting a
momhly incrt·use from S6.75 to S7.75 for basic service.
Storer officials had suggested a hike to S8 60 a month. but
1·ommittee membetl) s~ud their proposed 11 percent in-
c.·rease b more reason::tble.
At a meeting earlier this month. several L~guna
Beach <'able TV customers lambasted the company's
ser vice record. complaining about service calls and seek-
ing an actual decrease in the monthly service fee.
But the <'able:' televis1on committee. comprised of a
City Council member and several other citizens. said the
rate hike is not out of line.
In a city plagued with bad reception. Laguna Beach
l'able customers must rely on Storer for their television
view mg. ·
Official!l from the company will be present at
Tuesday's m eeting. so those with complaints or com-
pliments !,hould mark their calendars and make their
views kno""-n •
Squabbles Cost City
If San Clemente has a recall election early next year.
t 1ty voters may wish they had the option to dump all five
councilmen. not just the two whose names appear on the
ballot.
Sinct' three new councilmen were elected in March.
City Council meetings have been transformed into a kind
of prize ring. where councilmen vie for a chance to clob·
ht•r one another.
WASHINGTON S n.
Edward Ktflnedy •don't ull him ·•Teddy'') la
hcH •a•ln . ju l H h ~
In 1068. 19?2
and 1878. A
crowd of '
f U('S er8
n1ure1 ~ li.
r'*nnlna for
Pre6'dt!nL
thou1h the
1980 1eat0n 111
t8 months away. Those panting
for 1 pollllcal sovlour fret>ly tell
pollstel'8 that Kennedy Is the
ulvatlon. the aaJve. the cure·dll ror whut oils us.
Or. Gallup proclaim that
Dernoc:raht favor him over Mr
C1rter to be the 1980 norn~nee by o 44·20 score. and lh1t aU voters
want blm over Gerald Ford by a
whopping 59-41 margin.
THE DOPESTEBS who see all
evenls as crafted. and ignore the
power of the prosaic. mutter. uh
Mailbox
huh. und note that: a new POU
shows the public CorgMna Ken·
nedy tor Chappaquiddick: Joan
Kennedy's confession on
alc:ohollam ls compaaslooately
rec:elvcd: Kennedy has a busy
polltical sehedule this fall. one
wblch wltl put even more
Demoeruts in hl& debt.
All tbls fleases. even amuses,
Kennedy. le loves his populari·
ty and the knowledge that. aiven
his personal fftbacks. he re·
CRvcred and made his own way.
He doesn't plot or make moves
to run. nor will he. He actually
do~sn 'l want to. and could only
be persuaded if Carter pulls an
LBJ and quits. or is humiliated
in the 1980 primaries. or if a na-
Uon·&bakiru1 lssu.e develops. For year • even aforemel'I·
lioned factors ot this sort
wouldn't have •n enough to
persuade him, The trauma of all
the Kennedy tragedies was loo
muc~ Wltf\ him. and he was too
involved in being father to the
children of his dead brothers
ln recent years. tbe prob-
lems of his wife. and his son,
Teddy. who lost " leg to cancer.
occupied him more than any
presidential thoughts. Always,
there were the wlshes or hls sis·
ters and mother ..-cautious for
the safety of the last son.
Besides. Kennedy relishes his
role as a senior senator. ·•1 have
new opportunities In the next
Congress. as chairman or the
Judiciary Committee." he loJd
m(' last week. ''Think ot the
l'normous impact on the system
of justice. tile safety of our
cttliens and the protection or
liberties . We'll be passil}g on 140
new judges one-fiftH or the
Judiciary -ln one year." .. ' ONCE. K~nnedy somellmei
mouthed what was Ju..st
whispered in his ear by a bright
staffer. Today. he knows his
stufl down tQ oilly·grllty. He and
Sen. Howard Cannon. D·Nev ..
pushed for alrllne deregulation
to the polnt that the airlines
drasllcaJJ,Y reduced fares In self.
defense. Now Kennedy arrues
for deresuhtllon of motor car·
riers. and for retorrn of ex\sting
regulations so that new dnap
can be brought on the market
quicker. ,
Ask about tax revolt and big.
inefficient government, and
Kennedy offers liberal rebuttal:
"We can save $59 billion b)' 1984.
if we vote ror national health in·
surance. t think the biggest tax
spenders are those who want to
grant tax credits <tuition aid> •
without applying the same
criteria we do for stulght ap·
propriatlons. In oil and gas, why
don't we give lax incentives to
wildcatters i{lste1td or to dentists
seeking tax shelters!
"Prop. 13 was also a cry
against bigness m all forms. If
Howard Jarvis had packaged his
proposition In a way t.o cut the
s1ie of big business instead or
big . gov.ernment. the voters
would have approved that.. too ...
PEOPLE warm to Kennedy
des pite his libe ral rhetoric.
because. like his brothers before
him. he holds out hope and prom
ise Ht' will chair hearin~s this
f.ill on his national health bill.
on.-Wl' reully don't need. and
"111 Rel big ml·dio exposure
K e n n t' d .v w i I I s t u m p f o r
0(.'mocrats everywhere, and
more comparisons will be made
bet ween the enthusiasm for him
lfnd th(.' Lurning away from
Carter
It is heady stuff, but Kennedy
has seen it before and will see it
again. He said. "That's about
right." when I asked him if the
presidential goal was less im·
portant to him than it was lo his
brothl!rs .
"(l's obvious that the Kennedy
fomily has been through so
much." he told me. "and 1t con
ttnues to be a maJor factor 1n my
life Hut ~rundchildre11 grow up
and l!l'l settled down. Tames
1.'hange, and in a period or future
years. lhmg~ may change for
mt•. But my pos1t1on 1s that I do
not want to run. that I support
President Carter. and that ht:'
will be reelected.··
Last week a conflict of interes t tharge sel off s uch a
volll'Y of msults amonr.! councilmen that even longtime
obst•rvcrs were stunneo.
Councilmen who feel they must ·win .. such verbal
Jousts should realize that they aren't scoring any poinl!i>
with San Clemente voters.
Police Have Right to E x press Views
To the Editor
What the squabbling may do, however. is to driw
'uluablc l'ity staff membcn, to look for new Jobs .
Your Aug. 18 editorial entitled
"Police in New Arena" renccts
a surpnsmgly narrow view of
American democracy . Wh y
would you choose to discourage
any individual or group from
political activism. particularly
when most would agree that one
of the most serious threats to the
great American experiment 1s
political apathy? How can the
expression or political views by
any citizen or group of citizens
be equated with an attempt by
the police to no lon~er answer to
civilian authority"
I <1m oulra~cd that after the
public hearin~ Jul y 26 was
closed and a straw vole lak<:n.
Mr Dolley s ubmitted revised
plans for his project and private·
l y nego tiated with the
s upervisors in th.cir offices lo
give thc.•1r approval to chan~cs
Bv law. should not these revised
pians be submitted at a public
hearin~ for interested parties'!
:\lcCarthy era of tht.> ·sos. our
\'l'nerable gr<.'l•lcr in tht' '6-0s
1 althou~h he ~us later allowed
to return homt• for his final
da\'S 1. and. wl!''e done a lot or
good thmgs like changing city
C'ouncib when they no longer
aC'ted tn th<.' ovt•rall tnten•sls or
the whole community, and even
<'leaning up :1 police department
that threatened various group5,
r esulting 1n los t t a le nt and
revenue
rr a recall ell•ction 1s scheduled some months away.
t·on1 inuing d1~senc..1on among councilmen may cost San
< 'l(•mcnlt' dt•arly in dis ruption ol city \..usines~
• Opinion~ eJ1pressed 1n the space above are those ol the Daily Pilot
Otner view~ expressed on this page are those ot their authors and
artists Reader comment is 1nv1ted Address The Daily Pilot. P 0
Box 1560 Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) &42·4321
If Supervisors Schmit, Clark
a nd Anthony we r e indeed
represcnlm~ the tntercsts or in·
land Orange County residents. SOW. soml' M1uld attempt to
would they not be most con· deny us tht• leade r or what 1s
Boyd/RR Names
cerned with reserving traffic presently one of thl' best police
THE REALITY police officers capacity, parking and open d£'partmcnl~ inC;1lifornia ~ 1Who
must deal with. though many of s pace for their constituents at can honts tl; '>a) they feel Slffe
us would prefer to ignore. the beaches·• on the !>lrecl~ or San Francisco.
By L.M. 80\ID
Plt·a~e add to thal list or
oddball ni c knames for
railroads Southern Pacific
"a ~ the "Surr e rin '
Palhl•t1c ·· The Lehigh and
New England was the "Late
and N<.•vl'r F.:arly ·· The
Norlh&1mpton and Bath was
the "Nut~ and Bolls " The
Delaware and flud5on was
the "Delay and Hesitate ..
The Chicago. Burlington
and Quinc y was the
·'C h eapest. Bes t and
~uickcst."
coined a word to identify its
type: documentary
represents an important aspect or dot'!>n 't fl·c.·l a hit nervous
of our society. Their perspec· I AM OUTRAGED that four around a Los Angdcs cop., 1
ti ve. even if we find it un-men over whom I have absolute-W f! ·re pretty luC'ky to h;;i vc "
pleasant, should be a s much a ly no control can make a de· mun who undl'r'>lund~ and
Q. "Have any of the free-part of the body politic as the c1s1on that drastically alters my becomes a part of our un14ut>
love communes been sue-views and expressions or life I have no voice in the elec and lovely vdlu~c . <1nd who
cessful?'' bankers. teacbers. lawyers. lions or these men, but they have makes sun• h1~ pcr~onncl arc
A. It's debatable. Tbere farmers. laborers. and yes. even absolutely absolute control over educated to all our ltfestyle!>.
may still be quite a few of newspaper publishers. I applaud my whole community This cer· needs. wants. and proble m5
the households fuoctlo~ing anyone or any group who plays tainly says to me that South and servl' u s accordingly'
here or there. Most . .though, An active role tn the democratic Laguna should incorporate and Thanks for not ll'ttin~ a handful
have come apart. Couples processand see noreasontodis· t ake control over its own of big merchants cause another
tend to pair off. choosing lo courage police oHlcers from be· destiny. mistake by driving out another
devote lhemselves to each ing good citizens I am a~ ton 1 s hed that valuable La~unan tn the ·10s
other to the exclusion of the Paraphrasinfl' a famous Supervisor Riley. chairman of Our former First Lady ad
rest. Quarrels crop up over patriot, " ... we may not the Board of Supervisors. has so mr'tted her drinking problem. shared work. Money argu-always agree with someone's 1·ttle pol t'c I 0 th h 1 t 1 a P wer an e ··nd c1ur polict• chief has ad· menls seem Inevitable. Some viewpoint but we should be pre· t o t I 1 l " canno even c n ro a . acre mi·tted his. and "paid his debt to Some men o f scien ce theorists who've looked into pared to fight for their right to 1 l r 1 d h' d t · t J claim they've proved their the matt.er now think the un-express that viewpoint." Police P 0 0 an m is own is rsc · society" for his unfortunate, but
beard s (itrow most on successful commune experi· officers during their off-duty think that if th e other off.duty, behavior. Solomon's
W.e.'1ne.sdays and l~ast on -me.D.1.s lend tn nrov.e..lbaL hours, have, and should be en-s upervisors were so absolutely wisdom in not bending to those
Sundays. What explains it, monogamy i; l~stinctive. couragearoeDl'e"ise, rte same u.naffect.cdh.Y his delense..o! the -who would ..ll.Sf.....01\e.Jllistake Lo · h h F1·rst Amendment r1'gbts that al· South Laguna general plan. he remove -a man who has done so they say. is t e contention t at although others disagree. t 1 k ed'b 1·t · 11 r weekend pursuits -drinking, low you to publish your opinions mus ac er 1 1 1 Y m 8 0 much good for uniting most of us
d · · h'b· a·n your new~aper. Orange County. 1·s appreciated and respected by 1mng out. romance in 1 st You've seen that football Th nood t
d h I. h 1 RU ELL A. BOSTROM e ga es are now open. many of us. bear growl s 1g t Y player on the bench with an A th ad·o· 1·ng n rty ~ · ·rr 1 President, Newport ny ree J 10 .. rope Plaudits to the City Manager . .. ascmating.1 actua ox en mask._2~i."::'if-:a;;c~?--+-~-----HIH'bAi~m•-~~"'™ wb{L 'V8QI to joitlJ<>t:( C ~ . ~
•• '1" ' •• , ._, may ·f.or e. , end -vSk f<>r rezoning w-Jieayy.. • ourltY uuulu ~ scti:•
I 929 J h G · I I 'f h • . ing us well in undersftmurngtne n 1 • one o n nerson psycho ogica uph t. es not Ouira-d dens ity may now expect the needs of our total community _ made a two-reel film about helping himse lf much . 1r-s.a.me treatmcnt the British herring fleel. tw. __ MedK-a1--Pe9~arcfters now -TotheFAfftor: ~ • ----c: 0 JWPSON"'-·a--~ty&--tftM.-~·sap•
·ealled it "Orifte~ 1\ndhe contend that breathing oxy· I am outraged by the decision AROC 1 Hu port our peace-keeping officers
gen before or after exercise of the Board or Supervisors re· Co•111e"d• /tfanafl'r and remember whQ is the man
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
I'm tired or heuring
land lords compl3ln
about ne11ative cash
now and low proms. In
this country, no one 1s
FORCED lo own Income
property. c.c.
c.1 .. "''I °"' , __ , ·~· -l'!lltl• ., , .... ,, ..... 11•1
-tNfl1YnlM1"'9•1fWtMllM ................ """' ..... ,...... .. GteMIY Ml, 0.lly ~ .....
has no effect on performance garding a general plan amend· responsible tor changina ours to
or ~ecovery. ment-which willllliow rez.oeiDg To UleEditor~ • a sui;>erlor Police Department!
of a small parcel of land in l commend" City ""Manager -DALTURN&R C~t"Stdney Howard with --SOutftl..agune new~ R-J with -Fred Solomon in hi~ decision to
tbe obMrvatJon: "One-half of lbree slngle·famlty homes to retafn Chlef Sparks.
knowing what you want ls heavy.density zoning with 28 A few merchants In towtl who
knowing what you have to unilsallowed. have long represented a very
give up to gel it." I am outraged by Supervisor vocal minority in our unique
Pollsters report they've
learned that m08l young
girls have their first roman·
tic experiences in lhe homes ot their boyfriend&.
Origlnally the leader of ~
Ku Klux Klan was 001. known
as the Imperial Wl1ard but as the Grand Cyclops.
Am still trylnt to n11ure
out what you send to 1 sick
norlst
Schmit's reversal of his previous community of many minorities
vote lo support the South seem to have dominated the
Laguna general plan to support press of late. and because they
Mr. Dolley's request for up· have continued in these attempts
zoning. t am particularly out· to exert pressure in print and at ci·
raaed because Supervisor ty hall, 1 feel he should perhaps
Schmit i11 on the Coastal Com· hear Crom some of us who are
mission wtth the goal lo protect usually more quiet in our ex-
lhe Callfomle coastllne for all presstons.
the people or California. not just Our family moved to Laauna
Mr. Dolley and the 28 families Beach in 1948. Laguna has made
who m17 now be aHowod lo pay some mistakes In those JO years,
an eicorbit.ant price to Uve aJI like driving out of town some of
Jammed together on a 1.1 acre Its own "Lagunalics" -a aram·
lot. mar school principal ln the
1t'lao'• Re•pon•ffJ~1'
To the Editor:
Regarding articles in the
various newspapers 011 the care·
less performance of city officials
processing land development,
the reporters gave accurate ac·
counts o( the muddle surround·
Ing devel op ment In San
Clemente. •
lt was qwtc shocking for those
who dosel~ follow city govern·
ment activities to learn that the
government failed lo abide by
its own ordinances. A citizen's
inspection of files on local de-
ve lopment11 occidentaly round
evidence that a foreign de·
(
vclopt'r cul and graded a piece
of property for over 500 res·
1denccs without securing a use
permit or a variance to an or
dinance After the fact. tht! gov
ernment is now being forced to
process the development
HOW responsible should the
developer Ix'? Should he now be
forced lo bulldoze his property
into the onginaf configuration''
Should the city be held respons1
bl(' for its action Cor inactionJ''
Should legal action be taken hy
the citizens'! It is interesting to
no te that the former building
and planning director who ap·
parently faUt'<l lo proc<>ss th(' dt>
veloper's plans correctly and
who took an early retirement in
June Muld not be lo<.-att!d to
1.'larify the situation.
This is not the first t1ml' u like
instance h<i!> occurrNI 1t has
huppcncd in the pas t It 1~
d<'plorable that the citizen~
could not r('ly on paid staff to ad·
rnmister properly to a ll ahke
They are optimistic that the new
director or building and planning
"111 pursue the letter and intent
of ;;ill ordinances
MRS. R.W. KOESTER
C~an II IJp
To the Editor:
North La~una resldentio. arc
sick of the apathy you recently
reported in regard to the El
Mqrro Elementary School park·
·~tot --- -
This school wus designed by
its architects to be compatible
with its environment and to nes·
tic into the gentle sloping hills or
Jryjne. pro~rty. The pu sc . at Thlilt~s;ftfim.t""'-"""-~~-""1
ings PoSted; therefore. they are
ffl~at;~~L!Jld..~!fil_.Q~
OBVIOUSLY, it's an open in·
vit•tU>n to undesirables: name·
ly. translenu, tritchhHce~. -.nd
drug use1!:._!J liven.ext door>.
The "powers of authority''
best resolve their small dif·
rerences tand clean it up -we're
red up with the public nuisances.
Thank you for reminding the
community they have n
responsib\llty to each other.
Lt.JClLLE BISSNER
• uUMI /rorn readers are ~le~
TM right to condense lfltns to ffl
spoct or elfmmate li~l fa reserwd
Utttrt o/ 300 words or ltsa wUl bl>
giunt pre/erence. All lettt'TS '""'" •tt-dud.t lignal11re and m.oibng oddreu
bMt ncmet may ~ wttMtld on rt·
qw1t If 11A/Jicitnt recuon u appottld.
Pottrr wiU not~ J>ll~
.... ~ONDON CAP) -Tboae
f&j6ou1 and lt·nprodueed
,_.toral ace of rolllna areen
bills w luab meadOWt ln tbt
SNUA eount.rYS.lde were paint·
ed 1>1 Ccniubl~. all rifbt, but apP,attntb 1* all by John.
TWO LSADING aa1T1.SB art up rt• bave conclud d th•t many wort• attrlbutM to the
1r et tttJl century Ea1h b
land capo pallll• Na.IJy from t.Mbnob Of bll eon. l.Jeael. .ad otbert 1nl1ht b .. o n
petntf'd by vane. COnleaba. ol·
raprlna. London·• Daily Tel.,
1ra.Ph ~ed 1'\Msd11.
The Camlb. the experts aay,
Grinders
Repairing
Launched
WASHINGTON <AP) -T1'e
C9"5umer Product Safety Com-
mtuiQO reports that the Porta
ble Appliance and Tool Group.
¥cGraw·Edlson Co., Columbia,
Mp., is launchin& a r~pair pro.
tram ror 16,000 six·inch bench
crlnders which may pose a
.sbock hazard.
On some units a protective
sleeve insulating a lead wire
may wear through, possibly re·
suJUn1 in a shock if the machine
b not grounded. the agency said.
THE MACHINES WEaE
manufactured from April to July
1973 and for limited periods
'b'etween February 1977 and
·January ma
The repair program covel"S
ltle following six-inch grinders
PVrchased after June 1973 and
not showing any three-digit code
embossed in the nameplate:
¥anning Bowman model 715100.
Toastmaster model 5577, Power
House model 711100. J .C. Penney
model 3040. Weste rn Auto
Wiuard model POE 6203A.
Ward 's Powe r Kraft model
TGB·S102A and K-Mart model
3().09Tl.
ALSO INVOLVED ARE K·
Mart model 30-90Tl showing
date ,~pde 77B, 770, 77E or 77F, and wurd's P.ower Kraft model
TG B 5102A with the 77F date
code. II tools with these date
codes have an orange inspection
sticker on the carton or the unit
tl\ey have already been inspected
and are not involved in th~ repair
program.
Owners of the grinders should
stop using them and wri~ to:
Bench Grinder Repair Program,
National Service Manager,
Portable Appliance and Tool
Group, McGraw-Edison Co .. 2nd
81)d Vine St .. Boonville, Mo.,
65223 for instructions on having
tbe tool inspected and repaired
free of charge.
wa adepl at mlmltllinS \h m~tv. whoa• style o"'° the 1ear1 has been wldc!ly imitated
I>)' otbftl and ~m•ttm~ copied ~lo el1 enol&1h to fool ind 4 fraud art lov ra.
several )'eant of research by
LAiii Panis. de,puty kMper ot
London'• pu1U1lou1 Tate Gallery. and Ian P'lemln1·
WUU1ma. tbe Tate'• hlatol11n.
mean• hulldredl of Coftltables
wJU b•w to be N-evalu1ted to
d~termlne tde Hy or the
painter, the Telqraph 11 d.
11' '1'1M.e. Wblch confirmed &ho
DaUy T'efelraph account, baa
roomaful of Con1tablt1. and wGrtl auritued tO hlm ll allO on
uhlblt al lhe Aahmolean
M\ll um t Odord. the Mellon Center of 8rlU1h A11t at Yale
Unlveralty and etHwhere oe
bolh sld of the Atlantic
TH 8 EXPIUlTS SAID the
"8rtd1• on th Mol ," ono of
two Conltablfl works displayed
In the Phlladtlphla Museum of
Art. was paJnted not by John,
but by Uonel. the Tcle•rapb ,..
ported.
Donald Rosenthal. an assls·
tant curator ltl the Ph1l1delphla
.mueeum'ft department of Euro-
pean Pa&lnllna. ••id he was un.
aware or the atudy and waa
<'h tcklng on it. Of the two
Pondering lnjustiee
Sister Immaculate Co mmet of Oklahoma City listens to
a personal account of social injustice in Cleveland. More
than 1,000 religious leaders attended the leaders hip con-
ference of Women Religious and Conference of Major
Superiors to Men. They are discussing whether to exert
pressure on government anrl corporations to combat
social injustice.
.
Con1tabl11 on display. he said.
·' l would really be •urprised if
they turned out to be somoone
elte'• work, But there'• atwaya
that posslblllty In art."
Three others being attribu\ed
to Lionel ~ "The Old Barn."
"Looking Over to Harrow'' and
"Brook.. Trees and Meadows.'' oil1 ln lhe Mellon Center of
Brltl1h Art at Yale University.
AN ASSISTANT CURATOR
there. Susan Cuter as. said the
works had been s us pect rot
some time, but she said of such
turn-arounds in the art world.
"In many of these ca.ses. those
paintings are no less
diminished'' by di5coverl9 that
the art.lat was really someone else.
The lwo ~ltllb exper. are declinlna comment untU e full report or their sleut ng as
publlsbed Sept. 5 in lb Burl·
ington Magaiine. a respected art periodical.
CRl'nCS AND DEALERS said
Parris and Flemlng·Willfa~s
have proved ~t at least 20 oU
paintings. drawines and sketches
attributed to Constable are the
work of Lionel. his fourth and
youngest SOb. who was 9 years
Old when his father died ln 1837.
Many canv.ases were not
... DAILY PILOT A f'
J
)
I signed. and as dealer Huah Le&·
gatt expJaioedi
"Three ot"'r sont1 painted -
John ,.Charle$. Charles Go~
and Allred. JUs daughter !~abet painted flower pictures. Ha~
crandson Huah painted manne
and country scenes. It is clearly
posalble that some of their work as masquerading as 1hat or
John."
P~mis and Flemlng·Williams
say the Tate's famous ''The
Haywain" was indeed painted
by John. but that the well-known
"Near Stoke by Nayland," also
in tbe Tate. was painted by
Lionel. according to the Tele-
graph.
Substance Halts Virus
Tests Planned for Advance Cancer Patients
NEW YORK CAP> -The
American Cancer Society has
announced plans for a clinJcal
test or a substance made from
human blood cells to determine
its value in treatin& advanced
cancer.
The substance. leukocyte in·
terferon. has reduced the size of
tumors in animal experiments
and in a few scatte'red applica-
tions with human cancer pa-
tients, the society said Tuesday.
IT IS PRODUCED by extfact·
ing while blood cells from whole
blood and e~posing them to a
virus. The result is a cellular
protein that acts to inhibit viral
growth.
Leukocyte interferon has been
used against the herpes strains
or virus that produce shingles
and chicken pox. but it cannot
generally be used against them
because of the extreme scarcity
of the substance and its high
cost. The cancer society said It
plans to spend up to $2 million
on the test. The scarcity or the
material will probably limit the
trials to 150 advanced cancer pa-
tients.
SO FAR LEUKOCYTE in-
terferon has been produced only
in Finland. where the blood is
obtained by tbe Finnish Red
Cross and processed at Red
Cross laboratories in Helsinki.
Most clinical testing with in·
t e rferon on cancer has been
d one in Sweden . At the K aro l ins ~a lns iJtute in
Stockholm, researchers have re-
ported promising results in the
treatment of children and young
adults wtth osteogenic sarcoma.
a bone cancer. after the use1 of
high doses of the substance. ·
rn the United States. 15 breast
cancer patients have been treat-
ed with interferon at M.D. An·
d erson Hospital and Tumor
Clinic in Houston and six pa.
dents with lymph tbsue cancer
have been treated at Stanford
University Medical center in
Palo Alto.
society. said a committee of
scientists wilJ meet in about a
month at ACS headquarters in
New York to work out details.
"EARLY INDIC&TIONS sug-
1est that interferon may have
the capacity to bring about ob·
jectiv~ tumor reduction." the
society said.
Co·chairmen of the committee
will be Dr. Jordan Gutterman of
the M.D. Anderson and Dr.
Thomas C. Merigan Jr. of Stan·
ford.
Dr Rundles said the cancer
society'!! role in the project will
b4: limited to purchasing the in·
t.erferon. monitoring the trials
and reporting the r esults .
The institutes t hat will
participate have not been select-
ed. Or. R. Wayne Rundles of
Durham. N.C .. president of th~
r
Father Bitter
Retarded Son Found Dead
MANKATO. Minn. CAP> -Roger Heller says he will do all
he can to prevent a family tragedy such as his own from hap·
pening to someone else.
Heller's 19-year-old son. David. mentally retarded and sub-
ject to seizures. is dead. The body was found 43 days after David
disappeared Feb. 26 from a Mankato home for the mentally re-
tarded.
HE APPARENTLY DIED OF exposure. there was no
evidence of rout play.
Heller devoted a frantic. exhausting search for the boy -in
ravines. farm sheds, snow banks and hospitals. A clairvoyant
went to David's room lo touch his belongings in an attempt to
track the youth. Aircraft and snowrnoblles were used.
Heller says be is convinced his only son would not have
walked aimlessly through the snow northeast of Mankato if
more precautions had been taken. Heller. who was out of state
the day David disappeared, also says he should have been
notified 5ooqer of bls son's disappearance.
BUT MARION MAERTENS, DIRECTOR of REM-III. a
private institution, says residents have the right to live as
norttlall)' as possible. Most work. earn their own money and
contribute to daily living demands. she said. Tbe,ataff members
did not nealect their duty in allowing David to leave that night.
she says.
David left bis residence around 10 p.m. lbat Sunday. He was
seen at 11 p.m. at a gas·station, buying soda.
'
Imprisoned
Particular People Select JOHNSON & SON
Home of the "Golden Touch"
Trip Called llop
Belly Dancer's Dream 'Nightmare'
SAN FRANCISCO
<AP> -John Forslund,
known as the "Brown
Bag Bandit." was .. sen·
tenced to 15 years in
prison after pleading
guilty to 44 counts of a rm ed robbery . He
earned his name by pro·
viding brown paper bags
into which he ordered
victims to deposit their
cash.
COME PRAY
WITH US
You are COf'dially Invited to join us in mocnillCJ..and evening prayer at the
. .
I •
-·
CHATI'ANOOGA. Tenn. IAPl
According to lawsuits filed by three
dancing teachers who bought tours to
Egypt to learn first-hand the exotic
undulations or the belly dance. the
trip was a flop.
\ arious reasons On one occasion they
"simply did some dancing on their
own." the suits say.
CATHOLIC CHURCH
OFSAl~T JOHN,
THE BAPTIST
1015 BAKER STREET. COSTA MESA -ft .... ,_ h•_,,., .. _,...,,."*r.1:1061'"•"' _,CllN,....,.s., ...
The suits name two California-
based travel agencies. Touring Ex·
press Inc. and Trio Travel and TQurs
and Dalilah Bristow who is identified
in the actions as "an experienced belly dancer who maintains her----------------------------
studio in Las Vegas, Nev."
.. Best advertising. and. you had
more lo show ...
Rose Marie Park and Lavina Live·
ly of Chattanooga and Ellen Giles of
Atlanta went to Cairo last September
for what was proclaimed "a belly
dancer's dream come true" and "a
glorious opportunity to be exposed to
the Middle Eastern culture .. on a
10-day tour.
LA WYER HAREY BERKE filed
the thr~ separate but identical suits
on behalf of the women. Each seeks
$25,000 in damages.
ALLAN H. ANDERSON
Santa Ana, Call!.
ANOTHER SATISIFIED CUSTOMER
WHEN THEY ARRIVED, on a
plane six hours late. the suits filed in
Circuit Court say. they learned that
their instructor, Nagwa Foad, was in
London and had been for some time.
Another teacher. Tania Carioca. was
not available for the promised
seminars. the suits said.
Berke said in an interview Tuesday
that each of the women is a dancer
and dancing teacher and that they
s igned up for the tour to improve
the ir techniques and leaching
abilities
lie said the firms were answerable
Further. the women said that in·
stead of "excellent. first-class" ac-
com modalions at Jolie Villa Hotel
"they were forced lo accept a low-
c lass inferior hotel known as the
Ho\el Cleopatra ...
under Tennessee law because their our ust 3 oay W"4lend lefOA Scl\ool
advertisements for the tours were ORDER YOUR HOLIDAY
published in periodicals with Ten· HONEY dAKED HAM
nessee circulation. TODA y !
The women said that as they were
2626 Harbor Blvd. • Costa Mesa • 540-5630 They said they , howed up at the as·
signed sites for lessons for several days but no lessons were given for
leaving !or home they wer"8 tol<J.-'.'the_.....,......,_>700 I. COAST HWY • C... •Mir• PMOMI '7 J.toto
memories ot the excilinJ days past ..... a::OO:C:'s:-0:0':-:~LaKAitn ~Soon.;~
will accompany you for the rest of your lives."
ORIEHrAL CARPETS & RllGS _
We hlft )lit~-large lnwnt~ of exquisite
_..~"!'Iii gam. hlncknade-NgSfanElltemE\alope.Aslaandthe
Ortenl and wa sel In 11oQ1e ~ the entire k>t
by publt auction. The s .. tltiit c:onsbts of rugs
tan Inn. Russia. 0*1a. Afganlsuin. Turt<ey, India.
Rcwnan. Ind Pllldstln. They vasy ln size from
2' X 3' to 18' X 12'. An rugs are guaranteed by a
ful achmige wamny.
H~IOAYINN
2$205 La P~ M . ~· Hiiia On ,,lday, .. ,,.41t'11Mf , ..
At I P.M .. V1eW 7 ,.M,
•
ts
--~_@e Ur~d __ _
W ASIDNGTON I AP l -The trnitetfStates =tl:::l"!!!!P.:!:~
is urging an lnternalional investigation ·or tnmn1n rtgnts viOliffQns in -CamOOdia.
The State Department delivered a lengthy
indictment of the Khmer Rouge govemment
to the United Nations Human Rights Com·
mission in Geneva this week. lt alleged that
the Khmer Rouge have instituted one of the most brutal dictatorships in world history .
There was no mention. however. of a re·
cent suggestion by Sen. George McGovern. D·
S D .. that an international armed force.
drawn from smaller nations. intervene In
Cambodia to end the bloodshed there
NEW FALL HAIR FASHIONS
by The Creative Staff at , .
LUZZETTA Bernard
240 Newport Centtr Or., Suite 200
NEWPORT BEAC>i-640«>23
Let it carry you awhile.
A ft er all -turnabout is fair play.
~~De _Elaozet show you how far
your dental 1ns0rance'"Wflr~ yorx dental needs. - -
Wno knows -you could get all the
way home -free
Actf..,
Cel flw Alt Af• •I twww::t
642-0112
Dr. Arnold H. Flanzer,
DDS
370 I. '7tlt ,......
Costa Mesa
!
I
't
A• OM. Y PlLOT use ,
! Senior Housing Eyed
Irvine Groll)Yto Study Proposed Resol~tion
• Dedication of an lrvine 1eruor mobile bom paru and faemu Tho commltt~ plans to mlko cl\J~eu ceoterl a raoJuUon sup-oflerlna meal• and maid formal appUcaUon to the council portlna semor noual.oa and a de· rvtce S.pt. 28, and needs n1mes ror a
clslon about what to call petition.
tbemselvea are &oplu of a l&VINILAWNbowlenarebe·
aoaeral mHtlna of Irvine IQI aa~ed to &how their Al I 6nal plece of bUllneaa a~ the Sept. 1 meettn1. whOever comes up witb the beat name ror
the 1enion committee wU1 be
binded S2$ Lor the effort.
seniors Sept. 7. '"PP9tt COi' tbo leflior'• eommlt·
Tbe 10 a.m. meetlnl •• lo Clt1 tM drtve t.o Itel ~ council to Councll cbamben at caty ball, stablJt.b I bO•liq &ree.n in a.
172IOO Jamboree Blvd clty part.
DEDICATION OF the
center, on Sandburc W~ fteXt to
the Rancho San Joaquin Solt
course. rs ~«ht'dult>d for Jan. 11,
19 1rnd 20. though lh center as
u pected to bt· opened 1n Nov
t>mber
There wtll be a ribbon-cuttme.
arl4_ and crafts exhibits. a dtMer
and Cl~ and ent.ertamment The posed housing resolu-
tion d ask the city Council
to initiate a study of housinl
needs of ~nior cltiaens. with al·
tentton to retirement homes,
School Plans
Paper Drive
The parents group or Sad·
dleback Valley Unified School
District's Esperanza School for
the T r ain a bl e Me ntally
Retarded has scheduled a re· cycling drive Saturday from 9
a.m. to 1 p.m
Newspapers can be taken to
the school's parking lot on the
corner of La Paz Road and
Pradera Drive, Mission Viejo.
Proceeds from the fund·
raising event will be used to sup·
plement the school's fi eld trip
budget. s pokeswoman Mary'
Paine said.
Call 642-5678.
Put a few words
to work tor ou.
Classes to Teach
Life-saving Aids
Inst.ruction on co~ng with life-threatening sltuatiooa is scheduled
to be offered on seven Monday evenings beginning Sept. 18,
sponsored by tbe city of Irvine.
The bow'·k>n8 1 p.m. meetings will be held at Venado Middle
School.' Deerlleld Ave. There ls a fee of S5 for the series
REGISTRATION WILL be
held 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. Sept. 7 at
city ball. or by calling tbe couni·
Talk Slated
On Diabetes
An endocrinologist, Dr.
Herbert Rettinger. is scheduled
lo speak on "Day to Day Self·
Management for the Diabetic,"
at the Leisure World and Sad-
dleback Valley auxiliary of the
American Diabetes Association
meeting Sept. 20.
The 7:30 p.m. meeting will
take place in the community
room of the Laguna Federal
Savings, 24301 Paseo de Valen-
cia. Laguna Hill s, a
spokeswoman said.
-ty services department, at
754-3639.
Experts from the American
Red Cross, American Reai1 As·
sociation, National Lung As·
sociatlon, Occupational Safety
and Health Administration and
the Irvine Fire Department will
teach classes.
THE GROUPS. respectively,
will talk about disaster services:
signs and sympt0l1lls of body
malfunctions, cbokingm suffoca· tion and fires, emergencies in a
work enviroment, and
paramedica and
cardiopulmopary resuscitation.
Also represented will be the
·American Dietetic Association,
,about nutrition; the American
Cancer Society. about early
cancer detection; and the Irvine
Police Department, about public
safely and crime prevention.
ORIGINAL EASY PAINT
-
Goes on ltke a dream and dnes 1n minutes.
beaut1t ully 1ools clean up tn water. and wall5
are scrubbing tough. Great non-lading colors.
MFG. SUG. RETAIL $11.99
S Colon.Y atinTone
'lAt LATEX WALL PA.IHf
Easiest to 1ppty, ind at~y'
a..autffut longer. Weter
wash up. Great colors.
MFG. SUG. RETAIL $14.95 $8~!.
240 Broadwey, Laguna Beach
497-4403
OPEN . DAILY
VISA. 9-6
IREE
PARKING
•
DRUG STORE
EYEIEAR
IND
1~.~s!~~ charge
1111'1" ~IH,
i
JUST BRING US YOUR PRESCRIPTION FROM YOUR EYE DOCTOR.
STARTING WITH YOUR BASIC PRESCRIPTION
YOU CAN PURCHASE EYEWEAR AT ...
FRAME LENSES FRAME LENSES
$9.00 ~ $24.00~~ $9.00·: $40JJO:
FOR SINGLE VISION FOR BASIC 81-FOCALS
IOVER SIZED AND TINTED LENSES ARE EXTRA!
THINKING OF
FoR As Low As s150.00 (Including Care Kit)
..,,, ... ··-· •. :;:. .~e~J!fp~u,~ ~' MjlliQo,s Qt OSD@r . . . . Sat1s .1ed Soft Lens Wearers . · .. " ' . ..
~~~~~ll~N.C~ .. l(VE EASf!.IUfl IYEWEAR 0 A VA7lABtE7rr .. Jf .. • -.. ~
SAVINGS TO YOU!
•Pierre Cardin •Blorta Vanderbilt •Yves It. Laurent
•Oscar De La Renta •AND MANY OTHERS -
len11tlonal fram11 . ..dl1t1nct1vely tllealgfttf for'"' t1eet Y• ctn tet bttuty • .... , .. ht• fra"'e wltll 1 comortaltfe flt . .., our wide 11lect1o11aff111tloft111wHr at 1 trem1nllous uvtnp to rout
OTHO SAV-ON OPTICAL CENTERS LOCATID ATs
• NORTH HOLLYWOOD 13021 V~ Blvd. Phollt (213) 76C).1242
• SANTA CLAIA 3707 £1 C.lfto Real Phone (408) 984·2254
•'UN INIOO 3331 IOMCr'" SttHt Phone (714) 225-1771
• S.I VALLEY 2825 East Coctwan Strett fthone (805). 522.tlCM
• RIVERSIDE l563 Riverside P9ua PlloH (114) tlM905
. . . , ..
•'
17
I
Teday• Closlag \
N.Y. Stoeks
I Totna Burns as Strikers Bloek A.id I
-~
Burned (Jp
Ballan er aakl the nren1hl r1'
unaon Jewtd hls pleas for help.
but •bout ab atriken howed up
anywa1 .-I Qlllt.ed until volun l••r from Mlthborln1 com·
m uniti anivC'd
No lqjuriim WffO reported At
luat four buUdjn11. lnclucllnl(
lhe (Owtty p~C"Utor•a otflce.
wer~ destroyed ltttOll the 1trect
from the MadaJOn County aov
cmment complex.
It was the second emereency
In this central Indiana city or
Tl,000 -the state's eighth
lar1e1t -•Ince the 144 firemen
went on strike Saturday night in
ti pay dispute.
The fire 1s believed to have
11turted an the Courthouse Lounge.
u lb vem that had closed for the
ml(ht There was no Immediate
1nd1callon what caused the blaze.
Chesterfield Volunteer Fire Chief
Lury Musser said there was no
evidence or arson.
A W~stminster teen-ager )Vas injured this
morning in Newport Beach when he lost
control of his pickup truck and it crashed
into a car parked on Balboa Boulevard at
Ninth Street. After the truck rammed the
car. both vehicles burst into flames. The
extent or the 17·year-old truck driver's in·
juries was not immediately determined.
police said . He was taken to Hoag
Memorial Hospital.
Air Crash
Kills 10
At Yegas
A twin-e ngine Las Vegas
Airlines plane bound for Orange
County Airport plunged to the
ground shortly after taking off
from North Las Vegas Air
Terminal today, killing the pilot
and nine passengers, authorities
said.
There were no s urvivors. The
victims were apparently part of
an Aus tralian vacation tour
group en route lo the Los
Angeles area after a stop in Las
Vegas.
Th e Piper Navajo crashed
about 7:50 a.m. just moments
after it. left the general aviation
terminal northeast of Las
Vegas.
Airline spokesm an Don
Donohue said the airJine has no
scheduled fught.s but mes on an
on-call charter basis between
Las Vegas and other Nevada
and California points, including
Orange County.
"The pilot took orr on schedule
this morning, but he never got
outside the airport boundary.
We can't tell what happened,"
OonnhnP ~1mi
Richard Jameson . a Las
Vegas contractor and private
pilot, was landing at the airport
and said he saw the plane go
down.
''The take-off seem e d
norm al," Jameson said. "It was
-· bua H shook vjolentl~
and suddenly pitched to the righl
and crashed."
There were no skid m arks, in·
d icaling the plane dropped
straight down.
Coalition Supports
Coastal Commission
An unusual coalition or con·
servatives and liberals, includ·
ing Orange County leg,slators
Bruce Nestande and Dennis
Carpenter have sent a bill to
Gov. Edmund Brown that would
extend the lives or the s tate's re-
gional coastal commissions.
The bill, AB 3478, authored by
Nestande. a Republican as·
sembJyDlflll from Orange, was
approved 24·4 by the state
Senate Tuesday.
Carpenter, the Republican
state senator from Newport
Beacb carried Nestande 's bill on
the Se'nate Ooor.
The measure would extend the
lives of regional commissions
for two more years.
The commiasioos, along with
the state commission were set
up in 1976 legislation to regulate
development along the state's
t ,OOO·mile coastline.
The r egional commissions.
Bikinis Gone
In NB Theft
Newport Beach police today
sought the burglars who took 45
bikinis and a sewinR machine
from a central Newport swim
suit s hop.
'l'he items, valued at $1,350
were reported missi.ng Tuesday from the Barefoor Contessa, 2811
Newport Blvd.
Police said the thieves broke
into the shop by removing
louvered window panes.
where permits are processed.
are slated lo go out of existence
next June 30. Nestande's bill
would extend them until June 30.
1981.
A s pokes man for Carpenter
explained that the senator. who
had previously opposed coastal
regulations and the formation or
the commissions. supported the
bill because of its financial im·
pact.
1f the regional commissions
had gone out or existence. it
would mean anyone needing a
coastal permit would have to go
to the San Francisco o££ices of
the state commission to get one.
the spokesman said.
Extending the life of the re-
gion a I commiss ion also
s implifies the planning process
local governments are engaged
in which should end with those
agencies resuming control over
their own coastal territories. the
spokes man added
Tanks Derailed
McEWEN. Tenn. CAPI
Crews laboring today to drain
two derailed tank cars full of a
flammable gas worked with
special care. remembering the
deaths of 16 people in February
when a derailed car exploded 10
miles west of here. The two
pressurized tank cars. loaded
with Clarnma~le propylen~
'OX Ide. wet e polled ort the tnreks
when a three-locomotive, 99-car
Louis ville & Nashville train
derailed in a remote limbered
area.
About 3\.'a hours after the fire.
Superior Court Judge William T.
Clifford issued a temporary
restralrun, order directing the
firefighters lo return to work.
There was no immediate ln·
dication bow the strikers would
respond.
Musser said he and five volun·
leers waited 10 minutes at the
edge of the city until s triking
firefi&hters received approval
from their union leaders to let
the volunteers through the
picket line.
"I guea we'd still be standing
there wateblni the block bum ii
they hadn't let us tbrou1h,"
?fusser said. "At an emergency
meetiq Monday, we agreed not
to CJ'088 picket lines set up by
lbe strikers."
On Sunday night. about 25
slriklne firefighters responded
aft er the root on a busy
downtown movie theater col·
Laguna Recovery
~ lapsed under the welaht of1
heavy rains. 'lbree persons were?
injured, one crtllcally. and 88:
ot her patrons scrambled
through exits to saf ecy.
The firemen. however. set up
plc:ket lines Monday and vowed
to ienore future einergency
calls. Supervisory personnel.
who had helped answer calls the
first three days, joined strikers
on picket lines Tuesday.
Police Find Car I j ..
Ji ~ f
• t • In CdM Slaying
BUILETIN
Laguna Beach police today
found &lie mb•lAa auto of a
Corona dd Mar man wbo was
bludgeoned to deatla Saaday
llip&.
Officers said &be car was
foWld parked OD Brooka S&reet
near tile lntenedloft ol Catallaa
Street lbortly before aooa by fn.
vest!galor Gene Brooka.
Lagana Beach olflcen were
guarding &be car .belongla& lo
&be s laJn man, Ruben Ma~.
O, of UI Iris Ave., until
Newport Beacb de&ec:llvea who
have been invesUgallng tbe
murder ~ arrive lo lnsped
the au&o and It.a content.I.
Newport Beach police today
continued interviewing friends
of the Corona del Mar man who
was bJudgeoned to death late
SUnday night.
Tbe body of 40-year-old Ruben
Marlin~ was discovered •on·
day night m the bJood·spattered
wreckqe of bis bedroom.
Investigator Sam Amburgey
said today it appeared that
Martinez died at about midnight
Sunday. He said Martinez' move·
ments prior to his death led de-
tecli ves to a group of friends
with which the dead m an went
to a Laguna Beach restaurant
Sunday night. . _
He said Martinez apparently
le ft the night spot about an hour
before his murder. "We're still
talking to the people he was
with ." Amburgey said today.
Police are sti l l hunti ng
Martinez' car. a while 1976
FOR RENT SIGN
GO~ IN HVRRY
"My expectations were far ex·
ceeded by the response to my
ad. The very first people who
called re nted the condo, and
they have treated 1t as 1£ it were
theirs."
That's the advertising success
story of the woman who placed
this ad in the Daily Pilot:
Jmmac 2 Bdrm Condo
Bltins. W/D, patio. Pool.
S340/mo XXX·XXXX
If you have an apartment,
condominium or home to rent,
call 642-5678. A friendly Dally
Pilot ad·viser will help you
word your ad for greatest im·
pact,
Our market is a great place
to put just a few words to use.
making the Daily Pilot your
market
Datsun 8 ·210. California license
plate 627SMR. Uiat bas been
missing since the murder was
discovered.
Martinez had lived alone in
the two-bedroom home at 411
Iris Ave. for 12 years. He was a
real estate salesman with a San·
ta Fe Springs firm owned by his
brother·in·law.
His boss became concerned
about Martinez when he failed to
BWodmobile
In Newport
A SJ>e(!ial bloodmobile
will be set up at Hoag
Memorial Hospital Friday
afternoon to take don•·
tiou to meet the county'a
a bortage of blood, a
hospital spokesman said.
The dOnatlons will be
taten from 12:45 p.m . to 5:1.s p.m. in the Grace
Hoag Conference Cente r.
Appointments to donate
blood may be made
through the public rela·
lions office at the hospitaJ,
645·8600.
Red Cross officials said
thel'e is a shortage of aJI
types of blood. particular.
ly type 0 and they are
seeking donors so that
s uppli es can b e
replenished prior to the
three-day Labor Day
weekend.
.Banks Hike
Prime Rate
To914%
By 1be Associated Press
Several of the nation ·s maJor
banks. responding to Federal
Reserve Board attempts to
tighten credit, today increased
their prime lending rate from 9
petcent to 9~. It was the sixth
increase this year .
Analysts had been predicting
the rise in the rate -the in·
terest charged on loans to the
bank's most creditworthy
customers. It left the prime at
its highest point in more than
tbree years;
New York's Chase Manhattan
Bank, the nation's third-largest.
took the lead in the increase. Its
action was followed by other
major banks, including
C b em icat Bank. First Penn·
.syJv ~ii\. JJf~llh .first N ~tional ,
Bank of ~-Louis. the Sank p(
St. Louis and Ohio National
Bank, Analysts said they expect·
ed all of the nation's ban'ks to
raise their prime rates by
<See PRIME, Page A2)
Brown Signs
Tax Cut Bill
SACRAMENTO <AP> -A $1
billion state income tax cut was
!ent to Gov. Edmund Brown Jr.
today and be quickly signed it.
<Earlier story. A5)
The bill won 1mat legislative
passage on a 75·0 A~sembly
vote. On MMday, It won finaJ
Senate al)lm>val on a 39·0 vote.
show up for work Monday and
called an acquaintance who was
sent to check on Martinez'
welfare.
Police said the dead man's
bedroom showed signs of "one
hell of a struggle, .. but that the
rest of the home appeared Wt-
disturbed. They said they have
not ruled out ro-bbery or
burglary as a motive in the slay·
ing.
Airlines
Can't End
Noise Woe?
Orange County super visors
shouldn't depend upon the
airlines to solve jet noise prob-
lem s around Orange County
Airport. county officials report·
ed Tuesday.
Executives of both Hughes
Airwest and Air California te·
ported by letter that they will
m eet new Federal Aviation Ad·
ministration requirements call·
mg for quieter planes to be
phased into operation be tween
1981 and 1985.
But airport officials warned
the q uieter planes by themselves
won 't be enough to bring the
airport into complia nce with
state jet noise standards re -
quired by 1986.
The new regulations will n--
quire airlines to equip half their
fl eets with noise muffling
equipment by 1981 and the re·
mainder by 1983, a report to
supervisors said.
If they c hoose to replace
aircraft with quieter planes the
federal deadline is extended to
1985.
The airlines have yet to sub-
m it timetables for converting •
planes. county officials said. ·
County officials reported :
larger but quieter aircraft are '
available that could be used at
Orange County Airport.
The larger planes probably
would be able to carry enough
passengers to meet the airport's
J985 passenger demand. the re-
port said.
Weather
Night and morning tow
cloudiness with mostly
sunny a fternoon T hurs·
day, but only partial clear·
ing at beaches. Lows
tonight in 60s. High s
Thursday near 70 at
bea~ mid lo "f\~
70s inland.
INSIDE TODA t'
A Palo Alto high achool
football coach found being a
homemaker and moiher was
rougher than fourth down and
30 yard! lo go. See story, Bl.
t
AP ...... TWIN·!HOINE LAS VEGAS AIRLINES PIPER NAVAJO PLUNGED TO GROUND SHOATL Y AFTER TAKIOFP AT LAI VEGAS
PUot, AH I Pa ... ngers. lft Route to Orange County Airport, Perlatt9d In C!8ah
In a noor debate of less than
10 minutes, Assemblyman
Lawrence Kapiloff. D ·San •
Dle10. author of the tax cut pro-
posal called the bill • 'trqly a
'n o n .partisan bipartisa n mtasure."
.t •
•• ,,
' \.
..
,, ........
MAsa<EO C1VlllAN YOUTNS OPPOSE SOMOZA ftEGffff
llberehon Sign Says. 'Mo Priaone•a by Chrtatmu'
Nicaragua Stri/e
Escalates; 4 Dead
MANAGUA. Nicaragua <AP>
Gunfights broke out in several
ma1or cities and 2,000 persons
took over the offices or
Nicaragua's lareest bank today
as the nationwide protest
against President Anastasio
Somoza escalated.
Air force planes bombed
M atagal~a. Nicaragua's third
largest mty, ror two hours Tues-
day and kiJled at Jeast four
persons -two men and two
women, all unidentified -and
wounded many others, a Red
Cross official there said.
·'There must be more dead,
but we're not sure. There are
hundreds or injured," the of-
ficial said
Since Friday. eight persons
Funeral Rites
Scheduled for
Mrs. Comito
Funeral services will be held
Thursday for Newport Beach
resident Frances Ann Comito
who died Sunday in a Northern
California traffic accident.
Mrs. Comito, 45, was killed
when the car in which she was
riding plunged off a roadway
and into a reservoir near Cop-
peropolis.
Mrs. Comito, who worked at
the Tehachapi Men's Prison at
the time or her death, had
worked with the California Cor·
rectional Centers for the paat lS years.
Services will be conducted at 2
p. m. at the Smith Tuthill Lamb
WestcliH Chapel, 427 E. 17th St ..
Costa Mesa.
She leaves he r daughter,
Charlotte Comito of Costa Mesa;
sons, Art Comito of Costa Mesa
and Sal Comito or Newport
Beach; parents, Frank and
Aurelia Mason of New York; sis-
ter, Jean Ambrose or Newport
Beach and brother, Ro bert
Mason of Whittier.
Visitation wilt be at the
mortuary Thursday from 9 a.m
to 2 p.m
-Foul' Claimed
MANlLA. Philippines <AP l
Soviet defector Viktor Korchnoi
threatened today to quit the
world chess ch ampions hip
match with titleholder Anatoly
K a r_IU! v tt rU.e.ss ~ v i et
parapsychologist he claims is
spooking him is barred from the
playing area and one·way ~lass
,., 1nslallcd to separate the
players from the spectators.
OAANGECOAST N
DAILY PILOT
Jaolt c .. i.,
\/1f1 P•f\•dt'"t•nctGir,_• .. ~
~·•ocf<t<10<
'""::::o~Mr: a.a........... .. .. -..... JI .,,..,t•"t Mil,..,...l'tQ lditeo
OfflcH '°''" ""°'" ,,.,,,,. .. ""' \lrtfl L~~"_. e,._., f\ 1 , .. O~Yrt !lit'"'
MIJ"lh"'lfO" f'tMft f7'tl\ 8Hc1t~v_,-d .,_._. • venev nao i.. ,.., _
•1-0--0-P-
,
have been reported killed in the
violence in the city of 40,000,
about 100 miles north of the capital
In Manacua, five soldiers
were reported killed in a bomb
blast Tuesday.
Ei1ht others were reported
kllled in the towns 'ol Jlnotepe
and Est.ell the past few days
bringing the death toU to at least 21.
The military garrison Jn
Ma tag al pa bas been under stege
for three days with the civilian
population in vinual control or the streets.
The Red Cross source said it
was impossible to determlne the
number of casualties because
many victims were taken home
by friends and relatives who
feared the national guard
Nicaragua's 7,500-man army:
would raJd the hoapitals.
He said 80 soldiers bad been
rushed in as reinforcements, the
town bad been blacked out by a
power failure, the Red Cross
<i ppealed to Managua for
desperately needed blood and
plasma, and the people appealed
to the archbishop of Managua,
Miguel Obando y Bravo, to
intercede with the government
for them. The archbishop was
the chief mediator between the
government and the leftist
guerriJJas who selied the
National Palace last week.
In Managua, a bomb killed
five national guards m e n
patrolling in a jeep, a doctor in
the military hospital reported.
Rites Slated
For Victim
Of Car Crash
Memorial services wlJI be held
Thursday for Newport Beach res-
ident AM Martz who died Mon-
day night following a traffic ac· cident.
Mrs. Martz died at Hoag
Memorial Hospital of the bead
and chest injuries she suffered
when her car was struck
broadside by a pickup truck.
The driver of tbe truck, Ricky
Allen Barnhill, 20, faces charges
of vehicular manslaughter in
connection with the faUtl acci·
dent. Barnhill of 209 18th St.,
Huntington Beach was released
ltQJJL.jall. Tuesday after post.in.a
$2,500 bond.
The m emorial services for
Mrs. Mar'U will be conducted at
1 p.m. at Christ Church by the
Sea, 1400 W. Balboa Blvd.
Mrs. Martz leaves her
husband, Larry, and two sons,
Craig and Brian, of the family
home at 401 Lugonia St.; her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Smyser of San Gabriel ; her
brother, Richard Smyser of
Huntington Beach and her sis-
ter _Janet Whiteley of '.l'emple-City.
Visitation will be tonight from
five o'clock and Thursday from
8 a .m . to 10 a .m . at Baltz
Bergeron Funeral Home, 1141
Superior Ave., Costa Mesa.
Following the memorial
services, there wtll be private
graveside services at Pacific
View Memorial Park, Corona
del Mar.
The family suaeests memorial
contributions to the Chrlat
Church by the Sea pre·school.
Strike Attacked
LIMA, Peru CAP> -Peru's
ruling miltt.ary realrne declared
a s tate of cmersency and
s u s pended constitutional
guarantees In five of the
country's 23 stat.es Tuesday ln
an apparent move to end a
crippling strike by the nation's
45,000 miners
'~~ ~ ffolltehl ...!!' ~~'), boiDeldrr;;r Jlj~
la excbailp for Ne~ ~ a-. ec.iieti epprov-.i "' coo-: f/l H ""' bom• lD the bomood.
ftlt wa re.ached
at M d1Y CtMaacll meet· tnc • ~rt proteSUld tbat the conatructlon project
could wotMn the Ct'OUDdwat.er ~~ ... ~the Upper fu'i~t;;"'u armed with
reports from three dlltere:nt COD·
aultaota tbat all aald the 14
bomea, ti built wttb 1ublurface
dra!u. wouldn't aunvat.e the problem.
Mayor Pro Tem Ray Williams
auuested that 1Jmllar drains be
installed oo tbe 13 ·homes that
will adjoin the proposed COO·
atructJon on Vista Caudal and
Viate Bntrada.
When Holstein ureed. coun·
cilmen approved 6is develop-
ment plans in a unanimous vote.
~uriq a beariq preceding
tbe vote, oae ID.gl')' botneowner.
Arthur Barlow, criticized a
$28,200 city report which lnltially
estimated the amount or
groundwater at 2SO acre feet.
That teport was later revised
downward . listing the
groundw.aer total at 80 acre feet
per year.
Noting the magnitude of the
error, Barlow advocated •·a
very careful study before
any more homes are built.'·
Conuncllmen, apparently
satisfied with tbe revised report,
have launched an effort to in-
volve the homeowner assoda·
lion. Holstein and the Irvine
Company in a joint project to in-
stall new drains and correct im·
properly lnstalled drains to ease
the problem.
City officials said some homes
have been damaged by the
groundwater and it baa caused
erosion of the bluff race near a
city sewer line.
City offlcJala said tbe blutr
area around tbe line will be
fitted wttb drains to prevent
further erosion from
groundwater. .
Hooker Told:
Go Bock Home
To California
FORT WORTH, Texas fAP>
-"Fort Worth bas enough proe;-
tltutes without imeorting any
from California."
With thoee words ringing in
her ears. Deborah Elder. 21,
found herself bound back for
Fresno, the graying, grizzled
visage of County Court Judge
J .C. Duvall stamped on her soul.
The BG.year-old judge, known
tor his sometimes off-beat brand
of justice, told the woman he would not fine her if she prom-
ised to go home.
"You be back in court by 2
p.m.," Duvall croa~ed in a voice
that has been compared to a
parrot with strep throat. ''1'11
have your plane reservations
ready."
Miss Elder gladly paid her
plane fare and vanished.
But four others, called •·tocai
talent" by Duvall, didn't do as
well. Each hooker got a S2SO fine
and 120 days as guests or the
county.
Duvall's actions, while un-
usual, set no precedents. He
used to have bailiffs escort un-
desirables to the county line
where they were told not to
come back.
Hero Trucker
" To Be Cited
MIAMI <AP> -Grateful of·
flcers prepared a citation or
br_a very for a b.e roic truck
driver who rescued a policeman
from an •gry crowd and then
disappeared.
Police flnaJJy learned the iden-
tity of the trucker when Paul
Becker. 56, of Homestead !:f ped a Dade. County officer ~C)fle oryoui' Of· -
flcere is lookinc for me ... He was ri t. Since Friday,
patrolman M Ian Pilat bad been
tr11.DM .to find the tructt drh'er who interceded when an angry
mob surrounded Pilat as he
tried to arrest an alleged
narcotics user,
Two Boys, 3,
Burn to Death
MODESTO <AP) -Two S.
1ear·old boyt burned to death
here after a C!&n of 1uoUne they
bad been pl•yln1 wlth tn a
1ar11e expk)ded into namea. c•·
ty flre otflclaJa said. •
The boys were identified BS
Ryan Lee Carver. aon of Mrs.
Catby Carver, and Juon
Rodney Pettijohn. son ol Mr.
and Mn. Q.alph Pettijohn
•
--=-----=---- --
llUNN&A.POLIS <A.P> Kinder1artaner
Jmon 8ID Hf'" hU second day ot school wu no mat.8 ror the n,..t.
.IMen rode elf on a school bwa Monday,
but didn't return aa. DDOn. Ilia motbcr called
Barton Scbool and 1be prtnclpal checked with
lbe kinderganeo teacher, only to flnd that
.luoc oaier arrived.
and iomct1mes be makes an ·s· backward.
the way a ~year-old does How he luted nil
day In third grade is beyood me · ·
,MON, 1'llO 18 TALL l'Olt 1118 81 •
had ~ spent the clay 1n a third·
•rade clulroom.
THE TBIRD·ORADE TEACHER dl1·
covered the mlstake shortly belore the prin·
clpat found the boy. She reallied~ was not u mature or learned as the other children
alld asked him what sc:bool be was in la&t year.
''Nursery school." Jason repUed.
Mrs. Sims said Jason wasn't much Im·
pressed with kindergarten 'l\lesct•Y· "l aalted blm wbat he dld with those bl&
tit» all day," h1s moqier, Loretta, Hid Tuel·
day. "Ho Mid be lutd to read about autumn
and draw a picture. He doesn't ~ad much,
''He was upset because he ~ldn't stay
for lunch Uke he did Monday ud he bad to 10 home at noon." sbe said.
IJijacked
AirUn~r
lands OK
BERLIN <AP) - A gunman
hijacked a Polish airliner with
71 persons aboard today and
forced lt to a U.S. alr base in
West Berlin, wbere the bijacker
and nine other passengers asked
for uylum In the West, an Air
Force spokesman said.
Tbe spokesman, Information
officer Lt. Col. Gerald R. Roys,
said seven or those seekin1
asylum were East German and
that he presbmed the other three
-the bijackef' and a woman and
child who accompanied him -
were alao East German.
The 10 stayed behind at Tem-
pelbof Airport after the JeUiner
took off again for East Berlin.
An 11th passenger, a West
Berliner, also remaJned behind. •
Thirty.four passengers were
bused to East Berlin and the re..
maintng 18 rode back aboard the
plane.
"The hijacker surrendered
peacefully aa soon as this thing
landed," Roys said, gesturing
toward the TU-134 twin-engine
jet or the Polish airline LOT.
The hijacker. who was not
further described, had put a
pistol in the face of the pilot and
told him to land in West Berlin
ins tead of East Berlin as
scheduled on the flight from
Warsaw and Gdansk. foland.
Roys said.
The nrst person off the plane.
a man carrying a brown bag,
was escorted peacefully away,
witnesses said.
The blue-and-whlte plane,
which carried a crew of eight,
took ore after West Berlin police
interrogated passengers.
,, ...... ..,.4.
PRIME •••
week's end.
The /rime rate ls not directly linke to the mortgage or
personal loan markets, but can
have a peycbological effect on
interest rat.es in those areas.
Tbe Federal a.erve. in an at-
tempt to slow the ecooomy and
make the slumping \1.S. dollar
more attractive to foreign cur·
rency tradere. has been pushing
up the lnterest rates It charges
member bub. tbus maktng it
more expensive for them to ob-
tain money.
Meanwhile, word of the huge
U.S. trade deficit lD July drove
tbe dollar down nearly six yen at
the start of trading on tbe Tok.yo
f oretgn exchange today. It re-
covered less than a yen to close
at 189.?Z, 2.4 perc:eat lower than
Tuesday's clo&bul rate.
The drop. the bluest since the
1973 revaluatlon of the yen,
came ~r stmUar action Tues·
day on the European and New
York markets following the an·
nouncement that the trade def.
lclt was $2.99 bUUon, nearly
double the June amount. The
dollar lost more ground today oo
all European foreign exchange
markets.
The dollar fell 1.4 percent
against the West German mark
in Europe Tuesday, 2.4 percent
against lhe Swiss franc and 1
percent against the French
franc. and continued its steep
fall in later New York trading,
Trading in Tokyo ended Tues-
day before the Washington an-
nouncement. and tbe dollar
closed on the Japanese foreign
exchange market at 194.30 yen,
10 yeo above its record low.
Trading dpeoed today at 188.50.
and dealers said importers
began buying, which pushed the
U.S. currency at one point back
above 190.
SALE ENDS
TIDSWEEKEND
Don,., wait any tonger.
Substantial savtngs now
during the final days of our
summer sale.
TORRANCE
2~9 HtwthOme Blvd .•
(213) 371·1279
COSTA MESA
fS9S Newp0rt Blvd.
( 11•> '41-2050
Supervisors
~pt U.S.
Beach Fund
Agreements !or I $3.8 million federal program to replact!
eroded beach sand from Sunset
Beach to Newport Harbor were
approved unanimously Tuesday
by Orange County supervisors.
The 'Program calls for
pumplng 1.3 million cubic yards ot sand onto eroded beach areas
this fall and winter as weU as
monitoring erosion problems, a
report to supervisors said.
The U.S. Army Corps or
Engineers will handle the work
and pay $2.6 milUon of tbe
program's cost.
The state Department of
Parks and Rttreation wUI pay
another $950.400. while the
county will spend $174,140.
Newport Beac h $\02.960.
Huntington Beach $23,760 and
the Surfside Colony Storm Water
Protection District SlS.840.
County officials said recent
declines in the sandy beach in
the Surfside-SWlset Beach area
prompted the county's request
for the rederaJ program.
The sand replenishment will
begin in October and be
completed by early n ext
summer, omcaals said.
Teachers Strike
NEW ORLEANS CAPI -With
classes due to open for 90.000
public school students. New
Orleans teachers voted lo strikl'
today after union leaders c-alled
a proposal !or a 4 percent saJary
increase an insult. About 3.000 _
members of the United Teachers
of New Orleans gathered for the
vote inatead of going to first day
of classes.
LAGUNA BIACM
3'.S North Cotat Hwv.
(714) ..... 551
DAIL V PtLOT .45
fJ;S l'or Eae• €.Utondaa FIBllfl ,
$1 Billion Tftx Cut Vote Today
~,008 Errer
SWJpect Says
He'll Return
LOS ANGELES tAP> When S2·year-old ac·
couotant Ame Rlstol dJs<'overed that $921.000 had
been erroneousty·transferred to his bank account,
he took off. He now wants to return and "clear his
name," according to a lawyer friend.
Tbe Los Angeles Times on Tuesday quoted
.., Santa Ana attorney Daryl 0. Hansen as saying
that Rlstol "has expressed a desire to return and
clear his name, but he wants to do it under
circumstances that are fair."
Hansen would not reveal the Wefit Covina
bookkeeper's whereabouts. saying Ristol wanted
assurances of a bail reduction from the district at-
torney. "He doesn't want 'to sit in the can for
$100,000 bail because l don't think he can post It."
Hansen added.
Echleatloaa l l'-dl11g f'la~d
SANTA MONICA I AP> Although billions of
federal dollars have been spent to improve educa-
tion, return on the investment has been low -
mainly because teachers and local school officials
were never taught how to improve on their own, a
Rand Corp. study says.
The four-year study commissioned by the U.S.
Department of Health. Education and Welfare ex-
ammed 29.1 federally funded projects, Including
some to eliminate illiteracy and other:. to improve
vocational and bilingual--------
education ( ) The net return to the f,T ATE
federal investment. th~
researchers said, "was '---------
the adoption of many in·
novatlons, the suceessrut implementation or few
and the long run continuation of still fewer."
3 Seatnarftl fn NIAM Prate•t
SAN LUIS OBISPO I A P l Three of 10 def en·
dants facmJZ trespassinR char~es in connection
with a Diablo Canyon anti-nuclear power dem-
onstration have been sentenced to si x months in
Jail after pleading no contest
Municipal Court. Judge Harold Johnson said
Tuesday he imposed the maximum sentence for
the m•sdl'mcanor because thev had refused to
abide by all laws durmg a 24 month probation
period.
The thrt.•c dcfendanU>, Peter Klotz-Chamberlin
and Chnsty Lanzi, both of Santa Cru1, and Samuel
R T) :.on of Waterford. also were rmed S500 each
Batik Seen ln We lfare ffllce
SACRAMENTO <A P ) The stage is set for a
maJor battle in the Legislature's closing days over
whether cost-of.Jiving grant Increases should bt.·
reinstated for nearly 2.2 million welfare recipients.
The Asi.embly Revenue and Taxation Commit·
tee voted lo do that Tuesday, but refused to ex-
empt county hospital nurses from the state wage
freeze.
The battle is certain to focus on whether
welfare recipients can gel grant increases while
government employees· wages are frozen
11ob1Jertf Saspe~• S urreader •
MARTINEZ <AP> One of three gunmen who
allegedly robbed 13 would-Ix-gamblers of $2,000 in
a Reno-bound bus Saturday night has surrendered
to the Contra Costa County sheriff's department.
Darril Terry. 26, who was booked for in·
vesligation or kidhapping and robbery Tuesday.
said he turned himself io after telling his family he
was joining the Air Force.
Terry said he met two strangers at a bar in
Richmond, where they hatched the plot to rob the
Trailways "gambler's special" bus Saturday.
After robbing the 13 passengers. the two strangers
ran off with the entir_:e loot, he said.
SACRAMENTO <AP> A tt billl<m atale ln· C'Omo tal t'Ul WU headed today for I final Al·
aumbly \lot th1l would send lt to Oov Edmund
Brown Jr. ror bls promlHd 1l1n1tu,...
Tb pl n would 1lve 1 ooe-Ume '7• 1t1te In·
romo las cul for 1978 lo each Callfomla,n fllloa a
parate return. 1od 1 Sl~ taic cut to each cou9lc
fllln1 1 Jolnt Mum.
MtJl'lllWBLY VOTE 1cheduled for today
more tban a formality. bceauat the As·
t wed approved the m-.tor '°atures of
Mayor Wt
Removal Requat«l
VERNON <AP> -A r~tlred flreflabter
hat accused Vernon·, mulll·mlUionaire
mayor of 111~1al.ly llvme outsi<M the city he
prealdet over.
Thu action filed Tuesday aai.iost Leonis
C. Malburg, so. is the nme charge bis
wealthy erandlather was lndkted on 35 years
ago.
Filed with the slate Attorney General's
Otftce. the action seeks to oust Malburg as
ma~or, a position he has held for seven
' years ft also requests his removal from the
City Council seat he has occupied for 22
years
The charge wa~ filed by Curllon E.
Claunch, 41. a retired Vernon firefighter who
was an unsuccessful City Council candidate
last spring.
Claunch claims Malburg controls the
city's v~g because most or Its 240 residents
are either municipal employees or Jive in low
cost city-0wned housing.
Judge Attacks
Lawyer's Attire
SAN DIEGO <A P > -No one would have
blamed James Kinder for feeling he had taken his
suit to the wrong court after a Judge pronounced
the attorney guilty or "vulgarity" for his casual at-
tire. but Kinder says he'll do it again.
Superior Court Judge Edward T. Buller said
he was "appalled" Monday by Kinder's brown
plaid suit, rust.colored sweater and open collar -
no necktie -as the attorney's client pleaded lnno-~otto afelony
"Are you an attorney'? Are you ·admitted to
practice in the courts of this state?" Butler asked.
KINDER SAID HE WAS.
Huller said there was nothing he could do
Jhout a lawyer's attire becau!>e appellate courts
huvc ruled it's not a Judge's concern. but he had
plenty to say about it.
"Manners of dress tend to portray how a
person feels about himself and his prQfess1on." the
judge intoned "Adherence to a code of conduct.
standard of dress. symbolizes the hallmark of
educated. cultured people ..
"Bit by bit the waves or vulgarity are eroding
our standards," he added
KINDER Sl\ID TUESDAY thul he will
l'hall cnge the JUdl(e for raust.• in the current case
because Butll·r·~ "emotional barrage" left his
el1ent. a 21 year·old woman accused of att<.•mp(ed
murder. "with the imprei.Mon that the hostility his
honor wa!> rel<.•a i.ing on me would be also released
upon her because she was my client .. She did
express grave concern over whether there would
be a bleed-over of the Judge's feelings about me
onto her own ca!>e."
The attorney !>aid the ·~ue or neckties IS
!>imilar to many court reforms that have occurred
over the years
"If it weren't for the courage of attorneys to
promulgate change. we'd probably ull still be
wearing while wigs,'' he :.aid. "I am sure there
will be many occasions in future when I appear in
San Diego courts without a lie ..
Besides, he added: "Ttes give me a rash."
Vets Unit Talk Set ..
Me dical care for
Orange County veterans
will be discussed Sept.
13 at a meetin~ of the
Orange County Veterans
Advisory Council.
The meeting will
begin at 7:30 p m. at the
St1tt~Mutual Sa.vmp
and Loan Building, 62S
E. First St .. Tustin.
The meeting is open to
the public. Information
cun be obtained by call·
ing Adm. Phil Niekum.
USN ( ret.) at 586~.
o r Ben de Leon at
834·204Z.
. ..
First, you'll enjoy a marvelous soup du jour or crispy
tossed green salad. Then we proudly serve you a generous
portion of succulent Prime Rib, the king of beef, plus a
piping hot baked potato with all the trimmings, fresh sour-
dough bread and butter. For the finishing touch, it's coffee
or tea and a tantalizing dessert All this for only $5.95.
Monday-Saturday & to 7:00 PM. Sunday 4 to 6:00 PM.
Charley Browns
HUNTINGTON BEACH-16160 Beach Blvd.
Reaervatlona Accepted-(714) 842-6602
the 1ame blll oo a bl·partlHn 73-0 vote.
The meusure -sp0naored by Brown and
Democratic leaders or the l..e8Jslature -is a com·
binatlon of earner tax cut proposals authored by
RepubUcan.s.
GOP LEADERS ln both houses have com·
plained that the Democrat.a are steallili their pro·
DOHls ln an ttlccllon year polltical maneuver. But
Republican luwmakers have nonetheless unan
1mou1ly supported the bill. AB 3802 by A&·
semblyman Lawrence Kapiloff. D·San Dleao. 1n a
serlea or committee and noor votes over the put
two weeks.
The Senate -graveyard or other tax cut pro·
posals th1s year -voted 39-0 for the tax cul on
Monda¥. clearing the greatest potential threat to
pass ace.
THE COMBINED EFFECT of the propoied in·
come tax cut and Proposition lJ's propert~ tax
cuts would reduce the average homeow,per s an-
nual tax bill& by $7SO to $1 .000.
Renters. who got nothing from Proposition l3's
voter-mandated 57 percent pfOS>erty tax cut. would
get $75 each In income tax cuts from the bill.
SENIOR CI TIZENS, both renters and
hotneowners. would get up to $375 each in addi·
tional tax cuts under the income tax cut bill.
In addition to the one·Ume tax credits. the
Kapiloff bill would adjust state income tax
brackets annually with inflation so that most
workers receiving only cost-of-living increases
would not move to higher state tax brackets.
Thal so-called "indexing" has been a top
priority of Republicans in recent years. and lt was
opposed vigorously by most Democratic leaders
until this summer. when the tax cut fever of
$10,-Plot
Man Charged
In Extortion
SAN DIEGO IAP> -A 26-year-old Phoenix
man was arrested in Phoenix Monday and charged
with attempting to extort $10,000 from San Diego
radio personality Bill Ballance
Charles Steven Sawyer. a tree trimmer . was
arraigned Tuesday in Phoenix on cttarges of ext.or·
t1on and booked in Maricopa
County Jail on $10.000 bond.
An FBI spokesman said
Sawyer contacted Ballance
more than a week ago and
threatened to mail him an ex-
plos1 ve device at San Oie~o
radio station KFMB unless
Ballance paid the $10,000.
Sawyer was arrested at his
home while making final ar·
rangements on the telephone
with Ballance
fo'Bl officials declined to reveal how Sawyer
became aware of Ballance. who formerly conduct-
ed a radio talk show at station KABC In Los
Angeles.
..
Propotltion l3's pauaae swept •hrou1h thl ~
Lealalaturc. :
THE INCOME TAX CUT would ~ linancc.-d
from tbt state's budftt surplus, now estJmalA!d at
up to ~ billion annually for tbe next few yean.
The rest or that surplus ls tentatively earmarked to contlnue to help local 1ovemmenl.$ whose rev-
enues were slahed by Proposition 13.
'lo
Brown. who predicted a statewide buainesa re-
cession and eventual state tax hikes If Propoeltlon
13 paased. now aays California can a/ror<I more tax
cut-a because the state is recelvlnt excess income. •
business and sales tax revenues from .. the
greatest peacetime boom in our history."
The Democratic governor says, and non· •
partlaan anaJysts agree. that Celiromaa can cut fn·
come taxes this extra SI billion and continue to
give schools. cities and counties S3 billion to $4
billion annually In Proposition 13 aid.
BVT REPUBLICANS have accused Brown of deliberately deceiving voters about the growing
budget surplus -now estimated at SS.8 billion
com pared to a state budget of $1.S biJlion -in an •
attempt t.o defeat Proposition 13.
Attorney General Evelle Youneer, Brown ·~
GOP toe ror eovernor in the Nov. 7 general e1ec·
tion. has charged that Brown is "playing games"
with the budget surp1us figures.
"The numbers change almost overnight to swt
the governor's political purposes. When he was
against Proposition 13. we bad only S3.S billion
When l3 passed. he suddenly had more than $6
billion." Younger says
ACl'UALLV, THOSE TWO budget surplus
figures do not contradict each other as sharply as
Younger s uggests in a statewide barrage or radio
commercials.
First of all. the state itself has been the big-
gest single property taxpayer in California ror the
past decade because or a pre-Proposition 13 $1
billion aMual "homeowner·s exemption" tu re·
lier program under which the state pays property
taxes on the first S7 .000 in value of each owner·
occupied home.
P ROl'OSm ON J3's tax cuts therefore gave
the state an immediate S600 million annual cut in
the cost of that tax rehef program.
In addition 'o that. the rfduced property tax
bills for business and homeowners reduced tax dt:
duct1ons on state income tax and business taxes.
raising estimated revenues rrom those t axes by up
to S250 million annually
AND IN RESPONSE to what Brown called
"the spirit or 13." the Legislature and Brown havt'
made ~ milllon in cuts in the state budget. in·
eluding a freeze on welfare grants and state
salaries and a freeze on hirings.
Finally. estimates or state income. sales and
business tax revenues are being revised upward
by about S300 million because of updated estimates
or the California economy. now in a fourth year or
robust expansion instead or the downturn predicl
ed by economists
PERFECT H A IR COLORING
Done At. ..
LUZZETT A Bernard 240 Newport Center Or .• Ste. 200
NEWPORT BEAOi-640«>23
••••
-.. ---.---...-.-_.-.. ... --_ ..... ....,,,.
If you have $10,000 or more In
a 5% bank passbook. we
can Increase your Interest
rate by at least 50%.
you can defer Interest pay-
ment untll 1979.This option
may provide special Income
tax benefits.
Important too. our now·
famous Savmgs Loan Is
available should you need
funds prior to maturity since
tederal regulations require All you do Is switch your
funds Into one of our Six·
Month Money Market Certl·
f lcate Accounts.
Interest wlll be credited
quarterly or, at your option .
~ ,, . 'lt. ~ ii THE Bili M
MUTUAL
SAVINGS
AH IOUAL °"'°"TUHITT IMf'\.0'1'11•
a substantial penalty for
early withdrawal.
Call us for r---.------.
details at the fSI IC
office most con· ----
venlent to you. ---~--
Paseoena 1M11n Office> 12131 U9·23'51Arcad1t1C213)4..e.01ee1c1noo1P•MI12i31884 ••22 C-p111rano Sen Ci.men1e
C714l 493·5851 tCetrllos1213)929·13761Co1on,1 0.1 Mar {714) &75 50101Covin1121s1339 S4761Fa1lbr001t /714) 728·17241
Fount11n V1ll~ 1714) 993.-8*1Gl•M•lt 12t3) 2•2·'14&1 l..tk• San M111cos 11t•1 7'4·2771 ' Port Hu.nerntt 1~>086~1
S11nt1 An1 (71Al '47-97•11Tttousand Oelis 18051•97-27871Up11ne1171•1981·282' 1\11111<1 111•1 72e-858!i
-~·-Or..tngc Coast Daily Pilot
Coast Committee
Hits Rough Water
T upµotntm nt or to Newport Beach re Iden to
t•1u1stol planning commtltet' ~'Ould apJ>Car to be the drle t
und dull~t or subj l
Given to th cantunkerous cUy council. however. tn
rnulmt• m.utcr hu~ ballooru'<I into u full blown con·
trovers)
So far. l'll\ l"OUnc 1lmen hav<! been unable to ·~·1'olv4.'
their dispuh.' 'anti Kl•t tht! uppo1ntments mudt• So th~
l'Ommlltt.>t• h:• been un<tblt-to be1etn 1t.'i JS.month effort
Whic h ._hould t"fld With th<> ~Um to the C'llV Of t'OnlrOI Of
the \.'OUMal ZOO(' no v. held by the coa&stal commission fl
,1ppNu~ ttw Mlluttcm v.all be reached at the next council
rnt•tttln~
Tht· µrubll•m •~ that of\er ~ettmg coa!'ltal C'omm1'is1on
JJ.>J>f0\,1l or the committt-t• sL'l up. three counctlmcn ur~ en m~ to "•'u:ooile on their own p~ and change pro-<'t•dur~ .it tht> l..tst manult•
Thl' rt·u~.on '°" v. antmjt to s haft the uppomlnwnt or
1 hn·l· or tht' 10 rommat\l.-e rnl'mber from thret• ex 1st mg
t•1ltLl't1 ..:roup~ to the rouncal "' obscure Counc1Jmcn .tlrl'ad~ h.1\l' l'Ontrol or M'\f'n of the aplJ()intments Why
Puul RH·kofl. H4n Wallium s and Paul Hummel want <·on
t rol of those> thrt•t..-rt.?mainmsc appoantments is a mystery
lt ·~ unfortunate tbb last minute politicking had to
t.•m('rJ:l' Tht> l'Omm1ttct' will have plenty of issues to face
without gNting off to !>uch a bumpy start.
Seniors Merit Backing
Newport flt•a(•h 's ~t'ntor citizens must be relleved
<41'ter city councilmen Monday approved the contract for
C'Onstruction of lht> t ma I building of their center in Corona
<lei Mar.
M onda~ 's council m eeting was attended by a la rge
t·rowd of a nxious seniors who we re concerned that coun.
t 1lme n would not follow through on their three-year com-
m1t m l'nt to comple te the cente r.
Their fears were based on past council action s which
:-,1w <.lela):. 1n the opening of the facility and a near re·
I us al of thl' lu~t installment of the federal grant that
pur thased the cente r.
'.\1 ayor Pro Tern Ray Wllhams was right on tC:Jrget
when hl• tc.i lled for completion of the center by con-
s t ruettn1-? the buildtnf!. saying that it is the fair thing to
do
Thl' counc1 lmcn who Joined Williams in approving the
contract are probably correct in assuming that the
:!.100·ml·mbcr oq:~anization is going lo expand not only its
ranh but lts financial participation in running a nd main
I LJining the tl'nll'r
The a{·comphshments the sen iors have marked in one
~el.Ir of operatio n a n• a credit not only to them but to the
dty touncilml•n who huvc: had the confidence to back the
... cn ior~
'Share' Out of I ,ine
Little reason can be seen for the Newport-Mesa
Unified School District to seek a 10 percent c ut from the
revenues Coastline Community CoUege could r eceive by
subleasing facilities at Bay View School in Santa Anu
He 1ghLc;.
Such u sug,:!estion came up at last week's school
lmard mct•tmg a nd e nded m a 3-3 split vote.
The trus tees deadloc k effectively can celled a
... uble<Jsc <Jgrccmcnt between Coastline and Temple Bat
Yahm of Nl'wport Beach which planned to use some l'lus~rooms on u limited basis for $10.000 per year.
Perhaps some school trustees were upset at the
lhought that Coastline might benefit to an excessive
degree by s ubleasing facilities once operated by the
:'-ll•wport-Mcsa district.
However , Coastline already is paying the district
S82,000 a year for Bay View. And, this revenue. like the
ill·concicved 10 pe rcent sublease proposal, is money that
must be returned to the state to pay off old Newport-Mesa
bond debts.
The proposal seems more like a case of sour grapes
th:.in an e ffort to improve the dis trict's c.fiminishing I manc1ul stalu~.
• Opinions expressed 1n the space above are those of the Daily Pilot
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
artists Reader comment is invited. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O
Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321
Boyd/RR Names
. By L.M. BOYD
Please add to that li st or
oddball nic knames for
-l'<Ailro~: Southern Pacific·
was the "Suffe rin '
Pathetic .. The Lehi gh and
New En~land was the "Late
and Never Early." The
Northampton and Bath was
tho "NuLs and Bolts ... The
Delaware and Hudson was
the "Delay and Hesitate ...
The Chicago, Burlington
and Quin cy wa s th e
"C h eapest . Bes t and
Quid,ea;t. ·:. ~ -.
Originally the leader or the
Ku Klux KJan was nDt known
n Lhe Imperial Wizard but
as the Grand cyerops
-· -I
~ar
Gloomy
Gus
1 don 'l need 1taUstlc1 to
tell me about lht tn-
crease in nlKhts from
Orange County Airport.
The air above my house
between the hours of 7
a.m. and 9 a.m. sounds
like the aJr chaM scene
tn "Star wars ..
E.O.
t
Pollsters r eport they've
learned that most young
girls have their first roman-
tic experiences in the homes
of their boyfriends..
You've seen that football
player on the bench with an
oxygen mask over his face?
Except maybe f or the
psychological upltft, he's not
h e lping himself much .
Medical researchers now
contend that breathing oxy·
gen before or after exercise
has no effect on performance
01 1eco.ery.---
How do you account for the
fact that-far more men than
\llOllll!D fllll... OUL cl hospital
beds?
Am still trying to llgure
out what you send to a sick
florist.
Q "Have any of the free-
love communes been s ue·
cessful?"
A. It's debatable. There
may still be quite a few of
the households functtonlna
here or there. Most, though,
have come apart. Couples
tend to pair off r choollna to
devote themselves to each
other to the exclusloo or t.be
rest. Quan-els crop up over
shared wor'k. Money 1tlU•
ments seem inevitable. Some
theorists who've looked lnlo
the mau.r now UUnk I.be UD·
aucc...rut commune experi·
mtnll tend lO pro•e that
mono1am1 11 lDtUacUwe, ··~Cllhen .........
-.
Kennedy Sa:voJ!S .. Senator Role
W ASHINOTON -Sen.
!dward Kennedy 'don't caU hlm
"Teddy"> I•
hot a1aan.
JuMt aa hew
ln 1968. um
nd l976. A
c rowd ot
auttaaer11
fhrurta he Is
runoto~ f<>r
Prculdent .
t ho uah the
1980 aeuon la
18 months awuy. Those panting
ror a political saviour treel~ tell
poll ttrs that Kennedy ls the
aalvatJon. th• salvo. the cure·all
for what all ~.
Or Gatllup proclaims that
C>cmocrals fuvor him over Mr
Carter to be l~ 1980 nominee by
u 44 -20 !>core. and that all voters
w1tnt him over Gerald Ford by a
whopping 59-41 margin.
THE OOPESTERS who see all
events as crafted. and ignore the
power of the prosaic, mutt.er. uh
WEU, ... ONE GOOP
iHlt«;.AfJJUT HIM-H~ AINT PART OF TAAT
GEORGIA ESTAll!SMMENT
UP™ERE-
Mailbox
hob. and note that; a now poU
ahowe th• public rortlving Ken·
ntdy for Chappaquiddick: J oan
Kenned>"• cont eulon on
alcohoJl!J.-, Is compaaslonately
received: Kennedy hH a busy
oollUcol fChedule this tall. one
which "Ill put e ven more
Oe mocrat!J In his debt.
All thls pleases. even amuses.
Kennedy. He loves his populari·
ty and the tnowledge that, given
his ~raonal setbacks. he re·
covered and made his own way.
He doe!ln't plot or make moves
to run. nor wlll he. He actually
doe n 't "'1mt to. and could only
be per u)ded tr Carter pull an
LBJ and quits. or Is humiliated
in the 19if primarieis. or if a na-
tion-shak1ng issue develops.
For •Yetars. even atoremen-
uon e d factors of this sorl
wouldtl't have been enoueh to
pers uade him. The trauma of all
the Kendedy tragedies was too
much with him. and he was too
involved lin being rather to the
children t' his dead brothers.
lo recent years. the prob·
tems of his wite, and his son,
Teddy, who lost a leg to caMer.
occupled him more than any
presidential thoughts. Always.
there were the wishes of hJa al~·
ters and mother -cautious 'or the safety of the last son.
Besldff. Kennedy rellshes bia
role as a senior senator. ··r tuw
new opportunities in the next
Congreo, as cbalrman ol the
Judlclary CommlUee." he \old
me last week, "Think of the
enormous impacl on the system
or justice. t~ safety or our
citizens and f.he protection of
liberties. We'll be passin' on 140
new judges -<>fte·fifUt of the
judiciary -in one l'ear."
ONCE, Kennedy SQmeiimes
mouthed whet wt,~ Just whlspe~ in hia ear by 'bri.ght
!;tarter. Todor,. M knows his .
stuff down to mtty-eritty. He and
Sen. Howard Cannon. D·N,v ..
pushed for airline dereaulaUon
to the point that \be airll.n6s
drastically reduced tares ln self.
d~fense. Now Kenned}' arpes
for deretulatlon of motor cat·
riera. nd for reform of existing
reaulatlons so that new druas
can be brouaflt on the market quicker.
Ask about ta" revolt and bi&.
inetrtclent government. and
Kt>nnedy orters liberal rebuttal: "We can save ~9 billion by 1984.
if we vote for naliocial tutalth ln·
aurance. I think the bi.cCest tax
spenders are those who want lo
1rant tax credits <tuition .aJd >
without applying the same
criteria we do for straight ap-
propriations. In oU and gas. why
don't we glve tax incentives to
wildcatters instead of lo dentists
seeking tax shelters?
··Prop. 13 was also a cry
against bigness in all forms. tr
Howard Jarvis had packaged his
proposition in a way lo cut the
size of big bu,,iness instead of
big government. the voters
would have approved that. too ...
PEOPLE warm lo Kennedy.
despite his libe ral rhetoric ,
because. like bis brothers before
him. he holds out hope and prom-
ise. He will chair hearings this
fall on f\is national health bill.
one we really don't need, and
will get big media exposure.
Kennedy will s tump for
Democrats everywhere. and
more comparisons will be made
between the enthusiasm for him
and the turning a way from
Carter.
It is heady stuff. but Kennedy
has seen it before and will see it
again lie said. "That's about
right ... when I asked him if the
presidential goal was less im-
portant lo him than it was lo his
brothers.
··It ·s obvious that the Kennedy
family has been through so
much ... he told me, "and it con·
tinues to be a major factor in my
life. But grandchildren grow up
and gel settled down. Times
change. and in a period or future
years, things may change for
me But my position is that I do
not want to run. that I support
President Carter. and that he
will be reelected ...
Police Have Right to Express Views
To the Editor
Your Aug. 18 editorial entitled
''Police in New Arena" reflects
a surprisingly narrow view of
A m c rican democ racy. Why
would you choose to discourage
any individual or group from
political activism, particularly
when most would agree that one
of the most serious threats to the
great American experiment is
political apathy? How can the
expression of political views by
any citizen or group of citizens
be equated with an attempt by
the police to no longer answer to
civilian authority?
THE REALITY police officers
must deal with, though many of
us would prefer to ignore.
represents an Important aspect
of our society. Their perspec-
tive, even If we find it un·
pleasant. should be as mucit a
part of the body politic as the
vie ws and expressions o f
bankers. teachers. lawyers.
farmers. laborers, and yes. even
newspaper publishers. 1 applaud
a nyone or any group who plays
an active role In the democratic
process and see no reason lo dis-
courage police officers from be·
ing good citizens.
past they have had explosive
harpoons fired over their heads
into surfaced whales. This year
they also had high pressure fire
hoses turned on them. yet they
stayed. w1lh their lives on the
line. They continued to prevent
mass killings.
Our heartfelt thanks go out to
these 26 brave people. I'm proud
to be a member of the same or·
ganization. and r hope you all
join me in support of such ac·
tivities.
Welcome home Greenpeace
crew. Job well done.
MICHAEL GREENIA
Not Worth II
To the Edit.or
A friend of mine was killed
last night. My sadness and rage
at the unfairness of her untimely
death was increased today when
1t proved to be a police chase
that prematurely s nuffed out
this vibrant. caring human be
ing
Was catching a punk with a
toy gun worth the death of a
young mother who left behind a
husband, two s mall children.
parents and many grieving
friends?
It seems we're always reading
about potice chases ending \\lttli
the death of an innocent. but this
wasn't jusl tt statistic ; this was
a talented. giving woman whose
loss is inealcur'able.
There must be a be a better
way. Tills should not have hlll)-
pened .
MARGIT MOTI'A
Paraphrasing a famou s
J)"ahioi~ • • ~ we m~ not
always a1ree with iJOmeone'S
viewPolnl but we should be pre-
pared to fight for their right lo
express that viewpoint." Police
officers during their off.duty
houra, have. ad should be en·
couraged to exercl.se. the same
First Amendment rights that al·
low you lo publish your opinions
in your newspaper.
RUSSELL A. BOSfROM 'Brohr' Clllrfllefl
_.J>.re.wtent..NeWRC>ti.... ~~· _
Harbor Bar Assn. Your edito~ial on the number .........
'l'o the Editor:
On Aug. 24 I had the privilege
lo be pa.rt of a welcoming com·
mlttee ror a ship returnlng from
war. a war where th.ls aggressor
had no weapons. The ship was
the Peacock, out or Wilmington.
a Green peace vessel ; the
enemy. the Russian whaling
fleet.
Greenpeace, a non-profit fOW\·
datlon, had once again gone to
sea to prevent the kUling of help-
less whales, whose numbers are
dwlndllna fall. They launched
I nflatable boata from the
Peacock and placed themselves
between the Ruaalan kUI ships
and the whales. Twenty·slic peo.
ple, with nOth.ina but courqe.
compauloo and det.erlnlnation
dllrul)(ed lhl barpoon-carrytna Ruaafam.
T1IJS II the IOUJ'tb year aucb
9W•lel bne takm p.laee. ln the
•
of brokers In California was in
error and created a m islead.Ina
tmpresston of the ml atate
profession. There are 400,00J)
licensees in Californla not
brokers. This number Includes
both brokers and sales persons.
You further showed your lack
or knowledge of our profession
by stating that a person could
"pick up a broker's license." To
pick up this li cense a person
must have certain licensed sales
experience or college degree in
addition to 12 college credits in
real estat~ law. finance,
appraisal and practice. Arter
"pickin g" up the se
qualifications he must then take
a 200-questlon slate exam that
takes over three hours.
W.F LOWANCE.
Realtor
Maf~NHfl.fl
To the EdJtor:
Al, COOCll1Yd PllNOta. '" , ...
the importance of sharing with
the community our dis may over
a s itua tion involving t h e
Newport Harbor High School
Sailor Band.
Due to summer school cut·
backs. the district eliminated
the s ummer band program. But.
because Harbor High 's band
director. Richa rd Eng land,
volunteered his services. the
s ummer progra m was t e rn ·
porarily approved and offered
for the Harbor High band stu·
dents.
However, to our dismay the
school district later m ade a de·
cision not to allow the band to
continue with its volunteer sum-mer program .
There is certwnly an impor
tant need to continue music
skills through the s ummer.
There is a need for our vanous
athletic programs to continue
t hrough the s ummer as well
Howe ver. while a thletic pro
grams are continuing, the band
was not allowed the same con-
sideration.
Ir our band is expected to SUP·
port the football team by
performing at home games in
September, they too need to
practice.
Band ja an-elec~e course. for
these mll$leatty talented young
people. It enables them to con-
tribute to the traditional spirit
a nd pride or Harbor Hi&h
School.
RABB.OR IDGH can boast oC
one of the county's finest award-
winning bands. Each year band
students add new trophies to
their collection for their ex·
-Cl!Hftt~&-D1tls and
I
@
s-i>erior playing ability abilities.
Further, Mr. England has the
respect and support of all his
students and their parents, who
eolleelively support him and the
band progra m through their
booster club
Music has always played an
important part in our everyday
lives. (f Wl' aren't serious about
the importance of music educa·
lion. who will be our musicians
to.morrow?
We certainly hope that the
school administration will re
alize that efforts must be made
to find 1 workable solution with
the band director and again
s how conc:ern for the education
and eortchment of these band
s tudents
DON GRIGSBY
f''RAN GRIGSBY
Bffut Lfglats
To the Editor:
According lo a recent article
ip your paper. the Newport
Beach Bicycle Trails Citizen Ad·
visory Committee has proposed
that traffic light push-button
controls be installed for
bicyclists.
The cost is lo be $21.000 to the
city, plus matching funds from
tile stnte tn the form of gas tu--
funds . The new push·buttons are
to apparently be duplicates of
existing eqµipment and would be
probably only about five feet away.
I CAN SEE no justification for
expenditures of our funds for a
project ot such limited use. The
philosophy.that "we would get it
che&J> JJeea~ .5'.ata ~~ ·-• ha ff'T• 11 completely wrong
because we end up paying the
ttate 'a share in gas taxes sooner
ot llttr.
The other proposal ror a tiley:
cte bridie 99er the Delhi Flood
Control <hi.noel sounds like it
might be • good Idea. depending
on where It would be placed .
What really aets me is that
the city council has approved
the application for funds for the
wbqle ball of wax. Mayor
Ryctotr, who opposed the but-
tons, soys they are inconsistent
'wUh cl\Y traffic policies. Good
for him.
DOUGLAS PARMENTIER JR.
•
' I
VOL 71, NO. i4~ 'SECTIONS, 46 PAGES
After. .. •
N.Y.. Stoeki
TEN CENTS J
Saddleback to Train Santa Ana Cops
aareement, dlatricta relmb\u'M
each Olber whoo 1Wdents cboole
to attend a camwa outside tbelr
own dl.IU1ct ot reaideMe.
lo aplt• of Rancho Santiago'•
retuuil, • Saddleback trustees
Mood~ night agreed to accept
lhe Santa Ana offlcen.
Saddleback college chief Ro~rt Lombatdi told the board
the officers could enroll in the
pro1ram wit.bout creating any
additional costs. and pnvtCllUBlY
enrolled officers would be a(.
lowed to c-omplete the cur·
riculum.
Truttees Non1n Brandt and
Larry Taylor crtUci&ed lbe1r
nelgbborina board for refllsthl
reimbunement. Rancho San·
ttago trustees have complained
of lack of cooperatlon between
tbe community colleae dlBtricts,
Mrs. Brandt said. Now, she
...............
t
TWIN-ENGINE LAS VEGAS AIRLINES PIPER NAVAJO PLUNGED TO GROUND StfOATI..Y AFTER TAKEOFF AT LAS VEGAS
Pilot, All 9 Pa ... ngera, En Route to Orange County Airport,1Pe1llft~ in Crash
~----------------------------------~---------------------------------
Jury Suggests
Execution for
i County Killer
An Orange County Superior
. Court jury said Tuesday that
convicted murderer Maurice
Thompson should cfie in San Quentin's gas chamber. i
7 ~ I .
Thompson showed no emotion
as the same jury that found him
guilty of the Nov. 14, 1977,
murder of Michael Whalen in La
Habra said he should be put to
death.
ThC' five-man. S<'ven -woman
jury could have decided that the
33-year·old convicted killer
should be sent to prison for the
rest or his life without possibility
i of parole.
t ..
~ ' ;
Instead. after about five hours
deliberation, the JUry decided
that the slaying of Whalen and
the serious wounding of June
F<.'hce last fall warranted t he ul·
timate penalty.
The ·man and woman were
gunned clown in Whalen's home
during an early morrung rob-
bery attempt.
Mrs. Felice later identified
Thompson as lhC' assailant.
Deputy Puhhc Defender Ron
Butler said ht• will move to have
Thompson given a nc:w trial.
The dC'ath penalty assigned by
the Jury came as a recommcn-
dallon to the Judge and 1s not
binding on him when he sen·
t e nces Thompson. That pro-
nouncement is expected to be
m ade Thursday unless an appeal
by Butler for added time is
granted.
Beaded for County ·.
10 Die as Planii
t .
Crashes in Veg.i,l,s
I
A twln·engtne Laa Ve1as
Airlines plane bound for Orange
County Airport plunged to the
ground shortly after taking off
from Nortll Las Ve1aa Air Terminal today, killing tbe pilbt
and nine passengers, authorities
said.
There were no survivors. The
victims were apparently part or
an Australian vacation tour
group en route to the Los
Angeles area after a stop in Las Vegas.
The Piper Navajo c rashed
af>out 7:50 a.m. just moments
after it left the general aviation
terminal northeast of Las
Vegas.
Airline spokesman Don
Donohue said the airline has no
scheduled flights but m es on an
on-call chart.er basis between
Las Vegas and other Nevada
and Califotnia points, including
Orange County.
"The pilot took off on schedule
this morning, but be never got
81,450 in Jewels
Taken in Viejo
An intruder who entered via
the unlocked front door tqok
Jewelry valued al $1,450 from a
Mission~Viejo home.
Orange County sheriff's of.
ficers said the theft was report-
ed by medical administrator Josept\ w: Hlldreth, 36, o1 2:U91
Terreno Drive. He was away at
work at the time.
outside tba a~ ·beaadai'y.,
We can~t ten .. what 'happened,"
Donohue said. ·
Richard .lallli'son... i Las
Vegas contractor-and private
pilot, was landing.at the airpon
and said he .saw the plane go
down.
. . Th e l a k e ·-0 rr S·e e m e d
nonnaJ," ,J ameson said. "It was
climbing, but it shook violently
and suddenly pitched to the righl
and crashed."
There were no skid marks. in·
dicating the plane dropped
straight clown.
The back of the craft was
broken, but the plane was re·
latively intact. It did not catch
on fire, authorities said.
Yormger Probe
Clears Briggs
SACRAMENTO IAP> -State
Sen. John V. Briggs did not
violate a state law by transfer-
ring $250,000 raised by his
guber~lonal campaign com-
m It t ee to commitlC'es that
spearheaded two ballot i n·
itiatives, the state attorney
general announced Tuesday.
Attorney General Evelle J.
Younger said an investigation
showed the money raised for the
l wo initiatives -concerning
homosexual t.eacbers an«Ll.he
death penalty -not used for
Briggs· gubernatorial campaign.
Three County
'Highway Jobs
'Ready to Go
Three south Orange County
highway projects are scheduled
for eonatructio• aext year
fellowfa« mite aPPfOVal of more
than $420 million worth of mltjor
highway work.
Approved Friday by tbe
Califonal.a Transportation Com·
mission were projects in El
Toro. Mission Viejo and San
Juan Capistrano.
An .estimated $570,000 is ex·
peeled lo be spent on a main·
tenaoce station in San Juan,
about a mile south of San Juan
Creek Road, the Commission an-
nounced this week. The project
is to be bid next spring and com·
pleted late next year.
State commission approval of
a $2.1 project to widen Crown
Valley Parkway overcrossing
ramps on Interstate 5 releases
federal and Orange County
funds for that project. It is
scheduled for bid late this year
and completion late next year.
Scheduled in El Toro is the
stringing of cables at freeway
bridges to act as earthquake r estrainers, a Commission
s pokesman said. The El Toro
work is part of a $290,000 earth·
quake package for Interstate 5
bridges in Los Angeles and
Orange counties.
Flights Slowed
PARIS •AP> -The French
air controllers' work slowdown
delayed international nights ar·
riving at Paris' Orly Airport by
several hours today, but other
airports reported few delays, of·
ficials said.
added.· they don't seem 1Jillln&
to J>r•c:tiee their own philosophy. Tbe Santa Ana Police Depart· meot prefers the Saddleback
pollce scteuce program beeause
SantJ Ana officers are instruc·
tors in the proaram and have
helped tailor It to tbe needs of
policing • small multi-ethnic cl·
ty, Santa Ana poJice Capt.
Robert H. Stebbinl said.
Santa Ana College's pollce
science pro1ram Js afflllated
witb the Oraqe County Sheriff's
Department. be said, and
geared more to tbe sheriff's
needs, which are quite different
from tbo&e of tbe Santa Ana
Police.
Tom Adams. chairman of Sao· ta Ana College's administration
of justice program, disagreed
witb stebbios.
<See POUCE. Paae AZ)
Bor.i.:r Patrol Claase
I Dea~ 5 H111•t
In Auto Crash
One person was killed and five
others Utjured Tuesday mcvnmg
when their car crashed in San
Clement~ as it was being
pursuecS by federal border patrol
of(icers. California Highway
Patrolmen said today.
The name of tbe dead man
was being withheld pending
notification of relatives. officers
said, but he is believed to be a
22-year-Old National City resi·
dent.
Investigators said the car had
been halted at the San Onofre
border patrol checkpoint ~hen
the driver sped away Crom ?{Ues·
tioning omcers.
It was being pursued by patrol
officers when it went out of con·
trol on the San Diego Freeway
and bit a guard rail at A venida
Pico, officers sald.
All six passengers were hurt
in the 10:45 a.m. ,£rash, officers
said, and were ~aken to San
Clemente Hospital, where one
man died late Tuesday night.
Identified by the U.S. Border
Patrol were Jobllny Lopez. 23.
and a M-rear·old youth. both
frpm National City.
Both Lopez and t.be teen-ager
are beUeved to be U.S. citizens,
the Border Patrol spokesman said. They were riding in the
front oflhe car when il crashed.
The juvenile was treated in
the hospital's emergency room
and released to bis parents.
Lopez was reported to be in Sta·
ble condition today in the
hospital's intensive care unit.
Also treated in the hosp11al·s
FOR RENT SIGN
~IN HURRY
"My expectations were rar ex·
ceeded by the response to my
ad. The very first people who
called rented the condo. and
they have treated it as if it were
theirs." "
That's the advertising success
story of tbe woman who placed
this ad in the Daily Pilot:
lmmac. 2 Bdrm Condo
Bit ins W ID. palm. Pool
$340/mo. XXlMtXXX
If you have an apartment,
condominium or home to rent,
call 642·5678. A friendly Dally
Pilot ad-viser will help you
word your ad for greatest im·
pact.
Our market is a great place
~ put just a few words to use,
making ffie Daffy PftOC your
market.
emergency room and released
was Feliciana deJ Ramos. 25. of
Guatemala. The Border Patrol
said she was in the trunk of the
car along with three men when
the auto crashed.
Admitted lQ the hospital were
Raul Alfaro. 22, of Guatemala.
and another man whose name
was not available today.
Gates Clear,
Not Angry
About Probe
Orange County Sheriff Brad
Gates said Tuesday that he
never doubted that an FBI probe
into his affairs would clear him
of any alleged wronJtdoing.
In a statement issued a few
hours earlier. U.S. Attorney ·o a v i d H i n d e n s a i d the
five-month Gates investigation
was at an end and that no
evidence or wrongdoing bad
been uncovered.
As Gates basked in the clean
bill or bea.lth given him by the
FBI. he said he still does not
know who his anonymous
accusers are or what he was
accused of doing .
He did know. however, that he
had been gone over with a
fine-tooth comb and b een
subject lo the same scrutiny
.. normally done only for a
nominee for U.S. Attorney
General or FBI director."
Gates did not fault the FBI for spending fi ve months poring
over his affairs. "When a
complaint is made against a
public official. it s hould and
mus t be investigated." Gates
said as he refused to fault the
FBI for delving into his personal
and official conduct.
He noted that the probe had
t>een deep and thorough.
''They have reviewed every
aspect or my personal finances
since I was 18 years old,
including every check written by
me since 1970 and my personal
income tax returns from 1974
on." Gates said.
"They've talked to everyone
who has been a friend of mine
for 20 years or less and they
certainly have had unlimited
ability to examine anything they
wanted to."
The 39-year-old sheriff blamed
the. invest1gat1on and its
(See GATES. Page A!J
J~venile Hall Attacked by -2 Gounselors Coast
. .
..., ..........
JUVIHIL.E HALL COUNSE.C>a A1TACK IUP£AVl80RY POLICIES TheJ Are Cfrom .. ft), Alfred au.a, fhlt1rt AuMIW, the Rev. CUf Marqula
By GARY GBANVIL-t.E OI tllt Delay P'IMit Sid •
Robert Ausmus and Alfred
Skiles are counselors at Grange
County Juvenile Hall who don't
like-the way l.he ball is being
run.
Tuesday. Ausmus and Skiles
joined forces with a chaplain at
juvenile hall to make their
sentiments public.
At a pre5s conference· in the
home of The Rev. Ollf Marquis
ln Orange, the two 31-year-old
counselors unleashed a scathing
attack on the ball and those Who operate It.
Cornerstone of the assault was
a 163-page term paper Auamus
and Skiles completed last
spring. a term paper they said
earned them an A ln an
undergradu~te class at ttle
University ot Redlands.
WltbiD ml.nut.es of \heir pr.a
confereace, the term Pl.PU bad
become a report •nd cowatJ
offlctal1 wer• beln1 -·~•d
quetlk>DI Moat a ttudy they bave..-...,.
, ·That &U&d¥--concUt.du Jtl t
there is $1 million worth of fat In
juvenile hall's annual budget,
tat chiefly in the form of
supervisorial pe~nnel who do
liWe or nothing lo earn their
pay.
As bad, Ausmus and Skiles
asserted. policies at the 310·bed
juvenile facility have resulted an
a breakdown of inmate
discipline.
And part of that breakdown is
an increasing dange r ot
violence. lnmate·to·tnmate and
inmate-to-counselor, the two
counselors said.
They also charged that the
failure to enforce dtscipline has
resulted in Juvenile Hall
becomin1 "1lttle more than
Orange County 's second
Dianey1and."
Furthermore. Ausmus and
Sklles Insisted, 1eu serious
oHenden are bomed with heavy
cilfenftrl at the hall.
M a reeul~i accordlai to the
t.lil"lla ~.UM haJI ce.ndl to be <'-"YOUnl.. •• ,.Al>
Weather
-1'lii~OrniDJLlOw cloudiness wiTh -mostly" ..
sunny afternoon Thurs~
day. but only partial clear-
ing a t beaches. Lows
tonight in 60s. Highs
Thuraday near·10 at
beaches lo mid to upper
70s inland.
INSIDE TODA l'
A Palo Alto high school
football coach /ound t.ing o
homemaker and mothn was
tougher than /oMrth down and
30 yards to go See story , Bl.
••••
' I
'
I
.~ .......
MABEL 5"E£HAN. LEFT. F1NOS HOMl CROWOD
Widow Jf •Y• In Convent Wl\n. Rumon AbOund
Caehe Denied
Bul Rumors Surround Widow
PlllLAl>El.PHIA I API f-'rom the SlZC or the crowds out·
-.1dl' tht> Widow h~han·~ house, one might lbink she was
giving moll4!y away
And that's JU.St the idea hundreds of people got in thetr
hl'ads As a re-.ull. police have been posted around the clock to
kN'P out peoplt• poking around for money s upposedly sta:s~ in
thl' h OUSl' ~n•
MABEL SHEEHAN, MEANWHILE, HAS gone to Uve at a
convent to get uway from burglars and curiosity seekers. police
~aid ~
Tht• monl'Y ~mffmg crowd outside the old row house. a
modl:~l two story l)rick affair in a lower middle-class
nei~hborhood. swelled to some 300 Monday night. So 100 police
officers some on horses, some wearing riot gear -went to
the sct?ne
Rumors of the cash supposedly kept inside by the 72-year·
old widow had grown by that time to $4S million from an initial
l'sllmate of SJS,000. The fuss began when stories circulated that Mrs. Sheehan.
who lives alone with her sheep dog. bought a car for a friend
and paid for several trips lo Puerto Rico for other friends.
POLICE SAID THERE WAS NOTHING to the story. But it
was not until Tuesday that the scene returned to normal By
then. police said. they had arrested 19 people who tried lo break
m. Officer!> were po~ted o"·ermght at the rront and back doors
Mrs. Sheehan msast.s her only income is a $247 monthly
Social Security payment. police inspector Paul Frankenfield
:.aid.
But a neighborhood youth wasn't having any or that.
· · Jf there is no money in there, then why are all these police
~u:1rding the house?"
Nader Scores
Industry, U.S.
On Car Fires
WA S HlNGTON tAP) -
Co ns ume r advocate Ralph
Nader !>lrongly c riticized the
federal government and the auto
industry today for railing to
ensure thHt <·ars can s urvive
rt-ar end collis ions without
po~sably fatal fires.
Nader e xpanded his criticism
from the Ford Pinto, which is
!>Ubjcct to a massive recall over
the problem, to the General
Motors Vega and said other cars
pro bably have the s ame problem.
The recall ordered by Ford
Motor Co. of 1.5 million Pintos
a nd 30,000 Mercury Bobcats
stem med from allegations that
when the cars were hit from the
re ar the fuel t<rnk could be
ppnclun·d. leading to a fi ery
explosion.
N<1der <1 ppcurod at a press
confe rence with a uto s afety
consultant Byron Bloch of Los
Angeles, who showed slides and
released documents that he said
!'!howed Pord knew how to build
a saf<' fol'! tank m the early
1970s but chose not to do so to
save mont•v
··Ford has known and tested'
the exact remedy we are urging
todav." Bloch Sjjld
Pord announced a recal\..ot the
cars June 9 and offered free
corre ctions . However, Nader
.md Bloch said the corrections
will fix only part of the problem
and there -;hould be a 'lecond
r ec all ror more e xte ns ive
repa ir~
DAILY PILOT
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f'l'09IPageAJ
GATES •••
resultant publicity on his failure
to win re-election in the June 6
primary election.
· W hlle Gates finished on top
or a six-candidate field with
roughtly 41 percent or the vote.
he was forced Into a November
general election runoff with
Lauren Rusk. · · n has appeared to me from
the be ginning that this
inves tigation was politically
motivated," Gates said as he
assessed the damage done his
primary election campaign.
Frota Page A J
POUCE .•.
In 1977, the Santa Ana Police
Department asked Santa Ana
College officials to help set up a
training program tor the city's
police, he said. College officials
eventually refused because they
believed setting up a separate
training academy for Santa Ana
would conflict with the college's
exis ting affiliation with the
sheriff's department.
Santa Ana police helped set up
the Saddleback program primari-
ly because they wanted a pro-
gram all their own, Adam a said
Hero Trucker
Tq_~Cjted
MIAMI <AP> -Grateful of·
ricers prepared a citation of
bravery for a heroic truck
driver who rescued a policeman
from an angry crowd and then
disapJ>eared.
Police nnafly Jeamelt the tdetr·
tity or the trucker when Paul
Becker. 56, of Ho ~estead
stopped a Dade County officer
and said. ·•1 think one of your of·
ficers is looking for me."
He was ri&bt. Since Friday,
patrolman MUan Pilat had been 1 trying to firfd the truck driver
who interceded wben an anary
mob surrounded Pilat as he
tried to arres t a n allege d
narcotics user.
Envoy's Wife
Reports Theft
LOS ANGELES <AP) -11\e
wife of Abdalla Saleh Aahtal,
Yemen ambassador t.o the Unit·
ed Nations, reported that her
purse cont.ainln1 $39,740 in caab
ind jewelry wu at.oleo as she
ate dinner at the Bonaventurt
Hot~l. police said. .
Sat. Alan Yankee said Vivian
Aabt.al, a), told pollco &be bed
plued her pune oo tht rloor bl
her ta~• &be att at the hotel •
&MiewaJk cafe ~Y evenlna. Wba lbe WU f'Ud1 to par
bet' ~herk. dllC!oYef'ed tbt
-.. . Yank• aal4.
BERLIN (AP> A sunman
hijacked • Pall.lb alrUner with
71 poniona aboard lod•y and torted lt to a U.S. air base ln
We1t Bertin. where the htJ•c.~!{
a.nd nine other pusengera UM!U
(or HYlum ln the West. jft Alr
Force spokesman sald.
The •pokesman, lnlormatloa
oftktr Ll. Col. Gerald R. Roys.
old seven of lbos~ seekln&
Hylum were East German and
that b" presu0ted the otber thrff
-the hijacker and a woman and
chUd who accompanied him -
wer • ello Ea.st German.
Tb lU stayed behind at Tem·
pelbof Airport alter the jetliner
took off qatn for Eaal Bertin.
An 11th i>aasenaer. a West
berliner, a1ao remained behind.
Th1rty ·four passenRers were
buaed to East Berlin and tbe re-
malnlng 18 rode back aboard the
plane.
"The hijacker surrendered
peacefully as soon ¥S this thing
landed." Roys said, gesturing
toward the TU·IS4 twin-engine
jet of the PoUah airline LOT.
The hlJacker, who was not
further described. bad put a
plstol in the face of the pilot and
told him lo land in West Berlin
instead of East Berlin as
scheduled on the flight from
Warsaw and Gdansk. Poland.
Roys said. ,
The first person off the plane,
a man carrying a brown bag,
was escorted peacefully away.
witnesses •aid. The blue-and-while plane.
which carried a crew of eight.
took off after West BerUn police
Interrogated passengers.
UaterDeath
Threat Called
Maid's Hoax
IDAHO FALLS, Idaho <AP> -
The Secret Service said today it
believes a message on a motel
room mirror threatening death
to President Carter was a hoax
carried out by the maid who re-
ported finding it.
Kathi Lynn Wagner. 23, who
police say reported she found
the threat in a Ramada Inn
room and was bit over the bead
by a man lo the room. was being
held in protective custody, said
Secret Service spokesman Tony
Sherman In Salt Lake City.
··We and the Idaho Falls
Police Department believe the
actions she described actually
were done by her." Sherman
said. Agents had removed a mirror
in the room on which was writ·
ten, ''The president will die
Thursday." Two burned mat·
tresses were also found.
Ms. Wagner was being held in
isolaUon lo an Idaho Falls jail
cell, said St.even Hart, deputy
Bonneville County prosecutor.
He sald sbe was believed to be a
threat to herselr aod others.
Police Chief Robert. Pollock
said Tuesday that Ms. Wagner
was being held, "I bate to use
the word ·mental.' but for her
mental well-being." He said she
was "not very cooperative" dur-
ing questioning Tuesday.
Ms. Wagner said a man came
toward her when she turned
from the mirror and said, "You
shouldn't have walked in here,''
then hit her on the head with a
handgun. knocking her un-
conscious.
Mattresses in the room had
been burned, and a picture of
Carter next to the mirror had an
"X " drawn over it. hotel
employees said. The employees
Sllid the Secret Service had
taken the mirror
MINNEAPOLtS <APl -Klndergart.erter
Juon Sim.a •a1• hl11econd day of school wu no match for the flr1t.
an ' e make an ·s· backward.
the way a S·year-d does. How he l~ted all
day In Uurd grade Jg ond me "
Ju.on rode off on a school bus Monday,
but didn't return at noon. HUI mother called
Barton Sthool and tM principal checked with
the klndqarten teacher, only to flnd &.lMat
Jason never arrived.
THE THIRD·GRA TEACHER dls·
JASON. WHO IS TALL FOR HJS •ae.
had contentedly spent the day In a third·
1r•de classroom. "I asked hlm what be did wltb thole bt1
kld• au day." hi.& mother. Lorett.a. aald Tues-
day. "He laid be bad to ~ad about autuma
and draw a ptcture, He doesn't. read much,
covered the mistake sho ly before the prin·
dpal found the boy. She r aJlzed he was not
as mature or learned as the other children
a'ld asked h!m whut school he was in la5t
year.
"Nursery school." Jeson replied.
Mrs. Shns said Jason wasn't much im·
pressed with kindergarten Tuesday.
"ffe wu upset because he couldn't stay
ror lunch Uke he did Monday and be bad to go
home at noon." she saJd.
F,... P-ee AJ
YOUTH ILLS ALLEGED. • •
a breedini ground (or crime. a
crime school with street-wise
toughs acting as school masters.
The two counselors charged
that administraton al Juvenile
Hall are lsolated from their
charges and have placed an
unneeded layer of supervisors
between themselves and reaUty.
To all of that. county officials
had UtUe to say. if ror no other
reason than few of them have
seen the report or heard the
charges. "I'm a little perturbed by the
fact that no one in a position t.o
correct any situation that might
exist was first given a chance to
respond," Supervisor Thomas·
Riley said.
"They <Ausmus. Skiles and
Marq\lis) appear not to have
permitted those of us vitally
concerned with such problems to
do anything about them," Riley
added.
Acting Chief Probation Officer
Nancy Nelson was also at a loss
t.o answer the allegations the trio
leveled at the ball and its
operation.
Miss Nelson had not seen the
report or heard the charges until
they were repeated to her by
news men.
··we're having a meeting
today to try to gain some insight
into what all this is about," Miss
Nelson said today.
She pointed out that policies in
Juvenile Hall follow legal
mandates and that those in her
department "wiU always listen
to constructive criticism and
suggestions for Improvement."
Meanwhile. Ausmus. Skiles and Marquis sald tbey have
appointments to meet with the
county Grand Jury's justice
committee Tuesday.
Simultaneously, Rlley said he
is planning to meet with
JuvenUe Court Presiding Judge:
William Murray and Supervisor
Philip Ant.bony later this week.
Riley said be so far does not
have a measure t.o welgb the
validity of the trio's alle1atlons
and is likely to favor havina an
independent committee study
them.
Ausmus was suspended from
hb $16,000 a year counselor's job
Friday after allegations of
misconduct were lodged against
him.
He said he does not know what
he Is charged with and has not
been told why be was suspended
with pay. .
But Miss Nelson said the
allegations have been sent to the
district attorney tor
investigation.
Both Ausmus and Skiles
predicted Tuesday night that
their up-front criUdsm of the
hall will eventually cost them
their jobs, a job Ausmus has
held for eight years and Skiles
for six years.
Both men insisted their work
records at the hall are
unblemished.
They also said it was an
assault on a counselor at the hall
last Saturday that touched off
their public explosion.
Miss Nelson said the assault
was reported, charges filed
agains t the juveniles involved
and that three of them have
been sent from the ball lo the
special juvenile section in
Orange County Jail.
"We acted as promplly and
responsibly as possible.·· Miss
Nelson said as she began her
own inquiry into the charges
alred by two counselors and a
priest .mo aets as a volunteer
chaplain at Juvenile Hall.
SALE ENDS ' Tms WEEKEND
Nicaragua
Civil War
~tes
MANAGUA. Nicaragua IAP\
Alr force planes bombed
Nicaragua ·s third largest city
and civlUans battled President
Anastasio Somoza's soldiers in
other towns as a general strike
to drive the Somoza dynasty
from power gained new support.
Two planes bombed
M atagalpa. 100 miles north of
Managua. for two hours
Tuesday. killing at least four
people and wounding many
others. a Red Cross official
there s aid. The military
garrison in the city or 40.000
people had been under siege for
three days with the civilian
population ln virtual control or
the streets.
The Red Cross source said it
was impossible t.o determine the
number of casualties because
many victims were taken home
by friends and relatives who
reared the national guard.
Nlcaragua·s 7,500-man army.
would raid the hospitals.
He satd 80 soldiers had been ·
rushed in as reinforcements. the
town had been blacked out by " •
power failure, the Red Cross
appe ale d to Managua (or
desperately needed blood and
plasma. and the people appealed
to the archbishop of Managua,
Miguel Obando y Bravo. to
intercede with the government
for them. The archbishop was
the chief mediator between the
gove rnment and the leftist
guerrillas who seized the
National Palace last week.
In Managua. a bomb killed
five national guardsmen
patrolling in a jeep. a doctor in
the military hospital reported.
--~----·
Saddleback
:UaguePlay
Wmpleted
Boys and 1irls going into the
third, fourth and....fifth arades
completed league play in the
youth softball Bia Sky League.
sponsored by the Saddleback
Va~ Unified School Distnc!t's
Rec!mtlon Department
Final team standings were:
Olivewood Surfs, 5 wins. O
losses; Montevideo Mets. 4 wins.
1 loaa; Colteau Mud Monaters, 2
wlna, 3 losses : Los Allsos
An1ela, 2 win.is, a losses; San
Joaquin Z~ps. 1 win, 4 losses:
and the Montevideo Otants. t
win, 4 1068es
Wlnnel'I in the bike decorating
conte1t were: Funklest, Davtd
Stapleton; most creative.
Johnny and Karen Brldaea;
para1e prtnce11et, Sue Glau
and JeMy Hart; coach's award,
Joey Shaman; mOlt 1lap1tlck.
Geor1e Stapleton; and bat use
ot CO~l'l..1. Juoa Fortney. Mo~ wtnoer'l ftl'e: P\rlt, JUcb,rd Sanden.
ffeQadJ. lr'tt1 lJlmmtn: t.blrd, k .J . nuttt•r; fourtt1. Matt
8brlcb, and flfUL IHOD
ForlDeJ.
Don t wait any longer.
Substantial savings now
during the flnal days of our
summer sale.
...
TORRANCE
,,... H•w1horne Blvd
<213» J7 .. t27t
COSTAM!SA
IS9S ~wport Blvd.
'114) 6'2·l0.50
""~~llOlllC»¥ ,,.,aA....,.. -• ,.., 'l'O .....
l.AGU~A llACH
J4J Nort" Cottt Hwv. ""' ..... "'
t
. • • ' . • • I
ln this central Indiana clt.y <:A
'71 ,000 -the at ate '1 el1htb
larseat -alnff the 144 firemen
went on atrtke SalW'day nlpi ln • .,., dl.lputt.
TM flN ll belle\'ed to lulve
t\erwd lnt.M COUrtbouH Louftlt,
a hHrn t.Ut bad clOMd fot the altht . ..,... WU no launedlat.e
btdlt'aUoft Mia caused the blue.
Chaterfteld Volmuer Flre Chief
IAl1"'J lluaeT aald there wu no
evldenceol anon.
'
About 3.,.. boura after tbt ftre,
Superi« Court JUdc• William T.
Clifford ltaued a temporar~
restralnln& order direct1n1 tbl
nrenahters to return to wort •
TheN WM no iaunedl•te lo·
dlcatton bow the strikers \lfOUJd respond.
Muter llld be and five vol UP· teen walt.d 10 mlnut.es •t the
edle of the city until 1trikln1 tirerl&hters recelved approval
from their union leadera to let
tht volunteers tbrou1h the
picket ttne: ••J •~we'd still be at.ndln1
tfttre watdllu the block bum I!
tbe.Y badll'l let us tbtouab ...
Muuer Nld ... At ID emeriency
m~Una Monday. wt aaretd not to cross pJcket lines Ht up by
the strikers."
On Swiday night, about ~
1trUdna f\refi&bters responded
after the roof on a bus y
downtown movie theater col·
S OM Y Ptl.OJ 4§
lapsed under the w"ttht of
h avy raios Three peNOlll ~
injul'ff. one eritlcalty, and •
other pat('ons scrambled
throuch extta to safety.
Tbe nremen. however. Ht uP picket l1Ms Monday and vowed
to lanore future emersency
ca lls Supervisory personnel.
who had helped answer calla the
first three days, Joined strikers on picket Ii.Des Tuesday.
.. Supervisors Irked
Plane E~Hpse
John Wakeman of Orchard Park. N.Y. took
this photo of a OC-10 passing the moon
from the Alfred t;niversity Astronomical
O b ser vator y in ups tate !'Je w York .
Telescope was a 14-inch F -6 Olson reflec·
tor. Photo was shot at 11250 second on SO
115. a high resolution. monochromatlc. red
~ensitive film. Visible behind the plane a re
heat vapor trails.
Pontiff Asks for Help
Jolm Paul I Admit.s Cwia Inexperience
VATICAN CITY <AP) -Pope
.., John Paul 1 told the cardinals or
· the Roman Catholic Church to-
Departing from the text of his
formal address, the new pontirf.
elected by the conclave of
cardinals Saturday. joked that
he knew "only the pontifical
yearbook," the Who's Who hst·
ing or church officials.
have to count on the expertise of
the veteran Cun a adminislra·
tion. in particular those he re-
ins t ated Monday to the ex-
ecutive jobs that expired upon
the death of Pope Paul VI.
"We plan. therefore, to hold as
precious the suggestions that
State Usurping Land Use Power?
By KATHY CLANCY OI • Olilly ~....,
Oran1e County Supervlsora
agreed Tuesday to remind state
and federal agencies that con-
trol of land use ln unineorporat· .
ed south county communities
rests with local, not state, gov·
ernment.
The board asked state
authorttles to tell them what rules
will be followed In permltUng
some new home building In the
south county area Impacted by an
18· monUt-old sewer restriction.
S(Jpervisors Chairman Thomas
Ril~y sald he wants an
"acknowledgment" from the
stale Waler Resources Control
Board and federal Environmen·
tat Protection Agnecy that land
use decisions rest with
supervisors by state law.
Supervisors have been an·
noyed because the state board 18
months ago imposed a five.year
moratorium on new sewer
facilities in the area served by
the Los AUsos, El Toro and
Moulton Niguel Water Districts.
Those agencies had been seek·
Ing slate approval for a SlO
million fede ral grant to con·
struct new sewer raciUties to
serve some 15.000 future Sad·
dleback Valley and south county
homes.
Meanwhile, one developer has
won permission from state
authorities to obtain sewer
service for up to 2,000 future
homes iq return for a pledge to
I aga1na Hills
Man Charged
In Map Theft
A Laguna Hills man and a
partner were charged Tuesday
in Los Angeles with s tealing
classified maps and charts. or
potential off-shore 011 fields from
Union Oil Co.
Los Angeles authorities iden·
tified the two men as Jackie W.
Nichols, 39. or Laguna Hills and
Jeff Stiles. 45. or Camarillo.
They were charged with stealing
trade secrets.
Nichols, a printer. allegedly
stole "hundredis or thousands"
of documents ftom Union's San·
ta Fe Springs office in 1975 and
1976. sald District Attorney's In·
vestigator Robert W. Ew~n.
Stiles, who had worked u an
oil scout for Union. allegedly
contacted various oil companies,
saying he would provide the ln·
formation to them if they hired
him as an 011 scout. Ewen sald.
price a POl'tioo In the ao-calJed
affordable price range.
Neither supervtson nor eoun·
ty planners were a party to that
agreement.
Riley sald be would ask state
officials for a list of criteria that
would be applied to other de·
velopments in the restricted
agency, but said he didn't know
what klnd of response be would
receive.
Supervisor Ralph Diedrich
said the request "ls really going
2MoreYears
to put them on notice that we
want to know exactly what the
eame plan is ...
The f1ve ·year sewer
moratorium was imposed based
on lhe contention that more
housing would lead to more air
pollution.
Local sewer agency officials,
however. contend that limiting
new home construction leads to
increased pollution because
commuters must drive farther to their Jobs
Coalition Supports
Coastal Panel,s
An unusual coalition of con·
servatives and liberals. includ·
ing Orange County legislators
Bruce Nestande and Dennis
Carpenter have sent a bill to
Gov. Edmund Brown that would
extend the lives or the state's re-
gional coastal commissions.
Somh Lagrma
Retired Judge
Btdthis Dies
Frank Spencer BaJthis, a re-
tired justice of the California
Court of Appeals. died Monday
at South Coas t Community
H06pital in South Laguna.
Jud&e Baltbis. also a former
Superior Court judge, retired
from the court of appeals after
16 years on the bench.
The 76-year-old judge lived ln
South Laguna after his retire-
ment, with bis wife Holly ffaJ.
sted Balthis.
He was a 1926 graduate or
UCLA. and was graduated cum
laude from Harvard Law School
in 1929.
He was a former member of
the law firm of Shepherd.
Mullin, Richter and Hampton.
and later became a member of
the Board of Governors oC the
State Bar.
His affiliations included the
Zeta Psi fraternity. Blue Shield,
and the Chancery Club.
The judge was born In
Huntsville. Mo.
He is survived by his wife. of
the family home in South
Laguna: son. Frank Spencer
Balthis Jr .. and daughter-in-law,
Judy. of Forestville. Calif .
brother. William H. BalUus of
Maui, and niece. Barbara
Fitzpatrick of Coronado.
Memorial services will be held
at Pacific View Chapel •n
Newport Beach at noon Fnday
Burial will rollow.
The bill. AB 3478. authored by
N~stande. a Republican as-
semblyman from Orange. was
a pproved 2-'·4 by the state
Senate Tuesday
Ca rpenter. the Republi<"an
state senator from Newport
Beach earned Nestande·~ bill on
the Senate noor
The measure would extend the
lives of regional commissions
for two more years
The commissions, along with
the state commission wert' set
up in 1976 leg1Slation to regulate
deve.Jopment along the state·s
1.000·mile coastline.
The regional commissions.
where permits are pro~essed,
are slated to go out of existence
next June 30 Nestande 's bill ..
would extend them until June 30,
1981.
A spokesman for Carpenter
explained that the senator. who
had preVJously opposed coast.aJ
regulati<>M and the ro,.mation of
the comnuss1ons. supported the
bill because or its rinanctal tm·
pact
Ir tbe regional comm1ss1ons
had gone out of ex1sten('e, 1t
would mean anyone ne~ng a
coastal pemut would have to go
to the San Francisco offices of
the state commission to get one.
the s pokesman said
Extending the life of the re-
g 1 o n a I C'Ommasston al s o
s1mphf1es the planning procesfi
local governments are engaged
in which should end with those
agencies resumm~ C'Ontrol over
their own coastal territories. the
spokesman added
Suspect Gives Up
SAN FRANCISCO •AP1 An
internatJonal ftn an<'1tr !'iought
for bank fraud involving more
than $1 3 milhon surrendered to
federal authorities Tue-sday
Amos Dawe 44. wa!'I taken into
custody by lht' FBI as he cirnved
at San Fran<'tS<'o International
Airport from Taiwan
day that he will be the humble
"pupil" of experienced church
0H1dals a nd a s k e d th e
cardinals' advice on how to
"carry the cross" of administer-
ing the church.
John Paul. m a s peech to
about 80 cardinals. said it was
"no problem" for him to rec-
ognize his lack of experience in
dealing with the Roman Curia.
the administrative backbone or
the church.
John Paul, who s pent his re-
ligious career as a JocaJ-level
priest , educator and bishop, is
the first pope elected in 7S years
without specialized training as a
member of the church's
diplomatic corps or a s a
member of the Curia.
will come to us from so valuable ;~ ·~c:s:==:c===~'=ll1'l~· advisers. becoming. so lo s ay. a
pupil or those who well deserve
our full confide nce and our
grateful a ppreciation for the
merits acquired in a service of "
lh-------As a result, he said, he will
TV Insulting?
Flight Aides DeplDre S~
WASHINGTON <APJ -The
"coffee, tea or me" mentality or
the new television program
.. Flying Kigb" is an insult to the
intelligence and morality or
every flight attendant, the presi.
dent of the AssoclaUon· of Flight
Attendants bas cbareed.
''The show concentrates more
on bosoms than brains, and on
sex more Uren s afety," said
Patricia D. Robertson after viewing Monday ni&bt's TV pres·
entation or • pilot mm for the
series, which will be on CBS this
season.
The pilot depleted the swtnc·
ing life of three novice
stewardesses, a portrayal which
Robertson uld Tuesday wu lD· accurate and demeaning.
··1 can only say thal the script
used every stereotype and cllche
that has ever been used in a de-
ro1atory manner toward meht
attendants," she sald. "We have
worked for many years to dlspel
tbe mlstUen tmqe of ntaht at·
• t.ndanta •ta toddelaea, and
: th1I Protnm b a real aetbact ln • . .. r
those efforts. .. Flight attendants are on
board planes not to be sexy
stewardesaes,butfurth&a»ft~
of the passengers," Robertson
.. said. "II this first script is in·
d\cative ol the rest of the series,
we can only expect a reinforce-
ment of the already negative Im-
age of fliJht attendants as
brainless sex goddesses. Safety
is our business -oot sex."
A spokesman for CBS. uJcing
not to be identified publicly,
said. "It certalnly ls not ou.r in·
t.eDtioD to put ruabt attendants in
a ppor· u,bt or to downerade
them or emban'a.ss them in any
way. ·•we would hope that they will mp In mind that lhls is really
only the pilot for the series and
we ask them to look at the next
two or three episodes, and they
might find somethlng they'll en·
joy."
II not, the spokesman said
"We would be dellabted to alt
down with them and llaten to
any crlticiam they m!ibt bave. ''
such a great importance."
-lc-nHmg-~r¢inals a
dressedoy l.J1e' i)ope were some
who. because or the 80-year age
limit imposed by Paul VI. had
not taken part in the conclave
that elected him.
-~ord.ing to Vatican oCficials,
the former Ca.rdfnaI Albfno Lu-
ciani of Venice won election aa
pope with many more votes than
the minimum 75 out of 111 re-
quired.
John Paul said that the elec·
toral support be drew "still SW'·
prises and confounds us ...
He s aid be en vied the
cardinals who would be able to
go back to their dioceses "and
look forward to the joy of en·
countering so many children,
already well-known and tenderly
loved.
"This ls a Joy that has not
been granted to us. The Lord
knows the sadness that this re·
nunciaUon raises In our heart.
However, in His love. He knows
how to mitigate the bitterness of
parting with the prospect of a
broader fatherhood.·'
On Thursday the pope will
meet the diplomatic corps and
on Friday he is schedu~ to re-
cel ve Journalists and photog.
raphers who covered his elec-
tion. He will be formally in·
st a lled In a Mass on Sunday
cooaecratlng his pontificate.
•
•
Gem
FOREVER AMBER
tven attn so miUioft ~
Reconts dating blck to the Bronn
and Stone Ages show that ancient peo-
ple appreciated the beauty Of ember •
What Is amber? Scientific researchen
tell us that this nwsterlous TOC1t was
first formed aboUt SO mllllon years aoo by the fossmzln; of th• resin of pine
trees. If you have observed the color ot
pine resin, It Isn't hard to lm~lne hOW ,
this substance could harden, tum to
rock and product a beautiful oem.
Most fine ambef' Is mined •tono the
coastllMs of the Baltic States Of utvla
and Lithuania, which are now a part Of Soviet Russia. Hlstorl.tns tell u1 tMt
,mber has been mined there since the 13th century. Ambet' 11 also found In
Romania, the Dominican Republic and
Burma. n has a wide rana• ot uses In
Jewelr/, lncludln9 rings( neckllCH, pendants, earrlnas and p ns. After SO
million years, we stlll admire the beau-ty of this plne·prOduced eumple of
nature's bNuty. Its color It used to describe such classic tovellneu .s the •
"amber waves Of or•ln" In the '°"9
"America the Buutlful." A9a1n mottttr nature cre.ttt her bMutv tor
all to behold.
/1
-
Diamonds.
an investment in lasting joy
No gift in this world can match diamond for beauty.
durnb1!ity und Justin~ \Ulut' But how cnn )'Ou be
certain ot gem quul1t} '" ht'n buym~:-our member-
~hip m thf' Americuo Cem Soc1tl~ llSSUr~ you we
are dependub!t' und ,:temolo~1cull~ 1ruinecl to SE'rve.
And wt-const.1ocl~ u<lc.l to ou1 kno\\ ledStt'
throu~h ACS l'st' our t'Xpt-rt1w ro "ouch ~)
for your pur<·hui.c-no'" un<l for tht' futurf' ~
J. e. J./unip,rk6 }ew1ler6
MEMBER AM ERICAN GEM SOC1ET Y @
\ 823 NEWPORT BL VO COS T A MESA
CONVEMENT TERMS Ban~wO\ltve
32 YEARS IN Tt-tE SAME LOCATION PHONE IMl-3401
.IUSI' CATnNO AaOVND: rt now deve)opl that the
·Seal k.aeb CJty Council. In I.ti WI.nit• wltchm>. II about to
adopl a cal-ron\rOl le law. "nUI MW dklum may 10.
down u one of lb latl*f itUks to waft auou ow
coatll\Ot lD IOme •
The ncition beblnd \hll new Sul 8eatb ord.laNICI la to
make ll unlawfUI fOT a domest.le f.Unt to WUdet olf lta
own r'a prope.ny.
Tbll lnit.laJ ~ pro that t.bo framer or thl.a law
knows ootbinl a bout cat.a.
PEOPLE DO NOT OW1'1 cat.a. Cata own oeoole. They
have the whole \h.ln1 bldtward rte.bl from the aurt. Dur·
ia, a reported ooe·bour ct.bal• on U.. cat lNue Just tbl
other nlabt, oae eounclhnan waa reported lo have
challenaed another with lb• queedoa. "Do you tb1nk •cat
bu th• rteht to come ovtr lnto your 7ard?" Aaaln. bere'a proot that certaJn Seal Beach council
penons know nothln1 abcMrt the brMd Fella Catus.
You see. ll doesn't malkr a bool whet.her or not YOU
think the (al bu tbo fiiht \o wander over into a Mtibboc''•
yud. Whal matters I.I whether or not t.bo eat tbln.U be b&I
the rt1bl And be lhtDb be does.
Tbo ~al Beach city brass really ouaht to do some
feltne research. They would discover tbat cat.a firlt were
Cat-cateha on Nighl Pahol Or¥r Seal BftJCla
recorded to be wandering from one yard to another on our
globe in the Pliocene Epoch.
That would put the first yowl on a backyard fence
about. seven million years ago.
TIDS WOULD ALSO suggest that the cat bas been
around even longer than some members of the Seal Beach
City Council.
Cats fmally became domesticated ln ancient Egypt.
That was about 3,500 years ago. This meant that the cat
had a wider selection of fences upon which to yowl. Even a
pyramid or two.
The Seal.Beach council might also take some note of
feline characteristics that have remained essentially un·
changed down through the ages:
~ -On bis feet., faster than a speeding bullet.
-Moves sUenUy across all kinds of terrain.
-X·ray vision at night. Excellent beartna.
-Eaally upset by abrupt cban&es in routine <Be sure
to underline this one. Seal Beach Councill.
-Independent personality.
AND FOR THE BENEFIT of lhe municipal fathers.
one final note from feline history: "The cat bas never
yielded readily to s ubjugation and Is able to revert to com·
plete self·reJiance ... "
As one Seal Beach councilman who opposed the cat
leash law suggested. "our city wUI become famous. With
tbls law. we have Just changed the nature of cats."
They might want to check with tbe Egyptians on that
point.
Worsening Inflation
Projected for 1979
WASHINGTON <AP> -In a pes.simiatic usessment of tbe na·
t1on 's troubles with inflation. a member or the Federal Reserve
Board said today that inflation might be worse next year than the 8
percent rate so far this year.
••JnfJatlon hu clearly accelerated, from tbe 8 percent area in·
to the 8 percent area, and threatens to accelerate further next
year ." said board m ember Henry C. Wallicb. w allich urged that the government consider a tu incentive
' program to penalize or reward business and labor for their prtee
and wage behavior. depend.in& on whether it conforms with gov·
emment anti-inflation goals.
~ A new approach ls needed, be said, because tbe 1ovemment's
' traditional ways of controlling inflation through spending and in·
terest rate policies are not working.
Such a t.a.x incentive plan is "tough," Wallicb said, "but Vie
have run out or pleasant options ...
WASHINGTON <AP> -A Houae H~mctu... alllaf'Pll ~ntlclaln& &MraY Depanmn ocnetala, ~ the admlalltr•·
Uon faUed to make a c:Glvtndna
case for r.movt°' prte. CODUola
OA llaolioe aod wttllbeld fD·
form1UOD predleUaa 1 pc>Mt ..
abort• .. la UllO. •
Th aubtommlttee ntPOft aaJd
Ute •hort••·· fONCU( by tM En r1y lnlonnaUon Admlnlstra·
Uon, Could be u b11b u 400.000
barre la a d.l)'.
.. A -.... p R·DAY •uoUne 1borU1it, with or without
1a101'De COl'l&l'Ob, would be an
unmtuiat«t national dtauter," Hid the report.
The subcommittee aald the
1borta11 dudna the 1873-1974
Arab oll embarto wu 280,000
barrels a day.
The department had no im·
mediate comment on lbe t"el>Ort.
.. TllE INABILITY ot the DOE
to proaent a lolical and coherent ~ ... f« paoltne decontrol la •t·
trlbutable to a number of lac·
ton.'' 1ald t.be House Commerce
subcommittee on overalcnt and
lnvest.iutloos, chaired by Rep.
John al06S, [).Calif .• in a report
made public today.
The M)Ort elted: -"Tbe department'• •eearent
intellectual lnabllily to Just!f1
tbe admlnistraUoa 'a loqstand-
ing commlt.ment. to iuollne de·
control.
•
_.,NEGLECT ON the part or
David Bardin, administrator.
Economic Regulatory Ad·
minlsttaUon. charged with pre·
paring tbe environmental as·
sessment and supplement ln re.
viewing the work of bis
subordinates." It said the
forecast of a possible shortage
was included in a June 7
memorandum to Bardin.
-"An emban'&Ssing failure of
acting assl$tant secretary for
the environment, Dr. James L.
Liverman, to fully and effective-
ly discharge the duties of his of·
flee tn reviewlng the environ·
mental assessment."
The subcommittee said it was
not commenting on the question
of whether lhe price controls im·
posed on gasoline during the
Arab oil embargo should be Ult·
ed. "but on the competence and
credibility of the DOE in ad·
dressing the issues surr<'Unding
gasoline decontrol."
3 Balloonists
Filming Flight
Die in Crash
FISHERS, Ind. <AP > -Three
balloonists filming the maiden
voyage of another hot air
balloon were killed when their ~rafl crashed and burned after It
s wung into a power line, state
police said.
State Trooper Don Schoeff ten·
tatively identified the victims as
Elizabeth J. Domont. 31. of In·
dianapolis. the pilot; Michael A.
Kelly. 30, or Bloomington. and
J a m es E . Kohls. 44 , or In·
dianapoli s . Scho eff said
autopsies were ordered.
As the craft piloted by Mrs.
Oomont headed for power lines.
burners were turned on to make
the balloon rise, Schoeff said.
But the balloon hit the lines.
tipped and the propane-fired
burners apparently set fire to
the gondola. he said.
The trooper said one of the
men either jumped or fell from
the JZondola at about 300 feet. He said the craft continued ming
and Mrs. Domont, her clothing
on fire, either jumped or fell.
The other man stayed with the
baJloon. which continued about a
mile until the gondola, at an
estimated 500 to 1,000 feet,
burned free rrom the bag.
Tornado Rips Memphis
Te•perat11res
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•
,,
NATION I WEATHER
BR..,. Da•aged In Sto ....
The Goodyear blimp "Mayflower:• valued treated for minor injuries. A Goodyear
at about Sl million, was severely damaged spokesman said that. after an inspection.
Tuesday when it broke away from lts its parts probably will be t a\en to
moorings during a tbunderstorm at Houston. base of another of the company's
Au1usta, Ga. One crewmember. who had neet of blimps.
been standing outside the blimp. was
Arsenal Rated Adequate
WASHINGTON tAP> -The
Carter administration's arms
control agency says America·s
nuclear arsenal will be more
than adequate throug h the
mid·l980s.
Right now. said an agency
study released Tuesday . the
United States could take a Soviet
first strike and still destroy 58
percent of tbe potential targets
within the Soviet Union.
BY mE MID·l980s, the study
said, the Soviets' missile de·
velopment campaign will make
them the equal of U.S. strategic
forces.
But even then. the study con-
cluded, American forces could
retaliate alter a Soviet first
strike and destroy 82 percent of
potential Russian targets.
The stuay t>UeS uns increased
abUity to retaliate on the as·
sumption that the United Stat.es
would have both more numerous
and more accurate warheads
than It does now and would have
deployed the cruise missile,
which resembles a small, un·
manned airplane.
THE STUDY, which assumes
both sides will soon be under the
now-tentative SALT ll s trategic
arms limitation treaty. does not
allow for possible American de·
velopment of the improved MX
mobile missile, which the treaty
would allow.
·'The public is entitled to know
that some or the alarmista' com·
ments are incorrect.·· said Paul
Warnke. director of the Arms
Control and Disarmament Agen·
cy. wbfch made the study.
Warnke, while not identifying
the "alarmists." was clearly re·
ferring to groups such as the
Committee on the Present
Danger.
IN FREQUENT studies and
reports. that group has main·
taioed the administration·~
arms control policies, par·
ticularly the SALT II treaty.
would leave the United St.at.es
dangerously vulnerable to a So-
viet first.crike by the 19fl>a.
The study confirmed t,wo ma·
jor point.a made by arms control
critics
-It acknowledaed that the
Soviets. at the rate they are lm·
proving their missiles. could
destroy 90 percent of land·based
U.S . missiles by the mid·l980s.
-IT SAID THE Russians.
gaining on the United States in
numbers of warheads. accuracy
and other measures, will
achieve parity by the mld· 19805.
But Warnke tald neither de·
velopment is as dangerous as
the critics claim.
He said even a successful pre·
emptive Soviet strike a1ainat
land·based missiles would l&ilJ •
subject the Russians to destroc·
lion by American submarine·
based and air·launched cruile
missiles.
·NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
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,
..
\
W11dn•day. Auguat 30. 197f DAit. v PU.OT As-
$1 Billioll Ta:x:· Cut VOte Todaf
~,OOOError
Suspect Says
He'll Return
LOS ANGELES lAP> -When 52·year-old ac·
countant Ame Rlstol discovered that $'927 .000 bad
been erroneously·transferred to his bank account.
he took off He now wants to return and "clear his
name." according to a lawyer friend.
The Los Angeles Times on Tuesday quoted
, Santa Ana attorney Daryl D Hansen as saylng
· that Ristol "has expressed a desire to return and
c lear his name. but he wants lo do it under
circumstances that are fair."
Hansen would not reveal the West Covina
bookkeeper's whereabouts. saying Ristol wanted
assurances of a baj) reduction from the district at·
torney. "He doesn't want to sit in the can for
$100,000 bail because I don't think he can post It."
Hansen added. '
Edtlf!atlOflal fi'-dlag f'la11ed
SANTA MONICA f AP> -Although billions of
federal dollars have been spent to improve educa·
tion, return on the investment has been low
mainly because teachers and local school officials
were never taught how to improve on their own, a
Rand Corp. study says.
The four-year study commissioned by the U.S.
Department of Health, Education and Welfare ex·
a mined 293 federally funded proJects, including
some to eliminate illiteracy and others to improve
vocational and bilingual
education ( J The net retur n to the Sf ATE
federal investment. the
researchers said, "was '---------
the adoption of many in·
novations, the successful implementation of rew
and the long-run continuation or still fewer."
3 Snat~d In Nulte Prote•t
SAN LUIS OBISPO IA P ) Three of 10 deren·
dants facim? trespassmiz chan res in connection
with a D1ablo Canyon anti-nuclear power dcm·
on!>lration have been sentenced to sax months in
Jail a fter pleading no contest
Municipal Court Judge Harold Johnson said
Tuesday he imposed the maXJmum sentence for
the misdemeanor because they had refused to
abide by aJI laws during a 24-month probation
period.
The three defendants. Peter Klotz-Chamberlin
and Christy Lanzi. both of Santa Crui. and Samuel
R. Tyson of Waterford, also were fined S500 each.
Batt~S~na In Welfare Ill~
SACRAMENTO !AP> The stage is set for a
major battle in the Legislature's closing days over
whether cost-of-li ving grant increases s hould be
reinstated for nearly 2.2 million welfare recipients.
The Assembly Revenue and Taxation Commit·
tee voted to do that Tuesday. but refused to ex·
empt county hospital nurses from the state wage
freeze.
The battle i~ certain to focus on whether
welfare recipients can get grant increases while
governmentcmployces'wagesarefrozen.
~ Saupert Surrender•
MARTINEZ rAP> -One of thte1:! gunmen who
allegedly robbed 13 would-be gamblers of $2,000 in
a Reno-bound bus Saturday night has surrendered
to the Contra Costa County s heriff's department
Oarril Terry. 26, who was booked for in-
vestigation of kidnapping and robbery Tuesday.
said he turned himself in after telling his family he
was joining the Air Force.
Terry said he met two strangers at a bar an
Richmond, where they hatched the plot to rob the
Trailways "gambler's special" bus Saturday.
After robbing the 13 passengers. the two strangers
ran off with the entire loot, he said.
SACR.UCCNTO fAP> -A tl btlllon ataU in-come ta• cut wu beaded today ror • nnal As·
Hmbl1 \ott \hat would Hnd lt to Gov. Edmund arown Jr for hls prom I ed 11snature.
The plan woukt 1•~• a ontt·Ume S7~ 1tale in·
c:om• Lu c:ul for un to eac:h Caltromlan rmna a
••a>•r•le return. and a $1&0 tax cut to each CO\IPl• nun1 • joint return.
AN ASSEMBLY VOTE achedwed for today ...... mu. mor than • (onnalJty, becauae the Al·
10mbly I t week approved the m.ior teatum or
I•
Mayor mt
Removal Requested
VERNON <APJ A retired firefighter
has accused Vl'rnon 's multi-millionaire
m1yor ol 1llegaJly living outside lhe city be
prealdes ove r.
The action filed Tuesday against Leonis
C. Malburg, so. is the same charge hls
wealthy grandfather was indicted on 3S years
aao.
Filed with the state Attorney General's
Office. the action seeks to oust Malburg as
m ayor . a position he has held for seven
• years. ll also requests his removal from the
City Council seat he has occupied for 22
years
The cha rge was filed by Carlton E .
Claunch, 41 , a retired Vernon firefighter who
was an uns uccessful City Council candidate
last spring.
Claunch claims Malburg controls the
city's voting because mosl or its 240 res idents
are either municipal employees or live in low
cost city-owned housing.
Judge Attacks
lawyer's Attire
Sl\N DIEGO I AP> -No one would have
blamed James Kinder for fe1:!1ing he bad taken his
suit to the wrong court after a judge pronounced
the a ttorney guilty of "vulgarity" for his casual at·
tire, but IGnder s ays he'll do it again.
Superior Court Judge Edward T. Butler said
he was "appalled" Monday by Kinder's brown
plaid suit. rust-colored sweater and open collar
no necktie -as the attorney's client pleaded lnno· centtoafelooy.
.. Are you an attorney? Are you admitted to
practice in the courts or this state'>" Butler asked.
KINDER SAID HE WAS.
BuUer l>a1d there was nothing he could do
<i bout a lawyer 's attire becaust: a ppellate courts
have ruled it's not a j udge's concern. but he had
plenty to say about it
··Manners of dre::.s tend to portray how a
pe rM>n fe<:ls about himself and his profession." the
Judge intoned "Adherence to a code of conduct.
::.tandard of dress, symbolizes the hallmark of
educated, cultured people."
.. Bit by bit the waves or vulgarity arc eroding
our standa rds." he added.
KINDER SAID TUESDAV that he will
challenge the Judge for cause in the current case
because Butler's "emotional barrage" left his
client, a 21-ycar-old woman accused of attempted
murder . "walh the impression that the hostility his
honor was releasing on me would be also released
upon her because she was my client ... She did
express grave concern over whether there would
be a bleed-over of the Judge's feelings about me onto her own case ...
The attorney said the issue or neckties as
similar to many court reforms that have occurred
over the years.
"If it weren·t for the courage of attorneys to
promulgate change, we'd probably all stall be
wearing white wigs." he said. "I am sure the re
will be many occasions an future when I appear in
San Diego courts without a lie."
Besides, he added · ·'Ties give me a rash."
Vets Unit Talk Set
Me dical car e for
Orange County veterans
will be discussed Sept.
13 at a meeting of the
Orange County Veterans
Advisory Council.
The m eeting w ill
begin at 7:30 p.m . at the
State Mutual Savings
and Loan Building, 625
E. First St.. Tustin.
The meeting is open to
the public. Information
can be obtained by call·
ing Adm. Phil Niekum,
USN <rel.) at S86-6926,
o r Be n de L e on at
834·2042.
First, you'll enjoy a marvelous soup du jour or crispy
tossed green salad Then we proudly serve you a generous
portion of succulent Prime Rib, the king of beef, plus a
piping hot baked potato with all the trimmings, fresh sour·
dough bread and butter. For the finishing touch, it's coffee
or tea and a tantalizing dessert All this for only $5 .95.
Monday-Saturday 6 to 7:00 PM. Sunday 4 to 6:00 PM.
Charley Browns
\
HUNTINGTON BEACH-16160 Beach Blvd.
Reservations Accepted -(714) 842-6602
the tame b1U on a bi·Partlsan 73-0 vote.
The measure -lpoJUOred by Brown and Dem~raUc leaden ot tbo LegislatW'e -is a c:om·
blnatJon of earlier lax cut proposals authored by
Republicans.
Proposition 13. pai;uge ~wept tbrouah
LeclslatUtt.
THE INCOME TAX C\JT would be fin1nc~
from the :.t~t~'s budget s urplus, now estimated' at.
up to ~ blllion annually fol' the next few years. 1
The rest or that surplus 15 tentatively unnarlled
to continue to help local aovernments whose rev·
enues wereslithed by ProPosiUon 13.
GOP LEADEllS In both houses have com·
plained that the Democrats ire stealing their pro·
p05alt ln an election year political maneuver. But
Republican lawmakers have nonetheJess unan·
imously eupported the bill. AB 3802 by As·
semblyman l..awrence Kapiloff. D·San oteao. tn a
serlea d committee and noor votes over the past
two weeks.
Tbe Senate -graveyard of other tax c:ut pro·
posals t.hls year -voted 39-0 for the tax cut on
Monday. clearing the createst potential threat to pass age.
Brown. who pr~lcted a stateWide buslness re·
cession and eventual state tax hikes ll Proposition
13 passed. now say~ California can afford more tu
cuts because the state Is receiving excess Income. r
bus iness and sales ta x revenues from "the 1
ereatest peaceUme boom In our b.i5toty "
The Democratic aovernor says, ind non· '
partisan analysts aareo. that Califomla can cut in·
come taxes this extra $1 bilUon and continue to..
give schools. cities and counties $3 billion to $4 t
billion annuaJJy in Proposition 13 aid. l THE COMBINED EFFEtT or the proposed in·
come tax cul and Proposition 13's pro~ tax
cuts would reduce the average homeowner s an·
nual lax bills by $750 to Sl.000.
Renters, who got nothing rrom Proposition 13's
voter-mandated 57 percent property lax cut. would
gel $75 each in Income tax cuts from the bill
SENIOR CITIZENS. both renters and
homeowners, would get up to $375 each in addi·
tional tax cuts under the income tax cut bill.
ln addition to the one-time tax credits. the
Kapiloff bill would adjust state income tax
brackets annuaUy with inflation so that most
workers r~eivlng only cost-of-living increases
would not move to higher si.te tax brackets.
That so-called "indexing" has been a top
priority of Republicans lo recent years. and it was
opposed vigorously by most Democratic leaders
until tbis summer. wben the tax cut fever of
$10,000 Plot
Man Charged
In Extortion
SAN DIEGO 1AP) -A 26-year-old Phoenix
man was arrested in Phoenix Monday and charged
with a ttempting to extort $10.000 from San Diego
radio personality Bill Ballance.
Charles Steven Sawyer . a tree trimmer. was
arraigned Tuesday in Phoenix on charges or extor·
lion and booked in Maricopa
County Jail on $10.000 bond.
An FBI spokes m a n said
Sawyer contacted Ballance
more than a week ago and
threatened to m ail him an ex·
plos ive device a t San Diego
rad 10 s tation K FM B unless
Ballance paid the $10,000.
Sawyer was arrested at his
home while m aking final ar·
r ange ments on the telephone
with Ballance.
FBI officials declined to reveal how Sawyer
became aware of Ballance. who formerly conduct·
ed a radio talk show at station KABC in Los
Angeles.
BUI' REPlJBUCANS haYe .accused Brown of
deliberately deceiving voters about the growing
budget s urplus -now estimated at SS.8 bUlion
compared to a state budget of $15 billion -in an
a ttempt to defeat Proposition 13.
Attorney General Evelle Younger. Brown's
GOP foe for governor In the Nov. 1 general elec·
tlon. has charged that Brown is "pl1yjng games" ~
with tbe budget surplus figures.
"The numbers chanae almost overnight to su.it
the governor's political purposes. When he was
against Proposition 13, we had only S3.5 billion.
When 13 passed. he suddenly bad more than S6
billion." Younger says.
ACTUALLY. THOSE TWO budget s urj>Jus
figures do not contradict each other as sharply as
Younger suggests in a statewide barrage of r1dio
commercials.
First of all. the state itself has been the big· '
gest single property taxpayer in California for the
past decade because of a pre· Proposition 13 Sl
billion annual .. homeowner'• exemption .. tax re·
lief program under which the Stale rays property
taxes on l~ first S7.000 in val~ o eac~wner
occupied home
PROPOSmON 13's tax cuts therefore gave
the state an immediate $600 million annual cul in
the cost of that tax relief prov-am.
In addition to that. the reduced property tax
bills for business and homeowners reduced tax de·
ductions on state income tax and business taxes.
raising estimated revenues from those taxes by up
to S250 million annually.
AND IN RESPONSE to what Brown called
"the s pirit of 13 ... the Legislature and Brown have
made S850 million in cuts in the state budget. in·
eluding a freeze on we lfare grants and state
salaries a nd a freeze on hmngs.
Finally. estimates of state income. sales and
business tax revenues are being revised upward
by about $300 million because of updated estimates
of the California economy. now in a fourth year of
robust expansion instead of the downturn predict·
ed by economists.
PERFECT HAIR COLORING
Done At ...
LUZZETT A Bernard
240 Newport Center Or •• Ste. 20C
NEWPORT BEA~23
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All you do Is switch your
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/ Interest will be credited
quarterly or, at your option. ,
•
you can defer interest pay·
ment untll 1979.This option
may provide special income
tax benefits.
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MUTUAL
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AN EOIJAl HOIJSINO LIN~"
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Important too.our now·
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funds prior to maturity since
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a substantial penalty for
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Call us for r---.. ---.-.,
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P111den& 1Maln Ofll~) 1213) 449·2~5/Arcadia 1213) «6·0)881Canoo• Park 121318&& '422, Cep1srrano·S<in Cfementf'
f71 4) 493·56511Cerritos (213192\M37e1Coron• Del Mar (714) 675·50101Cov•n.i t213) 339 54761F311brook 171•1728·57241
Fountain Valley (714) 963·83981Gl•nO•I• f2t3) 242·41'61t..k1 S•n Marco'.\ 111•1 7« 2771, Port ~ueneme lllO!>le-23231 ~nll An• (714J 547.9741 1Thot.1a.tnd O•ksceo51 •9i'·2t871Uplt f\d (714)981 28211VISl:t 17141726·858&
• • ••
Church kOcation
~erits Approval
Ma. ton Vt ~e> !unJt'tpal Advasory Council m mb<!ra
~enUy rerommended Howln a church to lac l In low
nmt. Industrial r>urk pac:~ ln lb communit)'.
If upa>n>\'\"<I. by th OruQi Count PhmnlntJ Com·
ml ton. th u t> permit for church ae-rvlcc in lhe in·
dustrlal ure11 ul Vto F b i •llJUe and Ahcia Parkwa)
would. ~u pre<·1td~nt for other n?h~lc.>U groups lo Joc&l<'
thert•.
Whlle thot lund of UM· in an industnal area muy at
first glnnce uppe r . tr n e. the l\l!O kind• or uses arc
quate compallbh~ b ~ on their daffermg hours or operu·
ta on
•h Fu...,t Church or Chrl:,l Sclenti t member:'i pclntl'<i
out tut ~1AC'. t•hurch en 1~ arch •ld on SundMy and
Wedrwschty evemn wh n the lndustraal art!~ 1s basically
rlosed <kHm.
Thul means t•hurc.•h parking will not be con!hcung
"lth :.-hopp{'~ t(Om~ to store located m th~ ureu or
'"orkers ut thl' dtfferent mdu ·trial roncem~
Tht-n.• '"'· huwe\ tff. another rcaM>n for uppro\lng u
condlttonul ~rm1t for the church use m the area.
1\s ~t.'\'crul \all~)' c.-burch leaders have s1ud. land Jn
the urt•a i!. e><trcmel)' expensive and few developers are
w1thng to allocate land for churches
Thc.tt s1tuut1on bus prompted some creativity on the
part of rell~ious l~aders who have established so.called
!ilorerront churches and churches located in school build·
an gs.
Allowing churches to locate in inexpensive industrial
purk space at lea~t. temporarily is one solution.
The MAC's recommendation was correct and Orange
County Planning Commissioners should approve the use
SCAG Melllhership
The lrvme City Council is considering withdrawing
from the Southern California Association of Govern-
ments. as have several other Orange County councils.
For Jrvine lo follow m their footsteps is to tread firm·
ly over quicksand.
SCAG is the official planning agency for a s ax-county
Southern California e:irea and the clearinghouse for
federal grants related to those planning functions.
Like it or not. if cities members or not refuse to
<1bidc by SCAG·developecf regulations <for example .
c1uotas for adequate low cost and moderate cost housing l.
they run the ri~k of los ing fedl•ral revenue sharing money
ass ignt'Cl a ntriety of projects.
Much of that money is essential to a city like Irvine.
which is growing and needs financing help with roads.
sewers :rnd like accoutrements of expansion. SCAG
dropouts like Cypress may thumb their noses with rel-
<.1ti vc impunity: t ht•y a I ready are cities built to their
limits.
Certainly it ts 1mpQrtant for cities like Irvine con·
stantly to analyzt• their positions within SCAG. and seek to
impcove them. An alternative would be to develop a new.
more restricted. council of governments more represen
tative of s uburban mlercsts.
Without an ultl•rnativc. however. u move away from
SCAG would not be a ~tep out. but <J s tumble.
One-man Cam.paign
The.· "hl'l•b of burcaucrucy gnnd slowly." and
"Wh.1t cun one.· Pl'f'l'>On do"" arc common expressions of
pc!'ls1m1:-.m nowudays
But. not to 75-ycar-old Art Kraus of Leisure World.
Lust week Saddleback Community College began
rc('ru1ting volunteers to staff a new federally s upported
consumer counseling program which may be the pro·
tolypc for about 150 more such programs across the coun-
tr\·.
· Legislators and coll ege officials give Kraus most of
t11e credit for bringin{! it about.
The rl'tirt.•cl ins urance executive s<1id he got the idea
for the.· coun~l'ling program several years ago when he re·
•ulizl'd ho" muc h ('Onsumers were being exploited.
·pt1rt1eularly sl'mor l'Jt1zens on fixed incomes. Jgnorance
of the workings of government and bus iness made the re·
t1rccs vulncrablt'. Kraus ::,aid.
To sell hi s 1de<1. Kraus sought introductions to the in·
huential. inducting C<1ltfornia's Senator Alan Cranston.
wrote dozens of IL'tl<'rs. made trips to Washington. D.C ..
and knockl'CI on man~ of the right doors.
The "hl'ds ground slowly but Kraus refused defeat.
Sl'veral C"omprom1scs and changes later. he saw federal
money uppropriutt•d to make his idea a reality.
Rates of c1t1 zen ta xation and best use of the collected
revenues urc controversial issues at present. And. the
merits of Kraus' brainchild remain to be seen.
· The mt•rit of his persistent optimism. however. is ob·
vio us. What ctin one person do'? Next time ask Art Kraus.
• Opinions expressed 1n the space above are mose of the Daily P ilot.
Ottier views expressed on tti 1s page are those o-r tnefr au hors an<f
,artists. Reader comment is invited Address The Daily Pilot. P.O.
Box 1560. Cos ta Mesa. CA 92626 Phone(714) 642·4321
---... ~~;.Boyd/RR Names
By L.M. BOYD
Please add to that hst of
oddball ni cknames ror
railroads. Southern Pac1flt'
, was the "Sufrer1n '
--Patllettc." The Lch1gtt and
Dear
Gloo1ny
Gus
I don't need statistics lo
tell me about tbe ln·
crease in Olghts from
Orange County Airport.
The air above my house
between the houl'3 or 7
111 m . •nd 9 a.m. sounds
llke the air chase scene
In "Star Wars " E.D
New England was the "Late
and Never _.Earl_y ." The
Northampton and Bath was
the "Nuts and Bolts." The
Delaware and Hoosen was
the "Delay amt Hesitate ...
The Chicago. Burlinglon
aod Quincy was lhe
''Cheapest. Best ano
Quickest."
Q "Have any of the free·
love com munes been sue·
cessful?"
A. Jt 's debatable. There
may still be quite a few or
the households functionin11
here or there. MO&l, thouah,
have come apttrt. Coupl•s
tend to pair off, chooslna to
devote themselves lo each
other to the excluaJon of t.he
rest. Quarrels crop up over
shared work. Money arau·
menls seem Inevitable. Some
theorlslS who've looked Into
the matter now think the un· successful commune exper1·
ments lend to prove that
mono•am~ la instinctive,
although othms disagree.
Ro~rt N Weed/PubliSMf
Ke~edy ~avons Senator Rele
WASHINGTON -Son.
Edward Kctnnt'dy fdon't e II him
· 'Tuddy" > ls
hat aaaln,
ju1t H he waa
ln tH8. 1972
11nd 11>76 A
l'rowd or
aue111er~
flaure» he Ii
runntn1 ror
Presld•nt.
th ouah the
1980 season Is
18 months awuy. Thou panting
for a pollUc.t aavlour freely tell
p0llatera thot Kennedy is the
stlvatlon. lhe 11&lve. th~ cure.all
for what oHs us
Dr. Gallup prochums that
Ocmorrat.s favor him over Mr
Carter to be the 1980 nomint!t! by
11 44·20 11rore. and that all voters
wunt him over Gerald Ford by a
whopping 59-41 margin.
THE OOPESTERS who see all
events as crafted. and ignore the
power of the prosaic. mutter. uh
Mailbox
huh. and not~ 1h t o new poll In recent years. lh& prob·
spbws the.1p1.1bllc for1tvtn1 Ken· !ems ot his wife. and hu son.
nedy for Chappaquiddick: Joan Teddy. who lt>st ~ leg to cancer.
Kennedy 's con f~ss 1on on occupied him more thun any
alcoholism ls compasstonatelf presidential thou«ihls. Alway~.
received: Kennedy hJet • buJy there wert> the wishes of hls sis·
political scMdulc tlais rall. one ters and mother -cautious (or
which wUI put tv~n more the safety orthe last son.
Democrat.8 in his debt &e5ides. Kennedy relish~ har;
All thts pleases. even amuses~ as a senior senator. ··1 have
Kennedy. He loves his populari· new opportunities ln the next
ty and tM knowledge that. given Congress. as chairman or lhe
his personal &etback5. he re· Judiciary Committee," he told
covered and made hJs own way. m e last week. "Think Of the
He doesn't plot or make moves enormous impact on th.e sysJem
to run. nor wtU he. He actU$.Jly or juslic•. the sarety ar our
doean 't want to. and could only citizens and t.he protection of be persuaded IC Carter pulls an liberties. We'll be pus.ins on l40
LBJ and quits. or ls humiliated new Judges ...: C>rl...Citlh or the
in the 1* primaries. or if a na· 1ud1c1ary -in on~ year."
tlon-shalting issue develops , .
For year!\, even aforemen ONCE. Kennedy $Omtbmtl'
·t1oned f(lctors of this sort mouthed what was •J'61t
wouldn't have been enough to whlgpered in his ear by • br1&ht
persuade hJm. The trauma of all staffer. today. he kftOWA hrs
the KeMedY tragedies was too sturr down to nitly·grit\}'. ~end
much with him. and he was too Sen. Howard Cannon. D·Nev .
involved in being rather to the pushed ror aitline deregulaUon ~hildren of his dead brothers. to the point that the airt1'e-ct
drastically ~uced f1ret 1n self·
defense. Now Kennedy araues
for deregulation of motor car.
ner~. and for rerorm or exlsUng
r~gulat1onr. so that new druas
can be broustht on the market
quicker
· Allk about tox ~volt and big.
1nl'ffl(1ent government. Mnd
.Kennedy offeN'o 11beraf rebuttal.
"We cun S¥ve 159 billion by t9M.
If we vote for nalJonal health in·
s urance. I think the biggest taic
spenden1 are those who want to
grant tax credits 1tu1tion a1d 1
without a pplying lhe same
cnterta we do for straight ap·
propriat1ons. In 011 and gas. why
don't we give tax 1ncenhv~ \ll
wtldcatt.ent mstead or to dentists
seeking tax shelter.;•
.. Prop 13 was also a cry
against bigness m all forms. If
Howard Jarvis had packaged his
proposition In a way to cut the
size of bt~ business instead or
b1 g government. the voters
would have ~pproved that. loo.··
PEOPLE warm lo Kennedy.
despite his liberal rhetoric.
bectiuse. !Jke his brothers before
him. he holds out hope and prdm·
1se. He will chair hearin~s this
fall on his national health bill.
one we really don't need. and
will get b11( media .-xpos ure
Kennedy will •.tump for
Democrett~ t'\ erywhere. and
more comparison!.-will be made
between the enthusiasm for him
and the turning away from
Carter
It 1s heady stuff. but Kennedy
has seen 1t before and will see 1t
again. He !'laid. "Thal 's about
right." when I asked him if the
presidential goal was less 1m·
portant to him than it was to his
brothers
··tt ':. obv1ou!\ that the Kennedy
lam1ly hai. been lhrough so
much." he told ml'. .. and 11 con·
t rnue:. to be a maJor factor 1n my
lifr But grandchildren grow up
and J(et !->Citied down. Times
t·han~c. and in u period of futurt>
yl•ars. things may change for
ml.' But my position 1s that I de
not want to run. that I support.
President Carter. and that he
will be reelected ··
Police Have Right to Express Views
To the Editor.
Your Aug. 18 editorial entitled
"Police m New Arena" renects
a surprisingly narrow view of
American democracy. Why
would you choose to discourage
uny individual or group from
politicaLactivism. particularly
when most would agree that one
of the most serious threats to the
great American experiment is
political apathy'? How can the
expression of political views by
any citizen or group of citizens
be equated with an attempt by
the police to no longer answer to
civilian authority'.' ,
THE REALITY police officers
must deal with. though many of
us would prefer to ignore.
represents an importaQt aspect
of our society. Their perspec·
tive. even if we -find-it un·
pleasant. should be as much a
part of the body politic as the
views and expressions of
bankers. teachers. lawyers.
rarmers. laborers. and yes, even
newspaper publishers. I applaud
anyone or any group who plays
an active role In the democratic
process and sec no reason to dis·
courage police officers from be·
Ing good citizens.
Paraphrasing a f a m o us
patriot. " ... we may not
always agree with someone's
viewpoint l>uf we Sbuutd be pre·
pared to fight for their .,right to
express that viewpoint.'' Police
officers during their off -duty
hours. have. and s hould be en·
couraged lo exercise. the same
First Amendment rights that al-low you to publish your opinions
in your newspaper.
RUSSELL A. BOSTROM
President, Newport
Ha.Ibor Bar Assn
(Jtdet War
To the Editor :
On Aug. 24 I had the privilege
to be part or a welcoming com-
mittee for a s hJp returning from
war, a war where this aggressor
had no weapons. The s hip was
the Peacock, oul of Wilmington.
a Greenpeace vessel ; the
ene m y. the Russian whaling
fleet.
Greenpeace. a non·proflt foun·
dalion. had once again gone to
sea lo prevent the kJJUng of help·
tes11 whales, whose numbers are
dwlndlln1 fo.st. They launched
inflatable boats from the
Peacock and placed themselves
between the Ruulan kllf ships
and the whales. 1'wenty-alx pee>·
pie. wllh nothing but couraae.
compa 1Jon and deterlnio11tlon
dlsrupt.ed the harpoon·carrylna
Ru11lans.
' nfl8 I th rourth year "uch
voyage have taken place. In the
~
past they havl' had explosive
harpoons fired over their heads
into s urfaced whales This year
they also had high pressurl' fire
hoses turned on them, yet they
stayed. with their lives on lhl'
line. They continued to prevent
mass killinf'{s.
Our heartfelt thanks go out to
these 26 brave people. I'm proud
to be a member of the sa me or·
ganization. and I hope you all
join me in support of such IH'
tivities.
Welcome home Grcl'npc1H'l'
crew. Job well done
MICHAEL GREENIA
Not Wol"th I«
To the Editor
A friend of mrne was killed
last mght M.y sadness and rage
at the unfairness of her untimely
death was increased today when
it proved to be a pohc~ chase
that prematurely s nuffed out
this vibrant. caring human be
mg.
Was catching a punk with a
toy gun worth the death of u
young mother who left behind u
husband. two small children.
parents and many 1itrieving
friends"
It seems we're alwuys reading
about police chases ending with
the. death oC an iono<:ent, but this
wasn't just a statistic . this was
a talented, giving woman whosl'
loss is incalculable.
There must be a be a better
way . This should not have hap
pened
MARGIT MCYITA
•Brolu!r' f:larilfed
To the Editor.
Ottf" ed1tor1al on lhc....nwubfr
or brokers 1n Cahtornia was ln
_e.rror and created a misleading
i mpression or \he real. .eat.ale
profession. There are 400.000
licens ees in California not
brokers This number includ~
both brokers and sale~ persons
You further s howed your lack
of knowledge of our profession
by stating that a person could
.. pick up a broker 's license .. To
pick up this license a person
must have certain licensed sales
experience or college degree In
addition to 12 college credits in
real es taltt low. rlnance .
appraisal and practice After
"picking " up the ~e
qualifications he must then take a 2()0.questlon Male exam thut
takes over thrl't' hou~
W F LOWANCE.
Realtor
s .,,,.,. lftd ...
To tht' &d1tor.
Your supcNJlfttlh ,lournalists
are to be comphmented for in
formmg lht: voling public that
··a capital gams tax cut favored
b y 60 of the 100 l>Cnator:.
1 .. and to be voted yea or nay
in the Senate before the Octoher
reces s 1 would allow 110 in
dividuals who earn more than
$200.000 a year to complete!~
escape federal ~ncome taxes ..
This quote is attributed to the
Tax Reform Research Group's
Robert M Branon. director of
C'Onsumer advoca t e Ralph
Nader's tax·research or~an1za.
tion. This is responsible report
ing. and much appreciated by
readers
A CONCLUSION neces:-ary
for voter action will perhap!> risL·
in protest that the s amt-pro·
pos ed bill would give a 0 Z per
cent tax cut to those 1n the
SIOO.OOO-S200.000 le ve l while
those earning the Sl0.000 a year
income would ~et a 1 9 percent
increase in taxes .
Whatever happend to Robin
Hood 's theory. or bettt:r yet. the
American ideal staled 1n the
poem on the Statue or Liberty
..Give me your tired. your poor.
)our restless masse~ yearning to
'breathe frC('. . ""
Tux the poor and ~1vc to the
rich"' Do the free enterprise en·
tupce.ne.w:s._ Llh.e. ri.c.h.1 serve ~n·
ly their own cause. or should
they contribute to a I ree re
public. bearing a proportionate
s hare or democracy·l
f'AlTH BEIRLE
Reading £op-011t
which wouldn't be needed 1f the
threat were reul
CHILDREN can then be taught
with the phonics -.ystem. This 1s
Jccomplished through repetition
and drllls. There is no easy way
Children should not be passed
from the second grade unti! they
have mastered phonics and can
construct words They should
never be passed into the fourth
~de until they can read and un·
derstand the question~ on a test.
How can u non-rcuder possibly
answer those questions right"
01s<'1phne. phonic". repetiflon
these are the three elements
that go into teachmg children lo
read in lwo yeur!> After that.
becaust: they can read. they can
be I a ught other things much
easier Does n't this make sense"
JAMES W BOLDING
Blk# ~lglU•
To the Editor
According to a recent article
1n your pa pe r. •he Newport
Beach Bicycle Trails Citizen Ad·
vtsory Committee has proposed
that trafric· hght pus h button
rontrof 'I be 1n'\l t.tlled fo r
blcyclisL-..
The cost 1i: to be $2t .OOO lo the
city. plu~ marchiniz funds from
the state In tht: form of gas tax
fundtt. The. ne.w. push:bu.Uons ar.e
to apparently be duplicates of
existing equipment and would be
probably only about live feet
away
I CAN SEE no JUSt1llcat1on for
expenditures oC our Iunds for a
project or such limited USt' The
To the F.ditor. philosophy that "we would get 1t
The teachers are copping out cheap because the state pays
when they blame TV because ha I/" t~ comple tely wronl{
children-e'IM')il'ead H children because we end up paying I~
were taugb\ to read 4o yea~ ago-»' 'le ·s share_ m ga:. taxes sooner
before Ufe tbtrd gradr.ttten-tbe,T or later. -. ..
can be taught to read today &efore The other proposnl for ~ biey-
the third grade cle bridge over the Delhi Flood
If children can't read. it ·ii Control Channel sounds hkf' 1t
becausetherlghtsys tem 1s not be m~ht be 11 good idea depe nding
Ing used. • on where 11 would bt! placed
In the first place. there ~hould What really gets mt-1!-. that
be strict discipline. with the the c1ty. council has approved
threat of corporal punishment the &pphcat1on for funds for the
whQle bull or w11~. Mayor
Ryckorf. who opposed the but·
tons. s ayi1 they are int'onsistent
with c1ly traffic policies. Oood
for him
DOCGLAS PARMENTIER JR.
• Ltrters /1om rtadtr' ere weLcomt
The nghl to condf1t&e lelltt~ to /IC
lpcJCr or rlimmatr hbel 11 r~#roed
Ltlttrs ot 300 word.I; or lf>ss u.1U be
QIVf'ft prt'ftrt11ce All lertna muit tn·
cludt' ngnat11rt and malli~ oddrtu
bW oom.1 malf ~ wltMced on ,,,.
qwll t/ ..,.,,ftCttftt r.a..... u ~.
PMt'l/ wtlt nol bf pubhchtd
s
'Red' Kojak?
China Beeomea Capitalut
BJ MU.TON •$0Wl'IS
The news eom'!J. out ol Cb1M tb1I summer bu beeu atartllna. Wbether It a aood or bad depends, I suppose, on
yout viewpoint. but It •1 clear th•t 11 '1 dllf trent.
Flnt came the r•port that tbt Chinese Communisl
Jeaden have deelded It •1 OK fOf &he country to 10 IMc>
debt. Just a le• years 110 China tooll: apeelal pride in be-.
lnl •ble to say that It b•d "oelther lnt.emal ow memal
deblt."
THB OllNBSE llE EXPECl'ED TO reoudlate that Dolley and eeek direct loans rrom banks outalCle o( ChinL It'• a 1tmal that t.be ChllMH want to step up tbe pace of ln-
duatrlal1u.t.lcn. And lf they look at tbe UDlt.td States or Japan,~~::0-boW thll ls doM: wltb borrowed fUbdl.
Ac to a dlapatch filed by Wall Stl'fft .lournal
report« Prank Chlnt from Hons Kong. banke:n are
champing at the bit, anxious to eet a pleee of the Ch1nele
action. c&lna ii considered a tood financial risk.
Money
Tree
Next came tbe re-
port tbat aunese banks
ln Holli Kong had re-
c elv ed lnstructlona
from Peking uying
they would be permitted to do
an)'tbinl that the other
banb ln Roal Kont are doing. lncludinl such spec,dative
activities as buying and selling stocks or trading in fon!igd
currendes. "
The directive from Pekina warned the banks that the1
were expected to make profits, b\,lt it said: "Although OUf
banks have a socialist cbaractet. we can use capitalist
methods." ·
CHINA MAINTAINS A NETWORK or 13 banks in
Hong Kong, includina more than 130 branch offices. They
control one-third of the British colony's $12.5 blllion in
bank deposits.
These reports were followed by the announcement that
China is importing more goods. In the first ball of 1978, China's exports rose 29 percent while imports were up 60
percent from the levels or a year aeo. HelpinJI to swell the
imports were farm machinery. chemical fertilizers, catUe.
watches. insecticides and whole Industrial plants.
Not far behind this news was the visit to China of John
B. Ricker Jr., chairman of New York-based Continental
Corp .• and several of his top executives. Continental is one
of the largest property and casualty Insurers in the United
States. and it also owns the Diners Club operation.
ONE OF mE DEM..S DISCllSSED by the Continental
executives with Chinese officials was the introduction of
the Diners Club card in China.
You know things are changing In China when they
start talking about accepting the Diners Club card. Are
McDonald's and Coca-Cola next?
What was next was the report that Hitachi Ltd .• one of
the Japanese electronics giants. is going to ship to China 1
$78 million plant to produce color television picture tubes.
The Hitachi plant. to be installed at Slan in northeast
China, will be able to turn out about one million TV tubes a
year.
That must be the beginning or the end for those who
expected China to become a Marxist model unlike any the
world bas seen previously. With that many TV sets moving
into the Chinese marketplace, can "Kojak" and his
cohorts be far behind?
Gerwral to Sell
General Telephone or CallfomJa will bef in selUnf the
public both tbe shell and inner components o a specia line
of telephones on Sept. 1. Tbe standard instruments will still be available on a
lease basis.
JOHN J. CASEY. VICE PBESIDEl\'T of marketing,
says the approach ls in response to customer d~and and
ls a break from the industry practice of leasing telephon~s
to subscribers and/or selling only lhe outer shell of certam
phones.
For sale at Phone Marts (General's customer
telephone service cen-
ters > will be the com·
( T'"'KING J pany's designer collee-n ti on' which reatures
STOCK eight styles or instru·
ments in various colors,
-----------plus the Mickey Mouse
model and an automatic
answering/reocrding device called "Code· A-Phone."
Prices will range from S88 for a "candlestick" model
to $165 for an executive chest phone with a clipper ship on
lts cover.
TELEPHONES GOING ON SALE will not be avaUable
to customers on a lease basis after Sept. t. Casey said.
Subscribers leasing phones will not be affected by the
marketing program.
General's entrance into the telephone retail market
was prompted by a recent Federal Communications Com-
mission ruling that allows the public to connect customer-
e!QVided equipment direcUy to the nation's telephone
n.elw.orlc_. -
This ruling is expected to spur telephone sales, Casey
said. I
Under the retail program. the manufacturer will pro-
vide repair service. Telephones will carry a six months'
manufacturer's warranty.
C'e1'111gt .. BrecJaers Stieff
Covington Brothers, a Fullerton-based construction
company, has announced thatCS&M loc .• a California cor· poration. has filed an action against the company and two
of its employees seeking loss ol profits and to enjoin the
eomp~ and individuals from usmg alleged trade sec-!JS5
relatin& lo a pre-fabrfcarecr panel or CS&M. -
Tbe. eompany reeeived CS&M 's co~~lalnt last Jfeek amt ts..uun1JJllla:1lie alle1ations. acCC)l'ding lo Lorin D.
Covington, president.
OS&M meet the acUon on Aua. 24. be said.
Covinlton Brothers ls producing lmpac panels, a pre-
fabricated panel. at its Riverside faclllty and the panels
are being used in a slngle·famlly housing tract under con.
struction with the D t L system. a partially pre-
manufactured con.strucUon system, in Fontana.
IJC'8 ee ... Sle,.r• ....
LOS ANGELES (AP> -United C&llfornJa Blnlt wlll
acquire Sierra National B~ In a $3.4 million merser.
both companies have announcoct.
SJerra, with uacts of about '34 million. ii head·
guartered ln Petaluma and baa br•oeb offices in Mill
Valley, Corte Madera, Novato. Sebutopol and Soaoma
Valley.
UCB, the flft.h lar1est bank 1n Calllomta, bu utet.I ol •.a bUllcn and 2'71 brancb ottlet1 tn the stale. The mercer LI aubJed to the approvaJ of Sle1T1 and
UCB abareho1ders, 11 well u bank re,Waton. the com· pantes aa.ld Tuesday.
__ ,._ .. A•p P .. •IM'tl I
Trtactlon E.nterprll s bu taken a 1lx·1ear lease on
l,280 square feet ol 1pace at 20363 Beach Blvd., Hu.nUacton
Beach, ttom Rlcbard Krupp.
Value o1 tlle luHhoJd la SSS.211. KconllDa to BoctDMt
Properties Broker .. e Co .• wblch ii an&ftliq the ·~~ Triac:Udla plana to open a doaut ibop-;~ pnm-
•bout Stpt. 1. ,
·"''"'"''''' lWNltO .. , .......
p 'I lil9CJt 0.. A..,.,_ ...... Ill"*"*" .....,.. __
..... wt .. .._ ................. ,,.......
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~,.....,....," .... • ~OON'TIAT
,,.~
''J111t Wl'llle Yov't• ;-:1.;.. ti Of' 1AN
'9W'09CO .,..,, ~to..-oio
ITteftCI llMI ly CIClatt "-r. .. 8 CWJtlMV
FnUF"6ct~llte
10AO 1r><1 ~ ctino
~.Orw~~
••Pla1n1 I~ Hrv1te• • HcllCIK'e" ~. ,,,.
.-.. OI .. .,CIM tor Ot01r
pert0ft9, iau mueaoan
EdOla Outein hnOt ~
In 1111 rl"'8lt I RI
...
Ro111ance
• OTTO: 100 OCflU.A
~·a llncolfl P8fl(
Zoo • Ille M11tnQ tor t looll ., ,,,. l*>av!Or ot r: In c:aptMI)'
08SHEW8
WOAU>HEWS
TOHtOHT
Dick Shoberg and Susan Lucci play a
romantic couple facing obstacles to their
marriage on "AU My Children," which airs
at noon weekdays on Channel 7.
1:30. MY T'HAEE 80N8
Pr~ive o<oom Robbie
un"-'ooe• a comp1ece
inl09Ctk>n by hll liane.e $
CJ 80WUNG FO-. DOU.AAS Q» I LOVE LUCY
Ricky br•ngt hOme a mink
coat. and Lucy think• that
n'storhW
CD THEF.BJ. I~ and aororuy "''"'' • MK:HA!l JACKSON
Ouesl 0. Wllhaf!\ A
NOien. authOr ot "'Baby In
A bottle"
(J) TO nu TH£ TRVTH
({I MERV OAIFFIN
Gu.It; Robet1 l(eHn, ~.
• lnspec10< Ertlllne mouritl
a ma)Or F B I. att.ai on a
planned mulll-mlllion dol·
rw robbery. m MAONE>i.11.EHRER
REf'ORT m SPECIAL
iWhlle. Kay Stllf't
1#1 C88 HEWS
N8CHEWS
UARS~U8
WOALDNEWS
To.JHT
"Roell Sonata Fe< Plano
And Amplllled Cello" Per-
formed by planlsl~
er Paul Schoenfleld and
cellllt Petet Howard. (A)
(I) JOKER'S WILD
Ou111nr l l.btin9•
8 KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles
• KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles e KTLA (Ind ) Los Angeles D KA.BC-TV (ABC) Los Angeles
(I) KFMB (CBS) San Diego G KHJ-TV (Ind) Los Angoles
9 KCST (ABC) San Diego e Knv (Ind) Los Angeles m KCOP·TV (Ind) Los Angeles e KCET· TV I PBS) Los Angeles
I!) KOCE·TV (PBS) Huntington Beach
Actor Signs
Consent Form
~StockRap
WASIIlNGTON IAP ) -The
Securities and Exchange Com·
mission has charged actor
George Hamilton wi1h violating
securities laws in the p·urchase
and sale of stock two years ago,
the SEC announced.
Hamilton. who lives in Los
Angeles. agreed tn a consent or·
der filed in U.S. District Court in
New York not to resume such
activities, although he did not
admit or deny the a llegations,
the government agency said
Tuesday.
THE SEC COMPLAINT al·
leged that Hamilton violated the
anti-fraud provisions of the
securities laws when he bought
stock in IPM Technology, Inc •
of Sarasota, Fla .. and Pulte
Home Corporation in 1976.
7:IO I TATTllTALU IHANANA
Guest· Miiton a.rte.
I NEWLVWl.D GAME
MATCHOAMlP.M.
JOl<EA'8 WILD
ntE 000 COUPLE
Otcat arws F111111 con~ra
to brMlc up a P<* ... g-
in their "*1"*'t IO they
tan go out Wltll tile Pigeon am ..... fill 21TONIOHT
Host Clete Roberti
Cli) STAMOAAO
"TheEnd~lt"
(I) CANCIO CAMERA 9 'AMllVFEUD
l:OO IJ ()) FRED ANO 8UNNI
Fred Traveleria Miii e
muaieat-variety atlOW com-
bining l1V'8 perl~
and animation, with gumta
Sandy Duncan. Pat Htn·
lngtori, and Vicki
l•wr~ 0 NBCMOVI! • * ·~ "The Day Of The
Dolpllln" f t973) a.c>rge C
Scott, Trllh Van Devere A
acienlfll '• effort• to com·
munlelle with dlllpllln1 .,.
le<>Pllrdlzed by a group
glannlng 10 UM the dol·
plllnt In a polltlul plOI. (R) D CAU.OWAY'8 ~IM8
Sad Bmneconaing
n. .......... .., et
CIOWllgelflCI ...... ...
-.. 1.0CIMllot ... -Oll9 "' y~·· fnOlt '°'" ..... .,..... .... ""tlPMrtd&O' ...... liW.
... H111119y, •• Hoowir. •• eGHT• INOUGt4
'Poor L"$1e Net\ Olrt" TN ~Of a PIOfM*lt conttector .,.,_.. ~
wlttl ~ Qlft9 In lift
alttft\PI to buy hie 1"9o-
li0ft. (")
• THeaAINT
"TNOOod~" L~
811111: "Tiie 8u•ln•••
Lunch," "The Vfn(llng
MeGNne.' "The Butdltl
Shop,''
• w:T'Of'V AT AA
··~ Ot TM Ao*-'' TM
ground llghttng for Luzon.
Ille princtpal Ptlllll)C)lne
111.tnCS, ended wltll the
~·~of the~ • R
"Hombi. Cc1nt9lredea"
EtlubMh ._ ltle warrMt
for Mer)"• ~ after
hllltlng lier flight from
Scoti.nd. ID THEGAEAT
AMPllCAH ~ DANCe
The hlatory Of equ.,..
~In America.
uo I CAOeS-wna VICTORY AT SEA
"F.,U Fathom ~" The
trerl'lendoue destruction on
Japeneee lhlppjng cio-
otr communication•
bet-Japaneae home
ltlandt Ind outpoata CMK• .....
Ii) Olla. EASY
Fritz Fald dlsCuSMS Ills
long end active acting
~: Or. Wllllern L-.
••Plain• ttt. HMllCff
"Hoepce" pr<Wlde9; the
value of eerclM for older
~•: )czz musician
Eddie Ouren nncn comfort
In hit mlnlc.. (R) t:CIO. (J) MOVIE
••• "The Amalng How-
wG Hughw" (1917) Tom-
my lee JonM. Ed ~
ers. The life end ear.. of
one al the worid'• most
weetlhy Ind eccentric men
Is tr**', (Pwt 2 of 2) (R) 8 8PEOAL
"Ceuglltl" Three daring
20th-<:entury crimes: the
$2 15 minion Brin111 rob-
bery that occurred on
January, 17 1959 In
Botton: the half·mllllon
dollar bank truck tiold-up
1t St. Anthony's Church tn
P1tenon. N.J.; the I 10
mllllon looting of the
The complaint charged that
Hamilton art1f1cially innated the
price or IPM Technology stock
in April 1976. The SEC said he
bought the stock and then urged
his accountant and an uniden·
tified female acquaintance to
purchase stock in the company
while at the same time entering
orders to sell his stock.
Ric hard Thomas consoles Verdie Foster when he returns
to Wa lton's Mountain, only to find the rural community is
suffering from dismal economic conditions. The two-hour
episode of "The Waltons" will be broadcast Thursday at 8
p.m. on Channel 2.
TUBE TOPPERS
KTLA • 8:00 · .. Calloway·s Climb.•· Patrick O'Neal and Mariette
Hartley tell of drama on a dangerous
peak in Yosemite .
KTLA e 9:00-"Caught!" Three
daring robberies that occurred during the 20th century are profiled. •
KCET @ 9: 30 · "Sarah." Zoe
Caldwell depicts the French actress
Sarah Bernhart on "Great
Performances.··
Sodet9 a..•'" Ha. • tll CMAN.IE'8
AHGll8
"Utile Angefs 0t Tiie
Hight'' Tlla ~ move
Into a br04MI to ~
O'de tM f'llY'lertou8 deethl
C)f two of It• molt popAer
t-U.(A) 0 M.LYOIWWI
c..J8ADI
• Mf.JWGMfff ~ Aober1 l<elln. Bet·
1y ~ Kay Sllrr. Tlppl
Hadrerl. No9t MarWlall. e VICTORY AT MA
"The Fate Of Europe" The
deatNCllon Of Ille Allla
loroee In Ewop9 and the
COll'C)M of Hitler'• ...,.,.
medllne It depicted. G l\IENING AT POtt9
Ciu.ic.1 gultarllt Anoaf
Romero performa Vll/aldl't
"Conoarto de A.._,,j\IU."
t:tO • ORA&. AOllEAT
SPECIAL
• GREAT
NAFOMWltCH
"Swell" The turtlulent hie
and tempeatuous mooda
of Frend\ acireM Sarai!
e.mhardl are ponrayed tit Zoe Ctldwlll.
10:GO D POUCE WOMAN
"SWMt Klthlean" p..,.,_
andUwe~bylN
conlBdlt:lory ttatementa
of the onty two wftMIMa
10 1 rol>tlwy. (R) II~,
HUTCH
"Hutchlnaon • Murder
One" Hutc:t1'1 ••-wife'•
visit ..._ him wltll a
1tolen diamond and a mur-
der •arrant for IN• arr .. 1.
~ Bill MCM.AS' JOURNAL
"The Very Remarkable
Yamato Famlly" Modern
Japan and lt1 people ere
examined. (P9'1 2 ot 2) (R)
tO::IO •• HEW8 W1LOEA. WlLDEA
Few of Thornton Wilder's
Mtty playl on rMglow I morw themes ... Pf-I·
ed. 1 1:001=~
S1'YL&
"LOW And 0.. Old Mom
And Ced" Elle and 8111 ...
~ rnatttal ~
"love A"d The
Playwright" Bill llUbfect•
1119 wh 10 urlUIUll litua.
tlOna.
• MOv.
• •~ "ptro" (1983) s.ry
Sullivan. Marth• Hyef.
Af1w loelnQ hie wife and
c~ '111 • fire. • dildlgllred
m.n plots to avenge their
deattlt, (2 hrs.) '8 THE ODO OOUP\..l
F911• unabuhedly pre-
parea 10 ~ ,,.. lead
role In • ~ perform-
ance wtlen tile lead csanoer
doeln'I lhOw up. e FEANWOOO 2NIOHT
~ MIL Rultl Ovnbat
anc1i.~.~
McCormick. Harold
Ctemerlt ........ LMlan IAttl-more. e DICK CAVETT
Guest: Kenneth T)'ltall,
attic. 911thor, ~ '°"""'
lil«aty dlrKtor of lhe
Natlonal Theatre In
El'lgland. (Per1 2 of 2) ( R)
• MACHEL I &.8fRER
~
11:30 e ()) U.8. OPEN
T8N8
Hlohliotrt• of the Clay' I
actlvltl• In this tourna-
ment from Auslllftg Mead-
ow Park In Cor°"9. New
YM. 8 IESTOFC~
Ho11: Johnny Carson.
Gueat1. Tom -Snfder,
S4.lufine Pleehette, l<.rty
Garrett. Dr. Paul Eh11ch.
TONIGHT:S l!ATEST LISTINGS
i NIUQK'f lONI.
A ~ trlMlllf llndlt • ...,,.... ~ ..
-of~ • 0 '°'-'CaST'OfW
''OIW' A pOllot Clflief -.,.
~ WI 111 llf'"IMion ptot
ltld i>olfttc:el ' --In °"* to ~ at an
lrnpof1ant meettno. (R)
• HOGAH'I HMOU
~ U1Cllt KIWI Into
~ e F'*'Clft pilot'•
~. • CIST-.wn'
Mu end 9t '""" ....... • dMdly .a.ntHlo ltl90fY
f'rgft'I KAO&.
• CUTIONID \IWOMD ..weTONGHT"
11:41. (I) HAWAI ""54
"TM FlnlahlnO Toucfl"
McGerret1 ~ • eorg.y ""9 6MlirlQ In QO\'-
emmlnt aacut1t* (fU
J.l>RNING
12:00. TWIUOKT ZX>HE
A piano, oi-M a 1*1'1-
ct.,,~. bat a-~ ~owrl'-wtio.._
tentol1. 1 ::::::.-
Aalpll and Ed try to oac on
the good tide C)f • but
cornpeny ft41CUt!Ye
t2:IO 8 MOYIE
• • • "Tiie AccuM<I"
( 1948) Loretta Youno.
Robert CUmmingl. A pey-
dlOlogy ~ oomee
under IUlplCIOn Of murder
(I hr., 25 min.)
8) MOVIE • * "~ "Wolf Larsen" ( 1958) Barry Sullivan,
Peter Olevte. A brutal ...
capCa/f'I ftgfllt aQCJ<OeChlng
bllndneel ~ mu11ny. ( 1
hr .. 30 min)
• MOVIE * * "Impact" ( 1949) Brian
Oonlevy, Ella RalMa. A
woman'• plot to murdet
her hulbanCS beckflf-. ( 1
tv .. 30min.) 12::$7. QJ l.EOENO °" ntl
11.ACKHANO
1n me t890'•· • rnurderout
Sldllan noblemen c:llal-
~ a memb9' of 1t1e
MCfwt Met In.~
tary r-(Part 4 of 5l
12:118 (J) 088 LATE MOYIE * * "The lllll Eac:.tc>e"
( 19701 Stuart Whitman.
JofMI Col1in An Amel1can
epy attempt• to ttnuOO'e •
rocket ••~ out ot WW II
Gennany 1:00 e TI>MOMOW
Guest· Theodore Whl1a.
author of "In Searefl Of History ..
G MAVENC*<
"Accotdmg To Hoyle"
1:46• HEWS
Tlt•r•da9'•
Da111I~ Mo.,ln.
K>RNING '-
'1:30. • * ·~ "In A lonely Place" (111501 ~
Bogart. Gloria Of'8tlMla. A
~--felle In IOl9 with • flelgllbor who ........
...,,.. an lllbl ""*' Ila ,.
acCVMO OI murder. (2 tww.,
20mln.)
AFTERNOON
12'00 •••• "Slttlno PNtty"
( 194a) Clifton W.atl, Rob-
9'1 YounQ. Art enoocy,
mlddl•·ao•d "~lu•" •
provea to be .,. 9llClllent
b4lby9ltW. ( 1 nr .. 30 min.I l.'009 ••• Ulolllng"(tt70)
George SeQal, EV. ....._ •
SIMnt. A~ ar1llt le
obeanled by guastl .. a
awinglng party aa he m•• I0¥9 to a -b•lore cloaed-clrcull
c:ameru. ( I hr .. 30 min.)
~ ••• * "Ole, Ole My
Dering" ( I 9651 T allulllh
Bankhead. Stetenle
Powers. A dllmenled "'°'""
an lmc>mont the tonner
flllnCM of II« dead '°"'
planning to kilt her. ( I hr ••
30 '""'.)
Early Wllder Filmed
TV Presenu Pl.ays 'lmpossibk' to Stage
By JAY SHARBUTI'
LOS ANGELES <AP> -The
dramas you see on public TV
\lSually are made in New York.
here and London. But now, the
Midwest will be checking in with
a half·hour work from WHA-TV in Madison, Wis.
It's "Wilder Wilder," consist-
ing of four short plays by a
Madison lad who made good -
the late Thornton Wilder, author
or such classics as "Our Town"
and "By the Skin of Our Teeth."
IT WUJ.. BE shown tonight at
10 :30 p.m. and Monday at 9:30
p.m. on Channel 28 and Is a pilot
for a possible series of dramas
by Midwest playwrights. It will
be repeated at 3 p.m . on Tues-
day.
The program's wee plays
aren't too well-known . They're
"The F1i'!ht into E.zvot." "Now The Servant's Name Wa ~
Male hus." "The Pe nny That
Beauty Spent" and "And the Sea
Shall Give Up I&s Dead."
Performed by members of the
Milwaukee Repertory Theater,
the dramas come from a collec·
...........
IN THORNTON WILDER PLA YLET FOR PUBLIC TV
John Mansfield (Front), Jim Pickering lion of Wilder's early writings,
·'The Aneel 'Ibal Troubled ~ Comeback for Actres& w::: .. :::::~·:~AVS
""were thought Impossible to put
Then. fie said, J"ofin nmon.
a rtistic direc tor o t t h e
Milwaukee Rep, perused the
"Angel" collection, picked four
or the book's 16 plays, and sum·
mooed his players for re-
hearsals.
"Affair in the Atr," was-OR-PBS.
this s ummer. said ttre world ·
ending "Sea" segment was his
hardest task.
on stage, says producer.director E .J.: -Ada s·-~ . NBC-'T'l"J' ... . Rudi Goldman , because oot only (LIB Tn8 MU I l>ng lll .6.. ,, 1F.6..0VW were they brief but also each
By JAY SHARBUTI'
LOS ANGELES <AP> -Edie
Adams said she's jusa bougtat a
out farm. "It's really a nut
farm, an almond farm up near
Bakersfield.."
'Tllat ~ .. _-.all tht .blonde -ae-
trna-slnger has done lately.'Srie also is returning. with great
vigor, lo what some consider
another kind of nut farm -TV
acting -aft.er a leave or some 15 years.
SHE SAID SHE'S spent. those
years mainly on the road, play-
ing summer stock and working
clubs in L as Vegas and
els ewhere wath her second
husband, Pete CandoU, the jau
tnlmpeter.
But lhiB fall she stars ln an
NBC movie, "Fast Friends," playlnt a ·
once-big
1ln1er whose
career laded
on account ot
drlnk -she
gets a l«OOd
chance when
sbc'1 booked
oo a TV tallt
&bn'e·n aJso ~
be ·= ... rocstp quec tn an e ol NBC'• new "F.ddie Capra" IWDtboe n , u a nmnerolocbt ~CBS' new "Fly·
ing High" and as a voyager on
ABC's "Love Boat."
"I ALWAYS WANT lo be on
television," said Mias A .• widow
of Ernie Kovacs, considered one ~~fumwnen. ''Su\..-What am I now, an old
new face? -rve beett on the
road so long.
"I Just suddenly decided no
more. The agents who book you
on the road don't want you to
stay home because they don't
make as much money if you're
sitting comfonably with your
family in your oYni house.
"I said, 'I don't eare, I'll sell
shoes. I'm not Jeavio1, "' added
the lady, whose last coocentra·
lion of TV work was in the season of '63, when she lta.rred
lo an ABC variety series.
MISS ADAMS, WBO lauibl
easily aod abitritl a llne seme
of tbe abllun:l, nota that if a
performer doesn't keep
perfonrun, tu ffollywood, the in·
mates tend to think ot you as dead or worse.
The attraeUve former Julliard
opera student 1'eCallod one year
in which, after tbl'ft anoatht at
1lnJln1 opera ill three ~IUu, a.he returned to TtnseltoWn to appear tn a bt'neftt show.
"J 'U never fqet •hen tome
Greene lDlroduced me by ..,.
ing, 'And now, here's a lady who after many, many years is re·
turning to her first love -sing-
ing,"' she sighed in mock sor-
row.
WHEN AnE DECIDE D this
ye1r to malce an. frufiislrlil-
strength return to acting, she
said, she did two lbfngs: got a
new agent and unabashedly told
everyone she knew she's off the
road now.
Aeling ofrers ensued. In the
old days, she wryly recalled, she
usually cot aim. ingenue rotes.
Later she was known as tne
Prostitute wtth a Heart of Gold.
But no more.
"Now I'm getting character
part., ma1nly bitchy parts, and I
Jove lt, •: abe said. "Wonder what
\bat means? Well, they're easy to play, And that scaru the bell out of me.'•
8R E ONLY WAS kiddina, but
abe dld recently take a course to
fight a dilrerent fear -ol writ-
tn1. A wiw idea, 11 1bo'1 wrltlnc a book -"Everyone la," she
1hru11 -aboUt ber Ute hi abow bit. •
"They want that lint chapter
and rm tc~ to death," she
U)'S.
The book'• tJLle: "You Can Do
It, Edl-1.''
•
"had a Uberal dose of out.
rageously demanding require·'
ments."
These include, be noted, a
lavish personal jewelry store ·
owned by a French king in
"Penny,'' a talking donkey in
-··&nin"·lDJd tast but not least, th~~d of the worfd lD "Sea. n
But suspicion lurked at WffA.
TV, operated by the UnlversJty
of Wisconsin, that TV might be
able to deal with the visual de-
mands made In these wild, pre.
TV plays of Wilder, he said.
H E SAID TRI show t>eaan
taklna form with class exercfses
Jn reading Wilder's early plays.
The classes were run by Esther
Jackson, a Wilder expert and a
member of \be unlveralty'1
theater department.
·'Before we produced
anythlna, they (students> tried
them o ut In classes and
workshops, tried p\aylnt some
of tbem," Goldman said by
phone from hla office at
WHA-TV.
"And they reallied they, tho
play1 ln Wilder'• 'Ansel' coUec-
t1on1 were very dn maUc, couJd
be aone on televlalon. So l tb1nk
It 1¥11 a discovery proceaa
Lhrouah academia."
Filming started last August
and ended in January. The total
cost, Goldman said, was $90,000
-a sum that would buy a 30-
second prime time commercial
on network TV.
Goldman, a former Air Foree
C-130 transport pilot whose SC·
elaimed ~ation documeatacy -~..--
OnChannelS
lT INVOLVED a decision to
depict. the grand-finale-with.an
explosion instead of a big bang,
much electronic wizardry, and
many con5ultations with the un·
lverslty's chemistry depart·
ment.
Prior to all that, he laughed, "r a I most went nuts. I sat
around in bars asking people.
'How does one destrpy _l_be
Bsrth1'"
'The Dating Game'
Returning "J(Onday
Last year the 'Newlywed Game" made a au~ful retum to Los
Angeles television via KTLA. Thia faU, anotb~r ~taple of the 19605,
"The Dating Game," debuts weeknJgbts at 11 on Channel 5 beginnln'
Monday.
Jtm Lange, host of the orl.atnal series. wblcb aired from 1MS to
1973, rejoins "The Datlng
Game" s how as chief matchmabr.
On "The Datln& Game."
aln1le1 from 16 to 76 get a
chance to select an ideal date by
queationlng lb.tee members of
tb' opposlte sex hidden behind a
~TtJUon. Wlnnl.nc couples a,..
sent on "d.rffm date•" renitna
rrom Intimate dinners to
weekends at romanUc resorts.
"The Datln1 Game" has
be1un tapin1 at Golden We11t
Videotape Division In
Hollywood. SJqles interested In.
becomlnJ contestant• should
Pbone ""I'M Dalio& Game" d · ..
. nee (213) 46'7-l.875from toa.m. ~
p.m .