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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1978-08-31 - Orange Coast Pilot" t I • ... s eace • • • • ort Debate Going Nowhere? . ~ { Speaks to Diplo•ats Pope Vows Peace Search VATICAN CITY (AP> -Pope John Paul 1 vowed to continue tbe work of bis predecessor in the field of human rights, de- tente, disarmament and world peace in his first speech to the diplomatic corps lo the Vatican today. Using a foreign language · French -for the first time In bis five-day pontificate, he ~escl'ibed the Vatican role in in· ternattonal affairs as "unique." "Obviously we have no tern· poral gods to exchange, no economic interests to discuss such as your states have," the pope said. ''Our possibilities for diplomatic interventions are limited and or a special character . . . Our diplomatic missioris . . . far from being a survival from the past, are a witness to our deep seated respect for lawful temporal Power and to our lively interests in the humane causes that the temporal power is intended to ad~ance." The pope said that the Vatican wlll gladly assist "in the search for better solutions to the great problems that see at stake de- ten te, disarmament, peace, justice, humanitarian measures and aid, development, etc." That, the pope added, "ls one appreciable form of cooperation or mutual aid that the Holy See bas the possibility of contribut- t;> niomJ.n,' low clou<Uness wtt.b sunny af. temoon Friday. Not much temperature change. -=-.a·-Lows tonight 60 to 65. 1ttr1u P"r i tf a y rTI> m wound 70 at beaches lo -.,,er--?08 htland. •• INSIDE TODM\' Tlwrt'• lmMthing about a Jaguar that inSJrirea aucla odorotM>n °'"°"" Otarlh• that tu11 •oe /orme~ a club to tlOGP tnformoUon. Su Featuring, Polle Bl. At'fwfllnla AM ..... ,IC_. U ................. ~ u L.M...,. M....... 1•11 ....... .................. ~ Al....._...._ M CtfWt Alt °'"9e c:.e.y A f7 a...-. OflJMe,.. .. o.ecs ., ...,,. N4 =Uf'f -91 MKa...... It ...... AIJT....._ aM ........... ,,,..,,......... .... ,, ..... , Jt,...t....,_ M ,._.. at·IWM111..._ M ing, thanks to the lnternaUonal recopitioin tbat It en}oya and the representation of the whole of the Catholic world that it ensures." Attending the audience were 51 heads of diplomatic missions to the Vatican and their aides. The pope spoke in reply to a con- gratulatory address delivered in French by the dean of the diplomatic corps, Ambassador Julio Antonio Torres Arriola of Guatemala The pope will be inaugurated Sunday, and Vatican sources say he is simplifying the ceremony to emphasize the humility and dedication to re- ligion that be wants to cbarac· terlse bis reign. ,, "It's a matter of getting rid of some or the trappings of the past denoting the pope as a civil ruler or king," the Rev. John Loni of the Vatican Secretariat for Christian Unity said as details of the ceremony were released Wednesday. The pope has chosen to have a thin, circular band of white wool, called a pallium, placed on his shoulders rather than be crowned with the beehive-shaped tiara used for 15 centuries And be will not be carried to or from the ceremony on the traditional (See POPE, Page Ai> Laguna Sued h a st-e-fY o a1una;.>0 Beach on behalf of Costa Men truck driver Delbert Mathieson who was allesedly assaulted by Police Chief Jon Sparks in a tavem June-a:-l!ilatbieson, 32, ls seekini city funds in excess of $$,MO Chief Sparks was fined $500 ln Santa Ana Municipal Court on a single criminal charge of bat· tery in the incident. He has re· turned to full dutiea as police chief in the wake of the bar incl· dent. The claim, reeeived this week by the city, seeks ctamaaes for assault and battery, invasion of privacy, intentional infiiction of emotional distress and also aeeks pUDitive damqes. lhtbielon's attorney. John H. Evenmeyer of NeW1>0rt Beach. said the claims required before a lawsuit can be filed. The City Council u.soally de· niea aucb claims ln routine ac- tion, and relera Lhe claim to ltl Insurance carrier. Tbe clalm comes before LbeCOW\cll Sept. 5. It's a topsy-turvy world for wing-walker Bob Oates. who bottomed up over the Toronto waterfront Wednesday in a practice run for a four-day airshow that opens Friday. Pilot Joe C. Hughes made the picture by remote control from the .., ........... cockpit. A camera ~s attached to the tail or the Super Stearman acrobatic plane by Globe and Mail photographer Dennis Robinson. Hughes is a Hollywood stunt pilot. 30-year ·Unit Dissolved Orange County Sanitation Dis· Tom Woodruff, counsel for the trict No. 8, which served no eight sanitary districts, sald in a Laguna area property owners. ·Its expenses included a few • ar i ad- ministration costs an to each director at rouahly twice-a-year business sessions, Woodrdff wrote. Directors' last More Studies Asked By GOY GaANVILLE .. ...., ......... A debMe over Orange County Airport ended Wednesday virtually where it began five years ago when the county Board ol Supervisors: -Opted to keep commercial jet airliner activity at the airport wider the same wraps that have dictated levels of operation for the past eight years. -Conceded that new environmental impact reports will be needed before any improvemeat projects at the airport can be approved. --Ordered a new study. this time to develop an airport master plan. -Declared that Orange County Airport will forever be a short-haul airport. Airport development p\ans have been bogged down in a rive.year study that led nowhere. Tbe board did declare the $290,000 study adequate to serve as an environmental impact report. In the next breath, however, the board conceded that new reports will be needed to support specific projects, including commercial airline lease renewals. · That concession represented a major victory for Newport Beach. The city insisted the bulky and costly study did not address itself to specific .projects and, therefore, did not fill the legal requirements imposed by the Quality Act. If the pro-airport forces won a point, it was a board order to the county General S e rvices Agenc to prepare new leases ' . operate at Oranae Co~nty' ---• SOCCER CROWD SlJMS PADDEDt Th• Callforma Sunshine bu been paddlnl lta attendance ft1urea, accordlna td an in- veatl1tativ1 report by Daily Ptlot 1port1wrlter Ernie Caatmo. ~ •tor>' on Pac• 83. ' .. 4 San Clemente fire officials are investigating an explosion that lifted a two-ton fire truck off the ground when it ran over a land mine fuse, apparently placed ln the street deliberately to ex- plode when hlt by passlnt vehicles. Fire Manbal Don Hod1son said aafety devlce.s bad been re- moved from the mine fuse on Weal Avenlda P.onlente and from another fuse found nearby . The bu1e truck w11 not damased, but Hoct,son said a smaller vehicle ml1bt have been. U a chlld had found it and lrltd to explode It or take It <See BL.UT, Patt A2> .. Alr1>9rt. <See AIU'ORT, Page AU tta Bull----a.-~--- Salesman Markets By-product NASHVILLE, Tenn. tAPl Howard Marchant admits he's bullish on America . And he hopes tin cans full of the natural fertilizer produced by Georgia bulls will become his pet rock. Marchant, a Sl-year-0ld liquor salesman, sees lots of possibilities for the $3-per·can offering marketed by bis company, 8.S. Sales. "I just woke up one night and was tired qf being poor and didn't have $200,000 to open up a McDonald's," he sald. And be thinks the product is a natural for some markets. .. First, consider Washlngton." he said . ·'Congress should be a prime prospect." ,,...,,,..AJ Economy Due For: Slowdown? AIRPORT ••• Presently. Aar Callfornta. Hu1hes Alrwest and Golden Wm Airlines se operath\g at the airport under month-to:inonth a,..eement.a. Before new ftve-year leases can be approved. however. environmental Impact reports must 'be ~ared and accepted by the board of aupe..-vlaol'B. WAIHINOTON CAP> - Anotber 1overnment report today pointed to a poulblo lowdown In th conomy tn month• ah ad . Tb• indu of lHdln economic tndlcatort dff Un O 7 ~cwt In July. n t drop nee J11DUan. T he tndu t1 4IHt1ned to foreabadow trend• tn the conomy. Wbll a one-month dec nn doea not by lt .. u tsUbli. h • trend. U came ... t • b IJ'OUDd ot other ~conomic atatlallc that also point to al"'"11b 1rvwt11. Man Talks Too Much? DETROIT (AP > -A man has been cbareed with flJ'Sl-dqree murder after watchlna a television report on a slayin1 and aJ ... legedly brag&ln1 that be bad committed lt. Reese Toater, 21. was bound over ror trial Wednesday in Detrolt Recorder 's Court on charges stemming from the fatal shooting Aug. 14 or 64-year -old Philip Fornili. Fornili 's body was found in an alley. He had been shot once in the head, police said. Geraldine Johnson, who identified hcrselr al the preliminary hearing a s To s t er's girlfriend, testified that he told her about the slaying while t h ey watched th e television report. She told Judge Harvey Tennen that Toster added more details t h a n were o n th e newscast Age Upped For Adoptees lnAidBill SACRAMENTO IAP > -A bill that prompted emotional pleas from adopted c hildren and parents has been modified to al· low only 21-year-old adoptees to seek their natural parents. The revised version or SB 5.15 by Sen William Campbell. R- H a c i enda Heights, was ap- proved Wednesday by the stale Assembly by a 43·32 vote, two more than necessary. It also needs Senate approval. The bill, passed in differing versions last spring by both houses. would require the state to keep a registry or adopted children and natural parents who wanted to meet each other. The stalf! would assist in meet- ings when the adopted children reached 21. The Assembly version or the bill had the age at 18, but oppo· nents argued that some 18-year- olds are still in high school and too young to handle the trauma of finding natural parents. The new version also requires all siblings adopted by one fami- ly to be 21 before the older ones can begin the search. Under present law. adopted children can find their natural parents onl y through a com· plicated court process. "I still think it's a bad bill ," sa id Assembly m a n Eugene Gualco. D-Sacramento. who has adopted children. "I think it's going to cause an awful lot of human misery." But the bill was strongly sup. ported by Assemblymen Bruce Young, D-Cerrllos, who was adopted and made the long search for his natural -::..~f ... -~::i=lo,!N~~ • OWl\ll"WI""""~.._...-... =w::-=:"'.:~~"'=·=6:. ~ talft V•ll~Y ''"'"' S•dcU.-.C9' v.u., ..,.,. .._..l .. <AISO..lhCOHI ·~r ........ H; llorl '' CllAllllllH SetvrcMlf\ --"' The 11(111<.I~ OVl>ll~lllQ pl..,I I\ 411 DI WUI 1141¥ .'llI'M Cllla.MllV ~ ...... ·-....... -"'-"'*'-Jicli'll.~ lllco Pft\l<lotnl encl o.-.. Mt- T-11 ll""H Efltor ~ .•. ._ ........ M•nao1nq ldllar a.. .... " Lff• .ldwl ... ,. """ •ultl""I W,..Qlntl.dll°" OtflCH '°''.~"' )J0,.,. .... ,$1_ L•IJvn• hKh 11 .. 0-.,roSI ..... "~"r.:.~:.n.!'W,t~~.':.""' •I S.n D•O<IO fr-y T9Mphone (714>104a2'1 ClenHled Advertl .... iQ.1111 -·11•1 .. yNtMOllk• 611-4110 "'°"'*c..-4IMIOO .. .__.. .. Or_Gwnty~ ... 540-1220 ~··ir~ =. °'.: ~.::::::."":s.= m:Tttr er •t1werttMmefth fwtllft ,..., .,. ......... , ..... _, ~··' "*'"'"" ..... .......... ,_ r.c,~r: ... '.~",.::~~r. .. :·· .. : ,~::. ~·:. ;:r.:..::~"6 :~:~:--My mUllMf ' ' t Tb• 01 ~ dNUne In UM tndlcatora Index In July lolloWed lib lnCl'f'UO Of 0.6 percent in Jun . 1be tut pr vlou1 declln was• l pert nt drop In January u th• economy 1lowed beeau.. ot tho Mvere Winter and lbe coal 1tr lk . The Comm rce Department reported separately Wednesday that new-rectory ordera dropped a.a percent in Jul)'. lb• bl.. t decline In nearly four yean. a nother indlca~ioJ' that the nomy ta en~ a •lowdown period. Tbe Carte r adminlatratlon m1lntalna the economy should 1row at a 3.$ percent annual rate in the second half of the year, enough to keep unemploy- ment from gettJna worse. But the latest 1tall1Uca cast doubt on whether that much a rowth can be achieved. The economy grew at an 8 per· cent annual rate in the second quarter ot the year. and some s lowdown was considered necessary because of the need to help keep lnflalion from gelling worse. Even admini st rati on economists are saying that If in- flation cannot be controlled, a recession could hit the economy some time next year. The decline IQ the U.S. dollar resulting from the huge trade deficits of the past 18 months, in· eluding the $3 billion deficit in July, has been another cause for worry over the economic out- look . 2 Suffocate Under Ground LOS ANGELES <AP > -Two workmen apparently suffocated in an underground telephone ca- ble vault when they were unable to hear their air ventilator's motor stop due to heavy over- head tra ffic on Wils hire Boulevard, authorities say. The blower, which supplies fresh air. malfunctioned and toxic fumes filled the chamber, authorities said Wednesday. The bodies or Johnie Wayne Allen, 23, and John Anthony Con- ti, 19, both of San Diego', were discovered Tuesday afternoon when officers noticed an open manhole. Fro..PageAJ AGENCY ••• Directors were Orange County Supervisor Thom as Riley, Laguna Beach Councilman Jack McDowell and Harold Edwards, a director or the South Coast County Water District. Supervisors approved the dis- sol ulion Wednesday without comment. F,....PaeeAJ POPE ••• portable throne. The "coronation" designation has been removed from the Mass that will be held outdoors in St Peter's Square. as Pope Paul Vi's was. Instead the Vatican says it will be the Mass "solemnly marking the begin- ning of the ministry as Supreme Pastor." Dope Goes (Jp in Smoke State Bureau of Narcotics supervised the burning of about $250.000 wor(h of narcotics and restricted drugs in Hunt· ington Beach on Wednesday. Destroyed we re four pounds of heroin. three pounds of cocaine. two poonds of hashish and has h oil. four pounds or miscellaneo us pills and 113.5 pounds of marijuana. As· sis ting at the burning were Steven Secofs ky. left with clipboard. of the Justice Department and Crist Wagner. also with clipboard. from the West Covina Police Department. U.S. Tests • Another Nuke In Nevada LAS VEGAS, Nev . IAP > -· The seventh announced under- ground nuclear test of the year was detonated today at the sprawling Nevada Test Site. the Department of Energy said. The weapons-related lest. code-named "Panar," had a yield of between 20.000 and 150,000 tons of TNT and was ex· ploded at 7 a.m. There were "no problems. As far as I know. everything was fine." s aid Spokesman Dave Miller. The nuclear device was buried 2,233 feet beneath Pabute Mesa. about 90 miles northwest of here. The test was conducted by the Lawrence Livermore Laboratory of Livermore. Calif. The shot was felt in Las Vegas, Miller said. Two radio stationli reported they felt it at their studios and "I saw coat hangers on the coat rack sway· ing a little bit.·· The shot was the 17th an· nounced since 1963 when the United States signed a treaty banning atmospheric testing. Not all tests are announced. however. Fro• Page A J BLAST ••• apart, the explosion could take his arm off, Hodgson said. There was no apparent al· tempt to sabotage the fire truck, he said, and firemen.driving back to the fire station from a medical aid call said they turned down that street by chance. Hodgson said the fuses were believed .to be from Camp Pendleton , where they are used m training maneuvers. They are an inch in circumference. an inch and a half long and blue in color. Official Praises School Luncheons w ASH l NG TON < A P 1 -• • had any political implications Agriculture Secretary Bob because President Carter is a Bergland says schools can use former peanut farmer. their commodities from Uncle "No way," be replied. "I like Sam to prepare meals just as peanut butter. l told Jimmy tasty as his wife's cooking. Carter ... that peanut butter is "The quality was excellent." good for you." Bergland said Wednesday after After topping his plate with he s ampled a lunc h that other samples -fried chicken. Agriculture Department cooks one-quarter or a )ow-fat ham· prepared to illustrate what 26 burger. com, stewed tomatoes. million childre n will find ln a beef dish containing natural s<1hool cafeterias this fall. juices. and v'anilla pudding •'The cooking is as good as in featuring nonfat dry milk and any home and it's a good lunch. peanut granules -Bergland and it's healthy and it tastes good. Ms . Foreman adjourned to a It's as good as my wife can do nearby room to eat. and she's the world's best cook." Ms. Foreman said the depart· he said. ment 's $2.5 billion schoo l lunch But Bergland acknowledged program gradually is being thalnotallschoolcookstakethe c hanged to provide more painstaking care his department balan~ and nutritio~ menus. used in devising the demonstra· Frwt. for example. as packed tion menu. prepared from com-in natural juices instead of modilies the federal government heavy syrup to reduce s ugar in gives schools. the meals. The lower fat ham· Bergland. followed by Assis· burger -22 percent fat instead tant Secretary Carol Tucker or 24 percent previously -is Foreman and about 100 re· another example. she said. And porters and others. edged less salt is being used in canned through the crowded department beef and poultry given schools. kitchen where the food samples. But fed e ral don at i ons all neatly labeled, were laid out. represent only about 20 percent B~rgland reached for a small of the food served in the 94,000 paper cup of peanut butter and schools participating in the na- crackers, and was asked if that lional school lunch program. Siz new model.: two 12;· • 15~ a 11:· and two 19" (measured dJaqonally). Fe1tunn9 push·buttoo Express Tunan9, reduced power c:oruumption (they all use lea power than • 100.watt light bulb), and a redesigned cbulis for easier servaceabahty. That is where ll all belan In 1973 with the board of 1upervl1ors ponderln• new leases and calllna for a-n elaborate study that ~ help them chart the airport 1 IUture. The study called for Wednesday was proposed by Supervisor Philip Anthony. Anthony specified that the study should define llmlts on the airport's capacity as we I as spell out in detail what roise reduction proarams will entt n. The study should also measure the airport'• compatlblllty "with the surrounding areas." Anthony aald. And in the end, the study to be done by county wotkers should include a rnast.er plan aimed at meettng whatever future demands will be compatible with environmental constraints. In definition. that airport overview is not much different from the study ordered by the board in 1973. ln the end. that $290,000 stiady by consultants Daniel. Mann. J ohnson & Mendenhall was termed adequate by the board but not adequate enough to support specific projects. Speaking ror the Community Airport Council. a pro-airport organization. Joe lrvine termed Wednesday's board actions "a small step forward ·· Newport Beach City Attorney Dennis O"Ne1I said he was reluctant to assess the actions until he had a chance to review t he board minutes. "lt's too soon for a definitive answer because the motions were somewhat confusing. but I have the impression that our point Of view IS prevailing," O'Neil said. "However ... he added, "it doesn't seem that the ultimate solution to the airport problem is at hand." Veteran anti.airport crusader Dan Emory may have won a major point during the debate .Emory argued that.new lease agreements should call 'on lht! airlines to make a purchase commitment for quieter Jets if and when they bit the market. Arter the le ngthy public hearing. Supervisor Thomas Riley said he LS likely to insist on "some sort of provision that will make certain the quietest jets available a re fl ying from Orange County Airport. The board's vote declaring the conl;ultanl 's stud y adequate carried on a 3· 1 vote with Supervisor Ralph Di edrich c1:1sting the lone dissentinJ? vote. ----~-.... ·· New lagbtweagbt. eAq-tO'Clrry 9" model. Barrier• Drop Debbie Perdue or Florida works at her assignment at the U.S. Coast Guard station in Mayport.. Fla. Only 24 of the 707 women in the Coast Guard are on sea duty. but it announced Wednesday that it is in the process of assigning more women to its vessels. See story. Page A14. \..,I, a houl our· I r1•1• I ·' 1·ar ;, 'e•ar 1·1t11 ... 111111·r 1•r1;11•1·1 ion 1•1•111 275 East 17th St. Costa Mesa Phone 642-8882 Store Hour• Daily 9~i.S•t 9-5 30 ~ ........... _, ... For The Very Best Deal You owe It to y011rsetf to cltedl •r=es.ltefor• '°" t [ ' Today'• £1•~. N.Y. Steeb I f ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA . NJC TEN CENTSi ort De·b~te Going Nowhere?; I .. Del" ...... SUfl ~ . ' ~ i. SHERIFF'S CRIME LAB INVESTIGATOR GARY GONZALES INSPECTS DEAD MAN'S CAA Whtte Datsun Discovered In Laguna Beach, Wher• Murder Victim Last Seen Alive l .Mesa Post ! Office Eyes r New HoIDe By MlatAEL PASKEVICB oe • Olllly ...... SYft A florist shop and a new post f office are expected to take root ·in the former Safeway market. 1 on Fairview Road 1n Costa r Mesa. ' It should be official by next Monday, spelling the end of the Orange Avenue postal annex that has been in operation since ' .May 1956, said Lyle VerPlanck, r Costa Mesa's postmaster. f "The Orange Avenue lease ex· ::-plred March 31," Ver Planck ' said today, "but the owner has : been letting us stay on a month ti to month basis until we can find a new place." The new home will be the abandoned Safeway al 2230 I Fairview Road if no one contests City Planning Commission ap-~ proval ·of the move. said city ' planning aide Doug Clark. S The Safeway site. near the in· l. tersection of Fairview and Newport Boulevard. has been vacant tor more than two years. The building Is much larger than the 5,000 square fool ~l office facility at 1683 Orange Ave VerPlanck said the postal service would occupy less than half the building with the rest going to house a florist shop. The owner of the building is involved i,Jl the flower business, he said. J As for the Orange A venue an· f nex, VerPlanck said the owners • plan to tear it down as soon as . ' the 50 postal employees clear out Plans are to put a small <See POSTAL, Page AZ) 'GLAD rrs OVER' WUQ1m Harrie Car Find No Help In CdM Slay Probe Newport Beach police indicated today that the discovery or Corona del Mar murder victim Ruben Martines' car in Laguna Beach Wednesday has led them no closer to the dead man's killer. The car was found parked a few blocks Crom the Coast Inn. where Martinez was last seen alive Sunday night. OCficers believe the car had not been there since Sunday because they searched the area around the hotel earlier and had not found It. An all·points bulletin was issued Monday for the missing car after the battered body of Martinez was discovered in the bedroom of his home at 411 Iris Ave. Police investigators said Kremer to Tell Tra/fWPlan Irvine Co. President Peter Kremer will give an assessment of Newport Beach traffic pro- blems and proposed remedies when be speaks to a breakfast meeting of Harbor Area realtors Sept. 7. • Kremer will outline the com· pany's development plans for Its remaining" Newport Beach land and will detail the company's road proposals that go along with those develooment plans The meeting of the Newport Harbor·Costa Mesa Board of Realtors will be held at 8 a.m. at the Costa Mesa Country Club. -OAKll .._ and Emily Harris pleaded guilty todaJ'. to kidnaRJ!.Ln.&-'-a~ia tteirst lW"yeiii ago. Alameda County Superior Court Judge Stanley P. Golde ac.c•t.ed.J:: ~to a charge ol 1iftn a iid lit sen- tencing for Oct. 3. The original charge of kidnap. ping with bodily harm, which would have eliminated the possibility or parole if convicted, was dismissed after the plea was accepted. Golde said the Harrises, mom· bers of the terrorist Symblonese Liberation Army, would be sen· lenced under the lndetermlnate sentence law thal was ln effect at the Ume of the kidnapping Feb. 4, 1974, which permits parole. The Harrises, smilins broadly, en.tered the courtroom to an out· burst of applau1e from some spectators. ,After the pleas were accepted1 they each Nad brief tmOtlonu statement.I declartna their pride Martinez bad been so viciously bludgeoned that parts of bis brain were exjJOSed. Detectives had hoped that finding the car would lead them to the killer of the 40-year-Old real estate salesman, but those hopes appeared to dim today. The car, a )Vbite Datsun, was found Wednesday morning by Laguna Beach detective Gene · Brooks. who was working on another case at the time. Brooks said he was on his way to interview a witness in connection with his own case. but decided to take the time to drive through the neighborhood where Martinez was last seen alive Sunday night. He spotted the dead man's car parked on Brooks Street near Catalina Street. Newport Beach detective Sam Amburgey indicated no unexpecte d leads were uncovered from the inspection or the car. "We're continuing to talk to the people who knew Martinez and who were with him Sunday night," he said. Defense Pact? JERUSALEM IAPl -Prime Minister Menachem Begin said this afternoon he would accept a , mutual defense pact with the United States, including American military facilities in Israel, but rejected stationing of U.S. troops In the occupied West Bank of the Jordan River. He spoke to American fund raisers three days before leaving for a Middle East summit at Camp David, Md. Harris, sitting on the counsel table and facing the spectators, said that )tis _teellng.s wen comvtn . .~. trurttiere that the uncertafoty ol the past few years is over " The Harrises bad been scheduled to appear on defense motions that a psychiatric ex· aminatlon be ordered ror Miss Hearst and that the Harrises' trial be moved out of Alameda County because or massive publicity. Derense attorneys Susan Jordan and Leonard Welnglass had told Golde In the motion, filed In June, that Miss Hearst surrers from "impaired paycholo~cal makeup." The newspaper heiresa. now 24 and servln1 Ume at a prison ln nearby Pleasanton on a bank robbery conviction, would have been the key witness aaalnlt the Harrlaea. '\ ' Further Studies . Asked By GARY GRANVILLE °' .. Deity l"IMt ltlff A debate over Orange County A~rport ended Wednesday virtually where It began five years ago when the county Board of Supervisors: -Opted to keep commercial jet airliner activity at the airport under the same wraps that have dictated levels or operation for the past eight years. -Conceded that new environmental impact reports will be needed before any improvement projects at the airport can be approved. -Ordered a new study. this time to develop an airport master plan. -Declared that Orange County Airport will forever be a short·haul airport. Airport development plans have been bogged down in a rive·year study that led nowhere . The board did declare the $290,000 study adequate lo serve as an environmental Impact report. In the next breath, however. the board conceded that new reports will be needed to support specific projects. including commercial airline lease renewals. Thal concession represented a major victory for Newport Beach. ' The city insisted the bulky and• costly study did not address itselC to specific projects and. therefore. did oot fall• the legal requirements imposed by the California Environmental Quality Act. Ir the pro-airport forces won a point. it was a board order to the county General Services Agencies to prepare new leases for the three airlines that operate at Orange County Airport. Presently. Air California, Hughes Airwest and Golden West Airlines are operating at the airport under month·to·month agreements. Before new five·year leases can be approved. however. environmenwrt impact reports must be prepared and accepted by the board of supervisors. Thal ls where it all beJtan in <See AIRPORT. Page A2) 2Thugs Roh Mesa Eatery Two men simulated a weapon to rob a Costa Mesa coffee shop of an unknown amount of cash Wednesday evening, police said today. The robbery occurred at 1':53 p.m. at the Denny's Restaurant al· 31-70 Harbor Blvd. near the San Diego Freeway. There were no injuries. Police said two men ap· proached a hostess and de· manded cash. scooped tJp the money and drove away in a late model Chevrolet. PROUD OF ACTION Emtly Harrie Dallf ...... Mafl ...... i BOB PIEHL (IN HAT), BRIAN CHAPMAN RAKE LOT Newport Suffera Clean up El Morro Parking Lot Voluntarily ~ Smefers Tidy f They Clean El Morro Mess · ~ ... By STEVE MITCHELL Of..,. Olllr ,.... Stall Two Corona del Mar s urfers took it upon themselves to clean up an unsightly parking lot used by surfers and other beachgoers at El Morro Elementary School. The parking lot is adJacent to El Morro Beach and Scotchman's Cove. and. on weekends. the asphalt is covered with cars. vans and trash. Bob Piehl, 23. and Brian Chap· man . 22. said they we re watching the sunset from the parking Jot earlier this week when they decided to clean up the mess. So they were out on the lot bright and early Wednesday morning. with rakes and shovels in hand. "We always park in that lot to go s urfing at Old Man's (beneath Morro Rock>.'' Piehl said today. The two surfers piled more than 800 empty beer cans. an as- sortment or liquor bottles. dis· carded chicken cartons. and what Piehl described as a "de· funct beach blanket." onto their Cubans Seek U.S. Entry WASHINGTON IAPl -The Castro government has decided to aitow 48 Cuban political prisoners to seek entry to the ~t.M-eftL s pokesman. T err ence 8 . Adamson. sa1d 300 members of the prisoners' families also are seeking entry to the United States. He said that ultimately as many as 1.000 Cubans may apply Cor entry under the pro· gram. SOCCER CROWD ~PADDED? The California Sunshine has bee n padding its attendance tigures, according to an in· vestlstalive report by Daily Pilot sportswriter Ernie Castillo. See story on Paae 83 ... small pickup and took the m~ f to the dump. .. School officials lauded tbe ef· fort. but said they are going : ahead with plans to fence in the : parking lot. thereby making it in-J accessible to beach visitors. The Laguna Beach Unified 1 School Distract originally ~· planned lo charge for parking, thus providing jobs for students. But the cost of insurance was ! prohibitive, and the district is , working with. the Irvine Co. as well as operators of the Scotchman's Cove lot. and CalTrans to fund the fencing. To date. three of the four parties have agreed to chip in for the $4.600 cost of fencing the lot The district is still awaiting word from CalTrans officials as lo whether that state depart· ment will part1cipate. Piehl said he was unaware un· til Wednesday that the fencing might be going up "'Thal would really be bad news," he ~aid. Buti..al least the lot is clean - at least until this weekend. Prince Unharmed NONG KHAI. Thailand IAPl -A military helicopter carry- ing Thailand's Crown Prince Va- J i r a longkorn was struck by bullets fared by communist in- surgents today but the prince escaped injury, the military command said. cfou . y1 • ternoon Friday. Nol muc~ t e mperature change. Lows tonight 60 lo 65. --- H ig h s Friday from ar"rui-:N-e bea(he:s:-to-.-=-.,._._..--1 upper '70s 1nlan . INSIDE TODJ\ \' There's something about a Jaguar that inspires such adoralton among owners that they've /ormed a club to swap an/ormatzon See Featuring. Page BJ. e ts More Pay Lura Him to 'Ne_w Job a1 IOANNB aBYNO ................ ·~·• MtJUry wroq W1th1 tbls fire department I just c:an'l alfonl to ltay ... Nltlt W•lt• 1pot• qult&lJ. t-1Hrly dUQOOlnted th•l mo- 1neet.a ...,...~he'd t..-..d In lhe bad&• th-. marked blin u a N•*PGft Beach ftremM. Waite, a peramedle w"o joinfll u.. n ... department clOl yHrl l80, quit la l W k &O bttome a t'Oortt&.e f\n ber. ''I can m e • cnon &DOM)' doi"I IAat:· llllllapl••Md. It a protea tbal bu beeA repea'4d MYeral Um• ln lbl ftre and pol departaneall ln Newport 8eatlt at tbe nnrt ol the 1 ar. Normal .urtOon rate bastd on an a"er.,e ol tbt la t thrM nan for bath ~rtmeall ll • c:omblned total ol 10. So rar thla year 23 ma ~• left the two de-partmenu. Tbe dlputun of tmpjoyees l beiDI MeD In tbe clty•a other ~­ partmeats • weU. but lt teems lO be felt moat acutely tn the Ore and police departmenla for a eouple ol reasoo : Firat la lhe fact that the city paya tor the tra1n.lnc of it.a police and ""'employees. A police de· partment 1pokesman esUmated the city spends $10,000 to train a beginnin1 patrolman over a nlne·moatb period until be is ellitble to U1ume patrol duties on bis own. 1be fire trainina cost is about *3,100 over a aeven· week period. In addition, both departments must be staffed 3' boun a day. A police spoke.man saJd the department is functioning with 18 vacant positions. The summer shortage in the patrol· division ................... 'CAN'T AFFORD IT' hrameclc Walle bas meant that detectives who want tbeoveittme pay spend their off days workin1 shifts as patrolmen. Not alJ the 23 departures have been because of lack of pay - six have retired, one left on medical disability and one was kUled in an off-duty hours acci· dent. or the JS who have resianed to seek other jobs, a few have left Southern California expressing dissatisfaction with the lirestyle here. But employee association ac- tivists who are lobbying for bet· ter pay packages say that dis· satisfaction probably wouldn't 're..P.,,eAJ AIRPORT STUDY. • • 1973 with the board of s upervisors pondering new leases and calling for an elaborate study that would help them chart the airport's future. The s tudy called for Wednesday was proposed by Supervisor Philip Antbonv. Anthony specified that the study should define limits on the airport's capacity as well as S'pell out in detail what noise reduction programs will entail. The study should also me~ the airport's compatibility "With the surrounding areas," Anthony •aid. And in the end, the study to be done by county workers should include a master plan aimed at meeting whatever future demands will be compatible with environmentaJ constraints. In definition, that airport overview is not much different from the study ordered by the board in 1973. In the end, that $290,000 study by consultants Daniel, Mann, Johnson & Mendenhall was termed adequate by the board but not adequate enough to support specific projects. Speaking for the Community Airport Council, a pro-airport organization, Joe Irvine termed Wednesday's board actions "a small step forward." Newport Beach City Attorney Dennis O'Neil said he was reluctant to assess the actions until he had a chance to review the board minutes. "It's too soon for a definitive answer because the motions were somewhat confusing, but I have the impression that our point or view is prevatllng, .. O'Neil said. "However," he added, "it doesn't seem that the ultimate solution to the airport problem is at hand." Veteran anti-airport crusader Dan Emory may have won a major point during the debate Emory argued that new lease a re airlines to make a purchase commitment ror quieter jets iC and when they hit the market After tbe lengthy public bearing, Supervisor Thomas Riley said be is likely to insist on "some sort.of provision that will make certain the quietest jets available lire flying from Orange County Airport. The board's vote declaring the consultant's study adequate carried on a 3·1 vole with Supervisor Ralph Die drich • casting the lone dissenting vote. That ballot was followed by a series of 4-0 votes ordering the leases prepared, conceding the need for new environmental impact reports and ordering the new study Supervisor Laurence Schmit was not at Wednesday 's meeting. Age Upped For Adoptees In Aid Bill SACRAMENTO <AP> -A bill that prompted emotional pleas from adopted children and parents bas been modified to al· low only 21-year-old adoptees to seek their natural parents. The revised version of SB SSS by Sen. William Campbell, R· Hacienda Heights, was ap- proved Wednesday by the state Assembly by a 43-32 vote, two more than necessary. It also needs Senate approval. The bill, passed in differing versions last spring by both houses, would require the state to keep a registry of adopted children and natural parents who wanted to meet each other. The state would assist in meet- ings when the adopted children reached 21. The Assembly version of the bill had the age at 18, but oppo- nents argued that some 18-fear- olds are still in high schoo and o finding natural parents. bave Md to ao many departures ll pay waan 'l an inue . W altt, one or the actlvi1ta In the clty'1 P\re Flibtero Aasocla· tlon. contenda hls pay carries about lhe same buying power to- day ea it dkl eiaht years ago. The dllference la that ln thole tlaM yeara he's satned In Hnlorlty. been promoted to •n1lneer and become a paramedic, all or which put him In hl1her P4f. brackets. "My tate home pay after tax· ea, never mlnd credit union or any of that ltuff. ls $230 a week." he said. "Ny wife makes more beine a pa rt-time nurse at Hoae Memorial Hospital." Waite, once voted the fireman of the year for a dra matic rescue or two men injured in a helicopter crash, said that, if aiven the financial choice. he would continue his work as a medic. · 'Tbere•s a lot or reward in helping people. That's why I became a fireman in the first place." be said. Waite aaid be tried to stay with the department bl working on bis days off. ·•But at just got too bard to be up 24 hours <for a 'shift as a medic> then work the next day. "I decided to leave because I bonesUy don 'l see any relier. There's jusl no future for me workinsllketbis." Police and fire employees this sprin1 lobbied for pay raises that would put them near the top. Whatever .ground they gained was lost when councilmen voted a salary freeze after passage of Proposition 13. According to surveys pre - pared jointly by tbe city ad· ministration and the police and fire fighters associations, the total pay and benefit packages given by Newport Beach Jags well behind others offered in Orange County. Those surveys, prepared this sprin&. list police and fire pay packages at 14th in the county. There are a total of 25 law en· forcement agencies and 17 fare fighting agencies. For example, the fire fighters s urvey, prepared in March, showed that a fire-fighter in Anaheim made a monthly average of $2,026, counting pay and benefits, the top package in the county. Second was Santa Ana with a combined total of $2,025 and third was Huntington Beach with a total package of $1,885 a month. Newport's total attbe timewas$1,602. lo tbe police pay s urvey. Anaheim again was the county's top-paying agency. offering beginning patrolme n a total package worth $2,149 a month. Irvine was second at $2,117 and Santa Ana was third at $2,040. Newport Beach's pay package ror a beginning patrolman at the time totalled $1,814. Personnel Director Wayne Scbwammel, who supplied the statistics, pointed out that since the surveys were made, the value of the Newport package has Increased to $1,695 for firefighters and $1,920 for police because of an improved retire- ment system those agencies negotiatedinl977. . However, he aJso conceded that the other agencies above Newport Beach on the two sur· vey lists also have probably in- creased the value of their pay packets through better benefits or pay raises. W alte said he hopes be can find a job as a medic or fireman with another agency that pays better, aJthough he conceded the better-paying jobs are nearly impossible to come by. "It's really too bad we've got this kind of a situation," he said. "I personally don't think it's the departme nt beads' fault. They 're doing the best they can .. "But it's really a shaf!ll when you ·ve got experienced I>eoJ>k mo PD too because they don't see a future with the city." s The new version also requires all siblings adopted by one fami- ly to be 21 before the older ones Under present law, adopted ~re can begin the search. r ----r Ba.ck; ~LM!ilill-~~~c~bi~·~1dr~en~~~~~~~t;b·r~n~~~r."~~~ ;-..,,;;°':1:. CM•• 6.11i "'*-.. "'~ .. (..: puc:l'ed court process. ~ m-aees l ssues -·-~~ .. ~nr.;:~~~ "I still think it's a bad bill," _w ASHINGTON J~P>,;:;: Look: -~ ......... ...,........,llNc" "--said As enib'r}'man ·Eug.,ne ing rested and fit, President ~·..:~ .. :s;::c..~==::. Gualco, D-5acramento, who bas Carter ls back early from bis "°" ,, -·-'91urun -"-" ~ adopted children ... I think it's 'Western bottday-to-wrestt"e-Mth ~-~~'!.~.:..· -"" fI!!f lo cause an awful lot of · mQol' illua. that.. toncelvably· "'01=:=-ufuf ~~as strongly sup-could make or break Ills -acl-111<.~"!;= .. ,,,._... ported by Assemblymen Bruce mlnlatratioo. '-;:.:,--Young, D·Cerrltos, who was The first item on Carter's n-t•A.M......,. adopted and made the long post-Wlcation agenda is the push ...-. ... 01nou1.. search for his natural mother, to win Senate passage or a Ole'::.~.~"'-_.:.~:. 111" and De nni s M angers. D · natural ias price compromise. Offlo•• Huntington Beach, who has an That was the subject or separate L.•~= ~~~=~'="' adopted son. lobbylna sessions at the White .. ...,.,"91.,.. ...... 11m11Hc11ao.. .. ..,o House today with at least 11 IOV· -~;::6~:..1~~ .... ""' """"' ernors and about 100 represen· re1ep11ottecn•>~ Polio Cases Climb tatlves of major natural ias cteutfted Ac1Yent11ntt10o•11 UJers. ,...,_H••lt\'-Ol!lu THE HAGUE, Netherlands ,_":.,.,~ <A p > -Two more cases or polio Reachlnl climactic stages at a •IMIOO w e r e r e p o r t e d i n t h e point when the president is slriv· ,_,_0r_c-ty~,... Netherlands Wednesday. bring· ln1 to boost his popularity and ..,,no ing to 103 the number of vlclima escape a can't-do image are ='1': ~.;,;. C::::,,')"'*'-~ discovered amon1 members ol a 1ucb other issues as Middle East "'•"" ••t4-9i~ .. ,_,,, ,..,.,;;,m.;5 reliiious community in the peace, proepective Income .tax ~=.:..u::=..:;• ._,., '''"" .... •out em province of Zeeland Ci ll Se i 1aruza It(-<tio HU• .. N l41 et C...te MloM a CUtS, \I fV Ce reor • c.111a•••• tw•m••11ot1 ., o""' 11,. who refuse to be vaccinated. lion, water policy and allocation =~::~110 ;~,:-,,_.,.,, """'•'' Dutch officials said. or de~ense funds. ...., ............ FOAMER MARKET TO BECOME MESA POST OFFICE Fairview AOlld Fadllty to Replace Orante Avenue ••nett Huntington Pedestrian Hit by Auto A 21 ·year-old Huntington Beach woman surrered multiple injuries late Wednesday night when she was struck by a car while trying to cross busy Harbor Boulevard in Costa Mesa, police reported today. Anita Marie Ruff, of 19768 Kingwood Lane, was reported ln good condition at UCI Medical Center today. She suffered a broken right leg and lacerations to both feet wbe she was bit by a car driven by 36-year-old Maureen Frances Lawhorn of Newport Beach. Witnesses at a Harbor Boulevard fast food outlet near Wilson Street told police that Miss Russ was attempting to cross Harbor Boulevard at about 10:44 p.m. when she was hit. One witness said the injured woman was wearing dark clothing and apparently did not see the oncoming car. The driver said she did not see the pedestrian until she heard a thud and saw the woman bounce ofr the windsbld of her car. Police said an investigation into the accident will continue. ,,...,.,,.AJ POSTAL ••• shopping center on the site. The closure of the Orange A venue· branch will leave east side residents wit.bout a post of. lice. The city's main branch' la on Adams Avenue in Mesa Verde. The Orange annex bas been serving about 1,300 customers per day. However, even with the switch to tlie vacant market site. VerPlanck said it may only be a temporary move because of in- creased efforts toward mechanization of postal service. "We 're looking at it for at least five years in the future ... be said. After that. the annex may be shut down, leaving the city with just the main branch on Adams. The Fairview Road location is in need of repair and sp~ing up. VerPlaock said it will be between 60 to 90 days before the new postal annex will open to the public. Etna Still Spews CATANIA. Sicily <API - Mount Etna. Europe's tallest volcano, spewed lava. rocks and ashes for the sixth consecutive day Wednesday. SONY~ Six new models: two 12:· a 1s:· a 17;· and two 19" (measured diagonally). Featurin9push·butto0Eapress1\uun9, reduced power oomumption (they all use Jes power than a )()(}watt light bulb), and a redestgned chum for eamer serviceability. Federal lnveatJgators In Las Veeas were trYift1 today to de· termtne the caUH of a charter plane crash Wednesday that kUled 10 people, nine of them Auatralians endlu a montb·lonc ~ of the Unltecf Shtes with a vl1lt tot.as Vegas casinos. The plane, a twin-enalne Piper Navajo Chleftain flown by Las Vegas Airlines. was headed for Orange County Airport wlteo it bellied lnlo a dusty field •bortly after a 7:SO a.m. takeoff. Tbe pUot bu been iclentifted u Charles A. Hemina. •. ol Laa Ve8as. He was a retired Air Force colonel with more tban 6,000 hours ftJlbt time. The Clark County coroner's of. flee identified the dead pusen1ers as: Llllan Bell Clifton, 88. of Sydney; John R. MacLac:han. 53, ol M-=Gregor; Janet Grant MacLachan, SS. llacGre1or: Hazel Adlee Bush . 87, Sbellh"'bour: Lorne Casna Peady. 58, Woywoy: Kenneth Arthur J . Peady, S9, Woywoy: Stanley Marltwell Kannar. 73, Lan Cove. and Leslie Knight, 81, Brisbane. The 10..passenger plane was the last of three that had taken off on a Oigbt to Oran1e County. with members of the Australian tour group. said Don Donohue, a 1pokesman for the airline. The group bad flown to the Grand Canyon from Orange County on Tuesday before going to Las Veaa.s. Las v~f:t Airlines bas no reg-ularly uled runs but rues on an on-call charter basis from Laa Vegas to Grand Canyon and other points in Nevada and CaliFomia. A seven-member investigating team from the National Transportation Safety Board ar- rived in Las Vegas Wednesday night to begin probing for a cause oft.be crash. Newport Man Burglarized A Central Newport resident told police someone slipped into hJs home while be wu gone for two hours Tuesday afternoon - and made off with items he valued at $2,525. Gregory Gendreau s aid bis s tereo equipm ent and a television set were stolen. Gendreau told police he left a second story sliding glass door leading into the home from a balcony open in his absence. Police speculated that was bow the thief or thieves got into the house. Exclua.ve 1hnuron one-gun, one· lens •ystem on all models . ~- ..... ~ .,.--~ .. --.. -..-..- \..,I, ahu111 our· l r1•1• I ', •• ., .. > '1•;11· 1·011 ... uuu•r 11ro11·c·1 iu11 11la11 275 East 17th St • Costa Mesa ...... ............ , .... 2 De.t w ..... c.ta Ir. Phone 642-8882 Store Hours ,2,~ M 1. Sat 9-S 30 ......... --·- For The Very Best, Dea1 Y• owe It to , ....... tod9ecls ...pr1ces. ...... , .. ....,. M.aster °*Ve · VISA 9udgel~lt .. ' l!?ur!dlr· 9uat 31, tm DA!sY PILOT ,ti llatt Ice ltfetaaee EIJIJs -lust a Bit : 'School • ::'.Lunches I /i EXtolled " WASHINGTON <~P> - I •. A1rleulture Secretary Bob Ber11aad N1'I acbooat can UM • tMtr ~modit1e1 trom Uncle ., Sa1n to prepare meals JUSl u ,,,. tut)'• bia wife'1 cooldnt. •• "Tb• qaaall\y was ucellent~" · Beralud u.ld Wednesday after • "I he 1ampled a lunch that .-· Atrieult'*'9 Department coob ., prepared to lllustrate what 218 .':'mllUoa children will flnd ln •. school cafeterias th la fall. · "The cookina is as good as in . any home and it's a aood lunch. ll 's healthy and it tastes 1ood. . It's as good as my wife can do and she's the world's best cook," he said. But Bergland acknowled1ed tbat not all school cooks take the painsta.ldng care his department used in devising the demonstra· . tion menu, prepared from com- 'modlties the federal government gives schools. Snake calla last aprini tripled thou of prevloua 1e.ra and Ollv r ud llil ltalf were &lrdlnC tor a summer ftlled with reptiles -especially In south county areu where home construction lt bur1eonln1. Oliver'• tralnlns ottlcer. Dtck aoblllard. •ntlclpated that 1ever1J factors would contrtbute to Ute snake tnfeatatlon: a laraer adult analte population, con· 1tructlon in area formerly in· Dope Goes llp in Smoke • habited by anak and drencbin1 rain t..b&t flooded boles and bur· row1 In more remote canyon areaa. But Oliver 11ld this week his ' organization waa fleldinc more snake reports In May than now. "It's lnterestln1." he said. "Obvlouily. the snakes bave found food more easily than we expeded or people are learning the difference between a gopher Bergland, followed by Assis· ·-· tan( Secretary Carol Tucker •· Foreman and about 100 re· : .. porters and others, edged through the crowded department kitchen where the food samples, all neatly labeled, were laid out. . Bergland reached for a small State Bureau of Narcotics supervised the burning of about $250 ,000 worth of narcotics and restricted drugs in Hunt- ington Beach on Wednesday. Destroyed were four pounds of heroin, three pounds of cocaine, two pounds of hashish and hash oil, four pounds of miscellaneous pills and 113.5 pounds of marijuana. As· sisting at the burning were Steven Secofsky. left with clipboard. of the Justice Department and Crist Wagn.er. also with clipboard. from the West Co\£.ma Police Department. :-. paper cup of peanut butter and . . crackers, and was asked ii that • • 1 had any political lmpllcatlons because President Carter is a former peanut farmer. .. No way," be replied ... , Uke _peanut butter. I told Jim~y : Carter . . . tbat peanut butter as good for you." After topping bis plate with other samples -fried chicken, one-quarter of a low-fat ham- Laguna Faces $5,000 Claim Over Beating Two Libertarians Qualify for Ballot . burger, com, stewed tomatoes, An attorney bas filed a claim ··a beef dish containing natural against the city of Laguna · juices, and vanilla pudding Beach on behalf of Costa Mesa · ·featuring noof at dry milk and truck driver Delbert Mathieson · • peanut granules -Bergland and who was allegedly assaulted by Ms. Foreman adjourned to a Police Chief Jon Sparks in a ·nearby room to eat. tavern June 29. Ms. Foreman said the depart-Mathieson, 32, is seeking city ment 's S2.5 billion school lunch funds in excess of $5,000. • program gradually is being Chief Sparks was fined $500 in ··changed to provide more Santa Ana Municipal Court on a . balanced and nutritious menus. single criminal charge of bat· Fruit, for example, is packed tery ln the incident. He has re- ., in natural juices instead of turned to full duties as police •,•:heavy syrup to reduce s ugar in chief in &be wake of the bar incl· the meals. The lower fat ham· dent. · burger -· 22 percent fat instead The claim, received this week :-;~.of 24 percent previously -is by the city, seeks damages for >!• another example, she said. And assault and battery, invasion or l: less salt is being used in canned privacy, intentional infliction or ·~ beef and poultry given schools. emotional distress and also ~. But f e d e ral donations seekspunitivedamages. ~ represent only about 20 percent Matbieson's attorney, John H. {t of the food served in tbe 94,000 E f N rt B h ~· schools participating in the na· versmeyer 0 ewpo eac · ·:! tional school lunch program. f:~s~~~=:J!1.uired before a :! The City Council usually de· .: nies such claims in routine ac--. V-~oed Free tion, and refers the claim to its Two Libertarian candidates in the Orange Coast area have been qualified by the county Registrar of Voters to appear on tbe Nov· embe r general election ballot. David Bergland, a Costa Mesa attorney and law professor, will oppose Republican John Scbn'Utz and Democrat Ron Cordova in the 36th State Senate District. Jim Gallagher, a Sunset Beach "lax protester," will appear on the ballot in the 73rd Assembly Dis trict and oppose incumbent Democrat Dennis Mangers and Republican Chuck Gibson. Bergland was the Libertarian Party's vice presidential can· didate in 1976. Supervisors Vote to End Idle District ;: ~......_, . insurance ca rrier. The claim :: comesbeforetheCouncilSept.S. o Co t s 't t. Dis ·::· In Abortion range un y aru a ion . trict No. 8, which served no •• purpose when it was created in He received, nationwide, the third highest number of votes for that office. While circulating petitions to have his name placed on the ballot, Bergland has complained that he has not shared the can- didates' platform with rivals Cordova and Schmitz. Now that the registrar has certified the required 10,853 voters' signatures supporting his. candidacy were in order, Bergland is expected to become a full time candidate. Gallagher needed only ' 4,939 qualified voters' signatures to make it to the ballot. Registrar of Voters Al Olson said the signatures were ln order and or· dered bis name placed on the ballot. snake and a rattlesnake " ... He warned, tbouah. that the test of previous predictions would come thi'J fall -by late September, probably -wbeo rattlesnakes tradJUonally end their aearchn for water on backyard swimmln1 pool clecb. So far th1a year. Mission Com· munlty Hospital ln rapidly de- veloplntr Mission Viejo re-porta treatin1 anly two 1oatebite ftc.. Um1. San Clemente G taeral Hotpltal repoirU ~ aDd &db Coast Community ~tal in South t.quna bu rec oaly one victim. Saddleback Community Hospital baa treated fow vtc· tlms. Two were bosplltillled. The other two, lncludlna lls. Chaves, were &reated ln emer1ency rooms and relealecl. Spealcs to Dlplolllat• .Pope Vo~s / Peace Search VATICAN CITY (AP> -Pope John Paul I vowed to continue the work of his pl'edecessor in the field of human rights, de· tente, disarmament and world peace in his first speech to the diplomatic corps to the Vatican today. fRelated story. All> Using a foreign language - French -for the first time ln his five·day pontificate. he 'described the Vatican role ln in· ternational affairs as "unique." •'Obviously we have no tem· poral gods to exchange, no economic interests to discuss such as your states have.'' the pope said. "Our possibilities for diplomatic interventions are limited and of a special character . . . Our diplomatic missions ... far from belng a survival from tbe past. are a witness to our deep seated respect for lawful temporal · power and to our lively Interests in the humane causes that the temporal power is intended to advance." The pope said that the Vatican will gladly assist "in the search for better solutions to the great problems that see at stake de· tente, disarmament. peace. justice, humanitarian measures and aid, development, etc." That, tbe pope added, "is ooe appreciable form of cooperation or mutual aid that the Holy See has the possibility of contrlbut· ing. thanks to the international recognition that it enjoys and the representation of the whole of the Catholic world that it ensures." Attending the audience were 51 beads of diplomatic missions to the Vatican and their aides. The pope spoke in reply to a con· gratuJatory address delivered in French by the dean of the diplomatic corps, Ambassador Julio Antonio Torres Arriola of Guatemala. The pope will be inaugurated Sunday, and Vatican sources say he is simplifying the ceremony to emphasize the humility and dedication to re· ligion that be wants to charac· terize bis reign. "It's a matter of getting rid of some or the trappings of the past denoting the pope as a civil ruler or king," the Rev. John Long of the Vatican Secretariat for Christian Unity said as details of ··----GOAL: WORLD PEACE John P8ul I Vows Aid the ceremony were released Wednesday. The pope bas ehosen to bave a thin, circular band of white wool, called a pallium. placed on bis shoulders rather than be crowned with tbe beehive-shaped tiara used for 15centuries. ADll• will net be carried to or from tbe ceremony on tbe traditiooal portable throne. The "eoronatlon° 4esignatten has been removed frem tbe Mass that will be held otlldoen In St. Peter'• Sqall"e, as ~ Paul Vi's was. Instead the Vatican ~ it will be ~Mass "solemnly marking tbe begin- ning of the ministry as Supreme Pastor ... U.S. Aide Fired WASHINGTON CAP> -A staff aide to the Republican minority on the Senate Budget Committee was fired after be visited Japan and angered U.S. Ambassador Mike Mansfield, by his "lack of discretion" accord· ing lo a report published by tbe W ashingten Star today. · FLOOR SA.MPLE CHAIR SALE! ~ Rare Disease 1948 and found no function dur· :: BOWLING GREEN, Ky. (AP> ing the past 30 years, was dis· :: -Her ordeal over , Marla solved Wednesday by county :: Elaine Pitchford, acquitted of. a d supervisors. Reg. 279. to 395. N 0 JJ7 199 • •• charge of performing an abor· In~estig• ate The district was created in :: tion on herself, burst into tears · •' 1948, along with seven other •. and said she hadn't believed a t i·t t'on d1'stn·cts i·n •• BOSTON <AP> -Leglon· coun y san a I ' :·· jury would send a woman to jail n8l're's .a:--..... is suspected in a case It was needed to serve the •!· .. for something like this.•• W6Ca.;n;; • g pulat1·on 1·n a 6 '"'"' ... pneumonia-type illness that growm po ,.....,. ~ The slende r , red·haired struck seven persons who vaca· acre Laguna Beach area. ~~ former psychology stude nt, tioned together ori Martha's Al the time developed regions ::: charged with abortinl( her fetus Vineyard this month, the Boston already were served by the ,, itb 8 knlttt:ns-neectletwaA1S!t--fl6tl.lo11hli"'ftmnirt...,~---S ... n.... I n«u:na-- !O? rounarnnocent Wednesday Tiineffinrom!rtar"Dl~mr---!'!~~D-:~":-.,_.-----s' :S reason or insanity by a jury Control in Atlanta sent two Sanitary District • • ~ h h · 1 The Aliso Water Management :~ hwbich deliberated less t an an epidemiologists to t e is and Agency erased the possibility -~ our. Wednesday to investigate the ill· the district would be needed for ~ 'fied ness, the Globe reported today. ~· Her former fiance testt l .. We do DOl yet know whether future growth when it was creat- :.: against her during the trial to . • e in W72 t.o serve future re· ..L~'·.;;;·~~~~·~;...;;..::.M~.__~~1!~¥.tbat~;tt~l~~~nat~.~.the'~~.~1~~iilfti;iii~Tiiti~enir~~G;.r:a!ee~·fU1~fu~deslgned ,,,.. :?t Pltcbford's defebse ·:tttotney Globe quoted Dr. Steven needs. wlthau..-t..construction ~ says it may bave been bis Tom Woodruff counsel for the .,....v Come In Early for Best Selection • T e utsch, one ef th e in· • Thesecha1'rsbeaut1"fully -: testimony that "tipped the · ht ·tary dist · ts aid in a • 1 ·d " vestigators, as saying. eig sam · nc • s enhan"'-by meticulous tailoring ·~ sea es on our s1 e. report to supervisors the district ~ ·-. ha d been inactive and In· to give you lavish comfort. \: operative since its creation. ~... Bl 'f.lm cUstrlct sp~ut--Someareone :: as "l~ durfng its history. ~ _,,_~.,..a tttnd .~ · ported by a one-time lO·cent mx') •' levy imposed ln the 1950's on ::· Clemente Land Mi·ne Set Laguna area property owners. •, lls expenses included a few .. •• legal fees, $600-a -year in ad-!• mlnlstrallon costs and $25 paid ~ San Clemente fire officials are tried to explode lt or take lt to each director at roughly :anvestigatlni an explosion that apart, the exptosion could take twice-a.year business sessions, •:fitted a two-ton fire truck off the his arm off, Hodgson said. Woodruff wrote. :: ground when lt ran over a land There was no apparent al· Directors' last meeting was :: mine fuse, apparently placed in tempt to sabotage the fire truck, May 24 when minutes showed :~the street deliberately to ex-he s aid, and firemen.drivin1 they approved dissolution of -the ::: pl ode when hit b y pasaln1 back to the fire station from a dlstricL ;:. ve~~~~esYarshal Don Hodgson medical aid call said they turned Directors were Orange County ·.:.·s aid safety devices had been re-down that street by chance. Supervisor Thomas Riley. Hod aid th r .. •es we-Laguna Beach Councilman Jack ;:; moved from the mine ruse on l500 1 e ..... •" M o 11 and H Id ~d ~--•:·west Avenlda Ponlente ~nd believed to be froDl Camp c owe aro .. w .. "'"'. .. b Pendleton, where they are used a director or the South Coast ·~from another fuse found near Y· Tb County Water District. 8~Tbe busc truck was not in tralning maneuven. ey are Supervilon approved the dis· g ama1ed, bat Hodooo 181d • an lncb in clreumlerence, an aolutloo We dnesday witbout ;: maller .chicle ml1ht have lnoh and a balf lona and blue in comment. 'S n. lf a ebal had found lt and c.'o1or. ~ ~·· ~ " . I •Some are pairs •Some are swivel rockers HJ.GAR~Elf'~ f llRNffURE PROFESSIONAL Open Mon. 2215 HARBOR BLVD. INTERIOR DESIGNERS Thul'1. & Fri. Eves. COSTA MESA, CALIF.~:i'J~~~~~ a'·~-'- • .... r Q wl ... ~ ~-~~~~( Muplalae .. LAR~Revolt -TaCMJ'81.& IN .. 00 QTY: Abnactlv. 11 1 clear w11bbadl from the puuce ol property l1Jl·reducln8 ProPGS Uon u. we ftlld toda1 tb.ll ow nellhbon tn the clty ot Loa Anaetea bne .clopted not eootroll. Thi action· I aves you wwUl a l.Ot ol qlMIUoa marlta. , WlU this w bback from Propolltlon 11 now w11b over Into OrU\19 ~! U Or-..~ doet DO& adoDt not control•. wlU the renter populaUan atart ahlftlna bac'k to th• ~tty! ' What lb m an to the apartment c\l.on ln· du try? Suddenly, there are a tot ol questionl. PSUAPS 'Ills AcnON by th• LOI An•••• Clty Councll and MQOr Tom Bradley ll Ul·edvlled. ~conomlc aavanta surety wlll be 1tudytq lhia ~t control action In depth. How, for uample, ea JOU coat.rot one Htmtnt of tbe economy and lpore alt UM ot,bera? You tell the landlord hla Income ll h'olen. But you do not freeae hl• main· ce COit.i, hl• utlllt.y bllla or any of hla penonal ex- pe ea at the irocery aton or auoune pump. On the other hand, you can clearly see bow this rent freeu happened. • LA&GE PBOlllSES WEBE made by either statement or Innuendo that renters would benefit from the pusaae of Rent Control Qtuation Touches Off Lively Dtacwaion Proposition 13. ProPonents assured renters that they would share in the property tax bonanza. They were left to believe that rents might even roll back. At worst, the rent tab wouldn't be going up. · Yet hardly had the smoke cleared after elecllon day than some landlords started sending out notices of rent in- creases. Some or the notes even seemed to have an ar- rogant tone about them. You suspect there Is very little arrogance being dis- played by members of the apartment owners association in Los Angeles today. It is true that many apartment and rental unit owners announced plans to share the Proposition 13 tax bonanza with their tenants. BUT IN THE CASE of Los Angeles, a special commit- tee had polled nearly 1,000 renters and found that only 18 percent of them had realized any relief since the passage of Proposition 13. That set the wheels of rent control in mo- tion. - What apparently happened was that far too mam landlords failed to read the real temper o'f the electorate very well. But the politicians up in LA read it. Faced with massive protests from renters, they acted. Now LA rents are frozen back at May 31 levels. The open question remaining i.s, bow far will the .revolt spread? Australia Rejects Visit From Nixon CANBERRA, Australia IAPl -The government has turned down a request by former President Richard M. Nixon to visit Australia next month and meet with Prime Minister Malcolm Fraser, senior government sources said Thursday. They said the Australian Embassy in Washington told Nixon on Wednesday that a visit in September or October would be "inop· portune" because of a "heavy program" of official visits from other overseas dignitaries. The only visitor mentioned was Brt· lain 's Princess Alexandra, a cousin of Queen Elizabeth II. "IT WOULD RA VE BEEN an official visit in fact even if not in1 name because Mr. Nixon requested meetings with the prime minister and the foreign minister," Andrew Peacock, the sources said. "The repl) was couched in the most polite terms." ,_:92""~~ ~L--·-· - ' 150,000 Kie&' Out -~...-_ _..._,_..._ Teachers Strike .Across Country By die AMocla&ed PNea Some 150,000 acboolchlldren acro.s tbe Uplted Stat.et were without thelr resutar teachers today, and eiaht lndlana teachers wen tn JaJl for ref\ialni to return to work, u labor dllputn opened the 1978 achool year. . The larae.t acbool system struck wu New Orleans. where aome 91t000 PQPRll were affected but acoooa. cemained open. . l'eactter. Wflre also on strike In Mlchli•o. Illinois, Indiana arid Pennsylvania. ·. Otber work 1toppage1 were threatened, the situation In many states mirroring that In Mlcblp.n, where 192 teacher contracu -about 40 percent - were etU1 µp for decision. The laaue aJmoat eneywben waamoney. THE NEW oaLEA-N8 school board called tbe 8 percent wa1e boost 1ou8ht by the United Teachera of New Orteana "economically sulcldal." Of· ficlals said acbooa. would st.a,y open despite the work stoppace. Aulstant auperlntendent SOME SCBOOL BUS drivers were alao on strike, with New Orlean.s bus drivers and main-~ tenance men voting to stop work with the explratton of tbelr con- tract al midnight tonight. In· knox County. Tenn., a strike by county school bus operators cut opening daf atten- da)lc(r ftom the norma 29,000 We.dnesday as only 24 of 181 buses tnveled their regular routes. Kidnapped Envoy's Son Found Dead MEXICO CITY <AP> -The 35·year-old son of Mexico's am- bassador to·the United States has been found dead after being kidnapped by guerrillas who re- portedly demanded $2 million •'for the struggle of the pro· letarlat." A police source said an autopsy showed he was shot once in the leg and bled to death. There was speculation the fatal bullet was fired during a s hootout between bodyguards and the four men and a woman who ambushed Hugo Margain Charles and an American friend Tuesday night near Margain's home on the south side of Mexico City. POLICE SOURCES said the body was found in a field near Chalco, 18 miles from Mexico City, at 8 a.m. Wednesday. some 12 hours later, and taken to the morgue at Chalco. But it was not identified until 10:30 p.m., the sources said. 'IE4CHERS GET FIN SPEUNG NEW OIU.E.\NS fA_P) -An F rorapelllu. One o1 die pleke& alps Histed aloU wben teachers went on strike for blgber pay bere Wednesdayaald: .. GlvetJ1ADn· cent Salary." --Jerry Hart, the school board's chief negotiator. said the board raised lt.s wage increase from $1 million to $2.5 million when negotiations broke oft Wednes· day, while teachers reduced their demand by only $250,000 ln an 8 percent salary Increase. Some 4.200 public school teachers in New Orleans now earn between $10,096 and $15,250 annually. Bus drivers and maintenance workers in New Orleans seek a 7 percent wage increase. The board offered a 4-percent jump. A strike by bus drivers would af· feet some 14,000 public and about 5,000 parochial school stu· dents. STRIK~ ARE PROHIBITED by law in many states, and eight leaders of the Marlon. Ind .• teachers union were jailed on contempt of court charges as a work s toppage by some 335 teachers there entered its third day Wednesday. A judge im· posed fines totaling $16.800 a day. About 335 teachers are on strike in Marion. where the school board has offered a 6.1 percent pay increase and teachers seek a 12 percent wage jump. u ....... REPORTER MYRON FARBER (DARK SHtRn LEAVES JAIL Sentence Stayed Pending Appeal of Contempt Conviction Reporter . Released;--: Appeal Hearing Set · HACKENSACK. N.J . IAP) -After 27 days in the Bergen ! County Jail, reporter Myron Farber or the New Yorlt Times is • " free, pending appeal of a contempt conviction. The New Jersey Supreme Court took jurisdiction of the case Wednesday and ordered civil and criminal penalties against Farber and the Times suspended until the appeal was decided. A hearing is set for Tuesday. "l'M DELIGHTED TO BE OUT," Farber said-. "It's enormously gratifying or the Supreme Court of New Jersey to take up the matter." A $5,000.a-day fine against the nmes also was stayed pending a ruling. "The reason I was in jail is that I did not comply With a massive subpoena for everything I had ln connection with my in- vestigation -confidential material or not," Farber said. "I did what I had to do in the public interest. Any newsman served with a subpC>ena like that would have to do what I did." FARBER REFtJS6D to tum over his files on Dr. Mario Jascalevich, the surgeon charged In the so-called Dr. X murder case. Farber and the Times were convicted on civil and criminal ~ contempt July 24, but it was not until Aug. 4, when appeals of the sentencing were exhausted, that the reporter was jailed. "We are gratified that the New Jersey Supreme Court has de· cided to release Myron Farber and grant us the hearing we have so long sought," said Times publisher Arthur Ochs Sulzberger. Detectives said the body was clad in a suit jacket and un· derwear. and the spot where it was found was relatively free of blood, indicating Margain had been dead some time before the body was dumped there. Pardon Our Pride, but. .. Margain, director of the Institute of Philosophy at the University of Mexico. was riding in his 1972 Dodge with an American friend , Justin Evans, and with bodyguards in a car following. A POLICE REPORT said the Dodge was intercepted by a black Ford Galaxie containing four men and a woman. "When the bodyguards ... tried to intervene," the report said, "the attackers ... opened up with a burst of submachine· gun fire. A bodyguard was wounded. Return fire by the bodyguards also presumably wounded one of the attackers. but th ey all managed to escape." & AgeOCY • i· Great Lakes Cooling ------Huwkane Statm Expecied Today for Ella ,,_ Tempn"atlll"e9 8uffelo O\ovl1ln SC O.keoo ClnclnMll 0-4- 0.IFl.Wlll o. ..... , 0.lf!D'I .,.,_ Honc>IUIU , Hout I Oii *U'vllle Ken•tc11v Les V999a 7• " '2 '° 71 '2 70 ., 1t 60 " .. .. n 7S 5' ., S1 tO 11 ., 14 " 11 11 5' I04 11 w-a .'2 27 ... .. ~ c .. " w-~ -~t..••" s. ....... ,. Occtw4e4 mmm --· === UttteROCll LMAnoe1es ., .. ""11.tef'pflle IS n "" \ell JoM 77 5' -· 11 m "'-Ill• t07 11 Plttlllvrvtt 11 tt .ff """-'*" n ,. McN ... SI. P. ,. ,. .., PerttMCl,Ore. ., '" . ,._ . ~ Netflvllle 11 11 NewOfl-11 1S ·" l'l<hmOftcl " n .O. $1. Lo.ils 10 60 H-YOftl: um NorlOlk " n ta SI. P . T ampe 92 7S ,7' • S.lt L•k• t3 69 Okie. Clly ... , OmelM 11 St Orlando ., 14 ' . .., ... ....., ............ Moo~ II \QI 00 ""' '-__ .., 630 P"' cMllltb97 pM-l'Ol"t:llO'/-ba~ ...... -~11 ....,..00"61 -"°"' _.,.,., ..... -~ ,, .... -yo.,rCOCl'fWlllllt ,,.._.., S.n 01eoo n 10 51111 l'r an tS 5' s .. m. 1• u Tvlw 11 60 WHlllftQlon 90 14 t.00 CM.I'°""'" a...enfletd " 10 Fl'ftflO "t2 Needtfl ,. '" OMlllN 10 ,. SKr_,_ .. J6 leftle aMtaWe '2 SI """"'•' '°' 11 .. "... t02 1• •• .,.,. .. JO ••vtlle ,. 11 CetellN " ., 1!1 Cenlt11 107 11 u Anewt!Md u .M I.Mii .. tell ,, .. ~._,. n .. Oftterle '2 " "•Im lorl-IOJ 14 S-taAM 10 .. 11.s. s__..,, Cool# air ftWWllCI lnlo 1111 UOC>ff OfMI Utllet 1'91110n. Ttmt»t •lur•t drCIPIM« Into tlll 40t In nortllml por • llOftt of MlcllleM end MIN1Ho4e. Fo..cesws a1 1111 Ha11one1 Hur· rk•M Gaftter In Miami Nld II ...... llMIY 111a1 lrvpl<al storm £11• would become e llun1CMll lett tOdey. TIW storm wet 1treng1111111no 1111111 oc .. n IOlllllllHJI of lltfmude tocla• wltll wllldl of IOoml....,_.._,,, SllOWtrt •nd 0<ce1lon•• 1111111· llffltorms ceMlftllM tldey 1..-111e ._, °""" l..IMt ..... ....,. New ·~ _. ..... "" Oulf CNtC ,,_ f'lorklll!MNllltlT- Wtl -•llltf tlM WN rll*'1td ll"IH!I l11U-Mte lnte llOrt"-1.,n HtllrHh tM lrom non11easttrn Ntw Mtxlet llllt IOllllltHltrn Cel«.oe. Stmt ral111llowtrt co1111•.,.C1 111'911911 ttll -1Mm ltKlllel Into l\Of'lfltrll NtvMe -S '*""""'"' UWll. L.11111 .w .. Miii '°' ~ •'"• Ill• CHll Of tllt ~eclflc Hottllwt•I. €aHlonlla A suU•lt alert lor 1111 lnltnci valle~ ., ... WH ls!IM tcxi.y lly lht Air Ouallly MeMQtmen1 Olslrl<I. •'°"9 wllll •11 order tor oil retlnerln 10 in.kt Culb«kS In S4111•1• •missions. y1.i•~-~lo rffuct ....u... ..,...._ .,. to .,.... cant. ~ lllents -.. •t• --•10....-.mulmumuteott-. tulp!MW fwt °''· Tiie pubtk --IMO'to <Ill IN llM of tlt<lrklty. Sc~I .. Id. Sclltnkel wernte1 tNt yl~lll ~~Ill Oli Cos NIQeles ,area. •C1C1ln9 111•1 persons with -'uplralory probltm1 m111111 ••· ~tenet -dlKOmtoft. . aut CletlMe. Ille AQMO eler1 1111 N• tlonal WHU... WvlCe ll"dkltel lhal lollllnyWNINf .... tld.l .... 1161-<Nft--+-~~__.;;.~ Sovtlltfn Ctllfoml• today. € ... iai W'eatlaer NllJlll OtlCI morning IOw clouell wltll ,_., •'*'-tlW'OUOfl f'rldly. Ll11hl varlablt wlnot 11l9ht an11 mornlno ,_..,. H•Clfll f'rkNY trom 70 all>Hchtsto70tlnland. Conl•I ,_,.,.., .. Wiii (tf\99 • bt lwet n •S ano 72. lnl•nCI t•m· peralurH Wiii ranee 11111-n .. MICI 71. Tht ••~ temptrelun will 1111 •1. s-,11...,rwe. ntUQOAV Secellcl IOW t . '2 p.m. U Sec.and hltll •:.., P,M. u 11•1~v f'lrtl low 1. ••.I'll. 0 I f'lnt~ •• ~...... • , St<Otlll '-).14 p.m. •.• S.COllCI llWI •. to .. I'll. ' 1 Sun rlWlt:IS• m.,Mtl7;top.m. Moon r••• Jt• m •• ,.tst·tip.m. Btwlllep•n Hvnllf\OMll htcfl• WtVft t te I ... , •Ith~ ........ (oftdltlof>1 lalr Ntwlllf1 IN<ll1 W-I toet •ltll ectMIMM ,..... --. s...11 11 frem Ult ~t. OllllllUOM t•lr to , ... • Our helpful ad·vlsers are ready to help you. Call 642-5678 DAILY PILOT , [ P£FEN8E ATTO&NBYS •E•d that Black·•. Bea~b .. w re Lbe six made their naked PIJ!lHt. WH not a ''public I>«* ch.. as defined ln tbe law betauaeol its lnaccesaJbillt,y. llack's ls reached by cllmbln1 down steep cliffs or a private roed wtth a Jocked 11te. Kualer asked "why does the city provide Uf eguards If It is not a public beach!" And he or- dered trial to continue for the 1ix today before a jury in bis court. State lawmakers in both houses ha<i a few light mo- ments Wednesday i~ Sacramento when San Diego radio station KGB's chicken mascot dropped in and was honored by the salons. Looking amused as the mascot walked Into the Senate chamber is Sen. John Dunlap. D-Napa. REDDING <APl -Two men aueaedly hired to lddnall a follower of the Rev. Sun MYW\I Moon bave ~ found lnnocent by a Jury foUowtna tnUmony tbat the:;aot the wrona woman. Tlm Jones, 28, of B~na Park, Clifford Danlels. 23, of Chatianoota. Tenn .• were cleared by the Sba1ta County Superior c.oun {ury Wednemay of charges of k dnapptng, false lmprt.ooment and conspiracy. THEY WE R E AaaESTED Jan. 12 with Donald and Martlyn Guth of West Bend. Wls., who were eearctuni for a daughter they said was belie"'.ed hldinl as a follower of Moon's Unification Church. But Instead or their daughter 17-year-old Darlene. tbe two men allegedly picked up a gtrl resembling her and took her to the mobile home In this Northern California town where the parents were waillni. The (;uths were originally charged in the case. but charges were dropped ib return for their testimony against Jones and Daniels. GUTH TOLD THE JURY that he had requested help from a "de·programmer" of sons and daughters considered alienated by unorthodox religlo~a or· . aanlzations. He tald the de· proarammer sent Jones and Danlels to help recover their dauahter. But tbo ,U-1 who wu abducted tqrned out to be Karen Lee Kraus, 22. of BurUnaamei.;,ho told pollce •he wu forced a car ln a Pa.rldna lot. Police eald the abduction occurred 1bortly after they received a complaint from a citlien that members of the Unlflcatloo Cburob were 1elltn1 candy and flowers without a permit. Police said 111" Kraus was released u 1aoa u the Outba re- alised tbe mlatake. Reelaadfteatlon Solfflllt ~anel Doubts Any MIA.s Still Alive ROSEMEAD <AP)'-A conpesalonal fact-ftndi.aa committee that toured Vietnam and Laos will recommend that American servicemen classified as mtsalng·ln-actlon be reelus1fied u tilled· in-action, says Rep. Georae S. Danielson, D-Callf. Danielaoll, a member of tbo committee, said Wednelday after re- tumina from the 11-day trip that he ls convinced there are no American prilonen of war still alive in Southeast Asia. Danielson said he and the other seven congressmen sent by House Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill became rlrmly con· vinced after talks with orficlals or the countries and intema· tional neutral observers. families, but would start death benefits. The congressional delegation brought back to t~e United States t he rema in s c.:· 15 servicemen relea.&4ld t· ..bem by Vietnamese and Laotian aovern- menta. $1 Billion State Tax Cut Becomes Law Senate OKs B~r.gaining "THER E I~ J UST no possibility that these people are still allve," Danielson said . "Whoever we spGke with, in every instance -without excep· tlon -said there are none of these men alive. We've got to recognize the facts of Uf e and bring it llbe uncertainty) to an end." DANIELSON SAID tbe Viet· namese and Laotians •creed to try to recover remains of other American servicemen and the committee ln return agreed to provide data on estimated loca· llona of plane crashes. •'They also expressed a strong desire to normalize relations with the tJntted Stat.es-and com· mence trade with us, .. Danielson said . "We made it clear. however, that we would not pro- vide an)" reparation or construc- tion funds and they accepted that P,«>Sttion." SACRAMENTO IA P I -Gov Edmund Brown Jr. -· a recent convert lo the Proposition 13 crusade -has signed a Republican-style Sl billion cut from the state's income tax bite. The Democratic governor. who is running for re-election this year, signed Wednesday what be describe<I as the biggest state income tax reduction in California history. .. NOT SINCE 111£ income tax was invented have we ever seen a permanent reduction in its provisions so Californians can keep more money in their ·pockets," he said as he affixed his si~nature. ·"This really does help the Middle income and lower In come taxpayers," Brown added. THE INCOME tax cut which is on top of Proposition q 's $7 billion cut in property t•es -will reduce taxes an ex- t I'~ $168 for the a>terage c•mornia family or four with a 'S20.000 income. I The combined effect or the in· cqme tax cut and Proposition lJ's property tax cuts will re- duce the average homeowner's annual tax bills by $750 to Sl,000. SACRAMENTO IAP -The California Senate has given or- ganized labor one o( its biggest victories or the year: Collective bargaining for 90,000 University or California and slate collFge employees. The bill must stiU pass the As· sem bly and be signed by D emocratic Gov. Edmund Brown Jr .• but no major difficulty was expected. The employees or these in· stitulions of higher education arc the last major group or state workers without formal bargain· ing rights. IA Co•troi. ~· LOS ANGELES 1AP> -The ( STATE J city's first i:gandatory rent con- trol ordinance has been signed into law by Mayor Tom Bradley after the City Council approved 111-1 > the six-month freeze and rollback to May 31 levels. It is scheduled to take effect Oct. 1. Under the new law, landlords violating the rollback and freeze will face fines or up to $500 and- or six months In Jan. DC 1'ote Sta&d SACRAMENTO IAP> The Brown Gets Smog Inspection Bill SACRAMENTo IA P >-Only one large private firm will be al- lowed to do the mandatory smog inspections of used automobiles sold in Southern Callrom1a be&inning next year, under a bill sent to Gov. Edmund Br:own Jr. A compromise version of the bill, SB 156 by Sen. Robert Presley, R·Rlverside. was passed Wednesday by a 45·13 Assembly vote and later approved by the Senate. 21-S THE BILL MADE SOME UPDATING changes in the man· datory vehicle inspection program. under which aJl vehicles that change ownership in the South Coast Air Basin must be inspected for s mog control devices beginning Jan. 1. The state Air Resources Board bas signed a contract with .i private firm, Hamlllon Test Systems. to run 17 state stations to do the inspections. H you buy your clothes at The Storekeeper going back to scliool won't seent so bad. I' 10.?! lrv1~ Ntwport ~«h C.tlif<fTl'A. rhont' 042-7001 \ state Senate has killed an at- tempt to make California the first state to ratify a constitu- li on al ameqdment giving Washington. D.C .• votes in Congress. The upper house refused Wednesday to suspend ita rules so a ratification resolution could be taken up before the Legislature adjourns Friday. Nortlt Get• Sia~• ~Y The A.aaoclated Press Showers moved Into northern California Wednesday. as tern· peratures dropped along the coast while weather in the valleys remained fair and warm. The National Weather Service said today that little change is forecast in the next few days ex- cept for the threat of more showers over the northern coast later this week. IA 11..es Siied LOS ANGELES 1AP1 -The Church of Scientology has filed a Sl rnillion suit against the Los Angeles Times and two of its re- porters, alleging conspiracy to interfere with civil rights. The lawsuit. filed in federal court here Wednesday. claims the newspaper printed a series of articles on the church which were written by two reporters who acted in concert with the FBI and the Department of Justice. new store Danielson sald reclassifying the ~ names on the United States' MIA list would halt pay- ment of military salaries to Brentirood Triple Slayings Probed LOS ANGELES IAPl -Police continued their investiaation today into the bloody fatal stabbing of three elderly persons -two accoUn· tants and a lawyer -in their home in tbe affluent Brentwood area of West Los Angeles. The victims were ident.ified as accountant Arthur Scbarlin, 69; bis wife. Elf, and her brother, Joseph Freedson. Mrs. Scbarlln. a semi-r etired lawyer, and Freedson. a retired accountant. were in their late 60s or early 70s, officers said. THE FULLY CLOTHED bodies were found Wednes· day in various parts or the house after police were called by a neighbor who saw lights in the hous e throughout the night. authorities said. The three died so metime Tuesday or knife wounds. investigators said. ·'There were some signs or violence in the house." West Los Angeles police Lt. Tim Wapato said, but he declined to say whether a murder weapon was found. PoUce said blood was fol!nd throughout the modest. - beige wood·frame home and on the front porch. W AP ATO SA I D investigators were trying to de- termine lf burgJars were involved ln the killinp, noting that t.be re- side n c e reportedl y was burglarized a year ago. However. he said valuables remained in the house Wednesday. A car belonging to the family was being sought. Police said it migl}t have been stolen or loaned out. Another car was found in a local repair shop. . The couple was believed to have children living in Illinois. police said. ' BOIS D 0 R f in newport Come in a nd get acquainted I We are direct importers and bring yo~ the ultimate in contemporary design f umiture from all over the world. BQI S D 0 R C O NTr~POR 4 Rl' D f8 1 (iN rlJRN I TU R f ,. • r from Copenha gen Up to 1/J Off Featuring 11ioYer Coggin Pierre Gordin Pacific George Kovacs & Many <;>then .J 29 5 newpon blvd new Port beach ca 92060 tel < 7 1 4) 6 7 0·8000 f . u r j Taxing Figures CaUfornians who reel t.hey're overtaxed will find some interesting confirmation in comparative figures as· sembled by economist Conrad Jamison. Citizens or our fair state pay a per cap1ta average ~f S964 in state and local taxes, ranking third after Alaska ist,896) and New York ($1,140>. But the national per captl.a average is S731. so Califo(llia is 32 percent above that figure and 37 percent above the national average exclusive of California. For state and local taxes per $1 ,000 of personal in· com e, Californians pay 22 percent above the average in the rest of the nation In collection of property laxes 'before Jarvis l California has led the way 67 percent above the na- tional average on a per capita basis and 49 percent above on the basis of personal income. We place third. after Alaska and New York m collec- t1on of corporate taxes. but still 59 percent above the na· tional average. And in state collection of death and gift taxes we're number one. Balancing these figures. statistics · s how that California also exceeds the national spending average in expenditures for education, welfare. police and fire pro- tection. locaJ parks and recreation. In short. while paying some of the highest taxes. we also are receiving well above average government services. So the question remains: Are we getting our tax dollar·s worth ? And what would we like to do without? Frail Jails Fail WASHINGTON -Ttier. 11 bltaatlAI evidence that In Im d•rtn• veto ot the defense bill. PH1ldent Carter wu guided chiefly by • dellre to reestablllh hll preeidentlil vlrtUty tat.her than bf fervent oPPOtition to • eoatly flft.b nuele1,r aircraft car-· riu. The president was looking for a pee to ha.QI bta veto on." one usually pro·Carter Oemocrat on the House A r m e d Servlces Com millee told UJ. ''11le carrier was h1I best bet." By assert- in& preslden· tlal mastery and muscllne Cooeress lo sustain .hls veto after Labor Day. Mr. Carter is Collowina public relations ad· viser Gerald Rafshoon's get· tough formula. But in {getting tough, he bas risked Los ng ma· Jor defense items obtained as trade-offs for the carrier in the intricate congressional log· rolling process. Noae or the pre1ident'1 mlUW)' advisers. unlformed or clvWu, recommended tM veto. TMrt wu JDlrthlesa lauahter ln the P..u.ip when Mr. Carter told hta preea conference that be had "not bad a atnile adviler who told me that we ouaht to IO ahead wtth the nuclear alrCfaf\ carrier·· BY. LAW, tbe preatdent's "principal naval actvlser" ls the chief of naval operations. Both the present chief. Adm. Thomas B. Hayward, aDd Adm. James L. Holloway Ill, replued by Hayward July 1. have been strong proponenta of the nuclear carrter. Apart from the pr~sldent himself. the movina force behind the veto w~ White House political adviser Hamilton Jordan, alone with Rafsboon - not Secretary or Defense Harold Brown. That came out in Brown's private talks with congressional military specialists . soundin& out sentiment before the veto. The de(ense secretary made clear he had not proposed such drastic action, but th)lt Mr. Carter: Seemed cMtermlaid GD lt. Talklna to one rriendl1 eon· areaamu. Brown 1b0wed UU. waa 00litit1. not deteue. He SPff&ala&ed whetber tbe beat way to def8Dd t.tie Velo ""1d be oP- poeition tot» auelear c:arrter or oppoalUoil to ~ In ,...,-eh end d~Dt Ud In rad.l· Offs hmdl. As ll tunMd out. Mr. Carter UMd botb ar1umeats elltpbaiiltDI the eamer. POunc8 &bowed itself wben one con1res1man warned RafshOOft .Ille Wlto m11bt make 1'e presldi!lit kd aDU-def.-. Jlafsboon'a answer revealed bow . clearly the PQlltical tactics had been developed· don't worry: the president can deal with that in the veto message. Deal with it he did by calling ConlJ'eM anti· defenje. lg1fored by RaCshoon and Jordan was tbe effect of the veto on the delicate 101-rolllna needed to produce a defense bill. Although the veto probably wUl be sustained. writing a new de· rense bill will be no easy task. A case in point l's liberal Democratic Sen. Gary Hart of Colorado, an Armed Services I'LL TELL YOU MOW SLOW IT IS--WE'VE JUST BEEN PASSEi> BY THE REUBEN E. LEE! I Earl Waters Committee m'mber btably lllti>- tlcal or ,l:>jl nucJur carriers. Hart •treed in a trade-Qff With conH1v1tlve R•pubhc~ .~. Jeaae Helm Of ~ortli CaNUDa to 1vpport the nuclear e~ In retum ror Helms· backifti Of -' oew •eneratlOn of small carrier. favored bY H,rt. One day after the veto. Hart ~rott all 11enator1 ur11n1 •n override ot the veto Vt'ith thia argument: "Tbe Con1resa pro. duced a c arefuUy crafted. toelcal end l)l'Olrenive eootes>: tual approach to the q~ ol the future of the carrier.. ~ veto ~s this acbievemcmt and puU us back on tbe tread· mlU of the carrier question -withnoaolutioninsi~t." &OVTINE trade-Offs. spun in· to a 1umlea web. are at the heart of the con1ressional de· fense·budget process. That ex· plaina why vetoing a major de· tense bUI Is 80 rare that it has not been tried in this century. In t,111 dramatic effort to show himself a commander-in-chief who truly commands. the presl· dent ignored this record for the gamble of large political gain. For now. however. the presi· dent is less concerned with put· Ung the defense bill back together than with mobilizing public opinion behi~ bis argu- ment that 'he, not Congress. is the staunch fighter for national defense. That was the message Aus. 23 when 200 prominent businessmen were summoned to the White House for enlistment in the anU-carrier crusade led by Vice President Walter Mon· dale. Results were mued. One ex· ecutive was puzzled that the White House expected him to ac· cept Mondale's word on faith against that of Sen John Stennis of Mi ss issippi. veter an chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee. "They're crazy ii they think I'm going to tell Sen. Stennis he's wrong:· the executive told us. No s uch national campaign was started against the carrier until after the defense bill was sent to the Oval Office. That on- ly reinforces suspicions abollt the president's veto motives. Guidelines for "advanced. humane prison architec turc · · advanced by the Law Enforcement Assistance Ad · ministration 1 LEAA l sounded very interesting to officials in Monterey County. Especially since compliance with the guidelines promised to yield two million rederal dollars to help pay for a new S4.5 million jail at Salinas. State Public Def ender Office Costs Soar So the jail was built with plastic and glass windows instead of steel bars. hinged doors instead or the clank ing. s liding ones. individual cells with see-through vision panels instead of metal plates. carpeting and shared reading and television areas. Since the jail was completed seven months ago there have been 10 escapes. The inmates break out by smashing glass windows, melting plastic ones with magazine torches, prying off plastic panels with toothbrushes or kicking open inadequately fastened doors. Reports from half a dozen states, where s imilar facilities have been built with federal aid. indicate that. attractive as the "humane" jails may be. the clients are departing at an alarming rate. LEAA architects say the problem is inadequate supervision. The inmates should tie kept occupied so they don 't have time to break or melt windows. Monterey has been advised to repair the damages and hire more staff. at an estimated cost of up to another SI milliOJl. County officials are beginning to wonder about those strings attached to federal dollars. There's a lesson here somewhere. • Opinions expressed In the space above are those of the Dally Pilot. Other views expressed on this page are those ot their authors and artists. Reader comment Is Invited. Address The Dally Piiot, P O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321 Boy~ Burglary Trick directions. Just habit, he A re , ~ ~~ .-a . who worked burglary ror ii any such turns up, Crom y~ars, always hangs up his ~,..stripping bis closet tn one c lothes on hangers hooked grab. Appeals from guilty verdicts Involving indigents are costing taxpayers millions annually. And those costs appear to have been increased unnecessarily as a result or the creation or a state agency intended to reduce the costs or handling cases and im· prove the legal quality. But that agency, the State Of. rice or Public Defender, ap- parenUy bas failed to ac- c o m p Ii sh either goal. Judging from an analytical study done by John H . Sullivan for the California Taxpayers Association, it is another governmental pro- gram whose theory hasn't worked out in practice. He reports that the cost of pro- viding legal counsel to handle the appeals of indigents convict- ed or crimes by trial courts has risen eight-fold since the establlshment or the public de- opee ~A a lon t the .... ag~ d problem of poverty is at last at hand. I stumbled on il quite by accident while vacationing in a over the pole in alternate was the custom in old slmpl~ mountain cabin this sum- R~~ to meet ~at~-=f=~m-Her~.~~~~~~~~rtow.,..::;:. • Dear Gloomy Speaking or illegally parked cars. I sometimes wish I had an old clunker so I . could "accidentally" whammy one or those vehicles lert plugging up the market driveway so its selfish owner can avoid walking a few steps. FRUSTRATED ~M~ "'s x:-branched toaether, there to roa • came upon a gnetto o poverty with talk about inconsequential conditions so matters, mostly. Such tn-~ppalllng as tersecllons were called to soften the "trivium" -and that, ac-heart 0 f a cording to our Languaae H 0 w a r d man, is where we get the J a r v 1 5 . word "trivia." Percival Proctor Baxter was eovemor of Maine from 1921 to 1125. He had an Irish setter named Garry. The dos died. Go\I. Baxter thereupon ,orderell all the stat4} na11 to be flown at half stair. On the traffic sipals of Syracuae, N.Y .• the e reen ll1hts are at the top and lbe red at the bottom. Nowhere ehe nationwide a re the 1t1nal& so ~t up. ' There, bud- died in the dirt under the trees, were at lea s t a thousand people, none with so much as a permaneot ca.lvanhed root overhead-. . Some slept in their trucks like the Dust. Bowl emlaranta or tbt Tbirtlea. But most femillea somehow made do ln rumsy can• vaa structures no more than twelve reet 1quar1. Electricity wu non·exi.9tent The only runninl water came t fender office in 1975. Prior to that time all defendanta appeal- ing superior court convictions who were not able to afford lawyers were assigned private . attorneys by the appellate court. They were paid a modest fee based on the time required to write an appeal brier. But contentions that a full time state staff could provide better counsel at lower unit costs resulted in le~islatlon authorizing the state public defender office. THE RESULT bas been a soaring or costs instead of reduc· lions. Furthermore, eveft\thOugh the office has now been "1n ex- istence more tba n two years and has a staff of 81 lawyers, the ap- pellate courts are still relying on private attorneys to handle the majority of indigent appeals. Sullivan reported that during the period from June 1976 to June ur78 the appellate courts assigned over 65 percent or the 6,895 appeals by indiaents to private lawyers. He said the cost to the courts ror cases assigned to the private attorneys in 1977 ran to $1. l million while the state .public defender spent $4.4 million. The unit cost of the privately handled cases was · $526. No accurate cost figures exist for cases handled by the state public defender. THAT AEENCE OF records to s how performance did not however prevent the state public defender from obtaining a huge increase ln funds boosting his budget to S6.3 million for the . current year. It was granted on the plea or ·'increased work load.·· Al the same timP the ap· pellate court expects to continue spending more·tban $1 D)illion a year to pay private lawyers for cases which the state public de- fender says he can't band.le. Sullivan says that alttioup the office can't fumiah records be estimates the unit costs for ap- peals cases are at least three times higher than the cases handled privately. The estimate is based on the assumption that half the workload involved ap· peals, pointing out the office also represents prison Inmates. de- rom a s'bude leaky -ss»tot at -1Dg-conditions-wbenc:e they bad eaoh site. A penurious savern· . come that they were beading ment had erect~ a few com·' twenty miles farther up into the munal toilets with neither tubs mountains. nor showers as a eesture to public hYgiene, No wonder the AND 11IE sl)Ot they were 80 wruuu&~~~~~~~~-:tkei~~~'ttM!ft;;l!Hlba.Ml: squalor. 'tilk a60ut t e s ums or sintle leaky faucet nor even the Calcutta! most rudimentary plumbina !t raclllties. They would have to AT RST, I took them to be drink from an unflltered stream mi11ran workers. Imagine my and cook over a raw fire as thelr shock to leam that not one o( ancestors had a mUUon years them was cUJTently employed. before. Yet how pltUully proud Worse. not a single lndlvtdual they were or their Iron arms and was looking forward to going kettles and their crude canvu back to work. cots. 1 wish you could have seen the I thought I had seen every way the men struggled from thing until I was seated on a dawn to dusk tn an often fruit-rock one day and a hall-doten less attempt to catch a few pe>Or souls trudged by with all scrawny fish from a nearby their worldl;y Possessions on stream to eke out thelr famlUea' meager food supplies. Never had l seen more oppressed vie· tlms or the economtc system. Never. that ll, unW the follow· Ina week when I ran into 1 dozen men and women wbQ didn't even have motor vehicles They had horse• Sp Lerrtble were the llv· ,, ( I Quotes .· Thomu Jetfenon: "Were we directed rrOni Wuhlniton when to sow and w~ to reap, we should eoon want for bread ·· fends mentally disordered sex offenders. mes friend of the court briefs. and lobbies the Legislature. AS TO TUE quality of the state·s work compared to that of the private lawyers. SuJlivan re· ported a random sampling of cases showed convictions were affirmed in 81 percent of 'the cases handled by the private at· torneys and 80 percent or those handled by the state. Even though those figures showed no apparent difference. the private attorneys scored a better record m reversing convictions on 11 percent of the cases while the state succeeded in reversing OO· ly four percent. A further clue to the quality or the state's work, Sullivan report· ed. was round in comments made on a recent case by the 3rd District Court which found ap- peals "frivolous, manufactured out of whole cloth and res\J.lt in an inexcusable imposition upon scarce Judicial res ources. Counsel wastes the court's time butfools no one." their bafu. Here were the worst-off ot all. forced to sleep • on the barren ground -their on· ty shelter rrom the cruel ele· men ts being a fatten log or. with luck. an abandoned ca\'e. ey-Jlelll!:::mtt~!Ut:::ta:::-=±::=t them all' IT DID, that ls, until I dis· covered that those with pacb on their backs looked down upon those with horses as impure despoilers of the wilderness. At the same lime, those with horses snubbed those with trucks and plumblng as lazy sybarites. And God only knows what those ghel· to d we tiers thought of u ~ despicable luxury-lovers wit.h our box 1prln1s and electric stoves. For In that peculiar society, poverty ls a status symbol -1'd tho less one hu the more one is admlted. • So there's the solution for you· Ct after thousands of years of ad· vancln1 ctvtllzaUon we can't Ucl< poverty. the 1 aat we can do il' • learn to ef\iOy It • , ova Qllal OI alllOl&l eam· paiftl r~ nJ.s ID Callfonda And ....... bY Jarwil lllmMlf .. veals, 1'owever, tMt '81.817 wu paid dlreetly to tbe WUUam· Nonon Company for P*blie rel•· lions and contract labor. Wllllam-Norton. It Just 10 b.11>-pens. wu a rr.t eosnpuy &et up ~Y Janis' two aaaoclates. WUllam Morrison and Norton Nathan. · Postal lnvestlgatlon rttorda show that the three took their l ·n beginning to wonder about that police artist." bUDce ...-on the road the ..... ~ Y#ll and set,., u OUl· ftt'd.-.StlllNaUoeal 1edolft to Woit CDllilllttee. It.I IOU WU to luaaUe l>ucka from con· 1trvallff bUaineaamen who wanted tooullaw umoa ehope. In Illa demand for a retraction from us, Jarvis flnt told our as· aoelate Howard llo&enberc he was "never ID t.Nt committee or a part of It." He ltnalJy con- ceded that he had arranced Wublqton office space for the operation 11 "aort or a Pre· llmlnary favor. Now what they dld after tlaat l don't know." One t.b.lna tbeY dld was rake In more tban '275,000 ln nine montba before folding up their tent. TBE Ptl8TAL inspectors con· finned that "Jarvis stayed at the Congressional Hotel in Washington and arranged to rent office space at 1411 K St., N.W. for the Freedom to Work Committee." Added the Investigative re· port: '"l'be Committee Mt up an elaborate ofllee at Wubln&tem to 1ive it an air of respectabUUy. but all 'employees, lncludlnl a lobbyist. were directed to perform dudel more ill line with raS.ln1 f&mdl than tn attemptina to affect ~·Uon." Ae~ to a ~ Wpec· tors· report to the Justice o.,.rtmeat, Jarvta claimed be dropped out upon learnlnc that. IOllcltiDa funds by telepbooe ln the District of Columbia was ll· lecat. Md "carne to the oplnJon that the entire operation mltht be llle&al/' ho YMl'I aao. la~ls was tiack at bll old st.add with Mor· rilon. 1'bll time, they operated a film.nam known as the Friends for Hayakawa Committee. The or1armaUon. beaded by Jarvis, plucked Contributors for $51."54. Ostensibly. the moaey was to be uaed in support of Republican S.1. Hayakawa·s Senate race, but none of the money was ever 1pent ill the .-ator's behalf. JARVIS LAMELY claimed tbat federal laws probibtt ''in· dependent" COJ11mlttees from having any eontact with can· didates or their organizations. He said bi• committee abut doW1l before It eouJd spend any money promoting Hayakawa ·s candidacy. Tbe truth ls that the operation was closed down when a bona fide aroup, FrlencJs of Hayakawa, broua.ht suit to pn-\ veet Jania and lUa aroup ti'oln collecUnc any more f\mdl. Al the cue reached trial. Jarvis volunteered to cloee shop if the judae would dlsmiss the suit. The oppogln• lawyers •treed Olft· ly after obtaining a restraiDIQI order forbidding the Jarvll out· fit from oraanizlng a stmUir front operaUon tn the future. JA&VIS TOLD ua he .. ,hut the damn thin& down and went ftah. ing.·• When we reminded him that .the suit was not actually dismissed Wltll tbls year, Jarvis saad the Hayakawa people "were a bunch of finks.·• Footnote: Jarvis insisted tw never profited personally froo, any of the mone y .raising schemes. It is true that notbin8 in the reeonb shows that the money went into his pockets. But huge expenditures are unex· pl a ined. He is currently treasurer of the Yes on 13 Com· mittee and chairman of.tbe Unit· ed OraaniuUom of Taxpayers, an umbrella group he uses to campaign for rigbt·winl causes and to seek retractions from newspaper columnists. ~SALE STARTS 10 A.M. FRIDAY. SEPT. 1 41nch AFRICAN . )LIOLETS · Mlx'd Colors \ 5 gallon sp.eclalsl Special 6.99 Exotic beauties for your garden. Choose from Austraillan tree fern or New Z8aland tree fern. ••• Quantities limited! 2 gallon special! Begonia Richmon den sis. Garden Special 4.99 ••. Quantities limited Center Ceramic Pots with smooth brown glaze. In two different sizes to hold au your plants. First quality, and even safe for microwave ovens. Now10.99 • Snort Shorts voney styfe, s-m-Hd ass't. colors. Flannel shirts cotton, 9-m-f-xl. I I 300 reel orig. 17.99 Piano Tackle Box ~ a----~N--0...;,;.;W:;._7;..;. • .;;;..;88~ ~ ~ Texas Instruments Star Wars LED Watch· ffee poster & heat transfer ot Darth Vader with purchase. 1 S ecial 14.99~ • t:uu Length leather Coats F.• colora. Ml••• stzes. Spe0181pu1ct.1 I-JI~~~~------.-.-..-.....~ Vlrtltylizll " Denim Jean ....... 25'30. ntN/. It blue green & brown; orig. $7~ ~~----~~----....;..i NOW 5. • • -ei • . • \ : I• . . . . ' . . .. f • • "I I • J , ' . . ' ' I f l .; I . l i f ' . . . - i • , 1:> v )8 Jq dJ ,.~ .... fAil-Afl•r 14 , •• ,.. t•• uaaalled e-:1a~....,~ ........ . ft WMft't ....... •..._.DI -ioWft .......... ..UFCDU, but tlMt eatdl .-cbed tMlr dlltlna· Uon. 11...-man m ntum ~ th• t.hua ot an uncle aacl bro&.ber ot u.. dead eoldief', Mllll&L&\N AND ftlS nrdl,... tull*I to JacUcift¥Ule., tM .... .. , tatllldld to man u.em ...,_ r aot home. but tbe1 ...... .,. ....... 6etald .. Reeentb', wblle _. ~ war eouVffln. be relocated UM cards. Muaelman 10U1bt b9lp from Mrt. ~on Sterkeaber1, a JackloevlU• bowaewU ol J...-. delceat, lP r. tvalDI the Cardi. ... IBNT TBE• to the city baD near the town wblcb wu In the ad· ------__,..-..... dreu," Mrs. St.erkenber1 aald. "I NAllA.RllA MID A a&POnEa tor the newspaper hid helped locate · him ud dlil.lvw ldl card. TIM 4-l aokler'a poet earcl to -his bfotMr uld, tn put: ••J hope 10'.I are 1etttna aloal well. Soon mu.st be )'OW' IJ"Mutlan cla)'. WW you won bard, even lncludina my part? AJld. pleae, carry on a ham. IOOd life wltb mother." Later. Krs. Sterkenber1 and Musselman received Utanb for pre. 1ervln1 tbe cards from tbe soldfer'• uncle, M1noru Matsuhara. .Sun.Shine Act Flouted, Common Cause Claims 1 .............. , IVllY .. 00 MCllAll • SEPT. 1ST • 10TH . WE'llUITS ... ._ane v. Offat2FORntE~Of 1 ~ 20S Olf WASHINGTON (AP) -Lesa than 40 percent of the meet.Ines of ,.,, federal a1enclea covered by the Sumblne Act wen fully open to the pubUe in tbe act'• nrat year ot open. Uon, accordinl to a Common Cause study. exempttons,sucbuwbentbeycon. :;iiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilliiiiliililiiiiiiliiiiiiliiiiiiillliiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;:::- cern national security, trade secrets and financial lnformatlon obtained from a penon confidentially, or when a cue Is betni decided before tbe .. Government a1enctes are thumb- ing their noses at the American tax- payer," Hid David Cohen, president of Common Cause, a self-styled citUens' lobby. '"Ibey are often clos- ing th~lr doors to the public even when open discussion of the subject matter iS clearly in the public in· terest." THE SVNSBINE Acr. passed in March tm, is designed to reduce the number or government meeUnas cloaed to pUbUc scruUny. It pennlla meeUnp to be closed under ceJUin Open Harehback Dangers Cited To Car Owners WASHINGTON <AP> -1be Na- tional ~wa.J Trafllc safety Ad- mlnistraUOe bas Issued a warntq to owners of hatchback vebleles to avoid driyine witb children iD the luggage eompartment and to teep the batc~:f:, closed while the engine is . Administrator Joan Claybrook said that during the warm summer months the agency has received in· creasing reports of motorists driving with the hatchback in the up position, often with children riding in the rear of the vehicle. She said tbe agency has received rePorts of at least 12 accidents in which passengers were 4fJected through the rear hatchback, result· Ing ln five deaths and 13 lltjuries. lo addition, she said, operating the vehicle with the hatchback open m~ expose all occupants to concentra· tions of exh11ust fumes containing deadly carbon monoxide. aieacy. The Common Cause report WM· nesday cited three agencies for out- s tan di nc compliance with the Suultun. Act. It aald the Tennessee Valley Authortt.)' beld all 27 of Its meetia11 in open aeasion, the In- terstate Commerce Commission held 86 percent in open aesalon and the Civil Aeronautics Board, 82 percent COM•ON CAUSE ALSO issued a list of what ll called the "Secret Seven" agencies whJcb it said bad tbe most coD1latent records of secrecy. At the same Ume, Cohen said a few of them engage heavily In law enf~ent and UU1atlon and this might Juauty closed meetings. "But these a1encles bave established records of secrecy that appear to go beyond a mere 1ood f ait.b uae of legitimate exemptions under the act," Cohea said. The list included the Export- Import Bank, the National Labor Relations Board, the OccupaUoOal Safety and Health Review Com· mlaalo.n, the U~S. Parole Com· miplon. ~ Fede,ral Resene Board, th~ Commodity Futures Tradina CommlSlsion and the Federal Home Loan Bank Board. IN COMNENTING ON their lilt· Ing, spotesmea for the agencies said in general that they followed the Jaw in holdia& closed meetings. WilJlam T. Bqley, chairman of the Commodity Futures Trad.iq Com· mission and a champion of open meetings, sald "We are the most open agency in t.own." Some meet· lngs are closed by law, be said, but the commission bolds an open public policy meeting once a week. "Recently I found we had some •confidential' stamps around," Bagley told a reporter. "I gathered them all up and I threw them into the Potomac River, simply as a symbol that government can exist without confidential stamps.•• True crafta11ta11alll1' ••• never 1e rHI ••. --~•lntl\llMf•llN '" 9lne tott, 1eatlln-1111e "'"'' tlf Maxwell ....... A ...... ., lnMP'IOf'= _..._ ... *-" Ill • .. •••d ...... lla.rdw•od tr•l'll• ••• • m•t•I NII taster• ••• Marll•• 1eet ~"'°"' ........ t•k• ....... ., ... . t./Hlllt Ille "" "ctuellty" •• • llf Mu-11-MoON. Reg. 389• 528999 GLEGAN'.f SOFA BEDS YOU CAN AFFORD .,..~,.. ......... New Fall match-mates make an art of getting It 'together! You'll love our easy care fabrics done up in all the super shades of autumn! • TOPS our...._•·•' to io.M ............ 3 .. to e• • SKIRTS Our .... 4.llto10.ll •.•••.••.. a•to• .. •PANTS O.Reg. ue1o11.11 ....••.•••. 4~to 8'! •JACKHSow.._1.11to11.11 ••• rto faff Plus many, many morel · ~ Not all_... or~ avallable at an ator• • % H.P. ROCKWELL ROUTER 47~ U you'" uMCI a router before. you're Q'ODDG 1lke Rockwell'a. li you're anr. but amdoaa to lmpron your wooclwoddng um. .•• bereltla. WORKSPACE 52" HOBBY TABLE OR 72" WORK BENCH YOUR 4943 CHOICE . Fairly easy to auemble. th•M table• can be •tored then uHd at your con .. nlence. Excellent for 8011l90De with unall ll'ring •pace. HEADS-UP VANITIES 21dOWITR lhlt VARITY -TOP A1G> LEIS TOP .. , .77 DIAWEllS 218.97 21d4 WITH 2ldl WITH TOP 171.n DIAWDS 2lx2C WITH Liii TOP I •0.97 10f lDUWDI 20 .. 97 1ldl W1TB 21d0 WJTB DIAWEU TOP 1741.97 U:UTOP 2•7.97 Th• idea 18, I bell•"· you'" got optlou at Nattonal. If you're looldng for th1a •tuft we'" got It ••• Fcnac.t extra. LUSTRA TILE 2 47 APPROX. 12 SQ.n. This. on th• other hand. comee lD red brick. beige atone, natural ccme, to name a few. Ccmm about 12 aq. fHt. 1 . MASOmE RANCHWOOD LIGll'.~OR DARK PANELING 4x8 SHEET RanchwoocL Hnmmm, th1a ls good atuff. · Regularly .. u. for 8.95 a paneL What a deal. ~l HEATILATCt FREE ·STAND LO-CONE FIREP I went over to the Huntington Bea< lupectecl theM. They're aolld and H4tCltllator'a been mound a while. McGRAW EDISON RECO McGRAW EDISON HEAVY DUTY 7~11 CIRCULAR SAW 1297 #2'01 1 YEAR ROCKWELL POWER BLOCK PLANE 49~! Another addition to your new shop thClt'll mab a lot of HDM °"' the ,.an. This tool la cm IDcNc:llble time IMlftr. CALIFORNIA CLIPPER GAS MOWERS 1r s H.P. 67 .77 20" 3 H.P. 77.77 20" DELUXE 3~ H.P. 87.77 Your grau la growing Cit tbla ftlJ moment (I hope). Choo .. one of theH fOur cycle JD01Nn aDd then pert yo1U'Mlf on th• bac:k. I I FESCO 'ZI GALLON PLASTIC TRASH CAN 367 Eftll U JOU don't haft 'ZI Fllcm• of traah. thla la a great-ccm. 1'ght 1fd bepa the moop. CIWGf • Ira a Feec:o. CA wliat??) HARVEST HOME FOOD PRESERVER AND DEHYDRATOR ASSEMBlm &SHELF 58.47 &SHELF 76.47 Ulf ASSEMILEJ) &SHELF 29.23 • sHELF aa.2:a · - ROCKWELL 10" , WOODLATHE 1 87~!12 BARBEQUES STRUCTO TABLETOP . PROPAMEGASGRIU •7* 33.77 OUTDOOR WITI PORCELAIN GAS GRIU u LI. rm 62.97 - CAST ALUMIMUM WITH • "' •• ,.. GASGRILL 20LLTAJU 79.77 DELUXE DOUBLE •nio BURlfEB GAS GRIU :'::.TUI 96.6 7 MECO .,.. I SIZZLER •mJ 18.56 SWINGER II •"°° 25.69 SWINGER I •am 41.66 DOUBLE SUPER SMOKER 2924 More people are getting Into ~wing and preMnlDg their own food. Chec:k thla out. lfatCb.. you pay more for tJ1e pre-I Th18 h Southern Callfornla ••• We can BBQ all year round. Let Natloaal help. So much ch.oiee here ••• well. It"• your turn now. cnHmbled model -----------------------------------+-----------------------------~~ ..... ------------------------------------~ EA. Can be med to buUd J)Cldo ldta. wan.. or dog laouea. v.., "'8atlle. BRASS PEEP-HOLE 97• DOORVIEWER UNASSEMBLED LUAN BAR STOOLS 18". 4'" 1.77 2'H • • • 2.17 30" ••• 2.57 u ~'" clMchd Jtar 8tool8 lat.Jr. ~'U · bOW bf SN.ttlilG tlMlia to91daw roasMU . pa...._ a buClle. l l -,, SKID TEX NON SUP . PLASTIC HARP HAT ot or the banklntt empire ()( fuglt1ve • ! I 77• lta. CM ' #AD 1.87 . . NUTONE OR IWJISET #354 SMOKE ALARM .~!. .. ·yoUR CHOICE h atoreand lbow · ! <f I ) --· ~ ·'="· -- '. d ' ... ' 11 Without u~g .acare tac:tlca. U'a cllfflca.lt to llluatrate the importance of mnob alarmL Both modela are plug-In. • YOuR CHOICE NORA•tl CNID<S NO f(E-OROERS NOT AU.. ITEMS INAt:L~S CoME ~RL-V A\.L 1"'1 S STUFF ooSJECr ro sroC.K ON MANP. Dll'IONED .POWER TOOLS ~ McGRAW EDISON ORBITAL SANDER 9 9 .7 #2502 WARRANTY ROCKWELL 10" MOTORIZF:n TABLE SAW 154~~ Cute 3>H In. dMp at 80 desPn• ••• 2~ In. deep at '5 deal'M• ••• *' part of aU, lt cam-the BochNll mme ••• tW mean• It'• good atuff. A1,m ,•I,. 25 Fl'. REYNOLDS WRAP ALUMINUM FOIL Alwaya a m1l1lon uaea for Reynolds Wrap. I can only think of one right now ••• 111 tell you what It la next week. OUTDOOR FURNITURE REDWOOD CLUB CIWB ... s-.18.89 70'• CONIFER PICNIC TABLE 31.a9 70'° REDWOOD PICNIC TABLE 45.89 48"' Romm REDWOOD PICNIC TABLE ••••• Redwood furnltuN endmu ••• Not juat a elogan. It'• beautlful and It'll be around for many inunmen to coa:w. McGRAW EDISON %11 DRILL 8 97 #2130 PARK TOOL CHESTS 11 DRAWER 8 . .. DRAWER 59.84 49.84 Nothing WIOASJ with a little orgcmbatlon. Park man. tM bMt tool cbHta moUDd rm told. (0£ Mr. Park told .-that.) PRESTONEll SUMMER COOLANT/ ANTIFREEZE 2 89 GAL Preatone ~t8t about top9 when It come• to radiator coollng 11 ••• Gln your~ cat the p10tectlon lt needa on CIDY hot dar• Plenty OD hand. METAL BLITZCAN 7 77 SGAL. • TheM uaed to be ca11ecl HlenY' CGDll • • • J~ didn't lib that 80 they Nncmwl lt the blitz can. Help. Who'• Mr. Bllta? --·-:.:.- PUB MIRRORS MYSJZE 697 STORALL TRUCK TOOLBOXES 7688 # 110 FOR STAJU>ABD OR # 120 FOR COMPACT TbeM GN tM cablneta that go outald• on your truck. ~-ra:taproof. rattleproof. e..,., kind of proof ID tough ba:l*I wbia. enczmel. CLEAN WELD SOLID-OX WELDER 16!~ To aolder. weld. or brme. you nffd the right temperature ••• The SoUd Ox Torch doea It. Job right •• , you do youn right. COOL ATTIC POWER VENTILATORS SNAU. 1200 ta.18 GAILE llOUllT LARGE 1400 tt.11 ISCIO 21 ... AOTOllA'ltC sauna 21111w Zip into JfationaL gift u cm idea of your~ reqmr.. menta. and w.11 help connect you with the right attic power nntllator. FOAM BOARD INSULATION 29! ALL SIZES OF 4•xa- Foil hocJred caacl worb-..U -place of fiberglau batt .. Easy to lnatalL 1~" ht· •••• Ea. PIZAZZ BY DURO 991 •oz. TURTLE WAX ~oa~<i.~ 1.M ~ SUWVANSTAR AMEIUCAR MADE LOMG BAMDLE GARDEN TOOLS SQUARE POINT SHOVEL •EU 2.97 EDCER •SE 1.97 EDGER•• 2.97 DRAIN SPADE #SD 6.97 Jf your aboftl or edgw got loet b:a the garden. DOW la tM time to replace. 1 of the bankina·emplre of fUglUve -··• ..... r ..---... --•n•lf\lftf ~ cnu~ ll't J oeurt-(ti ·......,r.-. ... pert~·." H tlmated the Va\lc:an's pope once remarked: ., : . . • ~ •YGtJ IUrl'CANT l•AGINE ITS stie," be says. . ·Rademan is doiDC bia best to soft.en Qle impact of the mine's •Pf:Cted operations bere . -~IS. 2.1 ~-a.. people ;"a,t payrQD:-1t mUll mine a tott of are to ct$ •• ,.._ ot 1lltldEGIQl~V tlemQt With a • ~ atmu mine, on tbe CoatiDental Divide near LeadvWe. ts ~ dDen·pit1 at an elevaUoo ot 12,000 feet wtlb 100 miles of m~ng Po6m: ~ d...,_~ di'::,teel. It ls..S-aa a-ti alloy {j( @VCtW' • a iirp.I• ancl'P•eecraft. Climax m t;#e.sflJS.ClilltP.mlnespiore ltt a day than 90.Jflt'te e1· ,\inericanr~ Ptodd<j! ln a '1M~ D_.., .. ..~ ..... CORNEA OF DOWNTOWN CRE$1'ED BUTTE. COLORADO, WITH MT. EMMONS LOOMltfQ 3.000.f'EET Aiiiii' ' The Town, Which Almo9t Died In 1852 After the Coal Mine Was Cloud,.Wa• RevtMd by• Sid Resort :. •.r· . , ~&~oduction~ ;ri81f':t& ~7 ,000 tofte Hay, flrom • tOM a day ln , • RALF OF BARTLETT MOUNTAIN, THE mine's "gJory . ~le, .. loclks like it has been scooped out by a giant ice cream dip· ptb:! Across the highway, a tailing pond bas a capacity of 52S 8>11Uon tons of residue. • Coal Cr~k bubbles through town. a reminder that mining can kill nature. Metal from forgotten mines bas stilled life in the stream . J.t is~ miles by a meandering highway between Climax and ' Crested Butte -and perhap15 a century in philosophy. Crested Butte ls nestled in a valley at the end of a 32·mile road fJ'.OUl the rancbiq and farming cqpun~mlty of Guntiiaon. The smell Qt wood·burninl stoves permeates.the air. Horses graze in a field on tbe edee of town. Motorlsb ca.r'Hully observe the 15 mph speed lffni1. Orlldren play in the streets. It is a vista or peace and tran· qaUlty, of Victorian architecture, wiUJout neon lights. Paul Veltri is in a minority here. Sitting by the pot-bellied stov.e in Tony's General Store, he says he'd like the mine in town. Raised on a coal field in Wyoming, the fortyish Veltri supports his family as a rancher and construction worker, when there's somethlne to build. He notes the country was founded'by farmers and miners, and quoting Thomas Jefferson, he says a strong na· ' tlon mu,st be both well-led and well-armed. ' Rademan disagrees. · : .J'llE TOWN ALMOST DIED AFTElt the local coal mine ed in 1962 but was revived by development of a ski resort ii' , In six years, Crested Butte bas grown from ~ to l,200 ln· ~tants. F1sbfng, bJlting, ~kpacking and skilng bring new,resl· nts and thousands of tourists. "It is a sorry state of affairs if we must destroy our small com· munities to develop natural resources . . . when we should be re· vlving small-town America,'' he says. "This is my home. We are· Jooklne for people to invest time and eneray to nurture a personal community, rather than merely invest their money." HE NOTF.S 111AT 18 MONTHS ago a 50·bY·l2S·Coot tot sold for Sl0,000, but now goes for 1$25,000, as speculators from both coasts fTlOVe in. The editor sak1 :tbe Vatican, c apltallsm : the Cisalpine "despite reforms by Pope Paul Overseas Bankioflllassau." VI, continue to. l~ve wttb a Accompanyiq the open letter dramatic coutndletion in tlle was ar,t unslgned report titled most temporal 1ftbifelltatlon of .. The Wealtb_\~f Peter.'' thal the eartb: mofte.Y. ctalmed MarCU1kus also lookB "Believe us, Yout Hollnen, after Vatican investments ii) we understand well.the exic.-i.· vartous parts of the world cies of the VatlCAD to ba\fe flJWI· t,hrough the Continental lllJnOis cl al autonomy t. tmtafn. t~ ap-1 , 81.ok of Chicago. paratua, to spread the fah.h ,. in The report sald the Vatican • addition \O pioua ~or,ks. We bank, called the Institute for believe that is riaht. But don't Rell&loua Works, tiolds deposit& you think, Your Holiness, that to estlm.ted at $2 billion aod its achieve 1ho$e objectives \here 7,000 depositors include "some .. arewaysotberthanthemastun· or t1'e bl11eat Italian in· s c ru~ulou1 channels that dustrla1illt a~ busln smen " capitalilm offers'!" It did not give names. · • • PANbAI &\ID 1RE VaUcan IT SAID mF.SE men use the it heavUy hlvolved ln stock and accounts to transfer tbelr bold· logs abroad tn vtolatlon of Cllr· rency laws forbiddlnt transfer of capital eamed In Ita1y. 1l Mondo said lhe Vatican E about S80 miUloa ln thf colla or the banJdne empire of tualt ve Sicilian finaocler Mkbele Sin· ·dona. who was convicted In absentia of bal'\k fraud and sen· teoced to 3Y.t years ln jail. Sin· dona is figbtina exlraditlon.froDl New¥ork. The paper said Ute Valle has eXtfll\Slve investments gold and stocU ln the Uni States, lncludln1 share Genetal Motors, General trlci Shell and Gulf Id, Beth ehem Steel, IBM, TW Pan American. .. People who I are sellina Corget w~y they moteci here, •• says ·Rade man. "They have a perverted sense or the frontier ethic ... thinking they can keep moving on and don't have to save anyplace." Lee Irwin came here seven yea" ago. giving up.six water outlets in the San Francisco Bay area. He publishes the wee Crested Butte Pilot. "It's a beautiful place to bve. '1e don't lock our doors an a community. not a spr,awUna suburo. ··be says. At Mt. Crested Butte. the ski resort which incorporat as a town in 1974, geologists from Climax have rented apartm ts for the summer. J.R ... GlJS" LARKIN. FORllEll Crested Butte m r and re. sort general manager. says the mine will have an im t in hous· ing and competition for skilled jobs. The resort pays .25 to SS.50 an hour for Wt and ski patrol employees and leas fo usekeeping stare. Startlng salary ror the lowest or 200 job cate es at Climax is nearly $7 an hour. Rademan fears an influx of trailer homes. "They are cheap in the short run but ex . sive in the long run" he says. and predicts they will disintecr mto sJwm under 350 inches of a:nnualisnowfall. "The community will pay the social co as the workers are • crammed together and take out their frustr ODS on the town:· he says. The town has 23 restaurants. most quor. FUGATE. DIRECfOR OF PVBU elations for Climax. dis· agrees. He notes that hundreds of ax e~ployees co_mmute more than 100 miles a day to homes uena Vista and Salida and predicts that many. miners at Mo mmons would commute to Gunnison. 32 miles down the valley. But he does agree on the tr ent character or miners. He says the firm bas an annual t er rate of about 35 percent at the Climax mine and bad to hi total of 7 .000 persons before its payroll stabWud when the staf 8$ increased fJ¥>m 1,680 to 2.~ in 1973. Many work ih the mines r a grubstake before moving on. be says. Others, fresh out of col and Wlable to find a job, come to work and grow frustrated be e they can't afford to leave. In attempts to assure a ore permanent work ro~ce_. 242 com. pany-built homes and 10 ·story apartment buildings were moved 13 miles to Leadvl in the 19605 . .Employees renting them were given fll'St option to y. A 10..room house sold for $2,400. g to live in a place you make It your home," he -"Everyone calls me 'Tennessee··· -· was advitle two years ago when bis car broke down. at Climax and no"'t...dt!Yes..an.ou traiD -~7rr ,....~'-y-'-ear anawrn probably stay a lifetime ... he says . ...,,.,.,.r,. VS THE IMAGE OF miners has always been low, e's real estate and sells se properties at windfall pro- wltbout paying Italian taxes. also accused the Vatican or tul'Qlng historic religious build· tngs Into modern hotels and banks. The Vatican news paper L ·osservatore Romano called the L 'Europeo report "'lllethodlcal scandaUsm•· and "anUclertcaUsm" aimed at drlv· int r.u,ioua institutions ot.lt or Rome, It denied the Vatican evades laxes and said It bolds property other than churches aod relillOU-' thstitutes beca~e of its "dewloptna needs." SOME TRANSACl'IONS are made, the paper said, not ror speculadon but "for runcUonaJ necessity or for charity • • Vatlcan finances are secret. but last wetk lhe Turl~aUy La Stampa, ql.lotinc ·•fin al ex· pert~,_" estimated the attcan's wealth in real estate and other investments at between $600 million ancl,$720 million. The HQIY See elves hints of its financial status only by refuting reports that It ls rich. In 1970, wlien published reports put lhe Vatican's capital investment in and out or Italy at $12 biUioo dollars. the Vatican said the total actually was under $130 million. POPE PAtJL VI often rererred to lhe financial dlrficulties or the church, brushing as1de reports ot fabulous Vatican riches. Ke once said that the church "must be poor and appear poor." And hls successor was noted for Cost· c uttln1 while patriarch or Venice, aut.horiling hts churches to sell 1old to help the han· dlcapped. ''The true tr?res of-~ cbureh an l tht ...,-- pope once remlll' ·ed. Nft YOU CAP) -?Cft Yeft, ... lw 1'fart • UM ** --ol etu.. ta a. U. IDldlt ot a ce.· .,.._ .._ Ula wW ... a '111 mUllae Mgl riM ,.... ,,.. lqur."• ~ .... oftM MlM'"" ,_ .. b1 tw ftl U. ..._., ......_ <OrPOfllllaM; S-.11 ....... a. t'Ollltndicm II IC911 •11• la = ~ .. :-: =:=· .. ..., ....... ClftlOI ~ ma1auc110H -... ...., ..,. ICllH.., 1Cb1 .... -" .............. .,. lm ....... ...,__, fOI' New Ycft. m • lmPl'O'· .................. , ............ ... ..-... , ., 2 -,_ ............ .. .............. 1 .. ,..... WWII• Dia : l~tfle •1 .... tr11J .. JIHI .... II a turn.,_. ..... tM'lliclllle.,... oldtt ..... . ,... ta. ..... Tnclt Olllta' -........ twta. u....,-...-................ ,, .. ffri.tt Iii .... _.;.=lflltlb° I I ............. Ya omc...-.ra....-.i•••"•...._ Tll&N TOO. eofmftlJC'l'lc:.f WOii& •• to -= acl tlMll 'bridl~ ¥Glad to &Me a PQ cut to --1 .. .... Md u avwace ol Moat so .-eent an. em~·· aaid &arl hlllJoft ~ die 8u1lcUDI fl'rades ~ AuoelaUoo, ··~from 80 pereeat unemplc>1meat for brlcldQen and it.one cutten to 10 pel"CeDt for U. ~. •• Fullilove Nici tbe IDdUltrJ•• unemplO)'IDeDt II 1Ull some• ~at, but expedl It to lmprOVe as 1)lanned buildiQP 1,t wader way. KVCll or ftlE CONSfttJCl'ION will be ln Manhattan. and mmy of the projecta are botell, promptina Mayor Edward L Koda to sq: · .. !Wcire lol\I. with all the new development, you not only will DMd a reeervation to find a hotel room ln New Yott, you mitbt Yfff'1 well need a re- 'tenatlon to build a hotel. .. Tbe most apectuular project is the $112· 'l'Dllllon, 2,000-room Portman llcltel to be ~t in the blighted nmes Square area. Other boit.ets In- clude a S41·milJieb venture on East 42Dd Street; a ~-story Hilton lnterbational Hotel near the World Trade Center; and the l,050-room. $75-mllllon Palace Hotel behind St. Patrick's Cathedral. \ A NEW HOUDAY INN IS planned, and Hilton 185 dusted off an old plan to add to the New York lUton to make It the world's lar1est hotel. Meanwhile, the old Commodore Hotel next to Gnnd Central Termiqal is getting a $90-mlllion fac4irt, and Dunfey Hotel Corp. ls spending Sl6.6 ) mill"'1 to refurbish the Hotel Berbbire on Eat S2Dd ~reet. ·· A ~mllllon convention center -proposed but no~re near the construction phase -could ~ set orf a 'ave of more hotel construction. Hotel\ are not the only new buildings in Manhattanot course. CitiCOJ'P, parent company ol the nation'9'econd largest bank, recently opened a headquart6tJ building on the Eut Side. NEARBY•'9M IS Bun.DING a 43-story. S81> million office U.r and AT&T plans a 37·story, SUO.ml.lllon buffi~;· 1be AT&T building ls tbe creation d archi Pbllip Jobmoa and bas beea described as the t innovative skyscraper de-signed in years. In asaess1ng ~'uilding boom ln New York. IBM rresident John • Opel said "New York is one o the W<>l'ld's mo&\mport.ant 'centen of com· merce and inaustry. It a great place to do busi· ness." Albert A. Formlcola llhe city's hotel associa· lion said of the improv~de "Businesses are finally realizing that New rk bu not gone down the Hudson. that it is still ood place to come to and do work." THE CITY HAS 100.oeo brEL rooms. Last year, they served 17 million ~'«S who spent $1.6 billion. This year. Formicol8\aid, buslJiess ls about 5 percent above 1969, ~ industry's best year. Europeans, attracted by tb'fevalued dollar. account for much or the increase. Visitors are still dlscourag New York's reputation for crime, MEN WOMEN ARE YOU READY FOR THE JOB MARKET •• HAS YOUR LIFESTYLE atANGED DRAMATICA~LY •• ARE YOUR CHILDREN NOW GROWN ••• OR HAS THE TIME ' COME TO CHANGE YOUR DIRECTION? __ ~ A recent survey disclosed that more than 80% of the lndlvldoals surveyed went unhappy or dissatisfied with their present Job ••• are you? If so • • • you may be Interested we are not en emotoYment - agency, and wllf not find you a Job. We offer a comprehensive program of personality and career testing, combined with personal Interviews with ~lonel counselors. OUr concept 11 valid, our •PPf'Otch prKtlc:.al, . and ou:r f•rffsonabfe. • ALL RRIT OUAUTYt • R.UZl.E-DRD. f GUllOUR FOR FLOORS IN MY ROQMI • SPECTACULAR DESl8NS LOOK HAND-MINTEDf • • LAST1NG GLAZE FINISH WON'T MAR OR STAIN! • EXP£RTLY CRAFTED lY ITAUAN ARTISANS! . Whether you are a high school dropout, a~·~""*-*lt.b.MV'IM!~r.:::iwmm~ degrees, biien out of the lob merut. or are Just ready for• change, we can assist you In selecting a career Which wlll succ:esstuny utllla your potential. 41 For complete lntonnatl~ wlthoUt obllgltklft. call or write today. NEWPORT BEACH COUNSELING SERVICE 1501 Wtstcllff Drive Sulte221 NEWPORT BEAat 92660 I .. ' 111'1 '• ( ,\f'(lfl ll.\~ Vill111 Blacksmith® Y ardwCKktrs •tr utl l\arvester makes coC1«11n1 the fruits of your labors !>lmple 1 l>C)le/UW - oruM< ~sth1ngs ~ ..... -..... OMtaodlo<IY harvester 8.99 oole !MIW 9 • 99 TtnJ/Btach Pool Pad ' 5.99 Chlisel: 3.99 , ... ....., lt2 4102 • Utility Shelling • Pf9tt)I prxtical . ·"'"*" tt..-.s °' sturdy st.el to Mr'1e In the den,pr1p ... whereVer storlfl 1• In short sul>C)ly! • HHmble In monutn to lower "8''Yll.2'"---MCI 10" deep. •• thelrlNMI llCladtewrylW' (IUit )'OIK·lhelt) "'~ • Of • ~-- Lou1t11Pad 7.99 A boot 3S worken at el1bt 1tai. parb and 38 other 1ame. fllb ancl public-accMI altes tulvt b'een ecMldtltl tM nwnber of bot· tJea thrown away at cam.-l&ea tbla l\UIUIMI". 11"1 will conduct tbe Hme survey next year and co•p•re llridiqs. to determine • tetl~ or the bu. Dt~artment offlciala have pe1ced the exDtttment a "bfO ptlori~" talk for tbe summer. However~ Harry Oe>eboe. head Of policy deYetc.ment for the department; aakt workers were aat oMlfecl to cl1c ~ ..,..,_ .. "beeMIH ti* nihdlt;&e a vk>JaUon of bealUa .udarda. .... E CAN'T ASK them to plck tbrouc_h the trub. J would be upset myHlf, "I>oehMJ.."'~· He said WOilen were al1ftPbt orcter.s to eordoa oft aft area ln tbelr parka and count tbe • , .. , GVE&S SO•lllODY mis· uil4Serito0d wtiat we bad in lilJJ\d:. RR aald. But JIUzpatrick said a depart· meQt memo 1peclflcally ordered ...,....,.:R,,<Kluthecca· tenll of litter • ''I have Into sewage manholes _. wells to make j Dela1t Surf Rider Wooden Plant Stands • ru51ic l)en:hes clolked 111 •deep w•tnut hn1!.h • P'f'¥fll<S yOUr l'"'*Y Ol'l lht 3 snetl style 11141 re.dies 'JO" or fr¥ our h!Cfl """' ~Pf)Oestll unit that'\ 36 .. tall1 • nsembly te<alllftd Neh 7.99 .,.,..•e••lrf:I ............ .,,. ........ ··eobenanasl • countless Winds of plifble vinyl wrap round• sturdY tubullr . steer trame. .. fdlionld into a fokf chair (measuntS 74" IC 23 ! • Vivid colors to brilhten your llOOr de1 an.nor 'c:tlllr~ ~'·" ....... .... Champagne & Cold Dun from California ...J .. ~ • turn• lltlor dly c:oollout ·~' ; • ,. 111to1celetlralionwlfh · \ spertllinc fifths°' wt'11te • • OI Ptnll ~rnpqnt .. . try some ctteese •nd quldler5 with .·. ~· ;.~~ ... 1.69 J ·: •.f . HUNTINGTON BEACH, H.tington Clnteii ~ .. repairs Yiben it wu neeeuary to provlde service to part uaen." he sald. ··But tbe crew has ob-Jeeted to tb1s JC. m 1 ooncar with them." Meanwhile, Fltcpaltkk aiid his crew's romp throuab JO &Giii of aarbaee bas tumed uP more than 12.000 drink cans. new~ 7 .ooo throwaway bottles. le.ii than 2.000 Pl¥llt bottles Jftd Just seven retur!lable con· talaers. I .......... 11 ...... ~....--. Chromed-Frame Director's Chait .. .. ) t l 1 .... . ' lid ••rt-.e r ......... ,,.,er < •. DEAR PAT: My wife and I are ()()Miderln1 the ) ; . purchase or a mobile home. We also ha\'f a recrea- tional vehicle and are somewhat conrtised about whether or not storage for the R . V. would be in· eluded in our space rental. Some parks w4tb storace areas seemed to evade our questions abOut this. E.T., Costa Mesa Uaaally. the storage charge for • reereatic.al veblc:le Is not couldered part ol &be rea~ It la • .eparaee agreement becaue It doeta'& 9tllbe a specific plot of land. A partlealar area In •Idell tile nbtde can be puked la aulglled, bowever. You sboald be aware that the park owner can evld the recrHtloD vehlcle from tbe storage area, bat tbe mobJJe home rental ·a1reemea& ls for tbe apace or plot of land apon wblcb tbe mobile bome. aot tbe recreaUoul vebkJe. ls placed. O.tt let tbe part manger avoid answering quesUoes aboat rec:rea· tJoaaJ Yddcle atorage, or any other maUer tllat af. fed• naJes ud regulaUou 1°" wUJ be expected &o foUow as a lllOblle bome pa.rk resident. -Ntm1te C'fla-Not It' ore• •.20e DEAR PAT: Would you please tell me bow to go about changing my married name back to my maiden name without going to a lawyer? Wben· J got my divorce in 1973, my lawyer said be would change it back for $200 extra. I didn't get it done then because I couldn't afford it. P.M., Santa Ana First of au. you should write a letter of com· plaint to tbe bar asaoclaUoa ln tbe county where your divorce lawyer practices. It doesn"t .. cost" anytblng for an attorney to reqwaest tbe comt to re•tore yoar maiden ume as part of tbe dlvo~ decree. 1be one or two sentences required to re· qHst &his change couldn't possibly be wortb tioo la additional legal fees. Since it is an accepted practice for women &o retam to their former names aleer beiDC divorced, the change by usage method uaalJy ls accepted wttb no difficulty. Just notify all govemment and business agencies you deal with that you are changing back to your maiden a.me. Thia notlflca. lion is accepted by governmental a'encles witb the exception or tbe passport offtce, wtdcb will not grant a new passport for a mage change anW one year bas elapsed. The covt petition method of name change does not require the services of an attorney. Complete information on name change pro- cedure ls published In "How To Cban1e Your Name • ., by David Ventura Loeb (Nolo Pre11>. Both uuge and covt petition metboda are flllly explained. with particular at&ention paid to pro- cedures for women's name changes. Co11J1 petition forms are Included In this book, wbJcb coatl $5.95 - and U.at'aqalCe a bit less tban your attol'IMy'a SZ80 fee reqaeat. Od,..,,~cl~ Co1'n-age U_.,ed DEAR PAT: I've been going to a chiropractor for treatment of a back problem ror several years. I'll be eligible for Medicare soon. Will it cover my chiropractor's servtces? K.T .. Costa Mesa Medicare medical Insurance helps pay only for maaual manlpaJatton of the spine to corrMt a aablna&lon daat can be demonstrated by X-ray. Medleal laArance does not pay for any otber or tber FREE BIKE BAG (With Minimum S 10. Purchaae) ·~C..... ... • """' YllMly c.... •C....y ...... ._..,lh. • 0.-Nlt u...itM • IOOIS • IACll•AMMOM • CA1DS Jrtttlrtou '· -~ ~B90K ,., & ,,.. .... w~ s.--. c:-. ....._ ...... ..,..,17 .... --.M ..... ""' ... NATION I AT YOUR SERVICE WA HINOTON f AP> More GERM.4NS SEE fJ'll4LE BERLIN (AP> -For th6 firat. tl me ln 25 yean. a whale bas been , alahted orr East ll _, ........ . .. m ...._ Germany's Baille coast. and a aulawu raUnca w&&&.,. open tbe state news a1ency to tiotb men aDd women. said. Coaat Guard women nnt went to The whale, which . -L ...... v-f•tNlft .::,..'":. &W-~~ "==-~--.,._.....,_ I CMIOll ---... --COME 11' CO lUVD., llC. 1145 s.. c..tJtwr. ........... '71414914401 wom• will Iii aeme1 at Ma and bandtla( touaher Ull&mnentl under: a PollC)' IMOUDCed by Ule Coatt Gurd. ' Cout Guard Commandant John 8 . •e• lut year, but until now b•ve came within 200 J::'d.s or been Umited to duty aboard two larte' tbe coast near • was------------------cutten. Twelve women serve on e~ seen by vacationers and veuet. the d I rector ol a [ L 11. llOYD J marJtlme museum. the \ . DAILY PILOT 1H91n aakl w~~ tbe 1ervtce ts Nmovll\I resttlcUona J>aaed IOlelY on su lJl &m tralnln.I, aaatcnment and career opportunlUes of personnel. IN .fVLY, A FEDEaAL Judce In a1ency said. ------. Wublngton ruled that the Navy can· ....... -----=--------..;...;--------------------not bar women from aervtna aboard ONLY U OP 7t1 Coast Guard any of its ahipa only because they are women are on aea duty. but H-.yes women. 11ld many more are bein1 asalped But U.S. Diatrict Judge John J. to cutters and other vessels. Slrica let\ il to the Navy to decide Under lbt->pollcy. all women wbetber ••womed members abould be 1raclv•t-. .. 01 the CoHt Guard excluded from abipboard tolDMt •· Ac..,..,.-.~ne the men, wW be as-' alpmenll ... or for that matter ..... '° •ea duty for theit lDlUal rrom all ablpboud duties unW lueb toun u commlaaloeed omeers, and tlme as the v~ll •re properly ialUd·NI trewa m11 be ~ to equipped add crew r,nemben proper. any uaM. afloat or U1'0re. which can ly t.,.ained to accommodate tbet.i' ' proy~·~1ble privacy fM eath female countaparta ... aex ln ....,.., Pd peraoul b.Yslene. The Coast Gurd ls part of the "Of eoune. u.ere are an&tomical Tramportatlon Department. dlff er~ which ~annot be ignored. Hayes said, "Henceforth, there will but these cu be accommodated as be absolutely no arbitrary re11trlc· Lncldental matters. in areas such as tlona based solely on sex in the way med~al t\IWOrt, aNl not allowed to the Coast G"'ard uses its people." override the really important rac· t.ora," Hay~ said. WOMEN CAN TBAJN for ratings from which they bay~ been excluded, such as fire ~I tech.nlci."1. ~· ners mate and sonar technician. Numerical cdllngs based on sex have been removed from recrwting quotas, and all officer career Aelds ... THE COMMANDANT SAID equal opportunity implies equal reaponsib11ily and accountablllty. ··i" shalt demand equal commit· ment and performance from both men and women so that the produc· tivity or each will not only be equal but the aggregate productivity of the Coast Guard tncreased." be said. Air California now has the lowest every day fare from Orange County to nine California destinations. Our new 25% off midday and evening fare. That's 25% off every day and no strings. No five-day advanced reservation requirement. No restrictions on holidays or weekends. No limited number of seats. Just call Air California 1HE ALJC110N Wl1L TAKE PlACE AT HUNTINGTON RACM INN HOUDAY tNN 21112 P.aflc Coe9' Hwy. 25205 Le Paa Rd. utUM Hlfll Huntington IMdt On ThuNC11y. Aygult 31et Frtdey, S.Dlptlftlllfllblber• , .. At I P .M., Vlew 1 P.M. At I P.M .• View 1 P.M. Reservations or your Travel Agent. Now, you don't need to understand the clever names and tricky loopholes of other discount fares. Just fly Air California. We've got the low- est fare going every day. From Orange County to San Francisco, San Jose, Oakland. Lake Tahoe, Sacramento, Palm Springs, San Diego, Monterey and starting October 1st, Fresno. ... ...,.; .. _ -'t '·· 119 CILIFllNIA Call Air CaUiomio ResorvaUons In Orange Counry. (71 4) 752. JOOO: Downey, (213> 924-33 13: l.oguna. (7\4) 496-6000. Los Angeles. (2l3)627·~0l: San Clemente. (7l4) 496-6000: Riversk:ie/San Bernardino. (714) 825·6900. or your Travel Agen1. , " \ ~ " ., .. I .... heaclq~" ln San Francileo and LOI A ... a.. POLITICAL CONSULTANT D;n Bradley •at hired aa camp1l1n maaa .... Berl aald. and "we are try. taa.to ralM~·al leut tt mlllloa to naanee &hia effort•• J Ruling Upheld 1 Berl 18'4 It.ate Stn1 :Jobn Bri.111, R· 11'.aalltrt.on. •·1,.nt '1 mUllon to set t.hla wttcbhtn tnrU1Uve on the baJJot." 1 FRESNO (AP>-The 1tate'1 5th District Court of Arpeal tw upheld a Stan 1laus County dep~ ly • ertff's failure to knock before enterina a van to arrest a Stockton man for investJ.aatlon of burglary. Samuel D. Robinson, 28, appealed a 1 state prison eentence for aecond-defree bur1tary. starts tomorrow, Friday, 10 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. * Saturday 10 a.m. to 9 -p .. m. * SUF)day 11 · a.m. to 6 . p.m. * -and Monday, Labor Day, 10 a.m. to 9 g.m. * big savings · for this big holiday weekend. Thousands of I unadvertised s·pecials. I • shop tndoy downtown I.a. 'tll 7'30. son barnard1no. montclair. oxnord riversiclEY. ce<rltos 'til 9; soturdoy downtonw I.a. 'tU 7. cerrltos 'tU 6; Sunday downtown I.a.. cemtos open noon 'tH 5 p.m. save on misses' sportswear Famous make separates 8.99-25.99 Pants, skirts, cutottes, vests, Jackets, blouses, knit tops. 8-18. were $14-$39 misses' sportswear 7"6. no. 422 -Oii mov company stores save on ladles' ·accessories Genuine leather bags 15.99 large se1ectton of hand. shoulder bags. Styles In all popUlar shades. were 19.99 hOndbogs 485 -all may ~ stores Stickpin sets 2/$5 or 2.99 ea. Tac pin sets included. many styles in gold tone metal. comp. val. 3.50-SS Tropic-Cal® sunglasses 5.99 Assortment of styles with both SunSensor® and polarized tenses. comp. val Sl0-$16 fashion accessories 3 -al mov company stOfes savings ·on girls' fashions School dresses 11.99 to 24.99 Our entire stock is on sale for both sizes 4-6X and 7-14. Many famous makers. Peasant-style, 7-14, reg. $26 20.99 Pinafore dresses, 4-6X, reg. $24 18.99 Plaid smock dress. 4-6X, reg. $17 13.99 • i savings on men's fashions Print polo shirts 11. 99 Short sleeve shirts from a famous maker. Wide variety, machine wash. reg. $17 main floor tops 178 -all mav company stores Tennis shirts 9.99-11.99 Colorful assortment of polyester-cotton blends. Assorted styles, sizes. were $14-$17 men·s sportswear l73 -al mav company stores Tennis shorts 11.99 Care-free polyester shorts in assorted styles, colors, sizes. were $17 men's sportswear 173 -al mov company $tores Golf shirts 8.99 Munslngwear cotton-polyester blend shirts in fresh tee-off colors. S-XL reg $13 men's sportswear 1?3 -an may company stor.es savings for young men/boys Boys' print T-shirts 3A9 Cotton/polyester Hang Ten® screen prints in sizes S-M-L-XL Stock up. comp. val.$6 boys' clothing 23 -all may company stores .Boys' knit shirts 7.99 Famous name active knits of cotton and polyester In sizes 8-20 comp. val. Sll-$13 bays' clothing 23/164. -all mov company .. stores Young mens' pants 11.99 Assortment of styles In sizes 28-36 inch waists. Great buys. were $17-$20 Mike's Place T76. 130. 133. 191.-an may company stores Denims and cords 12.99 Cotton denims and cotton/polyester cords, b ru shed denim, pre-washed. were $16-$23 Mike's Place 409, 130. 133. 191. 462 -an may company stores savings on domestics Print comforters 24.99-44.99 Dlo(s "Damask Blossom" by Wamsutta in polyester and cotton. with polyester fiberfill. $45 twin 24.99 $55 full 34.99 S80 king 44.99 linenS and domestics 34. 41-all may~ staes Dust ruffles 9.99-16.99 Save 50% on Dior's "Damask Blossom" by Wamsutta In cotton and polyester. $20 twin 9.99 $24 fult 11.99 $28 queen 13.99 $34 king 16.99 Pillow sham: $15 standard 7.49 \ .. t ~. ; : i llneN-and dOmelttCs 34. •'1--al ~ storet-------- 4-6X collection, reg. $15-$27 11.99.-20.99 7-14 collection, reg. $17-$32 13.99-25.99 chiicten·s 77. 56 -all may company stores savings on men's shoes - Nike ruMlng shoe 16.99 Take off In color-blue nylon with man-mode traction soles. comp. val. 20.95 men's shoes 193 -al mov Corl'QOnV staes Boys' jeans 7.99 Denims In Jr. and prep sizes. reg. or slim, were $12 boys' dOthlng 14 -Oil may company stores Shirt assortment 8.99-9.99 Includes variety of styles and fabrics, long and short sleeves, were $12-$18 Mike's Place 83. 196. 462 -al may NYl!'lnt'lll"IV stores Tablecloths 9.99-19.99 Dress your table with Sunshine·s ~New Rapture" mock eyelet tabledoth with ruffled border. lrs machine washable and d ester r on ~ ................... ....._ __ _ o white or ecru. Weekend specfolf $12 52x 52" 9.99 SlS 52x70" oval 11.99 $21 10·• round 16.99 $25 90" round 19.99 napklhS reg. $2 each 1.49 Bnens ~domestics 30 -on may c~nv stores tmpolted placemats 1 A9 . Popular assortment Includes round. oval. tray and wedge shapes in colors. reg. S2 linens and domes1tcs 30 -Oii may companv stores PkJcemat assortment 99' Includes rectangular. octagonal bac/bac styles and two-tone Burt braid. reg. 1.50 linens ond dOmestlcs 30 -all may company staes Napkin rings ..• only 75' each Choose from beautiful carved wood and abaca Jute crochet styles. Special buy. linenS and domesttcs 30-al may~ staes e sore 1s may cbmpanv I Riv.er RedUced to ~armor During Trip GRAND TE'roN NATIONAL PAaK:; ~. lAP) -lft tM raft for aldli. seent &entce aaent,a Mi~~ attomp...sed PNeld'lt Catttt' •wa tM mid~ 4&ie .... at.a.. Wmon JUYW, &he moat ........ IOUftd WU tM rub al UM rivt'I". lutMd at ~ bow' of lbe day or ntaht. tM IOUnd ol the ubi· qultou1 radio eommnWllcatlon .,stem latnaded \lPGO the t,y of wUdemeu. TB WllJTg OUIB Com· m\lnkatklol A1eney Mt up an l borate rad.lo Q"SleJn tor the prftlUDl to k~p lll toueb with tbe outatde world d11rlna bu lbtM-d-.y trlp. In tM IHUDlalm blab above tM riYW, tM com· munkaUCm aaeoey Mt up at various point.a a)Qq Carter'• route. livlna u tb Ille a aame that t>eaao W\th u.i. l.U-c. It didn't matW ~ you were 1olftl lbl'C*lb a white water raptcl or camped. alone tb• banks ol UM river. Th•i. w a s n o escape from beariaf tbe people at the relay 1t.atloolJ talk1n1 eon· s tantly witb ~YCUTH each other and ataff aides. 1t uaualty beau like this: "Cowpuncher, Cowpuncher. Checkmate?" Tbat meant the Checkmate aJte wanted to talk to tho CowpunchV 1lte. Sometimoa 1&. ••• Chaperone or Cabltfl'am. 0 TBSY "81 f'VNN\' DlllMI to amUM \betllHlv.," 1ald OIM White lfodM aAM. 1 t wu mueh Uke tbe eode namea ret Service •ltDta &lve membtn ot u.. nnt faaitly which alto uMd treq~ over the ndlo. 1'be P"*' raft knew for In· •lance that 10.)'ear-old Amy bad f or1otten her eye1luH1 when, (or aeveral hours, I.Mr• WtN varlout radJo m attH lnatruct· ll>I that "0ynam(),.I" alalMI were to be put on the next hellcopt.or and nown to the preal· dcnt'a da~r. 1 THE RADIO ALSO wu UMcl t.o keep enry~ abteut ot the prealdent or ''Deacon'•" whereabout.a, usually •• an •d to keep the PRU raft from 1et· tine clOH enouah to '" him. SomeUmea a •tatter ln one raft would UN tbe rad.Jo almpJy lo tell tboee ln another raft to watcb for aome local altht aucb u 1b'i:fncrutna on the 1lde of a moun . The system was installed for the president but several ob- &ervera concluded that It was mainly Wied by the talkative White House staff. White House press secretary Jody Powell, who wu travellnc ln the press raft, 1pent almost the entire Journey flahlna serenely off the end of the boat. On• an.moon be pulled ln a cutUaroat tr®t about nve lDthel )on •• SI.nee lt WU lll .. aJ to keep, Powell wu pffparlna to toll tbe na!I back ln Uie river wbell l1 tlipDed from hla band onto tbt botlom of the raft beaHtb eartont and baaace. ff avtna reportert on board In 111ch a -ditlteate 1ltuaUon made Powell ob· vlou1ly un· comfortable. He beaan a frantic aearcb for the fllh. Aflet' some tlme, be found the flsb and. although it was a bit HW•u. the worse for wear. toned it back into the water. THE BAFTERS speculated on it.a fate as Powell le8* hallway over the raft keeplq track ot its progress. Finally. be announced: "It turned over and sank." After dinner one nlaht. at a camp1Jte on tbe river bank Powell came up with a novel ap. proacb to (iJldlna peace ln tbe Midea1L Tbe press secretary sugest· ed that the Mideast summit with Carter, Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin and EIYPUan President Anwar Sadat &e -COO· vened on a ran lo the middle of a rlv"r instead of Camp David. ~~~---~~~---~~~~~~~~~---~~~~~~~~- What's Your " , Rackett' 1 With all of the models and styles of J racquets available today, It's sometimes J difficult to know which is just right fo~ you. Forty Love specializes in \. determining exactly which quality ~ racquet wlll improve your game. / '\At Forty Love one of our / rackets is racquets. // Narcotic Replaced By Drug WASHINGTON <AP> -The makera of a new· l y a pp roved. non· narcotic pain·klller HY their drug can reli~ve severe pain without sub- jecting the patient to the risks of addiction. The drug, Stadol. is made by Bristol Laboratories and won marketing approval from the Food and Drug Administration. Te lNe't Mary Lou Anderson. 35. con vlcted In Wharton. Texas, of the murder of her father. has become the first woman ln 17 years to face the death penalty in that state. None bas been executed in the Tex· as prison system. Road Work SAN JOSE <AP> - Pl a n• have been ap· proved tor a 10.7·mlle stretch of freeway between San Jose and Morgan Hill to replace a bl1hway dubbed "Blood Alley" where 5T people have died in auto acci· dent.a since 1972. 87 .IOYCE L. KENNEDY Knoeldn4r an n•nipJoy .. ta soinl to be muc& tousher In tH future. U rou had a •tiimma,. on "'1r last Job. wony Jes& that an amfaVOtable Job refcnoce will become a 1earlet letter bra.ndl.q you unblreable. Why? Becaute references are beC<UDlnt 1bort -and lf not a..i. terse. Emplo)'ets wbo aren't look1s\g for trouble are boldin1 tbelr ~ when diacuuln1 former empJoyeea, tearlne they'll be cauaht ln tbt brew· ln• te1at ttorm of ''bl~kballlnt" 1ulta. ONE EXBCVTIVE. d4*rtbed by an ex·bOIS as ••1omJUltni ol a character," collected $56,000 to clear his 1ood name. V. Paul Donnelly llreet tlWt n- ferencea·related llti&ation ls oo the rise. Donnelly. a f>ettooit attorney wbo represents employees in dis· crlminaUon and stmU,r Job market suits, cites a SO perceht Increase ln slander <oral> and libel (WliltenJ charges in bis cases the past severaJ months. • The developina judicial rationale seems to be that management bu no rtaht to badmouth workers, except und er i ncreasingly nar row circumstances when the truth can be proved. BlJT WHEN THE truth can be proved, the employee ls likely to loee a legal challenge. New York City personnel relations attorney Elmer Ellentuck cites a'1978 case in which a bospit.Jl employee was discharged for drug use follow· lng her annual physical exam. Her teferenee 1'tated that 1be ·~ been tennlutfd for vtolatlni • ~! rule and was not ··reblre-ble." Iott ber CaM OD tbe ooQDd U.. employer hat • prlvUtle to absolutely lraok In amwenna a fk• ference lnquJry where thil appUc conaellted to it. ~; OTHER ~T CABU auu~; employers should not volunte'91:• answen to unasked quffUons, o , mike unflattering public remar~+wi about a Conner employee. :'11 AJthoup employers often wln 1~· cbarltns diem with defamation « character uaault. bulldifta aAefenae la expemlv• and time consumtn1. That's why many personnel veteran1 are adviling management to say lit· lie if nothing gOOd can be •aid. · "Yea, Smith worked here u our of. fice manager and left last June" is the idea. A8 ONE WBITER bas said. personnel officers are becomina~ masten of "sterile non·language lan1uar." · A cUpPed answer ls often taken as the lip-off that an apl)llcant is bad news. So if you are leaving a Job wtth flying colors, ask your boss and personnel officers to give you a glow· ing and expansive reference. If 1ou're leavtna under a cloud, at least you can breathe euler knpwing that harsh words are lesa likely than ever to follow -and if they do. you may have a le aJ recoune. As of september 10, 1978, schedule changes Wlll go Into effect on several Par1<·N·Rlde Express and Local Axed Routes. Ard fares Wlll be increased on all Orange County Transit Olstnct bus routes. New OCTD bus tar.. caiecir.e ~ 10 19181 The new fares are listed below along wrth the routes tnat have been deleted. P\ease remember to carry the exact fare since our drivers cannot give change. There have also been changes on SE!Nices not listed below and we will be rev1S1ng our schedules. For new schedules or route informa· tion call 547·3311 or tolHree ZENITH 7·3311 from 6 Af-A to 10 PM weekdays. 7 AM to 5 PM Saturdays, and 8 AM to 5 PM Sundays. New New Senior Cruzen SeMce Regu\ar Fare & Hardcapped Fare Local Fixed Route& EasyAider 35¢ 15¢ Peri< ·N-Ride Express & Oial·A·Rkje 70</. 35¢ Oial·A·lift 70</.• 3~ ~ortv OllCOf1tlnued Route&. The following Park·N·R1de Express Routes have been discontiooed: 207. 260: 271. (Other Parl<·N-Ride Express and Local Fixed Routes have been changed as wefJ. so please can for new route information.) " '· THE BR I STOL · Myers Co.. parent of Bris tol Laboratories, said that Stadol can be used as a replacement drug for such highly ad· dictive painkUlers as morphine and Demerol.-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "··...__ ,.\ , ... ~ '\' #26 Faahion laland Newport Beach 84CM423 ----which are both narcotic. Stadol is a brand name for butorphanol tartrate and will be pre· scrlbed in injectable form for moderate-to· severe paln In cancer patients, those recover· ing from surgery, and other chronic pain suf · ferers. BECAUSE IT is non· addictive, the new painkiller is not classified as a narcotic nor subject to the con· trot of the U.S. Drug En· forcement Administra· lion. Bristol-Myers said it. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-was studied m cllnica\ trials throughout the INTRODUCTORY OFFER! SPECIMEN ALOE VERA ............. I .. da pot.11 to 20111c• ....... RtcJUl•Sll.95 50%•F s5ts COME IN TODAY! Offer· good thru Fri., Sept. 8th llWIE VERB CEN'l'ER °!!~~7· . 17181-A Brookhurat. Fountain Valley an..tllll btodl 80llUI of°"'°° 11'1 ttte arootfVIC ,.... (N9irt 10 Guy,...,.. AMtU'ent) M l-2111 United States and Canada involving more than 2,:SOO patients. Horowitz Ta/,k Set Consumer advocate and broadcaster David ---ROroWTI:i WTtt ~ Sept. 15 at the annual Secretaries' Day luncheon sponsored by the Orange County Bar Association. begins with a aoctal hour at 11:30 a.m .. will be held at the Dilneyland Hotel Grand Ballroom and costs $10 per penon. Information can be ob· talned by calltn..- 838·9200. CenterOK9d SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -'fte1peodln1 of $8 million in botA!l tu re- venues to start ex· cavatioos for San Fran· cisco's Verba Buena Convention Center hu been approved by the city's Board of Supervhors. Pa W¢ serve hearty platters of golden fned chicken, plus a second entree that changes every day. Plus soup, plus salad, plus two garden fresh vegetables. plus mashed potatoes and gravy. plus our famous hot corn bread and honey butter. All you can eat. .. $4.95. (Even less for most chtldren.) Cocktail~ and wine optional. VISA and Master Charge accepted. Omner: Mon.-Thurs. 5-9. Fri. 5· 10. Sat. 4· 10. Sun. t2-9 . The Bil Yellow Home In Coeta Mesa la ope.o Cor lunch Mon.ct..y t.hrouah Friday, 11:30.2:00 p.m. ·The Big Yellow Bouse Bestaur.ult 1639 East lmpenal Highway. Brea• 3010 Harbor Blvd .. Cosla Mesa • . i . . • ORANGE COUNTY I f!OLITICS I OBITUARIES lllurldly. Aue• 31. 1971 OM.YPtLOT .4J7 PerdatentPet This 1.075-pound steer lS gettlng to be a little bit too pushy with his owner Kinder Coley. 15. of Laguna Hills. The Mission Viejo High School FF A ~ber will take he r animal to the Los Angeles County Fair in Pomona. which open for a 17-day Deatlu Elaewhere ROANOKE. Va. IAP> board chairman of the Hennao H. Pevler, Norfolk & Western 75. former president and Rallway, died Tuesday. SALISBURY. Rhodesia 1AP > -Beat.• Nociee. COMITO Rhodesia's state presi· l'ltANCes ANN COMITO, rftkteftt dent. John Wratball, 65, of "-Oort llMCll, Ca f>a)\ed awn on di d od hi ffl . I AUQ~I 27. "71 In Copperopolls. C. at e t ay at S 0 Cl8 ,,,. •oe of ~. a.-oaUQll••• ot residence, government F ,.,, .. •l>d Aw•ll• Mo.so.. OI Ne• h ( f . . l VOrll, IOVl"O molher ol Charlotte 0 US e\ 0 l C 1 a S an• totnllo of eoai. ww. ea .. Art Comito nounced: ol Cot!• IMM. Ca., Sal Comito of NeWpert llMCll. Ca., sister of JHft Ambrose Of ,...._. Bffcll, C... ano RObert MUO" OI Whittler. NI". Comito was • S.roeant tor the T~ ... pl Men's PrllCWI, "'9 has """ tn¥Olvecl with the Callfor,.la Cotr9<· tlol\al c..,tan for tN Ptil H ~ F-•I _.\'left wHI be held°" T~ 4-¥, A"9VSI 11, 1'71 at 2PM at t1le Snlllh TUllllll l.Ml'IC> WHl<llf1 O\apel, •t1 E \711\ St , Costa Mase, Ca Fri...cl' wflO wllll top.., llWlr r-IJ may un •• the Mof1...,., Tl\Wway tram fAM to 7PM. Smll" Tutlllll umb ~*-"-......... LAMICIN FRANCES F. LAMKIN. luMrat SAN FRANCISCO CA P > -Thomas Church, 76, a pioneer of modem architecture in America and a principal planner for Stanford Universit y and other college campuses, died Wednesday after a long illness =·~·00r!.u=~: Shorthand Parll. Ha~ i...wri·Mount Olive --- Ao\On16ary, <:bst• 1'WM. "4SSS4. lt091M.•lt DOROTHY LEE ROESst.U•. ,..,.. Classes Set -· of Uoo Ille, ca. p.,.... •••Y Oft A"9"tl ~. tt71 at the "9• of 71 Balovecl mot,_. OI AOOln M<C.-11111 OI Santa ..,_., Ca . FrMU Aoeuler of Co\18 Mesa, Ca FrecterlO J. Roen••• of ......._, Beach, Ca . alto WfVI,_.., bY • \l•t." Ala Hal'OIM..., Of -Je<Sef, -,.._QUIOn Of """'°" Bee<I\, Ca , Liiiy BroOM\ of 114tverty Hiii\, C• anO Emmy MartOft\ OI lrV1M. Ca G<a--vlcn wilt be htl6 on S.lurdl.,, 5efll-• 2, 1'71 at IOA# al FalrMven Me'-1•1 f>arll In Santa Ana, Ca with Or GeralO 8Hh of ttle Flrsl Christi..., Cl'Klrcll Clfflclat· ono, Interment will bot al Fairhaven -'•I Patil. 5nlllh Tull\lll l.amb ~wrydlnt<1or. . ....._ OUNSCIOM8 HoNOR DENNISON OVNSCOMB, IMleved mother Of COnsa.Mlr Hell· OrlCl<s and QrariclmOI-Of Teri Lynn Heaorlcks •"" Alc11aro L•• 11•n· O ridl s, dlecl WltdMSda\t, AUQ<i&t 13. ,.,.,. ., Mr home '" Saft LUIS OOl>PO. Classes in beginning, intermed iate and advanced shorthand will be offered by Orange Coast Co ll ege's Secretarial Science Department. The fall semester begins Sept. 11. Registration is under way through Sept. 22, with information available by calling 556.5735, c.a. Sh• was • IOftO lime rH!derlt of ea111oa ...a c.osc. ~ Funeral .,. OCC Library re....-nl\ _... f\anclled b'( the Nep. h;ne soc: •ety. .,-.-----Hours Posted Pme1•01Has SW'nt'S MOttTUAIY ·> 627 Main St Huntington Beach 536-6539 SH"'8 MOITUAIY 976 So Coast Hwy L.aQuna Beach 494-1535 1533 N El Camino Real San Oemente '492-0100 Orange Coast College's library will open ror the fall semester Sept. 11. run on Sept. 15. College students. FF A me mbers. 4·H Clubbers will sell top quali· ty market beef. sheep and swine at the Junior Livestock Auction. Sept. 20 begin· ning at 1 p.m. Board Backs Park Plans A $2.9 million plan to protect Irvine Regional Park int.be Oranae area for "increased overuse" by visitors and erosion problems has been en· dorsed by Orange County Supervisors. The plan will Involve erection of barriers and other work to :-estore native oak and sycamore trees, as well as flood control improvements and realignment or some park roads, a report to s upervi.aon said. The park bu been used by the public for the past 80 years. The plan approved Tuesday is part ot an eventual $5.9 million improvement program at lhe facility. Badham Fund-raiser Rep. Rhodes Will Speak BJ O.C. BUS11NGS Of ... .,..,, Ptlll ICllff U .s. Rep. John J . Rhodes, R-Arizona. minority leader of the House of Representatives, will speak Sept. 8 at a Costa Mesa dinner-dance for Rep. Robert E . Badham, R·Newport Beach. The Badham fund-raiser, which costs $100 per person, will be held at the South Coast Plaza Hotel. A reception will begin at 6:30 p.m., with dinner at 7:30p.m. Dotti and Glenn Stillwell of Newport Beach are chairmen or the dinner. Other dignitaries ex· peeled to be on hand include state Sen. Dennis Carpenter, R·Newport Beach; Newport Beach City Councilman Donald A. Mclnnis, and Rep. Clair Burgener, R-San Diego. ••• A HOUSE PLANT sale to raise proceeds for Chuck Gibson, Republican candidate in the 73rd Assembly District, will be held from 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Sept. 2-4 at the Town House Shopping Center, 981 Adams Ave., Huntington Beach. Information is available by calling 847-9604. ••• ' $50,000 Grant R.eceived- orange County to Provide Job Skill Tests Oranae Coun\y government has received a *50.000 arant to provide Job akJU tests for work en ref erred to f ederally·flnanced employment pro- arams. The new test pro1r1m. expected to be tn effect by October. would help match unemployed workers with proper Job open.l.np and tralnins pro· grams. The new pro1ram will provide computen&ed teat.I in bulc readlnt. wriUna and malb •kiUa. alon1 wttb problem aolvina and attitudel a reJOrt to 1 1upervt10nsald. ,\ All clients refetted to tbe-CETA proaram wtllnc undereo the tests. the report sajd. •1 The county ll among local agencies which hire worken for public and l\on·profit agencies under terms of the federal Comprehensive Employment and Tra.inlna Act cCETA>. -------· ~--- DAI LY PILOT :ti •f l 10 141 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~----~~~~~~'--~~~~~~~~~~....;~ FURNITURE 110N PIECE . OUr exclulM MW teettonal It ot home ln comempofory OJ ffantlttonal Mttlngl wttn 12 feet of .up«bty comtottabte ..attng onct an expenatve 100~ nylon texhnd w.ow fobrte accented by comraattng hOnd·woven fringed pillows. The bouc focal potnt fot your .. tttng, It's vMOtlle, spoctcx. and betPeokl auoltty In every Inch and stitch of tta next·aeoaon design. The aolld blacit walnut and contrasting veneer 2A ·· choW tablel are o perfkt occ.aory, eo. $99. Decorating s s s 14"Ylce. dellVerf and our fomoua war· 1 ronty of quottty ot no extta coet. • n "' I ) :J rl . ., v l ,, •• .. ... ,_FAMILY CO&.OMIAL ....... L The library is open to the public and its hours will be 7:30 a .m . to 9 p .m . Mondays through Thursdays, and 7 :30 a .m . to 5:30 p.m . on F ridays. The library wi ll be closed on ds SEVERAL EVENTS are planned in Sep· _w;e;e;ke;n; . ._· --------tember of Harriett Wieder, a candidate in the HOMI 7801 Bolsa Ave. Westminster 893-3525 rACIRC 'llW UlltOIHALrAll Cemeterv Mortuary Chapel 3500 Pacific View Drive Newport Beach 844-2700 McCObla •-r: ··~ 494-SM15 Laguna Hills 768-0933 San Juan Capistrano 495-1778 HAllOIUWM-MOUNroun MOllTUAaY_. t • 1oa1•1 r.4D Mottuery-Cemetery CrematOf'Y 1625 Gisler Ave Costa Mesa 5<40-555'4 IALn.IBGMON N•ALHOMI 646-2424 CoetaMeN 673-9450 mL•OADWAY MCMITUAIY 110 Broadway ColtaMeu 842·9150 Sto411M-TUTHIUA AMI MOllVAIY WUTCUllP CHAP& 427 E 17th St Costa Mesa 646--4888 A • Orange County's Second Supervisorial District. FUNERAL DIRECfORS BARBORLAWN- MOUNTOLIVE A Mexican Fiesta will be held from 1 to 4 p. m. Sept. 10 at her campaign headquarters, 1m77 Valley View St., Garden Grove, telephone 891-1,17. The Committee to Elect Harriett-Wiedermso- will sponsor a reception and musical fashion show presented by Mr. Blackwell Sept. 13 at Tiffany's, 3388 Via Lido, Newport Beach. with cocktails beginning at 6 p. m. Cost is $40 per person or $75 per couple. Information is available at 846-8365 or . 891·1917. 1) I estimate m~ho-:..:..m:.;.e~·s~v.!.!a~l.!:::.u=e~----$'-------===~ 2) Multiply line 1times80% 3) Equals A Wieder fund·raising cocktail part a 4) Balance l still oww~e------.--""::":'.""'-'!"'~~::==:==:=;=;====:=:=~-~-=-~-:-1~~1 .~ ...... -------- • Interment In Any Cemetery • Shipment- • Burl•I lnaur•nce •Cremation $255 complete· "Serving All Faith&" You can Charge DAILY PILOT Clo11fffed Ad1 642·5671 *** ANOftlER StSI per person dinner ls scheduled Sept. 11 for Assemblyman Roa Cordova, D·El Toro, who la seekinl tbe state Senate seat current· ly held by Dennis Carpenter, R-Newport Beach, who la reUrlng. The event, with tickets at $250 for couples, will be held at the home of · David Stein in South Laguna. lntormatlon can be obtained by calling 556-7441. • *. THERE WAS LOTS of Joodwtll all around, ac· cordln1 to the candidates, but Auemblyman Den· nls Mancera. D·Huntlngton Beach, and Chuck Gibson, the Republican nominee for Man1ers' seat. couldn't agree on sign limitation policy. Glbloo bad auaaested a maximum of 30 4·foot· by·8·f00l sisns, but Mancera said that was lnautri· clent for the 7S-square.mlle 73rd Assembly Dls· trtct. However, both aareed that the wtnner wlll make certain all 1l1M are removed af\er the elec·, lion. • 5}Mc001num amount l might be eligible to borrow {subtract 4 from 3) 6) Amount I'd like to borrow · With a Homeowners Equity Loan from The Bank of California. you may qualify to borrow from $3.000 to $30.000 (or even more!) to use for your children's education, travel. other worthwhile investments- almost any purpose you can na·me. Calculate your borrowing power, adjust that amount to you r needs and budget and then stop by or call us for details. You worked for your home, now let it work for you. THE BANK OF CALIFORNIA ~rt Be11ch Offlrr t4()1 Dove S1ree1. Nl.'V.lfWln s .. .ich 92663. 17141 ~ 3511 "'auc NO'l'ICI "18UC NOTICB ~ ........ ""=----=-Efi--........................ ... .._..,.., '=-\...... ... .. ""' •Clu:'6wmtft .•.••• .•• • _........ .... .~ ..,.. _ _..... ... 1.110T1caw&,.1181ll~rn._-.. •~nM. ....... TllltNaClltl't .. a*ta ,,,.,,., 1.11t.m -~!.""• ---.......... "-" .... ..,...., ................ ..,M. ........ ""' ... .,,. .. °"'" -•"MW ............ ....,_ Me Mll•l•IAffOlll flOll T•tlle~ ........ •MwtcMlll1 Cllillf .. MllCIP ...... ., ............ ~ W•1Ul •· ttNTATN9 ~~DOH HllOWI', ............. ,_ lt<i ....... IMMICll, ..a a ... __...._ ..... ~ •• I(, CMll ... C911111'/,._,, .. ................. -a.,.,, ... .,... .. ,,.....~,, ................ ltlcNeery ......,, .... c:.11..... •.....••••......•••••••• .... ..... • l'UIUCATION "*#~L .UOOaf ltCl'OllT. Tiit .,_... ........ ¥~-.i...-. ....................... ,,._.., t.40,,. ._'II,....._.,.._,. e. ""..-~ ..-.-. ...,. Clllfl9tt .. ~ =· ........................ ........... t1t.-•.m ~ ~. ~ ..-.1<1i11-........,.....,,., ....... ~ ,...... ............................ ... tca.t .. -..... N4wM .. NMft , &&. OHNllWT Mani ... , ..... , .. . ~1'11* t.#1,tM ""9 ...-.C ......._ • W• rwert wle W ._.. -~ .... ()ty ..... "'"6QwfW0J ........... ,. • ...... • 1.tft.llt t.»I ..... ..... "' ............. ..., ....... ~ ....................... t.'1',4U ........... ,.......,., ..... M........,.,.U.ont••..,... ..... ..._WednttCT ._ .... _.._ ........... MteAINel'tttA ......... C*fTI ... ltOCt 4we..-...OMt.YAnt-..c. , "-•••'•---~• .............. ....,, ,.,..,,.. """' .... .." -""""'! .. .....-noll''*9 ......... ii lrr'ftfll • .-................ ....... ,... '·* 1 t " ...................... .. •N uaa ......... ~ .................................... .,..,. "·"'• It~ ................. •••••••••••••••••• °'9ertM ,., ....•..••.....•••.••...•••• •••• 0...•1• .............................. .. ............ -..... ................ .. I.• UM _.. .._.~_._.____. •••••···. 1 ...... 1 ...... .~ ,: ~ Mml'...._ ................... .,,.. ...... .. car-~••, ............................. . 91 .. I .......... MUIJC:s.,_Yt .., c::ttlllfl<-it'f~__., .......... ...... . ..~ .... ,. n.•• u.: .. .i ;,~g::.--uu.a .............. •.•u-*U ,.-.-o;-. .. u....,....., ............... .. ~,...,..ttlll•ltllo I ll 1111111111 I .............. .,..,, -IT AT• INClOMS --ttltTu ........... A1MM ...... ..,,~·~-----....... . I(. • ..... .,...._~ ................... . .. .. ... • ... .. ...... TUii •" °""' , ....... .._. .............. . ~~'--.~ .::··. :·:.:.::'.:·:::·::·: ... ::·:.:·:".'.'iU: =~·.H(;O...· ................ .. .. Q~SOW ............................ 1 •1tC>f~lfluT- ""-11 Mitl' • .. .. .. .. • • .. • .. .. .. • • • M •n ttcw.1 "911 .. • .......... , ........... . ,.... .. . . .. .. .. .. ...... ..... .... .. ,,. •" "-........ . ..................... . WIMM•Y .. c:vtt•e.-t edftte\' TU HlllllW"" ,..,_....,. 11t1-.i. ...__.,_ . • ............... . """° ..... "'.,... -.0.1_, ....... C"_. ., ....... '<~hi-... , ..... -"'"''-"" .. ~ ....... . ~ .... ftW"tlll ••••• •••••••••••••••••• .. ,_ ., ••• -0.lltf'U!QI'-............... .. ...... c--.......... ......... . ............. . T01'At. l•CDl!lle • • • • ............. .. C.TOTAL. ... TM ........ Mu•c• MID 111COM11 O.trnt•aWTeo l1lf ~OTMeltOUlGO ~WVlo ,.,_ , .... I Ml.m ....... •••• 1 .. _., .... Fl'*4M 41t(_.. el ~",_..._...,_ ......... ,~ ..... "'*"""*' . .. . .. . .. . .. ... .. . .. .. .. . ....... , ...... C.M~ •••• 10TAI.. ....... • • .... .,,_.,,. ..... , .»10 ,.,. ... N .. ~ ...,..C.M.Q•s I I ...._ 111..,.. llldOINr k('rie•~ .......................... . Oltlw ,...,_,.. .......................... .. TOT AL. OTM• CMl1*» • .. .. • .. .. • • .......... ~.Niii. ~\ft(~~ (alt !fl c...tY,......,... .. ... .. ... .. . .. . . IAllll.AD •,171,ffl C-t• ...... E-. .. . . ..... ........ --•7J •ITa•DtMOMUWC:. . ..... .. • 1,Gll,4> 1,111,.,1 N-iDOn C-.. • • .. ,..... . . W.,18' 0UJ I . TOTAL. O'f'MH CMITOO l'\.US ..... _.. ....,_ HIQll .. • •• .... .. •• •• • .. Slt.JIJ .M.S:I 1ttT •11ot"'9 ....,.we• .. .. . . . .. .. .... .. •.or.-.,,.,., .... _. ........ °"' .. .. .. . ,...,. ·"" eUtLDUIO •ut10 A1'AI. Y&U Of" M ... ltAL •llWD TU:H UIWT NOM. CMt MIMCCT TO. PIO~ Ta• bTe UMfTI A. e101 ........ UU.1tCe, JULYI ~Ill (_.iy ,-,.._-, ............. .. A~trlcllO ~. Jllll' 1, ttn ............ . Tu At<•lllb. "77·7' ...................... . s..blOlel, Aatrtcll9dllel~ plus I-............................ . Acflltl ....... tf71·11 ............... .. I 1l!ii1I1111 NITeC .. •ttt01Au.ca ........... .. a..tttCOM• -LOCM. INCOME .,. VM ef 9lllldlflll ~ ............... .. TOTA&. IMCOlllll4S .......................... . C. TO'f&L.lll'TKotMn• UUMCS MO HllCICIMI ............... • ............ 1V.Q MM>ont•• °""° .. SITH, IOIL.OINGS. eoo«S ANO Ml!OtA. ANO NEW EOUIP'MEMT lvlldlftt..., ,,,.__. ol IOt.173 1,.. 11.'°2 lulldlnQI, ............................... .. 141,._ 1'3,27S t .... S22 TOTAL, l•NNOITUtlH • ................ . ·-· I . IMOIMO IA&.Alltc:., JUMa a ISt,m IU,m '~ C.sh 111 CowltY T,..,._., ............... . 1"'"4"1 1 .. u..a t -~ NIYIMDIMO~ ............ .. ... .. f,111 tt,IQ 11,14 ''"' ·•-,.,.,,_, '· TO'fAL.UNWOITUalSAltO n.m MOS ,..on .,., ••otMM&.A..al ........... ..... 11,14 ~estr1cted 11MeM», June ao, tm .......... .. E511met• te• ~ Oii unteQWM reu. lt,..19 ....................... _.... .. 11,m IU,020 INCtAL •HaaYI """D A, ••• , ....... MUIMCS, .IUt.Y t 11,10 11,10 t ,f11 •.117 .... ---- 1,771,ttl 1,711,tll .... , .. ,....,,. Solillfotel, ,..ldeitlltl- ptvs Inc-........................... . -........ •lllMdlture -I« lr-'W, ..,._19 .............. . ... ,,, lt0,0'1 c.ltl'll~~ ·••···•·•• ••••• ~c.,..,.,. L.1*1"'-................... . ttU2' t.•AN MU eaCM ..... MOIA&.AltCI ..... . o i.en.m 41.tn 0 t.D.- ,.._.,,.,._..,_. tolleMllefW I" IN summervof~llistrict tn -·~for tm-19 totw t»rlwel by levy .. , .. COM« ... INCOMUtO TIU.NSFUIS ~l~Tr~ ................ . TOTAt. IMClOMa •••.•••...••..• on Ille secw.cl roll ••• ISi.i.. t.•211,"7 C. TOTAL. NtrT e•Ol•NIMO Ul.ANU ANO lltCIOMI ............... . tm·JI 1.,.,. O. IXP'•MCMT'U~ ANO OTMI• OVTGO AC-.e -JDOO COHTAACTEO SER,,ICES ANO A. e•CUMIMO ULANCI, JULY I --OTHER ONAATING EXP'ENSES Cull In Ceutlty T,...wry .. .. ...... .. •• ... •·-·'°' S.l2f... J,ttt• RevotvHlg <Mii Fund........................ JO.D 211.-0 -.- Accovnb ,.._.vllble ...................... . •.11s ••..552 , .. ,,,,.. s-..................................... l2ID.JIM "'.-•.m ~ ...... ...,.._ ............. . ..OSITES. IOILOtNOS. ec>O«SANO NOIA, AHO NEW EQUIPMENT si ... ...-..... --OfSltH .......... . 8ulldift9S ... ,,,,...,_, .. P.....i4 ~ .. ......... ........ ... ... "7,115 M.155 oNJ,116 TOTAL.QHta•lln'~TI ........... • • ....... 1..2"..IZJ •.ftl,114 Mldtftgs ......................... . l.etS: Cllnwlt U*llU...... &tau~ • ... • • ..................... . ~ ·-... .. .. .. . .. .. •• •• • .. • .. .. S,2116,ftO a,ttt.DI 4,J11..... SuOtoe.. • ................................ · ••T IEOtltlMllOaAUMU ....... a.m.1.ci ··--t.uuts TOTAi.. IJtllMOITUdl ................ . AdjUst"*"ttoACcounts A.ctlveble • 22,ID 211.MO tr. RNOINOIAL.AflCC, .IUNI • '·'"·'" 1,m .m ...... rJ,UJ ttS,157 36),114 al,J2' Ad/int-btoCurrentLl9blllllu .. ($,6211 111,417 CMhfn~yTrteiUrt ............ . AD.IUST•o MT •EOfNNIMO less C11rre11t U.iillltle$ .................. . Ut..ANC.• ........ .. 2.'2• ..... 4,ul,O» 2.12',US NET EMCMMGIAUIMC• .............. . un .m 2.a..«» 4l,1n .. INCOME '·TOTAL, bP'DfDITV••S l'>L0US 1,.IM,406 U~.a 110H400 FEDERAi. lltCOME HT •1t0tNO aALAMC1 .. . • ............ . IMO Etementery-~ry STATE SCHOOL IUILOt•G "UllO ~etlonA.ct .................... · · ·~·92• Sfl,'2.c no.7to A. llOHfNHIOll&UlltCl,.IULTI 1110 ~ Ernptoy-nt CM1\ II\ OOllMY Y,..wry ••..•.•••••..•. Trellll11t Acta) "71... ......... ........ 25,!'7 .. ,T llOf•Ote.IAUUtCI ...... . ll1t Hltlonll o.Nftte E_._ Act • . • ,_, a. ttt<:OMC IMI V~UGNI EducMNlllA"tei ... t4ilb e.oo STATE IHCXIME .. ,,.. . .. .. .. .. . .. . . . .. .. . . . ...... . . . ..... ...,.. so.-... "'" ...... for~ ...0 Ottwr fildlwM t..c-. . ... .. . .... . . . . . WA• 1..-..aa. 4'2.m •.cttltl• ................................ . Sublolel ................... ............ .. l,f79A>t 2,.SM,Altt 1,m ,a» ... L.OCAL.lltCOME MOO ST A TE INCOME ~-•10 PrlM.lpel 4-11onrnenl II.cl -1" anees1c .,.E4UellntloftAld ......... un.s12 l.t»,• 11,6741,ltl =~::.!t\..lnll..S84tl~ ............. . •12 ""''lc.ellyM~~ ............ • . "I.est 561,lti W ,10t .............................. . •u Ewc*tMentell' Itel.,_,,........... J2,t'2 21.Aa 71"51 ... Otllw LocM ._ ................ • :;;~;:=-~~~... ..... ls.110 ,._., M,ue =f:'cc>MiNG;:.W.sF£iis' ............ . Puplh ................................. , 1l,tSI n.S-10,J10 etlOlnttrfundTr..,,.... ................. . ... EclliUllGNC•Y Mendl~d •• . • . . • .. 363, .. , •.sas ..,...,. ~~::~~~c:;a.-.o.·.n;i•io'a:t.:A••c•· .. · a.11 M.m.tty G1t..s • • .. .. ..... .. .. . • • ..... 1n.1i. ITJ,201 1.-,15s ·-, .. ..._.. ~Stle<lel """'"9"-'1IOl ..... nt ---..... ~ ..................... . -21 0 I T '"'-'-1~.21t 1•• U1 1a TOTAL. •X ... ..otnHIH .... • .......... .. 0 • 100 ,,, .. ,,, .. 0 -'...., '--.,, ..................... •• -....,, • I . CMDINOIALAllC:m..IU.I• "22 Tr--1etlOI\ .... . .. .. ••• •. .. . • •• ••• 1n.ne 1esA21 1 .. ,llS Glilll tn ,...-,~ 1 , .. 112$EOl'ty0tl.,._E-.ati.rt............. J2t.2.Q -~ .._ .......... ~ .................... 1·) .. "30 5"<1• ....... _ ..... • .......... . ............... . 8'32Al~lllllMte~IMlnlc:lloftet ,...... t.111 _ ::1~·~~~-~~.~~~~....... 1,1 .. =~~~-·MWk~........ -4•-• U.•aTHIA ACiCOU'IT Plopils tor ""'°"'No s..te S.-let A. 8£0Httfttt0 llAlAltCll, .IUL 'I I Edl!Calloft Ftcllllles .,. '"" In ..... Of Anwrlc>, Anil.ote ... •. • .. . . • .. .. .. . •• .. . . • . . ?t,"10 »,JM ».• tttll StNet, C:.W 'MM 863' AllP0'1MN11e<1t for lrwlnoctleMI ''Qwleretll\O'" Call ..................... .. Me1 .. 1e11.......................... ... ... .. 10.tn 10"'7 t,3$1 "R-•e''c.11 UnctlldlnvAccvmvletl,,. 8'lt~$pe(WMlowenu1 ...... -.. ... JJMO '°·* 31.ns ~et«l•Equipnlentftetllec-m •10 T n ,_.....~Ions ltettrv•l ................................. .. au Bu•llteu ln...mory EJi.....,.loM .. • .. 731, ti' 4ft.ft0 A«ounts lteatlvMlle ...................... . 8'12 M-0..U' ~I-.............. 1,nt.lll 1,4'J,'l41 S4ores .. • .. •• ......... • .... ··" • .... •• ... .. •nDIMfT•Aa!NfSW-tlons....... . 14,tlS u.n1 11.126 TOTAl.aHtltflNTASSCTI .............. . "'°°"'«S&M•1-...... .......... .... 45.• as•u iun L.nsc.,,.,....ue111ut1es .................... .. Sv1>101e1 :................................. 1,rn,... 1.Aa.-. tt,tu,tst NET••Of"'"MOIAL.Ulct ............ .. 81• COUNTY IH<XHllE :=: FEOEAAl. INCOME 8780 "MllCtl'-Fllllds" ... • • ... • .. .. • *--'' n,m •• t100 LOCAL INCOME ttt0 OIHd Nutr1UOOI ,.,..._ • , ••• , 1110 Olnrld Tues llOOSTATE'. INCOME •n *"'" Aott ............... -.......... ».m.->2.ASl.m 11.Jn.'-==':.!~.,,, .. tt.m tN.J7' •12 UllS«urect Rot• • .. .. .. • • . ... .. • . • .. .. • l..Dl.47t uao.m '·~ 1113 Pr!« YHrS' THH..................... 1.01~110 ....... t,otJ,6U -LOCAL INCOME ""° Sties · ... Sties 810 Sele Of Equlpmenhlld Supplfes .. .. . .. . 2.111 t,11M 2,79' 11U F..e SenlQ S.lff .... • ........... •• • .. IMl Set• Of lAnd -flullellfl9\ • . • .. .. .. . .. • • J,7'J,S10 -.0 lllltrest ....................... • ..... .. ... Otlltr Sela . • • • • • .. • .. . • • • .. .. .. • • .. .. . 101,US Mt. tt6 "'° OtMr LOC.el Income ................... . llSO Aenltls -1.Aaft, Eace"' Sutltotel ................................... . 'Mis< elf-Funds".. .. .. . .. .. • .. . • .... Ill.US H0 .. 11 21t.-TOTAL llt<:OMa ........................... . lS,140 I04.00I t,111"'5 '47 11,toQ 1.••.122 1,m,sn t .'lll lSO :>,m 4,6'1 0 ""°Inter~ .... . ..... ... . .. .. ... .. ....... lU,102 sto.1*3 sn.-c. TOT•&.,, Nat NOllffltltG •AUNC• •10 Fe" -Corltrecft AltO JNCCIMa .. .. ... • .. .. .. .. • .. . .. .. .. • • .. t,tH).S) ,, .... m •11 AClull Edut.ellOll . • .. • .. .. . .. • • . .. .. .. .. 2-.S 0. ··~•WOITUttH N7SConlntetSerric:tt ..................... J.S,10-t~,110 l1.7IO 2000CLASSIF1E:OSAl.Alt1ES .............. ..,.... 101"'2 111t ~ Feeund Coft\re<t llCIOO EMPLC>YEE 9ENEFITS ........... , •• Sttvlcu ............................. .• .. .• . I.OU '°' ,,.. =~~Pt.JES ANO EQUIPMENT mo '"MIKtl1-F_.. .. ... . . . .. .. . .. •AltS 2.1)4 >,• Feed Sentlcn lltOOl .. rl.DC.all-....... _........... J,tlS J.m a.-FOOd ..................................... .. =·~~pMtHGTRA~SFEM··· ........... >l.Nt.»il 41'711'110 ll.20'.-.S OIMr F-Sef'llk.es ..................... . mo OllMr TulllOll.............. .. • . . • . • .. .. .. SIS,174 11'.... as,.., Ectu~ R~ment ................... . TOTAi. iNCOME ............................ 4',619,116 J2AM,12S •1.aes.111 541bfotel ................................... . C. TOTAL, NET eaOCltNING to00 SI TES, eVtlOIMGS, BOOKS AICO Ul.AttCIAlfOINCOMI .............. , 1U04,#n S.,tle,rtO 4S,21S, ... :'!.~.!_!~NONEWEOUIPMENT o. u .... tOtTVltUANOOT'NElt OUTGO ......... ~ .. 1000 CERTIFICATEOSA.LAA•ES Food ~vlot ~ ............ ....... •,154 14,tft TNCliers' Seltf1es 10 •II.All 20 m 411 IUOS w TOTAL. ••NNOIT\lllEI... ..... .. • . .. l,10S,t10 t,ea.ru SUIOOI AdntlniltFet~· ;-;~~.-,·.;.... • ' ' ' ' E. l•OINO MUNta, JUNI • eu.n t 11•. t11 111.sa '"·• .. uos t.OJ9.S$7 1.ort,an . ... , .... , . ... , 0 .... , .... , u• t'9,S.. ....», m.11• 127..tn 1'1, ... S6S.OOO 1,2n.ooo '·'" U.000 1.216 .... 1.-ss .... 2,IS), ... 7U,ODO UO,ClllCI ...... ,, .,.. l.SOO 1,101,11• 21.ClllCI i.ou.11' and Olslrlct Adrnll>lstretor•' Cull tn •en• oc Amerlte, SelerlH .. . .. .... .. .. .. •. • . .. .. . . .. .. ... ,,..,... • ..... , 1,75U7t !~·~~~~MeH • .... 000 Other Gertltlc.alwd s.1er1es .. .. . •• .. ..... . t,11).1111 i.c••• 1,1'1,m ,..._re ·~ ._.... • ·· · .... · ...... •• ·.... ·-S,711D '· s..1ot.i • . •. •. ................ •. . .. .. .. ll,tll\,at 2•,m-"' ta.OW.OM Reserve Call ......... · ............... "· 2•.. 2 ... ~ 2001 CLASSIFIEO SAl.AltlES A<cO<lnb Alcel11Mtla .... • •• .... .. ....... .... l'°,110 149.S.. -,w- lllSINCll-AlclllS fw Ol-1 SforH .................. ................... '1,IQ ... 561 '1,tOO T"'lllntM&llt..ces.ferlts ............ • "'7,2tS 127,JIS TOTA.LCU ... lllTASl.n ................ m ,716 lU.... 32A,M Olller Claslftecl Stlerltt •• . . .. • . .. .. ..... .. 1,.an.ou 7,211,21> L.ess C\ff'rent Uflbtlltlti ......... .. ... ... • . . IM,112 127,11t 237,HI ~4K~~~~~Wtl~ft"~~-.:..:.~-1.MR;.i11~~~~M~~~··--~ol;iliit~•~.TOYA~~~~U.u.J1tn1.1.-~-~ ... ~ ;. .. ,.,. _ ..,_ 9eneflt&,.,, THC:llel"Sertd lrmructlctnel AldH ....• OMmplo,,_,,. lrt.Alt"tn<fl '°' Tuc:Mrt •nd IMl~I Aides . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . 0-r E~ BtrMfll• ................. .. s<illlotel ................................. .. 4000 eooKS, SOPPLll!S ANO IEQUlf"ME.Nl ~£PLACEMENT Ted_, ....................... . Ot!Mt" 9otlls ............................... . 11'112rvdlaftel ~Its ...................... .. Ol'.ller~ ............................ . 1,11•.• 2,..0 71,llO S0,110 3.M ,61t 4. UUJ7 •.-.,n1 s.1se.aos s..asi.m s.m.-n •·*'-• ......, 114,M .,...., NET EMOl .. G UL.Attell .. .. .. • .. .. .. .. .. • Ulf.4S3 uoo,n2 '· ISJ, ... t•IVllANC• f'U"D a.a•o1•tNOMLANc:• • ..1uLY ........ o m .u• I . IMCOM.I ........... . "7,tM SJ,111 C. TOTAL. ... T UOINNINO IALAMC.I 6 IM<lOMI .. . • .. _.. •• ... "7.•M tSl,01 O. ••~IMCMTU•U~ .... ~................ o "1,t.St 1 .-.ttOltfOIAJ.AltCI, IV.I•.......... • 19?.tw 52.177 '·TOTAL e•N•CMT'Ullll, 01"1• OUTGO l'>LUSM•TlltOINOaAUNC.a ............ m.u• Ut.01 PWllWMI Or..,.. CDest DIMiy Piiot AllO, al, lf7' 407S.71 FOOd Servlc.s ............................. . EC1Ulpmett1 A.ottcef!Mflt ................... . 5'.tbi•l•I .................................. .. 2*0,2f1 .. PVBlJC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE SOCIO CONfllACTEO SERVICES ANO OTMEA OPERATING EXl'>ENSES Ceftl••cl for ....._, Sef'rk•• .. eo..tr ec 11. "-S, Md Le_. . Ot!Mr O,.raOllQ Expenlti •.. Sul»tofitl .. ....... ..... .••. . • tOIO SITES. 8UILOIHGS, llOOKS AHO <MEOIA, ANONIEW EOUIPMl!NT Si1es enct I mptOWl'Ml\I Of SitH ................. . ts;;lldf1191 -Cmcwov-• el 81tfkll"91 ............... . .._, tM Midi• tor,.... or IJl,llt 10'1,m •"·'°' n1)J1 t, ltS,ZU 2,t .. f* 2.•.'41 t,718,Jlf 1t1Ats J,JIU,lto Ea......,Sdlool Ulll'ertn ................ '1,1114 ... ,. f~ ................................. W ,161 6a.tM SolMofM .. • .. • • . • • • .. • • • .. • • .. • • • •• • ... t.11ltS4 I.I..,. IUITOTM..all....,.TVal.t ............. ~ o.....- 1000 OTNlll OUTGO De-.. Sel"<rk:a A-I ll~CIOOAcC-1 of St tfe klMMll Wldlnct ~"°""""" . .. . . . 0u1.,.i.,. fulllGll TvlllOll IOr ......... ~leMt C.lllffS 9' ,,,.,.._ •• .,., ·, ... •• • ... All ~ T\lltlol\ • • • • .. , ., ., ..... . S4141fotel , .. , ................. . l""''llfte f•-'-·· Ot!Mt frMtten l ••• VO 1.)12,tl• 2tf.tat nt.At 124A"J uun t'i!M4 ""·"' ),14.) S,10.,•~ 1,tS1,Mol '"'*" f'llOll\l*S OtMOR Co.I" O•llY Piiot, Alf9. 10, 11, 1•, )I, 1"1 ) .. ,... Plc.TIT10UI IUllNHS MAM&ITATaMl"T T ... tollowlnt IMUOft\ ••• CIOll>O bu•lnettes: L A GU NA MOUSIN G PA .. THl! .. SHIP. JIU l~ey. 51111• 211. Le9une flHCll, Collt.,,.1• •Wt RCT Ot .. l~t. lt21 So11I" L YOfl StrHI. Sent• llln•. Cellfof'lll• tt10S Wood••rd 01•• l.•lldSC•P• Arc1111ect1 •114' P'le11nett, no ero.ctwey, ktMt Ill.~ llff(ft, c.41fltnl4• .... , flllt bldl,.._I It ,_U<IM by o ..-.. ~. R ...... C.Tlleel tw ll<:T Ot .. ~ ""'' tlettrnellt -Ill.CS •1111 .... Cov111y Cttn of Of..,_. f"ov1>t) on AUOllll If, lt11. "'"'U Pul>lllMCI Or .... (iOHt 0•11' Piiot, Auoual 11.'•. J• -S.pt•-t 1 1•11 .. ,..,. PVBUCNOrlCE PVJWC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE PVBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE MO'fle&Of' l9'TIMTIOM TO OICMCATI LUlllll!a"T NOTICE IS M£1t£ev GIVEN tllat °" !tie ™11 dt' flll My lf1t, Ille loetd of Eduulklrl of ,.,. trv\M Untlfed lclloot 0111r10 Of <>'M19e COllntY. (.flllotlllO. ~ o AftOlllClllft of 111> 1.itllllll t~ ""'"' to , ... lf\lllM lll•tlCll WOler OIWkl O cierpel~I -•nl Mid r191\t-of_, fW Wft!Ur, -er Hrvlcu Of'I IM Horttiwwd Ml-'• Sc.llool 54 le. A Ollblk MeltlftO UOofl IM -1tofl of mo••no wm Oedlc .. loft wfu i. Mid ot th• ve11edo Middle School. • l>Hrtlttd •-. •Nine on ,.,. "" deY ot s.til:Mlber 1we. .i Ille llOIW of I lO o'ctocl< c,._m.1 BOAAOOF EOUCAllOte •RVINE UNIFIED SCHOC>t. DISTRICT A.Sleni.-,Couv S.<retarvoltM Boord Of t!ducollon P"l>li1'hed OrtnQe C:O.st 0•1ly P1tOI, AUQustll. lt11 JOS..'I P\18UC fll'0'11CE PUBLIC NOTICE PIC'1Tl°'IS eUllMHS ltAMa UATIM .. IT Tiie IOl!QmlftO --~ dOlft!t bult _., STA)( 9UJtGEAS .... W '"" Sl,..1. Coli. MIU, C.llfomlo •2'21 .to"t·.io Veno. SMI Gerule•n s ....... 0.,.,, ~. CtllfoNW• ~~ flus IMnlMM it cOtlduClod I>• ~ '" div~•· J~MoY- Tlus \Cohtment w•s hr.cs "'"'" ·~ Co11ncv Clerll of Or•n911 GCKinly "'" AllQil'* 1• ... , .. ,...,.. PulMlslltd er..,.. Coost 0.1lv PllOI. -------------Augvst 11,241.Jl-Seol~r r. "" PVBLIC NOTICE t-~-~--~-~~~~-1 NOTIC. TO Cll&DIT'Ottl 'Ul'>&ltlOlll COUln' O" THli STATllOt"CAU"°"NIA FOR THE CI04JlfTY 0, OttAHGIE ..... ....., E'IUe of LOIS 0 . SMITH. flt, aoY J•Pf'tOtl, ISO. ........ er.-•,,_. -·l~etw. ........ .._., "'"'· Cellf. tt2t t Put>ll"*I Or°"9e Coat! O•llY Pllol A"9.Jl,s.til I. t.C,21. t'71 OIS.TI PUBUC NOTICE 3001-11 PUBLIC NOTICE Oe<used. NOTICE Of NOTICE IS HERESY GIVEN to 11\e NOfl·RE~SlllltTV crec:lltors al It. Mlovll Mmecl CS.C-1 NOTICE IS H£AEBV GIVEN THAT IMC all per\Ol't1 hevfno c~lrns egolnsl the ullders~ w111 no! ~ rei..oonslble Che said OK-..1 •r~ reqol,... lo Ille to. env Mbh or 11.e>Olllk>s untrM:ted ""'"· •flh the N<~ vouchert, In by e1>y-ottoer thMI rny~tf on or t!W olllce ot the t1er1< of tM obove en-olter ltll\ «Mle lltled c0"'1, °'to l>'n&nl 11\erft. with O•teel 11Ms .J0111a.tyol Auoust 1918 '"• necHsary vouchers. oo ,.,. ur" OoMldG Alce Clersh;ined et AARONS & AARONS, 901 tluntinqton Avf INC .• 2790 t4¥l>or Blvd., #~. P 0. Huntlnoton llHcll. 0 Bo• 1469. c.osco Mew, c.. 9261•. Wlli<h Pul>lltlled OrOl>Qe C.0.\1 D•ily Pl!ol I\ IM Pit<• of blniMss of ·~ Uft• Auo. JI, Sept. I.'· tt7t HIO TS dtolQM<t ill efl fl\attef's pertelnlnq to _;;..__.....;.......;.· -------- IN estate Of stod OKedeftl, "'""'" · PUBLIC NOTICE MOfttM •Off Ille ffm Pllbllcellon Of lttlsnolice. -------------O•led AUO\ISI 19. 1'1'1. '°ICTITIOUS IUSINl:U MICCNU• Alllle il£tlt0f'I NAME STATl:M•NT Exe<.utfh10Hll4!WCll Tiie lot1ow11>9 i>ersorl\ ••e do1no 01 the ot>ove ...mecs bu\ir>en o cs.cadenl PLANTS & COMPANY, 216• Mell· AARONS A AAllO..S, IHC. OOH, Cosro Mew. C..llfom1• '2t26 »tt ... ,_....._,wwi.. A1114r1 O.vld OUntff. ?169 Mt11 11>.0 . , .. , .. , csou. Cost• Nina. C.lltornl• f262e (HI• ....... c... '2626 AllbncSO Frenc1ne Gunt.,, 2169 T•I: ~ Mendo10. Coste Mew. Colllonue t?626 Attwwystwl•«lllrl• r,.,~ '"°'1.,.u 11 cond11<1ecs by a PUOllSlled er-. e.o.u 0.11, PllOI ..... ,.1 Ptrttlerslllp. AUQ.ll,Sept.1 14,21 tt78 •21 .. 11 Albert 0 . Gun1tf • • This sCOtem.nf Wff llleel "'"" the PUBUC NOTICE Pet~ Yl#l9-(Jll"9 MSWll, (lll·Villt IJeo11 Wul M\\lell, Oft tlehOll ol lhemselw~ -their "''"°' <llild,..,., Cll•f'l9·Hstno Hs....,, OIM!o·Jen Hsuel't •nd c11ano-011• H'ue" l\ave tiled .. r.tillon '" "''' tourl tot '"" Ofcler 111 1ow1no ~tlllOfllt• to <"""91" tfl~I• n•m~ ,,.,.. ~ter v..,..o.,no "'-· Chi YlflV IJHI' Wiii M-n. Cllono·HSl"O Hsu•"· Cl\tnO .Hn Hwtf\, Olanv-Cllr• Hweh 10 ,..,., VllftCl·CIMno Sii•'· JH" Wu Sii• '. Slllrtey °'4119·Hstn11 Shn. Tllom•s CIM'"O·Jen Sh•Y. Oennts CllMIQ·Ollo Shey. rHPK!twfy. II os l\ef'M¥ Of'Oered tllal all ,,_,._ 1ni.rtttecl rn Ille mttt>ff afOreWld •1>-P .. ,. before INS COIWt In Oepef1JMnl Ho. l et 100 Ovi< ~ 0.1,,. West. S.nl• ArlO, COllfornle. on s.tit. "· 1'171, at n o'<IOCll. o.m .. Mid !Mn eltd l?oere Ill-<OUM!. •t -they ll•v~. why Miid peliliOll IO< <:IW"91 Of Nmt' ~llOVld not l>P .,..,.,eel It •S fu-ot-ed lllot • <OCIY Of llllf or~ to \llOW c-be l>Ubhslleel '" O••noe Cout 0.11, Ptlol. • newsp•i>er of ~nerel circul•llon • publfsfled In !tits county al leon once• wee« lot' kKlr consecuti-.e -11.s cwior to ,,.. oe Y c1 soid "-•• ino. O•led A~t 10. 1'11 SAMUEL OAEIZEN Juooe ot t11e 5-lotCour1 P'etwv~...­ tt41Cem1Mh' FlttlflWlll. CA mu T .. : 1114111Mm '"~la,..,_ PUl>li$11ed er""91t ea.st D••I~ Piiot. AUQ '7. l•.l•. Sei>( I ~111 .Oll·IS PUBLICNOTICE 41Sl-,. PUBLIC NOTICE JOn.11 -------------PUBLIC NOTICi. PUBLIC NOTICE ftCTlTIOUI IUllN1'5 NAME S'r&T•MENT ,,.. lotlowlng .,...'°" ts dOt"O bvs• nessn: SO OUIH"TA PARTNERSHIP. 2•711 Merbor Blvd., o 210. C°'I• Mn. CetlfornCe 121f1» Belty I..~ • .,. N1ot.t1•••• '"'lne. Cot 1fornU ~714 T 111\ l>u~1ness •\ conouc!td b• a flmlte9 ~•-Ylio 8e"'l...Olal\CU!r T,.1\ \llltrnenl ••• Ill.CS w1tl' ,,.~ Co11t1lv c1 .. ,~ of Oran~ Countv 01' Auou~t 1•. ••18 F~I Pul>I~-Or•not COiSC Oe11y P•tol AU11'1'1 11 1•, JI, and Sepcem~· • "7S 3060·18 ----~~~---~ ...... PUBLIC NOTfCE "ICTITIOUS IUSINISS N4MI: STATEMENT Tiie IOllOWlllQ l)ef10ft It dolllQ IN" ness•'> DANCE OF FUN 0< 0 0 F CO 2060 o; Eu<tid Slr~et. o.11.11e1m Ulhlornl• 92802 H.ro•d (.oyd ""•''•' 0) w O••noe•oocl. •n•llt1m . C••11or11.,. '2801 '"" t>u!>IM1\ ~ ~onOucttd I>• ...... dhnduel . H•rold Mattel Tiii\ ~1•1-f ... ff flifd WI!,. ll!f' County Cl&n of Or•noe Count• on AUOV$1 I•, lt11 ~ Publfsl'Md 0r""99 C:O.SI Oe1I• P•IOI A\19VSI "· 24, ll alld Sel)ltlf\Oer >. 10111 1079./I ~---~------PUBLIC NOTICE ,,CTITlOUS eus11H.SS NAME STAT~MENT T ~ •o11-1nv 114''"°" ,. oo.no ""'' ness .s WE <.TlAll'.E VlllA C.t APARTMENT'>. ~ W Ot••nfront, N"'Po'I Be.en. CA "7663 A•cn•rO A Ca"''"'' u oo w 0 Ce6nlronl, NtwPOrt 8eacn CA "166J Thi\ b\lff"4t\\. t\ (ono\l<.t.0 DY.,, •f't dtv•OU61 Aocherd R Canlr•ll ff'\1' ~t4femtftt w.-''I.cf 11W1'rt ,,,.• Cou111, Clerk of Orenoe Qxinh ott AUQ. I. 1•1e. ,,_u Publl\lleel Orenoe CoeSt Dem, .,1101. Auo 10. •1.1•. Jt. 101a P• ,.LIC NOTICE County Cler• at Or.not c-1, on July '-IP tT, 1'11 ftc:TlTIOUS IUSINEU t.=::=====-~.:::::...-t---fitlrtWll--~......,. t--rt1BLI~-----• ;:1c1'tnOUI IUSIN•is Publklled'Or...-ccUll o •• ,, Pilot. Tiit foUOWlllO ~r~I~ dolf'IQ O\lll NAMa ITAT .... NT Auou•I 10 11 2•. :11 ma nen d \ FICTITIOUS 1us1•as!> Tiie fOHOWlllQ ""''°" Is CIOlf'\9 bus.. JOIO·lf (;A TS-A-U~ 80AAOING HOTEL NAMI STATEMUfT neuu. ----------11.01\Forti.s Ao. !111tt-::n L•ou11e .. .,~ •ollo••ro IM'•\On\ .,,. 00111; T E LE PH 0 N E S W I T CM NIOu.,1. Calllorno• ~11 busut~U •' NEWSLETTER. IU21 u Gr-. Hun· PUBLIC NOTICF. C HUIJf\ HYSloCI, UI lowu C.tltt C.tNEAAl PAPER \lOAf Ill" llf\lllon Beech. CA '2t.tt Or•ve, • •. Y9\lfl0 BtM:n, C•hfOU!fr arbor 111.e . (.oat.; Meu. CA~·~, AIC-Mrd J. Fobt•ll, IUtt l1I SUP'•RIO.~llT~TM* m11 Muo" '"" Corde~. 1 .. n c • ... Gr•nd. HuntlnQIOll S..Cll, CA n.... STATE Of' CALllOttMIA ,.o. r11 .. busfneu I\ Conducted by en fn. lngfOf'I o ....... ~"""·CA •2•~ Tiiis -IMSI Is condUCtff by en 111· TN• CIOU•TY O• ()aANG• dlVfeluel. S.nelr• J-CMOH.. i*2 Ci.-. dlvldlltl. .... .....,... C HUIJfl Hyjl09 lllOtOf'I Ori....,,'---Hiiia, CA '26S3 lllkl\trd J , FelllMI M 0 T t Ca 0 ~ HI A It IN 0 0, '"" sco-1 wes flf .. with ll\t Tlll1 IMISHlesa II toflCIUCMcl l>y en "' Tiiis lie~ wn fllecl wllll t11t t'1"tTIOM POa l'tt09ATI ~ Wtl.I. Count• (;I-of Orente Gounly on dlvl-1 Countr Cl"11 of Orenot Count, on ANO IO• &.anaH TaSTAM•M· Auousl 14. lt11. H llff1 ~ AUO. 7, lt11 TARY AltO JllOlt AUTMOtlllATIOtt "'"14$ '"'' ll:eltftW\I w<IS fH .. wH11 !.,. """" fO AOMINISTlll UND•ll TNE Pul>hW!ffOrenveCoostOetlyPllol, COUt11,c1-0fOr11119"<:ounhonJ .. ly Pul>ll511ed OrtllOe COl\t O•tly Pllol, tNO•l'>IMDaMT AOMINllT.ATIOM AUOll\I 11 H. JI &llO Seoternoer , ,.,. "· 1•71 AUO 10, 1'.t4.Jl.191t Ofl•ITATHACT ••Tl ~ Eslele OfOANIELPEIF 0.<••MIO NOTICE IS HEREBY 01\/(N PUBLIC NOTICE 1"41 Auln v Peil ,,., 111.cs """''" ~ petition '°' Pf'Otlele Of Wiii •ncl for " ,.,CTITIOVS IUSIN•U \lf•ll<t of ltl'en TesC•fMntorr !O ,,,. ..,.M. STATEM .. tT llC'llllontr -lor Aulltoffle!ton to Ad r ne 1011ow1no person• .,. do1110 m1111tt•• ..,,.,., lhe lncltPtl'dt"' AO· tN~n.n Al mlnhtr•cfon Of Estat•• Atl, retertnce TAI-COUNTIES FRAMING , to •h H h " m•d• IOI '""'"' 1120·• WH\. C.fltr•I. S•nl• All•. iMM'tfCVltt"\ ...... lhet Ille ti-•no Colfforll4e'779f • llle<e OI ,_.,,'IO Ille._ lies lie..-,_. ~ C I~ IM., e CAlllOnll4 tor .... M'lbtr 12, mt ... IO;• •ft\., ,orl>Of•llon, >tlO>I WHI c.Mret, 5ofl. Ill 1M c_,_ of°'"*''-"' HO. i CO AM, CetllonlM'"'4 of Mkl C~ .. 100 Cl'llt Cofl\9' Ol1ft Tllft 11W1Mtt It~ r, • cier· Weit. '" tllt Cit' of S.1110 ""•· "' .. '°" c.i llO(rM. S CIHVISTO"S, tNC. O.IH .....,..1'. mt Sfllrtey A ~ WIU.1AM • St >OMN, s.cm.r.,11',..-.r °"'"'' O..• T"ff tletffMftl wM Ill.cl Wllll Ille DAVID ITl•LINO TINOl.111. PUBLIC NOTICE .... ,. .. P uOM"-d Orenqit C:O.st 0••·• P1ro1 A119 ' ' 10 It 5ePI I ••1!1 IQC• ,, PUBLIC NOTICI. FICTITIOUS lllSIHl:SS NAMlUATeMeH• fht '•llOWtflt llef\OflS •" do11•0 lluMMU• OANClWOftKS OAltCEWEAR tH4 £01~ Avtn .... ki.nt•nttDn .. ecll. CA m.t1 0.rJ ...," Meetle. "''' C..-• Clul•. klll'll~ a..c11, CA.,... ...,., ~ llM( ... , "''' C-lot (1'1;1t, Nllfll.,,....1Mc11, CA.,._.. Tiii\ l>u,IM" I• <-V<led 11, a llmlltd ,.,_tllfP 0.,.. "tl•I( Meehl Cou11ty Ctor-of Or•noe ('ounty on I.AW co•11. Auoutt I•. "" 1 ........ ,..... OMff Or •ttt '"" ,,.,_, .... Ill.CS ..... 11 ,.. • County Cltrll .it Of''"" ,0 .... 1, "" • ,..,... .... ,.n INdl, Ce ~ ~"-Ot1111te c .. " o.u, ,.11o1. A~n ..,. ""''"-a11911,1 II 2' II ot.l'ld S-pt-t I 1'11 Pvbct\11«1 0.tinOll C°"'' O•llv P11Q1 A '"I lO JI 5'\pll 1t711 .. ,. Auo II ,.,, • ...... ft P11111,,11tc1 0r.,,.. eo..1 0-11• Piro• A ... l• J1 ~ • •• .,. •ttO. , • ... - NEW YORK <AP>. -Phylllt Glubtra ot Loi Anc•IH remembere ber divorce H "de· ll1btful ..• absolutely amicable .•. tb• moat U6era~ UW., Chat bad ever happened to eltber o(us." Jem• Q.. of Ptttlbur1b rem mberl hll dlvotee •'very t.ro.abl me .. Ilea .•• a IDMJllaCl ... ,ritual." CENS truaEAU 8TATIS11G lllOW that la 1~·lt'16, th• US divorce raw doubled: alm09t oa ol tbNe blarriq today eodl IA divorce. The endlna ol a marrlqe ll etnoUonal. often onilinc. How emocJonaJ and atonlatq -and how euy cu d pend on t,he law. "It's beeome more and more 1lmple accorcllq to the hawa," aa,s malrlmOlllal law expert Dorta Jonaa F'reed. Calllomla. where Ma. Ellasbera llvet. wu one of the ftnt states to pass a no.fault dlvorce law. Pennsylvania, home or Jamea Q. -be asked that hls identity be concealed -ii one of only three »tales to retaio a.he (ault concept In dlvorce. The otben aro D.Uno!s and South Dakota. UNTIL tt7t. MOST STATES OPEaATED under Jaws that requlred one spouse to brina charaes a1ainst the otber. Even in cases where both husband and wile wanted the dlvotte, where they acreed that no one was at rault and no crime was Involved. one party had to be named u tuilty. No-fault changed that. Marriages end by mutual consent. Louis Kiefer, a Connecticut divorce lawyer, said no-rault generally has eliminated the situation where one spouse "blackmailed .. the other. threatenina to me charges or adultery~ for exam· pie, or refusing to agree to the dlvorce without a large eeonomic settlement. "For the most part," Kiefer said, divorce is .. less disagreeable." CALIFORNIA RECENTLY LIBERALIZED ITS divorce law further. Beginning Jan. 1, couples who have been married less than two years, have no children and little property, can get a divorce without appearing in court. Ms. Freed. a New York lawyer who is chairman or the American Bar Association Committee on Research, Family Law Section. said that as long as both parties agree. divorce is relatively simple even in the states where guilt must be proved. The difference is that these slates, she said, "put a premium on hypocr\sy and lylng." One party must testify that the other is guilty -even if he or she doesn't believe jt. "YOU KNOW ALL THESE 11UNGS are lies," said James Q. whose ll·year marriage ended this year. "The lawyers tell you. 'Look, this is the thing ... ..,...... WHEN YOUNG ROMANCE FADES U.S. Divorce Rate Doubfea Ellasberg who, although she is a lawyer' herse)(, was one of the earliest backers of the do·it·younelf divorce concept for couples involved in uncontest· ed separations. Ms. Eliasberg admits that no-fault divorce has Its drawbacks. "A lot of divorces have become whimsical," she said. "Like instant rice and instant coffee, you can have instant divorce." Linda X. or New York. who asked not to be named. is in the midst of a no-fault divorce. She riled a separation agreement last December and, when the required year is up, plans to convert it to a divorce. The process is simple and inexpensive, but 1t is not without pain. "IT'S STILL VERY UPSETl'ING," SHE said, discussing the end of her 10.year marriage. "Neither my husband nor I has ever gotten over it. .. It makes it easier that there's no.rault. Otherwise, at the very minimum, you're forced to lie in a court ... maybe not lie. but exaggerate or at least hang out your dirty linen In public. It's humiliating and painrut." Mary W., another Pennsylvania resident who wanted her Identity hidden, confirmed that view. She said her divorce last November after nine years of marriage, on the grounds or indignities, was made more difficult because "one party had to be guilty. It's very uncomfortable .. .I did not feel a lot or hostility toward my hus band, but I was very uncomfortable about 'going public.· ... It was unpleasant." I A number of Oranae Coast re,,denta have ,racluated or received advanced degrees from UC Riversi~e during the ~.Auouet31. tt71 OAILV PtLOT AJ• ~a·to~ •past academic year, university officlala have announced. LABOROAY WEEKEND BUNDtE ·CLEARANCE They are listed below by city. f c:er.-e ... Mer -MICllMI G. PntlCM'. Cett• IMM -O•rY L. CoMll. Norm•" H. Olll•Y •114 Arnold I!. JofWllOfl, PH•tl lll VIII.., -"lerre A. l'ortO°"· RoMrt I... Scl\Hdt •114 SMetf lllelMTe\llOr. MWlt .... "9Ndl -l(eltl'-' O. Co1'rt"ey. SuM" J , Oucllo" •11d ReDKce E. ~el1ff. MhtlH Viii• -Petrick J . Sutll11e11. Keltl«IM I... "umlnQ •lld HollyN.~. New,.n· .. ecll -K1tllry11 A. ColHwortlly 111d Alue..oer M. Mc~. SM JMM c.,av--1.orl ,,.,.,.. ., ..... Ifft hedl -Mk hllel 0 . CourlMY· ...... Ll9IM -Ct•'9 PllllllPt. WlltMI---Dellorlh K. Helt• 1119-. • Ne wsman Cancels Lecture Newscaster Jess Marlow, scheduled to kick orr Orange Coast College's 1978 Celebrity Lecture Series, has can· celed his Sept. 15 ap· pea ranee. He will be appearing for two weeks on NBC 's Today program In New York at that time in· stead. Marlow will b e replaced by psychologist Dr. Toni Grant, who has a dally radio program on KABC. Tickets are $2.SO and are available in the OCC SAVEFROM · 500to to 80°/o OFF ORIGINAL PRICES 4 .DAYS ONLY . • FRIDAY • SATURDAY • SUNDAY •MONDAY S'ECIAL HOURS ON LAIOR DAY -~0:00 o .m. to 3 :00 p.m. •ODDS AND ENDS • OtSCONTINUED PATIERNS • MANUFACTURER'S CLOSE-OUT • SPECIAL PURCHASES • UMITEO TO STOCK ON HAND • LIMITED QUANTITIES • FLOCKS FOILS V1NVLS ORIENTAL TEXTURES ANO MOREi . . PllASE MOTi: AA ~-OIJ·ereQ II' ""'$Cle'' llrP QJOlltv We .:.=. l'IGll&f tell teconcM ()I ompetfec:ts All l049 mefCllOodlMI ll 1)18· pOCkoged "' IOOt'll·lll• b\xldles cor-..st1no ot l10ln IWO IO II• •Oh ~Mt mud be IOld C11 pcx:llCJ090 Sl'ClP eaty IOI 00s! sekle· ___ ....,,._.. ........ __ ....... ...., -....·~--· 11()(1 fol'll c:;ome • .,. ..,..., No deCHI$ No ICJYOwoYI 8uv Wl1ll -·-......... conl\denCe M rnefChonWe re4\lnelble ~ ellCf'lan08.ol U tefVnd Wallpaper1to 9(! OPEN l0·9 MON·FRI. 10·6 SAT. NOON to 5 SUNDAY • -.. COSTA MESA 2300 Harbor ltVd. PHONE: (1WI 6'6-5055 (Holbof Shopping Cenlerl I.A HABRA TARZANA LA MESA ANAHEIM T°""ANCE CERRtTOS f ARTESIA PUENTE HILLS MAU. Ticket Office in the ad· STORES ntROUGHOUT THE WEST ministration building ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ rrom 8 a.m . to 4:30 p.m. -] weekdays. Information [JACK ANDEllSON is avallable by calling . . SS6·5880. REVEALS In lhe REVIEWS In the DAILY PILOT you've got to say' ... The notion that I was inno-••••--•lll cent and my wire was guilty ... that's silly. We were both guilty." James Q. divorced his wife on a.he grounds or ''indignities," a category that can cover every- thing rrom yelling at your spouse ln public to re· rusing to let your mother-in-law come for a visit. There were no children and no complex property settlements. Lawyer Bob Raphael or Pittsburgh, who is work- ing lo change the P ennsylvania law, said the fault concept in divorce "makes absolutely no sense." As for the "indignities," he s aid: "In the best mar- riages. if you look hard enough, you can find in- dignities." JAMES Q. IS BOTHERED NOT ONLY by the racl that he had lo lie, or at least exaggerate, but also by his belier that no one seemed to care whether his reasons for ending the marriage were valid. "I found the hearing very troublesome," he re- called. '"It was a meaningless ritual. .. Here's the lawyer and you silting in this little room with ... a clerk who swears you in so fast you can't un- derstand what's been s aid ... Everybody treats it as a joke." Ms Eliasberg and her husband decided in 1974 to separate after 17 years of marria1e. They agreed to share custody of their tb!'ff sons. They flied the appropriate papers saying their marriage bad broken down irreconcilably and, with a minimum or fuss, they were divorced . .. IT WAS SO SIMPLE AND SO easy and there was no assessment of fault or guilt,'' said Ms. t\esa \7erde ~q,oor THE OIAINS WANT WAR HERE'S A SALE! TaY lHIS OMI. MAIDr IASUT rrs LOWB lHAM YOUI PllClt SAYE10% $ LOWBGllAU u.w1»t. 833 BEER ~~~~: J.... •.. ~.,, .. SANTA AHA HI I So. In.ha , .............. c.... .............. w w.....,. ................ ... INSl'A~flON 10% Our/n Off w111 g th/a l1m11-84lve '0% ""'aaie, ro ~•lal/ the earn.a~" Iha coat t~ rrorn ua. ,.,. You PUrcl'ta1e WESlMIMSTER 11Jll .. 9-ltw4. ........ c-. .......... .,._ & M HI t • t., WM, n.r. Ill 6 ... .... he 11·1 l Carpet Town: 5 56-8287 193-7546 wn11DAYs rill 9 . sA1 r1Ll s . suNDAY" ~.FREE esr1MAres 1N 11ouR HOME / Covering Callfotnla Wa ll To Wall \ EMii CRCDIT TERl.lft . 30 eo 90 DAY NO INTERl!&T ACCT$ • SANl<AMEFllCARO . MASTER CHAAGe Con!!~• t.cenle HO 304832 '-"------------------- • PlJBUC NM'ICE PUIUC NOTICE • P\SSUC NOTl<:I! '~---::a:~::=:~i·~~~-=~·-.. -.-,..:.. ... :..-~--"'9.----Ju-.. -.-.-------------i-MllNAL'1NMCIAU•H--Tivei.T • .:..~1~..tl ; . . t c-ll lft~*l'lt.nll. ( .............. .,_~_,,,,,... .. ..-. ...... ~ =--· -~· ....................... . c... ............................. u......... s.1ti •• • , .. .,....,._ -~-: ... •0t•tte0Ml lllQ ... CAltt IM~fV T~Y •••••••••·· •e'WCM.YIMOCAIH ~. ,. •• ••• • • • • • · •· • CASH AWAITtNO OCt•o•n •.•••••.••••• AoCCDUNTS ...C:SIVAM.I: ............. . ~f'AIOPN •••••••••••••• TOT~ CUAllllNT ~ ····•••••••••· ... CUll•NT UAINUflO a CMEl'•1t•tOt~.. •• •.• • ..••••• •••• lAD.• .. ET .. GINMINGaa&tlil'ICI .............. t~ Af)JU$T .... NT$ ACCOUNTS lt«CllVAlll.£ • , ••• •• • • • .. . • Mml cu••un u.utunn ............... . ... .. AOJU5T&O NIT MG1'"41NO~• ... ••••.•.... • 11_.".- tNCOMI -NM9tALC.-I ...,_ ....... Aca .... ,.. ......... ~"'"'······· ................ ..... Cein'••-••E••wn11111..w Tr~Al:l-191) ........ .. ·•·••. VOC.Mltftaf ~-···· ••• ~ . ...., ............................ . TOTAL. PCMUI. ltlCOMa ........... . STATE ~Ollt.9t ... ti••=* ......................... ,.~ e.N-t~Ta....... . . ........... M,ATI -o-wn~Taa-let .......... t.)14."' ~........................................ '·"' Otlwf........................................ , .... TOTM. ITAft l...::otM • • • •• • • • . . . • . • . . . . . :n. -- C:OUHTY ~ty CoiM9t TllltlOft •.••...•...•••• ., ~ ..................................... . TOTAi.. COUNTY INCOME .............. , 1.0CAL OIWkt Ta~ s.<11rf'CI Aon . . . .................... ~ "--"°''. . ...................... l,JS4.MO _..IOI' Year•s .. ... • . .. .. .. .. .. • .. . . . . .. . . • SIJ.11' Tot.I Te#\ .... . . . . .... .... .. . . .. ... • . ~.all s.tft .. .. .... .. ······· .............. .... 111,117 LA.WS & A!ental~ • .. .. • .. • • • • • • • • .. .. • .. • n...s . ~, ............. .................. .. .. ... Total Sates, LHSH, lnt.,~t ................ t...S.,.., Studant Cllarvft · _...,. Stlldlllts .................. .. .... o. ... .__ CA<lterl '°' "~ .... . J.J71 Olit o! Olttltc:I "-" ..................... . ... .wi •.•.. ........ ...................... m.021 OU\at............... ........................ 547,'10 TOI.ti StudlMt 0YrvH · · .... · • · .. • · .... • • · ,..-_,_ Mlteltl'-FUlldS .. ... ........... ... ..... J1.111 OCMr•-.............................. ~ ... ... TN! . . . .. •. ... .. • .. . .. . . .. .. . .. . . .. . .. .. .• . l,,ft,00 TOTllU •• LOCM.INCIOMS ................. ,.,_,.. ... TOTA.I. lllKXJME ............................ ~.427 INCOMING TRANSFERS <l'Oll ct41 TultlOft Tr-.ten... .............. ......... l,N4,1'6 TOTM.IMCOllMAMD IMCOMHfO TltMtl'lltS • • . . . . . • . • . . . . . . M.m.m a 1 • ..... ...... ~ ........ ..... w ..... euMl'T ......... ,.,, .... .,.. , .... M,tt2 ,......,. ~ u.-..a u.-, t.»J,411 .,, .... s11• , .... ,..,.,m .... 10,000 I0,111S.JM m .m Sll.11J 11,1n.11• ,..., 20.000 ..., ... ,...... J7UOO 4,JOO ·-sa,111 513.000 ,,.,., ... .. .., !St.JOI . ..., ... ··~.o" ~,.Sl.01' 1.ISS.Bt SS,NUJI • i ~ ...... ~.............................. ... 1C91111~--~.~ ~~ ....................... , .. . ...._....,_ ........... ,,,,,.,, . .,,,...... t.ll'I •Tte•CNlV"710N._T.,......1'TM. 0.W·fl~·······-··••••••u•••••·· ..... ................. .................... .,.ai.. ................................... ,....., ...... rtlle.,.O.. 1WY~~ ~ .................. . t-..C.,_..,.. ··········•··••••••••••· 16.l'tJ t• ll'lff\lfttlfll .. ......,........., _.... -L.itei~U*lelet , .... .............. IM14 T•IMC..W~ .. SC.....! ="'~&.;.;•.:.:,••··••"······ _.... ·~ •n•· .. -~.. ....... ... tA• ·-•. Tt .. TATIV. 4'MIUAI. IUOO•T ••P'CHt'r. TMr••U•--"• AL;".. ..__. • ---TOTAi. •• ......,,, .... cmtc• OUTM AMO .., 0,. ...,..,.,,._,. .. h tdllef _.,ICt. Mlrf ....... ••• ·· · · · · .. · • • • 1,-t,m -•w••MLUCa ·' · .. u&:fti·;.19·;;.,.."'• •• o.i.•"*'•'-•tm ..._,.,..~~ .:..-.............. -.~•"9flle.,... 1'9CIOMAI •• PUlk.tCAfl09f ..... UM. •uoollT .. "°"' .,.,. ~..... ~ ... ~ ......... ., .............. . •••~ llavlflt~•---•· """wd!MlltlMI, ....... =--••• ~-.cllu• ....................... . ''°' .... ~IW.AHQ .............. • -·~, .......... k.IMell.~...,........ .. !!!°""TE....,. ............... . ~ l'lttlWM h ..-rt. ,:.,.;.L... ~ -.................... . c.tlW........................................ '!!-!! ~~c:=:·:.::.::=:i=:ri::---=.~ ~lllT-111.-~ .............. ~ .... =··::r9iwiifii:'iti"".......... ...... ---......... .-...:°"' ,..,.. ~,~ ,.,..,, oaAOC ... Oll'Dtt'l1ltCT ,_..._......... : ••.•• _.......... .... -- f 0 TA .. '. '4'M·i··~·.1·ii'i"·;·;;· ~ av1uoa~YA1"111N9ea ; --~-· I Te'fM....., .......... eM,Atfa, ,.,,..,, ........ ,..,. ... i •,> • • .. _ ............. --• a----·e-ou· "'-',' ~ ,._ ..... ..-i~•-............................ ,..,. -iff.'•°'..V;;;""'" -• .............. 1(1~. .............................. ... h . .,. =·.,··~ .. ,.............. ~ ...... ,,,, .... D'"'"' '"'"tit 1• ..... Of'-*•,.................................... . U SJ'lt ~ "-~ .................... ~1 ...... -· _.. ................ ·-.. .... ,... 1 s .... ··--... ---a.Alltf'llDMl.l<llllM WS41 Of .. tl ........... , ••• ,.................. '"!:!' -:-,~ =~·; ....... 1 .. ••·;;c.····""'""•··· ~ ..-,..-· 900Cl.M1""-llS. ••• .............. • • IC .. SWnmw~............ .... .... .. ..._, • • ~• COUl~CNT • •• • .. . . ..... , •• rt.-°' .. ' ... , ....... ·· .. · · ................. • 1MI a,m ,,_ -..., ,,.......,.. ··· · · · ....... . . .. • • "* . \ . I ::-.= COMflllACTllltVIC&S&OTW•lll c;r ..... ,,~sc...................... m •n • ~Al:..-.. ......... y ........................ ......... Ofl•ttATt~IXNNHI ..... ............ UM1$ Olf~~·······....................... l7' t.= ~ ~~:····· .... '6.ltUfl •;M.Mt CA•ITAlOUTl.AY ..................... , .....,, oi. •••• ................... ••·•••• • It.I" t .._....._ ~!!!!i•"OiVTM' " ~ I• TOTM. •lllNNOt'f\14'0 ••••• , •• •.t21 --~C&.Atliro~•--•-~Or-..C...DMl'I ~4ll9-._>_1._tt'9 _______ ~ __ 11_1 IC ... •·• .............................. , ............................. ~;.: ==::~:·:::::::.:::::'. • PUlllJC P\1BUC NCYl'ICB K .. S-lt*SdloOI ........................................................ , ()OMTJUICUD M~cmt•" -----------1-----------1.,n ............................................................. · .. >,m •AnNOtllCP'I~• ' .. ---~-we •u••••~.!,-,.... •ns--Sdloel ................................................... ,., . .,, ~·==···· ........... . r ... , _ _..,.,.... • r --.. ..,... Oef~ ................................................................... 177 ... t'T9fl.'9UM. .eootCIAMO ·~:·~=-o:~"':' ·;:~~=-o:~~ SU.:::~·~·o;•••~·c>tm.cf';.&;iiiii-..-·1m·,,_·,.,.,, ~~=:-... .-.... ~ ........ . eeonmo.~ ..... nnOM OTtca': .. -=A•••• o; ~MO.._,....,.. •....... : ......................... . .._. ... ~PUalUAlfTTOUC:. "~ITIC*l"OttNOUTCOflWIU. =~~":-iAiia·u"=--!..i:....,.., ·-ftii~~············· , ... •t.J W Tiie ..-.Tc COO& AlllD PO• &.anC•I TiltTAM&• r--. A&.. •••· • • • • • • • • .. TAaY AMO AUTltOllltlATfott TO TO. •••al.A. TAX UT& UMtTS OTNal'OUTOo' ........ aowA•D ... ClllAIO, AOMIMtna• UMD•• .,... .:::::: :e::;r.,...Sd'IM(.~ ~ IMD•~IMMNT ADMIMltl'hTtOlt ........... .....~ ..... tliise. NOT•C• IS ........ y GIVEN~ Of'aSTATCIACT Tu•--,.,.,.,. .................................................. ZN-1'.,.......,~~--. ' . ·~~ .. •• ,,:ii.; ·~ STIVBM eOWAltO CIUllG.... ... Emte .. El.LA It. MIUElt .... Acl~ E....-. tf7N'I ................................................ ..,. ste..r ............... , ......... ~........ , ...... ~ !:".:.t:.::~:r~M<~=-~ fL~J~...:·~~~M~V~~'t EttlmetedtDnlCll'-°"--'"'"·""°"····· .. ·················"·'· ~--ottllrT,...._ .............. uaAiP ~ t,ltQI, ........._ ___ "_...~ ._ _...... f-.. ~ SWlotal, ...,,.lcttd ti.'-'*!'~-...... ;·.:..;;.:.;,;.·················· ...... "·* ..... Mo, OIW&•Oln'M ......... .,.,.,. J,1'11.Jt' 12,'7...U 3.tWl1 .............. ......, ,. ,,_ -,_...., STlllATIS, alle MltS. JOE OYAA. -..., r...... T9T ~ P¥tlc11lart., .,._ lllat the time Md O.C...-. ""'" tm-11 t"1' ~ MIO •'--._ ~. ptae .. i..rl111U..M1NM~Nel\Mt NOTICE IS HEltEIY GIVEN !Nt ac-.. Adllll ... OTMa.. ··············••••••·• ...... -'2,"9)'U .. ,,...,.., for s.pt..-..WD, 1'11, .. t:•. In IN ~IALEY OAAU:NE ~,,_flied l•OtNNINOMLAMCS,JUt.\'t ... _ .... •6fMCL~- <.-tr-1111 °'""'1-3 of Mid heteln • pecltlOI\ for,.,... .. Of Wiii CM.lllnQ!ulllyTtMlllfV .................... J,'= 1,n2• IA.lt1 'll.ce•~'Oltll#l1;':;j;=~•""' .................... t.111...,•M 1,-!?~ <~ al 100 Ovk Cemet Drift Wffl, and for 1-01 Latten T"1-· tt-= ' .. " ... '• • ... " ...... •. 2,)17 _._ In &tit City fll s..taAAe, Ctllfoml•. •~ to ,,,. ~u-afld Mlltlorlt> lt•Yolvlno CM/I F..nd · .... • • • • • · • • • • • •• •• •••• --1 ~ 1 -'= 10TM. --· ~ ·· · · · ..... · · · ·.. ._,..,. t.1M.N OeWll-..-11,"11. ;;..."toaomlftlsWttw ...... lllldWl!W AC<OOH1tl""91¥............................ 'W; .:;:: ';;;:;;f \ea~~·1••••••••••·•••••••• Ut 10J , ... .... .... =-c:ie!lt.IOHM lncMpellclenl.Admlnl$1r .. IOflofEstaWI :.=id·~·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::. ..... W;AIJ .~~ ;!-. .. • ==·-···· .. ······ '-"'1• Util,111 Act, rel.-to Wfll<ll Is -for TOTAL COWllllNT Allatl • . • •••••••••.•.• Ull.M2 t.m.1• .. ..,.,.... .,.... =::... EIMIY!lw.rd l11rt~ pettkill.,.., _...,~Ille.,.,. LA euirwlltUellltlet ;:...;.,,. Mt~CMCl.L&"'l.•C• and -'K• °'.._.._ti. -"-H ! ........ ,-.-!.~··· _T....... .................. • .... ...,-.nun U'D.Mt ._..... ... ·-..... aftG Oefef'Nd ·-... ... ••• .• • • • .. .. • • . ••• ·~,--~ --· c • ~.;:L. .....:· -wt for ~ It, ,.,._ •I M•T eE ....... MOMUNCC ••••.•••...••• t ..... llllt ,..,. ,._....-OM. ••HllYS PUW $111te0 IO:OO•.m .. lfth~-of°'"*1· Mhntmentito~ .. .calYMM ........ ,.,,,.. ~ .... .....,. ... _,,.,...,., • .. .......... --.~ ment No.Jo! said c-t.., 700 Cfvk AdlinlrnentttoQlrrwnt Uelllll~ .......... l4S ... I '40,#11 Ostt ""~........,.. .................... ,,.,.. LM ........ CAw.J Ceflt1W01'l ... W.tt.lnU.CftyOISema AC»UST•D•P•IOUtNt•o NllT:.: ........ lur.l.MCIR .............. ,,,. ,,. ... !:.!!;!::0--•;.~1~.;:,:·u.m1. ~:<';::~ .................................. •.-.w t.-.m 1.iat;Jn ~-:=-................... ,,.. ~ '"'*ltNCIOr*91Golllt Delly PllOI, WIWAllil•.MJONN, lloo.t400FE'.bEAAl.INCIOM£ ~MeO'nleaOUTM -..o,i._2l,"11 3091·1' STAM'==· :::~..;:::=:::=· .. ········· ,..,.. t.JDAI , .... =0~~1=/INO ------------1IMM .. Mlilltll. 1!duc,1tlon.t.d .............................. U4;4d U7."1 19'Alld ~~h .. -....-.. ""91, ............ . wwm 11neo.. ............ £~_,,, .,._. • ......,......,°'_,......,. ... . s.taAM,CAtml Trelnl~ActOltm.......................... m,M'1 ~ TeTAL.•.,...1Ve.······ .. ·········· -----------1 T .. : C7141 MN1f1 1140 Voutlotl ~toll .«lllOI ... Mit..MIC'a. .. su,. ... ,CMtC:OU•TOFfHE A~hr:......,.. Anwfld-sot...a ......... .............. ...... '"'"' .... "911'1ft~T,_.r.:::::r........... "',,. STAT• Of' CAUFOlllNIA f'O• Publlslltd Or-..oe eo.st °'"" Pilot "'° OtNr ,.... .. I-... ........... ... ...,in t:tt't.. 2.17IAll 1'0TAL.•..._,.,.,..,.....,. fHEC:OUNTYO,OltANGE Aug.lO.Jl,sapt .• ,19?1 •201-71 SWtotal , ................................... t,'7"°'6 i..U,. •.U:S,taa •TtllCl•'ttaMS .................. ttt• t9t.a Ne. Amt• ... ST ATE INCOME l'TA1'11 ICMOCM. MllLOtllO ....0 P\JBl.JC NOTICE OlllOI• TO SottOW CAUSC "'° PrllldNI "-'~ ............ ~.Ni.YI ICCf'ltZVI PUBUC NOTICE "" S.skMllEtua!lqtioftAkl .............. J.»7.Z" t,W.,..7 n.-s.1n C.IM)••llY"'-Y ...•.••......•...... •.n..• ,....,. In tlle Mettw of Ille AP!l4katloft of "" Pftyskalfy~ ..... ........... 29.M -.... •.m u-c:un.~ttttes...................... 1..-a.- C:ASSONOAA AOXAN LONG for------------•U~ClllUll!eMemfllYAftarded ............ ,_ 14.... ...., ..,. .. ...,....lotlLAlfCll .............. tAftm ,,,,.... ..utJ C:llanQeofNamt AJ_.a,wa!WW6HI 16UTreftlOOl'tMlonOIKendl(.elllled ~QlnwltUeltlllltlft •••....... fl.»41 VllhEAEAS CASSON DA A ROXllN •t:~UTION0f'T14190A9t0 ~ll .. . .. . . ... .. .. .. . .. ..... ... . .......... IUD lf'"1J 21-AONtftD~ LONG. petl~ .... , ,...., • petition CWTlllVSTSUOP 1616E.clveaC**IY~ ............ 2'11."*2 1..... JS'-MONt•fll4lliHKll .................. tMO .... '·"'-• ~· wltll lM o.rto ol ttMS Court for •n O<'· COASTCOMMUNITY ... 7 Meftteffy~ ...... .. ..... ....... ... 70,7M tJ,AM •t)n ·~~ dtt c11ano1no petluon•r't name trom c:ou..ao101n•1CT •20soec1e1 PlwllioW"""°"'°""*" •sn•TE ~ CASSONDRA AOXAN LONG to Of'OflAM041COUNTY, at.ti OrlverTrtl"'"9 ........................ Jt,2AO 40.llO w.-... =,..,.,., ZJATO GHAENOJYIAH JANAOI c:AUP'OflNIA 1612 Tr~................ ......... J".lSS *·'°' 4'),.• ~ ........;.;.;;,;··· ................ . LAUMPUAA. ....,_,....,. .. u Early°"..._, Educ.Mlon... i-.na -~ -.... .._.._~ IT ISOROEAEDtheUll penom ln· On motion of frllSt .. GEOltGE IU05oed411Allowatlc.fl =-~~_:.::;.:.:;...:.;,:··.·.·.·.· .. ··.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·. i.re51td In the aoo-tllted mailer AOOOA JA .• ClvlY l«Ofldtcl -car· _,, ~~for ttw E'-n\afY .,.. -~--..,.,_.,before tllla CollN •t 11 :oo a.m.. rlltel, tM lolloWlnt RMO!utlon of lnten-S<'-1 AeaClllOO Ptoor""................ tt, 154 n_..o '°"" ... i ............................. . --of Dtp•rtll'Wftl No. l at 700 Cl'lllC nntly nueled tor Educallonal T•i...lskwl ................. ................. 4.117 S.)lt s.-f"""'8fl Tt..-.n ... ................. 2,40,» >.Mt.,,. >.7MAll Oft Oct~ IO, 1'71. In the Courtroom llOll lo L-A .. I ..,_,,., noc -M12 AllOw.W:. lot 11\W\Ktlalwtt !~ TIIAHSf'Elll$ CeftM Oti ... Wist, Sent• AM. Orenoe PvrPow• and Ctll lor SNlad Bids WK 116» ~'°""'*"for~ ~ ..... . • •• • .. •• . • • • . • . . . . ••• . . . . •• ..,...... .. "'"" tt.MMt c-••· c.tlfornl•. <Incl s11ow U11w. 11 eOoPt.O. Pupils tor~ Ho Stat• Special M.;..,....,..... al>'(, Wll'I' ,,,. petition for <'*'08 Of WHEREAS. tlle Coast COmmllnlty EducatloftFKlll!k$-A'llell«>le .......... 12.#0 ~ ~ .... ~~;.;.-.:.;~···· •.•.sis ....... 1',115.n. name sMU4d not be Ql'ented. Colleve Ol~rlct ft tlle _,...of certain 8'3' APCIOl110ftrn9nt for tnstno1<~I _ U~ ... -'QHta .... 0 _ .. _ IT ISFUATHEAORDEREDtheta rHl-oenonalPfOlltrtYIWelMftitr ~.,lals.................................... '·'° S,65' SAii :~fl-.0s.t.Ul9tlf:S ............. . COOY Olf tllk ~to"-<-De dH<rlbed;...S _,,OlllWS..ClalAI~ .............. ~ EMP\D'r'Etrl~FITS ............. . "m . ... ...ltO IJ,Mlf Pllt>lls lled In IM Delly Piiot, a WHEREAS. seld ~may be •10T8JIA .. ltf~lolft .. SJT£\,8UIY»NO$.~.SANO new,P•IHlt of geMnt cfr<ulatlon medeavallllf)letorO\llSldlUMwltholit 167te115ltleSal""""'°"'EtltMPt'-........ 21t.M >47"°' "':=~OIA,"'90114-~°'!,l~e.. •. ' .••.....•... t.l ... IM ·~•... 1_..._ Pf'lllted In Or-. C411nfy, Olllfornle. lnterl•rln<.1 wllll tne otWlct't llMCK; .. 71Home0Wnen'EJlemClflons. '10.2l0 6M,U• .• ·.,-"""'"'... ~ .,,.,._ ""-OllO t .... for tow wt<euift _., and "1t Olllet Ta11 "-fief SUO-UOllS............ 1• t,m -.._ _. li•O.lllfltW hlldlfllJ' .. .. 4,MI .JIN ........ ••,Jf' prior tollWO..•torfleMlllQOft Ole WHEREAS. 11 llCJCIMl"S eo .,. '"Ille lffOOIMf'St-.lncmN...................... ,_,.,. Jt.IQ ·~ ............ -..... ~ petltkln. bHt lnl•rests OI wld c0tnm11nlty COi· S<lbtotat .................................... S.WMS S)'1t)tt t~ ~ ······-·········· .. ··· . OATEO: Augys!J0.1'19 lei>e dlstrkt tMt u ld property lie t700COUNTY INCOME f'wlw'•~····· .. ············••""'"•·"· BAUCE w. SUMNER IHltd to IN l\lollHl bidcler. Pll~-l7IO "Mlac.11-Funds" ................ tl.Jt1 1a,n1 IS.-~ .... : •.• , ...... / •. \. ................ . Jlldgll of IN 10 wcUons l1l60" _.. al llW £.ouc. 1790 Ottwr Co&a'lt'I' Inc-.................... 17~ !OfAl.. ..,.~ .............. . S4111trtotc-'t tlonC-OlttltStateofCelllOt'llla; Wal .................................... 11,ltl ti,Mt JJA'9 ..................... . MIQCO'MAUSY NOW, THeR&,OAE. BE IT -LOCAt.INCOME ~'-CiNllY1"111*Y ................... . ..._YatUW RESOLVED tllal tllls Board does •t004str1Ct ,_ ~~ ..................... . 611 ..___. °"""' OriYe roertbY ·~ ltt lntenlloft eo lease •11 Stcut'Wd Aoll .... • • • • • .. • .... • .. • • • • • • •• • I0~7~ "·~~ "~!?! M&Y ... ~~!!t!~,·,;.:,·;~ ........ . 1.m.• ,..,. ..,,.... ··=.: 14111'1 t•fS tlle llertlnelttr -rlbed ,...I .,._,-. •12 UMt<ured AoU .. .. . .. . . . .• .. .. . • . • ••• _ -· _...,. -·-10t'"-•-.._. ,...,,. • .._..... eMdl, CA flMI ,., llM 11 1, IWACJ\' follncl. OMKrnlMd, •ta Prior Yeart' has...................... 141.JU •ft• •IUl7 ft't CMG11411f lltiN *"<a . . . . . . .. . .. .. . .. 1.w.srs •.-.J11 to,,..,_ T .. : 11•1...._ aflCI ordttecl· ..-S.lft ·----~!.... , "'ETC•tA .ACCOUWT A"""'"fer....,.._ t , Tiit property llerelnafter -.USeleofEQUlllnWntancJSupclli.. · ..... U~ " ___,ftc>IMAlllCE.~t.Yt Put>llllled Orange Coast Dally Piiot det<tlbed Is owned by Ille eo.tt Com-9"0 Int.rm • ...................... ...... i.s.11a 111.-,,._ Gl!Pllfte-.ot~· Au;.31, ~.1. t4.21, 1911 42~:"71 m11nlty Cotle9e Olltrlctend wlll not IM •10 FtMand Cofttracb __ uo ~••icll ~ for scllool ""'-' dUrl~ tllit •Jt Contra« Servittt .. .. .. .. • . • •• .. . . .. , • ..., 17,A17 =.-t'()ptr~~ ....................... . time ..-c:Hlad tntlle IMta. ..., "Mt-i.-,,_, .. ·· .. · .. · · .. ·.... -.m ..,._ .~-: ,._......_...._ ....................... . 2. 11 It IN lnttlltlofl of tllls llottd to 9"00lllerl..oc.tl 1~ .................... 2.l'tt mAZ --s.tft ------------11-s.ICI prop9rtO> Ille l\l9llHl ~ 5'1btotel . . .. . .... . . .. •. •• .... t2MI."' IS.tft.... .....,,. ,_.._;~·Man·:::::::::: .. :::: •u••••,.!~T-TME derwltllamlnlmumec~l'Wfttal ~017c~1NGlonTAANSFEAS -.... •• -1.-eUc+tee··· , .................... . .. .. _. ......... .,.. of SJ.700 -<f9M, eccotdlll9 to tt;e ...... lier 1111 ............................ , ..... s ····"· •n-"'"" ~ ............. . STATEOPCAUP'OtlNIAFOlll terms and condttlons ~ .. , TOTAl.INCll»W ............................. .w U-.Ot i.,s-.,m ...,.,,,, ·~¥Mlle ....... .. TMCCIDUMTYOFOttAMGe lortlllnllle._. TOTAL,NETHOfNJtlMO Adjuilt.,..,CS~U.-.itttes ......... . .... ""'7nl . '· Sato ,... ~y IS situated In U&.ANU MIO INCIOM• ........... . .•.• 21.M1.tlt 21t..m.m 27.Nii.-~·""' ,.~~T~~~~O::T~ •:,. 0w:tr ~::.!.~!:'Ta•=~~~~,~ ~o:o"!:.:>:~~~~~/.:sOllTOO ::__... .. ,_. ··· · .... · · · · · · · .... · AHO FO• UTTEllS nn•M•N· ...... ,I.._.'" -...... clff< ..... lon and fff<ller\'Satwlel .......................... 1.IH.MJ ·~ •.ftl..712 =='ena=ffM.tHCOME TAltY AHO "°" AUTNOtUZATIOM ~ ..... v .. .._ • .... Sc'-! Adrnllli~eton' ~""'9ndfnts' ~ ........ TO AOMIHISTElt UNOE• TN& ==~!'::-'~..:.~artat· anctOlstrktAdml"""aton'Sawi.. ... :.... "1,Mt .. .211 _,..., 5 ~.r~~PNer-.... ········· IHOE~aHOINT AOMIHISfltATION '· Tiie wtn of Ille._ .i.all h fOr a Otllitr Ctt11flUilad Sltl¥1eo\ .. .. .. .. .. •• .. .. .. 111'.MS t. ISIJIO I.~ $11ee.Mt IAI 1 - OFESTATHACT. -rlod of,,.,. Ul .,..ws commenc""" Subtotel ............ :·....................... • ... ,., n.a..a n.... (M..,.,.tftllft,.....,_ ............... . Estele of JOHN S. TORREY. ~Oct-l, tm end efWllf>9 ~ JOOOCLASSIFll!DSAA.AAIE.S -U)CAL~HCOME PUBUC NOTICE tt.701 ,, .. 10 iun IOIAD Jt,622 ... 2UOI ... ,.. O.:o~~E IS HEREBY GIVEN 11181 t-ber JO. HIJ, _,"""be~ ~ns'"'f'~~~04rte1 ... ~. ' .. • -lod ... --.. ~n ..... t... N<ll no ..... • • • • • • • • . . . . • • • • M112 W.Jtt 'IO.sl:J ..., ,,._, s.rwc. s.. 42ol.1'I sat.M ....... , • MARGARET TORREY llas fll•d -"'"ft-•-"" ,,. o.MrC:l~lecl~ 2= l.0"«JI 2 ..... 7*° ...................... -r ... r•ln a _.ltlon IOI' PT'ot>at• of Wiii mutual c~ of tM SWH11es at tllit Subtotal .................... l ... • ~,..·.,. ·---~.-...-............................ W ,IM .a,,. ...,... ~';,ci tor ls~e of unen THtemen-lermlNtllon of Ille 0t1Qlnal term. Tiie JIDOOEMPLOVttEeEHEF.tn ····· .. •·•· .. ·· ,,_ .,_.,_ ._._ TOTM.~Wl•llllO • ter1 ar>d tor AutllOrltatlon 10 Ad· Olstrlct may termll'Wlt• the le•• •t HHl111andWeff-Benefltslor l,tla A*-IAlllC>ttlQOM4l .................. Sft,* '41• •M,Nt minister ""°9r Ille Independent Ad-any llme ""°" • -ye4W's wrl1t•n TH<llen-lnstrll(llollal "'*' ....-, ~ 154Ale •Cl..USlf'l'£0$ALAAl'E'S .............. ""4ISS ~ -'..¥1' mlr>lstr.,IOll ol Estates A<t. rei.renc:• r>Otl<•. Said~ SMll be wed -Unemplclymeftt lrtwrance lor ••• · · • · · · • · · .-llOOtlS.. 5'1Pf'UE.S. ANO to wlllCll ls mad• to r lurtller lylOte>v<llOl"-OYedbvllleOi~ TH<llffsanctlnstructlONIAldes t"2 tl.$ 5'i.s €0Ul.,.EHT9tE~MT :l pertl<uler~ and tll•t Ille time and tr1ct •ncl Ille wc:cessl\il bidder sllell lie Ot~r E~ Befttfl1\ • • • • • • • • ,.-;... t.AC.ot2 2 ,..:..,. FOOi SW-: :: ~ -.. : c "' ; i ~-~~.":":.':~'.':':':~~~::; ;,-:':::::..·:c=~~.~.i:~a:n·k:r; =~s:suPi>i'.in:~~-~·:::::::::::::: •.111.01 2.m.-s> ,:.,..m :,;·;,;;.;~~i*\i::::::-.::::::: ... i ",,1 J lye " £z ~~ ~ ...,.. of~rnen!Ho hf..icl lM Purcllaslno Aoef\I. CoHI Com· EOUIPMENTllEP\.ACEMENT E•11meiut ...... 01n•A ................... . e .. ~I .. ~:)§1 :~= .. €J •. ~~,· tla H•.~l I dltill 1~. ~r.~:_,°'u.~.~;.f,,._:?:H~. ,":''· ~,:~~~~::.~:~:!'£!:! ~:~·::::::::::::.:.:::::::::.::::::: '::: ·= ';: e:t::~fo ...... . ~ _ "'"-~ ! {!i! ' ~. I .. ~ --·.:..., ~ .,,..,.. amlnatlon prtor to receipt of bkh. It Is lftflNCtlOllel Supplies........................ •• S"1# ,..... 04flwo.nt""~ .................. •.IM. .... -~ , -1'J1l..,••~•lt!l ... i.1t1 t 11 ~: Cowtlv0er1o ~stood tMt CAtr1aln IWTM OI Ille Otlltr~ .............................. ,..,. _,1'14 ~ ...._., ··•··•·-···•-·•···············" •• • "' I 1 .. ~ • 1J • j -' % j4• O.llllOM l••H ere s11bl•<I to negotlallon Eou~-..l~l....,•I .................... 1 ~.-tJ• t~ 1 ~ l'OIA~'&JO•••--•···•·"·"········ Sll,,m •1l.O "'·"' :::,in.di 1·.,!.; .. eiae!UEHll .. nhi f!e~ ~~-"'c:.=. .. ,,., ::::~~.=.. DIWk t and .... MK• =~NTIW:Ti()"S£.tviciEs0ANCi....... -... ..,,_. .. -~ ~!::...~~- --S ....... _1,., ..,....._ate ..... 1Md thel OTHER OPERATING EX ... NSES UCl•"---alCll TOTAL. lllrT MCM*"lle MLAMC8MDIN<lOMC •••••••••..••••••• 7s,n4,Mt TOTAt.•111,...._TU•as .A11M> OTMalll OUTM ••••••••••..•••••••••• 42.29.229 ••ou•o uuueca ........................ 12,.-. • .., CASH IN CI0"9ff'I TitLUUltY .. ••• . . . . .. • lt.9"- ltCVOt.'IUtOCAIM PUMO. •• • . • .. . . . •• .• .•. tS,- ACCOUlff'S HClllVAllLC. •• • • • • • . . . . • • • . • • ,_.,,,DI Paaf'AID ..... MS& •••••••••••••••••••••• 26.911 ............ .,, ................... . TOTAi. CU•UWT Allan . . . . ..•... . . . .. ......,.. L£$5 CUlllllEHT UA81UTIES & OEFEAlllEOINOOME ...................... s~ NET ENDING eAUINCE • . . • ••••••••••• •• ·~ TOTAi. lwe..OtTU•UMD OTM•• OVT80 PUii MCT ..................... _ "°'" ............ 1'.n'Mf SH.ClAL llEH9tVE FUND IN<lOME eEGINHIMOeAUIHCE.JUt.Y t Gnft Ill c:.wic., Tr_,, .. . • . • • • • . • • • • • • • .... C4"Ttfil Ulettltlft ..•.•••••..••••..••••• Nia llEOtlttftN08ALAMC£ ............ . Ml ... """*toCWnllt UMllllllft ••••••.••. AD.IUIT•D _,. NOtM•tMO UU.MCE • • • • . . ••• • . . • • .. . SH.-0 £ Gll>ftal OuHar • . . . . . . . .. . • . • • . . • •• .. • .. . • 1't,OW TOTAL ell"*MTUftU .. .. • . . . . . • . .. • • 1'11t,t1A l!NOING aAlAHCE. JUNE» CMll 14\ OlodY T_, ................. .. ..... Owrtllt u.llltlea ..•...............•.. •T C•OIM l.t.I •MC& C'tl ............... . TOYAt.U......,.TVtl&S,.AND '"'°" 71.16.S .... ltftCMDt-~ .••.•••••.••.•..•. tft,"1 c.vn•••• Aa::outtf IMCIOM• ffOINHINO llALAHCE, JUI. Y I GMll lfl Q9CllM *"' ...,__ ~ .................................... ·-···· .J,7tf O,...ttlft9 Clttl ............................ . ~'""°"" ............... ··········· .......................................... fCIU40iln'tM .... , ..................... .. ~ C¥rrwtl U.lltlea .•••••.••• •••••·•··· M4ET aaOt ..... NG~ •••••••••••••• MUWTCO_., .................. ._. .................. .. INCOMI t,tSt ..117 ,, .. S,117 '·"' ~ ......................................... lM.M toTA&.~ fUaMINllOPM.._. .. ~, tM.tw TOTAL. llft ........... UUttQI, IMCOMS .,............. ,.,. llllNllDfTVltat rt oe.HICT tr>C~•NOITUfld Qatl~~ ......... ··· .••. SUPPLIJI •• , ............................. . IQUtf"MflNT 111•~CSMSMT ........... . OTHe9t ONJUif1NO UNNKS ""o w.vtc:as ..................... · ... ·· · TOT~UNNOtflllllD ................ . f'etMeN,CAt'lttt Ille ;;;~~'j,,';.ion .. ~ Olntra<ttor"'""°'*StrvkM.............. "·"' ".277 --~-=--~·-······················· ~~ Tell (lUl:-4~ _,Ille ~ bldCIK wlll '--=~ IW!h.anct ~ .......... •...• ::::: ,,,,,,,.. ,..,,. ..._.._. ............................ . A"-Y :Or Goalt Oall Pllo 1111trecl etlllsOM1e~toteewe ac allng~.................. !~ , ............................................. . ~ .... 115,21' 56,AiO ...,,. .... 11.•1 .. .m .... .... u.- ... 112.tl' .. --"'·"' .,. , ... A~:~=-.1~11 ~219-7~ CHS. • =~e$:eu'1U>iMGi:ii00tcsAH00...... • ....... ---...... TOTAU'911•uetn'AS1Sft ............... . -----------I •· Bids wm be recel\led at • !Mlbll< MEOIA, ANO NEW EOIJI PMEHT Un°"'""' *'IU.. ... ' ........... " .... . meeting ot t?lls &oerCI, to.wit: 1310 Sllftaiwtl .... SI... = t,'IGIJl•#fl• , ....... -tt•T .. ~.,..a;;,_·u··.; ........... . •oem\ Av•n11•. Cotta Mesa. .. .. u-.............. ...,,_ l'C1r~ •-ro. .. Bulkllf'OS and 111 ... ,.,,._.,, OI lkllldl119t • • • • .. Callfornt• on Ille l)tll clay ot Sep. &oouMdMecAafW....,or 11 ., ••• , ........... . ll·mlt t•mt>er. 1m, at I 00 p.m . .tt Wflkll E ndtclScllUOI Lltit Its ia.• *• --ttdU9tAteea MOTIC:CTOCllll:OtT09tS llmesHlllCl~tlol .. saltltpro.. wp.a . ., .................. 2·::0-.-........... ~~., ........... . .... '"........... -rty "•rtf• .......... -Krl~ ..... , .... Ect11lllf'"tlll • .......................... •• •• • •• 2'0,11> ,_., "" -=• ._..._ ,... '"" ,__.... -_, _..., ""'5llblot I t1«'t12 •-w _:.--Ill,..,,_• ,. .,:·····•••"···· ... ·•·•·•·• ............ . SU,.aalOllCOCl .. TOFTH• rK•l'llecl and <OfllfOtrlld. Tiiis 8oercl a .................................... '-. •• ._. :..--~~~--~ ......•..••....... iTATCOf'CAUf'OttMIAf'Olll resatWStllert;llttoreJ«lanyand•fl =~:..~=DITUau .............. 19..m..-. ,....... ~ tn Tt:::"o':"t~~s~:,. ol :':11~C:.~wl111e1taw1tsof1Mlol-o.otStrvl<ll :::..,,....,_.. ••• ::::::::::::: HAALANR,CAIPPEN,0.UHed. Befor• ec~I ..... ..,,, wrlHeft -A-·~Oll~ofS...• .... TCRA~S.~ont•• PUBUC NOTICE 141 ... ,..._ ... H0TIC:£ IS H£AEIY GIVEN to pOMI, tlle tloM'd Slltll cell for orel =~~--!.............. t2Q.Ut "°•'"" Oill't6-~ r - <red!JIWS llhlnO a.in. ..-um -lllctto. •t-_.cwn.--Dldr;.,.,., fllltlonfor......,..Occ~o.ntersor ~~ ······•··• ············ = !:.'!. O.::: ~.!: !f" .:.:·~~:: '"410f1Slble penon Olfws to -tlw P'rC19rems l<:wreM E.llpeMat. •• ••• .. .. ••• ••• n.M tM.2d •• , ........,Or,... Cllalt 0.-r Pllet.1 .......... ___ ai_._..,,. _______ _ '4111'1 Ot " pr9Mftt trlem to tllt un-:,~ "'~.:'°",._~ ~ =~ All Otllet TlllUlll ... · • ·" · ·" · · · ........ · · · • Jt7 J"l t22.m ' ...,... • rtJBUC NOTICE PUBUC NO'l'IC£ Clenlonect .. u. offk • of KEITH w. c.:i!o'': .. INS\""_:..,, m:i ~~·1·~·········................ ~ !!'!~ --::: ... M11.U9t, Mlllel' & Mtullno, 30S Bank ,,. llllJN'I tnen 11f111>0M1'#llktt1 n er ~ ······· ................... • ·-r---.------------1----::~=r----:~~---... ,._,1, •• ,..,. ~•ttler, ,.,. _,.1• I ~-,...., ~ ~torClllll"9M'" ..••.....•.. f,t•. tlte:TmOla....... '9Cftl'fOUS9W .. UI "'_,_ -..,._ "'" '"".,_ ,,,_Dy•··---"""°"'""" SUITOTM.,.OTHW .. OUTOOANO ~AT&Amwf ..,....,A.,...WT Wllkll r.tter offlCa t. the Piece of t>usl· lllvllnt ~ oral bid "'911 be APP•OPttlATIOtt FOft CIOHTINGENC:IU 414."2 t.116,W '*"' Tiie-I& ..... .... TM ft4....... del neu of Ille .-S9*1 In all matt•" finally ec<epCecl OI' ell blcls "'911 be r• TOTAL CXNMOt""'•I. OTMCJt ...,_ •· • ......_ .,. nt penalil~no~~~Mlcl~~flta~;w~.;Suc~ll~c~l•~·~"'~'~lec~t~IHl~b~y~llle~Boel'~~4~~~~~~~0~U~T~OO~A~N~D~AiPiPllOll'tl~~·~A;Y;IC~-~~---va:~~!"':tlli~"1~"''flii~~~~~~·::::=:~·~~~~::::~~~~~~~":!~l~t~A.'i:1~ .. ~'""".~~~~ w.IJIU NOS 'Mr•"· Sltff• trl•tot Stl'Mt ...... ~ 8Mdl, flliB"i Jll NII ~-' c..-...-. ~ low ~....., H llnhut>l~tlon Notlu of lntantlOfl to L.a•" .... , Ctlll lnColllttf y; ., ••• • • • ••••• • ._.,. Plfltw, M.O.. m w . ..., WllN-c. °"' ,,. v .. u. Glftlllanota. P1'0c>erty. sJoned b'( the aer11 •Ille 11..,....,,11111a.tt"-"'....... ................ 10.-,....., •Q. OtMa a.w. CMI..,.,.• s.uo. .....,..le«ll.~9*a Oat.o A119u11Ut, tm. 80erd, In lllt• Ill Pllbllc plecff In tlle AGCOU!lts Rectfllallte ........................ _,, · llllt 1111"-~ Is c..Mw!M ., a JEANA. TANNHEIMEft c-ty not""' tMn flftMn cm daya ~· ...................................... """~"~..,Ml~ lltn4 ......... ....... ~y ntfMCI In ii.fore ttw .-e. ol Mid JllO!lc MMllflt ~ bpeMe •., • ••••••••....••• , •• , •. , • ....... 1 WllltMf C. Oe¥it .. dtcedanC'S Wiii es • ... .. PIA>!l1'1. eopyef Ille --"W....,..,,. N.... . ~---.. ....... -M.Q 0-M ~..... ~ if.M',. Y11~•11M11 £A ............. ~ ;:-;,. i1.~itfTAlins ................ 2,ISl,NI 2....... ,,,,,..,_. Ttl{f"''~ ti¥ ftW wiflo the Tlllt ,......,.. -"*' wl~ ""' .. nc: ... t. ~ w secutlYt WWllS before tlte .... OI -I-· c -I ...... ,",_ I -IOI ·~-'-~, ,,_ OI ..... _ r-~ •• -.. _ •• ,. ,..__ ....... ..._. '-~ -OI wk! Clecedanl rnetll"9 In -0rtnQlll Ooatt 0.fly --11"-" .__ -· .. • • •' • '• •' • •' • ... ••' ,_,, " .._." '":'!:,., .__..., ......,, -· ,;;;:;;.. 1;-;;;., --.._ __., .. -Mll.LElll & MAUTINO Piiot, • -ot -at clrcul• MeT &MDfNO IA&.A"Cll '. " .. " ' •••.• '... ,....... I _,., tt• .... -ti.,•-.--' -• ·--...-..--.,..._, TOTAi. lll""°'TV .... Ofltllll ~ ~ lteel•W.Ml-1 llOn pvblllMll In tt'41 District. OUTM ANO ~IATIOM PO« CCMn'l .... '9011 ~~ Coa• CMlty "411f. "'*""*'°""' 0.... Oetly "4tet; An.ntey•L.aw 7.tm...-clpertltttnrf----u1•n• ..... -~ ttMltU ....... _ ... --...-...... l1...,s 111e41.1• tm Wt,._,,_S••n•-1,t•.-•aa.att~...._ dll'-lblCldtfllllnfonnatton.ltl<llldlno r~ _,_ ............ • • --•• .._ _....... ..,. -~ ~ ~':' a teoel Olktlptlon OI "'8 IWUI, by ... 1> llff'lllllUT AMO 9tlouentC* f'UtfO Ttt:1Hlt S ctfttedlftt .. ~ Oltl<• OI °""'""°"'°IOMOCD lll'llbllslled Or ... Cotst 0.tlly Pltot Ille Olstrkt. 1111o••TC011CU• .......... •··••·• ........ ···-A119.a1.s.cie.1.1.t.21.1911 .,,.,,. Peuaf ..i ~et llW........, "411t,,,_.lf..,.1ote1 ................. ..-.-..__ ,,,..111111 of a. Gowml"9 Board of .,. S1111tot.e1 • • .. .. • .. • • • • • • • • • • • • .. • • • • .. .. .. • .. ,, .... a.m• Coast ~tv Colieot ot~rtctOI Mlnut~of..,.~.......... ,..,... •• Orenot c-ity, Gtllfontl• Oft Ille IMll OUTtTAMDf• eottDtlO INO••nD••u Jo.J" -,.,.. .. PUBUC NOTICE l'ICT1'10US aUSIMSU MAMI ITATIM•HT Tiie 1011ow1no penons are ctolnt bllslfteH at: AL.LaN INVESTMENTS, Ul1 W. Oceanfront. ~ hacll, CA '26'J T~ S. ....... W. O<-. lrMlt, N......,.n llMcll, CA ""3 T-I!. Al ..... 711'1 SHlllerll Cir· cia, H1111tl ....... 9Hctl, CA n... ~Dell Allen. 72tl SNINra Clrck. """"""'°" e.ec11. CA m.e Tlllt -•net• h conduclect Dy • ...,.,., P41'11"1~ f...,._S LH Tlllt ,...__. w" llled Wftll Ille C:-ty C!ef11 ol Orwnoo COllM'I' °" J11lf '1, ""· ...... .. CS.'1' Of A..-. 1'11. Ce&ll 111 ONlly ~ • • • . • • • • • • • • • • ......,. •.OS:U- A YES: TAUST&U: 0..1'98 MHl•Of .... NO~Q .•• .,. -"' 1.#a ... ROCICI• Jr., Wllllam E. ic.tUff. W01111 INCOME ttun•. "*'' 1... Huml'flros •no tlOO Sf ATB IN(IDM• DonaldO. Hoff .. ,. ftll R ..... ~ HOU· TAUS'TU'.S: NoM •11 evtl,_. t~ C~lons , ..... . AISl!NT:TlllUSTE.S:NMlt 9'7tHMtt0Mtrs'...,._ ................. . STAT& Ol"CALIP'OflHIA SuMltal ••••••• •·••••••••••••• ••••••••.••• COYN TV Of' 09'.ANO« "'9 COUNTY IN<X*I I. NOltlMH a. WATSON1 SittM~ liRll-Otl.~llt~I...!!.-. • ............... , ••• of tM ._,, OI Trwtfet et Ille C#r I.ii.iii ..,_ ._._ °"""'""'"" Otllett Otatrtct .. Or... .,. D411ricl ,_, C-ty, Cal~ llttWy <8'111¥ tllat •11 SKW.cl .._I ................... . IM .oow ..,., toretO!no R"9111l141ft •11 Un_..,.. ........ . waa dlll'I' Mid '-'laf'ly,.,...,..., ltr tllo •U f'rlat 'ft¥t' Tutt , ,.,,.,. .• , . • ,•Id •o.rd at • reOlllaf' meetlntu IMO 111ttret* 1 • • .............. . ,.,.,tot 11e1c1 OI\ tllir lttll My ot A11911\I ... Otlltr ~ I-.........•.•.••. 1'1t and.,,._ bye llMlll19!111n vot• Of SWi.tel w l•90el'd TOTAi. INC:IOM9 N.,..._ I! WatJO(I 1'0T AL, NST ...... ._. ... '·"'·* ... ... 14"1• ,..,... ,. •.m.•ia 1,,0S.IU Pvtlll\lleCI OreftQt C.O.st Oefly PllOI. ~ Aul. It. 11, t•. )I, "11 -JOl1·71 ltu«>llslled Orelllt Coast O.lly "410t, LU.AMC• Af!.~ tMCOMa , ....... . Aut11tl U, )t.,,; ,.....,_, 1, "71 ont9'.I OUT.., f017·7t ,..°'"''°""° I d£)CAL I CALIFORNfA ' ·More tbA t.100 1tu· dent.I araduattd 01' ,... 't • t v e d a d Y • n c • d ...... from Cal • Fullerto• ta. Jt1n•. Oran11 Cou\ ~te were.by • :· ~ -oi.." 9'1t1*• L:'~-----""---~ .......... -........... . J1 .. , .. ' ....... • ........ . ...,... ....... &;-c.-•-----O.lt o.c.w ... lt•lfl9f'lll ...... ,..._ ~·caw.. _ _,_ O.....L ..... A11•••• • .,._.. .... Clilllll M, Mc L•11tllll11, 01w11 M ...... ~Nt .......... .,V .... C:.. ---T-A. a.n., U-. • S ~ .... LOlllllPUA. .$i14t41 • ,..._, 0... ....... •i.-....... a.... •. o-. .~ ••• , .. J 0.IMtt, Crelt 0 ,a.in..rr;. C)lftlel • .._. ...... M.~.,. f ..... _., l'r•M •• Hv-141. .,...,_ M. IUU,, 0.V ~ ll•••I•. 0... .. l L. .. 1 .. •Ml ¥1c""lllt ......... Al..-, ••• G. ...... ,. __ "" ~. o.Mef. MllMor. ~ 0 .. ~----.~ fl ... """" .... a.... OK.Iii. 11. ' Crlekets ·Foree So•e Shop Closings. "Traffic II unusually hea111......,t.'' lmecta Invading Coalinga COALINGA <AP> -So many crlcket.t have invaded t.hll Wfft alde San JC)*luin V.U.y community that aomtlt«elhavecl0Mdtemporu11y. ''When I e>pened the doora Tuesda)', I couldn 'Otep on the carpet," aaid Tobr. Caatlllo. owner of a restaurant ln Coa · Inca SboJ>ptnt Center ... It was covered wlth crtcketl. They were an over the pot11nd pans. The noise-ll waa like a awaarmolbees.'' l &ONlCALLY. A MOVIE about ldller bees called ''The Swarm" ls playln1 at the local ~eater. Caetuto s ayed closed Tuesday and Wednesday. He said al leaal two other businesses in the shopping center also had to close. "lt'1 1 pretty bad situation." said Bob Semple, Information officer for this community of 7,000. "The only way you can appreciate lt is to come down bere at night and bring a microphone." Cl&CKETS BA VE INVADED ·the San Joaquin Valley , and particularly Coallnta. more heavily than uaual this summer because there wu Uttle troet laat year to kill off SQ me of them. Alao, the two·year drought left cracks in the around whlch provided good nesting areas. and rains this spring provided good breedlna condl· taons . The crickets are attracted to the Ci· ty because of street liehts. lack of moisture in mountain areas ind pesticides sprayed on fields out.aide of town. said Semple. THE CITY HAS been unable to &et a permit to spray pesticldes but is letting homeowners request that Lheir~t t lights be turned off. Paclllc as & Electric Co. \s being asked speed installation of high pres~ e aodlum Uabts which emit a wave length that does not attract in· sects. Semple added. But mainly. residents are hoping the crickets will die or go Into hibernation by the end of September. "I wish J could catch al11 the crickets and sell them for bait." Castillo added. "I'd make a mint." •IA .. IW•B • QDUTOlWEB Jewett .,, •OMPM It Marof\lno for diamond• end gtmtt~ 6om Pf'W• .. lndwld.-.net •tat-. Careful tutJtl~ and eniluetl()ft bV OtJI txpertt. Highest pnc:.t petd. c.tl 64C).o90M 1CH dally, Saturday UM. Sunday dosed Ml< ro( Betty Grace Of Frank VanderWall lewels by ioseph South Coeac ff'an • 1'33 Britt()!. cOsta Mela• 540-906& MERCURY SAVINGS E11~ut1ve Offices: 7812 Ed1~er Ave .. Huntington Beach. CA 92647 5-0cJt/'lfJm Cst11om1~ RMJIOnal Ollrees 8955 Valley V•ew St • Buono Park. CA 90620 20115 S Aveloo Slvo.. Carson CA 90746 22821 lake Fo1ut 01 . (l.al<e Fores11. C:I TOIO CA 92630 1001 E lmpcr1&I M111y . La Habra CA 90631 41401..ong Boaeh 01~0. I.Ono Boach, CA 90807 • 1095 1rv1no Blvd Tuslln CA 92680 235 N C111u~ Ave Wel>I Covina CA 91793 ~ T•1-••L -lcot. •11n' ~----------------~-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------·~Mw, IWC_. G 5'ett, lt_I .. H P•t•', J\141101 Siie••, Ml•I•"' _..., •• WOiien\ F W.. eurtis W ·wr10 .,.. MwV A 519tf,.... , 1,11 •ddllllll1 O••td A Snllll. ltkherd .J ~. Oo\ft114 J, Souclior, .....,Ill• e: torH·G•rc•• K•rr, M'tttell, *'-' L WllitlellM -Joi\ ft A ¥It IQhl ·~ ....... V•tOllt~A T"""'66 •1 t-Lydie L Br-. ROWtl 0. Ir-ft, EllOIW M. Ck•v O.v .. A. ...,Kek, C'4rOI A. ~ MKJ1N4 A . M<Ml~1 It-"' L WeC.. lndKeth-..1 Yeme-. ..... , .. 111 ._ ..... -$ ... r.t\ "' All"~• ~y L Aldllft, L•t\CMI L. Com, HMeld O. EflQle, CatrOll It H1y .. 11111a, Mlcllffl T. Ho111uln Rlcllerd P Ju.ar~. Pet•lci. E. ll•llY JoM C. KllWWY, P ... I A U«lllnc Rld1.,d J Ml:C.rtlly, Pelrlcl• A SP••n. N•nc I '\/anem•n, SlllH Vffftllre -G'-' S Wrtgllt. M1111tl ..... -II Jollft L ""° de"on, R•nd' O•der, Terr, L Baker. Geelrl91 Buc'-*111, SIMI.,_ H C•llow•r. O.vld Cl•'·~ M. Cllbll. Thof'U1> 8. Ferrett, Ell•n H ~•no1ky, Jolln T. Gr••lllleld, ~I S Griffin, C.rol ttatperln, Oerren o kerrl$, 'Ooull~ L Hert. "°"nie 8. H9fvy -KetNrlM In· o~-Aho. Jol\n 8. Jey, Jeffrey A Jolley. Mlc"-el C. .!Ordal\, Terrence W Kl-•, Mer1L \..eywn, l.o~ E Uc:arl, Mike M<Covlf, ~ It Miller, J-1 I(. Mui~. t1rry J N6elllluls, Catollt L.. 0r,.ies.. CNrie. J P••rson. M•t•ll• K. Perklt\l. llllOa•• 8, ..... ,..,.,, J_..., I!. A• dll\9 elld Merla L. R•lrltlWdt. • .1a 1ddlllo11. aonnl• L. ••u. 9'rtlllne E ~~.Ire A. ltowl-. GrlVOfY S.tlos, c.wotlrw I.'.. Scllu<1•r. lttcJl•r!f S. Sl'llll#llder, Merk H Siio<•, S"-' A Sllns -J-L Im"" •Alto. 8elJ• J. Strelgftl, M•rcl• Tevtor, Fr•nt.n• G Thompson, Barry R W-fNn. Clv1Stopflet 4 W..bb. Roi.rt A. W.lner, Cn.ri.s A •tt\, O•vlel M. Wenn~. Damon Wlllt• •ftd .-... ~. ,.. .Jr•I•• -Pelrlcle G, Andenot1, Mery J ~. JMll W. hllJ, .. ..,. .. J. ~ ltollt<t I(. C-lllni. etuert K. C04lp•n1, P•l•r W Co.m.11~. Oa<;IO M. Oal•Mndro, Sheron Denial, Ovl111M I. pen-.. '""'""' J F .. lna lll'td Joeo F•r•lro-Pln!D, AIM>, An10fllO 'GI•~·. $\lvltf\ "'· .,..r. Mldiele A. Hel91tl, Lynes• Heml'lleftel, OS. .._ltl\, Te..-" J Je<•wlu, Christine M. Jollnton, Jovt• W. ~.Keren S. Jol\mon, Arlel ltl-r, R~1 L uurus. ~°" M<CMI, O.vld L.. M<Ovtfle, ,,._.rT E. Mltc1"'1, NOHW:Y L, Morris, ~· c. P-11 91\d Kristin H • ._. .. < J" eddlflan, lto!lert E. R-let\CI, ~· A. ~left. £1'-S. $t>r-1n09f, Merllte M. stir-. R-1 'Tlleemllno. c..tN<'IN S. Venn-. 8ruc• E. Voelkel, S~ J, Voul•r .19'1!1 WorsMy encl l(Ml(I t.. Yon La ... 11a hK!I -l!Mry C. An· ,,.''°"· R-0 . 8uck, AdrllnN M. (#>en. Susan C Elsner, Vlrolnl• t.. kenw.... l..oub A HOt-cl•, OIOra K. Prcaen. l(atllerlne J T Mllleu141v end 'fjaller L WH,.I. l.etotN Hiib -JO A ~lie. 01- L Oekan, -Linda J KlngdOft. ,.~ ... H.,.... -H.•ncv G. Cflolr rll!,; Sl'l•I• £ Oc>uglan, C>...,kt Felder Susen ~bin, .._,,., M.' SWln. ~rl• l>'#4fQU .. ·Eetlletly -Ketllerlna A •""•I Mfltl•11 Viel• Tllomu M . 8utorec. Lii' M. Crelg, Albert K Crl\P, P•ul R Dye, John J, E11sl119, ~lie Glllle, TIMOtll\I S Hollen, mas J Htreltn~r. S•ndr• O c ller, David E Krusclltll. •IHlll J . L.11\0en, Maf'Qeret S. Ma· I 111\d l(fll MtlM Also, Joseph H McOarrnon, Judltll ~Cl.eocl, Alben NI MM-. Terri ~. 01.-L Pllllllps, l!lffnH ~Ith, Tlmollly St-. MaurMI\ £. u1, ROOtrt W, Tllampsdn, Mlt\11 t l••n •nel Wllllem 8. Wooekoc.k. N••••rt I HCll -Pamtl• G ewm. Vickie A 8•1dQm.en. J111141n. ~.C.mlen, J'"'" M Collet. JOHpll b ltnlro, lllllbert C O'fil•. £11"n t. [rl•1 eoo.,.e M Kiiiian, Rlcfl>lrd i'CUYk..,.,.11, !.Mii• I(. NtAlll'ltfy, ~rlen W l'llaon, M•rllyn L 0 l(ffft. N .. , M Rider, CMol s "''llmoncl, l'Mrcl• w Smith, Alme ff. V-s'9, Cherle1 T • Wtrrefl anCI ~lannt H Ytsk. SH CM...,... -Dougie& A. 1.-11. Amur E. P .. mer.nclJ-A. Tell 51" J,..• c.plstr--SNron L. 8rGn\, Pres .. Otttton MCI OltM "' OIJ«, SH I l eecll -Maril C. Clerkt, Gren! A L'nd, Al•••nller 0 W)lllm•n at\d CAIMl...UN F. ~ .J••tll L.191111a Lor•tt• A. ~ld\tarrNOn, Gebrlellt Li. lllle"•nieu W Dev .. 1. rr-,..en Wettml11Uer -01.119IH IC Aullanoer, V.1er1t L. 8-r. CUiton Oicofdobl, OelfN Doerr,~ II. Evens. Frencls .1 ~-• .*'9 A. ....,., •D 't too AJlO °"°'"' L .Mccnt\', MleJlell p . Mlll•r, MICl\HI R. NHrto"· •oberl E P•llSOfl, lltlcll•rd I.. seerfoH e1111 Mlrllyn M. WetlOI', ~wire Fraud ~N DIEGO ~It A Lonf Beach man who pleaded guilty to one count of wire fraud in an alleged scheme to bilk e El Cajon bank out of $140.000 has been sen· ten.ced to flve ean in federal .prison. Robert Grant Jones, 42, was ac· cused of trytn1 to defraud a Security Pacific Bank btanch. C.llH2-H71. Put • faw wordt to work for ou. -ANNiVERSARY SALE! I I SALE ENDS SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER2ND .. HURRY, SOME QUANTITlES ARE LIMITED! One great weekend of big storewide savings. ~ oAY Wc~-t ~ f ~ . ~ 0 Special." Mines rich brown and rust coordinates to mix or match. 597 to12!! Women'esupercoordanateeranpfromplaidat.o border printa. Some are polyeeter knit. Miaeea' ' Choo8e from blazers, cardigan, tops, pant, skirt. Women'• 11zea 38.-U, S2-38 ..... ...each at II more \ll""'f.:-. ..,l~llOMH .. \11 SPECIAL CASUAL FLOAT FOR LOUNGING 997 Polyester interlock float of 100% nylon for casual wear. In a88orted prints and ~lore. In S, M. and L. I JSl,f 111~; SAVE•to rl "/ Special. Men's comfortable knit shirts with placket collar design. Accent stripes help make 4ss this a sporc.y favorite! 5ey; polyeater. 60".+ cotton, mach1newashable,comes tn many assorted colors. "~"' s rt 'KSIKtm:c;..., SAVE25% BOY'S TOUGH DENIM JEANS 444 REC. S.99 Western 11tyle m no- iron cott.onipolyei..tcr Front. buck pocket:-, yoke. Shm. re~. 8 -16 6.99 husky• 8-lti .... 5.4!4 1/30FF oMEN'S SOLID No iron double-g· 9 7 kmt polvc11ter Modified Oure I~ ~ :!042 REC. $15 :\If.'.., fl 'ftSti;111:-,1:.., ~~~-~~~~~~~~~--t-~_..;;::.....,q · ..l:. ·sA.vt ··23 ·-"""'" -SAVE 3-l~ CHAIN DRIVEN EXCERCISE BIKE =~69'8 arttrol Redlrad FUNCTIONAL HIGH INTENSITY LAMP L51.'t"hiwhencc-1 n&8 tended,bnlland u -- w11lnut colored GI a re free bu lb OIFTWAIUl Save tsr~ All purpose athletic shoes for your active young men. For ~on:\:r, football, a fl 4ss twf sports. Black Naugalon • v1n_vl uppers lnJt'ct1on molded soles. clealll. fully padded collar S izes I ·9. REC. 5.99 ® ~f~llHl,l.f ,111111, SPECIAL BOYS' OR GIRLS' KNIT SHIRTS }67 Thc!!e ~hurt !lll't'Vt: kn 1t !>h1ru. lorboy!>undl(trl1o are 100'• couon und u re avalluble 1n as- sorted colors 3-6x. CHILDREN'S FASHIONR Durable _plastic J 288 freezer. The~ etatically con· trolled motor HOUIU:WAllt:::i SPECIAL_ NOISE ABSORBING CORK PANELS I " 2 foot panel11 1 99 cover approx 8 PACK sq. fl E .. y for you to inetall. 4 PER PACK Ill 11111:0.t. \I I Hiii \I" YOUR BUYING POWER -APPLY FOR A WARDS CHARC-ALL ACCOUNT SOON Just looking? Be our guest. Save 23% • Bedspreads coordinates in plaid or solid ribcord fabric. Best. qw1htv weighty nbbed gss spread Machmt· washabll'. 14.99 full lliw ribcord.11.~ TWIN I t.99 bunk i.l,.A' ribt•ord,lt~ 30'.f off rel(. price all othtiri. REG. 12.99 1111111"'· tool knit ll htrts 1n poly011t.er/colt.on blend are perfect for back· to-school. Pick-up sev- eral today. 3-6X. CHILOREN'R f A!llllONS SAVE•to 17flwattmercurv 44· 88 Onod haK photo t•lt'<'lr1c 1•yo Pr•· wired. Hurry' REC 54.99 111 < I IHI \I SAVE44% LAWN RAKE FOR SWEEPING ACTION 24! llPflnjl Slt>d tl't'lh \\11th fin•· h111d••n1•1I ::ir ..... h h.111dlt• •• \Hiit' '11111' 3aa REC. 6.99 SHOP MONDAY -FRIDAY l 0:00 AM·9:00 PM ... SA. TU RDA Y 1:30 AM·9:00 PM ... SUNDAY ti :00 AM-6:00 PM ... LABOR DAY l 0:00 AM-6:00 PM I • 1 -- •I . ' ' . add-to ... add-on ... add-together~ .. all add up to back to~class savings! our entire stock of · Junior knit tops 6.99REO.. ~cotton blend kntta with lace Md ribbon accenta. <:.., eleeve ~ In duerv QOlor9. Great with pera or lkinL Junior lizel S-M-L ~ ' '· l .. . save2.01 on new-season skirts REG. •13 TO •1& 10.99To 12.99 2.01 off junior big tops REG. t10 a •12 . :·'.rj' .. ' Shown, one atyte from our selection. Choose from shirred backs, button fronts, belted waistbands, tiers and trims. Solid colors or florals. Sizes5/6to 13/14. salel put-togethers for a total new you! 15%off Start at the top with a cap, add a sporty vest and jazz it up with an oblong scarf or menswear tie; wrap around a belt; wear a stickpin and dangle earrings for sparkle ••• you've created a new you I oblongs Chooee an aU- impoftant open- W81N9 oblong eatff. Add a tie in florals or prints, plus potyest8f I cotton cordurovin 80lid colors. REG.U.$6 3.40-4.25 accent pins Headlight atbnes, enamels, ceramics and more. Add a touch of sparkle. REG.*3-M 2.55-3.40 vests The key item to achieve that look. Vests in cotton corduroy, flannel or cotton vetveteen. Sizes S-M·L. 11.89 REG. •1' hats Thia corduroy cap ii just one from our endre stock of wool, felt and knit etytee for fall. R£G.M-t7 3.40-5.10 belts Leather, rnec:r.me, fabric 188h-ltykt. Wear two together. REG.t3-M 2.65-5.10 aave2.01 on velvety velour tops 15.99REG.•• ::t V-neclcw colim-atytel With ttnlr.lllnd bottom and cuffa. Dusty plum, cNr red, ntlV'f or brown In cotton/ polyester. Junior Ull S·M-L 2.01 aavinga on pre-wash denim Jeana 7.99.9.99 Stv* Include thirring, emoddng, puff 1111 wee. Crinkle dolt\ pot, 1 t« I coaon; t.11 ~ SiZlll s-M-L 2.01 off corduroy jackets 17 .99 REG. ta . suede sweater jack818 24.99 REG. t30 Spit aaede with 100% acrytic knit in button or zippered styles; hoods or ful c:olllrs. Junior sizes 5-M-L ~OTtfie final touch ..• -::.:-:;;.-;;;:.-.;,_._;===-=:----=-==~::~~ 13.!l!r:eo. •11 ~~~~-1·~~~ stinky-skin leotards Pierced drop earrings in a choice of gold-tone or lftver·tone Choice of stytea: weift.Hne belltn--.. metals. Reg. $3 pr •••••••••••• • ••• • •• •••• .. ········••· .2 PR. ti lhining, buddetrimland 1tOCMt •12 16'% off vinyl and fabric handbeg1, roomy tote and lhoulder detaJll. 10096 pre-w81h axu.~ Our Everyday Price styles. Reg. $10 to $12 .........•••..•.•.••.•.••••• 8.4t TO 10.11 Indigo Slzel 8 to 18 Three ltylel: mock wrap (lhown), Accessory and Costume Jewelry Departments • • IPIQhettf 1trap or racing beck. Stnrtch nylon/Lycra9 spandex in lize1 S-M-L. Hoelery Department. Pt1CM .tteotlve through Sundey. lept. lnl 'lltOP Mondey-frid9y9:»8:30 ••• ttW Saturdiy N ••• Sund8y 1M ANAHEIM CORONA CV,.. FUUERTON HUNTINGTON BEACH 'TUSTIN ..... ,,..., • .._t.lelld..,..._111.-noN.Me1n1t.1n~ .... ....._1144110 ,..._...,,... ....... __ a .. a14Pc.n.r,_.1..cv ... u. •1111 .. ,..._._.. mtm 11ta1MM•·" m1111 PW8 40 MORE 8TORD TOIERVI YOU nMOUQHOUT ARIZONA, c.AUIORNIAAND NEVAPA • t. • - J 1i • INSIDE: Sara Anderson, before. At right, Sara and Sharlene, after. Before and il.fter . , . We take someone who has a lot going for her, then improve on what she has, ' says a beauty consultant. 't ' By MARCIA FORSBERG Of .. Dilltr .......... Racks and rounders of women's clothes bad been pushed to the edges of May Co. 's Cosmopolitan Dress department. Every available square inch was tatetJ up by more than 200 teen·age girls, young women and moms. They sat fanny to fanny or stood at the out- skirts or the dress department, some on tip.toe, straining to see alJ that was going on. The event was Mademoiselle Magazine's .. On Location" fashion show and beauty make overs. 1be South Coast Plaza store was one of five Southern California stops made by the New York-based Mademoiselle team, including edit.on Lowell Amey and Bonnie Wanamaker and photographer Mark Platt. Tbe magazine will use the most striking "before" and .. after'' resultsinitsJanuary, 1979,lssue. pleaded. .. Me, me," when Ms. Amey asked for vol"¥J:rwi> girls chosen for the beauty overhauls -Sara Anderson, 19, of Santa Ana and Sharlene Coleman, 16, of Garden Grove -took self-conscious waits down the nmway to 1ive everybody a cbance to see bow they looked "before" 'J'tley beth agreed ~anted a new look. They bad ~.J!ctures then disappeared to bave tbelr iwasbed. "'1"be CODCe)Jt of a make over ls that we take someone Who Illas. a. Jot aolng for her. then we illlJl'0'9 • wi.t abe bu by making the most or wbat she .bas. You· can do that by 1eWn1 the proper haircut and by wearing the right Diak •• explained Ma. Amey. D:ta, .a, (asblon show by .Professional modelsJpl ~ &esaloo on beauty Ups, tile twe Yolunteers wesw in tbe middle of tbe make ov,r<pmcess. T.wehe mon young women from the au· dience got a.'cbance to take part in an impromtu .. Sharlene Coleman,· before. THE ALLURING notion or being made over appealed to the teens who reached tanned arms high into the air. waved their hands and <S-BEFOBE, Page 8%) Rosezella Toomer applies makeup to Sara Andenon. o.tty ............... ~ ............... George Felton: The license plate says 'JAG' Emblems indicate membership in clubs. ·Jag Lovers One owner calls it 'a p_oor man 's Rolls Royce.' Whatever, it certainly inspires adoration among owners. . ,,, .. ,, aiJJti•lll111:ARP~-~ .... ~ •• ~~-~~f;n~~~e1:te;;s:<.o~r~e County Jaiuar Of• C>lltf ,..... ..... Owners Club. Jaauar: a sleek British car with Some people like Jags because a reputation. Peo.Ple love it or bate they betft!ve them b1 ·be tem · it. There is no middle groun'd. p e r a men ta I . • • T h e y • re a To be a Jaguar owner, you are challenge," one owner noted. supposed to be a little bit eccen-"It's the car that brings people trtc. And you are supposed to be a t.o.g.etb.er, • • commented.. Andy free spirit. -· • "¥' • Leavitt, a n engineer from Also, you have to have a bit of Cbataworth. money. Not only are the cars Jaguars also bring together the themselves expensive but they owners tbemselves. Many attend may be addictive. Once you get owners• club meetines. At a oae you may. want another. And typical get.to«etber, iuesu are in- uotber. And maybe another. troduced, birthdays are celebrated Some people have as many as a and tbere ts a 'Fickle Ftnger' clo1en. Allen T. LeMice, a Newport 3ward glven to the owner wbo bas Beach public relatlOllS specialist, bad the most trouble with his car says. be only needs three, in the past~th. bo•ever: ''One to drive, one to Mem1*'1 swap information and keep ln the garaae and one to kick tdeas and there is a raJr amomit of a lot.'' wheelinl and dealing between the Jaguars are compelling, there's salad and dinner <lOUrses, since no doubt. about it. Listen to tbelr mant' members seem to be ln the owners: marketforatlustanothercar. "Jaauars have a mood, a reel There are other reasons for the • wblch ls unmatched by any other Jaeuar myatJque. tndlvlduallly Is ai)Orts car," said Frank Weikel, a ,one. accord \n R t o owner<1 . Fountain Vaney resident who ''Everybody and their brother In owos a tm XJ6. Newport has a Mercedes Benz. I "The car la arroaant without be· wanted to do something to help tn1 abruive, t('1 1loof wJthout be· lend the pack away from the com· tn1 inaulferable," ho added. mon denominator." says .-real "THEii,£~ ~ certain style, a estate broker. tn71t~u.. ID lilct•11tated e»eiance Frank WeU<el clajms it's a myth to lh1m," d Mark Mayuga. a dtl41nerwbo p ldentoflhe Los · <~ IAG, Page 8:!> ...... • , • "T,,/.J ,~oj '.~, ~ ,. ' ~ . Ge19I .... -. . Sifting Old Dreams Dusty boots are packed in cardboard. The disassembled case rests against an empty wall where pictures once bung -and the trunes that madetbisbomearealmostgonenow. ~ndbere I sit on the bed pack.l,ngoocemore. Already there are thinp to be missed; the shimmering view of the Pacific, the wood-beam ceiling in the living room. the children, barefoot ,anc1sandy .. always knnclringoaowdoor These are the things of SUrf City -the little beach community Just this side of nowhere with trash in the streets, noisy parties and oone.xisieot parking-I shall remember. And there is another birthday and It's cmce aeain time for the yearly re-evaluation of reads: "Do not resent crOwina old. Many are denied the.privilege." But there are still those birthday blues. -r carefully empty each drawer. Why. there ii. the Gemini keycbain from what·was·his·name? Could it reJlly bave been so many years ~o? And here ls a fading medalllon inscribed: "'Peace La healthy for children and other living things.·· And cards and letten ftom old friends and lovers, diaries, a button collection. Tb«\ there are empty rtbbon spools which have evadl!d the wastebasket and everythine my cbJldren have ever written me -much too pre- cious to discard. . . Look at this micro-miru skirt. Today, I m em- barrassed to admit I wore it; but no, don't throw tt away, someday someone will have an ''old bi p- p le" party and 111 need it. Tbtte's the first wed- din1 nng,stillsblnlnainthe boxfromSpain. See this pricelesl plece ol broken dbb? And these b1taol colored paper and broken beads? I re- member. Waan'titJust ... 1 Jam reminded Ulatsummer'ulmostover. Autumn comes -Ith b~y a notlce. And I know that in a few days J'll find new spaces and challenaes. But I'm not ready. I Protest. for new seasons or birthdays or mo,,ea. Why, I've not even cultivated my summer tan or lost UUs bit of nab that Uled to come off so easily. And tooJC at au \Dele mamla folden filled wlth grand, uncompleted projects. So I contlnueto t1f • slowly siftin.a thtoueh old dreams, my band OfCOslonally reacbtna out to the w..iebaaket -;- abdpulllngbackapin... ) ' ' DSAll ANN LANDERS: 111 IMllbMd a'14 I bavt ,,._ married H years. It WU WTOq from tbe it.art aad l kDtW lt afts two ~. butwe.-..... and had c~. _.... Jt ... _ L9••er• mltbt belp. Now aie1 an••~ D1M ._.a. •• .-.. .. ..-. tre• me•• ...... -. .. 1 .,. ot .... • ........... J ....... , ................ . Lau Dectmber ~•• •• ••er••HIJ · mett& .,. u.e ,..... ••.. .. Fred" became la· .,.,,,... It l1 ••UYl•t •a•l _... ....... ,._ .... volved w\Ul a cti~ wUlt Dheret, •• t.1 to l•lt•&e. C•U•rea, ,wocnanlnour1odaltlr-&at"••• lltert•••· Ir•• &lte •••tat or tte. Th.ls ... IA ttalrd <P•t.lliller, Tlt••H blnlt, are .-....ve &o atfalr fthat I new ol> •er• PreH. Ht N. &a.. •oodl of..._ wllrio and l t.houlbt lt woaW WaMtlt ""·• Cllkaao, 1arreall4 tll••· Tlt•1 blow over if I· 1'4HDalned m. ..... ~ .... , caaMt M ........ calm and .,,....,.. not .. N• ...... na. .._ teall wW. to notice. 1bla It Mw I Ille ...cdld ,_ &M 1ab <'U ~ CJ> Leav· had dealt with lbeotlMlr'I of U1e ,......._ Wltat s.a. <I) W.. Left. (4) but I mlaJud.aed lbe eoloasal ••••I• ltH l'a•lll•~~· Family, situaUon. Last week he ta e e • I• fl le te d •a Frindl (I) 11e1Jt1 asked for a divOfte so be e 11 11 d r e • b i & II e Aloae. I lleuUly NeO•· can marry her. J'lt••1 'altni1t.1e' de• •ead It u a praetkal, I am no longer lo me dlloas of parea&a wlM lellllble ud •••0<•tlYe wltb Fred -be killed d e e I d e d & o a & a y pldt for pareatl wbo; my faltb and trust many I.Oleta.er •for u.e kid.a.• lllare ,_.. pnblem. years ago. To com-No ehlld deaerve1 to ' pllule matters we are earry Ute bardea or Catholic. I realize the 1uch scapecoatlD1. V•· Church bas softened its for&aaately, a 1reat position on divorce but it namber of ad•lt• are still bothers me. now In therapy aUempt· I'm writing lo you tn1 to cope wttlt conlllcta because I need lo know that 1>e1an with con.atant what you ·think divorce ariamentl between will do to our children. I tltelr pU'flftU -tearful. confided in m3 mother wreaehlal 1tt11e1 by a and she insists that I motber wbo 1ald, •JI It owe it to them to keep weren't for yoa I woald our marriage together have left your father -Te1ardless. Mother Ion• ago!' pointed out wbat has "Tbll ta not &o 1a11e1t Jlappened to tbe chlldren tllat dtlldren whoae of some ol OW' divorced parent• divorce aaffer ltiends. I countered with no m effects. Tiley do. :examples of c hildren They are affeeled by 1rom ''happy" homes tllelr parents' life de· -wbpee lives were just as dslons and wlll need b a d l y m es s e d u P · help In understandlnl < Tr u an c Y . drugs • and eoplnc. But tlley runaways, arrests for should not have to pay ht burglary and two term• or emotloaal sulcides. > health for tbelr parents' I am terribly torn, anhapplneu. They Ann Lande r s, and I sboald not have to be desperately need some railed In an atmoepbere guidance from an un-where parents barely biased party. Please tell' tolerate eacla otber, me what YoU know about bicker beUUle or battle this subject. I am --wbe're one parent pro- B ET WEEN THE motes a conspiracy DEVIL AND THE a•alDlt the other - DEEP BLUE SEA. where a good from u pat DEAR BETWEEN: I on for relatives and RUFFEll'S UPHOLSTDY ...... w .. ...... lt22Nll'tlorM..t C ... • MIN-S4a-015' YOIJf Dally Pilot c;sn be Recycled. ()Mfe ('.oatteoNge ,,,,..Olfi,c.tal '«"tc.WtO Ult'INI' lolC-•~ 5f>6·~981 DEAR ANN LANDERS: Last week, oa my last birthday, I received three beautiful books from three dlf- f ere n t people. They were very expensive C$27.~). In each book the sender penned several lines of warm senti- ments and signed his name. These books were duplicates of one I already had ln my library. CA Christmas presenL) I appreciate the thought behind these gifts. but who needs four copies of the same book? If those well· meaning people bad not signed them Cor had they used a UtUe in· genuity and written their messages on a sheet of paper>. I could have returned the books for credit. How does this strike you? - CBRlDGE, M~. DEAa CAMBlllDGE: U strike. me u lneredl· ble tlaat a penon who coald lasplre sach devo- tion could be so crassly coqamerdal. Yoa have four duplicates -SO WHAT? Tbe personal lnscrlp· Uons should make the booka priceleu. ( . ' ·Boroseope l'&IDAY. 8SPI'. l 8)'. IYDNBY OllA.aa ] AaJD (Match :n·April lt): What ... ma nnJ1hed can be nvived. Know lt and Dian ac· cordlqly. Your view., orocedurel wUf be vlD· dlcat9d. You dJ.lcover hidden l'elOW'ffl, You learn hew to better communicate needl. You a•t pOllUve retultl. TAUltJI (Aprll 20·May 20>: You can domln• lffl\e. Your per&<KWl~t~!IDlna­tlon heJ111 briq about 1lpitlcant ~· Leo, Aquarlue lndlvlduala play lmpol'\ant rot ... SpeeU\Cally, you make new atart -anCI Jove Lt very much a part of 1cenarto. GBlllNI <May 21-J\lfte ~>: Your pottUoG Lt 1t.roa1: resowus are subltanUaJ. You l•ln needed lnfonnatkln via lntuWve n• Be pa· tJent, thoroulh, penl1tent and coaftdeot, v ... Aquarian ta fn your comer. You wtll lain add!· Uonal 1upport. CANCD (June 21-July 21>: Actlvtty In· creaaes: )'OU make more COfttacta. lain ln atat&are and feel more at peace wtthln. Yea, amldat burly-burly of accelerated social We. there descends upon you a feelln• of inner saU.fadloD. LEO tJuly 23-Au-. 22): Accent on re· sourcefulness, money, ~bllity to protect poe1esak>as. Aquartue, Taww penona ftpre promtnently -so does the nwnber 4. You make slgnlf=aln by cbeddn1 faeta, llOW'C*. who o you could actually become an ally. . VIBGO <Aug. 23-Sept. 22>: Vou 1et Wblt you want -alm<Mlt handed you OD proverbial platter. Taurus, Libra penons fllUl'e prom- inently -and so does the number 6. l:Amar cycle bicb -judgment. hunches, inner feellnp are on target. You'regolngtowin! LIBRA <Sept. 23-0ct. 22>: Get information reeardina special conferences, get-tocetbers. hotel anc1 bolpltal facilities. Family member preeeata eift. Harmony replaces recent travail. Another Libra la tn ptctu~. Re-all&n prioriUes. Beautify surroundings. Make coacea1lona to loved ones. SCOaPIO <Oct. 23-Nov. 21>: Accent on friends, hopes, element of luck -and romance. Study Libra message. Locate what bas been mis1lng. Make Inquiries. Shake off tendency towarcb self-deception. Realistic appraisal works wooden. SAGITrAal\JS <Nov. 2%-Dec. 21>: Accent on business, civic duty. career. gettina most from investmentl QI. time and money. Capricorn figures prom.lnenUy. Older individual. who can "pull strinp," ls willing to do something for you. You'll have more responsiblllly -and authority. CAPRICORN <Dec. 22-Jan. 18): Good lunar aspect coincides now with journey. closlne dll· tance gaps: You feel more vital, "in touch" with happenings. Aries, Libra figure prominently. You have remarkable oppo~wlity to open fresh markets. to finalize agreement regardina dis· play and distribution. AQUilIVS tJan. 20·Feb. 18>: You gain new insights. You become more familiar with areas that had been considered "off lhnlts." Leo is in picture. Accent on money of close H · sociate. mate. Be on lookout for hidden clauees. unusual lease requirements. PISCES <Feb. 19·March ~>: Your actions now are Ued in with those 'of others. You Jose some independence. but gain legal security. Means some adventure. speculation is removed. ' ~----=--EAMA BOMBECK I ANN 'LANDERS Guide for Hubby l have a little plece of eottumt Jeftlry I wear float Ume to Ume. It'• a lltU• button that nadt. "U aaan'1 bome is bl• cutle . . . let blm clean It." J didn't naunt that Ut- tl• m ..... back ln the da)'I ~ l WN a lull· Ume Mrf ud mother. J'ace It. l bad whole days to devote to du.at and italic electricity on tock•. but u time went. OD thlnp ln the castle CH IL DR EN : Pus h beraD tocbaftae. alarm button OD the became a tbree-clock the night before to Ume-a-~ court Jester manual. Set three l.Dcbes for a new1paper S)'n· from child's ear. ll wUl dlcate, took on a few activate child at 7 :00 tnOt"e respomlble thln11 who will rush around the In tbe comaawdty. and house llke an out·Of· tbe appearance of three control aarden hoge. vegetables, 1ubtractlnE one potato for dieters. addtn1 an .xtra portloh of meat for football hopeful, and trying to anttclpate who ate soft pretiels on the way home from .1chool or wbo had a birthday at the oUlce. Use six o'clock u fail-aafe lime tor wblch there ls no re· turn. belng careful to calculate lnterst.ate traf· fie on exit l&, overtime. rlde borne from friend's hoUle and lete practice KNOW YOUR LAUN· DRY: Clothes in the dtr· ty clothes hamper are not dirty -only 'dis- carded. Clothes on the noor havt not been dis· carded, but are only d1r· ty. Ctothes on the bed are not dirty and not dis· carded -only in limbo. Clothes that are being worn are definitely dirty ehlld.ren took a bite out To keep child ln run. of my toaa lunch houra. nina order. fill with food Moat men reco1nize six times a day and have tbe need to •hare some re&ular checkups. <You of the domeaticlty . . .. not the children.> Others refule to believe M AT H £ M' AT IC AL that boueework i• an FORMULA FOR GET· equal opportunity TING FIVE PEOPLE em.PlO)'el". AROUND ntE TABLE With Ute openin1 of· AT THE SAME TIME school at band wben FOR DINNER: As soon everytblna &eta · cruy. a~ one meat is finished. I've madt om a manual atart to thaw for the for bUlbandl wbo mlgbt next one . Gauge ·~ Ilk• to pltcb in. pound meat per peNJon. JOIN SOMETHING. It may not help you with your frustrauons, your aniueties. your loneh· ness. your boredom. nor will it clean your oven. But they give you little buttons to wear thut make you laugh once 10 awh\le. HOW TO OPERATE one potato and I wo ••• .Jag < ...... Pap Bl> tbat Jaguan continually break down. "U they are t.allen eare ol tb~y don't have problems," he s aid. W elkel, who felJ in love with a brand-new Jag in a St. Louts auto showroom in 1951, had to wait lln· Ul 1963 to get hi.a first Jaguar. however. SOME JAG OWNERS become enthusiasts' accidentally. such as Garry Concannon. a specialist in reetoring eluate Rolls Royces and Bentleys. He bought his first Jag, an E· type roadSter. for $3.000. strictly for transponaUon. "The car came out of East L.A.,... be said. "Someone had knifed the top. It had been hit and had writing all over the side There were dents all over the car 1t bad never had an oil change.·· Concannon had to borrow the $3,000 to buy the car and now wouldn't sell it for less than 150.000. He has completely restored ll .. from the ground up. ~very nut and bolt · · George Felton. a Newport Beach resident. sa1d he finds notes in his yellow 1964 roadster periodically. some asking if he wants to sell it. FELTON WORKS on bis car when he has time and never lets anyone else drive it. "I never let anyone near lt." he emphasiied. "lt 's really a toy. It's not u car that you can take seriously. You have to enjoy it ... cans of water and oil in the car. Alan Woodward. a Costa Mesa resident who repairs the caNJ and drives one himself. says JaRs are hard to get. "The factory <in Cov- entry . England l is not in a hurry to make them. The company itself as mysterious. We get manuals a year after the t'afl'I come out. "They don't tell us when they·re sending cars . We only find out when they gel here.·· Wedding and engage· mem mmout'ICtmtnb run on Sunday fn the Doily Prlot. Forms ore available at aU Doily Pilot o/flces or by colling the F'eatures Department. 642·4321 To ovoid d11oppomt ,t· ~ Page School t";( .,; U) of Costa Mesa !"~ \\ ~,' rotlHHD 1• 4._ \FOR BOV.s & GIRLS.AGES 2·12 \IRS. 6.3'A.M.·6.l5P.M. ~ [ S • I ~ I d ) :~:;.,,C~~,~v:~~ ~<;m).~·~ w0Tf0~~~1 1ng es "a en ar . ~~~:¥,:.~~::~ DISTINCTIVE GIFTS to the Feature• Deporf· • ,.;,. FALL TERM BEGINS SEPT. 11 ~ GRADES PRE·SCHOOL THRlI cth GRAD!:; ~. -eP'/ NON SECTARIAN •,.,. ... Highest St.andards-Modem New Equipment 2 Acre Campus lnd.MduaJ lastnactkNa·No Cbild Neglected Antiques Interiors SUMMER END "RED TAG" ORANGE COAST SELF-ESTEEM PRO. SQ U EE z E .1 N m~ week before the SINGLES: Labor Day GRAM: A seminar will SINGLES DANCE: The weEngogement annotmce· Olf°MI Pa~Y ~~s~eey h~r'~ begin at 8 p.m. Wednes· Orange CCounl b tiy Cat.hol~c ment•. with block-and· day, Sept. 13, nt the !'lumnl u s sponso · whale gloMy ol the future p.m. Monday, Sept. 4. Registry Hotel in Irvine. ang a young singles bride or the couple. muat Bringyourownmeatfor Open to the public. No dance at 8 p.m. Satur-be received by the Ca alblaMrbeqan· uea at8!~ "8140YOoBr admission charge. Call day. Sept.. 9, at theCCosl tba Feature• Department •iz l>U<T'9 497·4801 for information. Mesa Country u . he wedd •Bemecllal lleadJn1·How To Study •Fkld Trips •Hot Luncbff •Rea1oaablf! Races •Dlacount for Znd or 3rd Child CAI.LOR WlllTf: P'OR 'RH BRoetrulr: .. '57 VICl'ORIA AVE. ' t r COSTA MESA • 143-tM I SAiE E v e l Y n F rills a t Costa Mesa. Tickets are week.a before t mg M6-~.~~o~rlt F&IDAY NIGHT~ ~~~~~pre·~·~t~e~·------------------------- 20 to 33Y.1% OFF • CHlNA • ORREFORS CRYSTAL • DINING ACCESSORIES • BATII & BOUDOIR ITEMS • GOURMET COPPER • ClULDREN'S GIFI'S And Much More ---flt IONI 6ff.J17t- M21 I. c..-Hwy .. c--• Mer , ............. ,rt#& ... cl••' !!!!!!! a,. hlly 10..., te l:JO ~ liiiiiii SINAI YOUNG ADULTS : Singles between 21 and 35 are in· vited to a .. '50s Dance" at 8:30 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 9. at. Ziegler Hall, Sinai Temple. 10400 Wils h ir e Blvd .. Los Angeles. Call 1213) 474-1518 for information. S INGLE AGAIN : "Dating and the Single M..an:.:....wm be!i!~tomc oJ a program with -curt Booraem, Ph.D.. a t 8 p.m. Friday. Sept. l, at. the Marriott Hotel. Newport Beach. All ages, $5. ~----7St~ Jm,itt~ali~ ----..... ~wEettJNS-- Forwomen Tr8dltlonal dasslc allp-on Fntllon right for all vour c:uuata. 8operb cratt1man1hlp. WteJun Brown 127.95 AM 5Yt • 10 AAS · 10 A 5~ • 10 8 311> • 10 cs . 9 Softy T'9 oenutne tlandaewn construction. FeMUflng a "°"'411p lono-weerino Goodyear IOlt. Tan. Calf. t37.96 ~ 4t~q SHOES-. ____...,.. 9Q Fashion Island ... Newp0rt B~aoh ... 7&9-9&51 FEVER: The Costa sale. Call838-0216forin· Mesa Unitarian Church formation. · ls sponsoring a dance for singles from 20 through 50 at 7 p.m. Fri· day. Sept. 8. $4 per person. For inform&· tion. call John. 551-5255 or Linda, 646·7561. BALBOA SKI CLUB: A club luau ls slated for Friday, Sept. 8. Cost ls $11 for members, $12 for non-members. Call Lee at 559-4426 for details. ••• Before Prom--Pap-at fashion show. modeling fall outfits from tbe May Co. Then, at the end of the tw~hour event, Sara and Sharlene -magically transformed -took their places on stage. 'J'.he two teens were ·Later, clc9ta&e.'the pbOtoerapber clicked the "after" shots and Sera said, "I like it. It makes me look older, and my hair needed to be cut anyway." But Sharlene looked Uke she might cry when she whts~red, "I Just don't Uke it." But ~ 'f'Mtt'Pre't!Y<l~s;ttn<Y~ 's'tfti1ed·fortfle camera anyway. Does your daughter need confidence? Ctll*..,....,. ......... .. Ud I 1 lcMel a A1u1y ·=-= ~ ,,....... .. .. , ... .,..ah: .......... I ' l ~....__..._____....._.....__..._ ___ ~--lrwestigative Report~~~~~i!i--~ ........ ~~-...._.. -"•e Pads ~ttenda~ee ·Figures a, iraMs cunu.o nl11 any wron11te>in1 \bOUlh be did Utile to help cle-r tbo aJr. H f alled to deliver a breakdown of Tullday ·a tleket aalee u promised after ldmltllnltbeS.114fllur wuwayoff. team:• said Everakes, an Orance opb· Uwmolollst who purcbaled the team late last seuoa when tt wu on the ver,. of tX>lllPH in santa Ana. that the omctat who has them Is on • baek· .............. Alt uoe 1091. c:rorif at C.llfornla llu~ 80C'Clt" l•ID• M" IOl*ed amaU.r tJau U.Y WI !lYptd up to KM 'heillday, au .mew. let wlial m'*' be IM k1Ad of NC· ofd fOC' exa11tt1t Gil by lnllldD1 an attn· ~ n...... to more tban twtee iU adU.11 • ... .oackltia trip. · 1 But when conlm>tecl with the 1.661 ft1ure. The revelation raises sner.i major quet- tlona, none of which could be uswered. TOLD ftlAT THERE WAS proof that the' orftJnal nJUNl nnounced by the team was in Everakes appeared stunned. Aller severaa mlQutes of silence, be muttered wbat amounted to a P.repared statement. -Row •ccurate were the rest of tile crowd counts dwin& the regular season! -Why were the figures mblndlna ln \M first place"! Tbt tarnout, the D lly Pl1ol b .. teamed, wu 1,tll raUH!r than tbe I.lit~ at. baU\1 ~ t.be blne'a a.1 Amelfcu Soccer Leaca• ~win over the Sout.bem CaJJfornla Laun. rror, Everalces nodded hll head tn aareecnent durina an lnt.ervtew Wednesday al'ternoop 1t bl.s VIila Park home. "Wo bave not yet caritlrmed th.at flaure," he aald rollowlng a meet1n1 with the Lazen· general manager and an ASL of· f\clal wbich alleaedly concerned the distribution or 11te recetp&.a. "2,500 (a fiaure he would later retract> would probablJ be a more accurate ttaure. •J retract all the figures I previously aave you.•• he aald ... It appears the ncures that were released were Inaccurate. Befor~ I make any other comment, I will bave to review all the data. The attendance figure released lut niaht fTuesct.y> was erroneous and l will prepare all the information you requested and present It to you." -And how come the Sunshine could onJ1 draw around 1,000 local fan• flbtt Laier• brou1ht at least 600> to wbat wu its mo.t im· portant game ln history~ Tat 18:SEPANCY WAS 80 11u1A1 aa to Inv te cbarpa th.It tbo CO.La 11 ... bUecf team wu Ndd1M U. crowd t Orante C.OUt OoUe1e Sladfu•. Aid l1nce th turnout wu ooe of Ll\e lar1 .. t of lbt aeaoo, it. railel do.abU ot the vaUdlQ 0( tbe real ot tbe crowd f1lura releued clwinc t.be toune of the reculat MQCll'.I. "It waa an error, it was definitely an error. I •Poloaize for anything that might have off ended the pttSS." TOE NUMBIRS REQUESTED -bodies in the stands, pre-sale tickets sold, Ucketa sold at the gate and complimentary ~ lssued - were never presented to the Daily PUot. SINCE TUESDAY'S TURNOVT was. in fact, one of the largest or the season. one could surmise the team's announced per 1ame average of 1,937 is inaccurate. Bob Everakes, prealdeot and aeneral man.,er cl the Oedallns franchise, atroqly de- P&ESSED POR DETAILS. Everakes be.came .irate. "U that's all you want to talk about. I think you'd be doing a disservice to the Cont.acted this morning, a Sunshine official said the figures were sttll not available, adcJing Several times throu1bout tbe se~. the Dally Pilot expressed disbelief at tbe announced attendance fil\U"e. In the season opener. when officials claimed a crowd of 3,219 tZ,700 paid>. . See S\JNSlllNE, Pa•e 85 One Step Away L4 Olympics ~lan Approved ""~ LAUSANNE. Switzerland IAP> -The executive board of the International Olympic Committee today recommended acceptance of Los Angeles' plan lo stage the 1984 Summer Olympic Games. The 89 members of the IOC will be asked to raUf y the decision by mail -a process that may take up to four weeks. The nine-man executive board approved unanimously a devia· lion from Olympic traditions. It favored the signing or two con- tracts. IF mE FULL IOC approves, Los Angeles will be given the go· ahead to sign one contract with the lOC. The other one will involve the IOC, the Los Angeles Organizing Committee and the United States Olympic Committee, which has offered to guarantee the d· ty against a fmancial deficit and thus protect taxpayers. Monique Berlioux, director of the IOC, said 45 votes are necessary from IOC members to give final approval to the plan. Sbe said as soon as 45 positive votes have been received. the IOC will give Los Angeles the eo·ahead. THE USOC HAS TO GIVE formal approval to the plan at an executive board meeting Sept. 22. It also has to be approved by the Los Angeles City Council. Los Angeles was provisional!y awarded the 1984 Games three months ago, but has not complied with the IOC's request to sign a contract under IOC rules. Instead the USOC bas come to Lausanne, backed by a letter from President Carter. to plead for a new formula for financing the Games. Under this plan, Los Angeles would sign two contracts. One would be with the IOC, pledging to keep to the rules of the Olympic charter .. The other would be a financial contract with the USOC and the Los Angeles Games Organizing Committee. The USOC has said it will guarantee financial loss with help from industry. THE DODGERS' AON CEY TAGS OUT MONTREAL'S GARY CARTER AT THIRD BASE. IT'S ALL A LOT OF JUGGUNG with words. Rule 4 of the Olympic Charter says the host city and the Olympic Committee of the host country shall be jointly responsible for financial arrange· See OLYMPICS, Page 84 Dodgers' Smith Ponders Triple Crown Bal West Division Pennant Dri~ Comes First, Says Slugging Outfielder LOS ANGELES <AP> -Reggie Smith is thinking about a triple crown. But winning games and winning another National League West Division pennant come first. ble quest for a triple crown in the final days of the season. Smith made his rema rks Wednesday ni ght after his two-run eighth inning homer launched the Los Angeles Dodgers' come-from-behind effort in a 4·3 victory over the Montreal Expos. He has 16 home runs since the All·star break, and 42 of bis RBI in that period. One of the batters he would have to beat in the RBI column ls Garvey, who has 90 for the season. Steve Garvey singled to drive in the winning run in the ninth. ••1•0 ALSO like to try for the home run record for a switch hitter," Smith added, again stressing that individual goals have to be set aside as long as the division title is at stake. SM1111 HAS 28 homers. 87 runs batted in and is hitting .312 to be among the National League leaders in all categories. The Jast National Leaguer to lead in all three departments was Ducky Medwick, 43 years ago. The switch hitter's homer record is 35, set by Rip Collins 44 years ago. Smith had 32 last year. "If the more i~portant things are taken care or. l'd like to take a shot.at it," Smith said of the possi· The victory over the Expos completed a three· game sweep over Montreal. The Dodgers improved their NL West Division lead by two games over the San Francisco Giants AFTER SMITil'S two.run blast ln the eighth, By HOWARD L. HANDY Of .. °"'il "" ..... When the Crosby Southern go tournament is pres~ed at Irvine As86clalion <PGA>ssteltiteevenl. However, a strong possibility exists that the Hawaiian Open qualifying round will also be played at the same. c:o-...ne Yi NP..¥'~ Beach the following Monday. TRIS WILL BE the fifth year that the Crosby Southern bas bffn pl~ ~t JCCC':""'Each of the past fmtr seuws1btrPUA .bas listed the tournament as a satellite event. But tbJs year they withdrew and no contract has been signed. "We are no. longer involved with that tournament.'' Labron Harris, director of tournament adminlstrat.lon for the PGA told the Dally Pilot by telephone from his WaahinCton. D.C. office Wednel'· day. .. That's l11Je," says Suzanne Sclnvellenbach. director of sup- port 1roupa for Hoag Memorial Hospital, tbe ben.e(lclary of tbe Crosby Southern ... We do not have a contract with the PGA tbls year. "WE A&E CONTINUING with the tournament and will be utilliing the touring pros but we can't depend on PGA officials to be here. They told us that because or so few players partlclpatlng, they couldn't Justify spending that much Ume bere. •• The tournament will have a $10,000 pune again this year but the flve exemptions for the foUowina week's tournament WW not be available for the top five finisbers. "I have a letter rrom the PGA offerlnl us the HawaUan Open qualifying \OUmament on Monday, Feb. 5 ll we can meet their con· diUona," Scbw.Uenbach says. "But we still haven't negotiated for the course at Irvine Cout. 'Jbe b1I drawback la that we need Tues· day al well ln case of ram at Pebble Beach or OD Monday here. There's a 98 percent chance that tbe coune would not be Uaed on T\lesdQ." •"I'll£ TUESDAY DATE lan't feasible." Preltdent Woody (See Cll08BY, Pa11 ac) 4 Guess Ho It' cu R4J•t"! Home plate umplre Djck Stello <center> gestures to where a disputed home run off the bat of New York's Willie Mont~nez went during a game in San Francisco Wedoead~. :Vbe Giants• Darrel Evans • Ron Cey tied the game at 3·all with a solo homer. Rookie Dan Schatzeder of the Expos had shut out the Dodgers on four hits through six innings. and gave way to reliever Stan Bahnsen after walking leadoff batter Lee Lacy in the seventh. Bahnsen gave up the two eighth· inning homers. With two out in the ninth, Exl)OS' pitcher Wayne Twitchell gave up a single to Bill North , and North took second on a wild pickoff throw by Twitchell. Smith was given an intentionai walk before Garvey's single into center scored North to end tbe game. DODGER STARTER Don Sutton gave up two Ex· pos runs in the second and another in the third. He al- lowed seven bits in his seven innings before the vie· tory went to reliever Charlie Hough 15·3 >. Sutton shook hands with Garvey in the locker room and said "congratulations" for tbetlijllle win· See DODGERS, Page 84 <left> and Manager Joe Altobelli obviously disagreed, claiming the ball was a foul , but Stella's decision stood, The Mets won, 10·4. ., DON BAYLOR We're Not Together -Baylor TORONTO (APl -"There's no real togetherness with this team, no reaJ leadership among the players." says Don Baylor. one of the high.priced free agents brought together to form the backbone of the Califomaa Angels. H~'s hoping some mstant togetherness can crack a losing streak that has reached five games. "We did a good job in New York last night." Baylor said Wednesday. "but in the other four games on this trip we played like a last place club, as if we were expected to lose. We fall one run behind and we're beat.•• The slump has dropped the A 11geb Slate All <Mm"• KM~ C7'1tl TO<llQlll Idle Frt<Hy ~llfclf"nl• .. T-t Ha.m ~h;rdn C•lltwnte .. T--.to t S5e.m . Angels out of first place in the American League East Division, and they are two games behind Teaaer Kans~ ettnoJ.ng-tnto a- weekend series at Toronto. UNLIKE MANY other top teams who have played togetfaer for many years. many of the new to each other in 1'. ,• • sev~taL.of...!!'.!' ~~el!~ ~ · p1lyers had a meeting ln New York City Tuesday night, after an l l ·inoing 4·3 loss to the Yankees. The· meeting that involved, Baylor, Joe Rudi. ·Frank Tanana. Dave LaRoche, Terry Humphrey, Ken Brett and Al Fit.zmorris dealt with attitude, direction and leadership, and was very Informal. Baylor said. "But ii we don't show some tm· provement this weekend, I think there will definitely be a meet· Ing of all the players before we go home." The work of Manager Jim Fregosl was cleared by Baylor. who said Fregosi ·'has done everything be can do." BAYLOR SAID that 1111~ tC M-g ~ .rune 2, former Ansel shortstop Fregosi has "won respect, established authority and alven an organization that was without it a sense of tradl· t1on ." Baylor went on to say: "Jim See ANGELS, Pa1e IM . t I ..... , .. JI.ill VILAS MNGS ON Defending U.S. ()pen tennis champion Guillermo Vilas ol Argentina •ten• had a slow start berore d~reating South Africa's Cliff Drysdale in first round action Wednesday in New York. Vilas won. 7-5. 6-~. CROSBY SOUTHERN. • • Smith ol ICCC qys ... We also have to l\W'anlee a practice round a day or two before tbe tournament and we would be takina too much away from our own members to do this. "U we didn't have the ~t the week before, we mllbt be able to do this. But with the toumamf!Dl and our heavy play on SUnd1y, It would tate 10o much away from our members." . "We're still bopln8 to negotiate with the e<>une," Scbwellen bach says. "One bi& advantage of having the qualifying at Irvine Coast would be that at least half the field would be playing in our tournament the week before and would have their practice round 0 WE ABE LOOKING to another course in the area in C8$e we don't get Irvine Coast but that is our rll'St choice. "We need some incentive to eet the Pl'QS wbo miss at. Pebbl~ Beach to come here to play because we no looaer bafe t,bOse OYe exemptions · "ln talking to the pros who have played here in the past, they come down here for a number of reasons. Very few are bere for the money or for one of the exemptions from what they have told us .... SCBWELLENBACB ALSO REVEALED that the field for the Southem will include senior professionals and Southern California clubproa. · In past yean, '12 PGA players have beeb in the field but PGA officials have indicated this may be cut in half for the next event Tournament officials plan to issue 38 places to the seniors, leaving only 36 spots for touring _e_ros Tbe pro-am event ,..w be played ~a competition with starting time at 10 eacb day. It Is s by the 552 Club of Hoag Memorial Hospital with Paul S ata as chairman this year F,.... P,,,,e 113 OLYMPICS TO LA. • • ments. The USOC delegation led by President Robert Kane, claims lhal will be so. under the new plan. But help from industry would amount to a kind or commercial sponsorship -a factor that dominates professional sport but has so far been resi$ted by the Olympic movement. Los Angeles has been arguing with the IOC since last January, and the saga was not due to end today, whatever the Executive Board's decision. Uthe board accepts the USOC's plan for Los Aqeles. it will probably ask all 89 members of the IOC to conf'um the decisloo by postal vote. That eould take a mcmth. Then the USOC Executive Board needs to give lta approval at a meeting Sept. 22·24. And Mayor Tom Bradley, who at one stage threatened to withdraw Los Angeles' bid, will have to decide wbeUler to submit the new plan to bis city council. And the city council bas to vote on It ,,,.... P.,,e 83 . ANGELS ••• can only dO IO much aDd it's up to the plqers to start working toward brd•ding a feeling of we instead of I. We've had a lot of guys thinking only about· in- dividual tbinp." One of the few Angels wbo has had a big lndividuaJ season, des· ignated hitter-first baseman Baylor bas bit a career hl&h or 27 homers and •lso lead& the team in nma batted in with 72. BA YLOa PIA YBD with a pen-nant wiDDer in Baltimore in 1974. before two ye-ars in Oakland and last year with the Angels. He recalls that in Baltimore "we were 10 games out with 32 left. We got together on our own and talked about au the lit- tle things that had to be done. We won 26 or 32 games and the Division tiUe. We bad a different hero every day, a different guy picking m up." Word from a player not able to make the road trip may cheer the Angels. Pitcher Nolan Ryan, out for 10 days since suffering a rib injury, said there was "quite a 'bit of improvement" when be worked out at Anaheim Stadium Wednesday. "The most encouraging thing is that the longer I throw. it doesn't get any worse. In fact. my delivery gets better,.. Ryan said. He will keep throwing every day and hopes he'll be able to pitch twice in the eight· game homestand against Kansas City and Texas that begins on Monday. Koch Sets Record PRAGUE, Czechoslovakia •AP> -Marita Koch of East Germany smashed her world re· cord today in the 400·meter run with a Ume of 48.94 at the Euro- pea n track and field cham- pionships. Jo•1 .as-,. ........ Baseball Standings USED CAR SPECIALS ?6CAm1 4C SIYILU Full power. tilt wheel. cruise control. A.Ml FM atereo tape. Leather n..Uor ~.root. ~.ooo "'81-. <50210n $9888 AME&ICANLEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGUE . Welt Dlvldoa West Division Kansas City Ansell Texas Oakland Minnesota Chicago Seattle W L Pct. GB W L Pct. GB 71 60 .542 Dodgen 79 54 .594 70 63 .S26 2 San Francisco 77 56 .579 2 65 65 .soo 5~ Cincinnati n Jll .538 7\a 62 '12 .463 10~ San Diego 69 ~ .515 10\l 57 75 .432 14.... Houston 62 70 .470 16\'I 56 75 .427 1S AUanta 59 73 .447 19\ ... 49 82 .374 22 Eut DI...._ Eest Dlvkhfl! PhUadelpbta-1t a Boston 84 48 .636 Pittsburgh 68 64 .a s New Yen 76 54 .SSS 7 Chicago 68 65 .5'M 5,,.. Milwaukee 75 56 .573 8V.. Montreal 61 '12 .458 11"2 Detroit 73 S8 .557 10.... St. Louis 58 74 .439 14 Baltimore 72 59 .sso 11 v.a New York 53 79 .402 l.t Cleveland 58 74 .431 27 • ,......,_ ~~'#:r.:::11.~po~w~•--r.~A~Ml~~"t~t~r~~-"ll'.Gl~to"°~o~,r"".Jrt•,.~,ICllll~lwln:,r..~_~ltt'""""~~~sq;I:~~· tape, ........ tt'tel. .......... ,..,......., ~ ..... Olldwllll .... , ... tinted glees. wheel ==. .. -=:.:._,..,. ~~-.....,..__L1 covere. Landau top. K-Otrti.~• --~...-._ i.-her Interior. IUl'VOOf. °"'' ............ CllldflMll , ......... , .. St. L.eull ,......., (855PUX) ~--~ Ml....._ C~ .... _. rr-. "1l al Me11trHI Cl'r191H 1·11 el Ult Ole .. $9~77 ~,,._._, ... ..._ .. Ul,tMI nt-1$-· New Yet1l (Tl.,.• I-ti al hltl-. Ollly __ ...._ '~······ ....,.._ Mi--.CZlllll .. Q) ..... CY-.H).11 ~ ... ~=· 71MOM11 CUIO Y-8. ~ llcby llr. P'S. P'B. ,... FM rdo. tinted 11111. Wheel covera, L8ndeU 1Qp. (M3SCA) s4m \ 77M411Y °"''............ ,__,., .....,..._ AtlallUlet......_,t ........ ,...... OMJMlll•k &Aul• ~................. ....... .. SallOletll ~----· ..,...._. .. s.....--. SNttla ............ T-•Mll ?Fii ~ .. ,., .... OW...•---°"·" AMIFM ~ ateAtO tlpe, "9loul' Interior. fun power. aulee control. Ult ...... Auto held Nghta (743ASD). .JOllNSON a SON 1*-I SCJ888 2626 Harbor Blvd. • Costa Mesa • 540·5630 ' DODGERS. • • nlng hit. Early last week &&ton and Garvey bad a well publicized scuffle when the team was in New York. ·1'banks, .. Garvey aaid. ••And Don, way to keep as tn the ball game.·· Tbe Expos play at San Diego tonlihl Tbe Dod&en are idle to- day and start a four-same series at Dodger Stadium qainlt the New Yort llets Friday nl&bt. .... .... CW.WI f-1:41 ........... . / ~AP••ll .. fl•llitll!lll•r•r:• ' • ..__ •• NEW YOU -,........_ t'.09Wlllt i1' um tnatal...._ ol ... JobD P• I aw..-.. ID Bome...,,... iD a.._,. ldddr r. u.e N-.;;m;-~· • ne new ta• be._ ..... --•••[ t•• =·~--: to~\i~~~:t:: willbe~--~CBS« • ' to c!:.:-Jo1m ~~V::='::s~~-= certainsomeprofootballwillbepre-emptect.'• -• An .Ntte =Wt wd UUll ~baa DOt dedded if "·wa=. !lri .. IA'ane ·J>l'nw;a "' ... .-.. • Val Pindlbeck·~~:16wll CID ........ llUodl.bat tij Pa~h>ere__, 1"Jl start about ... eed IMt Ollb ebaC one boW'. u. SeuUe bM no p1w to an• wu... But tM ~~la fJDDt.I ...... to ........ "9 lttutloft and. If it ~an-the cere...., wUl I.a IDGl'J tbla 9e bour. tbe lUpe COClld cleddl· to ~ ticko« tilnil l fqr tho9enlnepmel. • •••• "9•efl• ... ,, ... LONG BEACH -Troublel -Unue to. ' ...._ .. .._~ aa-. t.-e...,...,._ betWe. tw ....-coaee. ~a ...... -~~~ ............ ltfWd .. Mu CG11r _.. ltae maa IDW'Ol..S ID U. netiml Ill taie ............... ,, ...... hotbllll i.e..,....._ Cll•d --~ ... --~-,... JlirUl;B"""DI" , ..... tM sera1i.:::-bwr'..., . aftldallJ tbe .... W • eoaunem. report•• aat ...... . Caw ol 11111 ftabt wua't cli.ehMd Md otlMI' eoeebel aepanted tM two Mfore madt damap ... ~ .. .... ,..,.. reported. Botb Waller. 51, and Colef. St. joiaed tbe Rams staff Wa yes after Geoqe Allen•• appoblted bead coeet. to aucceed a.ck, K:Dml. wbo_natpec1 to ~.....,.. to to Buffalo. After two PftM8IOll sames. Allee was ftred ud Ray llnlavul toot °"" • bead c:G9Cb. WaDer came from WubinatGn where be bad aalated AUea Md CQlef from tbe s.n Oleto Cbareers wbere be ,. bad bee.a offf!Mlve eoordlaator. ., ...... , ....... ··Sure 1t•• • violent came. That•• wbat Civea " tis thrill. But wben you talk about~ to late IOIDeCIDt·• head off. trYtnc to permaneatlJ hart IOllleODe. that'• dlf· fereat." .._,. c.-M Delller. oow ot tbe New Orte ... Sa:tllta. u1 don't need to plQ dirt)'. WbeD I do, lt"w what rve always c1as1ec1 • •rict1m-tnduced violmte. • What ,_ 1ive, you receive ... lle6 ,.,..,,. •••e• 0. For the Ont time at Ciad•at1•a Ny-tr• II ; Stadlum. rain •• tbe winner. ~ "*'*P Pirates led die Reds, M. after ............. wben a rain lbower wubed Ollt tlrtbel' pl.Q. lt WU tbe first ralDcM since tbe ....... opeMd ill 1970 • • • Tbe Kwu ~t~;• bll¥e ~alled . npt~ pitcher lteft from ~·wbere.file •• mUlna a comeback from ......_..,. To mate room for Dalby. the lto7U bave ctestlft8'.,ed re- liever &eve F.-nlt for as&qnment . . . Los Aftleles Dodier outrtelder lleg- gte Smida was chosen W~ay to serve as honorary chajrman for the Na- tional AssotjaUoo Of Sickle Cell. Dis-ease. Inc ••.. ·New Tork Yanbe ece pitcher a. G"'*7 won h1I 19th against just two losses Wedaesday. but had to 1eave the same after bein1 struck by a bat which slipped out ol tbe hands of Baltimore's Kem SlagtewL The injury •llOCMUMtne was not believed serious . Darrell Porter droft in four runs and Pete LaCem eoatribuled three RBI u the Kamas City Royals sluued the invading Chicago White Sox. 12.0 Wednesd.ay •.. .... a.i ...... t'dft"ll• Four Veterans were released' on waivers by • the Rams lnclucliq safety ladle Wellaee. • center Du a,aH.-defensive end Al c..tlllcl and punter Glea Walker . . . Tbe tr* ol Ernl Maaa by Oakland to Buffalo was just a gimmick to keep him safely through the 43-player limit and then retum him to the Raiders, a club spokes=r'itlM ... n. Dal~ Cowboys siped former Ram tker aaraet 8efdai to replace Bfra Renew a wJM> wu tnded to SeaUJe .. TM Minnesota VlkiDp beld tbelr first falJ wcftout in prepan. , tion tor their NFL opener at New Orfean:s wit.bout ttteran Carl Eller. He bas ~ placed on the exempt Uat a.od could be ~ Jnelillble for the season tf he doesn't ~· turn by Priday . . . A t4·year-okl MlMesota hilh schoof youth. Pele Herats. collapsed and died following football practice Wednesday. ....._~,._,,wA•~ Mark O'Meara or Mission Viejo won a 11 .second rGUPd match in the '18th U.S. Amateur 8Qlf cbampionships at PlalDfietd <N.J. t Country Club Wec1Desda7. deleatlq ltelld Palft.lllW ol Ohio,~ 3 .. :"""nle SZ!S,OGIJ lfC. Open statlM tndl ... ...,..,....,t-=- Endicott, New YCll"t.. · OTllD SPOaTS -Soviet IPfinter V~ llernv failed ID bis comeback bld at the BurGpean traek md ~ champklbsblps tn Prape, and the 21-year-old O~c pld med••lat ~ reedJ to retire .•• .lact a aPGftlwak ... et••ed.•t-1~• .. IH~-~-.... ~~':":':=1t::: ~ Wedlfe&clay ai ap 7'. . S 'C • lconcl ~ ln the 9ec;oad bait to stve Uae ~ Yortc Cosmos ' c:oq1e. from·belliad 2·2 tie with the World Socetl' All«ars Wed· neaday Ill GtaDts .stacuum . . . Cal state Nortluidce ap. aointed -Weflllll u tta bead trd Md crou CCMlalr7 Coach. He succeecll Cllff AW. no Mlped to telce the heed tndl job at Loal Beacb State . .•• ...,re11alt1•• . au.IQ:-NO .vell&I ~. f);day -~ at' Toroato.'10 a.m. ICMPC fTlOt. TV~ U.S. Open teu1I ~ ~. 11:30 p.m •• Cbannet I. , . Elmore Toyota Leasing c&ICA-S. coaou.A'S. TIUCIS 4WDw•c•••s .. ~ , . Soceer Club to Bold Teyout Tbe terana 8ucb Socc. Qub •lll ..-o&d ·an open tryout ud ~ lelUoG for ~Ye memben SMmdaJ. ,.... ltllkm wW bel\n •t to a.m. It a ikno I o. c.• ... • ......., .... '* .... __.............. &lemntart ~l on North Padflc Coat . ... _,. ,.._ .... o& Hilh"'1 ... IAiUn• Btldl. cu:. s I I 62' ....... UPTMCa .,,. EL~9.Y .. ~9J~QRS eU11~~~ out~en~·~~ = .. ~, t114JIM 1m 0141 nN411. lllll ltWln secood ln the tout Soccer Leaiue 1111 year. . Am,._. •• itwll ·: . fW' lurtber llilorm~tlon. uU ac. BNcouo at.· • J...-..------~·:.1111r.:1 ... :111~11!~·=-------...I 497.1195.. ·~ ..... ----------------------------------------------------~---------------.-... .. -,. I I ear. This season only one player returns rom the offensive a.mil that was tbe econd highest scoring machine in ddleback history 127.9 points pe.r am,>. Defensively, the Gauchos re- uru "gbt players from a unit that al· owed only 107 ooints in ll games. Swearingen insists the ••W ot pla~tl Nturnlq doesn't ~.:a•a::t .... 1hould be aood ..... .. ..... • '°' ot talented ~le." be says. ..But the ~uous ,....,_ of all ~ colleaes ti that ol •P'O'fWl ....... '"Tbi' .. ieal key wtll be bow they mold M a unit. A a.am may have tood ability Mt mlabt not be able to fuaeUoo as a team. What )'OU try to do as a head coacb is iet iDdlvtduals to play IDd functioP as a unit. ·• U you ~an do thll, then yoor team la likely t.Obe aucceaaful. 1f you can't. then they won 'l '' WITH ONLY TWO DAYS remain· lng beftwe tho team'• lint scrim· maae aaam..t Long Beach, Swear· ingen aay1 he's happy with the team 'a Pf91J'e1S. "We•re doinl well at tbJs stage of the se&Son.-There are....{l few people beat-upright now, but they'll be OK. Here's a look af how the team sbapes,up; Qaar1.ttbaek1: The -Oaucho!I have two. good candidates In freshmen Scott Spear •Mission Viejo1 and Tim O'Hara •Mater Del 1. A third prospect. Cary Brockm11n. gtves the Gauchos the best depth ~he 'icbool bas had at that pMilion ln ~·eitrs. .. Spear and O'Hara are good enough to be outstanding JC pla~·ers some duy." Rays ' 1 FROM WU.ERE, AND FROM whom, did the Sunshine figures come froQl? Even Everakes claims be doesn't know. There are no tW'!'f!lles at Orange Coast Coll~ge Stadlum and Everakes admits the Sunstiine's "accounting' at tl~ could best be called teouoas. •• The 1,661 figure came from an Orange . Coast College employee who counted speetaton • walking through the lone open gate lead.in& into the stadium 'wtth a band.held cmwd meter. He was doing so a scboc>l official says, not to find out. how smati the turnout was, but bow tarae .. Under an aareement wttb the'" coneee dis· trict. the Sunshine's nightly rent ls increased if the crowd is over 4.000. The reason la for added clean-up CO&b. hence. the presestce of U)e OCC employee at the gate. Nobody, including the press, lme• of the count until the following morning. "One thing l would never WJLDl to do la be dishonest with the press." Everakes says. "I could look around and see there wasn't that many people in the stands. But I'm sure some : I Swearingen. people didn't show.·· * * * * * * I ~ Ranalng Backs: Gone is the Gaucho8' one· man buckfiefd show ol Greg Speicher. and to be as profitable this year Swear ingen says. ..Somebody has to come through like that again for us to be suc- ces~ful. ·· Swearingen will be sh'tlffllng four candidates unlit one. or two. a.c;..'lt'rt themselves. John Gill. Kerry Crabb. Garrett Calhoun and Mitch McGregor S1mshine Hosts Skyhawks Tonight ~ . ~ o.lty .......... FOAMER NEWPORT HARBOA, GOLDEN WEST STAR SCOTT REIO. I presently head the list. WI* recdwn: ··rm more upset with our wide rtteivef'S lhllll any other posi- tion." says Swearingen. Jn order for the Gaucho&· spread olfehse to be successful. the wide receiven. have to be a threat and right now they're not. ·'They h11ve to be good enough to have the defense u.'le ut least a man and a half to rover them. Right now. t-i,aJf a man could do the Job.·· 14 Area Grid ProdUcts Tb~ Great Crowd Count Debate probably won't - have an effect qn tonight's CS> American Soccer League pl-.yoff game against the Skyhawk.s at Orange Coalt Collete stadium. Nothing, it. seems. : I I Play for WAC Schools Horse Race Results Rick Von Zup~rm t.O be the only pla~·er By ERNIE CASTILLO doin1 an,vthing at Uie moment. Jciy Ciaf · Oft!• 0.11., f'llotS~H fa. Steve Hund and Vince McCullough 1tre Golden West College ap~ars lo be the other candidates. developing a pipeline or football talent to the Western Athletic Coo· Offeaslve llae: "Best pool of tulent rerence. we ve had deptb-wise since I've been S~ven Golden West products will be here." says Sweario~n. P~entl~·. Sud· playing for WAC members this fall. dleback is riddled with lnJuri~ ut this Including one of the league's biggest position. Five players return Rus.<> Win· names . Rick Partridge. All told, 14 Del .._, ninghorr •6-3, 220 pounds 1. Rirk Gibl!on . 1 121 .. .,0.,-. a. .. _.., ·6·1. 225l. Brett Stevens •6-0. 1951. Robert Orange Coast area products will be , F1rstr~m.Comtn1111to11 .. -1100.uo.2.111: Ponce •6-0. 190• and Brian Andrew •6-0. competingforWACschools thisyear. tf,,. c-..1 JudQe tRuoi 1MJ. t.10; o...,·. ~ 205 • but all saw llltle. if an~-. pla~lng Partridge, a 6-1, 174-pound senior •IM<H•r9W> UG. $ _. h .. __ W C · . Se<Oftd r~FIKI< "'~" 1~ .. 1 uo, a.oo, lime last year. Still weu •• ngen us ~n from Tustin, led the A m punting "'°' MM'-u.. «Me:GlrrOlll s.•. ue: "i. _._ impress«f. ·Tm anxious to see how they last year with a 43.8 average that f tMdi.,OWI J.60. Deily Ool<llle {~I ,.idtlUCI. · ... ~ h · do" t Tt11ns rece-Pattv °"" IG«f•tloMI u.oo. t.20, uo: play an a game """'ause l e~· re ang so ranked sixth in the nation. He'll be .,,.,., ._..... c0t._1 uo, Mt; ~ v111retton well... k. lbe l f let.term 1IM411.-,,...." Eucta c2-41 "1c1 ~12.0D. ta mg ong snap rom an F '"°""" r--0-h 8alcoll'I ITorol s.oo. J.AO. >.GO; Defense Une: The Gauchos hHve two l'X· Bill Mockett. a 1974 graduate of ~f~~.'t,~~=~~.:~n::'~~ cellent shtrters retumin& In Brett Steveni1 Newportffarbor High. p1~~~F~ Bow tOtlv.,..1 e..o iuo. ui>: •6-0. 1951 and Allen Streeter •6·1. 2121. '"ov•nc:• ._, IM<H•rowl a.~t).tO: FiMt o1 All Swearingen also bas capable nthlclt'!i in R ICU AYRES, who prepped in 'i.Mcc.r .. 1s.oo.~uctel1-'l-~.GO.. Phil Moent Scott English and Rick Bat-p Ut h b t ho li•ts his ' Slatlt r..-1'11'!1-P• IMor-l,7.60, 4.GO, UIO; b ti · h l b rOVO, a U W <> Fu11A4~1r111~1uo.a.oo;T9PktorT°'"11M ters Y rom w ac 0 c oose. hometownasHuntingtonBeach,and •P=~2.:!-se...tn1-IMc:CMfen)U0,4AD.UO; .. They're all good players. we should be Randy Holladay. 1977 graduate or rou·re •-1oi•-> uo, •.ot; Ud¥ •"-Mist very strong at that position .. Edison High, are listed as Utah's Vel•sciuezl UO. SS ea.tea 1!>41 .,.ict lllt\.06. d ff ' EIOhtit rec~ P.-r 1Pler'91 'f4 a.AO. r.m; Unebacken: Jeff Dreher will lead the first and se~on string o ens 1ve IMcC.rr11111uo. '"'I"" r~~ Bill Leer. a Newport Beach resi· dent who graduated from Servite High in Anaheim. is a 6-5. 256 starter at offensive tackle and one of six three.year lettermen at CS'U. which was 9·2-1 last campaigp. AT sAN DIEGO STATE, Golden West product Randy Morehouse looks like a probable starter at linebacker while Orange Coast College grad Steve G e arty . will be trying to rebound from an mjd'ry that hindered his play last year. Hawaii. which won't officially become a conferencd member until 1979, has two players from both OCC and GWC. Walter Guild, a 6·4. 250· pound offensive tackle who did not play football last year. attended Orange Coast in 1975 and 1976 along with Bobby Livingston. a linebacker who ts not on the Warriors· roster but is reportedly woriting out with the team. --OllllML lllllic ..... ) .... UO; _.., la"st of '""""fub al this rvwjtion. D~ re-tackles . Ayres. a 6·3. 260-pound , H'"'" ·-~,.. tM<~I , .... 1.-. i•: turns rrom last year·s team where he was junior, is a two-year letterman while PENNIS·FORTIN and Eric Berg, .!'~~1!'7~1•:=c;J,::::).JO:ao.1 •,,__>J.AO.u second in defensive points with 21 Holladay. a 6·2 , 240·pound 1976GoldenWestgrads,arealsowith ~ At19"CIMC•114.077. primary tacklers and 71 Hsslsts ... we·re sophomore, didn't letter last year. Hawaii. Fortin. a 6·1, 230-pound let· Hol~ Perk solid there." says Swearingen. "We also Another familiar name tu the Utah term an linebacker who prepped at f aies the young Sunshine p~yerJ except what hap. pens on the playing field. Surely if they are worried about anything right now.' it is t.be status of striker Poli Garcia, who injured his foot in Tuesday's 2·1 overtime vie· tory over the Southern California Luers. Coach Derek Lawther says Garcia probably won't play. Garcia says he probably will and the front office is saying he probal>ly mi&bt. . . If Garcia is forced to watch from the sadelines. as he did when be exited at 52:39 Tuesday, the man on the spot will be Andy Cba.pman. The 18- year-old Englishman has been the team scoring leader throughout the season but was bumped from the starting grid when Malcolm Darling burst upon the scene early thls mOJ>.th. Neither could produce in a half hour of play Tuesday against a team that was two men s hort. Darling, however, played a much bigger part In an offense that was active if not accurate 11-27). In addition, the 31-year-old English vet.eran banded out his third assist to up bls five-game point total to 11. More importantly, Darling has offered the young Sunshine team what it needed most · · an experienced team leader. Tony Douglas . continuing bis late·season surge, was the man in the scorebook Tuesda_y. H~ scored the club's regulation goar tn the se~ond half. tapped in the penalty kick that decided the marathon overtime session and c<>llld easily wind up as the team's top point producer. Chapman C201. Douglas (26), John Lowey 126> and/or Garcia 123> will be countered by th~ Skyhawks' Jim Rolland <44) and Billy McNicol C~?, . . -By ErnleCastwa t I-~-.:!--:::...--.. got thrtt ol the best freshman I've evl'r camp is Bill Gompf, who' w;r the Los Amigos High, was bothered by a --. ..._,....__~_,,. received this.year.·· VP I _.... Fl•SI r~" <Lente>•• t.•. •AO:-.... South Coast League',s M as year knee injury in 1976. Berg, a 6-1, ~ ':,.':'i~ ~~u:,._:o_oo; s.oa "-'°""""> t1.a. u Secolldary: ·1'hey'll really be solid. but at Laguna Beach. Gompf injured a pound otrenslve guard who prepped p F b II Qd..1- s.c....i 'P-Pl'IM• (l(~I MG, uo. L•: right now they're not performll\i well shoulder ln practice Monday and will at Mater Dei High. red-shirted last ro oot a u.e . w11-1s.rt• <T414NI uo. uo: o.ci. H•IMf heeew ... -efrnae ..,., ~~..i--Uwm.-be-ou~wo..weeks -----~~ __ __ _ -------------'S9t~~~,~~!'e~ ~ They'tt an. prov~n attiret~~ead· Two Golden West g1radds a 5 re st Th~ University of Nevada at Las RENO CAP> -The Harrab's predic~ Sun, ~u..~-...tt-HO~~ Ing the Gaucho lt"COl!dary are retumer.4 rapidly improving Co ora o tale. Vegas, which won't officially join~ Tampa Bay Buccaneers day's results will ue: • ~ F •tR~tc~MO.•.~~~·:-C~~~;.~ ~i~e g;:;:~:ein~~~~ti1~':!~~~~~~: One of them. Tom Formica, is belni conference until 1980. boasts De= and tbe Ne'f!' York .. ~.:.;:·~-~ Flftlt ·~ iuci.ir1 -...o. s..-. ••: "'ev ... Spei ........ r •stx lnter-ptloru•1 and hailed as the n~st offensive lineman Luppens. a 6·1. 225-pound center Glants are rated even in K•-ciry, CltwlMd '-::r, ~ OoUll (~Ill ...... 4.00; Tn1 SUr ll'llrrYI 4.21. .;n "' "u" "" " t l d U f G Jd W l ls<.o Dltrott • "-0.-"'5 .. M .. Cl·21.-0ao7.50. Steve Carroll •six interceptionin. Last ever oat en · s 1 tarted 11 games or o en · es S~rday's pro football :~e"9i-i, _ WNhl"ff°"' ~~, ·~•~ 1 ~ ~~:~~;~)~·e~a~r~~~M~l~•~c~~~)UM~c~q~~~eu'~~~c~.~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~ AU~L ~eg~~~=~~~~M~~~~=~ 4 ror 32 1n•--16ns. · -JC 11 . Mark 'i'60rn6urg. a r acc•rdiftd ti) Odds re· All\ltMS' • _ .. ,~, "="' ,,.~-......, .. -• -. ~ -1 ''"" ""l" A '1 I t Fi i ...... l Ora v ... i • ..., St. Louis. w--.. > ..... -------~ __,._. .. _ m e r can as year. orm ca Newport Beach. Is tu'<: on y nge teased~-6y Har· ~---·~•-o.iwr •• .,., 0o11 ~. 111e1111191 uo. a.20; ~,Ledle H bo H'gh H h h .......... .__..--..c1t•ktlfonl>s.•sse»Ct4lc.w> .... w.-. Kltklng: Saddleback ap~ars to be prepped at New ar r 1 . e as County product listed on the Brig am rah's eno Race. and llfldS.noi.t1ou..,.ws..tt1e.o.1 ..... 1o. 1191111tr__...,1W.,t5't<lft•ruo,.,.uo; hurtlnghere.RlckLovtwas pulleclolfthe beeo worldDI bard wltb weights to Young University r oster. Sportsn.w.1.. ~~"""!!.~.!!.,-a.tt1-llo 'lo=..o:tr' «~> a.oo. l.to: "*'°" H.n track team to do the ')>untlng and. as or build his8-4, 240-pound frame. ......,. ....,.,_ .,,.~ ·-·- ""''" ·--v...-... 1Pw111fte> >.ot, uo. uo: this date. Swearingen ~tlll didn't feel he An-•=Anner Rnctt .... is ...... t elld. . ,~::,~ 1~1 ..oo. ue: ,,....,.°'*-haa a p~ field goaJ klck~r. "J(s a mat· ~ • ho _....,.. d tF ~•lftlh r---.. _. wt11i. 1v.u .. ....,_.1....... ter of fact. wt're auditlonin1 somebody Jack U • w pre~ a Olm· , uo: ,._.._, 1~1 "" uo: o-toda~·." lain V ey High. c1.ir> 11A. ss.ua. Cl·S> ~ ...,.JO, ,, l A.---.:--.•# olleyballEventSet ~-R£DONDO BEACH-.wlqnen ol tbe Cuervo Morld 0..mpiaaSbiD ~ ~each Volleyball fiere Sept. 8-10 will split. a Roth Leading $2,SOO Ont prize, tbe lar1est pune ol the year t on the be8dl clmdl Tbe two-pla,yer t.eama wUl be vYinl for a total pune of $5,000 at Redon· do KlDI Harbor'• SeUlde Lqooa. a beach park remodeled ·~~mcal11 u oae ot C&Ufornla'• ft.nelt beacb volleyt.ll frecltttlel. An tlUlnated 10 to IO team•_..~ to eaw tlle evmt, wblcb ~nehadM t.be ~mm• etrcult. Prbe mone1 ~tt offered by Joe(! cu.no hqulla. . ' . ' SPORTING GOODS I I COMINS! 2 DAYS-SAT. SEPr. 9 SUN. SEPT.10 10TILL4 JHEGREAT SKI SA~E , • llt; Wl'IE lllYlll IT ATM . OIWl8E COUNTY . FAIRIROUMDS .. L..' To the many craftsmen. hobbyists. woodworkers. J,.,, ._, • contractors. boat owners. decOratora. carvers. i; ~~ and home owners whO have become our valued ,..~ customer&. ~ •YOU Afll'llCIAft ... WOODS. VISIT US AT . HARDWOOD CEMTER • OOtM1tiC Ind lmoot1td Hlf'dwoOd ~ • Cuatom Miiiing • Chopping 8k>cb • Hardwood PlyWOOd • Closet Uotng • MoukMnQ • Paneling • FIOoring • Vtneen 540-7.J 17 I 121 I SLATll AYL flOUMl'AIM YAU.IT O*•W .. •~• .... •I llZH~•T ... •W.,Olllrt ---- r l:XftBllBLY lftONG tlyen, tbe peat 1onaaUOae ol . I•... will IOOD be bonkfnl I.Mir way IOUUl lDto Callfonata u far u 5.000 mllel trvm ._... tbe ftoeb nated. . ··- Commonly called tbe c.ade '°°"• or Caucllaa boU•r. eetually tbere are l2 1ul>aptdel ol UU. 111.,.an. ceat blrd. Tbole bird• replarly ml1ratla1 tlal'Oup Callforola are the Oreat 8MID Cuada ..-.. tbe ...._ Canada ioc-. tbe w.tern Cuad1 10Q1e ud the cackl1q IOOM· Tbe meet comlDOI\ "boaker".., bere II tbt Great Bula Canada fOOM, marked with a blaet bead aad neck and a wb1te patch under the tbroat. A Blg~ateh WBIGlllNG no• BIOtrr to 14 poUDdl, tbele blrdl breed lD aortbeutem California and nortb 11 far u Siberia. but wt.nter .iona tbe Colorado River and lD tbe Im· perlal Valley. Gee1e are noted fol' their awareDeM and eow:fne. Farmen ftnd domeltic aeese 1ood watebdoo, boM~ and bill1nl and beatlq off lntnaden wltb tbeb' •lronl wtnas. ~ will take on dos. coyote or man. Steve Myers of Newport Beach has a rough time trying to hold the 30-pound albacore he caught aboard bis dad·s SPortfisher "Wanderlust" recenUy. Myers is an active. fisherman and has several species of salt water game fish to his record. Dirk RoMnson ID a reomt televlliOD lbow. bunten were lbowD aboot· tna wUd _.. fn>cn pit blindl lD opea sratn fleldl. F~ 1Dto tbe decoys, a larte 1001e 'WU abown nicked by IOllM pellets t.beD dropped into tbe bl1Dd wtut tbe bunter. Very quickly, both man and bird came fbial out al tbe blind where tbe aooee beat tbe l'ID barrel troln the startled man •a banda and continaed whaekinl blm all owr bl.a bod)' for aood measure. First °"Year A proud Bob King 'center• display~ the 1~1'2-pound marlin he ~ed as the first of the year for the Balboa Angling Club. Hold · ing the No. l flag for King is Harry Miller 'left 1 while Stu Heisler logs the official stats. King caught the fish trolling a green lure 15 miles off Del Mar. landing it in 28 minutes. Yotlr Best lie .. Could Pay Off AND GBBSE A&E KNOWN for their loftcevity. In lllrch 19'1'7, Carlos Murillo abot a larce Canada IOOM ln Baja CaWornla around Ma1adelena Bay. On tbe lee of tbe btrct· WU a Wyomtn1 Game and Flab Departmeat tac number fM9888255. The blrd bad been banded 2S yean before and released on the Toaaue River lD W)'Olftlal. Tbe old 1ooee wu eeUmated to be 28 years of qe ~ harvested by Murillo. Waterfowl OutWok 1 Gun Species Fall Most everyone is a frustrated write'r, lncludlnl me. But Instead of dreaming about it like Walter Mitty, now everyone that fishes has a chance for a free trip to Ireland by merely writing the blgsest lie they can dream up. Now you can let it au bani' out with your pen or typewriter. Now you can tell it like it really ain't. The 1978 Gladding Tall Tales Contest is a f11herman •s dream ldL Here is your opportunity to lea.Uy lay on tbe world the blaest lie you can tell and end up staytn1 seven days in the historic Newport House in County Mayo. Once lD tbe land or the leprechaun, the bi11est liar in the wQrld will flab for lake and river salmon and for brown trout in the famous Bu:nilboole, tbe River Moy, ln lbe Newport River and on Lougb Feeagb, Furnace and Beltra. or so the Gladdlng people clalm. IF 11IE CONTEST ls for real, the sponaors, the non- profit Gladding International Sport Fishing Museum. the lrlsh Tourist Board and Air Llngus, the Irish airline, will load you up with a raft of fishing and boating gear and jet you tbere and back for free. As everyone knows, the Irish have been known to em- bellish the tnJVi, especially on St. Paddy's Day. what with the snake story, but I think this contest is legit. But you mlsht want to check with Roger Hantke of Mitchell, S.D. who the Gladding people claim wrote the winning lie last year. This was when Hantke said he went trout fishlng with a lunch made by his wife which included some of her special baked beans and a pack of Rolaids she bad thougbtlully included. CASTING IN A STREAM, Hantke spotted a big trout and be9an baiting the fish with salmon eggs. which the fish ignored. He said he even dumped in the whole jar of eggs, but the fish wouldn 't chum to them. Now out or bait, Hantke had a brilliant idea. From his lunch he threw the baked beans after the eggs and the About one million aeese mlsrate to CaUfomla each year. The birds frequent some 350.000 acres planted tn rice. and the 400,000 acres of puture lands that a.re ln· t.ermlttently fiooded to attract waterfowl. In 1961. the Accelerated Wetlands AcqulllUon Act pro. vlded for advancing the necessary money a1ainlt future sale of Duck Stamps to acquire tbe 200,000 acres of land that make up the 12 NaUonal Wildlife Refuges operat- ed by the Federal Government in California. These landl are Islands of safety for 1eese and ducks who were once bunted intensively to drive them from &rain fields that bad yet to be harvested causlna great crop and dollar loss to farmers. Tll&OUGH THE WOK of Ducks Unllmlted and Federal and State wildlife agencies. waterfowl mana1e· ment bas reached sucb a successful art, bunters and birdw atcbers alike can be assured or larae geese Oockl in tbe foreseeable future. HunUng geese from fixed blinds and in open fields un· der camouflage has always been an exciting, tedious and usually unsuccessful pursuit because the birds are so wise. far seeing and wary. Communicating in night and scannlna a proepectlve landing and feeding site several times, 1eese will almply honk on to the next field if the slightest unnatural move· ment catches their sharp eyes. Once on the ground feeding on &reen fora1e and wut· ed grain from harvest, several eeese take turns keeplna watch over the flock. The moment there is any cause for alarm. the .ceeae are long gone, surprlslncly quickly for thelr size. Biggest Year Broadbill Strike trout started snapping them up. Tb c -"-Ch I After a half hour of watching the flah disest the e at-.&&11a anne is tuminc lnto a aladlators' legumes. the trout started swimmin1 around in circles and arena 88 the battles with the bi& bruialng broadbUl COD· rollln& his eyes. tlnue. ll was then that Hantke made the move the fish In the biggest year ever to date. 13 awordflah bave couldn't refuse. Taping the Rolaid to the book, he tossed It been aucceasfWJy encountered by sportsmen and wei11H1d in. It was the coup d' gras. After a see-saw battle, the fish in at the Balboa Anillnl Club. Many more have come un· was his. stuck. AND NOW HANTKE never goes flshlng without bis Some of the battles have been epic ln the hours analen wile's beans and some Rolaids in his lunch. have spent on the fish. Already reported bas been the 23 What Gladding ls saylng is to write down your lie ln· hour and 50 minute fight between one of the fish and Dick stead of talking about it. Ir It ls a real address, Tbe Glad· Spencer and his crew on Sea Hunter II. ding Tall Tales Contest, P.O. Box 586, Back Bay Annex, Last Sunday, Chad Obanlan spent 13 hours and 35 minutes to beat a 238 pound swordfish. Boston, Mass .. 02117 is easer to receive entries from both Walter Gibson was hooked on his second broadbill of WASHINGTON fAPI -Waterfowl hunters can look forward to this autumn wttb mixed blesalngs. Some species of ducks ~.Yf increased. but some important •unning species did not fare well on the nesUng IJ'OW>da. The latest U.S. Fish aDd Wlldllfe Servlce breeding survey shows mallard populations declined seven percent from last year. Can- vaabadm. a species in dire trouble. dropped 40 percent. Scaup numbers fell flve percent and blue-winged teal declined by three eercent. Black ducks. an important but troubled species in the Mlsslaslppt and Atlantic flyways. are censused on the wlnterlna grounds. These show the Mlaslaslppi Flyway popula- Uon declined by 10 percent. while the East Coast populaUon Increased by three percent. A LIMIT BAG ol mallards. blacks and cans once were the shotgunner's pride. A limit bag of t.bese big ducks marked the supreme test or a sportman•s sldll. Two exceptions are redheads and pintails, whose population increased by 21 percent and 14 percent. respec- Uvely. But the service noted in Its annual waterfowl survey that pintail populations remain eight percent below the 1955-lm average. The implications of these declines pose ominous questions for the hunter concerned over the future or his sport. Waterfowl regulaUons once were set on the baals of the mallard populaUon. If mallard numbers ln· creased after the nesting season. regulations were llberallzed. If mallard populations shrank. &unn.log restrlcUons were tightened. THE FAUACY of this approach became evldent in the 1960s when black duck. redhead and canvasback populations shrank precipitously. Thus was born the concept or species management and a morass of restrictions based on individual species. But cracks a~ starting to appear in the foundation or species manage· ment. The new concept assumes the U.S. Fish and Wiidlife Service knows e nouah about a 1tven species to -manipulate lt.s populaUons. On ~ basis of the results to date. this assumption Is faln Efforts to brln1 back black duck and can· vasback populationt have failed. The species remain in Jeopardy. THE MALLARD, the continent's most numeroua duck. as troubled in significant parts of its range -· as evidenced by special hunting restric- tions. And this is the duck which biologists know most about and have ··managed" ror the lonsest time. The question need!'i to be asked· rr the service l·annot manage the mallard, what spet'les can 1t manage to ensure bountiful populations., There are several possible solu· lions. The service could decrease the general bag limit. a move which would dlsroura,e some hunters rrom going aneld and reducing hunting pressure. The service could abandon the point system. which encourages high bags. The service could s~ awarding to hunters •o·called bonus birds of spec1u whose populations have declined durtne the summer. species like scaup and blue·wtnged teal. And It could stop makina bonu11 birds or species lilte the American sotdeneye. about whtch population data 1s ex· tremcly limited. Janlor Tourney Results professional and amateur writers or fishing lies by the the year and lost after a s~ hour strug&le. Then there was dea~~~ · ~'=~:e ... ~~~ror --D ..... •ng_l=~e--:1-~ligle bis story in a Imler and includes bis address and telephone The shortest tussle on record la the one between a --.i-·~ _.-:r-1.&C.&5~ •-.A--~,.,.,,.--__........, number and sits back and walls for Ughtning to strike swordllsh and Bill Hadley f\sS1:t on his yacbt El zaial alone with a Tall Tale membership card. It will cost me 15 t post.age, but 1 am going to submlt laat Friday. 1b1s one lasted only S mlnutes from hook-up The final results or the um Balboa Wright, 11 pound el1ht ounce haJlbut ; this story ln the professional writer's cateaory and see if to when the fish was gaffed and safely on board lD tbe Anallng Club'• junlor tournament Steven Tagaucl, two pound ei&bt the e lope comes bttk "addressee unknown". Ir not. 1 cockpit. It was those intervening minutes that demOMtrat· which began June 10 and finished ounce mackerel; Tim Putnam. oQe am 0 tart ackln m Irlshflsbin ensemble. edtheawesomeatrengtboftbesepmefllh. Aug. 20 were announced today by ound yellowfln croaker; Jim ~~:::it::::~~..,E11i.......-:;~r;.:;.;;-=:s..:~.::.;::.:.:~.==;a.;.=:~~:.:..-... -~__,..,,.~ .... ~~-~-~--........ ------------......-----~~~~~~-6il\(j~'Cf'llllt:Mll!lkf~Mt'lltmittt:.:""""':,~~.--~ . ..fwti,~ltn~~aac ~~ MY YARN 18 A.BOUT two friend.I wb(, told thelr wives IJee Sea Fllh~ ror varl<Su species for 5panlsft mackerel. :le r Wand1~r. j ·x ~~ • therw~iotnl trout fishing tn the Sierras. • •n Fi --L W'1 lfalnu. ""1'07)'bldlk~~trfrom S'lO"'lS Pound tc OUtl~e yellowtall. Dressed ln raunchy jeans, boots and jackets, they '.I:"' -relHI water yeanotaeechei:kedin2.57fiahlnthe High Girl, Cathy Spaeth. 14 loaded the pickup with tlshi.ng and camping gear and then summer competltlon with Larry specles. drove directly to Uleir omce. Here ~Y cbaDaed tnto attire Fi.sh Renn rt Trout Plants Dln1 named champion by catching 16 more suitable for appearing in Las Vegas. Then they r-specl .. ol fllh. jumped in a Continental they had left at the offtce and set M••f'OtlT '°"""" 1.ea11r1 -,,. .,..._: 1 ORANGE -No~t Wlnnen In the rive to lO·year-old' sail for Fun Otty. :~:~~ii!':!c::'.' ,:.,~:: ;:!.'!~.~ plants. cateaory are: David Clock. 19 pound On the long road back home, with two days of whisk en -~. rn ....... » .... 1 11et1M. • ..,. L08 ANGELES la albacore: Gret Munday. eight pound and bleary eyes, my friends stopped lD a au,.. market and rKllN. Rock Creek, Bouquet four ounce barracuda; Erin Wrtaht. _. SAM ... 00 IP11Fll .... ""' -'IO ..._,., ft pound i'"" l ba purchased two sixpacks of trout. w e111ee-. Canyon Creek, Crystal ve e ..,t ounce ca lco as; Back in the parking lot, they ditched the Mark V put ..,. "•°"° '"""' O' ea111 -'°' .,..._, t Lake, San Gabriel River Erin Wrtaht, two pound sand bass: the trout in a creel. chaD,ted clothes, rolled around irl the :::.~"e~ ~:.C~~.~~J:::: (East, West and North Steve Ofark, two pound 12 ounce dlrt,andbeadedbomelnlhetruck. 1t.~-=u.,._,.,..._..,,,,..,. Forks>. Upper Plru spotted 1>11s: 8rtan Hoyer, ttve In U. kitchen scene, aft.er tbekilsea hello, my frtenda ;:'::!<ti.'!!.~11o1u. 11 NM...., w--. Creek (Frenchman's pound corblna: Steve Clark. one removed the trotlt from the ~lat the sink for the split· •100etoo -''° -..-: 1.100 """°·,.. Flat>. ·pound croaker: Erin Wrl&ht . one up under the admirtns e)'et olthelr wives. u•ICO .._, .,,,_....,.,, tts ...cti 11111• ,..,.., SAN BE&NARDINO pound l2 ounce mackerel; Terry ~.,Mltlln. tootionoo. ,.s-11tnt.•JOrck -Bil Bear Lake, Green Takeuchl, four pound one ounce TllAT 18 WHEN one man noUced the required metal .. :-~!~.;:!:r"~:,O~ Valley Lake1 ~Pre1or1 •trlpptd bus. ~s attached to the gm of each came flab that said ' wt11w ... -.. , ..... , -.., .....,_, • ,.. Lake, Santa MA River, Hilb Boy, Erin Wright. 12 species. • afeway", and so dl4hia wlle. ••:·~~=-=~·-~~ .. Santa Ana River <South Hlgh Glrla. Allee Takeuchi and Terry ''What la that cute Uttle marker .on the fllb?" said 911ftl .... Ml .... 2_Mret._NCut•. Fork). Tabudli. lhree species. spouse No. 1. "Whatin the world does it say?" 0c1AttttM -,..__.., ' .. , .......... sw. a I VE a 8 IDE -Wlnnen ln the 11 to 15-yeaf-otd "Oh that," sald my friend, "that ls the name or the :~.a.~,..:"'...:~:i• , .... _ Fulmor Lake, Hemet cate1ory are: Jim Slemlnakt, 31 Game Ranpr that checked out our &rout wheD we left the SAltTA wtAiiA -•.,.......:,.,,.. ..._ Lake. pound albacore ; Steve Smith. four Slre~•• JS lft.C...._., ti Ultu llM.t, 1tlM ...... 1--· end HVen ounce barracuda', Steve ~1..1 h h ked th ··-ln l wtlllttN ..... ttllne~ .. "'..,y e c uc • -to I.be mtddle ot t0me DAMA ..,., -ne .....,,, -. --. ,,,. \V ""' · mltb, three pound four ounce callco canta peaeedalnthetraabcompac:ter. c.w•,•~ .,.,._,...,,_,___.. · ater & etllpf b11s: Adam Ayers. el1ht pound eltht Ye .... lhlt aounds all rt&ht. I think rn 10 ahead w , ~~..!.!~~°:::.'::::,;.~-:! ........,,,.., .. ..,... ounce •and bus: Tim Puwm, two pack. 't.:' .. ~:=..-:1~~-.:::~:r.a • ti..-=..,. =:: pound spotted bass . C1thy ~eth, 1MCurt1,ncaa--.a.,,...,• t-,.,....... ,,..,.. t.btH pound four ounce bonJto : Lisa a.,....,.1 .. ,,.._. .• .,.. .... ,........ ...... ,....,_ Butt. four pound corblna. Alisha Woman Gored ' . By Wild Bison A wild bison in Yellowstone Na- tional Park gored a New Mexico woman tour1st when she approached the animal too closely ror a photo- 1rapb. Darr•ch Callahan. 34, of Albuquer· que, suffered serious injuries when she was attacked by the bison ln Hayden Valley. Treated at lht Lake Hoapttal in Wyomlna. Canahan was later transrerred to Umversity Medlcal Ctnter ln Salt Lake City. Utah where sbt Is Uated In falr condition. Accordina to wlLneaaes, Callahan wa~ standlna In front or the animal with ber camera when the bison lm· paled the n1ht !ltd• of her body and threw her 10 reet In the ~Ir , I 11l wlah he'd learn }u1t to CRAWL Into b.af" l'UNKY WINKlalEAN ~ Pll.LEO 'IE fWE (ff ~::U.Ti~<.oo 'i> ~Z£#4)SncKff~ 00 fftt1 ! ,_~..., ,,,_..---..., SHOE MOON MULLINS GERIATRlx ')OJ NOT!Ce ALL 'THE Grlf:AT ~ 'm~S l~Hl~~A ~TS~ M/JiiN1111 .. ---·--- • ~ ... ~~ 6LOWIN1 Ul<fA R,~·' THIS UMPIRE JOB IS t>ANGEROUS by Tom Batluk by Jiff MlcNelly by Ferd and Tom Johnson ,,,. DOOLEY'S WORLD ···-··· , -by GusAniola TIDAn CIDISIDID PVIZLI : t , which the qunUon ts not 10 muc w,•loelt you bU>'. but _........,. buy It "cheap .. tnd IM out lt at the n1ht Ume. Block poted that tlmln1- 1trate1IH have frown In popularlt1 beoauae of the market•• behavior over tbe lut dosen yean or ao. In that period lt bu experlenced • lona aerie. or volat.Qie us-.and downs. but produced UW. or no net 1a1D to reward tbol wbo ahnpty eat .ad )Mid 1toeb. In ~Uon. ht aald, tbe rile ot littereat rat. bas encoura1ed a •httt of mope_y to fixed-tncome lnveatmeota. Money he~d out ot atocka can earn 'I perceot-plua in abort·Lenn Treasury bJlla. 88.\aPL y &EDUCED COPl· miallon ratee alnce the advent of full fee competition amon1 brokers in ms bave alto en· coura!!~ In-and-out tradlq atratefia• be noted. And human uture playa a part: .. Slnce everyoae else ll doing It, a1greaslve timtna beeomes part of tbe conventional wisdom," said Block. 11E RECALLED A much• quoted warning from eco.nomilt John Maynard Keynea that it la risky to be a non·conformilt, .-hether one ls r11bt or not. ''The non-conformist ll atven very lit11e credit tf be Is rtcbt and ls ~emned roundly if he la wrooc. TM ~ormlst tan go do"n lD flames with his bead Mid. h18h, • long u everyone ease la 1olna down i• namee. too .. All t1Ua bu left ~ ba,·..ame irowth atocu In disfavor tor mOlt of the past n~ years. Bill lbOle luues have tbown IOllte signa of life thlt 1ummer, ~ tna • atrcma •tock mmet rally. TRIS MONTH stock\.. Hice IBM, Kodak. Walt Dlsney Productions a.od Polaroid have reached their highest levels for the past year. although they re· main far below tbetr )72·73 peaks. . 11 tbe pendulum ltartinc tO 1win1 beck to.Ard the. ctamot IMues? moet Aid il •• 11Mible tllat a new "Favorite .Ytfty" ml1ht emer,.. wtth a rew 4if, rerent 1W1MS from tbe las& tilht around. He noted that lntere•t ln 1lamor ltocb Ud perked up lately bi put lMitaute of talk ti• po11lbte econom.tc ahamp: • cum• ln ·.~1*11:'iP'Wlh com-panies are ~:to fare bet· ter Utan &bole more rilJnienbW to eycllcal forces ln tb ffOftOmy. I But, ••1 doubt they will ov~ tbe frowth ltoCb apln, at atdl untl the D!l!!'Xt seaeratioft of,_.. managen, .._ tbe ones wl'O &ot burned In tbem the last time are gone," be 9dded. ·county Firms Promote Empfuyees ., leek A. 8ertd bas been named vtce Pft!lldent Hles for llteroata Corp., Irvine. He ass1lts With the office administration and OOW'l•ellna of sales personnel. He joined the com· pany in 1968 as a member ot the ofOce buJldiq leasing and sales staff in its Santa Ana otfice. He is respoosible for the company's domestic sales force, including penp.berall. system and end· WHAT TO EXPECT FROM YOUR PHARMACIST 'Dragon' Eyed for U.S. Car WASIDNGTON CAP~ Selecting a pharma -China ts talking to caa be a life and deatl, Gulf Oil Corp. about matter. Thousands of petroleum sales to the tragedies are prevented American market, rals- e a ch yea r by alert Ing the chance that pharmacists. l" r Cb'-A pharmacist Is 8 gaso ine rom Ulese professional on whom crude may someday you depend to give you power U.S. can. the r i&ht medications But tbe dragon -an and the proper anclellt symbol of Information about taking Chinese power -will and storing them. He can not replace the tiger tn spot errors and see that your tanlt overnight, an they are corrected and Is ·1 i d ·d available to counsel you 01 n ustry source 181 about medicines and Tuesday night. h e a I t h a i d s bot h An imminent deal is pr escription and unlikely because non-prescription. We Chinese oU would be too hope you d)O()Se us as expensive now, said the your pharmacis t and source, who is familiar expect a lot from us. with the talks between Y 0 li O R Y O U R the Chinese and Gulf. DOCTOR CAS PHONE Despite the high US when you need a pre1>cription. Pack up transp<>rtat.ion costs and your prescription if unanswered questions shopping nearby. or we about the quality and will deliver promptly quantity of Chinese o1l, without extra charge A the source would not great many people rule out a future deal. entrust 1,1s with their And neither would Gulf. prescriptions. May we The source, who asked compound yours" not to be identified, said PMKLIDOPllAIMACY the Chinese recently "'"Del-, contacted Gulf through 151 ....,... ._, an intermediary and of-.__• .. _•reu_,,_.._. __ 64_~_1"°--• fered their oil for sale. - Halliday'• f ea tores the finest in traditional menswear like thls wool navy pinstripe suit worn by Bank of Newport Vice President Dick Millel\ Natural shoulder stylfns and expert detailin8 complete a classic look from G If. user sales. He alao ls responsible for its authorized dealer-sales organJzation. He is former vice president marketlna at Microdata. • Attorney Robert L. Badamo, Irvine, has joined Vl'N Corp, as vice ~dent and 1eneral coumel. Be will be involved In general co,rporate work i.ocJudin& securities, real property, contracts and litigation matters. Thia work also will Involve forel1n tua.. Uon and international law as It pertains to the company's in- creasing involvement in the Middle East, Western Europe and Latin America. He served u a corporate counsel for the Pacific Telephone & Telegraph Co. in the Southern counties 'ector in San Diego. He was responsible MCMMA• for legal consultation in the areas of general UUga- Uon and general business matters. While with private legal firms, Bachman speciali%ed lD general corporate work, California securities, real property, taxes and bankruptcies. * . ~ GeM J. Mama, Newport Beaclt bu been name_d nationwide director of marketing for Coutraettoa Alda, El-Monte. He will initially be respomible for supervising sales of the Safe-T·Sentry, a prefabricated speed control bump. He's founder an<t former president of Sbacco, a Newport Beach marketing consultant rum. • Steve E. Caseld.hle bas been named assistant manager at Wella Fargo Bank'• Newport Center office. Before bis assignment, be was nslstant manager at the bank's Buena Park office. He joined Wells Fargo in 1974. -. CORPORATE IDENTITY BOLSTERED Jensen Marine Changes Image Jensen Marine, Costa Mesa. manufacturers of · production sailboats. has adopted a new logo de. sign in a move to strengthen its corporate identity in marketing and other functions. It also has changed the name of one of its sailboat lines from "Ranger" tX> "Performance" and will market the boats under the Individual de-si1ner's name. First of the series, "Mull," is named after naval architect Gary Mull. Based in Alameda, Mull has been designing racing yachts for Jensen since 1968. • Until ~tly. the firm has used solely the name of its two sailboat lines, "Cal" and "Ranger," for advertising and other marketing communieatiooa. Rangers are designed by Mull, and the Ca1s by Bill Lapworth. A wholly owned suMidiary of Bangor Punta· ee>rp., GreenwlC'tl, Conn., tlemen Mlfftle sold more than Im sailboats worldwide last year. DOESN'T MAKE ANY SENSE DOES IT? Neither dOes permltting your amng1 to succumb to akyroc:ksting lnflltlon In a ~ aavin119 acco11nl Anaheim Home Loans offers an lntetllgent altern•tl• Let u.n b9 your touchatone to a secure & almple Investment fllt"'9. 10% INTEREST 0 SECl:JRED! wHll STEADY, SAF£, TIUST DEEDS c .. ,.. 0.. ..... ,., ... ,, .... t • 774-0601 ...... , .... ,., Anaheim Home Loans lee6 ~ Brookhurlt Bt., Buite O. An&twitm ... 1 Robert Helwig, Newport Beach. has been named a vice president of Great Wes&ena S.vblp and LoaaAmoda-. • Manager of the Santa Ana office. he Joined the association in February: He is former business de· velopment manager o• anctber Callfomla·based savings and Joan aaoclation and bu worked u marketiu,g vice president and branch manager for Paine Webber Jackson & Curtis and as re&lonal manager Cor E.F. Hutton and Co. * Martt L Le1unan bas Joined Baao/Boatman. Ille., Newport Beach, as an account manager. He prevloual.v was aasociated with Haas Advertising, Los Angeles. • .lau M. Potttllo, Newport Beach. bas beeu ap- pointed manager of Industry sales for Air cawora1.a. Newpon Beach. ,Lflt.o.t Horizon In the newly created position. he will be ~0 ..,..,....... · responsible for the development of the airline's in· Added to the Plymouth Horizon line for terline sales to other airlines, major tour 1979 is the 2+2 hatchback, the Horizon operators, car rentals and ~ls. TC3. tt has front-wheel drive and a · He has ~n y.ith the airline seven years. most traverse-mounted four-cylinder engine. It r4:cently as district sales manager of sales ln San is eight inches longer and almost 2'}J • Diego. ;nches lower than the four-door Horizon. Over The Counter HASDUstiftcp MUTUAL FUNDS , L .. ' .d&!ii .. ~ad Iii .,~er --:I -Cit c;-~ a!-c.::s ... Cll Q ! =·~ <-~ 31=1 P:if ' ' ... r = ~· ~ 5· ~~g. ~~ : [ 1g ll f ~l~ ~fi'~0;1:1 5_l f;I~•fl .l·l'.'~·-;r:Z•• -•• ;- . -~·11 ·'' " f -i •• ·,j • .. ~!!Ui~ l~U !f{~ls; JHl~i!!~Pliiiliil!fi: _ _:it~_~, ;!~1 ?rti, ~_t .. !2 s.!i'il!' !irf• S a_J.a.s. ~sc .. ~ .. l11·[_iJJl~3 If."' . . . ~ ,. ~ ·--=--a-fl>~ i ab ... 11 11.. -i _ 1r .. l ts ,~ ---·-' ~ -~~ .. ::1 .. ~ . ii" ~ .I . -'5 ~!1~n1 ~i~ ~:l1t1 ~1a;iia1hH 1 au~llll · d11.,.~!I !;t·_in 1~;~il!'l_!lj. ·_i : -:·1· :_ ; :_fl_]a1·i!f_~·,··1_.-_=_-1-_~11_-' n•_·1·_. __ 1 1 !f_1_•_ •I =r I . 1'1 -I i I 1. rs ' -~f u ,-l 'c f!I . J11 =1!. !· I J .... -I': -• ·' . ,·' . " l~ ·t . ;r;i ~-~~· I 'f! ... -. 1 . It ..... a .. f .......... 1 ..... L .. li. n .. .. . d .. 1.l1 .. 1Jl.Ji. lfrt .1 .• se s. a . ,, c c a · ~~ s _ . · 1 . a.~ , ~ .. -· a. " I Rl~hard Mulll1an. Cathryn Damon. RObert GwUaume. Katherine Helmond and Robert Maildan, left to right. who are all cas t in tbe television show. "Soap·'. will appear In a ret~pective t 9: 30 tonight on Channel 7. Ola•MLuii•9• I KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles KNBC (NBC) LOS Angeles I Kn.A (Ind.) Los Angeles KA8C-TV (ABC) Los Angeles Cl) KFM8 (CBS) San Diego G ~TV(lod.) Los Angeles 9 KCST (ABC) San Olego I KTTV (Ind.) Los Angeles KOOP· TV (Ind.) Loa Angeles KCET·TV (PBS)Los Angetes e KOCE·TV (PBS) Huntington Beach . , .. ~ .. l~'·1 .. i111l~ ' Sports 'Pioneer' Bnurehing Out • By BOB THOMAS HOLLYWOOD <AP> -"Phyllis, you want it all, don't you?" said film producer Robert Evans. "What's wrong with that?" replied bis short-time wife, Phyllis George. THAT )IAY BE one reason why their marriage <bis fouFth, her first) failed. It also tells you a lot about the Denton, Tex.. beauty, a notorious over-achiever. Being Miss America of 1971 was not enough for her. She went into broadcasting as co-host with Bert Parks of tbe Miss America Pageant <she'll be at it again Sept. 9). with Al- Jen Funt on "Candid Camera," as en- tertainer and actress, a.s well as female pioneer in sports broadcast- ing "The NFL Today". "Going into sports wasn't easy," she admitted. "Many questions were raised : Was I a threat to the male sportscasters? What did J know about sports? Why was I there? the pUot was shown to visiting press a few mouths ago. "The show that we are doing dlf. fers from the pilot." Phyllis re- marked. .. Tbe new format moves more quickly; most os the segments are lhree-minute5long." MUCH OF THE .,_~ criticism centered on a segment in which c ameras followed tbe Manhattan wanderinp of tbe premiere reelu.w, Greta Garbo. Critics considered it an invasion of the silent Swede's privacy. "Perhaps the segment· wu not wise, but at the same time, it was not that bad," said Phyllis defensively. "I think the film ls touching and Oat- tering to her, showing bow great she looks in her seventies. I did the voice- over, and I must say that I bad tears in my eyes as J watched that fabulous woman. "But if we did hurt her, I'm soqy." .. PEOPLE" WILL BE like the .. FIRST I BAD TO prove myself to magazJ.ne, Phyllis explained: "I can me. I didn't know what role I was read it in 20 minutes and learn a lot." supposed to play, what questions 1 She wu proud of a segment with was to ask. I just bad to learn to go in country music superstar Willie and try to gel answers. Finally, with Ne.Ison, who is ordinarily shy of TV interviews with Jimmy Conners and dmeras. Dave Cowens, I showed what I could "We went right into the bayou do. People didn't realize that my country of Louisiana and photo· Texas background gave me a graphedblmataconcert,"shesaid. thorough knowledge of spoiV." ''I not only Interviewed blm on She appeared destined forl-career camera; I found myself on stage with as CBS's resident female jock unW him. sin1lng and playin& the January. harmonica." ., .......... 'PEOPLE' STAR Phyllla George 'Wiz' Star Collapses, Treated -rt:a--~~.-.,.,.,.11111 .... 1111r~Bowt---i"1111Jtlil!P' lefl!h!ll• ..,teta LPIQ4ll& and decided I'd bad it," Phyllis re-during a .day at Sout.bem California's called. "I told the people at CBS, and La Costa resort being exercised, .that's when they came up with a new pounded and stroked in a filneH contract, which involves •P· course. I ' pearances on comedy and dramatic "PEOPLE" WILL BE inv-ading shows as well as specials. 'People' private lives such 81 Garbo's, and by rovid " ~·P~WILL l>E"BtJT on-cBS 6eol'ge's -~bOald be fair game as Sept. 18. It is based on the weekly well. She ~u asked what caused her .People Magazine an~ ls produced by breuup wlth EYans, Time-Life with David Sussklnd. "Conilictlng careers," she replied. Phyllis George will star as the prin-"We were both gotna in 95 different cipal oarrator·intervlewer. 'directions." ·--Sbe adiniltecl that ·~.eople". drew Now 1'0Uld .. hople" Mtt1e for an f;rickbata-from TV reviewers wben answer like that? .. . . . . Victorian lniritP.te Returns • "The Pallisen," 22 e i.sodea • cbronlclina the fortunes of a Vlc- toriu polidcal dynaaty, repeats befilllllna Sunday, 00 to U :30 p.m .), °" KCET, Channel 28. The remaining proaram1 will be broadcut Sunday ~ Friday &om 10 to 11 p.m., (wltb a few excepUonJ, when tbe series .m air lat.er ln the ev.o-inc>. endiq Sept. 28. 8A8BD ON TDB SIX "Pallll• newel•" of AntbooJ Troilo~. a coatemporary of Charlel Dlctem, and bolted bJ Slr John Glelpd, the aeries Thes e conflicts or the atan tJuw.Ume Emmy.winner he a rt , Interwoven with Su1an Hampabire •• tbe\ EngJand'sstrugglewithpoUUcal beautlfUJ. attona·wtll_ed Lady reform and the Palliser family's Glencora PaWMr, and PbWp drive for power and ' prat.lle, Latham u ber boeonblt rather provide the drama for ensutni 1tod8Y husband, Lord Plan· eplaode1, whlcb compose a. taienet Palllaer. portrait of perlod Brttl1b IOClety. The tint epllode la the story of "The Palllaers" 11 a procluc- their tietrotbal. a loveleaa aftalr ttoo of BBC·TV and Tlme-We arran1ed, as IO many Victorian Televlllon. produced for the marrlaa_a were, b)' relauv... BBC by Martin Llsemore. Coo· E.en .. they speak their YOM. 'emporary BrlU1b novell•t ·both brict. and 1toom harbor Slmon R•ven adapted the feellnp for another. Trollope novel• for televtslon. ' Frlfl•_,• •••llatirll•., ... M:>fNNCi tt•• ••• "HllGilt~ C*Ot c.r., Qr9M. ADllf. Ind ......._ A NP0rW .... Clfldl ......... ---~-.­hie~ ltpMMad• ... .,..Ill ........ C2 fd..201\'M .• *TEANOON tl:GOG • • "Hlldter.n." ., ... ,,..,.......,_ ~.A'°""'..,_ ,....,,. ..,... '° ,...., ....... ........ .., ....... "* rlllgae. t t tit .. 30 "*'·• a:oo a • • -nia Cottwld" Eva Swen. 8'uno llndlil. "" •JhllilW '° ...... murdlr .. ..._. bya ,_. f ·~ dler. ,, .... tt "*"' 3:to •• * .... ""-"" fltoleor!M ,,.... ,.,._.,, ...,.... T~ ~· Nt •<COft>. ~,...,,,. . ...,......, • _., ~ .. mrt'fl'llaClt- ._y C.l.A. agn. Ct tw .. 30 l'lln.I 'Company' Most Watched NEW YORK CAP> -ABC con· ttnued its warmup for the fall TV s e ason by winning the networks' prime time rat.lng.s race for the flftb week in a row. And, like old times, the week's most-watched show was on ABC. The nnt 14 programs ranked bWbe A.C. Nielsen Co. for the week ending Aug. 27 were re-. peats, and ABC, predominant in the ratings most of last season, had three of the top four. ABC STARTS ITS new season Sept. 11, so the strong late· summer finish is good news ror the network. CBS and NBC kick off their fall programming Sept. 18. ABC, with its strong showing at the top of the list, finished the week with a rating of 15.3. C~ was seoond at 14.8. NBC third at 14. The networks say that means in an average prime lime minute, 15.3 percent of the mD llAllP!Qf homes in the country with 1'V were tuned to ABC. ••Three's Company'' WU the week's No. l pro&ram, with a rating of 25 Nielsen says that means of all the homes in the country with television, 2S per- cent saw at least part of the show A&c·s ... LAVE&NE AND Shirley" and "Carter Country" tied for third place. The three ABC programa, plus "Happy Days," No. 11 for the week, COO· trib&Jted heavily to the network's strong show lut season. CBS, strong in the ratings dur- ing the early summer, bad four shows in the flflt 10. Including No. s "M·A-s:n " and No. 6 "Alice." The top.rated new show was "60 Minutes" on CBS, wttb a CBS special, "Paul Anka in Monte Carlo," No. 16. A three-part. CBS N&wa • special on public edacatioa fared poorly ID tbe ratings. The tint inlt•llrnent Tuesday ~ was No. S7 ln the ra~lMS. ~ -~ shows checked. Part 2 was 54UL Part 3 was No. ~. Rounding out tbe bottom fiv~ in the ratings wer.e· ''Operation: Runaway" OD NBC. No. ss;' ABC's college football preytew. No. 56: "WUder ahd Wilder" oe CBS. No. 58; and "Plight of Dou. ble Eagle 11" on ABCt No. 59. Here are the week's Top 10 prouams: "l'Tlree•• C•~11•.'' wltl\ • U ret..._ ,..,_, .... 1IU mllllllft ...,.., A8(, "'Qwlftcy,. M.E .• -23..1tw11.J f'Nllloll, NBC;·~_. SMrWy" ... "Clrtw n..-.-..... zu., " mllllon, tlletl MC: "M-~~.1· tt • ...,/l'lffffOI\ .. ••Afiu.-22.1 --..s """-~.lllWll ~ ''AOUf....i Rift,-22.A °" 1'.J lrtl1-~ "Olle l)ey et • T1me:· 22.J « '6.2 mllU.., C Md ~ -S Huld\." A8', Mii "All lfl Femu,, ... c:es. tlOCll20.1ot IS.I frtjlflOfl.. ,..,._.'° ...... : ...._., o.,s.• AK; ''\.ell Of'•"_. ""'9 .., ft-.• ..... cas: "CMrlle'S ~· AeC: "tO Mlllultl" _. "Paul ~ "' C.IO," tlOlll C8$; ,...... _ ... """"*' .. World s.ttee,•• ~; .. ...,,...,. ,,__.. . en4 "8er11" MIUer" <1114 ""'"41a• -••· "Veen.·· blltli ABC. lie. MATINEES SATUllAY & SUNDAY "SGT. PEPPER'S LONELY HEARTS CLUB BAND" (PG) "SMOKEY ANO THE BANDIT" <PG> "SOUND OF MUSIC" "THE OiEAP DETECTIVE" IPGJ "THE LAST REMAKE OF BEAU GESTE" -i "NewlM ........ '"'"''° uryeme ....... ftelbrc- tbe •UtmellC ti ...... fiiER FIAMPTCti TBI IEI QEl!S "SG't i'EPPERs LanU lllARTS CU1I BAND" ·--,_.... ~.r:_1.;_;_=-~~ 00~~..., -==~ NU W Pl J\YINCi { '"FOUL Pt.AY'"(PG) "'FUN WITH DICK I JANE'" "OOAVETTE SUMMER" .. JOY RIDE" (PG) "STARWAA$" "LOGAN'S RUN" (l'Q) "HEAVEN CAN WAtT"' "AMERICAN HOT WA>f' (PG) "SMOKEY & THE BANDIT" <PG> "STUNTS0 0 You've seen lt0 on tv~ now see it for yowself! Wodd•a Largat W•tenllde Is open everyday from 9:00 am to 10:00 pm Adjacent to the Santa Ana Fwy. (1-5) at Ball Road ~lay' .... ~.._ .... <1 .. 14 .. >194111 .. 6..,4 .. 680_. ....... .--Kids Facing " '. ITllOfUIM ... ..... IOY'I .. CO.ANY CCII) --........... IUlf ........ •IMLY,_. MOOINa ..... """ ODI TO llU. Y JOI.,,. -llArT.,... Cimini MIAVIN CMWAIT"' tuft • 111&.LY ... MOCIF•CNt 'Wt OOI '° y JOICHJ _,.. Mtot&W ..,. ta&llMI UCIQ .,,..Of ntl ,..,.._...., .. ·-·---llOCll ................ AYAI U"C11',... .wa ....... , ........ •• ,,;;) ~::::~=~=- -Otl"fCllAM-~NAWM r '"FOUl ...... Y.. I ... n _ ., .. ,.....,., UT/ ... &llGM- 111_1..,..,.,.... .. w.-. .. m "'NIAYIM CAMW/Jr"CN) ---..1 IAT/ .. NOM~~l::.1a.111M11• ....................... , ............. . IMPORTANT NOTfCtl CMIUHWf UHER 12 FRO! '----· ... ·-·-11-11 111·-·· .... fllTl1I taUI UY. Of ..,. •MntBCNt ""' INTllNAnoHM vnm ""°' -~·--"""' coanm ...... .,.. """ "94041H ... ) ..,. .... llY. Of ... ,........cNt ""' '"81MnoHM vnmCNt ~OIMleeo&m ...... Unemployment Funds Loss S ACRAMENTO <A P > Should child actor s and ac- tresses be eligible ror unemploy- ment insurance ? . No. says state Sen. Dennis Carpenter, R-Newport Beach. ANU WEDNESDAY, THE Ways and Meaos Committee of the State Assembly agreed with him. Carp e nte r s aid h e wa s prompted to action when he saw a news pa pe r photogra ph of a mother . and h e r 8-year -old child. an actor. to the unemploy- ment window. .. This undermines the validity of the system in the eyes or the public." Carpenter said. UIS SB 14t6 would deny un- employ ment ins ura nce to anyone under 12 years of age. The committee advanced it to the noor on an 11-3 v9te despite opposition of the state AFlrCJO . which said it diserimlnated on the basis or age. Mlllrllllt1U4H711 ,.,_ "HEAVEN CAN WAIT'' =:(PG) SO COAST PU\ZA wear l*'lloullY thin. particular· ly wben Divel are belnl 1boved lDto beW., or ln the coune ol an \11'1 •ar•te fiaht betwen Bur1eu Meredttb and Rachel Roberta. and -especially - durln1 yet anotber of tbose careening; car·smuhlna dashes up ud dOwn UM Mtilel blU. ol San Francisco. Tbere 11 a callouaneu about all tbl1 that bellea the splrlt of comedy. Nor. for that matter. is there anythlnc intrtmlcally humorous. ln fflatns' pivotal notion~ an elaborate plot to murder the vis- iUn& Pope durina a performance of "The Mikado" at San Fran· clsco's marbled War Memorial Opera House. Chevy Chase costars as the U.utenant uaigned to the cue who dimly begins to suspect that there may be sometblng to Hawn 's story after findina her shoe near the apartment to which she claimed she had been abducted. PEBllAPS IT IS foolish to go on poking boles in a plot that often resembles a golf course - NeteMeme J ane Fonda will star in the movie. "Nine to Five.·· a film about the adventures a nd misadventures of a secretary. Production will begin early in 1979. Vereen A.Uk Jai/,edfor . Bail Jumping COLUMBIA. S.C. <AP) - George Fedorcback, sin1er- actor Ben Vereen 's road manager. bas been aente.nced to two years ln priaoo for jumping bail. He wu aentenced to 10 years on his 1971 coavlctJon for passing counterfeit money in South Carolina. But Fedotcback, 36. left tbe country while his conviction was being appealed. and became Vereen's road manager lo wn. Vereen. who appeared ln the television miniseries ''Roots." sent U.S . District Judge J . Robert Martin a letter describ- lne Fedorchack as a trusted friend. Martin ordered Fedorcbact to serve tbe new term consecutive to bis previous sentence. ~--,~~~~~~~~~----------~~ It ... the Deltas -Inst the rules ••• the rules lo.ti ---- John --.Tnwalta Ollula Newton·.John ---..,...... -..... ---HEAVEN CANWArr .,~ YOUR DAILY PILOT CAN BE RECYCLED! Orang• Coatt Coll•ge O~f8ttl$ "'-offlcllJ/ recycling center fOr Costa Mesa 556-59~1 \ Ew.ept Appia Most Fruit To Cost More WASHING TON <AP> -Consumers probal>l1 will be PQinl more for their orance Juice, canned peaches. crapes and pears next month. but apple loven may pay leas for their favorite fruit. the Aericulture Department says. . M06t canned, rroien, dried and ftesb fritlt Will cost mere this fall because crape eeneraUy are smaller and some f rults have yet to recover from severe weather. BUT APPLES, PRICED WGR all year. should be cheaper thanks to an U percent increue in the national crop, department economist Jules Powell said. He said It is difficult to predict the exact rise in fruit prices this fall, b\4t 12-month 1ovemment figures show that inflation for fruit bu been steeper than for au food and beveral(es. The unadjusted ( J Consumer Price Index CONSUMER registered a 16.2 percent ~ rise In fruits and -------vegetables from July 1977 lhrougb July 1978, compared to 10.3 percent for all food and beverages. "IN 11IE FALL, FRUIT PRICES usually are low. They're higher in the sprblg, and then dip in June and July," Powell said. "This year there haven't been any dips. "Fruits and ve~etables have done a lot to in- crease total food pnces this year," be added, not- ing that fruit comprises about a quarter of the average family's diet. Prices for proeessed fruits -dried, canned and frozen -should increase because farmers re· ceived big.be1 prices this year while procesaine and marketing costs have also risen, the depart- ment said. POWELL SAID FROZEN ORANGE juice prices might rise slightly because a small crop this year followed the crop4a.mqing freeze of January 19'17. Peaches for canning this year were more scarce than in any recent year and the crop is still trying to recover from the California drought of. the summer of 1977, Powell said. The pear crop remains low, signaling higher prices, while the cost of grapes shows no signs of declining despite a laree crop, Powell said. Bryant Support Said Not Anti-gay BOSTON <AP> -Gay-rights leaders plan dem· onstratioos, but a spokesman for Anita Bryant says bet' appearance for a Senate hopeful bas nothing to do with a candidate who is a self- described lesbian. .. Neither Anita nor Bob Green <Miss Bryant's husband and manager> nor myself knew there was a gay involved when she accepted tbe invitation to go to Boston," said Edward Rowe, director of Protect America's Children, a group growing out or Miss Bryant's campaign a&ainst a gay-ripta ordinance in Miami last year. Miss Bryant is to appear in Boston on Friday, for the f'lrst time in 10 years, at a benefit concert for Howard Phillips, former director of the U.S. Office of Economic Opportunity and a founder of the National Conservative Caucus. Pbillips is one of rive Democratic candidates seeking the nomination to run for the seat held by Seo. Edward W. Brooke R-Mass. Another can· didate is Elaine Noble, a two-term state re resen· . ... ' . . . UCI to Spo~or Women's · Courses UC Irvine Extension will ofter a variety of courses this fall of interest to women. These include "Matbematlct Foundations'' for those anxious about math abilities, a job seekers' clinic, a course In career planning, a class in sinalea liberation, an aasertion training workshop ror women and a course entltled "Women in Manafement: 'lbe Inner Game." .. COME PRAY WITH US You •r• cordl•llY lnv'lt~ to join us In morning and evenlnv pra~r at th9 CATHOLIC CHURCH OF SAINT JOHN, :rHE BAPTIST ::.r-..... friends ptlllr Wnether tfa aet up In your dining area or patJo, everyone wnr be lmpresaed and comfortable with this 5 pc. set. Includes 42" round tempered glasa top table and ~ arm cha.Ira wfthlellow or brown PVC atrape. By Alu-Mont. A • 249. 7 kick back In co1nlart ChalM lounge with ac:IJuatable back, strong metal frame end PVC atr81)9 In chOk:e of colon. #110. Reg. 119.95 9911 . llttle grill tor couples Have an Intimate little cook-out tor Just the two of you with thta cut Iron hibachi with 10"x10" equare grlll. Reg. '4.99 2•• double yo• cooking ........ 10"x1r hlbllchf with In- dependently adjU1table grills. CUt (ron brazl« and WOOcl NincS* and .... ~. 7.86 311 thll 11 the tough lbdl WMver alt are · und"to take hard knockl, appty Glidden. Spred Latex Enamel. Orlee to • Mint· Qloee flnleh. Reg. 15.25 I/ .... JOU •1111111 wldle cooking Oeluice 14 .. XU.. ntbachl with btg grflMng .,_ 10 you oen oootc everyone'• •teak at once. With ~-7•• . . made for trnlllngfolb Thta i. the double grlH caM Iron Nbechl that foldt up and la relldy to go wherever you want to c:oolc-ciut. Reg. 15.99 ••• one COit C.dolt_ • NEWPORT, R.J. tAP ) -Sen. Claiborne Pell called his retirement from the Coast. Guard "a sad occasloo." aft.er a wasp added a stinging touch. to the ceremony marking t.be end of bis 38-year career. Pell. D-R.t .• was stuna on the right wrist as he approached the podium to speak~ but continued with his remarks Pell !erved in the Coast Guar_d_ durjoe World War n and re- mained in the reserve on active and then inactive status. He faced man- datory retirement on bis 60th birthday Nov. 22. OCCSlates Surfing Courses Two board s urfing classes are on Orange Coast College's physical education schedule this fall. Fall classes begin Sept. 11 at the-Costa Mesa school. One class m eets FTidays from 7 : 15 to 9: lS a.m. and the other is slated for Saturdays from 8 to 10 a.m. Stu- dents planning to enroll must be able to swim a nd have access to s urfboards. Laird Hayes, coacb or OCC's national cham- pions hip surfing team, will teach the Friday class. Tom Gibbons, coach of Marina High School's team, will han- dle :.ht: Saturday course. Registration for fall classes ls under way through Sept. 22 in the a dmissions building. Registration informa- tion Is available at 556-5735. Health Class Set IATMMY,ai-.t ..... "" IM Tu11altl• ... . ...,.....~ ............ ....... ....................... ......... llacAUCIMM ....... ---·-····"'·"'' .... "' .. ._ ~-..ca111• a. uc• ~ ~t ... IMIWln tlllldl, ...................... " ... ,....... A vt1'll t• lllr ... ~ ................. . .......... --&AIMClolllaAUC ,,,,... ................ . ... "" .................. ... wi..c. ,..,, uo U1NW1 itoo• .... •flf .... "-"-,.,....,..., .,.. ---,. ..... Y, .... 1. "(llfrtflt .... f'rtl•<t•f f~J --iCetleMllt~1 ~.,__,w ....., IOIAr...,, "'-C> .. _.. ....., tf •ioc. =~~~·=~ Kfdnou'Gf1'ell lta\le11 _ _. • ., werUll••· t --~ ;:.~ !'.::~°'..:: :"..:C= Mariu Soltero, 8. poses with her lather. '-" Ismael. who donated one of bis kidneys iD ,.., •• .,. '°''· " ..... , her for a transnJant operation at• St SATURDAY, ..... ,._,.D Ill:; • • DI.or I "111trodvetl4M' 10 ,,,.,,_,,.., Joseph's Hospital m Phoenix, Anz . .-n.., ..... • ::'t1!':.'~o.~:H~:r.~:.:: cians performed the operation without F.u .1.0 .. -. °"''• ....,.1,,. charge because the Solteros are Mexican •ri.n. A UC: IMIW •.w.s1o11 "°" ' • d li ibl r U S edi l ·-· ,,, .. 1-10 , ...... ; '°'· • e.lft.·•t ClttZens an not e g e ,or . . m ca ,, •• n .,.. •·s ......... "'" 111. funds • Mwneftlllot .... 1. uo ~ I'•: • '" ~~~~~~~~~--~~~~--~~~.....-. SATUltOAY, .... t6 ''Oyfttft\IC; ~loll."' 1(-$. w11-. e.s.. ~WI'-",.. MKi.la. A UC lrvlM llrlllM'°'I .,._ do Mrnlnw. t :IO a.m.-4:30 11.111 .. ltrn. 229, SKlel kltnrA T-. UCI ca""""-,...: US. l11Cliodlt1 lundl, ll'lfletlels, elldpWIUftO. Connery Eyed For Thriller "Underslendl"9 , ... I COflOll'IC AIPHlt ol 8u1h1eu," Howar4 Wlteofl, ~. Mml11lstrat1w ltOM•rcll Atsoc:lelft, ltK. A UC Jrvlna Edentloft --Uy tem!Mr, •·• • rn.~:• ~m ...... Gold Room. ...,. ColT1INnl. UCI ~ ..... s.ss, 1nc1ue11t lunch, partilno, ancl BY llAN1r GRANT cl-meWttels. he-Jiei.,._,...,.. SATURDAY, ~ r-u. .., 11; Can Sean Connery and Uv Ullmau resist the "M•'" .,,. verb•• s1t1 11 s offer from Allred Hitdaeoek to topllne his .. Short Worti•llOP'.'' w.oetef' Jones, M.s.. Night" •'--mer pie to pop in Finland? We Wnk ,,..,rm..,,~~ uu.,,. ~ H.wflor Hleh Sctieo1; Gtetw1 not ... Why Finland? Well, you wouldn't expect ~.;::~:. ~:,:,'~.~1': "Short Night" to 'film in Alaska, would SU.Ool Oflttlct; CMollM J41ehon. you? ... Richard Barton. Jerry Lew and ... M.A •• EM11t1111MCtiw, u"'""'"' Steiger may staa.er a bit alt.er leaml.nl that they t4lllfl $c-4; etld 1( ..... HuffmM, -M.A .. , .. ,_, E1t111111 oepert· figure prominently and si1:1lin1 in Clarl1Uae :'::i~ ~:.=::, :;,.::. ~~ Norden•s just completed autobioe. II)' London •PY e.m.-n -mid'~ P.1'11 .. UCI ~ tells me that the blonde beauty or British .movies 'tte:::!'::).':,::;.~~'f:'. ~:;:~~~ in the '40s is now back in BUghty toiget her tome, sd...c: .. 8-; t/JD • tan, v...... ''Sex Sy~bol, :·on the publication road. 511111,1 IJ•"'911>, Rm. U4, ~ SCIMcft 8IClll-, S«lloll 2: f/16 .. U, U _..,,. s.1111 u one•>. Rm. ue. . .. AlsO tn London, here's a laugher: TI e :"~ S:,~:=;.~':!. ~: star Terence Stamp and the London compall)' of Pt1y11ce1 Scleflces Bldg. Section a: •·Dracula" hadda move outta •11• " u. w..-.. 5111111 IKulfrnM>, their rehearsal hall beocause of Rm. 11~ ~ SclMCts 81dg.;• of lb hall t/30 • ion. Math 511111a ccw..,1. a previous booting ' . e Rm. m. ~Sc'-" 11e1g. by the National Blood s.ctklft •: tM • 23. Vert1et 1111111 f i Se i N 1Jac 111:1on>, 1tm. u2, P11.,11u1 Trans us on rv ce. . . ew sci.-.._; •ta• 1111, M.a. Two You: Bagla O'Brlaa & Sltllll ('*-ti, llm. '"· P11y1lcel D l l d l l ... l ScloncH 81dg. P'H· for one a a S 0 n. D I e a ~.S27J11:tar_,.v.,...1fft4 Holvey ... 1'itto: Claadla Jen· ~ S1111n ..,...,,.... "'1ne11o11n ntn•s & ABC exec JoaaUau Ax· ~~~ . ~ brl THUltlDAY,,_.11 elrod •.. Donald S•t e aad'a "Commu111ca110"'· .. Howe rd live-in 1ove Fruelne Baeette wu_.., Pl'Oli4eot. Mrnh•laft"Olll•• jets to bis pie location in Van-wntHLA.No ~,!='~~'::O.~~..!:.~ couver within the fortnight so's he can·be in auen- t ;30 •·'"-~:» p.m~ H4111deY Inf\,,.,, dance when she gives birth to bis second child. No .·'' ~ ,. .. ~ ..... ..... , : 1 . 1 . . . THE nJl8'I' nA>1UDA execa· Uon since 198' could come tJUs year, tbe 1tate attorney 1eneral's office says. John Spenkeli.nk, formerly of Orange County, recenUy lost an appeal ln 5tb U.S. Qrn.lt Court of Ap- peala to overturn h1s death sen. teDee. He bM turned to tbe U.S. Supreme Court. ·. Tbe IMt execution ln tbe U.S. waa J-. 11, tm, wbe1a Gary Gilmore. Who demanded execu· Uoa for the murder ol a Provo, Utah. motel clerk. was abot by firing squad at the Utah St.ate Prison. Lawyers. prosecutors and anti· execution proponents point to legal and social factors for Florida's high number or death sentences. PLO&IDA WAS QUICK to le&islate a death·,enalty law after the U.S. supreme Court in 1972 returned it.a 1anclmark de- ctaion rulln1 llllconatitutlonal virtually every death _penalty statute ln the United States. In 1976, the U.S. Supreme Court let stand Florida's new statute because ft allowed judges to deviate from J,ury sen· tencea in mui'der trials. Death penalty opponents also claim the statute is a form of c lass punishment. inflicted mostly oo blacks and the poor. particularly when murder vie· tims are wblte. They cite these statistics: -ABOVT a PEBCENT of Florida's death row inmates are black. although blacks comprise 15.8 percent of the state's population. -The murder victim was white in 133 of the 143 death-s en le nce ~ases s ince 1972. although about half of all homicides refOl'ded ea~= in Florida involve black vi . -The state executed 132 , blacks slnce 1924 and only 64 whites. · -Flori4a never has executed a white man fj" killing a black man. 8rlstol, Cos\a Mna. Foo: US, I~ · 1 b t th · ix f c1..-11-11,pef'lt1ne.en11m-.1e1s. marnage paans, u ears years or more o ATTORNEY GENERAL uTUROAY,--. n togetherness is longer than most Ho~ illfll'· Robert Shevin, a Democratic "Flndl111 RMI esa.e. FIMRClnO," riages last. .. Comes a second wild rumor of dis· gubernatorial candidate and :,:~1.. =~·~.~ cord between stars Illa Farrow, Trnor Bowan vocal death·seoteoce supporter, 1>rooer11n 0MS1on. A uc 1rv1no e.-and Timothy Bottoms on the "Hurricane ' locaUoo dismisses these statistics. say· tension one·d•Y procar•m. t :JO in Bora Bora. We'll bet they're actually having a ing they only prove that blacks e.m.~:30 P.tn.. Rrn. 101. Pftor-lcal lb Bob H -'d •t to S<....c" B141Q., uc1 '-" '""' peachy time toge er. · · ope Seu 1 commit more crimes than us. 1nc1UOH pen1no. 1unch, •net Howard Jarvta: "You've done a eat job with your whi'tes. mater lets. who · · "unoerst.tnc11nca and Mollv•llnQ Proposition 13, but I'm one guy eDJOYS pay101 "A larger number of crimes Emptoyeos," How•d Wll-., Pf.SI-taxes. I also en;oy root canal work OD my teeth!.. t tt d b bl k denl, Admlnlstr.t!Yo A-rcll AJ-,_ are C 0 mm e Y a C S soclaln, Inc. A UC lrvlno Elrlenilon because more are poor and if -.dot}' wmlnar,t.30• m ~·JOp.tn., you're poor you tend to commit GOI• Room, Mtse eomrnon~. uc1 Oater heroes Lee Vaa cteef and Rory Callaolu t•mpus. F": us. 1nc1uc111 1unch, ere partnered in 8 new indie company to be called more crimes," Sbevin says. per1111111. ondct.s""''~''''· Spenkeltnk 's attorneys also "a.coming • ~1 ~ Pyramid 3 Prods. First coproduction will see Rory mont Consultenl,'" Arlllur H. directing Lee in an orig sc--.nlay, "HOW Bad Is argued in appeals through lower icur11011, M.e • .-.. 1ac1-. G<aduel• ·-... courts that Florida •s death ~'\:1~,:::~~~~ Bad? · .Bad!". · · penalty is racially applied. They ,,. •.m.~;JO p.rn., Rm. 24. Social T rving It apartsVl'lle after 21 years of mar-cited the statistics that most Science Ulb. UCI ~ F .. : us. J ~· l d th bl k inc1uc1o• m.tor1e1s, lunch, anc1 .,.,.. riage are Wilfrid Rvde-Whlte and actress·wile peop e on ea row, ac or ino. Ethel Drew. That's the bad white. were condemned for kill· Tu•soAY,'°"-»;Ckl.1,11,u . ""il~~..., news . The good ne ws for ing whites. Spenkelink, who is ..,.,, c::i Wilfrid, who's m ad e Palm white, was convicted of killing a sAT~0:,",;0:i~:.~~ou Springs his home base. Is that white man. The court of appeals "Pro11111onc 1~ Rock "" o1 he's been tapped for a return to rejected the argument that the Soull•••ll C•lltotnl•," IH•C c. h' f' l b death penalty is racially ap· ees1vo10. e.A., 1rch.MoloQ1c:e1 ,.,... is 1rst ove. t e stage, in a re- ll#wto,.. ••' BOYHOOD POSES Condemned killer John Spenkelink. 29. formerly of Orange County. is shown as child and young man. At top. left to right. are at 18 months and :.s Boy Scout at 8. Below. in 1958 and in 1965. 'OLD SPARKY' FLORIDA'S ELECTRIC CHAIR l'lrat Execution Since 1964 Could Come This Year Floiar,Bread FDA Drops Plan ; For Iron Additive wt1•n• •nc1 IOCluref. A uc irvine h-vival or "Lady Windermere's plied. WASIUNGTON <APl -The Food and Drug Adm1mstrat1on t\8$ "Home Health Aide," tension progr•"' •1111 t1oit1 irisn. Fan," to bow nevt month on Tu.. 1-10 Pm .,_,.. -· " C dropped plans to require an increase in the amount of iron added to a program of four s.n1~· An•:; ... ;;,,,.,., to/14 . "'° London's West End and then SVSAN ARY, AN official or flour and bread products. courses that can be com· iotzt.H. Gel'ftllfno or own lodQl1t11 In t o u r C a n a d a a n d Florida Citizens Against the t e1ytM or o.ert Center. F .. • "'· D h p al b b 1 The plan, intended to overcome any dietary iron shortage or pleted in a single -.netinc1w.IDdOl1111°'rn .. is. Rhod es I a· . . Look · eat en ty, c arges t at a-Americans. would have doubled the amount of \ron added to semester, will be offered Alikes: Newly arrived New tent racism ts one reason Flori-enriched flour. bread. rolls. buns at Orange Coast College, "~1o!":":"~~uP•r1 '·" ..OVAil Zealand beauty queen Sonia dians accept the death penalty. and other bread products Costa Mesa, Sethis fall. ~0~~~1:,11':iyc':ir~~;·v •:,:·~~'"~~ 8 a r r e t t & K t m ·we tend to have a strict f p FDA Comm1ss1oner Donald Classes begin pt. 11. tl•ll•vlor. UCIMC. Pl~°'. UC Novak. So much so that usuAJly austere Bistro judiciary," she says. "We have Drug or ets Kennedy Wlthdrew the proposal, Home health aides are ~':!ft:'!:~~.'~ patrons'gloomed Sonia and wondered out loud what a problem with racism. It's the saying the increase in iron has employed by health or 02. P11v,1c~11 Sciences e1c1v .. uc1 Kim was doing back in town-and with bon vivant So~tb. a culture of violence. Recalled by not been proved to be needect. · 1 · · :;.ii-· Fee: non-ere.sit. po; crec111, Henry Berger, yet!. . . Tbla Louise is now co1mng so safe or erfect1 ve socta service a~encies Id h • in h h · 1 "The soc1'ety just doesn't be ·d b I much teleblurb go s e s go g w ere t e action s Iron and vitamins mg added tfo pbroVl ebo ead cda~e the most. Tina's packing ror a move to New value the lives of black people to enriched flour and bread WJU or ome un or ts· l Be 11:>..aa-A ver much. It's really hard #or dd · · York ... On the Rea Estate at: 1111UK clams now ,, co t e to be a ed. '--=-~-~,,......,.~,.JA~~i~~~~..Mu.1..""::-ii~~'.i!fl~.~~~!i"l'l:--'fiiiia~liiiirinmiir.iif1liir!R~an~iiiifiiiifiil~;J"--ptl!Ots1':-."Ul{"'CllnlR!ft1r1:tialS:"'ttr'111J!"-..&.LJu:lt.l-.JLl~E.ML.:1.& .......... ____ .... ~n~n~o~u~n~c~e~~~Ti·irfi~~rrn~r·J_w;,rttW--;J 1° &nnl ~. Pll.O., t.fWltOIWleni.t cqtjwlt • A l h b.._..., '-K de-tand They think they aren't~ ranr \913 h ' uc 1rvfno a.ii-1oncourww11t111e10 W1th ate u u 3 '"""''"' ovacs. .., · WASHINGTON I AP l -The some. are in . t e P aa Information about the 011MrVet1on. Thurs.. 1.ta p.m .. Arn. , racist. But It's a very, very sub-Food and Drug Administration had been poslponed after oppost· prouam may be ob· ~~·. ~~ei..:=-~o~• ~"'r.!; Gary Basey'• busy turning down low.cash tle racism." has announced the nationwide lion emerged from var1oui. or- tained at 556-SS40. For us. pie oflers. Thanks to the success or bls title role in recall of a new anti·worm drug gan1zations includm& the Ralph registration iqforma· "The Baddy Holly Story,'' busy Busey's now t>eP.at·. "WHEN IT COMES down to tl)at it says has been Implicated Nader .founded Health Research "Cib'n, i>00ne-S.5735'." .. ----...iu-;,~-:e1::_ ~,._ ed "1\ls Qic salary price to a half-ntilllon bucks lflUS it. it Jliat gets ba~k to the. ~ .ex· in the deaths of 246 dois and Group. "N011t1ct1a11 wrt11nt: " Woni"'°P percentage. And hasn't Gary's latest turndown • pression 'you're in the heart or cats in three months. Editonals opposmg the plan Graduate Honored Corona del Mar High SCbool graduate Philip Dixon, son of Dr. and Mrs. Peter Dixon, is.31 Bun ya St.. baa bhn honored ror academic excellence upon gradua- tioa from UC Berkeley. Dixon, who will attend graduate school at Cornell Univenity, r• ceived a bachelor's degree to biology and was honored with elec- tion to Phi Beta Kappa. He aJ10 ;ecelved a fellowahJp fPom the Na· tlonal Sctence Found&· lion •1111 PMll Giiiette." Pwl G1•1t<11e. been a quarter-million offer to star in Stet'ea red neck country.' And Florida The drug, SansaUd, is made have appea red 1n the New Pll.O • ..,... Of ...., MOey ,_Me. 1-th bu-1..t of •I. d tb al " uc ,,.,,.,. E•ten11on -"•'"' SplelberC'• next epic, ·'tMt"? ... Though divorced ao e \;Me we ea pen · by Norwood Laboratories of St. England Journal of Medicine -11•1\oc1, ""··Mo p,,,,.; set. elld from Lan Sdunidt, bCdcl Bergman is vacation-ty," says Millard Farmer, an Louis and is being recalled by and the Journal or the Amert~ ~-~t:;~~~.~~ lng wlth him on Lan' private lsland off the coast Atlanta attorney. the distributor, B'eecba m Medical Association. or Sweden. Farmer. who has been ln· Laboratories of Bristol, Tenn. volved in about 175 death· The FDA said the cause or penalty cases. complains that de at!\ is unknown. but most of the most people see tbe death penal· animals were puppies and kit· ty only abstracUy. tens under eight weeks old. The ... GetUng Each Other's Mall: producer Charles B. Pierce & maater1mtstre11 of diaplse Cbarlea Pierce. The latter bows a two-week atg at tbe Backlot nitery -or will it be the former? ••. My Lon.don spy re· ports that the British charity 1roup, the Goal D1t1er1, is complalnln1 out loud about Br1&t Eklud ltlll not paytna her wtnnlng $'8CJO bid for a sequined EU. ,... 1uit that abe toolt away with her several days after the auction about three ... ~,. moniM aco ... My BevHllll •PY reports that ~ blsb r ldenl.1 ln his area ml)' no Joncer leak dc)Q their noeea al the San Fernando Valley u OQOr coualna teni&oc"y. lo0 Trawlta-. Just bou1ht\ri half.mlUion·dollar manse in Studio Clty •.. Quote of the~lfeek comet from Blnca .Jaa-t: ''I'm tbe rnost rornaotJc penon in the whole world!•'. . . • • drug ls available only from He also points to the averaae veterlnartans. ~ho usually give aae ·of Florida ·s population. the first dose in their offices, the which ls mnont tbe oldest tn t.he aaency said, and supply the pet nation. B• believes that older owner wlth a s upply to ad· resident.a are more supportive of mlnUiter at home. the death penalty than youn1er Tbe name or the drui should' people. be written on the envelope con· talntna the t ablets and pet owners should return tbese to their veterinarian Sansalld ts the compan,y's trade name ror ANDERSON, tn~1. (APl-Con· tract talka bmveen tbe ell)' and atrlklna fi~Oabters were repos:,t· ed at aa lnrpuseloday folloWinf • fire thatdlltl'Oyed.a downtown cl· ty blt>tk whU• nrtmen stood by andwatcbed. the drua uredofos A com.*y spokesman Hid it Is not certain that the drua caused tM deatbl and tbe com· pany Is condul8in1 studies to try and uncaver the problem Chess Duo Accept Plan · MANILA. PhUlppanes •AP) - Challenger Viktor Korchnoa hus agreed lo a peekaboo ph .. n w ensure continuation of bis world chess cha mo1onsh1p match wu.h Anatoly Karpo\' The 47-year-old Soviet deft(10t will play w1thout the 11ashy m\r· rored &lasses be has been "' .,.. 1ng . u nd the Ru ~\141\ J>arapsychoJogast he claims tllley. inl to hypootju him W\ll sit ~ Karpov'1 Sov\et dele&4fto11 ell away from the playing stagt • of Korchv• ' two lr>lfl'b 11econds. M"achae Ste n, an· nouncc<S toddy , I . • • PUBUC NOTICE It~ su11•1t101t C:OUltT 01' TH• ITA T• 01' CAU "OltNIA l'Ott TH• COUNTY OI' ""'90• ~ ......... MOTtC• OP HaARIMe 01' PITITIOM •Y •••cuTO• POlt olo•• Otlt•CTUfO CONVIYANCI OP Pa ltSONAL l'ROPIRTY TO C0MPLIT9 111&.9 ON COtlTltACT 11naaao 1wro av oaca.uao Esi.t. ol ... D. STl!PHEHSON, elto llnown ea FERRALO DANIEL STl!IPHl!NSON, end u DAN STEPHENSON, o.c...ca. NOTICE lS HERE8Y GIVEN tl\81 LLOYDS 8ANK CAL.,ORNIA. "91 .. "-· hel tlled Mrtlll • ~ * en Order Dlre<tlnt Coolveyanc.e ot ~I ~toe.,.,.,._ .... on CDfttfect _....,.., &Ito"' -...cf, r• tit,_. to Wllkll Is medl for ,.,,... ' 4Mlttleulars, end INI lht II-Md -.Co of llltwlftO Ille semo ._.. llMft Mt •~ ~. U. mt, et 1130 o.m .. In u11 c11Wtroom of~ No. l of IMO court, .C 100 OYlc ~ Or'lw w--. In tM City of s.nc. ""-. Qllfonlie. Oelod A .... U, 1971. '#ILUAMl.M.IOMM, Col#lly Cler'k VlltTUI & SCMICX, llfc:. .,~ ... Oft ... , P.O .... ,.. How,_,. llNCll, CA ftMI Antnoytfw:~U-• PIOl>lllllllCI Oreniaa Coast 0.lly Piiot A~ JI, 5"1e. 1, "71 4217-11 ~ PUBlJC NOTICE • Nhl'OltT MISA • UNIPflOSCMOOL DIPRICT •. NOTIC9 INVITING 81DS NOTICE IS HERE8Y GIVEN tl\et '"• 8oerd of Educetlon of '"• Newport.-U U!llliod !kllool District of Of'Mge Cowlly wlll ~YO INled tlleb up to 2:00 p.m. on I,. 12tlt Oey of ~ "9t>11m11er. 1'71, tt Ille oflke Of Nld kllool Olltrlct, toc.teo et 1157 Plecon. ~I• ltr .. t. eor.t. Mela, Celltonlle, et wllk " limo said bid$ wlll be putMlcly oe>eno<t and read for COUPLING DEVICE All biclS •re 10 bt In eccorO.nce with f!_~d ltlonl, Instructions. and ..,.clfK611ons wl\kll .,. ,_on Ille In IN olll<• .. Ille PurellnlftQ Dlrtttor OI seld Sc'-! DIWICt, 1157 Ptecenll• St'"'· Cofte Mesa. Qlltoml• 92621 A Ptrfonnenu 8ond IN'f lie ,.. Qlllrecl at IN dlscntlon Of IM Olstrkt. Ho Bi-._y wlthelr-l\ls Bid !of • PtrtOd of torty..11,.. days C451 ali.r Ille oate sot for Ille openlno "'°'"'· • Tiie Boerd of e-oucetlOfl of tlHI Ntwoort-Mtta Unlllad School Olltrlct rewrvH Ille rlQM to reJ.a .,,., °' •II BIOS and not _11., eccep1 tllo lowest 810, ano 10 wel\'e any fn. ~•llt'f or 1rnou1wny In 811y Bid ,.. .. ..._ .... "• NEW~..MESA ..,:. UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTRICT .... o10r..,..~.C.ll'°'11l• Dorothy H-y fl-, CPM Purc11Mlno Director 17141~ DATED: A ...... 22. "71 PuOtlsi..d Oranga Cont Dally Piiat, A1191At24, JI, 1"11 PUBUC NOTICE c ... 1111 PICTITIOUS IUllNISI NAMI ITATl!MINT Tiit fOllOW!fle ~ 11 doino llufl· .. , • 5 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D f ss ¢ r"f Id 111 I AINll._._ ... _.,.. ... *'ed .. ....,. .......... ... .............. ,&i.r .... la1 Aet 9f lHI ....... ~ ...... to ... ,.... .. ..,,,.. ........... Mlea. Of' .............. 00 ....................... ar utJoH' ...... ~or an LPC4n&ic-to make any Md p11•911ee. llmlt.a· Uan. or ditmmlnaUon. •• ,,. ~per wUJ not lllDOWillf ly IC~~ any •dnrl 1ln1 fo, rul .-... ~ ii bl vioJa· UonolU..t.W. ........... s. ••••••••••••••••••••••• • _,.. 1002 • • •••••••••••••••••••••• P~VllW A home u lndivldual u you are • ls aelectlvely loca~ ln prettl1lous Cowan Hetabts. Th1a 4 bdrm. a ba home w /3 frplca bu an unmatched panoramic view. Open House Sat & Sun. 1871 StrrlDe. 718-1501 ~ Walkr.r t; I UP. Real El!I t.at.e $1.62 per DAY 'lbat's ALL you pay fOC'a 30day ad ln t.be DAILY PILOT SERVICE II RECTORY DO IT NOW! 642-5671 DolngBuelneas Under A f1. Fictitious ~j OCIAMVllW a Bedroom. 3 bath. 11a&s atrium, model home. Huie muter aulte. w /l»lc + sliding door to pavllllon. Breatbtakin1 view of 1urf le Catalina l.llaDd. Try 11.2,llOO down. For prevlew ol this Uni· que bome, ca1198H767 Ol'f'°f 1119•11,HUN10111 N'<I ~- THE REAL ESTATl:RS _ ..-SSY MANSION ~ • BR fixer in ewport Beach I Larae 1~1 l\4!model le profit! Can't lutl Hurry! Call 86Q.1Q3 F'"'Or~EST E.: OLSON 5 Sln1Je family houses. $195,000. Gross income $1325 per mo. Cloae t.o aboppln1-CaUMS-9181 OPfN HOUSf Rf ALTY / DOYER VILLAGE One of the most ex· cluslve adult com- munities In Newport Beach. Super location. Pool & recruUon. Quiet ndahJ>orbood. Motivated seller. Call now. 646-7711 ~ Walker & ltrn Real&tate 3 U +POOL ..wPC>Rf HllGHTS + llACH $61.900 3 BR with hardwood Spadoua p.rden home, ,, __ and b ·1·•--Lo l .. ""e Uvinfi room w1;re1c, ,....,.., m wwt. w -• downatS111$0. ~oo:ntc::n. ::r JACOIS IEALTY mo .. asaumable pay. 675-6670 ments. Call963-8767 -------- J.'~ COATS & WALLAC£ t::n REAL f.STATL INC . I . ' ,, .. '. • • "rl' ... I • ~ •• .,' ttt ,,J. ,. I l/'a' ";tit " ''11 I ; flt I MllA ¥1UI CHA•MM -Owner leaving state -must sell, drastically , reduced. 5 Bdrm With hu1e familr, room and formal dlnlng. ..Su.nroom • with Jumbo 9~% Joan available. Hurry, mate offer. Now asking S138,500. C411 MMl41. COi 4 l':l'Oa"I RIM -In ooe of Corona del Mar's finest areas. You may be one of the few fortunate enough to live in secure community. Thia soon may become a collector's item for the discriminating buyer -2 Bdrm & den. $225,000. Ctl 64CMl61. ',, rvtrl•l (,., .t 1 M• • .. 1 Ir ~·Jl• li11•1!1r1qfr,11 [lo .•• r1 N1·w111•r! tl• .I• 11 \.\ I :~ l ! ·1 • \ TAYLOR CO. HJ· \I .,., )Ii ... , . II•' l' l·)f i llG CYM TOWMHOt• S 149.100 The most beautiful Oakcrest Model we have seen! Completely upgraded & wonderful location. Parquet floors in entry hall. dining rm & kitchen. an extra window in LR, shutters. etc. Extra lge patio. 2 Bdrms. 2 baths. WHUY M. TAYLoa CO .. llALTOIS 2111 S.Ju,ut ........ MEWPOIT CIMTll. M.I.. 644-4910 WHAT'SMIW .. ~ ... ·~· NEW S UKE EW + auumable VA loan and owner may &sallt. $1.M.900. Wendy Siller Newport Heights Realty 645-5044 One C:•ll Service Feat C...-. Approval AICDt•GH Ol 12345 A Broadmoor. Colorful. Delightful, Enticing. Flowing, Gracious Home. Or. by the numbers. 1 house. 2 fireplaces. 3 baths. 4 bedrooms ands really neat neighbors. Anyway you look at it this Broad moor single story ls something you should see. It's as simple as ABC, or 123 A Unique Home at $252.000 . U,_..lfJUI: 11()Ml:S REAL TOR~. 675·6000 2443 East Coast Highway, Corona del Mar also 11"1 Mesa Verqe. at 546 5990 OCIAM .. OMT Fine craftsmanship in mabog. trim & oak noors. sets off this landmark; 4 BR. 3 ba. home in finest ,location. Established trees & lawns. U75,000. MESA YllDI REDUCED TO $89,000 Attractive 4 bdrm., 2 ba. home in immac. condition. Xlnt loc . IACI IAY Fine 4 bdrm .• 21At bath family home on quiet cul de sac. Oversized pool. playhouse. extra storage $169,000. IAYFllOMT Severa! rme bayfront homes with pier & slip BILL GRUNDY. REALTOR ' I • • • • 'J 1• h / '1 ti I 6 1 n.e"=':Xuoita $5000 bave ses>arat. 1arages EMERALD IA Yl HB.Pt PROIATE! and priva~ yardS. Never DOWN I a vacancy. Located near STAlnlM'i OUT the bluf& ln Costa Mesa. • : Ol'f'°f 1119 • 11 S liJt<j IOHI N<I • ---., JUST RmUCID Reduced thousands. ex-ecutive estate. steps to ocean! Breathtaking vlew. Low price will tur- prise you! Hurry! Call today for details. 645-0303 Ideal condo for that s minute• from tbe No QuaUfYinl! Owner young couple starting beach. Good income and will finance! Why pay their family. Close to owner' ta motivated. Only Mlt? Build up your equ.I • 1cboola " abopplog in •ooo.CALL551-28IO t.y! Call DOW and TALK • scenic San Juan .SELECT TO RED CARPET. WE THE REAL ESTATERS -----"" UDO IAYFROMT SJS,000. Sounds great doesn't It? Well it 11 for a one bedroom, Sunn'-brook moblle home. It s right on the water with a great $5,0001 Btll abowplace! Over 2700 sq. ft. 4 bdrma, frml din rm & breakfast rm. Frplc in huae fmly rm & ln lvly rrml llv rm. Call for appt to see. 5'$-949 l ~ Walker r, lee Real Estate FO~ESTE OLSON -.. ~-~ OCIEAMFIOMT 3 Bdrm. + den bome on ~ ft. lot; ftpl .. built'· Ins, pat.Jo. beamed cell· Capistrano. 3 Bdrms. LISTEN 'IM-1202 with claulc early PROPERTIES -------- California deaign. $62,000 •--------MfalMA .. 67M4M ~~~ WITHYllW VETS LvlY Trina model condo HARBOR * * intbeBlurfs.3bdrm,2"'1 OOOWN-OCLOSlNG ba, spllt·level le a A Division of llarbor Investment Co. Homes ln all areas ol breathtaking view of ORANGECOUNTY BadtBay. ?»UOl VITAGT. C411154 l..ot00 Walker 1; lee Inga. $37~.ooo 613-3663 642-2253 DOVER SHORES Near ocean in Hunt-Aaume K loan. S BR. view ol boating activity. --------• $61,900. Real Est.ate <RU39210> C ALL 7Sl .. 1al CSELECT T'PROPERTIES ~ Walker & lee Real Estate MEWUSTIMG Fantastic Westwind lngton Beach. Sharp 2 pool borne on cut-de-sac. Way-one or the most Br. Just l.S mi to beach. 3 C8r gar. Best buy OCEAMFROMT Choice oceanfront duplex. on the aand ! Huge upstairs bdrm .. lge. kitchen. On luge R·2 lot. $375.000 ! superb view homes in In area of more ex· price reduced to S104,900. New po rt B e a c h . =~~==· 10% Bkr. 754G62 Completely remodeled 3 "EY •iE•LT"•s Bdrm, formal dining ------------"---------room and family room-I•--------J•~ ... AND on lee land. IAYFltOMTw}PtER -Ml"ECRHIC $Ci9,ll00. $4'5,000 2PlBR.1cte1 n, 2ba. popular an w /pvt yd & lrg Unique and flexible 2 patio. Beaut ocean vu . story ho m e w ilh 5 Nr Npt Cntr 4' Bi1 Ca· bedrooma, large living c room with VIEW. family n,yon C. ·Sec .• pool, tea- room 2 kitchens. 2 Dia. $229,500. SSS-7139 ftrepiaces. spacious •iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiimila aMAMT POOi.HOME! Exclusive Irvine Ter- lc6oalayPNp. . ..... •675-7060. race 4 bdrm. L1e lot.I~~~~~~~~~ many fruit treea. Nearl= harbor le Fashion Island. SELL YOUR OWN HOME On fee land & offered at S895 FEE-Assist in ads only S215.000. 5'$-9491 fm, sales, escrow etc. PETE R baJcony. plus patio. Can b e re sidence or 2 separate rental units. REALTY FREE HOMES 1'1lfllllllla To\lrlllt D • 1 R. E. Advisory Service V&Slt the SPECIALIST at ReaJ F.atate ~2224 c;J Walkr.r t; lee --------•! Park your boat out front. the Condominium In·•---------•--------- formation Center 642·5200 PUBLIC NOTICE PVBUC NOTICE WATERFRONT HOMES REAL ESTATE 631-1400 Serving all of Oranae Co. TOUCHSTONE RLTY 18582 Beach Blvd H Cal '63-0867 ,, CE 110111 ILlllS ca. $2 $75 -. ..,,, .. PENNY PINCHER AD Prtv•t• lndMduals can now aell any item 0< oomb1n•t1on or items totaling 175 or teu with a 3 hne ad fOt 2 oonaeoutlve days tor only $2 . E:ach 8ddlllonal line 1s 8()1 f()( the 2 days Charo• your Penny Pincher A.tJ or uM your eankamerlcard or Matte<charoe No com- IMfClll 9dt BCCePte<I Cal.-.,__,'" ye•r ed I" ,,.l•t .. _,, .. , 642-5678 ~ILY PILOT ~~~ I SPICTACULAI VIEW in A_c:c&DWaa. ..... CO. 844·9080 2111 IAN~-.UN> • ... Nlw.o«rc:enP macnab I Irvine raalty VIEW! One of the best ln Big Canyon! Private. front-row end-unit on the go tr course! 2 BRs + den - designed for luxury livlng at its best! $239.500. Jane Paquin 642·8235. (Q·l32) '42.a235 ...... 200 901 Oo"r Drlw Harbor View C.nt« lrvlne et Cef!lput Valley C.nter 7SZ·t414 -- OVER 50 YEARS OF SERVICE IWFFS JEWB. Beautiful Dolores End Unit On A Choice Greenbelt Setting. Large Wraparound Patio W/Fount.ain & Exotic Plush Planting. Decorated In Warm Neutraf Tone . ew 1 c en.. u y.. r Conditioned. Flexible Financlng. Shown By Appt. $179.500. "A Joy Of Newport Listing". II I DOVB DllYI 631·1• P t l S E C I' I I I I I LORAS I I I I' I I s 0 M 0 £ 11 f1cm ,.,. Memot•• of Stu· ~-...--............... pot~ "My flru love had 1 I r I ., brac.t on her lffltl M'td I had .__....__...._""_.....~ • btt<•• on ,,.,., '"'h f..,..y I IC U B R E N I time w• ltll'8d -fltw • I I I' I r. ·~~:-.... ~~ VOii ....... 1.-.,. N9. I Mltw • ..... .._ ,..,.. Onr 11M ••· h . o Nn'POJlTltR •JYc~ Uvh11 on a 1au CabrUlo Court. t,~~~pled;..olol. fWnta1o Valley. Open • trvllbt •• ,... ,... a..a l-!. .... ..,.,.. 11.11.NO. C111tom decorated 4 COSTA .. SA Bdrm. 2~ ba remoct•led I 8*m. I M lllOIDe In IO tDlarle dintni ana. Kl.Wde C.lll. oo Alva aiilded ll:itcbeft laland,ex· IA Quiet • aechlded. tra cabUMU+trub com· JUI& .....-.cl'° •. 150. pect.cr .•• ooo. CRAWFORD fl~. . D 157.o701 for appt. qu.wMOIUYB w ....... c..,. Veruflles or Deauvllle w/pool or pool size lot. a..-..... ~ ,._ MO-Ol2e I ~~·i7oo YA TRJIUX C.111. auper cond .. or selll ,... ,. :rr contract no qualifying. 4iOoo $ W0.000 .. $930. mo. In-I frime C'Allta lleH area come, Owner/Acent Du p I ea • 17th st . _se-_sm...;._ ______ 1 amenlUes. Owner will im back 2nd. $112,soo.•------·1 Undal4M45T M1W OM MAUIT I •y & OC 3 Bd.nna., 1 'h bath borne "' in x1Dt locaUon; clote t.o , VIEW South Coast Plaza . l.ocated ln ooe of acbools & freeway ac- Newport'a moet deslra· cess. Great opportunity ble areu. Complete with fot' home or investment. UJe PoOl • Grecian fou.n· SB2.llOO tam. sut1'0UDded by an abundance of trees & enel'd by a wt'lite brlcJc wall to lnaure the uJ- tl mate In prlvacl. Newport elegance at its fineSt. 64&-'1Tll ~ Walker & lee Total Wl'llrom! ' ' f . i+Y .._ ,.t..-y _. ... I . I 1"tr1 M'fa•Cn1..,. ..-.11,..,. ...._ nr.. ~ ...... two .... -.... ..., ::r.=..-:.~=:·1-t: • e,.c:W•• ... .tSll7,IOI. NIW DUPl.D c ............ ~_..:;:''"' n•1•1hd1Nt•1..._... lllWet .. ........ ....... Kew C9'f'•• .. . ....... ., ...... ,. ............. ... Sp~do......., .... ._ ... ...w:\.ew •2U11 • ce pGtMJrty .... C011•Dli•111 .......,. SlOS,000. · . LAGUNA BEACH MYSTIC HUS .... ~ ..... -~ ..... ...... tWt ......, c*orated ....... ~ ...... ... ............... LawiM ..... ,.,.., ... ~ d.ck aacl ,.tfo, perfect for ... .... etdet1ar1 J i A ..._ for tt. •unlfn1 fcnlty ••• 14t.t00. SPECTACULAI OCEAN A CANYOH VIEWS Newt, con lu;chtd ...., ... l9w wtMt •lews, slt•zted I• • prettfJ!= =att.ood. s..... ........... room. wetbw, lbl•aam,,.. J full batllroo••· M••t ••• t• 1ppredate ••• $291.500. · .. CMYOtt CREST a. <A the moll peaffflll condo9 we bave bad the ~ to olfet. Tbe J bdml.. 2~ bath hotne la 10 complete. even tbe planter boxes are au&omaUeally watered! Tbls wu written up ln tbe media aa a model. llfT~ .. tlf ltelc,11 "' ~ .J • ~ l, l • I, 1 ~ -------- NEW 20MIW .. HMS VISTA DELMAR Nowopendally By ownr. l BR condo. Puo 3Br.aBa.20001qft Orangtftrve, aar. all 801-GODelaware amen1t1ea, SO.SOO . W. d Beach N. ol Adema 71A/55H176 Eutalde C.la Mesa. Pre-O>m9letion Prices t;;;;;;;;-;.-;.-;..-;.-.-;.-; Pool, JacuuJ Mt,500. Troy Realty 848-9090 .. ::g~~g:ET· BY OWNER. 3bdr. 2ba. RV aceeu. cu.tom In· Prk 3 br 2 ba. family tertor. •1.000. l ml t.o nn. f\lll c~tdrapes. bcb. ~-9449 bril frpl, all b t·ins, walk 1044 (o ac6oola " 1bopplng. 115.850. "'1 .• Dan "l'..eWia ••••••••••••••••••••••• ._ WOODlltDGE OM'hACU a br boule. bone proper· ty, nice local~. Owner will carry lat. Plin. only. 546-1177. Popular Drlftwood model. 2 Story. i bedroom•. 2~ baths • Need• aome TLC . Motivated sellu at $108,000. Call 640-5112 .\lent. , GRANADA NOTICE A reward has beers of· fered for a ready. willing & able buyer for this WP notch San Mlcuel home in 'l1ae Ranch. To see d ,vouquallfy. C.11 ~. MMT'MCLIAM in thil 3 bedroom +den. two bath lam.UY home! New tiled entry. kitchen. and dinlng area: fJ.tePlace. double carage. lar&e patio and fenced yard. Close t.o schools and abopplna! Only $87,500 Call Bunnle Porter. 'lSZ-l.820 ~~!~HE Heritage Park. 2 bdrm. RNftl 21,Aa ba . upgraded. 11le most popular noor ~~S:Ste!isd~~ j 9.QAIL A.~~! to,. l:JO PJ11U plars built by Ayres. Ml--0685 Features 4 large1~---------~ bedr~. 2"'1 baths. Truly an necutive home ln oae of Irvine's most presUgloua areas. You own the land Ir there are noa.oclation du ... Call FIX UP Y OWNER. Price re·, _______ _ duced. fBr. Roman pool. IASTSIDI Abandoned 3 bedroom• home! NEEDS TLC! Low down VA. or submit your lerms! Call now and talk to RED CARPET -WE lJSTEN! 754-12:02 4ea/bar $95.000. 1 yr llAUTY lae/ol>l OK. S600Jmo. ""---W-cllff shopplng. Anxious. 3 br 2 ba .n...-bl 2 d ·-'"""" .... .-H-.uYV Broadmoor. + 4 br 3 ba "'e-..-HOME vwuer ~arry I n . Remodeled 3 Bdrm " ~ ~·. I I ~ v•• ,_.,.,, 548-7530 Biscay, auper r1 .ot, UTH •""Gu~• +.__-..._ _____ bure!::"J.room.Bltns, 551.2000 eG-Oiu.~ 50 ~ ""' -KESA VERDEVILLAS fplc, . pest bdrm --;----:-::-----:---t-:-=:..:.:::::..:..:..::..:::..: __ fee land + new 2 BR 2 bdnn, condo; no w/~ batb. Oversized WHAnA SACRIFICE!! OCR .a. ... FR~ MOllLE HOD bome + 2 unllt1Cd, DJ. qualify fOC' MOK P'HA pool. Alley eatrance. IAl6AIN! .Beaut. new 3 brm. totally SArw "" • center' ol town o in. Joan. S25K to -..ume; many extras. Owner Plice redured twtce-now upgnded. Alt· 673-4311 PliNCI f« qtllck aale at a.. d tnmferred and asking ~~ "" ,_. .. to -..... ...,.. -... ..-000 upended • new>ly e· ,._11 u... cmly •,900! 2 ~~ 3 A ,... GllF u wry ""' • ~ .,. -· · cOrated like • model; •·•· -....,..1151 bedrms Ii ,iganUc bonus Bin And oc ...... TN a .......... Wtlldi .. ~ EVJIS a ASSOC. .-: by oner. 557-~'n room. Lovely country a-~aut.·fu1 °"" the roclcs below • .._. ..._ to (714113• AJOO ldtcbet\:Spacious maater .- a...--a.. U-.., s'' 000. .--..... ~ MESA vaot =· Covered patio. 'Gas _...,,., • S Bdrm .• 3 ba . OCEAN YllW 3000 aq fl cuatomlzed . TRANSFERRED Devonshire Model an 644-7020 · JasmineCreekPlan8 home nr golf course.~~~~~~~~ SELLER MUST HAVE Turllerock Glen. Ex- AvallNov. By Owner. Owner wtll Can')' 2nd: br. famUy rm. 2 ba. IMMEDIATE SALE! tensive upgrading and 2 I 2J SAN JOAQUIM HILLS ROAD Call&C0-3'22 $175,000.~7196 prime Eslde locaUon. BARGAIN HUNTERS supeuandscaping. • .... ~RT 1R•CH --------compl. remodeled. new CALL7~·1700FAST! nm;.,.,,.,.v m;;;A •-------carpets. drapes. ""'"''"q .. '''""''0"'"""'' ~~tME ~!iii!~ ~~·:ff~;:j~~! [e&Ml;I FOR UASE JAS~ME CRIEB C<ny 3 BR 2 Ba, fplc . CORONA del MAR. Most fenced yard. Harbor. popular Plan 111. One level, 3 bed.room or 2 and Mariners & Ensign den plus family room. school district. plus of. G u ded. lt · flee garage. S600 mo. Im rea Y upgra 5 own Jacuzzi with med occpy. 1724 Tust.m. waterfall. Private gated gu:~ry Harder at community wtth pool and lemlia. CM MW REALTORS. 400E.tria FOR AU COLI OFMIWPORT . id4¥1'tt 675-5511 Want Ads Call SU-5678 South ol Bayside. A rare on quiet cul-de·sac. 3 n...... H - : npd aa~rr r0i sul n8g t ~ =a~~· s':~~~u~ 10 ;3i~e8:~o':F~i .£~~ JUSl REIJtl:m!! bedroom+den. 2 story 6"-0277 Priced to sell rast · Absolutely the most home. PLUS a never va-•-------•.OOO. By Owner. ~ beauU.fuJ Poplar Model cant roomy rental. Pvt._ _______ CecUPl.MB-70lO in Irvine Groves. Soper tt523CAMP115Da·l~E financin1 provided al EASTSIDE 1--------upgraded! Private com·i---------- auti.tantlal savings to 3 Bdrm .. 2 baths, with ATl'ENTION munity with pools. spas.11-------- buyer. low lnta'esl aaaumable · BUILDERS tennis and c:lubhouse. Ctil for.._.., loan. $'1S,900 Laree lot wltb good 2 BR Call today and compare. 644-7211 home & room ror 2 more ~·~1[,ft 11AIL( Y & I\ 'iSIJC 11\ T [ S 4 Bdnns.. family rm.. units. Choice Eastslde 2-sUlo' giant on a comer location. suo.ooo. lot. ~.900. Call 646-4463 Mariner's Cove REALTY R-2LOT ~ Hamilton. Drive by only. 3BDRM2BATH POOL HOMI double garage. patio, A quiet 3 Bdrm home on fruit trees, sprinklers. a large lot. Localed on a $79,900, cul de sac. Family room. lay McC4rcie, Rffr. pool, BBQ pit. copper 548.77z9 plumbing. Possible extra ~~~~~~~~ room in garage. Call :: s.6-5880 ror mc>c'e details. .,... , .. 1026 .. ~.s -HERITAGE . . REALTORS ••••••••••••••••••••••• •Br. central air . apctnklef's, lrl COY •atk>. new ext paint. 33891 Big SUr.861-3351agen1. ... , ... .... IAHCHUALTY 551·2000 TUITUROCK HIUS Outstanding President l>ome wath one of the largest lots ln the area. Park like setling .. c~n ­ traJ air . It's the Plan 3 with 4 bedrooms and a family room . New Jacuua off the master bedroom. Many other amenities. Call today for appointment. red hill ~ 552-7500 • Charm home. 2 Bdrm on Ctirr Dr next t.o beach with separate 1 Bdrm Apt It Olllce. White waler viewa. Gee.000 "'l'.llALTOIS 494.a" I ' -'6. t •'' l ( \, I ., LI • l " I " J COUNTIY RP Mr MIU IEACH 3 bedroom. 2~ bath townbouae wltb f antasUc view of bills, 2 pool9 and Jacuu:L Treat yourself l $89,000. ' A CCUWIU.u._co. 496-7222 831-'0838 ~NII .......... ........... •, , . L -. . ·. -ND. ... i~ ~ • - VIEW Rollin1 bills, borse raadlm, qaiet ~Dtl'y II vta1 • located ia ORANGE COUNTY. Tbe mot.lie home la a CUSTOM MADE VIENG. a&dO. air. all 1--------------~1 ·=·pro( .... ). _.._ .... ........._ ., tow park rent ---too. ~1·12). Prle•d for qulok 11111 'm SJJ.toO .. l£HOME Br. abasurfddecoodo.2 car garage A polio. <le.an " abarp. new noor coverin& ttirougbout $4\5. mo. No pets. lfl0.33:52. Com-r's•w.,..!I before you pay some •tt~ncy ro r lhe .. RUNAROUND" Call CONSUlllER"'S GUIDE. ~ have and are glad they dld ! ! Save ume, cas A money on fee. tOOO'loflewtah KIDS-PETS WELCOME 45-4900 Br. 2 be, frpl. 2 car aar w1epnr. Nr. Back Bliy. Frml din rm. c:pl/clrps. l"nccl yard at sprlnld,n. 1575. .132 Monui Viala. Do• 54'·0IU, eves 54W60I eetc.Ufl'-2BR 2BA ~elUJlt1 condo for lease. New carpeu, appl . & newly painted. No cbJldra or peu.SS2$. ~ -... ,J llblMTAklMG! , rm•sm. Yiew al Newport Harbor. Ph 142.1331 • Bdrm. .2~ ba condo ini--------- Newporl Crest. Onl)'i--------• --------- $725/mo. Call Bkr. OCIANNlOMT _&n_·l_S50 _______ 1 1 Br, l ba, S375 yearly THllWFFS C.1f1"UTIIMJ AVAIL MOW! 3 BR. l \\ ba. $485 Mo. 3 BR. 2~ ba. ~Mo. 4 BR. 3 ba. 1'700 Mo. 4 BR, poolside 1'750 Mo. H.ASl'lNGS & CO. REALTORS 64().5560 Bblfa condo. 3 BR, 2 ba, pool. new carpet&, paint· ed thruout. 1 Yr. lease. No children or pets. associated 8fJ1.)~f"S •'' /\, ... ._.., ] 1' "" ~ • I OCEANFRONT, Ii dlx 3br, W. Npt.16.'iO. MS-"8628 Avail. now!~ Mo. 1......:.-------- Agent 60-0020 3 br 2 ba, W /D, gas BBQ, auto dr opor. nr bcb. $450 mo. SL50 secur & clean.1--------- l. J. T. Bob Marcet. •-'---------·-------------------91S7-2666 UDO ISLE HOME, 3 BR 2 Bhtrs. lge. 3 BR & Cam Super rood. & toe. 1'750 Mo. Agent 6«-ll.33 s.a.-nte 3276 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ocean view, extra nice 2 br condo, own golf COW"Se, $3915. 983-&8'1 col- lect. eves, '714/12.4-8171 -...; (01i~rc!... GARDENAPTS CORONA DEL MAR 2 Br Townhouse, frplc. Pool. teunis. Some ocean & Catalina views. Close to Fashion Island• rane beach. 6"·2611 5GMa Ano 3280 3 BR, 2 ba, fam. rm. Sub. ••••••••••••••••••••••• children. no pet.a.. saso. 3 br 2 ba, 1 mi So. Coast Agent6'J3.S354 :;::~t:~~~e. upgrd Cotto Mno 3124 p :z •• > Vi ; = > ~•-e •••• •••• •1 ., ••• Af lw• ,_,RlllMCI LA M'AHCHAAPTS ••••••••••••••••••••••• Large 1.2"3 bedroom a.o.1"-d 3706 garden apts. D&hwbr, ••••••••••••••••••••••• bltna, encl. gar, gaa bbq. F U R N l S H E D t Pool. Gas Pd. 778 Scott BEDROOM garage apt. ,_Pl_. _6GS073 _______ 1 QIO per mo. S125 dep. New 2 br 2 ba all bltns Yearly. UUftties incl ! (fl>IC, encl. ,'ar, paUo: PreferDOQ·amo\er, qulet lndry rm. $350. male. TSL Mgmt 642-1603 673-Qt66 3 Br, 2 baths. frplc, 2 car Lge .t br. 2 ba, bay view. ear Nrnew. $450. frplc. brown crpt. $600. TSL Memt. 642·1603 642-SSOO. • .......__ ,__.___. ~107 O!lJ'den Uke apt.a, adult ---a • livmg, no pets. 2 Bdrm, ••••••••••••••••••••••• pool & Jacuzzi. 171 E. 1 ·br near beach & sbos-. 22nd St. C.¥. &45-2498 PK> mo. UlU pd. Adults only. 675-5810; 6'2-0393 New 2 BR, 2 all twnbse, w /encl aar & paUo, 1250 1 BR, of( st park'1, winter sq ft. Adlta only, no pet.a. t280, yrty $300. l l.3C W Located at 2se8 Elden BaJboa Blvd, 646-4238 Ave. Oya. 71'/821-8410; 3Td fl r , oc n It b 1y1-aner __ 5_P_m_MS-__ tl06_l . __ batC'Oftles, fab vu'•i.. 4br e 2 Br apt w/1•r. In 16 « I Is den, Indoor aBQ. unit complex. Adlll, no ~·a. see to apprec. Jl'.U. IZllO. lat. tut as de· v15-65'?2 poai\. m·~. r • People who need Peoplf! 1'bat'• what tbe DAILYPILOT SERVICE DIRECTORY is all-about! If you h•v• Juet flied your new Flcttttoua Bualn•H NaMe •nd h•v• .-yet •ub~ed tt for publlcdon, .,.. ... don't forget th•t the llmftatton t1 30 dllya from cMt• of ttllng. lbe DAtL Y PILOT wltl pubtlah iour tt•tement for $31.SO. Our clrculatlon Include• the entire Or•nge Co••t •r•• and .... , notice• •PP9•f In •" ecldoftl. In ord•r to .ubmtt yout IUlement for pubtlcdon Mnd ~·• copy •nd • check totL Y PILOT, P.O. 801 19IO, Cotta M•J•, CA. 12129. We'I do the r••t. '°' tnfonnetlon •bo.._ legal ' •dverttllnt P.••• cttH 142-4321 Ext. 3S2. DA!LY PILOT fice to lbare, establlaed location ln lrVloe. Nicety furn. Real will loci. 4 hrs secy serv .• + all office facil. Please caU (714 > m.cao. -..---------· For more lnformauon amt IO p&.c:e your ad ~all 142-5171 Lalt, male blt =l'e· Nmb&es Im lrilh • Yk. N.B. Pen. Rew • ITS-11115 POUND: Set*-. •le (If Buacbard • Banolq. BB. "' •• , 5JIO ..................... ~. MASSA•! AGUIE MODELS ISCORTS OUTCAU. OML Y Dp."91.lr 631-2140. COUNTRY (MIL *ESCORTS 2' hrs 15'7 "'4t4 -... srey Poodle •P. prox 5f anwers Piertt, Vlvtaa: Crew ol Prclspec. vie POlllOM & Victoria tor fouod your (oat S.UReward&t& em necklace. Write DaUy Pilot. P.O. Box L560 CM 921627. Box 1333 TODAY IS SUSAN OUNO : Golden ROGER'S . =~PllOM cockapoo. neutered. 9fh BfRTHD .&y Well·mannered. Vic A ht U ~DllDS WJlaon/Pomona. CM. HAPPY 2lld" ~ MU310 SWINGS&REFJ'S ---· ---BIRTHDAY CONSTRUCTION P'Ol.md : Small puppy t«· -APT&COIUfERCIAL rier. blk/Wht wearing 2 sut'IU MIGUB. colara. Rlvendaell It '1Aft MORTGAGECO GeronomolSS-0725. LoY• .. I ' 131·7381 661·251 I Found: Fem German , .. -. ._YD ... 'Y Shel>. 3 to 4 mos. Atlanta ~~~ s~ vr9" in-"" • Beach Sat. 980-491>2 --"'"T ... --------•I Call to identify. ••••-·•-••••••••••u,• 642-LOST and let a friendly ad·vllOf ... you In plac:.lng a "Lost" ed. Call Monday thru Friday 8:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. for next dlJ'I paper or call by noon on Saturdq for Sunday'• paper. ...... - ' ~ .. ' ' .. • • ~ .. vt~ .. ?~?.~ ~?~ ••••• ?!~ ~.!~;~ ..... ?!!! ~~~:! ... ~.?!!! ~.?=~ ..... ?!!4! ~~;.~ ..... ?!.~ ~'!.~.·-~ ..... ?!.~! ~!!.~;.~ ..... ?!!! ~?~-... ?!!! !!Ip. leCQ -*9 Ml time ASSB .. S Atn'OllOTIVE •-------1BeauQ' salon IJl CM needs ~tta IFoodJ GIPT~ER DIUYRY DtlTAIY AJOIS ecaploymenL Typee '70 Electro·Mecbulcal. DPll94C• 810kln1 bmr stylilts. Guam + F/time Esper. pref'd. Liqaor wtne lift sbop 1V Dept. F\dl·tlme bra At caav. boapital. Day le "PD-ab 80. Lwl flauree Good soldering aklUs. LOTMAH ~ oppor. '°" bank comm.~. D a y a le n l C h t a • bactaiou.nd • •l>lllty to lUpm, Part·time bra ar· PM Sb.lib. Will train . ....i Know color code, read e:tp!ll''d Newport« llUl. MC-1700 haPdle a.toGi lift WI r8Q1eC1. Neat appear le S&able employment. XJnl EUllOPl!AN Dt.beticlan. scbem&Uca. Mia 1 fr ex· ~ :-;~ ci:rao .~:~ TB.LEIS ~~open for ltiet utslS Jlinl. 541«ll4.-s.n:rp. pd drivtq recent. benefits. Apply. 1H5 P9d8llat • make up per. Good Pt.1 •benefits. -"'--•cal '---w•--. u .. _. ..... --· ,... r--'-•-~-•-··-•-.......... ....._.J. ... .._Ha dw... QJperior, N.B. Equal Oppor Employer .,.._...,.. .._, ...... v ----• peo. ......._. Q.IUIKW ~ .... 'I.Alla& care. ...,__eeper • <LEB.K-Liquor store Harbor Bl. CM _artiat. __ u_e_'_d._MU009 ___ __,1 DICC 25 to~ hours •week. ple oriented. Xlnt I.anti. Excelleat traininC livehllrvinew/priv rm. = aot nee. Sr• -Doc Groomer. exper, pt. _.klDI Mothers. A·l Jrvifte ~731 Some tlutblllty In beaeflls & pleu.ant program. Good OP· Mature woman to care CiOlle&e atudeat very poe. Tor )'OUDI tlm.Se.nJtlaDCallC>.Call ~ cle•n'nl ladY belt•---------• Khedullng. Contact. Mr. working surroundings. portUDlt.y f't advance· fOI' 2 lirla 7 le 8. Salary ot.883-3032 man SlbJslcally •ble in 88l~forappt. « ~ereoeea. Wlah day Dni9ooal ()penlJt&J •t ,Tu.atln & meat. :Ce lluy Poppins warebouse le delivery. Dom!& Sbop Pltime ill Wt. wort by the Job. ~EMBLY lOYCAllVH Newport~c:a. A1ao need one shampoo areyou?833-W7 CUllCnPIST SUS hr start. Muat be Girl NoezP.roec App. 11.uat be steady every IOUS.aoYCI UMTIAGOIAHX 1Ue~n<iue~"S5Jt. Qilde.re/Boulekeeper lmur. Co.. in H.B. seek· blenea.l•ppeartndri~~ .. ~: 1y,mE.l7tbSt.C.K . week.Ml-XM TRAINEES I &IMW ~~~r 3JO Newport Center J;;· 10:30-6:30, 5 daya week. ~tralneefrice~~ crean dri ..... ·-- Y.eMwrttwanted: man t =~~ 83i52oo,EOE. NB. ' a.o-7~ . s:ims::-. Goof c!: ~.Uc.m.&UZ. D~ ill IO'a for yacht maint. <OrExperi~) ,. 640-6444 l~~~~~~~~~lieiiE~AUUTrrvV"iuB".;iii;r-Cc;utttt;;:er Cblld care. M•ture bendlta.83H4.50. DIUVRYPBSOM STUDIMT • enw1aC 10 )Tl exp. Micro •d10llkl w /aome followioe . woman. exper in infant Freewa1 Auto, 26242 P/tl.mepenoatotakein· ......,_-wn ______ --1 We are aeeklnt ln·l·A-trro---------1--------•I Manicures. Aaaialaat. care w/refs, to live·ln C-....W.._. A'fff!f'1 PU'lnray 81 S.D. ventory of ofc equip. HllpW.tH 1100 dMduala for fl.rat ah1lt USIDCAI Benkin.!...1115 Will teach sauoon fOl"approslwkatartOct ScMel frwy,MiaaionVl~. +uai1t in drawing ._.................... pOl1tlona in our Produc· 1 a _ -· melbods. Call 21st Cen· 1, 1225/Wk wk. ~2589 Eun up to saoo per wk. 1-youta for IOC8lion of clc tionl>epartment. Wewlll MECHANIC Wearepresent.1yseekin1 turyBair 842-5381 C: 1i •-11 Low tult.ioll. Placement Deliverymen for early penoanel & placement ACCOUNTANT Sldrt sleft'e type for 75 emploJee ftrm. marine apr er tnowledJ(e pre- fllftd. The~ Com-ftN M0-5211. E .O.E. tuln tbe rlflbt lo · ---'enced Tellers in · · care, ve-...,la1D8 asailt.1Slflle AMoewpspaperloC.M. olfurn.iture,equipmeot. dlviduals ln the micro-Of--PORTU ... ....,I. ~Q;.uMesaofflce. Blueprint person for ok.H.B.area.Rm, . . Permp/t.M.us1.bavede-PUti1loos etc. 1'1exlble elect.roalcslnduatry. ~"' architect'• olc. Do er-bo•rd, •m wa1e. COllECTOI pendablecar&berelia. bra. CaU Peraonael Mgr lf yaU are looking for a Goodflgure•pt.itudeand rGds. Muat be reap. IM()..3046. Ageo/:y want.a brilhl • ~mo.646-584(. for~ Interview, lnte- Comprebenalve com· jobw/aeoodfuture, in· customer relations a Goodtranap.amust.8-6. cmLD CARE Tue" dle•mbit~~-toDrban· J>ellverymen, f /tlme f::: DataCorp,Coeta pe.ny beDefib lnttudine vestl&•te th1s ireat op-must. $3Hr. 631·1700. 1burs 8ft« seh1 for boy Cal a .. """°. •• needed for party rental · 5'6-e080. DllJor' medic81 and den-~I We U"e look· 7 ~ qaimt comm. to com· atcre. Must be 18, aood Draftamln. bai..U.O,, lit· tal. Call or apply ill ~ for a good used car We offer• 1ood stutinl loat Wider · rnemur•te w tabtlit.y " driver a neaL Apply 2025 ing & power design. ________ .. person, 395! Campus medl•nlc, wttb • Class aaluy, complemented CUatom yard needs lead Cleaning lady desired 5 exper. Cont.ct Mr. Newport Blvd, Cost• Eleetri·Pluaera Inc., BUpis Drive, Newport Beach. "A"•motllcenae. You'll b1•pleuantworkingat· lamlnator. Sailboat deck Hrs pr wk, $3.00 llr, DIWIOO.IM-UllO. Mesa. So.s.at.A.na,S40-GH y cn4)~.Equ810p-11.ketbebestolcompany moapbere. Excellent hardware & flnish 9G3257 portunlty Employer benefit.a, the pleaHnt compuy·pald benefiu earpenlera P Squared•---------ook •• broiler, exper. Delivery ID8D for early Drapery AISistaot. with ~ TodQ to work 11/F /IL wortdng condlt10na. Why C:::-Apply la person Bo8ts su-n · Oe•nin1 lirl wanted for nece11ary, full U~e. AM L.A. T\mes bome M-some experience, call •varioaa8CCOWltin&lc not come lo and check 9:00 a.m. and , furniture store. Ptr 12 perm., 1ood st•rt1n1 livery route. Ad.Its only 4M-11151.LBaru. bookkeepin1 aaalgn-JRANSMASK what we have to olfer. a:OOp.m.at: BOOKKEEPER bn.lyflexli ble. S3 Per~· pay. Profit sharing, 2~ bra day, 00 collect·•---------menu. Work close to Apply to Paul Caine, lmmed opening, PIT. App n penon, 1 .... 1 medical Insur. Apply i 11 g . Ms t b ave •DRIVER• your home. Figure CORP. ~N FORD. JWS 2970HarborBlvd Apply ln person, Moi;i· NewportBlvd,CM Mon·Frl 3·5. The economical car. Weatt Clerks to Sr. Accoun· Be•cb Blvd, HB . &llt.e205 CoetaMeaa Fri, 9-10, 3-5. Sulliver s Clerical Moonr•ter . 18542 HBarea631-0l26 ~ootlngfor =.~ed thruoa ~~~~~~~~~J..;;.8G:....;..4'Jt~l;;;.. ______ , m.4200 Inc. 18'82 MuArthur EXCITING CLERICAL lhcArtbur Bl. Irv. DEMONSTRATORS ~ .......... o:.w:t~: ..,,....__ '"-'~• Blvd, l.rvine. ,.......;,_ T:ni!°' typist E.O.E. ~ -"""; .... prod• .... ~ -..--rwua .. a.u Babysitter,2n11.bta/wk lo wbo-.. ;. uauu -~ _.., iDI rec. Over 18. Co Aceountempe •AUTOLOTPBSOM w.tch 9 yr old in my CITIZENS BANK Bookkeeper/Receivable can .. e ocavy Cook in major at.ores, for well vehicles. tUS per hr + ~S. Main, ste 501 Experienced penon or home. 5J>m-8am, CdM Mature peraon full & phones. Miaaaon Viejo Did& Clmdl't l.nt. known bouaewues mfg. incentives. Call Mark, No.Tower,UnioaBank wewt.Utr.m.lmmediate area. C•ll B•rbau Of pennanent responsiblli· ~ Will train rnln exp Top salary, w/train. 751-2888 ID '!be ClQt al Oranle openi n 1-per man en t 'lbompki~. 83S-0570. t.y Dana Point area. Start aertc.i aeedecl. P /fime. Serid ortef li18tory to PO -------- n4/8'3M103 POStt1oe. Call s.Jea lllf COSTA MESA salU)' $1000 mo+ fringe Wanted· deneral office Apply la person Box ~1 Pac P81, Ca . DRIVERS --------formt.erview. . IAIYSITTR benefiu. Send det•lled •....ift .. fi1!"ft .. l~key °": 211118NewportBl.CM ,_90272 _______ 'or .a-·-' tab. Good "or For 22 tb .n-1 resume le wort history ..,.-... ....... • ·-1' ucuuu •' AkN&UooalGuard .be» • ~ ..,,. 'cd'Y Equa1""'--'•ftt lo: 216218 s. Pullman #1.25, der desk, ID a pleuant COOK Daila.l A.aa't,· cbainide. housewives & students. lmtnedopeningaiJlElec-.,::t~~1aJ: £m~iii'Fty SantaA.lla,CA9'l105 Call~'l800ere .. Roura 8-S. F\allorp/time. Xbltpay 4~days, noSaL Salary 1_648-5068 ___ or_SG-_2002 __ _ tnlalc:s, Mechanlc~a, Ad ~__,, ... u oc ... eves ·-------• .,..,. _. __ V--'e Conv. u -p. open. CM. 54&-3000 mlalalration , Com ~-, · Bookkeeper F /Chg ---"'"'' """" DRIVER mmlcaticm « Wealhe BABYSITrER. Airllile p/time. Exper'd Small._ ________ 661 Center St, CM o.NICIM*Ude Ex per' d be Ip In Forecullng. No ex· atewardeaa ndt lovhlg, Banking bua. CM /NB area. Qerical ~. Aa.w.t bousebold&oodaforloc.al perience required. W A.ulomotJve rap ~a to care for 2 MZ-1259 Cook·Housek~j)et'. Uve· Experneeded. 548-5S88. furniture moving co. WW aead you to the LotAll1 :hat/ yroid cblld IJl D1)' home. p•·aJ.JIME Bookkeep1n • StilPPINCf In. Eng. epe.wldnl. room, Cl8.81 J driver pref'd. acbooll. Keala Ir 4r--L.-...__.,,_ 14 Dita. 7 days per mo. ft _...5TI1g _ ClRB., c• tat., bath. TV, priv. entrance. DENTAL ASSISTANT· 768-0Ml. -"'-' + -.50 _..,,,._.,... .... Refs. S•l•rv open . rv MG '"""" ~ o.J-day ___._ Top CHAJRSJDE. s;-.-.. oo ....... ....,.. -· "' Au _ ..... ·--ed ........ ., yr11 rns Excellent opportunity DCl1J s -. ~ . montb to at.rt. Cal "..., ~. ~ ..,,._.. ~873-3145 W.U Part-time 10·2PM lor · ly. Pleaaant olc. Some DllYB Callfomla Air National inl, xlnt working cond.1---------NwptScbCo., lOkeyby for entry level. Part· _utary __ ._644-_m_s ____ , expand e d dutlea . SCodc Boy. f\111 or p/t G1W'd (714) 979-7363 Salary open. Mission IAIYsmEI touch, good figure ap. llme. No exwillperle_~~e COOKS Weatmlna/ HB area. poe. W. Lee&Aaaoclat.es, m.uatorlnfonnatioo. ~~~II BUI L11bt. aipem.e2 t)oys,agea& !'! ~~s::!°cf <Mt tltude, va rted dutleRs· necessary, we tr..u. For Buntia&too Terrace 89Wl.51. 570 Glenneyre St, 10, lloa·W4d·Frl, 2 to tlce (Via l.Jdo). 20 H~ ~~ea~~Si.~ · Excellent company redremeat borne. Some OINTAl.ASST LagunaBeacb494--07S7 A/PAYAIU Allln atlY•T--. 5:30. Mybome, Mesa No. per week. Ugbt typlng benefits lncludlng major knowledge req'd. Will 2¥11>8.Ys per wk. Some Driver, Ught delivery in CUllTl.AIMEE UecllanlcM••dtd Teeuaer or adlt . required. Experience BOOKKEEPER·PUt· medicalanddental.Call tr8in. C.ll 8'8-8811 or Sata.6'2·1050 Hart>orarea. Ji)JJI time Growtna co. IJl Newport Sean Mobile Tune-up 54&-3l.B9 preferred. Excellent Ume, Balboa Isle, on or apply in person: 3952 847-3515. $3. hr. neat appearance, Beadlbaaeedforlndiv. Service. Sal, comm, n · Babysitter ln mJ borne beDeftt.s aad lood work· bayfrootl875-2992 Campus Drive, Newport--,.-__.._-.........._----DENTAL~~ANT gddriviqrecord. Apply 'l · r::se1 Immed open Wed all ..... o tni envtroament. Pleue Beach, <714) 540-6080. -.._.,..... FulJ.-Ume cbnide ual.e· al Master BJn-.r1nt 234 w 11eu accounllnC · · every ~· wn call M.r. Rytmn for ap. IBocti:eel:Jel' full charge, Equal opportunity P/Ume. Sal/Sun alto. tantneeded for Pedodon· FlscberCM~93'73 lmow}~l•t.,!°.! tr0a~e •wt Pbooe 7~2823 for tram.~o point meat. (714 > wanted for aaWJ grow. emp&oyerm/f/h. 5CW58S. Uc ofc. C.M. aru. --------pm. ~-111u•I· 1 ... ey · S.bJBjtter for 8 mo old 6'JS.3130. Ins co. S•luy com· .,. ..... 5.....,. • e 11 548-5588 addlnfl machine etc. Automobile Painters boy Ptr bo menaurate w /exp. '""'" """'~ Cosmetics DRIVBS Stutinl •81.$700 mo. e:an Helper. Pay acconllq to • an n':. ~::r 1...-alAL Please send resume only CORP. 40 people needed to leun Dental Aa.slst.ant Men or women 25 yrs or for•ppt.ScientificDrill· abillty.642-9373 yours. 4r•~s~L0_.... to Stadium Motorsporta,~~~~~~~~~ & tHcb profeaalonal Do you like people? older. KDow the COllst iu Colll.rola. 557-9051. · · B•by•itter needed, -~-~ 920 Glenneyre suite Tr:. make.up tecbniquee. Would you lite the cllies.NeUl.S>aweekor AlktorAllce. Automobile En1lne m•ture, for toddler, LaguuBe•ch,CA92651 ~time. LAURA challenge cl ere.Ung a more. Ounge Coast --------'l\meup Mechanic. Wiii wtdys, my home, own F.qualOpportunity U Y Qeric:al L COSMETICS. For Newport Beach prac· Yellow Cab. 17300 Mt . .,,...SB traJn for wheel align· trans. Non-smoler , lite EmployerM/F/H I 510 S *Jl Cl.Ell appt.call731-0561 tice? We Deed a wUllng Herrmann, Fountain XJa&oppor. iD Villa Park meot. Sal+ comm. App. bskpg,847·5920. lmJDediate apenlnga for Cosmetic Sales. ALOE ~~~ c~~:~~ Valley. lNo of Slater for lndlv. ly, 3000 E. Coast Hwy. =::':=:::=-:-:=::-::=:I•--------experienced busboys. SR. Cl.£RI VERA PRODUCTS. betwo Newbope & ~.!!~plnpu1~al CdM S.bysittermybome.Mon ~ Mr.W'dson.4SR""'1 * Perfect J-b for ~~rielY;.P•Jl 64Be2·1~58 EoeUdJ aper. ~ c --e thr\l FrJ. 2PM·SPIL, " ,_ys. /U& aor C•Y·i--------.._ ear, tuUy paid life-, AJitcwmlff N~ Etem. School LEA BUSBOY •CLERICAL •~ST housewtves. ~1 aft 49MW03eves. med• dental ins, profit s.,e....,. area. 5'art Sept. utb. For uvlnge • Lou, Exper. Full time M 12:30 •--------~ • bollua. Call 1 Experience 5e-8348. Newport Beach Branch •~07• Varied jobs wit~ Ca& ta~ o.HAlthtmlt-DRIVER Rlvride (1) 686-45060 NotN Vl• Lido). Ulbt typlag •--------wttboul aeer. iJl Cbairalde nt lU, Equal Oppor , ~ BABYSITTER. Mature req\&ired. Experience llllbor JDWtw...... olc aWTOUDdlnp. C. to-XlDt p/time job. oon to Newpor".., aalary open, (r. =NJED ~ But Here 8 What la. wom.n. Approx 3 dya wk preJerred. Excellent Accep\.lng appllcaUona day!!! 5:30. m E. 11th St. Costa i.oge beoeflts. no SaL or · _ _._ ......... _____ .... ·HighScboolEducatlon tor 2~ & 1 yr old. Vic. benefi&a IUld eooct wort· forday"nlg.btpo.ttiona. HOFEIS Mesa. eves. Phone Jenny, SI~ O ~.~lY ·<~•2 ~d~~~~~m~~~;L~P;1me~~~ii~~~~;~·~~~5~p~m~.~~'~o~f~t~~~~~~~~~~i~~~~~~!~:TI~~d~d~·~·a~~~~at:·~o2A~1~L~~r~~~ _!!~~~!!!!:!~.J :~~ "-=~: ........ , C~ ~~= Q~ rt ,'40 "8da . PILOI' bwidJet to CU· ·~ ..,_ .•---------__ ~ ~~.... ,._,. 1MP11JAL Bcb MIN. WAGETO~A T. fnaclllcuxper. Salary rien lo Laguna Buch -· n&AUV &Ul.A'elU .... ...--m IL _.... ~'E'mptlf)l'M'-JW"l1Ul."I -No .. ~ nee.-lowa vveo. ~vat• -.ea•. area. Requirea vau-w llaCJIOIC Most ol all.stroq desire -.w alU Pll. SA...,_•t.~ ,.,..,.,. aeanera. 1056 Bayside eo.uoo larle ttat.lca waion •Dd ASS•••S for an out•ta~~ AnF.qu.al<>PPortunity CAFITBIA 372381.n:hSt.N.B. Drtve,Nwpt&b87J.S385 t--------a lood: drivtq record. ........ co. tn llluton camer.. wtth_a auc IAl.YSITTR Employer M /F /H INDUSTRIAL F.qu81 Employer DINT AL-Otn'HO OFC can: VMdo it MMial esper'd entbuala1t1c ll'OWIDI Nt1'PC>rt Be•cb are..~~~~~~~= OJuple to m.:-1: 6S unit MaJe or fem. laterested 64Ml21 &H•mblera work.lo• ccwpOl"Uica 1:-.. 11Gn. • F'rt. Own Bank Gr l 11 . • • l • d •. --------•J :r..~u:f~:aad c,:•:: ID "on the Job trallilu" Aafor w/1m8ll components ·Topcompanybenefiu car . ..,. p/mo. M4·l03S .,.1 a 18Ddwiches, all 1bln1 CLERKS b•ve put Ume~b for labortory worlt. ......._ __ ,,__. ~ al.-man at C.U Dooa Wisdom Barbu&. 1111 --· aV.U. f\lll or ..... time. · Gfat -... to earn & .,_ ..,,_ VVV'I -u For comple&At hlforma· ---------•<Hunt Bch Bruch> efbe r--..:n...... Groaa$650.mo.83l· · Jearn ...... Newport Ctr. Equal()p=unily dexle t1 req'd. Xlnt •t-al B~ltter, mature, D..a~ .&.-J .. •-t:::. Alsoreli lp . ...__,.e "'m ver beDefttt New buUd1ng. .._. cber' 1ru ........ "'"" ... pa)'.CalllM-2331 caos..-CMIA.RD eu-140$. £o , Ola1J. depmcl•ble bacallrd. IAU& IUICI for t.u • 1 yr Jlon.fti J.Olm·l.2 enoo-UJOTrll ,...... -i F. VtJ -H ... _ ·-------....... IDdlYlduall 21Z5HarbarBl d. claqbter, Mon·Thur, ael Office Ooldennate CAIBSALIS 11111 "'"""ua toed.· --...-. DENTAL~-<hrslde DRIVERS Pwmwartr avail oab'. Coat.all v IAll·4 :80PM . Lite San•• Bank 1ozao s. OranpCo.Commlalon OpeninplfowAvallablt ~.~0201,Pr.s:r::~ Frr. s.i open. Frtn1~ RoyCarverRoUafto)'ce Callban511.a830 979•2500 h~oua:i~'c.:b: Paumouot:... tlowae1. plua traln1DI allowuce. : ::l: ~~~ 118Um. E.O.E. =: bcb are•. Call lstatiJll•pplicattcosfor H . ..&n .--211/lllZ3-N81. 2'0JC. Send resume to: John C. exlJer De"'ert' lry·w• qualified drivers for AllemblJ, llt., penn8· AUTOMOTIVE ._.-·-Pinto 18 S.. Ana.belm train. " DAYCARETEACHER ENTAL pictue ll delivery of ~~!.or~~. company •. -•. u._,._..__ IAIT'lteB Blvd. SWt.e105AnaMm, __.,_!d~anaemeto • ......!!' <>P"bo lrvtne.18 or older. EJu>r ~•-! ___."-'•t --'th Rolla Royces. ADolY to -·-· --•TJ com· ~ ·---Ac:cepUQs •ppliaat.looa CA---....._ w pnl m -74.M uaowu ._ .... _ WI Danell Sickle at llo1 llMlllUnte •lap. Call Excelleot opportunity to B«ntta,-• _ aper'd 6artftlder. Day -qua11fy. For lnf«maUOCl · experience for office Carver RoUa Roye. 6 -...,S-Q>M. learn from m••l•r •~ lbUl. A.pplJ lo penon, CUpeot.ert•=·••· ptoouraeanatmarktt D&ltBI man•1er PMitlon ror BMW, IMO Jamboree mechuJc. 5 dar wort l'Wourec.tall ... ofc. l!f.m• J .P . Macs per,forremode COO· orcontac.tt.hepenonnel Elq>er'd,ovcrl.8.P/time ••'tJ busy two doctor Rd .. Newport Buch. week. To~{Volvo Cl• F /Umt w /roht1n1 unnt.10l42Ad•m• t.rad«.131.S olflceat wtmds.8".Sfl.9. practice. Saddleback •ler ln oa VleJo. ~M1Dl~mo. Ave,Hunt.Bcb. tJMaLlmpsonSt v8Ueyarea.n4/830-1115 ... ~---·-----a l:'n min aper. elec· ~~_,:f LICbt at (1i4) Slftf'4. C..11 Mr. Equal()pporEmployer C.SHCAID Gardeo0rove517440 DEJ.J HELP, Full·Ume. 09ft'ALJICrT C1ttk p/tlme. WW tronlt dlrtcllon•1 . ·~~f~~: When you need expert CO..STO F.qu.al~Employer TradewindaDeU.e11ow. forsrowtntNewponof. Muat.bellorover. IJ'ltetna. olt lftduatry. AUTO TRANS Rlill .... 2190 Barbot Blvd, ....tee or repairs1 tum CAUllOlfQAl CoaatHwy,N.B. nee. Autat!qupr llX· FoupptMT-677lH.B. Dll....ntl.OrupCo., llAN, aper PNf~ COlt8 M•a Ca na8. to the Settle. DlrectOl'7 W•fteedlOtGpaalellpeo. lhke JOUr tbopplDI Delivery IMO for puta ta)'prel.831"733 Ciera *1IOR ana. call B.ay Must bav• own toob. l:qua)Oppor~yer. in Clu1lfltd to aolve pie immecllateb'. Call ...._.byusm..tbeDaU1 co. Colt• Meu •rH. Ooemet!ca.&lAslrcardl. QUmu.15'7"°51. ..... ~ probt,em. 85$.CMH PUct Cl.Ua1ftec1 Ads. Full Ume. 548-3443. Want Ad n..wu ... .,. MO-ms. • --_, , -. ._._ ----. --.,,_, ... .-•"• ~,.. . . . ---... -.... . --~ ~ ... .. -...... ,,, .... . ·-.. -.;.. ·-.... ~· ... , ... ' ( ' -.·-· I ___..._... ~w.-.. JIM W_... 7111 W..-M 7111 W.... Jiii W-. 'tt• ......... ••••••... •-•••n•nuro ...................... MilllW~ 71 MIAlllW--7100 W.W... 7111 .. ................... ••• PAIT11MI ~;;i. ...,. ~;;it -~'al. ,,....... ..... u.. .. ,,..w.. leUred Mu, llP• .... • MAll!IYI I B•--w ·-................. • ... ,••••••••·~··••• ... ·;;;;;;.7.·,--· "'!'r'!'. • ,·,....... " .... ""J' •o ........ J'l'oWMllfroa ...,_.___ ?'1C•ranttt1• ALS Coate _.... -E! · .,.. ,..; ~--roo11. ..... &11u1tto OUdn EWrrllilldaJ Uir.l...., ....... _ """"" '' Paltrlc eaoer. req . 8*a • ••bUa& .,_ It' J' *ctr·• •·1 ....... U..111 ~N~'••..._ ._ ....... ;_. .... Law ftnn ..... NHf• ~·:ti· Call Suua. bu Outt&ud1aa·~ ..... , ~ ~-"ell .,1:11 d&Ur • dq...-...;Drhwao u.lllwJMdqnpet" wtllfllW'WlD.,.._• J=n'<•• •••' ........ I•••• •,.•••1•-~•t L'YN. A.lWO. NB. Id• ....,..wecwTpm. llut dtop .,....... °' 0111' .,,....,. ~Mt 'WM,• alealad• for U1tlo1 lll&dt&aD"t•malJnL' lftil • w ....._.. W ArcMt llaftU, &el ol• ...._ 4 da1 wk. • anU to oc:c21maJ'7 l'tklt lo centen. Mutt b' Den. tDDWlit ..Ga. IOI' tale. X1i1t pateatl•' foe' rt,_ .,.,,_. ~· •Hitt•"'' ••d ....,,""""° ~ ~ or lll1 °l::.i Uft ••• ..,.. .. .-....-..caotttruo ·&l ~ •18'fld aper • ~-;o_-M'~:~••'"~·~ MecltaaJc. ~~.=-dazt. f..ark~U:-:ro; .._,,/f~ iwo--.hll~ ~~rc:J"~ 1111CJ1wa.et -11.,. ':;t8fl;J:0br '°,..__.Mor ap'9DNl·d. ffa"7 a.tte1 °'Doti ~"~:·"Ta.m: =~0,:•No8~·~: ~~~"=-"'o0.t. . ,,. ........ ,....,., .. .....,.. • ._...._°' •1 · ' AallJJIGO.mt-J.lln. ~ •mall ma1a1loe fteieboutl.S,1ourowo -~Rd ..!!!~===---f~~~~~~~J MANAfiEI ~·San C1toinw ~ln· co wt Or. bou. CtU for Info. c..a.._. ltltcllO 'ftlsDIUJPililW~Oftft· ~ w. A" l'.llPWt· PAIJ~Tm£ 1 alrfO~k ~= --SICUTAJlY.P/Umett.ir ... fclr Qre.aa ~··Pia· ~ ~4 Sa.19'1a41, .. ,.rtencecl. Ol'UlellorlN\. WW tratn. trrct' M...,tn n tAe Mint TIWI ..._.,_ ..U·~· ,.......,.,.. M6iMS .,...... ~ .,.. °' LYM Jl&CBPT....IJ'YPIST tilt. b' adwflve ct.....1.;..~~--------..-...-~~~--• Onell: 1 ....,.-'--Nune l'llU &!• or pait 8nln11 • Luo l a ~ accunP t.YDilt. .., 1IOI W..idift Or. SICllTAIY .. M&1earfem1 ,,_.....,.. tlmlforPllfbl.ILA6ov• ~~ater> dot. beuuu. ·call NB•toor tmmdl&e OPeDiol for w tspetlen• ::l~ tvtr•I• Hlary. Xlot Baperleact Mt-1Te'f SALISMAM fund ra1aln116ev.lop-c!J.,,. .... p=:aeourabioltlt.I ...nta. ~ P'la&all\P *" • hou.rt ..... _ .. bardwan •tor•. meat otnc. .-cretal'1- L"'! -n -. "" Cou. Center. 4H pnlerr un "'!! ~Accta.Paya· .._.~-b1 .... -.m. to IDtl'*!-S w .,._., ,_ b Rd N a Welk. Elcellflll beMftta bk clan. NMd. ea11r .... -........ CIOIO...., car wltb flat• IP • • ' ud tood worttn& to· coa1clenUo\lt p•raoa lt41¥• • Hu TOJIO wpm, • ••. m. • ~ _., vact~ _... vtronment.. Pleue call ~ Sa Pld wttb DWD· '*' ammt. ltnlOl~~c»-::.. ':a-:a.pealcD MUISIS ~ 1111. CnmlO fOf' tppoblt• hen fer fast DMed J:' ....... Ha4w... :r.bi:. Salary open. l!lltabllabldecaa.forthlll a~•I mmL <n4>Mf-l4'1. MructiODSC:P~~ar1 -llm'Wa&.Cll Pl ... ...-...a.me aDd paalUDDla'1•toPllper lDal ....ma. All ablfta JllPUIALSAVINGS ~ oa exDerleoee W IS tef•tDCllit to J. Ban• . .. fa t •/t•*FY wHk bHtd on H · avail. Apply. uu •LOAN ;:-;w train o,. rt• Oe-efnpJc!fWltlmen· ~Zl. eorooa del lbr • ..... • mr'1 ....-. ---------•=.--JI=· ~.N.&ld-IUO AnBqual~ person. Call tor appt.. ;;:d"'ua.woman. &Um1--"-------lD......_~ Ezpcr.~~~====----1 ....... ,c11t1• a.re:U:: 11. ..:::~ MUISl"SAIMll ~ /PIH -..a Carter 131 PHbloss SICltlTAIY •I-•· .... , n.e tporttwear mt• 11111 ci .. a . drivl111 r•cord. I'• P/I'. All aldft.t. PN llC9"r'IOMIST lallDdWNB. 1(8-1110 llC9"r'IOMIST Call 14'9• v Raad .__ ~ fclr; Ors&ah.t. wY"''P" to fttk witlt ~ dwfa of· PBX ,__ __ Co _,_ .,... /f\lll w. u. loc*ioa for 1lwp _.... IW•,.....,. odl,.W,....laveo. ~to.1tt.1oboys&Dd fend. HB OOQvalelCIOt ADl•trlall unlc• fb..m_..__. 7~ {or S: ~..::!°lilt pillODtowwerpbooea •••MSMOft ~=-~o~Jovolela1. 1irl11~UAll to tPll fbpl&t.N1"'515 ~tullflPtr.C.11 cordl ... 1wltcbbo1rd. NewpGCtBlvd.Clil •tneforou.raalelmeQ. L.&Me fttAntlilltlmlitM :!!~ _!~1~e.for.IN~ .. _...AIDIS 115.aMl Mutt have attractive l al\eeaperieac.belpful -JAMITOllAL -~ ~ -~ lO ..-au~. ln&nl •kllll ~ a~ ve, but oot Ot CHUTY. _.. .,,W.ODMt.llwJ,N B. .._.dwawoeb,part Jail annpaJ* delivery All alllfta. RN'• Day re· PISTC~L II IOOd pbQa. mao.oer. p;m;. Mdtudt. Full at MlalmJ::u~ta1 4$ ;;::=~~~-:;;;-;=:~~~~~~~~!---~top a .. 1-to&alcmnaiamntol Uet BouNkeepen. App. 'l'ra1Dee. &tMd1 job lot X1at b•n•a • at -p/L EQer.crwt.IHralD. wpm. beqJtul. G9lta1 Offtce p/\lmt Hoell ... -4tlcr l\aU ;..._ w I . a defined dl1trld of ly, Newport Coav. dPlpslGd. PTotltabr· n...-e.181)0.'8150.ca1l Appl1 ln penoa Staa· Major medical, pa\d =~ U.-ap prfnS or will cuatomtra, 1oun1 lu-Ce.nter, 1555 Superior in«ls&r«IPblaltb. ~ PerlODQel for appt. d&rd 8boe store, Cll, vacaUoa. amall offtce Aw.. lJll-Jt tra1a ICllMOM w /(toot J~aaUortal ~~ '?f~v·-dependeol dl1trtbutora, Ave, NB lY 9'-12, ~ • Wettem Orowtfl Al· llJJ'IS. aautol. tiawfta, Saiar1 ltU1a at .._. . ._ for -c:all w1-w-•un ~.service, col· --SIS .a•AIS day morn, 919·i0l1, tod.atkJn IDW .,, at com!MIW\lfate &.~.SA ~J~~ .. ~ZIOO LDI· *3.50 br. •·•:ao. led.loot. .._. -UO)'dPeltCoatrol. • Salel ·n&alL Olnc:e JUP· wtcx,.tence. cau Mn G g Ng a AL WA R E EOE. MN311, Tbme qualltled and ln· Earn wblle you learn. . Reeeptioaiat/See to op· ply /Ntklaar7 Jprtathl.. Turner 18M587. M·F. W J:lo'"S• ...... daw .~ ._.__. ftont deall dark 1 ier-Wdeo1Mt.o: llDDMd. OIMll\iD.P oo the Pet Store tometrilt. Pleuam )Ob, l\&ll ft Part Ume poai· or a•nd res.am• t o ~ .,;p.. ~ "'· F\ill'ume • t Part ume J.n• •/Jallre11 JJO w. 141y street 7.3 eblft •13-11 shift. cau FW1 Ume. Prr to Pull. Will t.ratn tlou av au. For appt. Vll1a&e Real btate. ~-m4> ~ IA.rTY pm~Colletestudent pftime • t/Uaw. Irvlne c .... Mtte 84'7·9S'11, Garfield Care ..a.ssza Mtol521or .. zaso !61.trmAaUorlilr. Weat ~ Dlvtaicln. lOlllZ Dale dea. D.p. ar W'lll train. area. WW traiD. Ideal for llCJllCl.U tbtoQabt Friday Coav. Hosp. HB. NewPo1t9t.aUoaen IDc. Garfield Ave, Hunt· F~ appt.. eall Mr. J -....rt.., .wden&.a A oo an4 1 k t .. 1015 PllOl'O expert penoa ln _.Beacb.D41 o..a& Clmee •s 11-F. llumla540-Dl0 cpl1. Mu•t have owa a:ao-&: an as or HUISIS,. co&ortaboperaloa.Cltm R.E.Salea SaM · type so wpm , n trauap Ir phone. Call ~~~tn~~ =~ ~·! ~ " automa~:Ualll1 llSY • Nrmll& MUS PllSOM =3~~=e 8atel ..... Allllts..r. ::~. 3.epm, (710 Eq\Aal()ppc)rtunicy t.raiD~fted person-=--T187N.B. 1MI UDIQue :t,,,..~M•a ft1LLTDIE iq twd. $700.tmo Exper'd. Pre1t\1ioua Emptoyer nel. it.art ~ · Verde la •<ptuspd tnto'' fll5'1-143lforiDW'riew N.8. ~-&M-1700. ext J.P.Mcla M-'===-'-t 11t. Apply, Flagah P ~t .. laer"tl a reloeatloo referral UlllQue retail nursery ,.._,ftnt_ 51.IRlck. EOE. .......... . -~ Coa.. Center, 468 C.U5'1-118i ..-viCe that baa created looklnl for lodlvld\lal ~ .. "'" .. ~ ForbuayaaloG. Fla1abip Rd, N.B . a demand for more wllb indoor p l tot ElectNDica firm ieeb HOl'EL Now lotervlewtn1 for ~12. MUI* Presa Operator·rubber. aaksileoD&e· We are busy 1mowled1e. Hper pre- b&qel' w/seaeral office NOW HIRING DayWait.reupoalUoos.5 ·--------1 Wllltralo.lltabltt.Com· .ad"need beJp! Ex-ferred.ApplJlnpenon ea per. Should b ave Days a wit. ~IO bn. Ap-1 • benefit. Salary d ..1 .. betwn -"5pm u--ur----'-SZ2K ....... '"DQ pany . perlence or new ao••'SA.&•-.as ab'oq commu1>1ca Uve PBX OPERATOR. SPM-M:in Fri. -~ ;:\~ $l2K , .. u~ commenaunte w/aper. ialelpeople may appb'.. ~~---~ akllll. Eatablla h w>ll, Security G_uardl. m42AdamsAve,HB w-.e•SalAdm $20K+ RN'S ~--.•5l>M. AUl'ad.lve(aatiqllel)of· Z901SanJoaquiD m.alerlal requireordemen~ all 1bifl1. Au lstant Call8Q.'1820 Delltm'Jla/Fi.x SUK+ ... ~for ~·tat staff lice Is top qua.li\1 (~ HWsRd Place purcbde rs ReatauranUlanag~ all Travel AIL .$615+ ~ Sbop pie) aaoclatea to Wun. Cd.JI. f~an~V!jk· shifts. Houaelteeft1n1 LagunaBeacb lrvinePenonnelA4!eocy ~~~all~M!~':e PrintPLA11MUll ~c;;t;.:.J:;:dlt SALISWOMAM ~ Mo-~ or P\:Jtten all abills. p ease MOTOR ROUTE 488 E 17tb Costa lleu del)end•ble Is have refs. Some Dre('d ltrlp-5t&8> For -··Ht &Dtlq abop cs. · ~ ~C:~ ~~ Dally Pilot route in ~~ __ 642--e Sklll assessment teats p1i1i .:::'• 18l~ f\lnc· ·-------... ~ 6 =~ I AuOAIAY CLUI Laguna Beach & South ,...__~ are alven. Group In· tiom. X1nt •Ol'IQDI COO· R.E.Sales "Llc.Only'" in antiques. P /T . 1-~.....:....-t-eanen---. -Tu-es--Ft-~1 t,:;~b'~!::; ~~ ;iAG~~~kv:~~! ~~~~-fu~::. ,....... _642-_'lMS __ • ____ _ . t~f:·J~~. ~:!r, S'; =J-a=:c,~ Material control ex-=·~f• in 9am-~·~ oJ=> .... ~~.c=17 ~~koa:a~ General RecQtilnist to BIETAllS fWlth • WlLboat SH l nPISTS PIX LoD& • abort term ... a.isnmen&.a. Holiday Ii vacation pay .· HoapltaU.ialloo pl•• avail. VOLT ., '' ' Ann'•· 1770 JD Orange month gross proflt. $50 l>edlter. Entry level poei-WESI'ClJFF Equal Opporlunlty ....,_ for aaodwich counter. A CM Cash depe>Sit required. boa. Minimum 1 yr olnre Nunes Reld.strY Employer Free trailllo& if you Steady work. for rtgbt •--------•. ve, · can 642-'321 uk for req. Ablllty to •!>rk 1617Westcll11Ste209 l~~~~~~~~~I qu.alif)' rt Mon Fri No ~ftlDl:TAIMtS laborers Rouaecleaners , S4 hr. CirculaUoa. Leave your wlfi1ures and det.ailed Newport.Bea_cb 1: C4014Mt-o660 ~gb~: Hoa1· HoSpltal .JUlll(.llUUt At&JOIS P /T, car neceasary. Name, Address, Phone lnlo a must. Call for 6Sl.o610or7SZ.9118 Pff bowewife or girl for area.~. <Wllh•WitboutSHl NO Fii EYER Gln3ham Girl. 645.5123 Number and Poke of appt.. 540-7839. E.0. E &WQ...eaandwicbabop. TYPISTS How would you li.keTto be HOUs&IEPER ~~~~student or MATSU.AL CONTROL OFAC!/Acadl le• M4-79al, eves. ..!~~~=·~&Jn. 51.AMSTllSS NX a "Permanent em-For mature famlly. Non-""""""..-~·· ClEIJC 8 to 4:30. Wages com-Prr medical WW'&a~e ... ,_... F l Canvas product.a II yacht pcnry" "~ tbe1~?°~ smoker. Llve·in/drive. 1 __. Seattsy Minimum 1 yr expr. mensurat.e. benefits . bUlina clerk, up" rel 1 ~:.!J>J:r fn~0 Ho[e1: gpbolster)' company ln L<lni 6 abort term u-~~~e~ • cc:!e,;; ~ ~ Bch law firm in PoaUo1. batching, ac-Typina 40 wpm. Neut oec.8G-06Sl a.4':i100. Call Chan ~ f:i~::'·a::J:; ~i~!°=~~-01!0u:a; y ~ take pride ln find1ni ekeeper Will share the airport area a.eeks in· curate wtngures & de-Neon. Inc. Santa Ana. pff salee lady wanted O'c»by or Julio Perea. available. E1tpr. pref. Ho1pltaliution plan rtgbt asaig,menu f my specious cstm ~acb t e1U1ent secretary taill. Heavy work load. S31-3374forappt. Pa&e i:u Mat.emlty ln-E.O.E. Co. beDellta. talarJ com-avalL ~·=·-"1etftllus~ ~.~r;aaU':t!d ~: ~/~1121yrl civil llti1a· CE.allOEfor appt. ~7639. Office Maaager, inside aide Rtoaonl 3rd floor RESINllIXER iDll*IJ'&te w/expr. Call 111111•91 .. N,_ ... --• '"' -.:uau tiM. ,_. · · ules. No experieDce F u bio11 I1land NB O>lor' mat.cbhlC or relat-_MS-_ZM_T_for __ a __ ppt __ . __ _ yourallfi~ & peDa~a ~~~~ef.~0 ~Sea ef_,J MATURE WOMAN necessary. will train. _6'4-4729_,;... _______ eel aper., wortln& with s~.,..llT.&IY qu. ca ... ooa. ,. · ' El' I .....1 2S .,.... or older. -•-Depen ~-~ bounofyourcboice. T pri•. beach. Box Sl.2, NB. 3Jl'llexper. Geo p /llme t o we c ome .,....... ,~-REAL ESTATE ~ n:..u. lablllt::!- pa1. llu•t have re Toro. 92830 practice background. newcomers & .contact 557.(1113&or77~. SALES p E 0 p L E aable worker, w/a l1 Gen ofc, lltetypina & ht-_,_. .un -bt .. -d f __ ........ F1e1uble bra .... work with ratloa & t=.,plD . Xlnt company fereoces•car. H k u . or ~ DaUJa, s .... pre .......... .._..... . CICAGl .... G W"'~D. pa-all--' ... caua.11.~191 r ouse eeper. ve·m. Sal w/ex N_,.,a car Ute typing p.& " """&"" _..... """' -n•••ea. Apply in .,..,., . or Weatdil'fTemporary pt-time 2-6:30 -p.m .. l It"/ ~~mens · ~~3095 • · "' traininl. Xlnt !:f:ta· p,,..~-~ a7 n , b l w n app'l. AaUorMr. Siegel. Services child. dlnner prep. CdM. per. 7S2-,r..u .o. '"'" · Expt'd. Versacount " tiam. High com ion IS17West.cllffDr, 67S·735S LEGAL Labelette operator. &beautifulolfice. lOIJl~ROMFG SecnUr)'forNBu)aof. Newport.Beach ........ U--'"--'c F/Ume1 to3:30pm. CM. u.u1oy••&•"l"V .,,_.,... a.y Ro••"'·b. lice W/•tron& t7p1n11~~~~~~~~ -~ -10or7"'"9118 Hou~---• SEC'YJASSlSTnna JllCUYUI 631-3290 ,.._ _, • ''"""""""' • .. ""' .. · 11 t ml ~ ...u~ _. ~-sn· .. a.• dilij!,~~isperson ........ ..-.. ..... CE • .::::..=::..:______ 96M342 W of n -a1ob So of s .. 1 a o p e r o r ·--------~~~~~~~~Al coov. hospital. Day as 'dfice a trator r-uu~~ ·-p-•-•-,induatrial&com-· uor; ~ ' • aec:r«arfal duties for 2 = , .. ,.. Will t in St.ab! l _...... .......,. Garfield, man.aaen. E.O.E. For Seer ._. * GBRU OFC ouu•· ra . e in Newport Center aw Needed ror f/Ume multi· merdal, quali(ied only. Real F.atate EOE .«JOO * ~ii118S -•'---' ed . employment. Xlnt bens. offc. Legalexper. pref'd, family unit. M"st have 1191•1001 IAIMIM& app,call752 · F---~ .. -r ..... h N.U....... ucauon corp. Apply 1445 Superior minimal typing. Testing " a.taurant ,.._....,......_,,.. ... ,~ baapo&itloo avallln stu· Ave N~B. & ref's req'd. Salary background in rarpen-,.._ ...... RY 840UGHIMCOMl1 StnwHatPiuabaBfull Seca1lsy/Recepf cmstrucexp$1.8Kyr. dent 1ervices dept. Typ ' 644~ try, electrical, plumbing Ill'" 1 Join an exclttn1 com· /Um da & igbt m>tmo. Muat type, re-EmployenPay All Fees 1n1 & some letter w!"t HOUSB(El!PB open. · Is other related trade RSO..., 5 pany with Wlllmlted in· :,.ce avJ. ov:r 11 quires ftlinl I& anawering Uz Reinders Agency log. Customer serv1c Aide. llve-ln ror f /time LIVE lN CARE duties. Appliance repair PE " come potential. Free pref'd. Apply at 24402 phooea. Wlll train ln ln· 4020 Birth St, Ste 104 ex per. helpful. Goo workiog parents w /2 for ambulatory elderly exper. pref'd. Sal nego. Must have exp in fine standing building ln kocldield Blvd, El Toro. s uraoce. Contact Don Newport Beach s:J:MJ190 pos1Uon for penon re school children in H.B. male.64.5-0092.NB Applyinpersooorcall cootinental coldfoodpre· million doUar location . ..:.;...;_;;;__.;,_ _____ Mlnlwnat&W-1718. CallforAppt/F.Btab'M tumin& to job m.kt . Hr Own rm & ba, English· . THE llVIHE CO. paratlon. Salary open Jmpwliate opening for Restaurant l-_;__Ycamla."f--1~~~~~~~~~ 7:&m-4:1Spm. Apply speaking, drivers lie. Live-JD housekeeper, 1071 Camelback. pending exp. Apply hl1bly motivated ex-ME&ED'SPIZZA I SICllTAIY North American Cor Must love children. Sal English speaking. Must Newport Beach wltdys, Rm. 2ll, SOS 30lb pe rle nred or lnex· Coob, bartenders I& de-SALES DEPT. SICTY ~. r espondence Schools open.Mi~. Bart. love children.536-2403. ~ St .• N.B. perienced people. Train-livery drivers. part-Ume Balboa lala11d, for 4401 Blrch St. N.B. <Ne , , 1 c ll l t to F.qual Oppor. Employer lng program. TulUon •• openlnll for men & Be pert al a dynamic & lawyer I& developer. oc Airport) Equal Op ousekeeper, mature &.o1Ve-n ° e1e. f. r PART TIME s islanre. Full time women with outgolllg ~'teunftrm!,_N~ Shorthand I& typing ~yEmployeT girl, \He d e aning. help w/H-S. ~tr · Xlnl manager penonallUes and take .. _......... ao aeeking skills. Prime office In babyslttln1 8 yr old. N.B. surroundings. Pvt Medical: Busy G.P. needs Call manager now for pride in tbeir ~·Able a telt starter w /Sood be.rt al activity. with GIRl.FllDAY 499-3605 eves, 552-1813 rm & b~, board & sal. experienced, mature EVENINGS confidential lnlervlew. to work evenings . clericalakll.ls.Xlntwork· out ·growth poteotiaJ. Sell llatter x.lnt typist dyg. Debbl. Good driving rr . Days woman, front office. 963-S671 SZ.70-Sl.OO \0 ala.rt. Ask ins coods & co. beneftt.I. ~s.eao Good tete bOne penonali . . Mon-Frl lm-!Ml · Must be proficient with Adulta with outstandinJ, for Matt oc Jean aft SPll Please apply in person or -------- t,y. Non amoter. $150 w Housekeeper, li ve in/out, Uve lQ. bousekee ...... , priv all types of insurance. liti daily410E.11tbSl..C.M. contad. Sec'y/Bkkpr, Ptr. 11~2. to start. lntervlews at foe 2 yng children, Mon-rm 6 ba Sp~ sptng Xlnt benefits. Salary attractive persona es ADP Moo-Fri. 1 &irl office. c-a ~ 556-6981. Win Frl ln motherless home . .u. ,.,,. ~...,, open. 9684737. wbo enjoy working with Real Dilate RETIREE Ute payroll ~vables, do;' Dealens. 3195 D Ref a requir ed . Mus t ..._.._..,,,.... . . kids. Start at $3.SO per Wrap arouod your social P1•1IOlts.-rices payables. Mus t type. AirportLoopDr c M drive. Eng. speaking Oil· Medical Ptr receptiorusl. boor. Pboe&f.2-4321 Ext. ~IST leC\ldty, 30 hrs wk. ln-18QNewport0enterDr Pleasant atmosphere. _..;_~---'--·-· _.___, ty.64UZ&Bafter7PM. LOAM atrlfriday. Gdoppe>rfor 250,BETWEEN4:~5:0C TowortSattson. aide, llesa Verde area. 2ndf100I' Neededlmmed.5'5-1195 ~.Jri~. li~~llt~~!::. Housekeeper for family !>f COUNSB.Ol ~.\~1f.;~~ :.:.~ PM. Asll For Jitn Newport Beach SportJiit ~lor 8fs~ Mon-Fri, = ~~ Service Sta. Attendant.. . SaUa by ·Sc.tiock. 501 6. Moo, Wed. Fri, detail. A po8iUon Ls avail. for a Call 640-6000 Alk for F.qual Opportunity House. 752-058S. 1--------eicper'd. Full or p/time. Sl.NB.67$-1823 cleaning, laundry, exp, person who baa the de· Mary. Employer .... Have~want .. ..., & LVN AJ>llb', ArcoStaUoo, 17th _::;;~......;..------1 rels req 844-4655 aft 6 sire to Join an acgreasive .. , do "" & lrvtne, CM GllLFRIDAY mortgage loan co. doing Medical rec~ptloniat, SELL idle items with a toaell? a._ Liceosed. P/T, 7-3:30 Secretary·Oirl Friday.1--------Froot ofc appearance-HOUSEPLANT t.mnesa in So. Oran1e busy doctor 1 office. Daily Pilot ClaMified Ad-lt well. Mt-5178. llhift. HB Conval~t Restaurant deal res ex-Service Station Atten- PR firm. Hvy typing. Knowled1eable People Co. Calif. Real estate Salary open. Benefits. Holp.847"35U. =ced typlat, book· dlDt, eaper'd . Day le pboneS Gen'I ofr resp. P/Ume for route .main-lic ens e re q u Ired . Call for appt. Bristol •-.1....1..1-• •-& u-• 6 boetess. Op.-Eves. Full & p/tiJ:ne_ Ap-Aakfor0Dc>nna6'5-7217. t en a nce poalt1ons. Preferencewlllbe1lven ParllMedkalGroup,722 -•--, r-r portunlly to learn all ply,ShellStaUoo.17lhlt 751-4760 to college graduate Balter St. Costa Meaa. Women oeeded lot aspect.I of business. Call Irvine, NB. Grocery cleru, groce ua•w AMnD w/prtorexperintbe neld 657-6300. !f!'!!!.cleantnf Serv. Mr.Hupeft!Me-3391Servi -----... -_.-..._----cbecken, supermarll ~ of finance, real est. In· ....,_,,., ....,_, maintenance men, all ex-Used carsalesmenwant-aurance or accounting. ME1B llADH SICllTAIY Profeu, exper, aerv 1ta- perieoeed. ~g for edexperienceoece!sary. Xlnt 1al/comm ac:bedule ResponaibJe penontore· rll rs NON.sMOKER. Airport tloa m1r. llusl have cbanfeT can 844-8860. Preferably lo straight pe rmill unllmlted adwat.ermetenw/ablli· Wolv area Real Estate A refs. Paid wkly. moo- Gelsoo'allarUC..NB. house sellint!;?cell~t Penonal growth & lm· ty lo deal effectively DOYOUPLAY Development Co. otrice tbly. yrty. Salary. com· compant at.a. med Income. Send re· w /public. Some record nt1 oaGAH 1 oeecta (Uri Ftktay. S/H. mm + ~-Dealer baa 20 CiUAIDS '" andaak orGarth. sumeto G. Kaufman,820 keeping exper helpful. II eo. tbere may be a some typln1. R.E lie y ra aame locallon. r~~~l~bla:~l;s!~ 540 5130 ~~~~·. ~ ·:r.::a~ta~r 8M;~ car.r for you at Oraao bt!pf\ll.5tl).2llO l;;mm>;;;;;; .• ;;;;;i~ra-~-IF.·~~~ .l•1t,l,!.\~~t\,~ ~:'t,\ welcome. Car Ir pboo 921681> ZS571 Marperite Pkwy, e. DOW 't 19alM a.;; AlldiS-...,1•\" req'd. lntne Complex. . .-Dela Proc ... lnl orient-Jltdi"?1ca Jlelper". i.t le ~:,,: •r 1 :.~. ·.~ .-:= U JOO're tn the mal"h\ COSTA MESA for a better' car, be aure t1•• ..... ~~!E!~----~·~sc;iFJii=il,1-. LiidJe~"ittte:;ma;;;;--;;wtth;Mt;;-;a to cbect tbe many autos Female. Top mo.ney. Handyman, genera DUlJ PUolCl .. slOed Ad. adYert.laecl foe sal.e lD ltwltbavecar. 631·2140. rnaiotmanc-., 30 hrs wk-ec.56'1'&. Ctasif1*L I Y • Appl Y 7 pm· 9 Pm -jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Mounter. Some exp w I Warner Dtlve-lo, 736 • dtUll rtq. Must speak & Wamer Ave., HB. 1 _ ~-• ~ ~ _lNld ~ SUO.for 30 HARDWARESALES-full· W.1 ~ t1llllW day tnlnlnl period. ____. Take ad to ne areat time, uper prete~. S•mAnislr g m p 1 o '/ m e n t APl>l:J l.o person: Crown ~I"' Developemnt Dept. BOT Kardwan atcn E. Cat Rapidly growirig savings & loan bas 739.681 . Ad paid by HwJ,Cdll i mm e di ate openings for employer. HAIDWAU experienc ed. loan service Eapr'd p /tlme retall representative & supervisor with aaleaclerk. Lacuna knowledge of all loan service Beac:b•~ functions. Key opportunities for people oriented . person. Excellent b e nefits & advancement opportunities. Contact Jan Hess, Personne l Dept. State Mutual Seip W&llted in Lapoa Belich. Salee etc. ror atona..;,!:rn1lblo 6 wlJ P\.IU t.lme er ooon to 5. llale only. Rk:bard Yeakel Atltlquet -.ssa Saving.a & Loan Asaociatlon. 400 I MocArlls llwl fi(t~ ••c .. Ce f 26'0 '714J IJJ.1313 F.qual Oppor Ji:mployer m/t I ., For Ad Actiln Call a Daily Pillt AD-VISOR 642·5&78 . 42-5618 DAILY PILOT -. ---------.. SALES lmmed tu.II time/part time ule1 le caabier JIDl'bkm avail. ApplY ln peraon Ward Is liar· rlnston Lumber 1275 Briatd CJf EOE ed to ualat ..-../pro-2nd Shifta. Apply al cor- crammloc , nonneJ In n er of C a m p u • & l*tllMlatkln • mstnt. ot llacArtbur. Airport Tex-tedmlcal o. P. documen-aeo, W1I Campua Dr. tation. Word Pf'OCdSWI _N_._B_. ------:t:" ~~~· ~·~! Service Sta. Atteod~nl. Int co. Xlnt co f\ill-Ume. USA Gasoline, ~ll . Phone Ad· 3l50Harbor,CM mlnl1tratlve Services Servtce Sta Attendants, )(anqer for appt. lnte-p/tlme. eaper'd. Lite •rated Data, Co1ta mecb1 kilowlqe. App. llaa. MMOIO. ty, 2580 Newport Bl, CM Salel. exclualve Jewelry boutique. Full time.••--------------• Some IUO&.a. ~Pb' I en Ciro at Sout ~UI a.nm DAY ~t'I &if~,.)" f~ aJO da)' ad Ill tbe DAILYPILOT •YtC• DIQCTOIY DOITNOWI '42-1'71 --·-........ ~---~- SALESCLERK Re tall marine hardware store, beach location, seeks salesclerk with minimum 2 years exper. in marine hardware. National co. w tall major benefits. lncludiq llfe ins urance. health plan, vacatJon & retirement. Call 8 Monisoft. Mon thru Fri ror appt (714) 645-1711 Equal Opportunity Employer ' .... .. ' -~----- f ' -- .. SEE YOUR ADIN PRINT . IN24HOURS Place your Daily Pilot classified ad before 5:30 p.m. and it will run in the next day's issue. THEODORE ROBINS FORD :,>t,CJ HARl\01> l,iVO CO'>IA Mt ,A c,.;J 0010 '64 Ford Ecoooline. 6 cyl. '76 Dtablisbment-Minl, net\ds some work. $900. xlnlcood. S9.000. or best off*:r. 831-9333 675-8473. days; 83'1·11S8eves. Omega 14, trailer, cover. Traltn. TNYet 9170 '70 Ford Van, off road aalls, 5 HP 0 19 . $l400. ••••••••••••••••••••••• wh1s w/snow tires newly '152-0n4or673-921l TENT TRLR. Mont· painted ext, capt seats, 23' RANGER. Fixed keel gomery Ward. Pulls eng rm great. Xlnt buy sloop. Head, VHF radio. easy. $275. 544·3606. at s20001or bst ofr. dinetle, 6 hp 0 /8. other s+M280 673-8970. extras. S6250 Ph 644-8787 _...._ .r-1--,__.... •---------....,-,,,,......, .-..... '62 Greenbriar corvair Hobie Cal 14' · deluxe &Ac.eeuorfn 9400 van. Motor completely ~1. includes trailer. ••••••••••••••••••••••• overflauled. ss:;o. See at all gear, Catbox • must ED: 4 used radials. no 1131 Back Bay Dr. N.8 . aell · P /P633-3132 mott than 30,000 mi's to ~l fll lS" nms <Datsun 5101--------- 1' rt LEHMAN Sailboat. $350. 673-1'40, 673-1320 wpl. F.d, 661.QISl, aft '65 VW Bus F /0 5:30pm. S800 Ca II 675-9507 4 whl drive parts. '74 Dodge Power Wagon, in· '76 Ford 351 V-8. auto, air. cl transfer case. 360 eng, Must sell . at ft. Venture. sleeps 5, auto trans & rear end. 675-55619 galley $2800, stored ln 842·3'92 '73 Dodge 8100. blk. 6-cyl, drydoct.559-5276 i2 Pinto. ALL PARTS sharp utm int/ext, 18' Hobie Cal w /trlr. FOR SALE. Call 67>8195 $3295. ~7MI Sl450tor ofr. 548-8239, 1-aft___;_,6;..:P;.;.m_._____ n...1" '74 ..,.,...e. x.lnt. AT. PS, eves/wkeods. 870-9944. aar. xtras. Nu tares. dys. 831·3'96/Aft s. 521·2745. • WIW1LLIUY YOUIOATSUM PAID FOR OR NOT TOPOOlLAI ITOPCAIS .. ,..... 9161.,_.. ... ,,,.... w..•r•rW ~...,orW ......................................................................................................................................... A DAllYPILOT --------·······.._ t1JO ........ 9740 Pu aut '741 T.,... 9761 ,.,,...... ~UHd ~UJ..t 178 CL~ .... • .... .._.CE ;~;.;::;;·;;; ....... "··;;;;~;~~ ....... ;n-;;;;; .. ·· :;;;·;;;;:·~;.::··;;.; ~~:;· ......... ;112 t;;li;; .......... ,,.,.i ;;;. ............. ;;4c; ~""'" a's.•tao. LUtbaclt·Sllver wltb ••••••••••••••••••••••• •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 7SU'IO'J ~~':'\.'!~ OllS&leAN black interior . Swedl1h Volvo 'T16do CS.Ville. l<>1dtd. ·11 LTD, alr. Z·dr. r(IZtrV0) OW 4 ~· air cond. fl AutomaUc. 1Jr cond .. Mecbaalu now at zut lront Seal. llP All/FM, •lnl ruM1oa • ':"oooMil rniJ!:.D!!!""ma~ • 17491· ~~ eauett• AM/FM ·~ whh 1 Ivan's, aves Htrbor .:!'o!t'f!r .. t '::· ecM.-.:IO 040-705t • '. r. 0 ' A .. J , .. MOWAID Q1"•• .... ~~'ttt ~':.;~ Blvd.. C.M. 145-lllZ CNN tntrl. I~~~ 1u: '67 FOID o..-i. Cl an Ir ••· Doft6QU&Ua. Also, "11 Ptuseota •t mU ..._t orr ... Pn Lr1l Volvo 1425.. blk. 70K P/Wlnd. Pl .al. •le MUSTAHG .. c"1ate, alnt. cond. UfeerllacArtllw. clearanee rrlcea • IQ c.J1Nr·74$1. ' ' ml. tew ulO tt OI, ........ A clanic wath V 111 mGlhv• J......_•Bri9tol> FR&£ ao omatlc All/PM, r\lu 1 rH t -,. ~ 11 /Nd ••l•llt-uutomatlt ,. • l+I. lil•w w/blk ~.~rCH ~-IMliODI °"" &eoC ~Toyata ~h)'l.M =-~or e.t ot· ll.hr h~t. ,,,:.:~~ape, lran1min1on. powu attent.. 4 apd. AiC, ,,_ ..... ...u 1._...,.....5 ...,._ Ult mM. Cc>li.t• • er-. ncUU la • staienai. air condition· A11 1r11 U pe, ~.,. -1 _,,tan,lm•c .. ~ ~· a •a.•llD....._. 'TfVciilwo »UwalQll.4·•P4 .._' .M>-i•M ~blt~ wull tir4!~. M>OD 1• 'CTIOM =:;·/'°''0 ..., • =~ easa. 111.eoo. :'~lr'\~m; ~~-rpa::fl:. =vei!n~f.1',o!: CAD .,, lldo Convert !~i1195 . 14 oauun eto udan. * * * * * * 7IMtOO ,..g'5 ' . ' MPG.tOml ~n~rfia~i:~·a~~ GUSTAFSON Vi TOM 4s.4'a. .W 11 IYI AMD YAM CONYlnlOMI ALLAT .... u .... s Mu1t Hll. xlnt cond. Pwlilie 9750 'nCelicaGTLAl*.kpd "TS Volvo Mr. aoto. alr. make ofr. pvt ply lJNCOLN MERCURY a.keolf .141-0115 • .. •••H•••••••••••••••••• A./C. atereo . ·CB. rr snrf. AM/FM cua .• lo a.sees 16300 Beach Blvd '71 610 Wason. •·•pd, ...... YOU M fTtU~nrloya, w b· llladow. wht •"-"int. m1.0ri1owner.673-6522 Cauo "" Hun=:4•ch ma11. rtd.lo. t4,000 ml'•. ~ "'Y' ::.?.'Mak~ ott!..~~ ... .._..71 '73 HS atn win. A/C, ....................... +--------- WEIUY C&.EANCAIS &TlUCIS CONNELL CHMOLET 2828Harbor Blvd COSTAMl-:SA 546-1200 WE PAV TOP DOLLAR FOR TOP USED CARS FOREIGN. DOMESTIC or Cl..ASSICS II your car IS extra clean see u.$ f1rat IAUBIUICK 2925 Harbor Blvd. Cost.a Mesa 9'19·2500 WE BUY USED CARS CALL GARTH U&edCarMar 540-5630 IOll~SO\' ,~SO\' • LINCOLN · M f fH'.lJRY a.lnl coad. llOGO-ll'f·-wl.. CAMOWM ~ orl'10e00.uU orFtank ';lf Celica. U,000 mi, 5 A.II/Fii. aldo. rf rlck. '77 Camaro LT A/C. U.. 9945 -n P.U. adl mJnor wrort&. ~ • eGlllOUI "'Y' apct, factory matt & S>,000 mt, towner. excep AM/FM stereo. 8 tr. new ...................... . ell -''1 tlJ, 5 spd, CIH Jl.e, louvers, AM /Fii tape oond. S2950. 494-2932 tires. Only S6000 847 2678 u~~ ._. '71 nlllll -.· -::"'--. wl.. -••c--~ mlntcoad. ~ ~ l a. --I ....,v_.. -·· ~ .,.__....,. "'Y' • _., \111.rac ... -._,rn 7 2C ........... ..,... TOWHCOUPE ~ 1_.. ~ ~ warrut.y. l40 H• aft u.H -"' t7Jl ~ _.. "'Y' IPll Sporty Z·door w1t'h air Loaded. under 500 miles. ••••••••• ... ••••••••••• •• 911 $-1pd, aunroot, 9905 condatsonina. V·8. contact J ohn Turo. lt-hrAtUlllllAI it caass.bra.cd eoad.f7000. 711 Toyota Chinook. . automatJc power steer· t213>ell8-9401 btwn Sam "'l'Ga.G~Pl'kJtne 556-18381644..-C. AC/DC converter. air .... ••••••••••••••••••••• 1ng. rallye wht-e ls ~mM·F :=cw~-Jt. s4995--'749l4U .oriaowner.im· 19 .000 mites. $6500 711 Hornet Sportab~ut <36'7ESWI -~-------9-9-5-0 M0-0839 waeon. PIS. P/B, cruise S2ll6 ....__ r ~ ~ mac. must sell. $SOOO. oootrol. A/C. lo mi. lug. • • ••••••••••••••••••••••• •:RT~S~ ~ t.aot11 ~ 836-0315 P.P '72 CBJCA rack. top cond. $3500. GUSTAFSON ORANGE COUNTv·s EXOTIC CAIJU * ••w -.&<RouC ir '729UT, tangerine. 5-spd, 4-speed. rad to and 751-95112 LINCOLN MERCURY NEWEST ... _., AM/FM radio, xlnt cond. beaU!r. Come in and test ck 99 IO 16300 Beach Blvd UNCOLN·MERCURY WyeWllJ.Couhlln ,..,_ ~ ~ Best offer over $9800. drive! (004FMMI •• .. ••••• .. •••••••••••• Huntington Beach DeaJersb1p isnowOPEN our ..-Ol'K e. ~ TO CHOOS1 ~ 675-8783 • S2495 • 1,72 IUICK 142-1144 RAY R.ADEIOE ~:r.~Y~:;, I lt-RCM i' '77 911S Targa, full y GUSTAFSON llVBA Qn,dlt 9920 LJNCOLN-MERCURY $ SPGIUCar LINCOLN MERCURY 16-18AutoCenterDr. • ~-~~°::"Y msaleablecond. lt-;!.~ .. ·~ ~ ~~:iG.dnt-~l~t cond. ls:M>OBeach Blvd. =d.~rir·w'::r.>",;fft ;;~~··~·~~~·.";;;:·;: SDFwy·Lake Forest exit 83&·3171 Nik for Frank or Tom .iD., w Huntlneton Beach aeat.s, padded top & rally Sedan. lmmac.. classic 1 RVINE ,...,~''au"o11MNOMAc111H1 14Z.4U5 lt-c: ...... c.. ir FORCED SALE! '73 842-1144 wh ee l s . S ba r p ! eoodiUon.42.000ongmal IJO..JOOO *u~IEft IMWt.., HARBOUR VW ~ ~ Poncbe 914• 1·7• ap. grp, <STIFNE>. milel.115(). 673-3858 iO Montego for fast !!al~. ~ .. Under New Ownership ,...... "'Y' blk wttan int, xlnt cond. '72 Corona 2 dr hardtop. $2499 '755306 Auto. <916MTV ) 111 MOW .. • $4800/bstolr. 64.H782 Auto, R4df. xlnt. cond. '73 Mo nte Carlo, air. S8SO or nearest . Xl~t '76~pS/R (549PHZ> Fiat 9725 * u.&••OUR ir: , pd 640-0735. ·ctean, PS 6 P B. Landau ~n1'!_.., eng. & bod) "765'30l, S/Rl581RCSI ••••••••••••••••••••••• * """'9VW .. ell 91.2, 5-s • 1'.000 mi's, top. 12100. Dys, 751·3211 .,..,. "'"' '7U08iS/R (028RKM> reblt eng, xtremely '72 Corooa Mark 11. air. Ew.59-55&4. ...... 1 9952 ~· --as clean. alloys, bra & cov· auto. low miles. Nlcatin esMt CM9 'T1.....,.,... 41.P (pwa > • aarao 117 I I .___... a So. "'UI ••••••••••••••• •• •••• •• a..d o. S••-,..,_ -~ er. "500. 675-1019. -. sz100. sst.soea. 'SBC'bevrolet. MOO. •-~ •e.:;s ~ orbestoffer 1968 289. auto. 67.000 m1. Ol.a.~cou..-v.., Over200Flatsto ,..,_ -~ 71911SCT-.ToyotaCrown,xlntcond. M5-0382 very clean. xlnt cond ~ "'' • .. 1.w-tromplusan ~ "'Y' -.,-• 112.00 5114!092. A.alt ro '77 Eatate Wen. fully Newbrk5Sl750.673-3600 .-.... -.. ......_ BUc on blk, lthr. 7'a "8 •• v-..i-..._...... lo ml ·--~ _...' ouutanding selection ,..,_ 842 4435 ~ polisbed. elec windows, ncnu . -. • ....,._, "12 <::bevy Wp. oril ownr. , 6 6 M us la n g New of~carsat ~ • ~ A!C. incredible alarm ?JTOYOTA ~eves•wbds. :c.m~t cond. ures/brakes. Nds some DJ MOMTOlLLRSER * * * * * * ayatem. Bambert stereo c-UA '73 Apo1Jo. 2111'. JC.Int cond. won. $750. 847·3U6aft6. aygt.em. bra Is cover etc. -v Atr PS/PB All r adio ,..-. _____ ._ 9925 --------.,_, ..... •---m· g 120WWame. r.S.A. ....68-1.-.... -230--4-.. --.w-ht-w-/r---.. 9,000 mi Great invest· A real 1as miaer. 4 Orts' -.· .. w "-Ii mpwv '66289.nupaint,reblten1t. »Ill C_;;er~,•--557·2132 i -d ~ h cu ment. $26.950.675-9346 cylinder, automaUc. air afte.,::$51.ms -•• .. •-•••••••••••••••• gd cond. S1800tor bst ofr _ ,, """ nt. ra .• auto, s arp, coadiUoned. UOOJDH > .,._. '780ordobe. all xtru· Air. S4()-0239. Rolla ce BMW '68 850 Spider, runs & cln. bi mi, 1 ownr. P.P . ._ 911E, ........c coodlUon, $1995 -~·-•-W•• l Owner sumf crul.se cnt.rl only -------- l.540Jamboree looks rood. $1100. S3450.67U467 nms cre:tSS'JOO. Nev • • Xint ~•tifti cood Ali N850: Must see.' P.P. '67 MUSTAHG Newport Beach 640-6444 549-3471bet5-9Plll '73 280C drk blu, lthr, •un· CMBll8. 7SU054 GUSTAFSON pwr. A/C. AM /F M. 73M. Dys; l4UISO 8 . Myers. VS. auto. mags, bag t1r~. rf be d 900 UNCOLN MERCURY $2050. e v es w knd s good body. eng & an· '73 2002, 4spd, A/C, '76 12A, spyder, 5 spd, • aut. con . S8 . '72 Porsche 914, like new l8300BeachBlvd, 646-51.35. '77 Cordoba. li.000 m l. tenor. <UPT5781. 5995 AM /FM 1 owner vry mags, AM/FM, low ml. 673-7390,675-1328 inlide&out.lotaohtru. b smf, AM/Fii 8 track. ~ v .,....,9413 • • ....._, red bl" . t lnt S i l f Id HW1tinll0n Beac ... . ,_,. clean. its a steal at $4895. ~·,. • • m • :spec a actor y pa 14z.1144 io Electra, full power. wire whls. many xtras.1--------- 58HU7T cood. SS,300. 675-3544 HOUSE Of Calif. car. Make offer. A/C, nma dot. saoo. AsldDi '6500/baU61-0448 '811 Must, !luper A· t cond. .................. C REVIER 1976BMW 530I hpd air .._. 9727 7l4!52M'725eves. ! ~ '767 963-18&9 C•L 11t.. 9930 aspd~350 2626 HARBOR BLVD. stereo. sunrf. 0mint cond: ••••••••••••••••••••••• IMPORTS INC 77 POISCHI ....................... c Mic 9915 ....................... , ________ _ COSTA MESA $10,000.642-t&llOaft.6 ~Mew'71 ' • 1UUOCAllEIA 119TR6.mintcond .. whlte ... •••••••••••••• .. ••••• 7SCOMl'IMIMTAL ·811 Mustang. mmt cond. WE IUY ,.__,, 9715 HONDA Cars Autborb.ed Mercedes Peru Red. Sports lll*un· priced to aell. 84()-4006 or MAU IV S1200or best offer. -..... • 0 --Dealer root It equipment inch.Id. 835-57'11 fit ....... -. ra ... _, air 846-ll65 USED CARS! ••••••••••••••••••••••• MANY DCIUi n u • --~· -~ We'relhe newCbevrolet '74Capri4cyl,4spd,new ToCIMIHefra.l IESTS&ICTIOM :r:~.~d~~~g~~; TR·250, 1968, a clHsic. cond.. leather interior. '66 Mustang 289. speed deaJerstup in t he Irvine paint, great cond. Mov-IH 'IHI WISTII alarm. Leather seating. Stored 4 yrs. 58K ml. pedlled top, spUt seats. equipped, fast $600. Aulo Center. We need Ing. must sell. $1900. u~1vERSITY .. """/ofr 844 9040 cnUe control. Ult wheel 547·3182 f"'lll 1 o O % Con co u rs ......,., · . · &NEWst.ereo.! <814102>. uke ~~ your used car! 675-0394 Olck..wle • DllSB.S automobile. <982RUZ> __ 9955 JOE 1_'7_s_ca_p_ri_l_I_B_la_c_t _ca_t,_ Ho.da C.-. • GMC 7:~:&f.:-':,~ twbolrVW Volllw99"' 9770 • $5999 ••••••••••••••••••••••• u•c PHERSO... -..1 d pd 1•300ois.r mna... 111111••cH IL ••••••••••••••••••••••• · v c ,_ " lhu•, ecor grp, 4-s • Trwcb n300co1s.1720IW111t• ,._...._.-.. _ ... VWDUNEBUGGY.Rcnt o....gec-t,•1 811 JBta ruiser.power.9 CHEVROLET AM /FM cass. xtra clean. 2850 Harbor Blvd. • SIDAMS AND COWllWJI• _.. eno reblt, sand/1treet S..-. C...... 1e&l. S850tor b6t ofr $3750 /0BO. 752·Sl61 ,.,_._ u c:~n t•<un 14~ ..-435 e 758-9448/644-8722. 21 Auto Center Dnve \.Nit ...... esa .....,........, 72 2601Ser 837tlOny ~ tires. Canvas lop/tow r JASE RS CADILLAC .AUTO CENTER l RVINE . (tt.ys),~·5&54 (af\S). • 7 4 H 0 n d a c Iv l c 7~4=c~!!9'Jo't'l!..ca.=. bar incl. $11.50, 675-4870 • 768-7222 76 Capn n. auto, air. Halchbadt$1200.eves. 7.:42:,~~,n:n!: ·~.~allo:"'t>!:i _or_844-_m_1_bus_. ___ -==~~~E CUt.lass Supreme. Whl vtnyl top. wine body AM /FM s tereo. xlnt 494·3840 7&2t01s...,.,..,. offer.892-3489 r-a..iR'"foragooddeal! " __ .. .,__. __ _ WANTED! cond.. Mwst sell. $3400/ ---------n2t0~ts.O).tn011reot -e ~-~ batofr. MS-9471 Days. ,,__ 9732 73 ~~~k5:fs!.7&6J.8il9"111ue-1970 911T xlnt cond. ~~8:8Uus't"feern~e;:,~ IXtTSevillll«'Bes y •====~=-=;;;;_-I AM/FM. clean $3.000 !l8fj.Q6 Late model Toyotas, 9720 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 71 3IOsa.1s.12441a.., AM/Flltapedeck.bumt ~~r."""•""". -.--Volv06. Pickups & Vans. Dahm 6 J/H GT Hatcbbck, ~4::,\21.1=. :: $6500 494 5453 UIKUI., _,._ LOWMILIACH Callustoday' ••••••••••••••••••••••• S,OOOmi's.UJtenu.$6800. 7&4eOSELIS.<MM11 ~ orng, · . '78 7 pass Bus. AM/FM ExcellentSavings Autos.lntpOfW *DATSU~S* 714-494-41669. 7•4aOaais. 6034190....,."" ..._.. 9755 stereo, cass. tinted, f"'lll 774605al&or t7&41-CIOnd ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....,.w.ctlow ec--GWa 9735 '!;,~s:;.,1;:, °!:~~= TISTDllVEOUR $5800.548·ZSM.8C7·7851 Of All Modlft ••••••••••••• ••••••••• • • Su 'U C •R '75 bus, orig. inside & out, SALES-LEASING '73 Karmann Ghia. 76.000 w2110sL1s. 1m1s11v., ,,_ carpeted, s ha r p, lo PARTS-SERVICE mi. New brks, tires, muf· ·10 2e0Sl1s.. 33231ciawc Of THE YEAR" miles, PP. $4.795788-8275 WeNeedCleanDatsuns! ner . Car b overhauled. ~":'l::Si::=i'::!. Good inventory in stock. Tune up last. 1000 mi. 734.IOBl.IS. oe161 e.... ff11,.,..,whiletheylast! 494-35(l2 74 460Sl.(Ser 114&3JL-_.,, 7?teo46& ~s.;am8el,0:,1" MllACLE '83 VW Bug. xlnt mech'I cond. ssoo. Call 646-0106 • NABERS ~ 2600 Harbor Blvd. COSTA MESA DATSUN ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2845 HARBOR BLVD !~~~ .......... !?~~ 540..6410 540..021 3 Maida 9731 7&4a0Sl1Ser •1581NewCMd MAZDA/RENAULT ·1e46oSL1s.. 00831 Brown 2150 Harbor Blvd. 71480&.ls. mr.1eotn0ohn COSTA MESA ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cost.\ Mesa. S40-9100 '71 Pinto. xlnt cond. • 6 3 V W C o n v e rt . '78 Towne Coupe. 40M ml. Best offer CLASSIC, everyth ing dot. White w/maroon Mommgs67J.5873 75 PH-OWNED vw•11r IMPORTS to CHOOSE FROM! See Our Fine Une at Hart.ourYW 11711 HACH IL. t ... tltwJ• hoch 842-4435 AlfaROll9o 9705 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 74ALFAROMEO GTV. Wlth mags. AM /FM & electric sun· roof. (955WKK). Also. over 30 new '78 Alfas In stock at year-end prices . BEACH IMPORTS 848DOVESTREET NEWPORT BEACH 752-0900 •DRIVEA * *LITTLE ••• * SAVE A LOT SHOP&COMPARE BARWIC K DA TSUN ..... lf 111,dt I ,l,'1 11 I!\• 83 1·1375 493.3375 1978DATSUN CLEARANCE (on 82108, FlOs, & SlOs) miracle mazda 2150H.._ ... d. Costa MHO 645-5700 HURRY HOWAT MIRACLE MAZDA Wl1ll1llE PURCHASE OF ANY NEW 1971 MAZDA GLC You will receive an AM /FM stereo 78 4808l IS. Ma!~ 714&08ll8er 1074JLO!Wo.n., 645-5700 77 480 8L IS. 01"61,._ CO<Wl orig. Gd cond. Strong 1972 Cadillac Sedan leather. $7.100. 675-6138 •----~---- eng. Kathy. 64.S-8213 aft. DeVllle. Loaded. Clean. 673-8'100 i4 Pinto Runabout. Mag • S&.Ca Roll Royce 9756 '74 4aOSU:lller 4e21118-••••••••••••••••••••••• s suns. 646-5732 ,._ 9933 whls, stick. Asking $1895 -...,.-or best orr. 661-<>448 76460111.C(ller 93631NewCO<Wl -t14&0SLc1s. &?121°'.., #1 DEALER IN U.S.A. U1r1 VW convert. cham· 1970CADILLAC ••••••••••••••••••••••••-.---------~ ~~~· ::~~rh; COWEOIVIW . ~.~~~:~~:: ~~~g~~;:.wA~~~~ M11ot,ly of .,. ••• CAi i .,. .,,.,,_ tor eo nu ~ ""'"ne•tto--- CAU fc»AT -MfAUI HOUSE OF IMPORTS, INC. 6Ul-llo& ....... 213/'21-1511 714/523-7250 ~~~VER ROUS·ROYCE 1WOJ~mllof'M Newport8HCll \~---...._ CLOSED SUNDAYS cond . $6500/bst ofr. P\ill power. factOC')' air salO/olr 963-99'70 cass. great ramdy car 642·1490. cond.. Wt wheel. padded · Sl80(). 673-2097 top & AM/FM stereo. DodcJt t935 '64 vw. gd ena. gd Ures. Sha.rl>! <59128TVI. .. ..................... ~ 9960 $650. SI 999 '75 Dart Sport Slant 6. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 536·2291. auto. p JS. 8·trk. xlnt Must sell '?O Roadrunner. '66 vw bug. gd trans cond. $3000/bst ofr. Eves W/440 & rm on bck $700 Saalt 9 7 60 car. $600. CMno 631-0261 Gd cond ••••••••••••••••••••••• ____ 536-87 __ 68 ___ .... • rORtklc 996 s 1972 Sill 75 Colt Wagon. A 1C. ••••••••••••••••••••• •• "7S Rabbit. xlnt cood., de 50,000 ml Top shape .. 77 F' b d F 1 SONETT luxe int. low ml. S lrk '75 El Dorado. Fu lly S23lO 644-0463 &673-0511 ire 1r ormu '-'. V harp' (u.1::EQT> stereo, SZ.350. 498-2006 equipped. $6000. Ca II • sliver blue /blue velour ery s . .,.,.,, . 9fi8.,5484 '68 Polara. Z·dr. PS. PB. Loaded top cond' 27\1 $2995 '77 Diesel Rabbit, tak Rns fl.ne . Gd Ures, nds $5900/ 080 552·5263. Also. year-end prices on over !Be or pay-off, P.P. 1975 CADILLAC some body work. ~5. oew'78Saabs&Turbos. 77().Ml6 ELDOR•"'O 34202 Del Obispo •27 '770rand Prix Xlnlconll MG 9742 IEACH IMftORTS -. ' • AtC. PSt PB. Roma n •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• 848DOVESTREET '78 Sclrocco, AM/FM FUU power. factory air DanaPt.496·1575 red/Whtlandtop &mlr or the cash equivalent '72 MB Midget, x.lnt cond. NEWPORT BEACH CWl!I, shadow, pin stripe, cond .• leatber spli.t seats, Ford 9940 SS!OO. Ph 847·0236 ofS239.00 $1900./bstofr 752·0900 _Ri999 __ ._498-_5454 ____ --t ~0tr,1~~::· ~:!~~Wi ....................... ~ 9970 "FREE'' MllACLEMA.%DA eves673-8937 72VWbubbletop <Adven· wheel & low. low miles. •• · PHIL ••••••••••••••••••••••• $25 ZlSOHarbor Blvd. • d N l bl Mc.v 9762 ture> camper New eng (42078) ' 1975 FORD 69 MG Mi get. ew Yr t ••••••••••••••••••••••• tires. shocks. ster eo: $6499 FORLONG THU .... D£&11RD COSTA MESA eng. Looka gd. $1150. Ph '74 Subaru DL. 4 dr, 44,000 clean $3995. 546-9636 D "' """ OVER FACTORY 645-5 700 M0-6170 ml. A/c snrf. vin lop. FUU power. factory ,m •--------MG ,75 Midget $3200 Must s;h. $1650. or bat '6S VW BUS Nu 1600cc (. cond , padded top, tt ll '75 Spider red, Blaun· INVOICE! "76 9o6mo S-s~1 air. new AM/FM mags, xintcond: otr. 586-5299 en e In e w I 8 mo . ~.,,.,. wheel, stereo tape. split punkt stereo cass. just Plus tax, Ucense & de· pamt, new MicneUn rad, 2:9,000 ml, 548-042l 1,........ 97 65 guarantee, nu clutch pre· ~ • seat!. crwse control & serviced642·738'1 aler added equipment. $ll95.77().864() -r--· uure plate, T.O. bear · ~ ware wheel ..-oar:. ---------•Gooctunti148bounafter l uns Midget, AM /FM ••••••••••••••••••••••• lna •. motor mountl, '61.~~~~cli~ oO <974RLEI ~~~;::Jcm'1: ~ · :m ~-,'1~ ' ali bes t Wit "l"Ulli cood~"95~ ' -· ~ 1• • "-14"9 ,~ malntal.ned, Call Pat '71 .. ,, .. .,En ...... 1 Id ~ old! A.aklng $4900/ofr. vv• fct . or to · pp~ -HEW'PORTDATSUH lft.ftO> nn• n y, .. 768-7554 TOYOIW'.& fer.962.e466 .. _......... ~,_, __ ..._ ...... , s.4()..3666 888DOVESTREET ~. llhr. air, full r, . .,,,_, lt76CADll.LAC .. ,,__c-..._ .... 9707 (Near MacArthur Blvd. ount cond. Overseas 9746 SEE us• '64 Bug, xlnt cond. to NABERS CADlllAC AUTO CENTER . :. ' . 'l •'•t &Jamboree Road) porta845-S880or642-G696 ••••••h••••••••••••••• • tnlde for VW van or bus. COUPIOIV1W 1960 Ford Convertible. -·•·•••••1•9•7•.4••:•U•D••I•••••• NEWPORT BEACH ~~ •--9740 "74 Opel Manta Coope gd. MA19UIS TOYOTA 4M-951A FUU power. factory air &mliner;. l owner. 44.000, _______ _ ,.. _.__... tram uto tran.s inyl ~IONVJEJO cond .• s tereo tape, orta mu. Any realtstlc l9JJ FORD I OOLS 4 DOOR 833-1300 ••••••••••••••••··~··•• top. re~able 5&1~38lO ll 1·2110 495-1210 '60 VW. body poor. rblt .C.bliolet top. tilt wheel, offer considered, located •• 11.t.llit• 'I. ...... ..,, ........ , •• ,., ....... ,().fi•'lliiJll.lf" Automatic trans . & •-.7-7_D_a_ts_u_n_B_2_1_0_, -2-d~r lt75 MR210 clya 4!17·2362evs' Becky engine. Best offer. ~rulae control "-' spt lnN.8. 714/675-3292 THUHDERllRt> AM f'M 2162LW1'> SEDAN Complete with ' · · 19'Z3 <;orona, air. AM/FM 751~150 seats. (6110PCXl. VB. automallt· tr Jn' . 1 · l · sedan deluxe, AM/FM sunroof. stereo crulite Sac. family growing radio, PS. PB. auto, rear Yoho 9772 $5999 '76 LTD. 4 dr, P/W, P IS, pwr steenng & brakt•,, •1£•CHSlllM9SPORTS stereo, x l nl cond. control' & low· mlles. 1978. ~I AMIFM. air. wind defroster. new ••••••••••••••••••••••• MP/B. aUlr-..f!<>e!-~~ pwr window~. tilt wtitt•I. 1tEA 646-0601 (9am·6pm) ask (927NXH).Beyorlease. t3K m1. S2S50t bst. tires. Asking Sl.500. 190llYOU aak~:sart." .... .,., · foctorya1r..-ond ,c11s1om 848 DOVE STREET for Don $3650. 557.0723, 644-8581. wheel!I. r&d10 & tieatt'r NEWPORT BEACH ·70 240Z. classic, 1st yr of 1974 Ml% 450 SE '-ltot 9741 -,-4 -Cell_c_a_ST-. _4_s_pd_._r_b_lt SB.&. YOUI TT LTD II. Broughm, • dr Ser 1~~~~.;J4o!> 752-0900 prod. $3000. 631·5501 Leu than 37,00 miles. ••••••••••••••••••••••• en,(, A/C, s track. $3100. VOLVO, Champagne <'Ir. loaded '76 Audi Fox. auto, xlnl, days.873-74tseves. Immaculate t hruout . lt73PIUeEOT Ph842·9052 SEE us• '70 F1eetwood. gold. btlul ~~'~on~~r0srlgl6!n'!::. alr, snrf. stereo. M&-1381. '77 280Z 2+2. auto. AtC, ~::ea:1:J~'!v:~o~:: WAGOH 1973 corona st a . MAIOUIS VOLVO leather. Ster. tape. 548-3681 493·2'37eves &wknds. AM /FM, like new. S7200. bey or I eue. 042WW>. Automatic trans. It tlonwagon, auto. alr, MISSJONVIEJO AM/FM. air. l6K mi's. --------- 'iC lOOLS .... /f'M 4 pd OwneranJtlous. make of· AM/FM.!~9L9v5z>. $1100. 131·2110 495-1210 &toC'r 673-tsl4. ·77 Granada Ghia. 2 dr. • """ • 8 • fer. 640-7778. 76 M-450SEL -642·5928. A IC. AM t FM. Vmyt top. THEODORE ROBINS FORD 'W60 1-4AR80R Ill VD. COSTA Ml !>A 642 · 0010 low ml. vry clean. &i runs1--------'--•• Also, •781 at year-end OIAMGICOUMTY mags wtnew llr<'~. xlnl xlnt,67~9879 '736lOJ~~~~~~0~on. ~~~:!~o:t':~i.'':i~~ prlcH • with t!iEE i:J!r"Jltcylda~on. VOLVO ~~·~~ ~~~17552·4242 wkdy!! 13 T Bird Full poOAr• 64.2-4686. tape, pwr, windows, etc. automaUc transm on.a -•• ..... 1t· -~.-~...:-.,ew EXQ.USIVELVVOLVO everung! New rad1al!I. W1ff•'!> cJ1 Low, l o w m i les thruSept.30,1978. ....-. r11uuua.__..or With Cabriolet top.7 pt ( XI d /UlungS2i508921832 Classy Autos ·119 510 4-spd. nu tires. gd RCP > B I llACH IMPORTS best.58l·7334 ~VolvoDeal~r leather Interior & .. nto •ul-OI ntron cond.$1200. (502 . uyor ease M8DOVESTREET '788UtCeUcaU\bck,Ltd. lnBuvJ.t~~· /tape l513MWK> rnuast ss~~~~ls ~~'1~~?M ·mTH1rd. full power nu Advertised S48·6670,af\5pm. 2toCbooseFrom NEWPORTBEACH Ed.,full)'loaded,loml'a. DIRECT PECIALBUYatooly •· ' paint s11001b•t 011 a=~~~:~{ -~;~~~'' ::~~~~::' ~2025,.S~Ma~ .. R!fll!llS4~t..-9•9!!11!11.,.. ~~~,~~6,::: 1~1;:~7-~::;~~ in the DAILY PILOT Datsun 710, 2000cc eng. 15 mos okl. AM/FM. 14.000 mi.13.'iOO. 673-3600 nie fastest draw In the .._ _______ ,, W~t. .a Dally Piiot • r C1aulfi~ Ad 642·5671! ' . 1 -- @'"~J:~"l DArLYPILOTORY RolJ 'emoC'fthemarkt't -----~ P/8. P/~lr~°!ier~: ~~l~ond Make orr I .... SERVICE DIRECT With. Classified Ad A.-..... .u.r:n 750-2011 a.ooo ml, *1'75 •94·3645 ----- 7141831 '144 °' m• •-t'/04. h• all about I <:all Now' 642·5878 '"" "''-~a~lll3 ~1 Cl ~~~ 642 5PR ' I • • I .. • 0 8 mcohne av per cigarette. by FTC method. 11 mg 1a(. · mg on General Has Determined Warni~g: The SSurgk~ g Is Dangerous to Your He~lth. That Cigarette mo in . • '. L:i:' =-------:-: .. , --· I ' 1 a I • "B&H,lli~ your Style. Only llmg tar • -.. 7 --• I #l••-••-41• « Advertising supplement to the Dally Piiot. August 31, 1 ~78 ---·· Autumn on the AvefiUe ~-· 2 SOUTH COAST PLAZA * Stack Jacket •nd two-piece taupe 1u1t by 8111 81••• la evallable at I. lhgnln. -. . -. .· 'Six Ps' Highlight fall Fashion Look .. I . Magllin's fall fashions are "padded, pegged, polished, pleated, prairie and pulled-in, accordlng to manager Karen Obrln.cer. "Padded" refers to lar1e padded ahoulden reminiscent of tbe 19t0s. "Pe11ed" describes the new pants styles. Another new fall style, up..._. .. indicates an overall sophisticated loolr. "Pleated., points to tbe trend in pants and skirts, while .. prairie" refers to the newly-popular American pioneer prairie dress look and .. pallecl·ln" describes the new pronounced waisUines and belts. To showcase these fashion trends, I. Magnin has scheduled a series or informal fashion shows for Sep- tem ber: -Sept. 7 and 8 -Eveblng silks and dU.ffons by Hanae Mori. -Sept: 11 and U -Updat· eel day and evening wear collection by Dina.po. -Sept. 15 -The Fra&· ments collection of soft Jersey separates with complete wardrobe look. -~pt. 22 -Day . and even· ing wear in silks and jerseys by Giorgio Saint 'Angelo. Mrs . Obringer said all shows will begin at 11 :30 a.m. The "retro look." a revival of the styles Of the 1940s and Ute "triangle ahape," with wide shoulders and narrow waist are dominating the ran fashion designs, she said. While black ii the most important color for fall, the "Jewel tones" - garnet, ruby, sapphire and emerald -are also popular. I. Magnin is open 10 a.m. to 6 p.m . Monday, Tuesday and Satur· day; 10 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. Wednes· day, Thursday and Friday and noon to 5 p.m. Sunday. Party to Fete Refurbishment Carousel, Original Mall Receive Face Lift A grand remodeling party, scheduled the weekend of Sept. 15, celebrates complet.ion of a $500,000 refurbishment of South Coast Plaza's original wing. Hagidana, jugglers, contests and other activities are planned for the three-day event marking the re· opening of South Coast Plaza's famous carousel. THE CAJtOVSEL HORSES have been "out to pasture'' since mid· July for redecorating. One of the contests being held b a "Brand Yourself a Carousel Horse" competition where children are in· vited to create names for the in- dividual horses. Judges will select winuing names from the entries and name plates will be drawn up and hung on the horses. Winners receive a one.year riding pass on their horse. South Coast Plaza opened in March, 1967 with 86 store& in a single wing, anchored by May Co. and Sears. ONE WING and approximately 90 stores lat.er, the center has become one of the most successful enclosed shopping malls in the country. It is visited by some 16 million shoppers annually compared to tbe 10 to 11 million who visit Disneyland each year, according to general manager Skip Stevenson. "These shoppers don't appreciate anything outdated -therefQre, we saw it necessary to remodel the original wing to keep the center as attractive, appealing and unified as possible," Stevenson said. ADDmONAL SKYLIGHTS, mar· ble tile and green trees ease the transition from new to old wing and add a "newness., to the entire said. New stores also attract shoppers and with the opening of The Ac· tivist, Christopher Bennett, les Must de Cartier, Mark Cross. Forty Carrots, Cardee, Caswell Massey and Halston, bas come a unique elegance lo South Coast Plaza. PARKING to handle SOO new cars will soon be built at the comer of Sunflower Avenue and Bear Street near Nordstrom's and construction also bas started on Saks Fifth Avenue, scheduled for completion in fall, 1979. With the completion of construc- tion, added success is expected at the center becoming "Downtown Orange County." Autumn on the · Avenue pl~·~ewness attracts peop--Jlllr"e._ .. _h_e_-.:I ' ®J \JiB• a e agas1n Has Styles For Infants "Infant clothing ii more lubJon. able than it has ever been," said owner Louise Jertson of Le Mquln in South Coast PJaza, · Le Magasin is a specially shop for new-bom to six-year-old children. "I go to Europe once a year and buy tbinga no one else has," ahe said. Le Magasin specializes in &ills, European clothing, carriaaea, strollers, plush European toys and dolls. They a1ao carry a wide ~ection of band-embroidered chriatentna clothina. Custom bed quilts, bassinette cov· erings and decor ative items also are carried. ••we have a unique, pretty look mostly f01' infants to four years oi age," Mrs. Jertson said. U llquln Is open re1uJar mall Auguet 30.fr 31, 1978 Robert N. Wffd Pr9lideftt end PwllilSNr GeofgeA.L.tca.1 ~~ 5"clal 8'cttona Staff: Bob AY9f8, Vlctof Cook •ndJoMDodd P9'otogrllPMr: ...,..,. tary 11 • • tt 1 " If " D 11 ,. " ' 11 D " ' • • " D tl n • tt ·: 14 " • ) ,,, .. --- SOUTH COAST PLAZA 3 Nike Athletic Shoes let your feet do their thing .... ·~'4;e:c~:cw1-.r-~-e-at-:io0k,jng oo.mfaJ:t. ~.~. ~ .... ~. ---a.i ~---~~~ New tread design for "" •L '"" faster stops anc}quicker cuts on any court. Start with yol.Jf' feet. Then let Snowden-Mize help put the rest of your act together with the biggest names to wear in sports. SNOWDEN SOUTH COAIT PLAZA. Upper Level, Burlocka wing, Costa Me .. fAIHION VALLIY Cl!NTIR/MIHION YAU.IV Cl!NTEft, San Diego Copyd9ht 1978 Snowden-M~ Inc.. ,.. --- .. Sount co~ T PLAZA * Newly opened Merk Cro11 luggage •tore feature• burlwood panellng and glaH elevator connect-ing a tore 'e two levels. Leather Retailer Opens in Plaza By ROBERT AVERS 5"clal ~ Wrfw It's a Jong way from London's Victoria and Albert Museum to Costa Mesa, but Mark Cross, has bridged the gap. Jn the new Mark Cross store at South Coast Plaia, high quality leather goods and specialty items arc surrounded by Carpathian elm burl veneer, floral design, beveled glass and custom designed carpets and wallpaper. Two floors and 2,500 square- reet or Edwardian decor de·· s igned by internationally re· cognized architect Ernest Castro. greet customers of Mark Cross with a color scheme of grays, sky blues and burgundy accents. An Art Nouveau, stained-glass s kylight and a glass enclosed elevator gives the store the touch of elegance associated with the name Mark Cross. "For over 130 years, Mark Cross bas been a fashion leader in provid- ing the public with the finest in leather products," says George D. Wasserberger . chairman of the board for Mark Cross. Mark Cross began as a smalJ Boston saddle and harness shop in 1845 ran by Irish-born Henry Cross with hls son, Mark. The store con· linued to cater to the city's carriage l trade until Mark's death. Soon after, apprentice Patrick Murphy inherited the business and relocated in New York where he began developiq an extensive line of leather wallets, toiletry cases, luggage and other goods. Through the years since then, Mark Cross has introduced several items to this country including the cigarette case, wrist watch, travel hot water bottle, the Thermos bottle and the first whiskey and soda glass. Says Wasserberger, "Good taste never goes out of style. The key to our success is devotion to good tas~e." THE.KNIFE, one of man's oldest tools is still used extensively In day to day living, beautifully ••• Q S xx"" like these exquisite hand crafted sets. made from the finest cutlery steels and providing cutting Instruments of uneQUaled quality. Early American $75.50 And now, Plaza Cutlery ls offering FREE, a 12" Birds Eye maple bk>ck,. {valued at S29.60), wtth any $150.00 purchale of kitchen cutlery, (lnchj(jfng knives. spatulas, sharpening tools, and any other kitchen utensils.) But hurry and take ldvantlge of this wonderful offer, the supply Is llmlted. Knives .YI Other'Great Gift Items History Bows At SC Plaza By JOHN DODD 5'*111 SK"-Wrtter George Was hingto n . Dolly Madison, Andrew Jackson. Rudolph Valentino, Lillian Russell and Sarah Bernhardt all have something in common. They have ordered colognes, perfumes or other produ.cts from Caswell Massey Co. Ltd. Caswell Massey was established in 1752 in Newport, Rhode Island and has been in New York for 200 years. There also is a store in South Coast Plaza. "The store has a nostalgic ap· peal," manager Connie Leoni said. All shelves and cases are from an old drug store in the Midwest and the sales girls wear old.fashioned English dresses. The store is decorated in anti· ques. from the shutters and windo• boxes to the wooden floor ac lights. Swan's down powder puffs, goose quill toothpicks, bone toothbrushes, pure caslile soap, snuff, smelling salts and virgin beeswax a re some of the novelty items carried at Caswell Massey. Prices range from 40·cent sham- poo to $185 silver shaving brushes. The store is on the upper level Carousel Court on the opposite end from Bullocks. "We have imitation facial beauty marks by the same manufacturer who made them for Marie An- toinette." Miss Leoni said. @} GERBER.,., BLADES f© Gourmet Chef $55.00 Birds Eye 12'' Maple Block $29.50 . ~- { STO LOOKS . YOU Featuring • adlda5 First stop for Women on the Go. AtV'~ ~ mst~ 50UTi-i Cu.AST PLAi A 5 South Coast Plaza,C.osta Mesa ~ Copyright 1971 Snow~n-Mlze Companies. Inc:. 6 SOUTH COAST PLAZA * . Gentlemen's Tradltionals At Plaza Haberdashery ·'Gentlemen's clothing and ac· cessories in a traditional vein" are carried al The Livery in South Coast Plaza. Conservative clothing with natural shoulders in natural fabrics is the fashion look this season. "We're elegant, dressy and un· derstaled -we're not extremely faddish and we don't have Euro· pean clothing," owner Alan An· derson said. "There has been a wider accep· tance of the successful. professional men's look lately," Anderson said. The vested look in small pinstripes and berrringbone is one of these popular trends. The "country type look" and af. ter-houra attire also are stocked at The Livery. Shoes are by Frank Brothers and Cole-Haan. . Other name brands in · elude Pringle, Hathaway and Sero. Popular colors in sportswear are "earthy, fall colors," Anderson sald. Popular fabrics include: flannel corduroy, tweed, cashmere and camel hair. ·. The Uvery is open 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. daily, and until 6 p.m. Satur· day. It is closed Sunday. It's on the lower level near • Nordstroms. C•meo •hoe• offers fell ltyl•• In women'• drear •ho•• In camel, brown, palomino, rust end blKk p•t•nt le.U..r. Eddi• Monell ~I• CUUll fttlque cotton corduroY. pants, • bruahed cotton flannel ahlrt In earth tone pleld and • ah1wt collar cardigan, •II •v.llable at The Uvery. Cameo Carries Odd Sizes "We've gone-out on a limb to give women the shoe sizes most stores don't bother to carry.•' That's the pledge of Leo Rubens- tein, owner of Cameo Shoes near May Company in South Coast Plaza. The store carries women's shoe sizes from 4 to 11 in slim to wide widths by Socialites and Cobbles. •'Our shoe styles are more sophisticated this year than in the past. "Styles seem to appeal to middle aged and young business women," Rubenstein said. THE HERRINGBONE SPORT COAT by crlcketeer Winning fashion In 100% wool hen1ngbone. Styled with leather buttons. flop patch pockets and center vent In grey, brown. plue and rust. S110 This fall's new shoe fashions call for a higher heel in several different fall colors. Bordeaux and plum heads the list of fall colors being stocked at Cameo shoes. "Exciting women's fashions for fall prompted shoe manufacturers to come out with new colors, "be said. Handbags also have followedSuit with styles and colors one must "come in to see," he said. Store hours are the usual mall hours. 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday through Friday, until 6 p.m. Satur· day and noon to S p.m. Sunday. SI 11 THE ALL WORSTED FLANNEL SLACK byjaymar First in comfort with a continental extension waistband. Rich. all wool flannel. Light grey. brown. camel and charcoal. $45 'harris & frank for men and women since 1856 Open a Holts & Fronk ChOlge ~t · B<:rMmellcad · \1so . Moster Charge 0< Amerlcon Express. • 3333 Bristol Street. South Coast Plaza I. ... * SOUTH COAST PLAZA 1 Women's Shop features Distindive Styles Ana Macasor's "antique crea· tions'' are among the fashion ideas lo be found at Cardee. South Coast Plaza's newest clothing store for women. Barely one month old, the shop features "small quantities of dis· linclive styles, .. according to managcr·buyer Eileen McKinney. Antique lace and quilts form the basis of the Macasor line, said Ms. McKinney. The lace is used in fan· cy. disco-type tops and vests are Sherri Loudenback model• a hand-loomed Unen four-piece pant•u" by Chertah, avallable at Cardff. ,, ............ " Keep• you on top of the entertainment 1cene,Frld•Y• In the DAILY PILOT hand-stitched rrom quilts, some as much as 200·years-old. L 0 ·o SE FIT T ( N G , so ft , feminine styles are popular for fall, but have a less blousy look than last year. "Everything is slimming down for fall," Ma. McKinney said. Cardee features many clothing lines from Europe and New York, including Carol Horn's Habitat, Espresso, Maurice Sasson, Paula Saker, Loren and Karen Unlimited. Another popular fall trend la the "Joan Crawford" look -wide shoulders, narrow waist and a nar- row hemline, reminiscent of styles of the 19t0s. A SOFT SUEDE jacket trimmed in coyote fur beads the llat of leather and suede styles by New Mexico designers Char and Cher. The slouch jacket, a soft. normal· ly unlined. shawl collar style ls also gaining increasing favor. Popular colors are raisin, egg- plant, pewter. bordeaux, jade and teal. CARDEE FEATURES "40s-ish" rhinestone jewelry as well as bells, scarfs and hats. Among the shop's gift items are gr:andma anu grandpa stocking' dolls and pillow sculptures. Cardee ls open 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday through Friday and 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday. 186 STORES .••. THE TOTAL SHOPPING EXPERIENCE , SOUTH COAST PIAZA ~ Dat1v-101o9 Saturday -10 to 6 • &ntay -12 to 5 ............ __ .,... ......... ""."""~=-::----·------~·--- 8 SOUTH COAST PLAZA * Variety at Cutlery Collectors ' Knives a Specialty · We call ourselves the museum of the mall after all lhe lookers we get an the store," says Dan Delavin, owne r of Plaza Cutlery. An a ssortment of k itchcn. butcher . pocket and coll ector's knives are carried, ranging from S3 kni ves for kids to $1,100 collector cutlery among classic displays of antique knives. One or the displays is a never- been·used set of C<tse doublc-X test· cd kni\'CS which is over 00 years old "We encourage browsers in the store because looking often leads to buying Especially the collectors," Delavinsaid. Knife collecting is increasing in popularity around the U S . he said. ·.'Strict gun e nforcem ent and transportation laws have forced people away from gun collecting and many of those have started col· lecting knives." Popular collectors· cutlery in the s tor e 's Inventory i n cludes handmade knives by Levine, Ran. dall, Fuller , Cooper and Duff. Kitchen and butcher knives by Forschner, Dexter, J.A. Henckels, Case and Gerber also are on hand along with paper, manicure and sewing scissors and game shears. Browsers and serious buyers can s hop Plaza Cutlery Monday through Friday, 10 a.m. lo 9 p.m., Saturday 10 a.m. to 6 pm .. and Sun- day 11 a .m. to 5 p m. ------ look! , . we ve got an eye-popping below cost . and at cost Final Clearance Starts Thurs ., Aug.31st 10 a.m. Mon. thru Fri.· 10·9 Sat. 10 6 Sun.· 12-5 All Sale Merchandise From Our Regular Stock blouses-tops-sweaters -T-shirts pants -skirts -dresses Reg. $10 -$20 Reg. $30 -$40 " ·~ .................. . p•ls-T -slllrt•occ"sorin While They Last! A ll Sales Final -No Refunds -No Exchanges SOUTH COAST PLAZA COST A MESA Gourmet Cookware At Plaza Williams.Sonoma in South Coast Plaza ls a gourmet cookwear shop for the serious cook. "We're not a frilly store -We're for the serious cook," spokesperson Karen Roltmann saJd. t Yet our customers. range from people who don't know how to to boil water to catering services," she said. Williams-Sonoma stocks French copper and aluminum pans, woks. fish poachers, glassware, mixers and.food processors .• Other "unique gadgets" include: mushroom brushes, melon ballers and corkscrews. WRITE PORCELAIN pottery, cappuccina machines, a line of knives specially made for Williams· Sonoma in France, oils, vinegars, honeys and spices also are carried by the store. Prices range from a $1 paring knife to $650 lee cream machines. COOKING DEMONSTRATIONS are held ln the store every other Wednesday, and cooking classes begin in September. The first class, Christmas Fayre, ls held Monday and Tuesday nights and deals with English Christmas foods. Classes on English and Irish foods are scheduled through October. Sport Shoes Carried at Athlete 's Foot Athlete's fool Is no longer just a foot discomfort. Now, there ls a store in South Coast Plaza that stocks popular athletic footwear for men and women. It's called The Athlete's Foot. Running, tennis, basketball, soc- c~r and racquetball shoes are ,car· ------~---........... =~--~----- ..... :A'd1 as. iJ<e,. uma. ~er. New ,.,~ Balance, Tretom and Converse. People really know us for our shoe selection," says store manager Lora Crafton, although the Athlete's Foot also features men's and, women's sportswear. Ocean Paclfn:, Otr 1ihore and· Thunderbolt sportshlrts and shorts are in stock for Men. Fashions by Bill Weather, Ruth Robbins and Hang Ten make up the women's apparel at The Athlete'a Foot. Lettered T-shirts with major col- legiate and professional team logos also are stocked. Jackels, sweatera and ski gloves are among the winter ski fashions that wlll rm the store withJn the next month, Miu Crafton said. The Athlete's Foot operates lOa.m. to 9 p.m. Monday through Friday 10 a.m. to6p.m. Saturday, and Sunday 11 a.m. toSp.m. * SOUTH CO~T PLAZA 9 Penny Baekln demonettate• uee of the C&Ulnart food pn>- ce e eor at Wllllame-Sonoma gourmet cutlnary •hop. I -... 10 SOUTH COAST PLAZA ~ , .. .. , ... --. - .. . International Jeweler Opens New Plaza Store By VICTOR COOK "'9cJal *--...... Les Must de Cartier. a famous in· ternational Jewelry firm, has local· ed its rirst western U.S. store in South Coast Plaza. An official grand opening is scheduled for September 22 at 1 p m . according to manager Jim de Cordova. The store has been open since August 8. "This is the only store west of Detroit to carry the complet e Cartier line." Cordova said. "There is nothing lo compare with it in the entire nation ... The firm was founded in 1846 in Paris by Alfred Cartier and was carried on by his sons Pierre, Louis and Jacques. The firm became known as the "jeweler of kings" in the period 1850 to 1900, designing pieces for 17 of Europe's royal families. Cartier·s New York store, at 52nd Street nnd Fifth Avenue, was opened in the early 1900s. At about the same time the firm designed and manufactured the first wristwatch as a gift to French aviator Santos Ou Mont. In 1917 the frrm made Its famous •'tank watch,'' presented to the cap- tains of the United States tank corps who fought in Europe in World War I. These early watch designs join more recent styles available in the new South Coast Plaza store. Certler'1 exctualve lln-a of lellther good• rang•• from S100 to S1 ,000. The t!rm's tri·eolor jewelry - rose, while and yellow gold in pen· dants. bracelets and rings ls also on display, as well as boutique rings with diamonds, coral, ivory, · bill ho1re malachite and lapls lazuli. Italian suede and leather ls used in Cartier's line of handmade leather goods, which features items from wallets to large pieces or lug· Bill Haire's siren suit. Structured shapes. Softened fabrics. Well· tbQ.uQbt· .. QutRi~~s ... ·1n't0 'focus. "11le-suit in black wool gabardine. Padded·shou Ider jacket 222.00. Slerder side-button, slit·to- there skirt 138.00. Pleated, padded· shoulder bow blouse is sand acetate·rayon 90.00. Sizes-4 to 12. By Bill Haire for Frledrlcks Sport. Sports Shop I.ID mn 2 Fashion Square Santa Ana South Coast Plaza Costa Mesa gage. Designed by Ernest Castro or Weisberg.Castro, New York, the store teatures an exterior or Italian marble. Interior walls are done in smoked mirror tile imported from Paris. Light beige carpeting and brass· trimmed floor cases complete the decor. CASUAL CONCEPTS How versatile the Blazer! A.c.,c._e.uQ.[l{ed with our ,,....._M•~>'s tartan pf aid · s lr:t and 1mpeited wool tie by Talbott, ll covers the social circuit. Open at the neck, lt doubles as a tasty sport shirt. Wool Flannel and twil ... slacks by Corbift in a host or colors to complete the ensemble. SOUTH COAST PLAZA 540-4600 • . - -1 . ----------- SOUTH COAST PLAZA 11 Shoe Fashions Focus on 'Bottom lntereit' "Bottom Interest" is the word in style at Innes shoes, according to store manager Roo Carpenter. "The sole la selling,'" Carpenter said, pointing out that the "hot dog ;tylc. with a hot dog imprinted on the sole and the "Five Speed," with a gear shift on the bottom, are among the more popular designs in men's styles. ·'These are rough , rugged casuals, with heavy bottoms," he added. Another aspect of bottom interest Tammy Jann (left) model• tennl1 outlft by "Fiia" white Terry Tull weara deltgn by Sergio Tac- chlnf, both from the Activist. Activist Stocks Action Clothes Clothing for "active women" is offered at the Activist in South Coast J!laza. • .. ... • · ·· v~-~tve· worrrerr sportswear for tennis, jogging and skiing," manager Terry Tully said. Women's tennis fashion is moving toward a tailored, cleafl look, she said. "Women·s sport clothing 1s more fashionable," she added. "You can wear a warm-up-suit to the grocery store or even out lo dinner.·· Sport shoes by Adidas, Nike, Puma, Titer and Etonic are offered at The Activist. Brand namea ln apparel include: White line nta, Sergio, Tacchlnl, Givenchy and Geoffrey Beene. "We have a 1ood ran1e of shes," she said. "and our prices ran1e from a $2.50 pair or socks to a f'70 'Fila· warm.upset." A mono1ramming service is of. fered and a brus key chain la given away with every pair of shoes bought. The Activist is open from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. daily, to 6 p.m. Saturday, and from noon to 5 p.m . Sunday. is reflected in the Famolare line, which features a wave·shaped sole. "These are ror joggers, hikers and walkers," Carpenter said. lnnes carries men's dress shoes by E.T. Wright, "the finest quality shoes made in America,'' according lo Carpenter. Boot, loafer, moc· casin and oxford styles are avalla· ble and prices range from $60 lo $90. ln the medium price range Innes stocks Jarman s hoes, including dress. casual and bottom interest styles. Prices arc $35 to $45. Bottom interest is important in women's styles as well, including popular designs with wood bottoms and platform soles. Thirty-five to 37 types of wave· soled Famolarcs for women are available al the store. They are priced from $35 to $55. Bear Traps are another impor- tant brand for ladies, priced from $23 to $42. "We have all kinds," Carpenter said , "including high heel, dress and crepe sole styles." Innes also has women ·s boots rn high heel dress stylei. and sheepskin styles for cool weather. "Southern California has become the fashion leader in the shoo in· dustry," Carpenter said, "and we h ave designs by all the local makers." In addition, the store carries a large selection of better grade, high fashion suede and leather handbags to complement high quality sbOes. The store is at the lop of tht. escalator above the Carousel Court. ( 12 SOUTH COAST PLAZA .. ALL QUARTZ. ALL SEIKO. ALL SUPERBLY ACCURATE. THE LADY SEIKO THIN DRESS QUARTZ COLLECTION. No. YL182M-$215.00. LadlH' thin dress quartz. Yellow top/stalnten ateel back. allt dial. Alao evallabt• In whit• $215.00. No. Y JOl<C-$185.00. Ladles' thin dress quartz. Vallow top/stalnle11 steal back, mldnl1ht blue dlal, ttrap. If you must have a magnificent gift, Lady Seiko Thin Dress Quartz is your answer. SEIKO NEW ULTRA-THIN DRESS QUARTZ FOR MEN. A MATCHLESS COMBINATION OF ELEGANCE AND ACCURACY. No. FE038M-$250.QO. Men'• Ultra·Thln dress quortz. Yellow top/ataln· less marDRTf.'1J1~n­ dlal. Also avallable In atalnlau-$195.00. ~ No. FD034-$185.00. Men'a Ultra-Thin dress quartz. Yellow top/stain· less stffl back, pearl whi te d}.81, atrap. Also available In stalnlesa- $165.00. Seiko alone can make the thinnest, most elegant Incredibly thin, incredibly handsome-these quality wateh-for women. Combineihis superb"· --·· -----qoartzwatchErSC!_~--atso increcntrty a~~~M. ··-----r-----• --··-1ashicnJoak withsuper.b-aCCutacy-an<J.you-hav4---..The.demandina..soph-S.UCated.matl will..be..p.mud. --··-· the ultimate gift. Come in and choose from to own one of these quartz masterpreces a variety of outstanding designs. Seiko Quartz.~ from Seiko. Seiko Quartz.~ ... • South Coast Plaza JEWELERS • DESIG~ " ---- r • \____) • THE NEW LC DIGITAL QUARTZ MULTI-ALARM BY SEIKO. Now you can have 3-alarm modes in one compact watch. No. Ff'OOlM-$225.00. Stainless steel, black dial frame, adjustable bracelet. No. FF002M-$275.00. Yellow top/stainless steel back, brown dial frame. adJustable bracelet. Continuous readout on a 24·hour basis In hours. minutes, seconds and date. Tllis-amazing~y accurate watch features an automatic aJarm that repeats every 24 hours without resetting. It can also be set to produce an alarm signal every hour on the hour. Or a countdown of the remaining time with an alarm signal at ''zero." There's a volume control system and a battery life indicator. And it's even water tested to 100 feet. Truly an invaluable·addition tet · · the life of the man who has important things to be _______ . .cem.indedaf eyecy da,v. Seiko.Q~---- . ... ' . .. . ' ... SOUTH COAST PLAZA 13 --.-- .. 540-8101 14 SOUTH COAST PLAZA Potpourri fills an En9ll•h yew-wood sideboard, drc. 1830, et Th• Staircase. Face Flfllt ............... . Soaps, Rare ... Imported ............. . Batb~ ... MedlclDe a.est ...... .. Hand and PNal Paraphernalia ......... . u Hard-to.find Antiques at Staircase "I stock antiques no one else in the mall carries." Owner Arlene Hegelheimer of Th e St a ir c a se in South Coast Plaza cllplained she carries exclusive items because she buys in England twice a year. If customers want items not stocked al The Staircase. she said she is very successsful in finding them . "The type of customer who shops here is looking for the one thing they need to top off their household decorating," she said. "I like my antiques morn lhllll 100 years old," she added. Some people. she explained, think a ntiques only ha ve lo be SO years old. Tables, a Mr. and Mrs. chest and a side board in pine and European oak are carried at The Staircase. Other items include : fine Italian china by Richard Ginori, china bathroom accessories, porcelain by Lim og es. picture frames and sandstone cats. "We're a browse shop-people come here looking for things no salesman can show them," Mrs. Hegelheimer said. Discounts of 30 percent on fabric frames and desk accessories and discounts Of 20 percent on band· painted wicker by Ann Dennis are of. fered during the month of September. Exclusive Shops I. Magnln, Cartier Jewt'lera and Mark Cron luggage are some of the lnternatlonally- k now n stores located In the newest wing of South Coast Plaza, Costa Mesa. Hair aDdScalp Care ... _._.'-+--•----~ SG~&- Brultes ud Combe of all KlDdll ........... . Sllavlll1 8'lppllel ....... . • 0.r Note.IQlnmber -ProdllCU ............. . Oral Hyllene Needs ..... . Edibles for llealtb and Happbaea ....... : . Potpoanil and Aromatlct ............. . Etcetera ............... . Tiie Kllbe ~~~~ Collectloa ............. . ~----••"9·ErD .... ____ _ South Coast Plaza 957-8951 Brea Mall 529-0784 J --' .~ • -Jew•ler Opens in Plaza Bennett Has 'High Line' Styles Five-thousand dollars worth of diamonds. emeralds and rubies will be given away Saturday, Sept. 23 at the grand opening ,of Christopher Bennett Jewelry's new South Coast Plaza store. Certificates redeemable for the stones will be placed in u sheet cake to be served to the public beginning at 1 p.m. "We arc here to service the com· plete jewelry needs of Orange Coun- ty." said store manager Jim de Cordova .. Cordova said the store specializes in "very high fashion, high line" jewelry -rings from $100 to $100.000 as well as pendants, bracelets and gold chains. "If we don't have it we will make it," Cordova added, indicating that the store bas a European·trained jeweler working on the pr~mises. "We arc designers. gemologists, ring makers and appraisers," he added. A wide range of loose stones in all sizes and types is available. as well as watches by Rolex, Piaget, Corum and Seiko. Open for business since August 8, the store features interior design by Ernest Castro of Weisberg-Castro, New York. Walls are of smoked, beveled- glass mirrors with grey velvet trim. Cabinets are of rich burlwood and display cases feature burgundy velvet with chrome trim. Store hours are 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday through Friday: 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday and noon to 5 p.m. Sunday. Pet Ceaaerez In crepe Kebuld top, Georgette blouae end dirndl aldrt end Met¥ Jo Blelr model• gaberdine aldrt with poly·tllk bloun, from Ofenea, SouthCoeatPleze • Dianes Has Sophistication "When ll customer walks Into Dlanes, they 1et a sense of clarity -they don't walk into confusion." President Diane Baskin ol Dienes in South Coast Plua said her women's fashion store is practical. "We are a well -designed, all- around rashion store for the sophisticated young woman. We have casual to dressy fashions for day and evening," she said. "We believe lo fashion, but we believe rasbions have • practical reason. We pull all fashions together ror the customer and show her what can be done," she added. "We've done the shopping ror the customer," she said. Current trends are towards silky blouses and sort tops, she said. Dln· ner and street dresses ln prints and solids also are popular. Velvet, velour, chenllles, textured knits and tweed menswear are popular fabrics, and vegetable col· ors like eggplant and celery are popular colors, ahe said. SOUTH COAST PLAZA 15 J. HERBERT HAL~ewellers A-esenti~ South Coast Plaz •PASADENA • SANTA ANITA FASHION PARK •WESTMINSTER MALL e WOODLAND HILLS PROMENADE e SANTA ANA Fc\SHION SQUARE • THE OAKS • CENTURY SQUARE e PUENTE HILLS MALL • SOUTH COAST PLAZA • BREA MALL • GLENDALE GALLERIA • FOX HILLS MALL • HAWTHORNE PLAZA e ALSO IN UNIVERSITY TOWNE CENTRE, SAN DIEGO. . . -.... ..._,,_ 18 SC>Unf COAST PLAZA * Ivy League Clothirig Sold In Old-World Atmosphere "Old world elegance and old world service" is the motto of Guy LI vingston Ltd. ln South Coast Plaza. Oak, leather and greenery pro- vide tbe surroundings of an old world men's club according to owner Guy Livingston. "We're an Ivy League store for the conservative, professional man," Livingston said, describing the casual to semi-formal men's wear fashions. Although Livingston buys clothing twice a year back east, most design· ing and detailing is done in the shop. "Since I do my buying six to eight months in advance, I have a feeling for the pulse of the European market," he said. "I help set lbe fashion trends in lbe area." Livingston said his medium·bl&h priced, average size clothing is usually bought by 25· to 55·year-old men. "We're a multi.faceted, classic. specialty shop," he said, carrying sportswear, slacks, shirts, cruisewear and heavy weight Items for travelers. Custom tailoring and designing services also are offered at Guy Livingston. "You can design clothes any way you want -you can even have 18 pockets on a suit if you want," he said. Snowden-Mize Stocks Clothes For Southern California Living Casual sportswear for the Southern California lifestyle is featured at Soowden·Mize in South Coast Plaza. Men's shirts, shorts and shoes are among merchandise in the store's inventory. A full line of fashions from Ocean Pacific, Off Shore, Gant, Izod, Ralph Lauren, White Line Fila and Adidas are carried with a variety of athletic footwear. Shoes by Nike, Adidas, New Balance, Puma, Brooks and Tiger are shelved for running, tennis, basketball, football, soccer and men's leisure. Winter ski wear is expected to ar· rive ln the next .month .with long sleeve shirts, down jackets and ski sweaters heading the list. Although Snowden·Mize carries only men's wear, women's wear is available at the Activist, a sub· sidlary of Snowden· Mize. ROOTEN'S An imported trnditionnl English Wicker Picnic Set that comes with complete service for four, includes two thermos bottles and two large food containers, $95.00. Comes In a smaller size se rvice for two. $55.00. Also. a larger service for.six, $125 00. ROOTEN'S offers on unparalleled selection of unusual gifts. ROOTEN'S LUGGl\GE STORES SOUTH COAST PLAZA Upper Level. Carouatl Coon 540·3110 ANAHEJM PLAZA l doon from Robin'IOO's . 956-1180 WESTMINSTER MALL Urrcr Level. next 10 May Co. 898·3331 Guy Uvlngaton models en Engllah wool twlll blazer et his store. HeMlwa ... ....._,_... Lm V~ N.1. LonQ 8eoch, CA ~3 ""'\• '-. •/·1· ,··.,• -~ '•\ * SOUTH COAST PLAZA 1 l Best Year for Maternity Styles at Page Boy "Women's maternity fashions have come a long way in the last 40 years," says Page Boy Maternity manager Virginia Bell. That's when the shop was originally started by two sisters in Dallas. Today's fashions would as· tound them, she satd. "This Is the best yur we've ever hud in terms of real good-looking clothes," s he said. Maternity fas hions for fall are similar to regular styles in vogue. U>ng dresses. separates and group coordinates are included in t h e inventory al Page Boy Mat<'rnily. "Maternity is such a short time In a women's life that it's more economical to dress in coordinates. ·'It doesn 'l make sense to wear something a few months that Is not in style with the rest of a woman's wear and Isn't easily mixed and m<.1tchcd," Ms Bell said. All fashions in the store carry lht! Page Boy label and are manufac. lured in sets or groups so coordina tlon is easy. "There are corduroy, tweed and suede groups that come complete with blouse, pantsu1t. jumper and even hats." Pants range f1om $20 to $24, tops from S19 to $30, dresses from $33 to S88 and pantsuits from $41 lo $56. Page Boy Maternity shop is local· ed near Nordstrom's on the upper level of South Coast Plaza. Domestic, European Tailoring Featured at Gentry, Ltd. European taHoring in suits and shirts prevails at Gentry. Ltd. Although the shop has domestic styles by Hammonton Park and Le Baron, European styling by such prominent designers as Yves St. Laurent and Jack Belline is fcall.1rcd. "The European suits have more suppressed waists on the coals and lighte r fitting pants with narrow, cu mess bottoms," according to store manager John Conte. Located on South Coast Plaza's lower level,-near May Co .. the store is open 10 a .m. to 9 p.m Monday through Frid~y ; 10 a .m . lo~ p.m. Saturday and noon to 5 p m. Sun· day. High fashion slacks by Angel 's Flight are available at Gentry in a variety of styles. They have flared legs and come in stretchabl e polyester fabrics. Sport shirts by Roland also are on hand, featuring polyester fabrics and form·liUlng European styling. The shop also carries Augie shirts. with styling and fabrics similar to the Roland designs. Shirts in more mature styling are by Joel while dress shirts by Ex· cello are also in stock. Accessories at Gentry, Ltd. in· elude belts and ties by Don Loper, Roland and Pierre Cardin. Kim Moyer we•r• four-plec. beige polyHttr-cotton corduroy outfit from Pege Boy. SALE! ....-::: ... \JIS So,.. t~·-·vo WILLIAMS-SONOMA (i ~ 1; South Coast Plala ~ lllJ ~ Beautiful Hand rxiinted wicker --~mt~•· trays, planters baskets and more in vibrant colors 200/o off the staircase South Coaat PIH• '-" Ln".t !'kw.....,.. flt' 549·8'148 Lovely Frames in hearts, ovals and squares. Many colors, 3333 Bristol Street Costa Mesa CA 92626 "'"'DE o::l, CLASSES FOR COOKS patterns and . SEPT. II MEDIEVAL EHaUSH FUST fabrics to A lesson in the history of Eng II sh food and their products Ch0084lffo~---J-~-gjiPT::-n'"Cl'91STl ... s-11'*1'11~~~~~~~~~ 3001 0 Sept;mber may .seem too early to stat1 thinking about Christmas but 11 you are -1< an aficionado of English oook81Y time Is very much of the essence orr Antique s. one of a kind <•ollcctablcs. GIFTS ... from the heart for the home. It might be just what you've been looking ror. SEPT. 25 THI PBFICT IH.USH AFTEIMOOH TIA "Alice" and the "Mad Hatt8f'" wtwe not alone In their enjoyment of afternoon tea Discover why. SEPT. 26 A TASTI OF lltB.Ate The menu will be a selection of the best of traditional Irish menus. -cWiiiiiliiiiL•'• cdlc ... , Oct. I MMAM .aul.Ml1' I - -~ __ ··- Oct. l MMAM eoulMlf ff Oct. ' ~ DILHMtTI '°' HOUDAY •ins Oct. 16 JAMS. -.UU. 911 U9Ulll Oct. ll fllASTS JOI 1'WIMT'f OI MOU • Oct. Z4 WfS .. OM tNI 11TCH94 Oct. JO A JlllMCH HOUOA Y NAST -..-.:•• __ ...,_.___ --. --------------·TEAR ~FF·--------------- Reservations are limited. Please send check alon~ with desired classes checked All Classes are evenings, starting at 7 p.m Each S 15. 0 Sept. fl ~IVAL NAST $15 0 Sept. It CHllSTMAS PA Y11 S 15 0 Sept. 21 ...... SHTIAS11 0 Sept. 26 HltSH NAST SI 5 WIWAMS-SOMOMA SO. COAST PL.Ali 3333 lllSTOL. COSTA MISA CA. 711·1166 ~------------------------------~-~--~ .. ·-_.,. 18 SOUTH COAST PLAZA * ' Koven'a Jewelry offera • v•rl•ty of diamond rtng etylea and diamond wetchea by Omep. Koven's Offers Diamonds "We specialize in fine quality diatnonds," said Godtfred Nielsen, manager of Koven's Jewelers. However, other items are carried al the South Coast Plaza store includ· ing: jewelry boxes, cultured pearls, watches, 14-karat gold jewelry and gif'tware. "Wf! have the latest styles ln jewelry, but I see no change in these styles," Nielsen said. Neck chains and bracelets are popular styles, he said. Resettina of diamonds and free diamond cleaninl are services of· fered at Koven's. The jewelry ls COJlServatively priced for the t ypical 22· to 35· year-old customer, he added. Name brands ln watches are: /i Omega, Accutron and Selko. "'-1 Sliver-plated figurines also are o~­ferecl. . Koven's hours are from 10 a.m. to 9:15 p.m. daily, to 8:15 p.m. Satur- day, and from noon to 5 p.m. Sun· day. 0 OMEGA GIFT CLASSICS For someone very special -on Omega Clouic:. Beoutifully oc:c:urote timepieces, from S 175. Above, left to right, s.440, S395, S575. Ko~rv'Cntdlt M:asNr Chorge lankAtnerfocwd American E.-u SOUTH COAST PLAZA 3333 UISTOL STRUT, con.A MESA PHONE 546-4510 --· Construction Guarantees Proper Fit •'Fit is what Stride Rite Children's shoes are all about," says Bill Reines, manager of Stride Rite Bootery in South Coast Plaza. "In eacb pair of Stride Rile shoes, ~ different manUfacturing opera· 4.ions ensure a proper flt and a quality .shoe. "Most of our shoes are all leather -this is Important in a child's shoe -to allow perspiration to be absorbed," Reines said. High quality soles and steel shanks go into each shoe as well as continuous research to constantly improve footwear by Stride Rita: Reines says that the Dunhill, the Spartan and the Winner, a school shoe with an athletic look, are popular boys' footwear while the Jamie, Kitty and Pixie are selling well in the girls' line. Each style of boys' and girls' shoes is available in six different widths "to allow our professional sates peopteto get tbe proper fit. "Our sales staff allows the max· lmum amount of growing room with the proper fit" -usually one size - or three to six months crowing room -for the average child. In addition to school a hoes for children, Stride Rite Bootery car- ries orthopedic shoes by Dennis Browne and Outfiare. Dancewear by Capezlo including children's leotards and tights are M8rllyn Brice dlapleya back· to-achool atylea for boya end glrla at Stride Rite 1hoe1. stocked along with ballet, pointe and tap shoes. Located near Sears in South Coast Plaza, the store is one of three Stride Rite Bootery outlets along the Orange Coast. Two others are round at Hunt· ington Center in Huntington Beach and the Westminster Mall . I CAMEO SHOES I ' The luxurious leather boot Is fashion's newest charmer Porttcutorty done with the stocked hlgh·heel you see here. Crushobly soft leolheB hove been used to form one ot the prettiest boots fhls foll. With on 011-lmportont zlppe< fOf m. Plus o foshlOOOble Instep strop. $6 1 Rust. Brown, Palomino 546-5210 . . M•i Co. I• •howtno the new, unconttructed "llouch" ·1oo1c In women'• Jacket• for the f•ll f•lhlon M•ton. Men's Traditionals Offered Traditional suits and men's and women's furnishings are the specialty at Harris & Frank in South Coast Plaza. Since 1856, the store bas offered a large selection of fine men's ap· parel, said associate manager John Furst. TradiUon81 Amerlcan·made suits from Crlcketeer, Chaps and Palm Beach are carried in sizes from 35 short to 50 long. Sult prices range from $135 to "5(). "We also have some extra longs in the store," said Furst. Better slacks by Jaymar, Hag- gar, and Renaissance are in stock along with overcoats by London Fog and ties by Pierre Cardin, Wembley and Brltt.ania. Shirts and shoes round out the men's furnishings department with slightly tapered Pierre Cardin and Van Heusen dress shirts, and Joel, Mr. California and Spire sport.shirts available. Men's footwear is by Freeman, Banister and William Joyce. Women's wear at Harris & Frank includes fashions from Breckenridge, Rose of California, Act III, Panther, Jody's of California, Discovery, Alex Coleman and R&K Originals. An in·house taJloring shop also is offered at Harris & Frank and most alterations are free. Feet in the sand make footprints . ..---1...-i1----...:.Fc:.!:et in Birkenstock footwear do the veiY same thing. ......__~ The Birkenstock footbed is heat and pressure sensitive. co mold to your foot, and become your footprint. So walking in Birkenstock is a lot like walking ba refoot in the sand. with one very convenient difference. You can walk-in .Birkenstock.all year ~ ·, * SOUTH COAST PLAZA 19 'Slouch Look' Jackets Big for Fall .. Wardrobe Jackets are beco\nina as lmpor. tant a part of a woman's fall wardrobe as a man's. "With new soft, unconstructed slouch, the jacket is the pivotal point in every fall ensemble," aald Carol Holben, spokesperson for May Company in South Coast Plaza. THE FALL LOOK in jackets is a softened silhouette, she said. ''The bard, interfaced and underlined form is defll11tely a thins of tbe past. "Fabrics run the entire gamut," , ij .. she saJd "including wool, velvet, corduroy, sweater knits and satin." JACKETS COllBINED with pleated trousers, a man's shirt and loosened tle, or with a floral lkirt for a feminine appeal complete the look, she said. Name brand• include: Coun· terparta, Topics, Koret of California and Evan Picone. "Don't forget to push up those sleeves and fold up the collar for that special '78 fashion signature," she said. · Harrla & Frank'• South Co•at Plue store h•• ;ecentty completed ex-tenalve remodellng. a_ 0 .. .. ..... , .............. ..........-....... . ....... -.. 20 SOUTH C04S T PUZA Quality Jewelry Store manager Jim de Cordova tit• • customer with • ring from the wide aelectlon at Christopher Bennett Jewelry In South Coast Plaza. (See story on page 15). £e-Jh~ NEU' A RR/VA LS ( ti/ I Wgl'\, .\// 11/IC'J \ .\11/lt'riur ltalw11 L>n1g11 & Cr11/1 "'''"""'''· South Coast Plaza 714-549~ . .., .... ---...---. -·-- For ChUdren Convertible Shown $155.00 Included in thi8 Shipment Reno "R" Stroller• 179.00 Roadster Strollera $110.00 Lu.ror Strollers $150.00 • • •• I. ........ --··-·--"" ...... * SOUTH CO~T PLAZA 21 Flat, High Heels Fashionable at Capezio Very fiat or very high heels are the two shoe f ubion extremes at Capezio, according to manager Pat Keating. "We are a Capezlo store and we specialize In Capezio shoes," she said, indicating that Capezios are made in Spain and Italy, using mosUy kidskin. A variety of styles are available, among them "the runner," a flat oxford type with a crepe sole and the "polly," a medium·beel strtppy sandal. Capezio boots are available ln medium and high heel styles and knee height uppers. One style, "the lariat." features a medium heel with a tractor sole. Boots range frpm $75 to $100. In addition to Capezio shoes, the sbop carries Bandolino and Basa sport shoes as well as Birkenstock "footprlpt" sandals for men and women. Capezio also features toe shoes, ballet shoes and dancewear. Marte McMahon, former dancer and dance instructor ls on band to fit toe shoes properly. Sbe stressed that proper fit.tlng of toe shoes ls ex· tremely important. Daniel Eastman Products Now Available at Patouche Daniel E&stman, a complete line of naturally derived, Pb balanced cosmetics ls now available at Patouche, according to assistant manager Debbie Osterman. Among the products available are two cleansing washes -cucumber milk for oily or balanced skin - and herbal cream .for dry akin. Myrrh, a non alcoholic astringent to remove bacteria and minimize pores, also contains mint and lemon. Cleansing is followed by the use of one of three moisturizers -protein, ginseng or la creme de vie. The Daniel Eastman line lncludea a water-base foundation which COD· tains protein moisturizers and a translucent face powder made from talc. Acccording to Miss Osterman It acts as a protect.ant, controls oil and won't clog pores. The line also contains herbal· shampoo, tanning lotion, sun block and body moisturizers. Patoucbe is open 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday through Friday, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m . Saturday and noon to 5 p.m. Sunday. TllBl~L·­ OFVICTORY WITllOlJT THE AGONY OF THE FEET South Coast Plaza 3333 Bristol Street, Costa Mesa Phone 540-4717 C•pezlo on.ra an extenllv• Hne of fall ahoea, boot9 and dance •ho•• for ...... BRDTANIA RULES. Rule • 1 l.qok for thi. labcl. Rule • 2. Jeans with sll;I~ , __ -... I ... I ... 22 SOUTH COAST PLAZA Jewelry Heads List At Mall Shop Jewelry, famous.maker watches and giftwarc bead the list at J . Herbert Hall jewelers. ··we have Rolcx and Omega watches, and Patek Phillip and Audcmar 's Piguet watches from France," said store manager Bob Kreger. "We have one of the best selec- tions of gold chains in the mall," be said. pointing out that the store stocks both 14· and 18-karat gold chains in all styles. J . Herbert Hall offers rings in 14· and 18-karat gold and platinum. A variety of diamonds and col- ored stones arc available, including rubies, sapphires, emeralds, lapis lazuli, malachite and ivory. Wed· ding sets range from $200 to $21,000. Silverware, china and crystal are featured at the shop. Silverware is by Gorham, Wallace and Reed and Barton while crystal is by Lalique, Waterford and Lennox. Sabino, a style of crystal recently imported to Southern California from France, features green and blue milk glass with flecks of gold. Porcelain figurines by Lladro are also on hand. Fine Leathers Kreger said the s tore also specializes in cwitom design work in jewelry. ''We also do hand en-graving work," he said. Manager George Albera end aaalatant manager Brtan Nelaon examine leather attache cases by Renwick and Franco at Rooten'a Luggage. Ltd. a complete selection of tflel ilest Ti1 styles and colors to ·co11ipliment yoU.. wcrdrobe SPECIAL VALUE SALE f11turino selected 11Ylts of Stride Rite Sh011 lrom our regullr ltodl. Tht blf school rusll stem soon, so come 10 llriy, be fitted by profallONI shoe littt11111d 11111 ldwn1191 ol limt•d ti"" Speael Vtlua ondloes. 8trideRit loutheoa• BOOTERY Plaza I ~ .. ... .. .. .. ... -..... .. •' ·~ . --... ,.. .. , _ ....... ~-----~'.~".ilt-' ··-... .. Optlque Classlque Stresses Fashion Straight Leg Jeans Stylish At The Gap 0 Any optician can fill a oreserio- Uon, but we are li1to fubioa. We are cosmetic opticians." Jerry Keller, manager of pptlque Cla11lqlie in Soutb Coast Plua said glasses are a fashion accessory to complement facial features and hair and skin tone. 1. Without changing her wardrobe, Keller said, a girl can be made to look like a sincere exeeutive secretary or a 16-year-old. Keller said be bas attended three Max Factor-type cosmetic scbools. Optique Claasique stocks more than 3,SOO frames and more than 4,000 lenses. "It's confusing with such a large stock, ~our people are trained to fill the mental image of our customers,'' Keller said. Frames range in price from ~132 to $15.000. "We carry the finest frame made in the world, an 18- karat gold with diamonds frame," be said. Plastic frames are popular now, Keller said; because people like to have several pairs to complement their wardrobe. Thin metal frames also are popular. "We do all our own work in the .store, and we can provide 90 per- cent of our glasses faster than anyone else in the area," be said. "We are going into the straight leg look in both denim and cor· duroy." said Cheryl Hurlbut, assis· tant manager of The Gap. The store displays a large assort- ment of Brittania corduroy pants in brown, tan, kabki and dark denim. F. U .s, a new clothing label im· ported from London is now availa· ble at 'lbe Gap. These are straight leg, unisex style pants in dark denim with a lot of stitching and ornamental metal studs. F.U.s also makes western shirts, Miss Hurlbut said. The Gap also stocks an increasing number of styles under its own label, she added. Among them are corduroy and denim pants, fuhion pants of a cot- ton..polyester blend, sweaters and solid and plaid shirts with mandarin collars. · The military look is coming into popularity, she said, with khaki and military green tones in pants and shirts with epaulets and mandarin collars. Keller said the store ls very classy and ultra-modern with a wall·to-wall mirror. A typical customer is a well educated, jet-set type, Keller said. "We have out-of-state customers because there's nothing like our store where they live." Optlque aaalque manager Jeny K...., coa~lty ffta gfa ... a for patient Gayle Slay. For women. the Gap offers, straight leg pants with a "paper bag'" waist -pleats all the way around -or pleats only in front. Sweaters and antique vests also are popular. Custom engraving also ls offered at Optique Claasique. "We can en- grave anything from Mickey Mouse or Winnie the Pooh to porno- BARETRAPS ENTERS A NEW HEIGHT IN FASHION COMFORT. BLACK OR MAHOGANY LEATHER .... , . . . . . . . .$J8. Innes S ·H · 0 ES WE HONOR MOST MAJOR CREDrr CARDS South Coast Plaza r graphy," he said. "Glasses aren't a curse or 'four eyes• anymore -now they are part of people's look," Keller added. Styles in tops include big cotton· polyester types, sweater tops and baggy styles, Miss Hurlbut'sald. CLASSICAL TRADITIONAL CLOTHING GUY LIVINGSTON SOUfH COAST PLA%A 157-1100 24 SOUTH COAST PLAZA * the store is may company May Co., Costa Mesa. South Coast Plaza. 3333 Bristol St .. 548-9321 l f l i I l· t ' I VOL. 71, NO. 243, 4 SECTIONS, 61 ~AGU .,...., ................ JOHN HOCKETT, 10, AT ADVENTURE PLAYGROUND City Officials Plan to CloH Unconventional Park for Winter \ r Huntington to ~t~: I :~~o:~~~~r~: !~~.~~~~r·s · ott•o.t1r~ ... s1Mt creativity wihen.. ,n-ope.roliy As summer wanes, the end supervised. a also appears to be in sight for a Parents nave-suppJ.ied the S popular youngster's paradise park ~th many donjtred build· t known as Adventure Playground ing •sup}>li~ · and fur.njture for in Huntington .Beach. kids-te~ atomdJ.said Mrs City Council members have Borns. · ; . '· • · decided not" to fund any recrea· Chil~~ M', 4 ages but'l.d tional programs this year that forts, ~ · ~ud 1slide5, do not pay their own costs. swings and"• ~ Me$t ·Adventure Playground, an youngsters~ · .lisPtb outdoor wonderland of mud, dirt from a hose or ·;t:a· ~~ off a raft. in the· aJ)d creativity ror youth at the The four-acre, .ci -owned\site 1>9ttom of an abandoned gravel usually sees about,SJ)OO children pit, has cost the cY.y taxpayers hike down tbe tr~f'to the play about $7,000 per year since it ground between the. months or opened in June of 1974. But with the city budget cul· June and August. b a c k . the p 1 a y g r 0 u n d is The park has als• been open t.· scheduled lo close for the sum· during the other nine months of t mer on Sept. 9. Recreation of. the year in the· afternoons. ficials expect the facility will re· open next summer. "It is impossible lo think it would be self·supporting during the winter," said Vivian Borns, a city recreation official. But playground supervisor Blake Hinman said Wednesday parents of the 44 youngsters who daily frequent the facility, near the corner of Talbert Avenue and Gothard Street, want the Tom Sawyer-ish area kept open all year. When a child's injury led to the park's temporary closure in 1974, it was a group of vocal parents who forced the city to reopen the facility. During the past year, youngsters have been charged 50 cents for all the dirt and iplashing around in the park's pond that they can handle in one day. Hinman believes the park fees can pay for about half U1e cost of operation. Costs include in· surance, supervisors' salaries and a telephone al the park site. But Mayor Ron Shenkman said Wednes be bas seen no easi e p an l at wou ma e the playground self-supporting. • City officials had high praise for the park. Mrs. Borns called it "an ex- cellent facility " City Manager Bud Belsito said the park has Man Talks Too Much? DETROIT <AP> -A man bas been cha,rged with rll'St-degree murder after watching a television report on a slaying and al- legedly bragging that he had committed it. Reese Toster, 21, was bound over for trial Wednesday in Detroit Recorder's Court on charges stemming from the fatal shooting Aug. 14 of 64-year-old Philip Fornili. Fornili 's body was found in an alley. He had been shot once in the head, police said. Geraldine Johnson. who identified herself al the preliminary hearing as Toster's girlfriend, testified that be told her about the slaying while --~dtbe television report. She told Judge Harvey Tennen that Toster added more details than were oo tbe newscast. been .. soceessM.!! "' The playground ts based on a Bandit ~T- concept that landscaping is not J. BAeS needed and unconventional play Harbor Aides Quit LOS ANGELES IA P l Fred W. Crawford, 50, general manager of LoS Angeles Harbor and bis top assistant, Ed W. Clocksin, 59. have resi11ned following a lonastandlng feud between them. SOCCER CROWD Slf)fi PADDEDt The Callfomla &unshlne hu been paddlJlg Its attendance figures, according to an in- vestiJ{ative report by Dally Pi lot sportswriter Ernie Castillo. See story on Page 83. Auto, Walle t An armed bandit wearing a black cloth bag over his face held up a Huntington Beaf!h restaurant patron early this morning and made off with the victim's wallet and auto, police reported. The hooded man jumped trom the darkness In the Captain Jack's restaurant parking lot, 18121 Beach Blvd .• and ordered the startled victim, Loren J. Leland, 35, ot Coeta Mesa. &o bud over biia wallet; Tb• bandit bnndl1htnc a clarome·pla'ed handaun, fled south ln Leland's compact sedan shortly after 1 a.m . The auto was recovered a short distance away in the Five Points area, but the thJef was oowbero to be round, police d. I ~fae ..... • N. Y. 8teelul ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNIA THURSDAY, AUGUST31, 1978 TEN CENTS Contract ' n Workers <;all Huntington 'Hostil,e' BJ aOBE•T BAaKE• Ol .. Olltr_.... .... Contract ta l ks with Huotlneton Beach's largest employee association are nearly at a taJemate, a negotiator said Wednesday. James Harker, who represents about 500 workers afrllialed with the Municipal Employees AssociaUon. said that the city bas been somewhat hostile "and bas not offered anything." Harker said that further talks are scheduled Sept. 8. He said that an impasse probably would be declared if an agreement isn't reached at that time. Contracts with the association expired June 30, as did agreements with the Management Employees Organization and the Firemen's Association. Contracts have been extended as talks continue. Agreements with the Police Officers Association and the Marine Safety Officers Association are not up until Sept. 30. Harker said that the Municipal Employees Association is seeking a 7 percent pay increase •'to keep up with inflation and the cost of . living." He said that his group also is asking the city to pay increases on premiums for-dependent medical insurance. T h e association also is seeking final binding authority on employee grievance cases. The payroll for some 900 city emplo.yees is now about $23 million . Should an across·the-board increase of 7 percent be granted. It would cost about $1.6 miUlon. Assistant Personnel Director Don Lewis said that labor talks have gone slowly because the budget was not approved until this week and because of uncertainties posed by Proposition 13. He predicted that negotiations would move ahead now tha~ a budget bas been adopted. Lewis said that apparent restrictions on the use or state surplus rescue money also has been complicating talks. He said the city is in line to receive about S2.3 million from the state providing it doesn't give pay raises in excess of those given to state employees. Deed. Laten Well Done A pay raise for state employees bas been froien. Labor negotiator Harker said the matter is being litigated. He said he believes it is unconstitutional to prohibit Huntlniton Beach as a charter city from giving raises. Harker also said lhe city is negotiatin1 to reduce the <See TALKS, Page A2> U.S. Tests Another Nuke In Nevada LAS VEGAS. Nev. CAP> - The seventh announced under- ground nuclear test or the year was detonated today at the • sprawling Nevada Test Site, the Department of Energy said. Boy Scouts and Explorer Scouts of Hunt- ington Beach's Troop 568 give the lawn of the seniors' Recreation Center at 17th Street and Orange A venue a manicure to help qualify for Eagle Scout badges. They include. from left. John Waite. Bud Drake and Glenn Wilson. One scout who participated in the labor. Jim Weisshaar. 15. worked with his leg in cast. 1 See story and photo. Page A3 > The weapons.related test. code-named ''Panir," had a yield of between 20,000 and 150,000 tons of TNT and was ex- ploded at 7 a.m. There were ·'no problems. As rar as I know, everything was fine,·• said Spokesman Dave Miller. Two Libertarians Qualify for Ballot The nuclear device was buried 2,233 feet beneath Pahute Mesa, about 90 miles northwest of here. The test was conducted by the Lawrence Livermore Laboratory of Livermore, Calif. The s hot was felt in Las Vegas. Miller said. Two radio stations reported they felt it at their studios and "I saw coat hangers on the coat rack sway- ing a liUle bit." The shot was the 17th an· noqnced since 1963 when the United States signed a treaty banning atmospheric testing. Not all tests are announced, however. Polio Cases Climb Two Libertarian candidates in the Orange Coast area have been qualified by the county Registrar of Voters to appear on the Nov· ember general election ballot. David Bergland, a Costa Mesa attorney and law professor. will oppose Republican John Schmitz and Democrat Ron Cordova in the 36th State Senate Di strict. Jim Gallagher, a Sunset Beach "lax protester." will appear on the ballot in the 73rd Assembly District and oppose incumbent De moc rat Dennis Mangers and Replfblican Chuck Gibson. Bergland was the Libertarian Party's"vice presidential can· didate in fin6. He received. nationwide. the THE HAGUE, Netherlands third highest number of votes <AP) -Two more cases of polio for that office. w e r e re po r t e d i n t he While circulating petitions to Netherlands Wednesday, bring-have his name placed on the ing to 103 the numberof-vtctims-baHot;-Bergtand tras-complained discovered among members of a that he has not shared the can· religious community in the didales' platform with rivals southern province of Zeeland Cordova and Schmitz. who refuse to be vaccinated, Now that the registrar has Dutch officials said. Health l!ertified the Tequired 10.853 Mir.>tstry officials said the voters' signatures supportmg his epiael)'ltc-has eeused-only oae c and.id.a ey -W..~ r .e .. .i IL.1> r fil!_r ,_ fatality, a 3-month-old girl. Bergland is expected to become Blast Probed C'lemsme Mine Set San Clemente fire officials are investigating an explosion that Urted a two-tDD fire truck off the ground when it ran over a land mine fuse, apparently placed in the street deliberately lo ex- plode when hlt by passln1 vehicles. Fire llanhal DOI\ ~ Hid safety devicet bad ~ I moved from the mlne fuse oo West Aven5da Poniente and from another fuse found nearby. The hu1e lruck wu not damaged. but Hodpon sald a am a lier vehicle mt1bt ban been. U a child bM fOuDd lt and tr\ed to explode it or take it apar(, the explosion could take his arm off, Hodgson said. There was no apparent al· tempt to gabotage the fire truck, he said, and rlremen.drivlng back to tbe 'flre slatlon from a medical aid call said they turned down that street by chance. Hodgson said the fulea were believed to be from Camp PendletClll, wbere they are used m tr•lninl maneuvers. They are an lnch in circumference. an i.ncb aDd a half Iona and blue ln eoloi'. a full time candidate. Gallagher needed only 4,939 qualified voters' signatures to make it to the ballot. Registrar of Voters Al Olson said the signatures were in order and or· dered his name placed on the ballot. It is not known. Olson said. if the two candidates will have their Libertarian Party affilia· lions printed on the ballot. If not. both men will be shown as in· dependents. Bandits Rob Westmins ter /R estaurant Two bandits clad in baseball caps and brandishing revolvers L Qb..b.e d a._lV e...s.t m..i n s t e r restaurant early today. after forcing on-duty employees to lie on the kitchen floor. The men then forced lhe manager of William Flagg 's Restaurant. 15123 Golden West St. to tum over receipts from the 1tinner-hot~fice:-- Police Lt. Joe Woods said the entire loss Is being accounted to· day but it Is believed to be $2,000 or more. Investigators said the armed bandits wore no disguises or masks of. any kind but brazenly herded the employees into the kitchen. 'COKE' SPOONS SIJR PROBE SAN DIEGO <A P I -Police investigating a burglary at the home of Cheryl Halstead say that among the missing Items reported were two silver rings and two cocaine spoons valued at Sll,500. . Investigators said Wednesday the rlngs and "Spoons were en.' crualed with diamonds. Teen Facing Huntington Rape Charge Los Angeles County Sheriff's deputies arrested a Bellflower teen·ager Tuesday on charges oC raping a 16·year·old hitchhiker in a Huntington Beach construe· lion site last Friday. Another Bellflower teen-ager is being sought in connection with the sex attack that oc- curr ed near the corner or Brookhurst Street and Hamilton Avenue at 11 p.m .. police said. The rape victim suffered minor scrapes and bru1sei. and was treated and released from Costa Mesa Me morial Hospital said Huntington Beach police Detective Art Oroz. Us ing a Huntington Beach ar· rest warrant, deputy sheriffs ar· rested Paul Denny Sanchez. 18. and charged him with the at· tack. Weath er Night and morning low cloudiness with sunny af.' t.ernoon ~id~y l'lklt-much tempe rature change Lows tonight 60 lo 65 High s Friday from around 70 at beaches to upper 70s inland I NSIDE TOD>\ t' There "' something about a Jaguar that insptres such adoration among ownns that they ·ve form•d a club to swap lnformaljon See F'eaturmg, Page Bl. ladex - Bop Goes Vp in S•olte Stute Bureuu of Narcotic~ supervised the burning of about S250.000 worth of narcotics and restricted drugs in Hunt- ington Beach on Wednesday. Destroyed were four Pounds of heroin. three pounds of cocaine. two pounds of hashish and has h oil. rour pounds of miscellaneous pills and 113.5 pounds of marijuana. As - sisting at the burning were Steven Secofsky. left with clipboard. of the Justice Department and Crist Wagner. ~lso with clipboard, from the West Covina Police Department. 2Suspects Arrested in Bank Heist Two armed robbery s uspects were arrested by Orange police Wednesday within three hours of a $6,000 holdup at a bank branch. officers said today. During their pursuit of one suspect, a 20-block area west of the Newport Freeway in Orange was cordoned off by police. who conducted a house-to-house search, aided by the Costa Mesa police helicopter. The suspect escaped the blocked-of( area, however, and was captured later at a home in Santa Ana. police said. Arrested on armed robbery charges we re Geor ge Para Nevarez. 32. of 1050 W. Chestnut Ave .. Santa Ana, and Robert Francis Wagner . a 28-year-old transient. police said The men are accused or a 10.45 a.m. holdup at a Bank of America branch at Tustin and Lincoln Avenues, police said. Nevarez was a rrested by police when his car was stopped -.hortly aft('r thl' robbery, of· fic crs said, but Wagner escaped into a residential area and fled. Tht-$6,000 taken tn the rob· bc•ry wa:, recovered. police said. Rites Held Today For Historian, 93 Funeral services were held to- day Ior Old West history buff Marion Artemus Speer of Hunt- ington Beach, who died Sunday at age 93. Mr. Speer had been an oll company geologist and free- lance miner. He was known more than 50 years in Huntington Beach, where be both worked and operated the Western Trails Museum in his home on Speer Avenue. He often lectured school children on western history. "He was a real, real nice soft. spoken old boy." said former mayor and city councilman Ted Bartlett. himself an old Hunt- ington Beach hand. Friends say Mr. Speer out- lived two wives, a near-fatal auto accident, and, on geological expeditions, a rew hearty meals or burro meat. Services for Mr. Speer were at Peek Family Colonial Funeral Home in Westminster, followed by interment at n ea rby Westminster Memorial Park. Advancing age led him to tum over his entire Western Trails Museum to Knott's Berry Farm. where he acted as its curator for a time. before retiring com-pletely. He loved to visit it and rem· inisce. visually and verbally .. "He offered it to the city if they would build a place for it. but he got turned down ... Bartlett said. "So he gave it to Knott 's Berry Farm." A frequent traveler in the western states, Mr. Speer also wrote a book, "Western Trails." and didn't give up his lectures to students until he was 90 and in failing health. Born in Kansas in 1885, Mr. Speer was a member of. the Western Trails Association, the Old Timers' Mineral Club and th"e Christian Businessmen's As· sociation. His daughter Leila Broderson, who lives in Napa with Mr. Spet!r's five grandchildren. sug- gests flowers be sent to the Warner Avenue Baptist Church. Laguna Faces $5,000 Claim Over Chief Visitation Friday For Mrs. Deeter An attorney has filed a claim against the c ity of Laguna Beach on behalf of Costa Mesa truck driver Delbert Mathieson who was allegedly assaulted by Police Chief Jon Sparks in a tavern June 29. Mathieson, 32, is seeking city funds in excess of $5.000. Chief Sparks was fined $500 in Santa Ana Municipal Court on a single criminal charge of bat· tery in the incident. He has re- turned to full duties as police chief in the wake of the bar lnci· dent. Visitation prior to a Saturday funeral is scheduled Friday for Huntington Beach resident Katie C Deeter. 89, a we ll-known r hurch member who died Mon· ct.•v at a convalescent hospital. Services will be Saturday at 2 p.m . at Pierce Brothers Smith's Kenyatta Buried NAIROBI. Kenya !AP> President Jomo Kenyatta. who led his nation to independence from Britain 15 years ago. was buried today in a marble-walled tomb on the grounds of Kenya's parliament building. His body was borne to the cemetery on the same gun carriage used for Winston Churchill's funeral. ORANGE COAST HF DAILY PILOT I ~=:i:.~~·r·=·=~~ Coolt -1\llo ... Comc>•nY -eteOOot~ .... oubll"'" Monet•• threvQft J:rla.y tor CMt• ... _. Pff•-t ... <h HIHlll ........ -h·"- t1I" Vlll•f lr¥1n~ S.d~,.fO.C:lt. Vltlf'y ~ ~llu<h S....thCoe\t A\lno'e-IH• ''°" " puou~ S..tUl'O••' .,.., ~\ T,. ~~:~c~':!~~e.~.·~~.~~ m --•• ., 11-N-p,_.,.O.nt •~ Put)l1""" IH•ll~ Y'<I Pr•\Htitr\t •Ml 0.Mlf'et MIM9t" ~··-'"'"" T ... -, ... M ......... ~..,..1119 l"oitcw Cll•m• 11 LMt '"'...,_ P Not" "'"''..,' ~""9'"9 EClllon ...... _ w .. 1 ()'"""'° Counly EclUot Huntlnaton leKh Oftlce •ttlf&•Hh &oute•"O Mol 1 I lfl11 Addr"t P 0 IOI! 1'0 .,._ . Offtc•• ~e.ec11 •••o-..os1,..1 Cot•• Mjo .. ,,.W.•• &.yl4rwl -..,~::.:~~ ......... •• Mortuary. Visitation will be noon to 9 p.m. Friday. Born in Kansas, Mrs. Deeter moved to Huntington Beach six years ago to be near her brother, retired Southern Pacific Railroad car inspector Frank Hentschel. She also leaves a sister, Grace Robinson.of Ottawa. Kansas. The Kev. Dr. Arthur Reese, of the First Christian Church of Fountain Valley, which Mrs. Deeter attended, will preside with burial following at the Odd F e I lows Cemetery In Los Angeles. The claim, received this week by the city. seeks damages for assault and battery. invasion of privacy. intentional inniction of e motiona l distress and also seeks punitive damages. Mathteson's attorney, John H. Evers meyer of NewPort Beach. said the claims required before a lawsuit can be filed. The City Council usually de nies such claims in routine ac lion, and refers the claim to its ins urance carrier. The claim comes before the Counci I Sept. 5. Officials Investigate Plane Crash Ca.Ue Federal investigators in Las Vegas were trying today to de· termine the cause of a charter plane crash Wednesday that killed 10 people, nine of them Australians ending a month-lonJ tour of the United Slates wlih a visit to Las Vegas casinos . The plane, a twin-engine Piper Navajo Chieftain fiown by Las Vegas Airlines, was beaded ror Orange County Airport when It bellied into a dusty field shortly arter a 7:50 a.m. takeoff. The pilot has been tdentmed as Charles A. Heming, 48, of Las Vegas. He was a retired Air Force colonel with more than 6,000 hours flight time. The Clark County coroner's of- fl c e identified the dead passeneen aa: Lllian Bell Clifton, 89, of Sydney; John R MacLacban, 53. of MacGregor: Janet Grant MacLachan, 55, MacOrecor; Hazel Adlee Bush, 87. Shellharbour; Lorne Cuna Peady, 58, Woywoy; Kenneth Arthur J . Peady, 59, Woywoy; , Stanley Markwell Kannar. 73. Lan Cove. and Leslie Knight, 61 . Brisbane. The 10-passenger plane was the last of three that had taken off on a night to Orange County, with members of the Australian tour group. said Don Donohue, a spokesman for the airline. The group had flown to the Grand Canyon from Orange County on Tuesday before going to Las Vegas. Las Vegas Airlines has po reg· ularly scheduled runs but rues on an on-call charter basis from Las Veaas to Grand Canyon and other points in Nevada lf'nd Callfornia. A seven.member Investigating team from the National Tran•PortaUon Safety Board ar- rived In Las Vegas Wednesday night to begin probing ror a cause ofthecrub. "Some wttnessu 1eem to in· dicate the1'e may have been an en1ine problem," 1ald Homer Wormdabl, chJef of the F.S.ral Aviation Administration's Oi&ht standarda omce In Las Ve1u. Car Find 'No Clue' To Killer SpeaJQ to IHplO•ais 'Pope Vows Newport Beach police PeaCe Search. Indicated today that the VATICAN CITY CAP> -Pope discovery of Corona del Mar • John Paul I vowed to eootinue murder victim Ruben Martinez' the work ol bil predeceuor bl car ln Laauna Beach Wednesday tbe field ol human riahta. de- has led them no cloeer to the tente. dllarmament and world dead man's killer. peace in bia ftnt apeeeb to the ' The car was found parked a diplomatic corps to tbe VaUcan few bl<><:ks from the Coast IM, today. where Martinez was last seen Using a forei1n lanauaa• - allve Sunday night. French -for t6e firat time in omcers believe the car had bis tlve·day pontiflcate, be not been there since Sunday described tbe Vat.lean role in ln· because they searched the area ternational affairs as "unique." around the hotel earlier and bad "Obviously we bave no tem· notfoundlt. poral gods to excbance, no An all-points bulletin was economic in~erests to diacuaa issued Monday ror the missin& such as your states have.·• the car after the battered body of Pope said. "Our posalblllties for Martinez was discovered in the diplomatic interventions are bedroom of his home at 411 Iris limited and or a special Ave. character ... Our diplomatic Police investigators said missions ... Jar from beine a Martinez had been so viciously survival from the put, are a bludgeoned that parts of his witness to our deep seated brain were exposed. respect for lawful temporal Detectives had hoped that power and to our lively interests finding the car would lead them in the humane causes that the to the killer or the 40-year-old temporal power is intended to real estate salesman, but those advance." hopes appeared to dim today. The pope said that the Vatican The car. a white Datsun, was will gladly assist "in the search found Wednesday morning by for better solutions to the creat Laguna Beach detective Gene problems that see at stake de- Brooks. who was working on tente, disarmament. peace. another case at the Ume. justice, humanitarian measures Brooks said he was on his way and aid. development. etc." to interview a witness in That. the Pope added. "ls one connection with his own case. appreciable form of cooperation but decided lo take the time to or mutual aid that tbe Holy See drive through the neighborhood has the possibility of conlribut· where Martinez was last seen Ing. thanks to the international alive Sunday night. recognition that it enjoys and He spotted the dead man's car the representation of the whole parked on Brooks Street near of the Catholic world that it Catalina Street. ensures." Attending the audience were Newport Beach detective Sam 51 heads of diplomatic missions Amburgey indicated no to the Vatican and their aides. u n e x p e cl e d I e ads we re The pope spoke in reply to a con- uncovered from the inspection of gratulatory address delivered in the car. French by the dean or the "We're continuing to talk to diplomatic corps. Ambassador the people who knew Martinez Julio Antonio Torres Arriola of and who were with him Sunday Guatemala. · ht .. he ·d The pope will be inaugurated m~ • sai · Sunday. and Vatican sources f'l'09IPageAJ TALKS ..• number of employee holidays and to reduce sick leave and vacation time. "The politicians are taking the easy way out in having employees underwrite .the costs of Propostion l;l. ''They don't have the guts to tell people they will have to cut pro- grams," hesaid. Mayor Ron Shenkman said today that he is sympathetic to fair wages for public employees. He s aid that he hopes that employees under~nd t~at the city wants to be fair .and eq uitable "as poss ibl e financially and legall y." s ay he is simplifying the ceremony to emphasize the humility and dedication to re- ligion that he wants to charac· terize his reign. "ll 's a matter of getting rid of some of tbe trappings of the past denoting the Pope as a civil ruler or king," the Rev. John Long of the Vatican Secretariat for Christian Unity said as details of the ceremony were released Wednesday. The pope has chosen to have a thin. circular band of white wool. called a pallium, placed on his shoulders rather than be crowned with the beehive·shaped tiara used for 15 centuries. And be will not be carried to or from the ceremony on the traditional portable throne. Six new models: two 12:· • ts:· a 11:· and two 19" (meuured dlagonally). Featunng puah·button Express Turung, reduced power ciooaumption (they all use less Power than a 100.watt hght bulb). and a redesagned cb&ssts for easier serv1ceab1hty. .... , ...... GOAL: WORLD PEACE John Paul I Vowa Aid Huntington Pedestrian Hit by Auto A 21-year -old Huntington Beach woman suffered multiple injuries late Wednesday mght when she was struck by a car while trying to c r oss busy Harbor Boulevard in Costa Mesa. police reported today. Anita Marie Ruff. of 19768 Kingwood Lane. was reported in good condition at UC I Medical Center today. She suffered a broken right leg and lacerations to both feet whe she was hit by a car driven by 36-yt>ar -old Maureen Frances Lawhorn of Newport Beach. Witnesses at a Harbor Boulevard fast food ouUet near Wilson Street told Police that Miss Russ was attempting to cross Harbor Boulevard at about 10:44 p.m. when she was hit. One witness said the injured woman was wearing dark clothing and apparently did not see the oncoming car. The driver said she did not see the pedestrian until she heard a thud and saw the woman bounce off the windshJd of her car. Police said an investigation into the accident will continue. Ellclu11ve 'Ttinuron one·qun, one·lens'iystem on •ll models. •••• ~~-· . ... . .. -.... Four new remote conuol models 15:· 11:• 19" and 21·• lmectsureo dJa9ona1Jy1 Featunnq push·button Eaprea Turung and improved !um1sponder h9hr sens· mg sy.tem for wider dyrtctmic range. New h9htwe19ht .... y·to-arry 9" model. \.,I, ;1hu u1 o u r ar1•1• I '•·ar .» ••·ar 1·011.,111111•r 1•ro11•c•1io111•b1u 27 S East 17th St. Costa Mesa Phone 64!-8882 &tort Hourt 12,~ M .. 8"t t-5 30 ........ __ , ... For The Very Best Deal You owe it to yot1rHff to ct.eclt our prices. beifO{• you btly! Mimer ()large • Vl~A Buciver Payment• , VOL. 71, NO. 2'3, .-SECTIONS, 61 PAGES Y, CALIFORNIA t • THay'• c1 .. 111g ~ N. Y. Steeb l .. THURSDAY, AUGUST 31, 1978 J ' ~ace Lack Pia c s TEN CENTS l e Ch11rches l a, PBIUP MAalN ............... Clnttth 1rou tbat haven't 'Je'l nt.ablisbeid perma t meet· tni placcia in Irvine are beinl fnaalrt\cd, wUJ tooUn to be, b1 • dearth of available fat1Ut.i4 attordin.l to • ~ty re· port. .. AvalJablo au ror relillOul orsaniietlon developm l\t With n the· city ol lrvUM la mewhat Umlted," u.> a report lo the cl· ty coundl. submlttod by Plan· nln1 Director Mell P abody Jr . Further, PeabOdy reported, future development In are11 •ber• churc:bel are permlti.d by rontnc la hampered. ctrurchel recently hive bHn mulq news In l"lne beeaun aoe public ~>' that baa pro. v ded "tt.1nporary" fttUltl for rell1lo1.11 1ervlcea-tho school dltlrlct bet!n 1ued ror It by the American Civll ~ibertle Unlon. The other public aeency the church have turned to-the cl· ty-has been threatened with lawsuit by the ACLU. Last week, the City Council defied ACLU warninca that public accommod~on violates the con tltuUonal principle of separation of church and state. Council man David Sills araued that churches ouiht to have the same opPOrtwtities as other aroups. Otherwise, he said. the city would be dis· criminaUng against them. In practice, however, the council action may have been an empty gesture. According t.o the city com· munity services department. there are only two municipal halls laree enough to house a church congregation of any large size. According to Peabody. there are at least 15 known reJlgjous organizations. established and meeting within the city, that do not have permanent bulldjn1s. Most of those have been rent· ing school district facilities and are endangered by the ACLU laws uit. The others meet lo city buildinas and like wise are threatened. Where they would go ii legally booted out is of paramount con· cern lo church leaders. many of whom have asked Irvine Mayor BUI Vardoulis that question. Vardoulia says he doesn't know, and from the remarks contained within Peabody's re- port. the city staff doesn't know either. Vardoulls has scheduJed a special council study session for 7:30 p.m. next Tuesday to ex· amine with church and com· munity l eaders what (Sff aw&CRES, Pa1e AZ> ' ort Debate Going Nowhere? . '· t . "GLAD IT'S OVER' Wllllam Harris .... ,~ PLEADS GUILTY Emily Harris ·· Harrises 'Guilty' ! In Hearst Kidnap OAKLAND IAP>-William tl.. and Emily Harris pleaded guilty today to kidnapping Patricia Hearst 4'1'.z years ago. .. Alameda County Superior !· Court Judge Stanley P. Golde , accepted the plea to a charge of simple kidnapping and set sen· tencing for Oct. 3. ' The original charge of kidnap- • ping with bodily harm, which would have eliminated the t possibility of parole if convicted, 1 was dismissed after the plea { was accepted. • Golde said the Harrises, mem· ~ hers of the terrorist Symblonese !. Liberation Army, would be sen- l tenced under the indeterminate : sentence law that was in effect ! at the time of the kidnapping .: Feb. 4, 1974, which permits .i parole. ;' The Harrises, smmng broadly, ~ entered the courtroom to an out· t: burst of applause from some i spectators. ' After the pleas were accepted, f they each read brief emotional L. statements declaring their pride ~ in kidnapping Miss Hearst and ; taking "full res ponsibility for our actions." Harris, silting on the counsel • table and facing the spectators, said that his feelings were , "complex ... but there is relief . ~ that the uncertainty of the past few years is over " The Harrises h ad bee n .,. scheduted to appear on defense ! motions that a psychiatric ex· ~ amination be ordered for Miss f Hearst and that the Harrises' , trial be moved out of Alameda 1 County because of massive i publicity. Defense attorneys Susan r Jordan and Leonard Welnglass t bad told Golde in the motion. ,, filed in June, that Miss Hearst surfers from "im paired psychological makeup." The newspaper he iress, now Z4 and serving titne at a prison in nearby Pleasanton on a bank robbery conviction, would have been the key witness against the Harrises. She has identified · William Harris as one of three persons who burst Into her Berkeley apartment the night of SOCCER CROWD I S~ PADDED? The Callfomla Sunshine has been padding its attendance figures, according to an in· veatiJ(atlve report by Dally Pilot sportswriter Ernte Cu Ullo. See story on Page 83. ' ( Feb. 4, 1974 and kidnapped her at gunpoint. At her 1976 bank robbery trial, Miss Hearst said the Harrises tormented her and instilled in her a fear of the FBI during their 19 months as fugitives in the terrorist underground. The Harrises already are serving sentences of 11 years to life after a 1976 conviction on kidnap and robbery charges stemming from a bungled shoplifting attempt in May 1974inLosAngeles. Water Agency Names Clark As Chairman The Newport-Irvine Waste· Management Planning Agency has n.amed a c hairm a n to replace Ray Williams, who re· signed last month in a disagree· ment over poJlulion clean up goals. Wayne A. Clark, a director of the Irvine Ranch Water District, was named to the post. The agency is a joint powers group that includes cities, water districts and other organizations concerned with water quality in Newport Bay and its watershed. Ray Williams, a Newport Beach City Council member who remains on the pollution panel despite his resignation as chairman, claimed the panel is primarily interested in deal· ing with pollution aner it gets In· to the bay. Williams advocates control· ling souroes of pollution beCore the baY1saffected. Quakes Shake Mormt Shasta SACRAMENTO CAf>) -Near. ly a month after the first earth· quake, the ground is still s"hak· lng around Mount Shasta. About seven tiny quakes a day are being recorded on six porta· ble seismographs, moved into the area an.er mile-long cracks opened in the ground and some surface areas dropped up to 12 feet. John Alfors of the state geologist's office said Wednes· day that despite the quakes, cracks and subefdeoce there is no evidence of volcanic activity. Mount Shasta bu not erupted for 200 years, although It ls stUI clualfied 11 an active volcano. Slaying Remains Mystery Newport Beach police indicated today that the discovery of Corona del Mar murder victim Ruben Martinez' car in Laguna Beach Wednesday has led them no closer to the dead man's killer. The car was found parked a few blocks from the Coast Inn, where Martinez was last seen alive Sunday night. Officers believe the car had not been there since Sunday because they searched the area around the hotel earlier and had not found it. An all-points bulletin was issued Monday for the missing car after the battered body of Martinez was discovered in the bedroom of his home at 411 Iris Ave. Police investigators said Martinez bad been so viciously bludgeoned that parts of his brain were exposed. Detectives had hoped that rinding the car would lead them to the killer or the 40-year-Old real estate salesman, but those hopes appeared to dim today. . Babes Together ............ A YO!Jng homo sapiens and a tiger cub find some com· fort m each ~thcr's c~mpany. The cub on the right is from the Fre.1us Zoo m the Gardens of Pinet in Saint . Tropez. French Riviera. The car, a white Datsun, was found Wednesday morning by Laguna Beach detective Gene Brooks, who was working on another case at the time. Brooks said he was on his way to interview a witness in connection with his own case, but decided lo take the time to drive through the neighborhood where Martinez was last seen alive Sunday night. Federal Officials Probe Vegas Crash He spotted the dead man's car parked on Brooks Street near Catalina Street. Newport Beach detective Sam Amburgey indicated no unexpected lead s were uncovered from the inspection of (See SLAVING. Page A2) Bias Charged By Minister GREENFIELD, Mass. !APl -A 24 -year-old Methodist minister says he was denied a pulpit because he is a white male . New c hurch policy says women and minorities must be given priority until they make up 10 percent of the Methodist ministers iii souUMw·~ .N~ w England area. The Rev. Jeremy Paul Dun· can was passed over last March for a ministerial post by the Methodist Board or Ordained M 1n1 !:.lry or Southe rn New England Federal investigators in Las Vegas were trying today to de· termine the cause of a charter plane c rash Wednesday that killed 10 people. nine of them Australians ending a month-Jong tour of the United Stales with a visit to Las Vegas casinos. The plane, a twin-engine Piper Navajo Chieftain Oown by Las Vegas Airlines, was headed Cor Orange County Airport when 1t bellied into a dusty field shortly arter a 7:50 a.m. takeorr. The pilot has been identified as Charles A. Herning, 48, of Las Vegas. He was a retired Air Force colonel with more than 6,000 hours night time. The Clark County coroner's of· fice ide ntifi e d the dead passengers as: Lilian Bell Clifton. 68. of Sydney: John R. MacLachan, 53, of MacGregor : Janet Grant M acLacba~~ Ma~Pegor; H a z e I A d I 'e e B u s h • 6 7 • S hellbarbour; Lorne Cazna Peady, 58, Woywoy ; Kenneth Arthur J . Peady, 59, Woywoy; Stanley Markwell Kannar, 73, Lan Cove. and Leslie Knight. 61, Brisbane. • A Lotta Bull Salesman Markeu By-product I NASHVILLE, Tenn. tAPI Howard Marchant admits he's bullish on America. And he hopes tin cans full of the natural fertilizer produced by Georgia bulls will become his pet rock. Marchant. a St-year-old liquor salesman. sees lots of poss ibilities for the $3-per-can offering marketed by his company, B.S. Sales. ··1 iust woke up one night and was tired of being poor and didn't have $200,000 to open up a McDonald's, .. he said. And he thinks the product is a natural for some markets. "First, consider Washington," he said "Conaress should be a prime prospect." · ' I fl '' The 10-passenger plane was the last of three that had taken off on a flight to Orange County, with members of the Austrahan tour group. said Don Donohue, a spokesman for the airline . The group had flown to the Grand Canyon from Orange County on Tuesday before going to Las Vegas. Las Vegas Airlines has no reg· ularly scheduled runs but flies on an on-call charter basis from Las Vegas to Grand Canyon and other points in Nevada and California. <See VEGAS, Page A2J U.S. Tests Another Nuke In-Nevada LAS VEGAS. Nev. !AP> The seventh announced under- ground nuclear test of the year was detonated today at the sprawling Nevada Test Site. the Department of Energy said. The weapons -r~late-d t est. code-named '"Pan1r." had a yield of between 20.000 and 150.000 tons of TNT and was ex· ploded at 7 a.m. There were "no problems. As far as I know, everything was fine ." said Spokesman Dave Miller. The nuclear device was burled 2,233 feet beneath Pahute Mesa, about 90 miles northwest of here. The test was conducted by the Lawrence Livermore Laboratory of Livermore, Calif. The shot was felt in Las Vegas, Miller said. Two radio stations reported they felt it at their studios and "I saw coat hanger.i on the coat rack sway- ing a little bit." The shot was the 17th an nounced since 1963 when the United States signed a treaty banning atmospheric testlng. Not all tests are announced. however, .... . ... More Studies Asked By GARV GRANVILLE Of ... Deity ...... 5Uff A debate over Orange County A I rport end ed Wednesday virtually where it began five years ago when the county Board of Supervisors: -Opted to keep commercial jet airliner activity at the l! airport under the same wraps . that have dictated levels of : operation for the past eight years. . -Con ced e d that new j environmental impact reports 1 will be needed before any improvement projects at the S airport can be approved. ~ -Ordered a new study. this J lime to develop an airpott master plan. -Declared that Orange County Airport will forever be a . short-haul airport. "r-4 Airport development plans I have been bogged down in a rt ve ·year atudy that le d .. nowhere. The board did decla re the ·. $290,000 study adequate to serve · as an environme ntal impact t report. " In the next breath, however. l the board conceded that new t• reports wtll be needed to support specific projects. including i commercial airline lease> renewals. ' That concession represented a major victory for Newport Beach. The city insisted the bulky and costly study did not address itself to specific projects and, therefore, did not fill the legal requirements imposed by the California Environmental <See AIRPORT, Page A2) 'COKE' SPOONS S11R PROBE SAN DIEGO ! AP > -Police investigating a burglary at the home or Cheryl Halstead say that among the missing items reported were two s ilver rings and two cocaine spoons valued at Sll ,500 Investigators said Wednesday the rings and spoons were en· crusted with diamonds. Coast Weather Night and morning low cloudiness wtlh sunny aJ. ternoon Friday. Nol much tempe r atu r e cha n ge. Lows tonight 60 10 65. Highs Friday from around 70 at beaches to upper 70s inhmd INSIDE T001' l' There's ll01'Mthmg about a Jaguar that Inspires such adoration among owner.'1 that they've formed o club to swap in/ormation. See Featunng. Page Bl. lallex .. .. ... ' . . .. ~· Reftdue Pond Tailings trom the COmax Molybdenum mine near Lead· ville. Colo .. are filling up the valleys below the mine. ... wallowing up pine trees. Also swallowed up are lakes. tht.' townships of Kokomo and Robinson. and the headwaters valley of the Eagle River . There is a series of ponds like the above. one of which alone has a capaci· ty of 525 million tons of mine residue. Residents fear further destruction of towns as mining boom returns to Colorado. See additional pictures and story. Page All. Bad Check Writer Gets to Keep Home lNDIANAPOLIS IAP> -A wom an who wrote five fraudulent checks -each print· ed with the word "Help" -to pay taxes on the house where she bas lived since childhood will be able to keep her home because of an anonymous benefactor. • Marion County officials bad been preparing to sell the one. story frame house to anyone willing to pay the back taxes when an unnamed woman de· livered a certified c heck for $400.54 Tuesday. "Please thank the people." s aid the homeowner. whose parents built the house some 50 years ago. "But please, don't use my name. We've always tried to pay our bills." The woman said she lives with her husband and an older sister . T he three live on a Social Security check of $350 a month and a "small pension,'· she said. Marion County Treasurer E. Allen Hunter said he had re- ceived five checks from the woman on a bank account that had been closed for some time. Hunter said he believed the checks were sent because the woman "wanted us to know she would pay if s he had the money." A local newspaper article Monday quoted Hunter saying that Indiana law required him to make the .house available to anyone wtlltng to pay the back taxes. J ames Hardin, an assistant deputy treasurer. investigated the woman following arrival of one of the fraudulent checks. He repor ted to Hunter that the woman was j ust a vlctirn of circumstances. Hunter said his office received more than 100 telephone calls with offers to help, including one from the woman who brought lhe certified_chedl The woman ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT =~.~~~~;,'~':11==~= ~·,•~:n~~~:":!:::.!.,~;.:'.:,~~""'t.~;: ....,.. .,...._, a .. c,. Hvm1ntton llt«ft F.,.,... l•fn V•ll•y '"•'"• S•fOlebMllc '11lft¥ 1"4 ~ .. 9<h Sovl,.CoMI 4~•-IHI ._._ '' CMtOl•\l\iM ~•ttlf"dan -"' ~ Tiw r~::~=··M~!..ZO:,. J)D ""'" a., ........ _ P'r•\tdef\t •net PuOll~ 'KU,.C_., VIO "'"'-t-0.-llMo- '-tlC ..... .. ' e.111r ~···~ Mo,...i,.. lldlw CMf'tMM '-"' -~ .... AUhlenl MoNtllllN"9n Offic4A Cott•MtM HOWe.iS.ylt'"' ~...,.llt«ft 11 .. G...,,.yn54-t .. 'C:..~~~~~ ... !'W~~ft~o:"1 ••,..., o._ ,,...., Teteptton• (714)1142-4321 CIHIHIM Actver11•11'19 M1..et7' \.tdd*tN< lit V•ll•v ..... W"'I Othu• 111 .. 310 r reM Wft Ct(tftVM'tl• ....... C..rr,_.. "" :m= '-'' ~"'""' ~ -,.. -. '""''-'-· ... $ .... ".. ., -:r• ·r-'"' ... ,..ft ... ~ ~;f::-•--··· ""'"" tee.-CllU ""•r. Hid .t Go•la MoN, C:.lll•r11•• Sutur J!llO" DY """' tJ.M ftll!lllllt: Ill> 1'!1111 .... ,. -~''' 1111111 • .., .-u•-• said she didn't want the house, only to help its owner. "I've never beard of such response. It was most graUfy. ing, ··said Hunter. H e noted that only three callers said they wanted the house for themselves. The rest, he said, wanted to pay all or part of the bUl. Tears came to the woman's eyes when she learned her taxes had been paid, Hardin said. "I want to pay but. . " and then words failed her. l'ro• Page A J CHURCHES. alternatives there are. Peabody's report ticks off the problems for church develop- ment : -In unimproved areas, he says, development is "relatively prohibitive" because churches would have lo pay the costs for streets. sewers, water lines, utilities and the like -In areas alread)' developed, development itself is the prob· l e m : "v i rtually no op- portunities for areas of further development c an occur," Peabody says. -In areas which already have the Infrastructure for develop- m en t -streets, sewe rs and such-and there is avallable land, churches are not included in development plans. "In these cases," Peabody says, "the landowners general!)' Hre not willing to release the land for church use, or the price of land is unaffordable by most religious organizations." In short, the message from Irvine is, there is no room at the inn. Peabody further reports that in areas the major landowner, the Irvine Co., has attempted to develop churches, the churches themselves have balked. The company, be says, bas tried to Al'OUP churcnes in "ac· tivity corridors" to encmn'8te in· terfaith centers -several churches using one building. But, he says, "Their attempts have been relatively unsuccessful due to lack of cooperation.on the part of denominational organizations. lions "Currently," Peabody adds, "the Irvine Co. bas indlcate4 that all specific church sites over which they have control have been purchased, leased, or are under negotiations. "There are no other specifical- ly designated sites for reliaious p"fl)Oses available." there are &even eatabllabed church f aciliUes ln Irvine- Irvine Community, University Co mmunity , St. Matthew Lutheran, University United Met~odist. Woodbridge Com- munity !under construction) and Good Shephe rd Luthefan, Church of Religious Science of Newport Beach and ChrliJt College. Other reUgious aroups, lnclud· I ns Lutheran, Baptist, Presbyterian and Mormon or- aaniaations, plan to build on some of the seven sites deaiinat· ed by the city for church bulld· inaa. ' Somoza Strike Waning. MANAGUA. Nlcaraaua fAP -A nationwide strike called to rorce tbe ouster of Presldent Anaatulo Somosa appeared to be loeins steam today. but fllht· •n• naed between national 1uard troopa and armed clvlllana controtuns much of the northem city or Mata1alpa. No reliable fllurea were available on the effectiveness or tbt strike, In Man•IU• or in the provinces. But only about half the atores in the capltal's mlijor 1hopplnJ center were closed Wednead.ay and most businesses elHwhere in the capital were open. "ll certainly ls not causing a crisis," said one diplomat who ulled not to be named. The strike was called a week ago by political leaders opposed to Somoza. It was supported later by the Nicaraguan Con· federation of Chambers of Com- merce and the Nicaraguan Development lnatltute, the coun· try's two leading uaociations of bualnessmeo ancf'industrialists. But the response to the mem· bers apparently was fiaHinJl. The archbishop of Managua, Miauel Obando y Bravo, failed in an attempt to stop the bloody fiChting in Matagalpa, a city of • 40,000 about 100 miles north of Mana1ua and returned to the capital to try to see the presi- dent. "It was a scene of savagery like I've never seen," one veteran Latin American cor- respondent said of the situation in Matagalpa. , • Olllty,_ ........... SHERIFFS CRIME LAB INVUTIGATOll GARY OONZALEI INSPECTS DEAD MAN•s CAR White D~•un 1>19covered In L8guna •ech, WMre Murder Vlallm Last lffn Allve R~ports Predict ECOnomy to Slow WASHINGTON I AP > - Another government report today pointed to a possible slowdown in the economy in months ahead. The index of le ading economic indicators declined 0.7 percent in July, the first drop since January. The index is desi1ned to foreshadow trends in the economy. While a on.e·month decline does not by itself establish a trend. lt came against a background of other economic stattstlca that also point to sluggish growth. F..._ Page A J SLAYING. • • the car. "We're continuing to talk to the people who knew Martinez and who were witb him Sunday night," he said. Police s aid Martinez was killed late Sunday nl1bt at his home. His body was discovered at about 7:30 p.m. Monday by a friend who was sent t.o check on Martinez by the dead man's employer who became worried when he failed to show U.P for work Monday morning. AIRPORT STUDY. • • The 0.7 percent decline ln the indicators index in July followed an increase of 0.5 percent in J.une. The last previous decline was a l percent drop in January as the economy slowed because of the severe winter and the coal strike. I'..._ Page Al Quality Act. If the pro-airport forc~s won a point, it was a board order to the county General Services Agencies to prepare new leases for the ttrree airHnes that operate at Orange County Airport. Presently, Air California, Hughes Airwest and Golden West Airlines are operating at the airport und er month-to-month llfreements. Before new five.year leases can be approved, howeve r , environmental hnpact reports must be prepared and accepted by the board of supervisors. That ls where Jt all began in 1973 with th e b oa rd of s upervisors pondering ne w leases and calling for an elaborate study that would help them chart the airport's future. The st udy called for Wednesday was proposed by Supervisor Philip Anthony. Anthony specified that the study should define limits on the airport's capacity as we ll as spell out in detail what noise reduction programs will entail. The study should also measure the airport's compatibility "with the s urro undin g areas,•• Anthony said. And in the end, the study to be done by county workers should include a master plan aimed at meetln1 whateve r future demands will be compatible with environmental constraints. In definition, ttrat airport overview is not much different from the study ordered by the board tn 1973. In the end, that $290,000 study by consultants Daniel, Mann, Johnson & Mendenhall was termed adequate by the board but not adequate enough to support specific projects. Speaking for the Community Airport Council, a pro-airport organization, Joe Irvine termed Wednesday's board actions "a small step forward." Newport Beach City Attorney Dennis O'Neil said h e was reluctant to assess the actions until he had a chance lo review the board minutes. "It's too soon for a definitive answer because the motions were somewhat confusing. but I 3 Countians Among Victims In Air Crash POMONA (A P > -Dental charts have identified the bodies of four men burned beyond recoaniUon when their light pl&(Je crashed Into a ~foot power pole in heavy fo1 then burst into names, authorities said. The victims were Identified Wedneaday as Randy G. Wood , 21. of Oranae. Terrence Ubl, 34, of Glendora, Jefr Grisham,~. of Santa Ana. and Gale Walker. 34, of Orange. They had just taken off Tues- day from the Brackett Airport in Pomona when their P iper Cherokee Lance hit the power pole and exploded near the Los Anaelea County fair1round1 , police said. The cause of the crash waR un. -der lDveatilaUon . • have the impression that our point of view is prevailing ... O'Neil said. "However." he added. "it doesn't seem that the ultimate solution to the airport problem is at hand." Veteran anti-airport crusader Dan Emory may have won a major point during the debate. Emory argued that new lease agreements should call on the airlines to make a purchase commitment for quieter jets if and when they hit the market. After the lengthy public hearing, Supervisor Thomas Riley said he is likely to insist on "some sort or provision that will make certain the quietest jets available are flying from Orange County Airport. The board's· vote declaring the consultant's s tudy adequate ca rried on a 3.1 vote with Supe rvisor Ralph Diedrich casting the' lone dissentin~ vote. The Commerce Department reported separately Wednesday that new·f actory orders dropped 3.8 percent in July, the biggest decline in nearly four years, a nother indication that the economy is entering a slowdown period. ·• The Carter administration maintains the economy abould g row at a ·3.5 percent annual rate in the second half of the year. enough to keep unemploy- ment from getting worse. But the latest statistics cast doubt on whether that much growth can be achieved. The economy grew at an 8 per- cent annual rate in the second quarter of the year, and some s lowdown was con side r e d necessary because of the need to help keep inflation from getting worse. Sis new models: two 12:• a 15:' a 11:· and two-19" (measured diagonally). Featuring push-button &press Tuning, reduced power consumption (they all use less power than a 100.watt light bulb), and a redesaoned cbasis tbr euier serY1c:eability. VEGAS ••• A seven-member investigating team from the National Transportation Safety Board ar- rived in Las Vegas Wednesday night to begin probing for a cause of the crash. "Some witnesses seem to in· dicate there may have been an engine problem," said Homer Wormdahl, chief of the Federal Aviation Administration'• llight standards office in Las Vegas. Prince Unharn;ied NONG KHAI, Thailand IAP> -A military helicopter carry- ing Thailand's Crown Prince Va· jir alongkorn was s truck by bullets fired by communist in- . surgents today but the prince escaped injury, the military command said. E1clua1ve 1hrutron on~. one-lens tystem on all models. Four new remote c:ontrO: models: as: 17.' 19" and 21" (measured dla~onally\. Featunngpush·buttonEspressTurunq and improved lum1spondtr h9h1 seni.· 1nq system for wider dyillm1c c4nge New bgbtwet;ht, MSJ•tc>cMry 9" model. 275 East 17th St. Costa Mesa Phone 642-8882 StOfe HOurs O.lly MJ~S.I H 30 .................. _ .... You ow. It to yMrttlf to check Mr prfcn. before you buy! ' Lag11na/S011th fiNist Afte raooa .Y. Stoeks VOL. 71, NO. 248, 4 SECTIONS; 61 PAGES O RANGE COUNT Y, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, AUGUST 31,'1978 TEN €ENTS. Rattlenaake Hewe Ehhs .Just a Bit arJDaYU.A ................ Wt.en • dialll!ODCI back rltUer lqed 9l Lourdel Marl• Olavea an O'Ntlll ran aon ut ol m Toro, Uae Santa Ana woman bHame the lOtJ\ oak le ric· lim takto to IOUt.h county &Na bOlll\lrall um ar. She WM treated for • bite on the rllM al Tuesday evemi. and releaa.t from ~ Community Hosplt•l. Laau.D• HJlh, a t.Pital tpohlman wd. Tboup ft -ma, be Uttlt con· oJaUOn to Mr and Ute other nine 1nake •ktlma, feftr bltH bave btn ~ lh111umm r lhlUl had .,.. pnc11ctec1 br oran10 C.ount)' anlnial eontro otttclala and the medical communl\y. ••From ooe end or thl• county to the other, we are turnhic up rattlelnaites," .loe OHver. chief count,y animal control omcer. said in May. Snake calls last 1prln1 tripled \bolO of prevlou1 years and Ollvor and bla staff were 1lrding for a aummer filled with reptiles -eapeclally in south county areaa where home constructlon la burgeoning. Ollver's traJnina officer. Dick Robillard , anticipated that teveral f acton would contribute to lhe anake lnf estalion: a larger adult snake population, con· struction In areas formerly in· . habited by snakes and drenchlna rain that fiooded holea and bur· rows In more remote canyon areas. 8ut Oliver said this week his organization was fielding more . snake reports in May than now. "It's interesting," be said. ·'Obviously. the snakes have found food more easily than we expected or people are learning the difference between a gopher snake and a ratUeanalce. •• He warned. thouih. that the test or previous predictions would come this fall -by late September. probably -when rattlesnakes traditlonaily end t heir searches for w,ater OD backyard swimming~ decb. So far this year. Mission Com· munity Hospital ln rapidly de- velopinl' Mission Viejo reports treatlna only two Ptakebite vie· tims. San Clemente General Hospital reports three and South Coast Co111munlty Hospital m South Laguna has recorded only one vtcUm. Saddteback Comm unity Hospital bas treated rour vlc· tims. Two were hospitalized. The other two. Including Ms. C h avez. were treated in emergency rooms and released. Third Councilman Faces Recall No Clues in Auto Laguna Fi,,J, No Aid in Slaying Newport B eac h police indi cat ed today that the discovery of Corona del Mar m urder victim Ruben Martinez' car in Laguna Beach Wednesday • has led them no closer to the f dead man's killer. , The car was found parked a t few blocks from the Coast Inn, where Martinez was last seen alive Sunday night. Officers believe the car had f not been there since Sunday ; because they searched the area around the hotel earlier and had t Against Laguna I not found it. An all-points bulletin was issued Monday for the missing car after the battered body of Martinet was discovered In the bedroom of bis horne at 411 Iris Ave. Police investigators said Martinez had been so viciously bludgeoned that parts of bis brain were exposed. Detectives had hoped that finding the car would lead them to the killer or the 40-year-old real estate salesman, but those 1 1 Mesa Truck Driver Files Attack Claim j An attorney has filed a clairn .1 against .the clly of Laguna I Beach on behaU or Costa Mesa truck driver Delbert Mathieson who was allegedly assaulted by Police Chief J on Sparks in a t tavern June 29. 1 Mathieson. 32, is seeking city funds in excess or SS.000. ' Chier Sparks was fined S500 m 1 Santa Ana Municipal Court on a • single criminal charge or bat· Armed Pair · Rob Clemente Jewel Store Two well·dressed men armed with pistols and possibly a sawed-off shotgun entered a San Clemente jeweler's Tuesday, tied up the store owner and a c l erk a nd l e ft with a n und e t ermined amount or jewelry. Police responding to a burglar alarm at Phillips' Jewelers. ·157 Avenida del Mar, discovered Roy Phillips and an employee bound with tape inthe backofthestore. store. Phillips told police that two men. who appeared to be either Arab or Indian, came into the store at 10 a.m. One man held the clerk in the front of the store, while the other located Phillips in the back. The clerk was brought to tbt back where the two men bound the hAnds and arms of their victims. The robbers then went to the front or the store and re moved jewelry, placing the baubles in a cardboard hoY The two men were last seen leaving the store, walking west on Avenida del Mar. They were both described as In their·early 20 's, about six feet tall and slender. tery in the incident. He bas re- turned to full duties as police chief in the wake or the bar inci- dent. The claim, received this week by the city, seeks damages for assault and battery. invasion or privacy. intentional Infliction of emotional distress and also seeks punitive damages. Mathieson's attorney, John H. Eversmeyer of Newport Beach. said the claims required before a lawsuit can be filed. The City Council usually de· nies such claims in routine ac- tion. and refers the claim to its insurance carrier. The claim comes before the Council Sept. 5. Man Talks Too Much? DETROIT CAP> -A man bas been charged with first-degree murder after watching a television report on a slaying and al· legedly bragging that be bad committed it. Reese Toster, 21, was bound over for trial We dnesd ay in Detroit Recorder's Court on charges stemming from the fatal shooting Aug. 14 ' or 64·year-old P hilip Fornili. Fornltl's body was fowld in an alley. He bad been shot once in the head, police said. - Geraldine Johnson, who identified herself al the preliminary hearing as Tosler's girlfrien d , testified that he told ber about the slaying while they watche d tbe television report. She told Judge Harvey Tennen that Toster added more details than were on the newscast. hopes appeared to dim today. The car, a white Datsun. was found Wednesday morning by Laguna Beach detective Gene Brooks. who was working on another ease at the time. Brooks said he was on his way to interview a witness in connection with his own case. but d ecided to take the time to drive through the neighborhood where Martinet was last seen alive Sunday night He spotted the dead man's car parked on Brooks Street near Catalina Street. Newport Beach detective Sam Amburgey indicated no un expect ed lead s were uncovered from the inspection of the car. "We're contmuing to talk to the people who knew Martinez and who were with him Sunday night," he said. Police said Martinez was killed late Sunday night at ~ home . His body was discovered at about 7:30 p.m. Monday by a friend who was sent to check on Martinez by the de ad man's employer who became worried when he failed to show up for work Monday morning. San Clemente E x plosion Inve stigate d San Clemente fire officials are investigating an explosion that lifted a two-ton fire truck off the ground when it ran over a land mine fuse, apparently placed in the street deliberately to ex- plode when hit by p assing vehicles. Fire Marshal Don Hodgson said safety devices had been re- moved from the mine ruse on West Avenida Poniente a nd from another fuse found nearby. The huge truck was not damaged, but Hodgson said a sm1.ller vehicle might have bee~ If a child had found it and tried lo explode it or take it apart. the explosion could take his arm ore. Hodgson said. There was no a pparent at- tempt to sabotage the fire truck. he s aid, and firemen.driving back to the fire station from a medical aid call s aid they turned down that street by chance Hodgson said the fuses were belie ved t o be from Camp Pendleton, wbece they as:e wied in training maneuvers. They are an inch in circumference, an inch a nd a half long and blue in color. Kenyatta Buri~ NAIROBI, Kenya <AP> - President J omo Kenyatta, who led his nation to lndependence from Britain 15 years ago, was burled today, .... ., ................... BOB PIEHL (IN HAT), BRIAN CHAPMAN RAKE LOT Ne wport Surfe rs Clean up El Morro Parking Lot Voluntarily Smefers Tidy They Clean ~l Morro Mess By STEVE MITCHELL Of t111t Deify l'llet Staff Two Corona del Mar surfers took it upon themselves to clean up an unsightly parking lot used by surfers and other beachgoers at El Morro Elementary School. The parking lot is adjacent to El Morro B eac h an d Scotchman's Cove. and. oo weekends. the asphalt is covered with cars, vans and trash. Bob Piehl, 23, and Brian Chap- m a n , 22. said they were watching the sunset from the parking lot earlier this week when they decided to clean up the mess. So they were out on the lot bright and early Wednesday morning. with rakes and shovels in hand. .. We always park in that lot to go s urfing a t Old Man's c beneath Morro Rock>... Piehl said today. The two surfers piled more than 80Q empty beer cans, an as. sortment of liquor bottles. dis· car(ied chicken cartons, and what Piehl described as a .. de- funct beach blanket:· onto their s mall pickup and took the mess to the dump. School officials lauded the ef. fort. but said they are going ahead with plans to fence In the parking lot, thereby making it in· accessible to beach visitors. The Laguna Beach Unified School Dis trict originally planned to charge ror parking, thus providing jobs for students. But the cost of insurance was prohibitive. and the district is working with the Irvine Co. as we 11 as o perators of the Scotchman ·s Cove lot. a nd CalTrans to fund the fencing. To d ate. three of the four parties hllve agreed to chip in ror the $4,600 cost of fencing the lot. The district is still awaiting word from CalTrans officials as Lo whether that state depart· ment will participate. Piehl said he was una ware un- til Wednesday that the fencing might be going up "That would really · be bad news." he said. But at least the lot is clean - at least until this weekend. Polio Cases Climb TlJE H .. AGUE. Netherl&'nds 1 AP) -Two more cases or polto we r e r eporte d in th e Netherlands Wednesday, bring· ing to 103 the number of victims discovered among members of a religious community in the southern province. of Zeeland who refuse to be vt1ccinated, Dutch officials said. Health Ministry officials said the epidemic has caused only one fatality, a 3·monlb-old girl. Police said they are looking for a gray 1975-76 Ford in good condi· lion, which the robbers may have been driving. Tbe value of the stolen jewelry la still unknown. The owners are maki111 an inventory of their re- maining stock, police said. ~--ty S~wer Unit Dissolved SOCCER CROWD SIMS PADDED? The California Sunshine has been padding its attendance naurea. according to an ln- vestlutive report by Daily Pllol s portswrlur Ernie CasUllo. See atory oo Pac~ B3. ' . Orange County Sanlta on Dts· trict No. 8, wb1ch ser no purpose when it wu crea in 1948 and found no function dur- ing the past 30 years, was dis· solved Wednesday by county aupervtlors. The district wu created In 1948. along with seven other county sanitation dlstrlcta. tn case tt was needed to serve the 1rowlna popU)atlon ln • e,()3.S. acre ~·Buch area. \ At the time developed regions already were served by the Laguna Beach city sewer system and South Laguna Sanitary District. The Aliso Water Mana1ement Agency erased the possibility the district woµld be n~eded for future 1rowth when it was creat· ed in 1972 to serve future re· 1tonal wastewater treatment needll. Tom Woodruff, counsel for the ' -------------. ---- eight sanitary districts. said in a report to supervisors the district had been inactive a nd in- operative since its creation. The district s pent about SlS,000 durlfl.B its history. SUP· ported by a one-time 10-cent tax levy tmpoaed in the U~50's on La1una area property owners. lts expenses included a few legal feea, S&OO·a·yeaf ln ad- m1nistraue>n costs and S25 paid lo each director at rouebly twlU·a-year business sessions. 1 Woodruff wrote . Directors' last meeting was May 24 when minutes showed they approved dissolution ol the dlstrlctl' Direct.on were Oran1e County Supervisor Thomas Riiey, Laguna Beach Councilman Jack McDowell and Harqld Edwards, a director or the South Coast County Water District, Supervisors approved the dis· solution Wednesd1y without comment. Clemente Rap Hits Mushett By ANNE COOP ER Ol U. o.lfy r l ... Staff Sa n Clemente City Coun- cilman Howard Mus hett was served Wednesday with a recall notice. becoming the third coun- cilman in the city lo face possi- ble recaJI. The notice was filed on Mushett by the San Clemente Citizens Committee ror Good Government. Members who signed the notice were Howard Massie, a former San Clemente mayor and councilman; William Kendall. past president of the chamber of commerce; Roger Cumin; Eleanor Markham and Boyd Ames. Jr. The Orange County Registrar or Voters is currently verifying signatures on petitions calling for the recall or Mayor William Walker and Councilwoman Don- na Wilkinson. Mushett has seven days in which to respond lo charges made In the recall notice. These include claims that he has: -Constantly dis rupted city council meetings. public forums and city business. -Abused and misused city funds . -Shown a disres pectful ar · tilude toward ci tizens . in- dividuals and organizations hav- ing business before the city council. -Made false and misleading statements and misrepresented facts to the detriment of the community -Caused lowe red morale a mong city employees . -Violated sections of the California Government Code Mushett is also charged with having a conflict of interest. which is not identified. Mushett today denied the charges and predicted the recall effort against him will fa1J. He said the same people supporting t he Mushett recall campaign have twice organized support g roups against the recall or Wa lker and Mrs. Wilkinson. These groups have folsndered and so will the recall attempt on M usbett. he predicted. ··1•m positive the Wilkinson and Walker recall will preva11:· he said . ..The people of San Clemente want a stop to the abus ive use of government power and spendinsz. ·· <See RECALL, Page A2> • ,..Ora nge Coast Weather Night and morning low cloudiness -with sunny af· ternoon Friday. Not much t e mpe rature c ha n ge. Lows tonight 60 to 65 Hi g h s Friday from around 70 at beaches to upper 70s inJand I NSIDE'l'OD1'" TheTe '8 something about a Jaguar that IMp!Tes nich adoration among owners that they ·ve formed o club to swap rn/ormotlon . See F'eatunng. Page Bl Index r l 2Slidea 'Cackled In Viejo Work on two "'uaive Mluton v .. ;o t1wHer IMl clOHd two major...,.... ii~ ca.,11 "°"· ........... Or~•O. ty I••.,_,_.. llu•••• •nl Att nry otncia11 Trataueoo Road. clGMd la tae April wt.. u atlm.ted •.• eub•c yara ol e.,U. cucaded from • slope IMtween AUclt Parkway ••d Loa All•o• Bout vard. opetMd lO trllftlc Au •. 11. Northbound traff c la on N1r1u rate Parkway. clo&ed o"'lh of 0.0 Parkway wbtn •bout .00 tons ol dart toppled "' from • blUakh n Narda. &S expected to be open to lraftie • ln approximai ty two w , the officials d. John Hunt.aman. EMA con· tru~Uon div lor. manac r. aaid 1radln1 Is completed oo tbe Trabuco llope reconatruetlon and tbat the proJed la expected to be rlnlstied at a coat of 11 .2~.000 a quarter million dollars les than authorlted by th~ Oran1e County Board of Supervisors. EMA now ls waltlna for a con· tractor Moore and Taber of Anaheim -to begin compaction grouti111 on the newly framed slope below two Moulton-Nl,uel Wat er District tanks atop the ridge. Huntsman said a cement solu· lion will be pumped Into some underground areas where com· paction voids are anticipated. An irrigation system la to be installed soon, be said, and planting is to beein before the rainy season. Gained 1n the rebuildin1 job, Huntsman said, is a small park carved in the hillside about a thl rd of the way up from Trabuco street. The picnic-sized area measures approximately 100 by 200 feet. . Native grass seeds will be blown onto reconstructed Marguerite Parkway slopes with a nozzle, Huntsman said. The slope has no irrigation system. Supervisors authorized $324.000 for the Marguerite Parkway project. Meanwhile, Moulton Niguel Wat er District officials report they refilled the 2.2-million· gallon water storage tank above the Marguerite slide area two weeks ago. The water district - which serves much of Mission Viejo -drained the tank to ease pressure on the slide area in March. Two 1.25-mUlion-gallon t~ above the Trabuco Road slide area were refilled by the district a month ago, official~aid. Those tanks were drained when district engineers reared aler weight might cause add' ional slope slougfi!_ng in that are . San Pedro Man Injured In Plunge A San Pedro man whose small foreign car left a curve in Ortega· Highway east of San Juan Capistrano and plunged 170 feet down an embankment into San Juan Creek remains in a hospital intensive care unit lo· day William Stearns. 21, was re· ported in stable condition at Mis· sion Community Hospital today. California Highway Patrol ac· cadent investigators said Stearns was driving too fast for road conditions when his small 1976 Fiat left the road as he drove toward San Juan Capistrano. The accident, witnessed by a rollowing motorist, occurred some 14 miles east of San Juan at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, officers said. Orange County Fire Depart· ment paramedics stationed in San ,•uan treated the victim at th0 s~en~ and brought him out or the 1·ovinc. DAILY PILOT t Depe Gen ()p i• S•oke Pope Vows ... Peace Search VATICAN CITY CAP> -Pope John Paul I vowed to COllUDue the work ot Ida predectlflOI' lft the fiekl ot buman r1-.u. a. tente. disarmament and world peaff in his first speech to the diplomatic corpe to the Vatican today. IRelatedatory. A1U Utln& a forel1n lan1ua1e · - French -for the firat time in his rtve·day pontificate, he described the Vatican role ln ln· ternational affain u .. unique.·· State Bureau of Narcotics supervised the burning of about $250,000 worth of narcotics and restricted drugs in Hunt· ington Beach on Wednesday. Destroyed were four pounds of heroin. three pounds of cocaine, two pounds of hashish and hash oil, four pounds of miscellaneous pills and 113.5 pounds or marijuana. As· s is ting at the burning were Steven Secofsky . left with clipboard. of the Justice Department and Crist Wagner. also with clipboard. from the West Covina Police Department. "Obvioull)' we have no tem· •poral iods to' excbanae. no economic interests ro dlscua1 such as your atates have, .. the pope said. "OUr possibilities for diplomatic interventions are t'I! 1 Im ited and of a special character . . . Our diplomatic missions . . . far from being a survival rrom the put. are a witness to our deep seated respect for lawful temporal power and to our lively interests in the humane causes that the temporal power is intended to advance." The pope said that the Vatican will gladly assist "in lhe search for better solutions to the great problems that see at stake de· tente. disarmament. p~ace. justice. humanitarian measures and aid, development. etc." .............. GOAL: WORLD PEACE John Paul I Vowa Aid Bene(actor Saves Home In Tax Case Tank .Truck Flips With Propane Gas LAYTONVILLE CAP> -A double-bottomed lanker truck overtumea on U.S. 101 today, rupturing both tanks of poten· tially explosive propane gas and killing tbe driver, authorities said. ' The Redwood Highway in northern Mendocino County was closed for five miles in either direction· from the accident because of propane vapors escaping from the tanks, the California Department of Forestry said. The odor of the gas was so powerful that it reportedly could be smelled four miles south or the accident. The identity or the dead driver was not immediately known, and he was stiU pinned in the wreckage hours after the acci· dent at 7:30 a.m. No one. including rescuers, was closer than one mile ro the accident because of the highly explosive fumes. officials said. ,.,.... P.,,e A J RECALL .•• Mushett s8.id it is difficult for him to answer the recall notice, because he said the charges made against him are unclear. But verbal abuse and misused city funds have been "on the other side." he said. Mushett agreed that morale is low among city employees, but said that is because a majority of the city council, of which he was not a part, voted to disband the city's parks department. "Employees in other depart· -ments are wondering if they are next," he said. Boyd Ames of the Mushett re· call committee said no comment would be made on charges against Mushett until the coun· cilman bas made his official response. "H people wonder about the morale of city employees, however," said Ames. "all they have to do is visit City Hall, now that the recall bas been initiated against Mushett. The people there will tell you who is responsible for low morale." "They're going to have to let it ct he gas> dissipate. This is a potentuWy very explosive situa· lion," said Gene Baldwin of the California Highway Patrol. Age Upped For Adoptees lnAidBill SACRAMENTO <AP > -A bill that prompted emotional pleas from adopted children and parents has been modified to al· low only 2l·year-old adoptees to s~ek their natural parents. The revised version of SB 535 by Sen. William Campbell. R· Hacienda Heights. was ap· proved Wednesday by the state Assembly by a 43·32 vote. two more than necessary. It also needs Senate approval. The bill. passed in differing versions last spring by both houses. would require the state to keep a registry or adopted children and natural parents who wanted to meet each other The state would assist in meet· ings when the adopted children reached 21 . The Assembly version of the bill had the age at 18, but oppo- nents argued that some 18-year- olds are still in high school and too young to handle the trauma of finding natural parents. The new version also requires all siblings adopted by one fam1 · ly to be 21 before the older ones can begin the search. Under presenV law. adopted children can find their natural parents only through a com- plicated court process. "I still think it's a bad bill." said Assemblyman Eugene Gualco, 0 -Sacramento, who has adopted children. "l think it's going to cause an awful lot or human misery." But the bill was strongly sup· ported by Assemblymen Bruce Young. D·Cerritos, who was adopt ed and made the long search for his natural mother, and Dennis Mange rs. D· Huntington Beach, who has an adopted son. Officials Investigate Plane . Crash CauSe Federal investigators in Las Vegas were trying today to de· tenntne the· cause of a charter l>lane crash Wednesdaf that killed 10 people, nine b them Australians ending a month-lon1 tour of the U111ted States with a visit to Las Vegas casinos. The plane, a twin-engine Piper Navajo Qieftaln tlown by Las Vegas Airlines. was headed for Orange County Airport when tt bellied into a dusty field shortly after a 7:50 a.m. takeoff. The pilot bas been identified as Charles A. Heming, 48, of Las Veaas. He was a retired Air Force colonel with more than 6,000 hours fiigbt time. The Clark County coroner'• of- fl ce identified the dead passengen as. Lllian Bell Clltton, 881 of Sydney~ John R. M acLacrtan, 5.1, of MacOre1or: Janet Or ant MacLacban, SS, MacOre1or. Hazel Adlee Buab , 87 . Shellharbour; Lorne C11na Peady, 58, Woywoy; Ken)\etb Arthur J, Peady, so. V{oywoy : :Stanley Markwell Kannar, 73, Lan Cove. and Leslie Knight, 61, Brisbane. The lO·passenger plane was the last or three that had taken off on a fiight to Orange County. with members of the Australian tour group, said Don Donohue. a spokesman for the airline. The group had flown to the Grand Canyon from Orange County on Tuesday before going to Las Vegas. Las Vegas Airlines has no reg· ularly scheduled runs but mes on an on-call charter basis from Las Vegas to Grand Canyon and other points In Nevada and California. A seven-member investigating te.a m Crom the National Transportation Safety Board ar· rived in Las Vegas Wednesday nlabt to begin probing for a cause or the crash. ·'Some witnesses seem to tn· dicate there m-.y have been an enaine problem," said Homer Wormdahl. chief of the Federal Aviation Admlnlstralion 's flight standrrdl office in Las Vegas. V.S. Tests Another Nuke In Nevada LAS VEGAS, Nev. r AP> - The seventh announced under· ground nuclear test of the year was detonated today at the sprawling Nevada Test Site. the ·Department of Energy said. The weapons -related test. code-named "Panir." had a yield of between 20 .000 and 150,000 tons of TNT and was ex· ploded at 7 a.m. There were "no problems. As far as 1 know. everything was fine ... said Spokesman Dave Miller. The nuclear device was burled 2.233 feet beneath Pahute Mesa. about 90 miles northwest of here The test was conducted by th e Lawrence Livermore Laboratory of Livermore. Calif. T he shot was fe lt in Las Vegas. Miller said. Two radio stations reported they felt it at their studios and "l saw coat hangers on the coat rack sway· ing a little bit." The shot was the 17th an· nounced s ince 1963 when the United States signed a treaty banning atmospheric testing. Nol all tests are announced, however That. the pope added. "is one appreciable form of cooperation or mutual aid that the Holy See has the possibility or contribut· iog. than.ks to the international recognition that it enJoys and the representation of the whole of the Catholic world that It ensures.·· Attending the audi~nce were 51 heads of diplomatic missions to the Vatican and their aides. · The pope spoke in reply lo a con· • gratulatory address delivered in French by the dean of the diplomatic corps. Ambassador Julio Antonio Torres Arriola or Guatemala. The pope will be inaugurated Sunday. and Vatican sources s ay he is simplifying the ceremony to emphasize the humility and dedication to re- ligion that be wa.nts to charac· terize his rei«n. "It's a matter of getting rid of some of the trappings of the past denoting the pope as a civil ruler or king.·· the Rev. John Long or the Vatican Secretariat ror Christian Unity said as details of the ceremony we re released Wednesday. The pope has chosen to have a thin. circular band of white wool. called a pallium. placed on his shoulders rather than be crowned with the beehive-shaped tiara used for lScenturiei' Andhe will not be carried to or from lhe ceremony on the traditional portable throne. Six new models: two 12:· a 15;· a 11:· and two 19'' (measured chaqonallyl. Featunn9 push·button &press Turunq, reduced power consumption (they all use leas power than a JOO-watt light bulb), and a redesigned cbusas for easaer serv1cea.b1hty. INDIANAPOLIS <AP> -A woman who wrote five fraudulent checks ..-each print· ed with the word .. Help" -to • pay taxes on the house where she has lived since childhood will be-able to keep her home because of an anonymous benefactor. Marion County officials had been preparing to sell the one· story frame house lo anyone willing to pay the back taxes when an unnamed woman de· livered a certified check for $400.54 Tuesday. "Please thank the people." said the homeowner. whose parents built the house some 50 years ago. "But please, don't use my name. We've always tried to pay our bills " The woman said she lives with her husband and an older sister The three live on a Social - Security check of $350 a month and a "small pension." s he said. Marion County Treasurer E. Allen Hunter said he had re· ceived rive checks from the woman on a bank account that had been closed for some time. Hunter said he believed the checks were sent because the woman "wanted us to know she would p ay if s he had the money .. Eltclus1ve Tumtron one·qun. one· lena •ystem on ail models. "'.Viaur new remote contrcl nodels 15;· 17,' 19" •nd 21" lmectsurea d.ad~onallvl. F.atunng pwih·buttonEspreseTurunq MlC11ms-oved lum1Spooder hqht sens· '-"9 system for wader dyndm~ r4nge. New bgbtwea9ht, ... J·io-c.rty 9'' modei. \-.J, ahn11 1 ou r 1·1·1•1• I '1•ar .-. '•·;u· c·o11-.111111·r 11r u11•1·1 ion 11l 11 n 275 East 17th St. Co1ta Mesa Phone '42-8882 Store Hours D111V t-e..!:t t-5 30 For The Very Best Deal ~ YM owe It to , ......... died ., prices. ....... ,.~ Mast ... O\aroe'· VISA Budget Payments -. . , - I • I P ro•· •• ,,ioual , .... , ic·•· •·or ;di·' our honu• c• c•c ·trnnu· ... _J ---------------- Oraage £east EDITIO N • ,I ~ .. ORANGE COUNTY, CAL.I FORN IA THURSDAY, AUGUST 31, 1978 . N/C TEN CENTSi ort De·bate Going Nowhere?i Dlllly l'ltlt IUff ~ i. SHERIFF'S CRIME LAB INVESTIGATOR GARY GONZALES INSPECTS DEAD MAN'S CAR White Datsun Discovered In Legune Beech, Where Murder Victim Leet Seen Alive lMesa Post J Office E yes :. JNew HoIDe By MICHAEL PASKEVICB Ol .. Dlityl'MllSc..ft , A florist shop and a new post I oUice are expected to take root ·in the former Safeway market J. on Fairview Road in Costa ... Mesa. I It should be official by next Monday. spelling the end of the Orange Avenue postal annex that bas been in operation since May 1956, said Lyle VerPlanck, r Costa Mesa's postmaster j "The Orange A venue lease ex.- :: plred March 31," Ver Planck l said today, "but the owner has f been Jetting us stay on a month "t to month basis until we can find a new place." The new home will be the f abandoned Safeway at 2230 I Fairview Road tf no one contests City Planning Commission ap- . prov al ·of the move, said city l planning aide Doug Clark. S The Safeway site, near the in- l. tersection of Fairview and Newport Boulevard, has been vacant for more than two years. The bwlding is much larger than the 5,000 square foot post office facility at 1683 Orange Ave Ver Planck s aid the postal service would occupy less than half the building with the rest going to house a florist shop. The owner of the building is involved iJl the flower business, he said. [ As for the Orange A venue an-1 nex. VerPlanck said the owners ~. plan to tear it down as soon as i. the 50 postal employees clear out Plans are to put a small ' <See POSTAL, Page A2) Car Find No Help In CdM Slay Probe Newport Beach police indicated today t h at tbe discovery of Corona del Mar murder victim Ruben Martinel' car in Laguna Beach Wednesday bas led them no closer to the dead man's killer. The car was found parked a few blocks from the Coast lnn. where Martinez was last seen alive Stmday night. Officer'! believe the car had not been there since Sunday because they searched the area around the hotel earlier and had not found it. An all-points bulletin was issued Monday for the missing car after the battered body of Martinez was discovered in the bedroom of his home at 411 Iris Ave. Police investigators s aid Kremer to Tell # Traffic Plan Irvine Co. President Peter Kremer will give an assessment of Newport Beach traffic pro- blems and proposed remedies when he speaks to a breakfast meeting of Harbor Area realtors Sept. 7. • Kremer will outline the com- pany's development plans for its remaining Newport Beach land and will detail the comp8Jly's road proposals that go along with those development plans The meeting of the Newport Harbor-Costa Mesa Board of Realtors will be held at 8 a.m. at the Costa Mesa Country Club. Martinez had been so viciously bludgeoned that parts of bis brain were exposed. Detectives had hoped that finding the car would lead them to the killer of the 40-year-old real estate salesman. but those hopes appeared to dim today. The car, a white Datsun. was round Wednesday morning by Laguna Beach detective Gene ' Brooks. who was working on another case at the time. Brooks said he was on his way to interview a witness in connection with his own case, but decided to take the time to drive through the neighborhood where Martinez was last seen all ve Sunday night. He spotted the dead man's car parked on Brooks Street near Catalina Street. Newport Beach detective Sam Amburgey indicated no un e xpecte d leads were uncovered from the inspection of the car. "We're continuing to talk to the people who knew Martinez and who were with him Sunday night." he said. Defense Pact? JERUSALEM <AP> -Prime Minis ter Menachem Begin said thls afternoon he would accept a mutual defense pact with the United States. including American military facilities in Israel, but rejected stationing of U.S. troops in the occupied West Bank of the Jordan River. He spoke to American fund raisers three days before leaving for a Middle East summit at Camp David, Md. Further Studies Asked By GARY GRANVILLE Of -Dlllty l'llM ltatf A debate over Orange County Airport ended Wedn esday virtually where lt began five years ago when. the county Board or Supervisors: -Opted to keep commercial jet airliner activity at the airPQrt under the same wraps that have dictated levels of operation for the past eight years. -Conceded that new environmental impact reports will be needed before any improvement projects at the airport can be approved. -Ordered a new study. this time to develop an airport master plan. -Declared that Orange County Airport will forever be a short-haul airport. Airport development plans have been bogged down in a five :ye a r s l u d y th al 1 e d nowhere. The board did de clare the $290,000 study adequate to serve as an environmental impact report. In the next breath, however. the board conceded that new reports will be needed to support specific projects. including commercial airline lease renewals. That concession represented a major victory ror Newport Beach. The city insisted the bulky and• costly study did not address itself to specific projects and. therefore, did not fUJ the legal requirements imposed by the California Environmental Quality AcL If tbe pro-airport forces won a point. it was a board order to the county General Services Agencies to prepare new leases for the three airlines that operate at Orange County Airport. Presently, Air California. Hughes Airwest and Golden West Airlines are operating at the airport under month-t.(>-month agreements. Before new five.year leases can be approved. however. environmental impact reports must be prepared and accepted by the board of supervisors. That is where it all beRan in <See AIRPORT. P age A2> 2Thugs Rob Mesa Eate r y Two men simulated a weapon to rob a Costa Mesa coffee shop of an unknown amount of cash Wednesday evening. police said today. The robbery occurred at 1': 53 p.m. at the Denny's Restaurant at 3170 Harbor Blvd. near the San Diego Freeway. There were no injuries. • Police said two men ap- proached a hos tess and de- manded cash, scooped lip the money and drove away in a late model Chevrolet. Dllllr l'lllt IUitt ...... i BOB PIEHL (IN HAT), BRIAN CHAPMAN RAKE LOT Newport Surfers Clean up El Morro Parking Lot Voluntarily ' ~ i! 1 f They Clean El Morro Mess . } By STEVE MITCHELL Of ... CMltY ...... Stan Two Corona del Mar surfers took it upon themselves to clean up an unsightly parking lot used by surfers and other beachgoers at El Morro Elementary School. The parking lot is adJ.acent to El Morro Beach and Scotchman's Cove, and, on weekends. the asphalt is~vered with cars.1vans and trastl. Bob Piehl. 23, and Brian Chap-~ n. 22. said they were watching the sunset from the parking lot earlier this week when they decided to clean up the mess. So they were out on the lot bright and early Wednesday morning, with rakes and shovels in hand. "We always park in that lot to go surfing at Old Man 's 1 beneath Morro Rock >.·· Piehl said today. The two surfers piled more than 800 empty beer cans. an as- sortment of liquor bottles. d1s- c a rded chicken cartons, and what Piehl described as a "de- funct beach blanket." onto their Cubans S eek U.S. Entry s mall pickup and took the mess l to the dump. ~ School officials lauded the ef- fort, but said they are going ahead with plans to fence in the • parking lot, thereby making it in-1 accessible to beach visitors. The Laguna Beach Unified School Dis trict originally j planned to charge for parking, 1 thus providing jobs for students. · But the cost of insurance was prohibitive. and the district is , working with the Irvine Co. as well a s operators of t h e Scotchman's Cove lot. and CalTrans to fund the fencing. To dale. three of the fo ur parties have agreed to chip in for the $4,600 cost of fencing the lot. The district is still awaiting word from CalTrans officials as to whether that state depart- ment will participate. Piehl said he was unaware un- til Wednesday that the fencing might be going up "That would re ally be bad news," he satd But at least the lot is clean - al least until this weekend. Prince Unharmed NO NG KHAI. Thailand <APl -A military helicopter carry- ing Thailand's Crown Prince Va- ji ralongkorn was s truck by bullets fired by communist in- surgents today but the prince escaped injury, the military command said. Co ast ~· I .. Harrises Plead -GoHty WASHINGTON (AP> -The Castro government has decided to allow 48 Cuban political prisoners to seek entry to the United States and U .S . authorities will soon begin screeni11g them lo determine which will be admitted . the Justice Department announced today. Attorney General Griffin B Bell said in a statement that the Cuban government has already released some of the prisoners and more will be released soon All or the persons are still in - Cuba. Weather { it • r • •QLAD IT'S OVER' Wlll•m Harri• OAKLAND (A Pl-William and Emily Harris pleaded guilty -t-Oday-to kjdn_a in Patricia Hearst 4"11 yean ago. Alameda County Superior Court Judge Stanley P. Golde accepted the plea to a charge of simple kidnapping and set sen- tencing for Oct. 3. The original charge of kidnap- ping with bOdily harm, which would have eliminated the possibility of parole U convicted, was dismissed after the plea was accepted. Golde said the Harrlses, mem· bers of the terrorist SFbionese Liberation Army, woUld be sen- tenced under the indeterminate sentence law that was in err~ at the Ume ot the kidnapping Feb. 4, 1974, which permits parole. The Hanises, smiling broadly, entered the courtroom to an out- burst ot applause from some spectators. .After the pleas )Were accept«,11 they eada read brief emotlOflal atatemdb declaring tbelr pride in kidnapping Miss Hearst and taking "full responsibility for our actions." · Ha~ris. sitting Oif·tileCO'UnSet table and facing the spectators, said that his feelings were "complex ... but there is relief that the uncertainty of the past few years is over " The Harris es bad been scheduled to appear on defense motions that a psychiatric ex· aminatlon be ordered for Miss Hearst and that the Harrises' trial be moved out of Alameda County because of massive publicity. Defense attorneys S usan Jordan and Leonard Weinglass had told Golde ln the motion, filed in June, that Miss Hearst suffers from "impaired psychological makeup." The newspaper heiress. now 24 and servtna time at a prison in nearby Pleasanton on a bank robbery convlcllon, would bave been the key witness aaainat the Harrlaea. ' A Justice D e partment spokesman. T e rre nce B. Adamson, said 300 members of the prisoners' families also are seeking entry to the United States. He said that ultimately as many as 1,000 Cubans may apply for entry under the pro- gra~.· SOCCER CROWD ~PADDED? The Caltrornia Sunshine has been padding its attendance figures. according to an ln- vestitaUve report by Dally A~w........., Pilot sportswriter Ernie Castillo . PROUD OF ACT10N See story on Page 83 EmUy Ham• I j l• ....... 1 •• l Night and morning low cloudmess with sunny af- ternoon Friday. Not much t e rn perature chanae. "tows tonight 60 to 65: Hi g h s Friday from around 70 at beaches to upper 70s inland. I NSIDE TOD" V There's 30methtng about a Jaguar thot tn$p&res such adoratwn among owners thot they've formed a club to swap information See Featuring, Page 81. l•dex • ' ts More Pay Lurea llirn to .New Job 9y IOANN a OLDI ................. • .,,._.,_ •IM"J WfOtll Wi\bi lhll tlre ... rtmeal I Jwil fln't affoN to·~ ti Ntek Walle 1polse qul~Uy, dHrly dla--6Me4 lbat IM-m•t.a Mfair'i:hil'tl ttined la 0. badf• th.a maned bltn • • Newport a.ac .. flnm•. • Walt•. a paum dtc •ho jt>ined l Rre MIMU1ment l&hl )'Hrl aao, qu.il lHl •·eeJc \0 ~ome a ~f fUua r. '11 cu mue l90ft mooey dotna tbat:• be upl•IMd. lt ta a protea t.bat bu beeA repeated MV«al Um ID &he nr. and DOlke 4Mpartmenta m Newport ~ al.nee t.M flrst of tM at. Normll allritioa nte baaed oa ao averaie ot the last Uli yean for batb cltoertm-.. ii • combined total of 10. So far Ulla y ar is mm have a.ft U.. two cte. partmenll. Tbt departure of •mployee1 lt tMtlna seen tn the clb''• otber de--putineata .. wen. but tl Meml to be fell mo11t acutely tn the nre and police department.I for a couple ol reasons : Flrst is the fact th•t tbe city pays for Lhe trainlna of its police and fire employees. A police de. partment spokesman estimated the city spend.a SJ0,000 to train a beginning patrolman over a nine-month period until he is ellllble to assume patrol duties on bis own. 'J1)e fire trainlni cost is about $3,100 over a aeven- week period. In addition, both departments must be staffed 2' hours a day. A police spokesman said the department is runcUoning with 18 vacant positions. The aum~er shortage in the patrol division has meant that detectives who want theovertlme pay spend their off days workin1 shifts as patrolmen. Not all the 23 departures have been because of lack ol P•Y -six have retired. one left on medical disability and one was killed in an off-duty hours accl· dent. Of the 15 who have resigned to seek oth~ jobs. a few have left Southern California expressing dissatisfaction with the lifestyle here. But employee association ac· tivists who are lobbying for bet- ter pay packages say that dis- satisfaction probably wouldn't have led to ao many departures ll pay wun't ao wue . Walt•, one of the actlvlsta la the ell)''• '1re Ftibtt11 Associa· tlon, contends hfs pay catties about the 1aine buyin1 power to- day aa lt dkl et1bt yean ago. The ctifterenco ill that ln those ••1bt year• he·a 1alned in Hn lorlty. Hen promoted to •nt•neer and become a paramedic, all of which put lum ln hlaber pay brackets. ·•My toe home pay after tax- es. never mind credit union or any of that 1tufl. ia S230 a week," he said. "My wife makes more being a part·llme nurse at Hoag Memorial Roepital." WaUe, once voted the fireman of the year for a dramatic rescue of two men injured ln a heUcopter crash, said that, if 1lven the financial cholce, he would continue bis work as a medic. "There's a tot of reward in helping people. That's why I became a fireman in the first place," be aald. Wai~ aaid be tried to st.ay with the department by working on his days off. ''But it just got too bard to be up 24 hours Cfor a shift as a medic) then work the next day. "I decided to leave because I honestly don't see any relief. There's just no future for me workin1liketbis. • • Police and fire employees this spring lobbied for pay raises that would put them near the top. Whatever .ground they gained was lost when councilmen voted a salary freeze after passage or Proposition 13. According lo surveys pre- pared jointly by the city ad· ministration and the police and f',...p_,,,AJ ... fire fighters associations, the total pay and benefit packages given by Newport Beach lags well behind others offered in Orange County. AIRPORT STUDY. • • 1973 with the board of supervisors pondering new leases and calling for an elaborate study that would help them chart the airport's future. The s tudy called for Wednesday was proposed by Supervisor Philip Anthonv. Anthony specified that the study should define limits on the airport's capacity as well as spell out in detail what noise reduction pl'OIJ'ams will entail. The study should also measure the airport's compatibility "with the surrounding areas,•• Anthony •aid. And in the end, the study to be done by county workers should include a master plan aimed at meeting whatever future demands will be compatible with environmental constraints. In definition, that airport overview is not much diUerent from the· study ordered by the board in 1973. lo the end, that $290.000 study by consultants Daniel, Mann, Johnson & Mendenhall was termed adequate by the board but not adequate enough to support specific projects. Speaking for the Community Airport Council, a pro-airport organization, Joe Irvine termed Wednesday's board actions "a small step forward." Newport Beach City Attorney De nnis O'Neil said he was reluctant to assess the actions until he had a chance to review the board minutes. "It's too soon for a definitive answer because the motions were somewhat confusing, but I have the impression tha t our point of view is prevailing," O'Neil said. "However." he added, "il doesn't seem th al the ultimate solution to the airport problem is at hand." Veteran anti-airport crusader Dan Emory may have won a major point during the debate Emory argued that new lease agreements should call on the a1rlines to make a purchase commitment for quieter jets if and when lhey hit the market OflANGI COMT DAILY PILOT After the lengthy public hearing. Supervisor Thomas Riley said he is likely to insist on "some sort.of provision that will make certain the quietest jets available are flying from Orange y Airport. The board' ote declaring the consultant's udy adequate carried on a vote with Supervisor Ralph Diedrich ' casting the lone dissenting vote. Thal ballot was followed by a series of 4-0 votes ordering the leases prepared, conceding lhe need for new environmental imQ.acl reports and ordering the ne~study Supervisor Laurence Schmit was not at Wednesday 's meeting. Age Upped For Adoptees JnAidBill SACRAMENTO <AP> -A bill that prompted emotional pleas from adopted children and parents has been modified to aJ. low only 21-year-old adoptees to seek their natural parents. The revised version of SB 535 by Sen. William Campbell, R· Hacienda Heights, was ap· proved Wednesday by the state Assembly by a 43-32 vote, two more than neeessary. It also needs Senate approval. The bill, passed in differing versions last spring by both houses, would require the state to keep a registry of adopted children and natural pare nts who wanted to meet each other. The stale would assist in meet- ings when the adopted children reached 21. The Assembly version of the bill had the age at 18, but oppo· nents argued that some 18-year· olds are still in high school and too young to handle the trauma or finding natural parents. The new version also requires all siblings adopted by one ram•· ly to be 21 before the older ones can begin the search. Under prese nt law. adopted children can fmd their natural parents only tbro'!jh a com· plicated coutt process. "I still lhlnk It's a bad bill," said Assemblyman Eugene Gualco, D-Sacramento, who has adopted children. "I think It's going to cause an awful lot or bu:U~~;as strongly sup- ported by Auemblymen Bruce Young, D-Cerrttos, who was adopted and made the lone search for his natural molher. and Dennis Mangers, D· Huntington Beach, who has an adopted son. Polio C88e8 Climb THE HAGUE. Netherlands <AP) -Two more caaes of polio were reported ln the Netherlands Wednesday, brint· tna to 103 the number of vlctima discovered amon1 memben ol a religious community ln the 1outhern provlnc. of Zeeland who refute to be vaccinated, Dutch officlal1 utd. Those surveys, prepared this spring, list police and fire pay packages at 14th in the count.y. There are a total of 25 law en- forcement agencies and 17 fire fighting agencies. For example, the fire fighters survey. prepared in March, showed that a fire· fighter in Anaheim made a monthly average or $2,02.6, counting pay and benefits, the top package in the county. Second was Santa Ana with a combined total of $2,025 and third was Huntington Beach with a total package of $1,885 a month. Newport's total allbetlmewas$1,602. f n the poUce pay survey. Anaheim again was the county's lop-paying agency. offering beginning patrolmen a total package worth $2,149 a month. Irvine was second at $2,117 and Santa Ana was third al $2,040. Newport Beach's pay package for a beginning patrolman at lhe time totalled $1,814. Personnel Director Wayne Schwammel, who supplied the statistics, pointed out that since the surveys were made, the value of the Newport package has Increased to $1,695 for firefighters and $1,~ for police because of an improved retire- ment system those agencies negotiated in 1977. However, he also conceded that the other agencies above Newport Beach on the two sur- vey lists also have probably in- creased the value of their pay packets through better benefits or pay raises. W a•te said he hopes he can find a job as a medic or fireman with another agency that pays better, although he conceded the ·better-paying jobs are nearly impossible to come by. "It's really too bad we've got this kind of a situation." he said. "I personally don't think it's the department head s' fault . They're doing the best they can .. "But it's really a shame when you ·ve got experienced people movi'U' out of here and the PD too because they don 't see a future wtth the city.•• - Carter Back; FllMB Issues WASHINGTON c AP> -Look· Ins rested and fit. President Carter ls back early from bis Western holiday to wrestle trith major issues that conceivably could make or break bis ad· ministration. The first Item on Carter's post-vacation agenda is the push to win Senate passage ol a natural gas price compromise. That was the subject of separate lobbying sessions at the White House today w•th at least 11 gov· ernora and about 100 represen· tatlvea of major natural gas uaera. Reacb.lna climactic stages at 1 point when the president is striv· ln1 to boost his popularity and escape a can't-do Image are 1uch other Issues as Middle East peace, pro1pecUve Income lax cut1, Civil Service reorganlza· Uon, water policy and allocation or de~ense funds. • ...... ........... FQRMEA MARKET TO BECOME MESA POST OFFICE Fairview Aoed Faclffty to AeptKe Orange Avenue Brandt Huntingron Pedestrian Hit by Auto A 21-year-old Huntington Beach woman suffered multiple injuries late Wednesday night when ahe was struck by a car while trying to cross busy Harbor Boulevard in Costa Mesa. police reported today. Anita Marie Ruff. of 19768 Kingwood Lane, was reported in good condition at UCI Medical Center today. She suffered a broken right leg and lacerations to both feel whe she was bit by a car driven by 36-year-old Maureen Frances Lawhorn of Newport Beach. Witnesses at a Harbor Boulevard fast food outlet near Wilson Street told police that Miss Russ was attempting to cross Harbor Boulevard at about 10:44 p.m. when she was hit. One witness said the injured woman was wearing dark clothing and apparently did ool see the oncoming car. The driver said she did not see the pedestrian until she heard a thud and saw the woman bounce off the windshld of her car. Police said an investigation into the accident wm continue. P,....P ... AJ POSTAL ••• shopping center on the site. The closure of the Orange A venue branch will leave east slde residents without a post of. nee. The city's main branclt ls on Adams Avenue in Mesa Verde. The Orange annex has been serving about 1,300 customers per day. However. even with the switch to tl1e vacant market site. VerPlanck said it may only be a temporary move because of in· creased efforts toward mechanization of postal service. "We 're looking at it for at least five years in the future." he said. After that, the annex may be shut down, leaving the city wilh just the main branch on Adams. The Fairview Road location is in need of repair and sprq,cing up. VerPlanck said it will be between 60 to 90 days before the new postal annex will open to the public. Etna Still Spews CATANIA, Sicily <API - Mount Etna, Europe's tallest volcano. spewed lava, rocks and ashes for the sixth consecutive day Wednesday. Six new models: two 12:· • ts:· a 11;· and two 19" (meuwed diaQonallyl. Featuring push·button Bxpnm Tuning, reduced power oonaumption (they all use less power than a 100.watt hght bulb), and a red9Slgned cbuas for easier serVlceability. NeVada Crash Probed Federal lnveaUgaton in Laa Ve1as were trytq today to de· termlne the CllMe of a charter plane crash Wednesday that kUled 10 people. nine of them Aatrallans endinc a month-long tour of the United Statea wtth a visit to Lu Veaas casinos. The plane, a twin-eqine Piper Navajo Chieftain nown by Las Veeas Airlines. was headed for Oran1e County AJrport w\aen it bellied Into • dusty fleid illortly after a 7:~ a.m. tMeolf. . The pilot bU been ldeotlfted at Cbadea A. Hemln1. 48. of LM Vea••· He was a retl,_. Air Force colonel with mon Olan 6,000 hours night time. Tbe Clark County coroner's cl· flee identified the dead pusensen as: Lilian 8ell Clifton. 88. or Sydney; John R. MacLachan. ~. of MaeGre1or; Janet Grant MacLachan, 55, MacGregor: Hazel Adlee Bush . 87 . Shellharbour: Lorne Casna Peady, 58, Woywoy: Kenneth Arthur J. Peady, 59, Woywoy; Stanley Markwell Kannar, 73, Lan Cove, and Leslie Knlght, 61, Brisbane. The 10-passenger plane was the last of three tbat had taken off on a flllht to Orange County. with members of the Australian tour aroup. said Don Donohue. a 1pokesman for the airline. The group had nown to the Grand Canyon from Orange County m Tuesday before gotng to Las Ve«as. Las Vegas Airlines bas no reg- ularly scheduled runs but flies on an on-call charter basis from Las Vegas to Grand Canyon and other points in Nevada and California. A seven-member invest\gating team from the National Transportation Safety Board ar- rived in Las Vegas Wednesday night to begin probing for a causeorthecraah. Newport Man Burglarized A Central Newport resident told police someone s lipped into his home while be was gone for two hours Tuesday afternoon - aod made off with items he valued at $2,525. Gregory Gendreau said bis stereo equipment and a television set were stolen. Gendreau told police be left a second story sliding glass door leading into the home from a balcony open in bis absence. Police speculated that was bow the thief or thieves got into the house. E1clu.1ve Trmatron one-gun, one•lens "SJ stem 011 aJt:owdp. Four new remot• control modela. 15:' 17." 19" and 21" lm8dswed daaqonallyl. FMtwm9puah·buttonEApreuTwunq and amproved lumi.ponder h9hr sens· 1n9 system for wider dyrw111c r&~ '"'• ahoul 0111· Ir•••• I,, •• , ... -.,, •• .,. '·011-.111111•r 1•ro11•1·1io111•1;111 275 East 17th St. Costa Mesa Phone 642-8882 StOf• Hours Daily M.i. Sit 9-5 30 ................... _,,.. For The Very Best, Deal 1 Y• oweltto . , ............. _.prtcee.w..e r• '*rt Master °*Ve . VISA Budge! Pavments I ( I I • ORANGE COUNTY, CAUFORNIA THURSDAY, AUGUST 31, 1978 ~ftera .. a N.Y. Stoek8 TEN CENT~ VOL 71, NO. 2.U, 4 SECTIONS, 68 PAGES Rattlesnake Jffenaee E'IJIJs .J.Ut a Bit '1 8yJ aYCLA ................. Wh n a dl1mond b ck nttltt \u.n1 d at Lourdc Maria Cbava In O'Nclll Part northn l of Toro. th .. ll\tl Ana Yte>man beum tho lOlh ~n•kebUe vie· tlm taken to outh tounl.) area bosplla th y ar. She wu lttllltd for a bale on the ri1bt ankl Tue •> evtnin1 and ttleased from • ddle ck Community Ho patal. L11un1 Hilla. a holpltal apok min aald. ~ at. may be llttl con· aolat on to htt and lh other nln anake v1ctlm1, few r bit have rerorded lhla aumm r than had been prec11cted br ora.n1 County an1m1I contro official• and the medical communlty "From one end ot th la county to lhO other, we are turolnl( up rattl anaket," Joe Ollv r . chi r county animal control ofncer, aald in May. Snake calla last prltts tripled thoao ol provlou1 yeara and 011 ver nd hla staff were alrding ror 11 summer Filled with reptlles -capeclally ln south county areoa where home construction ii bur1eonin1. Oliver's training officer. Dick Robillard, anUcipaled lbat H\leral factors would contribute to th snake infestation: a larger 11dult snake population, con. structlon in areas formerly ln· O.llyPllotSi.tf......_ f Dope Goes Vp in Sntoke ·' St.ate Bureau of Narcotics supervised the burning of <•bout 5250.000 worth of narcotics and restricted drugs in Hunt· ington Beach on Wednesday. Destroyed were four pound:, of heroin. three pounds of cocaine. two pounds of hashish and hash oil. four pounds of miscellaneous pills and 113.5 pounds of marijuana. As· s is ting at the burning were Steven Secofsky, left with clipboard. of the Justice Department and Crist Wagner. also with clipboard. from the West Covina Police Department. Laguna Faces 1 $5,000 Claim l Over Beating An attorney ha!i filed a claim t against the city o f Laguna i Beach on behalf of Costa Mesa • truck driver Delbert M ath1eson t who was allegedly a!'>s aulted by f Police Chief J on Sparks in a tavern June 29 Mathieson. 32, 1s seeking city t runds in excess of $5,000. t Chief Sparks was fined $500 in l Santa Ana Municipal Court on a ' single cnminal charge of ba•· r ter:> in the incident. He has re· ~ turned to full duties as police l chief in the wake of the bar mca· t dent. ~ The claim. received this week _ b} the city. seeks damages for ~ assault and battery. invasion of i. privacy. intentional infhct1on or emotional distress and also ~ seeks P11nit1ve damages i Mathieson 's attorney. John H E versmeyer of Newport Beach. f said the claims required before a • la ws uitcanbefiled The City Council usually de· nies such claims in routine ac· tion. a nd refers the da1m lo its : insurance carrier . The claim ~ comes beforetheCouncilSepl 5. ~ Bias Charged 1 f By Minister ~ GREENFIELD. Mass IAP> l -A 24-year-o ld Me thodist r minister says be was denied a ~ pulpit because he is a white ~ male New Study Voted On Airport Plan By GARJMRANVILLE Of,,. o.itv "'""Sutt A debate over Orange County Airport e nded Wednes day virtually where it began five year s ago when the county Board of Supervisors : · -Opted to keep commercial jet airliner activity at the airport under the same wraps that have dictated levels of operation ror the past e ight years. -Conceded that n ew environmental impact reports will be needed before any 1 m provement projects at the a irport can be approved. -Ordered a new study, this time to develop an airport m aste r plan. -Declare d that Orange County Airport will forever be a short-haul airport. Airport development plans have been bogged down in a f1 v.e -year study that led nowhere. The board did declare the S290,000 study adequate to serve as an environmental impact Laguna Hills Thieves Take Drugs, Cash report. ln the next breath. however. l.he board conceded that new reports will be needed to s upport s pecific proJeCts . including com m e rc ial airline l ease renewals. Thal concession represented a m a1or victor y for Newport Bi:ach The city insisted the bulky and costly study did not address itself to specific projects and. therefore. did not fill the legal requirements imposed by the Ca l1forn1a Env iro nme ntal Quality Act. lf the pro-airport forces won a point, 1t was a board order to the county General Services Agencies to prepare new leases for the three airl ines that operate ~t Oran g e County Airport Presentlv. Air California. Hugh es Aarwest and Golden West Airlines are operating at the airport under month-to-month agreements. Be fore new five-year leases can be a pproved. howe ver. environmenta l impact reports must be prepared and accepted by the board of supervi\()rS. That is where it all began in 1973 with the board of s upe rvisor s ponde ring new leases a nd cal ling for an elaborate study that would help the m chart the airport's future. The study ca lle d for Wedn esday was proposed by Supervisor Philip Anthony. <See AIRPORT. Page A2> habited by snakes and drencb.lng rain that nooded boles and bur· row1 in more remote canyon areas. But Oliver said this week his organization was tleldlng more snake reports in May than now. ••ft 's interesttna:· be said. "Obviously, the snakes have found food more easily than we expected or people are learning the difference between a gopher snake and a ratUesnalce." He warned. though. that the test of previous predictions would come this fall -by late September. probably -when rattlesnakes traditionally end the ir searches for water on backyard swimming pool decks. So far this year, Mission Com· munity Hospital in rapidly de· velopina Mission Viejo reports treating only two snakebite vie· lims. ' San Clemente General Hospital reports three and South Coast Community Hos pltal in South Laguna has recorded only one victim. Saddleback Community Hospital has treated four vac· tims . Two were hos pilaJazed. The other two. Including Ms. Chavez. we r e trea ted an emergency rooms and released. Slides Halted Viejo Grading Jobs Near Completion Work on two massive Mission Viejo landslldes that closed two major streets is nearing comple· lion, according to Orange Coun· ty Environmental Management Agency officials. . Trabuco Road=cl ed in late April when an esf ated 400,000 •Jbic yards or artb cascaded las Vegas Air Crash Probed Federal investigators in Las Vegas were trying today to de· lermine the cause or a charter plane crash Wednesday that killed 10 people, nine of them Australians ending a month·long t~ur pf the United States with a v1s1ftoLas Vegascasinos. The plane, a twin·engine Piper Navajo Chieftain flown by Las Vegas Airlines, was beaded for Orange County Airport when it bellied into a dusty field shortly after a 7: 50 a . m. takeorf. The pilot has been identified as Charles A. Heming, 48, or Las Vegas. He was a retired Air Force colonel with more than 6,000 hours flight time. The Clark County coroner's of· fice idenli(ied the dead passengers as: Lilian Bell Clifton. 68. of Sydney; John R. MacLachan. 53. of MacGregor ; Janet Grant MacLachan, 55, MacGregor : Haz.e l Adl ee Bu s h . 67. Sh ell harbour ; Lorne Cazna Peady. 58, Woywoy; Kenneth Arthur J . Peady, 59. Woywoy : Stanley Markwell Kannar. 73. Lan c·ove. and Leslie Knight. 61 . Brisbane. The 10-passenger plane was the last of three that had taken off on a flight to Orange County. with m embers of the Australian tour group, said Don Donohue. a spokesman for the airline. The group had flown to the Grand Canyon from Orange County on Tuesday before going to Las Ve~as. Las Vegas Airlines has no reg· ularly scheduled runs but flies on an on-call charter basis from Las Vegas to Grand Canyon and other points in Nevada and California. A seven-member investigating t ea m from th e National Transportation Safely Board ar - rived in Las Vegas Wednesday night to begin probing for a causeofthecrash. "Some witnesses seem to in-" dicate there may have betin an engine problem." said Homer Wormdahl. chief of the Federal Aviation Administration's flight standards office in Las Vegas. Kenyatta Buried NAIROBI. Kenya <AP) President Jomo Kenyatta. who led his nation to independence from Britain 15 years ago. was bur•ed today. frorn :i s lope between Alicia Parkway a nd Los Ali s o s Boulevard, was opened to traffic Aug. 12. Northbound trarric lanes on Marguerite Parkway. closed s outh of Oso Parkway when about 400 tons of dirt toppled From a hillside there in March. ,.,._,...,.... GOAL: WORLD PEACE John Paul I Vows Aid Pope Speaks To Diplomats In VatiCan VATICAN CITY CA Pl -Pope John Paul I vowed to continue the work of his predecessor in the field or human rights. de· tente. disarmament and world peace in his first speech to the diplomatic corps lo the Vatican today. cRelated story. Alli Using a foreign language - French -· for the first time in his five-day pontificate. he described the Vatican role in an- ternalional affairs as ··unique ·· "Obviously Ne have no tem- po ra I gods to exch a n ge, no economic interes ts to discuss such as your states have." the pope said. "Our possibilities for diplomatic interventions are limited and or a special character . . . Our d iplomallc missions ... far from being a survival from the pas t. are a witness to our deep seated r espect for lawful te mporal power and to our lively interests in the humane causes that the temporal power is intended to advance ... The pope said that the Vatican will gladly assist "in the search for better solutions to the great problems that see at stake de· t ente. disarmament. peace. justice, humanitarian measures and aid. development, etc " is expected to be open to traffic in approximately two weeks. the officials said. John Huntsman. EMA con· struction division manager. said grading ia completed on the Trabuco slope reconstruction and that the project is expected to be finis hed at a cost of Sl.250.000 -a quarter million dollars less than authorized by the Orange County Board or Supetisors. E now is wailing for a con· tract r -Moore and Taber of Anaheim -to begin compaction grouting on the newly framed slope below two Moulton-Niguel • Water District tanks a top the ndge . Huntsman said a cement solu·i lion -will be pumped into some 1 underground areas where com· , paction voids are anticipated. An irrigation system is to beJ installed soon. he saad . andl planting is to begin before the rainy season. · Gained in the rebuilding job, J Hunts man said. is a small park., carved in the hillside about a third of the way up from Trabuco street. The picnic-sized. area measures approximately 100 by 200 feet. N alive grass seeds will be blown onto reconstructed . Marguerite Parkway slopes with ~ a nozzle. Huntsman said. The ' slope has no irril{alion system. Supe rvi sor s a uthori zed $324.000 for the Marl'?ueritet Parkway project. j Meanwhile. Moulton Niguef • Water District officials report • they refilled the 2.2-million. ~ 1Zallon water storage tank above 1 the Marguente s lide area two weeks ago The water district - which serves much of Mission Viejo -drained the tank to ease pressure on the slide area m March Two 1.25-million-gallon tanks above the Trabuco Road shd~ area were refilled by the district a month ago. offa c 1als said Those tanks were drained when d~rict engmeer<> feared water ' weil{ht might cause additional slope s loughrng an that area Polio Cases Climb THE HAGUE. Nethe rlands 1AP1 Two more cases or poho we r e rep o rted an the Netherlands Wednesday, bnnj!· ing to 103 thl' number or v1ct1ms discovered umon~ me mbers of a rel1g1ous communit y 1n the soul he rn province of Zeeland who refuse to bl vacc1na1ed. Dut ch offtcial.; s ::iid Health Ministry offici a l~ sc.ud till' epidemic has caused only ont.- falahty. a 3·monlh-old girl Coast 6-.- Weather New church poli cy s ays women and mmontaes must be • gTvcn prionty until they make up 10 percent of the Methodist ministers in southe rn New England area. Burglars used a bolt cutter to snaJj ornament-al grillwork and enter La Paz Medical Center in Laguna "Rills early today where they took $143 in cash, a $2SO bot· tie of optoloy used in filling teeth and a "rew vials" or drugs in· eluding nembutal. -Blast Prollid That, the pope added. "i~ one appreciable form of cooperation or mutual aid that the Holy See has the posstbHil..Y or contribut ing. thanks to the international recognition that it enJoys and the representation of the whole of-the-Catholic world that 11 ensures.·· Night and mommg low cloudiness with c;unny af ternoon Friday Not much !em pcraturP <'h <10~t" Lowe; tonight 60 to 65 Hi gh-. Fr ida} f rom around 10 at beachei; to upper 7()!;. inland • The Rev. Jeremy Paul Oun- \ can was passed over lasl><March I for a mmlslerial post by the ~ Methodist Board or Ordained r Ministry or Sout·hern New ' England. J SOCCER CROWD SUMS PADDED? The California Suns hine has been paddrng its attendance figures. according to an in· veslhtatlve report by Daily Pilot s portsw rit e r Ernie Castillo , See atory on Page B3. Orange County Sheriff's in· vestigators said only the dental o ffices or Dr. Robert J . O'Callaghan were entered ill.the one·story medical buildlnf at 26302 La Paz Road. The burglars -at least two pe rsons -also entered the building's attic and uns uc· cessfutly attempted to break through ceiling panels above a pharmacy, investigators said. This morning's burglary is not connected with a buralary earlier this month in which more than $1,000 in cash and postage stamps wu taken from a Ml.s· sion Viejo medical center, an ln· veaU1ator .sakl. ' ' Clemente Land Mine Set San Clemente rire officials are investigating an explosion that lilted a two·lon fire truck oft the ground when it ran over a land mine fuse. apparently placed in the s treet deliberately to ex- plode whe n hit by passing vehicles. F ire Marshal Don Hodgson said safety devices had been re· moved from the mine fuse on West Avenida Poniente and from another fuse found nearby. The huge truck was not damaged, but Hodason said a smaller vehicle might ban been. 1t a chUd had roundlt and • tried to explode tt or lake it apart. the explosion could take his arm off, Hodgson said. There was no apparent at· tempt to sabotage the fire truck. he said, and firemen.driving back to the fire station from a medical aid call said they turned down that street by chance. Hodgson said the fuses were be lieved to be from Camp Pendleton. where they are used in training maneuvers. T,lley are an inch in circumrer'M'ce. an tnch and a ball Jong and blue In color . Attending the audience were 51 heads of diplomatic missions to the Vatican and their aides. Tbe pope spoke in repl>' to a con· gratulatory address delivered 10 French by the dean or the diplomatic corps. Ambassador Julio Antonio Torres Arriola of Guatemala. The pope will be inaugurated Sunday, and Vatican sources say he is simplifying the c~remony to emphasize the humllity and dedication to re· ligion that he wants to charac terlze his rei~n "It's a matter of getting rid or some of the trappings of the past denoting the pope as a civil ruler <See POPE, Pa1~ A2) INtlOE TODA l' There ~ sometmng about a Jaguar that tnsp1rf's .. uch adoration among owners that they've /ormed a club to swap 1n/01mat1on s,,e F'eaturmg. Page 81 ladex At V•11r Stfvl<• AH -..c._. U lrm• 1....-C.a II """ l..elMlers Ill I. M l•r• A6 Me••H 1t•t1 IMlllMU ... "'411WI '°'""" .. C.t1ter111a Al i.a11eu1 ,..,_. A4 C.r'Mf\ Alt Ou1199 C-y All Cl•n•llH a_. h•••• ,..._ •• C9mt<t 17 '-"• ... Cnn•9"1 17 "9<11 lllU,.... .. Otati. ".il<ft All hi.., .. ._ 81t 141Mnal..... ~, "'"'-..... , lllMfUI-1 ... 11 W.atllff M ~ .. ,..... ._,., . ., .. ,..... .. ) . To Keep Home School Lulic hes Extollea WASHJNGTON f AP• - Acrtculture Secretary Bob Berctand aays schools can uae their commod1Uee from Uncle Sam to Pfepare meals Juet as tasty as bl1 wife'• cooklns. INDIANAPOLJI f APJ -A womaa wbo wrote rl•• ............. _.ltdll,... wllh tht ~''Help .. -lo PA1 ta.--tM .......... w tall llwd aiace clll.._. MlJ bl Mle to hip Mr .._.. \•t1uae or •• aaon1•••• beMfadol'. AIRPORT ••• ADlbo6y ;peelfutci lbll lhe study hoUld define limits on the airport• upaclty a& w U • pell out In del1U what noise reduction proframs wm entail. Tbe ltudy should alto meMUl"e th airport's compa0b.Ul1 ··wttb the urroundln1 1re11," AntboQy 1aid. And ln the end, the t ludy to be done by county workers should tnclude a master plan aimed at meetlnt wh1tever future , demands will be compatible "' with environmental constraints. ~ Jn definition, that airport overview is not much different from the study ordered by the board in l973. In the end, that S290,000 study by consultants Daniel. Mann. Johnson & Mendenhall was termed adequate by tbe board but not adequate enou1b to support specific projects. Speaking for the Community Airport Council. a pro-airport organization, Joe Jrvtne termed Wednesday's board actions "a s mall step forward." Newport Beach City Attorney De nnis O'Neil said he was reluctant to assess the actions until be bad a chance to review the board minutes. .. It's too soon for a definitive answer because the motions were somewhat confusing, but I have the impression that our point. or view is prevalllng, .. O'Neil said. "However ," h e added, "it doesn't seem that the ultimate solution to the airport problem is at hand.'' Veteran anti-airport crusader Dan Emory may have won a major point during the debate. Emory argued that new lease agreements should call on the airlines to m ake a purchase commitment ror quieter jets if and when they hit the market. After the lengthy puolic hearing, Supervisor Thomas Riley said he is likely to insist on "some sort of provision that will .. make certain the quietest jets available are (lying from Orange County Airport. The board's vote declarin1 the consultant's s tudy adequate carried on a 3·1 vote with Supervisor Ralph Diedrich cast ing the lone dissentin~ vote. ....... Climb offtelall Md ................. u.. .. ~0 ........... 0 .. ,... "''"'•• to pq tM beck ,.._ wt.en an ·-·med woman de-livered 1 eertlftod ebecll far MO.M~. "Pie .. tllaall tM MliDM.'' 11ld UM bo•eowfter~ w\oH pareata built tM bfMM IOIM ID , .. ,. •· ............. , use my nam•. We've alwaye trlod to P1Y our bUll." The woman 11.kt •M Uv• wtth Itel" hulbaM and ea olMt' ailter. Th• three Un OD I loclal Security check ot _, a IDCllltb ud 1 "small pension." IM said. Marion County T,.uurer E. Allen Hunter H d he bad re· ceived five cbeckl from the woman on a bank account that bad been doled for tom• tlme. Hunter said be believed the cheeks were sent becauae the woman "wanted us to know she would pay U sbe bad the money." · A local newapaper article Monday quoted Hunter sa)'lna that Indiana law required him to make the house available to anyone williDI to pay the back taxes. James Hardin. an aaaiatant deputy treasurer, investigated the woman foUowina arrtval ol one of the fraudulent cbecka. He reported to Hunter tbat tbe woman was just a victim of circumstances. Hunter said bis office received more than 100 telephone calls with offers to help. lncludin1 one from the woman who brought the certified check. The woman said sbe didn't want the house, only to help its owner. "I've never beard of such response. lt waa most 1raUfy. ing," said Hunt.er. He noted that only three callers said they wanted the house for themselves. The rest, he said, wanted to pay all or part of the bill. Tears came to the woman's eyes jiben she learned her taxes had been paid, Hardin said. "I want to pay but. . . .. and then words failed her. r ..... r.,,.A1 POPE •.. or king," the Rev. John Lona of the Vatican Secretariat for Christian Unity said as details of the ceremony were released Wednesday. The pope has chosen to have a thin, circular band of white wool, called a pallium, placed on his shoulders rather than be crowned with the beehive-shaped tiara used for ts centuries. And be will not be carried to or from the ceremony on the traditional portable throne. .. , .... (Jp It's a topsy.turvy world for wing.walker Bob Oates. who bottomed up over the Toronto waterfron't Wednesday in a practice run for a f our·day airshow that opens Friday. Pilot Joe C. Hughes made the. picture by remote control 'from the cockpit. A camera was attached to the tail of the Super Stearman acrobatic p1ane by Globe and Mail photographer Dennis Robinson. Hughes is a Hollywood stunt pilot. Two Libertarians Qualify for Ballot Two Libertarian candidates in the Orange Coast area have been qualified by the county Registrar of Voters to appear on the Nov- ember general election ballot. David Berlland. a Costa Mesa attorney andlaw professor. will oppose Republican John Schmitz and Democrat Ron Cordova in the 36th State Senate District. Age Upped For Adoptees lnAidBill SACRAMENTO fAP) --A bill that prompted emotional pleas from adopted c hildren and parents has been modified to al- low only 21-year-old adoptees lo seek their natural parents. The revised version of SB 535 by Sen. William Campbell. R- H ac i enda Heights , was ap- proved Wednesday by the stale Assembly by a 43-32 vote. two more than necessary. It also needs Senate approval. Jim Gallagher. a Sunset Beach "lax protester ... will appear on the ballot In the 73rd Assembly District and oppose incumbent Democrat Denni& Mangers and Republican Chuck Gibson. B~r~land was the Libertarian Party s vice presidential can· did ate in 1976. He received. nationwide. the third highest number of votes for that office. While circulating petitions to have his name placed on the ballot. Bergland has complained that he has not shared the can· didates' platform with rivals Cordova and Schmitz. Now that the registrar has certified the required 10,853 voters· signatures supporting his candidacy were in order . Bergland 1s expected to become a full time candidate. Gallagher needed only 4,939 qualified voters· signatures to make 1t to the ballot. Registrar of Voters Al Olson said the signatures were in order and or· dered his name placed on the ballot. It is not known . Olson said. if the two candidates will have tht!1 r Libertarian Party affilia· tions printed on the ballot. If not. both men wi ll ~ shown as in - dependents. U.S. Tests Anotlwr Nuke In Nevada LAS VEGAS. Nev. •AP' - The seventh announced under- ground nuclear test of the year was detonated today at the sprawling Nevada Test Site. the Department of Enerl{y said. The weapons-related test. code· named .. Panir ... bad a yield of between 20,000 and 150.000 tons of TNT and was ex· ploded at 7 a.m. There were "no problems. As fa r as l know. everything was fine.·· said Spokesman Dave Miller. The nuclear device was buried 2.233 feet beneath Pahute Mesa. about 90 miles northwest of here. The test was conducted by the Lawrence Livermore Laboratory of Livermore, Calif. The shot was felt in Las Vegas. Miller said. Two radio stations reported they relt it at their studios and "I saw coat hangers on the coat rack sway. ing a little bit.·· The s hot was the 17th an- nounced since 1963 when the United States signed a treaty banning atmosphe ric testing. Nol all tests are announced. however . "Tbe quality was exceJleftt," Bergland laid Wednesday alter be sa.mpled a tuncb that A1rlculture Department cooks prepared to Uluatrate what J8 million children wnt find tn school cafeterias this fall. "The cooking Is as aood a In any home and it'a a tood lunch. it· s healthy and tt tastes COOd. It's as food as my wire cu do 1 and she 1 the world's best ca ... he sald. But Bergland acknowled&ed that not all school cooks take the painstakinc care bis department used in devtstna tbe demoutra· lion menu, prepared from com· modilles the federal government 1lves schools. · Bergland, followed by Assis· tant Secretary Carol Tucker Foreman and about 100 re· porters and others. ed1ed throuth the crowded department kitchen where the food samplea, all neaUy labeled, were laid out. Bertland reached for a small paper cup or peanut b.utter and crackers. and was asked if that bad any political implications because President Carter is a former peanut farmer. "No way." he replied. "f like peanut butter. I told Jimmy Carter . . . that peanut butter is good ror you ... Arter topping his plate with other ssmples -fried chicken, one-quarter or a tow.fat ham· burger. corn. stewed tomatoes. a beef dish containing natural juices. and vanilla pudding featuring nonfat dry milk and peanut granules -Bergland and Ms. Foreman adjourned to a nearby room to eat. Ms. Foreman said the depart· ment 's S2.S billion school lunch program sradually is being changed to provide more balanced and nutritious menus. Fruit. for example. is packed in natural juices instead of heavy syrup to reduce sugar in the meals. The lower fat ham· burger -22 percent fat instead of 24 percent previously -i:- another example, she said. And less salt is bemg used in canned beef and poultry given schools. But federal donations represent only about 20 percent or the food served in the 94.000 schools participating in the na- tion al school lunch program Etna Still Spews CATANIA. Sicily •API Mount Etna. Europe 's tallest volcano, spewed lava. rocks and ashes for the sixth consecutive day Wednesday . Thugs Get Jewels The bill, passed in differing versions last spring by both houses, would require the state to keep a registry of adopted children and natural parents who wanted lo meet each other. The state would assist in meet- ings when the adopted children reached 21. The Assembly version of the bill had the age at 18, but oppo- nents argued that some 18-year- olds are still in high school and too young to handle the trauma of finding natural parents. Two well-dressed men armed with pistols and possibly a sawed·off shotgun entered a San Clemente jeweler's Tuesday, tied up the store owner and a clerk and left with an und etermined amount of Jewelry. ~sShake Mount Shasta SACRAMENTO IAP> -Near- ly a month after the first earth· 9uake, the ground is still shak· mg around Mount Shasta. Abo~t seven tiny quakes a day are bemg recorded on six porta- ble seismograph&, moved into the area after mile·lon1 cracks opened in the ground and some surface areas dropped up to 12 feet. • DAILY PILOT '""""·"""' ""'ldtn• ~ ~t--. JKtll.CW-. v ... -._,_ o._.,._ TMMMC....U ...... ,,....... .......... llMMtfflt 1411• ClleftetM.~ ~ ... ..... ""'""" ............ .. l1d .. 1llMllV ..... Ollee mo1 u ... , .. ..., .. ,,..or._.._.., ~ -='t: .. ~~.::..=--"-.. -· ... ~~ ...... T....-111 (114)to«1 CleHMHAdw1rt1 .... -..n --· Vellty -000.C.e 111-a11 .,_..,.c_ ·--c.rr1c .::. '= c-a ,""*~= r:;r,., •• o:rt=-'T.' = ... ,., " ~~-· _ ... _ .......... .. 19<-CIM4 ....... Nl4il at (MU illlleW c.111er11la tw•.cr1,o.,. "'U•rter JJ M =t:i..~:::J'~ .....,...,. lllll!Wy Police responding to a burglar alarm at Phillips' Jewelers, 157 A venida del Mar, discovered Roy Phillips and an employee bound with tape in the back of the store. store. Phillips told police that two men, who appeared to be either Arab or Indian, came into the store al 10 a.m. One man held the clerk in the front or the store, while the other located Phillips in the back. The clerk was brought to the back where the two men bound the hands and arms of their victims. The robbers then went to the front of the store and removed jewelry, placing the baubles in a cardboard how The two men were last seen leaving the store, walkidl west on Avenida del Mar. Tbey were both described as in their early 20 'a, about six feet tall and slender. Police said they an looklq for a gray 1975-76 Ford ln cood COftdl· tion, which tbe robbers may ~ve been drivin&. The value of the stolen jewelry is stUJ unknown. The ownen are making an inventory of their re- malnin1 stock, police aald. The new version also requires all siblings adopted by one fami - ly to be 21 before the older ones can begin the search. Under present law, adopted children can find their natural parents only through a com- plicated court process. "l still think it's a bad bill ... said Assemblyman Eugene Gualco, D-Sacramento. who has adopted children. ''I think it's going to cause an awful lot of human misery ... But the bill was strongly sup· ported by Assemblymen Bruce Young, D·Cerritos, who was adopted and made the long search for his natural mother. and Dennis Mangers. D· Huntington Beach, who has an adopted son. Harbor Aides Quit LOS ANGELES f A Pl -Fred W. Crawford, SO, general manager or Los Angeles Harbor and bis top assistant, Ed w. Clocksln, 59. have resienerl following a longstanding feud between them. Salaman Marketa By-product NASHVllLE, Tenn. 'A Pl Howard Marchant admits he's bullish on America. And he hopes tin cans full of the natural ferttuzer produced by Georgia bulls will become his pet rock. Marchant. a 51-year-old liquor salesman. sees lots or possibilities for the $3-per-can o(f ering marketed by his company, B.S. Sales. "I .iust woke up one night and was tired of being poor and didn't have s200.ooo to open up a McDonald's," he aald. And he thinks the product ls a natural for some markets. "First, consider Washington,·· he said . ··congress should be a prime prospect." Six new models: two 12;· cl is:· a 11:· and two 19" (meuuted diaqonally>. Featurinq push-button Express Turunq. reduced power consumption (they all use lea power than cl 100-watt h9ht bulb), and a redesJgned ch&UlS for easier serv1ceab1hty. - Exdutave Tnnuron one-qun, one· lens ~ystem on all mode:.. Four new remote contro: modea 15~ IT.' 19" •nd 21" (meaur.a dwiooMil•'· Fe&twioqpuah-buttonEs.pr ... 1\uunq And unproved lumwpooder hqhr sens· tft9 sptem for wider dyrwmic rAnge New L19btw919bt, ..ay-co-cury 9 .. model. '\ ... 275 East 17th St. YM owt ltto , ......... cited .,,nc .......... . '" btly! Costa MHa MISlt'r O'lwo• Vl~A Budget Plymenl5 ,_ - 1•rot· •• ,,io11al '••r\ ic·1• i'o1· ;all' our hnnu· 1·l1·•·tro11i1·~ --------- ---- ---------------_J . . ,. .................. LAGUNA POI i iER HOUITON AND tU YIT·TO-K..f'IM'ECTED SUNSHINE MACHINE He Ala-TMt Futute ol tla ~ Kiin la C1oudy •• · Counlians Killed in Air Crash POMONA •AP> -Dental charts have identified the bodies of four men burned beyond recognition when their light plane crashed into a SS.foot power pole in heavy fog then burst into names, authorities said. The victims were idenlilied Wednesday as Randy G. Wood, " 21, of Orange, Terrence Ubl, 34, of Glendora, Jeff Grisham, 25, or ·Santa Ana, and Gale Walker, 34, . ofOrange. .. They had Just taken off Tues· day from the Brackett Airport in Pomona when their Piper Cherokee Lance hit the power · · pole and exploded near the Los Angeles County fairgrounds, police said. ·. .· •' Rare Disease Investigated BOSTON <AP> -Legion- naire's disease is suspected in a pneumonia-type illness that struck seven persons who vaca· tioned together on Martha's Vineyard this month, the Boston Globe reports. The federal Center ror DiseasP Control in Atlanta sent two ·. epidemiologists to the island . Wednesday to investigate the UJ. ness, the Globe reported today. ··we do not yet know whether · this is Legionnaire's disease, nor ~:·do we know that it is not," the .( Globe quoted Dr Steven ·:+ T e u t s c h , o n e o r t h e i n . :,•: vestigators, as saying. :.-: ~ Police Find Rugs ::: :~ •.. ·' ~ ~- -=· ;.· ~ PORTLAND. Ore. <AP> - Four oriental rugs .bel)eved to be part or a $3$0,000 l\il collection stolen from a Santa Barbara home have turned up in a Portland rug store, police say Sun May Fire Kiln For Laguna Potter By STEVE MITCHELL Of U. o.ily f'IM Slllff There's no real market for ex· ploding commercial clay. He said to reach standard kiln He hasn't been successful to temperatures, the dish would date, but some day soon Chuck have to stand six stories high, Houston expects to fire bis fll'St which Houston admits is a little clay pottery using the sun to beyond bis capabilities. heat his kiln. The Laguna Beach pottery So the imaginative potter is taking a new approach. maker has been toying with the He's attempting to formulate idea of solar-operated kilns for a a clay body to match the beat in· year and a half, but so far his ef· tensity and fluctuations of his forts have resulted only in ex· solar kiln. plodlng clay. He expects to come up with a "The stuff just blows up in the kiln that will tire pottery at kiln," the ceramic artist laughs. lower heats in two hours, instead But now that the Sawdust of the 12 hours required in the i:-estival is over, he'll have more standard fuel -powered kiln. lime for his energy experiment; This is not easy, because there The 33-ye~r-old Laguna':' s have been no books written ~a~k yard is cl~ttered wit~ about solar kilns and, as far as finished pottery pieces, clay! a Houston knows, nobody's been 25-foot kiln. and a large shiny successful at it. reflec.tive dish attached to tubes "The two principles <solar vs. an~:~~lar collector was a natural gas-powered kilns> are . so far apart," the Cal State highhgbt at the recent Sawdust Fullerton ceramics major said Festival, where Houst?n thought "It's the difference of walku;g he . could. wor.k on his project on the moon and the Wright while selling his pottery. brothers " Bu~ the bul!'f 10-foot diameter But the bearded artist will "dish J~ got 1D the war, and the keep on trying. He plans to have r efl.ection made festival-goers a limited production line by 'SQOlll~., sometime next year. He already So !ts bac.k. to the rear yard has had people ask him to make for bis expenment, which has solar collectors to boil water. cost ~m more than Sl,000 -not One woman wants one to beat countmg labor-so far. her sauna. The solar gadget collects sun If Houston comes up with the rays and focuses ~em on a five-proper clay formula to fire inch area about six feet off the small ceramic jewelry pieces face of~ dish. an .~ea Houston he 'JI start on larger solar kim.s' calls the . hot zone. . . for his other pottery projects. The fi~ng ~hamber, a six-mch But the potter admits he'll sq~are kiln, is mounted at that probably have his gas-powered . powt and the beat produced so k · 1 d f · far has reached temperatures of 1 n arqµn or some Ume to 1,100 degrees Fahrenheit. come. That's all well and good, Houston says, but bis 25-foot Blimp Building Set natural gas-powered kiln churns out 2, 150 degrees to fire bis pot· tery. Then there's the problem of clouds passing by while the kiln is really cooking The tern· perature rapidly decreases in· side the kiln, which leads to a Jess than desirable product. AUGUSTA, Ga. IAPl -The dam aged Goodyear blimp "Mayflower," torn from its moorings during a thun- derstorm, will be dismantled and reassetnbled to make a new air s hip , a spokesm an for Goodyear said Wednesday. r Indian Heritage Taught ~ San Juan Descendant Lives in Tiro Worlds . By ANNE COOPER °' .. ~ .......... · In 1826 a dying Indian named · Lobo was baptized in the ruins of :~ Mission San Juan Capistrano. • Today the Mission is restored, :• and another Lobo has c:>me to :; San Juan -to leach computer :' programming. .,·; Harley "Wi ck" Lobo, a ,. descendant of the Lobo whose ·: name appears on the Mission :.: baptismal record, is a man of" two worlds. AA a teacher of data :: processing for the Caplstr~ :: Laguna Beach Regional Occupa· •: lion Program, be keeps up to ... date on comJ)Uter science. :: But as an American Indian, •: Lob o p a rt i c i p a t es i n a ~ Capistrano Unified School Dis· :• frict advisory committee to .he ~ sure lhat Indian children In the ~' school district are taught about • their heritage. :., He'll .be leaching a new ROP •:i course m computer science this ~ fall. It ls designed to prepare :::;adult and hi&h school students :ot·l•r posldeu ln the computer O~ftetd. ·~ :· In addition to teaching, Lobo ~=-will continue to direct data proc-~~ easing for the, Laeuna Beach • Unified School ay&tem, printinc . and recording studenta• erades, t keeping attendance records and f. scbedullng Laguna Beach High ~ School classes. He u.ld computen can save a ~school dlstrict. money and man-~~wer wai.n Peel effttleotly. ~ * lDneaM aceur.cy ol :si . retoc"ck; be Wd. .. .,...., ,. ... 14.tff ...... BACK TO SAN JUAN Hartey 'Wick' Lobo •'Tb«e la a mystique about computers," said Lobo. .. People are a UUle leary of them or aay they make mls· takes. But they don't, any more than a typewriter makes typo- eraphlcal errors -it's the human operator at fault every time." Lobo, who 1rew up ln San ~n and craduated from Lbe old Capbltnno Uldan Hip Scbool ln uu. &aid a. ia loc*iq forward &o WO?-ba tba )(1WoD ell)'. ••1 live l2 miles up the road in Laguna Niguel," he said, "but 'San Juan> Capistrano will always be my home." Despite his obvious -affeotion for the city, Lobo said growing up an Indian ln San Juan is not easy. An American Indian is set apart as a non-white, he said, but nobody is quite sure what it means to be an Indian. "I'm not always sure myself," he said. "I feel a strong Indian identification, but lf\e very ag- gressive, militant Indian rights supporters confuse me. "They are Indian and I am In· dlan, but we are Indians who are not talking to one another ..... Lobo said he supports wides pread education oo American Indian bist.or,Y.. and culture for both Indian and ns>n· Indian children. This approa will do more for Indian children than belligerent demands for In· dian rights, he said. "Working here with the com· putera, I feel a pa.rt of the White world -I don't think about be- ing Indian," he said. "But once I attended a meet· Ing of lndlflDI in Sacramento, where I w~ed down a hallway and beard Indian chanting. •·As an American, I get eoose bumps every time I hear the 'Star Spangled Banner.' Hearing the Indian chanting, I was stirred In that same way. ' "I was probably the moat In· '9.Jan I've tter been, respondi.na to thote chants of my an· ceaton." Waning By A.&111UR •• VINSEL °' .. ....., ........... Linea from the hit musical tbroush le•d tl'U eter .11m "Hello, Dolly" w!r danclna W•uaar•a "'-' nllbt ot MANAGUA, Nlcarafua t AP 'Feb. 16 as he grab hla insttu· -A naUonw1de atrtke called to ment out of the trunk of his rorce the ouster or President family'• car ln a rush. An11tulo Somoza appe•red to H~ was to Pl•Y It with the a be Joslna steam today, but ftitit· M a.rina H1Jb School Concert Ina rafed between natlonal Band Sn a ~ormance at the cuard troops and armed Hunttnston S.ach Hl&b School clvlllana controllinl much of the Audllori\llD1 but the show ftftt northern city of Mategalpa. on wltbough hllJl. No reliable figure, were A car zoomed out of the Maln available on the effectiveness of Street darkness. rammed the the strike. In Manaeua or in the rear of tbe double-parked car provinces. But only about half and mangled the boy'a lep . . the stores ln the capital's m-.)or "I don't remember anything. 1 sbopplnc center were closed was in Pacifica Hospital for Wednesday and most businesses seven weeks •.. SO days ••. ln elsewhere in the capital were the ICU for the first four days ... open. says the youth. He wasn't ex· "Ii certainly ls not causing a peeled to live. crisls," said one diplomat who De>ctoa boped, at beat, be asked not to be named. could survive, but ant~ipated The strike was called a week amputating both legs. ago by political leaders opposed Tbat would have put an end to to Somoza. It was supported two of his favorite actlvlUes - later by the Nicaraguan Con· performtnc with hll school's federation of Chambers of Com· marching band and lone· merce and the Nicaracuan dlstan~bicycling. Development Institute, the coun -"I was cycliq 60 or 70 mlles. try's two leading associations of o n w &'e ken d s • ' s a y s businessmen ~d industrialists. Weisshaar. 15, who lives with his But the respo&se to the mem· family at 17381 Coronado Lane, bers apparently was nagging. ·' Huntington Beac}\. The archbishop of Managua, He and bis buddy. J9hn Waite. Miguel Obando y Bravo, failed a fellow Eagle Scout candidate in an attempt to stop the bloody from Troop 568 and ·Waite's fighting in Matagalpa, a city of father, Bob, would pedal either 40,000 about 100 mlle5 north of to San Cl.emente or to the Managua and returned to the Riverside County line and back. capital to try to see the presl· Weisshaar hopes and expects dent. to bicycle agaib and be will try .. It was a scene of savacery to march with the Marina like I 've nuer seen," one Vikings band again this fall. veteran Latin American cor· The steel pins in bis shattered respondent said of the situation legs don't deter bis Intentions, in Matagalpa. although be must sometimes use The correspondent, who asked crutches and even a walker. not to be named. said there was "He's going ahead with the continwil J{Wlf'tre. ba:id. He doesn't know if be can make it, but the school needs Explorers Accepting Sign.ups Registration for Saturday's six-mile run, sponsored by the San Clemente Police Ex- plorers, will be accepted until 7:30 a.m. the day of the race. Check-in will start at 6 a.m. Saturday in the K· Mart Plua on Camino de Estrella at the ~ Diego Freeway, said Sgt. Craig Stec kier of the San Clemente Police Depart· ment. Trophies will be awarded in each of 12 men's and women's divisions. The $7 entry fee includes trophies, shirts and refreshments. Registration and addl· tional information are available at the San Clemente Police Depart· ment, 492-5101, ext. 232, between 8 a.m. and 4 p.m . him, .. says his mother. Her son, who has resumed playing the handbells for the choir at St. Andrew 's Presbyterian Church in Newport Beach since the accident, faces lengthy physical therapy. "My therapis t, Mitch Yamamoto at Huntington Physical Therapy, says I'm coming along great:" says Weisshaar. How.long must it continue~ ''They haven't told me a thing about that," he says a bit dejec· ledly. I Tbe yeulh' was -out ilast week with fellow members of Troop 568. sprucing up the Huntington Beach Seniprs' Recreation Center as a joint community service project. Getting that Eagle Scout badge is one more or his goals. U.S. Aide Fired WASHINGTON <AP> -A staff aide to the Republican minority on the Senate Budget Committee was fired after he visited Japan and angered U.S. Ambassador Mike Mansfield, by his "lack of discretion" accord- ing to a report published by the Washington Star today. Drell\I ,.. ... St.ft ,..._ STILL STRIVING Jim Welt.ahaar, 15 Coed Cleared In Abortion BOWIJNG GREEN. Ky. <AP> -Her ordeal over, Marla Elaine Pitchford, acquitted of a charge of performing an abor· lion on herself. burst into tears and said she hadn't believed a • juty would send a woman to jail "tor somethine like this ... The s lender. red·hai red former psychology student. charged with abortinJl her fetus with a knitting needle, was found innocent Wednesday by reason of insanity by a jury which delibera~ed less than an hour. Her former fiance testified against her during the trial lo gain Immunity, and Mi ss Pltchford's defense attorney says it may have been his testimony that '"tipped the scales on our side.·· FLOOR SAMPLE CHAIR SALE! Reg. 279. to 395. N 0 W 199 • Gracefully designed with superb construction These chairs beautifully enhanced by meticulous tallc to give you favtsh comfort •Some are one of a kind ~earepairs •Some are swivel rockers Come In Early for Best Selection f A4 '!!:u!ll!I!· A9'* "· "" Revolt ftlOV&ll·'IN lllOO aTV: Abnautlv. •• • elear wuilMdl h'Oal &M , ... .,. ot propertf tu-Nducln• ~ ia. .,. ftnd ~~ow nelpbOn In tht ctb o1 ·Loe~· '-" ldOPhd Net cotatl'Oll. Tbe acUon· ...... '°"' ..... kit ol Q.-Uoe aWb. Wlll U. wMllbU-from PropoJWOn 11 DOW wub ovtr • late<>.-... ~t . U =eo.t1 do9I not ldoDt nmt controb. Wlll th renlerkla II.art •hlllint bHk to the bl• city? .. Wbal doel lh1I mtan to the apartment eontlnletlon In· duatr1! &Mldenly, tMre .,.. • lot ol quest.Jou. PDBU'I TIU: AcnON by lbe Loe Anlelet City Council aed llla.yor Tom ~Y ta UJ.advtsed. Economic Mvanta anlJ' U be ato41taa \hi.I rent control acUon ln deptb. How, for a.ample, can you ccmtrol one Mtmenl of lbe economy and lpcn all tbe otben! You tell the landlord hit lnc:ome .. troaen. But you do not freeze hll main· tenanee COIU. b.la ullllt1 bill.a or any of his personal ex· pen1n at the aroeery •tore or 1uoUne pump. On tbe other hand. you can clearly see bow thll renL freeze bappeoed. uaGB P&OJIUES WUE made by either statement or innuendo that renten ~uld benefit from the passage of Rm Control Question Tou.cMs Off Lroely Di&cua.Wn Proposition 13. Proponents assured renters that they would share ln the property tax bonanza. They were left to believe that rents might even roll back. At worst, the rent tab wouldn't be going up. · Yet hardly bad the smoke cleared after electlon day than some landlords started sending out notices of rent in· creases. Some of the notes even seemed to have an ar· rogant tone about them. You suspect there Is very llWe arrogance being dis· played by members or the apartment owners association in Los Angeles today. It is true that many apartment and rental unit owners announced plans to share the Proposition 13 tax bonanza with their tenants. BUT IN THE CASE or Los Angeles, a special commit· tee had polled nearly 1,000 renters and found that only 18 percent of them had realized any relief since the passage of Proposition 13. Tt1at set the wheels or rent control in mo- tion. - t ' 159,8" Klm'Old Teac e:r8. Strike Across Countty 81 die Aaocla&ed PnN &om• lll0,000 1cboolcblldren acroe1 th' t1cttec1 Stat.a were wttbout their recuJar teachen today, and ei•bt IJMI ana tncben W9N tn Jall for refualq to mum to work. u labor dl1puwa opened the 1171 1chool year. The IU'l"t tehool 1y1tem struck waa New Orleans. wbtre eome 911000 puptta were affected but •Coooll ntmtined open. . :reachen Were also on strike ln Mlchla•.n. llUnols. Indiana and Pennaylvanla. ·. Otber work atoppa1es were threatened, the satuatlon in many alaUll mtrrortna that in Mlcbtpn. where 192 teacher contract.I' -·about 40 percent - wer e 1tW up for decision. . The lalue aJmott everywhere waa money. THE NEW OaLEANS acbool board called the 8 percent wa1e boost sou1bt by the United Teachers of New Orleans "economically aulclclal." Of· ficlala aald scbooll would lta.Y open despite the work stoppqe. Assistant s uperintendent SOME SOIOOL BUS drivers were a1ao on strike, with New Orleana bus drivers and main-~ tenance men votlne to stop work wllb the expiration of thelr con· tract a\ midnight tonight. tn ·Knox County, Tenn., a str ike by county school bus operators cut opening day atten· dapce· from the normal 29,000 We.dnesday as only 24 of 181 buses tf'aveled their regular routes. Kidnapped Erwoy's Son Found Dead MEXICO CITY <APl -The 35-year-old son Of Mexico's am- bassador to-the United States has been found dead after being kidnapped by guerrillas who re· ported[y demanded $2 million "for the struggle of the pro· letariat." A police source said an autopsy showed he was shot once in the leg and bled to death. There was s peculation the fatal bullet was fired during a s hootout between bodyguards and the four men and a woman who ambushed Hugo Margain Cbarles and an American friend Tuesday night near Margain's hom e on the south side of Mexico City. POLICE SOURCES said the body was found in a field near ChaJco. 18 miles from Mexico City, at 8 a. m. Wednesday. some 12 hours later. and taken to the morgue at Chalco. But it was not identified wttil 10:30 p.m .. the sources said. 'IE4CBERS GET FIN SPEUNG NEW ORLEANS <AP>-An F for apelllq. One of &be picket 1lp1 bolated aloft when teachers went on strike for bl1ber pay here Wednesday said: "Glve Vs A Des· cen& Salary." Jerry Hart. the school board's chief negotiator, said the board r aised Its wage lncreaae from $1 million to $2.5 million when negotiations broke ofr Wednes· day • .,>Vhile teachers reduced their demand by only S2SO,OOO in an 8 percent salary Increase. Some 4,200 public school teachers in New Orleans now earn between $10,096 and $15,250 annually. · Bus drivers and maintenan;e workers in New Orleans seek a 7 percent wage increase . The board offered a 4-percent jump. A strike by bus drivers would af. feet some 14,000 rubllc and about S,000 paro<:hia school stu· dents. STRIKES ARE PROHIBITED by law in many states, and eight leaders of the Marion, Ind .. teachers union were Jailed on contempt of court charges as a work stoppage by some 335 teachers there entered its third day Wednesday. A judge Im· posed fines totaling $16,800 a day. About 335 teachers are on strike in Marion, where the school board has or'ered a 6.1 pe rce nt pay increase and teachers seek a 12 percent wage jump. ... NATION I WORLD I WEAlliER v A~ ....... REPORTER MYRON FARBER (DARK SHIRT) LEAVES JAIL Sentence Stayed Pending Appeal of Contempt Conviction . ; .. Reporter Released;. • • Appeal Hearing SetA. HACKENSACK. N.J . f AP) -After 27 days in the Bergen . County Jail. reporter Myron Farber of the New York Times is free. pending appeal of a contempt conviction. The New Jersey Supreme Court took Jurisdiction of the case Wednesday and ordered civil and criminal penaltles against Farber and the Times suspended until the appeal was decided. A hearing is set for Tuesday. ••1•M DELIGHTED TO BE OUT," Farber said. "It's enormously gratifying of the Supreme Court of New Jersey to take up the matter." A $5,()()().a-day fine against the Times also wu stayed pending a ruling. "The reason I was in jail is that I did not comply with a massive subpoena for everything I had in connection with my in· . vestigation -confidential material or not," Farber said "I did what I had to do in the public interest. Any newsman served with a subpoena like that would have to do what I did.·· FARBER REFUSED to turn over his files on Dr. Mario Jascalevich. the surgeon charged in the so-called Dr. X murder case. Farber and the Times were convicted on civil and criminal contempt July 24, but it wau1ot unW Aug. 4, when appeals of the sentencing were exhausted. tlaat the reporter was jailed. "We are gratif'ied that the New Jersey Supreme Court has de· cided to release Myron Farber and grant us the bearing we have so long sought," said Times publisher Arthur Ochs Sulzberger. What apparently happened was that far too man) landlords failed to read the real temper of the electorate very well. But the politicians up in LA read it. Faced with massive protests from renters, they acted. Now LA rents are frozen back at May 31 levels. The open question remaining is, bow far will the .revolt spread? Detectives said the body was clad in a suit jacket and un· derwear, and the spot where it was found was relatively frei? of blood. indicating Margain had been dead some time before the body was dumped there. Pardon Our Pride, but..· A.U$tralia Rejects Visit From Nixon Margain , director o f the lnslllute of Philosophy at the University or Mexico. was riding in h is 1972 Dodge with an American friend. Justin Evans. and with bodyguards in a car following. A POLICE REPORT said the Dodge was intercepted by a black Ford Galaxle containing four men and a woman. CANBERRA , Australia f APl -The government has turned down a request by former President Richard M. Nixon to visit Australia next month and meet with Prime Minister Malcolm Fraser, senior government sources said Thursday. They said the Australian Embassy in Washington told Nixon on Wednesday that a visit in September or October would be "inop· portune" beuuse or a "heavy program" of official visits from other overseas dignitaries. 1be only visitor mentioned was Bri· taln 's Princess Alexandra. a cousin of Queen Elizabeth II. "IT WOULD HAVE BEEN an official visit in fact even if not in, name because Mr. Nlxon requested meetings with the prime minister and the foreign minister," Andrew Peacock. the sources said. "The repl)' was couched in the most polite terms." ..When the bodyguards ... tried to intervene." the report said, "the attackers ... opened up with a burst of submachine· gun fire . A bodyguard was wounded. Return rire by the bodyguards also pres umably wounded one of the attackers, but they a ll managed to escape ... ~ Great Lakes Cooling Hurricane Status Expected Today for Ella Atbu•que Atlaflte ' ..... moft llolse llostllfl ••-•uvll .. lklff•IO O..rt"nSC OtfU90 OMl-tl Oevefencl 0.1 Ft.Wlh Oenwr 0.lrolt ... ~ HonolUlu Hoonton JKU'vllle Kon'I City UtVQM Llltle llloc• Lo..,..,.., .. Mletnl Mllweul!Oo ~P. Naltlvlllo .... on-.... vCl'1l Nof1elll Ollle. City OINM ONMll Ml U ~ .. ,. ti 71 a> n .21 .. ,. " t1 I'° n .u 17• ti t'2 IO n ., 1' t2 .92 71 to .D " .. M SJ 1S ff a" to 11 ., ,.. .4} ti 71 " ,. f04 ~ IO '3 12 .. 17 "' ,, " " ,. .4J 11 71 .'4 111 JS ... II m ., n .n .. '2 II " " 74 5aft J-11 56 SMtaAN IO .. IJ.B. s ...... ,,, c:ooi.r tlr MO¥M lftlo ,,,. u- OrMt L..-. ,....... Temper•ture1 .................. «11 lfl llOl1Mrn Por• ti.M .. Mlcllleen elld MlnnelOle. F~ at '"' Nallonet Hur· rkeM C4M4lr In Miami MIO II w•• lllltly tMt ~ atonn atte would *-• wnc-.... IOCMly. Tiie "°"" ... •lrefttllltnlno In tM OCtMI to11ll'IWHI Of Mr~ --~ Wltll wlndl Of to.ml ........ .floolr, SllOWtrt •nCI OCCHlonal lllU"• Clerttonnt contlflUICI tDdeY '""" ,,,. tower Ol"Nll ~Into~,._ Enei•nd -•!Ont lllt G;ilf CMst trom Ftorldl Imo MUtll r ..... Wet WHll!ff ellO wel re,,...-led from MlllNMI• Int• -1hwftlern Nebc;,tlk• oncl from nortlleastern .... Mt•lce Int• IOUllltUlt rn GtlorNo. Som• rel"1110wer1 co"tlnueo tllrwtfl Ult llOl1Mm itocklff Imo ftOf"1ftiH'ft ........... ••Ucatl .. M Utall. Llllll ll1ai. Mii ... auum1C1 81•11• ttie CHll ol Ille PtClllc Hol1tlwfff. CaUlorrtla A tullel• aten tor the lnl-velle~ erH• we• 1$we<I todo by Ille Air ~llty ~· omr1<t. •IOllO wllh en ordlt< tor oll refineries to ~·· CUIDeckl In tull•I• •minion .. AOMO "'°"vn.n Jett S<llenllel HYl all r .. lneriff -• lnstr..ctecl to reckKe tutllll• emh.Slon• by 20 lier· cent. ~ ol.,b W9f9 elto vnder °'"" 10 INIUI mul,,_,. WM of IOw· tulpllVr fuel oil. Tiie publlc -• acllll..O lo Clll tM UM of elt<lr1Clty, Sc-Nici. Sc henhl WMMG tllel •l•lblllly WOllkl IM recluC.ed In t"9 l OS AnQtleS eree, eOOl119 t ... I '"rtonl wllh ruolr etor v prob1tm1 m lont ••· _._ -OllCOlllldl I. - Bui defOlle lhf ;lt!Mt> ilii'f the "•· llOllel WHl""1 5etv1Ce Pf'edl<lecl IMI 1un11y ¥WHtl'oer WOl/14 9"V•JI tcroJS So<it111rn c.lllOrnla today. c ...... lt'eaClafto NI gnl -tnOf nlflO toW c IOuOs wltn wnny •1*-tlWVUOll Frkley. l.lont u rlllt>I• w1nc11 nlont encl mornlno hOurs. Ht4fll Frleley lrom 70 tlbH<lletlo70lll\lencl. Coell•I ltm0ff81Uf'et wttl ,..,._ between •' ano 72. 1n1e110 ltm· per•lur .. #Ill r.noe ~ .. -71: TM ....... ~·tun wlll be t1. s-. ,,.,.,.. Ttdn fMU•IOAY Secoftdl-2.4tp.m. I.I SKOIWI 1119'1 l : .. p m. U FllllO.Y ""'low 3 2ta.m, O I Fl1'11 llltl" t :O • m 4./ S.CCMWI !OW ) 14 pm I• S.COl>d nlclfl t 20 p m S 7 s.in rltett U • m . wtt7·20p m ~•I-• Jte.m., ..,.,, U p m StWI ...... Hvn0fl010n llMdl· Wallet 2 10 J 1 .. 1 with tolll1-tC ...... ,. COftdlllOftl f .. r. Ntwp0f1 lleKll: W-1 I -Wllfo O(ca.-.. 2~ MU.. IMO It INlll tM """-'-a...tlleftl ltlr to '""'· Our helpful ad-vlsers are ready to help you. Call 642-5678 DAILY PILOT ' . " \ 11J IYLVM POlfl'D Whm a._,.... ntm.J Mf\1ct1 .. ,.. el'Mt4ld about IO yean qo, tbetr _. WU to belJ> lndMduab wbo couJd af. ford laW)'tn to flncMhe rtOt one. 'lbla foc\1111 bro.-1111 to IDelude ~ t.o llidlYWuala 1'bo cannot afford to pay ..._.,.:-.~ Nttirral ud lnformab Mntee ol ........ o.c .• bar bu u. ftnt plM "' Uie eomlry to ..-tM AmlrtcaA Bar AllOd1doa'1 ltand.lrdl for lawytt NferT.a w •ioa ltl ~ 11.unoA. certain to be U. IDOUl\ I«~· OPnCIALLY, TIO noGllAM DOF..SN'T 1tirt untn\. Md .oatb, but lt .ireecty a. aceepted MVeral bundreit1 calll.~ lb •·nar-old dlnctor. PQJ Carlin. · '~e often can IOI~ aomeooe·1 l)IObJe1n wttb1n a ma\• t.et of m!Duta.'' be says. "~shouldn't we tell people bow Iona they must live ln an area before tbt.y cu Ualtlate a divoree! Or tbat tbey woa't need to pay a lawyer ur 'ront' to laandle • WOl'ker'1 compenntlon eHe bee•~ lb~ lawyers· tees are uaually set by the Judie or the law!'' P'10Vidlna bale lnfonnatlon about tbe la• and i\11 ptVCeclllNll or teUlDI people wbetber Uley need a lltr)'er ate key featurel ot the pro1ram. · It mo 1eU ataadardl of aperlmee that 98-rtictoaU.. attorneys must meet before cUtota are referred to \hem: Lawyers mUlt have band.Jed four cues ,nthla a ffrtaln atea of the law, must acree to accept 1.t leut ooe me cue a year, and muat aine to a srstem under Which cues are accept· ed on a reduce4 or 1raduated fee bula for client& ea.m1.nc $4,000 to ll5.000 a year. Kt tbe coocluaioa ot each cue. tbe Mrrice cbeckS on client satllfa~ and cost of'tbe le,aal aetvice. ArbitratJoa ls mandatory in a~ lee "l;tPQte blvolvlna a referr.i. 1 A alBNT tJSING THE teni~ ts Miven tbe names ot three law)'en experienced in tbe neld. Tbe client 11 en.. coura1ed to call tbem for more lnformatloa about ex· perience, rees. etc. before making a selection. 11le preUmhw"J lntemew colts S15; tbe lawyer re1 turns tbe maney to. tbe service to cover adminlatl'aUve ex pentes. The Wuhinlton bar also publishes •three bootleu{ designed to help fndlvtduals find lawyers: <J> A district .. Lawyer Directory," a 12 paperbac available Ill tocal libraries. from the bar or at bookstores. * a.serlc Eaft, Mission Viejo, bas beeo appointed an assistant vice president with BaQ ol A•ertea'1 Los AD1eles corporate service office. ' He is assigned to tbe manufacturiJlg section and bu responslbWty for credit and account relationships with manulac:turing companies based in Soutbem Calltomia and the Southwestern United States. He Joined BofA in 1973 as a manacement trainee and served as a loan officer at the Newport Center branch' before his assignment in 1917 to Los An1eles headquarters· as a corporate finance officer. * Niau V.s.A.. diatribUtor of Datsun can and trucks. bas annouoced that BUI Sclld. Miuioo Vie1o. bu beeo promoted to sales promoUon and merebaDdi.slng mauger at the company's ~tionaJ beadquarters in Carson. He is responsible for vehicle sales promotion, merchandising, abgwS. exhibitions and competli(on. * r llervtn'• ~ment store' chain bu announced that Tllomaa H. Baock has been appointed di.rector of itritunt· ington Beach store. He succeeds GUJ D. i'errere. wbo wtll manageastoretoopen in Upland in September. He la former director of tbe Mervyn'• store in Sparks, Nev. He joined the chain six years aao as an executiv~ trainee in tbe company's·San Pablo unit and was depart: ment managec-ln stores ln San Pablo and Modesto, aaais- tant operaUons manager in Modesto, operations manager in Modesto and Visalia and assistant direetor in Sparks before being promoted to store director of that unit 1asl year. * Clll&omweHe Carpets, be., Fountain Valley. bu ap. pomted Peter John Nordqldlt as n:iarketing repraen· ta live. He bas responsibility for sales and marketifta •c· tivities for residential and publie areas lines throupout Minnesota, North Dakota. Soutb Dakota and west.em Wisconsin. • Marlln·Decker Co .• Santa Ana. has announced the promotion of Carl Caae1. Mission Viejo, to director of lntemaUonal operations. His new poet entails respomlbUitJes for service and operations ot international sales and service cent.en. In· temationaJ offices are in Aabmeer. The Netherlaads; Sin1apore; Bahrain. Arabian Gulf; and Aberdeen. Scotland. A veteran of ten years• sen1~ to t.be flrm, be bu been district manager ol Houston, district manaaer of Oklatfoma City and district manager at Odessa, Texas. Harriet Barcer. Fountain VaUey, has been promoted to sales mana~er ror state and regional accounts at Ute Dliney~aacu .. J~Aaaheim. - She will recruit state, regional and district groups to use the ho.tel for conventions, special events, meetin1s ~d conferences. For the past 21/!l years, she has been convention coordinator at the hotel. ' * , • ._ M. Bank has been appolnted mana1er or Paet.lie ftl.alMe Loau El Toroomce. He ll Conn~ ualstant manacer of the company's Tranaamertca t Corp. Anaheim branch . • ao,. M. a.tale. Laguna HillJ, bu been named com· munJty MrVt~ P.PretentaUve for Home Federals..._,, and Lou A.uoetlUoa of Su Dle10. TM UIOClltion '1 Laauna Hilb office Is to open ln October • At community servlce representative •• ht w111 be respoo.stble (or lnltoducina area residents to the assoc1a. Uon and tb Mrvica. Ht retired in 1915 as vtce president of Fidelity Federal Savlnp and Loan Auociation after 21 yean wtth t.bt II· aoclatJon. RJa work wttb Kome Federal will be oo a part. time baais. s.,.,~eled Richard MulUaan. Cathryn Damon. Robert GuJUaume. Katherine Helmond and Robert Mandan. left to right. who c are ll cast in the television show. "So p''. will appear ln a retrospective at 9:30 tonight on Channel 7. Ola•IWILbfl•g• • KNXT(C8S) Los Angeles D KN8C (NBC) Los Angeles I KTt.A (Ind.) Los Angeles AASC-TV (ABC) Los Angeles Cl) KFMB (CBS) San Diego e KHJ. TV (Ind.) Los Angeles 9 KCST (ABC) San Diego I KTTV (Ind) Loe Angeles KCOP·lV (Ind.) Los Angeles e KCET· lV (P8S} Los Angeles e KOCE·TV(PBS) Huntington Beacl'I . I ..... ,..,~ ,,. QOMG lt40W .DClff8 WIU) 1141 ODOOOUPla ~··1191 ~ tllk•• Mn for the W()fW, and Olcar oftttt to ~ ti. buf1lll tmlftOll1*'1a. • MTONIGHT 8y clllllnO 21~21. ~ cen tllk wtttl ~t• Aobtfte encl the '28 T onlgllt" proclUctlon staff •bout tM ..__ ttley would 1111• ClO\lef'td on KCEra ..-nlgtltly pubNo ..... PfOO'Wll. 1==:,_ "Tt~" ~d Nlmoy "'" ... the or.et ~ ture ot Heinrich Sctwn. • German l'IWcNm ,.._, dlecoYeled Homer"t Troy, llnd .,,... "'*""~-­rounding tlle ancient city. 9 MATCHGAMU1.M. · t::aO. (I) THI! WAl.TON8 John-Boy return• to Watton•t Mount.in lll1er a yew'• llbearlCt to dllcoller tt1at IN~ le auf. fertng trom dlemal eco-- no!Nc condltlont. (R) D OHIP8 A~ ~ttl wlunt- ( PhJllt Diiier) rnell• Ill• un~ tor an lnJut'ed 'People'·~inded Sports 'Piorwer' Brarrehing Out .... 87 BOB THOMAS HOLLYWOOD <AP> -"Phyllis, you want It all, don't you?" said fllm producer Robert Evans. "What's wrong with that?" replied his short-time wile, Phyllis George. THAT JWA Y BE one reason why their marriage fhis fourth. her first> failed. It also tells you a lot about the Denton, Tex., beauty, a notorious over-achiever. Being Miss America of 1971 was not enough for her. She went into broadcasting as co-host with Bert Parks of the Miss America Pageant (she'll be at it again Sept. 9), with Al· len Funt on "Candid Camera," as en- tertainer and actress, as well as female pioneer in sports broadcast· log "The NFL Today". "Going into sports wasn't easy," she admitted. "Many questions were raiaed: Was I a threat to the male sportscasters? What did I know about sports? Why was I there? the pilot was shown to visiting press a few months ago. ''Tbe show that we are doing dif. fers from the pilot," PbyW3 re· marked. 0 Tbe new format moves more quickly; most os the segments are three-minutes long.'' MUCH OF TR& PR~ criticism centered on a segment in which cameras followed the Manhattan wanderings of the premiere recluse, Greta Garbo. Critics considered it an invasion of the silent Swede's privacy. "Perhaps the segment was not wise, but at the same time, it was not that bad," said Phyllis defemively. "I think the film is toucbing_!lld flat· tering to her, showing bow great she looks in ber seventies. I did the voice- over, and I must say that I bad tears in my eyes as I watched that fabulous woman. .. But if we did hurt her, I 'm sorry." "PEOPLE" WILL BE like the "nRST I HAD TO prove~elf to magazine, Phyllis explained: "I can me. I didn't know what rol I was read it in 20 minutes and learn a lot." supposed to play, what q ·ons I She was proud of a segment with was to ask. I jwst bad to learn go in country music superstar Willie and try to get answers. Finally, with Nelson, wbo is ordinarily shy of TV interviews with Jimmy Conners and cameras. Dave Cowens, I showed what I could "We went right into the bayou do. People didn't realize that my country of Louisiana and photo· TextA,, background gave me a graphed him at a concert," she said. thorolrgb knowledge of sports." "I not only interviewed him on She appeared destined for a career camera; I found myself on stage with as CBS's resict.ent female jock until him, singing and playing the January. harmonica." "l woke up after the Super Bowl Another segment depicts Phyllis and decided I'd had it," Phyllis re-during a day at Southern Calllomia's called. "I told the people at CBS, and La Costa resort being exercised, that's when they came up with a new pounded and stroked in a fllnes!' contract, wblcb involves ap· course. pearances on comedy and dramatic shows as well as specials. 'People' "PEOPLE" WILL BE invading ·d al private lives such as Garbo's, and by prov1 es a natur transition." the turnabout theory Phyllis .. PEOPLE" WILL DEBUT on CBS George's should be falr game as Sept. 18. It is based on the weekly well. She was asked what caused her People Maeazine and la produced by breakup with Evans. Time-Life with David Sutskind. "Contlicting careen," she replied. Phyllis George will star as the Prill· "We were both colng in 95 different cipal narrator-interviewer. -directions." She adin.itted that. "People" drew Now would "People" setUe for an brtctbats trnm TV nvt-ewers wben answer wee that r ;::. . ••1' "A••O'J.,._lt To l(JI" ( ••> flavtoll 0 ....... Joell ....... Cof1>orete ,,..., .. ~eel 11¥ • llfMIM•ln~ ~~MCI(, KO'fTIR .. ,,.. "9tWn Of Hott)' TOllll(' TM I .-oga -..,... '° ~ • ""'* c·urmllt worlclnO • • Q!!-00 .... tf') • lMIMINT llfflon runt illtO I ~ of oun NMlft 1n South AIMtlcle • • (Wlll(M. IUNIST'f NllOfNINDI 111111: '0The Hot Dog ltancl," "The Morning AtW:' • flt()Yll ........ ,,....,. PdntM c tta) l6dNy "°""'· Botl- by o.M. A ptltOft ~ trillt tn.to~ hie ant~ltlc, Mt~ ..-.~~OIL ftAINTINO "St•Ute" a:90 8 9 WHAT'I ~ "Dea·• F1m Oele,. Raj'• lnl«eat In • glf1 ~ with O.'t relalloMtllO with theQ111·1 brOftllr. C~I l ~wrra PEA80H TO PEfl80N "S•l•cted tntervlawe: 1953-1958" Edwerd A. Murrow oonducla Informal lnlenMM with Adel c... lro and Honnen RoGkw811. ID ovtREMY Oongreetn\ln Cleud9 Pep- per on lmoroved llfe tor Mnlor citizen•: l'91wnlng 10 "'°"' whefl retired. (R) t:OO D NBC MOVIE *·~"Dirty HerT)'" (10'11) Clint Eutwood, Harry Ouerolno. A tough detec- llw wtth unortllOdox meth- ods stllll• • 11\ipar terror• lzlng San Frenclaco. (Netwcwll OtNa *-' cllecntlonl IRI • 9 BAANE't' MIU.ER "Woto'• Probleln •• Woto toeaa hit "°""" buopnCy bec:am °' jot> pr---. ® U N.LYGMHAM CRU8AOE Ga MEW GNFF1N au.a: Steve Mertln. Mar· llyn Mc:Coo, Adrian Arpel, Marilu T olo. fD PEA80H TO P£R80N "Selected Interviews: 1053-1959" EdWard R. MurTOW condUCll lntonnel lntervlewt with Edward Bennett Wllll1m1 and Jonathan Winters. '°9 IN l'EAFOAMANa: AP Wl'99ll01o 'PEOPLE' STAR Phyllis George 'Wiz' Star Collapses, Treated MOUNT VERNON, N.Y. CAP) -Stephanie Mill s, who plays Dor o thy in the Broadway musical "The Wiz," has been released from a hospital where she was treated after collapsing while jogging near her home. It was the second hospital visit for the 20-year-old performer in less than a week. Miss Mills said after being discharged that her condition was diagnosed as a disrupted metabolism caused by a lack of salt. Friday, Miss Mills started crying and col:. lapsed on stage during the second song of the New York production, which is .based on "The Wlzardo~ .... Victorian Intrigue RetU:rns "The Palllsen," 22 episodes chronlcllna the fortunes of a Vic· torian political dynasty, repeats beginning &mday, (10 to 11:30 p.m.), on KCET, Channel 28. The remalnl°j procrams will be broadcut unday tbrouah Friday from 10 to 11 p.m .• <with a few exceptions, when the series will air t.ter lo the even- in1>. endina Sept. 28. BA1SBD ON THE SIX "Pallller novels" of Anthony Trollope, a contemporary of Charles Dickens, and bolted by ..... Sir John Gielgud, tbe series stars three..tlme Emmy-winner Susan Hampshire as the beautiful, strona·wtlled Lady Glencora Palliser, and Phlllp Latham aa her honorable, rather stodgy husband. Lord Plan- tagenet Palllser. The rtnt episode la the story ot their betrothal, a loveless affair arranged, as so many Victorian marriages were, by relatives. Even as they speak their vows, both bride and aroom harbor reellnp ror another. These conflicts or the heart. Interwoven with England's struggle with political reform and the Palllser ramily's drive for •power and prestige, provide the drama for ensuing episodes, which compose a portrait of p eriod British society. "The PalUsers" Is a produc· tlon of BBC-TV and Time-Life Television, produced for the BBC by Martin Llsemore. Con· temporary British novelis t Simon Raven adapted the Trollope novels for television. . TUBE TOPPERS CB.S88:00 -"The Waltons." Aft•r a year in New York City. John-Boy re· turns tor a vlslt to Walton's Mountain on· ly to dlscover that the f'W'al community is suftering !roqi economic conditions. NBC 8 8:00 -"CHiPs. •• Phyllis Dlller guests as a wacky hospital volun- teer whose .Jokes make llfe uncomforta- ble for Officqr Jon Baker, hospitalized with bruised tibs after a motorcycle ac· cldent. KOCE 9 9:00 "In B rformance. at Wolf Trap." Ballet supe tar Mikhail 8aryshnikov makes an ap ranee with selections from "Coppelia· and .. Don Quixote." · • ATWOU'TMP "MlllMll ~ Tiie INlllllt ~ IMllet an ~ wlltl Ml«11o1'9 lrem llv• Mlltlt. ThrH ll1llerl11as -Geluy Klrll:l•11-. ~rtl11• Van Hemel a11d Merle1111• TcllerllH11ly -ere alto ffft\IAll. .:.ao. 9 9t»# A retroapecttwl vtlw of the ftflt MMC>n'• eplaodM trednQ ... Nga of ti. Tete and Cempl*I tatnl- llea. • 8IDNEY IHELDON- COHF£8llON8 OI A IEST .aa..LER A\lttlOf Sidney Sheldon ("8loodllnel:'• "TM Other Side Of Midnight"> It Inter• ..., by hie c:IOM friend, COlnedlarl Mat1y Allen. 10:00. 8AANA.IY JOND A cieap.me Olti plagutd 11¥ IN unw91lted atten- tlont of • '°"'* boyt1lend ~ 10 Barnaby for helc>· I GNEW8 LET'S MNCE A Dl!AL EVBMG AT POPS CIMlal ciulttrltt Angel Aomso perfonnt Vlwi6di't ··Ccnoer1o de Arwljuaz.." D NEW8CHECK (I) CB.BWTYTENM8 8ENIAT 10'.30 I t.=8 •• ,., FlddlW ...,,_, Fodor" Euo-ne Fodor e.lkt with .._.,. Wolf about hit Ille on encl off the concert .... 11:001DeCllO NEWS LOVE, AMERICAN • STYl.I "Love And Or•ndm•" Ruth H-vleltt her grandmother In~· Vlbge, llnd ftndl her lhl<• Ing her apettment with • man. G MOVIE • * "One Auttl•n Swn!Mr0 ' C1t7'1 ~ "-'· JoM Mc:liwy, TM paMlon _, ~ of todey ..... agMIM • ~ llan~.(21W't.I enmoaoCOUPU Feb Md oac:. cltlddt to tlOtd "'*own ··~·· to <Me111•11 wtto•a tn bet• "' PhYllcal OOfldll!On. • PllCN\10000~ ~~LllM Dunbar. the Dunbar ...... • DtCk CAVETT Outst: .i-Fonda. (R) • MACNR.I LEHMR AEPOflf 11:30 • Cll u.a. °"" TENNI Hlghlight9 of the •• actMtlle In ttlll tourna-ment from FlueNnO .....,. ow Pd In Corona. ..... York. D .sfOICAMON Hott: Jollnny O•raon. Ouflt1: Dolly Parton. °""" Celts. Joie Moll-~ na.. Ray JoMaon. 9 T'MUQKT ZONE ··au.n Of TM Niie" eO ITAMKY& HUTCH ''Olllian" IMc:tl 1111111 In IOll9 llrilh. ~ c.11 gilt (R) • H08AN'8 HIN& An Englllh POW ..-- rulnt Hogen'• flcape operlltlon. • GET-..ART Mu and " join • hlpc)le grOU9 wtien ttw .... .,. IU9C*led of ~ en lmpcwtant foreign mln- ltter for KAOS. • CAPTIONED WON.p HEWSTONIGKT 11:489(1) ... ,., ••• " H.wk9ye tttckl Fr .. Into Investing In non-olttent atoclct. (A) K)RNING 1l:OO 9 1WIUGHT ZONE , ,. ........ ........ ,,, . .,... MOANHG ,, ••••• "HllOl9tMd9f' (1940) c.y Onrll,..,,.. !rid ........ A NPO'tlr .......... -.... ....,....., ... ,..._ .. ~----­........ IO ....... C2 -~20"*'-l AFTEANOON u.•••"HldaCnM .. (1MI} ..... -.. Our ~,.,young.,... ....,.,.._..'°,_,. .... ................. _,....,t hr,.301'11ir\.) aoa a •• .,..Connd" Eve a-n, Bruno ......... An.,,... .. _'° ....... murder ........ .,, ... ~ l!Mtr. ,, tw .. 15 min.> a:ao• **" "PNtty ~­(tMI, ~ "-"'"' ,.....,w.o. "" ....... *' ,..... to "'*"' ..., • brW Jan -.,. lftlaglo NtY C.1..A. aaeM•(1lw.,30 min.) 'Company' Most Watched NEW YORK CAP> -ABC con· tinued its warmup for tbe fall TV season by winning the networks' prime time ratings race for the fifth week ln a row. And, like old times, the week's most-watched show was on ABC. The first 14 programs ranked by the A.C. Nielsen Co. for the week ending Aug. 27 were re·. peats, and ABC, predominant in the ratings most of last season, bad three or the top four. ABC STARTS ITS new season Sept. 11, so the strong late· summer finish is good news for the network. CBS and NBC kick off their ran programming Sept. 18. A BC. with its strong showing at the top of the list, finished the week with a rating ot 15.3. CBS was second al 14.8, NBC third at 14. The networks say that means in an average prime lime minute, 15.3 percent of the homes in the country with TV were tuned to ABC. "Three's Comp~" the week's No. l progr , with a rating of 25 Nie says that means of ail the homes in the country with television, 25 per- cent saw at least part of the show A Bc·s "'LAVERNE AN& Shirley" and •·carter Country" tied for third place. The three ABC programs, plus "Happy Days," No. 11 for the week, con· tribuled heavily to the network's strong show last season. CBS. strong in the ratings dur· ing the early summer. had four shows in the first 10, including No. 5 "M·A·S·H" and No. 6 "Alice." The top.rated new show was "60 Minutes" on CBS. with a CBS special. "Paul Anka in Monte Carlo," No. 16. A three-part CBS News _ special on public education fared pdbrly ln the ratings. Tbe first installment TUesclay aitbt · was No. 57 in the ratings, of SI shows checked. Part 2 was 5'th. Part 3 was No. SJ. RoUDding out the bottom five in the ratinp were 0 0pentioe: Runaway" on NBC. No. SS; ABC's college football preview. No. 56; .. Wilder and Wilder" on CBS. No. 58; and "Fli&ht of Dou· ble Eagle II" on A~o. 59. Here are the ~eet·s Top 10 pronams: ••fhre•'• Comp•ny:• wllll • 25 rall11• reiw-111'9 ,.., mllllon llolNs. A&C; 0'Qulftcy, NI.I .," n .1 °" 11.3 lnllllon. HK; "~Md Slltrtey•• MCI "C... C»MMn," llottl U.J or '1 mllllon, bolll A8C; ••M-A-5-H,1' 23 or 1'.t mllllofl. and "Allee." 22.1 cw 14.S mlll!Oft, ll0'9I ces; ··AoO.fwd FIM." 22A Olf 14..l ll'lllllon, NBC; ••0ne 0.y .. a Tlffte," 72.l or 1'.2 mUllOll, C8S; MCI "$..,._y 8l!d Huklt," A8C. alld "All Ill Ult Famlly :· cas. Mtti a.1 or 1$.1 mlMklft. T1'9fttd10-: ·HaclC'Y o..,.. ·• AaC; ··uu Gr..r· ...., "'TN ...., ... -.-.....,. cas· ··o..11e·s .-....s.· AtC; "60 Mift111M• end 4Pwl MU Ill._ Carlo, -11a1t1 cm: ....., _.. ••. ,,,.,.,, • 111e Worid Serift, • A8C; '"llaf'Nby JoMI..~ <:as; all-.... r,,.., Miiie~· ...0 T"ur~y -'-• ''V99M." lllCllAllC. lie. MATINEES SATURDAY & SUNDAY "SGT. PEPPER'S LONELY HEARTS CLUB BAND" (PG) ~ 'Ol -"""°"• ~.,.. ot wn• 110MC01.011• looDOL8YSTSMOl 0 ,.,.,_,,.c-.. ,, .. liil. "SMOKEY AND THE BANDIT" (PG) NOW THE FORCE ISATA lHEATRE NEAR '«>U ·~~~wtrl ··~~~631.().)C) UMAIOSCllllMAC1Nlll ST-DIM-lll()orOe~ CoolO -01114"1 lftA 'WA • ..,~ --lONC .. OllA ~lloclcf>~ •lOUfll OOUtY •~N ~y Kmlf "'°" ... '~'°'~~ MNMl1,., _ M-.s OIOt ...... .,..,..., '°' ...... 09 (Al~ NOW PLAYING fOUITAlll flllP DAlft·I• Foun~1n Vatltv 85-1500 "SOUND OF MUSIC" "THE CHEAP DETECTIVE" f PGJ .. THE LAST REMAKE OF BEAU GESTE .. .. HEAVEN CAN WAIT" (PG) "FOUL Pl.A Y .. (PG) "FUN WITH Ota< & JANE' "CORVETTE SUMMER" "SJY RIDE .. (PG) "STAR WARS" "LOGAN'S RUN" (PG) "HEAVEN CAN WAIT" ~AMERICAN HOT WAX' (PG) "SMOKEY & THE BANDIT" (PG) "STUNTS" AL.'-D•UV•·INS ONN '1HP.N.tMtf'rlf CfltN Uttdef t I ,.,.. ua ... t • ettui. ,._,._.. -