HomeMy WebLinkAbout1978-09-13 - Orange Coast Pilot.
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I -. Marina Oswald Testifies J
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County Approves Rain Snarls
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Mesa Site for Traffic in LA,
Retarded Dome Cuts Power
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DAILY PILOT
* * * 1oc * ·* *
WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, S EPTEMBER 13, 1978
VOL. 11, NO. lt6,. sacna.t ... f'MMEI '>.
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MARINA OSWALD PORTER TAKES OATH IN PROBE
Teattfylng About Her Ufe With JFK'a Stayer
Assassin's Widuw
;Testifies for Panel
WASHINGTON CAP> -husband was generally good·
Marina Oswald Porter described natured, losing bis temper only
(or Congress today bow she hap-about aa much as most husbands
pened to marry a man she hard-do, was somewhat dissatisfied
J.y knew, a man who would with bis work at a radio factory,·
become known BB the assassin of became best friends with a
~ president. Russian factory worker who w45
. Testifying with composure studying English, and rarely dis·
9"?fore the House assassinations cussed politics with her.
• r whirlwind courtship with 1961 , only a few months alter emmittee, Mrs . Porter recalled They were married in April,
~ e Harvey Oswald when she John F. "Kennedy was inaugural· f •as a girl of 19 ln her native ed as president. With a sbort-
1lussia. i wave radio, they heard some of
: She said she knew little about Kennedy's spee<:hes in English,
l bim except that he was an she said. ~ American and that sbe liked ''I would ask Lee what la be
t. ~m. saying? What is be sayin1?" she
; She was asked whether It related. "He told me to hush up
wasn't a bil hasty to plunge into and not Interrupt. His attitude
marriage after only six Wffks of was you being a woman, what
dating. do you know about politics?"
"Not when you're the age that • The young bride then spoke
(was," she replied. · only Russian but Oswald spoke
Recalling their Ute In Minsk, both languages.
01wald's widow said her <See PaOBE. Page A2)
•
e
, • Its ea End
Retarded Bo•e
Collnty Okays
Mesa Location
By KATHY.CLANCY
Ot .... Deltyf'ttetSUH
The Tustin man obviously was
proud Tuesday wheo he talked
to Oraoge County supervisors
about his mentally retarded son.
The father described his son
as a retarded child grown up, a
contributor to society, a man
who supports himself as a custo-
dian, donates to bis church and
·lives independently with three
other young men in a Santa Ana
condominium.
and detract from the area ·s res·
ide ntial character.
A fler As hling s upporter s
testifed that the state trend is to
move the retarded from institu-
tions into home-like settings,
Stubblefield also said. "We ob·
ject to being used as a guinea
pig for the state authorities."
Ashling. a Laguna Beach resi·
dent. attributed the protest to
CSee FACILITY. Page A2)
----· ) ~ ,
~
SOUGHT IN MURDER CASE
Poltce Drawing of 'Ted'
The young man described is a
graduate of an independent Liv-
ing skills program offered by
Colin Asbling and his son, Marie,
in a home for 18 retarded adults
in Santa Ana.
U.S. Recruitment
The Ashlings woo supervisors'
unanimous permission Tuesday
to relocate their facility to a
12-unil apartment complex and
three-bedroom home at 362 E.
20th St.. in an unincorporated
pocket on Costa Mesa's east
side.
The action followed two
months of protest that started
when the county Planning Com·
mission approved a conditional
use permit to allow up to 36 re-
tarded adults in the complex.
Corona del Mar resident Dean
Stubblefield, owner of re ntal
property near the proposed
Ashllng home, appealed the
permit, presenting petitions
signed by 500 residents he said also opposed the facility.
He contended the home for re-
tarded adults would increase
traffic congestion, add to an
already crowded neighborhood
DINING SET
BRINGS CASH
·'This money looks more
beautiful than my d ining set
ever did."
That's the advertising success
story of the Huntington Beach
man who placed this ad in the
Dally Pilot:
Contemporary walnut
dining set. 8 ~rs. 2 leaves. pads Xlnt cond.
StOO. XXX·XXXX
lf you hate furniture to sell
convert to cuh, call 642-5678.
Just a few words will work hard
for rou ln the Daily Pl1ot.
•
For Somoza Probed
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. CAP>
-Federal authorities are in-
vestigating a motel owner who is
usln~ newspaper ads lo recruit
an "army" of ex-Marines to help
beleaguered President Anastasio
Somoza of Nicaragua.
"The FBI is looking into possi-
ble violations of the neutrality
laws or the United States,'' As,
sistant U.S. Attorney Robert
Colllns said Tuesday.
Collins said Guy Gabaldon of
Albuquerque may have violated
two sections or the U.S. Criminal
Code. One prohibits American
citizens from enlisting into the
service of a foreign government.
and the second requires any
person providing military as·
slstance or service to a foreign
power to be lice~ed by the State
Department.
•'The re s pon~e to my
newspaper ads has been tremen·
dous," said Gabaldon, 52. "I'm
already over my 100-man quota
a nd I'm going to Managua
(Nicaragua's capital> to see if I
can get the quota Increased."
Gabaldon was awarded the
Silver Star during World War II
after being credited with the
capture of 2,000 Japanese
troops. Hit exploits became the
subject ol lhe movie "From Hell to Etemlty .••
Gabaldon, an unsuccessful
candidate for Bemallllo County
s heriff lo the Republican
primary ln June, said he did not
con.tact the State Department or
an~olber &ftncy before recruit·
ln1 American ex·Marines.
•'The Slate Departme nt
betray.cl ua when they gave up
the Panama Canal All they do
is get in your way," Gabaldon
said.
But Gabaldon's a dvertis e-
ments caught the eye of federal
authorities. who want to find out
if what he is doing is legal.
Gabaldon said anyone who
joined his "army" would receive
(See MARINES, Page A2>
Los Angeles
To Get More
I..ight Rain
LOS ANGELES CAP> -Slip-
pery streets and minor traffic ac·
cidents slowed rush-hour drivers
in a light rain here today, and the
storm caused a power failure.
The National Weather Service
predicted the rain would con-
tinue through Thursday in the
early morning and evening
hours, but with clearing during
the days.
Traffice slowed due to a rash
of "fender benders" on the slick
pavement, but nobody was
serlously hurt. said California
Highway Patrol officer Ken
Schulthels.
The Los Angeles Department
of Water and Power said rain
water shorted a 4,800-volt dis·
tributlon line in the Silverlake
area. leaving several hundred
customers without power ror
nearly a half hour starting about
6 :20 a.m .
• .J
G,ay Pals
Asked
.To Help
By JOANNE REVNOLDS
OI U. O.Hy l'i ... Matt
On Au~. 27 about midnight.
someone beat Ruben Martinez to
death in the bedroem or his
Corona del Mar home.
Today, Newport Beach police
concede they·ve run into a
deadend in trying lo track th~
41 -ye a r -old r ea l e s t a t e
salesman's murderer.
The problem. according lo
Detective Sam Amburgey, is
that Martinez was a homosexua l
who rrequenled gay bars along
the Orange Coast .
Amburgey said the gays who
knew Martinez have been reluc·
tant to cooperate in the search
ror the man last seen with
Martinez. ff>aring exposure as
homosexuals . One man. ap.,
p are nll y a c los e friend ,
told police he saw Martinez If.St
at the Coast Inn in Laguna
Beach. He sa id Martinez in·
troduced him to a young man he
called "'Ted from Indiana."
It's Ted that detectives have
sought in gay bars and hangouts
from Long Beach lo Oceanside,
including the two Laguna Beach
bars Martinez visited the night
he died. the Little Shrimp and the
Coitst Inn.
<See SUSPECT, Page A!»
Co ast
Weathe r
Low cloudiness and
local drizzle night and
morning hours becoming
partly sunny a long the
coast Thursday afternoon.
Lows tonight 62 to 66.
Highs from 68 to 72 at
beaches to 77 to 80 inland.
I NSIDE TODA~
At a $0/e distC11lCe. uke at a
Sea World erhlb1t. !hark&
hau~ bun a big attraction.
See Page "12.
U.S. Proposes West Bank Coinpromise?
Bf 'l'l9e As&oclat~ Preti
A .Proposal m•de b the Unit
cd Sta t u\ th \amp Ua v1d
~urnmlt t.tk could lead to u
breakthrouah In the M idea t
<'On rt let . th" Bo~ton Herald l\meriC'an reportt"d tit<tav
The key to ttw 1Jl 11po'ltl ur
l'O rd&n ~ lo an l ~1 acl1
poll cym .•kt'r quott•l1 1n tht"
<'O P}'rl1hted r;tory. 1~ ..t com
promu1e llll<kr whkh neltht;r
-.1de Arab or hr.wll would
press 1tb dwm to t>>.l'luistvf' M>\
ere15nty" O\.•t-r tht· IHal'l1
occupu.·cJ West Dank or the
Jordu11
l!si-.wl whH·h would be rorn-d
tn lllU\t' tnllltary foree!i oul of
vopulul1on (!('l\~nt lo clcurly de·
fined aarnton., und r the plun,
itPP<'d r~ l'f'adv lo 8('N•pt lht' pro
11m .. d . I h1• m·wt.v1.1,1wr :m ad
lh'I hracl 1:. :idumunt ubout
ll~pln~ its forr1•l\ oo the W1~l
R n~ throughout o pro~\·d.
hve·)'t·ar tfttn1jlllon period leud
1n1 to l'.1lt-.llnJun "elf ·rult-, I he'
Heralct AmunC'un :..-ild
Z11lnlod Shuvttl. u Llkud Party
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
~ JI# Ji .
Ar(!hite(!tural First
St ephen Miller of UC Berkeley holds tape at the top of a
tunnel in Ncmca . Grcect.·. whil e his wife. Stella. watches
at the silt.• where archaC!olog1sb s a y the~ found tht.·
t'arlicst known example of a vaulted tunnel built in the
western world. They say thl' tunnel offered an entrance to
the stadium where a ncient Grt'cks competed in Olympic ·
type games
Cars Hit Horses
In Laguna Canyon
Two motorists. heading out
Laguna Canyon Roud early this
morning. struck horses crossing
thC' bu.Hy arterial.
Hut neither the motorists nor
the horses were badly hurt in tht'
1.30 a .m. mishap near the iunc-
t ion of El Toro and L<tguna
Canyon Roads.
Police said Frankie Lee Haf
Alien Counl
Contract Cut
LOS ANGELES IAP > The
Immigration and Naturalization
Service has abruptly canceled
the contract of a private firm
that was researching what
would have been the first official
estimate of the number of illegal
aliens in California and 11 other
states. it was reported today.
The two-year-old project,
handled by J .A. Reyes As
sociatcs Jnc. of Washington. has
cost more than $750,000 in
federal funds, company officials
told the Los Angeles Times
AccordinR to u contract offi cer
for the INS, the contract was
terminated because of cost over·
runs and delays m finishing the
project.
ORANGE COAST \
DAILY PILOT
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~1Z.~"~~"'\~::~rn .. ::•d.,.•', ~~:;:, ~,~ ~.:~~be):~::.!° ~lhfV Mtfltt1ry
ft'rkemp, 40, of Santa Ana. was
admitted lo Saddleback Com·
munity Hospital for inj uries to
his mouth, arm~ and hands after
his car l'Ollidcd with a horse
t ros:.1ng th<' roadway
St.•t·onds l<tler. t he vehic le
driven by Ho wa rd Wes ley
Heaberlin~. 40. of 23832 Pa lmek
Circle. El Toro, struck another
horse wandering loose in the
road.
Operators of the Lazy Creek
Saddle Club, located adjacent lo
the canyon road, said a gate was
not properly shut late Tuesday,
allowing al least four horses to
wandt.•r out into the traffic lanes.
Only one horse, owned by Sal·
ly 1.t'slic. 20491 Sun Valley.
L<.tgum1 Beach was in1urcd.
Hafferkemµ wus treated a nd
released by hospital officials
rollowmg tht' early morning inci-
dent
Frot11 Page Al
PROBE •••
Oswald occasionally made re·
marks about Kennedy, she re-
called.
"Wha tever he s aid about
President Kennedy. it was only
good. always."
Two years later, of course ,
Oswald would be identified as
the assassin who murdered Ken-
nedy in Dallas on Nov. 22. 1963.
Oswald was sh1in in the Dallas
,, police station by J ack Ruby.
His widow married a Dallas
fac t o ry fore man. Kenneth
Porter, in 1965. They were
divorced in 1974 but later re-
sumed living together in OaJlas.
Soon after her marriage to
Oswald, Mrs. Porter said, she
was startled at Oswald's sugges-
tion that they move to the United
Stales.
"rt wasn't a very easy de·
cision for me to make." she
said "What should J do? Should
I fo llow him'1 Should I stay at
home? I told him wherever
he'd go, I should too."
Speaking in English with a
trace or an accent, she described
their move to Fort Worth where
Os wald 's brother Robert lived.
Oswald had trouble finding work
and his attitude soured, she con-
Uneud.
Mrs. Porter was the only wlt-
ne11s today as the committee
turned its attention to Oswald
and planned afternoon question·
mf( covering thf' days leading to
th<' :l.,~8S!l!n3110n
m e m ber or hrael l Prime
Minis ter Menachem Bel(in 's rul-
ing t.•oalltion, said tht.• sutces..-. or
failure ol the Camp l>av1d talks
depends on Egypt·::. w1lhna11css
to agr ee not lo 1>ress l\rab
('!aims to i.overe1gnty ov\•r the
Wt.>st Hank, t h1.· story said
Other lH<Jt•li offic ia ls re·
porl\•dly said the plan could lead
to a de facto freeze on new
hsroeh settlements on tht.' West
Uank. the Her a ld American
:uud.
Shoval. chairman or the
Israeli Foreign Ministry's Ad·
v1sory Commlllt.'C on lnforma·
lion, is not directly involved in
the Camp David talks, but bas
ke pt In regular contact with
Israeli negotiators and flew to
the United States with Begin. the
newspaper said
There was no immediate com·
mcnt by U.S. Israeli or Egyp-
tia n oHicials o n the Herald
American·s story
Meanwhile, President Carter
has met unannounced at Camp
David. Md , with Is rael's
Menachem Begin, setting off ln·
tensive U.S. deliberations in the
search for a way to compromise
Israeli and E1tvptian differences
ove r the future of the Palestin·
ian Arabs.
The Car ter-Begin ~esslon.
which lasted nearly an hour and
a half Tuesday night. was con·
fi rmed today by the While House
press office more than 12 hours
late r. Carter and Begin had not
met since Sunday.
After the meeting. Carte r left
his principal advisers. Including
Guerrillas Seize Area
Northwest Nicaragua Said in Rebel Hands
MANAGUA. Nicaragua <AP >
Leftist guerrillas fighting to
ousl Pres ident An a s t asio
Somota have taken a lmost com-
1Jletc control of northwestern
Nicaragua, including Lhc city of
Chmandega. travelers arriving
in Managua reported.
They said the Sandinista guer·
rillas set up l'heckpoints in
Fro•PageAI
FACILITY. •
the "narrow-mindedness of Just
a few neighbors.
"I was astounded by the reac·
lion by a few citizens and ap-
palled by the hes and rumors be·
i n g s pread both b y the
newspaper and the petitioners,"
Ashling said.
His supporters presented peti·
lions of their own from 320 area
residents they said favor the
complex.
Christine Finch. 327 21st St.,
Costa Mesa. said s he. her
husband and two children have
no reservations about having the
retard e d adults in their
neigh borhood.
"We welcome the opportunity
for our children to learn that
everyone is not the same." she
said.
"There is a lady who has
learned the biggest lesson in the
world ," Super visor R alph
Diedrich remarked . "how to
love your neighbors' children as
your own."
Ethel Rick. a widow who hves
next door to the Ashllng proper·
ty. asked supervisors lo deny the
permit.
"I think this is an institution
and I· can't consider it any other
way," she said.
Ashling said those living in the
facility all have jobs and arc be·
ing ta ught cooking. s hopp1ng
and money management skills
leading to independent liviog.
He noted no more than three
to four cars would be in the
parking lot al a lime. alcohol
would be prohibited and bedtime
would be 10 p.m. weekdays and
11 p.m . weekends.
J ean Echard. a member orthe
local Developmental Disabilities
Planning Board, called the Ash·
ling program "paramount" and
said her group would work to
help educate the community and
publi c t o a cce pt s u c h
neighborhood facilities for the
retarded.
"ll is their God-given right to
live as best they can wherever
they can," she said.
Supervisors asked the county
mental health director to inspect
the facility annually lo make
sure there arc no problems
The facility also will be m
s pected regularly b y state
authorities, supervisors were
told.
The board rejected a plea by
Stubblefield to postpone action
in the event residents succeed in
efforts to have the property an·
nexed to Costa Mesa. If that
happened. the use permit would
be up to city rather than county
offi cials.
"Whal do you know that we
don't know that gives you lhe
wi sdom that this will happen?"
Supervisor Thomas Riley asked.
Stubblefie ld said he didn't
know for certain but noted pell
tions seeking annexation are to
be filed with the county shortly.
In casting his vote with fellow
board membe rs, Supe r visor
Laurence ~hmit said. "All I
can say is that this is going to be
one of my more enthusiastic yes
votes in supporting this opera·
tion."
Police Car
Esteli, north of Managua. and
were stopping all traffic on the
Pan-American Highway ·
These sources said the na·
lional guard garrison in Chinan·
dega . 65 miles nort hwes t of
Managua. was restrictt:d to its
barracks
One traveler said the guer·
rillas were looting stores and
distributing food to the people.
Both electricity and water has
been cul. he said.
Heavy fighting was reported
in Leon, 45 miles northwest of
Managua, and ruvas, 60 miles
southwest of the capita l Looters
we r e said lo be active 1n
Jinotepe. 22 miles southeast of
Managua. arte r mos t of the
troops there were pulled out to
reinforce the Rivas garrison.
However, Somoza's soldiers
appeared to have regained con·
trol of Masaya , 18 miles
southeast o r th e ca pital.
despite occasional bursts of gun·
fi re and were reported mopping
up after 2112 days of hard fight·
ing.
Managua was generally quiet.
Somoza told a ne ws con·
ference the national gu ard.
Nic a r agua's army . secured
Masaya at noon Tuesday. He
said the guard would over power
the guerrillas in Chinandega and
Estell shortly.
Reporters were barred from
Masaya. but Red Cross workers
spent three hours in the city
Tuesd ay afternoon and then
withdrew because or sporadic
gunfire.
Red Cross Secretary-General
Leopoldo Navarro said three
blocks of the city or 40,000 people
were gutted by fire, a few bodies
were decomposing in the streets.
a nd about 1,000 persons had
taken refuge in the Red Cross
center and a nearby convent
"Many people were killed and
injured but there is no way to de·
termine the total number ," he
said.
Unofficial reports put the
number of dead soldier!> al more
than 200 in the nationwide San·
dinista attacks that began Satur·
day night. But Somoza said 30
g uardsme n were killed and
about 75 wounded He said he
ha d no fi gures on ci vi li a n
casualties but when asked about
reports of hundreds of civilian
dead. he commented:
"It is unfortunate that the
guerrillas enter private homes.
We regret the action we must
take but we have to neutralize
the guerrillas."
Somoza said if the guerrillas
"want peace we will give th~m
peace. IC not, we will give them '
no quarter."
Uus Cut
ForCoun
WASHINGTON <API --
No government cars for
th e eight associate
j u s tices or the U .S .
Supreme Court. Congress
has decided.
A House-Senate con-
ference committee. rca-
c h ing agreem ent Tues
day on appropriations for
the judiciary in the fiscal
year starting Oct. t, delet·
ed $28.000 for lhe leased
cars. 11te automobiles had
not been requested , but
the Senate added them.
The chief justice has a
government-provided
automobile.
For The Executive . • •
On display now
Secretary of State Cyrus R.
Vance. working past m1dmght.
It was understood the U.S. del·
egalion 1s working on the pre·
cise language or a statement en·
com passing Pales tinian and
other issues.
R 1s ing early. Carter went
back to work at 6:45 a.m., meet·
ing with Vance. presidential ai.
s1stant Zbigniew Brzezinski and
H a rold Saunders. a ssistant
secretary of state for the Middle
East.
Fl'OMPageAJ
SUSPECT ••.
Today. Amburgey said a com·
pos1te drawing of Ted. based on
the witness' description. Is being
sent to every known gathering
place for gays In Southern
Califorrua.
H e'~ wh a t ·s known i n
ho mosexual parla nce as a
chicken. a man who looks like a
boy.
Ted is described as being in
his early twenhes. or slender
build, standing about five feet.
eight inches tall and weighing
about 130 pounds.
He has sandy brown hatr and
a light complexion.
Amburgey. in pleading for
help in identifying and locating
Ted. said he wants to assure
members or the homosexual
community that their identity
will be protected.
"We really need lo find this
guy before something like this
happens again," he saki.
Martinez' body was found In
his blood spattered bedroom
about 20 hours after he died.
Pa thologist 's reports indicate
he'd bet!n beaten so severely
that parts or his brain were ex·
posed.
His car was found parked in
Laguna Beach near where he'd
bee n that night but police
theorize the murderer drove It
there after killing Martinez.
Amburgey said anyone with
information about Ted from In·
diana should contact him or Sgt.
Ken Thompson. 644-3785.
f'roaP~AI
MARINES •••
St.000 a month and plane rare to
and from Managua.
"I can't reveal my sources of
money because some or it is
coming from United Stated
sources." Gabaldon said.
GREENBRAE <APl-A No·
vato woman was killed here when
her car was hit broadside by a
Larkspur police car.
Several large, high-qua I ity
traditional desks, ready for delivery
Larkspur Police Chief J ohn
Sines said Barbara Woolsey, 32.
drove her car out of a shopping
center Monday and was struck
by a car driven by otflcer Steve
Odetto.
Some witnesses said Odetto
drove through a red light but
other witnesses said the light
was green. The officer was
r esponding to a call from
a nother policeman uklng for
1'upport in a nnrcotlcs ftrre11t not
far trom th<' ar<.'ldt'nt
TORRANCE
2~ Hawthorne Blvd.
(213) 378·1279
COSTA MESA
IS9S Newport Blvd
IT14l ~MOSO
. . . . ....
LACUNA BEACH
~.S North COHt 1'1wy.
(71'1 4q4-6S'1
7
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l
'.to I
7
Orange Coast
LDITION
Today's Closing
N. Y. StoelL4t
VOL 71, NO 256, 4 SECT IONS, .... PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEONESOAY,SEPTEMBER1~1~8 c
I I
Retarded Home .OK Near Mesat
By KATIIY C'Li\Nt·v
Ol-DMt 1'1leot1•.-.
The TWitln man obv1ou~h w~1' proud T\)(o~n> ~ ht'n ht• t3lk1~1
to Ora~c Count) .. u1wn "or" ubout his mtntt1lh· rt"tanl<>d ..on
Thl' hilh..r dt•~c·r1lwd ht'> '>On
U• a ret.ardt>c1 ch!ld itro~ n up u
<"Ontributor to "e><'lt'h . .t m<1n
who support' h1m:.e:ll :.~ ,, r u,tu
dwn. donutt>:. to h1., <'hur<'h 111111
laves 1ndepenck>ntly with thret-
other young men 111 •• Sunt.1 Anil
condomiruum
\
The Ye>unR man dl':.rr1t~d 16 n
Jtradut•lt· o( un md1•1wndt·nl llv 1ng s ktl4 llt0g1 um offt-n-<I tiy
Colin Ai.hhnR und h1 ' '""· Murk. •n .1 homt· for 18 • t'l<11 ch•d adult:> 1n S11ntn Anu
The Allhhnlil" 'A-On '>UJ>l'rv1:.11r' ·
unun1mow. 1>4.•rm1,K1on 'l'uf':.da>
lo rt>IC)(':th' Uw1r far11lt y lo 11
12 unit a1mrtm(mt c·om plcx 1u1el
lhree-bedrtMlm homt• il 362 f':
2tlth St . in itn unln\'Orporuted
pocket on Col'ltu Me!ta ·~ eusl
'>tt1t•
T he J('tlon followed two
months of proll'St lhal started
.. wh<>n tht• county Plunn1ng Com·
m 1i.s1on upprowd 11 conditional
u:sc 1wrn11t lo allow up lo 36 re-
tardt'rt ndults 1n the complex
C"ornn11 tkl ~.1r re~ident Dean
Stuhbkfll'ld, owner of rental
pro1H·1 t y near t h~ proposed
1\:.hllnA homt'. appealed the
pt>rmH. prt'senting pet1t1ons
signl'd by 500 residents he said
also opposed the facility.
He contended the home for re-
MESA HIGH STUDENTS SHOW OFF RESULTS OF SUMMER PROJECT
From Left, James Oalebout, 15, Rick Horgan, 15, and Dave Barrett, 16
Harvest Time in Mesa
Stude1its Reap Corn Crop at Acre 'Farm'
By MICHA EL PASKEVJCH
Oflhe Oa1ty PllOIS~
Fall marks the start of another school
year, but at Costa Mesa High it also means
harvest time.
STUDENTS IN the school's agricultural
program were out in their one-acre com patch
today reaping the fruits lor vegetables> of a
summer's hard work.
The student farmers are J ames Dalebout
and Rick Hor~an. both sophomores. and junior
Dave Barrett.
"They planted 1t. did the watering. weed
~praying and even damaged some equipment
in the learning process." said their instructor,
Roy Center
THE EQUIPMENT has been repaired and
the fund for the agricultural department will
benefit through the sale oflhe harvest.
There are about 15.000or20,000earsof corn
m the field. It went on sale today at a small
standoff Fairview Road.
And you can't beat the price -· a dozen
fresh ears for Sl.
THE STAND WILL be back in operation
Friday afternoon and will be open school days
until the corn runs out.
Center notes that a minjmum of msec·
ticides wen sed because of nearby hom es. so
the corn is close to completely organic.
With the funds from the corn sale, the stu-
dents will start a lettuce crop.
Assassin's Widow Talks
WA S HI NGTON <AP >
Marina Oswald Porter described
for Congress today how she hap-
pened to marry a man she hard·
ly kne w. a man who would
become known as the assassin or
a president.
Testifying with composure
before the House assassinations
committee. Mrs. Porter recalled
her whirlwind courlship with
Lee Harvey Oswald when she
was a girl of 19 in her native
Russia.
She said she knew little about
h im except that he was an
American and that she liked
him.
She was asked whel her it
wasn't a bit hasty to plunge into
marriage after only six weeks or
dating.
"Not when you're the age lhat
1 was." she replied.
wave radio, they heard some or
Kennedy's speeches m English.
she said.
"I would ask Lee what is he
saying? What is he sayin g?" she
related. "He told me to hush up
and not interrupt Jlis attitude
was you being a woman. what
do you know about politics?"
The young bride then spoke
only Russian but Oswald spoke
bolh languages.
<See PROBE, Page A2)
larded adults would increase
traffic congestion. add to an
already crowded neighborhood
and detract from the area ·s res·
idential character
Afte r As hling s upporters
testifed lhat the state trend is to
move the retarded from institu-
tions into home-like settings,
Stubblefield also said. ··we ob·
Jecl to being used as a guinea
pig for the state authorities."
Ashling. a Laguna Beach resi·
denl, attributed the protest to
the "narrow·mindedness of just
a few neighbors.
"I was astounded by the.reac-
tion by a few citizens and ap-
palled by the lies and rumors be·
i n g spre ad both by t h e
newspaper and lhe petitioners."
Ashling said.
His supporters presented peti·
Hons or their own from 320 area
reside nts they said favor the complex.
Christine Finch. 327 2lsl St ..
Costa Mesa. s aid she. he r
husband and two children have
no reservations about having the
rel a rded adults in their
neighborhood.
.. We welcome lhe opportunity
for our children lo learn that
everyone is not the same," she
s aid.
"There is a lady who has
learned the biggest lesson in the
wo rld." S upe r vis or Ralph
Diedrich r emarked. "how to
love your neighbors' children a::.
<See FACILITY, Page A2)
Cops Ask Gays' Aid
Newport Murder Probed
B y JOANNE REYNOLDS
OI tM Dally Pit .. Statt On Aug . 27 about midnight.
someone beat Ru ben Mart.Inez to
death in the· bedroom of his
Corona del Mar home.
Today. Newport Beach police
concede they've r un into a
deadend in trying to track the
4 1-yea r -o ld r ea l estate
sales man's murderer.
The problem, according to
Delective Sam Amburgey, is
that Martinez was a homosexual
who frequented gay bars along
the Orange Coast.
Amburgey said the gays who
knew Martinez have been reluc-
tant to cooperate in the search
for the man last seen with
Ma rtinez. fearing exposure as
homos exuals . One man. ap-1
parenlly a cl ose fr iend .
told police he saw Martinez last
al the Coast Inn in Laguna
Beach. He said Martinez in·
troduced him to a young man he
called "Ted from Indiana."
; lt 's Ted that detectives have
soughl in gay bars and hangouts
from Long Beach to Oceanside.
including the two Laguna Beach
bars Martinez visiled the night
he died. lhe Little Shrimp and the
Coast Inn.
Today, Amburgey said a com-
posite drawing of Ted. based on
the witness' description, is being
sent to every known gathering
place for Rays in Southern
California.
H e's wh a·t ·s k n own in
ho m osexual parlance as a
chicken, a man who looks like a
boy.
Ted is described as being in
his early twenties, of slender
build, standing about five feel.
eight inches tall and weighing
about 130 pounds.
He has sandy brown hair and
a light complexion.
Amburgey. in pleading fo r
help in identifying and localing
Ted. said he wants to assure
me mbers of the homosexual
community thal their identity
will be protected.
"We really need lo find this
guy before something like this
happens again," he said.
Martinez' body was found in
his blood s pattered bedroom
about 20 hours after he died.
Pathologist's re porls indicate
he 'd been beaten so severely
that parts of his brain were ex-
posed.
His car was found parked in
Laguna Beach near where he'd
been that night but police
theorize the murderer drove it
there after killing Martinez.
Amburgey said anyone with
information about Ted from In·
diana should contact him or Sgt.
Ken Thompson. 644-3785.
Mesa Man Arrested
After Trailer Fire
A Costa Mesa man was arrest-
ed early today at the scene of a
house trailer fi re that Newport
Beach police allege he set.
Mi chael J . Dugan. about 20.
was booked into city jail on sus·
picion of arson after the 1:30
a.m. blaze at the Ebblide trailer
pa rk. 1577 Placentia Ave. He is
being held in lieu of $25.000 bail.
Detective Lee Roberts said in
questionjng Dugan, the man told
Prison Break
BULLETIN
DICKSON. Tenn IAPl
Armed with shotguns. four IO·
mates of a minimum-security
prison took advantage of a bowl-
ing alley field trip today to
escape. police said. Two of them
hijacked a small plane and flew
away with the manager of the
Dickson Municipal Airport as
hostage.
him he'd been evicted from the
trailer earlier this summer.
Roberts said the trailer occu-
pying space D-9 at the park in·
curred more than $2,000 damage
in the fi re which burned about
half or it. He said it was vacant at the
time the fire broke out.
Roberts alleged that Dugan
got inside lhe trailer and began
lighting the contents on fire in
an attempt to destroy his former
residence. He apparently was still at the
scene when firemen arrived to
quell the blaze.
Cuban Return Set
WASHINGTON CAP> The
State Department said Tuesday
'that 66 U.S. citizens along with
64 Cuban fa mjly members wHI
fl y from Cuba to Mia mi on
Thursday in the first stage of a
repartriation program agreed to
by President Fidel Castro.
---· )~
I
~
SOUGHT IN MURDER CASE
Police Drawing of 'Ted'
U.S. Offers
Breakthrough ·
In Mideast?
By The Associa&ed Press
A proposal made by the Unit-
ed States al the Camp David
summit ta lks could lead lo a
breakthrough in the Mideast
conflict. the Boston He rald
American reported today.
The key to the proposal. ac-
cord in~ to a n I sr aeli
policym ak er quoted in the
copyr ighted story, is a com·
promise under which "neither
side -Arab or Israeli -wouJd
press its claim to exclusive sov-
ereignty" ove r t he l sraeli-
occupied West Bank of the
Jordan. Israel. which would be forced
to move military forces out of
population cente rs to clearly de-
fined garrisons under the plan.
appears ready to accept the pro·
posal, the newspaper said.
But Israel is adamant about
keeping its forces on the West
Bank throughout a proposed,
five-year lransilion pe riod lead·
ing to Palestinian self.rule. the
Herald American said.
Zalmud Shoval, a Likud Party
membe r o f Is rael i Prim e
Minister Menachem Begin's rul·
ing coaJition. said the success or
failure of the Camp David talks
depends on Egypt's willingness
to agree not to press Arab
claims to sovereignty over the
West Bank, the story said.
Coast
RecalHng their life In Minsk,
Os wald's widow s ai d her
husband was generally good-
natured, losing his temper only
aboul as much as most husbands
do, was soa\ewhal dissatisfied
with his work at a radio factory,
became best friends with a
Russian factory worker who was
studying English. and rarely dis-
cussed politics with her.
-pad Wants Jerry to Wed
Other Israeli officials re-
portedly said the plan could lead
to a de facto freeze on new
Israeli settlements on the West
Bank, the Herald Ame r ican
said.
Weather
Low cloudiness a nd
local drizzle night and
morning hours becoming
partly sunny along the
coast Thursday afternoon.
Lows toni~h l 62 lo 66.
Highs from 68 to 72 at
beaches to 77 lo 80 inland.
INSIDE TODAY
At a ¥i/e distance. like at a
Sea World extubit, sharks
have bttn a bfQ attracttqn.
See Po~ .412.
latlex
They were married In April.
1961. only a few months after
John F. Kennedy was inaugurat-
ed as president. With a short·
Misdemeanor .
Now a Felony
Costa Mesa police officer Tom
Winter tried to arrest George A.
Rushing, 24. of 424 Hamilton St.,
Tuesday afternoon on the basis
or a misdemeanor warrant is-
sued by a judge.
Rus hing balked. They grap-
pled. Rushing allegedly made a
grab for the officer's sidear m.
Winter held onto the weapon.
then radioed for assistance
Rus hing was jailed .
lie now fa ces felony charges
of assauJt wilh a deadly weapon,
assault on a police offi cer and
resisting arrest Bail was sel al
$25.000.
DAD LIKES HER
Lind• Ron•t•dt
..
SAN FRANCISCO <AP ) -Gov.
Edmund G. BrownSr.says heand
his wife wish the current
California governor would get
married, and lhey wouldn't mind
if their son's wife-lo-be turned out
to be country-rock singing slar
Linda Ronsladt.
The elder Brown· voiced that wish Tuesday during a visit here
on a campaign lour for son
J errv's re-electionbid.
What led up to talk about mar-
riage for the 40-year-old bachelor
governor was bis father's denial
that Democrats aren't all that
amused by hisson'slifestyle.
"Some may have been critical
of Jerry when he gave up the big
automobile. the new mansion and
sold the airplane. But I think he'll
right," Brown said. "He couldn 't
liv~ by himself in that big
mansion."
Asked about marriage, Brown
said he and Mrs. Brown wished
their son were married. adding,
"Our lhreedauihters are happily
mar"rted."
<SH BROWN, Page Al>
Al'WI~
WlU. HE MARRY?
Governof Brown
Other Coverage
Additional Harbor areu cov
erage appears today on Page
AlO.
DINING SET
BRINGS CASH
"This money looks more
beautiful than my dining set
ever did."
That's lhe advertising success
story of the Huntington Beach
man who placed this ad in the
Daily Pilot :
Contemporary wo lnu t
d1n1ng !>Cl , 6 chrs. 2
lraves. pad'> Xlnt cond
$100. XXX·XXl<X
I( you have furniture to sell
convert lo cash. call 642·5678.
Just a rew words will work hard
Cor you in the Daily Pilot.
7
Thnt.'s Re-enforrement Oe11• ...... IWlf-
w11rkrnt·11 dwd~ out :o.tt•t·I bars that wall re-enforc~ con-
l'I 1·tt1 top of flood <'h(lnn(>I being built down the middle of
Irvine Avenue or1 l ht· bord~r of Newport Beach and
Co!>ta Mesa Top of l'hannt-1 eventually will be covered
with dirt and landscupcd
Rome Sale• Break
Capital Gains
Hope Fading
W ASHINOTON I AP I
Despite lta populurlty an the
llouisl', the fu ture or a orwt>·ln a·
llC~tlme $100.000 tax break ror
people who aell their homa11 i11 in
doubt
The udm1n111trat1on opposes
Lhc cnpltul gulns lax relief.
which would cost the Treasury
$700 rnllUon a year in tax rev-
f'nue:,,, as tooexpensive.
Sen Russe l l 8 . Long ,
ch1urmun of the Senate Finance
c;ommillee, has indicated that
If~. too, would bke lo cut back on
the provision.
The sale of a home is the only
event for moi;t Americani. that
incurs the tax on capital aulns,
which are profits from the 11ale
of assets held a year or more.
Because Inflation drlve11 up
home prices. the h1x can be a
shock when it hits.
The law allows a person who
sells his principal home to dttfcr
a ny capital gains tax until
sometime In the future, as Ion~
as he buys another home that as
worth al least as much as the old
one sold for.
Double Oops
Reagan, Ford Goof
DALLAS 1 AP l Forme r Pre~ident Ford is at it
<.1gain Ami ht• had ~omt• hl'lp I rom former California.
Gov Honaltl Rt•agJn
The.• two bi~·nam1: Republicans were in Texas on
Tursday lo camµaign for state candidateb, and each
had u blooper lo t:Ontnbull'
l•'ord told the GOP luminaries at a breakfast
that h e tmd Reagan were m Houston to help Teun
Blll Clements get elected "governor of the great
slate or CaJifornaa ...
Later. Reagan <.'hippt."'Cl in his blooper in Dallas.
when he was askt:d how he thought the Texas cam-
paign was shapin~ uµ.
"So far the crowds haw been e nthusiastic, and 1
think it look:-. great for 11111 ." said the former screen
star.
Texas Attorney Gcm~ral J ohn Hill is Clements'
Democratic opponent.
Long has not said exactly
what he has in mind. except lo
indicate be thinks some lax
should be paid on the Sl00.000
profit. He has shown no Inclina-
tion lo go along with a Treasury
olan that would allow lax relief
only for hom<' sellers 55 or older.
Felony Rap Hits Ford
Long's committee. which 1s
writing its version of a broad tax
cut bill for business a nd in·
dlviduals. is considering several
alternatives to the $100,000 pro-
vision which the House passed last month. The provision was
widely hailed as a long-overdue
tax break for inflation-weary
Americans. mainly those al mid·
dle·tncome levels.
ELK HART. Ind. IAP I -A
county grand Jury today indicted
the Ford Motor Co. on three
counts of recklesR homicide and
one count of criminal reckless·
ncss in the deaths or three young
wom en in a Pinto a utomobile
crash last month.
Ford called the action un-
precedented and "unwarranted"
and said it had not broken In·
diana laws.
reur by a van driv .. n by Robc•rt
Duggar. 21. of Goshen.
T estimony by two Ford
engineers and four other wit-
nesses, including the Ulrich sis-
ters' parents. ended Tuesday.
The engineers were called to
testify about the design of the
Pinto fuel tank. said by the Na·
tional Hi ghway Trame Safety
J\dm1nastrallon to be too suscep.
table to explosion in rear-end col-
hsaons.
T h e Association ot Trial
Lawyers of America said ln
June there are up to 50 civil suits
stemming from Pinto cra8hes
pending in various courts. At
least six suits have bffn settled
out or court by Ford. including
three of more than Sl million.
f'r ... r~Al
Anti-inflation
Plans to Bow
Next Week?
Crime Pl111nhed
The E lkha rt County grand
jury or five men and one woman
had begun deliberations Tues-
day in the case, which stems
from the Aug. 10 accident in
wh ich Jud y Ulrich. 18 . of
Osceola; her 16-year-old sister,
Lynn, and their cousin, Donna
Ulrich . 18, or Roanoke. Ill..
burned to death.
FACILITY APPROVED. • •
your own " Supervisors asked the county
mental health director l-0 inspect
t he facility annually to m ake
s ure there are no proble ms.
WJ\SlllNGTON <AP l Prest·
dtont Carter m<1y unveil a!> early
a.., next w~k an anta-anflation pro
gram whi<'h will featurt' volun-
tc.ry wage.price guideline!>. ad
mana:.tralaon !>Ource!> say.
Th<' progn.1m . drafted by lh<'
hagh·lcvcl Economic Poli cy
Group, 1i; <11med at reducing an an.
nation rate that has been nearly
10 pcn:t:nl since the :-.tart of the
year.
Carter'!> advisers are con!>tder·
tnJ( Ii m1tan1< w;iJ(e increases to 7
1wrccnt <1 year ancl pnc£• an
cr<·:a:.e~ to 5 75 perct·nt. !>aid the
:.nurre!>. who asked not lo h<: iden·
ltfacd They s aid the program
might be rNady for disclosure
next week.
The administration could not
tmforce the proposed hmats, but at
l'ould put press ure on busmesses
and unions that exceeded the
1-?U1deltne!> Carter ha!> flatly ruled
out wage-price controls
However, even the voluntary
.guadelane~ have drawn strong op·
position from labor lea<.lers.
A FL·CIO President George
Meany has complained that
voluntary gu1dolincb are a !>lc•p
clos~r to mundatory w<1ge con-
trols.
In April the administration an-
nounced 1t would fi ght inflation by
holding down government wage
increases and tryin~ to persuade
busancs~1..°l) and labor to follow
:O.Ull.
The new program would go a
step further by setting target
numbers forncwincrcases.
f',.._PageAJ
BROWN •••
On the prospeets for a wedding,
Brown said, "l think that will
come to pass arter this election.
T his as JUSl a wish ... I am not
privy to Jerry's love life
"I have seen that Ronstadt girl
at the house wi th him on several
occasions. Bernice and I would
approve of her as a duughte r·in-
law ... bull haven'llhe slightest
idea on God's green earth
whether either of them has a ny in·
tentio n in that direction. lie
doesn 't say, 'Dad. I'm in love
wt th this gal or that ga I.• "
OAANOE COAST c.
DAILY PILOT
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Huntington Uses Hyprwsis
By RAYMOND ESTRADA JR.
OI ... o.ltr ~ ... 5Wtt
Huntington Beach police have
added a new weapon to their
crime-fighting arsenal.
It's not a special gun or exotic
device The new weapon, or tool
as some call it, is hypnosis.
Officer Art Droz. a trained
hypnotist. and his wife Marilyn,
an artist, form the first police
hypnos is t eam in O r a nge
County
Huntington Beach Police Chief
Earle Robitaille. Capt. Bill
Payne and Droz all have re-
ceived training at the Los
Angeles-based Law Enforce·
ment Hypnosis Institute.
Droz uses hypnosis to retrieve
information from the minds of
c rime victims and w1tnesse!>
who may have lost their ex·
periences in their subconscious·
nesses.
··It's not black magic ... we
don't use it for entertainment,"
says Droz. a detective.
A rapist's facial description.
an auto license plate number or
a thug's snarled words may be
forgoU.en or blotted out of a vic-
tim's mind by the trauma of the
incident. Droz said.
"Hypnos is is concentr ated re·
laxation," explained Droz who
admits there are many myths he
must dispel before he can hyp-
notize a subject.
No one can be hypnotized un-
less he or s he wants to be placed
in that mental state, Droz said.
One example of the 10 cases in
which lhe Huntington Beach
police hypnotist used the tech-
nique occurred recently when a
rape victim said she could not
describe her attacker.
Droz hypnotized the woman
wbo was then able to describe
the man.
With artist's pencil in hand.
Mrs. Droz was able to capture
the rape victim's description of
her attacker.
Without the use of hypnosis.
Front Page A I
PROBE ..•
Oswald occasionally made re-
marks about Kennedy, s he re·
called.
·'Whatever he said about
President Kennedy. it was only
good, always."
Two years later, of course,
Oswald would be identified as
tbe assassin who murdered Ken·
nedy in Dallas on Nov . 22, 1963.
Oswald was slain in the Dallas
police station by J ack Ruby.
His widow married a Dallas
factor y for e man. Kenneth
Porte r, in 1965. Th ey were
divorced in 1974 but later re-
sumed living together in Dallas.
Soon alter her marriage to
Oswald, Mrs. Porter said, she
was startled at Oswald's sugges -
tion that they move to the United
States.
"ll was n't 8 very easy de·
cision for me to make," she
said. "What should I do? Should
J follow him? Should ,I s tay at
home? I told him wherever
he'd go, I should too."
Speaking in Engllah with a
trace of an accent, she described
their move to Fort Worth where
Oswald's brother Robert llved.
Oswald had trouble findin1 work
and his attitude soured , abe con·
tinued.
Mrs. Porter was the only wit·
nus today as the committee
turned its attention to Oswald
uncl planned afternoon question·
1ng covering the days leading to
the assassination.
police would have had nothing to
go on and the case would be at a
deadend, Droz srud.
Since the Huntington Beach
Police Department began using
hypnosis on a regular basis fi ve
months ago, no cases have yet
been completely solved because
of the technique.
But Police Chief Earle
Robitaille s aid he has great faith
that the method will prove its
worth in the future.
Savings of time and money.
normally used fo r poli ce
"legwork" in tracking down in·
formation "is the major point
that sold me" on using hypnosis
in investigations. Robitaille
said.
Robitaille said it is not yet
necessary to trrun a number of
police as hypnotists since the
technique is not used daily. And.
like any new tool, the method
must first gain more acceµ
tance. he added.
In April. 1977, Robitaille hyp·
notized a female witness in the
apparent murder of a Mexican
national in Huntington Beach.
Mrs. Oroz. a Cal State Long
Beach art graduate. a nd former
Huntington Beach police dis-
patcher. was called in lo draw a
composite s ketch of the possible
murder suspect.
Robitaille said the information
cleared up at least one aspect of
the case but still left it unsolved.
Mrs. Droz, who works without
a hypnotist at limes, says the
technique really works. "I only
draw the lines that the subJect
tells m e to put down." she said.
Mrs . Droz. trained by Los
Angeles police artist Fernando
Ponce, said the use of artists In
crime problems is not as new as
police hypnotists but also not as
widespread.
She said both she and her
husband must work togettllo help c rime victims and 1t-
nesses overcome misconcept' ns
about hypnosis.
"There's no swinging watch
and people don't blurt out deep
secrets," Droz said. The hyp-
notist uses a gentle deep voice
and a comforting hand on the
subject's shoulder to help bring
on the hypnotic state.
Most hypnosis is self-induced.
A subject will not say something
under the hypnotic s tate that he
or s he does not want to have
known, Droz explained.
Rain Snarls
Tmfficin
Los Angeles
LOS ANGELES <AP) -Slip-
pery streets and minor traffic ac-
cidents slowed rush-hour drivers
in a light rain here today. and the
storm caused a power failure.
The National Weather Service
predicted the rain would con·
linue through Thursday in the
early morning and evening
hours. but with clearing during
the days.
Tramce slowed due to a rash
or "fender benders" on the slick
pave m ent. but nobody was
seriously hurt, said Californiu
Hl1hway Patrol officer Ken
Schultheis.
The Los Angeles Department
of Wat.er and Power said rain
water shorted a 4.800-volt dis·
trlbution line ln the Sllverlal<e
area, leaving several hundred
('Ustomers without power for
nearly a half hour startin& about
6:20 Im
The Pinto in which the Ulrich
girls died was one or 1.5 million
Pinto and Me rcury Bobcats
made. between 1971 and 1976 that
Ford recalled in June because of
government complaints about
the fuel tank.
Ford denies the tanks arc any
more s usceptible to explosion
than other small cars of those
model years, when no federal
rear-end collision standards ex·
isled.
William Con nour, a n ln -
dianapolt.S attorney who helped
draft thl' rcv1scd state penal
tode under which the action was
brought. said tht• consideration
of criminal charges against
1-'ord was unprecedented
The teen·agcrs' 1973 Pinto
sedan exploded when hit in the
Ethel Rick. a widow who lives
next door lo the Ashhng proper-
ty. asked supervisors to deny the
permit.
"I think this is an institution
and I can't consider it any other
way, .. she said.
Ashling said those living in the
facility all have jobs and are be-
ing taught cooking. shopping
and money management s kills
leading to independent living.
He noted no more than three
to four cars would be in the
parking lot at a time. alcohol
would be prohibited and bedtime
would be 10 p.m. weekdays and
11 p m. weekends.
.Jean Echard. a member of lht•
lot·al Developmental D1sablht1cs
Planning Board. called the Ash·
ling program "paramount" and
~aid her group would work to
help edu('ate lhc community and
public t o accept i-.uch
neighborhood facilities for the
retarded.
··it is their God-given nAht lo
live as best they can wht:rever
they can," she said
For The Executive . • •
On di sp lay now
The facility also will be in-
s pc c t ed r egula rly by state
a uthorities, supervisors were
told.
The board rejected a plea by
Stubblefield to postpone action
in the event residents sucettd in
efforts to have the property a n-
nexed to Costa Mesa. U that
happened, the use permit would
be up to city rather than county
officials.
"Whal do you know that we
don't know that gives you the
wisdom that this will happen?"
Supe r vi~r Thomas Riley asked.
Stubblefield sa id he didn't
know ror certain but noted peti-
tions seeking annexation are to
bt• filed with the county s hortly.
-In cast1n~ his vote with fellow
boa rd mem bers. Supervisor
Laurence Schmit said , "All I
can say 1s that this is going to be
one of my more enthusiastic yes
votes an supporting t his opera-
tion ·•
Several large, high-quality
traditional desks, ready for de livery
TORRANCE
23'M9 Hewthorne Blvd.
<2131 378-t 279
COSTA MESA
t S9S Ne wPOrt Bl1td,
(714) M2-20SO
LAGUNA BEACH
~s North Cont Hwy.
(714) .. ,..,,,
v
Wtdotldtv. Stetembtr 13. !97§ A3
.
\ ~ ,
' Flooding
DAILY P!LOI
Perils Little Rock
. Re b e ls
G .. a1n1ng
Control
MANAGUA. Nlcaraiua IAP
Leftist aucf'TUla... fi.aht1ng to
• oust Pr"•1dent Ana&labfO
Somo"a have t•ktn almost com·
, plete control of northwestern
Nlcanau•. tnch.tding the city ol
Chinandega. truvt-lers MrrlvUlH
in Managua rtported
They 11\d lhe S.-ndlntsti. guer·
rllh1 s i.et u p c-heckp<Hnts 1n
t;:Jtt>h , north or Munugua, and
wen~ bloppmg ull t ralfac on tht'
Pnn·Amer1can Highway
These 11oources s1ud the nt•
tional guard garrtson in Ch1nan·
dego.. 65 miles northwe st of
Managua. was restricted to 1ti. barracks
One traveler loa1d the guer
rlllas were looting !>lores and
d istributing rood to the peoplt!
Both electricity and water ha:.
been cut. be said.
Heavy fighting was reportt!d
in Leon, 45 miles northwest of
Managua, and Rivas, 60 miles
southwest or the capital. Looters
were s aid to b e active in
Jinotepe, 22 miles southeast of
Managua. after most of the
troops there were pulled out to
reinforce the Rivas garrison
However. Somoza's soldiers
appeared to have regained con-
t r o I of Ma s ,ya, 18 miles
southeast of the capital .
despite occasional bursts or gun·
fire and were reported mopping
~p after 2'h days or hard fight-ing.
Train Agems
Plan to Fight
Counly Woes
Task forces of railroad agents
a re scheduled to m ove into
southern Orange County next
month in a drive lo curb damage
and injuries caused by rock
throwers and individuals who
place barriers on Santa Fe
tracks.
The proJect was conformed
• this morning by Jim Seter. San-
ta Fe's division special agent
stationed in San Bernardino.
Specifically targeted. Sete r
said, is the San Clemt!nte area
and , possibly, the El Toro·
Mission Viejo vicinity where
rallroad agents and county
sheriff's deputies have reported
increased activity a long Santa
Fe's trackage.
Santa Fe trains run parallel to
the ocean a l San Clemente
where rock throwers have creat-
ed problems often in the past.
police report. The tracks curve
inland at Capistrano Be ach.
paralleling Interstate 5 and en·
tering a lengthy cut near La Paz
Hoad in Mission Viejo.
A county sheriff's department
spokesman said this morning
that policing the railroad cut
between La Paz Road and Lake
Forest Drive has become in·
creasingly difficult.
Rock throwing and placing ob-
jects on the tracks always have
been problems. he said. but the
incidents have been increasing
"Most of the problem." he
said. "occurs at about the time
school lets out between three
and four in the afternoon."
Diesel engine winds hields
have been broken, he said, and
the trains have been peppered
with rocks.
The spokesman noted that
placing objects on tracks or
throwing them at railroad trains
are felony offenses.
"Walking on tracks is a
tres pass misdemeanor." he
addt•d. "Most parents don't re-
alize that."
He said school children "have
been playing chicken -standing
on r a ilroad tracks and jumping
off at the last minute."
The s heriff's officer said
railroad agents are police of-
ficers under the law and that the
south county sheriff's s ubstation
has been ordered to cooperate
with them fully.
OOlllY l'li.c Slaff ~
WESTMINSTER'S WILLY THE WHALE HAS NOTHING TO SMILE ABOUT TODAY
Council, Fearing for City's 'Image,' Pulls Dealer's Balloon Down
Willy Whale Beached
Wes tminster Co1U1Ci l Tosses 3-2 Harpoon
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of tlM Oally Piiot s~
The Westminster City Council, sitting as cilwoman Joy Neu~ebauer and Councilman a municipal Captain Ahab. harpooned Willy Conner Collacott. the city's retired police
the WhaJe Tue_sday night banning the Sunset chief. voled Willy down.
Ford. dealership emblem from the sky over And. on the same night the council or-
the city. dered the Robert Macintosh family to get rid
. A.bout 40 people turned out to witness the of some of their 12 chickens and six dogs.
dec1s1on over whether the 29-Coot-long silver Willy The Whale's doom was sealed.
bulloon could take to the s kies again. said Ci -
ty Clerk Kay llarper. "WE WERE TERRIBLY disappointed.
"THERE WAS QUITE a lot of ap-
pl a use." she said or the outburst when the
council shot Willy down on a 3 to 2 vote.
We didn"t expect it and we can't see what
harm it can do anyone up there 90 feet in the
air," said Sunset Ford Sales Manager Jim
Jletnson.
Last year, about 1,200 citizens signed a
petition calling for reeling in Will.,Y the Whale
from his 90-fool cruising altitude above the
dealers hip at the confluence of the San Diego
and Garden Grove freeways.
I le added that owner Bob Heusser may
appeal the decision.
They fell the grinning little bhmp
e mblazoned with the firm's name gave the
town a silly image.
"ll 's like telling ol' Cal Worthington he
<'an't have hi s dog Spot , or telling Coca-Cola
to stop calling it Coke," Hanson declared.
"THE GROUNDING or the balloon has
seriously hurt us. We sold 14 less cars last
month and r had to spend $8,000 more in ad-
vertising j ust to compensate." COUNCILMEN ELDEN Gillespie and
Fr ank Fry voted for frt!e enterprise and the
right to advertise Tuesday night. but were in
the minority.
Mayor Pro Tern William French. Coun-
Willy the Whale first went aloft about four years ago when trees along the freeway
grew so tall they obscured Sunset Ford's 70·
foot advertising sign.
Heate d E xchange Motorists Hit
Councilman Flayed ~'::'m~~~~~~ing •u•
Laguna Canyon Road early this
At Cl t M t morning. struck horses crossing
the busy arterial. emen e ee But neither the motorists nor
San Clemente Mayor William
Walker requested the presence
of a police officer to keep order
midway through Tuesday's City
Council meeting, following a
heated exchange between Coun-
cilman Howard Mushett and a
me mber of the audience.
After pounding his gavel with
limited s uccess. Walker called a
five -minute recess as Mushett
a s ke d r ep eat e dly t o hav(
testimony by Charles Brent
ruled out or orde r . Brent i~
c hai rman of a City Council
appointed citizens' committee
on reclaimed water use.
Brent had asked to respond to
Mushetl's criticism at an earlier
City Council meeting of a mer
prepared by his committee. sup-
porting the city's $4.2 million
s ewer bond e lect ion in No -
vember.
When councilmen returned
from the brief recess. the mayor
said he had asked Police Chief
Gary Brown to station an officer
in the front row to keep order.
Both Brown and uniformed
police officer Marvin Mason re-
mained seated in the front row
until the mooting adjourned two
hours later at 1 a.m.
Today Musoott called the sta-
tioning or a uniformed police of-
ficer in the council chambers "a
disgrace to the City Council and
especially to the mayor." He
said Walker's action reflected
poorly on his "capability and
competence to chair City Coun-
cil meetings.''
Walker said today he based
hi s action on the California gov-
ernment code. which specifies
how city mayors are to conduct
City Council meetings.
"It is important to recognize
the a uthQr1ty of the chair !the
mayor conducting the meet
mg l." he said. "It got to the
point Tuesday night tha t it didn't
mutter what the mayor said or
what the city attorney said. At
that point I called a five-minute
recess so everyone could regain
his composure.··
Walker said he had given two
warnings before requesting a
police officer. He said he had
first told Mushett his interrup-
tions of Brent's comments were
Qul of order and must stop
Tht• recess cons tituted c.t
second warning. the m ayor said.
"There is no third warning,"
h~ said. "The next step would
have been lo have the individual
ejected from the meeting."
Walker said his series of ac-
tions Tuesday will be "standard
procedure" at future City Coun·
cil meetings
the horses were badly hurt in the
I :30 a.m. mishap near the iunc-
t1on of El Toro and Laguna
Canyon Roads.
Police said Frankie Lee Haf-1
ferkemp, 40. of Santa Ana. was
admitted to Saddleback Com-
munity Hospital for injuries to
bis mouth, arms and hands alter
his car collided with a horse
crossing the roadway.
Seconds late r. the vehicle
<1r1ven by Howard Wesley
Heaberling. 40. of 23832 Palmek
Ci rcle. El Toro. struck another
horse wandering loose 1n the
road
a •
G em
Talk
By J. C llUMPHR1£S
C:1•molog18I
MIXING
AND
MATCHING
Throngs
Stranded
By Storm
By The Associated Press
Torrential rains unleashed
floodwaters in Lillie Rock today,
killing at least one child in a
flooded car, stranding hundreds
of people, sweeping a school bus
into a creek and forcing lhe clos-
ing of all roads into the Arkansas
capital city.
No one aboard the bus was in-
jured.
Heavy thunderstorms also
pelted the the southern Texas
hill country today, dumping up
to four inches or rain in three
hours in San Antonio and stall-
ing hundreds of cars on ex-
pressways. A man drowned when
his car was submerged at an in-
tersection.
Officials said the San Antonio
River. which winds through the
city's downtown business dis-
trict, was expected to overflow
banks along the scenic river
walk. The National Weather
Service described the situation
in San Antonio as "critical."
Arkansas National Guard
troops were dispatched to Little
Rock and nearby Benton where
some residents were s tranded on
rooftops, houses were washed
from their foundations and cars
were floating in parking lots.
·'This is a critical emergency
situation," said Lt. Ed Ethridge
of the Little Rock Police Depart-
ment.
"It's getting worse. and we're
calling out more and more
men." said a National Guard
spokesman who said between 80
and 100 troops had been called
into action.
In Garland County. Ark., a
school bus carrying 21 elemen-
tary students was swept 300 feet
down a creek on a rural road by
the flood waters .
Catholics Win
Federal Grant
For Housing
A federal housing loan of S4
million has been awarded to the
Orange County Catholic Com-
m unity Agencies to build 100
low-income apartments for
senior citizens in parish land in
Buena Park, church offictals
said today.
The Casa Santa Maria com-
plex should be completed in
about three years, officials said.
It will be built on the grounds or
St. Pius V Catholic Church on
Orangethorpe A venue in Buena
Park.
Units will be rented on a Cirst-
come, first-served basis to peo-
ple 62 years of age or older. Ap-
plications are not yet available.
Officials said religious beliefs
will not play a part in accep-
tance .
The loan was made available
through the U.S. Department of
Hous ing and Urban Develop-
ment.
"We hope that in time we can
enlarge our service to the aging
in Orange County." said Bishop
William Johnson of the Diocese
of Orange. · ·nis 1oan from HUD
is a great step forward in pro-
viding the care that is needed." .-
it takes
the right
kind of
money to
Ddeetor .Sr.••
Bulgarian defector Georgio
Ivanov Marcov has been killed in London by an un -
identified man who jabbed
him in the leg with the point
of an umbrella containing
bacterial toxins which led to
blood poisoning.
2Marines
In Crash
Wu:ntia~
Two of the five Marines killed
Monday in a fiery helicopter
crash near Twentynine Palms
were from the Marine Corps Air
Station <helicopter) in Tustin
an d were Santa Ana residents •
officials said this morning.
All the large twin-rotor craft's
occupants were killed on im-
pact. officials said. The two men
from Santa Ana were co-pilot
and 1st LL J.E. Keough Jr. 28,
formerly of Holyoke, Mass., and
Lance Cpl. M.D. Singleton. 22.
formerly of Hebron. Ind. They
belonged to helicopter squadron
HMM-163.
Dead also are pilot and Capt.
D.A. Eckel, 29. and Sgt. W.A.
Nay. age unavailable. Both men
were stationed in Hawali and
were with helicopter squadron
HMM-262, officials said.
The fifth Marine is still un-
identified because his parents
haven 't yet b een loca te d .
officials said. He was not sta-tioned locally.
The craft went down about 20
m iles south of Twentynine
Palms in the Pinto Basin area of
Joshua Tree National Monu-
ment.
omcials said the helicopter
had just refueled and the men
were beading back to Yuma.
Ariz. where they were taking
part in a large training opera-
tion.
The 20-seal transport craft·
was at an altitude of about 4.500
feet just before it plummeted to
the ground a nd burned. <1
spokesman said.
The cause of the crash is still
under investigation, he said.
Dr. Spock Held
SEABROOK. N.H. CAP >
Pedestrian Benjamin Spock. his
wife and nine other protesters
were arrested Tuesday at the
site or the Seabrook nuclear
power plant when they attempt·
ed to enter the area to talk to
construction workers.
~,,,...Ql_,..,t,__, -·--.. _._,,.. -
look your best .
Allorated $24,864 comes to jewelry fashion Wideband
Gold
Coin
Jewelry Women's Unit Funded
Unlike the past two years.
O range County s upervisors
quickly approved the 1978-79
, budget for the County Com-
mission on the Status or Women
today.
The commission is seekjng
' S24,864 this year to fiDance sup-
plies and the salary of a full·
time coordinator. The com-
mission spent $17,158 laat year
because coordinator Karen
· KI am mer wasn't hired until
mid-year.
'The past two years' budget
hearinp were marked by long
debates from thole favoring and
opposin• the three.year-old com-
mi.ulon.
Today. after about 10 minuter;
of dis cussion, supervisors voted
4 to 1 lo approve the commission
budget.
Supervisor Laurence Schmit
cast the lone no vote arter say-
ing "You could never convince
me to support it."
Debates in past years have
been between those who viewed
the commission as a thre1tt to
family life and those who con-
sidered tbe advisory panel es-
sential to represent the views of
both housewives and working
women
Several pas t commission op
ponents now serve on the JS
member advisory pun~I
The co mmi s~ion ha s held
e mployment. child car e and
legal righl'i seminars. Currently
commissioners are gathering in-
form alion on the n eeds of
women senior citizens and a job-
sha ring proposal to help avoid
county layoffs.
Commissioners also recently
prepared a stat1stical profile of
Oronge County women.
Sftpervlsors today were enter·
Ing their fourth day of hearlng:s
on n propo~ed $508 million
budget for 1978-79, the county's
first post.J arvis spending plan.
''Layering" of jewelry is becoming
popular with the ladles. This Is a term
used to describe the mixing, stackln9 or clustering of several pieces of
jewelry to present a striking fash!on appearance. For example, the wearing
of more than one gold chain, or the
combination of a simple chain with one
that has a pendant. This adding-on
makes it possible for today's woman to keep her jewelry wa rdrobe current
without buying a lot of expensive new
pieces. After establishing a basic
ward robe of two or three gold
neckchalns, several stud earrings, a
few rings and two or three stickpins,
she can add onto these later. For ex·
' ample, scatter pins, stack rings and a heavy gold bangle bracelet might be
added, and used to vary and chanoe
the combination of pieces worn. Another Idea: double-piercing ears al·
lows the wearing of two pairs of ear· rings, offering an almost lnfll'\ltt varie-
ty of match-ups. Layering Is a clever wav to widen your fashion horizon.
Toe ngn1 ktn<I ot money tO<lay 1s gold eoms. Lus!rous
CCHns. yours or ours are making dehgntfu! ,ewetry Set
1n cratted 14 karat gold trames. coins ean be wom as
n~laces. pendants. and bfaeelels to mention only (l
tew Come '" and see our OOfT\PIOte soleet)()n ~ cotn
iewelry
J. C. .JJ""'f'J.,ieJ Je-ferJ
MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY @
1823 NEWPORT BLVD .. COSTA MESA
CONVENIENT TERMS BankAmericard-Mu.., Ch19
32 YEARS IN THE SAME LOCATION PHONE IMe-3401
1
' \ '
7
c
t • ,
'
•'
A.:I DAILY PtlOT
Jot et (~oa. ting ~ Grasso, Carey Win
with ~ '.r
Tom Primaries Set E/,ection Scene Nationwide
,,.11.rphi Of'
• in at Bay pmg
•:\'•:.-\'lGILANT OF.PT. Tht> g()Q(f antJ f111thrul
par~Ufb•rtl uf St Jwacb1m i. Calhohc t:Hurch m Cu~ta
Ml'M• arf• t·urrt•ntly hnlni< a bit of a slrU6(1lt wHh Cllf
Hall Tht•) would Ilk«' 10 ph1y 11 lltU.-blnl(o' Som<' C'llY o
tlc,'rl\ htJ'•h'H'r. fl'ar lht> ii.me
Now ll "hould bt madt-quu .. d,.ar th11t noborly ovt•r ut
lht' munlrlpal to"'cr' wnulfl 1mr1uan th• mot1vt•11 of th<·
aood and faithful •t St Jou("h1m' ll t'I "'"II l'i.tahhhhtd lhal lht~ p.11ri&h ls abovt> rt•proarh
ThC' church. of rour..f'. '>M>k .. a htngo tlf'rmn -.u th1&t lh
mt'mbenshlp un Ulhrr fnr • f<'w fnt'ndly gem.,, whnt>
:wmt-propltt \lo1ll win and th• ~l will ronlnbul<' hupp1ly to
lht• rtnuneutl ~ell beinic of lht'lr !)llrl'h
Bl T THIS ISN'T "' h> lht· \1ty Counril .md '>orrw of !ht•
mun1r1pal hr.,.., nn• n1·rvou'
rht•"H lll\ 11ff1n•h note• lhlfl b1nl(O I~. Wl'll. J)Ut plu1nl y
.: .1111 IJll11~
You pu~ for u r ard .rnd toke your rhance~ with th1·
num bt·r~ l't-.1111•· lo\ 1· 1t In other mun1c1rallt1t's, folk~
flock to thl' b1nl(11 g:u111•1' to pul up the prlt'l' o u fl'w card!!
'l'h1• t'tlY four 111 lhjt If th1·y 1s~ue a pt•rmlt lo St
J 11uc·h1m '· v.ho lhcn v.111 be next 1n line 1>Cl'k1ng a
munll'lpu l ht•t·n~c for tht' uimt·i. .,
/\llTitORITl~S Rl!:POkT that bingo runs rampnnt 1n ~1nful plan•1> ltkt• Anaheim Preachers havo been ordained
through mail order houses. Churches pop up behind desert-
ed store fronts. And bingo games are roaring away like
fire sales
By Tbc.-/\i'i!!OClatfod PreH
Oemocrat1c Govs Huteh Carey
of New York and Ellu Grasso of
Connecticut N1s lly squashed In·
trEtp1&rty chalhmges while Harry
ll uahes upset acting Maryland
Gov . Blair ~ aa the nation
he ld its largest number of
prlmunt':'i before t,he November
dectlol'll>
A TOTAL OF l4 states and the
District of Columbia h e ld
primaries Tuesday wll.h one of
tht blHelJt upsets being Hughes'
defeat of the successor to former
(;ov Marvin Mandel. Hughes is
u former Maryhilld tr».n.sporta·
uon secretary
The Democ r atic· Farmer·
Lubor Party nomination for one
U S Senate seat m M lnnesota
was narrowly won by busi·'
neslimun Robert E. Short. who
cdiied ltep Oona Id F'raser In the·
IHl.Ltle ror a chance to re place 1 Mur iel Humphrey, widow of
llubNt llurnphrl'y.
Car<>y had no troubie defeat·
ing Lt. Gov . Ma ry Anne
Krup:suk. who failed to gain sup-
p<>rt from women arid upstate
vote rs. Death penalty advocate
Jeremiah Bloom was third.
t 'AREY WILL FACE As ·
sem bly Minonly Leader Perry
Duryea. who was unopPosed ror
lhc Repub!Jcan nomination.
Mrs. Grasso swamped Lt.
Gov Robert Killian by a 2·\0·l
mar~1n 1n lh<' Democratic
primary and will face Rep.
Ronald Sarasln. who was unop-
posed in the Republican contest,
in Novt>mber.
City Counc il man Ma r ion
Barry held a slender 1,000-vote
leud In lhe Washington. D.C ..
mayoral primary with lncum.
bent Walter Washington runnina
thl rd behind Sterling Tuc~er.
'Nazi-Like'
.,..1,..,.....
RIVALS New York winner
Carey lleftJ, loser Krupsak.
also a council member. Election
officials say the outcome may
not be determined until absentee
ballots a re count e d Art
Fletcher, who served in the Ford
Adm lnlstrallon. captured the
Republican primary.
Here is a state-by.state run-
down of lhe other races.
MARYLAND: Hughes' victory
was seen as a repudiation of
Mandel. who was convicted of
mail fraud and racketeering and
forced to step down In favor of
Lee. Former U.S. Sen. J . GleM
Beall had no problem gaining
the GOP gubernatorhd nod.
NE W YORK : An acknowledgment by U S. Rep.
Fred Richmond that he had
solicited sex from a 16-ytar~ld
boy did not derail Richmond's
Democratic renomination bid in
the 14th Congressional Oislnct,
one of lhe poorest in the state.
Ri chmond race11 an aggrenive
challenge from Bernard Gi CCord.
a former school administrator.
RHODE ISLAND: P ovldence
Major Vincent Cianci ran away
with the Republican mayoral re·
nomination with 97 percent or
the vote. He defeated Robert A.
Costa Mesa wants none of that. The city has already
had enough problems with sin. You let a few s aloons open
and the next thing you know they've got nude dancing
girls in these places. News Leaders Hit
No sooner have lhe municipal fathers stamped out that
kind of departure from virtue, lhan somebody comes along
and opens o naked modellng studio.
The City Fathers are stiU grappling with that one.
Well, maybe grappling isn't the best description in this
case.
Court Decisions
Anyway. you can clearly see why Costa Mesa's
municipal Shakers-and-Movers s uffer fear and trembling
at the possibility lhal gambling might infiltrate and thus
weaken the moral fiber of the community.
£VEN WITHOUT BINGO, law enforcement is going to
huvc 1ts hands full right now ln suppressing the gambling
vie.·<.• Tht.' football season 1s in full swing. Baseball's World
~rieR is coming up.
The weak and un wary among us have been known to
lay out their hard-earned cash on the outcome of such
athletic contests. Such activity is clearly unlawful in Costa
Ml•:sa
We must ull remember that the price or purity is
eternal vi~ilance
Elvis Presley Estate
TO Be City Museum?
M EMPlllS, Tenn. <AP> -Elvis Presley's grave and mansion
may become a city-run museum -if Memphis and the managers
oflhe hip-swiveling rock star's estate can agree.
Memphis Mayor Wyeth Chandler said Tuesday that negotia-
tions for lhe city purchase of Presley's Graceland Mansion arc
"between proposals "
But Chandler says price Isn't the problem: "There's no ques·
lion the counctl would suppon any move within reason," he said
"I don't think any rlgure would be out of the ballpark."
Graceland, a Georgian·style mansion on a 13-acre tract where
Presley and his mother are buried, has become a mcccu for Presley
ranss1nccthccntcrtainer'sdcalhAug 16, 1977.
WASILINGTON CAP) -News
media leaders attacked recent
court actions against the press
Tuesday night. contending that
all Americans will Jose some
freedom if reporters a re forced
lo divulge sources.
More than 400 reporters who
~athert'<i ror a "Fll"st Amend-
m cnt Rally" at the National
Press Club heard ABC-TV com·
mentator Howard K. Smith de·
r1cte a recent Supreme Court rul·
1n~ s a nctioni ng searches of
newsrooms without warrants ,
calling it "a Nazi·llke rullog."
NEW YORK TIMES reporter
My ron Farber, who s pent 26
days in the Rcrgen County, N.J .,
jail last month ror refusing to
turn over his notes in a murder
tra<1I , said freedom of the press
"serves u very i mportant
societal interest."
Was hington Post publisher
Katharine Graham said legal
curbs on lhe press erode lhe
freedom or all citizens
"We need to show our readers
how they lose when our news-
g at h e r In g ability Is un -
dermined," she sajd.
Farber was released from jail
Aug. 30 pt;:nding a New Jersey
Supreme Court decision on h.I!>
request for a hearing.
A STATE JUDGE jailed
Farber for contempt and flnt.>d
Tht• Timcl> $5,000 a day for
Rains Flood Rochester
About 24 Minnesota Residents Evacua
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S.c-low I I• p M 1 )
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THVlltDA'I'
f trtHO• I 11 t m 0)
rin11111111 IUa m '' ~(OMI-' IOp m I )
\e(Or.d lltllf\ • ISO I'll t l .,.,,.,._. J}a M .. h 1 Olpm
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fHI wllft \Oollft-11 -tltohf Choo C.n1111ont _, 10 l•tr. Newpor1
.... (~ W-\ l le $ IMC Wllll Mlllft
••~II •nd •-<"09 c.Mllton• oeoo
Farber's refusal to tum over hls
notes lo lawyers ror u doctor on
tria l for murder.
Farber's Investigative ~port·
ing helped lead to the pros-
ecutors' dec1s1on to reopen the
case and charge Dr. Mario A.
Jascalevich w1lh murdering pa-
tients In 1966.
.. Skip" Chernov. a rock concert
promotor. Cianci hais vehement·
ly de nied aUegatlona In a New
Times magazine article which
said that u a lnw student In
Milwaukee 12 years ago he was
accused by a woman of rapina
her al gunpoint.
Sen. Claiborne Pell was easily
renominated In the Democratic
primary.
MINNESOTA: Lawyer David
D u r e n b e r g t• r w o n t h e
Re publican nomination for
Humphrey's old Senate seat.
The gubernatorial contest will
pit Democrat Rudy Perp1ch
against Republican Rep. AJbert
Qule. In a second U.S. Senate
race. Wendell Ander50n won re-
nomination and a challenge
from R e publ ican Rud y
Boschwitz in November.
WISCONSIN: Lee S. Dreyfu:-..
on leave as chancellor of the
University of Wiscons in at
Stevens Points. upended Rep.
Robert Kasten for lhe GOP
gubernatorial nomination.
Dreyfus will face Acting Gov.
Martin Schreiber. who took over
when Patrick Lucey became
ambassador lo Mexico a year
ago . S c hre ibe r took t h e
Democratic no~nallon easil y.
NEW HAMPSHIRE :
Conservative Gov. Meldri m
Thomson had no trouble down-
ing former Gov. Wesley Powell
in the s tate's Republican
prima ry. His opponent in No·
vem ber will be businessman
Hugh Gallen. who won the
Democratic nomination. U.S.
Sen. Thomaa Mcintyre walked to
an easy renomination and a
November contest agains t
Gordon Humprey, an airline
pilot and former coordinator or
the state conse rvative caucus
FLORIDA: Former U.S. Sen.
Edward J . Gurney returned to
the political scene. capturing the
Republican nomination In the
House district that first sent him
to Washington. State Ally. Gen.
Robert Shevin and state Sen.
Robert Graham qualified for lhe
Democratic runoff ror governor
and the former head or the Gov-
e rnment Services Administra -
tion Jack Eckerd won the GOP
race.
VERMONT: Republican Gov
~ichard Snelling had no opposi-
tion In the Republican primar>
He will face State Rep. Edwin
Granai In November
NATION
PRIMARY AFTERMATH
<Clockwise from upper left l
winners Gurney. Grasso and
Short. <tnd dtif euted astronaut
Swigert.
ARIZONA: Gov. Bruce aab-
bllt captured the Dcmocr<1t1c
gubernatorial primary with only
token opposition . ..while con
Nervollve Evan Mecha m . un
:iut omobilt• d<'al(.•r, won lhl'
thrC'e· w11y Hcpubllrun nomln:.t-
lion.
COLORADO: Rep. William
Arms trong de feated forme r
astronaut Jack Swigert by a
wide margin in a Republica n
primary. The winner will race
Democratic Sen. Floyd Haskell.
who was unopposed in thl'
primary State Sen. Teet
Strlc klJt nd beat state Sen
Richa rd Plock in the race for the
Republican nomination to run
against Gov. Richard Lamm.
who was WlOpposed.
WYOMING : l"ormer Wyo
m 1ng House S peaker Alan
Simpson was lhe winner in the
R e publican Senate primary
while Ray Whitake r. the former
stale Democratic chairman. got
the Democratic nod. Gov. Ed
Herschler won renomlnation in
the Democratic Rubernatorial
primary. Di ck Cheney, Whitt·
I louse chief of starr under form<·r
President Ford. gained tht: GO P
nomination for the state'!> only
lfouse scat,
NEVADA: Lt. Gov. Bob Rose
t oo k th <.> Oemoerati<.·
gubernatorial race and a shot
against Atty. Gen. Bob List. a
Republican. in November.
UTAH: Edwin 8. Finnage. a
law professor at th~ University
of Utah. squeake d by Pett'r
Cooke in lhe state's only major •
contest. a Democratic primary
for the congressional seat held
by Republican Rep. Dan Mar-
riott
7 -.
I
I
I
I
. . .
CALIFORNIA
Bt•sing: Kids Not Fazed
/ . ~
h LOS ANGEL 'lAP l For IJIOC'k s to U11lbo11 lloull•v<ird
l e P•rentt. t chtln tt nd •rhool Srhool
•dminlatn of Los Anaeleii, "But I w.1111 tiotn.i to get up
T1 Uetd•y was iht first d-.y of .inyway to ~o to 11r hool." hr ('On·
o t ct'd ·11ntt 1n tht' rno:at cl111tl!d
~ apret1 -Out d1str1r t 111 lh1.• l'Q1m F1f1 y fOl.lr (•h1ldr1·n ""'l'l'c ~urJ
try. pot;ed lo hO\'C ru.11.ll·n lhl· 78 11clil
BU for rnost of the rhlldrt'n b~ J.1rbcr .,.,.a:a un ·rti•· fuw whu
, who cllo .... · d 1it'<'med unc11nrt.•r1u'Ci u.houl
11 bu.sea, thrlr ('Ollt!a)(ut·:a · t1bl'>t-111·c urul -~ool :11".°,ut the two·hour vnt· way ndt•
• Well . yeah , today I aot u~ ~1 · rt1l1' I" nf:'ul !lt-11lly roomy. ~·-uh wh;Ut.vt•r tinte lhf' c lCX'k huh" .. i'IAld L.Qrl lh111dcll .1~ ~ht'
•went off," said 9·)'11!1t·old Adam boundl'd int.o the_ bu., : Ueber. one of 16 ~hildrtn whO
· rode bus No. 3162 from ~uhurba.n
Gra.nada llllls 1n lht· prt>
dominantly wh1tr San fo'"mando
Valle")' to • .,rt<'her l)Mvt! &·hool
ln G h11Ut'.ll Park
Llt:Bt:K .. IN/\1.L\' drl'1d1'd
he pr~b.ly r~· 11.boul 6 a m
nearly two hours t•»rlit•r th11~
IUl'll Yt.'llr ~·ht•n h" ~alked t~·o
Swmi Tab
Enormous
In State
SACRAMENTO (AP J Tht
Ca11Com1a Farm Bureau says
last week's stonn in the San Joa.
quln Valley was one of I.he worst
In history and will CO!:lt at leas t
$183 million.
Th e bureau s aid today
that another million dollars
worth or crops were lost in the
Southern Sacramento Valley
A spokesman Cor the bureau,
Clark Biggs, said the damage
may be topped in California only
by the Feather and Eel river
floods of 195.>56.
"WE HAVE SURVEYED 1.111
the affected counties a nd used
the low side of all estimates,"
said Biggs.
"If we had used the high side,
and it may yet turn out that
way, our estimates would have
been many mlllions higher."
"I l_.ll(F. RUSES," ~aid Marie
L<'f l'vt•r. H. "tu·t·aus1· Ir you
don 'I hnv1• hU..,t'b, ttu•n you h;1ve
I O ~alk "
"I wf'nt lo c1.11np l'\'t•ryd:1y tht/>
l'i um1nf'r on a buK <•nd It wa~ a
lot longtr way, nc .. rly out or lhl'
('\ly," was N;11t· Hubin'-. con1
mt•nt
··1 d1dn '1 wan na co111e at
Back II 01t1e
fi rst ·l·aU!>I' I thdn't know what 1l
wa• i1ll ullOUl , !'>t.""' Bul my mo1n
told ITil' ""'hat's happtnln& "
Tiit: .. ROSPt:c,-of the ir nt·w .
1nt c~l'ut1;d srhoul didn 't ra"e
tht·1n
"Ye ah, 11 '11 pr{l habl y be a
.:ood :.c hool ," s1'\d Eri c
.Johnston. t1 blond1;, freeklt.'d 8·
ycnr old. "It's JCOOtl tha.t we'rl'
f!Onn :1 be mixed, you know ''
Rccuusc las t yt~a r I met a
C hlnest' boy , ttnd we made
friends, :w . "
"Bl'S idl's. al i'~letcher, we 1:1et
to w,O to classes upstairs," said
un ('XCllcd Dawn Kovner. 9.
"I WANT TO BE on vacation
on1· Wl't'k more." groaned Adam
t'ricdrnnn. 8.
And so It wi'nt While the
1u1rc111 s who s ~t·11 herded their
chil<lren onto the bu.~ looked anx·
lous and worried , the younl!lstcrs
tht•rn $elves appeared on ly
curious and interested -und a
bit rt·gretful that summer w.11s OVl'r
When the bus finally got. to
Fletcher. the driver inadvertent·
ly parked on the wrong side of
the school -out of sight of the
wailing reception commlttet..
THE I& OllLDREN banded In
:1 s mall circ le for. several
rninutes until the school J.irin·
c1 pal, teacher.;; and aides came
trotting towards them, all smiles
and fuss.
One small blond boy clutching
a "Star Wa rs " notebook and
lunch boll: finally cut orr the
apologies graciously.
''Aw , that 's OK ," h e
mumbled . "We didn 't mind."
,.,,w ..........
,.,,WI ........
LISA HIGHTOWER GREETS BUSED STUDENT
lnbal Brozkl, left, From Woodland Hilli
'Value Incredible'
Hollywood Sign
Letters for Sale
llOLLYWOOl.J IAPI -People who missed a chance to pay S27,000
for a letter in the new Hollywood sign. take heart. The old ones are
still up for grabs.
The dilapidated letters -some 8,000 square feet or sheet metal
<"hopped up and carted of( from their Mt. Lee perch overlooking
1-fo ll ywood along with their
wooden support poles and other
assorted hardware -are cut·
r c ntly sitting quietly In a
bill board company warehouse.
But the Hollywood Chamber of
Co mmerce has already reeeived
several orfers of purchase -·
nothing to write home about, but
enough to whet the appetite of
chamber president Mike Sims.
''AFTER 111£ CBS television
special honoring Hollywood 's
Diamond Jubilee in November
the value of that sign is going lo
bl' incredible," he predicted.
The new sign will be unveiled
during the two.hour show.
and $10.000 up front
percentage or retail .··
RETAJL OF WHAT!
and a
Well, Sims says. "they want to
make replicas or the Hollywood
s ign, jewelry and all different
kinds or things.
"We're most concerned about
q uality and how the old sign is
used," he added quickly. "We
don't really want It turned into
ashtrays or something like that.
He said Fresno County, where
raisins had ju.st been put out for
drying. was the bigi;est loser at
$113 million, including $83
million worth or raisins and 40
percent of thl' fig crop valuc-d at
S7 milfion
Af'TER GRAPES, the largest
monetary loss was s uffered by
growers of alralfa seed in
Fresno. Kings, Kern and Tulare
counties. Biggs put that loss at
$15 million.
i\ flag·dra1>l'd coffin is c<i rried p ast <1
'fravis Air f'orre Base honor guard 1'ues·
day a s 11 more of' America's dead from
the Vietn<.1m war c ame h ome. The
milit<.1ry niers' remains were turned ove r
lo a United States congressional delega·
tion last month in J-lanoi, and for the pa s t
two weeks have been in J-lawaii ror formal
identification.
"We have probably a dozen to
20 bids in writing," Sims said
Tuesday. "Of these only three or
four are serious offers.
··Nobody has made a s ubslan·
tial enoughorrer yet. w e·ve been
offered everything from $2 per
square root up to between $5,000
"We may be giving pieces of it
<1way al the Diamond Jubilee
party," he added. "People like
llugh llefner and Gene Autry
who helped save the sign will a.II
be getUng ·substantial memen· tos."
HEFNER AND A\JTtY were
a montt the nine people who
donated S27 ,000 each to pay for a
letter i,n the new sign.
Other counties with l arge
losses were Tulare $24 million,
Kern SZ3 million and Madera $18
million.
Firm Fined • in Safety Violntion A pub.lie auction is a possibd1 ·
ty . Sims said. addinR that
however the letters are finally
disposed of, the proceeds will go
towards matntenance of the new
sign, on wtuch construction is Just now beginning. But Biggs said the estimates
could change if some farmers
get higher prices for the re.
mainder of their crops .
"Some people will be lucky.
They will be able to sell their
crop al a higher price."
Patrol
LOS ANGELES fAPI -A
Long Beach construction com ·
pany has bt.'t'.!n fined S12,500 for
violating slate industrial safety
laws and trying tu conceal the
infraction which allegedly re ·
suited in an accident that killed
one worker a nd permanentl.v
Gone
Oceanside Void of MPs
OC EANSIDE <AP> --The i\t arines have pulled their MPs ofr
the s treets or Oceanside for the first lime since World War II. but
it ·s "mor{' inconvenience now than trouble." a city policeman
says.
The action w<:is announced 1'uesday at neighboring Camp
Pe ndleton where the provost marshal said U.S. Supreme Court de·
c1sions left the MT's legall y liable ir anyone arrested orf base could
prove civil ri ghts violations .
OCEANSIDE POLICE SGT. ROBf.RT Krause said the city 1s
weighing the impnct of the move, but the problem may be greater
for "the young Marine who gets into trouble In Oce anside" than for
pollcc.
"Refore. we picked up a lot of Marines that we did not have to
hook , because their MPs were cl08e by to take them in tow and
back to Camp Pendleton," he said. "Now, we may be taking more
of them to be booked into city jail."
IN RECENT MONTHS, A l5·MAN MP patrol bas been as·
signed to Oceanside. A study blamed Marines for 40 percent of
downtown crime.
Chief of Police Rolf lfente bemoaned the loss of the Marine
patrol, but said, "If I.hey have some limitation placed on them. by
court decisions , that has to be acceptable to me whether I like it or
not."
Military spokt-smen said town patrols by Air Force, Army.
r.tarinc and other Navy units have been disappearing nationwide.
disabled another.
Los Angeles Pttunicipal Judge
Edward L. Davenport imposed
tbe rine Tuesday after convi ct·
ing the firm , R.M.P. Pttarine
Services. Inc., in the Sept. 13,
1977 incident.
The judge round that the com ·
pany had illegally used com·
pressed oxygen in a pneumatic
nail gun which exploded, killing
Ronald Ray Clarke. 39. of Ox
nard . The gun o~rator . Rixon
Gregory Pry. 27 , of Oxnard, suf·
f1.:red permanent damage to his
stomach and one leg.
OfJledo Qui U Ing
S ACRA~1 ENTO IAPI
Jl calth and Welfare Sceretary
~lari o
Obh·do. prob
ah l y 1hc
most promi ·
ne nt of !he
nutsulers th;.it
Gov . Edmund
Brown Jr .
brought into
stutc J.:Ovc rn
ml·nt. 1s lea\'·
in~ next vcar 0•1.l!OO
Oblcdo, 46, is rc turnin~ to
llarvard University in .January,
the school confirmed Tuesday.
lie is to he a Jaw g raduate
fe llow, doing research and
teaching fin;t.year law students.
lie has taught :it llarvard in the
pa st.
IJet011aflon Sel
SUSANVILLE <Al"I -The
U S Dcpar1 mcnt of Dcfcn :.e is to
OC1D changes
effecllve Septe111ber 10111:
• As ol Septembef 10, 1978. schedule changes w1H
go Into effect on several Park·N·Rtde Express ·
and Local Axed Routes. And fares 'Nll1 be
increased on all Ofange County Transit District
bus routes.
The new fares are Hsted below along wilh
Ille rout es lhal have been deleted. Aease
remember to carry the exact fare since ou~
drivefs cannot give change.
There have also been changes on service5
not hsted below and we will be revising our
schedules. For new schedules or 1oute informo
tion call 547·3311 or tOll-rree ZENITH 7-3311 fron1
6 AM lo 10 PM weekdays, 7 AM lo 5 PM
Salurdays, and 8 AM lo 5 PM Sur>lays
New OCTD bul fares. <l"".,'"" s.-~~Qn'()o~ m Hue1
New Nev.i Senior Citizen
SeMce Regular Fare & Handteapped Fare
Local Fixed
Route &
EasyRlde< 35ct 15<Z
Park·N-Ride
Exp<ess &
Dial-A-Ride l(}l 35ct
Dml·A·Lifl l(}l" 35ct
' ·"'1'•• ... .,. ""'
Olecontlnued Routes. The I011owing Par1<·N·R1de
E.xpress Roules have been discontinued· 207. 260:
271. (Other Park-N·Rtde Express and Local FiltCd
Routes have been changed as well, so please
ca!l lor new route 1nlounat10n.)
( STATE )
begin destroying 20 more "daisy
cutter" bombs of the type that
went off unexpectedly at the
Sil'rra Army Depot in August,
officials report.
The 15,000·pound bombs are to
be detonated one at a time
beginning Saturday.
Prors Car B•rn<!d
l~OS ANGELES IAPl --A
member of the Jewish Armed
Res is tance League claimed
responsibility for ;:i fire Tuesday
that burned a cetr belonging to a
UCLA politieal science professor
specializing in Mideast atrairs.
Professor Malcol m Kerr is re·
portedly unde r consideration for
appointment as HO adviser to
President Carter
llfan Pt-ges Io Deal h
SAN DIEGO IAPl -A 62·
year.old man fell to his death
rrom the 14th noor of the Bank
,of America Building, narrowly
missin~ liCVera l pt.-dcstria ns as
his body hit tht' stret·t below.
police say.
Deputy Coroner Claude Mon·
doux said Theodore John Foldy
climbed onto the 14th floor
balcony a.Iler scaling a ralling
and a pparently fell to the str~t
shortly before noon Tuesday
&
2 Operators Soflflllt
PALO A.LTO IAPt -Police
were searching today for two
P a lo Alto nursing home
operators accused of Wiilking
out on seven elderly tenants.
i:ed and Grace Allen setid they
were going shopping over the
weekend but ins tead dis ap-
peared with thou.sands of dollars
in advance room and board pay
ments.
San Dlf!flO Inn Sold
SAN DIEGO f /\PI -The
Sheller lsl;1nd Inn. once owned
by St. Louis Httomey Morris A
Shenker, has been sold at a
bankruptcy proceedin~ to a loca l
businessman for SJ.2 million.
'rhl' pric<' 1n (·ash reportedly
included S2.7 million owed to the
1'eamstcrs Union pension fund.
Frank Warren, the buyt:r, 1s
chairman or Rancho Santa t 't'
Sav1nj!S & Ulan Association
llfethod to Chan,,..
SA N DIEGO tAP1 --San
llie.:o County's Animal Control
Depart ment will begin using
lethal drug injections to kill un·
wa nted animals by Dec. I, the
Roa rd or Supervisors has ruled.
A s s 1st1:1nt C hi ef Ad ·
min1stralive Officer Daniel Bog-
J!an on Tuesday dt!ta1led the cost
of !he method to replace the con.
troversial USC or decompression
chambers to dt'!'itroy unwanted,
sick or injured ereatures
SEPTEMBER SPECIAL OF THE MONTH
Delicious smoked ham. lwo lresh eggs .
hashed brown polatoes . toast . jam an d butler
SERVED 2• HOURS.
Mean whil e, Sims cau ·
tloned souvenir-hunters to
beware or lfolly\oVOOd Boulevard
types hawking whal they claim
to be pieces or the sign
Blasphemy,
Nuke I ssues
Miss Ballot
S A C RAAfEN'f'O IAP l
California vott•rs won 'I have lo
decide al the polls 1r they want
nut'lcar pawcr plants on bargt.":-<.
or if they want to ban books and
movies th:1 t r~p God . say~
Scrrc1ary of Statt· J\.tarch Eu .
Ms. Eu reported Tuesday tha1
1n1 t1 c1t1vc drives to outl11w
hla:.phemous books a nd film:.,
;i nd to uuthorizc "helium cooled,
hargc.mountcd nuclear reuctor~
U! marinas," had failed to mak e
the June 1980 ballot
·rhe blasphemy nieasure was
!>ponsored by Felix Samaruel(o
of Banning. The proposed con·
stitut1onal amendment needed
499,846 signatures lo qualiry. Ms
Eµ said onJy aboul 4.000 were
submitted.
She said the s ponsor or the
nuelea r measure, Paul Ran·
dolph or Menlo Parle . fa iled to
turn in any signatures. It needed
3 1 ~.40'1 .
SPIRES
COSTA MESA 31 25 Harnar 81¥0
IRVINE
MJCAllhUI B:vo .11 S 0 .. wv
..
7
Afl C'
o"r." .. eo"·'o"'''l'•'J' Edito1•ial P ag
-------------------------------------------
Wudnv&<l..1v Sup1ornoor IJ. li/8 Ac1r IMra Kre1b1ch /Edltorlal PaQe Editor
Traffic Initiative
May Hit Roadblock
Impn>' l't1 truffu• < 11 culut1on has merged a~ u top
priority an rl•t·enl di ... e U!'l!'lmn~ amonK cm~ua Me!)u City
Council nl<'mber!\
f\ ~roup of l<><'al n•Mdt'nU ™'"" h ~ JUmsx><.l on th· bandwu~on wath u pc..•tat1on imcd ut low<>ring 11pecd llmlts
on nine Mesu Mrl't·~ from JS mph to 25 mph •
U ll gathers hl OBlUf"e!'\ from 10 pt>r<'tmt O( f('gistt•rcd
cit y \oters, the 1n1t1nt1H.' "ould uppt.·ar on the nexl
rcgulur elec-llon bollot, ('Xcludmg the up<."O mlnR November
Stinoral Cll'cUon ~c u ('Orta m e limits
A pt.>t·wl c·uy lcetton might be forr,•r1 1f 15 pt·r<'cnl of U~c city s voters fond their naml'S to the rwl1llon~ thul began
carculutmn thti-. "t'<'k
T ht.• ~trct•b lhul may lw affltc·tt·d 111 l' Anuhl•am.
Pomonu. Sunt.i Ana .ind Tu!'ltin AH·nu1.·::i plu ... llumllton.
18th. EWYt 19th :.md 22nd Strl't:l:.
llo \\-'<.'\lt'r apJX>alinJt th<.· 1n1taattvC' muv bl• to thos<.'
rolkl) livin~ On lhi.'!'IC ~lrt•t•tl), City Offll'Utls n.Olt! iJ IJf'Oblem
with l'nfur{"mg lht• lowt·r ~Pt.'t.'<l limat~
l'urn•nt po~tt•d hm1h tire bui.vd un ~tud1t'"' lhiJL la~t
i.IV\•raf<tl' ~µt.'t.·d tril\ <'It'd ny K.'> pt·rt·l·nt of motoni.t:.. Truf
fl<' coui~ tl·nd to thro~ out v1olut1on~ J~Mh:d lhut conflict
\\ llt) th\':,t• !',tUdU,•!'I
11Th(• 1111llat1vc I!> 'H·ll 1nknttoned but. 1f ~uc(·t·~sful.
muy not tw t•llhl•r t:nfOl l'Cabl ·or practical
Explanation Needed
With an uir of SN'l'N'Y uncommon lo the Newport·
M •i,a tJn1f1l•d School District. ti U!>ll't:!'I voted laM wt•ck to
put a gradual end 1 by D<:l' 311 lo al~ troubled "non·
profit" data proct•M.ans.: 01x·n-ttion.
lb ('Ounty cdut:t1t1on orracaab noted. 1l is unfortun<.1tc
that l)0 many 'fU (•i,tmns may nevc•r be answered ubout the
internal working~ uf lhC' Newport-Mesa Instructional
Ht•scarch Inst 1t utc IN M JRJ >.
Doubts alJout the legulity of thl' operation and its
potential <:onflicts with private businesses led the county
Dt•partmcnt of Education to withhold some $200,000 In
funds. The dis trict s ued . but thC' case became moot when
NMIRI was conveniently dis banded.
The distract owt>s taxpayer s an cxpletnation for the
<·nd of NMIRI. It is n 't e noug h to c laim that the corpora·
taon fell prey to Proposition 13 a nd general tightening
school district flnunc.:ing . To s imply disband NMI RI aft1tr
vt·hem cntly dl•fcnding its existence has only raised more
doubt:-; and su~pitions :.ibout why it was proposed in the
rirs l r>lat.•t•
Fees Justified
/\ Sli7.5 million budget approved la!>t week by Coast
Communit y Collt'ge Oistrict t rus tees marks an 1 J.2 per·
tent deer •asc from the previous year in the financial
P<Jc.:kage used lo run the district's three campuses.
The c utback was achieved with no layoffs of leaching
personnel and only about 20 non-teaching ~taff db
missals
Sabb<.1ltl''1l le avcb have lx~f!n <:ancclcd <.tnd tcac·hing
pos itions op(•ned by attrition or rel 1 rcmcnt w1 II not be
tilled.
Trustee~ deserve applause (or their JOb of paring lht!
budget. And we hope they will pursue the concept of ob·
t~11ning more fees ror hobby. cntcrt::11nment and sp<ffC·
llllll' types or t•lasscs.
The ~talc education code 1!. built a round a concept
th;.tt community colleges s hould be open to a ll re~1dcnts
:.at <.i non·cost 1 other than m<.1terials > basis. Thus. even
t ho:-.e who can l1<.1si ly afford to pay fees for ~elf·
11nproVl'mcnt or frill classes aren'l askC'd to do so.
In Uw :-.pint of th<.· time:.. this fee· free policy needs
uvl'rhuul
Therl''!\ nothing wrong with t eaching macramc.
~1 ~11ncd·gla.ss projects c.ind tap duncing, but tho~c who can
afford lo p<.iy th<.· t.•osl of the classes should do :.o.
• Opinions expressed in the space above are those ot the Daily Pilot
01her views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
artists Reader comment Is Invited. Address The Daily Pilot. P.0
Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626 Phone (714) 642·4321
Boyd/Eyes
ByL.M.BOYD
Tests show brown-eyed
11eople rcart faster than
others to stimuli. And the
darker the eyes. the quicker
the reaction. it's claimed. In·
tercsling. if true. And if true.
just as interesting is another
theory about it: Melanin is
what gives the brown eyes
their color. Neuromelanin is
what serves as a semiconduc·
tor s witching device in the
nervous system. Maybe these
two substances are f'tCneticaJ.
ly tied together som ehow
M aybc the best known pro·
duct of the 3M Company i1>
Scotch tape. Rut probably
the least known is phony
blood. sold to movie, TV and
:.luge producers for the ir
gory scenes.
Dear
Gloo1ny
Gus
How come the onl y
person In Costa Meaa
who 1eem1 to take "
consistently negative
attl~ude toward
completion of the Route
SS freeway Is. of ull
people. the mayor or
our town?
MIFFED
Whl'n an Italian says he's
"in the green." he mean:.
he's "in the red."
There it gOl'S, alrcudy
northeas t of South Am.
eri ca's southern tl 1>.
heading toward Africa: An
iceberg 36 limes the s ize of
Bermuda. Watchers aren't
worried. though. They figure
it will break-up when it gets
into warmer waters. Besides.
it's not on a regular shipping
lane. Still. an iceberg 36
ti mes as big as Bermuda
must be something to behold,
what'!
The average quart of milk
contains 15,360 drops.
Q. "Aren't most baby boys
called John named in honor
of St .. John?"
A. Possibly, but which St.
John'1 There a re as many as
60 Sl. Johns on the R<>mun
Calendar of Saints
Q. "Thot dog Sandy In the
Broadway show ·Annie,·
where'd he come from ?"
A. A cag.e ln the Connec-
ticut Humane Society pound.
Pretty lucky pup. He was
uboul to be dono oway with.
Q. "How many women who
become full·Oedged medical
doctors quit work to brlna up
t.hel r own children?"
A . Seven out of 100, about.
Q . ·•w asn 't Benjam in
f .. ranklln also the Inventor of
toothpaste?
A. One or the inventors. His
formuln called ror crtnhed ·
charcoal mixed with honey.
Earl W a ters
State Prison Facilities Wasted
Before lhe Lef(h1lature plunge!>
into u multi mll11on dollur prison
t• x pa n li aon
proJ(rum. a
<;ct rC'f11l
an:1lysit1 or lhl'
true nt.'t'dll are
in order For
'' r 1 11 o n f aealltlcs are
costly
The lu'l mu
JOr pr111011 s
<'OnlitrUl'lt.--d ID
tht' :Hate coi.t wt.•11 OVl'r $25.000 a
twd But thut wui; more than 20
Yl'ar:; ago Tocfay '~ costs c:an tM-
J>resuml'd lo run at least four
ti mcis that figure
Thul thr Legislature must bll'P
In and do such a study to uvoad
Mailbox
:spt•nd1ng nt·edk~'<ly million:. or
dollars lb math.· 1m1>erullvt> by 1t1>
elevt.•nth hour upproval or a S6 6
million appropriation ror plan·
ning or new prisons. some of thl'
rnont>y would be U8ed in planning
remodclina or cxa:.ting prisons
and the ruilng of Sun Quentin u11d
perhaps Fol!iom
TH E PRISON authorities have
been pressuring the legislators
ror runcts !or new prisons with
predicUoM of pri!ion population
gains of over 30 Pt·rcent in the
next M.•vcn ycarx by reason of
the more i.cvl.'re c riminal
pen alties whic h have been
c>nactcd. They say the number of
inmates will rise from the cur·
rent 19.SOO Lo more than 25,000
by that time.
for that reu:soo the off1ciub
are env1s1onln~ C'On~trul'lwn or
at least one nt'w muJor prison
s omewhcrt• 1n S<Juth{•rn
California. ln1 tially thl'Y had
zeroed in on a lon1t1on ncur
Chino but lO<'al oppo:.it1c1n hu~
compell<'d scrappan~ of that
Already purchased 1s 11 site ul
Otay Mesa near San Diego but It
too Is running into :.t rong locul
resistunct·
NOTING THAT :.uch 1nst1tu
!tons. whose puyrolb once made
them desirable to many com
munlties. are now shunned by
m ost locales, Assembly Way:.
a nd Means C h a irman Uan
Boatwright has demanded an in
ventory or properties a lready
owned by the state's prii;on de·
partml·nt. His vit>w 1R that any
nCl'l':SIWfY expaOSIOrl or facilities
('Un be achieved by bulldln"'
~a t el l1t t.• unit:. at existin g
prisons This alternative has the
udvantage of utiliiang the exist-
ing central facilities such us
power. w3tf'r. sewage. laundries
and bakeries and thereby saving
m 1lllons.
The actual fact as that at most
of thl.' existing prisons the re arc
hundreds of unused acres
uv:ail ablc fOI' such expansions.
And most of the communities
wherl' t hesc 1nst1tutions art-
located would welcome tbe in·
creaf>ed payrolls which would
result.
•·0 1.SOM, for example. 1:.
lo('ated on a 1,()()().acre site only
40 acres of which are used for
the prison. Si milarly. Soled1:td.
Val·aville and T<>hachap• havt'
substan11al acreages in execs& of
current use.
San Quentin cons ist s of 600
acres overlooking San Francisco
Ba~ with only about 50 acres
used by the prison. It however ii.
different In that not only is the
facility o ld . costl y and
huardous lo operate. but it ii.
generally unwanted by the peo.
pie of Mann County. Razed. the
land would probably sell for a
price which would finance an en
lire new pnson elsewhere .
SO IT SEEMS poss1bh.• lh:.st
the department•can meet its 11n-
11c1pated growth without sub
stantial costs by utilizing the rt!
sources it already has.
But before even that 1s don<.!
the Legislalure should fully r1·
view thl' conservation camp pro·
.:ram. Placement or prisoners m
outdoor tamps to work on rt:·
forestation and stream clearanrt>
projects was intended to reliev•·
the need for new prisons when th1•
Legislature authorized the camr
µrogram20years ago.
Lessons Teachers Learn from Parents
To the Editor·
Nick Thimmesch '~ Sept 7
article on Catholi c schools gives
only one side. People who pay for
the education oflheir chi ldren are
the most interested in education
They back the schools, respect the
teachers. provide help at home
and start children off with an
attitude suitable for learning.
Private schools provide dis·
tiplinc and homework. There. 1f
students don't conform. they t.1rc
suspended
But as a teach{!r for 14 years
in public schools, parents have
told me·
TO MIND my own business
when children an· so heavily
sedated from Ritalin thut thcv
sit like vegetable:..
Not to give homework .
becuuse children have church,
pia no lessons, Little League,
etc:
Not to keep children during re·
cess, lunch or after school if
they curs~. are rude. fi ght or
steal:
Not lo leach values about
fighting that kids need lo
learn to defend themselves .
Not to overburden the children
b y as kin ~ them to learn
multiplication at home in the
fourth grade
·These par('nts want their
children happy not educated
Yet watch the same parents
yell al kids who do not obey and
lose control over themselves.
If they would leave us alone,
we'd do the job riJ(ht
.I. SMITIJ
Tea~lwr•' 8f"tle ll••
To the Editor:
Many teachers suy they arc
unde rpaid and overworked.
There may be a few who spend
Sydne y Harris
extr a hours. bul most work
shorter houri. than other work·
ing people
l know :.cveral who operate
businesses, and they seem to be
there often during the day.
Many say they grade papers
in the evenings. Many of those
arc home 1n mid·aflernoon If
they worked until 5. most would
not be working evenings.
F.XCEPT FOR a few who
might reach management and
s upervisory positions in bui.i ·
ness. most arc paid better than
otht'f professionals' s tarting
sul<1rit>s and salaries received
after 10· 15 years on a Joh
They say they receive no pay
during the summer. When pro·
rated for lhc year, they ure paid
better than many other workers
with comparable training. They
have long s ummer vacations.
part of which can ht! spent work·
ing for someone e lse If they
wish.
Their benefits arc great. And
they can't suddenly be laid off
after years with a firm . like peo-
ple in private industry.
They say they must add to
their c redentials by study. This
is true in many other pro·
fess ion!'!.
In s hort. they do better than
most workers
EARL HOWARD
lrre9011dfl~
Tl) the Editor
I had alwuys presumed lhat
n<.'w s paper wr iters were
s upposed lo have some degree or
responsibility and . if not, a!
least the puJ)t.'rs that publis hed
their writings would f•xerc1se
some <'ontrnl over blatant
1rrcs pnns1b1hty 1 Certainly not so
with the tirades of Earl Waters
I When· Thert.''-; Smoke. Don't
Legislate. Sept. 3 >. lie keeps
repeating the same theme and 1t
sounds exactly like the equally
1rrcs pons1blc pol1t1cal
adve rtisements for which thl•
tobacco industry is paying sul'h
big doll ars . If ··tobacco
pushers" want to run anl1 Prop
5 ads. IC't them pa y for 1t
leg ili mately not through
newspaper columna:.ts. 1n th<·
guise of journalism'
Waters begins by staling that
the initiative would ban smokers
from almost everywhere hut the•
privacy of their own home:.. and
!has is even more toally false
and irresponsible thun lht• pe11<1
commercials
H <' e nd ~ hi ~ t1r<1de with
refcrencl• to "ci ~mall <·hQUl' of
1.calots. opposed to smoking.
seeking to perscC'Ut<' smokers ..
Tht• "small clique." Mr WJler..,,
1s 62 percent o f the total
population! And. contrary to hi-;
asin in e and 1rrcsponslb l ~
statement. non·s mo1ters ar c not
seeking to persecute anybody'
Most non-s mokers h<1ve Joni( ago
g i v c n u p a n y a l t t• m pl " t .,
"reform" the smokers. even t he
hus bands. wives. c hildre n .
fnends and relatives thf.tt they
huvl' seen s moke them:.clvc..,
Into the hospital or the i.:ravt•
MR. WATERS 1s right U> lhl·
t•xtcnt that if you want lo pursue
your <1dd1ction right on to your
uwn demise. you have the right
lo do so. But you do not have thL'
nght to drag anyone with you' It
has been stated. with great
descriptive accuracy. that the
right of a person to swsnR his
urms ends at someone else's
nose There arc innumC'rable
··xamples of s imilar !.1luat1ons
t he ltaw. for example. permits u
person to consume alcohol hl·
('an c•ven drink himst>lf into
insonslbility or to deuth if hl•
chooses -but he cannot hurt
·m m eone else by his drinkin"'
This 1s certainly a proper •
1.khneation or ··rights ...
. Waters pursues hi s vcnomou:-.
b11.1s by childish statements such
<1s "what shall he next laws
..Jga1nst those who don't use the
nght deodorant'!" Obvious lo
;1nybody 1s the fact that neither
clf'odorants. nor for that matter.
nothing else in our c1viliz1ttion
c·auses 300.000 deaths annually!
Rut , c•ven with that awesomP
loll. Prop. 5 permits you to go
right ahead and smoke your
l'1ga rNlt>s your rights remum
you t•an sttll ~m<•ll like• a d1r1 1;
c.i~h tra y, stain your lct:lh amt
finger~. makl' your steak and
lobster t aste like burnin ~
tobacco w(•ed . burn your carpt•l!.
;ind furniture. you can 1·v1·11
p r C p a y y o u r '' w n h u r 1 ;.1 I
t•:<penses but your "ri,::ht" to <lo
ull of these things ends a t tttl'
O(l~CS Of lhe majority that haw
nl'Vl'r llf>comt• addicts or that
h<1 vc had the fortitude to gl ve 11
up'
W. COLEMAN
Sadc ... -..1.,.,,
To the E<hlor
Whal u Si.td commentary on
the 1·1l1;.,cns of Cahf<irnia
Thl' ~I :ate Lcgisluture hassled
u ni II the las t minute and
clc·1mvNI the handicapped and
aged or :I tiny tncrca:.e In
l>cncfits
And today I read of the senou.'
s hort<1gt• in mentid h ealth
fac1litil·s in Orange County
Need I :.ay more?
MRS J . N HAl,L
• ~·"•'" trom r••dtt, •'• welcoM~ '"• rttthl to (Oftffnl• lettef\ 10 tit 'PM• er •l•m1rwtt hMI ''
r•"'r••d Ute.not JOO worch• fff' •••I IM 41wn prtftrttnut Alt lt1ttf\ mvst tMtYd• "-rwtwr• •"4 ~:~~~1 ~~~~:.:: ~:~:! ~·:,::,;~~"';:!.i= ••It ftOt bPovtliih"""'
The Roots of History's Revolutions Run Deep
Whenever th<•rf• 1s grnvt' un
relit in a ncighhorhood. a city. or
u C'Ountry, the estubllshm<>nt's
first public r<!uCllon is to blume
It on "con
:spir ators" or
"outside
agitators "
They are the
favorite whip·
ping.boys or
authority that r e e I s
threutcncd
V cl In
almost every
case. the l'Hlubll:1hml•nt Is wrong,
und knows It , or IR !if'lr deceived. fn~urrectlons motivated from the
outaide uro r~lulivcly cuay to re
111t1t and repel , It ls lhc ones that
come from the ln11ldc that make
the real trouble
Mon• than .1 ('l't1 l11ry ugo. We•n
dt•ll l'hllllp._.. ob:•wrv1•d, "ltc·volu
l11Hl~ are not mad<•. lhl'V comt·
I\ rl'volul111n 1:. u:. na-turul u
growth ;1s an ouk II <'omc:1 out
of lhl• past ll~ fnundal1on!\ arl·
luid fu1 huck ..
Th~· Amer1cun H1•volution
could nl'V<'r huvt• ht>t!n s ue
ccssful if a hund!ul of hotheads
hud itont• from town to town try·
In~ to ert?ntl' dlssutisfucllon with
thl' Oritash i:iovernmt.•nt. 011\con
ll'nt hud tw<>n ~rowtn~ for ye;1r!\
within 1•a<'11 l'clmmunity. and
pcoplt' like Sam Adums and thti
Sons of Lilwrty only trunslntl'd
the· popul;ir lt•mp<·r 111to mll1tu11l
;1('\IOn
"OU'rslOERS" <'Jn h11v1• llltle
tnflul'n<'e> on o n1•1Khborhood thol
is justly tr,·utl'd Mnsl people
would rulht•r sufft·r ..,mall incon
vcnit•nct•s I hun proflo~I. und <'an
bl• dt•('(•1v<.•d rc•p1•;.1lt·dly lu·for1·
tlwy ht>cOml' rnullnou._..
It 1s on ly wlwn tlw ~park 1-.
w~1itsng to be ht that "ug1t .1tor-."
of any !.Ort ;irt• 1•ffective Thi·
Hussiun lkvolut1on of 1905 wai.
ahortivt.• hc•cu ui.t• the worker'>
and f;1rmcr~ un<I ~old icrs hud
not yet b<.·l·n d1Raffoclt'd hy th1·
Ci:irist ~overnment . u do1.en
years lult·r. It took only u tiny
minority of Bol11ht•v1ks to set lhl'
whol<' mighty nal um a name
T he putit•nc1• of mo-.t llt'Ol>h·'
1!'1 1·quull'<J only hv lh1· 'tup1d11 y
and hllnclnl'~' of 1 ht>~c· who
clom inah' th<•m Th1·y :.t•c• uni)
wh at thc•y want lo ~et•. und
ht'llt•vr whul 1!\ mo~t t•omfortu
blc. l'V<'n whl•n ull lht• !Jets con
trnd1<'l them
Th<• irony or history 1s thal
..1lrno~t :tll rd>1•1l1011s und n•volu
lton!." t•oultl havl' l>t•t•n ;1v1•r1t•cl
"11hnu1 M•r1ous con!l1tt. 1r curl\
1 um hit·~ of d1sc11ntt'nt hud b•"l'n
.11t1•ntlt·d to Nohody in lh1·
t'ohm1l·:. .11 f1r:.l wanted indcpt•n
d<•nce· from Britain; It wuis only
"h<'n ll•1t1l1mote griC'vancc·~
Wl'rl' ri•fu:.<'<l, und auain refused,
th.it st'paration became an i:-.·
SUt.'
F:xtrrmCR prevai l whc>n
modf'ration 1s not tri~. The> trct•
hn•akR thut cannot bt•nd. Thmll'
who will 1tiv1• nolhin" end up rt?·
hnqu1!>h111~: Pvcrylhing. And they
who hlank "out!'l1d1• 11~1t11tors"
for ... , 1rr111g up ttw JIOOd citazt•n!\
invuriahly full to renlh:t• that 1,.
1~ their own arro~unCl' or
neah.'ct lhut hue. turned the &ood
c1tlzcn!i Into had ones.
7
LOCAL I AT YOUR SERVICE Wednesday, Soptcmtw lJ 1"73
Punch H~ Friends Furred Wt er
Assailed
In Poll
RAF'FITt ..... , ........ .
Clemente Man Likes Unusual Pets
By ANNt: <.:OO PF.R
Ol 11• 0.ll• Plle4 \ .. II NEW YORK IAP1
/\01mul11 urn mon· loyul
than muny humun:1 They
don't expt•ct u lol. Just to be
ft>d tr tht>y like you, they
:.how you affection
De mocratic vote:rs in -.--Re-......,,_..,_._....,.._
two la rge Northeas t
st ales say they don't
wanl t o see President ~A-Uw'"\ttM't ~..._.._
Ca rter run for re·
These nre the rousons, ssud
Fritz ''Buddy'' Pders, 18,
thal he iiurs ounds himself
with animals. Peters has had
a "too" at his San Clttmente
hom" since he wi.s a boy. His
pets havt." Included birds or
pn•v. ny1ng squirrels, dogs.
1>ku11k s, li ral'coon, ferrets.
.camt> birds und t>ven a
n1y11k with w broken lt>g
eleclion in 1980. putting -""-~~~lllllW~t-them at odds wilb party
members nationwide. an
Associated Press-NBC
News poll shows. ••lllilm••••• Only 34 percent of the
.. Thts could be d1tt1eu11 They say they re au l<>oethef "
De m ocr atic volers in·
lerviewed Tuesd ay
following primaries in
New York and Connec·
lieut said they wanted
Carter to try for a
second lerm.
Your
Daily P110t
can be
Recycled
AOCl'ION
SALE
ORIENTAL CARPETS & RUGS
We Nl\le ~st received a large
lnYentOty of exqulske hand
m.de rugs from Eastern
Europe. Asia ¥ld the Orient 61\d
'411111 sdl In single pieces the
enth lot by pubic auction. The
shipment consists ol rugs from ,,.,,. Russia. c~ Afganlstan.
Tulitey, India. Romania and
f>Mistan. ~vary In size from
2' X 3' to 18' X 12'. ""rugs
111e' guaran~ by a full ~.
c:hange warranty.
THE AUCTION WIU. TAKE PLAQ: AT
HOLIDAY INN
25205 Lo Poi Rood
LOg11110HHh
n.ndcry. s., ..... 14
at I P.M. View 7 P.M.
AUCTIONIB A........ t..O: CAU COUICT
21l-ttMJ2J
reR/115: CASH/CHEO<
Catalogues available at the auction
AA£A OIUEPrl'AL RDGS, IPIC.
Particular People Select JOHNSON & SON
Home of the "Golden Touch "
"The sincere friendly concern for my
particular specifications in an automobile.
convinced me to buy from Johnson & Son".
NANNETTE S. FRYER
Corona Del Mar, Caltf.
ANOTHER SATISlFIEO CUSTOMER
JOHNSON & SON
:• I
2626 Harbor Blvd. • Costa Mesa • 540-5630
HI S Af'FECTION FOR
Hnlmuls sturtt•d rather con-
vcnllonally. When he was
about 5. he had a Labrador
retriever. The thing Peters
remembers best was how his
pet lumbered behind him as
he ran. nipping al the seal or
flas pants
· · 1 guess you could say he
was my best friend,'' he said.
But when he was 11, Pelers
got a raven. A pal who li ved
up the slreel had discovered
a nesl. and the boys plun-
dered il for pels.
Peters had already nursed
aili n g bi rd s f ro m h is
backyard or turned over to
him by friends. so he knew
how to care for the raven.
The bird thrived. living in the
boy's bedroom, where a hght
wa s kept on ne arby for
warmth. Eating hard·boiled
eggs, liver and lable scraps,
the r aven grew to m alurity
and moved to the backyard.
THE BIRD SEEMED lo
e njoy short fl ying jaunts
around lhe neighborhood, bul
one day, probably prompled
by the matin g urge, the
raven n ew away a nd didn't
return.
Peters maintained his in·
teresl in bards. reading every-
thing he could about their
habits and care. When kids
wilh poles destroyed a
number of clay nests in his
n eig hborhood, Pelers
rescued 30 baby birds. Ten of
them s urvived and were re·
turned to the wild.
A friend who . s potted a
coyote wandering in San
Cle mente's h ills with a
broken leg called Pelers for
Seniors'
Trips Set
A quiet.
private life:
<>·-Coh•Qil-
.. me~I '""""""°-"' t..Ol'• ...... _ !>!>t> !>9111
Jasmine Creek.
Ac Ja!>mine Creek in
Newporc Beach, life 1:.
unhumed, uncrowded.
ANIMALS LIKE ROSEBUD THE SKUNK MAKE LOYAL PALS
Fritz 'Buddy' Peters of San Clemente Holds Chum
Rc~1denc!> have che secunry
of a 24-hour attendi:d
gacehouse. Cul-de-sac srrech
also comribute to privacy.
Well-designed homes havl·
many fe;itures ;mJ fine
Jppliances. The Clubhou~l
h.i, cenni~ court~. ~w1mm10g
pool. and J.icuz:1s. h all help. The two boys. wearing
welders' gloves to protect
lheir hands. caughl up with
the coyole on the E slrella
golf course.
THEY SPLINTERED THE
leg and lried to relieve the
coyote's nea, lice and tack in
festation by bathing him.
.. T hat was ha rd work."
s aid Peters ... We o n ly
managed to wash it three
times .
In about six weeks l he
coyote's leg was well enough
lo have lhc splint removed.
and P eters released him
again in lhe hills.
Asked whal he would like
to make his life's work, the
San Clemenle voulh answers
wilhout pause. ·'to lrain
anim alsforthe movies.··
IN THE MEANTIME, he is
lakin g a velerinary aide
course wilh the Capislrano-
Laguna Beach Regiooal Oc-
cupational Prog ram. He has
a lso applied for a job work-
ing with baby animals.
Of all his animals, Peters
s aid hi s f avorit e wa s
"Rascal,'' a raccoon. His
mother made him release the
lively pel, whose r omping
and leasing made her worry
thal al mi g ht hurt h er
younger son. Michael. who
was then 3.
"I wasn't grown up enough
to appreciate Rascal,'' s aid
Mrs . Peters ... In lhat
res pect. Buddy was more
mature tha n l was. He knew
enough to appreciale Rascal
for the wiJd animal it was."
Peters said he'd like to get
another raccoon. In the
meanlime, he st ays busy car-
1 ng for his baby s kunk,
"Rosebud ... and lwo golden
pheasants.
mJkes for d ran.· ltlc~tyle
JASMINE
CAllll'A
In rhc v1ll:igc of Harbor View
Home' from $200.000 M.J Brock~ Son,.,. Inc.
o\\o~s" p..\-G e'-e f,, ~e.O .
HERE'S
Company HELP _,
Do you wonder if your drtnkJng Accused too much because you have
problems OR -if you have Of Fraud problems because you're drinking
PH ILAD ELP HIA too much?
Autumn trips lo
Calalina, Hawaii, and
ldylwild a re planned by
the Laguna Beach Coun-
cil on At;ing for m em-
b ers o f the Seni or
Citizens Club in lhe Arl
Colony.
Book Early tor O~ean Crube
<AP) -The u .s. al · Advanced Health Center will help
torney's office has ac· you answer the question. cused one or lhe coun-
In addition, free legal
assistance. a discount
program , theater
wor k s h op, b rid ge
parties a nd 12 weekly
classes round out the
council's fall program.
For information, call
Bob Porte r al 497-2441.
DEAR PAT: I would like to take a n ocean
cruise, and wonder how far in advance reserva-
tions musl be made I 've heard that several
months advance booking 1s required. Wilf you
check ?
J W .. Newport Beach
t ry's largest mail order Solve your problems the right way.
houses or fraud in sell· e •Personalized Program' tailored in g coslume Jewelry
cross es the compa ny j ust for you! To meet your needs!
p romoled as the "Cross e Doesn't interfere with your job of Lourdes." American Cons umer Or family activities
Inc. r an advertisements • Professional Staff
last year in national e M th 35 a · publi cations stating thal ore an ye rs experience
the crosses had been in solving alcohol problems.
dipped in wale rs or the THINK BETTER• WORK BEITER
•Spiral sliced for easy serving
The way cruises a re bookin~ now, at least six
months advance reservation is recomme nded by
Sitmar Cruises of Los Angeles. William T. Kyle.
Sltmar's vice·presldent of Marketing, says travel
agents are advised to book their cruise clients a
minimum or six months ahead or their preferred
salllng date to assure a choice or ship, sailing date
and type or accomodations.
Shrine of Lourdes in
France. according to the ~Offs • FEEL BEITER • Honey 'n Spice Glaze •Cooked 30 hours
ti . . 11 • Nationwide shipping service H lP. O.~~Ul(l\'.'.. · • •Full service Delicatessen
r 6'U"~ey . Old World Cheese Shop
.,;' .~ •Sandwiches to go.
cA g!~~u!~!lS
Kyle says that less than a year ago a travel
agent could feel relatively safe requesting space
for a client witbln two months of the preferred
sailing date, especially in the Spring and Fall orr .
season. lie attributes the change to the resurgency
in popularity of ship travel over the past five years
and the favorable public response to air/sea travel
packages.
Penny for l'our lnfortflatlon
DEAR PAT: The word "penny" often iden-
tifies lhe size or a nail. Why?
K .K.. Huntington Beach
complaint. ~~A ~ CaU Now For Information Man y R o m an ,_ H ~
Catholics be lieve t he 'f! ('; (714) 975-0700
waters at Lourdes have ~i' Advanced Health Center
m i r a cu I 0 us he a Ii n g The Professional Approach to Control powers.
The complainl lisl ed Alcohol, Weight, Smoking, Stress
1. 000 pe r son s from 1300Britto1Sbeet North, Newport Beach,CA92660
throughout lhe U.S. who lliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii .. paid $15.95 apiece
J700 L COAST HWY • c--M9r • PHOHI 671-9000 Ana-. El Toro (Now Ooenl. 0....., Po"" 8-U Hllln. ()pentno &on 11'1 H""""910n
8Mtll, a .. c11 a Glrfteld AlllO S•n ~a Toluea lalle
A spokesman at Armco's Weste rn Steel '
Division plant in Kansas City, which produces
nails, says this terminology originated years ago
in England where nails of various sizes were made
by hand and sold for so matty pennJes per 100.
COMPLEXION PROBLEMS
ACNE-SKIN DISEASES
COSMETIC SURGERY
Ho c&rYe balls.
Dr. Flanzer likes to keep everything
straight. Which Is the only way you'd
like your dentist's pitch. And since
Dr. Flanzer belives In playing the
percentages, there's a good chance
you ·11 score big; a complete course
of dental treatment for a lot less.
Want to find out the score?
ActT.-,
Ctl,..M Aflpllllf It
642-0112
Dr. Arnold H. Flanzer,
DDS
370 .. I 7tlt Stnet
Costa Mesa
Prize Is C01tte•t Pllblicatio•
DEAR PAT: I subscribe lo National Reporter.
a monlhly contest clearin~house publication.
Several months ago I enlered a send· in-the· label con-
tesl sponsored by NR. I then received a letler
saying lhat I'd won third prite. That's the last l
heard! I've written sever a I times asking what my
prize was and where it is, but I don't get any
a nswer.
J .J . Hunlington Beach
National Reporter says your "prize'' was a
copy ol the publJcatlon. Since you are already a
l'IUbscrlber, no notice was sent to you. You can ex·
pect to receive an additional copy after your sub·
scrtption expires. National Reporter was formerly
affiliated with Lincoln Press, a dJet and self·
improvement book publisher, wblch ls now out or
bas Inns.
ts a· good day
to advertise in the
Dally Pilot
Classified Section.
DAILY PILOT
642-5678
... .-.
When your appeance really counts.
you don't want to take chances. Acne
can leave scars. The dr~tress and
embarassment of an unattractive
appearance can be reduced
Some advertisements claim a two drug
treatment for acne including Vitamin A
Aud. The American Academy of Derm
atlogy reports a possible a~soc1.it1on bel·
wel"n this Add i\nd ~un induced Sl..m
Canc<-r
We preler comple>oon tre.itment~
which include an entire range of therapy
since not all patients respond 1n the same
m.lnner
We treat acnt', from the mildest form~
of bldckheads and whiteheads to the
most severe cystic and scarring typer..
Treatments for skm diseases and tumor~
are .tva1lable 1n most of our offtces Also,
dermabras1on for sc.m1n~. Co,me11c. 'urg.
ery 1s perlormro by Board (Nllf1edl
Quahl1ed Surgeon\
In addition to u\udl d,1y·t1mf' con~ulta·
t1onr.. we ma1ntdtn t>.trly ('vening dnd
Saturday appomtrnl'nl\. Wn dClCpl
med1Cat plans, c11od1t <.Jtd' and findncing
1~ dVc11lable.
Cosmetic Surgery Center
Affiliated Dermatologists'
Medical Groups
F..R. Frankel, M.D .. Director
Member of American )ledlcal Auocistlon
f:ntln<> 21sit1to-1t110 •Lot A11n1 .. 2t3/9411.S7•17 • Lake•oo4 2t3/u1.1ao
HullllllflOfl Rntll 714164t·t"415 . Manta""• TWIUI '"31 • 8•11 Dl•co 71412'ff.J3U
Wt1twood 21314711-0-194
.. ..
...
7
A• DAIL y PILOT
Candidates to Appear
Coast Associatio1i Sets Lef(i,slators' Lwich
By O.C. H STlNG~
OI -CMll\' ...... t-..rt
Th~ Orang\" County Con111I ''' soc I u t ton Is 5 po n i. o r 1 n A> ·•
ll'&isJa~ • d uv lunt'h4."<>n al noon
T hursday .&l the Hunt1ntcton
Huch IM
h ab announl'cd th.it lht· A~
M·mbly ~pt•t·1 ul Subrommltlt•t•
on /\Kina. on whll'h he serves,
will hold u public ht•urlng at 9 30
J m Thurxduy 1n t .. o: Anaclci.
Cou~t PlutJ llotd in Costa
M t.'1111
Candidates S('hcduled to at·
t~nd Include Jim Gullagher. who
1::. sf'eklna the 73rd Assembly
d111tnct seat , David Bergland,
running In the 36th state Senate
district: and Ed Clark, the
L1berturiun candidate for gov-
ernor
ltxptttl-d to M pre~·nl ar1• "' i!>l'mblym1m lX>nni..<. Mjn~··rs . I>
tluntin.:ton Utal'h dnd h1'
Kt'pubht'Jll oppOnt'nl , Charle-.
C1b on , Aut>mbl.>m un Ron
Cordov~. 0 El Toro. l•nd h1'
Rt'publ11·an rival ror the 36th
~l •lt' ~nutt• '•'•l, John ~ hm1t2
.-nd Rt'p ubltcan Mur lan
Bt•rg.-~n .ind Ot>mMr:il John
H1ur1son, n indldotl'!'> In the 74lh
1\:-~\"mbl)' th\ttH'I
The h<>ur1ni:. v. h1ch will dcul
"'1tt'i th~ trund towurtJ t•onvcrt.·
111.: 1tpurtmenl~ t o (•on
1lomln11un"· will Ix· held al the
Male liulldln¥. Room 1138. Dt un
~ Broadway • • Writt(•n teHt1mo11y cun also ht>
lrl'lertcd into the• l'IUbcommlttee
1 t><'o rd by 1·1111t ,1ct1 nii T om
l'orlt!r ul t!H6 1 "4S 7272, an
~ll('fJOWllltl
CANDIDATES FOB the 69lh
and 70lh state Assembly district
i.eats will meet Orange County
newsmcn on "Election '78," to
be aired at 7 p.m. Friday in '
KOC E T V, Channel 50 . • • •
• • •
ASSF.M l\L \' MA!'oi DEl\SI ~
Mun..:t•f°!>, n llunl1n~ton licurh
Tift; l.llU:RTl\RIAN Party
"111 hold 11 l°Jn!11d11lub Nighl i''rt
lluv .11 t. :10 pm al the South
Channel 50's Jim Cooper and
th e i''ullt'fton Daily New
Tribune's Al Hewitt will query
c andida t es Ross Johnso n,·
Republican. and Paul Belt .
Democrat, in the 69th district.
which covers Fullerton, Brea.
La Habra, and part of Anaheim
and Buena Park.
~holarshlp Program
46 Coast Students They will also question As·
semblyman Bruce Nestande, R·
Orange, and his Democratic op-
ponent. Robert Music. Qualify on Merit Seven more pre-election pro-
grams are scheduled on KOCE.
* • • 1-'ony·stx Orange Coast high school students have been named
scm1fmallsts 1n the National Merit Scholarship Program A RALLY to benefit Chuck
Gibson. Republican nominee in
the 73rd Assembly district, will
be held at 7:30 p.m . Friday at
the Fountain Valley Community
Center.
SemifinaJ1sts, most of whom will complete high school and enter
college 1n 1979. represent the top half of one percent or their slate's
graduating i.eruors. They were selected from more than one million
~tudents in 18,000 high schools
across the country Erk I( 0.tv•<HOn. ~ C. Koum;o\ These students have received
the highest scores on the 1977
Prehmtnary Scholastic Aptitude
Test /National Merit Scholarsbjp
Qualifying Test
Ml••-Viele: C~streno V•lleY H'911 S<llOOI Glenn Cl....:11 ~. Robotrt TK!tombor. Do nation o f $5 inc ludes
refres hment s. Congr essman
Robert Badham, R -Newport
Beach. will be the speaker. Ad·
ditionul information can be ob-
tained at 847·9604.
Minion Vie to Hlgn Scl'IOOI -Ron•kl p SM Ith
A bout 4.100 Merit Scholarships
will be awarded to finalists in
the s pring of 1979.
Semifinalists from area high
schools include:
N•--1 .. _.Corona dtl ,.,..r Migl! SchOOI G••o L. ~n. Jim w Fr-lr1, T"°""" E M<N•lley, Helen c Sword. Enlo .... V•nHOYen, Sy1¥1• C. Wall!\. ~ C Woods, Newport Harb01 HIQll ScltOOI -Mallo• A. Beecnner. Steve W 8111< t . Jolln M c;.umlel<. JOllll O. H1nW<1, J-\ E HaNIQ6n, JU\Un B. ~nt, Erik 1<. .JKMn. Jenf>lt.r L. Qwln, 0..,les A. SIHI< • * •
c..t• Miu: CosU ~ MIOft ScflOo4 -CJ.iv ~ ~r,,,_ ,,,,_ E. Tiiiy; E•t11«I• Hl91t Sc-
Ma'1l A. Btu£
~,._:AMI .. o.I M'911 SchOol -~ J LAll6er of Cai. ,.,....., Molly C M<A~ of s.tnl1 AM, Barbera S. Mine., of HunUnQton Be.ell, Jetfl!I Tllom.auenof Newl>Of18 .. c.n DEMOCRATS REGISTERED
in the 40th Congressional district
are eligible to attend a meeting
Sunday to choose two delegates
for the Democratic Nationai
Conference in December.
o. .. ,.....: 0.-. Hiits Hlglt S<r-1 -A_.,
M Bfft....,,,Phohp~
Westml,....,: W~lml°'ler Ml9n ScllOOI -Joool Al<l\ard Fo., ~rry G. M<>uvnoul~. ~ler H
Tllela~r
II y_, El Toro HIQfl Sc--P<Hll A l(Mn,
A-rtA~e< f'-t• V.....,: ~aln V•fl~ HIQll Sc-I -JO P•ut ~. Danny V. l(lm. P-P
M<Orta.. """"...,.., .. a<ll: Edison Hlgll $th001
S.,)MI I. Gt-. Julie A. "-aNOn, HulltlnQtOft Be.en HIQfl Scllool A9"dolpfl I.. Hiit, --Hlgl\~--l(elly O Fullff,01-N IC•to. ln11t•: lrvl,,. HiQll ScllOOI -Ml<-1 A l(nowi~. Owl' A, UhHk; l.lf>lot .. \lty Hlfjll SCllool
-JO"f\ M.. SVQlo11o.
U-• 9Mclt: ~ 8HCll MIQh SdlOOI
To become finalists. lhese stu·
dents must be endorsed and re·
commended for scholarships by
their school principals. present
school records that confirm high
academic standing, and make
scores on a second examinaUon
that are equivalent to the scores
they made on the first.
The conference will be in
Memphi s, T e nn . Person s
wis hing to vote in Sunday's
m eeting must register between 1
and 2 p.m. at the clubhouse. In·
formation is a vailable at
833·0055.
Death Net~ DftUJINot~
Tnund•Y. -.. OWis!. ... 8url•I TUltMElt 9AM Friday, bo1h •I SI. Joachim -EVA AOAIA TUANEA, """°""' ot C:.lhoUc Oluf<n, Co!i. ,,.. ..... c:. ...... New~ 8"CI\, CL Pas'led _..., on 1ennent ,,.." ,..._ •I Pac:lfk vi.w ~em-II, tf7I 111 -... of II ,,.._l•I p.,._ ~ tlffdl, C.. e.-..-ofA~"-of Pkllk V-~dl~ Fount•ln V•lley C•. Gr••eslde 80LDMAN
MNIO\ ...... De -on ~y s.p. GUY 80l..DMAH. resi-of Cosi. temb<!r u . 1''8 •I IOAM •I Good Mew c. Pecuec! _,,.,on Seotemller 51tep1tcrd Cemeltrv. Huntington a 1'IL ~"''~ -~ IWld w.oneway Be.ell, C:.. Wiii! Atv. OoMkl ShKQtOn 11j Tiie Cltut<lt o1 Jew. (.hrl\I of LAt·
Offl<l•llnv. Fri~ who wllf> lo IMY ter-CS•r $<!int .. H.trtio< L.twn-MOunt
llletr r'e\Pe<b m.ty <•II .ti t1'e \Mlllt Olive Mort~ Co\1• Meu ~HM. Tutlllll L.tmo ""'''"" CIWlpel on W• llOd•Y from 9AM to SPM. Smlllt
lufPllll L•ml> _,.,,,.,.y di<Klor•. 471
E 1111\ St,...., <A\ta """• ~ Ma<OOHAl..0 LEWISS. Ma<~Al.0, ntSIOenl Of
Coll• M~s.. Ca P••W!d •w•y on Stop. temt>er 11, •m ~-""'°""Cl 01
' I' I '
Deatlu
t.Wroe, •1\0 -"•W<I bf 1 '°""-Mart Els he of (.o>I• -..... CA -Tom of e.1. .D'9., Ji rnont, C• .• 1 cS;tugnt.,.. Ou"" ,.,...,. . ..::;;SN, Oonold of ~ M411eo, Ce .. • tl•i>-
Cf\lldre•" Jolltl, 0.'lni\, Oebblt •nd !.(ou. • Dr-8,...,. ,,,,_OoNkl of Mt,,,,uot•. ••\ler S•llY Ooms 0 1 W•lnul Grow, C. S.rvlen will be
Mid on ~Y Sept~ u , "71 •• IPM •t P<t<lfl< View _..,.,.., •• Clt•P•PI P•cllt t Vlt• Mortuary
NewPOrl IH<ICll dire< tor ..
o.IV .. U.E GUILLEAMINA OtlVAl.l.E rtSI· O.nl of GarOt!n Grovt. C.o Pu•IHI •••Y on Sel><tmC>er 11, ••71 In SI.
_pft .. ~"''· O<-ot Su"''"" by lter 1111.M>and C..rlO~ ot Gerden Grove, C:. .. "°" C..rlM 0..IV•ll• Of Newport 8e•clt, Ce., d•uo111er\
Marl Ila p..,_,.,.,. G..-..n Grow, c.·· "OH Coulo ot Cott• Mas•. C..
TeH~• Navb ol Ali. l.Om.t, C:.. Mid
Elefl• O.IV•ne of Ga-~ •• ,..,
...,..,,...., b'f •l vr•ndCH-Re<ll• tlOft OI Ille HOiy Roury 7•)0 PM
PARIS <A P > -Gerard
Bulsln e, 52, a
Foreign Legionnaire
who joined the Secret
Army Organization and
helped try to assassinate
President Charles de
Gaulle in 1962, was
struck and killed by a
motorcycle two weeks
a go, it was disclosed
Tuesday.
-----'FROZEN' MA.IL
f'IB FAMILY
COl.OMAL FUMBAL
HOME
c,, RECOVERED
7801 Bolsa Ave
Westminster
893--3525
PACIACYlfW
MIMOalAl PAU
Cemetery Mortuary
Chapel
3500 Pacific View Drive
Newport Beach
644-2700
McCOIMtCIC
MOltTU.AatlS
Laguna Beach
'494-941 5
Laguna Hiiis
768-0933
San Juan Gap1strano
4'95-1776
IALT%-.. OM PUHHALHOMI
64&-242'4
Costa Mesa
673-9450
18.L taOADW A Y
MOITUAltY
110 Broadway
Costa Mesa
642-9150
SMnK-1'\mftU..U.MI
MOllTUAAY
WISTCUff CHAPIL
427 E t7th St
Costa Mesa
64M888
,_CltaOTMIH
SMITH'S MOITUAaY
627 M11tn Sf
Hu!lhngton Beach
!>3&-6539
$HlffH MOITUAIY
976 SO Coast Hwy
Laguna Beach
'494-1535 •
I 633 N El Camino Real
San Oemente ~92-0tOO
BONN, West Germany
CAP > -The We s t
German federal post of·
fice is trying to deliver
"deep frozen and his·
lorical" mail to German
residents tha t. w as
plu c ked fr o m t h e
wreckage of a plane that
crashed on a French
glacier Nov. J, 1950.
A Pos tal Ministry
spokesman announced
that French authorities
locat ed the wreckage
and the mall on th e
16, l OO -fool Bosson
glacier near Chamonix
in southeastern France.
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTIC1[ Of' SALii 0"
~C'"°""L~IKM'CRTY
Cle<. '-1 C.tlff. Clvll Cellel Notlu is _...,., ...... INI llMtt
~ IMH'-•IM -m«le -pro. vi~. Ille~ Joan Sl<tSMI •I 1., Tullp, Cal• Mtt.t, C•lllornl• will
wll •I pulllk llUC11on •t 1•1 • o Tullo.
Cost• Mtllt M 10:00 o'clock A.M. on
1"" 2lrd dAY ol September, "78 IN
loll-Ing clHcrlllecl person.I -"'· or so mll<ll tltereol u m•v b•
nKnwrt • Mllsly 1 11 ... -Ille ..,,.. oenionect tor,...,. -1nc....,i.is ,,,. curr..t •I 1"' -.....--_, lc>vetlter wllll CO$ls Of .ov.nl&ino •nd
•• '""''" of'Mle. OescrlollO<\: 8ooU •nd O•m· illfllel!o. Owner Cy Wllli.tM. A-
0,,. ,1,000. DtlM Wt 12'11 .., .. Wp!.,.-r,
"'-J-.SC...M4
~111111"*9 ()'.._ (OHi 0.lly Piiot.
~. U,11."7'1
/Neptune Society
C'll!MAflON 8U"IAL Af SEA
646-7431 ., __ ... MC.ntr .......... 11, _, __ ,_.... l«Vkt
(Ml ...............
~iw.. C....l•r
'Waste' Rapped
On Telegrams
SACRAMENTO <AP I Assemblyman Paul
Priolo says $2,751.60 ii. too much to charge the tax·
payers for telegrams from one of Gov. Edmund
Brown Jr. 's officials to me mbers of the
Legislature -fi ve blocks away.
Priolo, the Assembly's minority leader , sent re·
porters copies of the nine-page telegrams Tues·
day. a long with tbe notation: "This is precisely the
kind of thing the people were protesting against
when they voted for Proposition 13."
THE~ TELEGRAMS WERE SIGNED by Marion
Woods, the Democratic governor's recent ap-
pointee as director of the Department of Social
Ser vices.
A spokesman for his department said the night
letters were sent Sept. 1. the last day of the
legislative session when it was believed that any
other communication would be lost in the turmoil.
Pr iolo, a Malibu Republican, said t.hey s panned
the fi ve blocks between Woods' office and the
Capitol at a cost of $22.93 per legislator.
.. IF IT IS TIIAT URGENT TO contact the mem-
bers of the Legislature. why not send a memo or
letter by messenger ?" he asked.
The night letters began, "Trus Is to bring you up
to da te on the Department of Social Services' ef·
forts to provide food stamps to eligible California
SSISSP recipients on September l , 1978."
SSISSP recipients a re the aged, blind and di!>·
a bled.
The spokesman fo r Woods' department. J .
Shawn Ortiz. said it was believed necessary that
the legislators have the information. but also
feared it would be overlooked in the last-day rush.
SAID ORTIZ, "SOMEONE CALLED the
legis lative m ail room and tbey said, 'Send
som ething unusual'."
tsut the supervisors of the mail room for the
Senate and Assembly said they knew of no such
advice being given.
Priolo said be got the cost fi gures from
Western Union.
Protein in Locusts?
JOHANNESBURG. South Africa <AP
Swarms or locusts such as those threatening much
of northeast Africa could become a valuable
source of protein to help the undernourished peo-
ple or the continent. two scientists reported in the
South African Journal of Science.
H.R. Hepburn and G. Mitchell say a swarm
carries about one ton of locusts per hectare -2.4
acres. Since t.hese animals are more t.han 50 per-
cent crude protein on a dry-weight basis, this
represents a boon of concentrated, airborne pro·
teln. the writers said.
China Tackles Crime
HONG KONG <AP) -China ts cracking down
on murderers. rapl~ts. arsonJ!l ts. robbers and
other criminal11. Hong Kong's two communist
newspapers report
Ta Kung Pao and Wen Wei Po saJd the cam-
paign also will be aimed at unrepentlng landlords,
rich peasants and anti-revolutionaries.
The papers said China has a low crime rate
but decided on the cruckdown to solve "secunty problems."
t
ORANGE COUNTY I OBITUARIES / BOATING
Balboans
Race/or
Mallory
First Title Meet
Close action ~tarts marked the first class championship r egatta
the year-old Santana 525 fl eet at Dana Point Yacht Club last
weekend when 15 of the lively 25-foot sloops showed up on the
st:rting line . The winner was Twister <No. 57749 > sailed by the
father-son team of Bill and Bob Martin. Santa Monica Yacht
Cl ub. Boat No. 67225 <in foreground > finfahed second.
Cottontail
The 37-foot sloop Cottontail. owned by J ohn
Arens. Balboa Yacht Club, was dismasted Tues·
day en route to San Francisco for St. Francis
Yacht Club's Big Boat Serles
The accident occurred about 35 miles north of S~nta Cruz when a large wave crashed hjgh up on
the mast as the boat descended into the trough of a
heavy sea. according to Doug Weber, the delivery
s ki pper and part of the regular crew Three other
people were aboard but none was injured.
THE BOAT WAS ON automatic pilot and
Webe r said the wave struck at the change of watch
when everyone was below deck. Winds at the time
were about 20 knots but large swells were running.
The accident occurred about J : 15 a.m .
Loses
There was no other damage to the boat and it
was motored back to Sant.a Cruz where it will.
hopefully, be repaired in time for the start of the
San Francisco races. Cottontail is entered in the
Rheems Trophy series. ·
· Owner Arens said a crew from Sparcraft.
Costa Mesa. builders of the mast, n ew to Santa
Cruz and expected to have it repaired in. time for
continuation lo San Francisco for the Monday s tart
of the races.
THE DISMASTING WAS ironic in that Cotton-
tail has raced and cruised over some 20,000 miles
of ocean. including the Transpac and several Mex-
ico races. It recently participated in the Newport,
R.I. to Bermuda race after being shipped across
country in both directions.
A Balboa Yacht Club
crew of Brad and Bill
Wh ee ler a nd P aul
Murphy ts scheduled to
leave this weekend ror
Cleveland. where they
will represent Area G
1Califorrua l in the Unit
ed States Yacht Racing
Association compet1t1on
for the Mallory Cup ,
symbolic of lhe men·,
national sailing cham
p1onshjp.
The MaJlory compet1
lion will be sailed on ,1
rive r ou t s id e of
Cleveland in Lightnin~
Class sloops.
The BYC crew 1s thl·
same as the one which
won the Pacific Coa~t
Yachting Association
sailing champ1onsh1p 111
Sa n Franc isco last
weekend.
Mast
It was the seeond yacht that ran into trouble
en route to San Francisco. The yacht High Roler
was slightly damaged several weeks ago when its
mast st.ruck a high-tension wire while entering
Ventura Harbor.
COTTONTAIL LOSES MAST EN ROUTE TO SF
Sparcraft Crew Flies to Santa Cruz
Whitehawk on the Bloek
ROCKLAND, Maine
'AP > -The Whitehawk.
a 92-foot wooden ketch
believed lo be. the big·
gest ocean racer built an
40 years. may be sold to
a corporate executive
rather t.han become the
cherished possession of
the Cahlom1a land de·
vcloper who had it built.
The $1 m illion ·plus
Whit e hawk was the
dream of Philip Long.
44 . o f Santa Monica.
Calif., who planned to
race a nd live on the
yacht.
For the Record
The b oat w as
launched last July to a
chee r ing c r o wd o f
spec t ators. including
Gov. James B. Longley.
BUT 0 . LIE-Nielsen.
owner of Lee's Boat
Shop which began build·
mg the boat over lhree
years ago, said Monday
the "president of a large
corporation" who has
homes In both New York .. rria9e c1•mtn1t 0<rt and Flonda has made 1"•0 M• 1nd ,.,., .. ~ M<F•rt•n. SMi ao offer to purchase lhe c11me"'•· 11•rt Ll~~•n FOUNTAIN v •L.1..1: boat
Aufld121, 1'71 COMMUNITY HOS~ITAI.. .. w (' h a v e c 0 m e
LAuR•E·WAGNER -o..nnv Joe J1 Mr .nci ,,.,.~~~!1.;..'~:__.. J•. more or less to terms." ~~~·~~.':·A~~ :~To:o Jol\n :!':'4;;:':;.. ee~:,:;:., Pa•*"'-Hun· although "no money has
Ao11er1. n. -Aoc,,.nt DI.ant. 11. tonci•on eeac11,0,n changed hands," Lie bolll ot HIH1tlnoton S.a<lt. Aytonl u, "71 Nielsen said .
asked me to build th! ...
boat. l would not s tart
ta lking for ll'b!-. thun $1 '> million ..
LONG HAO plannE:<!
to use the Wh1tehciwk
which com~ compret1
with a firepl ace ancl
sauna in next year '
Tra ns -Pac 1f1C· R,1r1·
from Lo~ Angele-. 10
Hawaii
In an interview la ~1
May. Long said. "Ttw
vessel is a romance It ..
somelhmg that ;.i ma11 . 11
he knew what 11 was g<>·
1n~ lo cost him. woulc!
u n dot.: bl c <! I V n t• v., r
bu lld ·
"-lN.1'71 Mr <Ind Mr' Robot!"I 0..Wdy, Foun APL"N"LP.PAEW•rr -c.r1 '. 1.,1nv.,11ey.ooy He added. "I wouldn't • • • • • • • • • • • •" ~. Of 0rH, and June AllU, 60, OI A._t U, "11 Want tO go into why the .. r • • .. Hun11'1Qton 8ea<11. Mr and M"-II-• !>.tl.i.t<, Hun I Id ( · AAGHf8 l(EVZEAS Toor ... 1. ll, 1'1Qlon 8•acn 9••1 boat is being so . t IS • of Fountain va11..,., encl Nancy I( 2•. Mr •nd M•~ Z.,.O<tw u.-. F...,... his (Long's l business.'' •.1 • • of Lono e..cr. 1a1n llalltv. 01r1 GUIO().PARTHE' -S.lvalor• J Jr """"'' u.1•n
41, end 01-H, lj, bolh of lrvl"'° Mr and Mr\, Fr•nl< Ladd, Co.ia L 0 NG ff AS ' ' p U l •
Birth• Mt\•·11"1 ""91ntr7.m• money down on the •
•
SAN o.EM£Nn Mr •n<1 ""'"' S.-l..Oll u11. eos1.11 boat" and is involved in • 0£HEAAI.. HOSPITAi.. Mf'W, girl the negotiations. but the • AUfU\1 :tt, "" .....,., n. ma bo h b f • Mr .tllCI Mr .. G<egory 9.,..11, S.tn Mr •nd,,.,., l.<tllCtn OlbOUn Hunl· at 3S not een 0 •
c1emtn1•.00Y ~~·0~ .. ':,t'~~11o~,,,,"fl r<arr, Hunt· ficially delivered to • Mr end Mn. Ruben v.11 ... San I • C•emenlo. DOY l'1Qlon Buen. boy Long and Lie· Nie sen IS ~ 1· m• Mr And M.!.."'::r!:~.·~b'" Hun• the official owner. "The Mr •nd Mrs Alcl\ard Mutlltr C:..P•"••no BNcn. t>ov •1101on BtKl'I. t>ov boat stays in the name Mr •nd M". 801loo 811". Sin Mr and Mr• ~Chilo, Ht>nl Of the Shop unlJI dehvery • ..,. .. ~·· ;:~"'!~';·:;' .. Cl\er1e1 He<~w1111, l'1Qtonsuc~;:.r:,,.,,.,, 1s m ade," Lie-Nielsen •...._...,. ____ .._~:;;:;c=>•
M r ~f'IO Mrs W•lf••m """· • HERB C:..plslr•no 0.<t<ll, glrl HUnllnQIOll 8eacn. boy Said. •
Mr. •nd ~!·~~•ne• s.tn ~-•.im Asked if the boat's .• FRIEDLr\,Df.R • c••m•n••. llOY Mr in<i """-w111.,d w11"°" • ou" va l u"' 's about s I . 5 ,. IS .u •KJ"'.· ·c • ~-,, tm i11n v.11..,. oor1 "' b d Ir · ''" . ' M• •M ,,,,, .. t<._1"w""~ """ M•6NI M~=dt.~:.:,:,,. ... M" million. esa1 ... you • GREATDEA~ •
Ju•nC..P•r:;"'..;.!!:4,"71 _•_"Cl_•_on_e.._~_n_.0_,,, _______ c_a_m_e_t_o_m_e_t_od_a_y_a_n_d:.. FREE •.
Mr. •nd Mn. ~ Heider Jr . »n Ju•n c;.pistrMIO, Qlrl Mr. •lld ~ AICIWltd WHI,,,..., S..n
'llW JUDG~
ON 'SI'RI KE'
nANGKOK. Thailand
CAP> -Judges protest·
Ing c uts in their salaries
refused to preside over
trials in this city's
c riminal and civi l
courts.
About 300 j udges met
with the justice minister
to complain that the new
luw on ~ove rnm ent
s alary adjustments
decreased the\r wages1 rathe r than lncrea sea
them
Call 642-5171.
P1fl a lew words to work for ou .
#75380
THIS HK ON\.T!
MEW I 911 AA T Ut J DL
DICK MILLER MOTORS
IJOW ... W....,
S-. ... U74tJJ
• • • • • • •f4,llillt• .ill.1t1,.I• .. fA••••' I""' tt ••
• or oll.('lt,\'\(,1-:'°'1 • .. .. r~··· .... ,, .... ''""" 1.. 41 ......... ,. ... ,...,f., • • e HONDA e . • 1r. .... ~~lll1tl • • Ul n:1 ~nl-•1#1 ... •I:•
•*•********··· • MG ·TRlt;MPH : : e JAGUAR e •
• FIAT·LANCIA :
• UI ni~ .. '~!!:~:~:~11'!, u:· •
..... ******.****• • e TOYOTA e • .. 1•11 •• r-w... .... •
• 1. • .-....... u1.-.. • .. * * * • *'* * * * * • ~
1• ~IOTORllO~ll · •
: S \ t. ES & R F ~ T \I .~ •
it RESF.R\ t: '\O\\ • • • a:r;.;777 l-::\1 :iOll • ········ ....... • e LEASING e • • \11 .. ''" ... _ •• 0..-fl ii"-\ hWtt-.-... ~ _. 537 .777; t..xt. tiOO • ............... I
'
• . .
l
j
Nllt\Alogk~~ .... :...ii-H~E_A_L_TH ______ ~~~--------~----------w--~ ____ v._s_•_P•_em_t>e __ ,_,3 __ 1s_1a ______________________________ ~----------------oA_t~LY~~-L~O~r--A:.:=..B
Alcoholics Usually Deny Having Disease
u few days cv\•ry month. und he , ~ amount or liquor he drinks . ~s not eat much. Is more in
h111 be-come 1rrttoble with me ooc~oR IN AparenUy, he docs not mind dis· terested in Wklng u drink or two
Dtar Or. 84-lnrrobn: I recall und th.: chlldrt•n. ' I' · cussing his habits with the doc· or three before d inner to "loosen
)Our 11aytr16( thut 1t'11 ortcn dlf I~ there.' a ny dC.'finil(' way or THE' HOUSE tor. but there are clues the doc· up" after a hard day at the of
f1rull to dlAl1nj(u1.,h bt•twtwn be knowing whcllwr or not ht NUf· tor must seek ficc. At night, he can't seem to
1n l( u ~ocitt l 1lrlnkt-r nnd un fen, fro m alt·ohol 1~m " IC he '-~ For example. on questioning, watch TV without holding a beer
ulcohollr docs. 1 w1sh he'd udm 1t it and Usua lly the potential alcoholic he says that he has been having can and sipping. He fondles 1t
I hardly llikt· .i drink hut my ll:tk for help Mrs. T . hides the disease from his doctor heartburn and takes antacids all like a child does a security hu~bnnd '" u ht'""' cl r111kt'1 I as well as from himself. But the day . He a dmits to drinking blanket.
think ht· h• ch> \' to t~1ng un D t: AR M R S . T Yo ur doctor should be on the lookout before meals and stopping at the
1tlcohollc Ill' pooh.poohs It Si)' husband,lfhl'hutnulroholic.flts for certain s lgns and symptoms. bar or restaurants before going IF H E STI LL considers
that he 1·11n take It m luv 1t Into the pattt·rn of moM who int&-lhc dJnlng room. He thlnks hims~ be a social drinker
Hut I think m<>1tly hP tukl'N ll. htt H trouble "'th Ult-ir dnnkmg FOR EXAMPLE. H E RE is a the cocktail hour is the best ttme ra&her an an alcoholic. help ''SOMf c.ot4fRE IN 1'•1S WORlD l think it's bt•l(\nntnl( lo haH· and don't admit 1t-"unt1I at least man with so me typical warning of the day. will far away. As J said, it ER£'S' A PLACE fOF, ME!~ an PffM't on hi~ work 11nd on WI 10 y ears of hard drinking have s igns. A 32·year·o ld office While at work he keeps think· may any years before he ~========-===~_.::h.:_:1"~'..'.'.."~m~ll~}~lf1• ~'·'Y'_'_111_t _o_r _wo_r_k __ P_ns_!t_ed_. ___________ m_a_n_a_ce_r_. _h_e_u_n_d_e_rs_t_at_e_s _t_he __ l_ng __ o_f_h_ls_fi_rs_t_e_v_e_nin__;;_g_d_n_·nk_. _c_a1_1s_r_or __ P_-_1_·f_at_a_11_. ---
ROSE MILi
SKIN CARE
~'~ J29
Pt1<• 1n<I. 10' off on label
CANDELABRA
LIGHTBULBS
'~1 119
COSTA MESA
2l3 (. '"" 91.
16 IN. TALL!
RAID YARD
GUARD SPRAY
~229
1401.l<Hfl~owayl
CHILDREWS
MADE TO
SIUFOI
39.95
SPIN· TRIM EDGER-TRIMMER
POWERFUL Y2 H.P. MOTOR
light. eoty lo VH with the tlJ99r leoture\ found tn
mote powerful I e1pent1ve lrlmmen Sove 1
·BUFFERIN
TABLm
~:. 21•
Jor fatt poln relief
IA YER ASPIRIN OF MAGNESIA
:·33c ~88!.
I 1/, O' Oronte llo"Of Choi<e of P'loifl °'Mint
MIRRO ALUMINUM
GOURMET SKILLETS
REG.
1.79
WITH "SllYEITOMI" NOH· ma EVEt•·MUT SUlfACI
99 ...
... toSel
10-PAGE SELF-ADHESIVE
PHOTOGRAPH ALBUMS
All t ire phot~ Ill ti..Mt t ole pr1c4td olbvm' with
bnghtly cola<ed cover de\lgnt No glue ....a.cl•
\•''S\11. \41 If
PASSPOIT :05•"49
6.99 ·-
. SMllNOff 10 PIOOf
SYUIGllt v39 r.~5-
CHllS11AN ll05
CAUFOllll4A 99
WAS 1so.a 5 • 99 (2S.4 Ol.)
UILYTIMES
STUIGllT BOUllOM
WAS 549
6.79 IUAl1
MAnUSIOSl
flOM POR1UGAl r.~i 2!!
Mode to Sel for 3.49
FASHION PRINTED DELUXi
~!~~!~~~~!~ 99
cotton covered p1llowt 01 a mere I 99 Mony fomout
d~n.gne• mod4'fn conlemp<><orv I Oriental P""'' 1n
mvltotolo< ear1htonet fa< today' home fo\h•ont
Ml• AOWM •GOU»• GllDe • llUI ,
COCOABUmR
TONE SOAP
omGAGREEN
CHILE SALSA
TOP RAMEN
ORIENTAL NOODUS
41oa 109
KERNS NECTAR
WITH VITAMIN C 23c
35c 19~.
NABISCO
FROSTING MIX SNAa CUCIEIS
=69!. =69!
Chocolate Molt or TnKu•lt. Wheat
Whip. Cream., Sp•<• '•'""' & Chip~,
FOUNTAIN YAU.EV
111'1 ...,. .. Edlfttlf
FOUNTAIN VAUEY
Magnolla at T '1bttt
WESTMINSTER
Wts1mln .. tf It a...i Wtlt
HUNTINGTON BEACH
21131 ltlCh Blvd. It Mint• HUNTINGTON BEACH · I HUNTINGTON BEACH stat W1111t1 9'81 Adln11 It ~at
1
7 -
J
A f0 OAILV PILOT N WodnHday S9Pt•mber 13, 1918
With a S ong
Mt·mb('J'~ of tht~ year's Orange Coast,
Co llc~e Song Lt.·ader~ arc. front row, left
to rtJ.{hl. Sherr y Ph1lltp:, of Tustin. and
N<J n<') llJJ:ley, Le Toi Palmer and Debby
Bollcgraf. ull of Huntington Beach. Al so
on the team arc. back row left to right.
Kathy Rowbottom or Irvine and Kristen
Goggins of Huntington Beach.
'Clarification' Muddy
Newport, Councilman Backs Off on Order
Newport Reach City Coun-
4.'llman Paul Hummel said he
wanted to clarify a matter for
thl' c it y':. planning com -
missiont.'rs hy 1s::iumg an ord~r
Monday night.
Collt·agut·s. l'Xl'l·pt Mayor
Paul H) t•kofl. stud tht•y found
th1· prowsl·d vrdt·r su tonrus1ng .
N B Attack e r
Sentenced
To 4 Years
A Mex1l'an youth pleaded gu1I·
tv t o a ssuult with u deadly
"' t• a po n i n 0 r lJ n g c C o u n t y
.Juvl•nilc Court l:lnd was scn-
ll'nced to four ycur:. in the state
Youth Authority facility for an
~llt :.ick on a Nl·wport Beach
\.\Oman
T h e youth . <irrcsted by
Nt"wport Bem·h police Aug 4.
was originally charged with
bur~lary and auto tht•ft in add1 ·
l ion lo tht· assualt charge
11 t: WAS ONE of l wo youths
""ho apparently broke into a
home in Tht• Hluffs while the <><'-
t·upant was next door. When the
woman returned, surprising the
bur~lars. they beat hl'r and fled.
On l y the 15-yeti r ·old who
claimed to be an illegal 1mm1·
grant from Chihu:.ihua, Mex.
wai. captured
POLICE. PROBATION <Jnd
dist r1 ct attorney authorities said
they were unable to veriry the
:-.uspect's age or name using the
inform:.it1on he supplied.
Juvenile Court Judge William
Murray, who accvptcd the gujlty
plea on the assault charge after
meeting with the youth and his
public d e fe nder attorney,
handed down the term, which is
the maximum sentence allowed
unde r the state's determinate
~entencing laws. according to
Detective Gene Senecul
S ailor Vows
Ope n Boat
Globe Trip
SAN DIEGO <AP > -Webb
Chiles. who sailed around the
world in 202 days, says he wtll
try to do it in an open 18-foot
boat.
H the 36·year-old sailor suc-
ct•cds. he said he would be the
first person to sail around the
world in an open boat and in one
so small.
Chiles set a world record for a
solo circumnavigation in a
monohull boat aboard his 37-foot
cutter Egregious in 1975· 76. He
made a single stop, a nd the
188.000 miles and 150 days
between stops was the longest
no n s top s olo tr Ip by an:
American ever.
Chiles. In an Interview. said he
plan!! to leave in November and
twtor~ rcnchlng Indonesia follow
th" route tuken by Capt. Willlam
Bligh In un open boat after the
mutiny on the Bounty near
Tofua In lhe Tonga l11landis.
they were unsure what they
were voting on.
I N T H E END. H ummel
backed oH his original lengthy
proposal and settled for a resolu-
t 10 n t ellin ~ planning com·
mis:.ioncrs to "move out with
the general plan review us1n~
the tooll> currently available."
He said he'd come back al
a nothe r council mectin~ with
some or the detailed explanation
that seeme d to confuse col-
lcaJ?ues.
ThC' m ovl'. accordi ng lo
Ryckoff. was partly inspired by
las t week's speech by Irvine Co.
Pres ide nt Peter Kreme r in
which Kremer pledged $17
million from developers lo com·
plctc the city's road system.
RYCKOFF EXPLAINED that
whut Hummel wai. suggesting is
completion of a review. begun
more than a year ago, which
would tell both developers and.
city officials how much building·
1s going to be allowed in the city.
That amount would provide the
basis or an agreement ror u:,e or
developers' money.
The amount or allowed build-
ing would be determined by US·
mg such tools as the city's
roadway master plan. the traffi c
phasing ordinance. the ha lf·
t•om pletc.'<1 computerized traffic
model and tht• densities listed in
the general plan for the city's
undeveloped sites.
"If the calculations show no
~1bility . under the phasing or·
dinance restrictions. to build to
dens ities in the general plan,
then we have the choice or ex-
panding the road system or re-
ducing those densities." llum·
met s;iid
THE F:XPLANATION failed
to provide the clucadation sought
by II um mel 's counci I col·
leagues. so rather than push the
long explanation ht• settled for
the shorter order lo "move out."
lfumm(•I s<1id he'd come back
to councilmen at the Oct. JO
study session with th<.• detailed
explanation or what he's after in
the hopes th<1t when they sec it
in writing. they'll understand -
and approve what he's after.
UCI Library Group
To Hear Autlwr
Or ange CC?unty author Leland Cooley will speak Monday al 10: 30
a.m . at St. Michael's Church , 3233 Pacific View Drive. Corona del Mar.
Cooley will appear at a meeting of the UC Irvine's Friends of the
Library and discuss his current book. "The Dancer :" anether book .
"The Cay." a nd' a book in progress. "Hey Mis ter . Are You Anybody?"
Lunch will be se~ved in the church recreation room following the
r'rogram, Reservations may be made by calling the Friends at
833·5300.
.Joggers Vs. Cars
Mesa Seeks Policy on Rwzs
The pc>pul arity or organized running events is something the Costa
Mesa City Council sees few problems with as long as the runners
avoid crossing major city streets.
"I personally would like lo sec it restricted to Fairview Regional
Park," police tram c Lt. John Regan'told the council Monday at City
Hall.
LOCAL R ESI DENT J odi
Pedri Is .seeking council ap-
proval lo hold a daytime lO·mile
gallop Oct. 28 near the county
park site.
However. the council delayed
action on her request last
month, primarily because the
r.roposed route includes a cr~s
ng of busy Adams Avenue. Miss
Pedri said she would be willing to
alter the route.
But with such events on the
upswing. the council wunts to
get some guidelines for future
events
A R ECENT jogathon. a 7.5
•mile route run last month rrom
the Orange County Falr1rou.nds,
caused a number or tramc
problems. Regan said.
Trame on Harbor Boulevard
was delayed for nea r ly 30
minutes on a Sunday morning as
an estimated 1.700 runners
trolled past motorists.
Regan ~aid s ome or the
m otor lsts we r e I ess than
enchanted with the delays. He
said It waft fortunate that some
of the p0Ucemen a11slgned to pro
tect the runners were s mart
enough to persuade drivers to
get out or their cars and enjoy
the race.
· THE COUNCIL said It Is con·
·cemed about the number or run·
ners in s uch events. An Irvine·
based company. Share Health
Foundation. does nothing but or·
ganize such events.
"Fourteen thousand people
can be u mess." said Lt. Regan,
adding that his officers, though
paid by the organizers, are not
always anxlous lo sign up for
race route control.
City Manager Fred Sorsab&I
'aaid he hoped the council would
try to minimize any potenU&I cl·
ty llablllty by limiting use of city
streets.
' IT WAS NOTED that three
lap around Fairview Regional
Park would equal about 25 mlleft
and that the trail along the San·
to Ana River would cause no
tra ffic impact.
The council is oxpccted to take
action on Miss Pedri 's request
next Monday
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E.L TOfl0-24372 "octtlekl Ro.ct MISSION VIEJ0-25272 M1rquertl• Pkwy.
NEWPORT BEACM-t020 IMM, W•1tdlft Plu•
FOUNTAIN YALLE.Y-M1gnoll1 6 Winter SANTA ANA-311 t South l rj1lol SI.
.4J2 OAll.V PILOT • Wedneaoay, Sopw mber 13, 1178
'Picky Eater' Sharks Draw Crowds
SAN DIEGO cAPl -The very
thouabt ot th 1inl11tl'r dorsal rln
rislna from the wah'r the stuff
of lea ends and. mort> rcrently.
moviH as nough to t;t•nd lhc
braveat aw1mmer 1plu11hang pell
meU for hoft.
8ut at a safe d1~tanrl' :o.w1m
mer1 and ooosw1mmt•r' ahkf'
ar ... f~loaled by the \h1trk W11
D 1 the S2 million i.hu1 k t·xb1hll
opened lhisaumm •1 .it ~·.i Whrld
aquarium here and tht· IR pe-rct•nt
n se in aquartum a\lendanN• for
which th\' sharki. u 1 v mo.,llv
credited.
HARKS llF. d ngfrOWl, of
cou rst. That' part or lhf'I r
fu clnaUon But thf'y are alAo
a mona the-111.o rld ., oldt:'>t
crcaturt:-. Thl')' .ire• aC'lunlly
picky eater~ ~me ~wtrn 1n
fl't'Sh wnh'r
· · T h 1• " • r l' m .1 1.t n 1 f 1 <' ~ n t •
b c • u l I r u 1 u n I m •• I ' n 0 l
'!Umethtn~ thut :-.hould tw k1llt.'d
on shtht The 'l' I. ind of ~Ot\l'f\
J bum rap." 'Jld Hwymond
K~yeb. curutur for St·t• World
unct an 1ulhor1ty on ~hork s
QUEENIE
Koyet coneedcll s h nrk11 t1r1•
m1nenUy suited ror killing But
he believ ~•n lrratJonol, ul m~t
primitive ttar lhl' n•vul:slvn
usually re:-.erved ror \nt1kt•:1 kf>ep~ m o1;t l)t'Oplc (ro m
dp prcclu t1 na lhe s h ark's
near 1't•r(1'('I adaptation for It.
rolt• 1111 hl· nut untl <>rdt· rorth sea.
" UAIUUi All£ T HE lion¥
and tlie" or t.M ocean the top
c'arnh•orc.>6." he turd · "l'lw~
prl'y on mOtil thlna~ and vt.'ry
few thlnltll prey on llw!m Alm<Jbt
1n1 •hark can be dunaero1111 lo
liW1m mers In t•t•rtu1r1 sllutttlon. ... "
Keye. 11aJd, "but you hlH'l' to
remt'mbt•r that tht•rt• '1> nothl111(
per on.al about It Jt 'i. not hk1•
tht>y 'rc Neekln(l J>t.•oplt: out to
atwck them
"Usulilly ttw s hurk 11> dt•fl'nd1ng
hi~ tcrr1wry Or ht· nu1kc~ a
m11Hake and think' Uw mwn I:.
:.omNhan" t:ltte rJqp1>1ni.: arou11d 111
the woilt>r lie thinki. tht• rnan
look11 llkc!>omethm)i( to Nit "
~· 1•at wh1k. v11ta1n of tht• movie
"J uw'" ••r<' aR~r1•:0.!-.1ve
by naturl' Uut, tm1d Kl'Y"-'· "In
m uny lnRtaurt•s. wht•n 11 shark
-<l't'S )fOmelh1n~ he do(•:.n 't un
cll'r111 tund or someth1 nJ< that
fr1ght1•n11 t11ni. thl' shurk will nee ..
Shurlui havt• a muJor role In
prest•rvhlR e<'ologlcal balance.
In thl'lr search for food. sha rks
unpo e the law or naturul selec·
Uon . removing the sick and the
WCUk o( oth('r SJ>(lCICl> lSO Only the
hltcwl ~UrVIVl'
Keyc:s said that with about 30
!!hurkt-of neorly a dozen speci~
m tht• tank hl're. workers have
tn rnakl' sU•'l' thal the shark&
don ·1 fo ll ow ull their natural
hab1t:s i-U<'h as imposing their
own pt>cking order.
"TH•~RE IS Uf;UALl.V a lop
unam al and ""<' scl' this an our
l'll('lo!'\Url' U )o Wl·ll." ht• said.
··Hut 1r1 twrc you have a condi·
t111n \\-Ith Vl'r y confused tcr·
r1tor11•:. Wht•n there's aggression
b<•twecn aiumals in the wild, one
will ui.uully flee to a nother urea "
But In t he tank, the re 1s
nowht•re f'lse lo l(O ":so we're vt.•ry careful."
That especially applies at
fet•dang time. wht•n each shark 1s
frd 1nd1v1duully with long
hnndled tongs. Keyeb said the
nnimals receive frozen fi sh und
squid that a re fortified with
vitamin !!upplements.
.. CONTRARY TO WHAT we
a rc led to believe." Keyt>:. said.
"the shark is a very. very del·
lcate a nimal. They 'r e very
selective in what they will eat."
Keyes said the shark tank at
the profit·makang St!a World
billed a~ the largest collect1on of
captive sharks Is intended to
educate the public a bout the
shark and to st-rve as a research
center. .
''To do scient1f1c research on
any animal." he said, "you have
to bt' able to ke('P that animal in
your laboratory This ls our
labtJratory a nd it's a rather
sophisticated one."
Kt•yes s~ud surpnsangly little 1s
known about sharks. although
they are among the most ancient
or living creatures .
"SH ARKS AR E FOUND in
the fossil record as far back as
250 miluon years ago," he said.
"They developed before the
dinosaurs and their basic bodies
a re still the same "
ThrouJ;!h all those millions of
years of evolution, sharks have
developed into several dozen
~p ccies t h a t fil l differe nt
ecological niches in virtually au
the world'soccuns.
In fact. Keyes said. some
sha rks have adapted to fresh
water.
B ULi,. SHARKS. FOR in·
s tance. !lave traveled l ,000 miles up lbe Mississ1pp1 H1ver a nd
'regularly migrate up Central
American rivers.
In Central America. he said.
"the natives are Just terrified of
them. and with good reason. Bull
sharks arc mean fellows "
CALIFORNIA' I
Rep. J ohn And<•rson. R·lll..
may run for p rcs1dc:nt in
1980 but he won 't run in the>
Great Gobblc1· Gallo1>. 111.•'ll
be flagman for the annual
Tex~1s·Minnesot a turkc(.t
Cotton Rugs of India
• •~led lo ll>e ful~t Wtlh le.itl>er\ l'l'Cd500 '"
OownPfOOI ticlun~ P.r:>e<I round ttw e<lgeS 100•
• our thickly WQV('n ruJt\ dfC Datte<necf
'"a o<t•<:o!.e ethllOC de~•1tn \lr•~•l\I
Slr•Pt\•'1 d
"And that's the six o'clock. WOW! .. tune in at eleven
for this one."
Winner Loses
Wps Don't Get Joke
ARCATA 1ap 1 -I\ nude young man walked
into the pohce station in this small Northern
Californja town at 4:30 a .m .. said "Hi" lo the desk
officer and walked out.
A police officer nabbed the streaker not far
away, an a car with a male friend.
The unclothed man explained Tuesday that he
had just won a $20 bet with his friend.
But police, who issued a citation for indecent
exposure. said he 'll probably wind up a loser
because he could be rinC'd up to S.SO.
At the streaker's request, police withheld his
identity.
Laguna Altrusa
Aids Girls' Club
The Laguna Beach Altrusa lntemallonal Foun·
dation has donated materials and appliances to the
city's Girls' Club to help spruce up its old building.
The 22·m ember professional women's group,
headed by chairman Mary Burton, donated storage
shelves, a vacuum cleaner, a drinking fountain,
slide projector, office equipment and repaired a
restroom as a club project.
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colled•ou ~som~ into gleam11ig
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Mon. thru Set. 10-9
Sun. 10-7
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I ' INSIDE : •Comics •Stocks
•Movies •Television
.. ..~ ..... ...-
Center of Atteootloft
~ The \Vashington Redskins·
ctteerlcade rs . of \\'hich this
unidentified l a ss i s a
member, are more or a dis-
trBction than an a ttraction,
ct8ims Coach .Jack Pardee.
Pard ee wi s h es th t!
cheerleade r s . with t h e ir
new. revealing co stumes.
v.·ould go aw<Jy a t least to
--t'he-other side-of_t.he..Jield.
·rhc outfits fe ature bare
backs. frin ged . pl u nging
nel·kline s <Jnd d ia m ond
s haped c u to u t s at t h e
midriff. .
Spinks:
He's Under
Pressure
NEW ORLEANS !AP) -"I
knew I wa s g onn a b e
somebody." said Leon Spinks.
··1r it w as a drunk, I was gonna
be the besl drunk that e ver
wa2;."
'-ell the kid that grew up in a
St. Louis ghetto is somebody. I-le
isn't the best drunk that ever w:U; ... he isn't even a drunk.
Hq. isn 't the best fighter that
ever was. either ... but he is
the' heavyweight champion or
thfi world. the conquer or or
M~hammad Ali .
(.EON SPINKS knows where
he.Came from, what he is and is t teifrning what he can be.
'JI'd like to be a world fi gure
bu( I'd like to be a world figure mti way," said Spinks. who, in a
w~. presently is mainly a
figpre or curiosity , a kind or fat'" -made freak who beat a liv-
in ' legend but in the minds or
m y people can't do it again
Friday night in the Superdome.
Spinks is a man under pres-
sute. and his reaction to the
prli!ssure is a fatalistic one .. "I
doi't do any predicting," he said
of .,nis rematch with Ali . "The
best m an wins. The Man upstairs
s ajs youain'tgonna win, you ain't
go6na win."
BUT WlDLE the specter or de·
reit doesn't seem to frighten
hilh, he is s purred by the
knOwl edge that a victory takes
hidl fariher Up the road from
l poferty, a station in life that
shlped him but one he never
• warits td'visit again.
' •,\J think ;:ibOut the ghetto," l. Sp)nks said before a training
\ se1Bion. "I think why do I want
to go back and play my life as ;:i
repeat. You don't want to go
, ba~k where you came from. Ir
' you do, you're a fool." f 'the 25-year-old Spinks doesn't
I fit~the mold of a fool. But his
pu~lic image since he won the ti·
1 tle!has been one of carelessness,
, pOSBibly r ecklessness. His at.
I tlt9Cle is one of "I don't give a
dai:nn ...
' SPINKS, PAINFULLY aware or '11e endless comparisons with
I. Alli-''Ali is one hell of a pro·
rooter. He's a hell of a man" -
sa~ his image has been dis-
torted.
l Since winning the title last
I Feb. s. Spinks bas had sevcraJ
rudi·lns with the police about
dr"'lng violations and one con-
1 ceming drugs. The drug charge
I wd dl.smissed but the incident.
lik' the 9thers, was widely
plUed in the news media. f ·~ lot of people in the press tu~n things around a nd
m~lpulate things against me,"
' ht ilaid. Then, as if to emphasite
that. he 18 his own i;nan, he
ad~ed ; "They aJn 't puttin' no
food on my Ulble. They ain't put-
tinj: no clothes on my back.''
W~. Sept•mber IJ, 1978 DAILY PILOT BJ
Rangers Keep Cutting Angel Odds t
ARLINGTON, Tex11 8 iAl'I '!'he 11<1\d after the Rangers c11;ploded for five double in Tuesday night's fifth inning added a t'ouple more with hi s 10th I
Caltfornl.-~n11e l1 have los t ull 1:1 i11; runs In the fi~th and beat the Angels, eJtplos ion, er_aslng a 4·2 California lead homer behind J oe Rud1's double in the
(Ctt mea they ve pl ilyt:d th1~ 11cuson in 7-~. Tuesday night and thwarting Frank Tanana in a fourth.
l\rllngton Stadium. but it's the last two The Angels and Range rs play again second try for his 18th victory of the l.fe walked Bump Wills in the third.
IO!lt'ea to Ti:nuu' lh•t purtlcularl y bo ther tonight and Thursday before Californi a yeur. and Wills stole second and scored on Al
Anael m1U111ger Ji m ••reaos1 aoes to Kansas City for a crucial thr~-The wi.n went to Doc Medich, 8-8. who Olive r 's single Lo cut the CaJifomia lead 1
Th e An1ic ls carn e h e r e tr11 illnij wame weekend series. struck out five, walked one and allowed to 2-l. Then in the bottom of the fourth ,
Kansas City by only u ha lf M1:1me in lhe nine hits. Silt of them in the first and Bobby Bonds hit his 27th homer of the
American l...cwKue Wet>t, with les8 than ··wE llAVE TO WIN one or the two fourth innings, When California got four year and Texas trailed 4·2. j
t hree weeks lt!f\ to play. But. the deficit he re and l\lo'O of the three games at of its runs.
ha!l .zrown to 21/r IJfa me!I . Kansas City. If we don 't win one here,
we have to win all three against Kansas
"EVE:ltV GAME W•; J)()NT win now
1s one .z1;1me we h1tve to win luter. Thls
kt-eps t'Ultin): down the odds ," 1-~regoi1 I
City," Fregosi udded.
J uan Beniquez hit a two-run homer
and J im Sundberg smashed a three-run
TANANA, 17-9. had given up only
three hits with one out in the fifth. An
error and three s ingles had given him a
2-0 lead in the first , and Ron Fairly had
IN THE Fln'fl, Tanana got Wills on
a fly to left. But he walked Mike Har·
grove and made the mistake of hanging
a c urve ball to Beniquet. who hit it over
See ANGEl.S. Page 8 2:
Dodgers Confident
Houston Invades After Giants Tumble
LO.S ANGELES tAP l -The
San F'ra nCJsco Gia nts haven't
run up the while nag, but their
pennant chances in the National
League West indeed seem slim
"'Anything c an h a ppe n lo
;anybody -ii happened to us."
said Manager J oe Altobelli a£tcr
his faltering chargcs dropped
six g ames behind with 17 to go
foll owing ·ruesday night's 8·0
Joss to the Los Angeles Dodgcrs.
But soft-spoken right-hander
Ru rt llooton, who pitched a fi ve-
hit shutout and l.>qualed his ma·
JOr -leugue victory hi gh with an
18 -8 record, doesn't think the
Dodgers have much to worry
about.
"I CAN'T SEE us los ing if WC
keep doing what we're doing,"
s aid llooton of a finishing kick
which h;:is produced 11 wins in 15
games and 26 victories in the
last 36 outings for the streaking
.Uo.dg~.
'"We have the killer instinct."
Hooton added . "It's like the
strelch run or a horse race -we
can s mell it.'"
Tonight. the Dodger s wi.11 try ~
to widen the J!;ap when they meet
llouston ror the start or an 11 ·
game homesta.nd.
Rookie Bob We lch (5-3) will
ta ke the mound ror the Dodgers
and he will be opposed by the
Astros• Ken Forsch 19-51. who
two-hit the Dodgers the last time
he fa ced the m.
IF T HE DODGERS repeat as
Dodgen Slate
All Gll,,, ... _ ltA&C/7'0!
ron .. ;in1 Hou""" •' LD•A'"9"1n 'l·Up.m
Tnur>d•Y l-IDuOI"" •I LIX A-1•• l ·ISp.,,, F•la.y Attant• •t LO\ "'-1.,, 1 u p.m
the division champs, considera·
blc credit will go to Hooton, who
is 4-0 with a 1.14 earned-run
average against the Giants this
s eason and has won seven
games in a row.
"f-le just wrapped up the Cy
Young Award," declared Davey
Lopes, who cracked open a light
game with a two-run double off
loser John Montefusco, 11-7, in
the e ighth and added a two-run
homer off Ga ry L3velle in the
fi ve-run ninth.
r.tontefusco had a llowed the
Dodgers onl y one hit through
seven innings. but that fourth·
inning_single by Steve Garvey
produced a l -0 lead.
"TllE COUNT PITCllED a
super game, but llooton has
been doing this all year long;"
said Ma nage r Tom Lasorda.
"He 's some pitcher -a definite
Cy Young candidate. He 's meant
so much to this club.''
1'he Giants agai n w e re
betrayed hy faulty base running,
coming up empty in the bottom
or the fourth after Jack Clark
and Darrell Evans walked with
one out. and Mike Ivy grounded
a single to left. Third base coach
Dave Bristol waved Clark home ,
but Jack stopped in his tracks
rounding third and was nailed
trying to return lo the bag.
"'I got a ba d s tart from
second." s aid Clark. "a nd I
wasn't sure l could make it.''
THE DODGERS THEN made
1t a romp when Lopes collected
four RBI in the last two innings
and Bill Russell added a three-
run double in the ninth .
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RICK MONDAY OF THE DODGERS SLIDES INTO HOME TO START ROUT OF GIANTS.
··-The Look of Defeat
Rick Burleson s ums up the feelings or the Bos ton Red Sox
ufte r lhe s lumping American League leaders lost to the
Ba ltimore Orioles. 3-2. Tuesday at Fenway Park. lt was
the 10th loss in the la st 13 games for the Red Sox .
Will the Chicken
Turn Into a Hawk?
SAN DIEGO fAPJ -The KGB
Chi cken has until Friday to de· c ide whe ther to shed his
feathered suit and go to work for
millionaire Ted Turner as Ted
Giannoulas, the Atlanta Hawk.
for a yearly sa lary or more than
$100.000.
Giannoulas, the 24 -year-old
comedian who has cavorted
·around the nation and appeared
at e very imaginable sporting
and social event in San Diego to
promote KGB radio the past 4112
years, revealed Turner's offer
Tuesday.
GIANNOULAS SAID the con-
tract ofrer involves a possible
weekly te levi sion s how. pre-
game and post-game television
shows and other promotions for
the Atlanta Hawks basketball
t eam , the Atlanta Braves
baseball club and other business
ve ntures owned by the rlam ·
boyanl Turner.
A KGB spokesman said the
station wanted to keep Gian-
noulas .
"I 'M NOT GOING to talk
about our negotiations othe r
than to say that Ted is a really
ta le nted individual and our
chicken scratchings may be re-
vealed Friday," Turner said in a
t e le phone intervie w fro m
Atlanta.
''I was in Atlanta when lhe
Padres played there, pulling on
my chicken act. when Turner
waved me into the men's room."
Giannoulas said. "~le called m y
act ·genius' and made the con·
tract offer right there. f told him
I'd give him my decision this
Frida y.
"I KNOW TURNER takes the
elastic off the green an awful
lot.·· the San Diego State
University graduate from Lon·'
don, Ontario, said. "Hi s offer is
more than I've ever been offered
before, including one deal a ma-
JOr te levision network had been
ne~otiating with me."
If he decides to fl y the San
Dic~o coop, the KGB Chicken
s uit Giannoulas has made
famous by hugg ing former
President Ford and sparring
with boxer Ken Norton will prob-
ably be handed on to another
per s ona l ity, a s tation
spokesman said.
San Diego Padres General
Manager Ballard S mith,
however , isn't ready to let Ted·
the-Chicken escape the city
where he made his mark.
It's Just Another Big Game
As · Vsual, Tucker, Shackl.eford Downplay Rivalry
''PEOPLE I N BASEBALL
think the chicken belongs to the
Padr es ." s aid Smith .
"'Whenever m y 3-ye ar·old.
daughter goes lo the stadium,
the first question she alwa~s
as ks is: 'Whcre's theChicken'?' ·
Giannou1as, who pours his 5-
root-4. 125-pound frame into the
foam rubber suit seven days <1
week. reportedly earns about
$.J0,000 with KGB rad.io.
By JOHN SEVANO
01 -O.ilr f'li.1 SYN lt 's the week or the "Big Game'' as far as coast
area junior college football fans are concerned.
Orange Coast vs . Golden West.
It's a rivalry that's been going on for t2 years
and many claim the game often decides the
mythiC'al Orange County championship.
It's the land ot a game where aJI the statistics.
records and past meetings can be tbrown out the
window. The only game that counts is the one at
h and.
t\S USUAL, BOTH COACHES -Dick Tucker
or Orange Coast and Ray Shackleford of Golden
West -played down the game as being nothing
more than the usual contest.
Both complimented each other and their
respective teams. and both took on the attitude
that It's nothing more than just another ball game
"I know whenever we play Orange Coast a lot
of c liches are used," says Shackleford.
"You learn a lot about one another after play-
ing so many times. I think the ga me will be a lot
like the one last yell r •won hy OCC, 13-7 1 Who
knows who's going lo win ~"
OCC I.RADS TllE OVERALi. series between
I
the two 16-5-1) after the Pirates upset the Rustlers
last year.
During the rivalry, the home team has won on-
ly three Limes . Golden West is the visiting team
this year.
On the other hand, Tucker says he felt the un -
derdog had won more games than the favorite.
Golden West should have a slight advantage in
that category.
"We've always had some great games with
Golden West, and I hope this will be another," said
Tucker.
"I think their backfield is stronger this year
than last. and should pose a real challenge for our
defense."
GOLDEN WEST'S BACKFIELD of Johnnie
Oakley and Steve Fogel at running backs, a nd
Steve Rakhshani at quarterbaC'k, helped spark the
Rustlers lo 517 yards total offe nse and 27 first
downs a"ainst Long Beach CC last Saturday. Un·
rortunatcly, they fell a huck short in losing 34·33.
"I think they 're the best three guys around,"
continued Tucker. "I didn 't realize Rakhshani wes
that good a runner ""Wc"re going to have to play good defense to
See RIV/\LRV, P •1e B2
I '
* * *
Tickets on Sale
Tickets for the Orange Coast·
Golden West battle Saturday
night will be sold this week on
the OCC campus .
An overflow crowd or 8,000 is
expected.
Tickets, which are us ually on.
ly sold at the gate, are priced at
$2 for adults and Sl.50 ror coUege
a nd hi gh school students and
children. They are available at
OCC's ticket office, located In
the college 's administrative
building. The office is open
through Friday from 8 a .m . to 7
p.m .• and Saturday from 8 a.m.
to noon.
The box office 3l LeBard
Stadium opens Saturday night at
6:30.
For further information c&ll
556-5672,
. ..... . .. .
Dallas Favored
Over Rams Sunday
The Super Bowl champion
Dallas Cowboys have been
established a s a four·point
favorite for their meeting with
the Los Angeles Rams at the
Coliseum Sunday, according to
odds released by Harrah's Reno ,
Race and Sports Book. j
Other odds: -· 0 ... 1-11....-c;r_..B•v Hou,ton IO....-S... F•....,IHO Pill-Qll ~-CillC'.l!!Nll
Ne• V0tk GI-I~-· lt•"W' C•h
Ctilc.,..J-Dll<Dil All.,,l•10WrC.Wi-M l,_oot•U OWrl-D••
Pfl•!.ottptoi• 1 -...... 0. ...... \
W•'111!1Qt<1ft' -S1. l.ouii Ml•••>! 1)-a.it! ... °"'""''. -Min 0!990 ,. ... ,..,.,.Ho"' -~n~ -..... £!!01-11-• &.tl1"'9<•
• •
T
\
fl2 DAILY PILOT
ROGER CAllLSON
He's Living
A Dream
I 1k•· ~ lot nf oltll'r rnllt•&f' footl)ljll ""nlors, Erik Esr her
will hf. mukm" h111 final joumfly Uu ou.:h tht-fall wan with
htllt> and po~~tbly no rt-ce>J(nillon
But Jon t ft~I too 1orry for E1H·her He's llvln& 1,1
drt•11 m und ('f)Ul(tn 't fJt' ha m11.-r
Oran"" t'on'lt <'ollt>ltf' ('oac-h Dirk T ucker 111y11 heaven
11n t·Jrth ''a wmmna llX'kt1r room
For E.,chl'r, that fl·~lln& u. i.tmply rtre!l111ng out 1n Uw
l\lue 1tnd Gold oruC'LA
Thr pnx1uC't Of Nt>wport 11.rbor tltJ(h Mnd Golden Wein
t ·olll'Ct" ti. hark on thf' hruln' · praC'tlt•t-rlcld ais • walk on
.. .: in niter m1 .. s1na the 1977 l\l'ai.on due to tU\ a<'ademlc
mast.ikt'
llNUA\ NT•:o. t :t;<.'llt;R became the te•m manager
Now ht' " bark ag1un, lrYlllft ror a spot on the Vtu·aity us •
rece1vM ama<bt a horde or talent
'Tm JUbt han.canJC an there," says Escher "I've been
lookana forward t<' this St'UOO for so
long 1 ·m g1v1ng 1t rny beat llhot
maybe I .-an make a &pec1alty team In a
Ka makun• type role "
To ~ sun:, lbc dyed ·ID·t.be·WOOI
Hrurn would gladly take a root lD the
fo~·t' on an opponent's PAT try to pre·
serve a~ lead. He 'd probably be erin·
nmg it II the way lo the hospital.
ESCHER CAUGHT THE UCLA
fover a long time ago. He was raised on u1K •SCHH
the Bruins' campus and his living quarters were wher.e
Puuley Pavilion now stands.
As a youngster he was frequently chased orr the "C"
that graced the Sade or the hill where Drake Stadium Is
now located.
But the clcl6est he has been to the action was suiting up
ror the USC game m 1976. Then he missed a year, now he's
back and buckjng Lough odds.
Some might consider it wasted time and energy for
Escher. But he disagrees .
"I HAVEN'T WASTED my time al all." says Esch~
"ll's been a learning experience and there have been so~e
very valuable lessons. The whole football experience ts
here.
··s wung up ror the USC game really gave me a taste
or rt and it has kept me involved.
Escher's future? It is probably in graphics. but the
ever·football mad Escher leaves no stone unturned. "Who
knows," says Escher. "Maybe Canada, maybe the Rhinos.
Football will always be in my blood."
_ ESCHER HAS' ALWAVS been a n_ opportunist. He
m ade the most of his chances at Newport Harbor High and
<.it GQJden West. Thrown to sparingly in Golden Wes t's vie·
tory over Fullerton College· at the Blg ·A, he ·caught a
louchdown pass.
While at photo day on the Bruins' campus a young
.-oed requested her picture be taken with him a souvenir
photo of bcanf,! with the Bruins.
And Escher wasted no time-grabbing her by the
w<.11sl and guiding her up close. The kid defi nitely ha~
moxie.
The obvious conclusion to Escher's happy story would
b<· a game-winning run wtlh a fumble or a touchdown pass
an the Rose Bowl ... but those deeds may be just a dream.
And Escher ls already experiencing that.
F,....P~BJ
RIVALRY ...
'>IJ Y walhtnem."
In r<'lurnang the compliment
Shackleford ~uy~. "They have a
very fin«.' athlete· :.it quarterback
1 Oa vc Mollica> and they have a
~ood expenenced line and somf'
good running backs .·'
In maintaining has praise
~hac kleford said. "They also
have an ouL5tanding secondary
J nd Make Musso llcfl outside
linebacker> •~ probably the best
.it his positwn in junior college
f '"" b:.ill "They JU't don't have any
w1•akn•~~~ "
AS HARO AM THE COACHES
1 ricd to make the oppos1lion
.tmnd pnf••t·t, they did admit
some defic1enc1es when asked to
analyze their own team.
"As weU as we played, the
fa cl is we did lose." said
Shackleford candidly. "I thought
our offense looked better than
1 'd thought they'd be, and I felt
the defense wasn't as good as l
thought they'd be <although
Shackleford was minus four
starters up front>.
"We have a good football team
though and I'm not at all das·
couraged."
Like Shackleford, Tucker also
elected to talk about bis defense
· • J thought our defense wa!-.
pretty J(ood against Cypress, not
great. but pretty good."
Navratilova
Will Miss
wrrFinale
Frorn AP Dl8patebea
JJOWl'ON An ailing lert
shoulder will keep Wii:nbledon
<.'hump Martina Navratilova
from rhallenging U.S. Open
quc.>cn Chris Evert in the first
mulch of World Team Tennis
rio1tla with the Los Angeles
Strln1I1 lo Boston Loolght.
Navratilova , who won the
Open women's doubles match
with partner Billie Jean King
ht»t Saturday, experienced pain
in the competition and consulted
with Or. John Marshall In New
York on Monday, according to
thl' team
The Lo~ters' women's singles
star is suffering from a recur·
ring problem with a tendon ln
her left shoulder complicated
by calcium deposits. Team
spokesmen said Navratilova has
begun receiving cortisone sbolc;
to relieve inflammation in her
arm
Oldtier, FffHdc lt'fR
THE WOODLANDS, Texas -
Tom Okker of the Netherlands
and Wojtek Fibak of Poland, the
s econd·seeded team in the
$125,000 World of Doubles tennis
tournament, overcame a stiff
challenge from Americans Fercli
Taygan and Bill Maze Tuesday
night.
Okker and Fibak lost their
first set 6-7, but reeovered to win
their first·round match with 6-4,
6·4 victories in the las t two sets.
The No. 6 team , John
Newcombe of Australia and
Dick Stockton, bad an easier
time with Mike Machelle and
Tom Leonard. defeating them.
7.5, 6-2.
In other fi rst·roun6' matches.
Woody Blocher .nd Dick
Bohrnstedl defeated Peter
Fleming and Erik van Dillen 64,
7·5; Mike Fishbach and Bernie
Mi tton of South Africa nipped
Mike Cahill and Terry Moor H>.
1 ·6 ; and J ohn James of
Aus tralia and Victor Amaya
downed Owen Davidson and
Sashi Menon of India, 5·7, 6·4. 5.4,
F,..,..,..ltz Fafb
SAN ANTONIO, Texas
Ilana Kloss took a H>. 6-4 victory
over top seed Dianne Fromholtz
Tuesday in lhe first round of the
Women in Tennis International
tournament.
Only one other seed failed to
get through the first round of
play. Pam Teeguarden, No. 8,
fell to Stacy Margolin 1·5, 5-7,
6·3.
Second·seeded Marise Kruger
of South Africa easily advanced
to the second round beating San·
dy Collins 6·1, 6·2. Fifth·seeded
Yvonne Vermaak o f South
Africa beat Trish Bostrom 6-3,
6·2.
RUSTLERS CET
C4GE SI'ANDOUIS
Golden West Co llege's
Rustlers have picked up some
Inside s tr e ngth as prep
basketball stars Doug J ardine
!6·8> and Mike Heide <6·7> have
enrolled at the GWC campus .
Jardine was a n All·Century
League star for Estanci~ High,
while Heide prepped al Fountain
Va lley High before moving to
Golden West under new coach
Jim Greenfield.
Jolmma&S• , .......... BaseballStanJings
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West Dlvlalon
Uod~f"" Sun Jo'ranclsco
Cincinnati
San Diego
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W L Pd. GB
87 58 .600
Rl 64 .559 6
80 64 .556 6t,<.a
74 72 .507 13'h
67 77 .465 191h
63 82 .434 24
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Phlladelphlu 79 65 .549
Pittsburgh 75 69 .521 4
Chicago 73 71 .507 6
Montreal 1)9 77 .473 11
SL Louh1 62 84 .425 lH
New York 59 86 .407 20'.".I
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I* I 2626 Harbor Blvd • Costa Mesa • 540·5630
TENNIS I FOOTBALL I BASEBALL
Dllh•"'lllt ......
TIM O'HARA WILL BE SADDLEBACK'S QUARTERBACK SATURDAY AGAINST CYPRESS.
F,....PageBJ
ANGELS •.•
the left field wall, tying the game.
Oliver singled again, driving out
Tanana and bringing on reliever
Dyar Miller.
Richie Zis k doubled on
Miller 's first pitch. and Bonds
was walked intentionally to load
the bases for Sundberg. On a l·l
count, Sundberg hit a smash
down the right field line. It
landed barely fair. sailing into
the comer for a two·bagger
CALlfOltNIA Tl!..S
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8oflO<k r1
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TEXAS
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Clntllnd 7"> 0 o o o J
~ve-ci.w1eno OJI. WP-O Miiier. P8-
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spn1d tt>e -d ~his 1Nn""9~ IMI °"lnq -.v·, ~. l"raMI T-Wll yelhno lrom Ille~. "Let'1-thls8IMM." Altlr T-...,
nlQltt'sovtcome,....., .._..said, ''Tllh lupre1
tnood81eM\. TeN111hlMl'lllN*'lt'e1 ..
Lent Upset
Gauclws' Change Irks Coach;
When Saddleback and Cypress line up against one aoothtr
Saturday night <7:30. Mission VieJo High>. onl· almost gets Uie
reeling there will be more al stake than JUSl a victory
Unless it was for stage, both coaches Ken Sweanngeo of
Saddleback and Don Lent of Cypress gave ci pretty good ill'l·
pression or having respect. but a genume dislike for one another
Tuesday night at the J C coaches dinner.
Apparently, Lent was disturbed by the last-minute change in
sites for the football game. The contest, origmally scheduled for
Saddleback in the afternoon, wa~ changed Tuesday to Mission Vie·
jo because the field wasn't.ready.
''I GUESS the Important thing in talking about Saddleback is
to find out when and where we're playing," said Lent senously.
"We'll have our kid~ down here. although we might have to
come in cars because our buses were scheduled for the afternoon.
Swearin~en didn't bat an eyelash during Lent's monologue. •
CYPRESS HAS HELD a three·year stranglehold over the
Gauchos and their victory last year marred what otherwise wouJd
have ~a perfect season for Swearingen and his team.
Saddleback barely ed~ed Ventura last Saturday. 3·0.
It was the type of a ~a me the Gauchos dominated from start tc
finish. Only costly errors ins1d<' lhl· 20 ke pt the ~ame from beang c.
rout, said Swearingen.
"AS MUCH AS WE DOMINATED, at • 1mred1bte the scor1•
was 3-0," said Swearingen. "I thought our defense 1wh1ch returns
eight starters from last year> played exceptional
"J was a little dJsappoanted an our offense. bul you have to
have priorities. First, we won. And secondly. we blocked and
tackled well."
The Gauchos got their only pomts in the game on a field goal
by Tim O'Hara, who also substituted at quarterback and complet-
ed seven of eight passes. His performance was good enough to
earn him a start against Cypress .
ANOTHER CHANGE will be Kerry Crabb at runnmg back for
the injured J ohn Gill. who separated his shoulder in the game and
will be Jost for two weeks . -Bv JOHN SEVANO
Everything (well nearly
Everything) For the Athlete 0 > B•nk ..I
Volley
Balls
Soccer
Balls
Footballs
Baseballs
Softballs
Playground Balls
Boogey Boards
Weight Sets
Jump Ropes
Racket Stringing
of m
Amerlc• a: .... ~~~...-aiiiiiiiiioooo ___ ... ~'---...... 1 ree ,_ ____ .,.. cs:,__...._
HARTS
Sportl~
LI bf MY Good• . a ~ a
l .............. ~ ..... iiiiiiiiiii ....... .,_
Center S1. ~
,,,... ..................... .------..... i ,:',t :, '·_,I Q.
'-.. :: ~~
Lion• ~
"" .P•rlc/;•.
( -:r'' I\~' -'-"":, •.'·'< ,..._.,.\ '-· ;r· (!"\ •
l:
'•.
White
Star
Rawlin1s
Wilson
Bancroft
Jog JIJ
White Sta,
Wigwa•
Davis Victor 11111
Yonex·Prince
Speedo-AdidaS
Badminton Racke
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ••••
•
WATER POLO / HORSE RACING W~. S-.>tembef 13, 1978 DAILY PILOT 83
.•
A Capaule R•Port From the World ot Sport•
Forster Keeps Dodgers,
Opposing Batters Loose
Front AP Dbp.atc-.
LOS ANOl:Lf.:..~ If the l.oa An1elea •
l>od&erl la~ t.brlr way lo another penna.nl, it
~·111 be part!y \Jae wor\ or relid' pitdter Tf!'l"'ry
f'or11ter
Forster kroep& hls t rammates klotie while he makes OP·
pos1na Niten liRhtt>n up Ht clalma bb four-1ame hlttln&
streak puts him uv thl"re with the 44-game •l.l"eall or Pete
ROie. because t-'lu·slt•t also Is 1 424 lifetime hitter And
that 11.vt'rqe 11 no joke
''"<"Ill!~• news w nftrence r~cnl ·
I)' to announce hhi candld11cy for tht:
<'Omtb11t'k of the year award. No one ill·
tended not even t~or11tcr But he feel~
ht' dl"Sf:'t\'t"S the award after cnforctd
Idleness most or 1m at PitUburgh. And
he also plt>ad11 that he net.'(fs a trophy.
··trs ktnd of emb•rrassinx. My wire
""·ants to Slt'rt a trophy room in our
house She has three trophies bul I don't
have any ••
.T•lll•Y i<ottt1•• \\'h('n the Dodgers d efeated the
Giants at S:i.n Francisco Monday night, Forster relieved in
lht' seventh inning <and re11rcd njne ot the last 10 San Fran-
cisco balhirs, r;trik1ng out three and walking one. He also
singled to dnve 1n 11 run 1n the victory that boosted the
Dodgers' lead O\'er th~ Giants in the National League
Wesl Afll'r another victory by 8-0 Tuesday night the
Dod gers lead by six games. '
It was the 19th save or the season for the reliever
whose talents convinced the Dodgers last winter to break
from their previous policy or not s igning any of baseball's
free agents
-----'QMOte of Ille Daw----~
Ram Coach Ray Mal•"Y•si, criticii:ing members
of the press who have criticized his offense: "I think
'o''e are bein~ treated unfairly by the press. This is
your team and you should emphasiz.e the positive.''
-. Get Latin f'....., St. Louis
The Rams. seeking speed in their offensive [il
backfield, have acquired running back Jerry c Ill•
Latin from the St. Louis Cardinals in exchange
for an undisclosed dra ft choice ... A Wichita
man has pleaded innocent to two counts of battery in con-
nection with an a lleged attack on an official Saturday at
the Kansas-Te xas A&M football game ... Veteran
quarterback Jim Plunkett, who said he didn't believe he
was washed up at 30, has chosen to prove his point as a re-
serve quarterback with the Oakland Raiders. Plunkett
signPd three one-year contracts ... The Oakland Raiders
have traded reserve quarterback Mike Rae to the Tampa
Bay Buccaneers for an undisclosed future draft choice ..
Free-agent offensi\'e guard Greg Fairchild has signed with
the Cleveland Browns.
Parker Leach •-• Pa•t Plolb
A pair of two-run homers by Dave Parker •
and' a solo shot by J ohn MUner powered Pitts-
burgh to a S-1 'Victory O"Yer Philadelphia, snap-
ping a fi"Ye-game losing streak and reducing the
Phillies' lead in the National League East to four games
over the s econd place Pirates ... Michael Gazella, who
playf'd baseball for lhe New York Yankees in the 1920's,
was killed Monday in a two-car automobile accident. He
w as 82 ... Larry Gura, having his greatest season,
upped his record to 14·4 with a five-hitter, and Pele LaCock
supported the left-hande r with three RBI as the Kansas City
Royals defeated Oakland 8-1. The win moved the Royals
21J:z-ga mes in front of the slumping Angels ... Dennis
Martinez threw a three-hitter and Boston made three errors
in one inning to help Baltimore to a 3-2 victory o\'er the Red
Sox ... Detroit, which s till has two games to pl"ay with New
York and seven with Boston, pummeled Yankee starter
Dick Tldrow for three runs in the first and went on to win
easily 7-4. Sle"Ye Kemp's three-run homer in the first set the
tempo, with Ron Le Flore and Rusty Staub later adding solo
blasts ... Gaylord Perry, aided by Da\'e Winfield's 22nd
home run of lhe season. collected his 18th 'Victory with a
five-hitter as Sao Diego beat Atlanta 3-1.
Top Draft Pick• Sign C:oftlract•
There are a lot or happy races in the NBA m
today. belonging to owners and players alike.
Freeman Wllliuns was one of three No.· I draft
choices who signed multi-year contracts this
week, inking a pact with th'e San Diego Clippers. Mychal
Thompson, the first player chosen in the draft. signed a
five-year pact with the Portland Trail Blazers while Batch
Lee came to terms with the AUanta Hawks. Two former
No. I picks were a lso given new life. Raymond Lewis, who
walked out of the Philadelphia camp five years ago and
has been trying to join a team e\'er since, has latched on
with the Clippers. Veteran center Tom ~rwinkle, a No. I
pick of the Chicago Bulls in 1968 who missed most of last
season with a knee injury, signed a multi-year pact with
the Bulls. Ron Bebagen wasn't so lucky. The five-year
veteran was placed on wai"Yen by the Indiana Pacers.
omER SPORTS -The board of managers of the
Southern Pacific Assn. of the Amateur Athletic Union has
upheld the decision to suspend two-time Olympic high
jumper Dwt&hl Stones from amateur competition. Stones'
n~xt appeal will be lo the national AA U board of re-
\'leW. Radlo.T-.....
Ri\DIO: Angels al Texas, 5:35 p.m.,
lloustonatl)xlge.rs, 7:30p.m .,KABC (790).
TV: Noe"Yentsscheduled.
KMPC 1710 l;
UCI Will Shine Without a Star
By EllNIE CASTll#LO
OI ..,. o.itw "'"" $i..tt With four starters buck from a
team Utut reached the NCAA l'hamplo n~h l ps In 1978, UC
Irvine Oi;ures to field another
strong water polo team this fall .
The only problem facing
Coach Ed Newhwd as finding a
replacement for Gary Figueroa,
a thrtte·timc All·Amerlcan who
led the natlon In scoring with JlO
gouls laJSt year.
'0 l':Vt:RVHOO\' t"IG URES
we·re going lo be hurting," says
Newla nd. "It all depends on how
well we gel ourselves together.
how we develop an offense. My
rnaln worry 1s t hat we don't
h;ivc as. rnuch offense as we
should "
One thing is for certain.
Newland doesn 't figure on
changing the formula that has
p r oduced the following ac-
complishments in hi s 12·year
tenure at UCI : a 229--59 won-lost
record: a .798 winning percen-
tage; u 20·9 record in NCAA
tournament play; one national
championship; six appearances
in the NCAA finals.
"We ·n still do the same stulf-
stress defense and rely a lot on a
counter attack." says Newland.
.. We'll be in contention but it de·
pends on how the new players
* * *
ED NEWLAND
de velop. If we can get our of-
fe n se generated, we 'll be
tough ...
MUCH OF TlfE BURDEN
rests with Peter Campbell, a
freshman from nearby Universi-
ty High who was a first-team All-
C l F s election, a prep All-
American and a starte r on the
Newport·lrvine·Mesa AquaUcs
team that Newland coached dur-
ing the awn.mer.
"lle's one of the smartest and
most. natural players I hive ever
met." says· Newland who has
coached 22 All-Americana at
UCI. "He's probably mo~ Of a
natural player than G1ry was at
the same stage, believe It or not.
And he'a huge CM, 17S pounds I.
He can play any kind or sport."
TWO OTHER highly·touted
freshmen figure big in the Ant·
eate_rs' plans. One or those,
Mar1aoo Fort, ls a member ot
the Puerto Rican national team.
The other, Mike E"Yans, had two
14:0-plus goaJ seasons at Chaffey
High.
Both weigh over 200 pounds,
adding beef to a team Newland
says will be bis biggest ever.
"Fort is one mean du~e."
Newland says. "He looks more
like a middle linebacker than a
water polo player. He's the: en·
forcer on the Puerto Rican
team."
Manfredo L·espier, another
member ol the Puerto Rican na-
tional team who scored 37 goals
for the Anteaters last year,
heads the list of eight returning
letterman. George Newland, the
coach 's son, tallied 27 goals but
more importantly. was the man
who handed Figueroa most of
his assi&ts.
A MEMBER or the United
Slates entry in the . World
University Games, Newland was
the top assist man in the 1978
NCAA tournament.
All-American swimmer Scott
Becker scored 21 goals last year
while Mark O 'Brien, who scored
12, 15 a defensive standout.
O'Brien, along with Campbell,
played on the U.S. Junior Na-
tional team last summer.
But the key player rtght now
on the squad figures to be Bob
Malone. whom Newland calls
one of the best goalies in the na·
tion. A two-year starter with s ize
(6-4, 2051, Malone was a senior
last year but earned another
year or eligibility because of the
recent NCAA ruling allowing
players who red-shirted· their
freshman season to compete for
one more season.
The major diJrerences in this
team and those from the past.
Newland feels, are more depth
in • the set position and bigger
players.
"We're 12 pounds heavie r per
man than last year," Newland
says. "But that isn't always an
asset, belie"Ye it or not.''
Perhaps. But this season.
Newland is definitely hoping big-
ger is better.
Polo Powers JC Football
Head Tourney Sch~.e
MOTORIST
ORTURED
ON HIGHWAY
"NO NONSENSE" LEASING
-..... 1978 olos C\/TIASS SUPREME' -----..-c.r-... -. ... -.cn-._OI, ...,._&MOW
• 5 13~~ • UC Irvine's water polo team
"'°'on't have to wait long to find
out how it matches up against
the best teams in the nation.
With the exception of UC San-
ta Barbara. all of the nation's
powerhouses are entered in the
12th annual UC I tournament
"'°'hich gets under way Friday
with eigh~ games at, the Newport
11a rbor Hi gh pool.
1!:1 c.tml .. et F•......, CC ... _
Go!M<t _.el Cit ... Ci>.o•I
C•Pfl\\el ~-·
R o .... ,~i.. .t c.ornpt"" !l:JOp.m. I
l-BNctt'"' f Mt ~nt•-•••Gt~le _IN_.. .t So<ll_,,tttn
W•il L.A •I I.A 5ou1-._t
Rio H-M s.nt• S.lwl•• CC C.rtllO\ •I 8.alio«l,.l<I .
Mt.S-Anl""'°MP-CC ,..., B1r_o;...,.,1LO\A ........ CC
F11llerl""e!O t•11•
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S.n Ole9> WU tt s.... Olevo CC
ti JDp.m.J
omWi • ~ish car rhfl COllQhs •
misstt or dfavs OR the livh-•r t.n bt
Ylrer lortvrt. Err1tic engine Pttfor·
flltlllCt is ollen tlustd by uric.w
(OOtam#!tn~ Mid slidiog lledlntal
NI~. In !.UCtl Cist\ }'CU CAii hd, ttS!ott
lost periarmwe thanks 11 • S(l«ial
f~lalion called WTitH'S4' ENGIHf:
OPIN 7DAYSA WHK0 t:OOAMlo9:00 PM .
17141 540-9640
The host Anteaters ki ck off the ~;~=~=:;,,i, 1
TUHE-UP. Tim ltmM o~ trulmenl
•oits in ID Nits as ~ drM lo
hdp quiet 1tlm ¥11 liflm. while it
diuol~ts away hHmful deposits. So to
lrl~ tnd hiQh•ar IOl'IUre, (j{l WYNN'S
EHG!Mf TUHf-UI' tocley.
U•IVERSllY
Sales and Senic@ 12 -team affair with a J o'clock 0.1.e•t•1!ioc.o11-1e t,t,,1,.1 1"'9e<l•I V .. ie"/ •I"""'-Po!li'f game against Arizona. Other v 1c10• v.ii..•• &.<\I-key afternoon matches pit de-wKtHIUs•tR_,,...,
f d . . I h -s.ci-•~'"'-"'"' en 1ng nat1ona c ampion UC ,...,,..._..v.u...,.,1c..ny ..... LEAS IN& Berkeley against Long Beach -.. ....... e1A1i...>WK ... 11. 2150 ...... ""'-~ -540.9•40 State 13:501; Stan!or<f"Ys. UCLA IA11 ••"'"•I J :to '·"'· ••'"•
14:40 p.m.) and Pepperdine vs. --~-==·~1"'~-~:'.".~'--_j----------~::'.::'.::'.::'.::'.::'.::'.::'.::'.::'.::'.::'.::'.::'.::'.::'.::'.::'.::'.~ use <5:30p.m.1.
Be rkeley is led b y Kevin
Robertson, a Newport 1-larbor
lligh grad, and two members of
the Puerto Rico national team.
Fourteen games are scheduled
for Saturday with another eight
set ror Sunday, including the
4 :JO championship tilt.
First round starting times : ·-· l-UC lrW.vt. A<I......,
l .-UCBltktley Vil. Liln!l S.Kn
• tO-~lline n . use t ·?O-UCI n . H• .... at<I
1 10-uce .,.,..s.n"-s'•'• 1-St.nlonl .,.,.. C.I Poly-...
l :SO PC_<ll,_,..._ UC°'""'' -u· ' •. ,,..~UCJ..A "'· C.t Poly 1.»---usc.,.,..uc oav11
I +o-,t,<lmnt.,.,.. M• .... M<I
• JO-~~ ..... s.... Olevo
10:20 to b'«l--5«-'°""" <,1..-t •• J.0..m-1'1 1111 ..... ., •• ,_,
• •.m. 10 t•lO pm -FiMI rOUll<I ~mt-o. •I ~
m•nul• ;.,i...,,.,_~l'l<P ..-.... "•·JO.
Hollypark
Race Results
-T-y IH\11..._et,._..___._.,..,..iJootl
Flru r..:1-Pl ... l•n<I N. !RlltMO•<ll ,, 4(1,
11.tO. t .20; HO<.....,_k O...C.er !Ml.,l1l l .t0. l..O.
C~ro<I tlonuo! 1.10. '2 E•KI• !•·II pak1'2Q:l.t0,
S.-C,and ,_.._.,,,.,.,... Hound !81Kkm ... I •.60,
I tO. l .tO; All l1'at J.,_, ~Goll<lte•wl •.00, 3.66.
SI•< Sl>oole< (Mio-I! 1.tO.
Tl!lr<I r..:•~ !C!Horned U.00. 1.20, •.•;
80<'.IV C""<.ke< (..,..,,) 1 00. l.loO; ci.~s• Bye Bye
{1(111bl1<l l .OO \S E•..:I• !•·11 p;l•<l Ufl SO
Foufln •.Ke-B•<,1 o.<o<e• (Per<•! • -0. 1.IO,
J ti. 8••on 80Q•n !~•tcll!orct l I .JO. l 00,
Mofl~ ... -l~•ktt) '·"'· Fntrt ••e--T-(Noll IL"""'°! ll 00. s.oo.
•.OO: An-er 18ayln11 J.00. J . .0, EHie Top
tC.r•l<,l) t.1(1 ,, E•..:ta 11-?! IMl<I til l 00
S1•1n rke---SN-•v Cuti (Pet•rwnl 1 !111. l.00.
J.1'0. Ne•H Bener N 1v.i1-lnoll•ml I 00, L lO.
oi;,..,...000.,. F-CPCrtylJ..60.
Se¥9n!ll <Ke-OouQi~ W-C ~I 1.loO.
J.10. J.IO. _,... R;cky !t(-11.00,l.1'0. TN
811u"•CI A l.A.nclt<wnl S.60.. i s EU<!• n .J) Piii!"
loll.DO.
El<,111111 r.c-.Jolln 0 "100 \l«ll l<I 1.60. 1.60,
1 M ; Wlndarta P•rk IDelOMerl T.IO, l.IO;
Prv<1w• Boy l~.olcllfonll l.JO.
Nlnln r......S...,..wyn it<...-! 1.4'0. l.IO, J.60;
S..1>01 PTlnte CRllClli.! 1.loO. J.00: p,,,_ Me
IPClll"fl J.110.
T..,tn , • ...........,.., N CV111-1"911•1fl l M.14,
1.14. 1.00; Gener .. MlojM (t(lllOl1< I J.00. J.IO; Del
P•rH 40.-.I I,*), U E•Mla (10.SJ IMt<I
1191.SO.
All-..-..1.tJS.
WIN PRIZES
WORTH
MORE THAN
s1,500
Play DAILY PILDT
SPOHSORBJ IY
TY· APPLIANCES
WAREHOUSE SHOWROOM
RULES
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
l ENTRY BLANK i • •
: Nilrne ····-···········-···-··············· : • • • Address .................................. • • • : CltY ........................ Zip.......... ! • • : ,........ ···········-··-···················· :
: CircM wams you thi'* will wl" tttls week's ~mes ! • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
USC at Oregon
UCLA at Tennessee
San Diego St. at Iowa' St.
Santa Clara at Cal St. Fullerton
Kansas at Washington
Alabama at Missouri
Penn St. at Ohio St.
• • • • • • • • •
More than $1,500 worth of prizes will :
Michigan St. at Purdue
Auburn at Kansas St.
Northwestern at Iowa
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Oklahoma St. at Florida St. •
be shared by winners of 10 weekly l
Pigskin Pickeroo '78 competitions. : Baylor at Georgia
• • • • • • • • •
WEfKl Y FIRST PRIZE
r.E 17' DIAGONAL PORTAaf TV
• : California at Georgia Tech
IU.Cl&WMfTI
......0251JMO
: Kentucky at South Carolina • c-=~--=-~. :::"::=:=:==~ l SMU at Florida : • • : BYU at Arizona St. :
Hole-in-one
Bill Blankton of Costa
Mesa has qualified for
the 18th annual Rusty
Nall hol e-I n -o ne
sweepstakes after scor-
ing an ace at Santa Ana
Country Club recently.
------7Stl1 JlimlllettsO/lg-----
• too% Solid
Sl•t• Ch9sai1 • VHF ••Pfe-Set ..
FIH Tuning
E Dallas at Los Angeles E
: San Francisco at Houston : • • : Cleveland at Atlanta : -I pernxmanc:e
The sweepstakes win-
ner receives a free trip
to Scotland and $1 ,000
with the victor to be an-
nounce d early next
year.
STOP
SMOKING
Thousands MVI! with
Ju!.1 one visit ... at
reasonable rate!
San Clemente
HYPNONSIS
CENTER
Ste 1'26 <Medic.al Plant
493.3332 ..
Johnston & Murphy
Handsome moc toe tassel
"Boi.:er Too .. Slip.on lull
leather lining.
Btaek Calf
.. "'""1L "~ \i.----• 11uti1 SHOES
AA-101012 A-9.,.,to13
9-9to13
C-7to t3
0-6\l'llO 13
,, .... , ............... .,.. ......... 759.9511
• Set·A~V-t
Volu'IM c.ontrot
• 70 Poutkln
··cuck-tn ..
UHFT~ng
I TeLEVtStON
~
• Quick On .. D•yllght &right ..
Plctur• Tube
• Up·Front Contr0l1
: Seattle at NY Jets : • • : Kansas City at NY Giants : l Plttlburgh at Cincinnati l
: Phliadelphla at New Orleans : • • : Tampa Bay at Minnesota :
WEfl(LY SECOND AHD THIRD PllUS : Wa•hlngton at St. Louis :
TRANSISTOR RADIOS : • Oakland at Green Bay ;
: Chicago at Detroit •
. To be eligible for weekly cont••! : San Diego at Denver l
awards, entrants mult predict th• Buffalo at Miami :
winners of each of 30 football games Baltimore at New England :
and also guess the total number of : • points ecored In all 30 game1. :
TIE BREAKER -My gun.s on tM total !
YOU MAY ALSO PICK·UP & SUBMIT ENTRY fMllMer ot points sccnd In .fll JO games Is !
BLANKS AT: ! ~ -kl~c-.J.-......... .. :
n'·.tlft.l•HCU J !
W.U:9fOUSI SHOWROOM !
lttWT•llJllllA""-HOUaJ· • '::.':",:=' ---,:. :
-t6W?JI ..... \J.I •
1.::;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:::;;;o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::.i,, ••.•.•.••.•.•.••••..•........•..•.••••.••. : .,..
--·
--:.--·-. , . . .. . . -· . . '
llif DAIL 'Y PILOT W.OnMd•y. S9P~r ,3, 1971
What a Fox!
Baseball
Leaders
AMll•ICAH LUOUI 0 ••• H .. tl. <.Mew Miii U1 * n ,.. J)ol
1uce th11 14' ~ '°' "' .an Pt111.i1• NY 111 40J " 11' .>10
A Oii.,.~ T•ll 1 IJ ·~ ,. 10 ,Jlt
Otllvl• Mii 114 •U '4 US :IOI
Y0\1111 Mii Ill 4J\ '6 131 JOI
11-rh&ff Ill 410 .. IU ,"9
MvnloOll NY 13' ~ '4 10 .2'7
J Thmp"' ()et 1U \14 H IU .,..
~ ... 0.11 UI di M IU ,ltS .....,. .. _
ll l C•,·llO\lOll, •O; l•yler,
C•lttenWl, 12/ Hltle, Mllw-... JI,
G Thomu, Mllw-.. , JI. Tl-nton,
Cl•v•l•llCI, JO .. _.._1 ..
•ice, 1'°''°"· IU; St.vb, Q9troll,
HI•. Hhlt. Mllw•uli ... 10$, Tt.0<'11100.
Cltvel•nd, '4, CMty, 0.U•nd, '1
l"llidPI Ill O.CllleMI
Guidry,....,,. YOfll, 21·2, 8 .Sl.llll•y. 8 0\ton, 1,.,, Gura, Kanu\ (tty. "''· ro .... 1ev. ~IOll, ,.,, : 811· 1n911•m, O.troll, U 1, C:•ldwtll,
Mllw•11•"· I .... 1(-, C.llfenU1,
14-1, JenklM, lt&l,i, IM.
NATIONAL LllAOUl
G A811141"ct.
Plr'll•r PQfl Ill Sii 13 I" .JIT
J.Cnu Hin UI St• 72 1•1 .lit
811rroMAll 1a w ., 1a .Jl2
MaclloO SF • 109 -n ,,. .JIO
Cl-SF 141 W 13 IM .>07
CO.ney LA 14S S" 11 llS .>02
llOW (In 1'1 5" '3 111 .>01
Wnlleld SO 142 S,. 1S ISi .JOO
Pul\I Hin I» Soll '2 IM .JOO
11.lfftltll LA 12.1 4JI II 1>0 .JOO
"-"-Fo'1•r, Cln<lllll<lll, 12, L111l111-I, Pl\ll•delpllll . 30, It. S"'llll, LH
A1199ln, 2'; P•O.ef, Pit~, 2',
l(lnom•n, Oii~. ts. .. _..,.I ..
Fouer. Clnc:l11Mll. 10.. o.rv..,, LH Aftteln, 101 ; Per••r. Pllh·
1>11ro11. 100, O erk, S.n Fr~ltco.
'M; It. Smllll, U. ....,...., t2; Win·
fleld. Sen oieoo. 91.
Ida Fox cright>. a re male member or the
Poolesville High junior varsity football
t<·am in Maryland. runs a pass pattern in
practice afte r earning a spot on the t eam
as a second-string safety and a fifth-string
tailback. Fox. 14, is a 5-4, 120-pound
sophomore.
"ltdlNtt cu Dec..._,
1>9rry, s.... OieOD. IM, lloftlleM,
Cln,1n11ell, II••. Neel••• Le• A.._.tn, IM; lllv., Sift Fre11<IKO,
1H , 0 R~, Pllbburtfl, 12•; IC. For.ell. HtllMOll. H I lllet1, l.M ._...,,....
Sea Kings Set High Goals
Corona del Mar Hoping for Banner SeaJJon
By ROGER CARLSON
Of .. O.lty ...........
It's no secret within the Sea View
League -e veryone is aware that the
Sea Kings of Corona del Mar are loaded
as they prepare for the 1978 football
opl'ner
Coach Dick Mor ris can field a team
with 19 of the 22 spots manned by re-
t.urning starters from a team which
qualifi ed for the CJ F playoffs the past
two ~casons.
Morn s has the talent, experience,
de pth. balance, team speed and general
size that makes this 1978 outfit poten·
tJally the best to ever come out of
Corona .del Mar in the school's 17-year
history.
"WE'RE LOOltlNG FORWARD to
this season," says Morris. "I've not
-been in this situation before. We have
some qualily players and we've set
some high goals.·'
Morris declined to get speclfic about
goals, but a check with the record book
reveals five straight losses to cross-
town rival Newport Harbor, never a
victory in CIF playoff action and a 14·6
defeat to Costa Mesa in the Sea fGn gs'
final South Coast League outing.
In addition to playing with a stacked
deck, 'Morris has received additional
bonuses in ( 1) three promis ing
transfers (2) the e mergence or John
Mel hon as a potential s tarting
quarterback to afford the possible use
of Kurt Brockman at tailback and (3) a
46-man squad which reported in ex-
cellent shape.
AS FOR STYLE, the Sea Kings figure
lO maintain most or their emphasis on
Water Polo Season
Begins for JCs
Dy JOHN SF.VANO
Ot .... Dally "''"" lutt Whik the football teams have been
going after one another on the gridiron.
th<' Orange County water polo teams
have been preparing themselves for
their season.
Orange Coast. Golden West and Sad·
dleback are all set lo open wbat look
like promising seasons for each.
OCC. which finished 17-12 last season
and fourth in the South Coast Con-
ference with a 6-6 mark, will basically
be a freshmen-oriented ball club tbi-:
year.
THE PIRATES will have only six re-
turnin~ sophomores. and two or those
will be goaltenders. The team's second
leading scorer though of last year-Malt
Smith -will beback.
Smith. who had 46 goals. led the team
in assists with 32 and made the All·
Coast Conference first team.
Other sophomores include: Don Ter-
reri, who played for OCC in '76 but sat
out last year; Steve McGowan, who
didn't play much in '77 but had rive
goals and two assists; David Taylor.
who had four goals and five assists in
'77: und goalies Keller Penrod, who sat
out last year after being the No. 1 'oalie
the previous year ; and Larry S1stler,
who was the No. l goalie last year.
CO/\Cll JACK FULLERTON will
have a talented crop or freshmen to
choose from. led by Corona del Mar's
Most Valuable Player last year. Kris
Silva. who also made second team all·
CIF. and Mark Cornett. who was all·
Century League and all-CIF as a member
of the Villa Park squad.
"We're golng to be very young and ex·
perienced this year ," said Fullerton.
"We ·11 be playing a lot oHresbmen. so ti's
going to take us a while to jell."
OCC opens its season Thursday al Rio
Hondo.
One team that woo 't be expected to
take long to jell will be the Rustlers
from Golden West.
GOLDEN WEST, long a powerhouse
in water polo.l won its ninth straight
Southern Cal lJOnference championatrlp
Inst year. In 1976, it captured the state
championship.
The RusUen1 have only Cive players
returning from last year's team, but
head coach Tom Hcrmstad enjoyed a fine
recruiting season
"We have as much talent on our
roslt'r as we've ever had," he said.
8n('k from last year's squad ·~Tony
Wooten. Mart.y White, Jim Keefe, Eric
Bauer and Gu.'1 Avila.
"WE SHOULD HAVE a fine team,
but a lot •<>es Into o wu\nJn• year:·
Hcrmstadsaid. "You have toCOftllder in·
juries, illness, and bow the team meshes
together as a unit.·•
Top fres hm e n include : Dan
Moorhouse <Huntington Beach>. Doug
Pickford (Edison >. Tim Spaeth
c Edison >. John Ive rs on <Newport
Harbor) and Mark Gauger <Newport
Ha rbor).
Golden We5t opens its season Friday
at Glendale.
SADDLEBACK WILL try to improve
on a 15-16 season last year, but the
Gauchos will be doing it basically With
freshmen.
The Gauchos, who were 1·S in the Mis-
sion Conference, finishing third, have
five sophomores returning in Sam
Taylor, Dave Milloscb, Brian Boyd, Ken
Rickabaugh and Bogdon Dudzinski, but
none were starters last year.
"We had our first inlrasquad scrim·
mage or the season last Friday and I
was really surprised with the fine play or our freshmen. I would have to say
that we are about three weeks ahead or
where we were last year at th.ia time."
Gauchos coach Flip Darr says.
"Paul Milosch and Matt Beeman
I freshmen) both played together under
J nck Dickmann at Dana HUis and are
playing real well together. I expect
them plus Craig Brushier from Laguna
Beach to be our top scorers.
"We have an open field for the start·
ing line-up. It's conceivable we could
start all freshmen . It will be de-
termined by who works and who husUes
the hardest."
Saddleback will open Its season Sept.
22 when it competes ln the Mlsslon Con·
ference tournament at Palomar.
Prudhomme Vs.
McEwen at OCIR
Tom McEwen or Fountain Valley, re-
cent winner of the funny car elimina·
lions at the U.S. nationals In In·
dianapolis, will Cace Don Prudhomme
and 14 other outstandlng drivers will be
fentured in a Parade of Champions
Saturday night at Orange County 1n·
t.ernational Raceway.
McEwen. with the Indy victory,
moved Into third place in the National
Hot Rod Association ·a world chAm·
plonship ~hind Prudhomme and Billy
M<'yer.
The 16-car AA/funny car ellmlnaUons wm be supplemented by a full prograrp
of bracl<et raclng. Galea open al 11 with
time trials and bracket raclna ln the af·
tcmooo. Night racing be&ln• pt 7.
the running game out or multiple sets.
wi th perhaps a touch or motion involv·
m g the tailback and receivers.
Morris lost assistant Ed Blanton, who
has moved on to Estancia High to as-
sume head coaching duties. and has
replaced him with former CdM standout
Bob Ferraro.
Ferraro is handling the backs and
linebackers, while Dick Freeman bas
moved to defensive coordinator and
Rex Seyder is coaching the secondary
and quarteritacks.
ASIDE FllOM THE WEALTH of re-
turning talent, the three a foremen·
lioned transfers are Dave Forler CVan
Nuys > at center and defensive end :
Kevin Branigan CNew York) at fullback
and linebac ke r : a nd Bob Case
I Capistrano Valley> al tailback.
The most notable guns in the Corona
del Mar attac.k appear to be returning
all-league lineman Enc Raff, a two-way
starter, and Brockman, who has been a
starter slnce he was a sophomore.
Here's a rundown on Corona del Mar:
QUARTERBACKS Brockman, at 6·1.
190. is an excellent runner and was a
starter for two years. The a CC' an lhc hole
is Melbon. a sharp passer wh<> hus S<.'Cll
action at qm1rterback and an the secon-
dary. Mel bon checks In at 6·0. 185.
Another with experience <it QB Is Rick
Starnes. who appt'ars to be movln~ to
wide receiver and safety.
RUNNING BACKS With Brockman
at quarterback. Morris has returning
starter Martin Hubbard 15·8, 1601 ava1Ja·
ble. Hubbard scored three touchdowns in
back-to-back performances an '77 before a
hip-pointer In the Mission VleJO game
sidelined him. At fullback ore Dave
Briabt cs-10. 1001 and Branagan •6-1. 2051.
RECEIVERS Looking good in early
practice sessions have been Greg Kniesel
16·2. 180 > and Dan Flanagan 16 I. 1901 al
llJ.?hl end. while four are in the picture al
wide receiver Starnes 16 0. 1851. Dave
Johnson tf;.-0, 1551, J 1m Shollln 16 t. 1851
and John Turner 15·10. 1551
OFFENSIVE LINE The Sc.'u Kings
a.re especially tou~h h(!rc w1lh Raff
15.10. 1901 leodin~ lht• way at guard l\t
center Is Skip l\lll'n • G· I, 18.'i I. backed by
Mark Dobbs 15.10, 1751, although f'orl<'r
could bri:>ak up the nucleus or r<'lurn1ng
start.1•rs. Scott KarstPn I 5·9. 1651 al guurd
anrl ta ckles Bucky Gillett •6·0. 1901 anl1
John Davis •5 10. 1ss1 arc :.olld Anothc•r
prospect ot l tH•kl1· '' 111n1nr ~cn tt
Cr.4rpcntcr •6·1, 2101
DEFENSIVE LINE Dobh~ and Mark
Baker arc vy1ng for the starter's rnle at
noseguard. a vacancy crl•ated by the
movement nf narf to hncbacker l\l tarkh·
are Kory tturw<'ll 1(i 2. 22'7 Jr 1 and Ron
Pe rkins 16·0. 190 sr 1 Burwell wa:. J
starter as a sophomore. Flnnk1ni: this
pair will be Sholltn and f'lnnagon,
although Forlrr or Mark Valentine 1 ~ 11.
I~ 1 could mnVC' an to assume startan11
duties.
LINEBACKERS Rorr was the team's
lendln1t llwk.lcr uncl a unanimous choice
ror all lt•ague hnnor!i as n Junior ut
no11c11uard J oananJ; Harr will be either
John Schnit1t<'r 1~·11 . HIS. jr 1. a
.,ophomorc starter . or nrnnlaun. the
205·pound transfer from Nt•w York
SECONDARY Seldom a i;ore spot In
the Sea Kings' armor. lhl• defcniilvc barks
are !iOlld ugnin. Stn1·nc'i will he 111 safety.
backed by 6-4 Poul Glllcb•wrrl. The cor.
ner backs are Mdbon nnd Dove John:1on
with John Merrv hocking up either.
RrC>Ckmnn keys tiw secondary ot rovrr .
with St'nll Jessop and Warrrn ONin1:-. pro
vldln11 backup
KICKING GMO. M(l'll h111h '<'hool
out.lits •u!rf'r to on cxt<'nl an I hi' <frpnrt
ment. but It appears to tw no prubl~m ror
the S(ia Kin.al! Pl11n•kkkcr Brockman ts
back. So Is tfw c1•n1N snttPP<'r. Allen. and
lhc holoer. ::,wrnes llokrr rrturn." to han·
die lha kickoffs nnd F'lnn111(un bb~ted u
36-yard averaao 11 CdM'1 punter In '77
FOOTBALL /WATER POLO
I' BUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NCYflCE
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NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN tNI 41
lr•m• Ind ttuc'o ,__ IMMIW
IO<•led •I 604 C•lle P1J•11I•. S•n
Cleme111e, l\ ...,.11411>1• for remov•l lftd
f'91outloo. Avell<ll>illly 11\ell •KWftd
1111111 Nov 12, 1979.
C:ont•<I Jolin Knoke •I llUI
STMI ... o< ln31 cJ1.a121.
Publlt l>ed Or-. Coe1lt o.tly Pll04
Sept. I), 14. IS. II, It, JO, 11. 22, lS. 2•, 1'71 .,,,.11
PUBLIC NOTICE
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buSlnMI ..
GENERAL LEE PAINTING
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to. Minion Vl•Jo. CA mH
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S.ICll, CA S<oll Joi.r-, ,.,0 A...,...~
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£NTERPltlSE LIMITED u
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Tlll• ".......... w• "'" With ow Co<lnly C:1«11 of °"..,.. C:.0-ly on "MO 14. tm.
CA"ll I TZ.U.O"'ICOOUt.0
""-"-~ 8yJ-T.~
1-.u~ .....
lt'flM, CA."'" """'" Pullll"*' Or ... ~ O.t1y PtlOI
S.OI. •. ll, 10, 27, 1'11
PUBLIC NOTICE
PICTITIOUS l llMNEU
NAME STATEMSlfT
The IOI~ --t\ do<no llonl· M011·
El0EN P ROPFRTl ~S
L141!1ITEO. 7110 ~I Or . Co>I• Mete.c...m:i.
Tllo m•• R Wll••o. G•n••• P~r. 1110 Giwwwl 0. .. C:O.t;i Me .. c... t?•,.
Tiii• l>utlMH Is COfl<lu<I~ I>• •
llM•ltd ~·p.
~R -•y c;...re1 p.,,_
Tllla ,._. -llleO "'''" ,,,., CcKl11ly Cl ... ._ OI Or111ge Count't "" Don Somlonl .... , ... , Ocfffl. Lont e ....... u. ...... A-• 11, "" Thi\ l>IJSl ... u Is <Ofldu<lH l>y •
llmlledpM1-p Puf>lllhed 0r4'ft09 C.0.>I Delly Pll04, ,, ...... 411911\1 tl. >O lflCI ~-·· tJ, ,,,. ~!'ltd Or .... C:-St 0..ly PttO! Ter"'A I. ..
Thh 11 .. ...-1 WIK filed wlltl t"9
County Cltr11 ol Or-eoun.v on Se9-
1ember 12. 1'11.
.o)l·ll 4"' JQ. Sept, .. I),'°• 1'71 •IS.-11
PM8776
Publl\Nd Or-Cofft Delly Piiot
Sept. IJ, JO, 27, ()cl,•. 1911 QS1·71
PUBLIC NOTICE
~-----~----~ PUBLIC NOTICE ... ..,.
NOTia TOat•OtTOttS ....... ...., su ... •toa COU•T OP Tlll SfAH OP CAUf'OltNIA ~ TN a COUNTY OP ~AlllOI
"CTITIOUS 8USIMEIS tn lh• W•ll•r of lhe E•l•le ol
NAMI STATEMllNT ERNEST F SIMPSON. •U ERNEST
Tiie foll-1119 perM>n> •r• 004119 FRANCIS SIMPSON, DK••MHI bu, .... ,... NOTICE IS HEREBY c;1vtN lo
NE WI.ANO MANOR. l TO , 1120-8 <redltOf\ ,..,.tnt cloiM>m -'"" llWI
WHI Cefll•••. $Miia Ma, CA"'°' w ld de<.e.,..,I lo Ille wld Cl•lm• In '"'
N••••nd SI•••' Ae>ertm•110, • office ot I.,. ct.,,. of lllt "'"'•HtCI llmllH PMINnlllP, l110·8 _, c;.... covrl "' IO -"'"' l.,.m 10 IN -
trtl,S.1111AN,CA'21'0f Otr\IQMd"' llWI olllu of MYl.ES A
SC '""'"'""'· In<., • ~lllornla CREED, i.i.-IM!•c" ll1¥d .. HIHll <OfPOt•flOn, l 120-8 -C41ftlrel, Saft• lnolOft 8HCll, CA ~I. •moch l•ti.r te ..... 0 '7104 office I> Ille pte<e of_,..., of Ille IHI
T llh b ul!Mn I\ ,Oftdlltted by • der\lfl'ed In •II .... 11er1 ..-n•lnlno to
lllnlltt<I P•rtne"Np. •••a o t•t•. Su<h <latm\ •1111 Ille
SC INVESTORS. IN<:, necen••y VOll<Mr\ "W'I be lilfd or Fr-c. Brou.11, prne11tttd " •IO<•Wld within lour
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'tCT1TIOUj 8USlllllH
•AMa ST,tT•M•MT
Tiit l•io.I~ ,.,..,..,, art OO•no
Dv\llltt\H
AHNATE ~Nev. 1tOll Ool~ a.-. """""G'!On 8oe<ll, c.. . ., ...
f WfYft Aklva, td t O.vti L•N• HIHlll"" ... 8Ncf\. C. .,...
•W•c. A .. t••, tt41t 0.•1' L•ne.
"""' ~'°" IM«l\, C. '7M• fll" lklatM u " COfl<IUCll'd by ..
99 ... r.1 ,.,._.Slltp.
("91.,.. 4111••
Thlt •-,.It flied w1lh n. c-1y " ... -of °'-Co\lflty °"
A119U'1 "· 1'71. ,......,
Pvolllflod Ot_,. Cile,I 0.ly PllQI ..... ». \ff!C, •• ,,, 20, lt71 •J01·11
PUBUC NCYflCE
Pre>\kltnl mofllhl attitr Ille llr\I PllOll<Allon ol
Tiii• 1lalemAr1I w11• 11\ed w1111 IM thh nollo . ll·lWt Covftly C1er1o; ot Or-C.ounly on Sep-O•le<I Stcltt<"Clt• S. l'79 N01'1C.W TO ctiaDl TOttS 1em~fll. 1918. KATHRYN A FOLEY .... A-"'70 f't*7• E•Kutrlo of, ... will SU"l"Olt CIOU•T Of' THE
Pul>ll>tle(!Or-C:O.ll D•llY Piiot otwlddlK_,,I ITATllOPCALlf'OltNIA .. Olt ~Pl ll. 10, 21. Oct.•. 1'11 •3'1·11 MY Lal II. C-llO YMI: COUNTY Of' O•ANOl ~.'::::~~. tn Ille #tlll•r ot 11\e Eot•1~ of
PUB C NOT C. ltll.IAN ~ITH ~LAHERTY ~h• LJ I E "_,,.....,_,,,CA., ... , Lll.LIANS.HAHERTY,0..••MCI
----Pwl>ll"*I Or-Coell Oatly Piiot .. OTICE •S HEREBY G•YEN 10
NOTIU OP Nl:AlllHO ON So-pt 6, IJ, 10. 7"1, lt11 .,. .. ,. ".Ollor\ ... ~ ... ct••-Q411MI '"" "''"
SAVINGS AMO LOAN f'AC:ILITY ·----------OK-I lot .. S.O Cl•'-•II 1M ot
A,.f'LICATION PUBLIC NOTICE Ike ol '"" <W1I of llWI • ...,....,.., c-1
NOTICE IS HEREllY GIVEN !Ml <1 or 19 II"•-....... lo,,,. ~~
Pllbllc ...... no .... -K-ul-.1 ..... -FICTITIOUS 8 USIMIH •I IM Of!k • ~WILLIAM E DENNIS,
Ille OE PARTMENT OF SAV•NGS MAM9 STATSMaNT ~::h•11•,1A1~.:,.01~!':'°"'p1:. CA•~'!.!.~' .. · ANO lOAN rel•llno lo ... "'""k •tlOfl _..,. -.... ~ • ~ --~ l>y USLIFE SAVINGS AHO LOAN AS· Tll• lot-lnQ ""°"' •. , 00tno MU°' .... ~ In •II ,.,..t..-~
SOCIA TION, U10 Wlhlltte 8ov1n•rd, bll\IM\\ •• "'111111 ... t•-.. 141\e ~h Cl..,,,,
LH AllO•I••. C•lllornt<1 't>Ole, tor "SOMETHING DIFFE RENT(' wllll '"" --v ..euclWn ,,_1 i. .,.rmlUIOll • ~141bll~" t ... lllly •I,,, S'10 W••Mr Aven.,., Hunlln9ton lllff ~ IWftelt .. I\ MO<'H<ltd wilhm
111 Ille lmmedtelt vt<111t1y ot llW 111-a..<ll, Calltoml•fJIMI tour "'°""" "'" Ille tlt\I J)W4>tt<'1IOll tene<llOfl ot J-8 Bovtevard •ncl Htflry J. TOOO 8> Heltn I.. TOdd, .A,.,., ftOlk•
Ml<Artllur eou•••.,d , C•lv ol 620 Sent• YMr Ori.,., HulltlftOIOfl 0•194~ t, 1'7t
N•wPOrl a. ... 11. County OI Or-8•e<ll, C.lllorN• "'4I K<ll-F Sl-
The ""••1"0 wlll 111 Mid •t lhe O•e>ert Tlli. l>ll>t""'' I• <ONlll<I~ by •11 In C•K\1111• of 11't w 11t
-Ill'\ ofllu •I 10 00 • m on t~ 1&111 dlwl011•• of "110-0.y ot Octotler. ,., •• , Room 8, Olh Ht l"" L todd WILLIAM •• Cl .... IS
Floor tOO Soutll C:ommonw .. 1111 Honry J Tooa • ...,_.,....,...., f l'th •••-' •n 111..a w1111 "'41 JU '1'111 A-A.,....,., L.ot AllOel••. C.lltorN• ~s. Coullh , .... _of 0r.~ COUftl• Oii S.p. c, ............ CAlllll ttl9Pl>O,.. m11 ,,..,,.., ·~ • The eflClllUlllOll h OC19ft t« PMlllk 111. ltml>e• 11, 1'71. TM: C7141 •M-tlll ~lloll Ill •cor-• wltll IM ~· 111-Pul>ll~ 0t"'91 Coe•I Dairy P1101
MIUl-1'\ "911'•110ftt •• ••t~ otflu Plll>llWd °'""" CH tl 0.11, ~II .. s.111 ••• u. ~ 11. ,.,. .,...,.
ot "'41 C)eP4111,,_c of""'""' 1fttt L041ft Sot!!' IJ, lO. 21, Del 4, "71 • -·~-71
OI IM Slllt OI CllllOmll ltKe.0 I t .00 -
South Commonw .. 1111 Av•nw. Lot
Ano•IH '<IOOJ or •I uo hnHme
PUBLIC NOTICE
\tr"I, $<111 fl'rlf\d.co '4!04. l'lc;T'ITiout IUllNIH
Wrlll1ft OOIKllOfl or OIMf -II· NAMI ITATaMllNT
menl\ re1ev1nl lo the •Pt1llullo11 Tiie lot~ ,,.,_ I\ 0o1no llutl·
\llOUld be 1114'1 Wlll't the ~t ...... t, MO <I\
.na. toOY detl ... red O< ..... led 10 Ille ENCOUNTE• 'JIAVEI., 1•1
APPllUlll, USl.,ll"E SAVINO$ ANO lhlb•• Avenue, llelDO• •\1•11d,
1.0A." A.SSOCIAllON, ~ 1a1er 11\en C41lllor1111.,._.2
()(to!Mr S. ~II. Al\y """on """Y ·~ VlrQtft•• C llrnw.,,, 141 ll•IDN
""•' •t '""-•no --~· .,. Ot•I •••11~•. l •ll>O• hl•nd, C•111or111• •l•temenl CllKI"') Ml •-• of 11"'9 .,..,t
llMlled l>y mot ..._,lr>Ooftl<et. ""'t(h Ill Tiii\ l><nlM" I\ tOftOll<lff l>Y""' I"
Ille CHe of ... y ""'°" -Mt llOI dlYIO ... I
lllect prior -··-OOIKI'-,,, lttler v1romie c:.•-00<wm.nl\ I\ to lie llmllte lo~ -• fll" •1•1-wet 11\ff with IN IMll ts mtflllte\ •n _ ....... O< W(ll C-IY CIH'll of Or-,_,,Of\'--,,,,,,,,r time .. .,... lie <tl-Dy 1"9 1-11. ltJI
..... , '"' offkAr PllblhNiO Or .... Coftl O•ilY Piiot ~ember 11. "" .., ... ,.
PUBLIC NOTICE
,.CTIT'°UI auttMH•
N._"ATaMaMT
Tiie IOI~ PtnOfl I\ 410of\O l>lftl· ... ... ,
AME RICAN MltVIG•S. ll~S
SkYP•"-Cll"C19 lutte 1. !r•tlll (A, .,,.. .
W1lllt M Otll NM, _. a 0cHft
80utt •••ll s 1(1, l.tf19 ... ~11, (A
'OICIJ t ~., bll\tfte .... l~lt4 l>Y ... lft
dl•10v•t Wltl1-~ Nw '"" ............... ,, ... .,..,. "" Clw~h (letl. cf Of ..... (Ou11ly .,.
Alltw\I , .. mt.
..
FOOTBALL
Area Sports Calendar . ' ' M14*1QtOCR ...,.
Wa .......... 4:.0l-et (I f9'e J 111
~' ...... ~ ..... .......... ~,-v ....... ~\
Hiii\ la IN c.r-d9I l!Mf, IW ...... Vlelu
°'-"'--~ ......... -. ~·-c.... c:_... ~ ..... •t u ......... ,
Ill cou.a ..
lil•le• .... Or-Qllonl .. ate -U1 ...... , ...... '°'°°" -.n ....... -~ .... -....... -~ .. ,.. Oc-.v.._-~.,..,..,, .. _ ........ , .. -..... ~ ......... ....,. 0.-. ........... ,._ ~, 1,, .......... ........._. s... c.-•· ..•. , ... cla el -.....,.., ,_,.,.el H""1t"ll\On ..... , ...... 11
Weier 1161• Oel0.11 W..1 ti Qle.-O•la IJI,
AIW"'"'., Or•iue CM~•" )01 ...,...,
.. .... .c"oo" .. ,.
'Mlllell terl~\ \lftl ... "11' •I Ml~
Vl•IO. Cate -•• Lft.-&..ell flltllll et
tleM Hiii~ ~ Hiii• •I lil w-• to'4I Or..,,
V-el W..t Tou-• 110 • m I, ~,., 0.1 •I
IWw-1 hetllQf, llMI-"' ~ .. -.. •I Sell••
Ana 1Nw1 -~AMI V•lley •• ,._,.<llft Velley •I "'-"'1 ....... 9M(ll Hlqll II), 1111-••
c ~·o,.. 0.1 Miit et W..lmlnwer II JO 1
Watet -~ clal -"""~IO'I Vl•IO OtNol vi.w .., -•flfl~ o-<11 •• ,,.. Moot• l •e•u• l°"rnen•lll . lj.,. .... , r Per~ al S•n
( lom•nle 1101
(rt>\\'""""''¥ r \t.nc.I• trvuw •NJ l 06'41' at
,,. ,...mmotll ln••lat-1 cou,aga -C.rO'l C.0-ry -0.....,. c... .. -~· .. MootP«\ lft¥11Atl-.OI
I -!Mii (.fll'~\ et "oMIClle0.1 ~ C.ol<.lolf\ Wttl
et 0••"419 0.." lbolh 1 'IOI
W""*~ No-b~
SPECIAL VALUES FOR
TODAY THRU SUNDAY
Se hoblo Espanol
4-PLY POLY TUBELESS TIRES
w~. S.ptembef 13. 1971 PILOT ADVERTISER DAILY PILOT U
For Rose Bowl Game Bast Returns
To Cycle Racing
Defending chornpion Mike
Busl will rnturn to s peedway
motorcycle racing fo'riday night
al the Orange County Fair·
J:rounds ln Costa Mesa in an et·
fort to quaury for lhlll year's
fm1ls at the same site. Satur·
duy, Oct. 14.
Ticket Drawing to Be Held
A sepuraled shouJder has kept
Rast out of two qualifying races
and he is still hurting. But hls
physici an h as gtven him
swrmisslon to ride at Ascot Park
Thursday night and in Costa
Mesa in the final two qualifiers.
Bast Is a five time national
champion.
COSTA MESA
PASADENA -The collegiate
football season has just barely
begun but it's already time to
enter the annual drawing tor
Rose Bowl tickets.
This will be the only public
sale of tickets for the 65t.b Rose
Bowl classic, being played in
Pasadena Jan. 1, 1979.
The Rose Bowl annually
matches the champions of the
Big Ten and Paclfic·lO football
conferences.
A total of 3,500 public seats are
so ld through the annual
FULLERTON
drawlns. The balance are
dlatrlbuted through tbe
part1clpat.lng univeralUes.
The contest opens Sept. 1S and
cloeea Oct. lS.
Tbe contest rules are simple.
Merely write your name and
addreaa on tbe back of a
standard-sized postcard and
mall it to: Rose Bowl Ticket
Drawing, P .0 Box 1800,
Pasadena 9U09.
There ls no limit to the
number of cards you may send.
Shortly after the closing date,
SANTAANA
1530 S. HARBOR BLVD.
PHONE: 870-0700
120 E. FIRST ST. AT CYPRESS
PHONE: 547·7477
R£PlAa DIRTY AIR FR TIRS NOWI Dowgard
COOLAIT AIR FILTERS
YOUR CllOla
~ FOi MOST AIUIW CMS
1ouamo!C! 1 ~!
AID
Alli-FREEZE Newt·--ty ... """' ........... ~.A_., for air~
ONLY I I ·2"
UMfT 6 GAL
1, 7~ cards will be drawn at
random and the sender of each
will be malled an applicatioo to
purcbue two tickets.
Ticket.a to tbe 1979 Rose Bowl
a.re priced at $17.50 each.
"The response to our annual
drawing ls overwhelming," said
Wllllam H. Nlcbolas, chairman
of tbe Pasadena Tournament of
Roses' football committee.
"Last year we received the
staggering total of 100,000 cards,
mailed from all parts of the
United States and Canada.
WESTMINSTER
15221 BEACH BLVD.
PHONE: 893-8544
77 .--+-.:~~ 24 ll IOYS' All> GlttS'
or 26 ll MBIS' & LADIES
10-SPIED lllES
PLUS
$1.69
f.E.T.
A7a.1lllACICWAU TUlflESS
27 MONTH
f71 ,,
llMITB> WARRANTY•'trii:::~~....,......,.,....
$
WHITIWAll TlllS
30MONTH •
UMmD WARRANTY
PEP BOYS
STILL GIVES A LIMITED
ROAD HAZARD WARRANTY*
AT NO EXTRA COST
2 POLYESTER RA.DIAl IOOY PLIES +
2 STEEL IEL TS
$
WHllEWALL TIRES
36 MONTH LIMITED WARRANTY*
• IHOMOWJ. YOlU~ IALANQ-TC>fo41 SUOf
CONUOl5
.. 11lllVllSAl•1lllCI
SIDE MlllOI
fGl llOSf WMl .-.s. ~ & ·-• A TTIACTIVf SO'fa S TllENOT'H
COHTOUlfO HfAl> NACnCAL AND 0000 LOOIDNG
<mo.GI YO• ... ,..,.:"'.., CllOICI u.
~ YGm CllOla
•<M-·-·29~
IYNeAUC>e
14 SOCKnS MlftlC
• UVHSfllf flATCHH 5!.a • ll/1'"' Sl'Alll P\UO SOClff
• $rtNNH HANOlf
• 3" & O"/XUMSION 1.0 • o\OAl'lf • METAL CASI
HUNTER
SPiii BAUllClllG
HAVI YOUR WHllU ICINITICAUY &
DYNAMICALLY IALANCID IY THI &.Aft
lLICTaONIC IQU.,MIN
. '"'"' .. e«-• ...... belonu.
• klo11<•• oll """"'' ct , .. 11.1k hloh-1 .... -4•·
3!
PEP BOYS-ffEAVY DUTY
SHOCK
BSORBERS
1 y,,·· rlSTON
~ WOlll thocb-1ltt 0 (O'!fforto411e ttolilo .i.-.......,. rood owoy.
ms Most
AA\llKAH CAIS
l---~· -..,e-_, .......... ~ _ .. ..,. __ ,, ___ .... --·s.:r.: .... -~-...., ...... _ •• c-__ ... , ... ~ _ .... ,....,,,
..._. .. \it .................. ....,............ ... .. ..... -:-:t-:..-·::-""...,._ ..... ____ ,__ .........
FOR CARS, TRUCK S,
TRACTORS, BOATS, LAWN
MOWERS & MOTORCYCLES
l~~D 97c
CAN UMIT•
lllW SfP IAI fltATMlNf Nllr\1
• 1,._p1ove tt-• cleon1n9 power of
go,.11,... leod•d & v"l•oded
• l(Mp (01bv1eto1 clean ._..ll!:.I • c .. p ... ,a~• ..,1 •• , & i~toh
lflonifoldo cleo"
..-,_ • f 111h1 "'" "' '"•' •r••-i: 11~
LIMll. ~:( 59 c • IA.
~ CARBURETOR
PCVVALVE &CHOKE
SPRAY CLEANER
I
-DAll.V PILOT Business
Smaller, Lighter Fords Debut
Turkefl Brigade
Gov. FAimund G. Brown Jr. officiallv 1omis the turkey
brigude as he accepts a ·'Turkey· Tech " T-shirt while
cam paignrn g Tut.·~day at a Town Hall meeting an
Stoc kton. With Urown 1s Sen . J o hn Garame nd1 .
0 -Stoc:kton. The T ·shirt is from Cal State Stanislaus
tocated in Turlo<'k. ·
DEARBORN , Mich <Al'I
fo'ord Motor Co ·a. 1979 cars are
:nnull\•r und lil(hler than earlier
mod,,ls. und meet nt>w, more
i.tr lnacnt fodl'rul fuel economy
to tundurcJs bulJWJl btarely
SpN1klng at Mondny's unveil
10~ or the company'K four new·
for 1979 hnt-s the f''ord LTD
and Mustanlil und Mt•rcury Mur·
qui" und Capri 1-·ord Ex
ecutlve Vlc·c President Wil liam
Cl Uourkl' suu1 the fleet average
1:s u hlllc over 19 mill's ix:r
~ullon
THAT' "SLIGHTLY m ex·
t 'bi>" of whut the law requires,
f\ourkl' ·mid, ud1.hn&;. "I don't
ft<t•I that b a real comfortable
po:.1llon "
'l'ht-19 mph requirement is an
ttvc ragt> fue l economy figure for
ull vchades an automaker pro-
ctuceg an u tiinglc model year.
fo'or each tenth or a mile its
fl «>t-t toll8 short of the standard.
a manufacturer may be fined $.S
for t'Vl'ry cur it produces in tbe
modc·I yt!ur
BVT BOURKE SAID Monday
that Ford has until November to
s ubmit Its final mileage figures
to the federal Environmental
Protection Agency, and he hopes
during that time to come closer
to the standard.
Bourke also said Ford wouJd
be offerln1t automatic s eat belt
~ystcm~. und air bags on some of
ats cars 1n advance of a I~ gov.
('rnmcnt rcgulatlon requiring so
<.'alled pasruvt' r cl>trul n ing
syslNns on <Ill U.S. buill curs.
The automatic belt.<J will come
ilS options on some small c3r11 In
the 1980 mooel year. he said.
while air bttgs will b<: introduced
on some larger 1981 models.
THE f'OVR MODELS in the
spotlight Monduy huve been the
subjects of a Sl.2 billion redesign
and re-engineering JOb by the
automaker.
Company offic ials s aid tht!
1979 Grand Marquis will be 17
inches s horter and more than
800 pounds lighter than this
year's model. The Marquis' stan
dard engine will carry Ford's
smallest engme. a 302 cubic-inch
displacement V-8
A larger 351-cubic-inch engine
with special i gnition a nd
carburetor controls will be op-
tional.
IN ADDITION, the Capri line
will come in several revised
versions, all bulll in the U.S. tor
the first time and au larger but
lighter than this year's Capris,
the company said. .
The 1979 model year also wUI
see the las t of the fullsize Lin-
coin Contlnentul and Mark v
luxury cars. which will be
:>caled down in l980. The Con
tinental's laracst V·H engine will
tw 60-rubic Inches smaller th1tn
In l978, company officials said.
The Cougar also will breathe
( IN HIGH GEAR J
Its last In IL'l current size and
turn in a smaller vers ion
Catalina Passengen
Triple for Summer
The Newport Beach-based CataJma Passenger Service launchcct-
its new boat, the Catalina Holiday, in June -and it took off
"We figured we 'd be carrying more passengers because It 's a big
gl'r boat." swd Bob Black the line's manager
"We really didn't anticipate the reaction we got "
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
AC C 0 RD ING TO Black's duced 28,366 passengers .
statistics. the new boat carried
more than three times as man~
passenge rs between Newport
Beach and Catalina between
June 10 and Aug. 31 as the
service carried in the full threc
summer months last year.
Black said he's not sure why
the increase in passengers was
recorded this year. although be
conceded the new boat and an
Avalon promotional campaign
may have played a part.
''T HE TIUNG THAT amazed
m<'." be said, "was that it went
so s moothly. The additional peo.
pie didn't create <tny additional
proble ms at either end or the
line."
The service operates out or t.iie
Balboa Pavilion, where traffic
a nd parking can pose problems,
but Black said none a ppeared In
s pit e of th e inc r ease i n
passengers.
Meetings, Semina rs Sclieduled
For 11 years the business has
run between Newport a nd
Avalon with the 145-passenger
Island Holiday.
Black said Newport isn't the
o n ly are a contribul:ng to
Avalon's tourist business. The
services operatmg out of the San
Pedro area also increased their
c apacity when the is land·!"
C h a m b e r o r Commer<'('
launched a major promotional
campaign. Aee ... t••U M eet
The Orange County chapter of
the National Association of Ac·
countants will hold its first
t~chnical meeting on Wednesday
ol the Elk's Lodge, Santa Ana.
Speaker will be Dr. Herbert E.
Miller, director of accounting at
the University of Georgia, and
the co-author of the Finnev and Mill e r serieti or accounting
tcxtbooks.
The cocktail hour starts at
5:30 pm and dinner at' 6:30
IJ.m .
More information is available
from Horten se Cas illa s at
521-4152.
l...,ltutt! to Mt!et
The Financial Executives
Institute will hold its first meet·
-m g of the year Thursday at 6
pm. at the Sheraton Hotel,
.Newport !Wach.
Speaker is J ames J. Rrice. CO·
chairman of Arthur Andersen &
Cu
Mor~ information is available
from Verne L. West at 635-72 10
at!al E••a•~ S tudlftl
E leventh in the works hop
series, "Meet the Professions"
will be held Thursday at 6:30
p. m. at the Uaywood Recreation
Center. I Raywood D r ive,
Newport Beach.
( TAKING
STOCK )
estate, pyramidin~ and the ef.
reels of Proposition 13 on the
real estate investor.
They are David R. Michelson
or D. R. Michelson & Associates,
Laguna Beach, and David Zam·
beroCf or Newport Beach
MichelR-On is genera l partner
of several real estate projects
ffnd h as worked with t ax
shelters; coal, oil and gas, real
es tate; tape recording and com·
modities. He is also a consultant
to the pension department of
Equitable Life Ass urance Socie·
ty of the United States. Zim·
beroff iS a real estate attorney.
Miles Metcalfe. C.L.U. will be
moderator
The public wa s invited ; seal·
ing reservations may be made
with Loeb Rhoades, Hornblower,
s ponsor of the series, at 640·5600
vanced seminars are scheduled
for Sept. 22 and 23.
More information ls available
from Edward E . Schmidt , the
bank's vice president of market·
ing, at 996·1300.
fi'~r ..... Selat!d~
Investme nt forums a'r e
planned each Monday at 7 p.m.
in the Catalina Room at the
Park Newport Apartments.
The free discussions a re open
to the public.
The Sept. 18 speaker is Cap
Moody, E.F. Moody & Associa-
tions, who will discuss "How to
Maximize Real Estate Profits."
The SepL 25 speaker is Bob
Demmler, Merrill Lynch, Pierce
Fenner and Smith, who will dis·
cuss "Do You Want To Double Your income.,"
C'ha•Wr to Gi1't! Data
/\ four-part seminar in small
bus iness marketing will begin
Tuesday. The sponsor Is the Ba•ker to S peak Newport Harbor Area Chamber
of Commerce. Cost is $25 for Virginia Burroughs . vice mcm bers and $35 fo r non·
pres ident and e s c r o w ad-members .
minislr at.or at Valencia Bank, Seminars will be held from 4
will be the principle speaker at a to 6 p.m. at the cha mber, 1470
series of escrow excha nge J b R seminarstobe sponsoredbythe am oree oad. Newport Beach. bank at the South Coast P laza William Fawcett will speak
Hotel, Costa Mesa. Tuesday on "Marketing -The
Beginner's seminars are set Blueprint for Increased Sales.''
Two speukers will discuss
ways to in c rease le ve rage
thr ough r efinancing of real for Friday and Sept. 29 , ad· On Sept. 26. Claude M. Niesen ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-'-~~~~.;....~~~~~~~~~
When it co1nes
I to borrow• there's~~
tlpgg as
a "dumb" question.
Stores
Report
Increase
Nordstrom Inc., Seat-
tle-based company that
operates a store in Costa
Mesa and plans another
In Brea, has reported
that sales for its second
quarter ended July 31 in·
creased 27 percent to
$78 ,874,000 f ro m
$62,026,000 for the like
quarter of 1977.
At Newport Home Loan, we think tht> s mart p1.•npll' an.• tlw
oneo; who do a&k qut>stions -lots of qut'C>lion ~. [w n th''
question!> that seem "cl1.'mcntary".
Q.: Can I use the money from a secondary real estate
loan for a ny purpose?
Ne~ort Hom e Loan: Yes, wh ether it's business or
p easure, the money is yours to spend any way
you wish .
Q: Could I be making more m oney by reinve ting
-my equity in other real estate?
Newport Home Loan: Very probably. A lot of mart
people are doing just that.
At Newport H om e Loan, we know that borrowing money
fo r even the best reasons is often an intimidating ilnd con·
fusing experience. Not with us. We w ant to do business
with inquisltiyc people who wonder if their current equity
in a home 61 other real estate might be doing more fo r
them. If you've got the questions, we1re sure we've got
some answers that will make you glad that you asked!
Home Loan~ Inc.
II\ I '~II>~-·" I II
For the six months
ended July 31, sales in·
creased 23 percent to
$132 ,688,000 rr om
$108,224,000 for the 1977
fi rst halt
NET EAflNINGS tor
the second quarter in·
cr eased 23 percent to
$3,191,000, or 65 cents a
s hare, compared with
$2,6-01,000, or 53 cents,
for the 1977 period.
l"or the six months,
net earnin gs were
$5,075,000, or $1.04 a
sha re . a 6 percent gain
from the $4,805,000, or 98
ccni,g, In the 1977 first
ho tr.
Cons truction is to
start in this month on a
125,000·Square-foot store
ln Aldcrwood Mall North
of Se attle and in Nov-
ember on a 110,000
square toot store In
: Brea.
v
THE At.PERWOOD
: store 14 itet lo open Oct.
~ 1. 1979, and the Brea
.. store Nov. l , 1979. ? Nordstrom said its
.. director~ have declured f a dividend of 11 cc>nt.s 3
, shuc. parable Friday to r •harcholder8 of record
!
J7 C,•rp<)rot1· Plo:a N1·11•pt1rt Bradt, Cnl1fi1rnia 92660 714 (6-lfl·'135ll -------------------------__..jo Aua. 31
a nd Ralph Corning will present
"How to Develop a Marketing
Plan."
Thomas Gillen will discuss
"Advertising -/\re You Getting
Your Money's Worth?" On Oct.
3. and Gloria Zigner will speak
on "Public Relations -Without
Shovels" on Oct. 10.
More information is available
at 644·821 l.
T H E CATALINA Holiday
!'lakes the same daily round trip
an the same 2.S hours, but it can
carry 425 passengers .
Black said that in the three
s ummer months of 1977, the
Is la nd Holiday carried 7,851
passengers.
Star ting with the Catalina
Holiday on June 10. the three
sum m er months thJs year pro·
O ver The C ountfl'r
NASO L.istiwqs
HE SAID TOTAL tourists vis·
its to thE: island are up by a bout
25 percent this summer .
"They're busy. but nobody
seem s to mind since they still
depend on tourism financially ...
he said.
lip • a11d Do.,..
MUTUAL FUND S
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• , •v ti )4 H•rl 0th It! NL 1na.p t II 10 ~ PIO!lffr l'uncl w '""' • 114 t ~ woea "'-" ~, °""" 00 .. tO. Herl Lev IJ. NL MH\ •I •I 12.. "Uncl "., 17 ~ '" 01 \.. I <MV•O S3 ..... L Ill ~= :ut ~t ! Ii SI) 2Ut NL Hlf.:Ylf ,, ,,., ~I 111.._1 II ,, c p I ... , lft ,, Ill 14 "''"w •tin "°l ~,?.: ,'.iJ' g' !t ~f,:;:.n~, U fl Nl ~:, 'i.A.~ .~ W .r~ M:b :~ ~ lUt :i:,,~"v :: J 1~ .. ''~:,,.nr;«:'U \ ~ .,,,.. •l' ~ N\. ,..(I t t i I n Eth•" h • .. ISi Or911p MIO 14 .. ,, ii l'Hrrno I) f.3 I).. Iv 'd \ • \ r-• 11..,. c-l'elrltd 11 11 t? M Cirwlll \ U l" MFO 1$ 11 ~ "4 Price llllftltl r04 ~ S S •l
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7
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to\ l'Ct
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~. -~. ~-··" ~·~ ~ _..., -
STOCKS I BUSINESS
W dnt> doy'
C lo in~ Pri •es
.... ...
I• fl ...
NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
-. •. ••
0-..l•l-lfttl~ l•.00\.., "'9 ,._.. 'fo•ll.. M~l ~ltl(, l'IW • ....._., Oltl'Oll end CIM lllNll .iO<ll ··~-•-1!Nlby l1'o Neli•n•l l'l\-1.1...,Gll *•""i.' Du ...-. eftd ,.,,11,,.1
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•
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Wedneeday, September t3. 1978 VN DAIL 't PILOT •1
Tables T111-D.
'Cheap' U.S. Labor Tappeil
By MIL TON M081'0WITl ~
llow the world hus chaniied. American companlia
uaed to be criUclzed harshly for tst.abllshtng plan~ ova«)
seas to lake advantage of cheap labor. Now foreign cont
panles arc cominf here to establish plants to take "dvQ>
Lage of our cheap abor. ·~
~merican labor. we shou.Jd point out quickly. Is not ecr
acUy cheap. But as the European aand Japane.e econom o
have surged aheod. and as the dollar has declined In valUf-
againat foreign currencies. the respective labor rates hat e
moved closer together
RF.StJLT: MANY F OREIGN COMPANIES find ll
makes seru.e to tap the U.S. market by manu!acturio•
here rather than exporting Crom their home countries.
Examples of this shift abound.
Sanyo. a major J aparwse TV set maker. has alf·
nounced that lt will put a plant in San Diego. where Sony ta
a lready auembUng receivers. A couple or y~ars ago San19
acquired the Warwick electronics pl nt in Arkin••·
where m a ny or the •
Sears. Roebuck TV sets : ..
are made. Sanyo has ....
obvious ly discovered ~
that it likes manufac ,
turing here . .. Another Japanese
e lectronics producer.
Toshiba, has also announced that it's coming to the resc.a.
of the jobless Amer ican. It's building a factory (J)
Nashville to produce color TV sets at the rate or 150,000 ~
200.000 a month.
That brings to five the number or Japanese manuf4,\C·
turers producing television sets here. The two others &(c
Mitsubishi and Matsushita.
How can you say they are J apanese products when they are built here?
A DRAMATIC EXAMPLE OF HOW the Nies of thl'
game have changed was last month'ii announcement by
Mego lntematlonal that It was going to bu~·Jd a manu!ac·
turing plant In Bohemia on New York's Loo Island.
Mego ls a New York·based marketer o toys and dolll.
that has had a meteoric rise s mce its founding 25 years
ago. It's doing S7S million of business a year, which make:.
it one of the 10 largest companies in the toy Industry. Thi•
mte restinR feature or this advance is that Mego has nt:ver made a toy in the United States. It geLc; all its products
from Hong Kong. Taiwan and Japan. The plastics and
other parts will still com e rrom those places, but the toy~
wlll be made here In Mego's first U.S. plant.
Volkswagen opened a Rabbit assembly plant in
Pennsylvania earlier this year. The aim was to produce cars
.hal would cost less than ones Imported rrom Germany
~owever. Volkswagen has posted a $200 increase in the 197'9
Rabbit custom model, bringing Its base pMce up to S4 899
!ven thouRh lhis model Is beinR produced here •
Market Domirwted
By Gambling Stocks
NEW YORK <AP> -Gambling issues dominated ac·
tivlty again wi the stock market turned In another mlud showing todav. •
The Dow Jones aver age o! 30 lnduatriahs was on 6.84
points to899.80.
Galners maint.alned a small lead over losers. ho'liever,
in among New York Stock Exchange.fisted issues
St~lul•Tlw s,, ....... ,
..
OotDl••nA r.r•~
SALES
NEW YORK CAPI NY \loci. ~•lo
AlllWO• 1"'-4 • •J,lA0,000 PthlOll\ CUY • . • • M,d .000 -.II •OO .. • • • • • • . • • . • • • • • 41,.00.000 MO"ll• 4tOO • .... •• • • ~.uo,oeo Yeer -oo •• .. • .. 11,1'0,000 f-, • .,_, eoo , •. ,.. . •• IUI0.000 J.n I to o.!e •• ., , ,. • \, IS.,lOl,U)
1n1 to Clet• . . • . ••• l,t.Jt...,O,Olll
"" to Cl41l• ., • • . • . J,143, ttJ,JSl
-AT 4UUX 010
NEW YOfU< IAP ..
7
..
\ "'
. .
I . ,
I
• CWLYPILOT
MARMADUKE
"That'' no ploco to si t ond survey your
kingdom 1 •
FUNKY WINKER BEAN
(
SHOE
MOON MULLINS
...
AWWWK!
WELL,OK ··I
WAS<:oNNA
Pf(>ACilCE: ON
'SM MYS~LF,
BUT SINCE Y,A
UKEMUSIC
o foN.JCH.~
GERIATRIX
.--~~~~~~--.--~~~~~~-
lOON'T~MA~l/Jt6e~ RE-AU. 'I .,.._,T
~~~!
DENNIS THE MENACE
,__%_~_-'_<_• -wJ ---.
~-13
MISS PEACH
. At TH~~·~
At:Wtte •
()~How Tl
8fAf 'nf
~1'· t.AlE .. > 09 "l~
by Tom Batiuk
by Wm. F. Brown and Mel Casson
l
F lf.'9r, YDI..( HAV"
'TO ~£.1' 1'ME
Flt'ON1' MON!.Y ...
I
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(~
~
by Mell
criJ ·:..,.,_ ..............
f..11
AGATHA CRUMM
by Jtff MaicNelly DR. SMOCK
GORDO
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MeAN'"f"' NOTHING 'TO YOLJR
FATHeR!
NAH! PAP eveN PAIP FOR
YOLJl'-JGP J>J.,,. t..eVY'S
eAR Ml"f"ZVAH ...
MOTLEY'S CREW
by Ferd and Tom Johnson
LOOK, HELGA ... HO OHE WILL SU5f'ECT YOO
Of HAVIH<i ~OT DORElL! THE POLICE
ARE CEATAIH IT WAS~! TMl5
MEAH5 MY FATME~ ESTATE WIU eE
OOA5 ... AHO WE'LL 6£1' MAMtEO!
---
TME BISCUITS HE
LEFT UNDER Tl-IE
REFRIGERATOR
by Gus Arriola
ALL IHI: ~····Z COtJJ..D USE A Booze MtSTl/.JG1 R IBHT ).K)W'
.. . . ./' . •
•
~OMICS I CROSSWORD
PEANUTS by Charles M. Schulz
WHAT ..\~E
THf SE NOTCME5
tN L(OIJR
ROOF F<lR ?
I'll SET THAT'S rl
ISN'T IT? ONE NOTCH
PR08A8L '{ 5TAAD5 FOR
FIFT't' PIZZAS!
MA~6E i SHOULD
PUT THE NOTCMES
IN 1-jEf<'. HEAD ...
by Bill Hoest
'rt>o t<MOW,
WINNIE, Wt4£M
l0MA
PE0f'5TRIAN I
···A6 I MAT£ T~~
PE'OE~TRIAN!>
WHEN t'M ~ ORIVE~!
I HAT~ ORl~RS --""' ALMO'ST'
A6MOCH ...
I ~
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by George Lemont
ANP osec> 1'1" AS -rHe ceN--reRF»1ece
ON "T'HES e>UFFli'"f '"f"Ae>t...e A'"f MY e>AR MITZ:.VAH .1 -r---.--($>.
by Templeton and Forman
TIDAT'S caassnu RIZLI
ACllOSS SI Cehtt Ofiest
1 T·Mtn. ett. S3 CMC em-
S Pub game ployee
10 Judge's 57 Geome1ric
bel>ell form
1' Oeo•n 61 MIP!e genus
IS Dialect 62 Mill item: 2
16 Lamb pseu· words
clonym &C F•nna
171l81Sell\ 6S Arab. pnnce
velue 66 Italian town
19 Sand ndge 67 Swtrt
20 Bngll1 68 Dllllcn
21 Crew mem· 69 Otlle·s Pi)r1•
bets n8f
23 Fury DOWN
26 Sp river 1 Tenor
26 Mos1 shabby 2 1987 Monl·
29 VariOUs real event
34 "Ttlat's not 3 Plunges
--Ideal" 4 Spread
35 Fr~h de· lfOUnd
111nment S Tito, e 9
37 -cotta: Ce· 6 Go on -
11mte clay -Ear 38 French coin S0¥'"11'Y
39 llolld ma· 1 Narrow '" chines lel 41 Peddle lln -42 lllV one
44 011\ef Wholly
45 Test groood: g 81ot~
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wordf 11 A1tringen1
48 Fett one·s 12 Blue Jeya or
way Dodger•
50 Pu1 on \3 F rendl city
UNITED F•ture Syndicate
T~'a Plmte So1¥1ct:
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24 Connolled wltfl•
26 Hetb Equ•I 10
11 H1bilat 49 R1111Jltt
28 -Ste 52 Wirt ege1n;
Meue Abbt
JO Undergtands S3 Repute 31 Group ol S4 Reh soklter5. gerated 32 Delete
33 Vent1Hed S6Mtoe1
36 AIC:llC 9•· study of
plorer and 56 Alllllla clly
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membet Abbf.
40 Study CUS· 60 P11.cflse
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#
Chonnrl ~i•fing•
9 KNXT 1CBS) Lo<; Angelec;
Q KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles
1J KTLA find I Los Ang eles
Q KABC TV (ABC) Los Angeles
Cl) KFMB (CBS) San Diego 0 KHJ· TV (lnel ) Los Angeles
[§) KCST (ABC) San Diego
• KTTV (Ind ) Los Angeles
Cl) KCOP·TV (Ind.) Los Angeles
fl) KCET· TV (PBS) Los Angeles m KOCE·TV (PBS) Huntington Beacn
Vigoda
Wo1i't
'Roots' Does It Again
Be Back
By JERRY BUCK •
HOLLYWOOD (AP)
/\be Vigoda soys he
ha ~ bl!en unable to reach
d !>a lctQ' agreement with
lh l' p roduce r s o f
"Barncv Mall er" and
wa ll not return to the
A BC series as previous-
ly anticipated.
V igoda le ft the h il
police comed y series
two years ago when ag-
ing. :.ailing and cynical
Detective Fish was re·
tin•d and spun off inlo a
Sl'rll'S called "Fish "
A BC canceled the series
after two yearl.
THE .\CJ'OR said he
was leavi ng tooay for
C h i c a go, w he r e h e
would s tar for six weeks
in Neil Simon's "God's
Favorite" at the Ari·
lngton Park Theater.
AP Wire_.....
NO MORE 'FISH'
Abe Vlgoda
VlGODA SAID he was
unable to reach a salary
agr eem e nt for gues t
~pot::. and a t wo-hour
fil m lo Ix' s hot in New
Yo rk for s howing an
Europe. lie said, ''The
fact that I am going to
Chicago for a six-week
enga gement and a week
of rehearsals indicates
t hat we'r e very f a r
apart. That's a lot of
time to be away from
Hollywood."
Vigoda spent his early
NEW YORK <AP> -ABC wrapped up its sum-
mer rerun season with a s uccessful rebroadcast of
the hit miniseries "Roots," t.aking fi ve of the top
six spots in the A.C. Nielsen Company's weekly
prime time ratings.
The last chapter in the five-part "Roots" re·
run, Sonday night. had a bigger audience than any
other program during the week ending Sept. IO.
T he Miss America Pageant, telecast on NBC
during a break in the fi ve-day run of "Roots." was
No. 2. followed by the second, third, fourth a nd
first episodes In the record-breaking miniseries.
ABC FIRST AIRED ''Roots" in J anuary 1977.
attracting lhe biggest audience ever for a TV
s ho w. ABC estimated the audience for the
miniseries. broadcast in eight parts, at 130 million .
The network calculated 80 million saw at least
some of the rerun. ·
The rating for the final installment of "Roots"
Sunday night was 26.2. meaning of all the homes in
the country, 26.2 percent saw at least a part of the
installment. Nielsen says.
The a ver age rating for the initial broadcast
was 44.9, and 25.4 for the rerun, ABC said .
ABC DESIGNED THE rebroadcast of "Roots"
as a lead-in to its fall programming, which began
Monday CBS and NBC begin their new seasons
next Monday, though the two networks had some
new programming during "Roots" week.
ABC's rating for the last week of its summer
season was 22.4. compared to 16.3 for NBC and 13.6
for CBS. The networks say that means in an
aver age prime time minute , 22.4 percent of the
"T h e f a c t t h at
n egotia tions be tween
my agents and the pro·'
duc e r s o f 'Ba r n cv
Miller ' where unproduc·
tive has prompted me to
r etu rn to the s tage,
where I ori~inally came
from ." said Vigoda.
years on the Broadway ----------------------
esuttsCount ! !
"1 was just infor med
that openin g n&ght is
sold out. !.<> l feel pretty·
good a bout it."
stage until his role as a
gangster in "The God·
father " brought hi m to
prominence. He was a
member of the origina l
cast of "Barney Miller"
when it premiered on
/\BC in January 1975.
~11tt!Tonight ,Reporter 4 Mike McKeown
hosts a sixty minute
special on one of
Orange County's
most controversial
problems.
LIVE
7:30PM
W• M•• c--4 I Olaf M:• ._ _....,.. ____ ... _
.... n -co IZ 4fCI... • .... Mikle -·--··-.. -ell'n>H·'------SOVTM COAST ACTO•I CO.of' (714) 957-0212 J7D alrcll. .. _, a..c•
fJD~ldl!:§iiWAB
~ A great
place for kids.
John
Travolta
Olivia
Newton -John
isthewonl
A PARAM()JNT FICTOOE {ffi
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UA c-...w, .... 1ter 17141 HJ.Ol46
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homes in the country with television were turned
to ABC. Aside from "Roots" and "Miss America," the
five otber shows in the week's Top 10 were new, ln·
eluding ABC's Monday night pro football game
between Dallas and Baltimore. No. 8. A preview of
NBC's new "Sword or Justice" series was seventh
in the ratings .
CBS LISTED FOUR of the last five shows
ranked, starting with No. 42 "Wonder Woman"
and followed by "Ali ce" and "The Incredible
Hulk" and Sunday's telecast of the U.S. Open ten·
nis tournament. NBC's "Bay City Rollers Meet the
Saturday Superstars" was 46th.
Here are the week 's 10 most-watched shows :
"Roots," conclusion. with a rating of 26.2
representing 19. l million homes, ABC; "Miss
VISit
·Bogey
ovet' 200 other fuut Stars
at World Famous
The Biggest Gathertng of Stan In the World.
·A ·n
THEATRES-ORANGE COUNTY
,.._.
"'SA TUROA Y HHIHT "'91" lat
Wt • .,,... ()Ml • OM. y-.......
MANN'S "REVENGE OF
CIMEIWMO THE ptNK PANTHER" (PG)
14MS..MIMI .._ .. ,~,,~
....... "COMYOT" 1n.11e1 ,,.., ..... ,,__.,...._,•~• ......
MAMM'S "GO TB.l 1"t '"Aft.'Y!t' CJMEMAUMO •&&•-•"'',_.,, 141' It ...-...,,.. OttlYll" = , tA&T_,_l .... SAT,.__..l~,_I .... ,..,,...
'"THI C.HOllM"' Ill -IAf/w-1,.._ ...
··-·--.... ... .,.,.. --.......
"" -. • , • 4 • ..
•
Tla11r•day·11 1
Dayf iar Movir• ' AFTERNOON
12:00 CJ * * •. ,., "Batlle 0 1 'hO
S ean·· I 19601 P111••
Sefle111. Constance Cumm·
•nos An t1tttaency e•P41"
couns de&th wnen s111e •
begins onvestogat""il a ~·
Mt&bllShed ScottlJh lonn
11nr .30 m1n 1 I aJ * *·~··Lust For GOid""
f 19'191 Ida Lupino, Gi.nn
Ford A scN!mlng wo<nan
t loPS at notlltng to c1111m
Ille riel1M of the LOCI Dutchmaro mine I 1 l>r • !iO
mini
2.'00 D •••"Go West,
Young Man·· I 19361 Mat:
Wes1. Randolph Scoll Th.,
lldventuree or a ITlOYMI Siar
on a pet50'1al eppearancfl
tour (I hr • 30 min I
3:00@) • • '"' "Pe1am11 Party"
( 19641 Tommy Kirk
Annelle Funo<:ellO. A Met 1
1tan callt off • Planned
11wesoon when he tells on ;
love With • t>ea0t1ful Earth· ~
11119 I 1 hr. 30 min.I I
3:30 D • * • "'light In The f
Piazza·· (19621 OIMa d(' I
Hevfnanct. Rossano 8tau>
The mo1her ot 1 mentally·
retarded young women "• ,
torc:eO to decode of be<
oaugtiter wtll marry Of 'be t
sen1 eway. (I hr . 30 m1n.1 1
ID Ratings
America Pageant." 25.9 or 18.9 million, NBC :
"Roots," part 2. 25.6 or 18.7 million, "Roots," part
3. 25.5 or 18.6 million. "Roots." part 4. 24.9 or 18.2 million. "Roots," pa rt 1, 24.6 or 17.9 million. all
ABC; Blg Event -"Sword of J ustice.'' 23.3 or 17
million, NBC; "NFL Monday Night Football," 22.2
or 16.2 million, ''Eight is Enough," 21.8 or 15.9
million. and "La verne a nd Shirley." 21.1 or IS.4
million. all ABC.
THE SECOND lO:
··wonderful World of Disney," NBC: "Happy
Days.'' ABC: "M·A·S·H ... CBS; "Dick Clark and a
Cast of Thousands .. and "Quincy, M.E .," both
NBC : "36 Beautiful Girls from Texas," ABC :
Tuesday Night Movie -"Happily Ever Arter."
CBS: Saturday Night Movie -"Magnum Force"
a nd "Kaz." both CBS. t ie · and "Grandpa Goes to
Was hington." NBC.
We'N gelling slraletl, dJeHed,
bombed aad bluled.
JI.ad II l1a'I even
our damaed war!
BURT t.AllCAS'ft:R ~ "'00 TCLL "'la: SPART II.Mr -·~• CJIAJO WA890N MAJIC SlllOCll )OICAT>IAll OOUl8Mint <>·-., TCD POST .....,...,,. .. AU.AN I' llOOOH _, M?TCHEL&. CAHlfO(.O
•-"~" '"WOfDtLL MAYD ...... .,....,.. ......... .,.._.,..._, OAN1tL f'OflD c---MICKA1l. r i..t0N1: -"""'-" .... ~ .. --A ........ ~.._ ..... ~ .......... ..--. ,_.-,.en
.. AVCO D<llA9JT PICTURlll tw-fii'[::'ii~-:J~
1
J
7
..
8J8 DAILY PILOT
Tangled W.E.B. Woven
By JA \' ~HAll9 TT
LOS ANGELES I AP 1 Bud dhtl()lu bufb
"1ll have a arand hmt· ton11&hl and Thursday wllh
NBC'1i two pitrt dt•but or "WE 8 ." a liearinc
~rie or raw <'motion ond stuff al a fourth-rated
network It air. at IO v'cl()('k on Chann 14
The be. t oraatory 1& from it ruthtn. youna pro
1i1rami. C'h1el to .i •co:.auve youna producer who ,.
$30 m11Uon, 30 hour docunwntary may coat the
Oelwork 14uy hh, job If thot happens. the moaul
warns
· · I wlll pul '" If call to Vcau to 11omcr
cblldhood rr1.-nd." or mint• •ho ""Ill aet your lea•
bu l~d m t'l1thl pla~ei. and your ean cut off r>o
:you l\~or me. Mr Produt't•r ....
"W.t:.8 . •• I MADE BY Lin Bolen. the youna
une11&1. u .......
AM.AL 11981M
A UNM:~ PICM\C ltCHNICOlOR•
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OWIMI' ...._ 2 COTIMY 21
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form er NBC daytime proarams boi.s. Her epac
~tlltll Pumttlu Bt•llwood . a .cood uctrcss cast ui. the
youn" ht••HI nC duyt1n11• ~how~ <it lhc TAB
Televlslon nt'twork
TAD stands for Trons·Amcn ca Broadca~t1ng.
but NOC 11uys an ruture i.hows it'll mean Trans·
All1&nllc Broud<:u~ltnJt A l.111( chilnac. bul there's
~nother. TAH'K r urrcnt prc~ld nt only will survive
two naght11
---------NBC i;u ys J ohn TV llE\11 EW Coll<·o11 . now play in"
hun. will be succeeded in ._ ________ future shows by Steve
McNally. The series ' re
gular Thu~day run sturls Sept. 21, unless NBC
l'hunat.'I it to St'pt 43. or something.
The rc1euluri. Alex Cord as the wicked pro·
grumli ~. Andrnw Prine us the glib. cynical.
bo<wnai 11ulcs chief. lloward Witt us the kindly
operauona boss. L••t• Wilkoff as a chief research
ncbbi11b. and RJchurd Uasehart as a veteran. over
thl' hill news chlt!f
ZAl.MAN 'KING GUESTS as David Howell.
lhe young documentary-maker. He and daytime
1)ro1ramio c:hlef Ellen Cunningham I Bellwood 1
spend their nights together They seem to be lov·
ens, too
She. u jjUccesi.ful but not ruthless executive.
really likes him. She notes they've been together a
yeur now. Sax months, he says.
'Tm a tclev1s1on freak," she wryly sighs.
''I'm a!ways a sax-mo nth season ahead of myself.··
This exchan"'e occurs late at night at her
apartment during some sort gasps and warmup
woo that is abruptly interrupted by Cord when he
arri vcs to berate her beau and threaten his legs
and ears.
JUST BEFORE THIS, Cord and the rest of
TAB brass have been berated by TAB's president
at an emergency program meeting.
Seems the boss thinks Howell's $30 rtlillion
documentary, "Our America," is a "dlstorted. ·
sick . vicious attack on everything I have ever
thought our country lo be." Worse. he's even seen
the show.
He won't air it. tie gives his troops 24 hours to
find a substitute. Our heroine. an imperiled
Pauline ir ever. tries to salvage the documentary
amid rampant s neers by Cord and anger from her
lover.
Al one point. the shocked producer says of his
opus to Cord: "I was told you loved it." And
hears this from the programs chief : "I didn't look ----------------fill al it, kid. I hire people lo look at it." ,Nli\flf!t. -J ... ..otn • NHMT wwa.a Wonder 'who NBC hired to inspect "W.E.B. ·:
l,!JLfb A....._ WHO'\L l~THI IWNl1I> It's a turkey that has the flavor of last year's "79
TNI DIHYUIW> Park Avenue." All it will do is make you <a) laugh ,
-----------------yourself silly and <bl send condolences t.o the cast. l•••r~;;:;~ ,_... MUAI .:~~'!:, llYINGI Of ,. .. ,ANINll(N ) ·~m=cm:11111~"4~·~2~~J KUS ...:: _____ •_NTD_NA_n_ONA __ L _v1_Lv_"_1"°-'-.. Bimkers' Chairs Shown
WAHIM MATTY e .IUllt CNlllTII
HIAYIN c:: WAITCPOI WASHINGTON IAPl -The chairs used by
ONI AND ONLY1P01 Archie and Edith Bunker in the "All in the Fami· -----------------tCJ ly" television series will be displayed in the "Na-
_, 11TNOUS • u.u' •au• lion of Nations" exhibit at the Smithsonian lnstitu-~c.ot lion's National Museum or History and Technology
OOI TO &ILLY JOl(N I beginning Sept. 20.
--~~-----. fAn -WAT e JOMMT Uf IOllCS
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'UIS auacOUT ,.,
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~Am mm (PG)
Dino Joins Angels
ENTERTAINMENT I TELEVISION
Movie
Studio
Indicted
WASHINGTON <AP\
20t h Century-Fox
Fiim Corp. was indicted
by tt federal grand jury
Tuesday on a criminal
contempt charge alleg·
ang the rarm required
movie theater~ to accept
poor films in order to
!'how leading attrac·
t1om•
Dean Martin .J.!Uc~t s in a rare dramatic rolt-on te!ev1s1on in
tonight's s pecial two-hour season premiere o r Charlie: ... Ange b a t H
o 'cloc k on ABC . Chann<:I 7 The Angels. from left. are Cher yl Ladd
Kate Jackson and Jc.at'ly n S mith 'fhc cp1sodt' wa!> filmed on
location in Las Vega~
The ind ictm e nt
cha rgtd 20th Century
enf(:>gcd 1n a practice
known as block-booking
•n distributing lhe mo·
11on picture "Star
Waa i.." the highes t,
~rOSMOfZ him an history.
The company was ac
(used of fore an~ theate::rs
to s how · The Other Side
u r M1dn1ithl." a
..1 (!n1rtcontl y le~s s uc-
ct:ssful movae. in order
to obtain tht• r ight to
i.how "Star Wars.··
Actress Raps Critics
WASHINGTON (APJ The play
was "The Last or Mrs. Che yney," but
British actress Deborah Kerr had the
last word and the last laugh.
len new play. l :,ay. · · was ht 1
res pons~. The contempt t'italion
r.tcm!) from a Z7·year old
court orde r that pro-
h1b1ts block-booking. Miss Kerr. a usually serene beauty
on stage and screen. had a rew tart
words for critics who found the 1925
revival badly dated.
And. as for critics who fa ulted the
actress for playan~ the piano with one
hand. she said they obviously weren ·~
up on their music. she w11s playing CJ
·nocturne for the left hand.
Th ~ indictment wa~
returned 1n feder~l court
1n New York Caty
"Better a good r<.'v1val than a rot·
JUST WHEI YOU THGUIHT IT WIS
SIFE TD ID BICK TD THE MOVIES
PETER. SEl.LEAS
~'~'lllWI HeuE&T LOM•lleat WEISEi
111a1i ' DYAN CANNON;
MwN NeMIY MANCINI • Eatc1111•c Pr4411W TOIY AMMJ
Scru" ru1 b1 FUNK WALDMAN·IO• CLAa~·~ EDWARDS
.-K NICHOLSON
OHEFU.WOVER 111E~if'SNEST
ffi
'n"';!l.1'/,.., ~1
A~/lllQ/l4Nlrrt.11 'Jl'oU'"'""""'•ir;111rYl'ftUm1 nx1rm 1¥1.u·
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c1neuame 6 scAEen
634 2553 comPLEX
C"1om•n A••
" S1n1> An• F~ . ..,,,
MATINEES SATURDAY & SUNDAY
"'SGT PEPPER'S LON El Y
HEARTS CLUB BAND'" <PGl
'"SMOKEY ANO THE BANDIT'' (PG)
"'GONE IN 60 SECONDS~
"SOUND OF MUSIC"
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"THE ONE ANO ONLY'"
"HEAVEN CAN WAIT" (PG)
"FOUL PLAY .. (PG)
STRDIUm 6sc:Ree n
639 -7860 DAIVE-ln
"FOUL PLAY" (PG)
"FUN WITH DICK & JANE ..
"CORVETTE SUMMER'"
"JOY RIDE" (PG)
"THE BUDDY HOLLY STORv··
"THANK GOO IT'S FRIDAY'" (PG}
AN"IMAL HOUSE
'
"HEAVEN CAN WAIT"'
"AMERICAN HOT WAX-(PG)
"SMOKEY & THE BANDIT" CPG>
"GONE IN 60 SECONDS ..
AU DIJYl-4MS 0PtH 7:00 P.M. MtcMm. Y
Cftlld UnO•• t Z ~ro• Unl~H • l(ld01e Puy-,round
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WHERE THE BEST PICTURES PLAY
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: INSIDE : •Slim Gourmet •Club calendar
.
•Special Diets •Ann unders
Table Full of Mexieo
Celebrate Mexican Independence Day with fiesta food.
!ven t.boufh th~ Fourth ot Jul.J la over
Americana tJI have a chance to cdebrate In·
d pendence Oay -Mexican lndepende"ee Day.
that ••· For our nclahbors eoutlt ol the border.
Sept. 18 ii a day to c lebralt t.belr lndeptndence
from Spain
So wtur not Join In ~ feat by t,.aunc the
famUy or tri.ocb to the colorful. nUlrt~1~•nd eau·\oiftpare fooda ol Mexico tb6I S.turaay.
G\JAC MOL~ BE-'N TACOS
l peckaat" '4 K M > taco sbclll 11.2 abella>
I can fl5 oa l RdnN Bun
Guacamole • rt"cl pe bdow >
Chopped oolon
Chopptd tomato
Sbreddf'd Cheddar or Monterey Jack
chl•ese
Heat taro helli> 1n prehi}ated 2$0 oven unhl
thoroughly tM-all"d :u IPast s minutes In s mall
~aucepan. ('()Ok rerried beans over low heat.
8larnng fn!quenUy, until heated thoroughly. For
each taco. spoon two rounded tablespoonM
each beaJ\8 and guacamole into a taco sbeU.
Sprinkle With onion, tomato and cheese as de·
sired
pitted
GUACAMOLE
2 medium·s11ed ripe avocados. peeled and
I tablespoon lemon juice
I can 14 oz.> diced green chiles. drained
2 to 4 teas poons mild or h<>t taco sauce
,.., teaspoon saU
'It teaspoon Chili Powder
In medium bowl, mash avocado with lemon
juice. Blend in remaining ingredients.
.. ~ teMpoon g1nacr
l teaspoon each grated orange peel and
arat.ed lemon peel
Whlppt'Cl cream
Courst! H it
Melt butter in heavy saucepan; add onion
and auaute. Stir In flour and salt; cook until bub·
bly. 1.1tlrrlng coni.lantly. Remove from beat
Gradually aUr In chicken broth and milk. Bring
to a boll over medium heat, stirring constantly.
Boll and 11tlr I minute. Cool slightly. Stir In
cream. avocado. ginger. orange and lemon
5>ef'ht. Blend ln blender or beat until smooth
with rotary beater. Chill Serve witb a dollop of
whlppt..-d cream sprinkled witb coarse salt..
Y iuld 4 i,., cups.
TOSTADITAS
12 1one l~oi. pkg.) soft com tortillas
Butter
2 cups canned refried beans
"'2 cup chopped onion
·~ cup eacb chopped sweet red pepper and
fresh Jalapeno OR green pepper
l cup s liced ripe pitted olives
2cups 18oz >shredded Cheddar cheese
Cut each tortilla into 4 wedges. Ljghtly
brown each over medium-high heal on both
sides in a lightly butlered skillet until beated
through and crisp. Place crisp tortilla wedges
on cookie sheets. Combine refried beans and
onion. Spread about 2 teaspoons refried bean
mixture over each tortilla wedge. Top wilb 'h teaspoon each red and green pepper, 1 teaspoon
olives. and 2 teaspoons cheese. Bake in preheated
425 · F. oven 3 minutes. Serve bot. Yield: 4dozen. I 1.4 teaspoon oregano
DAILY PILOT
f CRILLED A VOCAOO SOUP
' 2 tablespoons butter
PAPAS CHORREADAS
<Potatoes wttb spiced cheese>
2 tablespoons butter
Dash cumin
Dash pepper
2 tea.spoons finely grated onion
2 tablespoons all-purpose nour
1 teaspoon s alt
1 cup canned condensed chicken 'broth,
undiluted
1 cup milk
2 cups light cream OR half and balf
2 cups peeled. mashed avocado labout 2
largel
Super
Supper
Shortcake
Ranchero Beef
Shortcake m akes
an excellent
main dish.
I
f
tr shortcake is a favorite of yours for
dessert, why not try a more robust version for
a supper main dish? Rancbero Beef Short.cake
is bound to win the ramUy's approval.
Cornbread provides the basis for this ir-
resistible shortcake. while strips of beef and
green peppers in a zesty barbecue sauce add the
final touch. No special barbecue sauce is
necessary. Merely mix together a can of tomato
sauce with prepared yellow mustard and brown
sugar for a tangy flavored sauce to contrast the
cornbread.
strips
&ANCHERO BEEF SHORTCAKE
2 slices bacon, cul up
1 to l '12 pounds round steak, cut stri1
2 green peppers. coarsely chopped
1 can 18-oz.) tomato sauce
2 tablespoons brown sugar
3 tablespoons prepared yellow mustard
1 tablespoon Worcestershire sauce
pan I using prepared mix or favorite recipel
Cook bacon in large skillet until cnsp. Do
not pour off drippings. Add meat to ~an wit~
bacon and drippings; cook and stir until
browned. Add peppers, tomato sauce. brown
sugar, mustard, and Worceste~hire sauce;
cover and simmer 30 to 40 minutes, until
tender. Split cornbread into two layers. Spoon
beef mixture on bottom layer ; top with re-
maining cornbread and beef. 6 servings 1
SOU111ERN STYLE POU STEAKS
2 to 2~ pounds pork steaks
1 tablespoon oil or shortening
Salt and pepper
'12 cup chicken broth
2 tablespoons crunchy peanut butter
2 tablespoons prepared yellow mustard
. 1 cup sliced celery
Brown steaks in oil in large skillet; season
lightly with salt and pepper. Add broth, peanut
butter, and mustard, stirring to mix. Cover.
simmer 30 minutes. Add celery: simmer 10
minutes longer, until tender. 6 servings.
RancherO Beef Shortcake Is lrresldble.
~ cup chopped onion
1 can 11 lb. 12 oz. l Italian plum tomatoes.
well drained and chopped
l ~ cups t6 oz.) shredded
Muenster cheese
'h cup light cream OR half and balf
1 teaspoon salt
1f.a teaspoon coriander
2 pounds s mall boiling potatoes. peeled.
cooked
Mell butter in heavy skillet: add onion and
saute until soft but not brown. Add tomatoes
and cook, stirring occasionally for S minutes.
Add cheese. cream and seasonings. Heat. stir·
ring constantly, just until cheese melts. IDo not
boil L Serve over hot, cooked potatoes. 6
servinp.
caHfomia cannelloni uses white sauce and red sauce.
California Cannelloni
Delicate crepes are rolled around a well-seasoned
chicken filling.
Cheese-fill ed cannelloni is a classic party dish .
Everyone loves It. And no wond,er -it's always
special yet inexpensive to m ake and easy to serve.
Many hostesses assemble the dish in advance,
then simply pop it In the oven to beat before serv.
ing.
California style cannelloni with both red and
white sauces is even more special than other
versions. 1be r~ipe given here features delicate
crepes rolled around a well-seasoned chicken nu.
ing. The velvety smooth texture of the filling Is
achieved by combining rlnely around chicken <put
through a food chopper> with white sauce and
grated pannesan cheese. Owners of electric food
processors please note that the filling can be done
very quickly and easily ln your processor, too. The
two sauces poured over the filled crepes AH
flavorful as well as decorative. Tbe creamy white
sauce made with half and half la acce1tted _.
nutmeg while the tomato sauce ii teuoned with
bull. Monterey jack cheese and parmeHn
sprinkled generously over the cannelloni melt
lusciously Into tbe d11h du.rial tbe baklnf. Tbe
rtniahed re1ult ls • tnoutb watertna, aromaUc ID-
'
tree that tastes as festive as it looks. A salad of
mixed greens and fresh tomatoes plus dessert
completes this party menu.
parts
CALIFORNIA CANNELLONI
2 to 2Y• Pounds chicken lep or assorted
o/4 cup chopped onion
1 large clove garllc, minced
1 o/4 teaspoon mixed Italian seasoning
l/4 teaspoon pepper
~ cup minced parsley
White Sauce J ·
1 cup grated parm an cheese
Crepes
1 ~ grated Monterey Jack cheese
Red Sauce
Place clUcken with enouch water to cover In
11ucepan. Cover pan and boU aenUy ao minutes or
until tender. Drain and cool. Discard skin and
bones. Measure meat <a bout 2\4 cups> and grind
ln rood chopper. Mix ground chicken with onion,
C&ee PASTA, Pap Q)
CJ
VARIATION : Sauce may also be served
over hot. cooked green beans.
CARMEL FLAN
Caramel:
'h cup sugar v. cup water
Dash cream of tartar
Custard:
3 cups milk
<See nESTA, Page CZ>
Sauey
Sauees
Fruit sauces are
handy dressings to
have in your
cooking repertoire.
Fruits in season or out -provide the
answer to our growing desire for lighter
desserts. But a frwt dessert can be more tban
.. a piece or fruit. ..
You can take a simple fruit dessert and
transform it into a glamorous mealtime finale
with the addition of a fruit sauce that is not only
delicious. but also quick and easy to do.
As a base for your sauce, use a fruit that
has a distinctive navor. The rich. tangy taste of
cranberries -fresh. processed or in juices. for
example. is an excellent flavor booster -g~
in combination with a ll fruits. And cranbernes
give you a bonus -beautiful color lo enhance
nature's blander-looking fruits.
Cranberry Raspberry Puree falls into the
category or a no-effort dessert sauce. Simply
puree a can of jellied cranberry s auce and a
package of frozen raspberries in a blender.
Spoon over luscious peeled, halved fresh
peaches and seedless grapes or whatever fruit
is in season. Add a new taste to fall and winter fruits
with Cranberry Spice Dessert Sauce. This blend
of cranberry juice cocktail mixed with cin-
namon. cloves and honey is especially good lo
poach pears and as a colorful glaze lo top the
cooked fruit. Apples and fresh Indian River grapef~it
segments acquire company dessert status wtth
Creamy Cranberry Orange Dressing. a quick·
to·fix mixture or cream cheese. sour cream and
cranberry-orange relish .
All three fruit sauces are handy dressings to
have in your cooking repertoire. The Cranberry
Raspberry Puree is great on its own served with
a dollop of sour cream. Use the Cranberry Spice
recipe as a glaze to pep up broiled s moked ham
or chicken. Creamy Cranberry Orange Dressing
would be a delicious filling for dessert cream
puffs.
CRANBERRY RASPBERRY PUREE
1 can 18 ounces) jellied cranberry sauce
1 package I 10 ounces) frozen raspberries.
thawed
(See SAUCES, Page Q)
Fn.it dmaings for deswts.
••• ': ••• :· ,: .. :.·:~ .; • : ---f ..... • • -.... : .. ··: -
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fl2 DAil. Y PILOT Wednttdty. S9t>~ 13. 1171 FOOD
Lste~ummer fare: mmt tiki ribs.
•
<From Pase Cl>
Phacc ingrecUent-; into a blender and whirl
until smooth Chall until ready to serve. Puree
cttn bt• 'PllOnt·d ov1·r pt•at'h halvt•i.. berriC!>, ~•·1·dh:" Jot• ap•· ... 1111wapplt· i.llcc:... sllcc!> of cuke,
Indy fm.ier ... Jkur halvt•'
POAC'lll::D l't;ARS WITH
CRANRER RV SPICE SACCA:;
I lurgc firm Pl'lffi-.
1 quart ('runbt·rry Juice cocktail
I crnn<Jmon 'tick
fl whole dovt•s
1 a c up hon<·y
2 t<tblt'1>pooni-. corni.l arch mixed with !
tuhle1>poon:.. wutcr
Ped J><'<Jr1> und leave whole with stem at-
luchcd. Plucc into ~aucepan and pour cranberry
juice cocktail over the m Add spices and honey
S1mmt•r. turning pe1Jrs occasionally until peart
arc kndt·r but still hold their shape, about 15 to :w minuks lfrmovt· pt·ars :md bring syrup to a
boll lioil until then· ure 2 cups l<'ft Remove
"l>ICl'I> St 1r Ill t•ornslurc h m1xturl' Stir over
m11dl·rult· hl'<•l until i-.a ucl' th1Ckl'ns Spoon
i.a ut•t· ov1·r Pl'dl':. and serve warm. Garnish with
rn 111t ll'UVl'"
('Rt;i\M\' CRi\NBERR\'
ORi\NGE DRESSING
I packugt' 13 ounces 1 cream cheese, l>Ofl·
1:: cup dairy sour cream or yogurt
:.::, cup l'ranbcrry·orangc relish
In a bowl, mix together cream cheese and
sour cn•CJ m . beat until !>mooth. Stir 1n cranber
ty·orangl' r<'hsh. Chill. Serve on rru1t salad!'
'graµcfrurt "l't'tlons, applt·s. orange:-., grapes I
or a~ a dip with fre:..h fruit
Rib-Tickling Recipes
H .> ou url· plu11n111.i a
l.1tt• 11umm1.•r put10 or
IJ~ll 1>411ty. wm po111h
l.lll d rralM• with I hi"
Ci•UA bUpper ldNt that
llte m s trom a n1.·w. 1.·ui.y Mnd de llclo~ n ·c 1 p1.•
!'h11er food In the form
of 11weet·AOur •r.arcrlb:. culled "M nl ·T lk 1
Ribs" maJ<ea for a uni
qu~ mcaJ your aucsta will
truly enjoy
Oo aJl thu wi.y If you
wh1h and aerve u com
plete "rtn1er 1upper" by
arranaloa trMya or crl11p
celery. cearroc. .nd zuc
chlni 1llck1, radlwht'b,
arecn oruon& Md othcr
p lck·Up foods
You cun aet min! MU'
rlh 11 by usklng you r
uutcher to cut u side of
'1>urer1bs throua h thl!
1•t•nt l'r . le nglhw1:-.l'
Pd rboll Wld allow to cool
tu1t!Cly In the broth
t>d orc dnuning You'll
find the tnl'Ul will bl• l'X
tra tender and JUit'.>
Place the drnincd rib:-.
an a larg~ plm.t1 <: hag
Pour on the pun~cnl
:.uut'l' und allow to
murlnak Thl'fle slmph:
:.tt•p:. cun bt· lakcn cure
or tht• duy helorl' you
plan lo 'll'rvc them
To com1>lcll' the cook
m l(. bu kt• und baste the
nhs m a hot ovt•n. Add
1· 11 11 ra l' d 11 a w a I 1 a n
p1 11 t•a ppl t• c hunk s
towurd th\• t•nd of thl'
cooking to hc!1l. gluze
and t ake on the richJy
fl avor-..'<.l :-cauce.
MINl·TIKJ RIBS
I s td t! pork
~purerib :.. <about 2
Jl()UOd!.>) 1 1 cup :..oy !.>aucc
·~ cup honey
• ;1 cup lemon Juice
2 tablespoons cats up
2 tablespoons syrup
from canned pineapple
l Uiblespoon brown
sugar
1 tea ~poo n dr y
must ard
·~ t e a s p o o n powdered gjnger
12 teaspoon corn··
:.tarch
1 cl pound 4 ounce>
••• Pasta
(From Pa1eCU
garlic, Italian seasoning, pepper and parsley. Mix
in •/'.! cup White Sauce and Vz cup parmesan
cht't'M: Portion onto crepes and roll around filling.
Spoon a thin. Ii.Iyer of White s~wcc in bottom of
:..h11llow 12x8 inch b1:1k1ng dish Place filled crepe::.
10 !)iJUCl' Sµoon Red Sauce in wide lengthwise strip
aero~~ crl.'pc::. Pour r~maming White Sauce in nar·
row band over Red Sauce· Sprinkle with jack
cheese and rem aining 1 2 cup parmesan cheese
Bake an 350 ' oven JO minutes or until heated
through. Sprinkle with additional parsley ii de·
sired. Makes 4 servings.
WHITE SAUCE: Melt 3 tablespoons butter.
Ble nd in 3 tablespoons flour and stir in 2 cups half
and half, 31.i teas poon salt, If• teaspoon white pep.
pe r and •,8 teaspoon nutmeg. Cook, s tirring over
medium heat until sauce thickens and boils.
RED SAUCE: Saute 14 cup chopped onion in 1
tablespoon butter until softened, about 1 minute.
Star In 1-2 teaspoon crumbled basil , "'8 teaspoon salt
and I 18-ounce> can tomato sauce.
CREPES: Combine 1 cup milk. 1 egg, 14 tea·
s poon salt and o/.t cup rtour ln electric blender or
mixing bowl. Whir or beat until blended. Melt 1
tablespoon butter in 6 or 7-inch skillet or crepe
pan. Blend into batter. Pour a scant 14 cup batter
into s killet. Cook over medium high beat, turning
once. until lightly browned. Repeat with remain·
ing baller Makes 8 crepes
FOOD PROCESSOR METHOD
Grind cooked, boned chicken in food proc·
cessor. using steel blade . When Cine. add 1 small
onion, 1 large clove gar lic, l~ teaspoons mixed
ita lian seasoning, 14 teaspoon pepper,% cup finely
packed parsley s prigs, 2 ounces diced parmesan
cheese and 1h cup While Sauce. Process just until
all ingredients are Cincly chopped and blended.
Proceed as above.
l'An plnea1>Plc c.11unk s,
draln1..'<i
Havt· s purnribs sawed
through m1ddk to mukt'
i-.hort('r lengths Cut
ap;,i rt in twos. Cover
with llnhlly salted wutcr
and s immer 11 ~ hour:..
<'oo f about 1t'J hour in
broth, then drain Pluct•
ribs in large plastic bag
Combine all rl'maining
ingredients c>xccpt corn-
starch and pineapple .
P o ur over ribs, and
r ~frlg er a te several
h o urs or overnight.
Drain, saving marinade
Place r ibs in s ingle
layer in flut baking pan.
B<1ke an hot oven 1400
degrees F'l 20 minutes
Mea n while, combine
dramc•d mannadc with
c·o rn:..tarch in :..mull
saucep1:m. and heat to
bo1lmJ(. s tirring After
ribs have bak ed ' 20
mmult':... spoon part of
marinade over . Con -
tinue baking a bout 20
minute::. longer, bast ing
frequ e ntl y with
m arinade. Add drained
pineapple, and bake 5 to
10 mmuleb longer. until
rib:.. are nll'<•ly glazed
M~kl·i-. <I lo ti ser ving!.
Wedding and engage
ment announcements run
on Sunday an the Daily
Pilot Forms a"e available
at aJl Dally Pll-Ot offices or
by calling the Features
Department. 642-4321 .
To avoid d11appoint·
ment. prNpeet1ve brutes
are remmded to hove their
wedding stories, With a
black-ond·white glossy of
the tmde or o/ the couple,
to the f 'eatures Depart·
ment one week be/ore thf!
weddmg
Engagemt!nl announct'
ments. with black.and
white glos$f! o/ the future
bride or the couple. must
be r eceived by the
/o'ecuures Department su
weeks be/ore the wedding
date.
••• Fiesta
<From Page Cl>
6 eggs, slightly beaten 1/ll cup honey
111-.: teaspoons vanallu
For caramel. bring sugar and water to a
boil in heavy saucepan or s killet over high heat.
!>lirring conslanlly unlll sugar dissolves . Stir in
cream of tartar. Slop stirring. Reduce heal to
low. Wipe sugar cryst als from edges of pan with
pastry brush dipped in water. Boil syrup over
low heat. without stirring, until syrup turns a
golde n brown, about 15 m inutes. Quickly pour
syrup into a round 9 x 2-inch baking dlJh or a
shallow l 112·quart casserole tipping immediately
to coat bottom and part way up sades of dis h.
Car a mel will harden 1 m mediately.
For custard, heat milk just lo boiling. Stir
into eggs gradually. Stir in honey and vanilla .
Pour into caramel·coated dish. Set custard in
large shallow baking p an on lowest oven rack.
Pour in hot water lo within Vz inch of top of
cus tard. Bake in preheated 325.F . oven 55
minutes or until a knife inserted halfway
between center and edge comes out clean.
1Custard will s hake slightly when re moved
from oven.> Remove from water immediately
and place on wire rack to cool. Chill several
hours. Run spatula around edge of custard to re·
le ase edges. Place shallow serving dis h over
custard: invert onto serving dish. Caramel will
run freely over custard 6 to 8 servings .
Plum Jelly wffh Almond Custard.
Plum-Good
Polynesian
Polynesia is the land
o f paradise . Mild
c limate, thunderous
surf, friendly islanders.
romantic ::.ccnery. and
t'lcot1c foods are the de·
lights of every visitor
But perhaps the most
intriguinl( of a ll is the
Polynesians' faf>cinating
range of ingredients and
cook ing styles. and their
ability to blend the two
d e l icio u s ly .
FRESH PLUM
DES.SERT J ELl.Y
Wint ALMOND
CUSTARDSAUCE
2 pounds fresh
Cal1forn1a plums 14
cups, quartered l
I cup sug<Jr
2 li.tbl espoons un ·
fl avored i.wlatin 1 2 cup rl'd wine
i,, tcw~poon almond
extract
Almond C u s t a rd
Sauce 1 rec1pe follows J
Shredded coconut
Pit plums and put
through a food mill or
pu re<' 1n a ble nde r .
S t rain through fine
s trainer Add s ugar.
Soften gelatin in wine.
Heat over hot water to
dissolve. Mix with plum
puree and rlavoring
Pour into 6 dl':.s~rt
glasses and chill until
set. Just before ser ving,
top with custard sauce
a nd s prinkl e with
s hredded coconut.
Makes 6 servings .
ALMOND CUST AR D
SAUCE
2 CUPb rich milk 1 ~ cup powdered
s ugar
2 tablespoons corn.
::.larch
Dash salt
•14 teaspoon almond
extract
In saucepan. mix H::
cups of the milk and the
s ugar. Heat gently. stir·
ring until dissolved .
Ble nd rest of milk with
cornstarch. Gradually
add to saucepan; cook.
stirring constantly, until
thicke ned Stir in s alt
<Jnd fl avoring. Cool. C-Ov-
l' r and s tor e in
refrigerator.
HOW TO USE THE FOOD
TO Slf/E MONEY. Ual ... the Detty Piiot food Mdoft
WIMly, JOU Nft ane '5 to $10 on
rour WMldy grocery blH. And, tftet'•
a OOftMIYatlve eatlmete.
STUDY THE AD9. The 0811J '9lot
Wedn11de, food MOtlon le M of
... ,.,....... end food .. wNc:tt
fe.tur9, ewer, """· epacl• end ottter ......., .... MaM • practice of
.,... .......... 9d• '°' ......... ..
.... I<-. "' Mind that ..... wNc:tt •r• ..... lo put tMtr prtcee ... wrtt·
Ing .. ..... llcety to keep their
pledeato .... JOU .... IMMJ.
CL" THIE COUPONS. Clp end aeve "centa off" coupon1. TiteJ ,,..,
.... JOU °"" • dime here end • ntckel there, but the ........ edd up
qutcldJ to dolare HOh time JOU
Mop.
UN THIE RICINI. Alt kinda of ff• ctttne ,.... .... ,,.Hftted 1n ....
D•lly NotfoodMOtton.f'°"' dtMM eouffle to etun9d lf99" .,.,...,.;
from diet deeMf't9 to puff PMtrJ.
You'I ftnd many lnt .... etlng •nd novel ..,. to lven up rour WHlcly
menu.
BUY IN SEASON. In many lnetancee
the recipe• •r• keyed to thoM
foode wNc:tt .,. In •••eon. Thia
IM8M..., wtll be In plentiful eupp-
ly •nd pMed low.
Pl.AN AHEAD. Plen tor et leeet •
week ....... Md ottectr the ..
pllH rou have on hand before
Mopping. Coetty mum trtpe can be
prevented br ttrat melllng out •
•hopping let.
Kii!' ._TO-DATI. World, n.aon.t
end etete eventa often can Impact
food Pflcn. h m•r be the .. atMr
In KWM, lltlpplnt ltrtlrH In New
York or potlttcel uphHvel In a
tor•• lend which •• a k•r .. .,._, of • ..,.. -el can foroe ,._,
prlcH here •long the Or•nt•
CoHt. for complete ..... of food
ttenda, JOU' OOft'HftUnftJ and the woftd, Nfr on the
DAILY PILOT
842-4321
I
RISHSUCm
BEEFUVER
IASTllN FA•..MH STYU
SPARERIBS 1~
CELLO IOU.
RUSSET IAG
NTATOES
;~c;mHA 1~ BROWN
FAIMaJOHH J39 -s
SLICED BAC. N a.a. 15c
ZACKY • POSTa FAIMS J 29 LI. ~"~":..BREAST u . .....,--------~
PO'iic'CHOPSUT •~ SaAIAsa ltc L-FA_IM __ a __ JOHM ___ lllF ___ or __ M_IA_T ________ 1 __ 1U.-,-. .. ____________________ L_L ______ -I
WIENERS
IASTllNLAICHLOIH-IMD J4Ll.9 LONG ,,J--~:-:::::;
PORK CHOPS GREEN a.;;;...;~r;;...;~~M.;;.~.;..;;0...-T ..;..K .-,c_H_E_Es_E_l_'_L~_,Cuc••• .. rs 2i25c
HUMT'S
TOMATO
AUCE
SNJMGAILD
TOILET
TISSUE
WllMGft&D
CORN
FLAKES
SPlllMGAaD
FLOUR
2 31 REMCH'SllCi-TATI 79 ~:-~ c POTATOES ~~ c
4
llOU.
rAete
12 oz.
IOX
I La. ....
69c cOFFH I LL 99c CREAMER Ju
llAFT MACAROMI & CHHSI
DINNER 11~°l
55c IUFT LOCAL I OZ. 39 • PllMCH IOTTU C
• THOUSAND ISLAND
• IT ALIAM SALAD DI SSIM41
'FOOD Wedneeday. September 13. 1978 DAILY PILOT (:3
----.J~------------------------------------------~--------,..-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------I
i Limit Sugar Intake
r .
Y o u t.lon 'l huH· to huvti d1ubctc1 o r
hypoa:ly<>cmla lo dl't'•lh· to cut down on tho
qu1nllty or reflm:d Whitt' ~UJCUr in your dtel Th"
Sl'll'ct Com mlll~t· On Nutrll1on And llumun
Ncl'djj, t'batn..'d by ~t'nitlor Gt-'Or&u McGovern.
h1u; INNU~ u l'\'l)()rt t·nt1U1•d Dietary 00111 II In
Whi ch OIW o( llH rl'('ornmcnduUOn8 l to f'educo
thl• Ulil' of rc•f1m•d i.ug ur lo only 10 perc nl Of
lht't r lohtl culont• 1nt,1kt• Con11ldc rln1 thail
AnwrtNtn" now U"ll' about ~~ J)('rccnt ot lltelr
tot ul l'ulorh•!I on rt'flni·'1 11uicu. lhlJ will be a.
tre m t>ndouN lood l'thu·a.t mn la.bk to achle-vc lhti
t.ll' I n·d rt.' ult11
1'ht• m<11Nt tHfh<'ult ~1o1rt of the m~nu to cut
buck the U'l' or ... UAtH I In dNl'it'rtS You
mn) still h:tH' t'urhoh\'drnlt•\ Ill the fo rm of
frUl'lO-.l' WhH·h ., found In fn-11h fru1u . 'SO lhMl
'ho uld ~· )0111 fir,t cho1('1· for d~ ert fo'or
vurtt<ty. mt• 1>11vt•rt1l frt·Nh fru1tr. touettwr und
pour fruit JUlll' nH·r tht•m fnr t•xtru 11weelcnlna
Your nl'11l ch11a· ... 'ho uld ht• walu p uck ed
riuuwd. un'lut:art-d frotl'n. or dn~d fruJtx Oc·
cu-.1tmull) \Ull m.1~ dc''9rt' u bukl·d desi.ert. i.nd
thut too c·un tw mtl(fr without i.ul(ar , o r eun b1:
mudt• with 'mull .1m1111nh of honey or mo lushl'h
1\\01d lh1• u't' of Jhltk ugt•d m1xc., high 111
'>Ugar t•o nk nt. froit•n or r annt:d fru1tr. packed
v. tth ht'UV} 'ui.:ar ~yr111" fl·c1peb using la rgl'
qua ntltll'r. of ('Omnwr<·1ul Jl'lltei. und JUml>
heavily s ul(ured v.h1111wd u 1·a m topr,.ngs, o ver
~WCt'l cuk1•' and pit':> ,11111 'ul(ar <·<JOklt'b
\\'h1.·n l>Jk lnJ< l'\ pt•ri mt•11l v.-1th cuttan~ down
on l ht: umnunL or rl'fint•d v. h11t· .,ugur 10 th ... rec
IPt' und i.ub:,t1t utt-hont·y for r.um1.· of ll Serve
popcor n for i.nu< ks 1n'll'c1d nf <·&.ind) Have
bowls of i.unn owt·r :-it·l·ds m1 >.ed with n.usinr.
im d s hellt'<.I nub for ht-ullhful und agreea ble
munchmg Take a h:.srd look at the .. mount or
refmcd sugar 1n your family's diet. <Jnd see how
you can JOin the growmg number or nutrition·
con:.c 1ous Ame ricans who a re lowering their in-
L;ike t o meet the ne w recommended dietary
goals
BAKED APPLES
6 large baking applt-s
1 •• cup J?Old<·n ru1,111:.
'.1 cup conccntntll'd thuwed apple Juice
'~1tc:tspoon cinnumon
1 t(tt•ai.µoon nut mt·i.t
I cup boiling waler
W ar.h and core apples Place in a rial bak
mg dish Combine ra1:.ins. upple Juice concen-
tra t e. cannumon, and nutmeg in a bowl; mix
well Stuff cores of apples with r aisin mixture.
Pour bo1hng wuter around it pples. Bake, un-
covered. in a 350 degree F. oven for 35 minutes,
or until lender. Baste apples occai.ion ally with
pan hqu1d. Makes 6 se r vings
('luh Calendar runs each K°Pdriesday in the Dally
1'1101 and rontmns r111l1Ct'~ of wmnen's and service cluh
ml't'tmy., und e1Jenl11 for the fol/11wmg week -Thurs
day through Wf•dnPsday Sc·nd notices tu Club Colen
dur. l>allu l'ilot. PO HoI ISM. Custa Mesa, CA 92626
He .rurt' ·111 md ude your 11ame and phone number
Nnt1cps mr4.~f hem our ho rid.~ two wePks in advance .-
Tfl rPquest a picture wntl' or call the f'ea:ure~
lJ<'por1me11t. 642-4:121 Picture.\ are hmlled to f und
raisers op<.'n 10 thl' public
p edal
IHet.s
By June Roth
MANDARIN RICE MOLD
I cnvclo pt! I l tablespoon> unflavored
el'lulln
I cun (4 ouncc 1 Ma ndunn oranges , water
11 1 cups milk
I pucku&c 13 ounce I cr eam ch eese.
l\Uflt•f1t•d
~ ''l(l::S. l\l'lm rutt•d
I cup took1..'<.l rice
1 tea,'>poon pure vanilla e xtract
Soften gelatin in 1 1 cup drained juice of
M anda nn orangei.. :.et uside Blend milk and
t• rt· um che1.•:.e together ; stir In lightly beaten
t•.CK yolks Add gelatin m ixture. Cook over low
heat. stirring constantly. unlit mixture coals the
s poon Add rice and vanilla . cool s lightly. Add
d ratnl•d orange s cl(mcnts Beal egg whites until
~lier pcuks form ; fold into rice mixture . Turn in·
to a 1-quurt mold. Chill until firm. Cut Into
wt'd gl':. C£nd s erve with fresh bC'rries or other
fruit Makes 8 i.cr vangs.
CHOCOLATE HONEY NUT CAKE
1 ~ cup butte r or r.hortening
11 , cups honey
2 c ups sifted c ake flour
I ' 2 tcwspoons baking soda
1 2 teaspoon salt
2 eggs
3 squares unswe<!tened baking chocolate.
melted
:.'a cup water
I te aspoon pure vanilla e xtract
• ~ cup chopped walnuts
Beal huller or shortening until fluffy ;
grndually add honey and beat well. Sift nour .
baking soda, and s alt togethe r. Add 12 cup of
the flour mixture lo the butte r mixture and beat
well. Add eggs; beat well. Slowly add water
Add vanilla. Mix rc.•maining nour with nuts and
add to batter. Pour into a gre ased 9·Lnch tube
pan. Bake al 350 degrees F . for 40 minutes. or
until cake tests done. Coo l before slicing. Makes
12 lo 16 se rvings.
~, ..... , J-ltotll, ""
If you have a special diet problem , write to
June Roth. c /o The Daily Pilot. Enclose a
s tamped self-addressed envelope for a personal
l'l'ply.
Wedding and engagement announcements run on
Sunday m the {)ally 1'1lot f'orrru are ava1lablt at all
1)01ly Pilot 01J1c11s or hy colling the 1"ealures Deport·
ment. 642·4321
To avmd d1suppomtm en1. prospect111e bndes are
re mmded to hove th£'1r weddmg ston es. with a black·
and·wh1/e glossy of the bnde or of the coupll', lo the
l"eatur11s Deportment one week before thl' wedding
f:ngage ment announcements. with black.and
wtute gwssy of the future bnde or the couple. must be
rPceived by the 1"eatures Deportment su week3 be/Orf'
tht> U)(.>d£tmg dal1•
Sa"e 10~ on the
wild and beautifbl
~~ ~ ee of Camag .
. '
•
camay just went wild.
With a gentle new fragrance of wildflo
Fresh as spring. Gentle as you are.
New Wildflower Fragrance Camay.
Try it. You'll feel beautiful. And wild.
CUT ALONG DOTTED LINE
10«'
9118
"' ,... • ----------------------------------------_.... ..
. . . . ' .
Salmon topped with mustard sauce for experienced or novice cooks.
Salmon With Sauce
M cany epicurean dish
es take countless hours
in the kitchen, years of
e xperience. and utmost
c are. Nol s o with
Broiled Sa lmon Steaks
with Mus tard-Egg
Sauce. This is an entree
wh ic h i s s trictl y
e legance with euse It is
a fall dinne r 1 o r a
dinner any lime> par ex·
Cl'llencc. Expe rienced
cook and novice alike
will know the s ame de·
lightful results for the
fish is easy and quick lo
cook. Dinner will be one
to remember.
BROI LED SALMO N
STEAKS WIT H
MUSTARO -EGG
SAUCE
6 salmon steaks 1:i 1
inch thick>. or other fish
steak$~ fresh or frozen
<a bo ut 2 pounds>
1 teaspoon salt
'Ai cup m e lt e d
m a rgarine or butler
Mustard·Egg Sauce
Thaw fis h 1f frott-n
S prinklt• salt over hot h
s ides of s tt-aks Place
s teaks on wt•ll-gn•ased
bro iler pan . b rush wit h
m e lt e d maq~a rint· o r
b utter Bro il a bout :J
inches from heat sourct·
5 to 6 minutes T urn
carefully and brush with
m e lte d margarant• or
h ullt r Brod 5 t o '·
rn 1nulei-<1r until fl:;h
fla kes easily whe n test ·
t.•d with a fork Brus h
s t e a ks w ith m t:llt-d
m a rga r1nc or bull tr
:.ever a l times during
broiling S er ve with
M us l<1 rd· E gg S auce
Make:. 6 st•rv1ngs
MU S TARD -EGG
SAUC'E
J lct blc.·s p oo r.
marga rine· or buttt•r
2 tublesp<>ons flour
1 z teas poon salt
1' :s r upi. milk
2 te as poo n~ prt•
pared mustard
I tablespoon lemon
)UICC
I tca11poon gra ted
lemon rind
2 to 3 dashes liquid
hot pe pper sauce
I table s poon dry
white wine , optional
2 hard-cooked eggs.
fine ly chopped
M c it margarine or
butt e r 1n :.mall
sa ucepan; bt1r an flour
C£nd saJt Add milk. all
<tl once:. :.tirrang con -
~. ta n ll y Cook over
mod e rate hc dl until
thickened. st1rrmg con
stantly. Stir m mustard.
lemon jwce. lemon rind.
pepper sauce, and wmc .
if used . Fold m chopped
eggs . heat. Makes about
11 2 c ups s auce.
KelloggS Product 19 cereal
pots your vitamins where
JOU won't forget them.
. ...
.. -... . ... . ..
. . , . . . . '
. , . . .
7
. .
I
C4 CAIL Y PlL OT
Dessert Grapefruit
Yo&tr taste buds need beallhi t and taaU t 1rapt>frult Juice <'hill~
DOl so an a diet, even lf way lO e.1l aince the I P • c k a IC e I 1 O
ai rapt'ftult Julee ttnd mu
pie syrup St:rveis l
7ou're CUUlna calon.. da7• ol Ad•Dl and Eve ounces l froicn rupber
The refreshfna navor Sin ce a ba lanced , r1c1 . lhawed HOT 'N' HEARTY
and extra meaaure ol h11h· nttl)' breaklu l bl 2 tablMpoot\I honey BltEAIO'A.ST GROG
Jwdn found tn Tu.u lhe day's meal 1mpor C'o m b100 ull ln&rt' l quart (32 ouncHl
l\uby Red crapdrull tant meaJ, •hat betttr dhmla an a blt!nder and 11r11pcfruit Julee
have m ade them a ume topve your family wblrl at top 1pet;d until ~ t'upapple Jelly
mornlna favorite the o1-tural fnaU.a, nulJI, •mo<>Lb. Pour Into tall Dosh .iround cln ·
Dreueduporeiuoyed c.reall aodwholearaln 11111 .Serves4. n a m o n and 1 round
pure and unadorned . bre.da they oeod tor • nutmoa each ro.y ha lf ta the Sood head atart MA PLY GUPEFRUIT Combine all lnare ·
bul1 for a aalidytq lyl ' l cup crapufruit dlenta ln a u utepan and
&lender ala.rt to the day. Juice. chJlled brin g to 1lmmerlng Bul don't llmtt Ruby· SUNal81 2 tabl poorut maple point. Pour into beat
Reda to b teakla1t GaAP1tnurr HllAIU! 11yrulJ "prool mu.is and servo al
FOOD
Your taste buds
can afford the
calories ol
grapefruit
their vau.Ulity m ak 1 quart (32 ounce.J M 1 " to a e l be r once. Serves four.
lllem • natural at a.ny ----------------~--------....----------------------------=-----------------=~·~":"'~;/! It used to take the first snows of winter ment lO ettam)' ~vlled ~~{.f~~:! to bring a Pork Roast to your table.
1arnil.bed with a apr11
ot miDt..
A apattllna mountain f or pure r e freshment, I Fresh Grapefruit Aspic
provldea a we lcom e
cbanae trom the ntllng
1oup1 and aaodwichea
that often &race the
luncheon table. A soft
mound served on the
hall 1heU makes a meal
d e lic iously lo w in
calorie., with a double
measure of all or the
goodness Nature has
packed into each Ruby
Red half.
Grapefnlit JuJce pre-
vents the gefatln from
becom ing t oo firm ,
guaranteeing a delicate
te xture. And the l ree-
npened fruit has juice
so naturally sweet it re-
quires no addillonal
sugar.
With jwcy Ruby Reds
weighing in at only 50
calories per half, there's
room lO splurge a littJe
on a s crumptious top·
ping for a light dinner
dessert. Creamy am-
brosia piled rugh on a
Ruby R e d half .
showered with nuts and
to pped with a che rry
creates an affordable in-
dulgence, Texas style.
Texa ns h a ve lo n g
boasted some of the best
g rapefruit a va ila ble ,
and with good r eason.
The Lower Rio Grande
Valley combines a rich
c lay s oil with s ub-
lroplcaJ climate to pro-
d uce an exceptionally
thin skinned fruit. This
guarantees sweet flavor
and added juiciness. I
FRESH GRAPEFRUIT
ASPIC ' 6 to 7 Texas Ruby I Hed grapefruit
J e nve lopes un -1
flavored gelatin •
1"' cup cold woter I 6 maraschino c her-
r ies
Halve 3 lo 4 or the I J?rapefruit. J uice enough
g ra pcfruil to measure
2 "'2 cups. I n s m a ll
~aucepan, soften J{elalin
in waler; then dissolve
over low heat. Stir in
Juice. Chill until firm. At
serving time, loosen sec-
l 10 n s in r e m a in i n g
g rape fruit halves and
leave in place. Spoon
g<'lalin on top. dividing
evenly. Garnish with
cherries.
Makes6servings.
GRAPEFRUIT
AMBROSIA
1 cup sour cream
l c up m i niature
marshmallows
2 teaspoons sugar
Coplional l
3 Texas Ruby Red
grapefruit, halved
1/4 c up chopped nut.a
6 maraschino
In bowl, gently m ix
together sour cream,
mar shmallows and sug-
a r . Chill. At serving
time, loosen sections in
grapefruit halves, leav·
ing them in place. Top
with a scoop of am-
b rosia. Arrange in
dessert di.shes. Garnis h
with nuts and cherries.
Makes 6 servings.
No doubt about it,
natural ls "in" -but it
never really went out.
Because a diet based on
natural foods has been
c onsidere d tbe
BANANA APRICOT
PARFAIT
1 p ac kage un .
flavored gelatin v, cup cold water
2 jars <7·~ oz. each)
Junior apncou
2 tablesp0ons sugar
l tablespoon pure
vanilla extract
1 cup beavy cream ,
wblpped
2 small ba nanas,
peeled and lllced
Sprlnk.le gelatin over
cold waler; let aland 5 mlnut~a lO ROtlen. Dis-
solve ovtt bollln& water .
S tir g e latin into
oprlcots; add sugnr and
vaoUla extract. Chill un·
tiJ mlxtura thicke ns .
Jo'old in whipped cream
a nd s liced banand .
S poon into parratt
f1UHI and aerve.
~
f •J
...
~·
Now, Farmer John and Lucky have a
big selection at every day low prices.
Back In the 30's when Lucky began, fresh pork was a
aeasonal buy. It was a special time like Sunday family dinners, Christmas feast!>,
Easter time. Why? Because freezers were not widely avaUable, so pigs were usually
:.laughtered when the temperature was below 40°. &lit-curing or smoking preserved
the meat for the remainder of the year. or for transporting to far markets. The usual
way you'd ha ve had fresh pork on your table back then Is If you'd raised your own.
or lived ne.u a farm Today, Lucky helps you enjoy pork year round ...
any moment he gets the munchies. Because of this hot house tredtment. crnd oocdU!>~
he's transformed to pork chops whe n he's younger and smaller. he's also leaner and
more tender than hls pals of the past. An average 31/2 ounce loin center cut chop.
without fat. has about 148 calories. The same size pork steak has 124 calories. And
pork has the same cholesterol count as beef. fish. or chicken and turkey dark
meat. Compare the protein content between pork and a t-bone. and t·bone looses
(Pork chops 34. steak 25 grams). And fresh ham does even better at 37 grams
Farmer John's pork ha• won over 100 award•. That's a big
•IUINA 'AM
pork from rarmer John These Mid Western pigs are shipped in live and
dressed fresh daily. (As fresh a<; ii you were back on the farm.) Meet today's
pampered pig. He's not playing in mud puddles any more, or eating leftover
scraps. The space-age pig Uves quite differently. Housed In an Indoor constant
temperature environment. With real food (corn. not cobs) and water. ready for
testimonial by a lot of different experts. That's wh y Lucky is proud to carry a
big selection -everything from loins and chops to ribs and roasts. And because
you're shopping Lucky today. you're getting the best quahty for the best
price. Lucky's pork prices are proof that we're what discount is all about
Fresh Pork
PORK
LOIN ROAST
)11\LOINCUT
J LG AVG 'UT ••.•
PORK LOIN
SPARER IDS
RID f NO POfllt.
LOIN ......... .
.. LD 129
••• LO 138
POP.K LOIN P.10 CHOPS LO 1 . ] B
PORK.lOIM CHOPS
0 1 .98 ir ... ritAiOIM
PORK SHOULDER ROAST 8B
tl\t,..1"("'( loNl.I ID ,
PORK LINK SAU~GE ""'""'Cl''~'°"" LO 1,48
SKJHLUS LINK SAUSAGE
• • • •..•.•••.• •Ol ""-.48
~P.~H ~U~~EllOU 1.26
SMOKED POLISH SAU~GE
IA""'ll\l()Mf • ' ;0 1 • 39
r AP.MEP. JOHN DACOH
)1<11) •• " 'ID ""(; 1 . 29
Fresh Beef
LAii.GE EHD l"D STEAK
OOHDlDDlll ••• '" 1 .89
~~~~CHUCK STEAK 10 •89
~~~S P.OUHD STEAK10 1 _68
T·OOHESTEAK ,. 2 _56 O'lo<O(D Diii 10'.. ,
TOPStRlOIH !ITEAK
ClOHQ!\I DOHlllD OW '"'" 10 2.46
t ~~!~~ ~ ~~~s,
r HOH FAT MILK ;,l,a~, ....... ..,,fill• •' ~ttl(J 1:4.19
r SPAGHrm SAUCE MIX 6 "'""'t\Nf.1tAA • '"'oz .-.c. .27
Canned& Packaged
PEANUT
PounER 6 LADYllC ~~~~ .. ~~~~~~/ JAR 19 9
;;
GRAHAM
CRACKERS SUN~llNC 160l DOX e 69
r HUtfrSSHACKPACK 0 ~ 16YAll.\lrt)> <1)0 / (N'\,83 f. RO~RrTA DEANS
II/IMO . ••• :)001 (l>H .65
• DOLE PIHEAPSU:
/., IH~lt.)VAMJll\1 7001 UM.57
~ HAP.VEST DAY TOMATOES
..........•.••. i&Ol LJM,39
HAP.VEST DAY C~ ""au M.""'1 •• • • • ,,Ol C..H. 29
Dairy & Frozen
t MOP.TON'S DONUTS
0 C.V.llOl\llUHIUID •.. 90 1""' .59
TREE TOP JUICE L t1AI\ c.n..P( CO..CJHll\ ... I I '01 '"~. 7 7 r REDDl·WHIP TOPPING 61'\
b •Ol CA>o • \J
Delicatessen
t X1.HT DUP.NTOS
A flVAl\ilfrl\I •••• H>~ "'6 .35
L SCHIP.MEP.'S KIELDA5A 1 69 '101 ""4 •
r WILSON fMHKS t '<11\111\H\l'l'll • •60l '"Cl 1 . 79
p MAP.CO POLO SALAMI 0 'f'<t"J lOl ftl.(i . 79 AMERICAN CHEESE !>PP.CAI;> b 1.AL1•111 i...:10 1io1 ,.,.,, 1 . 25
Delicatessen
pcRESENT 0~.8 0Z ~e49
p P£PP£1\0HI PEPl<JNS b""". ... )()/ ~ .96
Health & Beauty Aids
COLGATE p ~~~~EAM57 h LIME Mf.()ll)M
........ 11 oz ruoce
Liquor
SAVE 10% DUY A CASE
ANAOOlllOHAL 10~ GMNON
rt.UCASCPUllGHASl~Of \lllNf -'.>1111\11~
<KCY OVY 1100 lJlCLUOCO>
lAHCEll.'S WINE
L ~~Of\Alt(O 7'.IOIOL u 3.49
L Dnt'AA"S SCOTCH 7 19
"'"""' I)()"' DI\ • b COORS DEEP. ir.9 IOlc..AAA ~ll)()J , ..... 1 . .J
nv ,..,,,.,..,..... .. W'!~~.,., ... .,., ..
D--t.4'•« tWll"""f)(''"ffl'""flW ... ~WtVJ»,y ""t""'"'f.IUf fl«"I .,..,YI''""""'~ Wo~ •Qw\ t01~
Household & Pet
HOP.TH~ TISSUE L IO&l• .... •»• ....... ,,,,,""'. 79
r HEFlY WA!ITE DAGS 69 A ......,.. JOCl "'6 •
L GALA PAPEP. TO~,,"°" .59
t SANDWICH BAGS
A "'°"'" """'< •!>OCl °"" .59 ZEE LUNCH DAGS
V)(I .... C. .51 L KAL KAN MPS DOG FOOD
C-.13 .. 0 1 (AH.54
Produce
OARTlffi ~~~--...... Lo .39
CRISP S!';~~~~~.~ .. [A • 23
DELL
PEPPERS
LAl\G£ r lllM •
SUN GIANT
.1o e38
RAISINS 98 I OL P!'.C>~
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DIFFEHDACHIA 2 98 PLANTS
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DISCOUNT SUPERMARKETS
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110 00. OTATI COl.LIOI ILVD.
•,UU.altTON
120 NO. ltAYOMONO
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1111 HAfllOlt Al.VD.
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1111 ATLANTA AYINUl , .... IOLIA CHICA AVDUI
HU,. ctNOTON lllACH
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•u MIAAOA •OttA.MOI
LA MIAADA ~ING CINTllt 2HO I . CHA,MAN AVU.UI •IANl'A ANA tiH 10, lflllTOI. ITltln
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I
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'
FOOD
Grape bars add flavor to a child 's lunch.
Zesty Chicken
For the Grill
The delights of Orien·
tal cooking are not as
fam ili ar to mo st
American households as
the cuisine or some
other oat1oru.
But there's nothing
my~termus about pre·
paring the dishes of
China .• Japan or Korea
1 all s1m1lar enough in
character to be grouped
as "Oriental"). Recipes
are simpl e and un·
complt cakd. No special
equ ipment 1s needed.
And most ingredients
are already on hand.
Chicken. a staple in
this country's diet since
the days of the earliest
settlers, has long· been
important in Oriental
dining, too. Chicken 1s
mentioned in Chinese
scrolls dating back to
1,400 B.C.
Both chicken and
Ortental cookery have
s pecial appea l for
toda y 's ca l o ri e ·
consc1ous Americans. -
they're low 10 fat COO·
tent. Chicken. an impor·
tant source of protean
a nd olh<.'r essential
nulr1t'nts, has fewer
<.·alora<.•s than most other
meats And Oriental
<·ookt•rv doesn 't raise
the cou.nl with rich con·
d am t·nts. suuces ar
li gh t . desig n ed to
<.'nhance not disguise or
enrich the flavor or the
angn'dients ,,
Busy cooks especially
we l com e the time·
s aving techniques or
Oriental cookery. Food 1s most often cut unt·
form ly into bate-size
pieces which cook quick·
ly. One-dish meals with
chicken and vegetables
cooked together in the
easy stir-fry method not
only shorten cooking
time but cut down on
clean-up too. And grill·
mg is a favorite with the
Japanese. who use the
hibachi for warming ap-
petizers. broiler foods
t inc luding those on
skewers> and as a beat
source to cook at the ta·
ble.
Introduce your ramily
to Oriental cooking with
either of the recipes
suvcn here. They'U whet
your appetite for other'
c·hickcn dishes with a
touch of the Far East.
Just remember that to
Oriental cooks, ap-
pearance is almost as
important as flavor.
Serving dishes vary
from ornate porcelain to
rustic pottery so you
probably already own
some to set the proper
mood. Enhance them
with bamboo mats or a
brocade t able runner
and decorate the table
with chrysanthemums.
fruit tree blossoms.
fr~sh fruit or leaves.
For added adventure,
use chopsticks.
ORIENTAL MUSTARD
CID CK EN
4 ·6 broiler.fryer
chicken quarters
1/1 cup soy sauce
2 tablespoons pre-
pared mustard
2 tablespoons brown
sugar
2 tabl espo on s
vinegar
Brush a ll sides of
chicken quarters with
soy sauce; pour remain·
ing soy s auce over
chicken in shallow dish.
Marinate in refrigerator
at least 30 minutes.
Remove chicken
quarter s, reserve s oy
sauce. Place chicken on
grill, skin side down for
app roxima t e l y 1 5
minutes. In a s mall
saucepan mix mustard.
brown sugar. vinegar
and r e mainin g soy
sauce ; bring to a boil.
Turn chicken quarters;
gri II for 15 minutes
before basting with the
mustard sa u ce.
: Generously baste for ad·
,"di lion al 30 minutes or
until done To lest for
doneness; pierce leg.
thigh joint with fork.
when juices run clear.
grilli ng is complete.
Serves: 4.
LITTLE LEGS TEM·
P URA
8-10 bro1ler-rryc1
chicken wings
1 z cup ginger ale
1 egg, well beaten
1 2 cup pl am flour
1 lea.spoon soy sauce
1 teaspoon salt
1 cup vegetable 011
R e move tips from
each chicken wing. Cut
remainder of wing into
two parts. Mix ginger
ale, flour , well·beatcn
egg. soy sauce, and salt
very quickly and with as
few strokes as possible.
Dip each wing part In
batter. Heat oil in large
skillet at 350 deJtrees f'.
Fry "little legs" in hot
oil for 8 to 10 minutes,
turning often lo brown
evenly. Serve hot with
sweet 'n sour sauce.
Or iental mustard or
chutney. Serves: 16 to
20.
Chicken goes Oriental with soy~mustsrd sauce.
. . .. ---
Your
Daily Pilot
can be
Recycled.
~ eo.t Q>""9'f .,,,._..,
~IOIC ... -55&-5"81
.Vednesday. September 1J. 1978 DAILY PILOT a
Traveling Grape Bars
Finding tasty and
nutritious foods to pack
in your child's school
lunch is an ongoing
challenge. You have no
way to be sure your
child Is eating the foods
you pack or that he is
getting the nutritional
requirements he needs.
You ca n help by
s electing nutritious
roods your child likes
that wi ll k eep for
several hours. Keep
breakfast and dinner
meals in mind whe n
packing lunch so that it
wi ll b e part o f a
balanced day's meals.
Grape Bars are a
dehclous and nutnt1ous
lunchtime addition your
c htld will certainly
cnJOY. They are made
with dates. apricots.
orange juice. oatmeal
and concordgrape Jelly.
GRAPE BARS
l package 18
ounces l pitted dates
l cup chopped dried
apricots \.'! cup concordgrape
jelly
I/• cup orange JUicc
'h c up coarsely
chopped walnuts
1 1.2 cups unsifted
W£ f&ATUR£
flour
'~ teaspoon baking
·soda
1, teaspoon salt a.• c u p s o rt t: n l' d
butter or margarin<"
l cup firmly packed
light br6wn s ugar
l 'h cups raw
quick-cooking oatmeal
In a small saucepan.
combine dates, apricots.
concordgrape jelly. and
orange juice. Cook over
medium heat. stirring
co nst a ntl y. un til
mixture is thicke n ed
l about 5 m inut es>.
Remove from heat: stir
in walnuts. Cool.
MANNINGS
8£EF
AT PRICES YOU CAM AFFORD
IROUllD
ROUllD
Beef Standing BONELESS
RIB 449 C•CK
ROAST ~ ~.. ROAST
Sift nour. soda and
sail: set aside Cream
butter and brown sugar
until ltght and fluffy.
Add flour mixture and
oatmeal. Mix well with
h a nds until blended
thoroughly.
Press half of oatmeal
max lure an lo lightly
greased 9·inch square
baking pan. Spread with
ftll lng . Cover with
rema i ning oat meal
mixture : press lightly
with ha nds . Bake 30
mmutes. or until golden
ut 375 'F . Cool slightly.
Cut into bars whtle
warm.
LI.
OMless Cross Rib
~E. 1'! Tillamook
Cheese 14!
Boneless 11
Chuck 1'' Steak u .
......... 1·19
Short Ribs u.
Imported Slced 129 w.w Yon c.t 3"
Boiled Ham ~. Steaks u .
Cooked Rare 449 Beef Hind 139
Roast Sliced .A ~ Yz Ouarters u. Beef LB. aw .• , ...... .,._ ~~~~~~~~~
Now, a refreshing change of taste.
5 delicious new flavored teas (mm Lipton!
•
when you
purchase
any box of
Upton' Flavored
Tea Bags
..... ---.
······ , ... , ... ,
. ... . , .
Enjoy them iced or hot.
Fragrant Orange & Spice. tangy
Lemon & Spice. retrest11ng Mint.
slightly spicy Cinnamon or hearty
Black Rum-1hey·re all made with
a special blend or select teas
Try these new Lipton · flavored
tea bags for a refreshing
change of taste
Lipton
~~'f'l . 16 9'ea:Ba94
c~~N~ON FLAvo
• ~iPtorJ, . ·~
7
.. OI DAIL y PILOT FOOD
Like White Sugar, Brown Sugar Means Calories
QuasUons fro m tht> or l pound b<nldcbb to11 ra t ~k1mm ed (or 10· s pe ars on top of the slmmeroverlowb~at un-
Sll m Gourmet 'I\ l''it t round stcuk. l\:un, fat ounce cun> meat. then roll the meat til tener. about 1 and one· broth wtlh nour and )llr
Into pun hquid over low
heat. Cook and stir until
s uuce 1s thick Spoon
over rouJaden and serve
tmmed1ate ly. Makt•t>
four serv1ng b. u s·
calories each.
M1Uba1: trimmed l'12tllblespoons rtour around the pickles and hulrhours<orcookinpre·
Q. How muy calorlet1 SH• 1 tublet.J>aon pre If using round ste ak. secure with toothpicks. ssure cooker 30 minutes
la btowa ••tar com pared must1rd cut mto four equal-siie Spray a non -stick according to manufac·
paff'd wt&ll re1.tar "' Go11~C Sult und pepper to servings und pound thin skillet. Dutch oven or turer'sdlreclions).
ar! -Kn . .c .. Sift tuate with a meat mallet. pressure cooker with
hloaio, Teua. By Barbara Olbbona ~ .. l l•1.111 poon mar Lay lhc four steaks on cooking spray for no-fat Remove rouladen to a
A. There'• no i1n1ri JOrum a culling board. Spread frying . Brown th o platter and keep warm.
cant difference' s•nct 1 onion, chOppcd lig htly with must ard. rouladen over medium <Remove toothpicks .)
you'll need 100 u lorin' wul1tllnc llC!rc Mrl' Ml~l ROVLADEN 2 dill pickles. i n Season with salt and heat. turning to brown Skim fat from pan liq·
worth of btown 1uur to "<>mt' Slim Gourmet rt•<' 4 minute s teak~ thin. lingthwise spettrs pepper. Lay the mar· evenly.Addonecupofthe uid, if any. Stlr remain·
C.11142-5671.
Put • few word•
to work for ou. equal th.-"weetenln11 •PH to try 1 quarter· pound each>, 1 V.. cups beef broth, JOram, onion and pickle beef broth. Cover and 1ng quarter-cup beef
power of lOO ratori~a· 1~iiiiiiiijiijiiiiij;iiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iifiiiiiijii~iiiimiJ!iiii(iiii!iiiii:iiiiiifi~iii£iiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiriJiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiili:S-wonb o( wh1tt auaar I
One cup o f whit e
traoutated f.uJCar hu
7Sl calart . ~ rup of
ord inary brown 1u1ar.
flrm l)' packt"CI, hu 791
calori~ . The "franulat
ed .. 1r .. e .f owing
C"Brownulatfd") brown
s uaar h o nl y 587
ulorlf'S pu cup t bul
you un morel L1k"
white augar. brown eu1·
ar Is nothlna but
calones
Q. Oo )O• '•v~ any
ret:lp~• for yo1•rt
wtU...t aqar! AU tlM-
101.,u a.ave au1ar Hd I
a.ate ':' •P· -Rulh L ,MI ry,C-.
A Pla in yoj(urt has no
s u1ar, only the fruit·
navored varieties have
It Read t.be label and
look for plain, low-fat
yoaurt, then add your
own rresb unsweetened
frulL. Sweeten t.o taste
with sugar substitute, if
you like. Use the plain
low-fat yogurt t.o make
more of your own: fill a
thermos 'bolUe with boil·
ing water to heat it up.
Scald 3 cups skim or
low-rat mH.k, then let it
cool to a nice bath·
water-warmth. Empty
the thermos and pour in
the warm milk. Add a
quarter·CUpful or plain
low -rat yogurt. Cover
and s hake to mix well.
Leave overnight. The
next day all the milk
will have turned into
yogurt. Transfer to a
covered bowl In the
refri gerator and add
fruit to taste. as needed.
Q. I cUp oat yoar sum
Goarmet mlamn and In
one article yoa said raw
tarkey llas 48t calories
per pollDd. In aDOtlller
yoa said tbat 1round
Larkey lau 75t calories
per poand. Sfnce I am
coaotlD1 calories I need
• to know tlie accurate
count. -Marty T .. Han·
Ungton Beach
A. Both counts are ac-
c urate. The 480-per-
pound calorie count re·
fers to the meal and skin
o f the whole young
turkeys generally found
in supermarkets. The
750 count refers to the
more mature <thence,
ratter ) birds that go int.o
packaged ground turkey
or "lurkeyburger." Ac·
cording t o the U.S.
Depart m en t of
Agriculture. youn g
birds. under 26 weeks
old . average 480 calories
per pound. Medium fat
birds 26 t.o 32 weeks old
average 752 calor ies.
and old birds, over 32
weeks, a verage 1,136
calories per pound. The
USDA overall average
for all classes of turkey
is 722 calories per
pound. 1n virtually all
s upermarkets, whole
t urkeys are in th e
·•young" category.
Q. Some tlme a10 I
read an article by you on
dlet clabs. I would like t.o
join TOPS. Can yoa
please pve me a namber
or address wltereby I
may reacb tlaeee people!
I wouldllketojolaassoon
as possible . -Mrs ..
Carolyn M., Brtc11eton,
Mo.
A. TOPS-or Take Off
Pounds Sensibly -is
a n o n -profit . non·
commercial diet club
with chapters all over
the country. Check your
local phone book. tr you
rind no listing. call or
write the national head·
quarteni: TOPS, 4575 S.
Fifth St .• Milwaukee,
Wis. 53207. phone : (414)
482·4620. Ask for the ad·
dress or the nearest
chapter. U there is none.
they can tell you bow t.o
go about forming one.
For a detailed descrip·
lion of the TOPS pro-
gram, along with other
non-commercial diet
clubs like Overeaten
Anonymous and com·
merctal c lubs like
Weight Watchers, Diet
Workshop, Lean Line,
e tc .. read Consumer
Gulde magulne's "Rat·
lne the Drets" <send '2
to Diet Bookabelf ,
Sparta, N.J . 07171>. ••• German cooking isn't
111 noodles and strude l
and other wurst stulfl
You can cook wlth 'a
Germanic natr and atlll
avoid a Zepp eli n
YOU ALWAYS SAVEi
WITH STATER BROS. LOW·LOW PRICES
tvtltf "'Ct Of lllUI I\ UOICOM>lllOflAH 'f OUA .... NltlO
10 l'\lAM •OU 00! >OUll IOQNt 1
Wtll M 0.[ltfUU•"llUHOID
d.eli. \ 111.tJ •ti0Ntlt•~· tll81 tt
ZWf>f •.VAllH:llH> 1SPlllCll STtAK
JUMBO BURRITOS ~:r . u 4 9 c 11 Aftll ltlOS • COA"I 0
;EPPERONI PEPIUNS ~:>J u 99c llllf 11mn .,
ti s299
$149 ( IUr •CHUCIC •OOf A 11•
lW • AllM 80AST La..
'
,.OUll& .... OSnD ....
TURKEY RIB
DRUMSTICKS R!Y'f
49~. •1•!
...... •SLICID UO'• BllF LUNC•Oll LIVER -ATS THtN SLICED • 4 V AAIETIES
3-0Z. PKO.
79~ 43~A
iifffu•s '"' ... a uo s 11 •
l A $ J 39
"·~·"°flOllCCCDH•>'Af •• s• -·CNUCll • 1 n •Er•llAO«:Uf LEA• HOU• lllf l• 7•0t• llOAST .ll. c.CK Snatl
llUF•tof<UHS • 1 •• •U•IONf'...., • 1 •• Kl.F•..-«JC SEAFOOD ll. •••
ll •17• 09CAll 11 .. V(ll • • VAJllOtlS suaD BOl.OGNA ~g'
OllCMU&AYUI • ~VMWflCI
SllCED BOlOGNA :,:>~
OllCAll1114f£11 • -NtASOll
BIEF FUNKS I lft l't.G
""'"'' SLICED BACON 1 IB ·~c.
9 3 C r"ISii r110101
LA TURBOT FILLET
r A
$14 9 fll($H FtlOlCN •Cl L.411 IPtllHO~ TROUT 11 01 Pt<O
l
• $ J 49 ~lltSHnlOlEN.,CltANl>t(.
A COD FlllET
LI $ J 49
... $119
II SJ 98
SftWMIAT ll ~SftAK .ll. .... TUil
RUMP.HAST Le tis• itoiilDsnAK ll •1•• iii ...... 11
11W1
l((~•llO<>N0•90HlllU • 1 ff •lf•CHUCll•too<l,USS • 17• •tF•llOUN0•90HCLUS
TIP ROAST " 9llOULDlll ""'T LI n• •nAK
·~~~~~~~~~~~~-J iliiaSMaoA•T ll •2°• a.-•nAK ll • 1" •i• ... nu.
LI 'I"
ll '2" ,.•2n
.11•11•·s L01IOll llEO. Oii U TllM>llY
19-0Z.
......... -. "'
. .. ' .
•~ W(fltM.llV(
G<"'. I ' . , ... ~ffO ltllillT Oii lll"lll
IAllS YO
C~Al OfM.ClltOOI
W"OllW.1111 . '
" . -. .
f PRESERVES f TATERTOTS f PIZZA
-~;! ..... $109 o:.16 874 .~::c~ $127 Ollt f'llA'#K-"'J --... -
PRICES IFFIC.
7 FULL DAYS,
SEPT. 14 •
SEPT. 20. 1971
• •tOt 87C
~ ..... """:.~&-.:-:1!1:...."T:::-... --~t:.":.'C"~ ·;nf. f .......... ,.,. ·«'•""'"-,.,,.\: ' ,......, .... ,,....._ ....... ----;·---. ·=-''!To ....... ,... t -~2: .. If ... -........ --,,. --~--' • 0-. • ~ ,.,. ... .. ... ...... ..... ,,,_ ..... ii....::~-~ .. ~-=:,._,_.i.:: --.... .. ~ ...... -.. ,,........... :::1.............. ...... ----·-----mu::::n-·
. ' ____ .. . . .. ,; '
FOOD
Shrimp sauteed with Mexican 88/Jsoning.
Shrimp Shouts Ole!
SHRIMP SA UTE OLE
1 pound Mexican
jumbo bay white shrimp
in she·ls, fresh or frozen
(aboutl6to20)
y, cup butter
1 clove garlic, minced .
'4 cup fresh lime or
lemon1wce
lh teaspoon Mexican
seasoning <OR blend of
chili powder and cumin>
1 tablespoon minced parsley
Peel shrimp, leaving a
portion or the tall on
each; de· vein. Melt but-
ter in large skillet; when
foam s ubsides add
minced garlic. Cook
gently for a minute then
add the shrimp. Saute
until shrimp are pink
and almost cooked
<about 3 minutes). Add
juice, seasoning and
parsley. Simmer 3-4
mlnut-es ·longer. Serve
bot with warm corn
tortillas and glasses of
Sangria or medium dry
red wine with a wedge of
fresh lime for garnish.
Makes 3or4 servings.
Bran Buds' contribution
to yourfamilyS health.
Kellogg's~ Bran Buds'*
• cereal is one of the richest
sources of food fiber you can
give your family.
lf19u've been reading
the articles about food fiber.
you know it coold be impor· _
tanL And over the years.
ronsumption of fiber has
fallen drastically in the diets
of many Americans.
One nutritious way to
put more fiber back into your
family's diet is a romplete
breakfast containing
KellC>t&'s Bran Buds. , Tfr Kellogg's Bran
Buds. They're sweetened
morsels of bran with an
honest wheat taste. And, of
course, one of the richest
sources of natural food fiber
available.
So dip the COllJ>On and
save 7¢ ona boxofBran Buds.
It's our contribution to
your family's bu~t.
Bran Buds.
A high-fiber cereal from
-"''
•
Wedneld.y, September 1l, 1978 DAILY PILOT f:7
Salad Goes Antip asto
Plua and spaghetti
have lane been maeic
words to perk up the ap-
petites of young and old
alike. Now alone comes
Antipasto Salad to join
the parade of lrrealstlble
European family
favorites.
It's a potpourri of
artichoke hearts,
salami, ripe ollvea, pine
nuts and bite·she
chunks of 'Western
icebers lettuce toased
with a llnlY dreaaing
featurlq tomato sauce
with cheese and mixed
Italian herbs.
Tbe dressing makes
more than enou1h for
the salad but it keeps well in the refrigerator
for a repeat
performance later. In
fact, it's excellent sim-
ply spooned over crisp
wedges of western
iceberg -another salad
in llaelf.
And the remaining
tomato sauce certainly
doe an 't go to waste
either; it can become
part of an easy-do
Thousand Island Dress-
ing to dollop on
crosswise slices or
chilled iceberg lettuce
or toss with shredded
iceberg. <For fast shred-
ding, halve a cored head
of lettuce lengthwise,
place cut-sides down on
board and slice
crosswise with thin-
bladed knife.>
"Antipasto Salad" is
very versatile. For in-
stance, the second lime
you make the salad,
omit tbe salami and add
cubes of cheese. Or
replace the artichokes
with green bean s
marinated in some of
the dressing. Or mix in
Antipasto salad is a potpourri of good things.
some anchovies.
ANTIPASTO SALAD
1 bead western
iceberg lettuce
1 can <15 oz .>
artichoke hearts, chilled
l 1h to 2 cups cubed
salami
~ cup pitted ripe
olives
2 tablespoons toast-
ed pine nuts
Pizza Dressint
Core and rinse lettuce,
draln well; refrieerate
in disposable plastic bag
or plastic crisper until
ready to serve.
PIZZA DRESSING
o/.& cup corn oil
1,-'i cup can n ed
tomato sau ce with
cheese
3 tablespoons wine
vinegar
lh teaspoon salt
y, teaspoon maxed
Italian herbs
~ teaspoon pepper
1 clove garlic .
baved
-·Combine all ingre:
MJBtastes
good when
it shOuld!
dients in small jar and
shake well. Let stand,
covered. for several
hours. Remove garlic.
and shake dressing
aga in befor e using.
Makes 1% cups dress-
ing.
When ready to serve.
cut lettuce into bite -
sized chunks to make 2
quarts. Drain artichoke
hearts. Combine lettuce,
artichokes. sal a mi .
olives and pine nuts, and
toes with Pizza Dress-
ing. Makes 6 lo 8 serv-ings.
Wedding and engage·
ment announcement& nm
on Samday an the Dody
Pilot. Farms are avoilab~
at alt Daily Pilot of fices or
by calling the Features
Department. 642-4321.
To avo1d duappoanr-
ment. prmpechve brides
are remincUd to have the1r
wedding stones. with a
blaclc-Ond-whde glossy ol
the bnde or of the eotq>le,
to the Features Depart-
ment one week before the
weddmq.
.. .. . .... -----. . . .. -----.. -~--. " .... .., .. -. ·'· .... ,, ... ~ ...
I
Q DAILY PILOT Weaneadey Septembe1 13 Ul18 FOOD
Bread Goes Nuts!
Use old fashioned
pt111nut buttt-r for
andwlchea and for the
inevitable peanut butter
cookie. followlna your
favorite recipe. Or mall«>
I hit trio of peanut butter
broads. One la madt•
with whole wheat Oour
.md coot.aim YOl\lrt and
ralatna. Another la a
I nip w hol1• brun
Cl'fl'U I
2 t • poons buktn1i1
powder
1 ~ t«"IA'IPQOO IJUIOi
•od.t
• ~ tu11pnon u It
1 ~ll t'Up m Uhf'd
rl~ banunu < ubout 5 to ti
mf'dlum>
<' u fi r 1 r m I y vunilla until well maxed
p.id•.l'd brown sugar Stir m~.dry ~nttredlentl't
~. cup maraarln1" JWIL unul blended. Turn
bOfleood into !repared pun , '<• cup wattr tiprea to even batter
l lcaspoon vanlllu Bake in 350 •· oven 45 to
Gnau 9x5x3•anl'h 50 mlnuL or until cak<.'
loaf pan. Stir tof.cthl•r t t-11ter inserted In ccnl<'r
flour, bran c rea. h11k co mes ou t c l eun
Old Fashioned
Peanut Butter
Bread.
> eut b a tttr br~ad '~cup old fuhJon<.'d
"weet ned with hon 'I Cr" amy or auJ)l•r chunk
.uid data. For UI lb1rd peanut bull~r
bran, ban ana and --,ii~ii•iifiii
1111« powder. bakln1 .,111111 Hl•movt> from pan and
und u ll. In large ho\\ I l'ool comph.otcly on ra<"k
Mir to1etht!r bunJnu, Store tiuhtly wrapped
pcunut butter . i "\l.:ur. ovcrnlghtberoreculllng
mur orlne water und Makes l loaf. ~riiiii· peanut butter produce • r
navorful hllh nt>l'r loar
OLD ••A S RIONED
Pt: A N T 8 TT t; R
Bllt:AD
\11 cup un11Cl d
wholt1 w~11t noor
l cup uru11ftl'd flour
2 teaspoons baklnai
">Oda
1 teaspoon 1talt
2 conhl1nt'lrs hs ol
\'lU.'.h) plain yol\lrt
1 cup raisin.,. '> eup oJd f115h1onc-d
<'n.'umy or iUl)t!r chunk
pt•unut butter
1-i c: up mol as. c.
Grease 2 18hxn2x2 1-,
inch ) loot pans or 2 c 1
pound> corrce cans. I n
large bowl '>tar together
noun , bltktnl( oda and
s a lt. Add yo~urt .
rulslns, peanut butter
and molasses: stir until
well mllted. D1v1de bat-
ter between prepared
pans or cans. Bake an
350'F oven 35 lo 45
minutes or until cake
test er inserted in center
com es out clean. Cool in
pans or cans on wi re
rack 10 minutes; turn
out and cool completely
t>n rack. Tightly wrap
a nd s t o r e in
refrigerator. Fl avor 1m-
i)rovcs with age. Makes
2 loaves.
PEANUT BUTTER
BATTER BREAD
3 cups unsifted nour
l package '14 oz)
grti ve dry yeaKl
2 teaspoons salt
114 cups very war m
waler '120 · 130 F l
1~, cup old ra .. h1ont>d
rreamy or suiwr chunk
pl' a nut butter
1 •cup honey
11':1 cup c hopped
dates
Thoroughly g r ease
!lx5X3·inch ICl:.if pan. In
l urg<' mixer bowl. star
together 1 'h cup'i or the
flour, yeast und salt.
Add w ater , peanut but·
l cr and honey, beat al
m e dium spee d 2
manutc•s, scrupang side~
of bowl occas1onally.
Stir In rem aining flour
and dates. c Dough wilt
be sticky .> doubled In
bul k . Stir down batter
with twelve str ong
~t rokcs. Spn>ud l'V<'nly
into prcparl·d pun. Cov
l'r. l l't rist• about 45
minuh•s or until doubled
1n hulk. Bake In 375 F
oven 45 minutes or until
bread sounds hollo w
when tapped on bottom.
If top browns too f ast.
cover with foil. Cool
bread completely on
w ire rack. Makes l loar.
BANANA BRAN NUT
BREAD
3 cups unsifted flour
Classes
Jerry DIVeccb io,
Southwest Editor o f
"Sunse t ," h ome
ec onomi s t and
:.iu thor /ed itor o f
numerous cookbooks,
will prese~Super Sup· p e r s fro "Sunse t
Magazine" a Lawry's
Ca llfornl~ nt er,
Ave nue 26 al Sun
f'-erdaodo Road in Los
Angeles. The three-hour
rooking clan ls offered
on Sept 20 and again on
Sept. 21 with sessions at
1 ·00 or 'T:OO p.m. Fee Is
$7.00 per person and ad-
vance reservations are
r equired for the d e·
monstraUon.
Jerry brings to class
dinner Ideas gather ed
fro m ber travels
throughout the West and
atmrnd. Bulldlng menU5
m1 the fundamentals of
hulanred nutrition and
i.1mplicity or prepara-
tlOn , .Jerry gears her rc-
n vc·s lo adjust to the
b<·st buys on the market .
J\ mon~ her complete
mcsl offerings will be
Cheese Crusted Chicken
f''rench Style, Country-
S t y l e Omelet and
Turkey la Scala.
Enrollment ls limited
and confirmed lo order
of paid reservallona re·
celved . Make check
payable and mall to
Lawry's •·oods, Inc.,
Public Proerama Dept., P 0 . Box 2983, Los
A nge les, C A 90051.
Specify date and c:laaa
time sel«ted. Include
n nmt', addreu and
d ay l I m e l e l ephon,o
number. No refunds or
trantfera granted after
Se pt . 15 . 1978 .
Seteway·s thri fty new Scotch Buy Brand can really help you light
lnllallon. This new brand ain't fancy but It sure la good. Gooct quallty. lhat lsf So good It carries Saleway's Seal of Good Quality on every
product, Scotch Buy Is uncondltlonally guaranteed to please In
every way or your money beck
Smart ahoppera kn ow how lo buy according to their needs. When
3 WAYS TO SAVE
0SAFEWAY'S SCOTCH BUY
When your budget needs help, reach for Scotch Buy, the
thrifty new brand from Safeway'• money-eavlng line of Good Ouallty proctucts. The good quality 11 conslstenny
dependable ... ldeal for times when the ltem'a appearance
Is less Important to the dish or use at hand. Smart
shoppera know when to choose Scotch Buy to flt their
needs and stretch their shopping dollaraf
E) SAFEWAYSBAANDS
'folks who already enjoy ourtS>Bronda need no Introduction
to finest Safeway quallty llne ... every product la uncon-ditionally guaranteed. Comparable to the quallty of the
natlonal brands, yel our price la usually lower ao you ~n
realize extra savings.Some exampletol Safeway"'Brands
are Town House. Bel-air, NuMade, Empress, Lucerne,
Crown Colony, Manor House ... and morel
E) NATIONAL BRANDS :<:i Scotch Buy :c Scotch Buy =i!;· Scotch Buy
Everyone is ramlllar with national brands. They're adver-P•IOllle 1• _390 Rell 32..._ 97o Ta liquid Dish 690 StrlWberry 99c Used on 1elevlslon, In magazines, on radlol You count -. '141 ,......,,..2 .... them as friends In meal planning. Come and see how Mix ....... "-' MIJOllftllll •• · .......... loo.ct. Dl ... 11"1 ~
many 01 your favorite friends are on our shelves. We carry long 81'1111 99o Sllld 32--.990 Yellow Cling 49"' Flbrtc ••· 97c p_. Zhz.940 a tremendous varlke
1
1y of netlo
1
nal brands to give folks a Rice ......... ~ Dressing .J• Plldlel .a..z. ¥ lone.-... Im Hllva •.. c..
wide choice In ma ng select ons White l G I lath a-a..nt H Iv Naturally. we also guarantee all nallonat brands sold at "'-490 Diii f'I n ..._S,21 TGmltoel U-c.390 room ~990 .,._ 1 "690 Satewayl ~s;~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;.~~-·~~;~;~··~-~1~40~~;:-~R~lce~L~·~~;~~~·fi"~~~ii.E~--_)..~11~&-o~LC~a~n;J~i';eea~~~~~T~lss~iuei.~·i··~·"'~·~~~~1u~npi-.<1~51zs..ez.r:.~~~~~
U.S.D.A. Choice Beef, Boneless
~ROUND STEAK
Full
Cen1er
Cuts.
lb.
5
Boneleuleef
RUMP ROAST
US DA
Choice Beet
Round 78
USDA CHOICE BULK BEEF SALE
Cut and Wrapped To Your Speclflcatlons ... Freel
Boneless Shoulder Wholeleet
U.S.0.A. Choice
Beef Chuck Croaa s1 a1 Alb Includes:
Roasts or Steaks Ila. ·
(9 to 12-lb. Size)
elolndMd1181
::ft:&°'
Round Tip
Wllolelllf
U.8.0.A. Choice
Beef Include•:
Steaks or ~oats
-{9 to 12-lb. Size)
USDA CHOICE
!119
u .s .o .A. Choice Beef Sliced llCOll Round Steak $178 $128
Bottom Round ........ a. Smok·A-Roma.1-11.pq. .
lonelnaltull e181 TopRoundStelk $118 U.S.O.A. Choice • U.S.D.A. Choice Beef
Beef Chuck ........... a. Round Steak ............ lb.
SAFEWAY ••. The Leader In Low Liquor Price1/
GIN or VODKA BUDWEISER
~; ~':;~.s 2 11 u ··s14,
711CMee. ~ 811.:'
~ !~~~o-1 •411
_ ChrllU111 Bro1. '1'' C:::-./ Drys,,._,., 1....._
~~.~!~3='5
.-Clllva llpl 111MI -M Proof 8~ctl Al'll U ·
,~ 1na1enoo1c sz11 ;d~ Tequila ~~ •3•• ~ E:at.:T'• P•rnt S1t•h 7...,.., ~ Whill or Qold '11CM1lt.
MOUTHWASH
Anti sceptic
~ 1a.:oz.;
Mouthwash s 12 7
, _ __._, ~ Bottte
. --LIQUID
PEPTO BISMOL
1~~ Anlac1d s111 1S\~~~ 1 __ ... 12-oz. ~l'"'~./ loUSe
SAFEWAY
VITAMIN "C"
500-mg.lottle $14 7
of 100
LONGHORN STYLE
CHEDDAR CHEESE
Saleway $17 9 Random Weights ....
COLDBROOK
MARGARINE
LIGHT CHUNK
TUNA
_ ~.:; sea Trader 59c
"· ' 81h-OZ. CM
MRS. WRIGHTS
BISCUITS
8t:s1
,..... ............... 111nT11a. ..... •.tt1I a.==-n,.._.c......,,1 .. , .... ~IW.A-'UIOAJ..,
..... ... 14111i lft ..... Ol*lff•·
,:-::r• .. ~.
At tt:b..£ ' .... Of en.
Oddi very Clependlng on num -
ber 01 game t1Cllet1 you ot>tam
The more t10ll11t1 yoo oollocl lho t>ett« your ch•nc:e• ol w1nn1no
Odd• 10 obteln t•n t 101 Saver
Otte• end qyaJlly for 11\e Supo< Food Shopping ll1ng
Sweepllakea 1118 I •n 30 3
t1cl\eta Actual oddl 10 win any Shopp1no Fling will vary f1om ttore 10 11ora and dopend on lhe number ot S avor 011c
feOeemtlfl Thef• odds •re In
effect unut one month •If« atart
Up Oiled odds Wiii b,. ~led In
111 pertk:1pa11no 11ore1 and eny newepaper ada Scneouled ter-
mination ot thll promouon 19 Nov. 18. 1978 Howover. Sal-•y Su~ Dollar Casino end• when
all card• 11e dlltrlbulf!<l
Promotloo avallabta at Setewav 11or .. tocotod on C.11hforn1e
count1tt1 or Los Ango10, Ven !Ute, San ~rnardlno. A1vart1de. San t ull ObllPO. ln~o. Orano ... Senta Barwa. l<e•n or Mono
1168) end In Clerk County N•vaoe ( 14). Emp1oyo"• 01 Sal-•y Store1. Inc . •ts 110
ogonclet. game 1uppt1a11 ond m•ml>er1 ot their lmmeolete
11001tllOld f11mlll• era not ello•·
ble to play.
ITS AS EASY AS
1-2-3 TO PLAY 1. Get a Free Safeway Super Dollar Casino
Collector Card at your Safeway check-ou1
courtier or store office. No purchase
necessary Each card contains games worth
•2. •s. •10. •100. •1000 and •2000.
2 .Each time you via1t Safeway pick up A Free
Super Dollar Casino game 1tcke1 (with four
markers)
3.Punch out the perforated markers on your
game ticket and match lhem 10 the squares on
your collector card. Just follow the easy rules
on the back of your collector card!
Schaffl la a Inch $211 er Boautlful Indoor Plant Pot
Dried Figs............. . 11.-: 8B° Caullftowerrrosh
81111111 Squash ........ 10° Crisp C a .
Golden Dallclous
Applasr=
Cr1psand
Crunchy
·lb.
Ilg
• 1000 8ey1lde Dr .. Newport Beec" • IJI No. Coaat Hlt""•Y· Leguna le•c" • IOt I . Cemlno ,. .. ,, len Ctemente • 24 Monarc" lay PIHi, Sout" legun1 • Sante An1 FrHway at Le Pez, Min ion Viejo
• 2t 1 1. 17t" It .. Co1ta MHe •Adema at M1gnofta, ttuntlfttton IHctl • 14411 Cul11er Dr. et Welnul. trvtne • lHI So llr11101. Senta Ane
---. ' .. . .,. .. . . ., . . .. . .
•' ·'
I • .._ ,. • • • , •
.· .... . ..... -· ....... --., . "• .. .. -.,,
FOOD Wedne9day. Sept9mber 13. 1978 DAILY PILOT (»
American-Style Curry
The aenlus of lnd1an
coo kin g, II !>
unquestion d hl'urt. 1s
lhe use o ( lntrteall• mixtures (')( ground or
wholt' i.paces culled
musala11. In lndlan
kllcht.•n:., th' m .. ala!>
.tre prf'par~ '1•11y to
t· o m p I t" m t-n t '-' a c-h
particular dl.'>h Ma alu'
.ire so• important thut
tnun1n1t m lhf'lr mnon~.
.c r 1 n d a n a.: a n d u .. •·
rt•quirCs 't>A,.,. of )\lUd~
.inJ pracl1cc
1\ m1xtut'(• of <'loH•'
'innamoo. card•mom
r,•11ncl, mace. c-umcn
-. c e d, t u rm e r • c a n d
nutme1 called 1aram
mania, is t he baste
mas ala u.wd ln a wldt'
\ ar1ely of d bhes. A
Weaterobed vt-nlon of
~;aram masala l~ llOld In
this rountry as curry
IJ()Wdl'r
Curry powder 1s the (·hu~f f1avoriJ:l8 In many
dl'hcious lndlan . tyll'
n•t I flt•-; und ran be usf'd
111 pert. up any number ur t>\'t>ryday foods. Even
urdinary ground beef
Likes on an exotic task
"hen curried Curried
Ground Bel"f u~es a
numbe r or ln dian
in gredient!> s uch as
chutney. ra1slns. garlic ~md peanuts.
Peanuts are prized in
India and in the United
States for lhe edible nuts
and the high quality oil
they yield Pt>anuts give
flavor and texture to the
J(round beef as well as
:i<lded nutritional value.
Cocktail pea nuts a re
used in Curried Ground
Reef to give it the navor
of India. Accom pany
this delightful dish with
a crisp green salad and
rolls.
CURRIED G ROU ND
BEE F
2 tablespoons peanut
011 •
A 'Reel'
Party
The flicks are back!
Silent movies and early
-"talkies'' are capturing
the fancy of the mod
generation. No longer is
I him footage of Bogart,
Garbo. and Chaplin col·
lecting dust in movie
archives. It's gathering ,
c·rowds at the box or-.
fices! 1
G real party1 idea . . . ·
round up movie buffs for
a '"reel" party. First
~top. or course. is the
mo\. 1e house for a rerun or an "oldie but goodie"
1 t·hcck Licket office for
group rates>. T hen ,
hpad the group back to
your plact' for a film
a1tique and party fix·
1ngs. Keep decorations
m the spirit of the even·
ing with posters of old
movie s tars, t'mpty
reels. and even old fil m if
it's available.
The food should be fun
to eat as well as easy to
fix . Meatball Fondue
m cet s bot h r equir e·
ments. Mini meatballs
can be m ade an d
refrigerated pnor to the
party. They're a fan·
tas tic m ix or gro und
be ef, chopped onion,
bread c r umbs, egg,
Wo rcestershire, a nd a
surpr ise add1tion of fine-
1 Y' c hopped lunch eon
meat.
MEATBALL FONDUE
1 pound ground beef
l can <12 ounces>
luncheon meat , finely
chopped
tr.. c up fin e d r y
bread crumbs
lJ!i c u p fin e l y
chopped on1on
1 e g g , s l ightl y
beaten
1 tabl es p oo n
Worcestershire
1 can U0\.4l ounces>
chicken gravy
2 cups 18 ounces>
s hredded Mozzare lla
cheese
1 t ablespoon pre·
pa r e d h o r ser a d ish
m ustard
Dash hot p e ppe r
sauce
French bread , cut in
l·inch cubes
In bowl, mix bed,
luncheon m eat, bread
crumbs, onion, egg, and
Wor<:estershire. Shape
into 60 meatballs. t o
sk illet . brown m ea l·
balls ; pour off fat. Add
gravy, cheese, mustard,
and bot pepper sauce.
Heat, s tirri ng unti l
cheese is melted. Spear
meatballa wllh forks or
toothpicks and dip bread
cubes into remain ing
!'lauce. Makes 60 meat·
balls for appetizers.
~. cup ch opped
onion
1 c l ove 1arllc.
minced
1 aroen a p ple
peel d. <.'On.'d and 1rated
I pound lean around
c·hu<'k
•cup walA!r
2 t.abJespoont nour
~ cup dark aeodless
r.d1lns
I la blcapoon curry
powdf"t
1 tablespoon
C'hutn y
Asa
1 teaspoon salt
c up coc ktail
peunut.a
llol cooked rice
Cook.,d crumble d bacon
Touted flak e d
coconut
Heat ~anut oll ln a
lar.ie skillet . Saute onion
and aar Uc untll tender. Add srated apple and
a r o und chuck : c oo k
until meat is browned.
Remove from akUM to a
bowl. •
Gradually ~tir water
lnto flour. ma king a
s mooth p111le. Heat in
skillet untll thickened .
Return meal mixture to
sklllet . Mix In raisins.
curry powder. chutney. salt and v. cup cocktail
peanuts. Heat through .
Place nee on a platter
making a well in the
cente r . Spoon b eef
mixture lnlo center of
rice. Top with bacon .
coconut, ttnd remalning
cocktail peanuts. Makes
4 servings.
to Switch to -
••• 13
r
Ground beef
takes on an
Indian flavor.
r--·~Qf'·-., r-. ,~,. -,r--·~go,-• .,
I ._.... ..... "" 11 1~.:.-"41 11 ·-·• c.,.. I f ... John-Pork ,,_,.._,, CNcilleit.,..., "9fl*J-4 Siie*
I S.. '°'-13 11 ••Meat 13 11 Ralpl11 ~~: 13 I I lk*I .,... II Piii :.: • II ..... --. • I •-.... .. -... ............... -.... I u. o.. ._ -o... c...,...,. c-11 ..-°"'-... °"'~ .. c--11 .... °"'-... °"'c...., .. c:--I ~---.......... •11. ~ ....... ,.,...tell& c:...,. .............. ..,.
L COuPUN J L C OuPUl\I .IL LUuP< >N J ------------------------r--,~9r.>,. ·, r • -,~RO· -·, r • -·~D· - -, r • -'~90• • -., r • -'®ti·-., I Sawt.12wllhcoupon t4SO 11 S1vt .12 •1111 Coupon ••U 11 ''"·11w11t1Coupo11 ,._ I I aa ... 41 t .03THwiflC9'1P01'-11 S1M.M Wltt1Coupo11 MO I
f tetll Coni-Ptlg. ol 12 Mids Soft. Medium Of tt•d F ..... Froltn : ==-~ .13 :: =:r.~:-.13 :1: =-·~:13 :: =:.:13 :: ~·:.:.13:
I with Coui>Oft I wWI ooupOll 11 wltfl coupClft 11 wltll COllPOft I I _. '*"°" I ~ °"" -.... o... c-, .. c-I ~°""-•°"'c....-.. c-i.-o.. ..... o..e-.-.. c-..-a..-•o..c:.,... .. c:-.... °"'-... °"'c-.. c:..-~ -hjll M·...,..20.'911. C_.._._,......,'11. C:...,. ........ ,........ .. "11. ~-.. ,........... ~--..... ·-L counuN .IL couPON .IL couPON .I L couPCJN .I L couPON .I ----------------' ----------------' --------r--·~·--, r-•1®!'• •., r--'~·--.,r-.,~?:!>·--., r--,~?:!'·--,
I •-.2•w11t1COUp011 ,..,, I I s .... 11 • .01 r .. w1t11c...-,.... I I s ... .oew111e°"'°" ,..,. I I ..,..21 • .01 , ..... c..-.... I I •-.:ic • .01 r .. .-c..-I "~Dartt l rown or A1lpt1a Jiffy •,•aurttol
I Powdered 13 II Rallor..8111 .. 3 II ComMuflln 13 II Mlalc •ldl .. 3 II 1-.•11 13 I I ~ ~~ • 11 Dog Food 2::. I 11 Mix 1:.°: • 11 WI Tape .1 11 •ICh ".: • I
I wit" coupon 11 .. _.,.. I with ooupon 11 wittl-.on 11 .... ..,. LoMO..-nlO...~ .. c-UNI0...-... 0..C...., .. C-. I ,,_°"'_ ... o..c...., .. c:-~o..-•o..~ .. c:-1.11eo..-•o..c-... e-I ~--~·-~ .......... ,.......... c:.,... ........... ~ .. -~ ........ ,.....lt1& ~---..... ·-L couPON .IL COUPON .I L COUPON .IL t:OuPUN .I L t:OuPor.. .I ----------------------------------------
..., Rouncf..llone In Apple Timi Clll••lll'• .....
ROlllll 48 =·-Steak Apple SWiii ir Seu sauce Plckle Chips
18oz. II 2~oz. II .,., II can 1ar lb.
C1lltonu Grown-F'9eh ,...,._or Plnll·Fromn Kelagg's Urve
Fosllrfmms Rllphl Yllow Corn Best-0-f ryer L111IOMlll Pelctm Fllllll • per II 6oz. II 24oz. II .,., II lb. Cln box lb.
For Ralphs Number One Club Members Golden Premium Meats
,..-------~-·cuiii1 All Ralphs Beef Stealls and Roasts
'J'ltls
Weell's
Special
~ 1454 I
are USDA Choice exdusiwely
Offer!
.a;;· .. :: 13 l
Nlbllll Com c1n • 1
with COUp04" I
I ~c::=~~~~u:-: , ... c_v...,01<e.•_,,__,_...,..._o...c....,c•o ~ "·········CCMA'Oll ··········
Pantry Fiiiers
~ 1 .. 111ounc1.o ... 1'°'110 ~London Broil
Super Dell
r:. 111 ~c&mesteek -lb 1••
~ 1••
Super Produce
.10 ~ C8liba MelOi11
1., L.A"*-' ........
l!£J Banana Sql&alh
12 oz. '*• 111 ~R1;'~
:.' 2 21 ~ R,;i.,.
~.99 Super Floral
~ 2••
:'. .89
)to,&. 1'' Health & Beauty --.79
.... [-:A .... ,...,.,
.. ct. 311 ~ Lavoril MoutllWllh
:; 121 ~ p;;,.. Touch
Switch to Number One* •• .Switch to
I Pricll tn.ctive Sept. H thru S9')L 20, 1171
r••1l!f14'·--, r··,en°·--, I ..... ,.. • .ou ....... e...,... tn• 11 IM.1hilll~ ,." I
I 0:.. '!:' 83 11 ~.;Oft, .. :: 119 I
I Dllll Oak gn 1 11 Sot•• I llltllf.....--....... J
........... ,..., .... '"'. c-.................. ,000 .... . ,.,_,.c .. -ttf-•· .. ...,...,oe .. r
I """°"'""" ..,.01111 c~ ,., cwi-11 u.. °"'...,.•OM c.....,.. c...,.. I · e°"'°" "*"" 1fP1 ,..,.,.. to. tt11. e....-ltfwtlfe ..,._ 14 • ..,._ io. 111
L t:OlJPC lN J L couPOl\I J ----------------lfACI I CMfllt m l 11111 ST~ CISU lllW 2111 SM ..:L. IDPllT m.l.S ..... I Ill.Siii
CISTA llW ~-IUCI PASCO• HlOICIA. UC.U laLS 12'41'W1. TIS1ll. IOPllT I._ &YI.
11211 na ST. mrw
. "' . I -
... ' . _ i-.,_ • . ,..... ~"· . .
••-lht""" .... .,... ...... _ .... ................
, ... '
-. . ~ -·~ . .. .. . ., .....
_.. .. 1••
......,_, ......... ... _____
...,..., ___ ...... ..................... ---j ·--.. --.. ...
---------------------
. .
15411 S. ••MST. WUIMllt
SJOI( llOllS.. S 11lllt.1-9 S..,
. .
i • i • I
.. •
I
C:Je DAILY PILOT Wednffdty, Stp1tmb4ir 13, 1978 FOOD
Toss Up Tostadas
You work a 9:00 to s.oo job five days a
week. then fi&bt the rush
hour U'alftc . . . only to
be met by a bunch or ex
pectant and bun1ry
faces. "What's ror din
ner, Mom•"
in large 1k1llet. Pour off
exces1 ht Drain
tomatoes: r erve 1u1ce.
Add water to julct to
make 2 cu ps . ChOJ>
tomatoes, reserve Add
JUlt" '-water mlxluro .
tomato l)Mle, onion, nd
t'umin tom at In skillet '
mix well. Boll aently.
unc ov<i r d , 15 20
minulH IMaku I <1u1&rt
m ut 111u«'l
tr the •c nano sound11
fam iliar. consider th1 ..
happy endlna a ramlly
dlnn r M> impl~ it can
be prepar~d. tart to
finish. in about halt 11n To mah tottadu :
hour Pl11ce torttlla chip on
"Do It Youri.t'll plate
Tostadas" make 11 de
llclout mw, sure to ~ o bit with every m m~r
of the lunJb when you
let Heh penon aast"m
ble his own t.lne the
plate with tortilla
<'hlp11, and serve th~
meat uuce ~cparately
along with a varif'ly
or 111de dlShes such as
~h r e dded lettuct'.
s hredded yeJlo"N ehee!te,
sour t.•ream. chopped
~rtien Chiles for the
!>tout·hearted. chopped
green oolons. and whole
p ee led l o mat oei.
l'h opped into bite size
pieces.
!Sauce. rheest', lettuce.
rt1aerved t o matoes .
chlle•. ollv , omorut and
11our C~Mm
TOOT TOOT TOOTSIE AlJCt;
2 cups sugar
t c1.t,1> lliht corn
syrup
2 tabl poons butter ,, cup s ml·swee t
l'hocolat1.1 pieces *'ci cup liquid instant
nonfat milk
Combine sugar, corn
'!yru p, und butter 10
rnl•d l um l\ftuc~p11n
Pluce over tow heul.
btirrlng until s u gar
melts lncrease heat to
medium, cook. stirring
constantly, until mix
ture comes lO a full boll
Cook WJd stir addlUonal
S minutes. Remove from
hl'ut. Cool s minutes
Stir In chocolate pieces.
Be at with rotary beater
unlit smooth. Add Liquid
instant milk gradually.
beating until blended.
Serve warm or chilled
over ice cream or cake
< M nkes about 3 cups l
Do-it-yourself
tostadas for
a large crowd.
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I
A 11 of these s ide dishes
add up to an intereBting
medley of flavors
both bot and cold, s picy
a n d m ild , all a won-
derful foil for the rich
meat sauce and crispy
tortilla chips.
You can make t his
lively meal sauce in just
m in utes. a welcome
thought a fter a busy
work day. BeUer still,
teach other members or
the family to make it too
MAIE MARIO BASKET YOUR HEADQUARTERS FOR All YOUR LIQUOR NEEDS. YOU'LL FIND NEW lOW
PllCES THROUGHOUT THE ENTIRE LIQUOR DEPARTMENT . MORE THAN JUST A FEW ADVERTISED
SPECIALS ••• BIG SAVINGS ON ALL YOUR FAVORITE BRANDS. EVEN AT THESE DRASTICALLY REDUCED
a nd dinner can be
sim mering when you get
home.
Brown ground chuck
in a large skUJel and
drain off excess fat. Add
the bright warmth of
tom ato paste. a mixture
of tom ato j uice a nd
water. minced onion and
t·umin for a peppy flavor
that·s not too hot but
JUSt ri~ht. Boil gently
a bout a quarter of an
hour and serve.
DO IT YOURSEL F
TOSTA DAS
t 1'z pounds ground
"h11ck
3112 c ups <28·ounce
ca n ) whol e peeled
tomatoes and juice
J uice plus water to
make 2cups
~ cup <6-ounce can>
tomato paste
t tablespoon instant
minced onion
'• teaspoon cumin
t bag 18112 ounces 1
tortilla chips
S hredded Jack or
Cheddar cheese
Shredded leUuce
C ho ppe d g r een
t'h1 lcs
Sliced ripe olives
C h o pped green
omons
Sour cream
Brown ground chuck
Carry
Cake
BLUEBERRY CARR Y·
CAKE
3 cups sifted all ·
purpose flour
3 teaspoons baking
powder
1 teaspoon salt
~cup sugar
t teaspoon ground
nutmeg
PRICES YOU MAY STILL USE YOUR VISA OR MASTERCHARGE CARD .
e SAVlllGS (.ACUUllD lllOM •lGUUR POSllO PllClS PRIOll 10 llJNC I 1!11
Lucky lager
lllll'O•lEO I llOM ttOllANO
Hernekens
Wlllll C*illS UO 8UactlNOl ()11 IKl~I
Almaden Mt. Wines
Gallo Chablis Blanc Wrne
Gallo Hearty Burgundy Wine
'l>Sl Oii "'°' 1
Lancers Wrne
CllA•IS ~111 IOSl Oii &u•&UllOY
Sebast1ani Mt. Wines
86 PtOOI
Ancient Age Whiskey
IO'IOOI Gtlbey's Gm
10 ,.()OI
E & J Brandy
80 '"°°' Kamchatka Vodka
80 Pt()()I 8H ~OIO "''" •I'
Seagram's 7 Crown
ao PROOf
Jim Beam Bourbon .
6 1101 BJlS
ISO Ill
Bil
1 IHll
81l
l~Ol
811
IHll
Bil
l~O Ill
811
<,I.Al
~,,
"" 1111
IJI
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1)1
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kif
QT
81
2" , ..
4 2s 3" .66
1" p • .so
2" 254 .45
3" 3n .60
2" 254 .45
4n 3u .66
3n 2" .51
~-vi
, .. 2°' , .. 4u 2>•
6" 4" 1"
6" 4" 1'0
4u 3u .63
S" 5" .90
6" 5u 1 0s
1.U.
<All
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.Ul 9'1Allfln l !Cilfn HSll'IUI
llO SAU TO OUlflS OI JOI
IUAU OI COMMllCIAl llSI •
IC)ttf.fN
EllCllY
IRADE ''AA''
"LOW .
I RED-X )
LARGE E&&S
*
f
I
. I
l , .. !
1 1".z t e a s p o o n s
~rouo.d cinnamon
'-2 cup vegetable
shortening
3 eggs
SAVE UP TO $5.42 WITH RED-X COUPONS! •--------·· '11!111-··-------~.1:1111---1:~11.9r.·-··---------"-~·--------------------: DOVE I !=:0'1 I ~ H1t1 ~lllt s I ~ I rr.. I ' I
I m llSIWAS.H I I m WILSON CllTIFIED I I 111 CANDY IAIS I I (llSP I I CREEi I I <OU•TIY TIMI I
1 cupmHk
t teaspoon vanilla
extract
3 cups fresh blueber·
ries
STllEUSEL TOPPING :i:. cup a ll-purpose
flour
~ cup quick cooking
oatmeal
:i~ c u p f irml y
p ack e d light brown
sugar
'h cup butter or
m argarine
Combine flour, baking
powde r , salt. sugar,
spices. Cut in shortening
until particles a re very
fine . Add eggs, milk and
vanilla. Beat until batter
is s m ooth and thick.
Spread batter lnto a
greased 13 x 9 x 2·inch
pan. Sprinkle blueber·
rtes over top of batter
Combine streusel ingre .
dlenta a pd mix until
crumbly.
Sprinkle crumbs over
the blueberries. Bake in
a preheated moderate
oven (350" F .) for 40 lO
4S m inutes or until firm
to the touch. Cool In pan
a nd then wrap t.o Lake to
the picnic. Yield: 1 · 13 x
9 x 2·incb cake •
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ANN LANDERS/ HOROSCOPE ClufJ Calendar Wedneeday. Sootcmber 13. 1978 DAIL v PILOT c 11
From left. Mrs Glen E. Stillwell, Mrs.
Walter R. Bennett and model Chnstme
Jordan.
Fall Fashion
A benefit oockt;ul party for the Orange County
Music Center will be held from 6 lo 8 p.m.
Saturday. Sept 16, in a pa~ty ho~ted by Irvine
Pacifir. homebutldrng d1v1s1on of the Irvine
Company. The party wiU be held at lhe Newport
Beach community of Harbor Ridge Designer
fashions will be previewed. Cost 1::. $15 per
pt!rson. which will help fund the center
NOW: A "No on 6" discussion will be
featured at the 7 .30 p.m . meeting on of the Na.
tional Organization for Women Wednesday.
Sept. 13, at the Laguna Federal Savings build·
mg, Laguna Beach.
INTE RNATIONAL YOUTH COUNCIL: The
orgamzalion for teen.agers, sponsored by
Pare nts Without Partners. wUJ meet Thursday,
Sept. 14, at the Fountain Valley home of Fran
Bullock. Information is available from Marc
Gosnell. 531·7516, or Renee Davis. 646·0689.
CLIPPED WINGS: Orange County Chapter
will have its annual membership social at 11
a.m. Thursday, Sept. 14, at the Balboa B8:Y
Club. Information is available from Mrs. Louis
Able. Huntington Beach.
LES PETITES FLEURS: Entry deadline
for the fourth round robin tennis tournament for
A through novice players is Thursday. ~pt. 14.
Terry Harris, 493-5071. will answer q uestions.
KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA: Alumni will
meet for coffee Thursday, Sept. 14, at the home
of Mrs. Douglas McCrea. Irvine. Reservations
may be made with Mrs. James Kelly, 644·7072.
Pl BETA PW: South Coast Alumnae Club
will meet at 10:30 a.m. Thursday, Sept. 14 , at
614 W. Bay, Balboa Penins ula.
B'NAI B'RITH: Simcha Chapter will meet
at 1 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 14, at the Founta~
Va lley Community Center. Guest s peaker will
be Rabbi A. Yisroel Klein of Temple Sharon.
THURSDAY MOR NING CLUB: The Santa
Ana Country Club will be the setting fo r the an·
nual friendship tea at 2 p.m . Thursday, Sept. 14
M ESA·RARBOR CLUB: "Let's Get Ready
for Fall " will theme a champagne brunch at
Bullock's. South Coast P laza. at 9· 15 a.m.
Thursday. Sept. 14.
ASSISTANCE LEAGUE: Orange Coast res·
&dents are inv1too to enter the Junior Aux·
illary's annual shuffle and serve bridge and ten·
nis tournament an October , November, January,
f'~ebruary and March.
Applications must be in by Friday, ~pt. 15.
with a fee of $12.50 per person. Tennis shops
and clubs in the Newport area and the Mesa
Verde and Santa Ana country clubs have entry
forms
MISSION AUXILIARY: The Providen~e
Speech and Hearing Center support group will
have a luncheon and card party at noon Friday,
Sept . 15, in Ha mmond ~all, St. George's
Episcopal Church, Laguna Hills.
S ILVER ANCHOR AUX I LIARY : A
Hawaiian party is planned for Saturday. Sept.
16. at the home of Mrs. W. Rose. Cocktails will
be ser ved at 6: 15 p.m .
AMERICAN HANDWRITING ANALYSIS
· Jo'OUNDATION : William Warren, president of
the Hartley Co., Costa Mesa, will s peak at the
9:30 a.m. Saturday, Sept. 16, meeting in the
Stale Mutual buiJding, Newport Beach.
LAGUNA NIGUEL WOM EN'S CLUB: A
mem bcrshlp brunch is scheduled for 10 a. m
Saturday, Sept 16, at the home of Carol
O'altorio. Information is available from Janet
Meibaus, 831·2901.
PATRONS CIRCLE: J ohn Wordes, new as·
sociate dean or community services for Golden
West College, will address the circle at 11 :45
a.m Friday, Sept. 15, in the community center.
BIG SISTERS: The .county group is selling
tickets to the Subar u International Motorcycle
Olympiad to take place Sunday, Sept. 17, at Sad·
dleback Park, Orange. Tickets are available
through Friday. Sept. 15, at the Big Sisters of·
rice at the YWCA, Santa An a, 834-1116.
LAGUNA PIDLHARMONIC COMMITfEE:
A m embersrup luncheon ls scheduled for 11
a.m. Monday, Sept. 18, ln the home of Mrs.
Harold L. Hanse, Three Arch Bay.
SEA ClltCLE: A progressive bridge and gin
rummy tournament will begin in October for
Mrs . Jane Dobrott and Robert R.
Whiton plan CHOC benefit.
CHOC Benefit
The Cinderella Guild of the Children's Hospital
or Orange County will hold a pre-Opening ::.'}>eC·
tacular of the Advanced Health Center and
Center Club at 7 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 14. There
will be a buffet. dancing and entertainment. A
Limited number or tickets will be available at
the door. For reservations caJI CHOC or the
Health Center.
benefit of Florence Cnttenton Ser vices of
Orange County. The entry fee of $20 must be re·
ceived by Sunday, Sept. 17. Information is
available from Mrs. Pope Hilburn. 644-4775
LEAGUE OF WOME N VOTERS: A F r uit·
ful Brunch is planned for 9:30 a.m. Monday,
Sept. 18, for new and p rospective members.
Information is available from Reeva
Thomas. 581·0404.
NEW NE IGHBOR J UNIORS: A Get Ac·
quainted Night is scheduled at 7:30 p.m. Mon·
day. Sept. 18, at the Dana Point Community
House. New residents of Dana Point, San Juan
Capistrano and San Clemente are invited. In·
forma tion 1s available from Mrs. Larry Lam pe,
493·9127.
DOLPHINS: Judge F rances Munoz will
s peak on The Status of Women during a
luncheon at 11:30 a .m. Tuesday, Sept. 19, at the
Balboa Bay Club.
HARBOR VIE W HILLS COMMITTEE:
Maurice Allard, new director of the Orange
County Master Chorale. will speak for the com-
mittee at its meeting al 9:30 a.m . Tuesday,
Sept. 19, at the home of Mrs . Robert F. Weber,
Laguna Beach.
RANCHO VI EJO WOMAN'S CLUB : Mem·
bers will meet for lunch at the Mercury Savings
bu ilding, El Toro. Reservations are available
from Connie Cook. 586·5132.
WORKSHOP: "Wome n and Depression"
will be topic for a program at 8 p.m . Tuesday,
Sept. 19. at the Women's Law Center. Tustin.
Moderator will be Tr ula Michaels de LaCalle,
PhD.
H UNTINGTON BEACH NEWCOMERS
CLUB: A coffee is scheduled for 9:30 a.m.
Wednesday. Sept. 20. Information is available by
calling 848·3132.
BRANDEIS UNIV ERSITY: The National
Women's Committee of Orange County will
haH its annual membership brunch at 9 a.m.
Wednesday. Sept. 20, at the Balboa Bay Club.
Howard Kaplan, author of "The Damascus Cov·
er," will speak.
Reservations are available from Judy Ein·
bund. 64Q.6050.
OFFICERS' WIVES LEAGUE: A mem·
bership lea 1s planned for 2 p.m. Wednesday,
Sept. 20, in the Newport Beach home of Helen
Bernard.
VOUTll EXCHANGE SERVICE: Homes
are needed for foreign students for the fall
semester or winter holidays. Interested persons
m ay call YES at 492-7907.
SOUTII COAST R EPERTORY: The volun·
teer support guilds will host a champagne mem·.
bership brunch at 10 a.m. Wednesday, Sept. 20,
at the new Fourth Step Theater. Costa Mesa.
Reservations may be made by calling 646·3252.
NE WPORT B EACH CHR I ST I AN
WOM EN'S CLUB: Tennis fashions wi ll be
shown at ll:45 a.m. meeting Wednesday. Sept.
20, in the Airporter Inn
Speaker will be F lorence Lillauer, pro·
fessional model and marriage enrichment
teacher.
R eserva tions arc available from Mrs .
Waller Tyler . 673 8877.
AMERI C A N A SS OC I ATION OF
UNIVE RSITY WOMEN: Members hip events
are planned by the Huntington Beach. Newport·
Mesa and West minster·Fountatn Valle y
Branches.
T he Huntington Beach Branch will have a
champagne brunch at 10 a.m. Saturday. Sept.
16 at the Huntington Beach Central Library.
' Newport-Mesa's event will take place at 2
p.m . Saturday, Sept. 16, at the home of Mrs.
Daniel G. Aldrich. Newport Beach.
Westminster.Fountain Valley will greet pro·
speclive members the same day at 10 a.m. at
the Fountain Valley Recreation Center.
M USI CAL THE ATER GUILD : T h e
Newport Beach group will present a scholars hip
benefit fasruon show at 11 :30 a.m. Wednesday,
Sept. 20. in the Carousel Room of the Newporter
Inn. Cost ls $10 and procee¢; will go to music
and theater students attending area colleges.
For inrormation on the show, open to the public,
call 675-0968.
fRANCI8 -0RR
C.11142-5171.
Put • tew word• to work for ou .
•
fine stationery
.. ----
corm a del mar
. -. . .. .
• • • • ·-• • :t • • .,.. ~ ... -.,__ _____ ..__........_ ..
An Old Definition
DEAR ANN: AJl the
hulla baloo about Prin
ceas C81'0line's wedding
rem inded me or that
g r eat d efinit ion you
gave a long time ago for
"class" -something
a bo ut "gr ace u nder
pressur e ." Will you
repeat ll? -BELLAIRE.
OHIO
DEAR BELL: Actual·
ly It was a deftnltloa or
"Grace unde r preit·
ure": I said U was Her
Serene Highness wear·
Ing her 1952 girdle.
DEAR ANN : I am just
an average person with
a simple story to tell.
My wife doesn't nag me
a bout my snorin g or
other annoying habits.
My fat.her·in·law doesn't
try to· borrow money
from me. My daughter
isn't going with a bum
who gets on my nerves.
My son isn 't spaced out
on drugs or in jail for
stealing cars. I have a
he~lt~y ba nk account
Aaa
'-'·~
and plan to take a trip lo
the Orient next month
Last year 1 wen t to.
South America for three
weeks and to Florida an
February. Next year
I'm going to Australia
and New Zealand.
I am in good health
and have never messed
with tra~quilllzers o r
booze. My blood pres·
s ure i s li ke a
25·year·old's, although I
will soon be60.
How do I manage this"
I never married. Please
pass this formula on to
your readers. -HAPPY
ASA LARK
DEAR LARK: So you
never married? Whe re
( Horoscope )
By SYDNEY OMABR
THURSDAY.SEPT.14
ARIES <Ma rch 21·April 19>: Accent on
friendship. getting money's worth, stating needs
in frank manner . Aquarian plays key role. You
are given a way to correct mistakes. to use as·
sets to positive advantage.
TAURUS (April 20·May 20>: Be ready for
surprises obtained fro m wr itten ma terial.
Check labels. contr acts; be aware of "ingre·
dients," legal or otherwise. Business affairs
dominate. Promises are put to test. Member or
opposite sex can be an ally.
GEMINI <May 21·June 20l: Home affairs
are "cha nged" due to long·distance call or
m essage. Taurus. Libra. Scorpio individuals
figure prominently. Be receptive to peace offer·
ing.
CANCER <June 21·July 22>: Look behind
scen es -someone expects something for
nothing -you could be a prime target. Know it
and protect yourself in clinches. Accent on hid·
den cla~. s pecial terms involving leases.
LEO <July 23·Aug . 22>: Emphasis on
reaching agreement, accepting an obligation. un·
derstandingthat you pay for what you get -in one
way or anothe r. Business and love are highlight·
ed. Nothing is lukewarm -it is all or nothing. the
die is cast and you win or lose,nodrawdecision.
VIRGO <Aug. 23-Sept. 22>: You get job
done, added recognition results. Aries. Libra
persons figure prominently. E mphasis on de·
pen dents. pets, general welfare. Illus trate
belie fs. Develop a style or your own.
LIBRA <Sept. 23·0ct. 22 >: Get to heart or
m atte rs -and gain an understanding of your
own heart. Feelings dominate -logic fights for
pla ce in your persona l scenario. Welcome
c ha llenge, new contact --give yourself a
chance to love.
SCORPIO COct. 23·Nov. 21l: You gain rare
insight to the "rest or the story ... Means you
learn about costs. what to expect in return fQr
money and efforts. You will be more secure
within.
SAGITfARIVS <Nov . 22·Dec. 21 1. Gain
view from the top -leave details for another
time. Gemini is in picture --so is the number 3.
Relative conveys good news. is optimistic -
a nd there could be legitim ate reason to
celebrate.
CAPRICORN <Dec 22·Jan. 191: Accent on
finance, budget, getting mos t for your money,
checking fi ne points. details. Someone is willing
to take risks -al your expense. Know when to
draw the line. Aquar ian figures prominently.
AQUARIUS <J an . 20·Feb. 181: Take a
chance speculate on your own capab1hties.
tale nts . Gemini. Vi rgo, Sagittarius persons
fi gure prominently. Yes. the changes will prove
beneficial.
P ISCES <Feb. 19·March 20>: What was a
question mark becomes a statement -and it
favors you. You are on brink of discovery. Taurus.
Libra, Scorpio individuals play roles in your
personal scenario.
\.'!,a~G~~
THE RIGHT
WAY
Advanced
Health Center .
will help you get weight off
and keep It off!
e 'Personalized Program' tailored
just for you! To meet your
needs!
• No Shots, Gimmicks, or Fad
. Diet!
• Profeaalonal Staff!
LOOK BETTER •
FEEL BETTER
Get More Fun Out Of Life
Call Now for Information
(714) 975-0700
Advanced Health Center
Open Every Day 8 AM to 10 PM
The Prof1111ona1 Approach to Self Control
Weight, Smoking, Alcohol and StreH.
1300Brtleof91rMt Notth, Newpott8Mch,CA92MO
, .... ,.. ~ -I
' • I • • .. . ..
should I send the medal?
Granted, marriage is not r 0 r e v e r y .
one. but t'Very study I
h ave seen shows that
m arried men live longer
-and don't tell melt just
SEE MS LO NGE R . Married men also elQ(>y
better heaJth than &heir
unmarried brothers. If
you tbi.Dk bache lorhood
ls a guarantee agalntit
b e ing b r o k e, i.ick
alcoholic and miserable,
just look around, chum.
D EAR ANN
LANDERS What is this
world coming to when a
rN1red person's s mall
JOft or money ii; re·
turned "
l sent a lovely card tu
a graduate and enclost!d
a few dollar bills as my
gift. l was heartsick
when a family meml:)e r
returned the money with
a nasty note.
Should I send a larger
a mount and apologize.
or w h a t 7 I feel so
humJhated I don't know
how I can ever Cac~
the se rolks again.
COLUMBUS, OHIO
D E A R F R I E ND .
Some people consider a
gi ft of m on ey "in·
delicate." but there Is oo
excuse for returrung h
wltb a nasty note.
I ~u spect t here i
a no ther expl an ation .
Perhaps they felt you
co uld not s pa re tht'
money and dJdn't want to accept it for that
reason. Why don't you
make a telepboae call
and get the racts?
BACK TO SCHOOL SAVINGS
Girls' Jeans-Tops-Shirts
s700 -s1200 SIU 1 to '4
JEANS •1141-sio.oo
S\2,
LARGE SEUCTIOH JI. SPOl'TS ~
20 to 500/o OFF
10% OFF~._;!·
AMYPUIC*SE
GARMENT V.ORKS
CouPon Good TU 9/30/78
HlRBOR CENTEl~NNER MALL
! ................... .
2100 M. HlriMw-ll•d., Costa ~set 7~732
OP81 7 DAYSA ~
6JJJll:i.r.c • * • ~-THE SAVING PLACE-~
~Includes:
3-5x7's
15·WalletS
4·Colo< Portrait Charms
The pelfea Colo< Portrait
'-===--===-r-' PocXoge for the entife
'
fomily ot a supec-Kman
price. and In o variety of
poses and backgrounds.
One sitting per subject.
No additional charge for
groups. Poses our selec·
oon. Sotistoction otwoys ex
deposl(~~.
T teSI DAYS OML Y
SIPTIMla
TUES.. 12, \llllD. I l
TNllS..14,Nl 15
SAT. 16
D.ily:IO .........
s.tu day: I OAM-UM
2200 ....-.... wet.
Cotta M•to
11440 1Nclt t ..... .........
'''·~=:.!"'·
,
• t -• • -
'.
The Better Way to be sure you're getting your first choice!
= 29c
Orelt With port! prlnd)t!ld J8 01
Rice Mixes• . . • 49c
Choice of varieU. lD 6 Ol pk.I
P-nut 1utter=99c
Scudder'• Old Puhioned -16 oa
Potato Ch" =r 99c
Sc:udder'a -12 individual eise ha,.
Dressilg tr~· . . 49c
Vinaigrette, Italian, lt.alian/Cheeee 8 oz
Margarite • • • • • • 75c
Muola -the aoodneea of maize! I lb
Snack Packmn •• 7SC
For lunch -all ftrietieel four 5 oz
OCEll
SPllY
JUIGS
Cranberry or Cranapple! 48 oz
~al=1~ •••• 79c
Reg., Raiains or w/ Apple! 16 oz
liquid Slender • 39c
Carnation dietary -all flavors -10 oz
·Oreo Cookies •• 11••
Nabiaoo Cremee, Double Stuff -15 oz
Flour PWm • • • • • • ggc
Reg or Unbleached -5 lb bag
PUREX 69C BLEACH
Liquid for whiter white! Gallon
Breakfast Bars 79c
Grandma'• -all flavon -pkg of 6
Macaroni.-.•• 29c
Kraft's -easy to prepal'91 7 'A oz
Ty D Bol ••••••• 7ge
Cleam the bowl for you! 12 cie
, Viva Napkins •• ~ 59c
Decorat.ed -colon or wh1te -pq of 140
Noodle Roni •••• 59c
Romanoff or Parmeaano -'6 oz pkg
Fadal
nss•s
Scotties -colors or white -200 ct.
ftl IDll • Tt --IUT,.... ,__., _ U • 118111, IT 8 W
• llW" •·•·• .......... 111 ...... _,
...
~ ...
t .c ••
.--------
SPARE s119
RIBS ::U •
Freeh! From Eat.em grain fed pork
Pork Roast~·s14!·
Loin cut fresh Eutem pork
Pork Roast ... SJ•!
Loin cut freeb Eastern pork
IEESS iOAS, s2 4!
Freeh! Lean! .•• Eutem pork
Park lain Ina& ~w:.~.,c .. ~l~
Roast one to a golden good.Dea. thia week and see how your folks will relish every morsel! Here7s pork at it.s beet!
Cubes of Pork • s21!
Freeh! Leen! .•• for Oriental recipes
Pork Loin 5249
OPS:S-•
Fresh -and lean Ea.stem pork .
Pork Chops ... s11~
Loin cut and fresh! Bake or b-bq!
Pork Loin s 119
CHOPS:"' •
. Eastern flavor . . . fresh for value
Pork Sausage •• s1 ·~
El Rancho's old faahioned style
With Bread Dreeaing, but ter, egp
Fr11h Cli1/t11 ~ASTie •••••••••• 71!
Eztra Large Grade "A" meaty frying chickens. stuffed and oven ready to offer the family a real treat! from Zacky Farms!
Chopped s 179
STEAK •
Leaneet grind • . . three per lb. Does
not exceed 15% fat
CHUCK s109. SBAK
Center cut! U.S.D.A. Choice bee{
New York s419
STEAK •
Loin cut U.8.0 .A. choice beef
Msw Yark ftrlp = ..... ~lll.
Lookine for satiafactioo in hearty beef goodneee? Your8Nrch is ended with thia loin cut of better beef!
Ground Beef :r~s1 5~
Lean -does not exceed 22% fat ·
Ground · S 179 BBF •
Leaneet grind -does not exceed 16'll
fat content.
Ge111ine Milk-Fed Veal
Featured every day at El Rancho
~mt s1s' Sausage •
OR BRA'IWURST! We make It!
No Nitrites
Sliced Bacon ••• s14!
El Rancho's thicker ranch sty1'
MIFSS
lllfD Ef
Roast
Chuck cut Choice shoulder clod
Super Fresh 'ProdtWl'-4
. l1ri/1ii PlaPs~ ... II!
Sweetened by the California sun ••• mellow flavor you'll love .•• and large, for more pleasure
BROCCOLI
29~ FRUIT 31 s1 ROLLS I
Grocer's C hoice .•. assorted
flavor&. . . 1 oz pkg.
HOIEYDEWS
19t
· r:.:':'1 s24' ·s...,,... •
For the oven, Millet or broiler!
'lah• Mah' SJ51 I I . . . . . •
Fillet.a that promile real pleaaure
True Codfl&l11 ••• 125!,
Prelb! •• to offer rewuding tate
FRESH s219• TROUT
Mountain variety.average 1 to 2 lbe
Conina Bass •• s2•!
Filletl to afford gre1t dining
Hallfut Steak •• s31!
Center cut from Northern fiab
CRAB
UGS
Meaty! Alaakan crab for value
Johann Meuter wina con
make it a "ho·ho ••
..._ dinner inllteod of
.. ,,. • another ho-hum meal!
Liebfra1111ilch •• s221
Johann Meister -ezclusively ours! 5th
Riesling. 11 ••• s211
Johann Meister goes with pork! 6th
Zeier ...nun ••• s2''
Johann Meister -from Germany! 5th
Liquor Dep 't.
IEDUCEI $2.00!
GCllMl'S s9" Gii
Save on the 1.76 liter size
Scotcha-.s ... s499
Bottled in Scotland -86 proof! 5th
Vennouth.. • • SJ 99
Dry. Sweet or 'h and 'h ... fifth
SEIASTlll Wiiis s299
• Roee. Burgundy or Chablis -~ gal
CremedeMenthe s399
Hiram Walker Orem or White -5th
J & B Scotch . s17'1
The 1.75 liter size reduced 1.96!
SAVE 60C Whl:, s499
Straight -86 proof -6 year old! Qt
------Frozen Food Pricea in effect Thur. Sept. 14
throURii Wed. Sept. 20 Delicatessen
Ice Cream HALF-Clll~ ••• 99c
Chooee the favored flavon in Springfield't1 smooth creamy value!
Apple Pie •••••• SJ 31
Johnston's Double CNAt or Dutch -38 oz
Orange Juice ••• age
Minute Maid flom Florida -12 01
VEGETAll'S
" .. mu 19c Cll .. JI•
U•••·.11t)'
Broccoli ......... 39c
Birdseye's garden goodnesa -10 oz
Pie Shells • • • • • 49c
Pet RJtz -pkg of two - 9 inch
EICHILADAS ......... .......
O' '11 7'n • 49c
Opera daily 9 to 9 Sunday 10 to 7
No sak11 to dealers Jack Cheese a IWICHO'S • ~.1 7!
Smooth and creamy! Packaged just for ua -and fur you! By the piece
Braunschweiger s1 11
JoDM' Farm •.• aliced .•. 12 oz pkg.
Swiss Cheese •• s1 49
Alp1 brand -aliced -in 10 oz pkg
PIZZA 89C cnsn
Toni'• ... e ckar ot two!
,..., -,.,-., J -no>
Crescent Rolls • 49c
Pillsbury'a -light and flaky! 8 oz
Fruit Drinks • • • • 59c
Minute Maid choice ot 3 f1avon 64 oz
IACOI
BITS
Oacar Mayer-100% real bacon! 3 oz
ARCADIA PASADENA SOUTH PASADENA HUNTINGTON BEACH NEWPORT BEACM EASTBLUFF IRVINE . · LAGUNA HILLS
'-11111, •. , .-lnd Hun1111ql 1" ~.fl w {_tdOf'1dO flly11 ''l"lll11nl •Utd ••11•1f1nlJlt•f• w,,ll)f•r .. HH1 AlcJllflC~\1111 •1 '.'l ,...,,. WI""' u1 .... 1 ...... ·.I .1·.!111 ,, l> ,,,,t\,t'l ... rl\ l 1•1 "'111 ,,,. \11r• ,' th•l 1 ~'''1111 n f .,;~ .....
f I Htln(hu ( •• ,,r, .. , I of OutrH.~··i.i rov t• ~nuthr.1\lt I (l(IH'f • • "'. ' H.11hour M Aii (t .> On th·· ,,,.n.n·.ul,t . t .t•.ltil111f \'111.tq•· ( •·rtli•r ' "" °Vlt'Aao' .. ,,,,., M oullf)n f'.a ffW4i y PIA/A •
CllTAC WSIW •••..••••• $151
0lv.!1oor cold to COlftac ••• Piii of JO
Sun MllURIE ............. 89C ""ti_ ...... , ... '"
m1£TTE -..s ............ 790
Super 1talnJeee 11.etl -packap ol 6 b11dn
Cl.ASS Pl.US • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 19c
Clt3M *' man,. thlnpl ~l oi trlatr epr1y
COTTOll SWABS •••••••••••••• lie
From Jobneon i nd JobMon ..• PtcUP ol 88
llOU.YWOOD RSSICS ...... 79o
Chooet lt11ll1n or aa.lan In 12 oa bottle
1111 UZll •••.•.•...•.•••• $3.89
Olllett.'e new 11havln1 tenutlonl
m1P£ Jal.Y ••.••••••••.•••••• ftC
Smucker'• ••. it hu to be cood! 32 oa
PEl'TO ,..__ •••••••••••••• $1.31
Olwe rellet from ind._lont 8 as
STAY FllE 1111 PIDS ....... llO
Comfort you•,. enuU.ct to! pq ~ 12 1 1 I
•"'"" _ ..... ... , ... -.. ,. .. -. t I • e .. ,. . . . -.... . ... .. -. .. . .. ,.. . . ....
I I • •• • 4 I .... _ ..__, ------. "-"-.. ' . . .. . .. ........ ......, .. -,,. . . . ., ' .. .
t
. •
-. ..
t.· :.
By BU Keane
"I can't go in the wot., yet. It hc»n't bMn on
hour since f ote."
Coll~ ts Art
Lecture , Tour
lnleruet1ng wtth Art. a tour and leeture series,
as being ottered ui. part of Saddteback College's
Forum for Leaming program.
It is highlighted by fieJd trips and tours of
Sou them Califomfa 's art exhibitions and gallery
collecUoos. lectures and guided tours. ·
The senes is set for Saturdays, Sept. 16 and 30.
and Oct. 14 and 28. Reeliner bus transportation
will be provided on each tour.
Registration is unde r w ay in Building A. locat-
ed on the lower campus or the Mission Viejo cam-
pus, 28000 Marguerite Parkway.
PUBLIC NOTICE
Pl~ITIOUS alJSl"l!SS
NAMIE STA 1"£Ml!HT Tiit lollowing persons •rt d01n11
OU\,M\\H!
SONIC SYSTEMS LI MITED, "2
Tr-.CO Clr., ~ MeM, CMl'°""41
w.21
Robert M. Sollus •nd P•ul J,
N1colelll J r., "2 Tr-Clf .• Cost• ~w. C.lltornl•nt.27
Tl'ih l>Utlntu ls UW•OV<ted b't •
etntr•I~.
R-M~ fltt~ \\Mtmeflt -~ mec1 wit" , ...
County Cl~ Of Ora~ Co<intv on
'°"'9U>l 1', lt7f
,~
PuDllslled Or-co.t~t Delly Pilot,
Auousl 2), »end ~r •. 13, 1'71
40»·1'
PUBUC NOTICE
P UBLIC NOTICE
l wo Slcwy Wood frame .0 year old
Plld OW.lllng wlll be av.MletHe for re·
movel and relocMion from '°' NMh
8ay Front. ~ 8Nc" C.11 11141 us-,.,.. f()f" 0.lalls..
Pu1>11Sheel 0raft99 CoMt Oltlly PllOt, s.pt...,* 7, I, 11, 12, 1J. 14, IS, If, 1', 20, 197t
PUBLIC NOTICE
.,..,.
NOTICE TOCltl!OtTOllS
NO.~ su .. •••c. COU•T o .. THI nATECH'CALl~NIAFOR
THI! CIOUNTYCH'ORAMOE
In the M.9ner Of t1W Eti.t• Of RUTH
BREMER 8AKER, Otceewd.
Nolle• Is ,_..,., gl...n 10 creollon
FICTITIOUS •USINISS hning <Iii-~Inst t ... said de<e-
NAM« STATUMiNT dent to Ille said <i.imt Ill the offke of
The followlftg __, b dOl119 l><ISI-, ... <IH• Of IN .ioresald <-1 Of" lo
MSSH: -I "-"'IOIM...-niQMdatt ....
E 0 R EHGIN&ERING co .. olllce OJ O'MEl.VENY ... MYERS,
ISCAN A ASSOCIATES. ISCAN ISOLOMONM ICAMM.ltll~I SI•·
ENGINEERIKG, 22o. Colle9e AW., 111 Slreel, LOI AnqelH, C•lltornla
••. CoslaMese. ca. Q.11 -17, -leflt9iie. otlk e "thej)faceOf
Enllnc 1-. 221» ~ AW.. b\o~lntU of, ... -~ In ell ..... ,.
••· COslA Mn-. C:.. n.11 ter~ per1itlftlng to MMC! HI• ... S..C"
T"'' -'-ts~ Dr .,. ,,.. claims "''"' me N<ftstry vouctwrs dlvkNal. mu11 De 111«1 or Pf'tW!lt..S ., afOf"esald
Erdlft< lscan wllllln four monthS etter IM l1rs1
This SWlttnenC wat llltd wlflt ttw ~bllutlon at""' nolK:e.
CO\lftly Cieo< of Oranoe C-tV on 0.led AuQUSl21, 1971 AllQllU tt. tm. Fr.ncli H. 8u<T Fl-1 E 1'ttVl« ol tM
PuDtlslled Or-CO.st 0.lly Piiot Wiii of ~Id Oec-nt
A\111. 30, SIP!. 6, 13. 20, "71 ~*-1t ~.!. ~=11'5
PUBLIC NOTICE Att_.,. .. Lew
611 WHIMdl~ ------------t ..... A ...... ClllHenlie-17 Publlsn.d OrMgt CO.st O.hv P1101. ~7f74
MOTlc:tl TOCJt•CHTOlltS su .. 1•10. COUltT OF THE
STATI CH'CAUl"OflMIA FOlt
THE COUNTY~ OltANGI _...,...
Est••• OI WILi.ARO BERRY
WILSON, SR , 0.CNWO
Auqusl 23, JO and ~r•, IJ, 1•71
HOHi
P UBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lo.... FICTITIOUS a USINESS
tr~llO<"\ at the -namtO dtCe<lenl N_. STAHMEHT
th•I •II ~ .,.vonQ clel"" -Inst TM lotlowtng penon Is doing bu••· •~ w 10 ~• are reciu.r..i to lilt neu as:
11-.m, with h necess«v VOU<lle~ In • IRVI NE INSTRUCT IOHAI.
Ille offl<t ol 11tt C9-of ltM! •bow en-MEDIA •HO CREATIVE ARTS, I
lltled court, 0< to present tf\cm. will! CMlyonRl<IQt,lntlne,CA'1711S , Ille ne<en.arv vouc ... rs, to Ille un-Belly Jane Ferrell. I Onyon
CleNogMd •I ti.. law otllce ot C.•. Rl6911, I rvlM, CA 9271S
HIGBIE, mM.trfne ·-· p 0 So• Tiii• DUslMU •• conOuc1ed by an In· ne, ~'-lslend. CA 92 .. 2, whk" Is 0Moue1. Ille pl•<• of buslnus ot the un· Betty J-F~ll
deN•llnecl In Ml metttn pertalnlnQ lo This slatemtnl was lllecl "''"' tlle tile '1t•te ot wod OK-.it, wllllln tour COunty Cleric al Orange County on St!>·
montM alter tr.. ""' PUOll<ellol> ot temt>er S. 1971 Fl_,IS
Publtshtd Or-COHI Oltity Piiot '""notice
OeteO AUQUSI 17, ''" MILDRED WILSON
Ei<teutrl• of ,,,. Wiii of
tllt _,..""med 0tceoan1
C.A. HtGalE
ll'Marl .. A-P.O ... am
aa1 ... 111-.CA'2661 Tel: t1Hl •1>-1'11
At-y..,. ElllKVlrl•
Pul>lblleel °'""II' Coast Dally PllOI,
Auo, n , JO, 5e91. •· tl. 1971
PUBLIC NOTICE
SUPtUUQtt COUltT OF THE
STATI! OF CAl.tFOlltNIA ,Olt
THE C:OUNTYOFOltANOE
...... '71:11
NOTICE OF HEARING OF
Pl!TITION l<Olt PtlOSATE OF Wll.I.
•NO 1.llf T Elt S OF AO · MIHIST•olTION WITH WILi. AH·
"'EXEO
Est•te o t JO!>EP H 0 .
FITZ PA TRICK. Otce•sed
HOllCE IS HEREBY GIVEN tNt
EOWA RO "'· FITZPATRICK l>es fifed
~ 6, 13. 20.11 • ..,, 4231-lt
P UBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS alJSINHS
HNIOIE STATl.MaNT
Tt>e lottowing persot1 Is OOlng bull·
MUAS:
A I RPORT BUILOING
MAINTENANCE. 27012 El Retlro,
Mlul<>!> vi.to. C.ttioc'"• mrs
Jottn S~ Gustavvs. 27011 El
Rttlro, Mission Viejo, CJllllO<'r"• 91'7S
Tiii\ l>uSIM$S I• conducted by •n In·
dlvldu•I. SI~ Gustevll\
TMs ,._,_,was 111ec1 ""m lite
County Clerk of Or•t111e County on
Auqust 11, 1m. ,_,..
Pul>lls"4!0 Drano-Coast Oltlly PllOI.
August1l. l0 and Se¢ember6. 13. 1'71 ~---~--~•.1m.11
PUBLIC NOTICE
11tteln " petition tor Pro4Mte of Wiii FICTIT10U•aUSll41!'5>
and 1uuence OI U!tlen. ot AOmlnlstr•· NAMtESTAT.,1,.ENT
I • 0 n w I I " w I I I • n" ~ •• 0 • The 1011-1119 per,...., ere doono
rel Hence 10 wlllc" l\ maoe tor bw\IMn •~
turthtr -tkute"--ll'iel llW time LIOU·A·f'l.ATE. llUO Ward ano p•a<• OI .,...,119 1.,. -toai Strut, Fountain venev, c..i111orn1e 0ttn set IO<" SetJt. 26, t971, •I 10:00 t270I
a.m , In Ille courtroom Of Oeoel'tmenl ARCHER'S PRODUCTS, INC., a
Ho. l ot wio coun. at 100 0 Yk Center Olltornl• c0<-por•llon, tl320 Ward Ot1ve WHI. In ""' O ty Of sent• Ana, Strtet, Foun1a111 V•llo. Celllornta
C.lllornla '270I
o.1ecs Sot9t~r 1. tm This !WM~•;, c:onc111<1tC1 llY a cor· WIU.1-E. St JOHN, por•llon.
C-tV Cle<lc Archer's Proeluels, Inc.
•O•llltT ... EASTM.... Robert o. Arcller An_,.....__ Prftlcleftt
21't MaAw.......,..... Thlt st•1-t "'u HI~ ¥11111' 1M U~ JIJ County C1tf11 ol Or•~ County on Gett•-· CA ma itovoust "· "71. Telt ~ ~"""' AftttMY ter: "'9tlt...... Published Or..,ge Coert o.tly Pilot,
Pul>ll)hed 0r-. Coast O.llV Piiot August ll. JO ...o Sept-••. 11. t•7t Sf Pl .•• 7, I). 1•11 417)-7t 4101·1'
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W~y. September 13. 1978 * DAIL y Pit.OT Pl
The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast
DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS
You Can Sell It, Find It,
Trade It With a Want Ad (642-5678 )
H1u111PwS. .._...,._~ ..._.. .... S. 1t1-..ts For5*
One CaU Service
Fa i t Credit Approval
....................... ······•·········•••···· ....................... ···•·•······•········· ....................... ••••·•·•···········•··· •••rtl IOOJ Gt•rel 1002 C91•r.. 1002 Ci1•r.. 1002 Gt•r• 1002 ····•····•··•········•· ···········~··········· ...•..........•...•.•.• ··········•············ ·········•·······•····· .•••.•..••....•........
OCIANFION'r
Fine craftsmanship in mahog. trim &
oak floors, sets off this landmark: 4
BR. 3 ba. home In finest location.
EstabUShed trees & lawns. $475,000.
I.ACK 1.AY ft~ine 4 bdrm., 2th bath family home on
quiet cul de sac. Oversized pool,
playhouse, extra storage $169.000.
IAYFROMT
Several fine bayfront homes
with pier & slip
BILL GRUNDY , REALTOR
· , • , , ! , L'. . . •. '" t· I~ b 1t>1
•••••••••••••••••••••••
EQUAL HOUS*G
OPPOflTUNITY
IMtGAIH HUNTHS
Here 's the one you've
been looking for-:t
great Mesa Verde ramily
home for only S78.900. 3
Bdrm 2 bath family room
w/Cpk. Lots or exlras. re ·
ady to move into. Call
5*>-l.151
,~!~HERITAGE
. . REALTORS
............. Motke: lack lar Special
All real estate advertised First time orrered 1n l2tr..t
in UUs newspaper is sub-years. Out&,tand1ng.
Ject to the Federal Fai custom decorated home
Housin g Act or 196 with large cozy family
I IN BAYCREST I
IA YCUST llAUTY -4 bdrm. 3 bath.
f rplce, formal dining, lge ms tr s uite.
on fee land, $230.000.
SkYLARk LAHE -Re decor ated .
r elandscaped and really ready! 4
bdrm, 21h bath Bay crest beauty .
Single story with pool. $199,500.
UCl'TIMG FAMILY HOME -Newport's
Back Bay, 4 Bdrm. sgle sty, sparkling
pool and t asteful use of woods. tiles
and brick. Perfect ! $219,500.
U,... l()U I: t1 f)Ml:S
REAL TORSI!, 675·6000
2443 East Coast Highway. Corona del Mar
also 1n MCSd Verde. dl 546 5990
which makes it illegal room. built-in TV. &1---------a dvertise "any pre-paneled bar. Country
ference, limitation. o kitchen with stained
di.s.criminalion based on glass window. and room race, color. religion, sex, ror pool make this a
or national origin, or a perfect family home .
iolention to make any $198.500. 673-8550.
such pre.ference, limlta Ol'fN 111 o • u ~•UN roN r.i<1 •
Uon,ordiscriminaUon." !'w· I
This ~wspaper will no ' · · 1fiPd1~ ·
knowingly accept any l_~~~-~~-~-~·~·~=~-~~~ advertis ing ror real.=
estate which is in viola· SUHSHIME IM
Uonofthe law. EVERY ROOM!
Outstanding Mesa Verde
Pool home with a big
BRORS: AdYertiMn Camlly room. features in-..._... cMcJt fMir ods elude formal dining, wet
SWIMMERS
One of the most fabulous
aquatic complexes you
will see is in convenient·
ly located Village Walk.
Just around the corner 1s our sharp J bdrm. condo
which f accs a w 1de
greenbelt. At $75.500. you
should see this today &
en.JOY It tomorrow!
673-4400
HARBOR
bar. lovely new waU lo dalr mMI report ~ wall carpeting and built·
ran I n ulatefy. TIM in kitchen. FUii pricej~~~~~~~~~~ DAILY P.ILOT •-• $125.900. CALL 7Sl-3l9\
WATERFttOMT
Immaculate. profess. de·
corat.ed home. 2 bdrms. &den +dining rm .. large
quarry tile in hall & den,
huge p:tt10 & dec k .
$350.000 locluding land &
boatslip!
.... .,for .... first ... c:orftct -.rt1on CMlly. C: S ELEC T . I PROPERTIES
HoMsn for Sole ••••••••••••••••••••••• FOR LEASE OR SALE
TAICE YOUR PICK 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Breathtaking v iew or ........ ______ , harbor and ocean. 4
G11•1clt
Bdrm, 2\l:t bath condo in TREES TREES Newport Crest. Call for Quiet Eastside lree lined details.
street. Updated 3 Bdrm
MtlS. CLEAN
UVESHERE!
Sunny kitchen. Bn~ht &
cheerful home! Lvly J
bdrm & ram rm. 2 frplcs.
Lii;:bt pastels . Slatted
cov'd patio. Better call on this one now. Will go
ll46oa lay Prop.
Realton * 675-7060.
fast because it's pnced !~~~~~~~~~~
right. Near s chools &
shopping. Only $89,500.
Only 5 YT'S new! :>45-9491
ELEGANT
TOWMHOME
IACXIAY . ~ Walker & Lee home w/large family 400Llr"'FOIALL ~~f::;I. ~~~~ C,MAt. 1.~ a • _.,,,,b MW ::;;;;;Re;;a);;EB;ta;;le;;;;;;
guest bdrm w/bath and • n ·--, .. alley entrance. For de-OCEAHFttONT
Nea.r wild Life sanctuary.
golf course & riding
trails. This highly UP·
graded 3 bdrm. 2 ba is
elegant and only 2 yrs
old. Pool. 1acuzz1 &
cabana for the use or on·
ly 8 rew families. Offered
atSl20.000. 759·1501
tailscall540-lllil --.. -AL.4--A-KAli---.,.-.. --• 3 Bdrm. +den home on
Popular floor plan • 2 30X8S ft. Jot : frpl .. built·
story end unit. private ins. patio. beamed ceil· -'".$•HERITAGE . • REALTORS pa t i o. s hak e roof. mgs.S375,000
elaborate landS('8J>lt\g . 673-3663
select location · "nd
642·2253
HEWftORTSHORES "BEHOLD"!! A 1vly
Close to beach-invest or townhous e for o nly
live in this 3 bedrm 2 $63.900. 75&-1501 associated
fll10k.E R~ l'IE A. ~ORS
'tll vi. 1in11;,>n 6'1 bh•
Real Estate
SELL YOUR OWN HOME
bath b each h ouse. ~v,at.e patio entry lead· (~1'+'1Illf1ttltl'2iJ mg mto cozy sunlile hv· ing rm. It'll move Cast at Real Estate l·W-/l._T_E_R_F_R_O_N_1'_H_O_M_E 1
S~0,.;~!.!,7~~111 NtCI. .. .. -------•! Dock for 38' boat. J BR 3
S895 FEE-Assist in ads
fin. sales. escrow etc.
I I lcntw.ff lon)aln Ba. yard. Seller ready lo .rA11tl•lf'IJ Q Plan. Reduced $6.000. 3 move. ARt. 673·7737 ~JiQf)J =· ~~'f! t~;s~h~':J:: Classified Ads 642·5678
Submit on terms.
REALTY FREE
HOM E'$
R.E. Advisory Ser vice
530.2224
YOUrROFIT
''11.C"
Lowest priced 2 story
Greeotree home. 4
bdnns & lrg rmly rm.
Brick patio. heavy shake
roor located on quiet cul-
cJe.sac on oversized lot.
759-1501
~ Walker & lee
Real EBtate VA'S WH.COME
ONLY $82, 990
New landscaping, new
crpt, & new paint oHers
you the best buy in Irvine
-4 bdrm. 2 ba home for
only $82,990. 759· lSOl
~~~
FAMILY SID IA Y,.ONT
Brand new listing, and one of our
best. s bedroom, 4112 baths, family
roo m . Bayfront on Newport
Harbor's main entry channel with a
big sandy beach. Waterside
terraces plus large courtyard patio.
$649.000 and you own the land.
A COl.DWIU. IM«m CO.
844·9060
t1e1 •• u u OAOUIN NIU.I AO.
IN....,..TaNT'P
macnab I Irvine
realty
S IRs -llG CAHYON
Ru s tic.· c u s tom 1 -s t ory
contemporary w/over-size corner
lot on prestigious Cypress Point Ln
Space for pool. jacuzzi. paddle
tennis . Views 18th tee & Spyglass.
Redecorate & have one of the finest
homes in the area. Offered at
$465,000 incl. land. Submit offer!
Dick Halderman 642-8235. <T·1Z1)
64 2·8235 644-6200 901 Dover Onw Hart>or View Center
Irvine at Campus Vallev Center
7S2·1414
<0@\\.4l~-Li£~s ·
Tito# /n#ri9uin9 W ord Gome wit/, o Cltudl•
-----~ t.y CUT e PCM4AN
0 t-ronge ...,_,. OI ....
lour 'IUO~ word• b.
,_ .., ·-four ---"'
It
v I" T 0 E
I I r I I ,, IC I R H E I .
I 1~ I I ~ I
G A T N E 1 ., ..,.., ., OUll ha ..,,,, to be f 1 I I I r I .. rel~ M a plaM, IO
IOINOM wlll -\0 -. I RUBTEl I • ,_.... .... tlwcl.l<t °"°""' I I I' I I "" ':!:1 ........ "":1' -ck "°" _.,. ·-~ ,... billow
.... -. , ---~ ... -. ' -. . ... .. ~--.....
\\ I· ~ ... I I . 'r \;
TAYLOR CO
Hl<t\l.TUI\~ 'dt ll ·1· l!Ht
IA YCUST .•. POO&. & JACUDJ
Lovable s h ake roof ch armer on
Lee ward Lane ... Perfect Family
Home W/3 Bdrms .. Formal Din. Rm.
Mellow F amily Rm. w/B1g Fpk.
Breakfast area in kitchen. AND A
"GARDEN OF ALLAH" setting for
the 40' pool. jacuzz i & patio A new
EXCLUSIVE offered at $215.000.
WESLEY .... TAno• co .• REALTORS
21 ll S-Joa1jnl1 Hml lotld
HEWPOtrT CINTll. H.I. 644-49 I 0
IAY&
OCUMVIEW
Loc ale d in o ne o f
Newport's most deslra·
ble areas. Complete with
tile pool & Grecian foun·
talJlS surrounded by an
a bundance of trees &
encl'd by a white brick
wall to insure tht> ul·
timate 1n priv1:1 cy.
Newport cleRancc at 1l 's
finest. 646· 7711
EASTSIDE
COSTA MESA
Near lrvi.ne Blvd. J BR. 2
BA. dining room. shake
roof. carpets. drapes.
wrought iron fence.
sec urity sys t e m .
sprinklers. RV access &
many other extan •.
$127.500 Roy Mceanh, Rltr.
541.7729
'WATYFttOMT
Fabulous 4 BR. J ba . 2
sly. home wt approx. 28041
sq. ft . of luxury. Int•!
formal din. rm. w/:tnli
que mirror bar: CW> tom
wallpaper lhrooul.
('Uslo m chandeli ers.
marblt> frpl.. h11th open
ce11's. w/all glass on bay
side. mamt free yard.
fire Ptt. cantilevered con
crete deck w/dock for 5~
ft. boat S385.000
CYNTHIA KATZ
RMI Es"* 537-227 a
CORONA DH. MAR
HILLSIDE-Hardwood
floors and French door'
lead to :t lovely canyon
and ocean view. J Bclrm:-
w1th master swle with
fireplace on its o wn
level $245.000 fee.
PETE BARRETT
Rf.II.TY
Owner wants a partner 6'2-5200
Buy 1
4 ,' 1or 't?oCeleganl ------•--• COM duplex Extra l~e
Harbor View lot. <'USlom M a k e th o s e g o o d
decorated . totally r e-household items you·r.,
modeled. Ltve in or buyl not using available to
for investment. Owner someotber family by ad
will carry. Bob W. vertising them for sale 1n
991.9110 I Classtfied. Call 642·56~8
A C0NV£NICNT SHOPPIHC AHO
5£WINC CUllX rOR JH[
CAI.ON THE 00
~.
"'t~13~
Srnrlus you wear II-the~·
m11ttary looll •s dash1n1 rtl soft Crochet CIP Wllh 11unty pom.
DOii tnm and 5al1 ot worsted· ~&ht 'llfltMtlC-wef'f QUICl
easy. Patte1n 1224 drrectlOfts
IOI set cap ~1usts to It! all sues Send no-1
Sl.50 tor tath pattttn ~IS 4ot uc11 pattein foi hm<lns
a11ma11 and handhng s.td to:
Alice If.a
Needlecraft Dept lOS
Da ily Piiot
lol m. Ol4 CMMa Sta., 11cw
TllR, '" 10011. Print Name. Address. lip. Patttfn llu111bet.
NIW1NOW1 Out 1q7q NHOl!
CR A fl CA I AlOC -OOltl 200 l>OOU la• Cits.ans J tree 0•11ein~
p11nttd 1ni1<1~ Stnel l~t 12"Qui(~/UsJ T11asten \l.SO
12a.Pattl111tn ~ Sl.SO U7-At&MM '11' D.lill Sl.SO
12'-CrlftJ f1owtn SI .SO
l2S·Pttl0 QllMU Sl.SO 12~ilti 'n' OnlalMtlts Sl.SO
\2).Strttfl'"' Patcll~ SI.ZS
\lZ.Stvft '11' htf QtMlts Sl.2S Ul.,._ s.-Offs SI.SO
l 11.£11, ...... ,...., Sl.00
11 '-Mit\J fifty Oltllts '1.00
l l~--Ctlchtt Sl.00 1 IJ.191t1111 "1ts Sl.00 110.111~.. 7S4 I DS-S.. & bit Sl.2\
\Ol-ltntatlt lillt"4M Sl.00 IOl•l11St111t ,..,... Sl.00
105-tllltlllt '*"" Sl.00 104-1-.... ...._, Sl.00 \0).15~1eft•. 1S4 102 ......... Qltiltl 15'
101-Qllill ~ 75'
-.. -..... -
. ()le Day's Sewilr
t2'h-26'ft
r,,, 1ff'""; .... 1ff c--;: ...
WOI~ 01 play 1n lh1~ comt01
table lltte <11~ "'''" d shm
m1n1 honl pa~I and pocket 1ha1
u n bt Ille samt Of ' conlrJs'
•OR lablte Easy se•
P11nte<1 Pattern 901S tlall
Sim 1211, ''"" tElli 1e1; 201; ni., 24"' 2FI; S•ll' UI;
lbusl Ji) I~~ J I/It fl!S ·~
SfM Sl.50 fw utll pattem.
.... ,. tl(h """" ,.,
~ ..... ~ ~-:
1MW1 llMTll
Pa ttern Dept. t14Z
Da1ty Pilot
2U w.t 1-. St.. lllw TM.
IT 10011. l'rlilt -. AO-
DI£$$. nr. Sill _. snu ...-:1 .
Ltrs bt Pf1CtQl-91JV pt
mCllt IOI !HS S w"'11 yOll WW' S.l!d tor new fALl WINTER FASHIONS ro.stw~TAlOO flu
SI SO COUl)Ofl lor fiet IMI
ltf" of ,Ollf CllOtet /~
101·111U!t S.-. W SI.DO 19'-1-....r .. wsuo
\2'P .... Qllilts .SUO lZ~ .... OrMMMs suo
,.,, . ... . . . .. _,.,.. .. ., .. .... --........ ',_ \' "'' , .. ,,. ....... . .... .. .
............----~---
l
DZ DAILY PILOT * ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~.~~!':' ..• !~.~~ ~.~~!':' ..• !~.~~ ~::.~~ ........ ~!.~.~ ....... ~:.~~ •..••.. ....... .... s. ...... for s. for s. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
••-.. I 001m~tf"tll •••••••••••••••••••••
OCEANFRONT
PENTHOUSE
An extremely spacious. )'el most
eleaant. and tastefully decorated
condo, wHb a SPECTACULAR
PANORAMIC OCEAN VIEW In North
Laguna Beach's It neat location.
Nearly 3000 aq ft. of luxury with 2
extra l81')1e patlo dttka lhat wrap t.be
c.-orn er maRnlrylng the otherwise
fontasllc view Tolally SOWldproofcd
security bul ld ln.c with private
elevator. C JI soon ror more details
und appolnlment for showing. orrercd
a l $430.000 with e xceptionally
comfonable t rm~
JACOBS REALTY
67M670
2919 Newport llYCL ~ 30tlt
"'MO.,.._.S PL.Acr -Need a nice
place for mom to live:' A great t BR
t•ondo in adult complex. quiet and
pr1vuk Clubhou~w und pool included.
neon ind m•at New on the market at
$.'>1 ,000 Couples and singles welcome
loo. Ctil 146-4 I 4 I
YOUI .... , ISTATI -live among
oth er MIL L ION A I RES in BI G
CANYON for only 1159.900. We have a
best buy for you C.t '4CM 16 I.
S1·rv11Hj co ... 1.1 MP'>ii Irvine
tt u 11!11HJ 1011 fl•· .1 ch· N C'wpor I Beach
IUYBSDllAM
Seller bou.Cht unolht•r &
'" 11nx1uult ' lle luxc townhomc 1 S pttc 1ous
Pam Rm wtw«.>tbar ' sun
ny brli;cht kitc h e n !
OCEANFRONT
,EHTHOUSE
MEW SEAVllW HOMI WITH YSW
21 03YedttD...._
2 bedroom & den -2 baths. fireplace -
Big kitA'hen with breakfast area -Side
yard, has room for pool or large patio.
Priced below market at S239,000. Small
down payment & owner will assist in
financing or lease option. Open House
Sat & SWl 1·4.
CAU'7S-JH7
~.H. IOl8JIOM. llALTOl
~ Eld<•I\ """'9nue CO.ta ~
Ca1<1b<,,.~ I f 141642·6r.M
WOtnLAST!
1024
Mesa I 024 ....... IHdt I 041 tAIJ-o lffct. I 0 41 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
FOR SALE
BY OWNER
H~e • bedroom. 2 bath.
with pool, Jacuui. family
room , 2 ftreplures
tlreplt. completely re·
modeled throughout
B11nk apprais ed at
$155.000 Mus t i.ell
$149,950. As low its 10"}
down. As k for l!:d Chernow. 964 ·2455.
MESA VERDE
4 BOW/POOL
S89 950!!!
Steal lhis iig 4 be<Jroom.
2 bath home with pool.
f a mil y room . 2
fireplaces. This home
has been completely re-
decorated lo include
pe~ged oak e ntry .
cerarruc ule kitchen. new
rarpets and drapes. llle
baths. Owner has bought another home. Hurry.
JUSl llsted Won't last !
IRAMD MEW LAGUNA HOMES
.--------i--------·I Cockt1ul lan111 greets lwmous i.:n."Cnbell Va
An extremely spacious. Coll Prk 3 BR 2 BA.
yet mos l e legant & family rm, full carpel/·
ta:stefully decorated con· drapes. brk frpl. all bit·
do w t a spectacular in s, w a I k to
panoramic ocean view in sc hool s Is hop p Ing .
No. LaAuna Beac hs" $85.950. Agt. Dan Lewis.
Ask Cor Ed Chernow. ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'! /\genL 964·2455 ---"'------'"6M I 044 1m. I 044
POOL TIME •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 5 BR + POOL
Largt-hom~ 1n lovel)
Easlbtutr with .;111 single
family borne.. on lurgc
well landscaped lots
Heated &c flJtered pool, 3
baths, family rm. &
frplc. Great fa mily borne. close to schools,
churches & s hopping
Pri~ for qwck sale :.t
Sl94.SOO!
BAY& BEACH
450 NEWPORT CTR. DR.
759-1111
Old CdM Cottoge
One or those charmers!
Two bedrooms, n ifty
patio area, a fa mily
room or activities area. a
glass enclosed dining
area and a remodeled
kltrhen. DelJghtlul north
of hwy neighborhood
OnlySt39,500.
UNIQUE HOMES
675-6000
cant! Hurry. c1tll 64~303
FORESTE
OLSON ...... ,, ...
WOODED CHARM
nnest Joe Nearly 3000 sq. 894-9817 MESA VEflDE OH ~IVE ME MllD IOOM
Spacious. 4 Br + famlJv 6 HOME " "" ••••• GOOD PRICE' rm with H. F. pool. Nice· 8 2 bdrm .. 2 bath patao . • .
ft. of luxury w/2 extra --------, :=======~ lge paUodet'ks thatwrap •SI 15,750.• I•
the corner magnifying IAa<IAY VILLAGE
the otherwise r antastic 2 Story. 3 bdrm. 2 VJ
view. Totally sound· baths. Super location.
proofed serurity bldg Motivated seller. Call
w/pvt elevator. call for 64().5112
appt. to see. Offered at $430,000. • ' • ~ r '
' , 1' ll I I • HI•
ly decor. wtwallpaper & home. please. an adult Outstanding buy •n
MESA VEllDE other upgrades. Close to community, with lovely Greentree homes. Th\'
4 Bedrm 2 b h 1850 2 golf courses. Only carpelin~. fi replare. ~ampton Model can . bt-
f t . s9 3.o t~.' Sel~'!:r Sl16.900. David Bourke. mirrored wardrobes. either a four or five
mot.lvat.ed. Qlll645·916l _ru_tr_.S46_·_9950 _____ , fenced yard. + double bed. r 0 0 m h 0 m C' ·
1026 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Unique mountain al·
mos phere . Sweeping
redwood deck encloses
sparkling jacuzzi! Stun· Must Sacrifice--4 BR. 4
nlng living rm. lined --------TRIPLEX· Ba Bear h h o u se or
JACOISREALTY
675-6670 ; OPEN HOUSE
REAL TY
garage! OK. you got it! Considering the cost of With pools and tennis ar· ne w construction an_d ~! Only S78.900. Call replaccme.nt value. this
Denyse O 'Con nel l. quality bwlt Bren Home 752·1920 at Slo.5,900 must be one of
J (i)UAIL today'sbetlerbuys! w/ced11r! S pacio us ,. __ ..._.M 102., EASTSIOELOC. Duplex.Sl20,000.0wner.
ma s ter s u Ile _..__.. _. & $600. m o . lnrome.I•-------• lm·l300
/
wthtdeaway office! Must ••••••••••••••••••••••• $94,SOO. Agent . 673-1314 ------
see to believe! Hurry, PLACE red hill ~
552-7500 call 64S-0303
FOR ESTE
OLSON ...... " ....
HOME+ INCOME -S8•3•.9•5•0•w•/J•ac•uuJ-•I
Price Rtdllced ..._ $"5t,OOO In prime Cos la Mesa
"' & area. 3 Bedrms. \~bath. South of Bayside. A rare 1500 sq.ft. Secluded by
and s u rp r 1s 1ngly mature trees. Call
spacious 3 bedroom + ~9l61
MESA VEllDE ...... lificJtoft leach I 040 NOPERTIES""
COllMEll LOT ••••••••••••••••••••••• --~~~~~~_!~~~~~~~~~ Super hm11y h ome. 20MEWHIHMS 10,..Til l :JO,.M.I
featuring 2 fireplaces. VISTA DEL MAR WH•TT• Beautiful area. Univers1· es BBQ, RV access and • •
autl·rul lawn. Owner Now opendaily 1•tG•l ... 1 ty Park. Garden hollll', 4 3Br 38a 2000 fl • • ""· br. 1° mslt suite. 2"'2 ba anxious, call 546-5880 ' • sq Pnce reduced t w1ce·now S9S 99s 552.9288 190H920Delaware onJy S89.900' 2 Story 3 --·-·------W. oC Beach N ·of Adams bedrms & gigantic bonus t.._.... hoc:h I 048 Want Ad Results 642·5678 Idle items 642 5678 ---------• den, 2 story home. PLUS ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-iiiiiii;.liiiiiiiiii;;;;.;iiiiiii.;iii·;;.;1 a never vacant roomy · ~~ HERITAGE I SS4,900 rental. Pvt financing
provided at substantial CAR IUFFS
: OPEN HOUSE
REALTY
/
Pre-Completion Prices room. Lovely country ••••••••••••••••••••••• Troy Realty 848 9090 k tch Sp 1~~~~~~~~~ Fii1
• e&ve~~~t~~~~ 9UIET ~OMFORT . • REA LTORS
This lovely country home features
an 8 car separate garage, fully
air·conditioned & heated, the 3
bdrm. home is surrounded by over
a n acre of beautiful grounds which
include lar ge pool, & jacuzzi. Can
be divided for future building.
$254,950
I 00/o Down savlnga to buyer.
Direct from lldr. Calf« cMaits 1. 3 Br. 11..'.1 ba. twnhse. $3500 TRANSFERRED and close·tn convenience
Save $25,000 from com-644-7211 ~~~~~~~~·1·--;::;i:::::--down. Ass ume exist"g ER MUST HAVE Vz blockt.obeach.28ed .• :: l'OOLHOME !oan of ~.500 at 8:\4~ IMMEDIATE SA LE~ 2Ba.adult apt.S8S.950
A quiet 3 Bdrm home on mt. No po~nts. No loan BARGAIN HUNTERS MORIMS REALTY parable Or. Cly home.
New 1350 sq ft 3BR 2 full
BA, 15xl7 family rm, din·
ing rm, Crplc in living
rm. Forced air heut & /Jn NlfJ[L
Bl\ILf Y !-,.
l\55Ulll\ 1£ 5
MESA NORTH a large lol. Located on a ree or quabfying. Pnnc. CALL 752·1700 FAST! 494-8057
culdesac. Family room, only.Ph964·2832. __ OP1Nt11'1·"''U"''l'~'"'~''
Pastoral
NC. ~3 Fairview St DPLX 3Br home + 2 Br t '4 ma from Ortega
Spacious 3 br 2 bath.
formal dining room. ram
rm & frplc. New carpets.
3 blocks to school. Pretty
street $84,900. Will sell
fast! 645-7221
plumbing. Possible extra home. $66.000. THIS . } I r pool. BBQ pit. copper l mmac 2Bdrm . lBa 1·•;1~~~·ii·~1
room In garage. Call WON'T LAST ! /\gt. r'''~· ~;t-~~ ~~~··~~;~ PersDective
Hw y /Grand , Lake Apt, both w/frplc &
Elsinore). Only 27 mi garages. 007 Larkspu.r.
546-5880 for more details. 960·5580. ~ ···
Owner An.xious. 3 br 2 ba
Broadmoor. + 4 br 3 ba
Biscay. super lrA lol.
642-0112. 644-6687
Sparkling "blue water &
C3talina s unsets framed
by mature trees. Airy.
open floor plan: decks &
pool-sized lot. S2SS.OOO
FAR OUT VIEW
Of ocean, bay , Cata lina &
s pect acula r nig ht lights; this
d e lightful Spanish home has 4
bdrms., family rm .• 2'h baths
e nc h anting centra l courtyard: s:ns.ooo
~~~HERITAGE
. • REALTORS
from SJCap & 20 ml to $210,000. By ownr pnn ~
Corona via new freeway. onJy640-1840
B & J I n v e s t · By owner. 2 bd house, lrg 21 (7141678-2049. 493-2952). patio, sunny l bdrm apt.
oven;ized 2 car gar. Both ~ MF.SA VERDE 4 Br 2 Ba.
TOP
MEIGHIORHOOD
4 blks schls. pk. Seacllfr
Shopprng. 12 blks ~h.
Sunny 3 kng s t BR. 28a,
lg. den. Easy maint yd.
Orig. ownr. Sl27.500.
Open Sat-Sun 11-6. 1734
PineSl.~
SACRIFICE':
Beaut. new Lg. 3 brm,
t otal ly upgraded.
LIDO REALTY
673-7300
ONLY
$49,950
A Division of Red Hill Really
Low down. VA or FHA
W..ms! 3 Bedroom '1 )f.
old townhome ! Call now!
Talk to Red Carpet. we
listen. 754-l202
PENNY PINCHER ADS
FOR PEOPLE TO PEOPLE
ONLY $2.00
(for 3 fines. 2 days)
Call Today • • • Print Tomorrow!
Sell any ite'!' or com~ination of items totaling
$75 or less with a 3 line ad for 2 consecutive
days for only $2. Each additional line Is 60c for the 2 days.
You may place your ad by phone just dial
(714) 642-5678 and charge it. '
Call Monday t hr u Friday 8:00 A.M. to 5:30
P.M. for next day's paper or call by noon on
Saturday for Sunda y's paper.
Or you may use the handy order b lank below
and mail to: Orange Coast Daily Pilot P .O. Box
1560, 330 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa, CA 92626
4 WORDS MAKE OME LIME
-.
S2.00
$2.IO
$3.20
$3.80
PAYMENT ENCLOSED 0 SEND BI LL 0
Ba nkAmerlcard # .. , . . . . . . . . . Exp. Date
Master Charge # . . . . . . . . . . . . Exp. Date ..... .
Publish for ............ days, beginning ........ .
Classif icatlon ...................................
Name ............................................
Address ...........................................
City . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Phone ....... .
DAILY PILOT
642-5678
. -...... -.... ---·--"'··
rented month to month. Westdiff Realty xlnt cond .• $89,500. Open $17~.ooo. 67s.3956 -------=--House Daily 1·5. 2972 An· ...;._....;... ______ M E S A V E R 0 E dro6 St .• 546-4478. 673-4311
•DUPLEX• SHOWPLACE 11. acre --------FIXER U,,IER pert-view corner. BIG.
A kiss of paint and TLC B1G HOME. $179.000.
wiU transform this sleep-1967 Balearic. 546-9200
ing beauty to home plus
IEST IUY 2BR. twhse. nu rust cpts. WHAT"SYOUI
income atS197.SOO. Many
special features. CALL
640-5112
I I •,, • , 1 , ) ~. '•, r • 0
I ll i\1 •r111• •I 'I,• •lit ll •
"HARBOR VIEW". 5 BR.
4'12 ba, OCEAN VIEW.
pool tennis crt-sz fml
yard, unusual privacy. $290,000. Courtesy to
bkrs. 675--0580
LOWEST PRICH>
HOME IM C .cl.M.
Sll0.000.
Super home and zoned
R-2. Principals only
please. 640-5112 Agent.
JASMIHE CREB
Com e see lhe spec-
tarular OCEAN VIEW
from this 2 sty, 3 BR. 2'7
ba home. Master suite
has view plus rozy
retreat w/fireplace.
$245.900. Avail Nov.
&4(}.2422
Open Sal/Sun 1 5 PM
1024 •••••••••••••••••••••••
MESA VERDE
VACANT
Prl me corner location
Anxious owner has re·
duced price again! Take
advantage, only $123.900.
Call 646-7 l7l
Ol'IN ltt '1 •11 \IUN 10 1fl IV•\ I !eRNtll
By owner. 2 sty. s BR. 2
ba, den, d.in "g rm, lrg R·2
crner lot , SI04,000.
673-9179
$9500
,..,,.,... IP.•rTSIDE Wt O. 10'1-down· SSS.500 "'"~ Ovmer afl 6PM. 964·2140 Super r e m odel«.>d 4
Bdr m, 2 bath family SUPER BEACH CONDO
home in choice area. On· with view. 2 BR 2 ba, up-
ly$79.900. Call546·5880 graded beauty.,.., Mile to
beach. Tennis. Jacuzzi.
pool & s a una . Only
S73.SOO. BK R 754~ ·~~HERITAGE
• • REALTORS
PLEASURE
DOWN
SJike to the lake from
your coiy 2 Bdrm, 2 bath
Townhome in Wood-
bridge. Feeling lazy?
Stroll to the pool close by
Want sohtude? Take a
sunbath oo your secluded
redwood dec k. This ________ , ________ •I home has all the fine
MESAVYDE
3000 s q rt customized
home nr golf cour se.
Owner wi ll carry 2nd.
$175.000. 540·7196
No qualifying! Owner
will finance! 2306 Sq. ft. 3
bedr oom + family room! Quiet cuJ.de·sac! --------
Tallc to Red carpet we
listen. 754·1202 MESA VERDE
qualities or an S&S built
home. HURRY ON THIS
ONE! S88.500
Call kw D.tails
644-7211
/Jn Nl[JfL
BAIL[ Y &
1\550(11\l (5
STOP
THE WORLD
Her~·s the place to get oH
and see the value in this
s triking CUSTOM
BUlLTHOME. lmposrng
two story archilecturt>
nestled beneath t all
shade trees, has detailed
EX TE R IOR OF
NATURA L CEDA R.
EXTENSIVE USE OF
GLASS & walkway!! or
o ld r a ilroad t ies .
Spacious 3 BDRM. &
DEN lloor plan service<!
by 2 baths; reature:.
lower level w/FLOORS
OF FRANCISCAN TILE. Lovely 4 br 2 ba home. ___ ........ ____ ,
COSTA MESA prlvary, new pool & ------•W OOD BEAMED
Trytbisbeautiful 5bdrm Jacuzzi. lmmac. By Hwt~on Turtlerock 4 BR home. home in Mesa Verde. Owner. $113.500. Jeff. ~ 1042 OP!!" weekcnlis. 5222
Breathtaking landscap· 546-2873 Eves. 557 ·2157 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Grmnell. 833·3819
ing. formal din-rm. liv· --------WATERFRONT CONDO. OWNER·IBr Oran~etrl'~
nn & ram-rm. 1126·500· CUSTOM HOMES 2 BR main rhannel. 30 Condo. EASTSIDE OPEHDAILY rt .. slip. hi~hly up · ai r . al l am c n1t1 cs . COSTA MESA 345 E. 2lrd St, C.M. graded. $175.000 By The S46.500 1714 1 551-2176
3Bdrm. 2 bath home on a Lovely new 2slory, faml· Sea Realty 846445i Northwood lot. 7000sqrt.
oversized lot. Loads or I h 1 bd 3 B s 9
r:tentl.al. Offered at Y omes . rms. lnN I 044 Y owner 59. 50. aft. baths. s itting area 6PM. 964·2140 ,750. wlfrpk in master bdrm, ••••••••••••••• ••••••••
WESTMINSTER wet bar In family rm. GIVEAWAY PRICE
Great investment. 3 Much more Come & see Woodbridge B1sray 4 Bdrm & ram-rm home. them. Own e r / Agent bdrm, 3 bath. ram-rm. 2
lmmac. thru-out. f1C'Xi · 552-4894 or 642·2164 or frplcs. S20K in up~ades
bleterms.$73,000. 642·?752. ABklngSl49.000. I Owner.
CEILINGS & huge 11~.
rm . w /C ENTl!;H
Fl RF.PLACE. Upper
(sleepmj! J level looks 111
the trees through a wall
of !:(lass. Stepsaver
kitchen w/b1ll·ins. ha~
all mod l.'rn r o nve.
ruences. fo'or those who
see k th e QUIET
S OL I TUDE 01-' A
NATURAL SETTING &
slJll live at the beach. we PRESTIGIOUS believe this ls a rare find.
Offered for only :
1----------1 A~gt~._559-_6_7_73 ___ ~ 0 A REAL FIMD LEASE OPTIOH
Spacious 3 Bdrm, 2 ba 2 BR. pror det•or. patio
h o m «.>. w t 2 b r I ck home. Central air cond.
-
. ., -fireplaces, turned wood Adult community. pooli;
posts and a <h'<'P window &tennis.
ledge for your plants . BaJboa Island Realty $89,900.
'"'""''"""'"-"" 2512 Vassar Place 673-8700
....u~ ,,,f,. .. l 'l \1 11
2 BR Culverdalc Plan 41.
3 BR garden home, Univ.
Park. Alrt. 551-4682 ti·
IOAM·PM
WOODBRIDGE ~ 167.000 f1al ftrice
An exceplionolly sharp 2 CALL TODA y ' !
bedroom Poplar with on MISSIOM REALTY
ly a short walk to new 98."iS. Cst Hwy, Laguna
swim club and tennis Pho.Mt 494-0731 court~. Pnccd to catch•--5-.,-0-.-0-00-0-0-W-... --
your eye at only S70,SOO. & "" Owner will finance: 3 B ll
luxur ious home. fan-
tastic ocean views. Close
to shopping & beach.
Sl.54.000.
"%"REALTOR
494-861 I l'fELP! HE LP! Lonely
family home needs a
family. 3 Br. huge put10
& pool. Bonus r m. EZ :"I~ I Co,:.: »wt • 1•0•, 1,1 MJ1 JUST ACRIFICE 4 Br 2 Ba.
view hme. Pool sz yd. LOVELY! RAHCHREAlTY TO.W.Sl29.000.673..J4l5
Great 3 bdrm. town home 551-2000 LolJlllMI Hiits l 050
beach & frwy access., _______ _
Sll9.000. Selle r must
move. Ebblide Really SUPU SHAI, 2 fireplaces, 494·94.56 3Br. 1i,.,ea. paneled ram rm, lovely paUo. W .000. Neer Schools! SELL Idle items with a :JL 833-9024 dys.
in Viii. Ill. Shows real •••••••••••••••••••••••
pride of ownership. Lov· TOWNHOUSE. Irvine Due to s troke. Lelsur<'
ely patios . bnght a nd Woodbridge Crossing World 2 BR. 2 ba ma~r
airy 103ide. Spic n' span Brighton Mdl. S136,000 M05Uy furn lnrl sterhng
rond.iuon! By owner 646-3903 & & Dresden China. $$4.000 Immaculate 3 bedroom Daily Pilot Classified Ad. ·2906eves/wknds
home with delu xe C.-.. M• 1022 eor..a .. Mcr 1022
kitchen, eating area, en· ••••••••••••••••• •••••• •••••••••••••• ••• •••••• try and patio. $84,SOO.
iMliu. CE #·::::.-110181 ILlllS aa.
IUT SASS YI OVER 60 YEARS OF SERVICE
Cute Hansel and Gretel
cottage tucked In It's own
little foreal! Kitchen UP·
graded with nook. fn.Ut
trees, cemenl drivewa1.
In lovely Eaatelde. Only
S89.SOO. Call P•t Kent. 752.1920
J 9UAIL
PLACE NOPHnu -
10,-T'll l :JO r .M.I
I
COROHA DEL MAR
Canyon Crest Estates, Popular "E"
Plan. Two Fa mily Bdrms .• 2 Baths,
Format OJnlng, Wet Bar. Pool And
Jacuzzi. fJeeutifully Decorated In
Warm Tones. Upgraded Carpets
And Wall P apers. Minutes From
Fashion Island . $125,000.
111 DOYa OllVI
......... -........ ...
tt5Z3 CAMPV5Da·IP.""'6
PRESCOTI
Woodbr1dfe Place I. :SBr,
JBa on cu -de·sac next to
beach 731-4484 wkdys
WOODUIDGE
Loweet priced Orif'twood model. 2 story. 3 bdrm.
21.oa balh Anxious scllf'r,
submit on ter~s. CALL
640-5112
546-8474 eves cash. 837·21S3
a..,-..,... 1052 ...... 1052 ••••••••••••••••••••••• • ••••••••••••••••••••••
A COf..OW&L IAMl9I CO..
496·7222 831 -0836 .,.,... ...... .., ....
Let-......
'
\
~~~~.~!~~ ...... ,~~.~.~!~~•••••• ••••••••~•~•••••• WedMS<Say. September 13 1976 OAll Y PILOT D:J
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• -... "o,.riy JOOOe.c-"o,.tiy zooo • ...,_.leech l I 6t ~!!.~~~~~ .... ~~:.~~~~ .... ~:.~~~~•••• ....................... ••••u•u••••••••••••• ..... •• .......... ••• ... Cotta~ l224 Irvine 3244 Htwpori leocll 3269 Lefim...., 1012 Mtw ,...... 1069 s-ce..• 101•
••••••••••••••••••••••• pair •••••••••••••• ••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
ZS112 Via Piedra Blanca HIW'POIT AOOVF.'l tlb BEACH
brumculat• ap1c1ou. • lJlllm•tt REEFG/\TE THE Adults. no pets. 2300 I RR. l Ba $300 d" PI e "" s ~ "o t 1 I Elden Ave, upt E . ••so P11v1bon. 67S-4912 Bkr 4 SYMBOL OF 2 Br. ga.ruge. $325. mo RIMTALS o YEE' Houses. condos .
bd home U\ Nliu•I lhlls TltPLU WEST t·o11donai nlum ~ .. .blY pa.toted. N•w Lovely NeWl>Of'\ Tnplex ll11rt'ly av11 lable, now al
2 BR.28tt . ... "KNOW HOW" No depot.It~·· Move to 38R.2 liu ~16.SOi--------crpcc Ir lDdtcp. $93 soo 13) 2 6edrm urut1 Own~r 1139,000
'AUSTA VrTAu wUI eot>perate on lnah11l DERTUA HENRY day1 $265. Kld!i ! Yd. pet 5 llr. 3Ra $850187~ PROMONTORY 2 Bdrm ok ! Slllllll ree 64S·4900 3 BR. 2 IJu S500 .. _
............_ ment ••l 1 All le11~ct. R EAl,TORS
-497..142' Prl~ invt11tmtnl to:ii 215 ~I Mnr 492 4121
•CONSUMER'S GU IDI:: M1ll111on v1eJO with loft Pcntnvuse Apt
EXP£11ENC£-ACTIOM-1£SULJS Deluxe! 1 br w/xtrus ' Nr t~',;~TER 2 Bdrmi-, --------cellent locauon 1 Owner Laguna N.uel will consider COnlrol'I NllOCUM VllW C• _.. _...... ....... , *" 9' ..,_. 41 all $?.40. rt's a dti:il Sm boat sbp, $'750/mo yrly
Ree tty
pt'DAUI
0.ptura lM OQfllH'f Of
Uiil I bdrm aot\ deo rarll
Nt•uol ro111do "'um
•art.a IJIC\el, •butt•r"
ll&Mobef fasturei. d~C'\:•
Scrvtnptjous at S 111 15()
4tl-t4t4 495-SJJO
..... 14 U IJO.IOH
1055 .......................
s~ ~eplnl 1•out11I vl~w fer aelld preftHle••I ........ , I• fee. 645·4900 f'Um18hcd or unfum
trom all major room11. tllar&cn • .. , ....... ,.-w ._. ....,_. LIASIOMLIDO •CONSUME£t 'SC-:U IOI:: 0 N LI 0 0 l S L I:: fl'u from 11ny poulhle ..., -r ,.... ·~.. Top quality, improve· Beouurul 2 Bdrm. den.
obatruc\lona Pool alui for Y'-' We ... NYe ... Ilk Z, l. l , menls. serene environ-AT LAST! I! dirung rm. pvt pat.lo. 2
lot Ehiilillll 2 titory cul· twe )'t, 4, 4, fl" 4'-. I, 6, 6, 10, 16, JJ, menl & beuu\ifuJ anti· There'll onl,y one thing beth. S800/mo
d Ill' home Rar" buy lZ. u, J4, _., 100+ ..... ..... ques: They're all inare· wecareuboull WahrfrOfttH-.1 11Ul~.QOO _............_-... OW dlenlll of this 3 Bdrm. 2 YOU"! 63 l·l400
CUSTOMHOMI Cl •• :.-:.r..••rtJ.•tt--"" bath Lido Isle home. If you're n~~ happy , lf523C,otPOSf\..·IRVINE '~~~~~~~~ HOW'" • • Owner will lease 1m· we 'r e not happ y • "" 1= OM HUGI LOT Nllll Pl.AC£ PRO...,.£$ med.lately !or 9 months PERSONAL assistance PLUSH a br. 21,., ba condo Oettrablo Back Ba) 1r,•11 WN f"U I I or a year. on a tum1shed In locating a rental. Only steps from wat~r
ol N•~r1 8fob11chh, walk 17141.152•1920 or unfurnished basis 6 .S-'900 ~~2 ~~1.s':'Z.~ cfo:~ HlghJy upgradedlhi\\ ~1!
IOU> c • ...,..-ry. r11t t aur Phone Unique to see. lt's COMUMtr'1 Gulde to parks, schooli:.. & pool approx Sept 15 . $7701
roundlniu. rmm Spanh1h 50 onJy$85()/mo. ~ mo Duy .. glJ.11511. 5o58-8534or 675-l938 Ult rntry •11 YOU now UNl'''111HOMES E t "d BR
th bl d I hi, 1
'
-yw7r. J.000 as S I e I . very 644·5275oves SEA VIEW 3 bdrm. 2•~ 111 I • ' 1 II u a..........a..J.L .... __ , 6 u..afTS -private. encl. yard & g11r. hPaC•<'W> 3 bdrm holl'W' -~ " $3M. mo 11492_3710 bJ. + fam rm. OCt'J n
Call now 15.2 1700
l4"f!l.)r Ju •unl lA'lllU/t! Condo SeasC'UJX' Villo!le. For Sale 1100 E~TSlDE view. pool1tennas . Sl.000
... I •h ,.,. hv1n1 & rorrnal t'Ult'r NO'th s (.' LJlll phasl' ....................... COSTA MESA Oceanfront 2 BR winte r For lease 6 bdrms. 3 WOODBRIDGE 1213l 430-3629
Own« -.ill tinanN· 111{ .. talnln• Act·r u tor !X-itut upii r~ded rull ......,.....LJt_ .._ Ston Grab a brush and rake! rentals . From 9·15·78 to baths. pool. Avail 9/lfi E.lalt'~ Lmroln model, :i .•
a.w $ 8R. fam rm. 3 r11r rt'rrullon:.il \ f'hldc orr.i ll Ylt'W Plan 4 -Ideal for a builder or a 6·15-79, $450. John Va-$650 Onve by004 Denver brJ ba 640 127 1 ~ lir. Iba. dt>n in Newporl lat Blu ownr '7~ 648 1'711 41>'1 u~ t'ANT ASTIC BUY fixer. Older bwldlngs in nlan Co. 631·0900 Or Call 67S..0007 lleighlb S395
________ _... ['--itJftiJijjfj(ijJ .:'.-a.~ ~:r~fal/e. dc~~pie~:.; exeeUent. upgraded area ON BEACH. Decorator NEW 3Br. 2Ra Condo. nr University l'k Terrace. 642 794S tt • t•Vi.wt , _ ... _. _______ _,_, upgraded, very low park close to. s c h oo I s. Cumisbed2story. 4 Bdrm beech. ssoo mo 838-9200 Cjjmbnd#(e, :; BR. 2 ha, H V home.~ br. 3 ba. fm
Never OrC"up1ed dr R l"~-t I· C•str.o 1071 $24990 <6'78466 ) tr~portation,and shop-VIEW. In best. location. dys,642·9482 eves din , SS l ~ :;;;2 ;g9t)1 lyrm.2frpl'!1,welbar.3
h....,,al 4 BR, l•m rm. ea_ ..... _• t -••••••••••••••••••••••• rent. 848~ . . ping. (New co ndos S1400monthly. Ml 1245 car gar . view. tennis.
;;''bv,m1r-rooven,cn IYOWMll BYOWNER nearby se lling for 28drmwithBOATSLJP 3 br. 2 ba. compl re 3 Bd 2' b spa.&pool S8S0.644-218S
.,..,,,. .. ,o •·Sa1I C'lubfor ~1 U STSA C Rl .. 'IC E-"'1 BlktollunlBch.2Bdrm S87.500.,te1a0nch-l >CaS2lnOOOOadd1 $750yrly modeled,yd.2 car encl. rm . ~ a ,..~ ~ • Nwprt Hets Ira cornt1r " , r de ... , k $'" 750 one uru y H gar $475 Townhoui.e. tam rm. 2 Seetng ts believing~ l Ollly SW.toiO C:1tll Gh•n lot.. 2 bdr 2 bl. hamlly rm Lurrie 4 br. 2 ba. cor lot. + n. awt par . ..,,, . 752.1920 . , . Waterfront omes TSL Mgmt &t2·1G03 sty Town home. t.;n111 brat. beach. pool Smull
l&eltwarth + bonus rm $119.~ To rMny xtras too men-like nu. 536-7683. 631·1400 Park V1lla~e 111. Ohl rec. 645-4900
I I/MAX MS-70oM ()pc'! Sond_!Y_ t1on Mu&t see. $88,800. San Clem. beach. 3 br, J '-'UAIL Super deat 1 br kids ok SPlCIAL CONDO gar. 2 pauos. dshwshr •CONSU MER'SGUID E
ReaJton*il31 1266 Open hse. 496-2381. $26,000, San Juan 2 br T $300 Refri Call 3 BR. 2 ba. great area, Beaut. cond. Adults. No
________ _. OOVERSUORES OLEl·ll!•UTIFUL $26,000. Capo Bch 1 br PLACE SmaJlf~.645~~ avalJ 1011. $450/mo. Lse pets please l2 Mo lease. Lido Isle home for lea.e.
---------t0wnr.Bkrmu11t sell48r, 5"" Sl0000496-l840 •CONSUMER.SGUIDE opt.~.500.640.29111 $575.mo Ava1l.Oc:t 15 SOOO pr mo Call aner 3Ba. pror lnd!icpd, & de Custom Spanish home. · ' PROPllTIIS* Duys. 633·5001 or eve~ 6PM 548·0901
... .,.,. leecll I 06t cora te4 w/ Jacuu1 & F'tplc. 46drm. 2~il ba, Mobile home for sule by ca.....n t:>O ,.M.I Oceanfront winter rental 2 br enclosed back yard . 552·4996 •••·--·•••••••••••••• pool Bhn m1rrowuv1" ram rm w/wetbar Pool. owner.8x3S. -3 br 1~. ba studio. no single car gar. no pets •---------Bluffs. lrg 4 BR condo.
PURE CHARM m any o th er xtra s Ja c. f1replt Tot a l 545.1304 IUMITS pets. Refs. 642-0553 or $290 Avail Oct t.646-6479 Orangetree Patio Home $750.Ready togo
1229.500. Ofin Sunduys fir1 vucy Many extra S 155,000• 2131927.5541 Central air. Jdul~. $4i5. 644·03SOor 644·1757
S104,900 l.Z.S. 1531 I lg~iund Or eature~.; $210,000 by AcreefpforSM 1200 Can't beat this $19500 . KIDS/PETSOK Culverdale. l BR . $400 LIDO ISLE Ramblin g 64S-4226or833-l.\6. owner.4""-6506 ••••••••••••••••••••••• per unit. Super Or~nge Oceanfront luxury pnme EA~TS ID F.. I B il a.ooo i.q rt single sty
Cute 3 bedroom near ai...c-T-... --.. C'.--"o•--1080 fcAfool&.20Acre1 County location. Great area. 3 br . frplc. encl duplex . $295. 2 BR AIOAgMen1~•1 ;.;1 1 .i tJ8 2 ti homt'onovrs1zrostrect beach. Bright living ._..,, .. ,. . ...,..._.... .--. I Su h n garage. Refs . $800 townhse $395. 675·82S8. " B B room wi th w/bea med Resid/ Bkr &IO·OOl9 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Prime choice avocado ncome. per cas ow, Av a 11 3 t 0 1 mos 548 3324 lA> street lot. 4 r. 3 J . TllE PROPERTY lend. Need quick sale. Call before their gone! · · formal din rm. fam rm. wt::~r~i~i:1~~~~l~c4l ____ J\_l_A_R_T ____
1
Flexible terms. Submit. 540-1666 675-1849· 2 BR. 1 bath. no pets SJOO. ~~~.~~~ ••••• !~~.~ IK kit. + 2 lg patios
breakfast nook. M BR VACANT $9000. ac. 63l·4~Agent. 2 BR, bayfront. s bp avail Inquire at 232 S1erks. G . 3 b 2b ~3268 ______ _
. & b h BELOW UPV Furn or unfurn. $495. C M real view prime r II wtpnvate patio ut REAOYTOOCC 10 acre Avocado Grove 631_~0 675_5641 · pauos frpl nr bc.'h town ~-cl ........
AJ)rice)'ou'UUke,hurry 3BR,lo/•BA.S62.500. $\67.500. Valley Center · 4br JbalnMesaVerde. 4tW.0030aft4pm .-.. .,...... 3276
":save! MARKET Owneranllioust.osell. CNo . S .O. Cou n ty) 3 BR 3 BA condo in SSSO+gardener f __ B_I _ •••••••••••••••••••••••
CENTURY 21 call u11 at 642-2164, 673-0782 Eastblul!, on grnblt, xlnt 979.3752 $650 un ur/$700 furn, ue Vear round. Near beach lnthe 75 .. 7100 PRIDE k h 1 & LagoonVilla.ocnrmton 2118ar"elona ... brlba.
BLUFFS .,... 20 ACR"""'FALLBROOK. cond. nr par · sc oo s t b h -141·•99 3"17 ' .. GoldStarServtce .,,.,. OFOWtJERSHIP s......., ina $900 833-3985 3 Bdrm 2 BA. hardwood pv c ' " · ' · rru11 lrl'l''S. prt>fer 646-7434 Prime avocado land with " or"f P,zr~ · floors. new paint. cpts & 2131703-0230 mature cpl Rers Water. 410Vlato RCMM view. Owner flexible. 26units/W. Anaheim. 13, dr S 11 OK t h d Submi.t terms. Wants b h apes. 11\lt pet New. fantastic v1t'w, up r " i. P Seavlew · Hampton O,.nweekllftd• l·S _,.,·d BKR 7u .,...,., ffuoeuJtra modemumts. Cute cottage y l e sea $450 mo. Cull 546 51180 per. Vic.'tOn J B(•h lBr. S375.w/gdrdener S400
model. 3 BR, 21"1 ba. ram °"by oppt. =" own. · .,..__ BeaulifuJly mumtained. S32S. Ut1l. paid. No pets and ask for Larry or 2aa. frpk. deck. wet bar. 493·~1
S27rm5 .. 000oce2a13n:•~!'~grd , 3Bdrm. 2'hBa V·Plan IUILDERS!! lnt.hebest rentalareaof please.645-~7 Pam $600mo494i30t i---------"""'"""" Luscious 3 BR, 2 Ba . ---------• condo . Wood -decked I Acre building site w/all Orange County Xnlt tall u..-.~~ 1L...&...-.1-L-_. ----~. L' PACIFIC VIEW patJo. Uvmg room, dining Ott..r Rffll &tote util. Buy all 4 at $15,000. shelter . Principals only, ,._... _.._...-.v Mesa Verde l br. 2 ba. 2Bdrm, !Ba. great oc~un v.:ean view" . .-rplc. 2
room. 2 car garage. ••••••••••••••••••••••• e11ch. Fast growing area. please! Call Realtor. ••••••••••••••••••••••• new pamt. Avail. now view Gar & deck SSSU balconies. $500 492 7715
OPEN HOUSE $ ~ HCMIWI FARGO Days C'714 I 524-9913 G9Mrd 3202 $475. 546·9950 494-0437
WED/THURS I 13,500. Fors• 1100 l/676-5715or l/522-2080 Evenings (714) 832-4469 ••••••••••••••••••••••• o.a Point 3226 ---------SCIR Juan 1271 ~H~3{!~~oo J~. 4:.:. 714·640.0208 ••••••••••••••••••••••• C....tery Lob/ •HOMEAMDERS• ••••••••••••••••••••••• HO~E!i~l&:~~~ vu •• ~~!~•••••••••• ~~~~~•1Nmk1;.<1 • H=:~:, Late6.::~~~~de in •• ~~•••••••••!~~~'!!:!.~~.~ ...... ~~-~~ Cal~~~~:~ay. ~~~ga~u~[~.1n~3 i!:~. ~~rc~r!>:.~.,ce~.u~t~;n~ 1~o~r~p~. b~i1.11~~.b~~~. [w.11~111 ~1 Montego4Br. FR. brand finefamlly&adultpark. For Sale Crypt 6 level. OFAC.llLDGSITE tOOO'sof'Vacancies !~~/6~';~:1~ 1375· pnvacy Sl200moyrly carport. pool Rcr!' r~ ) rl ; nu crpts. redec thruout Bank repossession, easy Valencia Court. Pacific Hunungton Beach SW Bach ulil pd gar yd Wa~~t-~?,omes QUI red. $400. 493.35119
• 1 ~:' ~ j Vacant. easy financing. terms. Vie w Memorial Pk . 27.000 sq. fl. lot near $220 \brkldOKgaryd RENTTOIUY · .:zc::i::-••~•Z>I' $161.500, fee. Owner. MobHtHomt Store 540-1420aft5PM. Pacifica Hospita l .•. 5 S2402+d111ek1dsnrsch AU rent applies to down Oceanfront. 70'of spec· ~'::it;~.'ia~r-~.~=·~~~
OCEANFRONT HOM E 640-1141. 1062N. State College Points Shop. Cntr & CIVIC $2652br kid/pet patio payment. 3 Bdrm. den. tacular view. 2 BR 2 BA. ok s425. ARt No r~~
2 s~ .. 2 + den .. 2 yrs.· Anaheim lncCMM Proptt'ty 2000 Center. $135,000. $3003br gar srcttns 2"'1 ba townhome. Small beautiful decks & yarrl, 004.2566 973.2971
Bui. d'"'r occ.-Luxury El SACR1 IFICE 956-4500 ••••••••••••••••••••••• David Bourke Rl lr S3503br2bagarplx ocean view. Lse 9 mos at Winter rent.BJ SlSOO mo ---·------"' egant rg n ew up-546-9950 kd b y I S1'700 ... ., 0075 b om e . ob I gar .. graded 3 BR. 673.4311. TWO 4.PLEXES · $3954br /ptoPt/ uy $480-$1200 opt money r Y mo."""' or Tudin 3190 _
fee4447.000. Make offer.· Agt EXCITING S rf Ide one-of a kind l fee then service is and you will have $6000 793-4608 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ""'li••" d....,lgned-BIG & · e e WESTSIDE u s ' . . •FREE FOR LIFE• towards your dn pay . ..,. .. "'° COSTAMESA sandlot,lookingoverthe Goodin all2.$locations ment or $93.500 :;432 • Laurelwood 2Bd, 28a. B~ IN AREA.·3'h to Sl2,000Down HEWPORTIEACH Sl"ller e xtr emely blue Pacific. 25X44 Ft. AU areas-All prices K.RProperties.493.9381 LagunaMiCJMI 3252 twhse. rer . washtdryer.
S.0 . ..S.ve $8940. Charles Back Bay View. 2 story. Dll WIDE LUXURY mollvated . sharpest un· By The S ea R ealty ••••••••••••••••••••••• romm. park, pool. tenm~
QuintArd, RealtA>r. on du· 48drm. den. formal dm· SIS MONTH RENT Its on street! Enclosed 1146-4457 a.Aoo 1st.cl J206 B Toro 3232 TOWN HOME, 2br. 2bo. S410mo i52·6375 ty.1!!...,,~~to Fri. 11 3 ing, 3 Crplc 's, lrg lot. No 1m Wlnsl.Qn Manor. 2Br, garages : no deferred ..,_.._ Deseri .............................................. vu, pool, JSC, on• gmblt
siroSeasbore Drive quallrymg, immed oc· 2Ba. A beauUCul home. ma intenance. Can be l.ftOf't ' 2400 3 Br.,J ba. den. dm. New Nice 3 br. 2 ba, !rpk, gar. Ue avl, $400. SSi-4632. Aparlw9fth Fvnlilhd
--------i cupancy. Owner will Readytooccupy. s old togethe r o r••••••••••••••••••••••• painl.crpt.tile.No pets. patio, fncd yd Kids & 831-ll90teves •••••••••••••••••••••••
FtXERUPPER carry . Full prlt;e. CdtfornloPoctflc separately. $159,000/ LKARROWHEAD view $750,67H442 pet.Bol<.$445.Agt.nofee p l 1 1 d VII 2 lc6oolllcmd 3706
Blk from ocean. Fix up, =·c:i~~.j7~wner. Pnnc Mobile Honw SolH each. ?Sl·l!J'lO secluded, 38R. lba & ..._. p.-..aa 3207 964--2S66or 973·297I ;~·J~n. !;!!. ne~l~gr~d· •••••••••••••••••••••••
rent & make money. 3 ---------2700Harbor.Ste208 ' '-'UAIL d en. Furn. As k for ....................... FOlllltaiaVall.-y 3234 crt'd. S525t mo 493 7512 LrF! 3 br. den. J ba fum. Bdrm. bonus r oom . Contract of sale, 10'~ 540.5937 T Lenore,agt.7141337·2401 Oetkw/beautoceanvlew, ••••••••••••••••••••••• CanunoCapistrano Rlty Bayview Winterrentitl
frplc, patio. restricted down. 3 br 2 bs. loaded. _________ 1 pt .A.CE Outof'"--. ceramic skylighted en· 1 Yr New tn·level, 4 Br. 2 Mu<ll'nt :. ok S6SO
parking . S um -1.1.T Bob MJrce l. obi~H St ~ _.., O ,_ lb r I 3 b s t y Nr Ell1 o; &3 Bdrm• bonu~ rm 1»4-4974 mertw1nterrentals. 957·2666 M OfM ore NOflaTIES.. Property 255 .. _,.we ar. rp ~'.. f r. Magi;olta. Call 968-2720. View. air cond Lea~e --------24xS4 1977 Madison. 2Br. ••••••••••••••••••••••• din rm. 2 ba. 75 Y= rom 963.5520 wtopt. to buy possibl~ L1o1e 4 br. l bc1. bay view. NEWPORT CEHnR 1st house m rrom beach. 2Ba m very nice pork. 10,... Tl t :JO ,.M.l CHOICE bch. 2 car gar wtopener. · Avail immed 495.4557 frplc· brown crpt. $6(.IU
IE.ALTY 640. 1112 By owner, 2 hr. 2 ba. Low, Low Park Rent. IO HOUSES No pets. f750. 675.0168 or Hw1lhiCJ10tt leach 3240 · 642-~J .--------•I $159.000. 106 27th st Nowova1I <6MCA 771. PROPERTIES 1213)862·1633 ••••••••••••••••••••••• MissiOftViejo 3267 ---------642·~-848-8895 EASTSIDE ,.~...._.Mar 3222 Sunor sharp highly up ••••••••••••••••••••••• ON LITTLE ISLE. 2 BR . SALEIYOWMU COSTAMESA A-.t..Y.. _ _.. "" • 12X24 Lil. facanii BOAT Well maintained proper-_,....-Y ••••••••••••••••••••••• graded 3 br w/heavy Spotless Castille El Dall dock. i.:ar rood bar. sun lastblllff $10,000DOWN EXCITING t u dJ 1 . 1 ts ././ i,, acre horse pro· SE.AVIEW shake roor. brig ht. Plan. Central air. 3Br deck Wt O adlts winter VTEW-4 bedroom. 3 bath S 1100 Month • •. ..,t.hon two a ~ mng 0 pertles. Ready to bwld. New ocean view 2 br, 2 c h eer r u I k 1 t C' h en w/vu of hills. f"rm t din· ~SSO<> · Lo..;~r & up
Lusk built home. QualJty 38drm. 2Ba,\ 180 deRret> wil I I nhewl roof ls: owne~ $4660w/terms. w/dshwhr. Lge hv rm, mg. family rm S47Stmo per 548.!lf>47 or 673_5644 · carpets, custom window view of golf course. new Sea Side hauty w e P nan c e · ././ 1 V. acres. Fantastic ba. Lease or lease option. prof lndspd. $475. mo. lse. no pet!i. 644 ·721 I
treatment, all builUns. caq>ets. drapes. No Seacaps&sunsets.abtn 7Sl-1.920 view&uUlltiestoproper-Agent 675-0562· e ves 847·1622or848-9340 ICllM>oPeftinldo 3707
J Ac u z z I . s p A . 2 qualifying. 957·1998. CliHslde Paradise. l Br. ' ~UAIL ty line. $7650 W/terms. 675-3637 Super 3 br. 2 ba. rrplc •••••••••••••••••••••••
Fireplaces. Wa lk to -----------th+eboSenusa.rmPairnltLraegnutnaonBlyy To u 2"' lacresh. Hborse 1?,ro,· Harbor View Homes. Sit by the firecln th1s23 br. 2 dshlsw_h.."'/,nsscdAY!! KN1drse& Rf..ACll. View. pier. 2br. schools, shopping, ten-$I 2,000 DOW..... PLACE perty n t e eaut1 u hlng A BR 2 ba ba home . pts, car pe "" ..... . ,.. o e .... i5, lbr!400. S350 Adil!'. " $135 mo. Priced to sell at Mar I an n a s. $ 6 8 0 0 smas " · ·· gar. all for only S43S 964-2566. 973 2971 ""' nis. --OL HOME frpl. $700 Per month. u111 pd T11 May 303 t: C7I4J95S..017.7 ,.._ $16.500. CALL TODAY. PROPERTIES"' w/terms. Agent644-7383 Agt. No fee. 964-2566, $650 4 BR 21., BA • EdJ?.ev.oter 1I 18'71·2866
D..u.. 38drm, 2Ba, new crpts. (KC1007). u 20 acres. Nr shops & 973-2971. · · · super ---------
"""' new drps . I'll carry CalifontioPocific IO,...TIU:lO,.M.l schools.$1466 peracre. 4 Br 2"'i ba executive view or lake & mtn" Oelux J hr. l ba. steps lo
2 ArtMltvl baJanee at $USO/mo No Mobile HCNM Sol•t ---------i u DUPLEX. Outstand· vie~ home. gardener. Come one.come all' 4br G Jr d l' n e r & I J. k "' bch ()<on & bayv1ew rrom Newponleoch credltneeded.95'7·19'J8. 2706 Harbor.Ste208 TRIPLEX Ing buy for the investor pool, volleyball. new Gar, yd. kids, pets' privileites inc luded ~underk Winter $425 ~~~~~~~~~ C.M. Top cond. Reduced OnlyS27.500. c arpet s drapes, Small fee. 645·4900 168-4286 Yrly SS75 675 ~~ :: OC EAN FR 0 NT. S 540.5937 to $148,000. Income $930. Cal973-4626 now! wallpaper.S!I00.640-0008. •CONSUMER'SGUIDE 1-----------------t UNITS. Prime Balboa ---------No all! in ls 3 BR 2 BA Barcelona, nr 2 br, wt.nter rctl. htd. pool ltG CAMYOM Pemn. loc. Xlnt cond. MobiM HOtM Store Own~~/ A~. sti.~fn cos ' left ....... I.E. Inc. HEATED SPA & POOL 2 Br. I 1t"J ba, frplc. Stv, school. nict• yrd. beaut S325 403 E Ba lboH
HUGELOT Only $425.000. Agent fAMILV PA RK 16.11E.17thSt,S.A. Frrtc . 2 Br, 2 ba. r err1 g . S330 mo . view 5865721 7S9-0117cves
642-3338 24x603Br,2Ba Jefrerson. REALESTATE d r veway + ga r . 2131531-6306 aft 6 58r. 38a. 3 Crpks. lux----------new llX2l add-on, comer COUNSELOR SPARICUMG dshwshr . lndry. $52.5. 615 2131721-5219 .Wwporl leach 3269 Winter rental, rull 2 BR
urious home, built upon CUSTOM lot. unusual privacy, •Re-finance & Invest· HEW Larkspur. 644·5414 eves ••••••••••••••••••••••• $350. 1 BK S325
nearly "'• of an acre. cul-Nwpt Hts 3 br. 2 ba, cop· priced for immediate ment specialist s. Sgl 4 Bdrm Spanis h style, 5.3 &wknds 2 BR. completely re · EasthluH 4 bdrm exec b'i3 4743 de-sac lot, tastefully de· per plumbing, forced air, al $29 500 ( 739 73) fam/4·plex. of d 1 d · decor 'd. Mature aduJts corat.ed thruout. wet bar. frplc, lge lot. Vacant. 5 e. ' · 1 · · •Beach properties acres avoca 0 an ' 3 bd. 2 ba. frplc, $615/mo. 847.{i076, ext 024 home or 3 bdrm .., den Costa Mno 3724
wine racks, inter-com. Try lease option. con ____ 848_-8895 _____ , •PropertyMenagement Fant.astlcview. StudioS325/mo.2blks to DR Lse '825 m o •••••••••••••••••••••••
Plans for pool, spa, pad· tract. $125,000. Bkr •Tax&exchange advise FARGO ocean4.97-2292 4 br. 2'"'1 ba, 2400 sq Ct . w t gardener No pets Huj(e 2 bd furn wt gar.
dle board court etc. are 842•1418: 962~ •EXCITING• •Gary D. Bosler960-438S 1/6'1'6-S717or 1/522-2080 tge fmly room. S6SO mo Re(s rcq'd Avail Sept s.n5. r\dlts only. OP\.'fl
Included. Separate yd •Small 1 br. pvt yard, C/pk ereu. 847<)803 28th 645-7388 or 642 3524 s 30 s. Sat s 9-1. 5@.4968
area for kids. xlnt loan GO DIRECT KIDS & PETS 12 UNITS. Refurbished . ._..., New cpts. stv. ref rig. By appt 2110Newport Bl11d. CM.
asswnptlon. 1906 Highland Long Beach. $11,280 Inc. ••••••••••••••••••••••• $335. Utll pd 833-897• 4 br. 2 ba. fmly rm. 2 frpl. OPENHSE corr Irvine). This 3 :\'4 of a mile from the 800~ nlhecl dm. rm. fenced . pool BAVVIEWluxunous 2500Tra1ler. I br, furn. SIU> SAT/SUN 10-5 bedroom. 2 bath beaut. beach. fun in the sun. nae, ' -0377 ...... ,_ Above Little Corona Walk to bch. schools. & sq fl 3 br. playroom i\ 2538 Nwpt Bl , 1re41r I
IM lnverness Harbor Highlands va· 3Br. 2Ba, too many xtras (4) lBR houses on 2 ad· ••••••••••••••••••••••• Beach. unusual trl·level 5hopping. Best area ot REAL HO ME. Pool 646-0147
DllPre&Alaoc. to mention , In most joining Iota, rm to build, .... I.._ 3106 view home. 3 BR. 3 ba .. downtown HR Never CdM Hi · Elem .. shop •---------cant home needs new beautiful 5• Fa mily. $162,000, J2x g ross. ••••••••••••••••••••••• =rm, vacant & ready. rented before. Onl y ping near. $975. Avail. Hut1tlftcJt011 leoch 3740
A#c11·· Ca> l714!l_m09FI09aodofecrs, owner. Open House Sun. Park In Ca Ii forn la. J.482·3710 BAY FRONT BEAUTY. Mo. Agent 673-8494 '"'""ty tenants need app-Oct 8th, 759-9S87 ••••••••••••••••••••••• • ., 1-4. Century 21 Doyle Co. · I I j I 2B I ......... Sll..s78'1 res. " 64CMl984 Real 68 sw1m ng poo . acun. 28&', a, per. xtras, ly. $650 mo. including Cln 3 bdr 2 ba hse Bulll Bach beechlronl w/view.
SaVSun tot'S, 543-U · saunas. enclosed roller Covington 4 Plex nr. So. avail now, "'50 mo. ownr ColM Mtso 3224 lawn & meint. No pets. la.ndscaPe Fant..astic <K'n color 1v. carport. Near
NtciREDUCED! skating rink. minutes Coast Plua. By owner. 673-aot ••••••••••••••••••••••• 122IOMain.~187 & H rbr. viev,1 Bisl nt!w S25 0 inc util
Owner s a ys sell ! from Fashion Laland 4' Principals only. Call • .....__,• .a 1107 Mesa Verde" Br. 2 ba, d neighborhood $800 mo 536-2444 ---------1 the Pa vi Ilion & o nl)' 846-0039 _, •• fam nn frplc close to Luxury condo 2 Br+ en 640-1212 d . 642 6724 ---------Fabulous &qC> sq. ft. en-$33,500. <DL8246-7> . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~. lOp neighborhood. + frplc .. 2 patios, enc eves ays, . '""-3744
Harbor Hlfh a rea. 3
bedrm. 2 bath, pool, al-
ley, $127 ,500. Agent.
MS.50U
BUT INRJTION
OWN YOUR LAND
tertalnmen1 room + 4 C•forwla Poclflc New duplex, 2 br ea. Oceanfront 2 BR. avail $595. mo. to mo. OK. Call garage. S450t mo. Call . •••••••••••••••••••••••
bdrms .. formal dining Mobile Home Sales Carpets, drapes. d is· Oct l·JW>e l S400 mo, uUI Pete. Select Properties. MALLOY REALTORS at •••LIDO HOME, 3 BR 2 New & elegan1. Just mm
rm .. sep. family rm.. 2'708Harbor,Ste208 hwshr to t apt. Lg dbl pald. Adlls. no peta. 151·3191 96G-4342. Ba, lJ(e patio. gar. $8SO from lndust compl~xe!>. ~~~~r;~::_e~Cully 540-5937 rr, Wshr/dryer. Space 675-1832 i,, mile to beach. 2 br. 2 mo.559-6588.00·6822 frwys. shopping & bui..
MIWPORTIEACH ............ a~H-s~ .. ~S~ooact,McaCommpeplr Ion~ llllwllagl•leKh 1140 2~ ~·~pe· ~~~: ba. den. nook. lge. living Bayshores. Charming 2 mstrk BR. d2 balhsi II\' ...._... .,_.,.. .. ~ . . . ••••••••••••••••••••••• -o·"" rm. built·lrul, fp, Cncd yd. BR hom"' w/frpl" & lro rm , itch., en. ut1 . rm nM.TY 67S.1642 Single wide. Accen t s ulated Prln only .,,.,.. .wv •. do •• 75 962 1951 " ' " wiwsbr/dry~r . all beaut w/new 8'x14' add·on. • · Avail. Oct I. 3 Bdrm, 1.., · "' g run . .,... · · bn ck patio Nt>Rr pnv fu rn. Elee. Kar 1-'rpl. THEILUffS newcpts/drpe,belowplt 6.11·35118 ba. FR. DR. CIOlle to Eaatalde 4 BR. 2.,.., bt1. leves> bl"J <'h . S650 mn pool. priv. pa tio &
••YVllW rent. Only S23.000. HUtllYOH school.$450.968-2129 +larcefam&dlnroolnmcl. 4br,aba,S495mo.Sherp, 1-676-41"8 j11cuzzl. Only $275 mo -MOO/mo, gardener . .__ .. A devastaUnglY dcrorat· (81MHl2> THIS ONIU LAlflM leeell l 141 seo.1744, 751-0221. close to ""ach Nwpt Hta 3 br 1 ba frplc M2-8750, .. ttp tryms
ed At deUgbtfuf "DolOC'es 848-8895 Can you believe 6 times ... "•••••••••••••••••• M'7·9729 washer/dryer. rerrlg, ....,_.a.Kia 3741
P l an ". Definitely 1rou. 8 Units plus Beautitu13br,2babome. RENTAL BY PUBLIC tW~oa K•dsok.4blks to water ....................... .
wit.houtequal. S192.ooo Beach Livina owners unit plus comer ~to ocean. L1e nice-BID on Oct. 9. um. sill ...,._. 3242 $4'75. 631 t<ei. 675·9880 LAGUNA BEACH MTR
HAST1NGS4'CO. Several n"w hom~ left lot,allfor$88.000. tyland9capedyard.S595. 2,3.t . bdrm homes .. ••••••••••••••••••••• N 3 BR f I 2 INN $'75/wk & up M11d REALTORS 640-5560 " rAROO mo 497 3282 Badlbay/ Vnlvenlty Dr rl ew . amJ Y rm. TV ' In a beautiful rocky l/S78-5'Ttsor ttm ·2090 · · · aru For lnlo call: Coun· For lae, 4, BR wate ront f11>lr's. pool, tennis. $9& serv., color ., . heatf'd
ocean front park. pvt ---------2 br splll·level house. tie ty oi Orange. GSA/Real home. 36 boat slip. lg llv mo. •Smashing l BR. pool. Utll I• 10494·5294.
Be11.1Ufully decorated
Trina Model with Back
Bay view• the I~ has
a1rudy beeft purchased.
Move lo ready. Call now. S. a..• 1076 community. s ublcttlna 90 U.._.ITS deck, 3 bib to beach. Fatale Div. (71" > 834-2SSO rm, r•m rm. d~k. new den, condo vu of channel 98$ N Coas1 Hwy allowed In park, 3 " Sept.June. $425 m o. crpts & paint Lhruout &: b u;i t s USO m o. beaches + pier. homes SlS,000 a yr apendable. «M·7419or (2U~44&-49M. Charm·1 38r, 3ba new S1300 mot olft'r. Own r . 7S9-l002. Agt •enfront. wtnier rental· •••••••••••••••••••••••
New eu.~tom home, 2000
IQ ft .• 3 br. lamlt7 rm,
nreplace between dlnJng
fr Uvlng room, sundeck
olt muttt br. 2 bJ, 2~
• car aarac•. Beat b~ In area 980-4180, 538-8874.
848-tlMt
pricedf bldl ln xlnt condition. twnhae. Tennla/pool, 714/846·3990 wkdys aft !itudlo. 1 BR . 2 BR , hld SH~900 Fi ne L.A. location. Newport leectl Jl6t cbl~ welcome. S500 Gpm Harbor Ht&hlundi. J 8R, 2 pool Starttng Rt S325 pr
RIMAISSAHCI Wilahlre Ol1t. Waiting ... •••••••••••••••••••• Call beUpm, 840-0114 ba • 2 cur dct "ur , frpl . mo 494 3l38 ____ _
Uat atatua for renters. Ma1nlficent. beachfront . lrriM JZ44 lac. ltltch .. encl yord. Oceanl ronl i;tudio S3SO
MobUe properties" Trtmendou1 Q.Ppt'y for We.st Newport home. 5 Meo 3 le• den w/fp. No ••••••••••••••••••••••• Avail. Oct $600 mp. 1early ()(.'eonfroot 2 BH 1(1~:·~~Jt~~· Investors . Call Pat Bdrf!11 2 batha+dorm C.111. FamUy. no peu. 3br 2 ba twnh!e. nuw. Dn1 Daya: 833-L361 Aek for ,i ba ~ar deck Cplc n•~
(714,.57•0,00 McLau1blln 1oon. loll. nty lee. Sl.SOO/mo. SW/mo. Eve 545·7506 rm, common pool. $4~ Mr Sc'hlendler Or 213 c:rpt: '650 yrty'. No'peta 71~ 86Wl7l Dave. mo. 675-5'96. 9:26-6404 rv1t1 wk end!< (94 5792
". .. • • • • • ... • "-f"• ---------.. ~ .. -. .....,. .. ·~· . .. .. \ ',...... .,. .. _,, . . ..
I
I
DM.YPILOT W'ldrlndllr.1••••13.1111 ....... Y11 ... a.w1 4JIO ~...... 4400 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• a ... ,,_. , • .~ Afatwwt•.,.,.., ....... ....,......_. llH w..y1ea... 1ozs Lott&~ Hoo illO •••••••-••-••••• .. •••••••••••-•••-• ...... "9•••••--•••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Palm Sprtnp 2 br ~. 100-1000.2000 Sq, Ft. on ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• .. Mlieaat.._. J76t ..__ ........ 0 le nnls t 10Ht pool/Jac Coast Hw )'. N o rth ,__. .,._,_... ?C 11 ....,.~•••••••••••••• C.......... >114 -_,. 2 ~ ... ba,w~re:, Reservatlona. •H .. 118 t11una. 549-1188 or '-'lllCI( C "'SH ~niormar'INnUI .. ,•,r:ltan•c.. y. thank .)'OU for.,._ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..... .. " ---5611" TV A n ,. ~ in,aneallady
OC&UROMTNI LAMA.NCHAAPTS • beffh. '" 3 BR. toe JO' boat or two 20· eves. Leagud3'7·2273.no ree ·Love.Jeff
.,.._.rtM&llSBJUS.. Lari• 1 2.a bedroom hp c , dlabw .. be r, bOata.Uktnewlhru~ul. -.....tose..r. 4300 4.50aq.f\. Marlntt'1 Mlle, Ul" 21td Tn&&l Deed FOUND· Blk Oerman ~ ~ ... w.tbar. a•t'den i pu Oahwhr, 1ara1• • P•l101 . 2car 11r. pl~ 2 •ddt'I ••••••••••••••••••••••• pvt mt.room. UUI. pd. loans arranged tor any Shephe;d, female, nr._ _______ _ '1:'.:S aand Oft Nwpt blw , md aar. 1u bbq. •ma on. ..lttel 1ueat parklna •II SRICTIVI• Am&>le parkln1. epu " renon Credit 00 pro-California as MlnnHOta, UCWPOIT
J adL :eadi to Pool Gil~ Pd. na Scott •PIC'Cll· llSO. mo. Jacobi Gain• reliable drps. 544-11678 hiem. Borrow on the in· c M MS-3342 """
e " o y • Y • • a~1 6U Wls ~ .. ..r d vw~ ttea.1ty roommate au-1464 cre&Hd vaiue or your . . M£1CAL ~ROUP ~~~4' .. 4..!.0 ... .:"• 0 ' '11KJI .•-.I •SltAREAllOME• ~clSpacend .. •lriavalaUPMa~k•. ~c. home.Calllodayforfaat. LOST : Blue remale a ._ 1 -.. ..,. New 2 tr. 2 ba. llll bltru., N4t'* lfrJ bdnn ho1ury PAltl MIWPOIT ... -cowteoua WormaUon. parakeet, Harbor Vl,ew
OC&ANVRONT Nu rrplc, ~I. 1.r. patio. adull apt.I ln H plan• Bacbelora. 1 or 2 c.t... l'7thSt,CM'3l·S200. ~Heme L• ... ns Homes. NB. Vicinity
,..._ IBr, .,..,., ril&a IMrym.$5. tr-om U80 + ooo&a, &en· Btdrooma6Townhousea ~ ... 1 .... 1 CPA needs company In U9 FordllNewpOrtHlllADr. .., ,.u.. SS15 mo. WfnlcT TSl.. II amt M2· t803 nla. walerfaU1, ponds! From"*·'° Share a home or aplmenl beaut. new office bldg. Li enaed Home Loan We.t. Flew awa.y In naab en.-. WI),._,.,, BR _._.__ From San Dit'IO Frwy 8""-ctacular 1pa. lotal "-M••t.a)AJU iJl.uMn1D Stellll to bay " beach. Brokers servln11 So. on Sunday. Aua. 27th.
Nn' 2 1 • J._aty '•-::.. drive North OC1 Beach to recreallon pro au m. ~ • ._. _ _._ ... ~,_....__ Prf v ate showers for C.Uf. for n yrt. ca n our dwnb but happy. 6"_.118
I bdnn. t ba. UDO. m wi mr 1a.r !.~~· 1--.. McF'addn l.he1' West on aodal pro1ram. 7 llOOI•. 8 u.AC' ""~ ~,,_ ~,..~ athletic executives. On nearest office. (114)
AYaU•U.TltolU l91n a.q n..Adlta:-"ztanoz'):t.&. Mcl"adden to $4olawlnd tmnitcowu.AU'ashlon a>~w ... ~iwQ premiletparJWlt.400To 837..J744 FOUND: Welmaraner
QUlretlil llll AW 8111 Loca~ at71~1-.u1•0n Villa ... t'IH;m...&198 laland. Jamboree & Sao 832-4l34Slnce 19'71 1,400 aq. ft. Pro(ealonal OOYOUNE•DC'""'H" mlx1 •• ! .. : addlt. Xlhnlldl dhf• a¥d 0wftlft'/i\tl A'IC . .,,... • _,..,. ; Joaquin 1111.la Road. pte!~. M2..c623 c. ,,.. . poc1 tovo. IC w/c ren.
----al\er6pm&U-90el ~. loveb. •P•C' 1714)644-lfOO ROOMM "'TES lat.2ndle3rd M.S-1508.aft'aorevu.
----------6 home-Uk.e a br with "' Homeowner loana OCMJROMT 2 Br. utlJ lld. cblldren oil. p~. 1aLed rntrance + 2 VERV NICE Share-N-Save ....... ........ 4450 a1Tanted fast. Lost: Mln. French poodle.
t BB. 1 be , m:i )f&r\J No peta. 'Manaaer apt 7 paUot. Somt: with att 2 Bdrm. 2 ba, w/all bltns . Enjoy more . ray less! ••••••••••••••••••••••• Borrow $1000. Sl00.000 male white. do& coll~r
3BR.lba,wntr 5450 t•Walla<'e •9580 a,arap. Swlmnuna pool. WA.TllROMT AllA&ea&Litest,yles Stor~d IOOxL30 wtdbl flexible t•rms. past w/llcenae, "Chris •
AMHOUHCIS THI
l&OCA.110M °' ,.:raa'O:'/cn
Effoc.tlve September Sth mtto: llOO .. sWst.._.
~ ..... Robert . Schmit%. MD Albert S. Welt.od1](D
Jerome Jablon. • 0
(714) 975-0660 41Ul.Jba.•nlr ~ IMSTAMTMOVllM Jacu.ui Tftl01acouru l WITHNl&DOa< We~kReferencea iJarms~~Newport cndit no problem. Call _Ml_-8630 __ . ____ _ 28Jt.lbabu.yrl~'100 Uk ad llt h.-1 2 blk lD lhinUlll\oo •bop-fOI' one 30• OC" two 20' C411114M282 · · ·M · usnoobliaaUon. Lost Fem Bassett hoond ~~~~~~~~ 38R,lb9.tr'Dtr tarf,"i: :i.o wn t' llin&«"n~rf!lMll.AdulUl. boall.Remodeledtonew -ForLease920sq.f\.mE. STERUNGf'tN.SVCS REWARD Pia ca1iu you are an attractive s-r.5T00CIA.M lfti~ ok. ~· =~ No pats hom S43S thru·oul. Obi "ar, Galtoahare lovely2br.2 l7lh St . Coata Mesa. 714/~16lO<bkrl m ·Z2S7orl-639-105lroll. femalebetweenlla.od24
2 BR. t ba. wntl' 12'1:1 t • wkodl · Sea wind VIiiage. 1~ Rc>raae. 2 add 'I orr street ba apt at Park ..Newport. Avail. Sept. ts. S400. mo. Lil T.O. ·5, 2nd T.D. ·a. con· wiU1 sufficient me:nt:aJity 3 BR. z a,.. •nlr '31$ HuntJntton VIUaae Lane. parkln1 s paces. S850. Call Nita at work 847·3386 Forced air heaL ~2450, slruction. Call afle Lost 2 West HJghJand wht and awareness to un-Sl~ JI. lBr 1arden ILB. 1714llll8-998t. mo Jacobi Really, orhomeMC-7295. 6'7$-0707or673.()140 4PM . Sat. onytlmc. terrier dou. vie. dent.and the best thing ~ JIOOI. ttc arc-a. S2S5 z Br dl1ld 1 675-tS'70 548-?nS New I and / Warn er. )'OU can do Is to reinforce
mo..noW.tBt.hSt · ~ninwe ~ Coupl! .. to s hr lae .....,.all...tal 4500 Reward. 842·4182 or a male, come to Mr ---------• nn ~-..;.....rt II a Bachelor unit '" block "HOME • w/m.ale. non· Mot1g1g11. Trwt MZ.3297dys. Hyatl. 380 Popi a r , Nil'• 2 br, 1 b.a, en<'l mo _..._,, from. beach. All uUl pd. cig-smoker, wlnt.er. $390 ... ••••••••••••••••••••• Deidi S03S . Lagw\a Beach ~ara e & ~l10 Nr OCC SUPER l "2 br pool oar No kids, no pets. 201 E. + dep. Steps lo bcb. 7101 4 · 0 0 0 s q · ft · New •••••••••••••••••••••• • Los l. Pa Ir tri ·focal 1-----------
associated . .
No pets S290 751 3e9tl f le lrtttl ~ & 'i32s' Balboa Blvd. $250 per Seashore. N.B. 645-8410 dusw~al Parsp.a894ce._!!~1ln· glasses. vie. Pearl St, BEST WISHES TO OUlt --~-----3 br 2 .. _ . _, lo .... A'gults 84.2-9583 M2·52Sl . mo +-security dep. Call ... " ~ LOWEST Lag Bch. 494·S870 DAUGHTER BRENDA °'8nlront d I 3 b , ""'· en .... pat .. , Sue$56-7707 Roommate M/F needed lo , ., 0 N H E R l 6 t h up f'x r. carag~. No pelfl S330. Deluxe 2 & 3 bd opts share2Brdlxaptonbch~Nu2720Clind."ofc. Wereltl.... Found : Golden Br wn BIRTHDAY' LOVE
-------
~· ~aae. m s mo. mo. 751-3896.. frplc. encl aar. patio: \olJ BLOCK TO BEAC~ atNwpl Bch +pool. over :!~ :~~Ir, •B. lstT.D.'a. tiho ~~~:3°~er. 9'79·7187. MOM & DAD . .
IA.STstD Ca11Pesgy98CM392 3 BR 2 Ba. downstairs. 21.MS-l&« · WTD Lo9ts. ic. a esa .
.ocu.NFRONT 4 Br, ~ I C.M. Bltns. fireplace. yrly br b •-ti 1 lndusL Bldg for rent 5000 ' • 1 ,..9 Found· Y,ng Afghan vie ba, fanta&Uc view. Yrty 2 BR, super nice, $375 mo New dehixe 2&a br. No rent.al. $500. 6'0·l1Sl agt. 2 , 1 a, xu1t loca on n ft Sprinklers i:J!Jv / Fairest Terms s nee l'" h R S l ·Ania. r.u ar"' s.r.kes 5360
CJlnl.y. Eves6'2·004S. Ind utll. 751·2060 pe t a. Encl. garage . Dana Polnt. Young male ~ov . lrg outsid'e fncd s.ttllt' MhJ. Co. ~t~osa. an a . •••••••••••••••••••••••
c.-.. _ h d 1 Adulta. no pets. a. arden 964·379S : 968-2720 : LGEt!c.B~bf~io8~ d~· P~er0jd493SJ1~ plu~ storage & prkng are.. MZ.2171 545-0611 1dayDu1. -dwischol.State -~ to ueac . up e x apt 2 br Jacuii1 pool 9Q.t908 oora • ac . s e u . . evs Wiii rent all or part Found: Sml Teacup Poo-accredited. Meda coul1.I
apt, 3 BR. 2 ba. <'Ompl bbqareia:closediarafe'. '-ZBR 1 & closedlnpatio.S600yrly. wk:nd Corn e r Pullman & &tiredcouplehasm~ey cDe.SPCls.bln.tunarkson requirement for re-
rurn, 5450 mo, wanter Also 2 hr townhse. n· ..... I aptea~r8J~ 673-2507 Roommate to share 3 br Paular lno. adj to tolend.lst&2ndTDs bk.841-414.2 gislratlon call (714)
6'7)..:t987 qwre 177 t:. ZZnd. Apt 10, !:k·,C:, 4i:~e. Westcliff, 2 BR. 2 ba. de· hse. C.M. Sl50 + utll. Newport Frwy. Call Agenl. l-837-3'74' Found: Yng M. Husltle ~7141 --------•I 64.52498 · lux condo. New crpts . 642-2995. W.A. Dosla. 714/St9-9671. mix. CM Park area.•---------
2 BR Duplex. no pets. Nc::h.!s~~·. 2.~~ii.~o ~'. ~.!!J>ainted. SS2S mo. Roommale-2 Br Condo. So. Coast Plaza Area. 3 ~ DOMLOM SAYS 919178.646-4298 SocW C.... 5400
$270. mo. 1st & last. ~ $380.Call 964-2937. ....., . .....,., S.J . C. Non s moker, bays, ISOO sq. ft. ea. Found: 1 cassette tape •••••••••••••••••••••••
dep. 1938-A Anaheim 3 br 2 b f 1 2 LIDO Bayrront. Like new mature. Eves. 493-8649 Avail Oct. l . 67S-OS62 player. Owner Identify SINGU?
Ave 631·3856 • Va 8 • rp c, car 2+den 2 ba frplc NewPort Beach ocean· by brand name & give garage. Avail. 1mmed. $896/mo. Agt. ·645•5044: front fem. pref. l ·bd 4000 sq ft ol commercial brief des<:ription. date & Call lNTROVlEW for the 2 BR. dshwsr, new crpt & Xlntloc. $450. 631•3230 furn •car S180 87s-2986 space, rear truck entry, location lost. Call HBPD intelligent &t discreet drps. carpo rt. S275. TSLMgmt 6'2·1603 7AM• • • A/C offices. part of way to meet new slnglt>
GREAT RECREATION: 794·B. W 18th. Open 9-S. Lrg2Br. lba. RecenUy re-spacious new comm'I 53G-562l. people. 752·5411.
Swimming, sauni.s. 2 M7-4S79 ....._ 3844 dec'd. Htd PoOI, adlt Looking for l or 2 Fem. to park development. Nr • Losl, Parrot. pink & grey.
health clubs, balhards. . ... •••••••••••••••••••• eommun. Westclirr area. shr oceanvu apl. In W. f r e e w a Y s b Y Vic. Mesa North. C.M.1_C_EM __ T_ER __ C_L_U_I_
n1ghl·l1ghte d t ennis Lrg 2t'd" lthBR, lrlg k1lchd. BRANO NEW 642.s388 Newport. Call 646·9160 Bolsa/Magnolla in Sept. n .833-6500days,or
<'OUN-Pro & pro shop. crp ruou • woo * * , AM or alt 6 or S36-4205. lv WestminsUr. 412.3133 979-3107 eves ff' ~--t...6 aotr dnvmi: ran~e. p11rly be~m celling, no pets. n Ilg :J br, new crpt, bltns, msg. sa.p1y,.._ t-..
room children. 645-8894 deck. 3 Doors to bch. Yr· NEWPORT BLVD. I st TtUST DllDS LOST. White Cockapoo, •Pltylk ..
F UN ACTIV IT I ES 1 Br, cpts. drps. stove, llYINl-S.-WUT l,yS475.673-2S71 5br~~.p~~J~~~d;e~ Store<in~~~~. ap· 2-l&lr* maleN~C.M.vlcinjly, EM .......
f'ulllamc dirN·tor. rr~l' kJds ok, no pets. 1240. Arr COMMUHfTY Dix 4br, 2ba, encl gar. no over 23. Good ref a. Bef 12 prox. 2SOO sq. ft. Call SWlNGS" REf't'S 6'2·189'7 ys. •Alld '-1
Sunday brunch. BBQ 5• mo. 979-0136. pets, lh blk bay/bch, noon, 556-0'751 ~or642·1334. CONSTRUCTION Found: Irvine area, Blue· For All Ages
traps. parties . s port HERITAGE POINT $600/moyrlylae 644 1100 •PT•·COMMERCIAL .....Jnl Siamese. neutered ThePerfert toumamenls & more! $300. New l Bdrm apt · · G.i111111 -n • · ....,. Bar Alternative~
OEAUTJFULAPTS w/garage. Nr So. Coast 28rfumorunfum .$400. l f«llel.t 4350 StorCllJI 4550 MIGUEL ~~pprox 915' Call •Meet People• Singh~:.. 1&2 bedrooms Plaza. Days-call Joyce blk from beach. Clean. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• MORTGAGE CO •Relax•Have Fun•
t\tm & unrurn Model!. 835·3000. ext 320, eves An apt communily de· Laundry facil. Garage. Double garage, Costa RV winter atorage avail. 131•7381 661 •2s I I Found German Shorthair Low Membership Fees
Opt!ndally JOtt,7. Room 494·1498or493-2706 signed with you in mind 6'2.5466or64s-4483.· Mesa.Storageonly. Fenced, lighted, very re· -.i...1Eveayo.a.y Pointer . ma le . Vi c , CALL
I N featuring 8spacious noor . . 646-4382 t "'S 4 1040 vr_.. Yal ~ Tustin Ave." Chapman. mate service-uvu1 . o Spac. l br garden apt. flans. Furnished or un-Quiet 2 ~r. 2 ba. garden as ra es . " • · Orange. l/538-7685 97r0700 lease required. Sorry. Pool & rec. All util pd. urnls h e d 1 2 & 3 apt, t:aslbluff loc . •Single Mesa Verde. _839_-4569 __ .______ .i-
udults only, no pets. Adults, no children. no bedr oom a pt 6 • Im . Adults, no pets. $400 mo. $30. Storage onJy. vacant area avail. for A I ,.,.... .. , 5350
O a.kwoOd pets. S22S up. Also mediateOccupancy. 644-8726. 833-8974 ~or~.'·.·rsentotrap~ert, po:~~i r;'ta&~a-: ·a··:.::·:IN···G··~·ASS····~·G··E .. I .. :,..-.•
Garden Apartments gar3t;T' J:::'~~amo Beaut roomy 4 br Nwpt Storage garage avail now. "16 _. """"""' ..............
le FEATUllHG L" .. _ ·d 1 blk t F"'~"ew nr Baker CM of fenced. secure CL Bob J ames-Lac Masseur ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....,.....,Newill
880 Irvine 1 al 17th 1
645-05.50
19S9 Map Ave, apl5 ~ua up ex. l rom .... .. · · area. 90X26: behind 17th ~·••••••••••••••••••••• Ou II ---------.. •ParkUkeseWng. ocean. Lse SS65. mo. S35 mo. 642-6500 dys. St .. east C.M. Water MIRO•c-wh 5100 tea 9·9.494·51~1 Sd11l1&
HIWPOIT •Lighted tennis courts 956-5871 673-7489eves. av•'I r•o ~.13 ,, .... -1 •••••••••••••••••••••••PREGNANT? Car:n°. ...enctloft 7005 •Recreational facilities ... ,,,_.._ .,.........., .. APA.ITMIEMTS *Pool &Jacuzii East.side Costa Mesa Obi . confidential counseling & •••••••••••••••••••••• •
2 BR S210. Infants onJy. -Gas BBQ S. 0.•M• 387' g a r . s 1 5 / m 0 .......... W..tecl 4600 PENNY referral. A!X>rtion, a®'--REAL ESTATE ....,.. 9"d!/$-"t
1700 16th St
I Oover al 16th I
642-8170
Mature adults. No pets. •Sparkling clean laun· •••••-•••••••••••••••• S 0 UTH LAN 0 ER S . ••••••••••••••••••••••• alMf'llr8 Uon & k~pmg .
24SONewportBlvd dry 2 bd apt, walk to bch. 631-2133. Sculptor needs roomy I!'· r-n.lllll APCARE ~7-2:163 LICENSE
Costa Mesa •Garden patloJdtchen clean & ready now. $350. expensive pvt stucho in I~ LINDA & VICXI SCHOOL .~o beam ceilin"s Also 1 bd $275 498·1903 Office R....-1.....1 .... 00 which to li ve & work. NN 3br.2baupper,Mesadel ~r-"' · .....,... "'"' 963-1953N' kD'A I o.tulMOl:.Tt ---------Mar. $350. Family. no •Kingsizebedrooms 646-0507 ••••••••••••••••.••••••• IC m co Oll.Y $1 E-...._ ___ of I OFFERS •Large walk-In closets y~....,. ~cES ,._. ._ ,,_ Zbr, 3 blk from bch. Patio pet3. 546-6036 •Privatedreasing areas 2 Bel. 1 bath. Ocean view. IA "'""' vm ..-S /I t/ Serving all Orange Co
Clft canal, built-Ins. $400. S I . ·t 3 bd •Accented walls. Xlnt neighborhood. Cannery Village-New of· I llYH 835-7313 . Ciwstl.ectwefrt. ~5-4630 pac ous, qwe rm f' f JOO q ft Alalc• Sell .. _ ---------• townhse apt w/lge pvt $250/mo. Agt. 494-1561, aces rom s · any ,...,m or com·
Near -er of Walnut •· 494-7287 fan ta s ll c views . I g ••••••••••••••••• •••••• bUultioa at 'items fer S1S 1 BR. prtly frn, mature patio. Pool. Adults. w •u 0t .._1-_ CPI f · di · hbo hd So k'ds Jeffery off S. A. Frwy. patios· park Ing & ~• or less w1lh a Penny bbt' f~ri;n Jh~e$J751;rly'. s.nT'~~i'orS~~::;s. (714l5S9·7000. sorry no 2 br apt. walk to beach, janitorial included. 2808 Oppa: hiwily SOOS Pincher Ad. 3 tines for 2
673-7078 pets Rental center open S2SO. mo. Call 498·6324 or Lafayette Ave .. N.B. ....................... ~~t:·60'Eaf~
COUNTRY GIRL
*ESCORTS*
3' hrs 957-847 4
•Crash Course available
•Maten als provkied.
•Small ~lasses for
personalized lnstruc:Uon.
*°'°°8e own taste-day --------•Lovely lge l br. Cpts. daily. 9amto7pm. 6.14-1612. 673-1003 ...... VRI •~a..acy .......
S I BR r 1 """'"'IO!fa ,,,_.,..... tlle2days. Charg~ 1t! 9ac ous 2 . across r drps. s tove. garage. Ne be h L · l£B .._~HISE No 1 ds beach . $395 winter. Mature adults. No pets. Orangelree. Cond~ I br _& ~2b ac do Pux':'"ous THE EfACIENT """~ commercia a · Touch of ---------• ~night classes.
644·9548 1984 C Anaheim Ave . loft.Pool,Jacuu 1.teM:s. ut1t' aS37co5n 492 ~,gar. The new way to own a For more information l't-I
•Placement-up to 80' ~
commission.
M>3229or646-3160 rec. facil. $305. mo. Cull rm · · ALTERNATIVE travel agency. Travel andtopla~youradcall uu. l BR apt, sL.eps to ocean, 5.'i&-0638or661-0633 Net k Start MOOELS Free3Week
view. S2S5 mo. Winter J IESTEA.STSIDE 2 br 1 ba, n ewly decorat· Mo. to mo. rent lncl: Ex ~ o.ot rl:~f~:~: ~~2 5678 .,...,,_. SalesTralning.
person.673·2677 Cute studio, util incl. ...,._leoch 3848 ~·h2 hb l k.5 fsom R Complete support&long U'9 • &aris-ftc• CalForDtt•
Avail 1011, S250/m o . •• .. ••••••••••••••,••••• a c /s opp ng. 315· pe~~i!d p~o~; ~o·v: term service provided. ---------'7MOU Outcall 131-1003 4fl.0442
S..C ..... l'lt• 3776 64().2981 Oceanfronl.winter rental, 49'l-Sl2laf'tS. erage. conr. rm, matl Ca ll Mr . Bee c h.•-Bi-.rth--Con-trol--A--ge_ri_c_y_o_r --------•i Kalella
••••••••••••••••••••••• studjo, 1 BR. 2 BR, hld I 714.0.9242 On beach, 2 BR. 2 ba, S4SO. 3 BR twohse type. brlt pool. Start.log at $325 pr S.....,.. 3110 serv., parking & more n · So. Calif. A non-profit or· Spiri ..... 1.-.,. Real Estate School
I BR. 1 ba $Z75. Just like fplc, 2 mstr bdrms. 16S mo. 494-3138 ••••••••••••••••••••••• NeTfiE1exECUTIVE FAST FOOD fu~~~u~:t!n~~:!:,~: 1815So. El Camino Real l:ml CarnlnoCaplslrano
a h m Utll Paid Monte Vis ta. btwn Parle Brtstol 1 Br newly SanCl"'-'A.• '''"llvtlc .• __ San __ J_u_an_Ca_P._is_lr_ano __ o e. . Orange & Nwpt Blvd. a..,.. Hiit 3150 d Ad ti , l SUITE fl40.:>470 Prime Loe. In K·Mart Uon. & familf ptanninf. ~ .. """"" .. u , •• 1-492-3710, 1-498-3558. $500. + $160 move-in. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~mo.~l~~o pe s. plaza. Unlimited poten-For free nfo t'a I 1 __ ~_or_appt __ .4_92_·_7298 __ tr you need an attractive
1-492-1720. CaUappt.SS2·3195PM LA.UNA.HILLS CdM OFFICES Ual. By owner. $28,SOO. ~. .._.,...55,...'-E mature quallfled ad·
b du! I New adult deluxe aplS 2 Sty :J bdrm, 2~ ba. dbl lriqht Cluery Hew For Info. 642·5425 days. Open House. free de· -,... rnlslraUve assistant1gal Af. fwllh Super 1 Br. a lS on y, furn & unfum Billiards gar, air cond, nr So. Csl. SUITES. So. of Coast $40-779Sle&l060eves. monslration of garden· FIGUll MODELS fridaytexec secretary. ~ no pets. Encl. gar., lndry · d• Plaza. ssoo. First & last H A allable Now' M ESCORTS Irv/NB. Pleas e call ••••••••••••••••••••••• facll.. S23S 203S ~oloolely,baJJa1_cuui. s an + $150. dep. Lease. wy. v . · ~WERS & gifts. Nets Lngeq~pmnl. o.n. eve. 644-4596al\5:30PM Fullerto 642 5964 ~ .... ,. .-.. "' SEE to appreciate. S395 S"C 000 M I g to Sept 1:8l'\ al SPM. Tice Aar•:c .a.u o•·HY .... , ... da 1107 n. . . ALICIA VILLA.GE '""'"""'a.~. noon. Call Unda 675-2311 .;;.;.,all. r·0r. ~~/ Agt. &l\Lals. 1705 s. Coast VVI "' .... .... W...tect 7 I 00
....................... 2 BR upper ; bright & 25211 Stockport Aprwl• ... ,.,,..tllecl FULLSHVICE 751.1400 Hwy,LagBch.494-2412 D.,..•ves.llr ..................... ..
I or 2 Bdrm. Furn avail. spacious: balcony. encl. 581-6151or581·6130 or ......,..._d 1900 63 I ·2140 cceptlng Appllcatloru.
Ocean view. Avail lm· gar .. adults. $335. 132 ()(ficoeopen9-7dally •••••••••••••••••¥•••• DIUIXEOfflCIS MARKET/dell, Balboa. Lost& fomtd S300 for week days. avail to
med. Call Wknds & Lisa Ln. 631-1816 THE EXCITING Peraoaal telephone/ re· $12,000 mo. Sacrifice. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3' yr old young man with start btwn 7am 4t noon,
wkdyuftS,673-3958 . Htwport leach 38'9 PALM MESA A.PTS. ceptlonlsl. sec retary, Agt. 751·1400 al p kl blue eyes who enjoys the want to be off by t :JO . ---'--------• 1004 El Cammo. 640.Q59. ••••••••••••••••••••••• conference room. coffee FOUND: M e e nese beach wishes to meet a 2:00pm or later. Apply
Bayfroot 2 br 2 ba. 1500 sq $250 + S2SO sec. dep. MINUT&S TO NPT & hospitality services Terrific Bus iness Op· v I c M a g n o Ii a & yoong woman Interested Mcl>onalds Res tu rant
I\, fireplace, lg garage, Bach + EXCEPTIONAL •DELUXE• BCH. Excellent. k>cation, near portunity : For limited Westminster. Garden i n companions hip. 63S W 9lhCM J)ri v. beach, adults only. find! Eastbluff 3 br. 2 ba. Bach, 1&2 BR. freeways. •umber persons. over 21 Grove. 534-8422 89'7·2459. •---·-1---· ---
Vearl y l ea se . $850 . Leaae. lncl.apac.master fromS230.&up. IAIERCENTER yrs. Your opportunity L UN S b 1 k ---------Accountant Trainee, en·
673-2162 NEW 2 BR 2 Ba, pvt patio s uite, d in rm & dbl Adulta, No Pets (714 )!n9.2161 expand, diversify your F 0 D : m •SHERI LEE• try level Position. Ex-
& gar age. S340 mo. Call garage. Auto door 1S61 Mesa Dr. income. Run your own Cockapoo type dog: vie CERTIFIED perience helpful. but not
aJTElBRATBEACH& 546-5880,askforLarryor opener avail. Pool & ISBlksEastofNewPort Office s pace In pre· part-time business In lrvtnebtwnUnlvers1ty& MASSEUSE necessary. Some typing
BAV,$295/. Pam recreation area. Adults Blvd.) stigious Newport Center spare lime. 636-0276. 23rd, old. seems to be House Calls By Appl. required.Salaryopen.
661·3323.496-5660 2 BR. lg garage, Sl2S, only. No~ts. $450. 865 9am·Spm546·9860 lwe11aFargabldg.15thflr 5:00-8:00PM blind&deafS48-4982 83M838. Jatt01nc.54S-7422
$400. Great 2 BR, winter. bachelor. encl. patio AMIGOS AV OCE.A.HFltOMT w/viw . l~clud~s desk, STORE FIXTURES . ACCOUMTI ...
FP.D/W .closetoocean. S2S0.548-8204,64S-2316 3 br. 2 ba, bch duplex. Lag Bch, wlolcr rental copymachme,filespace. RACKS HANGERS
s hopping, fe rry. etc. . frpl. gar, bu.ilt·lns. No studio.I. t BR. 2 BR. htd $lSOpr mo. 6'4·7IS1. 1 ETC . ·FASH I 0 N Q.111(/SI.
W/fumlsh. 833-3307. Special Situation. pets. SSOOyrly. 645·1682 pool. ::>tarting at S32S pr ON THE WATER BOUTIQUE, 333 E. 1m1 Req knowledae of gen'I
Newly painted d e lux $22$-new private 1 story. LG 3Br, 2.Ba, frplc. ram MESA must be able lo analyze $295. l br apL for only mo.494·3138 STREET COSTA HAVE YOU ledger thru trial bal.
duplex, yard, S47S m o For adults over 30. No rm. deck, dbl iflrage, loo. 4000 Dellae S..itft: ---·------• een1 accts & ma.int sup.
lse. l unit away frm bch. pets. Deposit required. adlta. no pets. Nwpt ••••••••••••••••••••••• 631 & 1750 Sq Ft Sandwich sbop industrial porting schedules. W1ll 917\-IJ E. Balboa Blvd, 7SZ·l830 DIU.S4.2Smo.673·1668 R.oomw/ kitchenette Udo area. help run. Paul assist In othere acctg
67J.S745or213/349-4534 $60week &\lp. McriftaVI._ 548-8443Day1eve.A1t. LOST function$ as nee pre· C.--.. Mer 3822 0..,..... 31J6 Drive by 3706 Park Lane, S48-97~ .....,,... Ori tal k l ood v1ous related eJtper Is~· ....................... to see 2 BR. 2 Ba. frplc, .,...,,... 675-1662 neLenSlS,!J!.ardowne : , C,._11 q'd. Apply Kinch Co .. •"•••••••••••••••••••• . bltn1, Dshwshr, nice Ambauador IM In Coeta --=--------ol'N ..,. nm Armstrong Ave.
--------T;::nlg 2A18~lc:~1o:t cprt'I ~ drps. S42S. mo. Mesa. 2277 Harbor. Cen-Deluxemedlcatunl~Cosla P;ul S48-M43 day/eve. SOMETHING? lrv.540-8503. _ au VI • $350 • 1'*' call Jacoti. Realty, lrally located, 235 rooms. Mesa. 1500 sq. ·• 41tt _a __ . ______ _
"' ocean. ew mo. 6'7S-66'70673-458S MANY with kitchen. 548-2103. lillY•lf•llf Accounlant. full cnarse. t
fl G6-2S2l •phone" TV. Swlmmlna Cdm d'-suites. uUI pd. W_,,__,. 5020 Fi t .._k "L t nd Fo nd" person office. AlllR. AIP. ,. ~~~~~~ 0 Immed. possession. lg 3 J---i jacuul and rec .,. --rs c,-our os a u P/R. pefboard. le &.fl>· iL.. ~ ~ = = = I W"4• le9dl 114 BR 2 BA. bit-ins. block to ;;)"~. Dally· & weekly AIC. ample prkg. From ....................... classification numbef 5300 to ... If Ing, gn ledger. trutl
GARDEN APTS ••••••••••••••••••••••• beach. 5450 yrly. N.B. rates starting from $5' a 300' s.f. No lae req. Want to Invest &tor work someone haS found It (FOUND adt balance, bank l"e()()ncilla·
CORONA DEL MAR HO llNT M.S-7057, 642·0881 week. 6'7s.Gm. ln local small business. are plaoed in the Daily Pilot FREE of Uon for s ml ptasijc mfr . ..... ~u" Prln only . SS6·7280, f\&turc opp't,y foe coo· i Br Townhouse. frplc. IHCREA.SI YIA.ALY ..........,..., AlRPORT AREA· 545-3'722 chargei If your item IS not lilted H lroller t ype dutlea ac ~ca··~·v~:1s~ ~~~ OUAORWANTNEREESI Ptnlnaula 2 BR l BA up-Kitchen prtvUeges. ulU In-_.5 F ~F~c~:&-cept •--------0-being found then dlal l~".J.. mana1emeot. • -per unil. new drapes & cl $.2SO mo. S150 dep. °'"" · ·• 0 "' · MoMy to Lo. 5 21 54,._
toFuhlon taland&fine $430. New 2 br. 2~ ba palnt.$400.873-0697 'Prefer atewardeu. tesc>mo.Carpet,drapea, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 642•LOST Booklt:li:,f\tll..,.-e l beach. 644.-11 townhorne apt. Many 58!-3308 4t paneling. Call Karen. lllrl ol ...... At"'R-. ...•1 P. ~~~~~~~~~I •me• I ti ea. 1111 O a Jldnn, 2 balh, N._rt 1141........, ""'"""'orro•l et..., P/R. ......... .:.::a ..
Avail. now! a BR. 2 ba .. ~mm>n:ni RI' H.B. H""'"...,. Pen. Deck. a ar. $550. yr-Near new beachfro~~ HUNT. llA.~ MONEY and let a friendly ad-visor wist you :f;J:T ledsar. ' al chUdreo OK, no pet1. ,,,..,mi lY -1y.~orf83.S086 View. Color TV. H.B....., in piecing a "Lott" ad. Call Monday baftk a
"50.Apnttr7W354 \ wk.or$250mo.53S·U44 $300.UUlpd.M2-03ll F"""'--800 530 r Oontor'amtplutlcmtr: Bach apt $200. Ul l lnc. Mee 2 Br DPlx u.-laln. thru , .... , : a .m. to : p.m. or All around f'riCla,J t)'l>e
£xtn It• d&aplex 2 br. 2 Slnileaonl)'. t rpk, Wl f>. 1ara1•. P¥\/nn/t>., ldtch prtv11. IA.Y YllW wor'kln1 capital, ut • next day's peper or call by noon on wanted. L.D. PIHllc N. trple, beam cellnp , 518-0.'121. lldulU, no pets. nr Udo Npt b•Y vlew. pool On Latvette · Cannery 2nd roort1a1ea. lnven. Saturday for &lnday's paper.
oeeuvilw, tee , ... a«e. SHARP/NEW 2 Br. '"" Jaa.aboppUlc.1.M,cndlt =· M/bl or gay. Wlal•. otnce space 500 tOr)' alart·UPI, rt· Moldlng.SC'J-8043
pvt a..eb prtvp. SSSO. Ba. frpl. 1ar. no ref.~mo.414..ao:t.. , to~tt1i· UNDV celvabMa. ccoune.aot
im.m.DJl. children. U25. Call Neal' Hoa& Hotp. Alll'ac. 8-ut. furn. room. '200. Reahior ~ 67Wlll 714/547-84&1 642-5678 C.P.A. nrm need& Sr
BACHELOR APT ts:M71hakforMac. Uvt 3 BR t.w nh ... Pvt mer. Older penon ...... A.Mel(.. wtth minimum I rra w/•arare. $250 mo Nl 2 br aJ'l)Ol't pool carpet$. dra,es. pat.lo. pn1.t4MH7 Xlnt oalce or lnduatriaJ r::cacct'au~.
1'73-71Z'7 at8Plt. .~ mi. ~r I c.' t.o..,'. ODC:I. ,., • $450 mo. ,..... ......... 4250 =:· u~~~r> Js~2~1~" FIN~CIALSERVICES port~. ~~~
Bl: b L UUUtlel pd $:150. 1'7$.22$2 a..BS Adlta. ....................... pott ~ loanl: SpeclaU1t to: St~tall, Pulll:e1." ~ :PJac Retarenc.; 1 BrQl. l blkfrombtach. BIG BEAR CABIN 2 Br. SW~ avatt. In presU11oua ln hard·~•;t11oaM.lCall Guptill Inc. 3* vta needed.'225mo.17&-~ J'IDd ft&l >'°"wan\ lo Ul2Bala.o.Bl.G50/mo. fn>ic,qite,1lpsl.Wllor i.Bloeallon,805aqft.lle. =• oaoc n1. tJdo.Ste580.Nll,_,
or-.?5'74 days. Dell¥ PtlotClaleifi.ct1. a.IMS. wknd. 7141 7:14-6341. 4M-44Sl. La1 Bt'h. ___ . -----• No Phone callt please.
. . . • • I
I 0 . ' ..
Wtldnctsday. September t~. 1978 OAll.YPILOT .I
• ;-:.: i>~""~"'111. ~,t~~ :·1i ~ ... 11~ .,~.... ... >1a•. •1)1_1 ... ~1~;..._~>.• .. ~ ... !~'~1:-~'
Aci M ' c.,.... C-.t/c-cr.te P1u19t --~ t« .. nt U1•1d1 J I 1 ~P......... ,...../l.,..r T,... s.r.k• ....................................................................................................................................................................................... •·······••·••••······•·
AccouatlnJ I Rkkp J Carpenlera, flnlah "All rtiasl'& or concre!le OmamentaJlronfenclna OCCStudent.lTonlr\K'k. Uooaeclean.lol help. ~X· Palnting. Extrl fntr. £x· PATCMP~TERING CAU. 640.TIH
19'Vtce, mnatructlon ex rouah Comm & rH , work Blorlt waJIJI. plgn Oloice ol dl1il(Jl& $7 30' Traah, Lree trim. Roa ,,er. ol wlli ltaln. F\111 & pr'd, hoMsL neat. rcas Al 1 l Y Pt' I · I-' r ti~ Ul'S -& SMV.
per "'an.-..SOO John. 531-8082 or Wa.y1rn. tc•,.., brkk Uc 4'r bonded Up. Slevt' ~ IG-5'103 PIT. Guar. hn w1tb or Uc'd91W l04S Ortve tsull'\llUS. CaJI 540-68Z$ •"
-54'1 l~ &eeMIM WI O lra na. 1100 t:. . Ready for the wind" .............. .. •• , Pickup~ for moving ft Garry. 1226.SA.540-952 Prol pamt..ln11 E11t & lnt.. ,._..., Trim, apray, removo.
•••••••••••••-•••••••• ""' Umlll No job too Ca.lld C.. ••••••-••••••••••••••• Nu.Una deanu119. Steve _. Low rate•. R4lft . i''ree ••••••••••••••••••••••• ifal1., arind stumpl'. B•JApplianc-e~' small U c ront.ranor ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cltan.up11 . fhul1n1 Walho,7$1.elU I AK .... , est.~.~ PERRY'SPLUMBINO WeW&,._. TRJP-CltAftG 1:..1 O '1511 11191 l d ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• C l I Main t l.1C'·d fo'amlly dn)'C'are 1.and&C'aplng. mme Bubbl a h Haulln g.L.M.S.-Roto. Sod or HouMPOutUng In\ Ex· o mp ete ~umb1na Sped .. 11Trefl. = . S A c..,.t 0'""9 w Pf't'l<'h<W>I 11roirnm to H't"Y1c1ng 6'2·9907 i''umlture moving & tree Se e d e d L a w n s • ter. Preti est.. .John.Beck servlceA. Ora & H wer b\8r'd, ~ !n exp. refs ~ lile.7 OI~ ....................... rvt' you. NB ~ 2M_!_ •VERY LOW P RICF.S• trimmlnc. 49'7·2897. 24 Sprinklers. Plutlna. 63l~or64S-2161 . ~4:n!t~. °a."tir a:·~I~~ Ccli44 1 640.TRll
•••'•••'" Cc1''tt t.aJns. fadlnJ f'lC' Llce1ut"d <'hlld car• OnOardenin¥MalJ\t bn. Xlntrels.87~7633. cu.tocn work 87s.3181 ••••••••••••••••••••••• U•aran\ l"d. Rainbow N1ght..w 9 JOPM lO It c:mly Gt'U'"i;u ~-20t.:i . . pricee f • reusonable ---------Expert shaping. llunrung. •S.veMOM)'• ~l<'t!IJM6-9180 Re .. o n abte r•tu. ---Studeot. Hauling 1frage &lrol>eanLa.Ddse11per ~·17~ee ea mates. lloofincJ .iwnp removal. lndscp Dri~ways• Vark lnl lot C .. Sw.tc. -1147 077!> J~ iarooner. free clean·up. Need wol'k etc. ~work. Fair prtce. • 704.3 ••••••••••••••••••••••• crealioos 675-2821. ins.
•Repair• ·~alC"oatin111 ................. •••••• C ~ ed • 1 t 1 m ~ e · -~ua t t _S3f.aT7 Malnt.94647l EXCELLENT PAINT· REPAJR at REROOF. All wa..wCle I I
•LI C', 8. C M b A. S :-.-...-... •-· .. '-ln , ...... , -Si OI <%13)$ am uuq • .....__wlaJ tt.. Res Iden· r • ...&..Aa~· ............_ trim· ING Re, uooable ratu, t y r es s h I n g I e s · •••••••••••••••••••'••• ....... 1 ........ ~ ... -.-· '-"JllC"_,,.... ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~.,.. -~ &~ , _ _.. ll! ... Z7""' h .. A.!-1-•l, twMntt or plaN' of utl R.J llutfmian & Son Ex per. 1arden(lr . Free liaJ tlaulift• ol any type. ming. lean· up. 8 yrs U'l>'C-wmates. '"9' ..... roe 5 a .. es.compo-ta r • G« a dear view from
IMh.U*ls 1 c9/ n 1 by Vnn SC'hndet R!•rnod.-l &IMSdlU4'ml. eat. cleAnups. Reuon. Reuo~abl c rates. exp. Free e$l. Noboro. Painting, ext/Int . f"eeest.Ml·5930 ACLEARVIEW ~ di')' loam m«hod f\"t'C ~orMIJ--Utl. BenHo Cervantes . _.,. 91 .. l62orl9'1·2862 Rea.90tlable rates. Lic'd McOANEL '2JS. ma.x63Hl'llleves
""l r ... 11~1a. m.owro u ..... •-o.~ .. .-.. s.-4191 contractor...,........., Rool\n & R 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• t't'M•v -DUUUC!U .._ c.. s.r.ke Jl&M Landscaplng. lrrig. . . """""'°""' g epa rs Wmdow Clearunte or any
l.:lllm marin~ •aod•<>r\ '-"•mpoo 6 11team clun t\dditlcKl!'i, rtimdl. rt"' & Garcia's Oardenang co. ••••••••••••••••••••••• roto, sod. 1eed lawns. Apt Painting. Home'a. uc. M3446 11991·9339 t.ype. Reasonable ratcs-
IJ\lo Wood fbral.i tn.11nt eolur bn&hlencni-. wht comm 1-'r«'. l'ilt Int/Ext llrnd11C'apo & Going aw•y? fl!nglts h P lanting. Ins. refs. Int/Ext. Low rates. Re-Roof For Lesa 968-8946
Mal ~eu.m:M <'~IO rnJn bleaeb t:lnn 0.Min11 & plan• Lie maintenance 673·3417 lady, cap abl e & 631-3209 Jerry.$40-SUIO CallAnytime .... •-li'" din rm. hall ll,S AVM Spiro ~ ~ . trustworthy could tile S!M-04.21 na __..le• nn 17 so. couch $10. <"hr · -Home Pndl' G~erung. care or your home & pets. Otg:lt Laodsupe. ReM. Wallpaper banging, re·
Teds Windnw Care. Prof.
wmdow cleaning Reas.
rates. Refs. 642 7893 ••••••••••••••••••••••• " Gu•r C'llm pet odor Sulvtn Cons truction. l'4alntcn1mce. Cleanups Avail fr Oct tth. Ref's. pnces. Prof. landscape& asonable. dependable, T......_lepelr
Ol vorc•I B•nkrurtt'Y t'p( n•palt. L$ yrs ni>r Sl>t'<'uall:r.lng tn wood or fr Haullng. Free Est. 631M1854. lrrig.64~;.7070 guaranteed.493-5840 •••••••••••••••••••••••
frocn ftlinJt to ll.011 W Do wort m~ Rt'fa roncretl' d«M. fences. & nm M4-l'Ttl8 Carey ln & save $$S'S. Most Fiod what you want in
ct1on Leaal T\ p1nJ S31 ()101 pall-0 covt'nl. Uc'd & an· ••• •r .. ._ left Hw ....._.. ~ ~~ bdJ;mted. ~chns or color repair S22 so + Daily PUotClasslf1eds. 1160 ~ 19. 1.4~ H46 aft sr'd Call for est. 84$-6171 -' ....................... ...._ • .., ...uuvum p&1ft • pee. pe.rts. Free est •18710 _,
6PM 7PM. <.:arpet t1~anlnit Steam & ••••••••••0 ••••••H••• AMWAY c I ••••••••••••••••••••••• In s ml paiPt jobs. CaJtronl ~26ic>
-Shampoo 1'1ra & win BedriMI HANDYMAN: C8J'l)entry. oamet cs. Prol service with Atlas 492-1073 ca ~·.. ·~
..... .._... dow~ Dutc h M a1n ....................... eJeetrlcaJ plumblng " =~·. ":w;cware;:· VanUneecostsoomore! Does your set seem to be .:
..... ;': ................ &.Mal'K't'Sl-r'Vlct'. 971 11$4 It••• d lledrtc fin. 847-m. MS-3820 642-58S2 re omm · Free est . for locals. FioeR. .,,!:'_t.eSLC'. Plialnling~ in need ot cosUy or rr-;· Uc327136 &4S-fll74 storage, & tong d ist. .,....,.. c, ins ... ;, quenl repairs? Don L c.•,.. Aco.tic Gf 1#.1 tt moves. St.ate Uc. nuois. me. 83f>.SSM24 hrs. blame your set . Emil's ~Jay Alarm ~yi.lema ....................... F.LF..C.'TRlCIAN rrtced ut•u•u•u••••u•••••llUcll.U•9 PhS37·3160 & 1V & electroruc repuir h H a home bur.,lar b r ••••••••••••••••••••••• "-o n--r--.t-.. M CM • .. Now as IJttJe as l!Sc 5e1. ft ng t· ree e~umate on Haw, s kiploader dump W R._.. .. , 'Y CLEAN •••••••••";;fu..~. 19116 aple. · 548-6482
NEW
BUSINESSMEN
IA1arm you can alford At.-ow.uc re11Jnp ean bl> large or small jobs. lrlt, grading tree wrk ant a .,rHUA. •• Mo ve an Y th i n g • Fo r lnformal1o n call relurned to oriclnal ucensed 673·03$9 der00utionsetc.S3J.I.2S7 • H~E . Call Gingham anywhereatanytime". Piano tuning & repair. 2S Trfts.r.tc.
49&-3082 be&uty & fun<.'1 Ion. Fa11t ~---Girl. Free est. 64S-$1.Z3 2t hrs 7 da.)'3. S40-4ll44 yrs exp. Master'd deg. in •••••••••••••••••••••••
Contect th• DAILY
PILOT for informatton
regarding the county
requirement• tor
uelng • Flctlttou• Buatn ... Name.
---------1 non · Lox ic & dean FHdng ti•~• Walla ceilings floors music. $2.C+LS cents t.hl..I Re movals. Pruning. ACOUST1CL£AN Ill the ....................... ....................... "whxsows 1~ 1~P•rilMJ moon1y.e61·l'33 Trimming, Lie. Ins. Free c.,1 tee only onr who can TAYLOR FENCES Gen'I Handyman. Paint· ~l~S · ............... •.••••••• ""'1tlw/'~ estimates. 494·6221.
••••••-••••••••••••••• perform this widely 536-1837 . lo&. carpentry. roortng. PETERSPAINTING ••-••••:::;:";•••••••••i-642-_26:M ______ _
\.:arpenter. Free est. Any needed service. Call Wood &Chain Llnk masonry. Any h ome XlDt housecleaning done Expr'd . Reas Rates. NeatSMikbes&!t.extures
size job&, Call AJlan or "Arnie" Rep. <714 I malnt. or remodeling b.Y lady w/exp. Dependa· Free Est. Call Gene ,..EST "11 1439 Cauifted Ada, your Goe·
642-4321
EXT. 332
Tony, 64U649 962-0030 WanUd Results 642-5678 proj. J. Waugh, 631-2233 ble. own trans. M7·3637 ~ • ~ ltopahoppiDc center.
-~~~--~~-·
HetpW.e.d 7100 HelpW.t.d 7100 HefpWtliltM 7100 HelpW..ted 7100 HefpW..a.d 7100 HalpW.... 7100 HefpW..e.cl 7100 HalpW.e.d 7100 HalpW..e.ct 7100 ...............................................................................................................................................................................................................
ACCOUNTANT IAs.semblers Auto rental t.me. oppor. Beauty CHI LD CARE, f or 2 Elect OllicT t.
Data Processing Co is ELECTltOHtC fOf" int.el, fnendly. neat •WRCU'ITER school children, prefer a.ERICAL ' K seeking moUvated in· appear. yng person ov.er Take over some follow· etired l'"Au d IJO C Hll Salarv commens w/ex·
davidual with 1·2 yrs ex· .ASSEMILER~ l8. Prev exp, not req d. ing. Asst will t each r ~· l2·l4 ays. De right band to Person-M£STI P WANT!D per. NB area. Call Jim.
perience In general ac· Medic~I co. In M1Bsl~n Start w/IOl man duties. Sassoon m e thod. =·=~ts. Uve· net Mgr & learn all ._752_-8636 __ . _____ _
c:tg. B.S. or B.A. degree Viejo IS seeklng ex~r d Advancement avail. to MQnicurist. Call 2lst ·aspects of p ersonnel • Full-time, live·in housekeeper or. B.ICTROMICS
re q • d . Mu s l be a ssemblers working auto rental c~unter Cantury Hair,S42·S38l. Cbl.1d dept. Must be bright. couple, one ror housework, one for TICH~I ...... shirtsleeve w/advance· w/smllll components. person. Gd driving rec care sitter needed energetic. good typing & •' ~ ,.." ment pot.enUa l. E.O.E. Good eye sight. manual req'd.831·2480.4~ llNOERYa.EltJ( for 2 girls, 7 & 8. COM, geo1 olc b\gd. f\ln Job gardening and miscellaneous chores. lmmed e>penings & op·
Sendresume with salary dexterity req'd. Xlnt Auto.. tr fYIR We need an Industrious 2 ·6PM . My bome. for great boss & co portunitles in an estab.
requirements to: benefits. New building. . &DI. man. worker to coUalA! lesson 67S.O.S7 w/lood benef. Startl650. • Simple diMer cooking. no breakfast co. In the Orange Co.
Personnel Dept .. P.O. Only depe~dable hard ;:us"TenHA er~feo~~ materials. Req's some Call S40-60SS. Coastal or luncheon. Little entertaining. Two airportblarea. Applicants
Box m. Cost.a Mesa, Ca. worid.ng individuals call. TOOLS Call!MB-2288 heavy lifting & forklift. CLERICAL Pssonnel Aceocy, 2790 people in residence. to t.rou eshoot. repair & 92627 Perm work avail only. · Willlog lo train on Become a member of our Harbor.CM. test electronic sytems. -----------1 C..11Susan581·3830 Babysitter wanted . 2·3 rortcllft. Apply betwn 8·3. dynamic Newport Cent.er ALL JOBS FREE Recent analog & d1gilal ________ .. _..;_,._.;...;..;_,.__; ____ , d k M bo N ti l Ed ti Pl.nanclal firm. We are •If housekeeper ooly, will hire outside ~xper. req'd. Interview
Acang Bkkpng ASSEMILB/F-tft. ays • w · Y me. a ona · uc a on now expanding & there C'lerit·l>rugstore F/Ume. gardener. Own trans portation byapptonly.SS7·90Slask
TR.L..otPOB •1y M h I I hi 8:0M:30. 556-1107 Corp., 44-01 Birch St. N.B. . . ~ends E al ror Busft•h. --ec an ca :g rap c . <Near QC Airport> Equal are many opporturutaes IOl'De w . xper. essenti . 1 ___ .. _____ _
Kettlster Today t.o work machinery. $6 to $7 per Babysitter to take 9 yr . Opportunity Employer. for advancement. Appl>' help(w. A ply in person, -..1'!_1 .... E-
on various accounting & hour. after 2 mos train· old son from Balboa lse. -Now! The foUowlng J>OSI· Mesa Verde Pharmacy, S 11 mf t bl h k · .....,._" ~ bookkeeping assign· ing. No s moking . toCardenHallby8am,2 Boat Detailer. responsl-tionsareavaila ble. 2971 Harbor Bl. Costa • ma co or a e ouse eeper s Mecha nical engineer.
ments. Work close to Benel'itsmclude:dental. to3morningsawk.Pick· ble, work conscious Ce.riCGI _M_eu ________ apartment fully equipped -stove, degreepref'd.Musthave
your home . Figure profit sharing, retire· up 2:30pm. dally & person. Unified Yachts. MaUa aptitude &.llt.e typ-1_________ oven, refrigerator, disposal. bath, etc. f:,e;.ct~1~ :kldor~:i~
Clerks to Sr . Aceoun· ment plan & overtime. Babysit to 8 or 7 pm. NB. 2001 W. Coast Hwy. lng requiM. Then,, are 2 CLr•s wlhands. Call Mrs. Kyle. tants needed thruoul Rima Enterprises, 15395 Must .be avail. to oc· Apply in person. daytime poeiLioos open U\ft • Phone office Mon·Fri (714) 673·9310 581•3830, Mission VieJo
Orangt-Co. Cbemical Lane. Hunt· caskloally keep him or BOAT MECHANIC Ulam·5pm), 1 aplit s blft for appointment. Corp. MedicaJ Field. Robert Hall's ingloo Beach. 89:MS34 stay overnlte. Salary . Upm-9:30pm). & l nlghl
Account.emps •-~-------1 open. Call Kathleen, Oas & diesel y acht posWoa <5Pm·12:30am > UTOTEM IQc Secret_,
500S. Main,Ste501 SS7--08Jlda"" service. elect., pumpejob& ...... -•-Small co has lmmed No.Tower, Union Bank ASSEMBLY -----=";._~----.t sys.Muslhaveactuall --OpenlnpNowAvallable Deliveey man for early Diapatcher. experience Babysitter. my home. exp, wtrfrnt yar d . 'lbislsanentrylevel pos. for full or p/tlme clerks L.A. times hom e d e· PC'eferred.age18+. App· opening for an exper 'd. lnn;~fti~~ange TRAINEES days. no wltods. Days: Blackie'• Boatyard !re tbept. ~::!.'~a~etil~ oa 2nd & 3rd sbift.s. No livery. Econ/ car re· ly at G 6 w Towing. qualified. selr starting MS-1461.eves;T~. 6T.Ml834. ,.~ ... 'me """"itJons orw-n exper neceasary ·we quired. Adwt.s only. 21,11i 6C2·12S2 PAr:oress seFcly nbelarhOC .......,.. ,._. r-:. traln. Advancement op-hrs a day. No collecting. ---------• 1rport. ex1 e r s
ACCTGCLERK <Or Experienced> Babysltter needed as a Bookkeeper1H06tess 18am·5pm>. & 1 naght portunities to tbo&e who $37SWI HBarea.638-0l216 OocBatber.noexpernec:. Xlnt saJ&benellts. mo "'-"'--~-· com!f:d1·on for mildly re-The Village Inn Rest . Po s I l I o n o P e n q··-""y. ""or '-"ormatlon ---------9-1. Tue-Fri. 640-2009. • To balance & ed it ~ 11 <-m·"·""--) ........ , uu -.. customer inpul. Mu st be We are seek i ng in · tar ed teenage girl. Lite t yping. payrod. _. ·;:~T,~t gotoournearestmarllet DalVERY 548--orSS?-8469 -......._......._
dividuals "or,., ...... shi·n Some e venings & AJP. Someexper pref' . ~ ,,... or cootact the 1 rwa'~, • ...,.. ablelooperateJO-keyad· """it1'ons in'' our"p".roduc· weekends. H.B. a rea. Apply In pe r son 127 Good typing skills & offlceat personne PIT. S-9 Mon/Fri.. Must Donut shop work. Early Topwages&benef1ts.f.or
dtng machine. Some bk· u~on n.....,.a,..,ment. We will 844).5483 Marine Ave, Bal. lsllllld. pbooe ability req'd. We 1'M42LampsooSt have ow P trans p . AM. nDoKexDoop. nee. Appl,y shop trainees. immed
kpg education or ex per. ....,_. • now have 2 da,ytlme posl· Garden GroveS37-4840 531--0842. AM. u~ 14S E. opening for right person. Isl & 2nd s hifts, xlnt t~~i n lb~ r ight. in · Babysitter. supervision Bookkeeper. full Ume for Uoaaopeo. <S&m·~m) 17th St. or 2983 r -alrvlew CaJI S4s-(M03 for lnforma•
company benerits. d1viduals m the macro-needed for 2nd ~ade enh&aive '-'elry at.ore F.quaJ ()ppor Employer Demonstrators. SaJes CM. . lnte~rated Data ·~ --· '-d try ,..... s115 Hr + • tPe... ---------· ti 0 n " I n l e r v i e..,. e~-uvouCS ""' US • CdM Harbor View y in al S.Coast Plaza. Call Excel.lent wortln• condi· --Ori needed ' _._ O It C 9-Costa ega, 546-6080 h 2 PM Mr .a...n.-..a... '"" "101 " Temporarv posit ions . vers aor pa • .., e ronlC' orp., '"' • your ome . • -~uuva,.....,.... lions It co. beoeflt.s of· CoddalW..,...,. . ., ... ~CM ,,...,.,HJ Ba'---Sl. c u .,.,,,..,..,
--------• Comprehe~sive com · s :4SPM . Mon· F r i. BOYS fered. Salary, we train. your ._.."'. · area . .,... ....... · ...:. · ................... "'ft..a.....lll .... IST11 "'TIV'£ pan_y ben~1ts Including 759-l.363eves. Pleasecootactperaoanel Scllool area . Car a must. AsUorTom. FIC BKKR ror CPA F1rin
_...,.. RA .::: major medical and den· for afternoon work. lS to Eam up to l300 per wit. 998·6153; 636·3989 & •DRIVER• In Newport Beach nr ASSISTANT tal. Call or at'ply in Babysitter needed Im· 17 yrs. Hrs: 1to6:30. Ph ADP Low tuition. Placement (213>451·SBSS. Expanding 00 looking ror airpor t. Fu II 1 im e .
person. 3952 a mp us med. for l yr old, 4 days ~2702 uai.st. 7S1·9194. -'e wtlli'ng lo work. _7_52_-027_4 _____ _ Drive, Newport Beach. wk M o n .T hu r s . ....;...;.:....;;.,;,,;;,,;:;______ p • Dental ass 1st a nt. .,.."""
(714) 540..ro80. Equal Op. Fri/Sal /Sun ort. Hrs IUSIOYS 8flSIOR COLLEGE Gl.rl to live in OWrside & some front Neat appear. Good dnv-FEMALE Packagers . Assist the president by
keeping company re
cords. gather ing in
form ation r e la te d tc securities and exchange
f1Ltngs. Prepare and file
legal documents anc
coordinate with cor
porate HQ m New Yor•
portunity Employer. 9:1.>Spm.&f.2.1395 Over 18. apply in person wlprol. man & 9 yr old off. exper. for p/llme Ing. rec. Over 18. Co Meril raises ~-Sl25
M/F/11. 3 to s pm. Ancie nt Services so n , o n beach in position approx 2S hrs. ~ebicles. S28S per hr + 1S37 MonroviaAve .. N.B
TRANSMASK
CORP.
Babysi ttin g/lit e Manner , 2.607 w. Coast Newport. Must be home perwk.642·1050 incentives. Call Enc. • housekeeping. f/tlme. Hwy,N.B.646-0201. UlONewportCenter Dr rrom2pmto8pm eves on 640-8700.
New mother needs help. 2nd F\oor, Newport Bch school days. Must have Dental Asst · Oral Surg. ---------•
Own tr ans p . Ex · <714)644-4360ext263 drivers lie. cau 673·SS70 om ce. Fr nt & backi---------RMJ.-efryDept pe r 'd/ refs. SS7·60SS CAFr:fERIA IN·~ art. 7pm wkdays or duties. HB area. Mon·
morns/eves. ~~~o:.elas!i~rs~l~t~ ClericaJ·Gen'I ore. Typ-anytjmeweekends . Fri.842,2521
DRIVERS THEIROADWAY
and overseas operatioru ---------in England and Europe ---------Typing and shorthand re1•--------
BABVSITTER·for 1 &Jyr full & part tJmejobs. For Ing, filing. 10 key, order Compan/Hskpr, live·in, Dent.al Asal, Exper en·
old. 2 to 4 days a wk. Interview, re port to desk . Costa Mesa . saJ,pvtrmba,TV.COM. dodonUcasstneedeJ.full
College Pk. M0-9580 cafeteria at the Times. S40-'1800. Ref. 644-9666.. 644-9806 time for busy N.B. prac·
Meo or women 2S yrs or .... rt •-h older. Know the coast ..-wpo1 _.oc cities. Net SUIO 8 week or Some selling exp prefd.
more. Orange Coast Call Mary Meizner
Yellow Cab, 17300 Mt, , ___ 644_·1_2_l2_._e_xt_304 __ . -quired and able to speak
Frenc h .German or
Italian. Must be able tc use initiative, and havE
m\nimum s years tx·
penence In secretarial
a nd admin istrative
work. Sal ary S 130(
Assemblers 1375 Sunflower. Cost.a a.RICA&. tice. Non-smoker only.
REGISTER NOW FOR Babysitter needed for lsl Mesa, Frl. Sept ts. COOK/RELIEF Telepbooe644-0595. Her r mann. Foun tain F\JU/Part time. sale& &<
Valley. <No of Slater malnl for plants. NB
betwn Ne whope & area.675-5657 WORK ON grade COM/Harbor Vu l-4PM. Seeking perma· lfillmcial) O>nval Hosp exper pref.
ON·CALL BASIS boy. Your home or mine. nent employees only. Xlnt career opportunJty Good pa /benf Ba I Mon· Fri, 2P M·4PM . Highly experienced to wt rapidly expanding Y · yv ew WESTCLIFF 644-4064 trainees. Steady work. securities brokerage Conv Hosp. 205S Thunn. Temporary Services C M 16J7 Westcliff.Ste209 BABYSITTER. Costa ...:g::.;ood....;,,,;,;....;..beneli.;,__,;_1_ts_. ____ rmn In Newport Beach. 1---· -·-------•
month. Newport Beach Mesa Back Bay. 3 mo. Must be well groomed. Coolls &
631-06JOor 752·9118 old boy. Wkdays, call aft CARPET SALESMAN Open new accounts, light Cooks H ._
Take this ad lo nearest~~~~~~~~~ 6Pm,631·28!M Exper. for Shores In· typing le filing. Starting Exper. & 000~'f~:. for Employment Develop-= --'--------_,. twe r L~.~ s £.! rAp e t salary commensurate new Italian r""taurant. ment D e partment. Assistant Manager want· Bab y s I t t e r . areuuuae. _,,., von. wtexpr. Pd bonus and .....
o .O.T. l89.1J7. Ad paid ed C a s b .lc Ca~r y Grandmotherly ~pe to _642>-__ 2255 _______ beneflts.Call759-1611 Goodworkln~cood.ltlons
for by employer. wholesale liquor, wine. babysit 3 nltes pr wk. Carriers, early morning, ~r'fe~Jt. Sf/ ~=·s ~~~~~~~~~beer & tobacco. Santa Xlnt ref's necessary. No nmes route, nd depen· ---------
_ An_a_._s._7_-07_32_. ----• smoking. Must drive. NB dable car. over 18. CLERICAL COOKS Air National Guard area. 673--5666 Minimum Sl.00 hr + lSt lmmed openings in Elec-Mst AdMtlet tronics. Mechanics. Ad· Dlndor _Dll_ .• 992_-0894____ OPPORTUNITIES
ml n_lstr allon. Com · FUii time. conv. hosp. Banking CAJlWASHHB.P
Exper saut.e & broiler.
Arches Restaurant, 3334
Pac Cst Hw y, NB
mumcaUons or Weather 847·3S15 TB.La f\111 & Part-Time
l''or ecast1ng No elC · Pref with experience. 18&0ver perience required. We Attendant, Airport Tex· Contact Mr. Szllva . MetroCarWash
willsend youtolhebest aoo.Noexperlence nec. 546-2300. Californ ia 2950HarborBl.CM
schools. MeaJs & board 7-3. J..U. Apply al 4678 Federal Savings. 2700 ---------
provided + $397.SO per Campus. NB. Harbo r Blvd, Cost a CASH CA.ID
month to start. Call Mesa.Ca92626. COMISTO
CaJifomla Air National Auto mechanic, ex per. 412 F.qual Oppor Employer C ... • •fO• ..... I"'' Guard <714) 979-7363 or N. Coast Hwy, Laguna ,...., "",,..
979-1343 ror information . 8cb. 494·7935 ---------• We need 10 top sales peo. ...:..:.:....:::...::.;;.:;.:...;.:.;.:.:::.:...::=.:::..:.:.:.~1---------11--------.1 pie immediately. Call Alrpcri:;: A:::~:ru~l!l ~(r; Banking t b _955--_C_AS_H ____ _
OC ~ for whee! alignment. Sal ~d OPpor. or ank CASHIMS
lnleJ'e!!ting Job assil!Ung + comm. Apply Newport TELLERS F/Ume. Good Pay Pub I 1 c l o g round Tire Center. 3000 E. Orowth co. S Locations
lransportallon & direct· Coast Hwy, Corona del Muat be outgolng" peo-We train. Co. benellt.s
Ing taxi cah activities. Milt. clo oriented. Xlnt METROCARWASH Competiti ve wages . 2950H borBI CM Orange Co111t Yellow Automotive endlta Ii pleasant ar • Ca b. 17300 Mt. Her· DMV a.auc working surroundings. CashJers Temporary help
rmaM, F. Vly. Used Co r contract & ()penJnga at Tust in " needed for about todays.
APPLY MOWlll OMV. Experonly. Apply N=ofGo IAMIC 13.29prhrfull & P/T. In·
. ore Mgr, o r Fran ~~1ndF\ qutre at 833·8227 o r Hl(hcommw~Uge K in gman 11t Baue r 53l5E.lat~Tuatin r m&28 No experienced Income Tu rvlce Motors ~2$00 ..... ..--., EOE. needed. E.O.E. Complf!teTrtlnln• • · _.._,.,
Tax eorp. ol America Hosmst CHtlf TICH
5"S2·8600, 8418-3898 9to9 YOU could be the mature To wotk In Mlasion Viejo.
ARMED SECURITY OF· penon we're looking for Bankl.nl Calif UC'. 6 yn exper ln
F T to meet and areet our all .......... of tabor ,,...., FIC ER Exper. I • cuatomers. No aeWna re· TB IR .,..__ a..,.,,
days, perm. position. qulrtd. Please call Tom Eves It Sat. EXper. pref procedure, <'all S*OltO
C.11 S49--32ll . « Frank today for an In· Please contVct Kethy u k for Margaret..
An embly. light euto formal ln~ew • Ambur1e1. Caltror nla QUldcareworkeN needed
a cces . d e p e nda bl e, Hri1•VW Fedtral. m3 Bristol St. forOtriatJan achoot. AP·
permanent work. CM. Your Super DeaJcr C.M. C.ll 54().4066. Equal ply 16835 Brookhurst. 87~ lo ffunt..lnilon Beach ()ppf)rt Employer. 1_FV_. -------
Rave tom= you want . 142-4435 • Oi.lldcarc, COM. 1 child,
to tell? C ied ada do SEU. tdle Items with a meals, ll&e hlltppg. Uve•
it well. 642·56'1t. !Went Ad RelpT 642·5e'T8 Dally PUotCJaasified Ad. lnor P/T.87s-73$S
-... ·--·. ' -4
··-~ . . .. -___ .....___
A major life Insurance ... ~ __ 7077 __ . ------
company headquartered ln Newport Beach bas
opportunlttes ror In·
dMduals with skills and
ge neral ortlce ex·
perience ln l or more or
I.he following areu:
COOKS
For Huntington Terrace
retirement boq. Some
knowledge req'd . Will
train. Call 848-8811 or
847·3St.:i.
Typlng 46-«>wpm Cooks, Relief, 4-da)' wk,
Bayview Conv. Hos p.,
Bookkeeping/ 205$ Thuri.n, C.M. E.O. E.
AccounUng 642>-3505
Math Aptitude Cooks wanted. au shlft3 . Al s o opening f o r
Shorthand minimum management trainee 80wpm w/good future w/young
~ing company. Apply
Typtng Mlnlmum 60wpm ln person. Ma Barker's. 212 E. 17th St.. C.M. WE have lmmcdlate _846-G)3 _______ _
ope.nlnp. If you qualify. COSMETICS
we offer a unique work· 40 people needed to learn
lnamvlronment.. ln addl· " teach professional
lion to excellent com· malte·up t ec:hnlq,ues.
pany benefits. Please FUil/part Ume. LAURA
oont.act: LYNN COSMETICS. For ~Department appt. caJl 731-0561 •-'-"-------~
P •c~IC :=---· 01r1 needed p1t ~ for natural foods r ett .
MUT •L GE x pd e r . bhc NI p f u I 1. Ce~ 0 oo e noua atura
100 Newport nter r Foods. m.zws. Newport Beach. Ca 92660 .--------
(71'> 640-3S28 Deliverymen tor early
Equal ()pportunJty
Employe_l' M/P
AM newp1paper in C.M.
Perm pi t. Muat have de·
pendabtc car &c be relit. ~mo. 646-5844.
' • .r-........... -• • • -• ..., . . ..
Dental A ssista nt
chairslde. NB. Salary Euclid>
open. Fringe benerits. Nol~~~~~~~~~ FUU time office personnel Sats: or eves. Call J enny. needed nr 0 .C. Airport.
S48-560'ldayornight. DRIVER 1-SSS.~2992 ____ _
DIMT AL/IK.,t. O Full time person for the
Good opport ror In· WANTE care of condom1n1um
telligent creative person SUNDAY ONLY' recreauon centers. Some for receptionist l.n dental clean·up & minor main
specialty office. Salary tenance repair. Or. Cty commensurate with To d e 11 ve r DA 1 LY asea. Start $600 mo or up PlLOT bundles to car· a b l II ty & ex pe r . Ph riers in Laguna Beach 1_0_.0_E_. _Ca_l_l _752_·25_7_3 __
5"-S636.12tol pm only. area. Reqwres van or Furniture Delive ry &
.,..... ..... _. large station wagon and store maint. SJ.75 81'1
Expe.r wanU!d, call after a good dnvlng record. hour. Apply tn person C811· 221S Harbor Blvrl.C.M
Sepl 4• 644 0683. 642·•02 I
Denlal ornce Manager. Atk fOf' GAMES
Laguna Beach. Exper. DOii Wl•CllM FuJI time position avail
aJI ...., d .:.try Xlnt for resporuuble person .,.,ues en...-. · Equal ()p~rturuty wtimt-1aUve. who is in
hrs.Call830-007t. Emp oyer \ te r e i.le d in games.
Dental Asst . Use your Earn extra money in your Backgammon , Chess.
pen(onality & chalrslde spare lime. Call Mrs. Darts. Chess & G:1mes.
s kills In our busy & Neuman 64~1390 af\er 2700 W.CoastHwy,N.B.
rriendly NB practice. Spm. Gardener & Landscaper
Full time p osition . exper . pt·Ume. "hr. Nd 642-1~ B.ECT1tOMIC trans po rtutio n . Cati
Dental Asst. exper. TICHMtclAM Leooard.496-3S76.
career opportunity in HB digital preAsure gage "---aJ ()(f' "-ut olf""' Qu-"f'ed · mfg. nds a sell starting ua..,..-ice
""'8 1""' '"'1 an electronic l~h w/good P/T l Days Cl W ... ~i::.:x~~~ ~ulles. mech skill'\. Mln 2 yr5. Tues ·Thurs . Typln1t
---'-------• exp. xlnt ground noor OP· S().OOwpm. knowledge or Dtti,._.toAHt portunily. Company bookkeeping. acct's re
P opular Interior benefits including prom celva ble experience
fumlshlogs atoo10 has shartng. can for appt. helpful. $$7-0933
exciting pos. C.11 Tif· (710894·$351 G E N E R A I
fany. 833-2700, Dennis & o E • Dennis Perso nn e l Electrical estunalor. Top WAREH US sv. d:1y
., _ _, ..1 • pe.y & benelll.11. $20,000+. wit, Larey Mo~an AnU
.;x'J vice UI lrvme. 2082 Mu4t be experienced In ques (7141 984·24S3 Lar·
Michelson. comm'I & Industria l ry/Dale Dial A RJde eet..lmatlng Ir sales. Call ..;..:.._...;.., ______ _
Drt.en 714/s.w.3131 or apply In General Office
Operate modem eq,ulp. person at South Coast PllSOHM& CLBK
menl & door to door Electrk 3001 Redhill Part·Tlmt'
\ranlp. C..llf. drivers lie Ave, Esplanode s. rm Varted duties In busy
req'd . No prior e11per 2XM, CM. personnel dept. Req's
nee. Good drivlnt rec a ftOOd typing sk ltls " must. No Sunday work. Elllclncal helper, 18 or f!RwT aptitude. Approll
0 C t Y 11 over. wt partiol cxper 20 hrll per wk Apply range <>as e ow '"""11·" .. r"PM .... "I"""' b~t~n 8·3. Nat1onul CIJb. 17300 Mt. Her· ........ , .... " ''" ... ~ Edu~atlon Corp. 4401
rmann. F. Vly. The laat.elil draw In the Birth St, N.8. <Nor OC
Have eorMthl.ng to aell? Wat .. a Daily Pilot AlrporlJ Equal Op·
O•lfied ada do It well. Qa.'91fif!d Ad. 642·S6'78. portwUty Employer
j
II
l
~ I " pA!!.Y Pit.OT W!dn91d!Y. !!peembef "· 19'7& .... w ... ect 7100 MllaW~ 7100 .. W--4 7100 HltpW-.4 7100 ~~~••••••••••••••••••••
~ ......................................... ·•·••····•········•···· ...___. ._._,.,. _ _.... Mamt arturtn1 ..._...Ofnce nvv_...... L•quor li1or • Cl rrk.
~~~ ..... !!~~1~~~ ..... !IOO~.· W•hd 7100 .... W..ted 7100 ~ ... ~ . 7100 ····(···; ................•...................•••.....•..•....•..•..••..••. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * UALISTATI UCJl'TIOMIST S1'WT S8VICIS I Cl 1' •I I .. fer rwpooalble D•Y1 &1or
Amwr IUldiam 1n4Ulru11 ..... ._., a. euli •I• nit ..... Irv nz we Program SALHMIH Npt Bu<'h law farm PROFESSIO.._. •L POSITIO.._. nnd ol IM howl• bu 1 'l'yptn11 i.kllh1 r1q'd Un b1 mall.. Req'a aood l)'P f« ,...., ..._... & Uvf' tn nune a1df' r1 ~ed
w" !!!~~~l!Llalc nA n neu and would you llkt I »~ Call &a. "' Mary
POSITION OFFBS· to learn how u1y tht> '" ~IOI• =~~~!~: ..,.,. Mke ....... a. f« lovfl1 Laa lkh hnnrn
aen. uper. helpful Cer••• del Mer. ~in/en tbru •·r11t11('
ldMl ~ for Lodi11 r• ,.._. ell. MMl6t S3'r 00 ~·r day (:aill for
• , Veallndll and •xl'hanJ~ ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; • Sal:ta.. buslnc:N ,, .. And INlkl'
~lOJobmkt..•O Ur ... •PP l . U p John "'-X1aa ta.a• worklnl • lleahbu rc-S•rvlc ..
CUlda. nousn<E£PEB wanted E O IUUOlllG
lO U11e lD. 2 pre-school ~ ror thal lfJ"l"lal TIAMI rh1ldrcn. Ul·Z..01 aft 1•1-petMJO, full or pt
m...ct for • de'lreed pro hu1on a l wit h t>X ·
JlC'flt'n('1• lll\d tratnlna lo
Ult! UlM11a11e01cnl ol com· plu tf<t·hnical lml1111lrial
.,roaram• Must have workt'd with aovemment
* Ne • Management Opportunity bl• conuntuaon.a whllt w • Paid Vacation learnlna <Up to 100"" 1 * Complete Tra1n1ng • Factory Incentives Oall Curth lnvHtm•nu
• Insurance Progra m • Secun'ty llGXOO. 1&1k ror Vln<'t for c-onfldttntl1I In
~vWw ------Elllt1 kVti poe 1radul1 3PM um" Solary . Port O" a:ams. van°"9 diPlaAlt'd eatL8'15 n10 ~u .a.• llRIC ..U..Ulel.)10f6 oeat Uo11u k uper llU oul --T A...., ATIONS: handwri\lu.. req d. App R•I bo11 1•01tH area LOT A1184DAHT W6! offer •n u cellent llAl. ISTATI
IA.jt('Od .
IJ NaUonal &chwa&IM lhft'rncu p luaci. Muat Ue UI uJaey onJ 11 complete • Age 21 or Over • N E rt N · ~ .• ..en Bln-h &. N R ~ll bl•IJ(•llt.a JH&C:kage whlcb • High School Education ( Mln. > • D~.,1~To S~nuccec ... ~eesary SAl.~f'P!R.SON !NutOCAltp>C1)~"' -----'l "-IP/tt-romplement 1 th e .... u.: ~ N&tmr.o ~y £mt*»'er R 0 0 S g K' r: S p g R ec>m&Tj'~&iM41la. r.ur11on11 I iand pro · Pert0n1I aUenUon. u
OiNo Sm spo11uiJ ~.x:*'~~~r:fri~.·si:::~ 11 T-mzo ,~ °j~a1 0~~W:~.~:1~i We will recrult seveTal people ror a proresalonaJ sales C1on"':1~:1~t'P'~'
adl-nrm. ». Mnn uai;u
1
r
1
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1
P. Pu
11
, 1 m" l.01' MAN tor 1·ar rental. <>rlltlte <.:ounly Facility. career. Apply an person on Thursday. September 14th . -.ntlal ln1rrdl11t1t.a ror ~ .... i-n. lO •pm ~ fn,QOU L8 +, part Ume, AM or f"or 1mmtld111tc 11nd con· from S p.m. to 8 p.m .: Friday, September 15. from S p .m . rour aucreu Cootad "'
Receationist
RECIST{R NOW f'OR
WORK ON ON CAI.I. BASIS
WP.81'Cl.IP'Y
Twm por •rr Servlt'Cll
1617 W1111ttlllf. St• 209
G3J OftlOor 7$2 911&
-"'4-T~ .. '" Plhhil'l. 7~ 7l00 ndenU•I COl\Jllderatlon. to 8 p.m-Call Mn Green ror an appointment. or ('Onf•d•nllal in ~xp befplul. STOO p.-r II O U s E W I V E s --------pleas'' contact Employ· ~ = 1~ :=.ic: ~~ sruot:NTS ~ · MA.cH•N•sr 11li1\l OfrtCt'. ..,... ".1....... R "'
· park Clt' Sl G ~ r h a 11 e J o b a Learn to 1t1t up ancl ROYAL 642-1 JO • twil~
lrvuw. 9AM to'12 ~ . ~DAYS Qall Ven,ny operate 2 • 3 All .. NtC BUSY & MEIDIMG
tPlll to4PM at Pup n Tu o. CM tq\dpmenl No 1mok111ic -M-SMl brUPM Bi11diu lnclude . deot1I, l .. OUSTRIES liruqu. tki~ rA '4"J
GU-I FndQ. aett .. t.ar1CT' ---profit ahartne. rt-tl rt' l::nerttY Product.a llA&. ISTATI Verdf '-plc.1UM 1t11fl
alnt l )'p U t . cood M8f?O«Y ma'I\ ~n • ovtr1Jme l>1HM011 CU-7 • rrlCH"et1M1 '"'''""•'
teNl•Pboot._ S-N.OHlll)' , rs'• ..... ~ ~ml"•. lterpL·~n*!'. ·H·u~nl Lear Si.-.ler ,lt'lt.nllt' nf"W tomp1n1 .,.,.,.... d ·m'11hitnd' ",-:,rr!"tM on a mo .. t r 1)0 wk Pw-m p t ~ l.&k.lna ,.._ v oe .. • .. ~ IOC'•ted tn P'~•t1•l<>Ul .-" ... or•
5lart. Call fOf' mtcn1cw, uw lD\.a&.onN bl ,.._._ lnl&on Ouch ~ Inc. .... rt • ...-r \a ~IOI• W• .,,. tN'f •• ""'9... .-•porarre..,._1n1 &r and llt'f'd ._,.1". '"'•"
.... 8 It. l w I n d I) w ...... van.blie hn. 10 --------·I 2040 E Oyer Rd. llt'Mlfd fHI ~ ~ ., ,, n-1-lJ~D Ai"""' ...... H oe!' i....1p1··' but "odhlll •-..aa ..... ,v .. J,,,. .. (•,, ... _. pr t,,." r .-rt '' r "r _.
.._. ..... ~1 r~-·..., ... A MACHINIST Orowlna '"' .... Oyer Rd > .,... ""' """ """ .... , w~~ ,,..., •Wt ..
Loop Dr • CK nol nq d. Paid train1na M -'•AAI devl .... lab has ') S:inl.Jt Ana ca 540 3210 toml'mllltoft •pl.ti Chm .... . -• Lra\-d. X\ot oppty for op.u~ "'<' • Op .... ..,.ni1r• , .. ~~· r.f
.._ -·"' SI 000 od• in A"""'"''"""' '"""""•""' .. r..-· ... ual port Employ" •J AUTO~ DllYI. -1-j~' .. 1
A ... '°' ... '~ __ "_'ll9_"•'•n1•tt••y_,•~-Xln1 opportunity with lnvRLOl')I servi ce f or IXPBIMIM'TAJ. ~· ~·art"' tn wr.r~
N.8.. hrm '°" out~oini 1nt~n1cw ull (213J MACHl .. ISTS MAltMEIHGIHI * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * •tCft ,.,"'',."' c;.,_,,,., 11rt who ~ !arnJUar w/ all i'm-0114 col~ oil. Ca ndld1tea mulit have MIC HAMIC (~lu fJf J "" Wor-A '"'
b«ret&nal 6 &cn'I orfic<: 5+ yr1 rcluted exl>(lr, Must be exp. 00 lnbo•rd Medical. l·•lrl office. Nunlnic MA-!.MO
fuoctionA. Must bl-11e.tr 1111 ..... J CH.,... work rrom blue pnnts, 1/0 di 1 Buut NB loc•Uon 1 motivated. ln11l1t1rot. Sporc s weu mfg h u verbal wtrucllon or In or • tin or eae 1Y ut ·oin r · ov· LYM'S DAYS PBX O..rltln
have fu t a«"Ur•tr lYP· t'Jlk,'J\Jng ror : Orsallh:ed. formal sketche1. Must ~h~.P1t:!ur;.~~h! :O..:!ir~ per:!, ~:;:I.; 7·3 Ch:t:• Nur11 u . REOtsT'£R~<JW f'OR -,.,..,,.. Jc."~-;;.:."'~'
Ing 1klll1. s trong or· moOvated penoo. Typ. have fabricated new tool· h I g h e 1 t w • 8 e • " In front & back duU". ~very r •tend off. WORK ON f75-4el0 gllnlu uonal g.1.Jls & the Nim:. b,voiclnc. 6'2·:M72 lAI at repair ell11t'11 tooJ. benefit.a. Turbo Marine Satary toS900 + benenta euut fi1•C• w work. ON.CALL 8"818 OP A CA._ ablbty to work 1ndepcn· N8. lneonproductlon. Engines. in Lng Bch Dr.s-,..fee. ' PieaHca l R.oyaltConv. WESTCUY'r ltl'.CEP'TTOHIST ~ •llALHTATl1 ~ntly . Xlnt companyi---------i W~nltttxlnt Co beDefln· Marina Shipyard. 6400 Dr.PenonnelolOrs.Co. Holp6t.J,~. TemC~S.W.lta for OfV)odontl:9t'1 offi~ ,,,.,. 1nuu~a •I 1o•J beoeftta. Mon·f'r1. 8:30-5. J•-__
1
cd 1--11tahartn• M .... D L 8 b 1J01 W.LaVeta.Oraoae N .. -1... ,.,7 .... ff.°"--P"eMt ..,.S retiulM to· -.-fy
Plu st-call El•1nor . -""---...... •· a •• na r . n1 c · --.... ---p ._ TS2-TS8l. "' OFAU.ftADIS Apply In person or by 714/841Hl25anytlme. 63U740 LYM&RM NewportBeach eo:r:•tt. P O lk>• C4r7t•...,1....ie
WWTrain. But =~i::. ~~~.30· -,.-A-S_S_E_U_S_T...;;.R_A_l_N_E_E MES.SENGER PIT =nf on AM " PM ~~fJ31~.()8~10~0f~75a-~9~1~1.1~ :..vie~~~¢,. ... s--..~w8'eome. • ....... y•••1o..1c Earn while tra ln1'ng . S.A.olc.20hrweekauar. Abov . '/UmelrJ>/tlme. _ _ _ __::___;_;.;... __ _
...._._ ---" Salary + car allowance e avi;c 11tarting aal. ·--------•--fT-'-1 SOLDERJNG 17800Gillette Salary + bonus + tip. Call 0 av Id Sm 1th Xlnt bene h t1. Appl)'. __,.., T,.....
Girl Fr1d•Y· P T. Fri. wwt ends & holidays. C.ood phone personal.I ly.
SJ..50 hr. 714/1'10-2689
GoverMSS ror 3 boys m
CDW home. F\JUy !um.
a pt. will proVlde RIB +
WOOD P~YlNISH Irvine, CA 92714 Perm poe. We wlU train ~after lOAm. F1apb.lp Conv. H08p. 486 •PBX OPR * Good l )'p!ftJ ••ills. h
HTEAE ! AMP Call 979-0500 Under new marnnt. CM Fl a g" h Ip Rd. N . 8 . 11a1ne •• ~t ,...
LI ·n.->SEMBLY ~~~~~~~~~) & NB Call~ aflr· MgrT,... $121( ~. vircm•HL fo r •mall MACHlNING -noon v t 'l l __ ___; ______ ~itJoG1vallableforre· ma,.aiw Pob'tsblol ~">t-~--~----
FUUCompa.o.y Beoeflts MACHIME SHOP · ersa 1 e orcftan ur liable Individual with nr Or. Cnty Airport e>M~bu •om-,,.
In CoaU Mesa, 645-3321 Trainee ror MS predaion •MASSEUSl• ~t by rapl Y grow· Nursing IOOd pboDe penooa.liLy. Matu.rt womu. Sa~ry ~· to '"' ~ b&1
grinding . Xlnt co. New H.B. spa needs at· ~~~I~~: w~HOUbi SIWIVES A.b&etoworkflexlt>Mbn. to ll50. Call '"" ·~ A"'-' t<hoot M.ana•n
HARDWARESALES-full· JaniW-Houaekeeper. Ap· beneflt.s. & rapid advan· tractive ladies for mass· n1a Personnel Service of unr.W i.yourchUdren E'ljoy good compny m.Mr•. IChorA U fl.a <All •Att
Ume. exper preferred. ply
7
AM·
3
PM Mon/· cement for right person. receJlt .. positlon.s.Noexp. lrvine,2082Mlchelaoo. are In 1cbool. Nunes benefits. Apr.ly tam·•---------9Pm ~ wary ~.
Apply ln person: Crown Th Be ' Let us bear from you to· nee. Will train. Day & ---------Aide auls tant. Hrs noon. Moa·f't. Person· ~ST ~ardy wCdaM 3107 E. Ca Con~alesc::{1ft:P~~:.~ day ... Oeltronic Corp, 929 nighl. F\Jll & pit open· ... &~ TitAIHH 8 : 3 o • l : 3 o . App I y • oel ALFREDO"S ls llOW •c· T,..,::.:-M~ O,OOO
· 340 Victoria Ave. CM. Baker St. Costa Mesa. lng.s avail. Call 963-7723 OJ>portunity for am· 111aphlpConv. Hoep.'466 MAllUonHOTB. ~ applicaUooa for ......
H
.&.RDW.&.RE 6C-0387 S4S-0403. or 840-310010am·l()pm 7 blUous indiv. to learn ·Flagship Rd. N .B . iOONewportCoent.erDr receptlon11t and 1irl .-...l'Cftdulctl.am~~
A A ----------1 D""" fi b in .... "" ~ N-Bea"h rriend.. Apply In person seeklns CarttT' on.enul
M"'d.rullorP/T. '"'J~· mance us ess. -.uyv+. ----..;..·------! ..... ...,.. .. Th ..... C ' D Exper'd p/tlme retail JAHITOllAl ... caJIBob.SS7·7193 F.quaJOppEmply rMIF u~ thru Saturday. """ ptrson at. an.
salesclerk. Laguna Bcb P06itions Av all Exper. prererred. Material COllfrol United Personnel Agy. OFFICE Help. filing. typ-1610 West Pactfic Coast 833-2700. ™nnlS & Defi. 497-4400 PIT Night Work. Pays 642-3030 Cleril l50Adams.C.M. Ing, phones. etc. F/lime. Hwy.NB.67s-6C170 rus.Penonnel Serv1ct' of ---------1 $3hrtostart. 548·ss.3. Personnel Fee Paid lrwie.~ Michelson
HEALTH AID Atlantis in well. Mission Viejo/ Mald&Malnlenance 1 yr ofc exper. posting, GEN'LOFC $900 Recept, filling out rorms Costa Mesa. Noon til Irv/CMfNpt areas. Call Openin gs. Apply in ba lchl n g. accurate MODELS, female. sharp Opportunity avail for Valuable expertise will etc ror family planning Retail Sales Expenenced
4
a m .
7
Days, Call 9am·l0pm9'19·3652. person only. Ah Baba w/figures & details . only. Xlnt pay. 968·3520 dynamic rental agent. be utillzed l.n employee clinic in C.M. Approx 24 &&l.eslady to~ u 6't mgr
645·3433 2112 Harbor1---.:.------1 Mote l. 2250 Newpor t Heavy work load. Call or642-6282Bob. Uc req'd, commlss. on· relations poe Bl·lingual brswk.751-6717.9'73·1727. pos1t1on 1'.itperienl'l'
Blvd. C.M. Under new J·-" ..... altMaint Wvd.C.M. OpforpaEpmptp.'~.7639. Equal ...,._ ........ &&..-_._ ly.NolanR.E.494·1M2' Call L 1·. 8332700. WlthEuropeandes1gners .......,.,
03
, --~ n--.1. ~-sDenae., p . • Recept/Gen. Ofc. Ex· preferred Apply in
mgmnt. coa.. St•l111h Maids Needed . Tides Mm11•es ~____.......~ ~-l-olmalrvl-enon,..,....; ~· Call Beverly penon. 3363 Via Lido.
Help needed In small Penn. pftime. flexible MP/~~~ $3.25 an Hour. MahrlalCORtrol Female. Top money. Orderl>eak S85() Mi'J;bo;i: .... -..... ...,_ NB.Apropos.
rest.home. Some exper. brs..atourlrrineCo.apt. w.... Prodlctto..Cocet1ol Mwltbavecar.831·2140. TravelAaent $675+ --~-Pan or full Ume. complexes. 4M·3!4 Rapidly growing Orange Manuf Engineer $22K PLANT s rt d R N · I C U · 7 · 3 3 o ~ Callorapplylnpenon MAIDWANTED Co.firmlocatedoearOC Motel maid wanted. full Desier>erJig/Flx SISK+ f upe nteo ent Receptionlllt ror escrow EXPERIENCED ONLY.
__ H_d_p_w_an_ted_R-~-A,-1 -C-l·-r .. ....1 THllRVMCO. BAlboaino.$3. hour. l05 Airport Is seeking a time. Kirlnvood Motel. CalHorAppt. ~~-c~r.~~~: ~~·1 .,~,!n.!,!Y'Pinl skUL.. SHan Clrmtnte General
!or health food':'wre."' "' 1071 Camelback Ila.in St. 67~40 materiaJ control produc· t030 E. Coast Hwy, COM lrvl.ne Personnel Agency /Fri ~5. """' ""'"'"'" 2aC:P·· 7141496· 1122 e)(t
h
NewportBeach 6'4-6196 Uon control indiv. This 673-4520. ~El7tbCoetaMeaa Receptionist. p/time.1-'--. -------
r s. Apply a l 107 F.qualn.....-t Employer Maid wanted, Seacllf ind.iv. ls lO have min of 2 Suite224 642 1•10 •-.L.L.t-Bayslde Dr. NB. ..,,,,,.,.. ..~-• W'll b MOTB.u••DS ___ ~ .....:..._ Plutics eves1Su.nd1ys. Re gis -·s Rag&Mo9 _..;._ ___ .:.._ __ -1•--------•l .......... l66lSo.Csl.Hwy, yr s e xpe r . 1 e .,. ............ 0...-N ·~ •1 .... -CESS HairSlyling.~. Wome n needt>d /or
Horse lovers Opport Laguna Beach. 4~. performing produc tion & cWJ"' ..,.... me. o exp -· "'"""' H 1 S l y or a 1i fell m ~ni: IEYPUHCH materia l planning ac· nee. Sal&co. bene!. App· Pai.nter. lndustri~I &com· IMSPECTORS RECEPTIONIST· Lile ousec eanine erv
Be au t Ir u
1
New P
0
rt OPBA TORS M • i I c I e r k I Livi.ties. Offer xint sal & ly in person only Costa merclaJ. qualified only. Ope rungs for bolh the typing. V1cht Bltr & boat 1-
548
_.;..-07___;
5
_
7
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Beach• acre Back Bay Leading Orange County warehouseman. Full benefit pkg. Please send Mesa Inn, 3205 Harbor 1191-1001 aeruor level & trainees, distnbonthebay.tullor SAILMAKER
&late desires groom data center has immed. time. Good benefit s. resume & sal history to Blvd.CM. Pantry pers on. e x· aU shifts. Inspection or ~-Ume. incl"d wknds.
care for Its registered openings for e xper ~:1!s.hi~gg;~· 11~.f4~ ~~~ot~~e::6is%~ MOYIE&TVIEXTLU perlence. Apply after· =·toler ance plastic ~ITING ASSOC. ::n~~~;k"o~nst'e:,1~~ ~~err::rsy:; 'l°°ymou&r ~=.a~J'&~ !hlK!: 646-t4.55. CostaMesa.Ca92626 NEE o ED By ~~ns. Velvet Turtle •SI.LEADMAN sads.Sleadywork.1213• H O L L y W 0 0 D nc11lauranL 59 Fuhion 2nd ~ .. ,,. p-'"ion lni. RECEPTIONIST. now 5EJ8.!Mt1
horse. Pvt showrlng. box Weeke nd& part-time. ....,. .a.ILROOM MATUR E W o MA N Island NB ...,..... • ... ,~ ..... h ri N t d t---------
F I
l"'IA C~ING DIRECTORS. • . mA• .. •-a. Min c yrs e•· ' ng. ea • poise .
s t.alls · A dr e am . exlble hours. Call p /li me to w e lcom e ..-...... " ,. al-gal w/l"aht t i
Pre
. E 1 r a~sERTER Guaranteed resuJ•·. over per. ~. 1,. yp ng SALES
v1ous horse care ex· eanor or appt , "" newcomers & contact "' PART TIME ability t k I per1ence manda tory. 5•6·6080. Integrated Pa rt time . No e x. me~bant.s. Flexible hJ'S. s.ooo jobs filled this year •MOl.DIMG MACH. dlgn Hied
0 m':,~;itaa~
Call (714>759-0909. Data.CostaMesa perience. Wiii train at Need car, lite t yping. alone.$25.SlOOf!r day if OPfll.ATORS banking o rflt"es 1n
HOSTESSES LAITECHHICl·H work. Fleicible hours . 547-3095. vcflfro y~~~-r n.f~ EVENINGS Medical di~. 3rd shtn. Fashion Island. Cal l -"" For information call -----'-----SERVICE. m 41 761-l244 Exper&tramee. Mrs. Garo. 759·1511 or
lchadod 's in Fullerton Beaut ne w lab needs 642-4321 Ext. 338. Mature Male driver for n"t"" AduJ•· 'th l di apply In person. 230 needs cashiers. office tech.. exper in all phases pldting up pets & light ~ """· "' Wt outs an ng. Penn. ~itlon." w/xlnt help. & leom to bart.end, of lab procedure. Call Maintenance/Handyman, yard malnl. Sea Bree•" attractive personaUUef id d Newport Ctr Dr. Ste 200. "" Night relief clerk. 1 day. who -"'y working wilt oppor. or rap a van·
we train. S4.00 hr. days . .Marie.557·7193 beach area. Mature. Apt PctCemetery962·7111 some exper. prefe1Ted. kids."'start at S3.SO per cement. Very <'Om · RICEPT/TYPIST
$3.00 per hour nights. United Personnel Agy. + salary. No children. MECHANIC MGR 642-3'm hour. Phone 64.2-432l Ext petitive wages . good $850 to start. Npl Bch
Students full or pa r lSOOAdams.C.M. Replyw8ox #19'7.Dally Du•~ d . working conds. Xlnt area.Call752·2727.
DO YOU PLAY
THE ORGAN ?
If so. there may be "
career for you at Or~an
Exchange Operungs now
available Previous sale<.
expenence useful. but
we will train you Ca ll
Mn. Jett at The Laguna
Hills Mall. 111• • 58& 7302
SALES tune. o.k. Call 642·1225, l.a Be b Pifot, P.O. Box 1560. e2nd"' 8
1
ran
0
Aope.mng or NOON DUTY AIDS-S3.69 250. BETWEEN 4:00.5 .0I btnefits incl maJor ______ __:_ __ _
752.e955 gun.a ac Cost.aMesa92628. our oc. Mtsorrer-per hr. 2 hrs daily. PM ...... "'--JI-medical & dental in.sur. •--'C~ MOTOR ROUTE 1~ lo ~ respon person a r esp on s I b 111 t I es : -"" ..._. '"' & profit sharing. ---r-1 HOSTESS D
11
Pll . MAJHTENAMCE position m g r p a rt Sunervise noon·Ume ac· EqualOpportunity Applyinpenon;CIMCO. Brigbtindiv.rorexc1t1ng Fabnl'exper req'd Call
8 Y ot route '" u~1.1•o..1ic ... mechanic Volkswagen uv1ties on school play-Employer ...,.,, Bri00,. Ave .. C.M. career. major finance SUsan. 646-4040.
Exper not oecess. Apply Laguna Beach & South ~-""" ..,_ Xlnt rt u Uk -.. --ro. Will train. $600+ bef'lloraft 3. Bob Bums Laguna . Afternoons. &aECTIUCIAH oppo . you e.w ground. Avly in person rA.RTTIMEOHLY . E.O.E. CallBob.557·7193 Sales·Food
Restaurant. 37 Pashion Monday through Friday Perm opening for ag. ~00&' ~sOO::e S~~-b~~ 111 allT~Y h~:~se' Must now be employed & PLASTICS r ACTORV Un.rted Peraonnel Agy. Trainff SI 1.000
Island N 8 plus Saturday and SUn· a·rouive ma int mn"'h A •-G . f ...... •o wor" I ll tc""Ad CM E ---·-·-·-----.Id ... -""' "' uar salary For further Ln.Fount.ainValey.cor· ·=~ "'nmy sma WORKER Work w/sm ~ ams. X<'t'ptional <'lHt't't
ay mornings. $450 per ele"tr·1,.la n w/manur •-• I · applla b f I f HOUSttleaners, Tues·Fri. month gross profit. S50 ... ... w.iOP ea:i~call . ner Newland & Talbert. ncr. us. o a r plastic parts. must awaits set mouvated in 8-3PM. Apply Tues· Fri Cash deposit required equipment lnstallatioo & GERMAN Filing deadline 9-1~78. treatment eqwp. M·F. ablt to speak & un· RKfll To $750 div 1n this famou:1 1n
11·2 al Janice's Raggedy Call
642
.
4321
a s k ro~ repair skills. 2·3 yrs ex AUTOMOBILE E.O.E. 6· l Opm o r M ·Tb u r . derst.and Eng. Days. Fee Paid dustry leader Caal 8111
Ann"s. 1770
11
o Orange Cil't'ulaUon. Leave your per. troubleshootlng con-MAINTENANCE 6-topm & Sat 9:30am. startJ.na Call 642-2010. Congenial indav ofr'd fun 83J.2700. Dennis & Den Ave.CM. Name, Address. Phone trol panels & DC 75'·7571 MURSERYMAM 2:30pm. $400 mo salary po9WllopCo. Call Barb. rus Personnel Serv1c~ or ---------1 Number and Make or circuitry. Must be wtll· F\JU·time, mature male or profit sharing pro. Pr•ctlcal nurse need 833-2700. Dennis & Den lrvmt'. ~M ichelson
Housecleaning ror busy Ca Good ing to work overtime MECHANICAL over 21. 6 Days Incl gram. whichever you !or olte &Sunday care o nis Penonnrl Servlct' or mother. F ashion Isl r. forit.udentor Xlnt benefits & working IHSPECTOR Sat/Sun. Work with Pref.Noexpernec.Some elde rly s em1-invalld. lrvtne.~Mlchelson. SALESLADY
Exper 'd Gift Shop. APP·
ly. Buggs lntemauonal.
2043 Westcllfr Dr . N B.
a re a . 1 O a y a wk . retired peraon. ooods including 11 paid plants, trees & delivery. "'"r ontu avail. f'or In· Moothly salary. 645-3099 Rapidly growing Orange ...... ....'J
S2S/day. 6'4·5536. Land1l'ape Super visor holidays,· co paid group Co. nrm located near oc Exper pref'd. S3.00 Hr tervlew call art lpm:
mln3yrsexper,mustbe Ins plan. s ic k pay Aipo rt is seek ing a up . La g un a Hill s m.3860 able to super. & inst. benefits, liberal vacation mechanical inspector. Nursery. Inc. El Toro. __ _;_ ___ ....;.. __ Hous ecleaners . o wn
trans. full or purt-tlme.
tops. 673-1266, 646-4871
sprinklers, do plantings, benefits etc Coll for TIHs indiv. 111 to have 3 8»5653. PARTTIME
WANT ACTION"
Clas.siled Ads 642·5678 PRESSER
for Dry Cleaner. No ex· ;========::!.======== pr. nee. can btwn 7 a
Housecleaners. $4 hr.
P/T, car necessary.
Gingham Girl. 645·5123
Housekeeper lvn. fo r
elderly woman, Laguna,
call d<l-4858.
also seed or sod lawns. appt. or come to the rrun of 3 yrs exper. Must WEBC ·ENDS Must be willing to work penonnel otc betwn hrs be able to make lnspec· MURSIHG Every Sunday ond Every
hard. 675-7833. (6-lOPM ol 9 & Uam or l & 4pm tlon i1etups & ins pect Nune's aides & orderlies other Salu.rday and Sun·
only>. Mon-Fri tD complete op· various part s of as· needed for conv. hosp. day momlngs. DrivtJr to
plication. bl b hi I! orr All shifts avail. Prefer d b di r D I 1 . ......1.r-et-'f CALIFOAM sem Y Y msc . er rop un cs o a1 y ~ __. _, xlnt sal & bener.t pkg. exper. Good wages & Pilot to carriers. Mu st
Newport Beach law firm 16661 Von Karman J:>lcw.e send resume & benefits. Opportunity for have van or large station
in I.he airport area seeks Irvine 557.71()() sal history to Classtried advancement. Be verly + good driving record .
inte lligent secreta ry EqualOpporEmploycr ndno.~c/o Daily Pilot. Manor.340Victorla,CM Call 642-4321. ask tor
Housekeeplna & Babysit· w/min 1 yr civil liti1•· PO Bdl 1560, Costa 642-0387 Har ry Seeley or Don
2::K>. 548.6485
PRINTER
Great OpPor. for exper
pnnter. Xlnt benefits. to
S6.50 hr. Call Bob.
557-7193
United Pets0nnel Agy.
L500Adams.C.M. Ung liv·ln. for teacher. tion. 752·1211. MAINTENANCE MAN M ca 92626 Williama. Nice famUy & home. Pvt --------needed ror sm hotel In _es_a. __ _;_·___ NURSES AIDE
rm. Mon·F r l . NB . L.IGALSICllETARY Laguna Bc b . F IT .Medical Receptionist ror Exper-certlried.'f·3.3·ll. p•~J£llP Printing Shop helper
SpaniabOK.645-3363aft 5yean Califlegalexper-494-75811 Allergist's front otrc. country Club Conv IW .,, w /kn o wledge or
Spm. cooperate, real estate, Maintenance man ror lite Lite typing, Ca ll Brenda. Home,549-3061. PERSON dark.room " A.B. Dick --=--HOU--5-IEW--~-~-ER--I busioeu " probate. malnl. Perfect ror re .• _842_·_77_5_7______ presses. Xlnt starting
5R551" Bookkeeping, dual tape t.i A 1 Tr od • 1--------• wage lo qualified person. • hrs per day <S75 per t.ypiog or equillvanl. O.C. ree. PP Y ave I 11e. Medical Assistant NURSES with at lea.st 1 year ex. 5'2-317Uor app't.
wk) or 5 hni per day Airport area. Salary 6208W.CoastHwy, N.B. FRONT01''FlCEGIRL RN'S san$98 perlence. preferably 1193.75 per wk>. Mon commenaurate. Aak for MAH.AGEltntHES f or Lagun a H i ii s V-new1pape r. Excell ent Produc t ion Wo rker s
thru f't l. Housework. Mr. Ugblholder833-9U. Natlonwid• )"welry ,.0 Cardiolog1St. Must have company benefit.s. Apply needed on paint rllbng
la
.. _.. h · •-" " ~ billl & ins LYN $52 $60 between 9AM & 6PM. line. Wiii train. Start WNd, 11, oppbmg .. er· 1......1c-....a-will t ea ch you the ngR r urancesex1· • Monday thru frlday $3.SOhr.Goodbenefits& rao a or usy pro· _,,_ __ ... ,_, jewelry bua. S250 wk ~ per . es. r eq. a . kin d 1
feuloo1l. Must have own =rt area NB. Excell. comm. No .... per. n""" negotiable . 770-3830 110[ $42 $44 DA!lkl for Paul Ward or wor g con · App Y at.
l
•-..-1 "~" """" t o IL shrthnd sk'"· ,.,. ' " ('"' M Fri 1 IU • av d Outlerrc1. Behr Process. \603 Alton. rans .. •'l:JS. ~ • .. '""· Wall train For •ppt. call ..... pm on· SA So C Pl ___ _;_ _ _..;.....;..:_ _ _. A ty lo lake chrg. Needed for hosp1t1I staH ORA.MG! COAST · · nr · oasl aza.
Housekeeper. li ve· In, 2 Salary open. lns.-0782 642-5163 Medical Office. Gen'I as· relief. ICU/all noors. All DAILY PILOT PIT help needed ror por.
cbildren (7 & 9). Drive.•--.;._.:------Management slstinll. Wiii train. F\Jll or shl..fts avail. Must be de· 642 5682 Uon slicing. Male pref.
Sal1ry/rm/brd. Sandi LEGAL PEOPLE P ERSON ~time. Lite typing. pendable & have refs ..,.,.W ·..,_ St l"-aJ for """lle"e student. '752·7863. SEC'Y/~SISTANT ab helpful. Must be Skill assessment tesl11 ~-;·"'"M~• ·· ""' .. v "
Brl b
Exec looking for p/t as· ~-v.... Hrs nex. must be cln &
Housekeeper11. pt.time, i l, diligent persoo soc. ln wholesale supply. able to work net or ore given. Group In· Equal Op~unlty rel. S3hr start. C•ll
n. I C I as office adminlatrator Cull Mr. HaU642·l"'"A · wlmds.548·7771 aurance av all. TOP Emp oyer 979.01~1 art tOam ror ...,yv ew onva escent lo Newport Cent.er law ...,.. WAGES. Ask oboutothert---;.;..;_;.:;.;.;~.:..._--..
llotp., 2055 Thurtn, C.M. ollc. IAl-1 exper. pre· MAHICUlllST Medical Recept/ Assist, benefits. Come ln tam· PIX/ AMWff' s.rv ,__,appt:..:.-·------_E_~._o_.E_._642_·3$05 _____ 1 f'd .• minimal typing. ALFREDO'S 11 now ac· t ovely 1La guna Hills 5pm. Mon·Frl. Fuhion Isle. 40 hr. dafj PIT help. Mon·Frl. Super
"
k II I
Teating " ref a rcq 'cl, .,.1ft 11 1 oceUon or a Girl Friday WESTCLIFF shirts. Ex per or wl I Sandwich. 675 Paulari.no
ouse eeper, vc· n. Sal 644 6400 cc....-.1 app,..ett on., ror typ pc:r11on rnmlliar N R ls N.B. home. pvt rm & • •ryopen. manlcurlst Ii girl friend. w/!ront & bock ofrlce. 1617~1'!14!111 itif.i(/209 tr11ln . Co. be ne fits AveCM ~ ~1'!111·_!~1.U~s.~ !.e;_aklng. S.Cy $900 Apply in penon Thun 100% employer paid. Ne:'~ Beach E.O. E. 84(). ll10 RE.a.LEST .a.Tl
•Q ·~-..d .,...,._.., fo'ee Pa.ld thrlt Sat. 1610 West Pr rrnonnelor Org.Co. 631-0610 152·9118 BX EA ~ Exceptional rirm sei!kll Paclfic Coast llwy. NB 1201 W. UiVcta, Orange An ,werl n 1J serv Ice S AL F, S p E O p LE
Wbet.hu you're b1.1jln1 or qanlud indlv to join 67~0 633·9740 operator rull & PIT Call WANTF.O. Per10nallud sellln•· Cl•H lfltd ad· lla ff. Call Donn a . People who are seeking ~t tr11lning. Xlnt rt1puto. vertla1nl wtU 1et your 833-2700, Oennls & Den· SELL Idle Items with 1 Make 0 h 1 an 1partmetit look fln t I-'-'..;...;..___; ______ Uoni Hi&h commission
meuqetothe rlibt peo. n1a Penonnel Service ol Dail¥ Pll«Cl•Niflod Ad rasler 6Y ~ 3 i:P8 fi' ln Clualfied. Will your PBX o~ratora. P/T & full "~.::.~r0ulyolfRliA.Ln
p&e. C.ll Todly I "2·S671. Irvine. 2082 Michelson. 642.5678. Pilot Cl ., n1 A .. ': • Y -' be theret To pla~ tJme. Wiil tnln --uauled ~. ]OUT ad. c:~lllf.2-#78 &4&-8000 '6Ml42
----.:.. -.. -..... -. . . ----.... -. . . .
DAILY PILOT \
l
'T
$
00
d
p
Of
'71 co
75
Trt ...
iS'
co
~ 70 ,
rd
... -,,
!.... ~~~ ..... ?!~~,~~~ ..... ?!~ !~~~ ..... !!~~
••• .~~ ..... !!.~1~;;r.~~ ..... ?!~! WAUHOUSI ~••••••••••~!.z.~ ~.~~~ ••••••• ~?.~~ ••••••••~••••••!~.~~ ~~~~ ..... ~!~
Wedneeday, September 13. 1978 DAILY PILOT 87
Sea.mu w.ated, tul
tune IDeD'a ~wear
~not MC Mr. HawUlonlo. l£C8VlllC CUii
1'e • Ilay,..al & Tr *k I a-. • ••-Olrl's 2.8" bike for rent or l.ovin• bome. Manchester O qt prl'nur.-cOOkt'r, •----•-ln ... llb new. baby ltf'TTlS, *1lrl1hal'-ASSIMIUltS ..... aood eond. Wanl· Tttrter, 6 mOfl old. S.n urdu t ooh. furn , -ed: 28". Mer8962-872:5 Jiefac-e MO-l717
AT-£,ASg IN t•ASH10N l8LAND
of Hwl'P• .... c-1cuJator. •ewlna ma ch • ....,. IMM91ATI Gltl'1StJ.oiray·l)11eblke ,...... IOSO 2 tvs. clothlna. & m1a.c
NEWPORT BSACH
Has an opening ln It.a rece vln1 de-
partment. 8:30 to 5:80. Monday t.hru
Friday.
Au c .. Ip ••Ill p far.. Ol'941MeS su. .. ..................... Sat to to 4p01. 34322 Via
1&1 ~ S.'3281 Fortuna C.Po ~b
PllASI CAL&. 64"170 Wt r• t t•
Aik tor Mr JCobaut
Sal =W.•rvyn11 I no. appbca
far PIT ulM a. *' ~Ume, .-.v•ala11a ._. aMlb naU. App1
at 1111 Mama Ave. H
Bllt'wa lN I: 0
s.m ....,.an. 1>9rm1ful u .. JUil Abnau. lilt Ntwpcatlt"¥d CW
s-1 ,. ....
MURSBY
W• ~ Nurwn DC"«t
ttlMp.opk, full• PIT
J\ bove openings F /T. Min SS hr.
Neal a ppearance reqwred.
~ l»MI Brool.hunt
~'/TIMI ~f• dw-se acrooot.a ti\ dellt ltofw In Nl'w))OC"\.
l.apn.a Hilla or II unt
NASl8 IW9'llNf
214 ..... c..M.
S4 .. t37J
lnlton Bteeh. ..., ~ pe
hr comm. Mell hn W Se<Tetanal Full t ime tor
tnun-JSS.W79$ ___ --tSIOCRETARY. r1nanclal iduirp exper. aal Wtlh Cll
Sala~ to won ~ement firm. Typ. cell. typing , & die
by 1tore E1per1eac Ina. 4i rxper n«caaary taphooe •kilJ!I. Tt1mp ab· ne~essa ry Conte c t Ca119&2·1828 aJgrunenl. Nov l·March l
MlcbMI Stern, 2614 S~ SICI-.a ay w/posslbllHy or future Mi&Uel Dr. NB. Tues·Sal si AA employment. Exciting
640-2JS4I atore, 644. Otrl Friday Bookkeep· NB R.E. omce. Call home l.ng experience desired. La.ala. 833·2000
· Pattison Sail Desl1n ---------_______ .. 873-2180 Secret.aty
SALllPIOPLI Sec r e tar y, State
Retail Store lnberhaoce Refel'ee's You'll love 1eUlng ou Offl I · f1bulo1.ts fashions! W ce, rvine. Jn. te1111ent.. good skills and have lmmed P IT open malbemaUcal abilities lags for exper sales pie. We olter xlnl frin&ei-req--'-· 556-447 ___ 2 ___ _
benefit& It stable employ
menL. Apply ill person.
FREDERICK'S
Secret.a.ry, genera! duties,
experienced or will train.
Will consider fuJl or PIT.
For appl. call 64S. 7845.
MAlklTIMCi DEPT.
polhtWtnO .................. "
SI 1,9'4 A_.,
P..-C.C"'41 ,., ...... M--.
CWttTypltt '"'""W.. ,.....," ....... S'71PwM_. ., ... ..,..
s120r ... ...... ..... c,..
Sl.JOpw.._.
th• f 11 •c• Wart.r 11zor ... ..._.
'r hese are CETA hrnded poait.iom requlrln1
lluntington Beach resideocy le 30 daya prior
unemployment. AppllcaUona will be accepted
unlll 3PM.. Sept 22nd at·Tbe Employmect le
Trt1ninaCeoler, S38 Malo St. Hunt. ~h.
11lit 111.,10,.1•1 & Tr I I I
Adllllmi1tratim
of H_,iagloa leacll
AJlllWft op••g• ill.._ falowlag
•ocatioMlll trahlhlg dmMs
S..-........ Madlllle ....
Modlil11 Shop w ........ CMI Tedmlon
W ... WeterT.c .. al~
<All (Jf The Above S2.6S r)
These are CETA Funded positloos requiring
Hunllngtoo Beach re.sldency. Eligibility will be
determined upon application. Applications will
be accepted until 3PM Sept. 29th a t The
Employment & Training Center. S38 Main St,
Hunt. Bch.
SHl,.G/REC'G TRUCK DRIVER
Of HOLL VWOOD
Bristol Town & Country
3642 S. Brbtol Street
Sant.a Ana. CA
Equal ()pport Employer
Male. exp helprul, some Class I lie. Laguna
lifllng (S0·80lbs I In· Beach Lumber, 494-6538
SECRETARY rormal ok CM Call Millie orS40-8267.
Engineering, planning & ---------aft 9am 64S-S800$3.50 hr. Typist--.-. -ac_c_ur_a_te_f_or-IB_M_
Busy position w/varled
duties. Req's good typlng
akills. Strong figure ap-
titude & able to handle
~Y phones. Marketing
exper. helprul. Xlnl
working conds &
benefits. Apply betwn
8-3, NaUonal Education
Corp, 4401 Birch St. N.8.
<Near OC Airport) Equal
Opportunity Employer.
consulting firm has im· SICUllTY OfflCER SHOPTRAJNEE composer. Must be able
med opening for 3 secy Position available for re· Lile mlg, full time. to spell & willing to learn SALESPERSON w/xlnt typing & lite SH liable person w/some 642·35il5 to pasteup. CaJI 646-1820
Enlbuaiutic, energeUc, exper. Dictaphone exp law enforcement exper. ---------f betwn 1-4PM.
p/Ume morns. Weat.c · helpful Apply or submit Enjoy xlnl company SR. SECRETARY ~ST
Pl••• 642..o972 r esume to JACK G benefits Apply 9A M Insur. Co. In N.B. seek· '•n
Hi'CKORY FARMS RAUB CO. attn Person-noon. MM·Frt, Person: Ing exp. sec'y for Pres. & RECEPTIOHIST ---------1 nel 125 Baker St, C.M. net Financial Vice Pres. --------.c 92626. MI F. E .O.E. MARRIOTT HOTB. Good typlng & SH req'd. Architectural omce re· Wnwa..11/Matwe 900N Ce 0 Salary to $900. Good quires accurate typist. F\111 & p/lime for bakery Secretary for NB ~ales of. ewporl nter r compan y be n er i ls, 65wpm minimum. Front
shop. Apply In person ricew/slrongtyping&Sh ~e~w~!fOpBe~ac~ 833-MSO office app ear ance.
Tues lhru Sat 10 AM to s 8 k i 11 s . L 0 P e r f 0 rm ---------1 pleasant, reliable.
PM . Sca n d In 11 v I an secretarial duties for 21•-•E•m•p-oy•e•r-/•F--I SMCHERY
Pastry Shop. 685 managers.Salary$850+. ---------1 S.A. needlecraft mfr. WM.L.PEREIRA
Warner Ave. HB . E.O.E. For appt call SEC'Y/BKKPR needs experienced hand ASSOC.
893-1677 _7S2_:-&100 __ . ______ 1 PIT, 1·5, Mon-Fri. Ute stitcher to make samples MacArthur at Ford Rd
~~~~~~~~~;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j bookkeeping, good typ-at home. Good pay. Call Newport Beach
SANDWICH GIRLS M·P',
8·30-12:30. llu.t have car
& be neat In appear. call
6l3GM lCMSpm, eat to
Secretaries lng. Newpor t Harbor Mr Schllt540--6355 714/644--0620 ·
Lutheran Church, 798 ST,__ IOOM MGR E.O.E. M/F TYPISTS Dover. NB. 548-.3631 -W e w I 1 1 t r 3 i n . Typi sl·cle~k. Answer
Dan or Nancy. & SECRETARIES SEC'Y/CONTRACTS MacGregor yachts, 1631 phone for tnsurance of.
CO.ORDINATOR Placentia CM. fice. 6"-42t2
Sandwich Shop near
Airport. Yoo-Fri. 9:3
2:3'), 11:30 to S:30. 17881
Skypark Blvd. 55G-0070.
Doyouneedextra money Development company
& enjoy variety, Let the in Anaheim r eq 's ex·
freedom & Oexibility of perieoee & top skills for
working tempe>rary as· heavy detail purchasing
signmeols of your choice position. Typing 70wpm,
work for you. Call im· SI H lOOwpm. Good
mediately benefits, salary SI 100+. _SEAMS~ES~ ~O~ ~f fie e • 1tqualifiedcat1634-4741 Sail loft has 1mmed1a openi n g . Som e ex-0 overload SECY $14,640
perience desired . Ph Fee Pald 673-2180 557..0061 Gm1 mgr or prominent
3723 Birch St, N. 8 . corp «rs. exee pos. Call s.c.r.tary F.qual Oppor Employer Kay. ~2700. Dennis &
Finan, Srvc's Jnvstmnl ---------1 Denn as Pers onnel
Firm. Type: 65wpm, ex· Service of Irvine, 2082
per necess. Ms. Tabala Michelson
Supervisor ror top name
stereo & TV Dept. RM TYPIST Abrams. 18l9 Newport
_B_l_vd_._c_.M_. -----• F\Jll Ume, evening ahlft.
TEACHERS 70 wpm. ExceUe.ol com·
Paid posiUoo in Protes· pany benefits. Apply between 9AM & ePM. tant Church Sehl. Lag Monday thr u Friday. Bch. Sun only Nursery thru 6th g rade . Co· Ask for PauJ Ward or
ordinator also needed. Davld Gutlerrez.
Call 499·3088 mornings ORAHCil COAST
only. DAILY 11'1LOT
TECHHICIAHS 642'5682 330W. Bay St ..
Research & development Collla Mesa
Schwinn Jr. Vanity, 10· **I IUY * * Fri Sept lSlh Ulna SUo
apd. perfect cond. $90. Oood UMCt FUnuture & Sept 17th lGam. 568 Alta ~. 557-8469 AS)pllancea---OR 1 will VlsLa Way. Lai Deb. Too
NORRELL
Temporary Service. ____ ,;..__;,. __ ~• sell or SELL for You. mlX'h to htt.
14t..a071 c.ts 1035 1-------
EOE/MF ••••••••••••••••••••••• MASTBSAUCTIOH AB.AG E SALt.:·2 10 apd
--------P kit I C F A MM'86 & IJ3-96l5 boys bikes \ l'Omplett! en ... 11F' 3 vr. h · ·b · ~. 5 gal CiJlh aqwtrium un...1 ~. I b _.,.A rea. ,.., · ir. c p. I. i ll~ Ol I .. _ e aupp y I.Ill n._.. 673-0407 CA.SH PAJO wt gupp e1', . r K
P i t people oriented For d .. A..,., 1 ti clothes 61.zes 8-10, men's penon. Ownr&3l·5S88 0.,. 1040 flC "'""'. urn, an · cJotbe&. many to)'I, new •••••• .. ••••••O••••••• qUcS &clrTV 1967-8133 ta pieces of material • ~°'::r 1to1~e~3i:,.~1; Golden Retriever pup · Brtaht nor!I quilted 7· !1J11ber flt lamp SS. M1 any
ientleman. Live-In. pies. A.KC Field It show couch . s love aeat. indoor & outdoor Pants, f'lenl)' time off Need pet. Shots. wol'med . beauUlul cond. 1325. 333 2 pr of. boota, n 2 • 3.
:::'!>..:. Call """'•~Cd· M ralsedw/TLC.XJatdiap . L8tbAptB.C.M ~7 Hoove r elec broo_m .
CW'· u•-· <%13 >425-1561 graaa tnmmers. bard
WOIUC AT HOMI . Z.pc settiooal 122:5. Combo cage. lire. 210 Colle.:~
PboouaJee u ..... bulbs A.KC German Shepherd bumper poot. poker. dtn· Ave Thur le Fri only 9·" • .... pupa. Show background. in& t.bl Sl40. •game table
Call 530-5220 Top blood I.Ines. Black chairs. S90 ea. 549-2430 "°"'9ft 1060 and tan ea.-9308 •••••••••••••••••••••••
WORKERS hi chemical · Couch ti Jo\le seat, tables. yr old Chestnut mare ~13.: t~ start. Boston Terrien AKC. 6 lamps. t v .• sterhna S.red by Royal Corp Go ......, c m 11try or wb. well marked. Male silver ( Grand Barque >. dltposiuon l650 631-1094
wor k ellper w/cbem lc female.~. & misc. Reina too• •
h elpfu l. 7·3 :30pm. 6 how1n ~ Saturday HELP! Lovely lady nds
E.O.E. ~3281 MOVING can't keep P\IP· between 10-2 pm. 673-5427 gd home. Ref "'1 Arab
plea, blk miniat ure mare Super tempera T ARDMAN Schnauzer needs lovina H.lde·a·beda 115-4. Reblt merit. $600/ofr. J eannie
Rartal center has open· family. ahot1. papers. twi.n slu mattress It box 494·9456
1 0 1 1 t 0 r 2 m e n . lie. seu for under pd SSO. full st 159. Sterilized :;;;;;;;-G-0-0-111-1-0-6-5 Meehaoical knowledge Price of S22S. 642·683S full set. US King set MIS.,.
helpful. neat handwrit· Patrice B&J Mattress547·5636 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Ing nee. Week"8y off. BeautHul Black set· Custom made 4rt padded Mnt..tl
Wm train. Apply, 1930 ter/lab. Well trained. bar. cottee t ab les, Blk naug couch. lWln N.....,..,..rt Blvd CM beds. 2 chest ol drawers. ~-..., • well mannered. Good wooden benches, rocking dishes. books. stool,
YOUTH COUNSELOR with kids. l "'1 yrs. All cradles .. Plate racks. much rishin2 equipmc.-nt
M> per mo &\ benelill. shots. free good home space cabmets. all hand & mtl!c I~ Haven Pl.
BA desired. 1 yr exp. only. 494·2382 made. Must aell t h1.s NB. Aft 1 PM.
final filing date 9/11178. AKC male germ-s he 6 week. Make offers. 231---------Reawneto YSP Joe 2903 mo old $150 Good ~·ith Cabrillo. Co8ta Mesa Must sell. Makt• otler Ro al P al Dr ;.~ kids. · · eotree 1.able. dinette set. Y m • ....... ta · 962-486J m padded red velvet platform sora 979-5884!
Me&aCa9'.i!G6 Siberian Husky. AKA kingslze hud board """---------
pepen, John, 64.2-31173 or w/mareh. spread. Anll· 1071 ltitll • n .... 957-8554 que while chest. SSOO or ...................... .
••••••••••••••••••••••• otrer.545-7953 Pol welder 220v air .wt,..u 1005 Germ. Shorthair Pointer. opera led. 20K VA. $350.
••••••••••••••••••••••• AKC. hunung & cham-~1 =line. 7 wks. $17S. t--------1-08-0
SLOT MACHI ME •••••••• •••••••••••••• • S .... 11E Wante d g ood h ome vln1. bdrm furn for WGG .... GET .... ~S
_.., wt children for 6 mo. old sale. Call 67J..S66J 404 E A A,. SIPTIMIB gd natured combination ... ~_e_anfron __ l._Ba_l_bo_a. __
OHLY Ger ma n Shep Terrier
Antique Mualc Boxes. female puppy. Shots. S3S.
Clocks. 979·8613 or 80·3383.
...,.cm 7·9AMor4-7PM.
W11MllH•.. AKCyeUow Lab pupg,
(hleri" 9 wits. shots,
1.802Keitertng, Irvine M7-4405
---7•54•-1•77•7 ___ 1,,_ to Yo. 1045 ---------...................... .
Pc sect. IOC'• needs re· upbol.175.
54-8725
· uidating Dilate. Fine
quality ant19ua In ex·
cellent condition: Chap·
pendade cocktail cabinet,
car ved m a h ogan y
sideboard. oak carved
a r mo1 r e, c·arvt>d S4" round oak table. 4 2 dogs for large yard. Belgium bedroom set.
leaves. 4 pi ~ce Ma g Good pets & watchdogs . Beautiful oak sideboard.
bedrm. Empire sofa. Free! 6424190 Mr & Mrs Birdseye Secretary. 64.2-7347 ---------• A I · I ___ ..:;.__ _____ HELP! Pla. I nd a loving r mo r es mports.
DEPRESSION Eradiahes hm. I'm 8 beaut, gm. Mlsl'. 4807 Seashore.
. set of 30. Pressed . eyed male. silky blk. 4 Newport Beach. !lam·
Go&cSen color · lotncate mo old cal who loves lots 9pm until IOld.
pattern. $125 or beat. of love. 645-8121. Brown & Saltzman walnut
873..wxl an.. 1 :OOPM coffee tbl, 34x60, s moke ..._ '* glass top.496-3082
Call 54S-eo3s a, 8' bettulon. ereat
•yr old Austr. Shepherd. ~. $65 Recliner. sir,
loves kids le people, 1_Sol_ia_&_C_h_r ._MI0_983-4284 __ _
from your busmess card
Send one card ror eacn
t.ag plus one spare. Wf'
return permanently
scaled attrurt1ve tag &
stra p. me4?Ung airline
1.0 . requirements Prt'
vent I06s & theft t For a
person ah zed tag encl06t.'
wallpa per . fJbrtc or
"Day Clo" paper & we
will back & tnm your
tags. Or try two cards
back to back
PRICES
S2eaor 3/$5
4/5 laga Sl.60 ea
6/9 tags S t.5() ea
lOor more Sl 40ea
Sales Tu Included
NO CARD?
Draw your own or &eod
name. addresa. phone &.
we'll make ooe card per
t.ag. Add 2S' each. Send check ot money or
derto·
HERITAGE
ANTIQUES
'The original Jonathan's
Wholesale to the trade
HIWSCOmSH
SHIPMIHT
PreYlew Today
~2390. J . Stem. pc. comer bdrm group. 11'1LOT '9tlNTIMG
SALE
Thur Sept 14.
8:30AM
1833S Mt, Longley
Ftn Vly 968-1331
M. Poodle. silver. to good
home. Good w /klds .
842-0588
To good bome 3 yr old
IT•Y Tiger Cat, male.
N«.itered. 919-5882 eves.
To gd hm 7 wt Kitten, fem . grey t iger.
Penlonality plus. Finl
shots. 968-1130
yellow & brown l'Overs. P O Box 1560
great for teeri room. 175. Co5ta Meu. Ca 921626
552·9140 after 5. PHONEMATE
sell Pecao desk & Telephone answering
chair. double dresser, machines w1warr. S79,
Ro8ewood portable bar.. wt remote. 1149
2 upbol. chrs. glaas·toP ~r. 750-3791
PIU'llORll table, rosewood 1---------
23.. I ~ ahelvmg, full tv .. e ec. typewnter. adjustable shel\'es. a11
coffee table. & llP· sorted bin boxes, rsnbl pliances. ss.9·1416 ss7.9906
at 714/64().0123 *Secretaries* ·-se-m-i -re-t-lr_ed_c_ou_p_le-to mechanical background F.qual Opportunity
working ln engineering Employer .... me" 10 I 0
building medical parts. •••••••••••••••••••••••
ORNAMENTAL IRON
Choice of design S7 50
rt/up SteveS."J&.~7
Drapes. ivory. \16x8311: 7Sxl!3't?> Man's LED
quartl w<1tch, 1.ollector·i.
item. ltd edit , cHughes ),
rstm :1w1::.., cas<-& banrt
7M-b40&
Secretarv
Greater Ir vine Credit
Union has lmmed open
ing for secretary report·
ing direct. to treasurer.
Proficiency in ~yping &
shorthand desired. Fu U
benefit package. Cal
Mr Byrne. 556·1492.
Exec Secretary to manage 60 unit adult
Pres.S13.200A. c~m plex C .M . No
Employers Pay AU Fees children. no pets. $600.
Lit Reinders Agency grosa. 631·2950·
4020 Birch Sl. Ste 104 Service Sta. Attendant,
Exper'd i n mech'l Wailerneeded. Youn~. al· FRG HT DA MAGED
engineering, quality as-tr, exper necess. F/T. HOTPOINT SALE. 3308
surance etc. Call Susan Apply In person. see Mr W. Warner nr Harbor ,
S81·3830. XJnt benefits. Reiss. Rothschild's SantaAna.979-2921
Mission Viejo area. Cheese & Wines. 2'07 E. CA.SH PAID Newport Beach, 833-8,190 exper'd. F\Jll or p/llme
Cail for Appt/Estab 64 Apply, Arco Stat.ion. l7th Cst.Hwy .. CdM. f TECHHICIAHS Ws hr/Oryrs /Re ri g
&lrvlne,CM lmmed. openings & op· WAlTR~SS •. part time. worltingornot95HIW
po rlun i t les in a n Exper.'" Dinner House. Secntary/Cl«k •Senic• Stotioll• established co. in the H.B. 846-9656 <aft . S) or Washer, dryers. deluxe
102
Secretarial position open To handle real estate in· F\Jll & Part lime allen· Orange Co. a'~rt area. l213~18 tll-51 model. year euarantee t t C """ your choice $130 ea. for prestigious rea ves or accoun s. om· dan~. Mst be over 18. App Ii ca nt s to WAITRESS.COOKS. Dis· Coast Applia nces .
estate appraisal & re· =~~':!i.bt~e~~· es~ Xlnt wage. Apply 17241 troubleshoot, repajr & hwashers breakfast 537.2542
search office. Repro typ senttal. Prefer exper'd Irvine Blvd. T us tin lest electroolc systems. lunch. Vanous locations. ---------
mg slulls &. venr1able ex-mature person. Benefits 838-6534 M7·90Sl ask tor Busch. Sn~ Harbor. Sl7 30th SL Used Refrig, Washers. ~~~:~1.~~alary & xlnt location. Phone Service Station h elper , T•I.._ Sahl NB. Btwn8AM-Noon. ~~~rv~.\~~:11and ---------1 644-8824. capable ol doing lite re· Wrk p rf in our telephone W .AHTtO
Sttretary/ Receptionist . ---------I pair. Able to understand sales room & st.ill pursue Congenial lady to assist Sear s Ke.nmore elec.
F·lJme/35 hr wk. Typing instNCtions. Not afraid outside activities. AM & with cooklng & drivlng dryer. whJte. per{ cond.
60wpm, no S/H nee. SECRETARIES ofwork.Nolonjthairs or PMslufts.Guarwages+ forretiredcouple4or 5 Sl10.C&ll892·7229.
6"-3385 drifters. See Mr Botts. comm. Call for details. da eek Live in (With & Without SH) Exxon Station. Fairview ys per w · · · Frigidaire ref rig. Works Secretarial. pt· lime. g1 TYPISTS & Fal C M L.A. Times. MG-0301 Cleaning & laundry not good. $50. After Spm. pay, lo hours. Lit bkkpg, r, · · expected. Enjoyable 54841794 experpref. 646-9409 PIX TB.EPHOME ocean view loca tion. --------•
Long & abort term as-service Sta. Attendant. SOLICITORS Rererences requl red . Gaa dryer. Xnlt cond. S35.
SECRETARY·lnsurance signments. Holiday & Apply, El Toro Union. Call 6734!043 late after· WhJt.e. State Farm agent. in v a c a t 1 0 n P 8 Y . 24201 ~I Toro Rd, E.T Exp. Only Sell the Daily noon 642-66311 ~~;:~r~:r:;:c~.x~~~ Ho11pitalizallon plan wisio;::ava~able> :i!~i/fi~~~1~t~~m~ WANTED: No. Laguna Cook ·l op combo .
helpful, w i ll train . avaU.n 2' ours mission paid. Yo ur Beach . Olde r lady or W/ovcrheadran.S7S.Dls· ~o Service station attendant, phone at home Over 21 · mother of young child lo hmaslerSl5.00644·9l86
II i ~!J. day job s days, ex 1.0 . card. call 835-6453. 1 care for & send my 7.yr.
SICUTAIY ~ • perlenc.;d. Call 549-1200. to3PM onl)'. old lovely, well behaved• burne r gas s tove
11 ... Al Sal-Typln" •·sh Bob daughter t o El Moro wtoven . like new $75 ;.d. A;piy In ~;;on h ~ · T E L E P II 0 N E school. Your home or 642·6SOO dys . 673-7489
Surf & Sand. 9am-5pm: 31148 mpus Drive Service Stal!on Allen· SOLICITORS needed Im· mine . 497·2362/eves. eves
1555 s . Coast Hw)', 540-4741 danl, exper d. Day & med, no exper nee. Con· Refs. required. 1---------
La(luna Beach. (Across From Eves. Full & p/Ume. Ap· venient hrs for sludents. 19.S f'ree1erwticemaker Oran_jeCo. Airport ~y. Shell StaUon, 17th & CM earn up to $3.7S hr. Wa rehouse·lnve ntory 1275.
SICalT AIY F.qual Oppor Employer lrVi.oe, NB. 754-1601an2PM. Clerk for electronic parts MS-8811
Sh. atat lYJ>lng. (root of.c dlstrtbutor, f/time. Hrs ap~ar. &xper. only . Service Sla. Attendants T&.LHS a.s. Apply Avnet Elec· Avocado'"' refrigerator.
Tues thru Sal. 9·5. Mesa (3) p /time du r Ing Immediate openings for tronics. 350 Ml'Cormll'k, ec>od shape, 175.
Verde Country Club SICalTAmS achool. Will train aharp sharp personable tellers. C.M. 75'M061 493-1408 . ""._ meo.Apply2S80Newport Savi1 It L :we.om. ••• Blvd COila Mesa. ~~~fe5prefer:~~. i-:1i Warehouse ·Shlpplnf( Waaher. elec ~er xlnt
SECRETARYP/T•F/T, .al.OMCE Servkeatallon attend. al & part time needed. Clerldor electronlcp•rta cond. 21 curt C est FF ad SH •typtna. Pleuanl JOlitTHITIAM S h e ll Station. So. Irvine Savings & Loan distributor, f/Ome. Hrs freeur. redwd sq picnic .....,"'_ La.,•n•P .. -·nent,full Assoc.752·2900E.O.E. 10.7. Apply Avnet Elec· tbl&bencbea.~or penn._._. OF .. -~u-troolcs. 350 McCormick. ~-2783. L Ume summer. part lime Tire & Auto moti ve ---------SICllJAaY-l.MAL PllOFISSIOMA durin1 achoo!. Collc1u~ Service Sales. Tire sell· C.M. 754.Ql
5 yrs Calif lecal exper· TIMPOliltlS 8tudent pref .. will train Ing exper nee. Apply Warehouse Clerk needed lkydtt
cooperate, real estate, Good pay for aood man! Newport Tire Center, for marine distributor . •••••••••••••••••••••••
bu1ineu It groba le . NORRlll 32342S.Cst Hwy,•99-4l41 3000 E . Const Hwy. Some boaUng or marine 1boJc:d1rtblke.Good~ ~Book~i~k~lequ~~l~a~ Tempe>raryServlcea ServSt.aHelpneededlm· CoronadelMar. experie nce h e l pful , di on.~l-621.9
rt Sal med. Full or p/t App'" .......... ..._._... 0 . Warehouse Hperience . . area. ary , Y •uw u u..:& nvers H · neceMaJ'Y Call Mt·9671 For ale 2 d.rtJ bl I commenaur.te. Alk for 54t..a071 tllOE.CstHw,)'.N.B. per'd. Top pay. Apply for appi k detalla . ooc!scoodlUoo.~~~:h:
Mr. Llp~r W.1134 EOE/MF SEWING, lodustrial ex· O lcW Towing. HOB E.O.E . M/F/H etl-Clt ·--·•y pu. Some 1upervialon Ohms Way, C.M. 642·1252
-·---''d. WAalHOUSIMAM F.ntlneerin1 f1tm near aper .,.-MZ-154$ TraHIClefil ne.p penod tor fabric
OC Airport nMda outao-Secre~ Sewtna ln )'OW' home. Ex· Go l sl clau w/tour Co wa.rehouff. Good oppty mi •t.b•luUe penon =ce. Call between ueklng ln·lhe·know w/P'QWinl co. s.i com·
eve11 r. Comany '"'tt;:.i.-ld'Cnn
w/,food typtn1/pbone IU!XUSTEBNO FOR 9112.,._ person. Call Marion . mensurate !wfexper. 1kl la. Varied d uties, WORK ON . m.zroo. Oeonlll le Den· $'79U. pluu.n1 worklnf t'Ondl· ON.cALL BASIS SHIPPfMe CllaK n.la Personnel Service of ..;...;.. ______ _
t;!rlf.n ~01 S~1;,0~rJ1C:,· WESTCUFY Respon •neat penon to Irvine, 2082 Michel.Ion. Lolesomethinl valuable? Temponry Sttvlcn work 1hlp'1 It p1ckln1 Pla~ an ad In our Loll
benef ti s40.7a22 8•5 1817Weat.cliff Dr.Ste209 for «arment mfa. St If )'OU're looklnl for a bet· and F ound columns.
Maft.f'rl Newport Beach Joh:I Knll.I, 17422 Dt>rlan t.er job, YCMa won't want to Th.at'• wh«re people look
Q.-n.d A.di, your ooe· 83l~JOor752·9118 Ave, Irv, CA. 92'713 CaU mlaa the employment whln they've loud an
!tap •••'"*•IC•*· 54(). nu columaa ln Clualned. Item ohalue.
3.5 le 10 tod MX blkn
Part11 ~ repalu 111
makea. Catm bit cl11151c
blke1.
3470 Nwpt Blvd CM.
6'2·1910
I.Ml* 10 spd, Schwtnn
Alper 1port. 1ood COQCI.,
eo.Sll1
---. -. . , A
UGHTNING
ONE DAY
SERVICE
Th e Dall y P i lo t offe r s
classlfled advertisers 24-hour
service. Call us at 642-5678 by
5:30 p.m. any weekday and
your ad will appear In the
next day's pape r.
Also, lf you call by 5:30 p.m.
on Friday your ad wlll appear
In the Dally Pilot delJvered
Saturday morning or, place
y our ad b ef o r e noon on
S aturda y for S und ay
momlng's paper.
Our friendly ad-visors make
it easy to place a n ad. And,
you may charge your ad or
have u s blll it to yo ur
Ma s t e r C h a r ge o r
BankAmerica rd /VISA.
It only takes a few words In
the right place to attract a
buye r. Along the Orange
Coas t the rig ht place t o
advenlse Is In the
DAILY PILOT
642o$78
POOL TABLE Reg11l11
tJon ~z XlnL cond ~
Ph673-8593
Must sell lull contamer or
cer3m1c tile samples
Decided not to get tlllo
that bw;mess Best ofrer.
Cal 1833-0860
Moving Sale Bdrm St't.
kitchen hut~h . M 11>t·
other 1te~ Must st>ll
968.o:l21
Must sell refni.?. stovt•.
bm1gold llAlee<l <drp<'l
1ng , sculptured ~old
c11rpellnl! Xlnl cone! Aft
6PM.642·7<T16
Snakt' !Qver~. irumcd
2Ax:l0 Artistic collag+< 111
ml 1nclud1ng cobrai. Cull
642·6001
Treadway Arm11tro11 i;
111nyl tile. l3x l5. 1to!d
pall S75. new S57 Rl!lti
STORf.: fo'IXTUl<ES.
RA CKS, HA NG 1-:HS.
E T C . t ' A S II 1 Q II:
BOliTIQUE. 3.l.1 Jo; 11Ttt
ST H F:l-:T . CO~TA
!'dES1\
SCRAM-lETS
ANSWERS
~Olive -Kiker -
Agent -Butler -
TALK lo HIM
tie's so duJI he wants to
b• reincarnated 111' 11
plant. so someone will
TALK to IUM.
.. sc.tl••an w~ 8011 •••••••••••••••••••••••
WANTE D HOSPITAi.
WHE EL CHAIR. CAW.
~
WANTED: Double bed
m11ttress. baby crib.
Ml-8484
1013 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Cordovox 2111 w 'a mp
Stl001or off~r Ali.o pnn
rord1an $2~. 893 8060
~t.rfull Peavey Brain
Series 300 Speakeni op
uonal. Must selll m.tlt( otr &42 21!.9 a.ft 5.
..
Perfect cond, WurlHze
Ebony Baby Grand
Piano, $2000. S41H362
Walnut c ons ole plan
w/matching bench. Solid
cl.bl Iron harp. ex. cond.
SJOOO firm 333 E. 18th St.
4Udo14'a,
~.U.C.1.
833-6519. Dorothy.
14 Fl LEHMAN FI G
SAILBOAT. $275. Call
673-1440 or 673-1320
•••••••••••••••••••••••
1975
IMTRM.A TIONAL
Tlt.AVIULL
<347NW0 )
U445
Apt. B. C.M. 645-0377 ~~~~~~~~ SUNSET FORD
Rentals
Free Delivery
lOW AS· SI O. MO.
(714) 549· 7024
Sony TC-850 tape deck.
$600. Have Acces loo.
TC4!801600. pp SSl-8000.
•SEA RAYS•
BOAT SHOW
PRICES
NB businessman needs
permanent Jilip for Z7'
Eri cson sailboat.
~70
NEED SLIIHor new
Z7' Sailboat,
Dack 675-1393
Al 71 Modtf 1
Must go Tr ... part.tioll
Making room for 1979 c;••••••••s.••••••• ..
models now on display. .JJ'" I 9120 HARRISON'S
SEA RAY IOI>. TS
3101 Coast Hwy, N.B.
631-2547
•••••••••••••••••••••••
Okler camper 4-sale, w/o
truck. $150. Stove &
relrig. 640-Z?OO
28' Power 11por\f11hln11
Boat. Wood hull. nyJnit
bridte. ntowly r~bul It en1.lne Noda aornf' Honda450,needswork, wort. Over ell condition Bett Oller.
excellent. Brand new 538-79U. Jel.
directional finder •nd FM i.wa,y radio. seooo or 550 Honda, xlnt. cond,
be•l offer. Evenlng1. ta>O. 0.11 any no •fl« N-U11 5: PM. • Gll8. S.C .
................... ..
. --
(J8AlSNNt31166J
I 971 J.ZO rtautt
$6995
(J8A4'PN 1404391
~
FREE 100
GAUONSGAS
with purchase or any
Jeep with this coupon
THEODORE
ROBINS
FORD
~0(,(J tillllllOM IHVO
C O'Tll Ml \II r,i J 0010
'S8 Fon! ~ T .• rblt eng, of· ter. 631·4715 trans ,
brakes etc. $750/ offer.
63H71S
•llLL YAM
PORSCHE AUDI *
1976 Toyota Pic k-up
Truck. 4·speed, mags.
rear bumper, mirrors,
UCl4784 l
$3795
CONNELL
CHEVROLET
2828 Harbor Blvd.
COSTA MESA
546-1200
WE PAY TOP DOLLAR
FOR TOP USED CA RS
FOREIGN, DOMESTIC or CLASSICS
IC your car is extra clean
see us first.
l.AUERIUIO<
2925Harbor Bl vd.
Costa Mesa 979.2500
WE BUY
USED CARS
CALL GARTH
Used Car Mgr
540-5630
1011\SO\ & SO\
• LINCOL N·MERCURY
""Hert.er..., .. e .........
"'-64 .. UOJ w 140.'4'7
•••••••••••••••••••••••
75
NI-OWNED
VW's & IMPORTS
to CHOOSE FROM!
See Our Fine Line at HcriMMrVW
11711 IUCH IL
..... lwcJ. •oct.
142-4435
BARWICK DA TSUN
I I ti I •I' ' '
8)1 -I J7!>49 l -3 37!>
'75 XJ l2C. lo m1 ·s. xlnt
cond. SI0,500.
64M848. 675-8258
'60 Jag u a r XKISOS.
Coupe Fresh reslora· lion, much new. Mus t
'69 Datsun Roadster 2000. sell. $8900. Ph. 631"1176• 5·spd con v. ha rd top. 1-D).. __ 7300 __ as_k_r_o_r _G_a....;;ry __
good shape " runs out 1966 Jaguu XKE. con·
good. SUIOO. 661-7152 vert. top. xlnt cond.
S3200 or bst ofr. 642-4397 We may have your nexl '74 710 Wagon, rack, AC.
car in our inventory. Call new tires. good cond. '68 Jag E·lype, 2+2. 6·cyl,
us today! 963--0052 a u t o . n e w p a i n l .
831 -2040 495.4949 $3300/bl!toffer 536-3772
CREVIER
&I ST 6 HOADWAY
SAHfA AHA
835·3171
l'Hl UUlflllA fl OlllVINO MACHIN'
•USEDIMW1•
'7SS30i Auto. (916MTV I.
'752002Auto.air<ld 22361
'76 2002 4sp.alr03SNWZ)
i6S30i; SIRIS81RCS>
'76 3.0sl SJ R (029RK M >
'77~si4sp <962TRSJ
'77530; 4spS/Rt0179) .
ao..d 0. Sudays
ORANGE COUNTY'S
OLDEST
&
Sales-Serv1ce-Leas1ng
Rov Carver.Inc.
Rolls ftoyce BMW
1:>40 Ja mboree
Newport Beech 640·6444
IOI McLAREN'S
&
SALE
OH630's!
6ll's IH STOCK I
MO No. Beach Blvd.
La Habra
(Comer lleach & Wh it·
lier>
714/522-5333
CJosed Sundays
1976 710. Green 19,000 ml.
Xnlt cond. S2,900. or best
o<rer 496-0733
6 XJ12·L. 4 dr. sdn. 22.000
mL cream-puff. Cusl.
paint. Must sell fast.
'72 Datsun 2.40Z. red, good Best offer. PIP. Call Ha l
cond. 67.000 m1, air, 974·5.559or956·7460
$MOO. 64(). 7:>49 -------,-7-18-
F.rrcri 9723 •••••••••••••••••••••••
•••••••••••••••••••••••
miracle
mazda
............
9744 •••••••••••••••••••••••
GET TOP SS
FOR YOUR
DOTIC CAR!!!
We Will Consign
Your Porsche.
Ferrari. MBZ. Rolls Royce or
ZI SO......_ lltfd. '65 MGI. $600
r ...... W... 645-5700 ___ ea_1_1536_-2_1_~ __
Sports Car
in saleable cond. Ask ror Frank or Tom
142-4435
HARBOURVW
'67 MGB red convert. Lo il RXZ 4·spd, AMIFM miles. reblt eng. Radials. ~·1oxlnt cond. S900. xlntS17SO. S48~1
Under New Ownership
'71 Dino 246CT. AM/FM
cass .• xlnl cond. Dys
557· 7912, 640·5869 eves.
Ask for Steve.
Rat 9725 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••• • tr • • • tr • • •• • • tr ••
HURRY
NOW AT
.. R.ACLE MAZDA
Wini TIIE PURCHASE
OF ANY NEW
I 971 MAZO.A GLC
You will receive an
AM/FM stereo
"FREE"
or the cash eqw valent
of$239.00
MlliCLE MAZDA
2150 Harbor Blvd.
COSTA MESA
645-5700
Opel 9746 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'74 Opel Manta Coupe gd
trans .. auto trans, vinyl
top, reasonable, 581·3610
dys, 497-2362 evs. Becky.
1. 1900. Xnlt mech. good
body, nu tires l /up. Pat
645·6995-lve mess age
Sl.JOOor best offer
9750 •••••••••••••••••••••••
•llLL V.AH
PORSCHE AUDI•
1977 Porsche 924 . Copper.
4-speed, air conditioning.
stereo, alloys. (204357>
$9,195
~-
·--PO«TelACH •
'78911 SCTaraa. pet blue.
SM, all opuons. $26,500.
213/693-6375.
'73 280C, drk metallic
blue, sunroof. lthr. A/C,
lmmac. S8700/oHer.
673-7390
'87 ~E. 22.000 ml ·a. tan "bm. brn leather lntor.
sunroof. radk>. ldnt cond. S4SOO. 546-5.Wf
'68 2llOSL. beautJ!uJ cond ..
AMI FM 1tereo caas. 8900
ml on new ens,. all lthr
int. •Ir. new Michelin. a
tops, tuel ln.I. 675-8156
•ltLLVAM
POtlSCHI AUDI•
11'17 Porsche Turbo Car·
rera. Chocolate brown,
all factory equipped.
12,000mllet (00498)
SU.too
---
. -.
I
._..,, UMd Aldol, Ut-4 ....... Uted ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Wednelday. September 13, 1978 * ONLY PILOT ••
...... l•I 1rhd ...... .......... ....... UMd CMn"•t 9920 Ford 9940 Mwcwy 9950 AMtM. UHd A.Mtot, UMd Autos. Us.ct ··•····•···••········· ....... ~~,............ . .......•.•..•.....•...........•...........•.•... , ............................................................................................................. .
~ 975 Volllw.... 9170 c.-. HIS ·oo tthlibu. new t1re11. t~HIL 7 7 MOCURY OlcklaOW.. H55 PoM1ec '965 '970
••••••••••••••••• •• ••• •••••••••••••••••••••• • ••••••• •• •••••• •• ••• ••• AJC. aooc:t tra.na. Mu1t M LOOG COt.fG.AI D ·7 ••••••••••••••••••• • •• ••• ••• •• ·• •• • • •• ·• • • •• • •••• ••••• •• •••••• •• • • • •
........ VAH 72 VW CONVERTIBLE, aokl by Fri S7~ 6'5"°'89 · D MOON ROOF. Cabriolet 73 CUTLASS '75 Pontia c Astr~ St 1977 FORD ~"'"HI .... UDI hilt new I F t ct •Ir. or79l-42Gti •--.full pwr .• leather In · (119441 Wagon Many ~'<tru THUt«>UIUtO ~~ .,. • AM/t"M. lllchrlin•. Im ....... $I 910 XlntClOf'ld. 842·5000 lt76 Porsche &US Tart'a t cubly Malnlalnt1d 73 Nova UOO. Nceda some :<. tenor. spilt powur seal&. • VS. »ulomallc.-tun~
White ~ M lltt'ruo repair• \~ ract. atr. AM/FM stereo SIJMf'tT FORD 77 Flrebird Formula pwr. ~nna & brakt·~. • 11~ ' · 150. PPdf 319$ '831 0728 with Lape player. till ~I Silver Blue·BI~ val« pwr. wu>dowa. tilt wh1·t•I au.~.OOOmilt-s.OOl4!0l .-:;;vw Db;-wly • •""'-_., wheel, cruise contro l. S440 0ardenGrovt:81vd. Loaded. Top cond lactoryajrcond .. custnm .. r, ne 71 Monte Carlo loaded, ~ ~" .J~ Only lS ,000 mi le s . ...~ wheels. radio & ~dttr Ovt'rhauled. Pr l OWIH'r • On& owner, new rubber o0,.1111 fr (l~E) Westminster --4010 $S.800or 8/offr S5Z·S2163 Ser.llOllBl Slit P340S
onU> ~4.S.'l__ ar..e.c..ty'• 14.~752 l'm ., • $6799 flfnto 9957 '77 Fireb ird t'ormuhi. $5181
'71 VW 6W1 best offer S.•ille C...... 71 CHIVROLIT ~·..!..-::.:-"c.!:Oo9tot::; ••••••••••••••••••••••• :1M.OOO/ YnuM .• !:~~·~r~· c.u Alt•&:t;;82 • IMPALA w AGOM NABERS COMPUTE STOCI< .....,.,
-- -D1MO Q.IAIANCE Fuctory air rond .• power COMPLITI STOCK ~ Of •71 'ee Firebud 400
THEODORE
ROBINS 1f:~ t::iln:ir:!."''RS::: ·~~~t=!s~dow , lt11CADILLACS b~:~~:,~~f~:Sf!i3;:_c Of71 ' FORDPIMTO'S ~=7C:~16 ... ·-a "' ... s .... 1 Ulupt"'"~·dwtt (ll9MOU> FOIDPllSTA"S Pony2Dr.sedan.Pinto2 --------
FORD
·J(lbt> HAR flOR !IL' D
CO'>IA Ml'"' 6.;; \)010 ft\& • .. .!:_!lru-1• v• ---· ovct :,evllll'll SJ4SI 3 Dr. Hatchback. Oecot 3 2600 H..vbot 6Mt. 0 r . S eda n . 3 Dr. MUST sa.L
Ii? 912. 5 qlJ, ona. Vffl mo VW Bui. rurui aood IXTRIMILY Or. Hatchback, Sport 3 CosuMea.S40-QIOO Runabout. 2 Dr. Wagon. 1976 Astra. Beaut. cond.
clean UOOO. ltrm 10..000 ml 'lZ)O or bat LOW MILIAGI SUNSET fORD Dr. Hatchback. Gbla 3 2 Dr. Station Wagon low mileage. W il l ~--olff'I' .. sm. t:x~llentS»vln.ia $4400arden0rove Blvd. Dr.H~=~EOF '72 Mercury Marqu111 Squir~ALANCEOF sacriOce.830-3408
76FORD MOOMtOOF
La ~t of th ~ luxun 'Bir~·. Padd~ top, lull
pe>Wer with <'U8lom '" tenor. ! 154PI I::>
"77 1114, tred\. 14.000 ml •ILLVAH • Wewrunster 636·4010 '78FlESTASTOCK Broucbam. fully loaded. '78PlNTOSTOCK •7o~MDPtUX 4 ~pd, s nrf. A M t'M --sc .. AUOI loml.xlntcond. Best of· Sha
1loreo Min t <'nn tl ,.._ • ~RS 7 4 CHEVIOUT 2% fer over $1875. 846-9070. 2% &!per rp • Mui.l ~! SlG.400. p r 1>7$ ZllJ6 an 1973 Votklwa1on Sur.-r MALllU 536-m74 C3838QF> Only HAM RU« 1tl'rf'O u u etl1• ( ---------S I. 950. ~ ........... !?.~~ iJMGvc. snts "1ldt/lfi.t' M00Kxu~212s OVER ·~~:~~ o~::~~~~E SUNSET FORD
•1V>~1. l ,...... suu~n FORD All6PM.646-Ml5 CLEARANCE 5440GardenGrove Blvd.
$5999
NABERS ~) TIST DIJYI OUI /uvv' ir x• ~· ~I 'The 2'7r Overl nvo1ce Westmmster 636·4010 c IM<I ~' "40 OIOO 5440Gardeo Grove Blvd Excludes Dealer
"Cd Wt>Slmirud.er 636-4010 INVOICE MllstcmMJ 9952 Retention&Prep. Oii THI YIAI .. - -•••••••••••••••••••••••
Good lnv~nlOr)' 10 ~tod. '73 EL OORAO<J l9,000 CoatfMat.. '930 p R E . F O R D '76 Mustang Ghia, l3.000 •SMITH FORD•
H .. , 1 au $4000. mi, runs great. AskinR U1T)' w ... t .. lhey lllll' ~11 548.15711 ••••••••••••••••••••••• CLEARANCE $3600. Ph 642.7121 8 till 5. 12801 Brookhurst
MIL4CLI '67 l'•mper good C'On(j ---'74 Lincoln Continental 'lbe2% Over Invoice aft 645-0466 Garden Grove MAZDA/llMAUt..T 10.000 mi's 'on f'ng SlooO '72 Cadillac Sedan de Mark JV, xlnt cond . Excludes Dealer --5-· ------534-3254
2.150 HarbcC' Blvd. orbstolr. ~-8849 ' VIile, rully .:quip 'd. white exterior. air. Retentioo&Prep. 74MUSTANG11 Sale &ids9/l6/78
<.Xlb'TA MESA dean, $19SO/or offer cruise control, 8 trk •SMITH FORD• HATCHIACI<
645-l700 WSQl.Wd>ack, nt:w t.trea 64&-S732 AM/FM stereo. $5.475. COUPE
_________ 1 •brb.St200. PP 640-2008 eves or l.2801Brookhurat .... a.,c.. t7H Jeff, 548·1017 •llU YAM 752·1lll dys, Garden Grove Vinyl top, auto. trans ..
••;;••••••••••••••••••• • VW Squarebaack, reblt POltSCHE AUDI • C..ett. 9932 534-3254 V6 engine. pwr. steering, 1 DEALCl IN U.S.A. efti, nms good. 1976 Cadillac Seville. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sale Ends 9/16/78 ~fo.im>" rally wheels.
$750 67~3S76 borgundy, padded vinyl ---------• IOY · top, split seats, rull lt71COIYITTE '72SqulreWgn.Xlnt.new $2499
'73Squire Wagon.
exceU. cond. Must sell.
646-1815
'73 Pinto Wagon w/less
than 10,000 ml on hi·
perform. motor. Clean.
must sell this wk. Bst ofr.
64.5-Q4 CARVEi '6' B&Ja Bug, rblt eng. & power, all-leather In· Loaded! A Beauty! tires. 1st $1600. Oiclt. NABERS ltOUS·ltOYC( U'ans, $7SO. 842·9626 after lerior. AM /FM stereo, <364TDJ) 540-4113 Ul s. 557-0914 art
, ... ,,......,... 6PM. fuel injection. 35,288 510n3 z95 5 &wknds. ~ 71SqulreWagon,whlte.4
... __, .. Kii ---------t miles. (4SOPKD> .... • spd. air. PIS. AM/FM ,.__ __ _,......... 'at VW Beetle. ran white $9395 HOW.AID Ct.en"Olet '75 Granada. Stereo. air. caas. rf·ttk, cust. int.
C ..... runboard, orig beige pnl, Do •-Qu llS k> miles, xlnt, new tires. _._ M' h 1· l~D SUN OATS JOM tn ovemld eng, looks ve"' a la. S3300. Call M9-3982 aft 5. 2600 H..vbot 8tYd. non smuaer, ic e tn • _........ 9760 and ms like nu, s uper -.1!'-~--::'."'-::iliS <Near MacArthur. radials. $3950. 556-8660 .-"' Jamboree & Bristol ) COS(cl Mesa\. S40-9100 wkdays ·-•••••••••••••••••••• cln, mny xtras, $1450, Newport Beach 1 1....--..1-~!!!!~~~~~!_1----· ------• Sa b99G' ZYA-088. Call orig 3 S ..__ 9945 .: '72Pinto.low ml.l yrnew 16 a ..., air , sun· owner. Joe 975-5346 I 3-055 ••••••••••••••••••••••• rm, stereo. 30,000 mi. d.,.,847<J8'7Seve. 13831 Herbot'BMI y.,,.. E...-'78 Blk, Cobra. Under clutch. new tires. Must
xlntcond.SS000.494·1659 1-~-~-------1 c;au1enGto-e' .. ta-D» Ford 99 .. 0 !!;AA ..._ warranty $5600trirm. sell fast! $12$0. 846·2986
VW B T II 48 000 "' CLEARANCE Home 768·1545/work eves. 7S US, ype • • •• • ••• • •• • • •• • • • •• • • • • • 770-4U6
9765 ml, AM/FM, clean, $4200 '77 Cad Cpe de Ville. SALE
Toyota orbetofr.646-3466 yellow, loaded, lo ml, '76FORDLTD Now c losing out our '75FORD
••••••••••••••••••••••• pe rf . cond. $8,800 . lttOUGHAMSB>AM Brand new 1978 .. ...,-AHG2+2
'73 VW convert., xlnt con-7S2·78llor544-0590 Padded top, full power, Mercurys and Lincolns · -~·
• • • • • • • • • • • ditlon, runs greaL $2995. ----------1 factory air, Ull wheel, at sublltantial discounts. 4-speed. Rallye wheels.
F\rm. 675-9197 '7 3 CADILLAC split seats and low miles. Get a large part of that <eLPX)
l958VW van. COUPE De VIUE (704POM> Lst year's depreciation $2495
Frozen Motor. Padded top, full power , · $3899 on one of our close out SUNSET FORD
Best or'e """ """" fact. air, leather Interior. models. See us today!
74RUMAIOUT
Low Blue Boot Special .
l513PKJ)
Sl.425.
SUNSET FORD
5440GardenGrove Blvd.
Westmlnster 636-4010 ' r . ...,.,....,....., andlowmlJes. (570GJP> NABERS 540-5630 5'40GardenGroveBlvd.
Vot.o 9772 $3999 Westminster 636-4010 ....................... NABERS ~ -..,_... "'°
IEFORE YOU 71 MUST AHG VI ••••••••••••••• ••. •••••
SB.I.YOUR ~ • 2626HARBORBLVD :ir~?~~wMr:~'°::. 71PLYMOUTH
VOL YO, 2600 H..vbot 8tYd. COSTA MESA steel radial tires. tinted V AUAMT SB>AM
SEE Us.I Co~MMesa.S40-9100 : Mawridc 9947 glass, Rallye wheel&, V8,. a utomatic, pwr.
2600 H<lrbor Blvd 4,720 miles. CSlOl> s teering/brakes. fact . MAJl9UIS VOLVO c~Mesa. 54Q.<>100 ••••••••••••••••••••••1 • $55' I air, radio. beater. Sharp!
• HERR « MISSION VJEJO '74 Pinto, am/Im 8 track '73 Maverick, 43,000 m .. SUNSET FORD (98lNBQ>
•FRIEDLANDER ii 8ll-211049S.1210 stereo, good cood .. runs pwr~~1:!.':5Gii5 $2999
tr I M PORTS « --------Cad "T1 CDV 16-ml, sharp, _1tt_a_t._ruoo __ S4().648 __ 9 __ 1 5440Garden Grove Blvd.
ti •~ ~:\IU.,c. « OIANGICOUNTY loaded, priv. owner . 1975 Granada Gh ia '70 Maverick, xlnl cond. Westminster 636-4010 NABERS : •FREE' ! EXa.u~JfvoLvo ~~to~~·, ~s ~J.:;.~er. 1~ :;~S7SO/make of. <M•lal• 9955 rL:) J ./1/l _ -
.. OILOll\.SGES • LargestVolvoDealer 71FOIO Mtlcmr 9950 ....................... ~ ti,~;,.:,:·,~ .. :;:::·:_::.:..,!!;« inOrangeCounty! 9920 ••••••••••••••••••••••• "71 Cutlass, A/C, PIS. 2600HNbofBlvd.
tr , ...... , OR « BUY or LEASE ••••••••••••••••••••••• FAIRMONT ORANGE COUNTY'S P/B, V-8, auto. lo mi, COSldMes.\. 540-9100 • 50 (•Al~"· « DlRECT 'U lloote Carlo Landau ~. (656TZE> NEWEST xlntcood. $1375. 644-2046 I~~~~~~!!~
• ot· GAS '4r ~'~m-~,~·~ lo mi's, A/C, AM/FM $4150 LINCOLN-MERCURY '75 CUTLASS Su 2 ""''" ,,.... .., , ""''"',,.,., ., -tc -preme. '72 Ouster V .s. low miles.
: vu=·t=·h~-~~~~d:: !el • ~~f~~~~. wt!~t ~~~~~ SUNSET FORD ~'YFUDaol t1si~.1 ~~ .. P~£°f,fs: ~~ii,~~~~=lt6 ~~ ~ •--...-•-~-~· -~-~------• auto door locks, P /W, 5'40GardenGroveBlvd. LINCOLN-MERCURY AM/FM, crwse control. 634-'l4ll6 ,. 2025 S. Manchester elc. work ; 752-2315, Westminster 636-4010 l6-l8AutoCenterDr. ~ t---------• Anahei_m 750_-2011 bome;S52-se'l8 --------SD.Fwy-La.keForestexit '72 Roadrunner V-8, nms « 71 FORD • IRVINE '74 Olds Cutlass. good clean, Hurst 4-ll'Pd. HolY
ir 2 Swed Is h Vol v o '66 Chevy Capnce, 2 dr. FAIRMONT 130.7000 cond, loaded. Best offer 4 bar carb. Headers.
9970 2600 H.wboi 8M1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• C06"' ~ 54().<>IOO
'fr1 T· BIRO ClaSSI(', full ~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~• pwr., xlnt cond. $975 -=
497.3037 ber. 8a mt art y• H 7'
3prn •••••••••••••••••••••••
SUNSET
SUP&SAW!
C5l 7 7 T-llRDS
'75 V-8 Ve1a. Most ID<IJO(
work done. All or part
Aft. 6pm wkd a>"
89.1-3073 .
V8. auto trans. factory ...... Vega Hatchbal k 8.U' cood.. power steer· -r U\I. power disc bra kes. 1971. Low mileage. S7SO
power windows. :'>teel .... ~ __ u _____ _
radial tires, tinted Qlass. 74 Vea• GT. 4 spd.
vinyl roof. lilt whttl. P/B, PIS. air. Stereo Rallyewheels. <3l3SW01 $l300 .... o 2380
<079SWD> !3l9SWD >i-----·-'"°-· ---
1083SWDI 1317S WD I Hatchback. R&H. auto
1314SWD I C529SQS 1 tra ns . Good cond 1
CALL FOR DISCOUNT' Ownr. $750. 640-1717 . SUNSET FORD t-'1-4.-ye_ll_ow-. -au-to-. h-a-tc-hb-k .
46.000 rru. $1495 54-0·3066 S440Garden Grove Blvd. S22Traverse Dr CM Westmin.ster 636-4010 '
'74 Htchbk. dlx int., auto. SeUwtthEASE' new t ires. 21.700 m1
ll'sa BREEZE Perfect.. $1450 or bst orr
Clas&ifted Ads 642-5678 S40-4429 aft 5 & wknds ......_Mew tlOO Alllol, Mew 9100 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
'75DATSU•
B-210
Au•o trans.. tactorra1r: raato. vmvt
roof. low m1 1es. L11(e ne w•
(851MYT·118781
« Mechanics now al verygdcond.S7SO. 4-<loor, 6 cyl., automatic ---------s.1&-4254 $1950IBO.~U02 « Ivan 's, 1995 Harbor ___ 64.5-__ l679----1 lrans.(~>344 Y!AREHD Alltos.Hew tlOO ..._Mew .......... --9.oof....._.._w -~~..;;;.;.;.; ......... -....--..-•. Blvd .• C.M. 64r.S-1982 c:or-.• ~ Q.EAJt.A_MCE ••••••••••••• .. •••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••··~·., ••••••••••••••••••••••• 537·5464 •' '77 Volvo 245 Wagon. 4 spd Clossk SUNSET FORD SALE 534-4100 « c.•Rou1c.•<0vl rwY « overdrive. PS. AM/FM Engine in excellent run· We are now closing out
« « stereo. i m mac. 20·25 oing cond1tion. Interior. S440Garden Grove Blvd. our enUre stock or brand 2 Bk>cka South of
• • • • •..,. • • • • • mpg.$6200. Ph 642·9761 good coodltion, exterior Westminster 636-4010 new Llncoln·Mercury Garden Grove Frwy. needs minor repair. 1965. ---,7-7-FO--R-0---cars . Dem06 too . at s ub· on Harbor Blvd. IEFOREYOU
saL YOUR
TOYOTA,
Alllos. UMd S*XI or best offer. cau stantial savings. Low as
••••• •• •• ••••• ••....... 646--0430 GRAM.tJ>/14 S 397 8 ·~ 9905 Wh 4-door, V-8, auto trans, ror brand new Mercury -66 Malibu wagon. · lte, factory air coodllioning, ••••••••••••••••••••••• looks good. runs good. power steering. s teel ~01' <ll7045>. See us SEE US!
MAR(i)UIS TOY OT A
MISSION VIEJO
131-2110 495-1210
'71 Hornet SST. AC, PS, _1650_· _. 4_92_·_2828 _____ 1 radial tires, tinted glass. 540-5630 PB. new tins. in very gd (844RXG ) cond. Best ofr. 533-0387 Monte C8rlo. 1974 Lan· $4606 days , or 497.3114 art. dau, whl & maroon. 43K 1011\SO\ & SO\
6PM. mi, xlnt cond .• Al C. SUNSET FORD '70 Toyota Crown wagon. AM/FM, wr whls, 1 lady 2626 HARBOR BLVD
Good transp. car. $650. 75AMCHORMET driver. $3300/bst ofr. 5'40GardeoGrove81vd. COSTA MESA
• LINCOLN MERCURY
Phone 642·3460 arter 5 SPORTAIOUTD/L 83.1-~ Westminster 636-4010 --------
p.m. WAGON ---------i Must See! Low Blue A.tos. Mew 9100 Alltos. Mew 9800 A..tot.. Hew tlO
·72 Te>yola Celica. xlnl BookSpecial! (949MGT> ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• cond., maj!s, A I C. 1 $2700 ownr. $2300/best o fr.
673-J.342or a.1-0101 SUNSET FORD
1900 Corona 4-dr 5440Garden Grove Blvd.
Bei.tolfer over$450. Westminster 63&4010 968·1230.
'77 CA!hca GT Linback,
xlnt cond, lo mi's, SS 100.
Day ; 494·01611, eves:
41M-2872 or 898·9027
•llUVAM
PORSCHE AUDI •
1977 Toyota Cellca. 5·
speed. stereo. mags, air. CJ.80SXH)
$4,995
7 5 AMC HOIMET
2-door. (77 BM YU )
OHLYS2222
SUNSET FORD
5440Garden Grove Blvd.
Westminster 63&4010
7 6AMCPACER
Automatic trans, roof
rack. (L95NLP)
$2222
SUNSET FORD
5440Garden Grove Blvd.
Westmmster 636-4010
l9d& 9910 ~========~1 ...................... .
·n O>rolla, low miles, air, 73 Riviera . Xlnl cond.
Sl3lC>. loaded. Weeltdays
~8S74 after 4pm ~l
Ill Toyota. front & aide c1•1c 9915
datnage, eng xJnt gbape. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~whole. 6'2-3873 '77 CADl&J.AC
'71 Toyota Corona It
'78C«olla
963-1742
aoouoo
Red with white leather &
whlte cabriolet top. Full
power split power 11eat.a,
AM/Fil wllb 8 track
player1 fact. air, Ult
wtMld • cruise control.
'71 Corolla wan, xlnt
cood .. S2000 or beet offer.
7»1639 Low , low miles ! 9767 (53WMX> ,,.......
•••••••••••••••••••••••
8J TR t, mint cond., wh.ite,
priced to sell. 640-4056 or
m.S77l
·1~ TM. c,wette red. xlnt
cond, $4800 o r orrer.
SHt9
a.tm.497-1042 2600~1bor BM!
70 Tr 6. Good cond. 76,000 C~\ ~. 54().QIOO
mi.SUOO.
S37-:!8e9 Barsaln shoppers read
'73 TRS. New brakes. ·theUUJeadtln Classlfled
rdal1, reblt tran11. S800 reculatl)'. And they nnd
over low book MS-2700 What t.be)''re lookin1 for.
'
.1 s
I
......
BRANDNIW
1978 PIAT
2 DR. SEDAN
• IUllONAN QUAllTY
•2YLMM1000MIU WMUNTY
LEASE
TERMS
$1 2 t 23 per month 36
months. cap reduction
i n c lude s secu r11 y
deposit. tax & license
aod l•rs t p a yme n t
S981 17 36 mortlh apen
end lease. Res1dua1
S3 Z48 1? Cap c osr
S6496 Total per1od1c
oayments S4686 12
Ser J615145
VW IREAICS THI SO MILE PER GALLON BARRIER
13 MN,.. ....... w., wl 40 MK .... CIT
1918 EPA gas mileage ettlmttes a O'eeel Rabbit can oo 16.000 mlles for aJ>Ptox1mately s1ao
USED CARS
'7J YWC U 1
lu,tto. ,...,._ ell Ot191nlil: MlllC -to --*"""' SAVE
7 4C..t
4 ,, .. d 11• coftd.flono"f, AMIP'M --low _ONltloe __ ,,..
MflOr (ii 11..,.,l.
OUI
PllCI s2799
13731 tt.trbor Blvd.
Garden Grove -534-41
Sal•• Open
7 D•yaAWeek
. . . . -.,, .
.,. CWl.Y PILOT Wec:IMl9daX. l'P"""'* 13, 1171
77 PLYMOUTH
VOi.ARE
8 cyl. engine. auto trans. radio.
heater. power steering. power
bra\les. w s w tires . air
condll1on1ng. ( l 7 4 STK}
53895
'76 DODGE SPORTSMAN
V8. automatic. power steering.
power brakes and heater.
(001841).
54495
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Electric door locks. power
steering, pcwer wtndOes. luggage
rack. arr oond.. V/8. auto. trana..
radio. heeler. wsw tir98. 1005 KJV)
52295
Automatic transmiealon. power
brakes, alroondltlonlno. roof rack.
radio & heater. (423HTK).
5 1095
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d / ninht mirror· av " /S/W radial tires. rings & w 91 tML44A8028125
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transmuwon. rac:110. heater. waw
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DEMONSTRATORS~,,,
•75 PLYMOUTH
VALIAMT IROUGHAM
A cyl engine. auto trans .. raa10.
tieater power i11eenng oower
br.1kes w s w 11re :;. ii.r
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52595
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B11nting ton Beach
Fo11ntaln Valley
ED IT ION
Afteraooa
N.Y. toek8
. VOL 71, NO. 256, 4, SECTtONS, 44 PAGES
Oejty,.... ..........
EX-HUNTINGTON CITY ATTORNEY DON 80NFA
Bonfa's Happy
Owtted Aide Still Fires Stdvos
By ROBERT BAUEa oi ... -.. ..........
Don P. Bonfa is alive and well
lie has added a beard and lost some pounds.
He is still keeping his hand In the law business but he
also ls a broker for &l'l industrial and commercial real'
estate invesUne company.
He appears to be mellowing five months after he was
turned oul o( office.
And while he said it hurt for awhile, he ladeUghted th al he
no lon1er is the city attorney for Huntington Beach.
8tJT BON PA DEllONST&AftD thllt he .._ti f•IOt·
ten how to fire off a salvo or two in tbe d.lrecUon ol City
Hall, even if in softer tones.
He aatd that the City Council, a frequent aparrtnc
partner in hi.a 10 years in office. haa 1one from bad to
worse and that voters cheated themselves by elecUnc un-
qualified candidates last April.
Here's how he sizes upson}eofthe cily'aelected leaders:
-IOHN 11tOMA8: "Unqualified and q_uixotic. You
don't know which way he 'II jump next. Hla manners are of·
tensive and obnoxious."
-UCHARD SIE BERT:. "Incompetent and lacks abili-
ty to analyze problems. He comes to lncorrecl conclusions
while Uat.enlng to a handful of people."
-llOB MANDIC: "Unduly influenced by Tbomu and
Siebert. Hasn't demonstrated the coura1e or independence
that was hoped for. 11
-KUTii BAILEY: "Unquallfici and naive. Doesn't
have the background to understand complex problems."
Bonfa also offered some commenta, none of which
were favorable, about his successor, Gall Hutton.
"She's not strong enough to be independent and will be
frustrated trying to please the City Council. She doesn't
have necessary qualifications or experience and every day
proves it."
Donia also claims that the City Council made a major
blunder in reimtating John O'Connor who was Bonfa'a
Hparring mate as a deputy city attorney.
BONFA FIRED O'CONNOB after the two were in-
volved in a physical altercation laat December. Each
claims that he was au.acked by the other. Donia says th1l
the City Council was incapable of judging the diapute and
shouldn't have 1iven O'Connor hi• Job back. Boni• also
said that he received unfair press coverate and that he
was defeated lone before the election ,by newspaper
article.a.
''TllE8B WAS NarRING I could do to win. If I had U
to do over aaain I wouldn't have apeot $10,000 ol my own
money."
But Boora says tb1t he really isn't bitter about
anythlnl and refuaes to dwell on wba.l he eonalden to be
put l~Ullices.
"I had 10 yean of 1ood tfperleocea and there were
lots of pluue1. l learned a lot about i.w, poUUcs aDd Ufe ,"
Trustees OK Sale
I
Of District Site
HunlinjJlon Beach Union High
School Dlalrlct lrualffl voted' 3 t.o O Tue.day to aeU a 1.1 -acr~
~ormer dl.ltrict office site to a
subsidiary of the Huntln1t.on
Beach Company for $314,000.
The U1t tnclud" ellhl tennis
courts. auto shop equipment, a
omnaalum curtafo divider,
landscaplnc, parkin• f1cllltJe1 or
partJal JNU'menl for a swtmm1na
pool.
School board Pr•ldent Zita
Wena Hld1tat.elaw requlresthal
the land sale be Uled Oftly for
bulldln1purpo1e1.
The lantl ii located IL the
oorlbeut conaer of 17lb Street
and UUta Avenue ne1r the Hunl-
lntlon Beach CMc Center and
UunUncton Beach Hip School.
TrUl&eea a1lo acrMd to UM
JllO,oot ~ U.. funda from the
, land aale to pay for a 2.100-
aq u 1 r o fool wreslllnt and
Trua&ee Brian LU• abltalned
from the vote to accept tM
S314 ,000 bid from ffuntincton
Paclflc Corpor.Uon.
• wtllhl room addlUon for Otean
• View Hip School. 1 Ttte mnaln.lq SIM 000 from
; the aaa. .,..y be ustd ior 1ny ol
'pveral poMible lmprovem.ma
: allbe newKbool, trusteeuald. · ... .
\
• I
Althouib be own• no lnte,...l
In the tlrm, Lake said he 11
em ployed by ff untln1ton
Seacllff, another aubllldlary or
the Huntln1ton Beach Com·
munlly .
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY,SEPTEMBER1~19n TEN CENT$
" K Assassin Profiled;
Marina Oswald Tell,s
Of Li/ e With Killer
WAS lllN C TON CAP ) -
Ma rina Oswald Porter descrtbed
tor C:onarea11 today how she hap-
pened t.o marry a man she hard·
ly knew, a man who would
become known u the aaaualn ol a president.
Testifying wllh composure
before the House usauinatlona
committee, Mn. Porter recalled
her whirlwind courtahlp with
Lee Harvey Oswald when she
was a atrl of 19 In her native
Ruu la.
She said she knew little •bout
hi m except thal he was an
American and that she liked
him.
She waa asked whether It
wasn't a bit hasty to plunge Into
marriage alter only six ~eeka of
dallng.
"Not when you're the age lhat
I was," she repUed.
Recalling their life in Minsk,
Os wald 's widow s aid her
hus band was generally good·
natured, lOIUll his temper only
about as much as most husbands
do, was somewhat dissatisfied
with hil work al a radio factory,
becam e best frie nds with a
Russian ractory worker who was
s tudying En1Uah, and rarely dls·
cussed politics with her.
They were married in April.
1961, only a few months after
John F. Kennedy was Inaugural·
ed a s president. With a short·
wave radio, they heard some of
Kennedy's speeches in En1Ush,
she said.
"I would ask Lee what is he
sayln1? Whal la be saying?" she
related. "Re told me to h1.1.8h up
and not interrupt. Hi.I attitude
was you beln1 a woman, what
do you know about politics?"
Tbe youq bride then spoke
onJy RUlllan but Oswald spoke
both Jancuaaes.
Oawald occuionally made re·
marka about Kennedy. she re-
called.
"Whatever he s aid about
President Kennedy, It was only
good, alwaya."
Two years later. of course,
Oswald would be Identified as
the aasauin who mu.rdered Ken·
nedy In Dallu on Nov. 22, 1983.
Oswald wu slain in the Dallas
police station by Jack Ruby.
Hla wtdow married a Dallas
fac tory foreman , Ke nne th
Porter. in 1965. They were
divorced in 1974 but later re-
s umed Hving together In Dallas.
Soon after her marriage lo
Oswald. Mrs. Porter said, she
waa startled at Oswald's sugges·
lion that they move to the United
Stales.
"ll wasn't a very easy de-
cision for m e to make." she
said . "Whal should I do? Should
I follow him? Should I stay al
home? I told him wherever
he 'd go, I should too."
Speaking In English with a
trace or an accent, she described
their move to Fort Worth where
Oswald'~ brother Robert Hved.
Oswald had trouble finding work
and his attitude soured. she con·
tinued.
,.,,..,.....
M ARINA OSWALD PORTER TAKES OATH IN PROBE
Te81ifylng About Her Ufe With JFK'• St•yer
Rain Snarls
Tra/IU! in
U.Angelea
Hundley Will Quit
School Board Post
Huntingt,on
Seu Hearinga
On Brulality
LOS ANGELES fAP> -Slip-
pery atreeta and minor traffic ac-
cidents slowed naab·bour drivers
in a U&bl rain here today, and Lbe
storm causedapowerfaUure.
The Nat.ional Weather Service
predicted the raJn would coo-
U nue through Thursday In the
early morning and e vening
hours, but with clearing during
the d ays.
Tratnce slowed due to a rash
of "fender,.benders" on the slick
pavemerfl, but nobody was
serlomly hurt, said California
High way Patrol omcer Ken
Schullbela.
The Loe An1eles Department
of Water and Power sald rain
water shorted a 4,800-volt dis-
tribution line ln the Sllverlake
area, leavlnc several hundred
customers without power for
nearly a half hour starting about
6:20 a.m.
Alien Count
Contract Cut,
LOS ANGELES CAPl -The
Immigration and Naturalization
Service has abruptly canceled
the contract or a private firm
that waa research ing what
would have been the first officlaJ
estimate ol the number of Illegal
aliens In CallfomJa and 11 other
stales. it wu reported today.
The two-year-o ld project ,
handled by J .A. Reyes As ·
59clales Jnc. ol Washington, has
coat m ore than $7M,OOO In
federal funds, company offlclals
told the Lot An1elea Times.
Accordin1 to a contract officer
for the INS, the contract was
terminated because or coat over·
runs and delays ln finishing the
project.
DINING SET
BRINGS C4Sll
"Thia money look• more
beautiful than my d lnlnt H t
ever did."
That'• the advertlalnt succe11
story ol the Hunlin1t.on Beach
man who placed thla ad ln UM
Dally Pilot;
Contempol'aty walnut
dlnlna Ill, 8 chr•. 2
lo1tve~. p11d1J. Xlnl cond.
SU)(). lC lOMUUC x
If you have f urnJture to Mll
conv•rt. t.o cash, call Ml·~'181 Just a few wordl wlll wor~ hrf
for you In the Dally Pilot
'
.._....., -...
•
Cllln11erious rifts with bis col-
tea1uea and acbool chJef Frenlt
Abbott, Trustee John K. Hundley
said today he plans to resign from
the Untingt.on Beach Union High
School District School Board ef-
fective Jan. l.
Hundley, who was elected to
the board on March 8, 1977. said
lhe recent serious Illness of his
father and "the anguish or a
growing business" also led lo his
decision to resign.
But Hundley, who owns a
private counseling a nd training
program in Lo8 Angeles County.
said the last s traw was the
school board's d ecision to
charge student.s $40 for behlnd-
the·wh~I driver training. The
board voled to take the action In
light or budget cuts.
Hundiey asserted that the fee
Is unnecessary since the school
district receives $60 per driving
s tudent from lhe s tate. Private
driving schools only charge
about $85 per pupil, he sald .
Hundley calle d the school
board members "complacent
a nd accused President Zit a
Wessa of "misre present ing"
Trustee Doris Allen in a recent
closed-door meeting to dlscu.":>s
Superintendent Abbott's con·
tract extension
Hundley said he did not want
to extend Abbott's four.year con·
tract for its remaining two
years.
·'The board members only
want lo hear what Is good ...
they don't want to discuss po881·
ble problemB publicly," Hundley
said.
"It's so disgusting. I just don't
want lo be a part. or It any
more," he added.
Hundley said he boycotted
Tuesday's board meeting. But
Mrs. Allen asked the trustees
preaenl T uesday night If the
driver education fees shout~ be
reconsidered I n light o f
Hundley's realtnaUon.
Mrs . Wessa later rapped
Hundley'• attendance record at
school board meetings . She said
he haa only attended eo percent
of the meellngs and has missed
six out of the last 10 sessions.
M ra. Weaaa also said she
hoped Hundley would step down
rrom office lmmedlately.
But Hundley said today he
pl1n1 to waJt so Ut•t lbo remaln-
1•1 ~ .. td .,embers cannot e~~ a, n.tecement. H~ •• ..., ht w1nta voters
to ehooee a new lrUltet In the
March elecUon.
"lt'• tbviau1 he doesn't care
about &IM diMrict, '' Mn. Wuaa
Hid.
"I WMl tJ allo9 tbOM people
wbo ~run for ftl1 &eat t.o et orepaN f:.1 , •tnl1ey sald.
The rt1l(nln1 school truateo
o.lly ,,,..,, .... ,,_
QUITTING SCHOOL BOARD
Tru1tee John Hundley
s aid he plans to "attend as many
boa rd (unctions us l can" in lht-
next few months
"We need a totally different
board." said llundley who noted
that Mrs. Allen appeu i. to be h1i.
only ally.
"A new board will be ma ndat
ed " when Tru!:tlees Helen Oltt<·
and Brian Lake reach the end of
their terms or office m Murch,
Hundley prechcted.
Lake was appotnted to 1111 a
vacancy on the bourd after
former trustee Don MucAlhster
was elected to the llunllngton
Reach City Council last April
Mail Strike
Now Unlike ly
WASHINGTON CAP I -The
chance of a nationwide postal
slrlke a ppeurs to be la ding
because of o reluctance by many
union members to jeopardize
their careers and risk going to
jail
Me mber s or the 299,000·
m e mbe r Am c r1 coo PosUI
Worker s Un i on re(elved
m enages today rrom their
president, Emmel Andrews, aay-
inl there wa11 an "overwhelmlnR
gra11 root& resistance to the Id a
or de(yln1 ttio courts and ao1n1 on
strike."
Three po1Hal unions are
d e adlocked wllh the Pois t al
Service over J new contract.
Special mediator James J . Healy
ls preparina bindlna arbitration
of the unreaolvod lasucs tor "
Salurdav dead Un
A Huntinlton Beach f1ct find-
ing committee will begin hear-
ings tonight on allegations of
police brutaJily by a number of
residents
Some or the charges. already
aired before the City Council.
stem from incidents lust July l
and July 4.
Chairman Tony Amador said
the seven.member comm1tt~ i~
expected lo request pohre or.
ricers lo testify at a subst..>quenl
hearing.
Police legal adviser Bill Sage
said earlier he experts that
police association lawyt•r'i will
ad vise officer; against appear·
mg at the hearings
Sa~e said that an officer's ap·
pcuram•e would J{1ve pluint1rts a
free pai;s at prctnal discovery of
evidence. He said the courtroom
1s the proper place for s uch pro
ccedings.
Sage also said the police de-
partment 1~ obligated by law to
keep secret from the committee
any confidential information and
may refuse to disclose the name
of an informant
Amador said the comm1tlec.-
intends to take a thorough look
into compl ai nt' o f police
brutuhty
He ~aid that recommendat10M
that the committee will make to
the City Council constitutes tht!
real a uthority of the panel
The committee doesn t hu~
subpoena powcrb.
Coast
Weath e r
Low rloudinei.s and
local dr1zzh· n1gh1 a nd
morning hours becoming
partly sunny along the
coa11t Thursday afttirnoon.
Lows tonight 62 to 66
ff 1Rh1t rrom 6R lo 72 at
beuchcs lo 77 to HO 111lund.
I NSIDE T OD"\'
At a IO/e dWanct. hie# at a
S~o Worln exhibit . aharkB
hovr bell!ft o btQ attracllOn.
~' POf/fl Al2
f
o.lty ..... MMt .....
WESTMINSTER'S WILLY THE WHALE HAS NOTHING TO SMILE ABOUT TODAY
Council, FHrlng tor City'• ·1m999,' Pulls Deeler 't Belloon Down
Willy Whale Beached
Westminster Council Tosses 3-2 Harpoon
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of._ o.llY ...... SWtt
The Westminster City Council, sitting as cilwoman J oy Neugebauer and Councill'Jlan
a municipal Captain Ahab, harpooned Willy Conner Collacotl, the city's retired police
the Whale Tuesday night banning the Sunset chief. voled Willy down.
Ford dealership emblem from the sky over And. on the same night the council or-
the c ity de red the Robert Macintosh family to get rid
About 40 people tumed out to Wltness the of some of their 12 chickens and s ix dogs.
dec1s1on over whether the 29-foot-long !>ilver Willy The Whale's doom was seaJed.
balloon could take to the skies again. s aid Ci -
ty Clerk Ku y Harper "WE WERE TERRIBLY disappointed.
We didn't expect it and we can 't see what
harm it can do anyone up there 90 feet In the
air ,'' said Sunset Ford Sales Manager Jim
Hanson.
"THERE WAS QUITE a lot of ap·
plausl'," she said of the outburst when the
council l>hot Willy down on a 3 to 2 vote
Last year. about 1.200 citizens signed a
petition calUng for re<!hng 1n Willy the Whale
from his 90-foot cruising altitude above the
dealership at the confluence of the San Diego
and Garden Grove freeways.
He added that owner Bob Heusser may
appeal the decision
. "It's like telling ol' Cal Worthington he
can 't have his dog Spot. or telling Coca-Cola
to stop calling it Coke." Hanson declared.
They relt the grinning lilllc blimp
embluioned with tho firm 's name gave the
town a silly image
"TH£ GROUNDING of the balloon bas
seriou!>I,> hurt us. We sold 14 less cars last
month and J had to s pend $8,000 more in ad·
vert1sing Just lo compensate " COUNCILMEN ELDEN Gille~p1 e and
Frank f"ry votc-d ror frc<: l'nt<:rpn!>C and the
n~ht to advertise Tuel.day night. but were 1n
the minority.
W1llv thC' Whale first went aloft about
four years ago when treel> along lhe freeway
grew so tall they obscured Sunset Ford's 70-
fool advertising sign. M .. yor Pro Tern W11l i<Jm f"rcnch . Coun-
Services Held
For Principal
Eugene Lyall
Crowds or friends gathered
Tuesd ay for the fune ra l of
longtime Wt.-&lminster Elemen
tary School Di!>lr ict educator
Eugene Lyall . who coll apsed
and died Thurmicty after a rue·
que tball matcb.
The 52-ycar-old principal of
Ray Schmitt Elementary School
was dead on arrival al a hospital
despite attempts to revive tum
at the scene
A 20-year employe of the dis
trict. Mr. Lyall lived In Santa
Ana near the South Coast Plaza
area of Costa Mesa.
Rites were held al 3:30 p.m at
the First Presbyterian Church of We:itminstcr. a congregation in
which he was active.
fie leaves hts wife , Marilyn .
hi s m othe r , Martha ; sons .
Kerry. Keith and Kenneth, and a
da u g hte r Kim . plus one
~randchild.
Entom bment was to be In
Westmirusler Memorial Park
The Lyall family lived in
Westminster for m any years
Wamer Rites Held
LOS ANGELES CAP> -About
a d ozen rela tives a nd clo:-.c
friends attended private funeral
services Tuesday for 86-yt-ar-old
movie pioneer Jack Warner.
who died last weekend of a heart
ailment.
OflANOE COAST ~ 1
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Without Debate
County OKs Fumls
For Women's Unit
Unlike the pas t two years.
O r a nge County s upervisorl>
quickly approved the 1978·79
budget for the County Com-
mission on the Status of Women
today.
The commission is seeking
Two Countians
Listed Among
Crash Victims
Two of the five Marines killed
Monday m a ric ry helicopter
crash near Twentynine Palms
were from the Marine Corps /\1r
Station <he li copter) in Tustin
and werC' Santa Ana residen~.
officials said this morning
All the large lwm-rotor craft':.
occupants were killed on im·
pact. ofhcials said. The two men
from Santa Ana were co-pilot
and Isl Lt. J .E. Keough Jr. 28,
formerly of Holyoke. Mass .. and
Lance Cpl. M.D. SinJ(leton. 22.
forme rly of He bron. Ind. They
belonged to helicopter squadron
HMM·163.
Dead also are pilot and Capt
0 .A. Eckel. 29, and Sgt . W A.
Nay, age unavailable. Both men
were stationed in Hawaii and
were with he licopte r squadron
HM M·262, officials said.
The firth Marine 1s still un·
1dentiricd because his parents
h ave n't yet been located,
ofificlals said. He was not sta·
lioncd locally
The croft went down about 20
miles s outh of Twentynine
Palms in the Pinto Bas in area of
Joshua Tree National Monu-
ment.
Officials said the helicopter
bad just refueled and the men
were heading back lo Yuma,
Ariz. where they were taking
part in u large training opera-
tion.
The 20-seat transport craft
was at an altitude or about 4,500
feet just before It plummeted to
the ground a nd burn ~d. a
spokesman si.ld .
The cause or the crash Is stHI
under Investigation. he aald.
20th Horse Dies
SAN DIEGO <AP> -Th~
23rd hone has died at BradJey'11
Bonita Valley Farm ln five
wteka. opparenUy Uke 11 others
as the reftult of a mysterious
poison.
$24 ,864 this year to finance sup·
plies and the salary of a rull-
ti m e coordinator. The com ·
mission spent $17.158 last year
because coordinator Kare n / Klammer wasn't hired until
mid-year.
The past two years' budget
hearings were marked by long
debates from those ravoring and
opposing lhe three·year-old com-
mission.
Today. after about 10 minut(.~
of discussion, supervisors voted
4 to l to approve the commission
budget.
Supervisor Laurence Schmit
cast the lone no vote after say
ing "You could never convince
me to support it."
Debates In past years have
been between those who viewed
the commission as a threat to
family life a nd those who con
sidered the advisory panel e!>
sentia l to reprei;ent the views of
both housewives and working
women
Several past commission op·
ponents now serve on the 15
member advisory panel
The commission has he ld
e mployment. child care and
legal rights sem inars. Currently
commissioners are gathering In
fo rmation on the n eeds of
women senior citizens and a JOb·
sharing propoeal to he lp avoid
county layoffs .
Commissioners also recently
prepared a t>latlstical profile or
Orange County women.
Supervisors today were enter·
ing their fourth day of hearings
on a proposed $508 m 11 lton
budget for 1978-79, the county's
first post.Jarvis spending plan.
Shin Gave
'lheMessage
ASHEBORO, N.C. <AP)
-Orlando Mcintosh had
no doubt about what to do
when a 1unman walked In·
to the service statlon
where he wu working. He
followed lnstructlona
printed on the aunman·s
T-shirt.
Mcfnlollh told police the
man carried a pistol and
on h is T-11hlrt were the
words. "Stick Em Up,"
which la Just what Mein·
1.0eh did.
tie told police the gun-
man look '454 and fled .
Rebels
Gaining
Control
MANAGUA. Nicaragua <AP>
Leftist guerrillas fighting to
oust Preside nt Anas tas io
Somoza have taken almost com
plete control of northwestern
Nicaragua. including the city of
Chinandega, travelers arriving
in Managua reported.
They said the Sandinista guer·
rillas set up checkpoints m
Estcli, north of Managua, and
we re stopping all traffic on the
Pan·American Highway.
These sources said the na·
lional guard garrison tn Chinan·
dega. 65 miles northwest or
Managua, wat. restricted to its
barracks.
One traveler said the guer·
rillas were looting stores and
distributing food to the people.
Both electricity and water has
been cut. he said.
Heavy fighting was reported
in Leon. 45 miles northwest or
Managua. and Ri vas. 60 miles
southwest of the capital. Looters
w e re s a id lo be active in
Jinotepe. 22 miles southeast of
Managua, after most of the
troops there were pulled out to
reinforce the Rivas garrison
However. Somoza's soldiers
appeared t.o have regained COO·
trol of Mas aya , 18 mile s
s outt)east of th e capital .
despite occasional bursts of gun·
fire and were reported mo pping
up after 21h days or hard fight·
ing.
U.S. Offers
Breakthrough
In Mideast?
By 'De Asaocla&ed PIWs
A ptoposal made by the Unit·
ed States at the Camp David
summit talks could lead to a
breakthrough in the Mideast
conflict . the Boston Herald
American reported today.
The key to the proposal, ac-
co rdin g to an I s ra e li
policym a ker quot ed in the
copy righted story. is a com·
promise under which "neither
side -Arab or Israeli would
press its claim to excfosive sov -
c r e i gn ty" over t he Is r aeli·
occupied West Bank of the
Jordan. <Related story. AJ)
Israel. which would be forced
to move military forces out of
population centers to clearly de·
fined garrisons under the plan.
Gags Reluctant
Slayer Search
Hits Dead End
By .IO~NE REYNOLDS °' ... .,. ...........
On Aug. 27 about midnight.
someone beat Ruben Martinez to
death In the bedroom of his
Corona del Mar home.
Today. Newport Beach police
concede they've run into a
deadend in tryine lo track the
41 -year·old real estate
salesman's murderer.
The pr:oblem. according to
Detective Sam Amburgey, Is
that Martinez was a homosexual
who frequented gay bars along
the Orange Coast.
Amburgey s aid the gays who
' knew Martinez have been reluc·
tant to cooperate in the search
for the man last seen with
Martinez. rearing exposure as
homosexuals . One man. ap-1
parently a c lose friend .
told police he saw Martinez last
at the Coast Inn in Laguna
Beach. He said Martinez in·
troduced him to a young man he
~ called "Ted from Indiana."
It's Ted that detectives have
sought in gay bars and hangouts
from Loog Beach to Oceanside.
including the two Laguna Beach
bars Martinez visited the night
he died. the Uttle Shrimp and the
CoostlM.
Today, Amburgey said a com·
posile drawtng or Ted. based on
the witness' description. Is being
sent to every known gathering
place for gays in Southern
California.
H e ·s wh at 's known in
hom osexual p arla nce a s a
chicken. a maq who looks llkc a
boy.
Ted is described as being m
his early twe nties. of slender
build. standing about five feet.
eight inches tall and weighing
a bout 130 pounds
He has sandy brown hair and a light complexion.
Amburgey. in pleading for
he lp in identifying and locating
Ted. said he wants to assure
members of the ho mosexual
comm unity that their identity
will be protected.
"We really need to find this
guy before something like this
happens again," he &aid.
Martinez' body was found in
his blood s pattered bedroom
about 20 hours arter he died.
Pathologist 's reports indicate
he'd beef! beaten so severely
that parts of his brain were ex-
posed.
SOUGHT IN MURDER CASE
Police Drawtng of 'Ted'
Catholics Win
Federal Grant
For Housing
A federal housing loan of S4
million has been awarded to the
Or ange County Catholic Com·
munity Agencies to build 100
low . income apartme nts for
senior citizens in parish land in
Bue na Park. church officials
said today
The Casa Santa Maria com-
plex s hould be completed m
about three years. officials said.
It will be built on the grounds of
St. Pius V Catholic Church on
Orangethorpe A venue in Buena
Park.
Units will be rented on a first·
com e. first-served basis to peo-
ple 62 years of age or older . Ap·
plications are not yet available.
Officials s aid religious belier~
will not play a part in accep·
lance.
The loan was made available
through the U.S. Department of
Housing and Urban Develop-
ment.
"We hope that in lime we can
enlarge our service to the aging
in Orange County.·· said Bishop
William Johnson of the Di ocese
of Orange .
For The Executive . • •
On display now
Several large, high-quality
traditional desks, ready for delivery
TORRANCE
23649 Hewthome Blvd.
(213) l71· 1279
COSTA M!SA
l~S Newport Blvd.
111•> M2·:ZOSO
LAGUNA llACH
lO North Coett HwY.
(714) 4'4 .. SS1
A •• DAil. y PILOT s Wedn.-day. S-s>l•mbef 13, 1978
Nixon Meets the People
Manhattan R eception Like Days of Old
NEW YORK IAPl ll WllJI eenly like th old
da)• fo.r Rlch1m:t M Nixon Walkin1 In down
town Manhattan, S t'ret S<-rvtt(' tor'c and art.
Pl'Ople aa"1dna. or 11l·ekln1 auto.er•~. or boolna
And M full d r ~ nt•v.s c-onrercnce. 1~1n1 addf'i 11sed
a'i ·Mr f""'Mdt•nt · que .. unnf'(t ~bout Uta 1lall' of
tht· world
Nixon. ou\ from tht• "'ailed wt'IU Ion of San
Cl ·mt>nh• 1n lht• maat dramau"' way slncc be lcn
urfu•t•, M-emt"d a bat nt•rvou'i about ll all Tu day
Rt • Ht: SAI D IN ha l\ nf'w'I conferonct1. he
"'anh to let lbt> opinK>n makf"r.t know that Richard
Nixon i.llll hlll'I ..,omt'thang to offer
He wd tw t-oniud•r5 Pr ldenl Carter capMbl •
u( provldin1 IH dt>rshap a nd that h~ bt'llcvei.
c•r<'u mAtutt »r<' 'u<'h that lb Camp Davad
M 1d ·aat wnmll un be> 1uc<-ebt.t'UI
The-f'Orn\er presld nt wH In New York to a.Ian
u cont1·1u·t for a book tn be published nut year.
Thl' d adlmt' pn•ssul"<' of that proJt"Cl. ht> s aid, wUI
kl•t•p hln1 frorn making a plunnt-d world lour unlit
lht' manu.'icnpt 1s complt'tf>d ln lh<' 'ipr1nlC
O\lrorc walking l he four blocks from tus hotel
to tht> W1trm·r Communications Buildi ng In
RockoCellcr Plaza. Nixon had bre1tkfast with rorm~r $e('rt!lMry of Stull' Henry A Ki811lnaer .• lie
phana lo ll•Y In tht• rlty until Friday and has
1chtdult'<J m~t1na1 with other former associates
Toduy. he wn11 lo deliver an eulo(lY al u private
m r mor1ul service ror a former financial backer.
~IU\tr llo~t. who died h1!.l month
UNTIL Tiits l't:AK. NIXON nirtly ventured
owuy from hi~ iulftlllde home in California But In
January hl' uuendcd Scn. Hubert Hllmphrey's
funerul In WH hinl(ton and in July ~ddrcssed some
4.000 pi-ople an llyden. Ky . ul lhe dedication or u
n•c·reutlon romplex in lhut mountain hamlet.
flt· t1l110 wai. the ho•l at 1115 home for some 250
rormer prlaoncrs ot war. a nd recently had a fund·
raltln1 allalr there.
As ,lor political plan:> for hunscll. Nucon says
he hat none
NIXON AC'KNOWLIEDGED T HERE H AD fl__ h
l>t•t•O Orllt' chilly ttUC'llOn to !\UCh ll trip but Hid rune ·~ t• ha\ t> a num~r or JlO. luve s1ana~ " He would not dl5<'~ J.X.'t'1f1t tountr1M . other than Australla1 ,------------~=-------..,
whwh l\'t 1t ht• known lhHl ht' W¥Sn "l wanted there. .. -.j.... ·1
"I am planrung lo ito overi.eas." he said. ''bul ·::· \ .' ~
dut· to tht' dt .. 1dhnl'!> I have agreed to I will be
un<tble lo plan an travel this )ll'itr .. §J.·
Nixon said he unders tand!> Australia's r eluc· 1·.~.-rtAl-= lance and that of other counlne!'> lhut have not ex·
tended a welcome.
"We have not ever expected lo make olf1claJ
v1s1ts becau:-.e. after all. I'm not an ofricia.1." he
said "I ha d only hoped that m visits lo these coun·
tree!> 1l wouJd be possible to be there at a Ume
when I could at least ca ll upon those who are cur·
rently in the government."
THE NIXON BOOK, STILl. untitled. will be
published by Warner Communications which paid
him S2 million for his memoirs. Nixon was not
:.iskcd <tbout the fin ancial arrangements for the
nl'w work and dad nol volunteer the information.
The memoirs . he said. were helpful in paying
h1i. h uge legal fees.
"As far as the second book is concerned.
whether It will be a commerical s uccess remains
to be seen. I'm more interested in It being a book
that wall be read by the opinion makers in this.
country."
He ~aid he will write about major issues con·
front ing'tllle United Stales and the free world but
··not in atiy partisan o r political sense."
"Sixty thousand pounds' worth of eclentlflc researetl
and you thought we were g<Hng to Jet you take the
baby home?"
Al.TIIOUGH HE R EFERRED TO the book as
his Sl'Cond, it actually will be his third. He wrote ·sb. Crises" in the 1960s.
"l1xon said it would be ina ppropriate for him to
l"Om ml'nl on the talks at Camg,pavid since those
part1t·1vating in the conrcrenceifUe Steeping quiet. •
•liut. he s;ud. "right oow in the Mideast we
have a situation where the forces of peace are pre.
domin;mt. Neither Is raelis nor Egyptians want a
wa r Peace is nc~otialed when you have a
situation where both parties find the option of war
unacceptable."
Spanish
Classes
Offered
TALIHT
rRE-SCHOOL
9101 ...... .,,. ••
" ............ 92646 '61-442'
AREVALOS
rRE-SCHOOL
IHH~L-.
................... ,264'
'6Z·ll37
AMMOUM C IS ou r
conllnu1ng r8C1ally non
discnm1natory student
admission p01icy. Nixon said Carter is making every possible e(.
rort to provide leadership. But he look a swipe at
rc•rent Wh ile House efforts to improve public
f!(•rccplion Of the president.
A free progr am for
teaching medically·
orie nted Sp a n ish to
Orange Coast hospital and nursing personne l _________ _.
"INSPIRATION DOES NOT COME from im·
a~ny alone. it does not come rrom public rela·
lions ... Nixon said. "It comes from effectiveness.
11 l'omes rrom action. I think President Cart.er ls
1r)1n~ very hard lo provide substance lo the Im·
.iJ!cry wh1ch or course every president is interest·
cd IO ..
College Offers
Spanish Course
"Spamsh for School Personnel." a course de·
signe d to help educate both teachers and Hlspa.nlc
pupils , held at Golden West College in Huntington
Hcach.
The course requires a $S registration fee and
\\>ill he taught from 3:30 to 5 p.m. on Tuesdays and
Thursdays by instructor Fred Garcia.
College s pokesmen say it will be tailored to the
Individualized Education Plan (IEP> required for
bilin~ual s tudents lo rac1litale their education.
'Se eding' No Threat
By The Associated P ress
Thrt.>e te ams of sclentiSl't have determined
that cloud sec.-dlng proposals for the Centra l Sierra
seem to be a good idea and do not appear lo
threaten the overall course or nature.
E xperts from the Bureau of Reclam ation's Of·
f1ce of Atmospheric Hesources Management said
the studies did not indicate that short·term varia-
tions in the e nvironment produced by a carefully
monitored cloud-seeding effort would have ad·
Yl'rse e ffecL<J on wildlife.
Hut they said more studies would be needed to
drtc rmine the total e ffect of more annua l snowfall
in the Caliromia-Ncvuda mountains on wildlife
and planL'i and the general environment.
began this week under
auspices of Coastline
Community College and
fo'ountain Valley Com·
munity Hospital.
The course is open to
high school graduates
und persons over 18. and
two units or college
credit may be earned.
Graduates or lhe nine.
week course should be
able to converse In sim·,
pie f as h ion with
Spanis h ·speaklng pa·
lienls to complete basic
m edical history and ob·
la in related information,
sponsors said.
The cla ss will be
taught by T e r es a
McFarland. a UC Irvine
doctoral candidate.
Sessions will be iQ..lhe
1n ·ser vice classroom al
the hospital at Euclid
Str etit a nd Warne r
Avenue a nd more In·
formation m ay be ob·
tained by calling the
hospital or Coastline
Com munily College.
Utility Vote
OROVILLE <AP> -A
Butte County Superior
Court judge hus ruled
that an initiative asking
county voters if a coal·
fi red power plant should
be bunt can go on the
Nov. 1 ballot. Judge
Reginald Watt ruled in
favor or Citizens Against
Coal Power Pla nts.
...... , ................... ....,...... .
FALL SEMESTER ENROUMENT STILL OPENI
.. • M S.-st.r ..... s.,t. I * l1•au6h T..._ • •
Tr1n1Port1Uon aYllc.bl• doOf to door OWldren of all filths are wetcomt -
htgh 1eooe..tlc atencwd1 -leechlng the 4R'1. reeding (wtth phonlca),
writing. 1ttltwnettc and ,.tdlne ... Betort tnd after ~ c.-. avtlllble fot
cNldren of working P1r9nt1. • '
POUMTAIM VAWY
i 6835 Brookhur1t StrMt
(71 4)962~12
I
DPJttol Hints .,
Dulyne D.
Cltrtstansen, D.D.S.
•
.. NATIONAL/ LOCAL
11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111~111
EYE WEAR
?
DRUG
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Blvd.
Phone:
(714) 847-9833
JUST lllNG US YOUR PRESCRIPTION FROM YOUR EYE DOCTOR.
STARTING WITH YOUR BASIC PRESCRIPTION
YOU CAN PURCHASE EYEWEAR AT ...
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FOR SINGLE VISION FOR BASIC Bl-FOCALS
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We Can Help You Join The Millions Of Other
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DISTINCTIVE FASHION EYEWEAR ~~~ ALSO AVAILABLE AT A
SAVINGS TO YOU!
eflterre Cardin •8lorl1 Venderbllt •Yves' st. Laurent
•01c1r Del• lent• •AID MANY OTHERS
IHHtfHll frHtt1 .. .A9l1ttnotlvely d11l111ed ro r your facel You 0111
tit Mftty I et .. 1nc1 In 1 frt mt wlttl a oomfortM fe flt Set our
wl,. NlectkM ef '""'°" •r•w11r 1t 1 trem1ftdou11avl11t1 to'"'
OTHIR SAY-ON OPTICAL CENTERS LOCATED AT:
• NOllTM HOUYWOOO U02t Vlcfof'y a1vt1."'-ne (2U I 760-12•2
• IANTA CL.UA J707 II Cemlfte leal Ph9ft9 (.011 tl4-225'
• IAN DllOO Ja~1 lo .. cref'11 Street 'hene (71•' 225-1771
• llMI VAWY 2121 leat Cechren l treet 'hone (1051 S22 .. 9CM
• HAWTNOtlNI T4'41 1.1ntlewee4 Avenue Phone (213) 97'.0747
• llV ... DI ~ •••.,..ltle "••• 'heft• (71•> .. ~
• LAKIWOOD '1'1 W ... uff Avenu• , ... ,. (2U) 420·1'4'
NIMAlogk¥~ HEALTH W.ooe.dey, September 13. 1978 DAJLY PILOT A 9
Alcoholics Usually Deny Having Disease
1 1J
By DR. l'.T•:l Nt'ltOHN
0 f>ar lit SWlncrohn: I rel•all
) our .... 1ylnJl lhul II 'I of\C'n dlf
fl C'ult tu dl1t1ngu1 ... h bdwt•t•n be'
111a a aoclul <11111k1•1 ,IJld an
,1h 11h11l11
•• r1•w dfty11 evl•ry month, and he
has bocom\' 1rr1tulJll' with me
and the l'hlldn·n
h tht'lt' an> clt>f1nll\• way or
kno~ Ing wtwtht'r or not hi.' suf
frr, from uknhoh 'm '• If he
11iw~. I wl:;h tw'll 11110111 11 ,uld
.1:1k fo1 hel~ Mrl'I. 1'.
I> t-: I\ H M It S T Y u u r
''SOMfMttRt IN 1'1t1S WORLD
Hf 1£ If A PL.ACE F O~ ME'
I hurdly lukt• u dr1r1il tml rny
hu11hund 111 .1 hN1vy 1lr 1nk1•f I
th1t1k h1• "' do."I•' to 1 ... 1n.: un
.lln1hol11· Ill• 1wioh pooh/\ ll S11) •
thJt ht• run t le.-II 111 INIW-II
11111 I th111I.. mo"llh tw 1.1k1•" ll
I I h111k 11 ' t14•1Jtlllllllll( hi hllH'
.1n 1•rft'<l on hh "'"'" t1nd on l~. hi' fom1h 111· '1111\!\ 11111 of v.ork
hui.hand. 1f tw ti\ u11 ul1·otwl11·, fits
tutu the pul1c10 of ntohl. who
hu\\' trouhk with lhl•lr drinkln~
und cl1111 't 111l1111l It until at lt>ust
10 y t•11 1' uf h.Jrd drinking have
pu111wd
ROSE MILK
SKIN CARE
~; 129
P11ce .ncl ~·all on lob<il
CANDELABRA
LIGHTBULBS
·:::· 119
16 IN. TALL!
RAID YARD
GUARD SPRAY
:::. 229
16or Keepbvg•awoy1
CHILDREN'S
BAYER ASPIRIN llG.33c 4lt
I ~. gt Ofot199 flov0t.
MADITO
SIUFOI
39.95
SPIN· TRIM EDGER· TRIMMER
POWERFUL 1/2 H.P. MOTOR
light, eoay 10 uH with the .vpe• leolures lovnd on
mote powerful & ••pennve tr1mmert Sove 1
·BUFFERIN
TABLm
l lG. 219 Ut
F0t fowl po.n tellef
PHILLIPS MILi
OF MAGNESIA
~88!.
Choice of Ploin ot Mini
DOCTOR IN
THE HOUSE
l 'llu»lly lht' pot<'nlaul alcoholic
hidt•s tht• dlst>us<' Crom hts doctor
1111 Wl'll m; Crom himself But lhe
1l11<'111r 11hould bl· on lhl' lookout
for c·1•rt uln ~o~n11 un<t ~yrnJ)l<Jms
1-'0 R 1-:XAMPl.t :, HERE 1s a
mun with soml' ty11lcul warning
hlJ.tn" A 32 Y''ur old 0H1 cc
munn~er. he-understates the
umounl or hquor he drinks.
Aparently, he doe11 nol m ind dis-
cussing his hab1lb with the doc-
tor. but there arc clues the doc-
tor must seek.
For example. on questioning.
he says that he has been having
heartburn and takes antacids aJI
day . He admits to drin king
before meals and stopp1og at the
bar or restaurants before JtOinJi:
mto the dining room. He thinks
the cocktail hour 1s the best time or the day
While at work he keeps think-
mJt of his first evening dnnk.
MIRRO ALUMINUM
GOURMET SKILLm
Wmt ''SllYDTOeel" MOM--
ma IYDl·HIAT SUlfAa
99 ...
Heavy olum1num w11h boked on
po<t.elo1n eate110t. non·shck int ..
10t. [•lfo hard won I Krotch slo1n
or rno1 und•• no<rnol u.. 8 soul•
10. ,,.,., C)( g11ddl• Ce• oll 3
Does not eat much . l s more m·
tcresled In taking a drink or two
or three before dinner to "loo.-.en
up" a fter a hard day at the of
fi ce. At night, he can't :.eem to
watch TV without ho lding a beer
can and sipping. He fondles 1t
hke a child does a security
hlankcl.
U ' HE STI LL l'Onsi ders
himself to be a social drinker
rather than an alcoholic, help
will be far away A:. I '><ud. 1t
may be many years before he
calls for help -i f at all.
pl$SPOIT ..
SCOTCll WHISIY
WAS 549
6.99 IUAIT
SMIRMOff 10 PIOOf
STIAIGMT VODIA
WAS 539 6.69 eum
CHllSTWI BIOS
CAUFOIMl4UIA;;
WAS uo.1 5 • 99 (2S.4 01.)
£ARLY TIMES
STUIGHT BOURIOM
was ·s49
6.79 QUAil
runusROSE
FIOM POIT\IGAl :.~~ 2~!
Mode to Set fw 3.49 REG.
1.79 FASHION PRINTED DELUXE
10-PAGE SELF· ADHESIVE
PHOTOGUPH ALBUMS
All "'• photos 111 theH •ale pri<ed olbvma with
bt19hlly <olored cO¥e< det19M No give needed•
~!~~~.~~!~~1 -99
(Ollon COY••ed p<llOW\ QI 0 .... ,. 1.99. Morty lomoui
det.gner mode<n. conlempo<ory & Onentol P''"" m
mvlhcolo< eorthtones 10< today\ home lo•"•on•
MT • llOWN • GOlD • GIRN • llUI
COCOABUmR
TONE SOAP
4FOI 109
ORnGAGREEN
CHILE SALSA 35c
BmYCIOCIER
TOPRAMEN
OllNTAL NOODUS
19~.
Ch1<ken, 8"f °' 011gnol
IERNSNEOAI
WITH VITAMIN C FROSTING MIX SNAa CRACKERS
23c =69!. =69!.
Ol«olo•e Molt OI f r1Ku11t Wheor
Whip. ''eon"V 5p1c. , .. ,,., a c~ •.
COSTA MESA COSTA MESA
ZJU. 11'11.. 2300 HerMr If Mloft
FOUNTAIN VAU.EY
1tm ...,. .. Edlnlef FOUNTAIN VAUEY Matnolf It T,,_ WESTMINSTER
WtttlNnlttf at Gotdlft Wttt
HUNTINOTONIEACH
21131 ltldl Blvd. It MIMI HUNTINGTON BEACH . ., . ...., HUNTINGTON BEACH
•1 .... 11~
(
CALIFORNIA Wedneeday. Septemb4ir 13. 1978 OAIL V PILOT AS
Busing: Kids Not Fazed ..
LOS ANGli;I.~ 1A1'1 l''or
th~ par'"nl.ti, k'ach n and •<'hool udm1nh1truton of Loh An&t>I~.
Tuesday wa11 tht' first d••~ 11(
fort•cd bu,a.1ng 111 th1• mo't
i.pr\'¥d uut th!>lrlcl In lht· l 'oUJl try
Hut for mo•t of the l h1ldrcn
who bc>tu tkd tM ONt of yt•llo'4
buse . It wa~ JU.St lhl• flr,t tby of
chool
"Wl'll, '"ah · todav I aot up at
uh '4 h.it<'V r ti mt' lh<' drK k
w~nt off." 'llld 9 }Ur old t\1hinl
l.tt>lwr ont• ot lR rh1 l1tn•n "Aho
rodt• bw-o Jltk! from .. uhurb..n
ti r M n u 1J u II al I ~ 1 n t h (' pt t
dooun&ntly v. tutti S1tn t't"rnando
Vi.llcy to 1'1l•tcher l>n\C ~hool
in G 1.a~ll t'¥rk
LIEBEit t 'INALLY dec1dt-d
hc probably NM.' i.bout b • m .
Ot'i.rly two hour.. t'¥rllt>r \.h.tn
l.l!>t Yt'ar v.ht>n ht• v.Jlked two
Storni Tab
Enonrwiu
In State
S ACRAMEN1'0 •AP> Th ·
California Farm Rureau say!>
last week's storm in the San J oit·
qutn Valley was one of the worst
in history and will cost at least
$183 mllbon
Th e bureau sai d today
tha t a nother million dollar!>
worth of crops were lost 1n lhe
Southern Sacramento Valley
A spokesman for the bureau.
Clark Biggs, said the damage
m ay be topped in California only
by the Feather a nd Eel river
fl<>ods or 1955 56.
"WE HAVE SURV EYED all
the affected counties and used
the low side of all estimates,"
said Biggs .
.. If we had used the high s ide.
a nd it may yet tum out that
way, our estimates would have
been many mil hons higher."
hlodt11 t u UJlhou Boulevurd
~·hoot
·Dul I wa., ttoin6' to Ki!l up
,1nyw11y tu .io to l\('hool." ht• con
1 lutll'<I
fift y fuu1 1•h1ldr1·11 w1•1t• su11
JlOM'tl t11 hUVl' I lcJckn lht• 7tC bt!Ul
llub l.tcbf·r wu1> on Tht: h:w who
did bt-<•mt-d unconct·rr1l·d uhout
t h1•l r <'<)111•,.i.:iw" · 11 h111•ncl• und
Hbout tht-two hour ont· wuy rid•·
'Thti. 1' nt·ut H•·ully r Qomy
huh··" 'ltld Lor I ll.1ndell u!I !>h1·
l111u11dt>d Into thl· bu~
.. , r.un: Hl•St:.~ ... !l u1d Mam·
I ,.,. f'Vt>r It, "twrau:.c 1f you
d11n t h<1ve IJU~l". tht·n you huvc
tu ~.ilk
I .. ...-nt to c•o mp cvt•ryd.iy th1~
'um m<'r on a bu!> and 11 wui. <•
lot l1>n1itt·r ~ay . Ol'arly oul of lh1·
'lty." wa~ N.Jtc Hobin"' com
mt•nt
l didn 't wanna come at
Btu•kffome
flr!lt 't'uusc I didn 't know whut 1l
was ull uboul. see? But my mom
told ml' what's hMppenlng."
TU lo: PROSP•:CT of their new,
int cgrulcd :.chool didn't ftn.c
thl·m
"Yeah, it'll probably be u
atood ti<'hool.'' said Eric
John:, ton. :i blonde. freckled 8
yt·ur old "It's goo<l t hat we're
~011n a be m1 x('d, you know'•
Rt•cll u11e lu!ll year I m et a
C'hl n t'!>C boy. und we made
fl 11•r1ds. Ml "
·' lieiudeb, at fo'letcher. we gel
to g9 to da!.i.e:. upstairs." swd
un l'XCltt.-d Dawn Kovner. 9.
"I WANT TO BE on vacation
one week more," groaned Adam
l''r1 edman. 8.
And so it went While the
parents who shepherded their
children onto the bus looked anx·
tOU!> a nct worne<t, the young11ter:.
themselves appeared on ly
curious and Interested a nd a
bit regretful that summer was
over
When the bus finally got to
Fletcher, the driver inadvertent·
ly parkl'd on the wrong side or
the school -out or s ight of the
waiting reception commltte ....
THE 18 CHILDREN banded in
a s m a ll clnle for several
minutes until the school J,1rtn·
c1 pal, teachers and aides came
trolling towards them. all s miles
and fuss
One small blond boy clutchJng
a "Star Wari." notebook and
lunch box rinally cut off the
apologies gracious ly.
"Aw . ~hat's OK ," h e
mumbled. "We didn't mind."
,.,. .............
,.,. . ....,......
USA HIGHTOWER GREETS BUSED STUDENT
lnbal Brozkl, left, From Woodland Hill•
'\!alue Incredible'
Hollywood. Sign
Letters for Sale
llOLL YWOOlJ <AP) People who missed a chance to pay $Z7 .000
for a Jetter m the new Hollywood sign. take heart. The old ones art-
still up for grabs.
The dilapidated letters --some 8.000 squa re feet of sheet metal
chopped up and carted off from their Mt. Lee perch overlooking
Ho llywood along with thei r
wooden s upport poles and other and St0.000 up front a nd .,
assorted hardware -are cur· . percentage or retail. ..
r e nlly silting quietly in a
billboard company warehouse
But the Hollywood Chamber or
Comm erce has already received
several offers of purchase -·
nothing to write home about, but
enough lo whet the appetite of
chamber president Mike Sims.
"AFTER THE CBS television
s pecial honoring Hollywood's
Diamond Jubilee In November
the value of that sign is going to
be incredible." he predicted
The new sign will be unveiled
during the two-hour show.
R ETAIL OF WHAT?
Well. Sims says. "they want to
make replicas or the Hollywood
sign. jewelry and all different
kinds of things.
"We're most concerned about
quality and how the old sign 1s
u!.cd," he added quickly. "Wl•
don't really want it turned inlo
ashtrays or something like that.
lie said Fresno County, where
raisins had Just been put out for
drying, was the biggest loser at
$1 13 m1 llwn, including $83
m1lhon worth or r a1s1ns and 40
percent or the fig crop valued at
$7 million
A~ER GRAPES, the largest
monetary l~s was suffered by
growe rs o f alfalfa seed in
l''resno. Kings, Kern and Tulare
eounties. Biggs put that loss al
$15 million.
A f1 ~1g-drapcd coffin I!-. carried past a
Travis Air Force Base honor guard Tues-
day as 11 more of' America's dead from
the Vietnam war cc.1 m c home Thl'
military fli ers' remains were turned ovl'r
10 a United States congressional delega-
t ion last month tn Hanoi. and for the pa!:>t
two weeks have been in Hawaii for form<.11
identification.
"We have probably a dozen to
20 bids in writing," Sims said
T uesday. "Of these only three or
rour are serious offers.
"Nobody has made a s ubstan·
tial enough offer yel. We've been
offered everythinJ: from $2 per
square foot up to between S5.000
"We m ay be giving pieces of 1t
away at the Diamond Jubilee
party." he added. "People like
Hugh Hefner and Gene Autry
who helped save the sign will all
be getting substantial memcn
tos "
HEFNER AND AUTRY wcrC'
among the nine people who
donated $27,000 each to pay for u
letter in the new sign.
Other counties with large
losses were Tulare $24 million,
Kern $23 million and Made ra $18
mil hon.
Firm Fined • in Safety Violation A public auction is a poss1 b1l1
t y. S ims said. adding that
however the letters are finally
disposed of. the proceeds will go
towards maintenance or the new
s1~n. on which construction is
1ust now beginning. But Biggs said the esti mal~
could change if some fa rmers
~et higher prices for the re·
mainder of their crops.
"Some pt.'Ople will be lucky.
They will be able to sell their
croo at a higher price."
Patrol
LOS ANGELES <AP l -A
Long Beach construction com·
pany has been fined $12,500 for
violating state industrial sarcty
laws and trying to conceal the
infraction which allegedly re·
s uited in an accident tha t killed
one worker and permanently
Gone
Oceanside JI oid of MPs
OCEANSIDE <AP> The Mannes have pulle<t their MPs off
the streeU> or Oceanside for the first lime since World War II, but
11 ·s "more 1nconvt'nil'nCe now than trouble," a city policeman
:-.ays.
The att1on was announced Tuesday at neighboring Camp
Pendleton where the provost marshal said U.S Supreme Court de c·1sion~ IC'ft the MPs legally h<1ble if a nyone arrested off base could
prove c1v1I rights violations.
OCEANSIDE POLICE SGT. ROBERT Krause said the city is
weighin~ the impact of the move. but the problem may be greater
for "the young Marine who gets into trouble in Oceanside" than ror
police. "Rcfore. we picked up a lot of Marines that we did not have to
book bt•cause their MPs were close by to take them in tow and
back' to Camp Pendleton," he i,aid. "Now, we may be taking more
of them to be booked into city jail.''
IN RECENT MONTHS, A ts.MA N MP patrol has been as-
s igned to Oceanside. A study blamed Marines for 40 percent of
downtown crime.
Chwr or Police Rolf lle nze bemoaned the loss of the Marine
patrol but said "If they have some limitation placed on them. by
court dceisions.' that has Lo be accept.able to me whether t like It or
not."
M llitary spokesmen saJd town patrols by Air Force, Army.
Marine and other Navy units have been disappearing nationwide.
disabled another .
Los Angeles Municipal Judge
Edward L. Davenport imposed
the fine Tuesday after convict·
Ing the firm. R.M .P . Marine
S<!rvices. tnc .. in the Sept. 13,
1977 incident.
The Judge found that the com·
pany had illegally used com ·
prei.sed oxygen in a pneumatic
nail gun which exploded, killing
Ronald Ray Clarke. 39, of Ox·
nard . The gun operator, Rixon
Gregory Pry, 'l:l, of Oxnard, suf-
fered permanent damage to his
stomach and one leg.
OWedo Q.attl•fl
SACRAMENTO c AP l -
llealth and Welfare Secretary
M a r 1 o
Ohlcdo. prob·
ahly the
most promi-
nent or the
outsiders that
Gov. Edmund
Brown Jr .
brought Into
state govern·
mcnt, is leav-
inl! next vcar. oeLaoo •
Obledo. 4&. 1s returning to
Harvard University in January,
the school confirmed Tuesday
lie is to be a law graduate
fellow, doing research and
teaching first-year law students
lie has taught at Harvard in the
past.
Dftoaadon Set
SUSANVILLE <AP) -The
U S Department or Defense is to
As ci September 10. 1978. schedule changes will
go Into effect on several Park·N-R1de Express
and Local Fixed Routes. And fares will be
Increased on all Orange County Transit Otstnct
bus routes.
New OCTD bu• ,.... Cltll.-IM• ~ombtl< 10 19781
The new fares are listed below along with
the routes that have been deleted. Please
remember to carry the exact fare since our
drivers cannot grve change.
There have also been changes on seMCes
not hsted below and we will be revismg OUf
schedules For new srhroules 0t route 1nforma·
oon call 547.3311 or toll frPf• /t-NITH 7-3311 from
6 AM to 10 PM WOl"kciay-.. I AM to 5 PM
Saturdays, and 8 AM to 5 PM Sundays
New New Senior Citizen
Service Regular Fare & Handicapped Fare
Local Fixed
Route &
EasyRldef 35¢ 15¢
Park·N-Ride
Express &
Olal·A·Rlde 7QIJ. 35¢
Dial-A-Lift 7QIJ.• 35'Z
Dtecontlnued Rout ... The followmg Park-N·Rlde
Express Routes havo been d1scont1nued: 207: 260:
271 (Othef Pork N-Rlde Express and Local Fixed
Routes have been changed as well, so please
call for new route 1nf oonatt0n.)
( J 2 Opn-aton So•gltt
Sf A.TE PALO ALTO <A P > -Police
_ _ were searching today for two
Palo Alt o n ursi n g h o me·
operators accused of wal kin~ begin destroying 20 more ''daisy
cutte r " bombs of the type that
went orr unexpectedly al the
Sierra Army Depot in Au~ust,
offi cials report
The L5.000.pound bombs are to
be detonated one al a time
beginning Saturday
Prof'• Car B1trrtrd
LOS ANGELES I AP 1 A
member of the J ewish Armed
Resistance Lea~ue claimed
responsibility ror a fare .Tuesday
that burne<t a car t>clongmg to a
UC LA polillcal science professor
specializing in Mideast affairs.
Professor Malcolm Kerr is re·
portedly under consideration for
appointment as an adviser to
President Carter.
!tfan Pltatgn to Death
SAN DIEGO I /\Pl A 62·
year -old m an fell to his death
from the 14th floor of the Bank
of America Bulldinft. na rrowly
missing several p('de!ltrians as
his body hit tht• street below.
police say
Oc>puty Corone r Claude Mon·
doux said Theodore John Foldy
climbed o nto the 14th floor
balcony after scaling B railing
a nd apparently fell Lo the street
shortly before noon Tuesday
&
out on seven elderly tenants
Ted and Grace Allen said lhcy
werC' going shopping over the
wee kend but instead d is up
peared with thousands or dollar~
In advance room and board pity
ments.
San~ Inn Sold
SAN DIEGO IA P I Th<•
Sheller Island Inn. once owned
by St. Lows attorney Morns A
Shenker. has been sold at a
bankruptcy proceechng to a local
businessman for $3 2 mil hon
The price in cash reportedly
Included $2.7 million owed to lhe
Teamsters Union pension fund
Fra nk Warren. the buyer, •~
chairman of Rancho Santa Fe
Savings &'Loan Association.
Mnhod to Cha11ge
SAN DI EGO <AP1 San
Diego C.ounty 's Animal Control
Department will bcf(in usinR
lethal drug injections lo kill un
wanted animals by Dec. 1, the
Board of Supervisors has ruled.
Assistant C hi ef Ad ·
minis trative Officer Daniel Bog·
gan on Tuesday detailed the l~t
or the method to replace the ron
troversial use or decompression
chambers to destroy unwonted.
sick or mJurcd rreatures.
Me a nwhilC', S im s cau
!toned souvenir·hunter" to
beware or Hollywood Boulevard
types hawking what thc::y cl<11m
lo bl' Pll'CCS or the Sl~n.
Blasphemy,
Nuke Issues
Miss Ballot
SACHAMENTO tA PI
Ca I irornia voter-; won't ha vt· to
dec1dt• at lhl' polls 1f they want
nuclear power plant~ on bar~c11
or 1r I ht•y want to ban boob anrl
mova·:-thul r;ip God, ~ay:.
S<•crelary of Slate March Eu
M-; Eu reported Tuesday thul
1n1l1al1v<' drives lo outlaw
hlnsphcmous books and hims.
nnd to authori7.e "helium cooled .
bari::t· mounted nul'lt·ar rl'ac1or ...
in m;innas," twct failed lo make
the June 1980 ballot
T he blasphc>m;.-measurr wa:
s ponsored lJy f''ehx Sa man1eJ.W
of Banning The proposed con
!'>lltut1onnl aml'ndment necdP<I
499.846 stf(nature:-. to qualify M'
F.u said only about 4,000 wen·
'ubm1ttcd
She said the sponsor of thl'
nuclear m ea~urc , Paul Ran
dolph of Menlo Park, failed to
turn 1n any signatures Jt needed
:11:!.404
SEPTEMBER SPECIAL OF THE MONTH
Delicious smoked ham. two fresh eggs.
hashed brown potatoes. toast. jam and bullor .
SERVED 2• HOURS. .ea
SPIRES
COSTA MESA
31~~ Harbor Blvo
IRVINE
MacArthur Btvo cJI S 0 rwv
)
(
.. ,. •11·
Wednesday, Sec:>1omber 13, 1978
Robert N Wee<11Publl$her Thoma$ K~vll/E<Sitor
Barbdrd Kr.-1b1ctitEdltorlal Paoe Editor or•ngeeo.s•o•·•vP••o• Editorial Page
-------------------------------------------
Budget Doesn't
Reflect Message
lluntan~ton tlcarh l'lt) Coun cil members d1dn 'l eem to
Cl' unv rrop0Ml10n l ~t me suaic wh~n lhey recently
up proved u final ctt y lludR t or SM 4 m1 I hon lor 1978·19
Thl'Y didn 't t'Ut tht• bud~et Nlhcr
In foct. l ht'\ lac kt·d on on udd lllonul $120,000 to luitt
\'{•ur·~ ~penchntit puc·k oJ(e
t tndl'r normal unwi.. lhc ralt> or 1ncreu:se could be r~·
~urd<>d .... a \ tct<>r) over mnauon
But Urnt "'u ~n l the ca e this year Y. lth the pu~:-.aKt' of
Proposllaoo 13 Mo'\l obscr"cr aart>l' thut vokt :-. wcrt•
nylng en O\'l'rwht>lmmg numoor& thot thl'y wunled to t'Ul
buck ou ltQV~mmenl s~ndm1e
Adminlhlrution lt>adc~ ilnd 'omt-t•ounc1I m emberb
t•1lht•r didn't gt•t lht• m e ,saJ;e nr they d 1dn l heed ll
Th~ rur lh<>re ha\'e bt-t•n no plan-, advanced (or re·
or11an1Lutaon or rombmin){ of 'omc• 0Jl('rat1om. wh1r h mlJ;hl
!'ave monc).
Nor ha!' th,•1 t· ht•t•n .tn~ rru1rkcd !-tuc•c·c•:-.:-. in 1·uttinJ,(
bul'k uf :idmm1~t1 ut1n· <.1nd -.upt•r\'tsory f>t·r~onncl who
m.1) not bt· t·~~t·ntml
II h<.1~ ~('n />rt•tt v muC'h bw.int-:-.:-. ~•' u~ual althuuKh
~OOH' n~:\\-UM.'t l'l':-. hd \ l' 0l'l'0 I mJ>O~t·cl to mUkt' Up for
IOZ..Sl'!'\
Thi• d;1y tor· tuu~ht·r dN·1:-.ions ts approuchm~. The
ll·udt·1-. ul Huntington Bea<.'h have only delayed a nd
po:-.:-.1hl\ tntt•ns1 f1t•d th1~ unpopular ta~k
'>tht•r c1t1t~ m lht• ttrNt Fountain V:tlley. Newport
Hc•:H·h . Costa Me~•• <.ind Laguna RcaC'h h i.Ive <:ut their
hudJ.!l'I:-.
l l untm~ton lkach ~hould have.' followc.•d ~u1t
Concerns Valid
Fountain V:tlh.•y City Council rnt-!mbe rs have ha lt{!d
the QU{'Stionabll' prB('li<:C Of Withholding psychological
test r t.>s ults from ('1ty e mployees who m ay want to see
their own c.·xam ination
fl ~<.'Cms logical that polict'. firem e n and city d epar t
mc nt hl'ud s should be rcqurrcct to pass the psychological
tl'SlS
But 1t ha rdly ~crms ncccs!>ar y for the tests to be ad·
ministe red to secre t aries a nd c le rks. Council m e mbers
have ceased this procedure a s well.
City aides claim they were not told what to do with
the o ld tests that have accumulated for the past eight
y<.•ars. And thC'y rPported 79 of the test results could not
be.· located.
Some e mployees feel 11 was intimidating for ad
mm 1strator~ to hold the:,t.• tc~l'> unde r lock a nd key for so
many ycur!> Jl ... l·ons t ituted "secret files." the workers
S<sid
City <.1ide~ s hould h ave l'Ontactcd the city attorney
and t'Ouncil m e mbers many years ago with the question
of what to do with th e psychological test results .
Kl'cping a lmost 400 of these evaluations in c ity ha ll
for e ight years was quite unnecessar y . Perhaps a clo~er
psychological look is needed at those responsible for this
prac ticc
Fees Justified
/\ $67.5 million budget upproved last week by Com:il
Community College District trus tees m a rks an 11.2 per -
cent decrease from the previous year in the fin ancial
package Ul:>ed to run the dis trict's three campuses.
The cutback was achieved with no layoffs of teaching
personnel a nd only about 20 non -te a c hing staff dis·
missa ls .
Sabbatical leave!> h ave been c anc:eled and tcach1ng
positions o pe ned by a ttrition or retire m ent will not be
rille d.
Trustees deserve applause fo r their job of paring the
budget. And we hope they will pursue the concept of ob·
taining more fees for hobby. e nte rtainment a nd s pa re·
time types of classes .
The s tate education code 1s built a round a concept
tha t community colleges s hould be open to an resid•.rnts
at a non-cost Cothe r than mate rials l basis. Thus. even
thOl:>C who c an e a s ily a fford t o pay fees for self·
improvement or frill classes aren't a s ked to do so.
In the s pirit of the times. this fee-free policy needs
overhaul.
There's nothing wrong with leach ing m acramc.
s lained-glasi:. pro.1ccts a nd lap dancing. but those who can
a fford to pay the ('Osl ~f the cla~ses should do so
• Opinions expressed 1n the space above are those of the Daily Pilot.
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
artists Reader comment is 1nv1ted Address The Daily Pi lot po
Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321. · ·
Boyd/Eyes
ByL.M.BOYD
T ests s ho w brown-eyed
people r eact fas ter than
others to stimuli. And the
darke r the eyes, the quicker
the reaction, it's claimed. In·
tereslin~. if true. And if true,
JUSl a s lnteresting is another
theory about it: Melanin is
what gives the brown eyes
their color. Neuromelanin is
what serves as a semiconduc-
tor s witching device in the
nervous system. Maybe these
two s ubstances a re genetic al·
ly tied together somehow.
.....
Dear
Gloomy
Gut§
T hey're s till at it!
Leafing through the
l a te1t community
collese ad1edule I note
such It.ems as "Bein~ a
Grandparent." "Ethnic
C loth e s" an d
· 'C o n v e r 1ut1onat
Polish." Didn't they
hear Howard.,
P.O.
Maybe the best known pro·
duct ot the 3M Company is
~cotch tape . But probably
the least known is phony
blood, sold to movie, TV a nd
s tage producers for their
gory scenes.
When an llaUnn says he's
"in the green," he means
he's "in the red."
The average quart of milk
contains lS,360drops.
Q. "Aren't most baby boys
called John named in honor
or St. John?"
A. Possibly, but which St.
John? There are as many as
60 St. Johns on the Romon
Calendar or Saints.
Q. "Thal d<>t Sandy in the
Broadway s how ·Annie,·
where '.1d he come Crom?"
/\. A cage In the Connec·
Ucut Humane Society Pound.
Pretty lucky pup. He was
aboul to be done away with.
Q. "How many women who
become lull·nedgcd medical
doctors quit work to brlns up
lhe•rownchildren ?"
A. Sevenoutof 100, about.
Q . •·w un't Benjamin
Franklin al.llo the Inventor of
tooth past.e?
A. One ot the Inventors. His
rormulo called for crushed
charcoal mlxed with honey,
Earl Waa rs
State Prison Facilities Wasted
Odort• the-l..<•als luturt· plunges
into u multi 011llion dollar prison
1.1xpa n 11 l o n
proatrnm. a
,. a r <' f u I
u11ul y1111"1 or thl'
t rut\ net.>d:s are
tn ord,•r fo'or
pri so n
fac11lt1cs urc
co1tly.
The lm1t ma ·
Jor pr1son1'
cons tructed in
the sta\e c·osl w('ll over $25,000 :.i
bed tlut that was more lhun 20
year!> d~o. 1'oduy's costs cun be
prc11 umcd Lo run at leai;t fo ur
11 nwi. lhut figure
Thal the Lc1uslaturc must step
rn .rnd do such u ~tudy to uvo1d
tr
.. I \,.
Mailbox
I ~.~
'
spending nl·edles:ily millions of
dolluri; 1s mudc imperative by Its
e leventh hour approval or a $6.6
million appropriation for plan-
ning or new prisons. Som e or the
money would be used ,in planning
rem odeli ng or existing prisons
and the razing or San Quentin and
perhaps r-·oh~om.
THE PRISON authorities have
been pressuring the legislators
for funds for new prisons with
pr~dictions of prison population
gains of over 30 percent in the
next seven years by reason of
the more severe c rimin a l
penalties whic h huve bee n
e nacted. They say the number of .
inmates wtll rise from the cur·
rent 19.500 lo more than 25.000
by that time.
For th11t reason the otrs c1uls
are envisionan11 construction o(
al least one new major pnson
so m ewhere 1n Sou th t•rn
California Initially they had
zeroed In on a locatiun near
Chinp but local opposition has
compelled ~crapping or lhttt
Already purchasod is a site at
Olay Mesa near ~n Diego but 1t
too ls. running Into strong local
resistance.
NOTING THAT such instilu·
lions. whose payrolls once made
them desirable to many com
munrties. are now shunned by
most locales. Assembly Ways
irnd Means Ch ai rman Dan
Roatwright has demanded an In
ventory of properties a lready
owned by lhe state's prison de·
partment. Has view is th3t any
necessar y expansion or facilitif'S
can be achieved by building
satellite units a t exis ting pri~ons. This alternative has the
advanla!lc of ullliiing the exist-
ing central facilities s uch as
power, water. sewa11e. l11undries
and bakeries and thereby savmg
millions.
The actual tact is that at most
or the existing prisons there are
hundre d s of unused acres
available Cor such expansions.
And most of the communities
wher e these rns tltullons arc
located would welcome the in-
creased payrolls which would
re11ult.
FOLSOM. fo r exumpte. 1!>
located on a 1.000-acre s ite only
40 acres or which are used for
the pri110n. Similarly, Soledt1d,
Vacaville and Tehachapi have
substantial acreages in excess of
current use.
San Quentin consists of 600
acres overlooking San Francisco
Bay with only about SO acres
used by the prison. fl however i1'
different in that not only is the
r ac l11t y o ld , cos tl y and
hazardous to operate. but it 1s
generally unwanted by the peo·
pie of 'Marin County. Razed, the
land would probably sell for a
price which would finance a n en·
tire new prison e lsewhere
SO IT SEEMS possible that
the department can meet its an-
t1ci pated growth w1lhoul suh·
:'ltanlial costs by utilizing the re-
sources il already has.
But befo re even that 1s done
the Legislature should fully re·
view the conservation camp pro·
gram. Placement of prisoners in
outdoor camps to work on re·
forestation and i>tream clearance
proJects was intended to r elieve
the need for new prisons when the•
Leg1slalurt? a1,1thorized the camr.
program 20 years ago
Lessons Teachers Learn from Parents
To t he Editor.
Nack Th1mmesch 's Sept 7
a rticle on Catholic schools gives
only one side. People who pay for
the education orthclr children are
the most interested in education.
They back the schools. r espect the
teachers, provide help at homl!
and start children off with an
attitude s uitable for learning.
Private schools provide dis·
cipline and home work. Then~. if
s tudents don't conform, they are
s uspended.
But as a teacher for 14 years
in public schools. parents have
told me :
TO MIND my own business
whe n children are so heavily
sedated from Ritalin that thev sil like vegetables;
Not t o give homework .
because children have c hurch,
piano lessons. Lillie League.
etc :
Nol to keep children during re
cess. lunch or after school 1r
they curse. are rude, fi ght or
:-.te al;
Not tu teach values a bout
righting -that kids need to
learn to defend themselves;
Not to overburden the children
by aski n g th e m to learn
multiplication at home in the
fourth grade.
These pa r e nts want their
children happy not educated.
Yet watch the same parents
yell at kids who do not obey and
Jose control over themselves
If they would leave us alone.
we'd do the job right.
J . SMITll
T~liftos' 8ftlellt•
To the F.ditor:
Many teachers aay they are
underpa id and overworked.
There may be a few who spend
Sydney Harris
extr a hours. but m ost work
shorter hours than other work·
1ng people.
I know several who operate
businesses, and they se~m to be
there often during the day .
Many say they grade papers
m the evenings. Many of those
are home in mid-afternoon. If
they worked until 5. most would
not be working evenings
F.XCEPT FOR a few who
might reach managem ent and
super visory positions In busi·
ness. most are paid better than
othe r professionals' starting
salaries and s alaries received
after 10-15 years on a JOb.
They say they receive no pay
during the summer. When pro·
rated for the year, they are paid
better than many other workers
with comparable training. They
have long summer vacations.
part of which can be spent work·
1ng for someone else if they wis h.
Their benefits are g reat. And
they can't suddenly be laid off
a fter years with a firm . like peo
pie In private industry.
They say they must add to
their credentials by study. This
is true In many othe r pro
Cessions
In s hort. they do heller than
most workers.
EARL HOWARD
lrrnp••n•k-
To the Editor:
I had always presumed that
ne w s pape r writers were
supposed to have some degree of
res ponsibility and. if not. a~
least the papers that published
their writings would exercise
som e control over blatant
irresponsibility! Certainly not so
with the tirades of Earl Waters
tWhere There's Smoke, Don't
Legis late, Sept. 31. He keeps
repeating lhe same theme and 1t
sounds exactly like the equaJty
1rr es pon s 1bl c p o l1t1 ca l
advertisements for which the
tobacco industry is paying such
t)1g doll a r s . If "l o hacco
pushers" want to run anti-Prop
5 ads. let the m pay for 1l
legitimate ly not through
newspaper columnis ts. 1n the
$tUiSe or joumali~m'
Waters begins by stating lhat
the iniliatjve would ban smokers
fro m almost everywhere but the
privacy or their own homes, a nd
this is even more toally false
and irrespons ible than the paid
commercials
He e nds his tirade with
reference to "a small c lique of
zealots. opposed lo smoking.
:-ieeking to persecute smokers ..
The "small clique ... Mr. Waters,
IS 62 perce nt Of lhe total
population! And. contrary to his
a s inine a nd 1r res pons 1b le
statement. non-s mokers are not
seeking to persecute anybody'
Most non-smokers have long ago
g iv e n u p :iny a tte m pts t o
.. reform " the smokers. even the
hus bands. wives. c·hildrcn.
friends and relatives that they
hnve seen smok(• themselves
into the hospital or the l{ruve
MR. WATERS IS right lo the
l'Xlent that 1f you want to purs ue
your addJclion right on to your
own demise, you have the rs~ht
to do so. But you do not have the
right to drag anyone with you' It
has been stated. with g reat
descnplrve accuracy. I hat the
right or a person lo swing his
arms ends a t someone else''>
nose. There a re innumerable
CKamples Of s1m1lur Sllual10nl•
t he law. for example. pe rmits a
person to consume alcohol he
can even drink himself Into
insensibility or "to death IC he
chooses -bul he ca nnot hurt
~omconc else by his drinking.
This is certainly a p roper _
delineation or "rights ..
• Waters pursues his venomous
bias by childish st:.ile ments such
as "what shall he next la ws
.aR:iinst those who don't use the
right deodorant''" Obvious to
anybody is the fact that neither
deodora nts. nor for that matter.
nothing else in our civilization
cuusl's 300,000 deaths annually!
But. even with that awesome
toll. Prop. 5 permits you to go
right a head and smoke your
cigarettes --your righLS re main
you can still sme ll like a dirty
ashtray, slain your teeth and
fingers. make your steak and
lo b s t e r t aste like burning
tobacco weed. burn your carpel!\
a nd Curn1tur e. you can even
pre pay your ow n buria l
expenses but your "right" to do
all or these things ends a t thP
noses of the major ity that havt:
never becomf' addicts or thitt
have had the fortitude to give it
up'
W COLEMAN
Safi c ... •ftll•.,,
To the Editor·
What a sad commentary on
the cauiens of California .
The iJlate Legislature hassled
until the l as l m inute and
deprived the handicapped and
aged of a tiny inc re a se in
benefits.
And today I reud or the serious
s h ortage in m e ntal health
facilities in Orange County.
Need I say more?
MRS. J . N. llALL
The Roots of History's Revolutions Run Deep
Whenever there is grave un·
rest In u neighborhood, a city, or
a country. the establishment's
firs t public reaction la to blumc
It on "con
!lplrotors" or
"o ut side
agllutors ."
They arc the
favorite whJp·
ping -boys of
authority that r e e t s
threatened.
Y c l In
a lmo11t e very
case, the establl11hment ls wrong,
and knows It, or Is self-d cclvod.
Insurr~llon.'l motivated from lhe
o uUlde arc relatively easy to re·
slat and repel : it Is the ones that
come from the lm1lde that make
the rut trouble.
Mor e lhnn u <'<.'ntury ugo. Wen
dell PhilllpR observed. "lkvolu·
t1ons :1rl' not m ude; th.-y come
A r l'volullon is u 11 nutural :.i
growth us un ook. It comes out
of th<' past. Its foundations urc
tuld fur hnek "
The Am erican Revolution
c-ould never h ave been sue
ce11sful If u hundful of hotheads
h1:1d gone from town to town try·
ing to create dissatisfaction with
the British gove rnment. Discon·
tent ho<J bel•n growing for yea~
within {•11eh community, und
people like Snm /\dums und the
sons of Liberty only lruns lotl'd
the populur temper lnlo militant
act ion
"0 TSIDERS" eun huvc llttlt•
Influence on u neighborhood lhut
is j us tly t rcntcd . Mo!'ll r>eople
would ralht•r suffer small tncon
v\'niences thun protest. und c11n
b<' df'ce1ved rept•;ttedly before
they berome mutinous
It is only when the :-.(lark Is
wa1t1ng to be lit that "ug1totors"
of uny sort. url' effcct1 Vl' The
Russian Revolullon of 1005 wu:.
ubortive bccuus{• the workcrx
<llld formers and soldters hnd
not y('t been disaffected by the
Cza rist govcrnnwnt : u doien
years later. It took only t• tiny
minority or Bolsheviks to set the
whole miAhly nation afla me.
The ptitlcncc of most peoples
is equaled only hy th1• :stupidity
u nd blindness or tho~1· who
domlnotc the m They s e<· only
what they wont to see. und
believe whut Is most comtort.u·
bit·. l'Vl'll wh,·n .. 11 the luCt lf con·
lr.ad1ct lhem
The irony or histor y Is thot
almost all retwlllons and revollJ·
lions could have been uverted
without 8<'rloWi conflic t, If curly
rumbles or dl11cont •nl had tx'l·n
:itt(•ndcd t o. Nobody In lhl·
Cotonws al first wanted indc~n
dence from Rr\ta1n: it was only
whe n lcgltlmulP g r levnncos
wt•r(' rcfusl'<J, and a.culn refused,
thtil separation b('cumc nn Is·
s ue.
Extremes pre vail wh e n
moderullon 111 not tried. The tret-
brcnks lhut cunnot be nd. Thoso
who will glv<' nothlna t•nd up re·
linqulRhlng everything And lher.
who blumt.' "out. idP ngltutori. •
for :stirring up thl' good ctll7.cns
1n vurl11bly hail lo rouhw that b
Is their own urroguncc or
neglect that tuu1 lorn •d the good
citizens Into bod one
..
Today's Clo81ag
N. Y. Stoe!k~
VOL. 71, NO. 256, 4 SECTIONS, -44 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1978
Oswald Widow Recalls Swift Courtshi
WASHINCTO!li <AP 1
Iii artna CKwald Portrr dt1't'nbed
for Con&n"M today hn\4 she hap
penM to rnam a man !he h11rd
ly kn"*· a man w.h o \\<oultt
bN'omt' ""°""" a th ""''""-''n of a pre tdent
Tl',llf)'ina Wllh c·omposur('
b(·fort> tht> 1100-.. t' 3?.<iO'i .. IOUllM'
('Omm1tt~-e. Mn. Portt•r n'<•itlled
her whirlwind <'Our'\,htp with
l,~t· lh1rvev O,.wald when 11h1·
v. Ii ll QJrl of 19 In her n ttve
Ru1u11a
She u1d l\h~ knew lltth: 11bout
him t•xtt>pt that ht• wo11 un
AmNh'un and thul :;he liked
him
Sht• v. u" nskt.<IJ lo\< ht·I ht•r 11
v. a11n 't .1 hll hu1>ty to pl ungl' anto
marrluttt• uf\t!r only ~"' wcok!I or
daunt:
"Not wht•n y()U 'rt-the uait· thut
I wub." shf' replied
Recalling their life 1n Minak,
o~wald 'i, widow s aid her
hu:1ha nd wa11 generally good·
natured, 101mlg rus temper Only
uboul us mu('b as most husbands
do. wus ~omewhat dissatisliud
with hi!> work al a radio factory,
bt>ra mu bc11 t friends with a
Russian factory worker who was
:.tudyang English. and rarely cm ..
t•u11sed poUtks with her .
They were marnod in April.
1961 . only a few months after
John F. KeMedy was inaugurat·
ed as president. With a short·
wave radio, they heard some of
Kennedy's speeches in English,
she said.
·'I would ask Lee what is he
saying? What is he saying"" she
related. "lie told me to hush up
and not interrupt. His attitude
was you being a woman. what
(8ee PROBE, Page A2>
Koll Rezone Approved
Irvine Council Splits 3-2 in Controversy
Despite warnings that their ac
taon could mean loss of city rev-
enue and mtoleTable traH1c
levels in the Irvine Industrial
Complex-West. the lrvin.e City
Council voted 3·2 Tuesday lo OP·
prove a controversial zone
change
The approval paved the way for
the Koll Company to develop busi·
oess and professional omces on 15
acres adjacent to and owned by
the Bertea Corp
The site is at Michelson Drive
and Von Kannan Avenµe. It had
been zoned for researctf and light
industry uses.
The council majority or Mayor
Recreation
Director
Appointed
Almost eight months to the
day after Irvine Director of
Community Services Jesse
Was hington resigned, his
replacement will t ake over the
heavily criticized recreation de·
partment.
Tuesday the City Council an-
nounced the appointment of
Deanna Manning, 39, to the post,
which has been he ld since
Washington's resignation Feb.
17 by acting director Harry
Ehrlich.
Miss Manning curr ently is as-
sistant general manager of the
Livermore Area Recreation and
Park District, in the San Fran-
cisco Bay area.
She will be paid a starting
salary of $26,000 a year. She
starts Oct. 16.
Prior lo h e r L,ivermore
e mploym e nt , where s h e's
worked the past 4 th years. Miss
Manning was a recreation pro-
grams administrator with the
City of Torrance for 13 years.
She has a bachelor of arts
degree from San Jose State
University. and a master's
degree from Cal State Long
Beach.
She plans to make her home in
Irvine.
W ashlngton resigned under
criticism from members of the
community and after an un-
favorable job report from City
Manager William Woollelt.
Council members said they
wanted someone with more ad·
m inistraliveexperienceto handle
the expanding department.
I
Coast
Weather
Low c loudi n ess and
local drizzle night and
morning hours becoming
partly sunny along the
coast Thursday afternoon.
Lows tonight 62 to 66.
Highs from 68 to 72 at
beaches to 77 to 80 inland.
INSIBE TODA'°'
AC o so.Jedi.rt~. Wee ac a
Sea World exhibit. 3hark•
have bemi a big ottra.c:Uon.
~~ Po~Al2.
8111 Vardouhs. David Sills and
Arthur Anthony argued that, un·
der cidsting zoning. a head·
quarters office building cou!d
have been built there
Zoning that would permit con.
st ruction of office buildings would
have s ubstanhaJly t he same ef.
feet on the industrial complex. they argued.
Council members Larry Agran
and Mary Ann Galdo voted
against the zone change.
Mrs. Gaido alleged today the
approval was "a special favor for
the Koll Company." and asserted
that Anthony, the chief proponent
for the ioning on the council, was
influenced by campaign contribu·
lions Crom a Koll Company ex·
eculive. She didn't mention these
assertions during the council's
consideration of the matter Tues·
day night.
Timothy Strader, senior vice
president and general counsel for
the Koll Company, has been the
spokesman for the zone change
through a series of hearings lead·
ing to Tuesday'sdecision.
Strader contributed $240 in cash
to Anthony's spring campaign for
council, according to disclosure
s tatements, and paid a $25 bill for
Anthony's dinner at an annual
meeting of the Greater Irvine In·
Double Oops
Reaga~ Ford Goof
DALLAS I AP> Former President Ford is at it
again. And he had some help from former California
Gov. Ronald Reagan.
The two big-name Republicans were in Texas on
Tuesday to campaign for state candidates. and each
had a blooper to contribute.
Ford told the GOP luminaries at a breakfast
that he and Reagan were in Houston to help Texan
Bill Clements get elected "governor of the great
stale of Calif omia ."
Later, Reagan chipped in his blooper in Dallas.
when he was asked how he thought the Texas cam·
paign was shaping up.
"So far the crowds have been enthusiastic. and I
think it looks great for Hill." said the former screen
star.
Texas Attorney General John Hill is Clements'
Democratic opponent.
' Gays Holding Clues
In Bellting Death?
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Ol U. o.lty l"ltet S'-"
On Aug. 27 about midnight,
som eone beat Ruben Martinez to
death in the bedroom or his
Corona del Mar home.
Today, Newport Beach police
concede they've run into a
deadend in trying to track the
41 -year -o ld r ea l estate
salesman's murderer.
The problem, according lo
Detective Sam Amburgey, is
that Martinez was a homosexual
who frequented gay bars along
the Orange Coast.
Amburgey said the gays who
knew Martinez have been reluc·
tant to cooperate in the search
for the man last seen with
Martinez. fearing exposure as
homosexuals . One man. ap-1
parenlly a close fr iend ,
told police he saw Martinez last
at the Coast Inn in Laguna
Beach. He said Martinez in·
troduced him to a young man he
called "Ted from Indiana."
It's Ted that detectives have
sought in gay bars and hangouts
from Long Beach to Oceanside,
including the two Laguna Beach
bars Martinez visited the night
he died, the Llttle Shrimp and the
C".oasl Inn.
Today, Amburgey said a com·
posite drawing of Ted. based on
the witness' description. is belng
seot to every known gathering
place for "ays in Southern
California.
H e's what's known in
ho m osexual parlance as a
chicken, a man who looks like a
boy.
Ted Is described as being in
his early twenties. or slender
build, standing about five f~.
.eight Inches tall and weighing
.about 130 pound.Ii.
He has sandy brown hair and
11 light complexion.
Am bur11ey. In pleading for
help In Identifying and loc•lina
Ted, 11ald he wanu to assure
I
SOUGHT IN MURDER CASE
Police Drewtng of 'Ted'
members of the homosexual
community that their identity
will be protected.
"We really need to find thls
guy before something like this
happens again," he said.
Martinez' body was found in
his blood s pattered bedroom
about 20 bours after he died.
Pathologist's reports inttlcate
he'd been beaten so severely
that parts or his brain we re ex-
posed.
His car wH found parked in
Laguna Beach near where he'd
been lh•l night but police
theorize the murderer drove It
there after kllllng MartJnez.
Amburgey Hid anyone with
Information about Ted from In·
dlana 11hould coot.eel him or Sgt.
Ken Tbompt;On. 844·318S.
.
l
dustrial League.
Strader also was intermediary
for contributions of $250 each
from Irvine architect Dell De
Revere and Newport Beach in·
dustrial developer John D.
O'Donnell. according to An·
thony 's financial disclosures.
Mrs . Gaido alleged that Strader
bragged back in January that he
would secure the zone change. ·'It
was very obvious he was able to
get to the right people.·· she s aid.
About the contributions. she
said. "That's 10 percent of An·
thony's campaign. I think that's a
significant thing.··
<See ZONE, Page A2>
Churches
Get OK
For Leases
Churches in Irvine will be at.
lowed to spread the gospel from
buil41ngs within the Irvine In·
dustrial Complex, by special dis·
pensation of the City Council
Tuesday.
Churches previous ly were
barred from locating within the
complex, by city zoning or·
dinances.
The council 's unanimous vote
to permit church groups to lease
industrial buildings for religioul'.
services came a week after a re·
port from local clergymen and
city officials that there is a
dearth of available religious
facilities in the city.
The action. enacted as an
urgency interim ordinance ef·
fective immediately and good
for four months, will be followed
by proposals to amend in·
dividual Irvine neighborhood
regulations. ·
Public h e arings will be
scheduled.
The interim ordinance can be
ext.ended as long as a year.
T h e object is t o allow
churc hes. by conditional use
permit. to locate within any area
of the city.
A conditional use pe rmit 1s
s ubject to review by the city
Planning Commission.
,.,. .. ,..._.
MARINA OSWALD PORTER TAKES OATH IN PROBE
Testifying About Her Life With JFK's Slayer
Summit Conferees
Eye U.S. Proposal
By 1be Associated Press
A proposal m ade by the Unit·
ed State:; at the Camp David
summit talks could lead to a
breakthrou~h in the M 1deast
conflict. the Boston Herald
American rt>ported today
The key to the proposal. ac
cordi n g to an l s ra<.'11
policymaker quoted in the
copy righted story. is a com·
promise under which "neither
side Arab or Israeli would
press its claim to exclus ive sov-
ereignty" over the ls raela-
occupied West Bank or the
Jordan.
Israel, which would be forced
to move military forces out of
population centers to clearly de·
fined garrisons under the plan,
appears ready to accept the pro-
posa I. the newspaper said.
But Israel is adamanl about
keeping its forces on the West
Bank throughout a proposed.
fi ve year transition period lead
ing to Palestinian self-rule, the
Herald American s:.11d
Zalmud Shoval. 11 Likud Party
member of Is raeli Prime
Minister Menachem Be$.{l n's rul·
ing coalition, said the success or
failure of the Camp David talks
depends on Egypt's willingness
to agree not to prl•:-.:-. Arab
tluams to sovereignty over the
We~t Bank. the story said
Other Is r aeli off1t·1:.i b re-
portedly s aid the plan could lf'ad
to a de facto frecn: on new
Israeli setUements on I he West
Bank, the Herald Am e ric an
said.
Shova l , ch airman of the
Israeli Foreign Ministry's Ad·
v1sory Comm1tlcc on lnforma·
lion. is not directly involved m
the Camp David talks. but has
kept in regular contact with
Israeli negotiators and Oew to
the United Statel'. with Begin. the
news paper said.
There wa~ no lmmediat" com·
ment by U S . Israeli or Egyp.
t1an officials on the Herald
American's story.
Me anwhile. President Carter
hus met unannounced ut Camp
Duv1d , Md . with l i.ra el 's
Menachem Began, setting off an·
<See MIDEAST. Page 1\21
Irvine Approves
Dog Shelter Pact
'High' Quest
Mushrooming
/\n agreement to use Canyon
Kennels in Laguna Beach as a
temporary Irvine city animal
s heller was approved unan·
imous l y Tues day by th e
Irvine City Council.
The facility , located on
Laguna Canyon Road and owned
by veterinarian Rose Ekeberg.
will be upgraded. by terms of
t he agreement. at Dr. Ekeberg·s
expense.
The veterinarian is to install a
new drainage system to permit
the washing down or cement dog
runs. Install a high pressure
water line a nd repair roof areas.
Police ChJef Leo Peart, who's
'Death Tape'
Slayer Jailed
RIO DE JANEIRO. Brazil
(AP> -A court here sentenced
a m an today to 18 years in
prison ror fatally lbootlng bis
wlfe and making a tape record·
Ing describtn1 bow she was suf·
rerlng and dying.
A jury found Julio de J~us.
54, 1ullty ol murd'erinf his com-
mon·law wtle, Agllle Nogueira.
23. '
I •
;'
been in charge of contract
negotiations. estimates the
facility wlll open to the public by
Nov. I.
Lease charge~ to the city arc
SI ,000 a month.
Temporarily, the city will con
tinue lo use the Laguna Beach
municipal shelter. at $3,000 a
month
/\ proposal to build a new
Irvine arumal shl'llcr within the·
city calls for construction an
about three year~.
DINING SET
BRINGS CASH
·'This money looks more
beautiful thon my dming set
ever did."
That's the advertising success
story of the Huntington Beach
man who placed this ad m the
Daily Pilot:
<:onlernpnrar~· \\ nlnul d1nin11 set, 6 chr,, :ii
lt•nve,. pads Xlnt cMd
SIOO xxx uxx
If you have furniture to sell
convert to ca h. cell 642·S618
Jwit a few words wllJ work hard
for you in the Daily Piiot
.......
AUBURN, Was h. <A P > -
Police are cracking down on
people who arc fanning out
through the Kent Valley. break·
ing down fenet·s and setting cal·
I It• loose 111 their quest for
p!>ycheoehc mushroom!>
The obJe<'l of what hu:-. become
an annual hunt is the psilocybc
var1Ny of mushroom. which pro·
duces a psychedelic s ensation
when eaten. Possession of the
mushroom 1s not illegal.
Police huve begun citing the
hunters for trespassing and caus·
m g propertydamugc.
Irvine Bike
Trail Planned
Plans for a three-mile bicycle
trull alon~ San Diego Creek in
Irvine were approved unan·
1mo us ly Tuesday by Oningc
County supervisors
Th e trail. wh1rh will run
bet ween Pett> rs Canyon Wash
a nd J c rfrey Roud . w 111 be
financed with $125,000 In county
funds and $205.000 in city ap·
proprialions.
Construction is scheduled to
begin in December. with com·
plelion of the trail planned next
June.
,
·-
\
J I
...
DAILY PllOf
Delly~ ... ~ ......
EX-HUNTINGTON CITY ATTORNEY DON BONFA
Bonfa's Happy
Ousted Aide Still Fires Stdvos
By ROBERT BARKER
Ot -o.ily ~ ... sc.ff Don P. Boofa is alive and well.
He has added a beard and lost some pounds.
He is still keeping his band in the law business but he
also is a broker for an industrial and commercial real
estate investing company.
He appears to be m ellowing five months after he was
turned out of office.
And while be said it hurt for awhile, he is delighted that he
no longer is the city attorney for Huntington Beach.
BUT BONFA DEMONSTRATED that he hasn't forgot·
ten how to fire off a s alvo or two in the direction of City
Hall, even tf in softer tones.
He said that the City Council . a frequent sparring
partner in his 10 years in office. has gone from bad to
worse and that voters cheated themselves by electing un·
qualified candidates last April.
Here's how he s1 zes up some of thec1ty 's elect~ leaders:
-JOHN TIIOMAS: "Unqualified and q,uixotic. You
don't know which way he'll Jump next. His m anners are of·
rc nsive and obnoxious."
-lllCllAllD SlEBERT: "Incompetent and lacks abili·
ty to analyze problems. He comes to incorrect conclusions
while listenmg t.o a handful of people .. ,
-808 MANDfC: "Unduly influenced by Thomas and
Siebert. Hasn't demonstrated the cour age or independence
that was hoped for.''
-RUTH BAILEY: "Unqualified and naive. Doesn't
have the background to understand complex problems."
Bonfa also offered some comments, none of which
were favorable. about his s uccessor. Gail Hutton.
"She's nol strong enough to be independent and will be
frustrated trying to please the City Council. She doesn't
have necessar y qualifi cations or exper ience and every day
proves it."
Bonfa also claims that the City Council made a major
blunder in reinstating John O'Connor who was Bonfa's
sparring mate as a deputy city attorney.
BONFA FJRED O'CONNOR after the two were in·
volved in a physical altercation last December. Each
claims that he was attacked by the other. Bonfa says that
the City Council was incapable of judging the dispute and
shouldn't have given O'Connor his job back. Bonfa also
said that he received unfair press coverage and that he
was defeated long before the election by newspaper
articles.
"THERE WAS NOTHING I could do lo win. If 1 bad it
to do over again 1 wouldn't have spent $10,000 of my own
money."
But Bonfa s ays that he really isn't bitter about
anything and refuses to dwell on what he considers to be
oast injustices.
· "I had 10 years of good experiences and there were
lots of plusscs. J learned a lot about law, politics and life."
Warner Rites Held
LOS ANGELES <AP) -About
a dozen relatives a nd close
friends attended private funeral
services Tuesday for 86-year-old
mov ie pioneer J ack Wa rner,
who died last weekend of a heart
ailment.
DAILY PILOT
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Rain Snarls
Trofficin
Los Angeles
LOS ANGELES (APl -Slip·
pery streets and minor tram.c ac·
cidents slowed rush-hour drlVers
in a light rain here today. and the
stor m caused a power failure.
The National Weather Service
predicted the rain would con-
tinue through Thursday in the
early morning a nd eve ning
hours. but with clearing during
the days.
Traffice slowed due to a rash
of ·•render benders" on the slick
pave m ent. but !lob ody w~s
seriously hurt. satd Callfom1a
Highway Patrol offi cer Ken
Schultheis.
The Los Angeles Department
of Water and Power said rain
water shorted a 4,800-volt dis·
tribution line in the Silverlake
area, leaving several hundred
customers without power for
nearly a hulf hour starting about
6:20 u.m.
20th Horse Dies
SAN DIEGO <AP) -The
23Td horse bas died at Bradley's
Bonita Valley Farm In five
weeks, apparently Uke 19 others
as the result of a my1terloua
poison.
·-.. -~
Mesa tionOK'd Shirt Gave
The Message
Reta~d HollW· Bid Wins Approval AS HEBORO. N.C. <APl
Orlando Mcintosh had
no doubt about what to do
when a gunman walked ln·
to lhe serv ice station
wher e he was working. He
fo llowed ins truc tions
printed on the gunman's
T-shirt.
By KATHY CLANCY
Ot Ille o.tty ~lleU!aM
T he Tw;tin m1t1n obviously was
proud Tue:sday when be talked
lo Orange County supervlsors
i.bout his mentally retarded son.
The fnther described his son
l.l!> u rdarde<I child grown up, a
cont ributor to society, a man
who 11upports himself as a custo·
dian, donates to bis church and
llvcto1 mdependenUy with three
other young men in a Santa Ana
condominlum.
The young man described is a
graduate of an independent liv·
ing skills program offered by
Colin Ashling and his son, Mark,
in a home ror 18 ret.arded adults
in Sa nt» Ana.
The Ashlings woo supervisors'
unanimous permission Tuesday
to relocate their facility to a
12-unit apartment complex and
three -bedroom home at 362 E.
20th St., in an unincorporated
pocket on Costa Mesa 's east
side .
Th e act ion followed t wo
months of protest that started
when the county Planning Com·
mission approved a conditional
use permit to allow up to 36 re·
larded adults in the complex.
Corona del Mar resident Dean
Stubblefield. owner of rental
prop erly near the proposed
Ashling home, appeale d the
perm it, presenting pe titions
s igned by 500 residents be said
a lso opposed the facility.
He contended the home for re·
tarded adults would increase
traffic congestion, add to an
a lready crowded neighborhood
and detract from the area's res·
idential character.
Afte r As hJing s upporter s
testiCed that the state trend is to
move the retarded from institu·
lions into home-like settings,
Stubblefield also said, "We ob·
ject to being used as a guinea
pig fo r the state authorities." .
Ashling, a Laguna Beach resi-
dent, attributed the protest to
the "narrow-mindedness of just
a few neighbors.
"1 was astounded by the reac·
lion by a few citizens and ap-
palled by the lies and rumors be·
i n g s p read b ot h b y t h e
news paper and the petitioners,"
Ashling said.
His supporters presented peti·
tions or their own from 320 area
F,.._PageAJ
MIDEAST •.•
te nsive U.S. deliberations in the
sear ch for a way to compromise
Israeli and E~yptian differences
over the future of the Palestin-
ian Arabs.
The Carter -Begin session,
which lasted nearly an hour and
a half Tuesday night, was con·
firmed today by the White House
press office more than 12 hours
later. Carter and Begin had nol
m et since Sunday.
After the meeting, Carter lefl
his p rincipal advisers , including
Secreta ry of State Cyrus R.
Vance. working past midnight.
It was understood the U.S. del·
egation is working on the pre·
cise language of a statement en·
com passing P a lestinian and
other issues.
Rising early, Carter went
back to work at 6:45 a.m .. meet·
ing with Vance, presidential as·
sistant Zbigniew Brzezinski and
Harold Sa unde rs . assist ant
secretary of state for the Middle
East.
Front Page A I
PROBE .•.•
do you know about politics'!"
The young bride then spoke
only Russian but Oswald spoke
both languages.
Oswald occasionally made re.
marks about Kennedy. she re·
called .
''Whatever he said about
President Kennedy. it was only
good , always." •
Two years later. of course,
Oswald would be identified as
the assassin who murdered Ken·
nedy in Dallas on Nov. 22, 1963.
Oswald was slain in the Dallas
police station by J ack Ruby.
His widow married a Dallas
fa c t ory fo r e man. K e nneth
Porle r , i n 1965. They were
divorced in 1974 but later re-
s umed livi ng together in Dallas.
Soon alter her marriage to
Oswald Mrs. Porter said, she
was startled at Oswald's sugges.
lion that they move to 'the United
States.
"It wasn't a very easy de-
cis ion for me to make," she
said. "What should I do? Should
1 follow him? Should l stay at
hom e? I told him wherever
he'd go, J should too."
Speaking in English with a
trace of an accent, she described
their move to Fort Worth where
Oswald's brother Robert lived.
Oswald had trouble finding work
and hi11 attitude soured, she con-
tinued.
Mn . Porter was the only wit·
ness today as the committee
turned tta attention to Oswald
and planned afternoon question·
inc covert.nc the days leadlnc to
the aaaasalnaUon.
' '
residents they H id favor the
complex.
Christine Finch, 327 21st St..
Cos ta Mesa , s aid she , her
husband and two children have
no reservations about huving the
r e t a rde d a dults i n th e ir
neighborhood.
··w e welcome the opportunity
for our children to learn that
everyone is not the same." she
said .
"There is a lady who has
learned the biggest lesson in the
w orld.•· Supe rviso r Ra lph
Diedrich re m arked, "how to
love your neighbors ' children as
your own."
Ethel Rick, a widow who lives
next door to the Ashhng proper-
ty. asked supervisors to deny the
permit.
"I think this is an institution
and I can't consider it any other
way," she said.
Ashling said tbo&e living in the
facility all have jobs and are be·
Ing taught cooking. shopping
and money management skills
leading to independent living.
He noted no more than three
to four cars would be in the
parking lot at a time, alcohol
would be prohibited and bedtime
would be 10 p.m. weekdays arid
Irvine Offers
Classes in
Dog Training
Novice dog obedience classes,
for dogs six months to seven
years, are available through a
city of Irvine recreation pro-
gram starting Sept. 20.
The 1().week sessions, with one
class group meeting Wednesday
evenings and a second group
m eeting Saturday mornings,
cover companion dog training
including basic obedience com·
mands and off-leash work.
There also is instruction in
how to break bad doggie habits
such as hole-digging, destructive]
chewing, fighting and excessive
barking.
Wednesday classes meet 6:30
p.m . to 7:30 p.m.; Saturday
classes meet 11 a.m. to noon. All
a re at Univers ity Community
Park.
Registration is being accepted
at the recreation department at
eity hall, 17200 J a mboree Blvd.
The fee is $20 for adult handlers,
$15 for youth handlers 14 and un·
der.
11 p.m. weekends.
J eun Eehurd, a member or the
local Developmental Dlsabilitie~
Planning Board, called the Ash·
Ung program "paramount" and
said her group would work to
help educate the community and
pu bl ic to a cce pt s u r h
neighborhood facilities £or the
retarded.
"It is their God·gi ven right to
live as best they can wherever
they can," she said .
Mcintosh told police the
mun carried ci. pistol and
on h is T-shirt were the
words. "Stick Em Up.''
which is just what Mein·
tosh did.
lie told police the gun-
man look $454 and Oecl.
f're•r•,,eAI
WNE CHANGE APPROVED
Anthony couldn't be reached ror
comment.
City Planning Director Eddie
Peabody had warned the council
that approval of the zone change
would mean an annual loss of
municipal revenues of $4.500 on
the Koll Company project alone.
because of differences in taxes
generated by office development
compared to research or light in-
dustry.·
Additional revenues col.fld be
lost by other. similar requests for
such zoneebanges. he argued.
More significantly. Peabody
said. the office development and
potential su~equent ones would
increase traffic beyond what the
street system can handle.
MacArthur Boulevard, for ex-
ample, already is clogged to
standstill traffic during morning
and afternoon rush hours. The ad·
ditional employees an office de·
velopment would add over a re· search or industrial project sim·
ply would aggravate the e xisting
problems, Peabody said.
But Anthony charged that
P e abody's assumptions were
based on incomplete study of the
matter. a nd maintaine d that
Girl Raped;
Suspect Held
OAKLAND <A P l A
transient has been charged with,
raping a 12-year-old girl in front
of fi ve children.
Norman Ta te. 34. was ar·
raigned on four charges.
Tate, who lived in his car fo r a
month oefore he moved into a
hotel where the aHack occurred.
allegedly entered the children's
room, hit the 12-year-old on the
head with a hammer a nd then
assaulted her.
Peabody offered no data either to
s upport or refute his allegations
W estey Mar x. an Irvine en-
vironmental wnter und former
City Planning Commissioner.
characterized the council action
as a ''land use Frankenstein."
··The council had the option of
turning down the Koll Company"
he said today. "and closing up tbe
loophole in the w ning that al·
lows headquarters offices.
"Instead, they were willlng to
play c ivil' chump and march
through the perceived loophole.
''It wa;s just another indication
of the majority of the council to
accept traffic congestion and a
spi rating traffic accident rate as a
permanent reature of community
life." Marx asserted.
'Ripper' Said
Insane, Freed
AMSTERDAM . Netherlands
(AP l A Dutch painter who
slashed a self.portrait by Vin·
cent van Gogh was acquitted to-
da y on grounds of temporary in·
sa nity and was released after
more than four months in jail.
The court based its decision on
a psychiatric rePort that said
Malhijs van Rem, 33, was oot
responsible for his actions at the
tame of the knife s lashing in
A m s t e r d a m 's V a n Gog h
Museum last April 25. The re-
port added. however . that the
painter appeared to have re·
cove red from his te mpora ry
lapse.
Van Gogh himself, a Dutch
post-impressionist painter of the
late 19th century, s uffered in-•
term ittent periods of insanity
and lucidity. He cut off one of
bis ears and he killed himself in
1890.
rFor The Executive . • •
On display now
Several large, high-quality
traditional desks, ready for delivery
TORRANCE
23M9 Hawthorne Blvd.
(2131 371·1279
COSTA MESA
1S9S Newport Blvd.
<714) 642-2050
LAGUNA IEACH
34S Nort" COUt Hwy.
(714) '9UJS1
\
7
Laguna/South Coast Afternoon
N.Y. toeks
VOL 71, NO. 256,' SECTIONS, ._. PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1978
I. I
TEN CEN
Cops Seek Gags' Aid in Coast Slaying~
By JOANNF, REVNOU~ Ot_o.ot. ...........
On Aua ?? a bout m1dn1ah1
sorn~ beat Ruhf>n M 1rt1nM to
clo th In the MdrOl'lm of hl-.
Coron• dM Mar hom~
Toda). !'ll·-port Rn <'h pohc.
ronc cd l' the) \ t.' run into u
dcudl'OO an lr)'tna lo tr;.1<'k tht>
4 t y c 11 r old r e .t 1 ,. ' t a t c
,ulcllm n :. murdl'rt'r
The 1>1'0ble m. >tt·rord1ng to
Dt'l<'<"llvt> Sam Amburt(cy. 111
th••t M artin<·i wu11 .t bomo:u:•uttl
""'ho fn.oq ut"ntf'd guy b1tri. ttlona
th<' Orsn.ie CoaHt
Amburgey u id lhf' ~uyi. who
knl'v. Murt1nc1 h;avr been n•luc
t llnl to •"OOf)(•rult• in thl• ~wurch
for tht• rnttn lu t -.u..:n wi th
Martinet. feunn~ l'lll>():.urc tti:.
twmo:-t•'(ual!'I Ont> me1n . ap •
JHHe n t l y ti dub c (rl e n d ,
told oollce he saw Ma rtinez ha:,l
a t the Coa:s t Inn in Laguna
Belich. lie :taid Murtlnez in·
troduced him to u young man he
called .. Ted from Indiana ··
It's Ted that detectives have
bOU6'ht an gay bars und hangouti.
from Long Reach to 'Oceanside.
Including the two Laguna Beach
bars Martint'z visited the night
ht> died. the Li ttle Shnmp and the
f'oa:4l Inn.
Today. Amburgey said a com·
poslle drawing or Ted. based on
the witness' description, iis being
sent to every known gathering
plac e for ga ys 1n Southern
California.
H e's what's kn o wn 1n
h om osexual p a rlance as a
chicken, a man who looks like a
boy.
Ted is described as being in
his e arly twenties, of slender
build. standing about five feet.
e ight inches tall and weighing
about 130 pounds .
He has sandy brown hair und a li ght complexion.
Amburgey. in pleading for
help in identifying and locating
Ted. said he wants to assure
m e mbers of the homosexu al
community that their identity
Will be p~ted
"We really need to find this
guy before something like this
Meeting Erupts
Mmhett Criticism Heated
San Clemente Mayor Will.iwn
Walker requested the presence
of a pohce officer to keep order
midway through Tuesd ay's City
Council meeting, following a
heated exchange between Coun·
c1lman Howard Mushett and a
member o( the audience.
After pounding his gavel with
Limited success. Walker called a
five·minute recess as Mushett
a s ked r epeatedly to have
testimony by Charles Brent,
ruled out of order. Brent is
chairman of a City Council·
appointed citizens' committee
on reclaimed water use .
Brent had asked to respond to
Minor Injuries
Mushett's criticism al a n eurlier
City Council meeting of a flier
prepared by his committee. sup·
porting the city's $4.2 million
s ewer bond election in No·
vember
When councilme n r eturned
from the brief recess. the mayor
said he had as ked Police Chief
Gary Brown to station an officer
in the front row lo keep order.
Both Brown and uniformed
police officer Marvin Mason re·
mained seated in the front row
until the meeting adjourned two
hours later at 1 a.m.
Today Mushett called the sla·
tionin~ of a uniformed police of·
Cars Strike Horses
In Laguna Canyon
Two motorists. heading out
• Laguna Canyon Road early th.is
morning, struck horses crossing
the busy arterial.
But neither the motorists nor
the horses were badly hurt in the
1 :30 a .m. mishap near the iunc·
tion of El Toro and Laguna
Canyon Roads.
Police said Frankie Lee Haf·
ferkemp. 40, of Santa Ana, was
admitted to Saddleback Com·
munity Hospital for injuries to
his mouth. arms and hands after
his car collided with a horse
crossing the roadway.
Seconds late r , the ve hicle
driven by Howard Wesley
Heaberling, 40. of 23832 Palmek
Circle, El Toro, struck another
horse wandering loose in the
road.
Operators of the Lazy Creek
Saddle Club, located adjacent to
the canyon road, said a gate was
not properly shut late Tuesday.
allowing at least four horses to
wander out into the traffic lanes.
Only one horse, owned by Sal·
ly Leslie. 20491 Sun Valley,
Laguna Beach was inj ured.
Hafferkemp was treated and
re leased by hospital officials
following the early morning inci·
dent.
\ Ranch Plan Passes
First Clemente Test
Plans by Estrella Properties
Ltd. to build 450 homes on 293
acres of San Clemente 's Forster
Ranch were approved Tuesday
by the City Council. s ubject to 29
conditions.
Councilmen voted 4· l to ap·
prove the project's firs t ten·
tative tract map. Councilwoman
Myrtis Wagner voted against ap-
prov a I. saY>ng she objected to
the tract's density.
The City Council also voted
Tuesday to allow a variance to
the city's hillside grading or·
dinance, which will enable
Estrella Properties lo build on
certain slopes exceeding 30 per.
cent grade.
The council vote on the grad·
ing variance was 3·2, with Mrs.
Wagn e r and Councilman
Howard Mushett opposed.
The tract, which is the first of
several included on an Estrella
Properties master plan for 1,770
acres of the Forster Ranch. lies
inland of the San Diego Freeway
along an extension or Camino de
los Mares.
The tract map approved by
DINING SET
BRINGS CASll
·'This money looks more
beautiful than my dining set
ever did."
That's the advertising success
story or the Huntington Beach
man who placed this ad in the
Daily Pilot:
Contemporary walnut
dining set, 6 chrs. 2
leaves. pads. Xlnt cond.
S 100, XXlMl.X XX
If you have furniture to sell
convert to caah, call . 642·5678.
Just a rew words will work hard
ror you in the Daily Pilot.
the City Council shows 352 single
family homes. 98 condominiums,
a junior high school, an elemen·
tary school , a park and a
neighborhood shopping center.
Conditions imposed by the Ci·
ly Council include a provision
for "affordable" housing. The
provis ion was introduced last
week, when the City Council in·
eluded It in a list of conditions on
the Marble Head development
proposed on the neighboring
Reeves Ranch by John D. Lusk
and Son developers.
The orovision allows the de·
(See RANCH, Page AZ)
Teens Badly
Injured in
Auto Crash
A San Juan Capistrano teen·
ager was reported in critical COO•
dillon in the intensive care unit at
San Clemente General Hospital
after she was injured when the car
s he was driving ran head-on into a
tree in downtown San Clemente.
A passenger in the car. a San
Clemente teen-ager. wu in
g uarded condition today. a
hospital spokesman said.
The driver, Maria Ceja, 1~. of
Rancho Cerrito In San Juan
Capistrano. underwent major
abdominal s urgery Tuesday.
following the accident al the in·
tersectlon of Avenida Miramar
and North Ola Vista.
Her passenger, Socorro
Espana, 19, or 136 Ave. Floren·
cla, Apt. 3, in San Clemente. re·
quired surgery on a fractured
ankle.
Police said Miss Ceja 's car
went out of control when she
swerved to avoid a car driven by
Johanna GirouarcJ, 51 , of San
Clemente.
fi cer in the council chambers "a
disgrace to the City Council and
especially to the mayor." He
said Walker's action refleded
poorly on his "capability and
competence to chair City Coun·
cil m eetings."
Walker said today he based
his action on the California gov·
ernment code, which s pecifies
how city mayors are to conduct
City Council meetings.
"It is important to recognize
the authority of the chair <Ule
mayor conducting the meet·
ing >." he said. "It got to the
point Tuesday night that it didn't
<See ORDER, Page AZ)
Auto Sales
Autlwrized
For Laguna 'There, 1 Think'
A new policy adopted by the
Laguna Beach City Council wiU
see the city in lhe used car ~i·
ness for a few weeks in No·
vember.
The council voted to sell off
vehicles that are taken home
each night by several depart·
ment heads and other city of·
ficials .
Des pite being a freshman. Lucy Dorris today wa!> able
to help Haakon lrverson with the geography of Laguna
Beach Hi gh School campus. It was a whole new scene
for Haakon. a foreign exchange student from Norway.
The two were part of th~ small school district's more
than 2.900 students taking pa rt in back·to-school rites
this week.
Arfecled by the new policy are
Police Chief Jon Sparks, Police
Ca pt. Neil Purcell, Recreation
and Human Services Director
George Fowler and Municipal
Services Director Terry Brandt.
Village Party Cut,
But Will Be Held
The council also voted to sell
four pool cars used by oUler citv
officialsd~g tbeday.
Only the fire chief and the
director of marine safety will be
allowed to keep their vehicles on
a permanent basis. The council
decided those employees need
their vehicles at hand in case of
evening or weekend emergen·
cies.
Clyde Sweetser. supe rinten·
dent of public works. will retain
the use of a vehicle, and there
will be one pool car made
available for the various plan·
ning and building departments.
The city must still meet with
several of the employees on the
vehicle use policy because of
contract agreements. but most
department heads will receive a
flat rate monthly mileage fee
beginning Nov. 1.
The council also a pproved an
appropriation of $4,800 to permit
the fixed monthly allowance for
management personnel.
City Manager Fred Solomon
said the. policy was drafted to
cul back on costs of excess
vehicles and to eliminate un·
necessary use or city cars .
L aguna Beac h 's a nnual
Village Party. a 11me when local
residents celebrate the end of
lhe tourist season, is on for th•:.
Saturday, albeit on a limited
basis.
This year's party was a victim
of budget constraints under
Proposition 12, which will mean
an end to the annual bonfire and
overnight campin~.
The city did not budget funds
for police and fire protection for
this year's party. which will run
from 8:45 a.m. to 4 :30 p m
Nevertheless . this year's par
ty wi 11 feature voll eyball and
basketball tournaments. a one
mile beach run. sand sculpture
contests and family games
Deadline for signups for three·
man basketball tourna ment:.
a nd the doubles volleyba ll
tourneys is Thursday at 6 p.m.
The fee is $4 per team for
volleyball and $8 per team for
bas ketball. Entry forms are
available at the recreation de·
partment.
There is no charge for the
beach run. which begins at 10:30
a .m . Runners may sign up at the
north end of the Main Beach
Double Oops
Reaga"' Ford Goof
DALLAS CAPl --Former President Ford is at it
again. And he had some help from former California
Gov. Ronald Reagan ..
The two big-name Republicans were in Texas on
Tuesday to campaign for state candidates. and each
had a blooper to contribute.
Ford told the GOP luminaries at a breakfast
that he and Reagan were in Houston to help Texan
Bill Clements get elected "governor of the great
s tate of Callfornia."
Later. Reagan chipped in his blooper in Dallas.
when he was asked how he thought the Texas cam·
paign was shaping up.
"So far the crowds have been enthusiastic. and I
think it looks great for Hill," said the former screen
star.
Tex.as Attorney General John Hill is Clements'
Democratic opponent.
'.
from 9: 15 to 9·45 a.m. Compel•·
tion will be in eight age groups.
The s and sculpture contes t
beJ?ans at 11 :30 a .m. and is open
to a ll ages. Family games begin
al 2 p m. with sack races. three·
legged and wheelbarrow races.
balloon tosses. p1e·eating con·
tests and others .
Laguna Beach Kiwanis and
Boys Club members will operate
hot dog and soft drink booths
during the day
Se veral local service groups
are helping finance this year·s
party They include the Laguna
Beach Exchange Club . the
Kiwanis Club. Laguna J aycees
and Rotary Club
Homeowners
Lose Fight
Over Steps
P lans to rebuild the Thousand
3teps beach stairwav in South L a~un a w ere a ppro ved
unanimously Tuesday by Orange
County supt!rvisors despite ef·.
forts of homeowners to block tile
repa irs .
Supervisors agreed lo spend
S5t .500 for a ne w concrete
stairway and public beach ac·
cess sign and set Oct. 23 as the
date to open construction bids.
The South Laf{una Coves As·
sociation has filed a n Orange
County Superior Court lawsuit to
block repairs and enforce what
homeowners claim are their
rights to the steps across from
Ninth Street.
The association also has ap.
pealed to the state Coastal Com·
mission to block the county's re·
pair proJccl.
The county in 1974 and 1975 ob·
tained 140 easements to the
steps from homeowners County
o ffi cia l s h ave warn e d
super visors the county could be
liable for accidents unless the
rickety steps are repaired
More Coverage
Other south Orangt County
cove ru~e ~ppears toda y on
Page AIO.
. ..
. . . . . .
Mppens again." he said~ .
Martinez· body was found in
his blood s patte red bedroom
about 20 hours after he died
P athologist ·s reports ind1cau:
he'd been beaten so severely
that parts of his brain were ex
posed .
ltis car was found pa rked in
Laguna Beach near where he·d
been that night but police
<See SUSPECT, Page A2>
Slayer's
Widow
Testifies
WASHINGTON I AP I
Marina Oswald Porter described
for Congress today how she hap·
pcned to marry a man she hard·
ly kne w. a m a n who would
become known as the assassin o(
a pres ident.
Testifying w1lh composure
before the House assassinations
committee. Mrs. Porter recalled
her whirlwind courtship with
Lee Harvey Oswald when she
was a girl of 19 in her native
Russia .
She said she knew little about
him except that he was an
American and that s he liked
him.
She was asked whether it
wasn't a bit hasty to plunge into
marriage after only six weeks of
d ating .
.. Not when you're the age that
I was." she replied.
Recalling their life in Minsk.
O s wald's wido w s aid he r
husband was generally good·
natured, losing his temper only
about as much as most husbands
do. was somewhat dissatisfied
with his work at a radio factory.
became best friends with a _
Russian factory worker who was
studying English. and rarely dis·
cussed politics with he r.
They were married in April.
1961. only a few months after
John F. Kennedy was inaugural·
ed as preside nt. With a short·
wave radio. they heard some of
Kennedy·s speeches in English.
she said.
... would ask Lee what is he
saying? What is he saying?" she
related "He told me to hush up
and not interrupt. Hi:. <tllitude
was you bem~ a woman. what
do you know about politics?"
The young bride then spokt'
only Russian but Oswald spok<:
both languages
Oswald occas ionally made re·
marks about Kennedy. she re·
<See PROBE. Page 1\2>
'High' Quest
Mushrooming
AU BURN, Was h <AP t
Police are cracking down on
people who a re fanning out
through the Kent Valley. break·
ing down fences and setting cat·
tie loose in their quest for
psycheoeltc mushrooms.
The obJect of what has become
a n annual hunt is the psilocybe
variety of mushroom, which pro·
duces a psychedelic sensation
when eaten. Possession of the
mus hroom is not illegal.
Police have begun citing the
hunters for trespassing and ca us·
ing property da mage.
Coa~f
Weath er
L o w cloud iness a nd
local drizz le n igh• and
morning hours becoming
pa rtly s unny along the
coast Thursday afternoon.
Lows tonight 62 to 66.
Highs from 68 lo 72 al
beaches to 77 to 80 inland
' I NSIDE TODA~
At c so/e distance. Like at a
St!a World exh1b1t . 'harks
have been a big attroc11on.
See Page Al:?
,.
-~--
A.f PAIL y Pt LOT vsc
D.ity~S.... ....
WESTMINSTER'S WILLY THE WHALE HAS NOTHING TO SMILE ABOUT TODAY
Coundl. Fearing fof City'• 'Image,' Putl• O.•ter'1 Balloon Down
Willy Whale Beaehed
..
Westminster Council Tosses 3-2 Harpoon
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of "'9 D•lty PlleC $$aft
The Westmins ter City Council. sitting as cilwoman Joy Neugebauer and ~uncil~an
a municipal Captain Ahab, harpooned Willy Conner Collacott, the city's retired police
the Whale Tuesday night banning the Sunset chief. voted Willy down.
Ford dealership emblem from the sky over And. on the same night the council or-
the city. dered the Rot)ert Macintosh family to get rid
About 40 people turned out to witness the or some of their 12 chickens and six dogs.
decision over whether the 29-foot-long silver Willy The Whale's doom was sealed.
balloon could take to the ski~ agam. said C1· ty Clerk Kay Harper. "WE WERE TERRIBLY disappointed.
"T H E RE WA S QUITE a lot of ap·
plause." she said of the outburst when the
council shot Willy down on a 3 to 2 vote.
We didn't expeet it and we can't see what
harm it can do anyone up there 90 feet in the
air ... said Sunset Ford Sales Manager Jim
Hanson.
Last year, about l,200 citizens signed a
-petition calling for reeling in Willy the Whale
trom his 90-foot cniising altitude above the
dealership at the connuence or the San Diego
and Garden Grove freeways
He added that owner Bob Heusser may
appeal the decision.
"It's like telling ol' Cal Worthington he
can't have his dog Spot , or telling Coca-Cola
to s top calling it Coke." Hanson declared.
They felt the grinning little blimp
em blazoned with the firm's name gave the
town a silly image.
"THE GROUNDING of the balloon has
seriously hurt us. We sold 14 less cars last
month and I had to spend $8,000 more in ad·
vertis ing just to compensate." COUNCILMEN ELDEN Gillespie and
F rank Fry voted for free enterprise and the
nght to advertise TuesQay mght, but were in
the minority.
Willy the Whale fi rst went aloft about
four years ago when trees along the freeway
grew so tall they obscured Sunset Ford's 70·
foot .idvertising sign. Mayor Pro Tern William French. Coun·
New Budget
Weighed in
Capistrano
San Juan Capistrano coun·
cilmen will mull 1978-79 proJ~l·
ed expenses or $2.S million at
the ir firs t budget hearing
tonight.
City offi cials have prOJe<:ted a
loi.s of $450.000 to $850,000 m tax
revenues because of Proposition
13 City manager James Mocalis
said he has determined that San
Juan is not eligible for state aid.
The city manager added that
he doesn·t anticipate any major
c utbacks or employee layoffs
because the city has been "fis.
cally responsibl4:."
Tonight's m eeti n g i s
scheduled for 7 o'clock at city
hall.
Vandals Ravage
Ranch Equipment
Ma licious mischief, which did
an estimated $5,000 damage to
construction vehicles, and the
theft of barbed wire and other
fencing equipment valued at
$958 have been reported on San
Clemente's Reeves Ranch.
Police said ranch employees
who reported the loss on Tues·
day indicated the theft and
damage occurred about two
weeks ago.
ORANGE COAST l ~
DAILY PILOT
Tnt-Orlnoe' (N\t D.llly Piiot wfthwfw<h t\t ~ otMCI"""~~ Ptfl\ 1\out»tt~bvtMOr1ft(JI' CIMt\t Pvt>h,,,,11'\Q(OtnOftn• ~•tf'"°ll~•'" ~lt~O Moftd•'t tf\rouofit fr-Idly •~ Coi.t•
Alflifw ,...w'DO"'I 8-VP'I Hlif"lflnqlOn 8-4'C'ft J-°"' t•ln VaOey, lr•tine S.•OdlPbM:l V•llef •!'liCI ~ =~i~e-~'.~ ="S::.~';:. \:~o.~=11...~1·.:~~~ D> Wiit 8•¥
11.-nN.-PtntOtftt •f-.d ~•S"tr
J .. -. '"""" Y10 ... Hldtftl_c;._.,~
t
f'Jtem•' KH YH EClllOr
n::..:.~M=-CMn..N. I.Mt _,,_ ........... ,.. ............ ...
a.a-ne .. ltd! Office --ni6 G-•--~IWI <N~1119 ,._,.., fl 0 ........ 91M1
OfflC:H CO.I• Mow no W.\l e .. r.i,,.... ~""hf'Ol"" 11 .. <~ 11111-MIO<•lr•ord ~l.111<10 V•l .. y 2»011..,0 P.at 11-•I S-Oi-,,_,.
TelepltoM (714)&G4321
Clelllfted ActHftlllng IGM1t
I.~• .. Hh All O.,,.nnw"": T..._.._,,....._
,.,_...,,~ , .....
Copter Crash
2 ·M.arine Victims
From Santa Ana
Two of the five Marines killed
Mon day in a fiery helicopter
crash near Twentynine Palms
were from the Marine Corps Air
Station !h(>hcopter) in Tustin
and were Santa Ana residents,
officials said this morning.
All the large twin-rotor craft's
occupants were killed on i m-
pact , offi cials said. The two men
from Santa Ana were co·pilot
and 1st Lt. J.E . Keough Jr. 28.
formerly or Holyoke, Mass., and
Lance Cpl. M.D. Singleton, 22.
formerly of Hebron, Ind. They
belonged to helicopter squadron
HMM-163.
Dead also are pilot and Capt.
D.A. Eckel, 29. and Sgt. W.A.
Nay. age unavailable. Both men
we re stationed in Hawaii and
were with helicopter squadron
HMM -262. officials said.
The fifth Marin e is still un·
identified because his parents
haven't y('l been located.
officials said. He was not sta-
f'ro•Page A I
PROBE •••
called.
•'Whatever he said about
President Kennedy. it was only
good, always."
Two years later, of course.
Oswald would be identified as
the assassin who murdered Ken-
nedy in Dallas on Nov. 22, 1963.
Oswald was slain in the Dallas
police station by Jack Ruby.
His widow married a Dallas
facto r y fore m an. Kenneth
Porter, in 1965. They were
divorced in 1974 but later re-
sumed living together in Dallas.
Soon after her marriage to
Oswald, Mrs. Porter said, she
was startled at Oswald's sugges-
tion that they move to the United
States.
"It wasn't a very easy de·
cision for me to make." s he
said. "What should I do? Should
I follow him? Should t stay at
home? I told him wherever
he'd go, I should too."
Speaking in English with a
trace of an accent. she described
their move to Fort Wort'h where
Oswald's brother Robert lived.
Oswald had trouble finding work
and his attitude soured, she COD·
tlnued.
Mrs. Porter was the only wit-
ness today aa the committee
turned lt.s attention to Oswald
and planned a!temoon question·
ing covering the days leading to
the assussinat1on
tioned locally.
The craft went down about 20
m i Jes south of Twentynine
Palms in the Pinto Basin area of
J oshua Tree National Monu
ment.
Officials said-the he licopter
had just refueled and the men
were heading back to Yuma.
Ariz. where they were taking
part in a large training opera·
ti on.
The 20-seat. transport craft
was at an altitude or about 4,500
feet just before it plummeted to
the g round and burned, a
spokesman said.
The cause of the crash is still
under investigation, he said.
Pier Revamp
Due in Fall
At Clemente
Seven pilings on the San
Clem e nte municipal pie r .
destroyed by rough seas during
recent storms, will be included
in a $436,700 pier revamping
project, scheduled to start this
fall. In the meantime, the loss of
the pilings has prompted the city
to close the SO-year.old wood
pier to heavy traffic. including
emergency vehicles.
Stephen Burrell. assistant to
the city manager, said the pier
renovation is expected to go to
bid following the Sept. 20 City
Council meeting. •
Of the $436,700 estimated for
the project. 2S percent will be
paid by the city and 75 by the
state, using state and federal
grant funds. said BuM"ell.
Resurfacing of the pier and
replacement or 45 pilings are in·
eluded in renovation plans, he
said.
The pier was donated to the ci-
ty by San Clemente founder Ole
Hanson in the late 1920's. It has
been reconstructed several
times since then.
RANCH ..•
velopers additional housing
units over the number allowed by
city zoning, on condition that the
ext ra homes are sold for SO per-
cent or less oft.he city's average
resale price for comparable hous·
mg.
Problems
Minor at
Project
Work on the 3.S-mile sewer
llne that will coMect Laguna
Beach lines with a treatment
plant in Aliso Can yon Is under
way. with only minor problems
experienced s ince work began
Monday.
The traffic Ught at Diamond
Street was knocked out by con·
struction late Tuesd ay arter·
noon, backing up traffic on that
street until police could activate
a flashing red light at the in·
tersectioo with Coast Highway.
And a number or parking cita·
lions have b een iss ued to
motorists who insist on parking
at the curbs ide on Coast
Hi ghway near Bluebird Canyon
Drive-<iespite signs that warn
of no parking.
The parking lanes are being
used for tra ffi c on Coast
Highway while the sewer line is
laid down the middle of the
highway.
The fi rst phase of the con·
struction is from Bluebird Can-
yon Drive to Moss Street . run·
ning along Coast Highway. That
line is expected to be completed
by mid-October. with work
crews from Vido Artukovich and
Son or El Monte expected to
begin right in with the second
phase, from Moss Street to the
Victoria Drive underpass.
That section is expected to be
finished by the e nd of No-
vember.
The entire project is expected
to take about nine months. and
will mean further disruption of
traffic along Catalina. Glenn-
eyre and Coast Highway. ac-
cording to officials at the Aliso
Wat.er Management Agency.
The pipeline will follow Third
Street in Laguna Beach from
Forest Avenue to Legion Street.
From there it will jog toward the
ocean and follow Catalina as far
as St. Ann's Drive. It wi ll then
connect with Glenneyre Street
proceeding south to Bluebird Can-
yon Drive where the current work
is under way.
The Bluebird connection places
the pip e lin e u n d er
Coast Highway where it will
continue until it reaches Aliso
Creek at the treatment plant.
A pump station is being con-
structed near Bluebird Canyon
Drive in addition to the pipeline
operations. and another pump
station will be cons tructed near
Laguna Canyon Road and
Forest Avenue.
SOUGHT IN MURDER CASE
Police Dra wl"il of 'Ted'
,,,.... Page AJ
SUSPECT ...
theorize the murderer drove it
there aft.er killing Martinez.
Amburgey said anyone with
information about Ted from In·
diana should contact him or Sgt.
Ken Thompson. 644·3785.
,.,..,. rage A I
ORDER •••
matt.er what the mayor said or
what the city attomey said. At
that point I called a five-minute
recess so everyone could regain
his composure ...
Walker said he had given two
warnings before requesting a
police officer. He s aid he had
first told Mushett his interrup·
lions of Brent 's comments were
out or order and must stop.
The r ecess constituted a
second warning, the m ayor said.
·'There is no third warning,"
he said. "The next step would
have been to have the individual
ejected Crom the meeting."
Walker said his series of ac·
lions Tuesday will be "standard
procedure" at future City Coun-
cil meetings.
"It worked.'. he said. "We got
order. Thank the Lord we never
got to the point Tuesday night of
having to ask anyone to leave,
but we were close."
Mushett said he objected to
Bre nt 's claim that be<.'ause
Mus hett and Councilwoman
Myrtis Wagner do not live in the
San Clemente sewer district
they do not care about city
sewer rates. Both Mus hett and
Wagner have questioned aspects
of the November sewer bond
measure.
For The Executive . • •
On display now
Railroad
To Fight
Vandals
Task forces of railroad agents
are scheduled to mov_, into
southern Orange County next
month in a drive to curb damage
and injuries caused by rock
throwers und Individuals who
place barriers on Santa Fe
tracks.
The project was conformed
this morning by Jim Seter, San·
ta Fe's di vision special agent
stationed in San Bernardino.
S pecifically targeted, Seter
said. is the San Clemente area
a nd. possibly. the El Tor o-
M ission Viejo vicinll)t where
r ailroad agents and county
sheriff's deputies have reported
increased activity along Santa
Fe's trackage.
Santa Fe trains run parallel to
the ocean at San Clemente
where rock throwers have creat-
ed problems often in the past.
police report. The tracks curve
inla nd at Capistrano Beach,
paralleling Interstate s and en-
tering a lengthy cut near La Paz
Road in Mission Viejo.
A county s heriff's depa rtment
spokesman said this morning
that policing the railroad cut
between La Paz Road and Lake
Forest Drive has become in-
creasingly difficult.
Rock throwing and placing ob·
jects on the tracks always have
been problems. he said, but the
incidents have been increasing.
"Most of the problem." he
said. ··occurs at about the time
school lets out --between three
and four in the afternoon."
Diesel engine windshields
have been broken, he said. and
the trains have been peppered
with rocks .
The spokesman noted that
placing objects on tracks or
throwing them at railroad trains
are felony offenses.
"Walking on tracks is a
trespass misdemeanor." he
added. "Most parents don't re-
a lize that.··
He said school children ''have
been playing chicken standing
on railroad tracks and jumpin g
orr at the last minute ...
The she riff's officer said
railroad agents are police of-_
ficers under the law and that the
south county sheriffs substation
has been ordered to cooperate
with them fully.
Several large, high-quality
traditional desks, ready for delivery
TORRANCE
23649 H•~thorne Blvd,
(213) 378-1279
COSTA MESA
1595 Newport Blvd.
(71,, ~2-2050
LAGUNA BEACH
34.S North eo.st Hwv.
(714) 4f.WS51 ·
CALIFORNIA Wedneeday. September 13. 1978 DAILY PILOT A 5
Busing: Kids Not
LOS ANGELES IAP I For
lhc parl'nts, U:uC'ht•rs and school
lldm1m11tratOl"'li or Los An((el~.
Tut" dny wa. Uh· fir\l d•y of
forr ed bu-.t-tnit 111 tht• nw-.1
:.vrc11d-out dhlrll'l 1n lhl• <'uun tr)
But for 1110 t or lht: chlldrt>n
who boardf'd the Oct't or ycllo"
bu es. It Wah J~t the r1r:.l d3y or
a.chool
"Wetll , yeah. today r got up ut
uh ~ ha\('n•r tame lhc cloc. k
Wt'nt off," said 9 ytu old Ad11m
Lll'bt-r. one or 16 r hildren v.ho
rode bl.&.') No 3162 from iouburban
Gnnada ftll l In lhl' pr,•
dominantly 'Wtlite San Jo"emand<'I
Valley to t1t1cber Dnve SdMX1l
10 Gl1t~ll 1'1&rk
t.u ;1n:R n11r LL v d e<'1dt><1
ht' prob11bly r\)c.t.• about 6 11 m .
ncarlv tv.o houn carhrr than
l..i-.t '1'.er "ht·n ht.' "alkt'd l>wo
bloc·k:. to liulboo Uoukvurd
School
·But 1 was aoang to get up
anyw ay to i;:o tn l'l<'hOOI ," he con
duckd
f"1ft) four l0h1lcln•n wca c ~up
po1H•d t.o ht•Vl' rith.lcn the 78 soat
bus L1tJber WIL'i on Tht• few whu
did :.ccmt..'d unt'Onccrncd about
their eollt.·ut;uc~· <1bM•ncc und
about lhc two hour onf wuy rh.lc
·'This lb neut Reall y roomy.
huh"" !'>aid t.orl llundcll as :.ht.•
bounded into the bu.<ii
"I UK•~ BUSES," uld Mane
Lt-Fevt>r. 8, "bt.><'fiu:ic 1r you
don't have.· buM•!>, tht'n you hav~
to "alk ·
"I "t:nt to t.'Bmr> t·vcryday th1:,
'lummcr on J bu:. and 1l wa::. ;1
lot longc.•r way, neurly out or the
<'It)," wa!". N:1k Robin·~ com
ment
· 1 d1dn 't wanna comt: ut
first 'cau~t> I daon 't know what 1t
was all about. see? Hut my mom
told me wh11t's happening.''
Tiit: l'KOSPECT of their new.
lr1tegrutcd s chool didn't fazl'
them .
··vcah. it'll probablr be a
l(OOd srhool." sata Eric
John::.ton. 11 blonde. freckled 8·
year -old "It's good that we're
gonna be mixed . you know:'
Ucca use last year I met a
Chinese boy, and we made
frit•nds. so •• "
· · Hesides. al Fletcher. we get
to go lo classes upstairs." said
un excited Dawn Kovner. 9.
"I WANT TO BE on vacation
one week more." groaned Adam
t-'rledman. 8
/\nd so 1t went. While the
pa rents who shepherded their
children onto the bus looked anx·
zed
• ious and worned. the youngsters
thembelves appeared only
curious and Interested and a
bit regretful that summer wab
over
When the bus finally got to
Fletcher, the driver inadvertent·
ly parked on the wrong side or
the school -out of sight of lhe
waiting re<:eption committe\.,
THE 11 CHILDREN banded In
a small circ le for several
minutes until lhe school prin·
cipal. teachers and aides came
trotting towards them. all smiles
and fuss.
One small blond boy clutching
a "Star Wars .. notebook and
lunch box finally cut orr the
apologies gracious ly.
"Aw. th at 's O K ... h e
mumbled "We didn't m ind." .,,._,...,.._
Storm Tab
Enormn~
In State
LISA HIGHTOWER GREETS BUSED STUDENT
lnbal Brozkl, left, From Woodland Hiiis
'Value lneredilJle'
SAC RAMENTO IAP I The
Cah fom1a Farm liur~au says
last week's storm in the San Joa-
quin Valley was one of the worst
in h istory and will cost at le ast
$183 million
Hollywood Sign
Letters for Sale
The bureau sa id t oday
that another million dollars
worth of crops were lost in the
Southern Sacramento Valley
llOLLYWOOl.J IAP> -People who missed a chance to pay $27.000
for a letter in the new Hollywood sign, take heart. The old ones are
still up for grabs.
The dilapidated letters --some 8,000 square feet of sheet metal
chopped up and carted orr from their Mt. Lee perch overlooking
Hollywood along with their
A s pokesman for the bureau,
Clark Biggs, said the damage
may be topped in California only
by the Feather and Eel river
floods of 1955-56.
wooden support poles a nd other and $10.000 up front and a
assorted hardware -are cur· percentage of retail."
r e ntly sitting quietly in a
"WE RAVE SURVEYED all
the affected counties and used
the tow side of all estimates."
said Biggs.
"If we had used the high side.
and it may yet tum out that
way, our estimates would have
been many millions higher."
He said Fresno County, where
raisins had just been put out for
drying, was the biggest loser at
$113 million, inc luding $83
mituon worth of rais ins and 40
percent of the fig crop valued at
$7 million
~
BirekBome
A flag-draped coffin is carried past a
Travis Air Force Base honor guard Tues-
day as 11 more of· America's dead from
the Vietnam war ca me home . The
military fliers' remains were turned over
to a United States congressional delega·
lion last month in Hanoi. and for the past
two weeks have been in Hawaii for form al
identification.
billboard company warehouse.
But the Hollywood Chamber of
Commerce has already received
several offers of purchase -
nothing to write home about, but
enough to whet the appetite of
chamber president Mike Sims.
"AFTER THE CBS television
special honoring Hollywood'"
Diamond Jubilee in Novembe1
the value of that sign is going to
be in credible." he predicted.
The new sign will be unveiled
during the two-hour s how.
"We have probably a dozen to
20 bids in writing," Sims said
Tuesday. "Of these only three or
four are serious offers.
"Nobody has made a substan·
ti al enough offer yet. We've been
offered everything from S2 per
square foot up to between SS.000
AFTER GRAPES, the largest
mooetary loss was suffered by
growe rs of alfalfa seed in
Fresno, Kings, Kem and Tulare
counties. Biggs put that loss al
SlS mill ion.
Other counties with large
losses were Tulare $24 m1lbon,
Kern S23 m1lhon and Madera $18
million.
Firm Fined in Safety Violntion
But Biggs said the estimates
could change if some farmers
get higher prices for the re.
mainder of their crops.
LOS ANGELES CAP) -A disabled another.
"Some people will be lucky.
Long Beach construction com-Los Angeles Municipal Judge ( J 2 Operators So .... t p~ny _has been fined $12,500 for Edward L. Davenport imposed err -'Tr'
v1olatang state industrial safety the fine Tuesday a.fter convict· J .l./1..1. e,, PALO ALTO <AP> -Police
laws and trying to conceal the ing the firm , R.M. P. Marine _ _ were searching today for two
They will be able to sell their
croo at a hjgher price."
infraction which allegedly re-Services, Inc., in the Sept. 13. Pa Io A Ito nu r s ing h 0 m e
suited in an accident that killed 1977 tncident. begin destroying 20 more "daisy oper ators accused of walking
one worker and permanently The judge found that the com· cutter " bombs of the type that out on seven elderly tenants.
pany had illegally used com· went off unexpectedly at the Ted an_d Grace Allen said lhey
Patrol Gone
Oceanside Void of MPs
OCEANSIDE <AP) -The Marines have pulled their MPs off
the st reets of Oceanside for the first time since World War II, but
it 's "more inconvenience now than trouble," a city policeman
says.
The action was announced Tuesday at neighboring Camp
Pendleton where the provost marshal said U.S. Supreme Court de·
c1s ions Jen the MPs legally liable i! anyone arrested off base could
prove civil rights violations.
OCEANSIDE POLICE SGT. ROBE RT Krause said the city is
weighing the impact of the move, but the problem may be greater
for "t he young Marine who gets into trouble in Oceanside" than for
police.
"Before, we picked up a lot of Marines that we did not have to
book, be-cause their MPs were close by to take them in tow and
back to Camp Pendleton," he said . "Now, we may be taking more
of them to be booked into city jail."
I N RECENT MONTHS. A IS.MAN MP patrol bas been as·
signed to Oceanside. A study blamed Marines for 4-0 percent of
downtown crime.
Chief of Police Rolf Henze bemoaned the loss of the Marine
patrol, but said, ··rr they have some limitation placed on them. by
court decisions, that bas to be acceptable to me whether I like it or
not.''
Military spokesmen said town patrols by Air Force, Army.
Marine and other Navy units have been disappearing nationwide.
pressed oxygen in a pneumatic Sie rra Army Depot in August. were gorng shopping over lhe
nail gun which exploded, killing officials report. w eekend but instead disap.
Ronald Ray Clarke. 39. of Ox-The 15,000-pound bombs are to peared with thousands or dollars
nard. The gun operator, Rixon be detonated one at a time in advance room and board pay.
Gregory Pry, 'n, of Oxnard. sul· beginning Saturday. ments
fered permanent damage to his
stomach and one leg.
~Quitting
SACRAMENTO CAP>
Health and Welfare Se<:retary
M a r i o ·
Obledo. prob· 1
ably the
most promi·
nent o f the
outs iders that
Gov. Edmund
Brown Jr .
brought into
stale govern·
menl. 1s leav·
Ing next year. oeL.Eoo
Obledo, 46, is returning lo
Harvard University in January,
the school confirmed Tuesday.
Ile is to be a law graduate
fellow. doing r esearch and
teaching first-year law students.
He has taught at Harvard in the
past.
Dft011Gtfon Set
SUSANVILLE <A P ) -The
U S. Department of Defense is to
Prof's Car B•rned
LOS ANGELES IAP> -A
me mber of the Jewish Armed
R esi s tance League claimed
responsibility for a fire Tuesday
that burned a car belonging to a
UCLA political science professor
specializing in Mideast affairs.
Professor Malcolm Kerr is re-
portedly under consideration for
appointment as an adviser to
President Carter
Man Pl1111ges to Death
SAN DlEGO <AP> -A 62·
year·old man fell to his death
from the 14th noor of the Bank
of America Buildjng, narrowly
m issing several pedestrians as
his body hit the street below.
police say.
Deputy Coroner Claude Mon·
doux said Theodore John Foldy
climbed onto t he 14th floor
balcony after scaling a railing
and apparently fell to the street
s hortly before noon Tuesday.
San Diego Inn S old
SAN DIEGO <AP> -The
Shelter Island Inn. once owned
by St. Louis attorney Morris /\
Shenker. has been sold Lit a
bankruptcy proceeding to a local
businessman for $3.2 million.
The price in cash reportedly
included $2.7 million owed to the
Teamsters Unjon pension fund.
Frank Warren. the buyer. 1s
chairman of Rancho Santa Fe
Savings & Loan Association
Method to Change
SA N D IEGO I AP 1 -San
Diego County's Animal Control
Depart ment will begin us ing
lethal drug injections to kill un-
wanted animals by Dec. 1, the
Boa rd of Supervisors has ruled.
Assistant C hi e r Ad ·
minislrative Officer Daniel Bog.
gan on Tuesday detailed the cost
of the method to re place the con-
troversial use of decompression
chambers to destroy unwanted.
sick or injured creatures
As of September 10. 1978, schedule changes will
go into effect on several Park-N-R1de Express
and Local Rxed Routes. And fares will be
increased on all Orange Courfy Transit District
bus routes.
New OCTD bua f--. <Ellective Seot!JT"Om t0 1918) & New New Senior Citizen
SeMce Regular Fare ·& Handicapped Fare
Local Rxed
Route &
R ETAIL OF WHAT?
Well. Sims says. "they want to
m ake replicas or the Hollywood
sign. jewelry and all different
kinds of thlngs.
··w c·re most concerned about
quality and how the old sign is
used." he a dded quickly. "We
don't really want it turned into
ashtrays or something like that.
··we may be giving pieces of it
away at the Diamond Jubilee
party," he added. "People like
Hugh Hefner and Gene Autry
who helped save the sign will all
be getting s ubstantial memen-
tos ."
HEFNER AND A\JTllY were
among the nine people who
donated S27.000 each to pay for a
lette r in the new s ign.
A public auction is a possibili·
ty. Sims said . adding that
however the letters are finally
disposed of. the proceeds will go
towards maintenance of the new
sign, on which construction 1:--
JUSt now beginrung.
M eanwh i l e, ~Imo; cau .
lioned souve nir-hunte r s to
beware or Hollywood Boulevard
types hawking what they claim ,,
to be pieces of lhe sign.
Blasphemy,
Nuke Issues
Miss Ballot
SACRAMENTO <AP >
Cahforrua voter<; won't have tC1
decide at the polls 1r they want
nuclear power plants on barges,
or 1r they want to ban books and
mov1co:: that rap God . s ay!'.
Secretary of State March Eu.
Ms. Eu reported Tuesday thar
1n1t1at1vc drive!' to outlaw
blasphemous books and film!-,
a nd to authorize "helium-cooled.
bargc mounted nuclear reDclors
1n mannas:· had failed to make
tht• June 1980 ballot
The blasphemy m easure wa!-
sponsored by Felix Samaniego
of Banning. The proposed con·
!'t itutional a mendment needed
499,846 signatures to quahfy. Ms.
Eu said only about 4.000 were
s ubmitted.
She said the sponsor of the
nuclear measure, Paul Ran-
dolph of Menlo Park. failed to
turn in any signatures. ft needed
312.404 .
The new fares are listed be4ow along with
the routes that have been deleted. Please
remember to carry the exact fare since our
dnvers cannot give change.
EasyRider
Park-N-Ride
Express &
Dial-A-Ride
35<t 15<t
70<t 35<t
SEPTEMBER SPECIAL OF THE MONTH
Delicious smoked ham. two lresh eggs . ~
hashed brown potatoes . toasl. ;am and bulter ~
SERVED 24 HOURS. .es
Dtal-A-Lrft 10<1.· 35<t
There have also been changes on servtees
not listed below and we Wlll be reviS1ng our
schedules. For new schedules or route inform&·
lion call 547-3311 or toll-free ZENITH 7-3311 from
6 AM to 10 PM weekdays. 7 AM to 5 PM
Saturdays. and 8 AM to 5 PM Sundays.
°'9contlnued Route.. The following Park-N·R1de
Express Routes have been discontinued: 207: 260;
271. (Other Park-N-Rlde Express and Local Fixed
Routes have been changed as well. so please SPIRES
call for new route information.)
'
COSTA MESA 3125 Harbor Btva IRVINE
MacArthur BlvCI at S 11 f-wv
I
.16 L IS<:
Or.ing • Cri,1 Drutv P 1101 E dito·riol Page
-------------------------------------------
Weoncsday, Sco1em1>er 13, 1978
Robert N Weed1Publl$her' Thomas Keevil /Editor
Barbclra Kre1blc h /Editorial PaQe Editor
Put the Brakes
On Patrol Chases
La~t \Wt·k ' met•lmi.t bt.'l\\t!en S Border l'atrul
rcpresent:.it1vl·~ and • a11 'lt.•mente city official1> resulted
an on enrouri1~an1: orrcr h~ lhl· flod •ral agenlb to Chang~
lhelr h1gh !>J>e'l'd pur:-.u1t kdtnJquc
In lhl• pu:-.t t'l ~hl monlhs hiJCh !\pt>erl c·huseR hy Border
P a trol ;i~1·nh .1ltt•r 'u~pcctcd smuggll.'r. or Central
i\ml'r1cun nut1onub hJ' ~ 1 t:'Sulted in three Son Clemente
trnmc .icc1dcm11
Thr m ost r('t't•nt no:-.h k11lt-d a Mu1can rHtttOncil and
-.t>r1ou~l) lnJUrt'd thrl·t.' others in thf' puri.ued c ur "hen 1t
ran urr tht• ~An Ott.'RO Fre<•wuy Ol!Ur San C'l~ml•nk I llgh
'ch ool ttfh-1 a c.·hm:it' l' re·edinJi 90 m1ki. p N houi
1 n p rt>\ IOU!-i acc1ctt>nl :-. I ht' )'t•ar. two drl\'t·r~ "t.>r l• run
off lhl· ruad who had nulh1n~ LO do \\Ith ltll' Bo1dl·r r•atrol
l'h,l~l''· but nw1 t•h h,lppen1•<1 tu tw drl\ 1n~ in tht• ,·1c1n1ty
"hl·n• th1.·~ t1"H1k pl.tc•t• t-'11rtunatt•I\. nl·ttht.•r drt\'l'r "u~
~·raou-,1> 111.1u1 l·d
\\'h1l1.• ll mu'I bt• .irkno" INlJ:f'd lhol the Bord~r
Patrol '' l'hur~t·c1 "1th the.· 1mpo~:.1blc ~topptnK 11lt?gal
1mm1~ratton ll 1' dl·ar I~ nut \\urth risk mi;: the h VC'l\ of
mnoct>nt ,)j,~t'r' h~ It> .ipprc•ht>nd 1 fey. 1llei;:ul alien~ an
lht' mtd:.t or lht• flood" ho l" .. l'JJ>t' undt•tet·h·d
Budget Only Dented
Wh1lt• omt> tit y ('Oll n<·t li. in Orun.-:e County took meat
UXl'~ lo thl'tr l>uc.hH.·b tor 1978 79, Lajituna Bl'<.tC h c.•oun
C'llm(>n attut•k(•d tlw11·, "1th 11.11 mg kn1n.·i.
Th<' c.·nurw il \\Ith tht• H•ral l'\l't.'ptwn o l' Cou11c1lmun
Wu,·nt· Bagltn. u ppr1n ect ~111 SX l million i.pendrng
packagl' to ~ct ttw c.·1t \ through ttw nt•xt fi sl•al \'ear That
c.·ompur<'s '' ith Jn S8 I million hudget :.1ppl'OH'd last year
bdo rl' Pl'O IX>"1 twn l~i '' ;Js t•nac.·ll'd.
Wh1lt• the S300.0o0 c·ut fr'orn the 1978-79 huctgcl 1~
laudabll'. t hd 'rty Coun<.'11 <.'ould h:.l \'l' done better.
Other c ities along the Orange Coast took more h eed
of the taxpayer message. Costa Mesa councilmen. for ex-
ample . slashed ne arly S4 million and came up with a S21.6
million budge t.
Newport Beach counc ilmen cul Sl.5 million from that
city's budget last year. C'oming up with a S24 5 million
s pending package
Fountain Valley. which approved an S8 million
budget recently. cut S353.000 from last year's budget And
\\hile thut r1l~··s budget 1s about the same as Laguna's.
o ne mu!'.t keep in mind Fountain Valley serves a popula ·
t ion o l' 57.000, c.·ompttrcd to Lag una 's population of around
20,00(1
But c·it\ offiC'iab i.a\ mul'l' c·ut:. arc on the wav under
u n •orgurnzallo n progr a m initiated by the City M~nagcr
Pt·rhap:-. the c.:1l.'' l'an do better next year.
G()Od Housing Plan
San C lemente h as come up with a sensible s trategy
for as~uring tha t som t-moderately priced new hous ing
will be avuilable to people of limited means who g rew up
there or work the re or s imply love the city and want to
live ther e.
Last week the City Council adapted a recommenda -
tion of a citizens' housing committee to allow the J ohn D
Lus k and Son development firm a bonus of 106 homes on
its Reeves R a nch project. in addition to the 1.060 allowed
by zoning. on condition that the bonus homes be sold for
50 percent or less of the city's average resale price fOf'
comparable housing.
Important d etails remain to be ironed out. but this
was an ·applaudable e ffort by a city governme nt faulted
earlier this yc<tr by a county grand jury with r efusing to
a c knowled ge a serious hous ing problem.
Credit for the committee's sound recommendation
must go in part to Mary Erickson. who has worked
diligently and s ometimes seemingly alone year after
year to keep San Clemente a balanced community where
Pl'Ople of varying income levels can affor d hous ing.
The dedication of Mrs. Erickson and others may
finully pay off in a city policy which will benefit San
Clc m cnk rl:!sidents present and future . • Opm1on,c; expressed m the space above are those of the Daily Pilot
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
artists Reader comment 1s 1nv1ted. Address The Daily Pilot. P.O.
Box 1560 Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321
Boyd/Eyes
8yL.M.80YD
T ests sho w brown.eyed
people r eact f aster than
others to stimuli And th{'
darker the eyes. the quicker
the rcuclion. it's claimect. Jn
teresting, 1f true. And 1r true,
just as interesting is another
theory about it. Melanin is
what gives the brown eyes
their color. Neuromelanin is
what serves as a semiconduc-
tor switchin~ device in the
nervous system. Mf!ybe these
two s ubstances are genetical-
ly tied together somehow.
Maybe the best known pro-
duct of. the 3M Company is
Scotch tape. But probably
the least known 1s phony
blood. sold to movie. TV and
stage producers for their
gory scenes.
D ear
Gloomy
Gu
They 're still st It!
Leafing through the
l ate l co mmunity
college schedule r note
such Items as "Being n
Grandparent," "Ethnic
Clothe s" 8nd
••convers ational
Polis h.·· Oidn 't they
bear Howard?
PO.
c;1""''/ c;v• <•m,.,.nh .,. tw• lftlll• "' ,. ........... ,, ... .
lltatWrlll AflKI "" W .. wt ef -....... ,.. ~. ':!!''"' -• ~' c;-. -., .-.tit. •
I
There it goes, already
no rtheast of South I\ m ·
l'ric a 's so uth e rn tip ,
he ading toward Arri ca · An
iceberg 36 limes the size or
Bermuda. Watchers aren't
worried. though. They figure
it. will break up when it gets
into warmer waters. Besides,
it's not on a regular shipping
Jane. Still, an iceberg 36
times as big as Bermuda
must be something to behold.
what '!
When an Italian says he's
"irt the green," he means he·~ "in the red."
The average quart or milk
contains 15,360drops.
Q. ··Aren't most baby boys
cnlled John named in honor
or St John?''
A. Possibly, but which St.
John? There are as many as
60 St. Johns on the Roman
Calendar of Saints.
Q. "That dog Sandy in the
B roadway show 'Annie,'
where'd he come from?"
A. A cage in the Connec-
ticut Humane Society pound.
Pretty lucky pup. He was
about to be done away with.
Q. "How many women who
become full-fledged medical
doctors quit work to bring up
lhei r own children?"
A. Seven out of 100. about.
Q . "Wasn't Benjamin
franklin 1tlso the Inventor of
toothpaste?
A. One of th~ Inventors His
formula called for crushed
charcoal mhred with honey.
Earl Waters
State Prison Facilities Wasted
Odore the Legislaturl' plunges
into u multi-million dollar prison
ex pun ::;lo n
s1roaram. u
t' a r e r u l
anu ly~1sorthe
true needl> arl'
in order l''or
pri so n
factlilies Ufl'
costly
The luMmu
Jnr pric;ons
con:.t ructcd 1n
tht> ... t .. te cost well ovt·r $25.000 a
ht>d But that was more thao 20
\'l'ars a~o Today's costs can be
prei.umed to run at least four
timci. that figure
Th<.1l the Legislature must step
an and do such a study to avoid
Mailbox
spending needlt'ssty mtlltons of
dollurs as made imperative by its
eleventh hour apJJroval of a $6.6
million appropriation for plan·
nlng or new prisons. Some or the
money would be used in planning
rem odeling or existing prisons
and the razing or San Quentin and
perhaps Folsom.
THE PRISON authorities have
been pressuring the legislators
ror funds for new prisons with
predictions or prison population
gains or over 30 percent 1n the
next seven years by reason of
lhe m ore severe c riminal
penalties whic h ha ve been
enacted. They say the number of
inmates will nse from lhe cur-
rent 19.500 to more Ur<tn 25,000
by that time.
.
fo'or that reason the oftlc1ab
are envision mg construc tion of
at least one new major prison
s omewhere 1n So uth e rn
California. Initially they had
zeroed in on u location near
Chino but local opposition has
compelled scrapping or that
Already purchased is a site al
Otay Mesa near San Diego but 1t
too. is running into strong local
res istance
NOTING THAT such insl1tu
tions. whose payrolls once made
them desirable to many com
munities, are now shunned by
most locales. Assembly Ways
and Means Chairma n Dan
Boatwright has demanded an in
ventory of properties already
owned by the state's prison de·
µarlment. His view 1s that any
necessary expansion o r faC'1lit1es
can be achieved by building
satellite units at existing
prisons. This al tern a ti VP has the
advantage of utilizing the exist
1ng centra l facilities s uch as
power, water, sewage, haund.riei.
and bakeries and thereby saving
millions
The actual racl is that at most
or the ex1:.tmg prisons the re are
hundl"eds of unused S{'re:.
available for such expansions
And most of the communitie:o.
whe re these 1nstitut1ons a r ..
located would welcome the in·
creased p11yrolls which would
result.
FOLSOM, for example, 1s
located on a 1,000-acre s ite only
40 acres of which are used for
the prison Similarly. Soledad.
Vacaville and Tehachapi have
s ubstantial acreages in excess o(
current use.
San Quentm consists of 600
acres overlooking San Francisco
Bay w1lh only about 50 acres
used by the prison It however b
different in that not only as lhl'
fcH'il 1ty o ld . <'Oslly and
hazardous to operate. but it 1:.
generally unwanted by the peo-
ple of Marin County. Razeo. the
land would probably sell for a
price which would finance an e n-
tire new prison elsewhere.
SO IT SEEMS possible that
lhe department can mee t its an
t1cipated growth without sub-
stantial costs by ut1liz1ng the re-
sources it already has .
But before even that is done
the Legislature should fully re
''1e w the conservation camp pro.
gram. Placement of prisoners in
outdoor camps lo work on re-
forestation and stream clearance
projects was intended to rehe\'c
the need for new prisons when the
Legis lature authorized lhe l'a mr
program 20years ago.
Lessons Teachers Learn from Parents
To the Editor
Ni ck Thimmesch 's Sept. 7
article on Catholic schools gives
only one side. People who pay for
the education oflheir children are
the most interested in education.
They back the schools. respect the
teachers. provide help at home
and start children off with an
attitude suitable for learning.
Private schools provide dis·
cipline and homework. There, if
students don't conform. they are
suspended.
But as a teache r for 14 years
in public schools. parents have
told me:
TO MIND my own business -
when t•hildrtm are so heavily
sedated from Ritalin that thev
s i ti i k e vegetables: ·
Not t o give homework .
because children have church,
pia no lessons. Little League.
etc.
Nol to keep children during re-
cess. lunch or after school if
they curse. are rude, fight or
steal:
Not to te ach values about
fighting thal kids need to
learn to defend themselves.
Not to overburden the children
by aski n g them to lea rn
multiplication at home in \he
fourth grade.
These p a rents want their
children happy not educated.
Yet watch the same parents
yell at kids who clo not obey and
lose control over themselves .
If they would leave us alone.
we'd do the job right.
J. SMITH
Newatlee Ln•et1
To the Editor:
Today I received a letter from
my son's high school senior
class counselor which outlines
Sydney Harris
the minimum requireme nts for
his graduation and pointedly
e nc ou rages him to tak e a
reduced. hair day. load.
This as my fourth encounter
with tbis Lagunu Beach High
School policy which encoura~es
the seniors lo s lack orr and
undermines my desire to give
m y c hildren more than a
minimum education. It is a
negative lesson presented at a
time when those who are headed
for college should be stepping up
their effort toward the transition
into a more serious and
demanding program.
SLOTH should not be a part or
the c urriculum and a fu ll
schedule or productive learning
in this system is certainly not
goi ng to overtax anyone.
Continuation of this policy
makes one wonde r if the
administration is not more
concerned with keeping up its
average daily attendance <ADA 1
state subsidy than it is with its
responsibility to give our youlh a
full and totally positive
educational experience
BERNARD F. SYFAN
lrre.,,o•n•ie
To the Editor:
I had always presumed that
new s paper writers were
supposed to have some de~ree of
responsibility and. if not, at
least the papers that publis hed
their writings would exercise
s ome control over b latant
irresponsibility! Certainly not so
with the tirades of Earl Waters
!Where There's Smoke, Don't
Legislate. Sept. 3 l. lie keeps
repeating the sam e theme and 1t
sounds exactly like the equally
irrespon sible politica l
advertisements for which the
tobacco industry is paying s uch
big d o llars If ··t o bacco
pushers" want to run anli·Prop
5 ads. let the m pay for 1t
leg1t1 mately not through
newspaper columnists. 1n the
guise of journalism'
Waters begins by slating that
the initiative would ba n smoker~
from almost everywhere but the
privacy or their own homes. and
this is even more totally false
and irresponsible than the paid
commercials
lie end s hi s tirade with
reference to "a small clique or
zealots. opposed to smoking,
seeking to persecute smokers "
The "small clique." Mr Water:..
is 62 percent o f th e tolul
population' And . contrary to his
as1n1ne a nd 1rrespons 1hle
statement. non-smokers are not
seeking to persecute anybody·
!Vlost non-smokers have long ago
given up any ~tlcmpt s to
"reform" the smokers. even the
hus bands. wives. t•h1Jdren.
friends and relatives that they
have seen s moke themselves
into the hospital or the grave
MR . WAT E RS is rightto theex
tent that if you want to pursue
your addiction right on to your
own demise, you have the right to
do so. But you do not have the
right to drag anyone wath you' It
has been stated. with great
descriptive accuracy. that the
right of a person to swing his armi.
ends at someone else·._ nose
There are innumerable examples
of similar situations: the law, for
example, permits a person to con·
sume alcohol -he can even drink
himself into insensibility or to de·
ath if he chooses -but he cannot
hurt someone else by his drinking.
This is certainly a prope r delinea·
t!on of ''rights.··
Waters pursues his venomous
bias by childish statements such
as "what shall be next lawi-,
against those who tfon't use the
right deodorant" .. Obvious to
unybody is the fact that neither
dcodoranL<;, nor for that matter.
nothing else in our civilization
causes 300,00CI deaths annuallv '.
But. even with that awesome
toll. Prop 5 permits you to go
ri ~ht ahead and s moke your
cigarettes your rights remain
you can still s mell like a dirty
ashtray. stain your teeth and
fingers. make your steak and
lobster tas te like burnin~
tobacco weed, burn your carpels •
~nd rurniturc. you can even
f>rt>p uy your own burial
expenses hut your "right" to do
all or these thin~s enrts al thl'
noses of the majority that have
never become add1l'L!> ur that.
h,1vc h:.ad the fort1tudt: to ga ve it
up'
W COLEMAN
Sad COW1•e"11ta.,,
To the Editor
What a sad commentary on
the citizens of California.
The Sliite Legislature hassled
until the la s t minute a nd
deprived the handicapped and
a~ed of a t iny increase in
benefits.
And today I read or the serious
s hortage in mental h ealth
facilitie:. tn Orange County
Need I say more"
MRS. J N HALL
• /.,erters /rom readers are welcome
The nght to condense letteTs to J1t
space or eliminate libel is reserved.
L.etters of 300 words or ~ss will be
given prefeTence. All letters mu.st in·
elude ngnature and mailing address
but names may be withheld on re-
quest 1/ su/f1c1ent reason 1s apparent
Poetry wall not be published.
The Roots of History's Revolutions Run Deep
Whenever there is grave un-
rest in u neighborhood, a city, or
a country, the l!Stablls hmenl's
first public reaction is to blame
it on "con-
spirators" or
"outside
agitator s .''
They are the
favorite whip·
pin g-boys of
authority that r e e I ll
threatened.
Y e l in
almost every
case, the establishment is wrong,
aod knows it, or is self·deceived.
Insurrections motivated from the
outside are relatively easy to re·
sist and repel; it is the ones that
come from the inside that make
lhe real trouble.
More than a century ugo, Wen-
dell Phillips observed. "Revolu-
tions are not made: they come.
A revolution Is as natural u
growth as an oak. It comes out
of the past. Its foundations are
laid far buck."
The Ameri can Revolution
could n('ver have been s uc·
cessful If a handful of hotheadi;
had gone from town to town try·
ing to creute dissut1sfo ctlon with
the British government Discon·
tent had been growing for yeurs
within euch community, und
people like Sam Adums und the
Sons of Liberty only translated
the popular tempe r lnto militant
action.
''OUTSIDERS" con have little
influence on " neighborhood thui
Is jusUy tre tcd. Most people
would rather suffer sm <1ll incon-
veniences than protesl. and can
be deceived repeatedly before
they become mutinous.
It is only when the s park is
wailing to be lit that "agitators"
or any sort are effective. The
Russian Revolution of 1905 wus
~1bortivc becausl' thc· \.\orkcrs
und formers and soldie rs ha<!
not yet been disaffoctcd by the
Czaris t governml·nt . a doit•n
ye;.1rs later , it took only a tmy
minority or Bol~hcv1k~ to set the
whole mighty nation uflumc
The patience of most peoples
Is equaled only by the stupidity
<ind blindness of those whn
dominate them. They see only
what they want to Sl'e, ond
believe whut is most comrorta·
ble. ·vcn when all the facts con-
tra dict the m
The irony of history is that
almost :lll re~llions und revolu-
tions could huve been a verted
without scr1ous conflict. if early
rumbles of cliscontent had been
attended t o. Nobody in the
Colonies :1t firs t w~mted indepen-
dence from Britain; it was only
whe n Jegllimut c ~rievances
wer e refused . und u~ui n rdused,
that sepurution become un is·
SUl'
Ext r e m 1• s pre v a ii w h c• n
moderation i~ not tried. T he tree
hr('aks that cunnot bend. Those
who wiU ~ive nothing end up re-
linquis hing everythina. And U\ey
who blc•mc "outside agitators"
for stirring up the good citizens
invariably fail to realize lhut is
is their own arrogance o r
neglect tho.t hu turned lhe good
citizens into bnd ones.
I
~ A JO DAILY PILOT l)SC Wedntaday. Sei:>ltmbef 13, 1978
DUE AT SADDLEBACK I Phytlla. Guy Helferty
Pop Music
EvemngSet
At Samlleback
Thl' works or Rodgers and
llam merslein. Irving Berlin, the
Cershwiru. and Lerner and Lowe
"ill be part or the sing-along
music and anecdotal commen-
tary series "An Evening With
A m er i ca's G r ea t e s t
Songwriters" offered a t Sad-
dleback Community College.
G uy Ha Uerty, a n Orange
County jazz piarust and authori-
ty on what he calls "the found·
mg rathers or today's popular
music." and his wife Phyllis will
conduct the classes.
The series is set for Fridays,
from 7:30 to 10 p.m .. beginning
Sept. 22. Registration details for
t his a nd other Forums fo r
Learning are available from the
Offi ce of Community Services at
831-7850 or 495-4950, exl. 266.
(JACK A~DERSON)
REVEA;LS in the
DAILY PILOT
Water Btke• /flodified
South Coast
Fees Trimmed
• outh Con11t County WiHt•r l>1stnct users. who were recently
,lappt.-d with water and :sewer i.ervkc lncreases more than double
tht old rate. will rl-'<:elvt• l\Omc rt1litf beginning thls month.
l.atJt July the water district Increased water and sewer rates by an
averu~e of Sl3 pt:r two-month billing period District oCficials blamed
th<· lntrPORt'h on ta" loss.c>s to the
wulcr BJ(t'n cy u~ a result of
rropos1t10n 13
Bl'T THI-: BOARD r~cently
.. teelved word rrom the counly
• ,1si.essor's Otfke that D $200,000
tax windfall will be fort hcoming.
cnubhng the du.tr1cl to shave a
bat orr the rate hikes.
li<"ginmng ttus month, waler
and sewer service users In the
d1~tr1cl wi ll pay $8 for sewer
:.ervice. down from the new $9.80
per month rate, but still up from
the S4 per montb pre -Jarvis blll-
lng.
WATER BILLS, which had
been increased from 38 cents to
47 cents per 100 cubic feet, will
now be set at 40 cents, district
officials said.
That will mean the average
water and sewer user in the dis-
trict will now pay a pproximately
$33.30 every two months instead
of S39.
The rate before Proposition 13
averaged $25.
REVlSED BILLS for the July·
August period s hould be arriving
at district users' homes soon.
The South Coast County Water
District serves areas north and
west of Dana Point, including
South Laguna, Three Arch Bay.
Monarch Bay and Monarch Bay
Terrace, and Laguna Shores. It
provides water service only in
the northeastern portion of Dana
Poi nt
Laguna Cops
Aid Seniors
Against Theft
Laguna Beach policc-and two
service organizations in town
are helping to m a ke elderly
Lagunans' homes more secure
through .a three·month old pro-
gram of burglarproofing their
houses.
The senior citizen security
program. operated jointly by the
city's Crime Prevention Team.
the Council on Aging and the
Laguna Beach J aycees, began
last June.
An inspection team. head by
Laguna Beach officers J oyce
Glaser and Dave Rocco. in-
spects elderly citizens ' homes to
determine if they contain faulty
security hardware.
The city provides hardware
for the homes such as locks for
doors and windows. They are in-
stalled on Saturdays by mem-
bers of the J aycees.
Senior citizens who would like
to set up a security inspection
a r e urged to call the city's
Crime Prevention Team for an
appointment.
Call 497-3311, ext. 242. or the
Counc il on Aging offices at
497-2441.
Niguel Drain Project OK'd
A $22,000 storm drain project to relieve flooding problems on
Flying Cloud Drive in Laguna Niguel was approved by Orange
County supervisors.
County orficials, in a report Tuesday to supervisors, said the
problem was created when a contractor improperly installed a
drain nine years ago.
As a result, a natural slope has been eroded causing wa ter to
cascade down a bill near Sta rview Lane during heavy rains, the re-
port said.
MAIN 8£ACH
Co155t.
1-t~RD Wi:lRt;
COAST
>-c ~
Q c 0 a: tll
~ ....
HWY.
[;l] -
FREE,/
PARK
FREE PARKING
WEACCS'T
OPEN
7 DAYS
9-6
ELECTRIC
BUYS •
GROUNDING
RECEPTACLE
Leviton quality 3 wire u-6 ground duplex
outlet Choice o f ivory. white. brown. #5320
~
TIMER
SWITCH
....
CONTROLS LIGHTS FOA
HOME SECURITY. CORDLESS.
B161875 WATT CAPACITY. 01118
GROUNDING ADAPTER
INTEGRALLY MOLDED OF
UNBREAKABLE VINYL
3 TO 2 WIRE CONSTRUCTION.
PLASTIC ELECTRICAL
TAPE
l/4" x 601
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•
~
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DRUG
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Blvd.
Phone:
(714) 847-9833
JUST BRING US YOUR PRESCRIPTION FROM YOUR EYE DOCTOR.
STARTING WITH YOUR BASIC PRESCRIPTION
YOU CAN PURCHASE EYE WEAR AT ...
FRAME LENSES FRAME LENSES
FOR SINGLE VISION FOR BASIC 81-FOCALS
[OVER SIZED ANO TINT£0 LENSES ARE EXTRAI
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FOR AS LOW AS $l5QOO (lnc,uding Care Kit)
We Can Help You Join The Millions Of Other
Satisfied Soft Lens Weare rs .
L'OCAL
DISTINCT/VE FASHION EYEWEAR
ALSO AVAILABLE AT A
SAVINGS TO YOU!
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-Oscar De la Renta •AND MANY OTHERS
le1111tlOt11I fr111tt1 ... ~l1tlnctlve1y deal9ned for yoar facet TOM can
t•t fllauty It 1l1p1te1 111 • frame wtttl a eotnfortaltlt flt. let oar
wide Hlectloft of fllfttOfl eyew.ar at 1 trentetMICM11 aavt"" to J04l1
OTHER SAV·ON OPTICAL CENTERS LOCATED AT:
• NOITH HOU.YWOOD 13021 Victory llv4'. 'hon• (2131760.;242
• SANTA CLARA 3707 II Camino a.al Phone 1401) 914·2254
• SAN DllOO 3-331 IOMCroftl Street ,hone (714' 225-e77'
• SIMI VALllY 2125 Iott Cochran Str••t Phon• <IOS1 522-6904
• HAWTHOINI 14441 S. ln9l•wood Avenu• Phon• (2131973.0747
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• LAKIWOOD 4141 Wooflruff Avenue Phone <213) 420· t ... .
,,. •'
NIMAlogk~~
ROSE MILi
SKIN CARE
~.12•
Pnc• 111cl 20' off on lobel
CANDELA BU
llGHTIULBS
PAQOIJ 11 • SAU
PIKI
2' 0t '°wott II nl'
COSTA MESA nu. 111tt1.
HEALTH W9dneeday. S.ptembef 13. 1978 DAILY PILOT A9
Alcoholics Usually Deny Having Disease
B> OR. STEINl ROHN
Our Dr. ~otrohn : I recall
your r;ayinl( that It·:. often d1f
f1cult lo d1shnl(u1'h bctwl•tn bl'
lnl( u liO<'IOI d1 1r1kf'r und un
;.1lroholh"
I hnrdl)' t nk•• u drink but my
hua btltld 111 u ht·~vy drinker I
think 11.. 1~ c lol\e tu bl•lng an
akohollr Ht' pooh·poohs It. Suy.,
that ht• r an tuke at or h.1avl' 11
Hut I thmk mn!'ltly ht• t :tkt'' It
I think 11 ·, twg1n11111g to have
c1n dfert on h1h work 1tnd on u:s,
h1' r11m1ly flt• '>ltt)~ out oC work
16 IN. TAil!
a few days every month. and he
has become 1rritablc with me
and the children
11 there tAny definite way or
knowing whether or not he su!·
fors from alcohohsrn ? IC he
dOl'K. I wt11h he'd adm1l 1t and
ask for help. Mn. T.
DEA R MUS . T : Your
husband. if he 1s un alcoholic. fits
111to the patte m of most -who
have trouble with their drinking
and don't ad mil ll unUl al least
10 year~ of hard drinking have
passed
MADITO
SlllfOI
39.95
SPIN· TRIM EDGD· TRIMMER
POWERFUL V2 H.P. MOTOR
light, eosy to UH with the >ui>e• feotur95 found in
mot• pow•rful 1 upenal,... trlm~rt. Sove •
RAID YARD ·BUFFERIN
GUARD SPRAY TABLm
~229 ~:; 21•
lb 01. KMP.buvs owoy! F0t Iott poln reli.f.
CHILDREN'S PHILLIPS MILi BAYEI ASPIRIN OF MAGNESIA UG.33( nc.,,C 4JC 1.lt ...
I 'lo tr. OtOftfe flovot. Chotct of 'loin °' Mint.
r ~
DOCTOR IN
THE HOUSE
~ ~
U11ually the potential alcoholic
hides the disease from his doctor
as well as from himself. But the
doctor should be on the lookout
for ccrlain signs and symptoms.
FOR EXAMPLE. HERE ls a
man wiCh some typical warning
signs . A 32-year -old office
manage r . he underst ates the
amount of liquor he drinks
Aparently. he does not m ind dis·
cussing his habits with the doc·
tor. but there are clues the doc·
tor must seek.
For e~ple. on questiorung.
he says t.Hat he has been having
heartburn and takes antacids all
day . He admits to drinking
before meals and stopping at the
bar or restaurants before going
into the dining room. He thinks
the cocktail hour is the best time
of the day.
While at work he keeps think·
Ing of his first evening drink
MIRRO ALUMINUM
GOURMO SllLLm
Heovy oluminvm with boked-oft
por<•lo1n ••••nor. non·\tkk 1nl••·
10f. htro ho<d. won"t 1<rotch. \loin
Of lftO• ~r normol 11'9. II .. '°"'•·
10· • ..,... Of~· G.t oll 3.
l 4il 4'' S\1£
Does not eat much. ls more in
terested in taking a drink or two
or three before dinner to "loosen
up" after a hard day at the of.
fice. At night, he can't seem to
watch TV without holding a ~r
can and sipping. He fondles 1l
like a child does a security
blanket.
IF H E STILL cons iders
himself to be a social drinker
rather than an alcoholic. help
will be far away. As I said, 1t
may be many years before he
calls for help -if at aJl.
pA$SPOl1
SCOTCH WHISIY
WAS 549
6.99 euAIT
SMIRNOff 10 PIOOf
STIAIGllT VODIA
WAS 539
6.69 QUAil'
CHllSTIAN BIOS cau••19
WAS no• 5 • 99 (25.4 Ol.)
EAILYTIMIS
STUIGMT IOUIBOll
WAS 549
6.79 ewT
MAnUSROSE
FIOM PC)ITUGAL r.~ 2~!
Mode to Se1 for 3.49 REG.
1.79 FASHION PRINTED DELUXi
1 O·PAGE SELF· ADHESIVE
PHOTOGRAPH ALBUMS
All m• photos tit theM sc"-Pficed olbum1 wlltl
bnghtly colO<ed cov•r d•slgns. No glue n"dedl
~~!~ .. ~~!~~!-99
cotton c-ed pfflows ot o ~• t .99. Morry famous
dftigner moct.rn. contempo<ory I Onentol pnn1s '"
mulh<Olor eorttitone\ fOf todoy·, hom• fosht0ns
nS'f • llOWN • GOU> • GIUN • IWI
COCOABUmR
TOIESOAP
4,0I 10•
Wh1t.,1ocln 1g,11
IERNSNEOAR
Wllll VITAMIN C 23c
1 l oi o.llc1ou1ly noturol 1u•<•
omGAGREEN
CHILE SALSA 35c
BmYCROCIER
TOPRAMEN
OllfNTAl NOODLES
19~.
FIOSTING MIX sua cuaERS
=69!. =69!
Chocolot• Molt or Trn<u•ll Wh.ot
Whip Creof'lly Sf>«• fWlnl I Chi~.
COSTA MW FOUNTAIN YAU.EV ,OUNTAIN VAUEY WEITMINSTEA HUNTINGTON BEACH
21131 lt1eh IM. It A111nt1 HUNTINGTON BEACH .
5111Wlffttf
HUNTINGTON BEACH
•1MM111~ 2• Hnot It Whon 11141""'*11~ MlfdaltTlfMft Wtttmln• tt OoldiNI Wttt
•
I
7
Orange Coast
FOITION
Today's Closing
N.Y. Stoeks
VOL. 71, NO. 2S6, 4 SECTIO NS, 44 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY , SEPTEMBER 13, 1978 N TEN CE N-d;
Oswald Widow Recalls Swift Courtshi
WAS HI NGTON I AP I
Marina Oswah1 t>ort<•r dt-'lcnbt'(f
for Conin~ todll\ ho" 'he hap
P\'Dl'd to m<trry a m11n "'ht• hard
I> kne w, tt man '4ho '4 t1ulr1
bet·omc known u~ tht• J"lt'"n of
J prt'M<:k'nt
Tt.• 11( •1n~ "'1th n1mpo,un·
twton· tht• tlc)u_,,. 1t':-.u:."n.1t inn!-.
romm1tlt."l'. Mrs Pnrt1·r rt.•rallto<l
ht.•r whirlwind ro11rbh1p with
l.cc tlarvt'v Os" 111ld "'hen ~tw
wa!i a girl or 19 In ht·r naOvt•
Ru11.,1a
She \Clld 'h<' krww llttl~ ubout
htm t•><rt·pt thut ht· wu i. un
t\m(>l lt';m 11nd thut s hl' hhd
him
Shl' '4llt> u:,kctl wht•tht•1 1t
"'dM\ t a bit ha,ty to pluo~l· 1nt11
murr ta.:l' 11fkr only"" wt:t·ki. of
rl ulrni.t
"Nol wht•n vvu 'n · the age lhut
I "'as. sht! rt•pht'd
R~<'alling their hft! in Minsk.
Os wald 's widow s aid he r
hui-band was generally good·
nut un•d, lw.1ng his temper only
ubout as 10111'1\ .is most husbands
do. wus 'ionwwhat dissatisfil'd
~1th h1:-work at :1 radio factory,
bt·ca me be~t friends with a
Hus:.1a n factory worker who was
i;tudy1nl( English. and rarely dis·
cus:-ed politic:-with her
They were married 1n April,
1961. only a few months a fter
John F. Kennedy was inaugurat-
ed as president. With a short·
wave radio. they heard some of
Kennedy's speeches in English,
she said.
"I would ask Lee what is he
saying., Whal 1s he saying'.'" she
related. "He told me to hush up
a~d not interrupt. His attitude
w'as you being a woman, what
do you know about politics?"
Cops Ask Gays' Aid
The young bride then spoke
only Russian but Oswald spoke
both languages.
Os wald occasionally made re·
marks about Kennedy. she re-
called.
·'Whatever h e said about
President Kennedy. 1t was only
good. always."
Newport Murder Probed
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
OI "'° O.ily .. lie! Sl.iltf
On Aug. 27 about midnight.
~omeone beat Ruben Martinez lo
de ath in the bedroom of ht~
Corona del Mar home
Today, Newport Beach police
concede they've run into a
deadend an trying to track the
4J -year ·o ld r ea l e s tate
sa lesman's murderer
The proble m . according to
Detective Sam Amburgey, is
that Martinez was a homosex .. al
who frequented gay bars along
the Orange Coast.
Amburgey said the gays who
knew Martinez have been reluc·
tant to cooperate in the search
for the man las t seen with
Martinez. fearing exposure as
ho mosexuals One man. a p-1
pa r e nlly a c lose fr iend.
told police he saw Martinez last
at t he Coast Inn in Laguna
l:Jeach. He said Martinez in-
troduced him to a young man he
called "Ted from Indiana."
It 's Ted that detectives have
sought in gay bars and hangouts
from Long Beach to Oceanside,
including the two Laguna Beach
bars Martinez visited the night
he died. the LilUe Shrimp and the
Coast Inn.
Today, Amburgey said a com·
posite drawing of Ted. based on
the witness' description, is being
sent to every known gathering
place for J,!ays in Southern
California.
Me's what 's kn o wn in
homosexual parlance a s a
chicken. a man who looks like a
boy.
Ted is described as being in
his early twenties. of slender
build, standing about fi ve feet.
eight inches tall and weighing
about 130 pounds.
He has sandy brown hair and
a light complexion.
Amburgey, in pleading for
help in identifying and locating
Ted. said he wants to assure
members of the homosexual
community that their identity
will be protected.
"We really need to find this
guy before something like this
happens again." he said.
Martinez' body was found in
his blood s pattered bedroom
aboµt 20 hours after he died.
Pathologist's reports indicate
he'd been beaten so severely
that parts of his brain were ex
posed.
His car was found parked an
Laguna Beach near where he'd
been that night b ut police
theorize the murderer drove it
there after killing Martinez.
Amburgey said anyone with
information about Ted from In·
dia na should contact him or Sgt.
Ken Thompson, 644-3785.
Breakt hrough Near?
Summit Conferees
Eye U.S. Proposal
By 1be Associated Press
A proposal made by the Unit-
ed States at the Camp David
summit talks could lead to a
breakthrough in the Mideast
conflict. the Boston Herald
American reported today.
The key lo the proposal. ac
cor di n g to an I sraeli
policym a ke r quoted i n the
copyrighted story, is a com
promise under which "neither
side Arab or Israeli · would
press its claim to exclusive sov-
e reig nty" over the Is r aeli-
occupied West Bank of the
Jordan.
Israel. which would be forced
to move military forces out of
population centers to clearly de-
fined garrisons under the plan,
appears ready to accept the pro-
posal, the newspaper said.
But Israel is ada m ant about
keeping its forces on the West
Bank throughout a proposed,
five-year transition period lead-
Co ast
Weathe r
L ow c loudiness a nd
local drizzle night a nd
morning hours becoming
partly s unny along the
coast Thursday afternoon.
Lows tonight 62 to 66.
Highs from 68 to 72 at
beaches Lo 77 lo 80 inland.
INSIDE TOD~ V
At a ~le distance. Wee at a
Sea World ezhlbit, &harks
have been a big attraction.
See Page Al2.
Ing to Palestinian self·rule, the
Herald American said.
Zalmud Shoval, a Likud Party
m e mber of Israeli Prime
Minister Menachem Begin's rul-
ing coalition, said the success or
failure of the Camp David talks
depe~ds on Egypt's willingness
to agree not to press Arab
claims to sovereignty over the
West Banlc. the story said.
Othe r Is r aeli officials re ·
portedly said the plan could lead
to a de facto freeze on new
Isr aeli settlements on the West
Bank, t he Herald American
said.
Shoval. c h airm a n of the
Israeli Foreign Ministry's Ad·
vlsory Committee on Informa-
tion, is not directly Involved in
the Camp David talks. but has
kept in regular contact with
Israeli negotiators and flew to
the United Slates with Begin, the
newspaper said.
There was no immediate com·
ment by U.S .. Israeli or Egyp-
tian officials on the Herald
American's story.
Meanwhile, President Carter
has met unannounced at Camp
D a vid , Md., with I s rae l 's
Menachem Begin. setting off in-
tensive U.S. deliberations in the
search for a way to compromise
Isr aeli and EJtYptian difrerences
over the future of the Palestin·
ian Arabs.
The Carter -Begin session,
which lasted nearly an hour and
a half Tuesday night, was con·
firmed today by the White House
press office more than 12 hours
later. Carter and Begin had not
met since Sunday.
After the meeting, Carter left
his principal advisers. including
Secretary of State Cy rus R.
Vance. working past midnight.
It was understood the U.S. del-
egation Is working on the pre-
cise language or a statement en·
com passing Palestinian and
other issues.
Other Coverage
Additional Harbor area cov-
cra11e appears today on Page
AlO.
SOUGHT IN MURDER CASE
Police Drawing of 'Ted'
Two years later. of course.
Oswald would be identified as
the assassin who murdered Ken
nedy in Dallas on Nov 22. l963.
Oswa ld was slain in the Dallas
police station by Jack Ruby.
His widow ma rried a Dallas
f act o r y foreman, Kenneth
Port e r , in 1965. They were
divorced in 1974 but later re·
sumed living together in Dallas.
Soon after her marriage to
Oswald. Mrs. Por,ter said, she
was startled at Os wald 's sugges-
tion that they move to the Un ited
States.
"IL wasn't a very easy de·
cision for me to make." she
said. "What should r do" Should
I follow him? Should I stay at
hom e ? 1 told him wherever
he'd go. I should too."
Speaking in English . with a
trace of an accent. she described
thei r move to Fort Worth where
Oswald's brother Robert lived.
Oswald had trouble finding work
and his attitude soured. she con·
tinued.
AP WINflMtO
MARINA OSWALD POR, ER TAKES OATH IN PROBE
Testifying About Her Life With JFK's Slayer
Special Home OK'd Near Mesa
By KATHY CLANCY
Ofti..o.i1• Pllotstatt
The Tustin man obviously was
proud Tuesday when he talked
to Orange County supervisors
about his mentally retarded son.
The father described his son
as a retarded child grown up. a
contributor to society, a man
who s upports himself as a custo·
dia n . donates to his church and
li ves independently with three
other young men in a Santa Ana
condominium.
The young man described is a
graduate of a n independent liv·
ing s kills program offered by
Colin Ashling and his son. Mark.
in a home for JS retarded adults
in Santa Ana.
The Ashlings won supervisors'
unanimous permission Tuesday
to re locate their facility to a
12-unit apartment complex and
three·bedroom home at 362 E .
20th St.. in an unincorporatc.<d
pocket on Costa Mesa 's east
side.
Th e action followed two
months of protest that started
when the county Planning Com-
m ission approved a conditional
use permit to allow up to 36 re·
larded adults in the complex.
Corona del Mar res ident Dean
Stubblefield. owner of rental
pro pe rty near the p roposed
As hling home, appealed the
pe rmit , presenting petitions
signed by 500 residents he said
also opposed the facility.
He contended the home for re-
tarded adults would increase
traffic congestion. add to an
already crowded neighborhood
and detract from the a rea's res·
idential character.
A ft e r As hling s upporte r s
testifed that the state trend is to
move the retarded from institu·
tions into home -like settings.
Stubblefield also said, "We ob·
ject to being used as a guinea
pig for the state author ities."
As hling. a Laguna Beach res1
dent, attributed the protest to
the "narrow.mindedness of just
a few neighbor~
"I was astounded by the reac-
t ion by a few citizens aad ap·
palled by the lies and rumors be-
1 n g sp r ead bo th hy t h e
newspaper and the petitioners.·•
As h ling said
His supporters presented pell·
l ions of their own from 320 area
residents they ~aid favor the
complex.
Christine Finch. 327 2t ~t St ..
Cos ta Mes a, said she. her
husband and two children have
no reservations about having the
r e t ard e d adult s in t h e ir
neighborhood.
"We welcome the opportunity
for our children to learn that
everyone 1s not the same ... she
<See FACILITY, Pagt• i\2)
Bridge Repair Funded
Newport to Spend $250,000 o n Island Access
Ne woort Beach city coun·
cilmen have agreed to spend
S250.000 to repair the sags in the
Balboa Island bridge.
The project approved by coun-
cilmen Monday night also calls
for repair of the bridge's s urface
and replacement of the existing
ra ilings and sidewalks.
The 50-year·old structure ha~
been the s ubJect or careful
scrutiny for the past 18 month:-
after city officials discovered
that two or the bridge supports
had settled into t he mud. caus·
ing a gap bet ween them and the
girder they are supposed to sup·
port.
Th a t gap caused some
damage to the girde r al the
north end of the bridge which
was repaired in 1977.
The work to be done in the
current project includes the
s horing up of those s upports and
the 1nstallallon of ties which
would prevent separution of
bridge and supports during an
earthquake.
The project was r ecom-
mended in a report from Boyle
Engineering. hired by the city to
study the bridg~·.s problems and
recommend solutions.
The report listed two phases of
repairs. The work approved
Monday ts the fi rst phast'.
T he second phase•, which
would cost an e-.t 1mated
S 5 8 7 • O O O , w o u I d 1 n v o I v l'
strenE!thcning all of the bridge
supports plus the widening of the
s1dE'walks from four feel to ten
feet
Public Works Oire<.'lor Joe
Devlin recom mended against
the second phase. citing the cost
and the age of the bridge.
"If funds bE>come available in
the future, the merit:-of pro-
ceeding with additional work. or
of eventual tot<1I replacement of
the bridge ean be evaluated," he
noted.
Strikes Halt
Many Classes
By Tht> Associated Press
StudcnL" in Dayton, Ohio. pro·
tested thC'ir off-again on-again
e ducation , and Ea ~te rn
M1 ch1gan University faculty
member:-walked off the JOb and
urged stude11ts to join them as
teacher strikes continued around
the nation today
Dad Wants Jerry to Wed
Strikes by teachers affected
400,000 students in nine states
California, Connecticut, llhnois,
Massachusetts. Mi chigan, Ohio.
Pennsyln1n1a. Vl'' mont and
Wa shington
Some 320 tcuchcr s in Bur-
lington, Vt.. voted today on an
agreement that would end their
wcek·old strike. The tentative
contrart. reached late Tuesduy,
wou Id increase hase pay for
starting teacher:. by 4 percent to
$9.300.
DAD LIKES HER
Unda Ronstadt
'
SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -Gov
EdmundG. Brown Sr says he and
his wife wis h the c urrent
California governor would get
married, and they wouldn't mind
if their son's wife.to · be turned out
to be country.rock s inging star
Linda Ronstadt.
The elder Brown voiced that
wish Tuesday during a visit here
on a campaign tour for son
Jerry's re·election bid.
What led up to talk about m~._
rlage for the 40.year-old bachelor
governor was hjs fathe r's denial
that Democrats aren't all that
amused by his son's lifestyle.
"SQme may have been critical ot J erry when he gave up the big
automobile, the new mans ion and
, sold the airplane. But I thinlt he's
right," Brown said. "He couldn't
live by hlmselt In that big
man11lon. ·•
Asked about marriage. Brown
!laid be and Mrs . Brown wished u.k p Wft'e rp.arried, adding, ''OW.,. q8U&flle1'.I are happily mam~.-·
,.,. ...........
WILL HE MARRY?
Governor Brown
I ,
DINING SET
BRINGS CASH
"This money looki. mo rE>
beautiful than my drning set
ever did.''
That's the advertising success
story of the Huntington Beach
man who placed this ad in the
Daily Pilot :
Conl<'mpornr,\ wulnut
d1n1ni.: wl, Ii rh1 '· ~
t.•11\ e•;, puds. Xlnt cond
$ t00 Xl<X·XlCXX
If you have furniture to sell
convert to cash, call 642 5678.
.lus t 8 few words will work hard
for you in Ute Daily Pilot.
. .t2 DAILY PILO T N
f're•P._. I
FACILITY. •
~nud
"Thert Is a lady who has
ll•arnt-d th b•J.Ull'i.l lei.~on an thl'
world." Su1>t•rv1,or Ralp h
fht•drtt•h rl'ffiJI kt•d hO"'-111
lovt' youa m·1~hbor1> 1·h1ldn·n <&::>
)OUr O'l\n
Ethel RH•k. a Wldow who hvt:b neict door tu lhl· A~hlan,.; IJrC>PN
t~ • Mi.ked SUPl'r\-IM>r~ lo d..r1y lht• pt•rmlt
"I think lhb 1i. ~n tn110tutkin
and I can't eon Ider It 11ny ht.her ~II)'.'• 'ht• suad .
A&hhnJ( i.1ud t h.1st• hvan~ an th1•
htethty _.u h•vt• Jobs and ~re ~ ine tau.aht cooliana. shopp1na
und mont'y ma11u_aemtnt skill•
leadlna lO 1.ndept>ndent tlvtn1
He not.fd no more than thr• e
to four ~•rs WOUld bt .n Uw
park1n1 toe at a Ure1 .ilrohol
would ht-prohibited and bedUmt-
"'ould tK-JC. f. m 'Uckd Y$ and
11 s. m • tt.,en~
Je.-1. Ed wrd . .i mtm~r of the
1oc I Dc \t:lt)C)mental D1sablliun
P lannin:,. Roard, callf'd the Ash
ltn~ procram ·paramount .. and
~iud her group ~ould work to
ht>lp l-du<·ute th1• c·ommun1t ~nd
p u b I 1 ,. I o a <' <' 1• p t ' u <' h
nl'1ghborhood fuc1huei. for lht·
rct ardt'd
"ll lb tht•1r God ~lvt'n ra~h\ tu
h \ l' d !> bt•i.l lht•y <'Un Wht'rt'\'\'I
thl'I <'Jn.· :.ht· ~aid
~uperv1sor!'> :tsked the count~
n'lt!nt ul ht•alth director to 1ni.1xw1
lht· f11r 1hty annually to mitkc
i.ure t hen~ arc no problems
The fucihty abo will be in
SJ>t-Ctcd r egularl y b y ::.late
aulhor1t1cs. s upervisors were
told.
The board rejected a plea by
Stubblefield to post.pone action
in the event reb1dents s ucceed m
e fforts to have the property an·
nexed to Costa Mesa. H that
happened. the use permit would
be up lo city rat.her than col.Dlty
officials
·'Whal do you know that we
don't know that gives you the
wisdom that this wlll happen·!"
Supervisor Thomas Riley asked.
Stubblefield said he didn't
know for certain but noted pell·
tions seeking annexation are to
be filed with the county shortly.
In casting his vote with fellow
board members. S upe rvis or
Laurence Schmit s aid, "All I
can say is that this is going to be
one of my more enthusiastic yes
vote:-. in supporting this oper a lion.··
2,800 Homes
lose Power
In Newport
Failure of a transformer in an
underground vault a t the en-
trance to Linda Isle caused a
two-hour power outage that left
2.800 Newport Beach homes and
bus inesses without e lectricity
t-arly this morning.
A spokesman for the Southern
California Ed1::.on Company sa1d
caui.t• of the power outage is be·
ing investi~ated today.
He said the affe cted area
:-.lrc·tching from J amboree Road
Jnd Marine Avenue on the t:ast
to Superior Avenue on the west
wa~ blacked out at about 3 a m.
The power railure i.truck the
area banded by 16th Street on
the north and Ocean Front on
the south.
Police said the early morning
power failure posed few traffic
problems for them . although it
~et off burglar alarms in the af-
fected area.
OLDEST WOMAN
TURNS 100
LONDON <AP > -Alice
Empleton. believed to be the
oldest person in Britain, was 108
today. She invited 50 guests to
her birthday party. including
Polly Wilson. 103, and Florence
E\tans. who is 100.
Mrs. Empleton has been a
widow for 40 years and lives in
an old folks' home al Sawston,
near Cambridge
ORANOECOAST H
DAILY PILOT
f"-0.~ C. .. \I D"'tly Pilot witl\vmocft t\(O'ft
rMf'lf'd ffWI H.-""' p,..,, '' """OI'~ cw•~ Oi'•ttor
(,o.a\t"'wt>t· "•"'O(t"'0"'"" ~rM'tftf(t1t~1o4tt«"
O!Jbu•P\#o ~"" H '"''""'l" r '•!My '°" Co '" ~ N f"w()Otf Hr•l f't ... Vf'lf1,..,.l)J"I .,,... ...... Joun
l•tn V .. ttr~ t t'I "" \ .. ddlf'b,.,• V4'11fo" AM
l •Qu'\A u ... " '"""''" ( "" ' .. •f'IO'• ,, fl~t •d• hlW'I DV... ""°'<f ~ .. fUtd4'f' t"'ft "M#"OAtf l~ °"'"" ""' f'luh•1,J111fhl ()l~nt '" "'' l W. W\o"'I A'" ~t~t C.0-.t•~f'W C•l1torn1•~i... .. _ .. __
"•HtOtftt •NI Pilbltftf
,. .... c-...
"". Prtt.•OOf't.,., (Ao,..,.., Al\lftifOff
T"eiM•l K•elf'ft f4'•tM
'':.-::::"'~
Cll<lr .. •14 L-11.._.I' *" .,.,., •• , AM.,.01f19 li41t!o<•
Office•
Ch\lll ~'A ))0W•\t ft•'r\tl'fft '-40un-Bfl•t~ tlhCi•~•ftMrnt MVf'\flftQt~ H"•f Ji! t tU\ Rf·tC'h ftovf•WiHO
'\.,ttrfiOlt'h-4•' Y!tllt" 1\MI t 11t P•t ftu.MJ
f l '-tit O•tOO F 'NW•V
'f ... phone C114)t42-WI
Cl•ulfled Adwert111,. t4i-M11
.
SK-<l•n """" .,..,. ti ""'• Mt\t c..tflfOIAI• Su•\< tl•ll•ft tty t.•rtttr \l ~ _, .... , ........... \0 _,,.., "'"'111'\' ...,, __ " ,._"
That's Re-enf or(!ernent
Workmen check out s teel bars that will re-enforce con -
t•n•te top or flood channel being built down the middle or
lrvme Avenue on the border or Newport Beach and
Costa Mes a . Top of channel 'eventua lly will be covered
with dirt and landscaped.
Mesa Man Arrested
After Trailer Fire
A Costa Mesa man was a rrest-
ed early today at the s cene of a
house trailer fi re that Newport
Beach pollct-allege he set.
Capital Gains
Tax Relief
Loses Support
WA S HI NGTON (AP>
De spite its popularity in lhe
House, lhe future of a once-m-a·
lifetime Sl00.000 lax break for
people who sell their homes is m
doubt
The . adminis tration opposes
t he capital gains ta" r elief.
which would cost the Trt!asury
$700 m illion a year in tax rev-
enues, as too expensive.
Sen . Russe ll B . Long.
chairman of the Senate Finance
Committee, has indicated that
he. too, would like to cut back on
the provision.
Long has not said exactly
what he has m mind. except to
indicate he thinks s o m e tax
should be paid on the Sl00,000
profit. He has shown no inclina·
lion to go a1ong with a Trca::.ury
plan that would allow tax rehef
only for home sellers 55or older.
Long's committee. which 1s
writing its vers ion of a broad tax
cut bill for business and in·
dividuals, 1s considering several
alternatives to the $100.000 pro-
vision which the House passed
last month. The provbion was
widely hailed as a long-overdue
tax break for infl ation.weary
Americans. mainly those at mid·
die-income levels.
The sale of a home is the only
event for most Americans that
incurs the tax on capital gajns.
which arc profits from the Si.tic
of assets hl'ld a yea r or more
Becau~c inflatio n dri ves up
home prices . the tux can be a
shock when 1t hits
The law allowH a person who
sells his principal home to defer
any capital gains t ax until
some time in the future, as long
as he buys another home that is
worth at least as much as the old
one sold for.
If no new home is bought, the
profits from the s ale arc treated
just like any other capit:d gain.
One·haJf the profit is taxed as the
~ame rate that applies to the tax-
payer 's wages and other income
After a $10.000 exemption, the
other half is subject to an addi
tiona l 15 percent "m inimum
tax."
Dinner Set
By Newport
Beach Group
The Central Newport B~ach
Community Association will hoet
a dinner meeting Sunday to dis -
cuss a variety of issues pertinent
to the Peninsula area.
The event gets under way al
6:30 p.m. al the Tale of t he Whale
restaurant a t the Balboa
Pavilion. Dinner wlll be served al
7:30p.m .
Items to be dlacuaaed include
police protection, parklna, litter
control, traffic and density.
Reservations for the S7.75 din·
ner may be made through the as·
sociation. Post Office Box 772.
Balboa, or by ca1Ung673·3346.
Michael J . Dugan. about 20,
was booked tnlO city jail on SUS·
p1cion of arson afte r the 1:30
a .m . blaze at the Ebbtide trailer
park, 1577 Placentia Ave. He is
being held in lieu of $25,000 bail.
Detective Lee Roberts said in
questioning Dugan, the man told
him he'd been evicted from the
trailer earlier this s ummer.
Roberts said the trailer occu-
pying space 0 -9 at the park in-
c urred more than $2,000 da mage
in the fire which burnt a bout
ha lf of it.
He sajd it was vacant al the
time t he fire broke out.
Roberts alleged that Dugan
got inside the trailer a nd began
lighting the contents on fire in
an attempt to destroy his former
r es idence.
He apparently was still at the
s cene when firemen arrived to
quell the blaze.
AFS Students
To Be Feted
In Newport
Thursday will be .. Meet the
People Night" fo r the American
Field Service chapter at Newport
If arbor High School.
The annual event, open to the
public. is a gathering which in·
eludes the local students who
have returned from studying
abroad and the newly a rrived
foreign students who will spend
the year living with Newport
Beach families.
Al the 7 :30 p .m . event.
sponsored by the AFS Adult Com·
mittee. will be foreign s tudents
Birute J urksailis of Colombia
who will li ve with the Robert
Palmer family, Frederique Vin-
cent or France who will live with
the Robert Baker family and
Arthur Aanesen of Norway who
will live wtth lhe Sam Vaccaro
fomily
Returning local students, Missy
Beechner, who lived in Finland,
and Lynn Droke who lived In Mex·
ico, will show slides and discuss
their experiences abroad.
Course Slated
For Women
Members of Hoag Memorial
Hospital's 552 Club are s ponsor-
ing a program they call "a
woman's alternative to Monday
night football."
Seminars covering financial
and estate planning for women
will be held Monday and Sept.
25.
T he meetings will be conduct·
ed at the Grace Hoag Con·
rerence Center from 7 p.m . to
9:30 p.m. They are free. For
further Information, call the ~
Club office at 642-1463.
Touchdown Club
Plans Sports Fete
Members of the Corona del Mar
High School Touchdown Club wlll
host their annual fall sports din·
ner Friday night at the high
school.
ThO $S dlMer Is a yearly event
sponsored by the group to raise
fund• to benefit both boys and
girls athletic programs at the Sea
King campus. For rurther in·
form auon call 556·3320.
•
Newport
Chopper
Studied
Ne wport Beach Polite officials
s aid today the departme nt
helicopter, damaged during an
em ergency landlne. can be re·
built.
H o we ver, Capt. Kelson
McDanjeJ, comma nder of the de·
partment's patrol division, said
there has been no decision yet as
to whether the work will be
done .
"It can be fixed, but when it is
we 'II still have a helicopter with
11.000 hours of flight time," he
co mm e nt e d , M c Dani e l
"g uestimated" the cost or re·
pairs lO be in the $15,000 range.
He said the department also is
considering purchas ing a used
he licopter. A new one costs
about $90,000.
When the d e p artm e nt's
aircraft were purchased in 1971.
they cost 'about $50,000 each.
In a report Monday to city
coun c ilme n. C ity Manager
Robe rt Wynn explained that.
while the city's two he licopters
carry liability insurance. the Ci·
ty Council at the time of
purchase voted against paying
$18,000 a year for full Ins urance.
"Whatever is done will be at
city expense," he said.
Wynn said the department's
remaining helicopter is able to
provide lhe necessary air cov·
erage. "We 're certainly not in
c r itical condition with o ur
helicopters." he added.
The damaged helicopter. pilot·
ed by Officer Tim Grundeman
and crewed by Officer Myles
E ls ing. was on routine patrol
Friday near Spyglass H.ill.
The craft's engine died and
G rundeman was able to auto
rotate the stricken craft to a
landing spot on a dirt road on
the Irvine Ranch.
Just as it was comln~ to rest.
one skid caught In some mud,
rolling the helicopter. The rotor
and tail boom were damaged.
Neither officer was injured in
the m ishap.
Mc Daniel s aid the source of
that engine failure was still the
subject of a Federal Aviation
Administration probe . but he
noted that bits of metal were
found in the engine's crank case.
leading to speculation that a por·
tion of the engine structure gave
out.
,
Double Oops
Reaga1" Ford Goof
DALLAS I AP 1 Formt.·1 Pr t·~a<.lcnl Ford 1s a t 1t
again. And he hud ~oml' hHp I rom fo rm t r Cahforma
Gov. Ronald Rcagun
The two big-name Rc puhlicani, were in Texas on
Tuesday to campaign for stoH· <:t1nd 1 d<.1tc~. and each
had a blooper to contrit)ute.
Ford told the GOP luminanl!~ at a breakfast
that he and Reag an were in I lo~ton to help Texan
Bill Clements get electc·d "gov4'rnor of the great
state of California." ·
Later. Rcag<m ch1ppl'd m ha·. hlooptr in Dallas.
when he was asked how h(: thouuht tht Texas cam-
paig n was shaping u11
"So far the crowd:-. haVf• tJf'''" <:nl hUb1Cistlc. and I
think it looks great fo1 1111 1. ~..i •d th•· forme r screen
star.
Texas Attorney G'·nt·1.,1 .Jr1hr1 Ifill 1~ Clements'
De mocratic opponent.
Ford Motor Indicted
Over Three Deaths
ELKHART. Ind. <AP I A
county grand jury today indicted
the Ford Motor Co. on thr~e
counts of reckless homicide and
one count of criminc1I recklcsi..
ness in the deaths of three young
wome n in a Pinto automt'bih•
crash last month.
The re was no immediate reac
ti on from the auto company .
The Elkhart County grand
jury of five men and one woman
had begun deliberations Tues-
day in the case. which stems
from the Aug. 10 accident m
whic h Judy U lr ic h. 18 , of
Osceola; her 16-year-old sister.
Lynn. and their cous in, Donna
Ulric h. 18. of Roanoke, Ill..
burned to death.
The Pinto in which the Ulnch
girls died was one of 1.5 million
Pinto and Me r cury Bobcats
made between 1971 and 1976 that
Ford r ecalled in June because of
government complaints about
the fuel tank.
Ford denies the tanks are any
more susceptible to explosion
than other small cars of those
model years, when no federal
Bill Stirs Anger
SAN JUAN. Puerto Rico (Af> 1
-Gov. Carlos Romero Barcelo
rejected a U.N. resolution call
ing for self·delermination for
Puerto Rico because the com-
mittee that adopted it refused Lo
recog nize the Puerto Ricans·
right to choose statehood within
the United States.
rear end collb 1on standards ex
isted .
W 11 llam Connou r . a n In·
dian<.1polis attorney who helped
dra ft tht: r ev1!>ed slate penal
code under which the action wa::.
brouRht, said the considerat ion
of c r iminal charges against
Ford was unprecedented.
The teen.agers· 1973 Pinto
sedan exploded when hit in the
rear by a van driven by Robert
Duggar. 21. of Goshen.
Tes timony by two Ford
engineers and four other wit-
nesses. including the Ulrich sis-
ters· parents. ended Tuesday.
The engineers were calleti lo
testify a bout tht des ign or the
Pinto fuel tank. said by the Na-
tion a I Highway Traffic Safety
Adm1nistra t1on to be too suscep·
t1ble to explosion in rear-end col·
lis1ons.
The Association or T ria l
Lawyers of Ame rica said in
June thert: are up to 50 civil suits
stem ming from Pinto crashes
pending in var ious courts . At
least six su.its have been seUled
out of court by Ford, including
three of more than Sl million.
The biggest j ury award wa:,,
last Feb. 6 when a n Oran~e
Count y , jury a warded
$127.8 million -$125 m illion in
punitive damages -lo a teen·
ager badly burned when his 1972
Pinto burst into names after be-
ing hit in tht rear by a car going
35 mph. The plaintiffs argued -
1''ord knew from its own tests
that the Pinto tank would rup·
ture too easily, but sold the cars
anyway to save SlO a car.
'For The Executive . • •
,
On display now
Several large, high-qua I ity
traditional desks, ready for delivery
TOA RANCE
236441 HtwlhorM Blvd.
(213) 378· 1279
COSTA MESA
IS9S N~Port Blvd.
( 7141 Ml·20SO
LAGUNA BEACH
J4S North to.st Hwy.
(:1•! 4'4'4Jjt
CALIFORNIA Wedneedtly. September 13. 1978 CAIL Y PILOT AS
B11sing: Kids Not Fazed
~
LOS ANGEI.F;. 1t'\P 1 f'or block-. tolhltwu Uoull·v urd fi rst ruusc l d1dn't knowwhatit 1ous andworried,theyoungsters
the parent.w, tt•.chcri. and :-ichool St·hool wus ull 1_1bout. ~ee·! Bul my mom lh~mselves appea r ed o nly
admlalst,..ton o1 l..o An.:elea.. "Hut I +~ aio1ng to t:t:l up told nil· whun. huppenlng .. curious and interested a nd a Tuesd~ w I.be fi rst di.y of .my way to p t.c1 M'hool." he con bat regretful that s ummer was
fort'ttd bussrng In I ht• mo .. 1 1 lucft•cl TIU: PROSPECT of tht•1r new. over.
'Prt'udout rt11trkt tn lht· ''oun t•'irt) rouJ<'hildn•u 1H11• :.up 1n lt'l(IUINI !-trhuol d11Jn 't fa ze When the bus fa'nallv got to lJ'y J>OIH.•rt l-0 h •• riddt>n lh1.· 7K i.t•Ut I ht-m " But lot mO!it of lht• «hilctr.-n bu11 L1etw lt)( m1 Tht• few who "Yeah. it'll probably be a Fletcher , the driver Inadvertent·
who bod-'~" l .. _ fl t f 11 rt d d ly pa rked on the wrong side of ·~· 1t<t" ff o yl1 0¥1 1 l)eemc.1 unC'onr.•r nt'f1 aboul it o o ti :i ch o o l . · · s a i Eric the s chool out of sight of the
buHa. It -.u JU.'il thl-nr~l dMy of their rollluetf 11bMl'nce &net J oh11:Hon, a blonde, freckled 8-wailing reception 'tt school ••bout tht-hour one wu y rldt• yt·nr old "lt'ii good that we're commi e\..
"Wtll. yeah, today I sot ,up at ··This Is eut Rt•1tlly roomy. gonna be mixed, you know '.' a. THE 16 CIDLOREN ba ded 1 uh whatt-ver tlmf' thf' d()("k huh···· iu•I ,orl fl undcll UI) ~hl' Because last year t m e t a . 11 n n ~ent oil," ad •yur old Adam bounded I lht> bu' C hinese boy , a nd we made a .sma ci.r cle for several
Weber, one ot IS children who friends. so .. " minutes until the school )Jrin-
rode bus No 3162 from ituburban "I LIKEIU8E8," said Maril' "Besides. al Fletcher, we gel capat .• teachers and aides came
Granada ll rll~ to the prt> IA.-f''ever .. "lk't'tHIM' 1f you to go w classes upstairs," said trottmgwwards them , all smiles
domlnanUy whl~ S&n Fernando oon'l havo>U.'IHI. tht•n you have an excited Dawn Kovner. 9. and fuss.
Valley to f1ttt'her Orlvt S<'hool to "'a lk " One small blond boy clutching
tn Gl~U Park "I went t camp cvl'r)'duy th1:. "l WANT TO BE on vacation a "Star Wars·· notebook and
Llt:8ER t'INALL \. dt·c1dtd
hl' probably ~l' _,bout 6 a m
ne~rly l.,.'O hours t'uht·r than
lost \'t•ar ~ht·n ht· w1:1lk<'d two
!lummer <J a bu~ 1rnd It wus u one week more," groaned Adam lunch box finally cut ort the
lot lon~er '"Y. ntc>a,,Y out of 1 ht· Friedman. 8 apologi~ grat'iously.
city, .. w41 Null· Robin·, t'om And ~o rt went. While the
ml·nt pnrt'nls who s hepherded their · 'Aw . th al ' s 0 K . '· h e
· l d1dft wa nn11 ('11m1· ut children onto the bus looked anx-mumbled. "We didn't mind."
Ar WI ........
Swnn Tab
Enormous
In State
USA HIGHTOWER GREETS BUSED STUDENT
lnbal Brozkl. left. From Woodland Hiiia
SACRAMENTO IAP l The
California Farm Bureau says
lust week's storm an the San Joa
quin Valley was one of the worst
an history and will cost at least
$183 million.
The bureau ~aid toda y
that another million dollars
worth of crops were lost In the
Soutbem Sacramenw Valley.
A s pokesman for the bureau,
Clark Biggs, said the damage
may be topped in California only
by the Feather and Eel river
Ooods of 1955-56.
"WE HAVE SURVEYED all
the affected counties and used
the low side of all estimates,"
said Biggs.
"If we had used the high side.
and it may yet turn out that
way, our estimates would have
been many millions higher."
Bat!kBome A~WI .........
'Value lnf!redifJle'
Hollywood Sign
Letters for Sale
llOLLYWOOl.J •AP I -People who missed a chance to pay $27,000
for a letter in the new Hollywood sign, take heart. The old ones c.re
still up for grabs.
The dilapidated letters -some 8,000 square feet or sheet metal
chopped up and carted off from their Mt. Lee perch overlooking
Hollywood along with their
wooden support poles and other and $10,000 up front and a
assorted hardware -are cur-per centage of retail."
rently sitting quietly in a
bill board company warehouse.
But the Hollywood Chamber of
Commerce has already received
several offers of purchase --
nothing to write home about, but
enough to whet the appetite of
chamber president Mike Sims.
"AFTER THE CBS television
special honoring Hollywood's
Diamond Jubilee in Novembe1
the value of that sign is going to
be incredible." he predicted.
The new sign will be unveiled
during the two-hour show.
RETAIL OF WHAT?
Well. Sims s ays, "they want to
make replicas of the Hollywood
sign, jewelry and all different
kinds of things.
"We·re most concerned about
quality a nd how the old sign 1s
used ." he added quickly. ··we
don't really want it turned into
a~htrays. or something like that.
He said Fresno County, where
raisins had just been put out for
drying. was the biggest loser at
$JU million. including $83
million worth of raisins and 40
per<ent of lbe fig crop valued al
$7 million.
ArrEll GRAPES, the largest
monttary loss was suffered by
grov e rs of alfalfa seed in
Fresoo. IGngs, Kem and Tulare
counties. Biggs put that loss at
$15 million.
A flag-draped coffin is carried pas t a
Travis /tr Force Base honor guard T ues-
day a s U more of' America's dead from
the Vid.nam war cam e h o m e . The
milita ry ruers' re mains were turned over
to a United States congressional delega.
lion last m onth in Hanoi. a nd for the pa s t
two weeks have been in Hawaii for formal
identification.
"We have probably a doien to
20 bids in writing," Sims swd
Tuesday. "Of these only three or
four are serious offers.
"Nobody has made a substan·
ti al enough offer yet. We 've been
offered everything from $2 per
square foot up to between $5,()00
"We may be giving pieces or it
away at the Diamond Jubilee
party," he added. "People like
Hugh Hefner and Gene Autry
who helped save the sign will all
be getting substantial memen-tos.··
HEFNER AND A\JTRY were
a moni? the nine people who
donated S27.000 each to pay for a
letter in the new sign.
Oller counties with large
losse! were Tulare S24 m1llion,
Kern ~ million and Madera $18
milliOl.
Firm Fined
LOS ANckLES IAP> -A
Long Beach construction com
pany has betn fined $12,500 for
violating sta~ industrial safely
laws and t~ng to conceal the
infraction ich allegedly re·
suited in an ccident that killed
one worker and permanently
• in Safety Violation A public auction is a possibili-
ty. Sims said. adding that
however the letters are finally
disposed of. the proceeds will go
towards maintenance of the new
!)ll(n, on which construction is
JUSt now beguming. But Baggs said the estimates
could change if some farmers
get higher prices for the re·
maindtr of their crops .
"Son e people will be lucky.
They vill be able to s ell their
t'roo ala higher price."
Patrol GOne
Oceanside Void of· MPs
OCl!ANSJDE <AP> -The Marines have pul)xi their MPs off
the str~ or Oceanside for the fi rst time since Vorld War ti, but
it's "mere inconvenience now than trouble," ll city policeman
says.
T he a ction was announced Tuesday al naghboring Camp
Pendlet.cn where the provost marshal said U.S. ~preme Court de-
t'1s ions Ht the MPs legally liable if anyone arreSled off base could
prove ci'll rights violations.
OCE\NSIDE POLICE SGT. ROBERT Kra~e said the city is
weighinf the impact of the move, but the problen may be greater
for "the -oung Marine who gets into trouble in Oceanside" than for
police.
"Bebre, we picked up a lot of Marines that we did not have w
book, beausc their MPs were close by to take them in tow and
b~ck to <amp Pendleton," he said. "Now, we may be taking more
of them ti be booked into city jail."
IN ~CENT MONTHS, A IS-MAN MP patrol has been as·
signed t.oOceanside. A study blamed Marines for 40 percent of
downwwi crime.
Chjefof Police Rolf Henze bemoaned the loss of the Marine
patrol, bu said, "If they have some limitation placed on them, by
court dedtoos, that bas to be acceptable to me whether I like it or
not."
Militay s pokesmen said wwn patrols by Air Force, Army,
Marine all other Navy units have been disappearing nationwide.
disabled another.
Los Angeles Municipal Judge
Edward L. Davenport imposed
the fme Tuesday after convict-
ing the firm, R.M.P . Marine
Services. Inc .. in the Sept. 13,
1977 incident.
The judge found that the com-
pany had illegally used com-
pressed oxygen in a pneumatic
nail g un which exploded, killing
Ronald Ray Clarke. 39, of Ox-
nard . The gun operator . Rixon
Gregory Pry, 27, of Oxnard. suf-
fered permanent damage to his
stomach and one leg.
Obledo Quitting
S ACRAMENTO <AP l
Health and Welfare Secr etary
M a r i o
Obledo. prob-
a bly t h e
m ost promi·
nen t o f the
outsiders that
Gov. Edmund
Brown J r .
brou ght Into
state govern·
ment, 1s lcav·
1ng next vear. oaLEoo
Obledo. 46, is r eturning to
Harvard University in January,
the school confirmed Tuesday.
lie is to be a law graduate
fe llo w, doing r esearch and
leaching first-year law students.
He has taught at Harva rd in the
past.
Dftmaatlon Set
SUSANVILLE <AP) -The
U S Department or Defense is to
OCTD changes
effecllve Septe111ber 10111:
As of Septtnbet' 10, 1978, schedule changes will
go Into effett several Park-N-Ride Express
and local ~ Routes. And fares will be
increased on Orange County Transit District
bus routes.
The new f es are listed below along With
the routes that ve been deleted. Please
remember to the exact fare since our
drivers cannot e change
There have lso been changPs on services
not hsted below nd "'~' v•111 be rev1s1ng our
schedules ror !'"hrj1112s or route 1nforJTld
tion call 547-331 ~ :oll-lr.:-0 Ztf\ITH 7-3311 from
6 AM to 10 PM E.!k.c~y! •. 7 AM to 5 PM
Saturdays, and 8 to 5 PM Sundays.
New OCTD bua fares. (ll!oolVQSepcMU• 10 19ra1
Service
local Fixed
Route &
EasyR1der
Parl<-N-Ride
Express &
D1al-A·R1dc
Dtal-A-ltlt
New New Senior Citizen
Regular Fare & Handicapped Fare
35<t
7QIJ.
70<1!
35<Z
35<t
Diacontlnued Routes. The following Parl<-N-Rlde
Exoress Routes have been discontinued: 207: 260:
271. (Othef Park-N-Rlde Express and Local Fixed
Routes have been changed as well. so please
call fOf new route 1nf0fl'Tlat10n.)
•
( )
2 Operators So"fllaf
STA.TE PALO ALTO <AP\ -Police
_ _ were searching today for two
Polo Alto nu rsing h ome
begin destroying 20 more "daisy operators accused of walking
cutter ·· bombs of the type that out on seven elderly tenants.
went off unexpectedly at the Ted and Grace Allen said they
Sierra Army Depot in August: were going shopping over the
officials report. • weekend but inste ad d1 sap·
The 15.000-p<>und bombs are to pcared with thousands of dollars
be delonale.d one at a time in advance room and board pa)>
beginning Saturday men ts
Prof'• Car Burn.-d
LOS ANGELES IAP > A
member of Ule J ewish Armed
Res istance League da1med
responsibility for a hre Tuesday
that burned a car belonging to a
UCLA pohtical science professor
specializing in Mideast a ffairs.
Professor Malcolm Kerr is re·
portedly under consideration for
apporntment as an adviser to
President Carter
/tlan Plunges to Death
SAN DIEGO <API A 62·
year·old man fell to his death
from the 14th floor of the Bank
of America Building, narrowly
missing several pedestrians as
his body hit the street below.
police say
De puty Coroner Claude Mon·
doux s aid Theodore John Foldy
climbed onto the 14th floor
balcony alter scaling a railing
and apparently fell to the street
shortly before noon Tuesday.
&
San Diego Inn Sold
SAN DIEGO <AP I -The
Sheller Island Inn. once owned
by St. Louts attorney Morris A
Shenker. has been sold at a
bankruptcy proceeding to a local
bus inessman for $3 2 million.
The price in cash reportedly
included $2.7 m1lhon owed to the
Teamsters Umon pension fund.
Frank Warren. the buyer. 1s
chairman of Rancho Santa fo'e
Savings & Loan Association.
Method to Cllan~
SAN DIEGO IAP• --San
Diego County's Animal Control
De partment will begin using
lethal drug injections to kill un-
wanted animals by Dec. I, the
Board of Supervisors has ruled.
A ss i s tant Ch i e r Ad ·
ministrative Officer Daniel Bog·
gan on Tuesday detailed the cost
of the method to replace the con-
troversial use of decompression
chambers to destroy unwanted,
sick or iajured creatures
Mea nwhile, S im s t'a u.
tlone d souvenir-hunte r s to
beware of Hollywood Bou levard
types hawking what they claim
lo be pieces of the srgn.
Blasphemy,
Nuke Issues
Miss BaJiot
S AC'RAMENTO tAPt
Caltforma votC'ro,; won 't have to
decide at the polls 1r they want
nuclear power plants on barge~.
or 1f they want w ban books and
movies tha t r ap God . say,,
Secretary of State Ma rch Eu
M ~. Eu reported Tuesday that
1n1t1at1ve d ri ves to outlaw
bl<i sphemous books a nd Cilms,
;ind to authorize "heliu m -cooled.
barge mounted nuclear rcacto~
m mannas," had fa tied to make
the J unc 1980 ballot
The bl asphemy measure wa:-.
~ponsorcd by fo'cltx Samaniejlo
or Banning. The proposed con
~titutional amendment needed
499 .846 signatures lo qualify Ms
Eu said only about 4,000 were
submitted.
. She said the s p<>nsor of the
nuc lear meas ure. Pa ul Ran-
dolph of Menlo Park. fo iled to
turn 1n any signatures. It needed
312 .404.
SEPTEMBER SPECIAL OF THE MONTH
Oellclous smoked ham. two fresh eggs.
hashed brown pol aloes. toasl . jam ana butler
SERVED 24 HOURS. .ea
SPIRES
COSTA MESA
3125 Hart>or Blvd
IRVINE
MacArtlM Blvd al S O Fwv
A & )
Edit ri l .. a e ~9rt N We-ed Publ1sner Themas KMvll 'Editor
Orangt) Coasl Daily Pilol 0 a ..-I fl. Wec:tnetd11v. Seplember 13, 1978 Barbclra l(re1blcht Edltor•al Paoe Editor
Road Fund Offer
Calls for Action
LaM \H'<'k If\ int.· t'o Pre1>ldent PNcr Kr~mcr
def lured tw .md fello" de' clopers would be willlna to
kick an $1 7 nullton of lh(· (·~t1mat~ $21 million needed lo
complete lht• Nt.•"'p<>rt HN('h master plan ol roudways
Thl' Jlr1C'l' for the donallon 11> what Kt(lmcr described
Ul; UKi;urnnc'P~ nr rc·o~l'\ObJe" land ~es and den Illes on
lh · t'tty ~ n•muman~ undevt'loped acreug~ or t•ou~('. what Kremer and company con-Sider
rt.•u!;onable and whnt tho ctn power m city govemmcnt con
s ider rcusonJblt' may d1ff er
Mondu} Counr 1lm n P ul Hummel and Mayor Paul
RY<'koff tnt"d lo pUbh through the City Counral a mow.urc
uppure11tly d 1gnt.'<f tn reo('tton to Kremt.•r 'b ~pt•crh The
llH!U~UrP \\,,)> 0 ronfusln~. hoWPV('r, lhst It r:uled lo Jtt!l U
maJorlt} ),() llummel dropp('d 1t for the lime twin~
In ~p1tt.· of th(• ronfus 1on uwr llummel ~ propo al. ll
M't'm ), Owl t'll \ oft1r1.1I~ ou~ht to \erious ly etddres~ the
rnattl'r of tho:,l' land UM' den~1tle)> a!) soon as p0ss1bl~
Tht· ~t·m·ral pl.in rt'' a·" that wa~ t<> have produC'ed such
llJ:Urt'' ha~ bt•t•n tn lht> \\Ork, wr more than U YClir now
:rnd 1:-. :-.t1ll unf1n1sht•d
It), ('OmplN1on "o uld pro\ld(• data that could lJ<' lh<·
)>turtin~ µoant of d1sru~:,10~ bt!lween c ity people and d<'
\ t•lo pcr-. wh1d' m1~ht end with agreement on those road
ctonnllon" an ,., t•nt lh:.it would benefit all
Explanation Needed
With an u1r of s(.•crecy uncommon to t he Newport ~k-,a Lnafit·d School 01strict. tmstccs voted lttsl week to
put .1 g radual e nd (by Uec 31 > to its troubled "non
pruf11 " duta proc(>ssing 01>cralion.
/\s l'Ounly ~du(·ation officials noted. 1l is unfortunate
that s o many ques tions may never be answered about the
internal workings of th(\ Newport-Mesa Instructional
H.esea~h Institute INMIRf>.
Doubts about the legality of the operation and its
pote ntial connicts with private businesses led the county
Department of Education to withhold som e $200.000 in
funds. The district s u ed. but the case became moot when
NM I RI was convenie ntly disbanded.
T he district owes t axpayers an explanation for the
end of NM IRI. It isn 't e nough to claim that the corpora-
tion fell prey to Propos ition 13 a nd general tig hte ning
M'hool district financing. To simply disband NMIRI after
ve hemently defending its exis tence ha s only r aised more
d oubts and s us picions about wh~, 1t was proposed in the
firs t place.
Fees Justified
/\ s,67 S million budt.!t'l appro,·ed la s t wcc•k bv Coast
Community College Oistnct trustees m arks an 1·i.2 per·
cent decrcas t• from t he pre\'lous year in t he financial
packa ge us ed to run the dist n et 's three campus es .
The cutback \\Us ac hu.~\'ed with no layoffs of teaching
perso nnel and o nly :ibout 20 non.teaching s taff db-
missals.
Sabbatic.il lea\'e~ h<n e been canceled and tl'achmg
pos il ions opened by attritio n or ret irement "Ill not tx·
filled.
Tru!';l€.'CS des erve apµlaU~(' for their JOb or paring t he
hudg<>t. /\nd W{' hop(' they will purs ue the concept of ob-
t<Janin~ morl' foci-. for hobby, c•nH•rttainmcnt a nd s parc-
timc l Y(>('S of {'lassc~
The slate t'<Jucat ion code 1s built around a concept
that community colleges should he open to all re sidents
at a non· cos t I other tha n m ate rials> b as is . Thus. even
thos e w ho can easily a fford to pay rees for sctr-
1mprovcmcnt or frill c lasses a re n't asked to do so.
In the spirit of the times, this fee-free policy needs
over haul
ThC'rc··~ not hini:! wrong with teaching m acram e .
~t :11nl•d-g lass projects and tap d ancing, but those who can
;iff'ord to pay the cos t of the classes should do so.
• Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Dally Pilot
Oth er views oxpressed on this page are those ol their authors and
.tr11s1s Reader commen1 is 1nv1ted Address The Dally Piiot, PO
Bo.JC 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (71 4) 642-4321
Boyd/Eyes
8 y l •. M.BOVD
Tc~ls 1>how brown-c yNt
P\'<IP lt• l'l'<1('l ras lt.'r lhon
otheri. to !>l1 mul1 And the•
darkt•r the eyes, th1• <1uicker
th€' rcarllon. it's rhumecl. Jn.
krt•sltnil , 1f truc.-. And if true .
just us lnll'rcstln).t 1s another
theory ahoul It: Melunin is
wh1.1t jtlvt>s the brown eyes
thcir color. Neuromelanin is
whut serves as a semiconduc·
tor switching device in the
nervow1 system. Maybe these
two subtitunces are gcnetlcal·
ty tied tol(ether somehow.
Maybe the best known pro-
duct or th(' :lM Company IS
Scotch tape. Rut probably
I h<.> lc<1st known is phony
blood. sold to mov1t•. TV ~nd
s ta ge produl'er11 for their
i.iory scenes.
Dear
Gloomy
Gu~
They'r e s tilt at It!
Leatlng through the
lulClll community
coll eic schedule I note
8Uch ltemiJ as "Being 1l
Grandpar('nl." •· Ethnir
C loth es " und
"Co nversallonol
Polls h ." Didn't they
hur Howard'>
P.O.
Gl .. m'I 010 ( .... ~" ,.,. ... . 111111• ., ,. ........... , ... .
M<n .. rtly roft9CI "" ..... , 4lf tM ............ iHf ,_ ... ,..,,. It ~' Giit. o.tly ... ...
.... .,
T here it goes. already
northeast o f South Am -
er I ca' s s o uth er n tip,
heuding toward Africa: An
iceberg 36 times the size of
U('rmuda . Watchers aren't
worried. though. T hey fi gure
1l will break up when it gets
into warmer waters. Besides ,
it·~ not on n regul:lr s hipping
lan e. Still. un iceberg 36
ti mes as big as Bermuda
must be something to behold,
what '!
When an Italian says he's
"in the green." he means
he's "in the r ed."
The average qunrt or milk
contains 15.360drops
Q. "Aren't m ost baby boys
rullcd John numcd in honor
of St. John'!"
A. Possibly, but which St
John ? There ure as ma ny us
60 St. Johns on the Roman
Colendor or Saints.
Q. "Thal dog Sandy in the
Broadway show 'Annie,'
where'd he com e from?"
/\. A cage In the Conncc·
lieut Humane Society pound.
Pretty lucky pup. He was
about to be done awuy with
Q. "How m any women who
become tun.ne<Jged medical
doctors quit work to bring up
tbeirowncbUdren?"
A. Sevenoutofloo. about.
Q . "Wasn 't Be n jam in
FrankJln also the Inventor of
toothpaste ?
A. One of the \nvt"ntol'1'. His
formula called for crushed
cbucoaJ mixed with honey. ,
--------------------------------------Earl Waters
State Prison F acili es Wasted
Bl'fort• the Legibluturc plungc:s
into u multi million doll3r prison
expa n s ion
program . u
I' u r e r u I
anulyxiiwtthc
t ru1• ncNIH ore
II\ order f''or
pr1 11 on
fac lhtics ure
costly.
Thl• lai;t m <1
J Or l" 1s o ns
cons tructed 1r1
th1: !!tale ro~t well over $25.000 a
b<'d Uul th<1l wici.-more than 20
y1•;11 ~ ugo. Today 's costs can be
µrci.uml'<.I to run al least four
t 1mt':1 that figure.
That the Legislature must step
ao a nd do such a study lo avoid
Mailbox
s pending needlcs:sly millioni> or
dollar:s i:s made imperative by its
eleventh hour upproval o( a $6.6
million 1tppropriatlon for plan-
ning of new prisons. Some or the
money would be used In planning
remodeling or existing pri:sons
and the razlng of San Quentin an'1
perhaps Folsom.
THE PRISON authorities have
been pressuring the legislators
for (unds for new prisons with
predictions or prison population
gains of over 30 percent in the
next seven ye1trs by reason of
the more s evere cri minal
penalties which have been
enacted. They say the number of
inmates will rise from the cur.
rent 19,500 to more than 25,000
by that time.
1-'or that r'!o:ai. lht! 0Hicu1ls
are env1:sioning nstrucllon or
at least one ne major pnsoo
s o mewhere S ou t hern
Californi1t. lnlt1 Jy they had
zeroed In on a cation near
Chino but local position has
com pelled scra ing of that .
Already purchas is a site at
Otay Mesa near Diego but 1l
too is running in strong local res istance.
NOTING TllA uch mst1tu
lions. whose pa yr b once made the~ . desirable t many com
mun1t1es. are no shunned by
most locales. As mbly Ways
and Means Ch rman Dan
Boatwright ba s de nded an m
ventory of prope es already
owned by the stat prison de-
partmcnt Ills view 1!-i that any
neces11ary expans ion of facilities
ran bt achieved by building
1>atel l1 t e un its at ex11Hing
prisons nus alterna tive has the
advantage of uttlizing the exist·
ing central f:tcllilles such as
power, water. sewage , laundries
und bakeries und thereby saving
milllons.
The actual fact 1s that at most
or the existing prisons there are
hundreds or unu ~ed acre~
uvailable for such expansions.
And most of Lhe communiues
where these ins l1lutioni. are
located would welcome the m·
creased payrolls which would
result
FOLSOM. for example. 1s
located on a 1.000·acre site only
40 acres of which are used for
the prison. Similarly . Soledad.
Vacaville and Tehachapi have
substantial acreages in excess of
current use.
San Quentin consists of 600
acres overlooking San Francisco
Bay with only about 50 acres
used by the prison. It however i:-.
different in thut not only ls Lhe
fac ili ty o ld . coi.tl y and
hazardous to operate. but 1t ii.
generally unwanted by the peo-
ple or Marin County. Razed. the
la nd would probably sell for a
price which would finance an en·
tire new prison elsewhere.
SO IT SEEMS possible that
the department can meet its an·
t ic1pated growth without sub-
stantial costs by utilizmg the re·
sources it already has.
But before eve n that 1s done
the Legislature should fully re
view the conservation camp pro
gram . Placement of prisoners in
outdoor camps to work on re
forestation alld stream clearanc~
projects was intended to r<:lievl
the need for new prisons when th
Le~1sla.ture authorized the cams.
program20years ago.
Lessons Teachers Learn from Parents
To the Editor
Nick Thimmesch's Sept. 7
article on Catholic schools gives
only one side. People who pay for
theed ucation of their children are
the most inte rested in education.
They back the sc hools. respect the
teachers. provide he lp at home
and sta rt children off with an
attitude s uita ble for learning.
Private schools provide dis ·
cipline and homework. There. if
students don't conform , they are
suspended.
But as a teacher for 14 years
in pu blic schools . parents have
told me : .
TO MIND my own business
when c hildren a re so heavily
sedated from Ritalin that thev sit like vegetables;
Not t o g ive h omework ,
berause children have church.
piano lessons, Little League.
etc .
Not to keep children during re
cess, lunch or a fter school 1f
they curse, are rude, fight or
steal ;
Nol to teach values about
fi ght ing -that kids need to
learn to defend themselves;
Not to overburde n the children
by asking t h e m to le arn
multiplicnlion al home in the
fourth grade.
T he s e p arents want thei r
child ren happy -not educated
Yet watch the same par('nts
yell ut kids who do not obey and
lose rontrol over themselves.
If they would leave us alone.
we'd do the job right.
J SMITH
Tftldlers' ae11etfis
To the Editor:
Many teachers say they are
unde rpaid a nd overworked.
Sydney Harris
There may be a few who spend
e xtra hours. but most work
s horter hours than other work
ang people.
I know several who operate
bus inesses. and they seem to be
there often during the day.
Many say they grade papers
in the evenings. Many or those
are home in mid·afternoon. If
they worked until 5, most would
not be working evenings.
E XCEPT FOR a few who
might reach manageme nt and
supervisory positions in busi-
ness. most are paid better than
othe r professiona ls ' starling
salaries and salaries received
after 10-15 years on a job.
They say they receive no pay
during the summer. When pro-
rated for the year, they a re paid
better than many other workers
with compa rable tra ining . They
have long summer vacations.
part or which can be spent work·
ing for someone else 1f the y
wish.
Their benefits are great. And
they can't suddenly be laid off
alter years wlth a firm. like pco·
pie in private indust ry.
They say they mus t add to
their credentials by study. This
1s true in many other pro-
fessions.
In s hort. they do better th1tn
most workers.
EARL HOWARD
s ... .aerBer,..r
To the Editor :
As this, the most horrendous
of summers. comes to a close we
cannot he lp but comment on
what it means to live on the
great penins ula or Balboa.
Tom Murphlne's column or
August 25th referred lo a UCLA
study of the impact or living
ne ar airports or 1n airplane
fl ight patterns wh!rean 1t was
fou nd that life 1pans were
shortened compar«i to people
living m a more serene sur-
rounding. I belitve Garden
Grove was one of :he places of
comparison 1n a noucr article
I wonder 1( thesepeople would
like to trade places for one sum-
m e r and live on Balboa
Boulevard -one oain street to
handle all or th• traffir. or
course there is anflher street. a
one-way street pait of the way.
On good old Balbia besides the
constant t raffic Ne have the
sirens of paramtdics, llhank
goodness for thffl'l l. the am
bulances. the fiN department
and the poJice unilJ.
. THE SOUND 6 s omething
simila r to what I ibagine the In
diana speedway is like Don't
know how much nbber 1s worn
off on our streets from tires
scr eeching. Duriu~ the night
cars go out of cmtrol lall by
thems e lves I <rnd hi t three
parked cars along tht.'
boulevard. This t!Ven happens
during the day 11 fact two ex
ploded the other <ily upon im·
pact; luckily no h vu; were lost.
Murphine at one lime referred
to these people l S tourist s
Touris s generaliy com e to
s1ght·Sel. buy :.i ftw souvenir'>
and then i:;o on to o1'er places to
s ight sec. These µeoplc come
early. stay late, bring their sup.
plies for the day. the r emainder
of which is somet1m<'s left at our
curbs or placed in our patios
In addition to this it gives
these people a good opportunity
to "case the joint" during the
day. At night the rip.offs occur, a little boy's birthday bicycle
s tolen from his back door. hang.
ing plants taken from doorways.
patio furruture removed. Th«:: hst
1s endless.
My point is. at least wlh the
Jet noise you know about ~hen to
expecl at. On our gr eat penmsuJa
1t is the aruuety of what is going
to happen next. Wonder tow the
UCLA t est would fare i• com-
parison with what we put up
with here'>
NAME WJTIJHELD
Trf~lqf
To the Editor·
Som e one should look into the
antics going on in Cit Hall in
regarrl to the creation o another
department. We are al ady top
heavy with officials · d havl:'
alm ost a mass exodus r lowt•r
paid working employee:
The reorganization 1. a trick}
way lo circumvent the csults of
Propos1t1on 13 for a sel t few
Why did the City C uncil go
ror it wi thout a morc omplete
re port or s tudy i' pen to
question
CLARK
SflflC~•,,,
To the Editor
What a sad comm tary on
the c1t1zens of Californ
The state Leg1slatu hassled
un l it t hl' las t m1 l e and
deprived the handic-• ped and
aged of a t iny in
benefits
And today I read or
.;ho rtage in m<.>nt
rac1lities in Orange C
Need I say more'>
c serious
hl·all h
nty .
MRS. N. HALL
The Roots of History's Revolutions Run De p
Whenever there is grave un·
rest in a neighborhood, a city, or
a country, the establishment's
first public reaction is to bla me
lt o n "con-
111piratorR" or
"outside a git otors. · •
They are the
favorite whip·
pin g .boys or
authority lhnt
f c c I s
threatenM
Y e t I n
a lmost every
case. the L'Slablishment is wrong.
and knoW3 It. or Is self-deceived.
tnsurrectlons motivated from the
out.lldc "re rehatlvcly easy to re·
alat and r peJ ; lt Is the ones that
come from the Inside t hat make
the rc1J trouble
MOl'l' than a century ago. Wen-
d<'ll Phllllps obs('rved, "Rcvolu·
tions arc not mudc ; they come.
A n•volut1on is us natural a
1:rowth as nn onk. ll comes out
()f the pust. Its foundutions ar<.>
luid fur buck."
The l\merican Revolution
could never h:ive been suc·
Cl'S!lfUI if II handful or hotheads
hnd ~one from town to town try-
ing lo create dl:>11t1lh;faction with
tht.· Hrihsh gov<>rnmcnl. Dis con-
tent bud been growing for years
within t•ach community. and
1wopl(' llkl' Sum Adumll und the
Sons of Liberty only trunslated
the popular temper Into militant
action
"OlJTSll>EftS" con have litth•
1nnuence on a nelghllorhood lhut
1s justly treated. Most people
would rather suffor smull 1ncon
venienCl'S thun prolt.•s t. and cJn
bl' decl'ivt.'d rl'l)t·ut~dly t>cforr
lhl'Y l>t'COl'l'H' mutinous.
It 1s only when the spnrk 1s
waiting to be lit lh11t "ugitator;"
or any sor1 arc> l'ff<'cl 1vP. The
R us st an Revolution of 1905 was
11 bort1vc bt·cuus(• lhl' workt•rs
und furml•rs and soh11('r~ hnd
11ot yet lwen dis111frctccl by th1•
Czarist governmenl . ,1 dozen
years lul<.'r. It took only '-' liny
minontv o( Holsh1•v1ks tu s1.'l tht• w holt~ ni1ghty notion afl ti mt'
The putit•nCl' of moltl flt•oples
is cquolt'd only hy tht· stupidity
und bl indn1·~s nl tho~C' who
dominate them Thi v sec only
whut the> want lo "l'l'. and
bchevl' whut 1~ moi.t comfortu
bit•. t·Vl'll wht•n JJI the I acts con
t radict the m
The irony of h1 ory is that
a lmos t all rchcllio ;.ind revolu·
tion!l could huvt• 1•n nvt.'rted
without serious c fhct . 1f <'Arly
rumbles of disco cnt hud been
,11t c ndcd 10. body in the
Colonies at flr!lt ntt•d indepen.
ctenc<' from Brit ·n : 11 wus only
w he n 1l'g1timul! g r ievance s
wt.•r<.• rt!fuscd. ad UJ(a in refused,
lh<1l Sl•par:it1onbcci1ml· un IS·
SUl
Extre m e s >r~vu&I whl•n
modt•rution i~ l1l tried. Tht· tret•
hrc•aks th;1t c;,snot bt!nd Those
who will give othlng <'nd up re·
linquishtnR ev()'thing And they
who bhtmt• ··citside og11 uton<"
tor ttt1rring ~~hl' f(ood citizens 1ov nrrnbly· fa ito r ·ull&l' th•ll b
Is thei r o a rroiunce or ne~lcct that ~ turned the good
l'1l11:en into ltd ones
-I
7
Saddlehaek
Aft ernoon
N.Y. Stoek~
VOL. 71, NO. 256, -4 SECTIONS,~ PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1978 TEN CEN
MAC Backs 'Phone Vote' on Slopes
lliha&k>n Vt~JO Muntclp•I Ad
vtsory Council mr mb4-rs, who
voled by ll'lt'phont> on a recom
m\'ndallon to rounty supcrv1so,...
on a k>pt! ov.nc-r'\h1p dl:.pute .
have raOt1t-d lt\t' \Ol<• dn ptle lht•
obJcl'UOftS ol one of tht'tr C'OI
lea11u~. A l'OUnty envtronme ntal
hm111cmeot Ag~n"> spOkt>:o.Mt'JI
Nllld today utlorm.1t1on on the
owncr~hap problt>m 1nvolv101¢
about !IOO Minion Viejo ~lope
h>t11 would not eo to county
!'Upervlson> until Sepl 26
MAC Ch~urmun ·r,·d K~nl' or
dl•rt-d a Lt>l<•ph<inc vote Auw 24
under prl'hhurc from l'()unly uf ·
f1cu1h1 who uid the iNNUt' would
JIO lo NU()\'rVINOrs Without thl'
MAC '!\ l'e<'Ommendut1on
Co u n c 1 I m l' m b t· r N we r e
~Chl'dllll-d to dlM'UNN the :.lope IN
su~ at lht'tf publtc meeting Mon
Whirlwind Courtship
day. but de<-1ded the issue • by
lcll'l>hone instead.
At Monday's MAC meeting,
te rn pc rs flared when council
mcm her Kathleen Kelly assert·
t-d the telephone vote was "im·
proper if nol ill<'gul "
The issue involves about 500
~lope lots privately-owned but
publicly maintained.
County oHIClals were seeking
a solut100 by suggesllng four op·
Marina Tells Why
She Wed Oswald
WAS HINGTON f AP )
Marina Oswald Porter described
for Congress today how she hap.
pened lo marry a man she hard·
ly knew. a m an who would
become known as the assassin or
a president.
Tes tifying with composure
before the House assassinations
committee, Mrs. Porter recalled
he r whirlwind courtship with
Lee Harvey Oswald whe n s he
was a girl or 19 in her native
Russia
She said she knew little about
him except that he was a n
American and that s he liked
him.
She was asked whether it
wasn't a bit hasty to plunge into
marriage after only six weeks or
dating.
"Not when you're the age that
I was," she replied.
Recalling their life in Minsk,
Oswald's widow said h er
husband was generally good·
natured, losing his temper only
about as much as most husbands
do. was somewhat dissatisfied
with his work al a radio factory,
became best friends with a
Russian factory worker who was
studying English, and rarely dis·
cussed politics with her.
They were married in April,
1961, onJy a few month~ after
John F. Kennedy was inaugural·
ed as president. With a s hort·
wave radio, they heard some of
Kennedy's speeches in English,
<See PROBE, Page A2>
Trustee Pay Backed HoJWr Due
By Superintendent For Basques
Board members agreed. .. Jn N igiie l Despite school board member
pledges not lo accept salaries.
Superintendent Richard Welt•
will recommend tonight that
trustees leave intact a policy a l·
lowing them S200 per month for
participating in meetings.
Trustee pledges came during
often heated post-Proposition 13
budget hearings when several
community members irate
over potential program cuts
demanded that board members
refuse their salaries, s aving a
budgeted $12,000.
But Welte said Tuesday he
believes trustees "work hard
and incur many incidental out·
of-pocket expenses while con·
ducting school business.''
He will recomme nd that
trustees a bandon plans to
rescind the policy that allows
compensation.
The meeting will take place at
8 p .m . in Saddleback Valley
Unified School District offices,
25631 Diseno Drive in Mission
Viejo.
Autos Hit Horses
In Laguna Canyon
Two motorists, heading out
Laguna Canyon Road early this
morning, struck horses crossing
the busy arterial.
But neither the motorists nor
the horses were badly hurt in the
1 :30 a .m. mishap near the iunc·
tion of El Toro a nd Laguna
Canyon Roads.
Police s aid Frankie Lee Haf·
fcrkemp. 40. of Santa Ana, was
ad mitted to Saddleback Com·
muoity Hospital for injuries to
his mouth, arms and hands after
his car collided with a horse
crossing the roadway.
Seconds later, the vehicle
drive n by Howard Wesley
Heaberling, 40, of 23832 Palmek
Circle. El Toro, struck another
horse wanderln~ loose in the
Co ast
Weathe r
Low cloudine ss and
local drizzle night and
morning hours becoming
partly s unny along the
coast Thursday allernoon.
Lows tonight 62 to 66.
Highs Crom 68 to 72 al
beaches to 77 to 80 inland.
INS IDE TODA"
At a !Ofe di.ttance. like at o
Sea World e:rhibH, &harlu
hooe been a big ottroctWfl
See Page AJ2.
road.
Operators of the Lazy Creek
Saddle Club. located adjacent to
the canyon road. said a gate was
not properly shut late Tuesday,
allowing at least four horses lo
wander out into the traffic lanes.
Only one horse. owned by Sal·
ly Leslie, 20491 Sun Valley,
Laguna Beach was injured.
Hafferkemp was treated and
re leased by hospital officials
following the early morning incl·
dent.
'Death Tape'
Slayer Jailed
RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil
<AP> -A court here sentenced
a man today lo 18 years In
prison for fatally shooting his
wife and making a tape record·
ing describing how she was suf·
rering and dying.
A jury found Julio de J esus,
54. guilty ot murdering Ms com·
mon-law wife, Aglae Nogueira,
22. The judge ordered the ·'death
tape" played . during the lri,al,
despite obj~tions from the de·
rense lawyer. A woman Juror
and Jesus' daughter from a pre ·
vious marriage fainted while the
tape was being played.
Beaut.y Entry
Deadline Near
The dead.line for entries in the
Miss Saddleback Valley contest
ls Sept. 22.
Contestants must reside In the
Laguna Hills, El Toro or Mlaalon
Vlejo areas.
Official entry blanks are
available at s,veral valley loca·
lions. f'or further information,
call ~l-~.
The descendants of 12 Basque
families who settled in the Sad·
dleback Va lley and Laguna
Niguel areas during the early
1900s are to be honored Sunday
a l Laguna Niguel Regional
Park.
S ome 200 m e mbe r s and
friends of the Saddleback Area
Historical Society are expected
at an "oldtimers historical
barbecue.'' said Rose Noutary,
society corresponding secretary.
She and Merle Boulton are ar·
ranging the picnic.
Mrs. Noutary's father, Do·
mlngo Echeberria, was the first
Basque to immigrate to the'
valley as a shepherd at the turn
of the century. He first worked
the extensive heads of Lewis
Moulton and James Daguerre,
Mrs. Noutary recalls.
Echeberria and several other
Basque shepherds who lmmi-
gr a ted to the county later
became farmers in the Sad·
dleback Valley area.
The Historical Society notes in
a recent publication that while
the Basques "place of origin is
lost in the dim past. they have
lived throughout recorded his·
tory in northern S pain and
Southeastern France," s trad·
dling the Pyrenees Mountains.
"As Spain's world empire
crumbled in the 19th century,"
the publi ca t i on not e s .
"thousands of Basques came to
the Unit.eel States . . . . ·'
Sunday's 2 p.m. picnic is to
feature a costumed Basque
dancing exhibition . t hree
barbecued lambs and family·
type picnic games. Mrs .
Noutary said.
She noted that each year the
historical society honors a local
pioneer family and its descen·
dants or ethnic group that set·
tied the Saddleback Valley.
DINING SET
BRINCS C.4SH
·'This mon ey looks more
beautlful than my dining set
ever did."
That's the advertising success
11tory of the Huntington Beach
man who placed this ad In the
Dally Pilot:
Contemporary wnlnut
d lnlnR sot, 6 <'hrs, 2
leaves. pads. Xlnt cond.
SIOO XXX·XltXX
ff you have furniture to sell
convert lo cash, call 642·56'78.
Just a few worcb will work hard
for you In the Daily Pilot.
lions to MAC members The op
tions ranged from asking prop·
erty owner:. to give the disput·
ed land lo U1e county to muintain
to aking the land by condemna·
tion or to stop maintaining the
land.
In the telephone vole. MAC .
members supported an option
that would ask eal•h property
owne r to give the disputed land
to the county for upkeep.
MAC Chairman Keene a rgued
Monday that the telephone vote
was legal , citing a county
counsel opinion that backed him
up.
about the problem so no formal
deci::.1ons would be made without
their knowledgt-
But Mri. Kelly Wh unim
pressed
"'The counly and the <Mission
Vtt>JO 1 company had not notified
the homeowners a::. of the day of
1 he telephone vote." ::.he argued.
"I expected the issue to be on
our September agenda.
The s lopes. located next to
maJor Mission VieJO roads. have
been maintained by the county
for several years as community
s lopes .
H e argu e d that a ll
hom eowners would be contacted <See SLOPES, Page AZ>
I
D.tlly Pl!« ~tall .......
WESTMINSTER'S WILLY THE WHALE HAS NOTHING TO SMILE ABOUT TODAY
Council, Fearing for Ctty'1 'Image,' Pull1 Dealer's Balloon Down
Willy Whale Beached
Westminster Cowreil Tosses 3-2 Harpoon
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of U.. O.Uy P1"'4 SIMI
The Westminster City Council, sitting as ctlwornan Joy Neugebauer and Councilman
a municipal Captain Ahab. harpooned Willy Conne r Cotlacott. the city's retired police
the W~le Tuesday night banning the Sunset chief, voted Willy down.
Ford cfcalersh1p emblem from the sky over And. on the same night the council or·
the city. dered the Robert Macfnlosh ramily to get rid
About 40 people turned out to witness the of some of their 12 <-hickens a nd six dogs.
decis ion over whether the 29·foot-long silver Willy The Whale's doom w<.1s sealed
balloon could takl' to the skies again, said C1·
ty Clerk Kay llarpcr . "WF. WF.RE TERRIBLl" d1sappo1nted
We didn't expert 1l and wt• can"t see what.
hurm 11 can do anyon<' up there 90 feet in the
air ," said Suns<'t Ford Sule~ Manager Jim
Hanson.
"THERE WAS QUITE a lot or ap·
plausl'.'' she said of the outburst when the
council shot Willy down on a 3 to 2 vote.
Last year. about 1,200 citizens signed a
petition calling for reclin~ in Willy the Whale
from his 90 foot cruis ing altitude above the
dealership <.1l the confluence or the San Diego
and Garden Grove freeways.
I It' added that owner Bob Heusser may
appl•al the de(•tsion
"It's like tellin~ ol' Cal WorthtnRton he
can 'l have his dog Spot. or tellin~ Cul':!·Cola
to stop calling it Coke." llanson declurc<I .
T hey fe lt the g rinning little blimp
emblazoned with the firm·s name gave the
town a silly 1m<.1gc
"THE GROUNDING of the balloon has
:.eriou~ly hurt us. We sold 14 less care; last
month and I had lo ~pend $8.000 more 1n ad·
vert1s ing JUSt to compensate ·· COUNCILMEN ELDEN Gillespie and
Frank Fry voted for free enterprise and the
rii.tht to advertise Tuesday night, but were in
the minority
Willv the Whale first went aloft about four years ago when trees alonjl the freeway
gre w so tall they ob:.cured Sun~et F'ord " 70·
foot advcrtt!ootng sign. Mayor Pro Tern William French. Coun·
Saddle back
Seeks Aid
For Traffic
Accidents and traffi c conges·
lion were considered by Sad·
dleback Area Corordinating
Council executive board mem-
bers in launching a drive for
signals and hrne markings this
week.
The board ordered a letter
s ent to Oran ge County
supervisors calling ror emcrgen·
cy action on installing left-turn
sign a Is at the intersection of
Alicia Parkway and Muirlands
Boulevard. Aegean Hills, loca·
.ion or ::.cveral vehicle accidents.
Board members a1so arc see"-·
ing a left-tum signal at Avenida
de la Carlotta to accommodalt!
southbound trarfic turning tell
on El Toro Road in El Toro.
A lao sought is anotne r en·
trance lane to northbound In·
tcrstate 5 from westbound Lake
Forest Road in El Toro.
Hills Meet Set
Tho South Laguna Hills
Homeowner& Association will
conduct Its next re11ular meeting
at 7: 30 p. m. Sept. 26 at the Great
Western Savings and Loan com·
munlty rooom. 2,4100 El Toro
Road. f'or further Information.
call 830-8748 or 768·1294.
Gays Holding Clues
In Beating Death?
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of "'9 D•llY l"li.t St•ff
On Aug. 'l:1 ahoul midnight.
someone beat Rubeo M artine7. to
death in the bedroom of his
Corona del Mar home.
Today, Newport Beach police
conc e de they'vt.' run into a
deadend in trying to tr:a•k the
4 1 -v e ar -o l d r e a l l'S l a l c
i.alesman's murderer
T he proble m . according to
Detective Sam Amburgey. is
that Martinez was a homosexual
who frequented gay bars along
the Orange Coast.
Amburgey s aid the gays who
knew Martinez have been reluc·
tant to cooperate In the search
for the man la st seen with
Martinez, fearing exposure as
homosexuals. One man. ap-1
p arently a c lo se fri('nd .
told police he saw Martinez last
at th e Coast Inn In Laguna
Beach. He said Marllne:r. in·
troduced him to a young man he
called "Ted from Indiana."
It's Ted that detectives have
sought in gay bars and hangouts
from Long Beach to Oceanside.
includina the two Laguna Beach
bar~ Martinez visited the nil~ht
he died, the Little Shrimp and the
Co&st Inn.
'Today. Amburgey said a com·
pos ite drftwing of Ted. based on
the witness' description. is being
sent to every known f(ather1ni
SOUGHT \N MURDER CASE
Police Drawing of ·Ted'
pl ::!C l' lor IU V' in So1.1•ht-rn
Coltfornla.
li e'<.. wh <t t '<i krow ,, In
ho m OSl''<UJ p 3 rl !!l'C~ ll-4 ft
chicken. a man who looks Ilk\! a
boy.
Ted is de~crlbed wis beln& ln
hil> ('arly twentie5, or ~!ender
(Stt SUSPECT. Pa1e A.:. I
,u DAIL y PILOT sa W•dl\!!d!~ 8!Q!!!!!l?t' !3. 1!!!
;U .s~ Proposes West Bank Coillpromise?
By Tbe AsM>Cla&ed Pren
A pr~al madt> by tht' L'mt
ed St;ilt.~ at the C'ump 1>111v1d
a.ummu l&lki. i·vuld lead to •
brealtthrouah 1n lh-.· Midea11t
ronfhct . th~ BoMun lh'nld
,\m~r\can reP')rtt'd todu)
Tbe ltt•y to th .. propo .. al ll c
cordtn(l to an l i.raell
pohcymakor quot .. d 1n the
copyrlabt~ 1.tor> , ti. u <'nm
prom1~t· under ~htt•h nt-1lht•r
Mdt' Ar11b or hrut•h v.-oultl
ptt'M> lib c-hum to Clldu:.ive :WV
t're1.in t)'" ovt'f thc l!-.rtell
f're• P ap A l
PROBE. • •
·~::..tld
"I •ould wik l.-ff what ai, he
::.nymg, What•~ bl> ~ayln4:?" shC'
rdated "He told me to hu.~h up
4'nd not toterrupt Iha attitude
w111~ you beUl& a woman, what
do )'Ou know about polittcs?"
Th~ young bnde then spoke
onJy Russian but OswaJd spoke
bot!'. languages.
o ,waJd occas1onally made r e
m arKs about Kennedy, :.he re·
c alled
"Whatever he sa id about
President Kennedy, 1t was onJy
goOd , aJways."
Two years later. of course,
Oswald would be identHied as
the assassin who murdered Ken-
nedy in Dallas on Nov. 22, 1963.
Oswald was slain in the Dallas
police station by Jack Ruby.
His widow married a Dallas
factory foreman, Kenneth
Porter, in 1965. They were
d ivorced in 1974 but later re-
sumed living together in Dallas.
Soon after her marriage to
Oswald. Mrs. Porter said, she
was start.Jed at Oswald's s ugges-
tion that they move to the United
States.
·'It wasn't a very easy de-
cision for me lo make," she
said. "What should I do? Should
I follow him? Should l stay at
home? I told him where ver
he'd go, I should too."
Speaking in English with a
trace of an accent, she described
their move lo Fort Worth where
Jsw ald's brother Robert lived
Osw ald had trouble finding work
<1nd his attjtude soured, she con·
tanued .
occupied Weal Bank of the
Jordan CRelatecbtory,A3 >
1 ... r.wl. whll'h would bt· for<'cd
to nrnvt• m1lllury forces out or
populutlon cenle1'1i to clearly d~·
(an c·d ~.1111Konl> undn thl! pluu,
•11111\'M .. 1t•Jdy tu iH.'l'f'PI the pro ,,.,..,a I I ht: nt·w~11111>,:r ... u1d .
Hut I r1u·I I!\ udumunt uoout
l..np1na alb ton • on tht> Wt·~t
Bank throul(hout ,, prnpusNi,
r1 vt• Vl'<lr lr Ull'lltlOll jWl'lod ll'..id
in~ 111 Pa l,·-.t 111iun w H r ult-. lhl'
ltt'f ljhl Anw r1,·&tt\ 111t1d
'I ..ilmud Shov1tl. .i L1kud P~rty
member of Israeli Prime
Minister Menaeh m Begin's rul· w.: eoulitaon, saul the success or
ra1l11re of the Camp David laJk11
depends on Egypt's willingness
to U((rcc not to press Arab
('lalmi. to sovereignty over the
Wf'St Dank, the story said .
Other Is raeli officials re·
portedly !.aid lhc plan could lead
to u de facto freeze on new
lsr:a eh :.elllement!> on the West
Bank . the Herald American
i;aid
S hoval. c hairman or the
APWI ........
MARINA OSWALD PORTER TAKES OATH IN PROBE
Testifying About Her Life Wtth JFK's Slayer
Women's Unit Funded
County Allots S tatus of Women $24,864
Unlike the past two years.
Orange County s upervis ors
quickly approved the 1978·79
bud~ct ror the County Com-
m ission on the Status or Women
today.
The commission 1s seeking
$24,864 this year to finance sup.
plies a nd the salary of a full·
tim e coordinator. The com-
mission s pent Sl7,158 last year
b ecause coordinator K.iren
K lam mer wasn't h ired until
mid-year
The past two years' budget
hearings were marked by long
deb:.ites from those favoring and
opposing the lhree·year-old com-
mission.
Today, after about 10 minutes
of discussion. s upervisors voted
4 to l lo approve the commission
bud~el.
Supervisor Laure nce Schmit
cast the lone no vole arter say-
ing "You coulrl never convince
me to s upport at "
Debate~ an pu~t yt•ar!\ h.ivt•
bt>en bl'twecn lhosl' who vwwcd
the comm1ss1on as a threat to
family lire and thos(' who 1·on.
:-.1dcrcd lh<' adv1~ory panl'I t•'.'>
:-.ential to reprl'..,cnt lhl' v iew~ 11f
both housew1 ves and w1Jrk in1<
wome n
Several pasl commtsblhn 1111
ponents now serve on lh1· 1~,
mem her advisory panel.
The commission b a s h.-ld
employment, child care and
legal rights seminars. Currently
com missioners are gathering In
fo rm at ion on the needs of
women senior citizens and a job
ORANGE COAST \II
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41ht-IOl't\\) ·-"''
sharing proposal to help avoid
county layoffs.
Commissioners also recently
pre pared a slalist1 cal profile or
Orange County women.
Supervisors today were enter·
ing their fourth day of hearings
o n a proposed $508 million
budget for 1978-79, the county's
first post.Jarvis spending pl an.
Bonfa's Happy
Owted Aide Still Fires Salvos
By ROBE RT BA.RKER
Of, ... O.lty Pllet St.ttl
Don P. Bonfa is alive and weU.
He has added a beard a nd lost some pounds.
He is still keeping his hand in the law business but he
a lso is a broker for a n industriaJ and commercial real
estate investing company.
He ;ippears to be m ellowing five months a fter he was
turned out or office
And while he said it hurt for awhile, he is delighted thathe
no longt>r is the c1ly attorney for Huntington Beach.
BUT BONF'A DEMONSTRATED that he hasn't forgot·
ten how to fir~ off a salvo or two an the direction of City
Hall. even if in soft<'r tones.
I k saul that th<' Caty Counci I, a frequent sparnng
partn1·r an his 10 yNtrs an office. has gone from bad to
wor~c :md 1h11t voters cheated themselves by electing un-
quul if1t-d <'and1cta11·~ last April
11 l•rt• 'show he• srzes up som e orthe city's elected leaders:
JOUN THOMAS: "Unqualified and quixotic. You
don 't know which wuy he 'll JUlllP next. His manners are of·
h:n1>i Vf' un<I obnoxious."
RICHARD SIEBERT : "Incompetent and lacks abili·
ty to :inulylc problems. lie comes to incdrrecl conclusions
while h~t.cnanf( to u handful of people."
-808 MANDIC: "Unduly mfluenced by Thomas and
Siebert. llasn't demonstrated the courage or independence
lhut wus hoped for."
-RUTII BAILEY: "Unqualified and naive. Doesn't
have the background to understand complex problems."
Bonfa also offered some comments, none of which
we re favorable, about his successor, Gail Hulton.
··she's nol strong enough to be independent and will be
frustrated trying to please the City Council. She doesn't
h ave necessary qualifications or experience and every day
proves il."
Bonfa also claims that the City Council made a major
blunder in reinstating John O'Connor who was Bonfa's
s parring mate as a deputy city attorney.
BONFA FIRED O'CONNOR after the two were in·
volved In a physical altercation last December. Each
claims that he was attacked by the other. Bonfa says that
the City Council was incapable of Judging the dispute and
shouldn't have given O'Connor his job back. Bonfa also
said that he received unfair press coveraae and that he
was defeated long before the election by newspaper
articles.
"THERE WAS NOTHING I could do to win. If I had It
to do over again t wouldn 'l have spent Sl0,000 or my own
money.''
But Bonfa says that he reaJly ltn't biller about
anything and refuses to dwell on what be conalden to be
past inju.stJces.
"I had 10 years of good experiences and there were
lots of plusses. I learned a lot about law. pollt1ca and life."
Jsraell Fe>Nlp Ministry's Ad
vlsory Committee on lnforma·
l ion. is not directly involved in
the Camp David talks, but has
kept in regular contact with
Israeli negotiators and fl ew lo
the Unil.ed States with Begin. the
newspaper said.
There was no immediate com·
menl by U.S., Israeli or Egyp·
tian officia ls on the He rald
American's story.
Meanwhile. Preside nt Carter
has met unannounced al Camp
David. Md .. with I s rae l 's
Menachem Begm, setting off in·
tensive U.S. deliberations in the
search for a way lo compromise
Israeli and E~yplian differences
over the future of the Palestin·
1an Arabs.
The Carter· Begin s ession.
which lasted nearly an hour and
a half Tuesday night. was con-
firmed today by the White House
press offi ce more than 12 hours
later. Carter and Begin had not
met since Sunday.
Afte r the meeting, Carter left
his principal advisers. including
s~c retary of Slate Cyrus R.
Vance. working past midnight.
IL was understood the U.S. del·
egation is working on the pre·
cise language or a s tatement en·
compassing Palestinian and
other issues.
Rising early, Carter went
back to work at 6:45 a.m .. meet·
ing with Vance. presidential as·
si~la nt Zb1gniew Brzezinski and
Harold Saunders, assistant
secretary of stale for the Middle
East.
Agents to Move In
Target: Curbing Railroad Damage
Task forces of railroad agents
are schedule d to move into
southern Orange County next
month in a drive to curb damage
a nd injuries caused by rock
throwers and individua ls who
place barriers on Santa Fe
tracks.
The project was conformed
this morning by J im Scter. San·
ta F e's divbion ~pecial agent
stationed in San Bernardino.
Specifically targeted. Seter
s aid. is the San Clemente area
and . possibly, the El Toro·
Mission Viejo vicinity where
railroad agents a nd county
Two Countians
Listed Among
Crash Victims
Two o( the five Marines killed
Monday in a fiery helicopter
crash near Twentynine PaJms
were from the Marine Corps Air
Station <he licopter > in Tustin
and were Santa Ana residents.
officials said this morning.
All the large twin-rotor craft's
occupants were killed on im·
pact, officials said. The two men
from Santa Ana were co-pilot
and 1st U . J .E. Keough Jr. 28,
formerly or Holyoke. Mass .. and
Lance Cpl. M.D. Singleton, 22.
formerly of Hebron, Ind. They
belonged to helicopter squadron
HMM ·l63.
Dead also are pilot and Capt.
D.A. Eckel. 29. and Sgt. W.A.
Nay, age unavailable. Both men
were stationed in Hawaii and
were with helicopter squadron
HMM·262. officials said.
sheriff's deputies have reported
increased activity along Santa
Fe's trackage.
Santa Fe trains run parallel lo
the ocean at San Clemente
where rock throwers have creat ·
ed problems often in the past.
police report. The tracks curve
inland at Capistrano Beach,
paralleling rnter..,lalp ~ ~.•rt en
tcring a length; cut r.< <'• Le f ....
Road in Miss:or llieJO
A county sheriff's depart ment
s pokesma n s aid this morning
that policing the railroad cut
bet ween La Paz Road and Lake
Forest Drive has become in·
creasingly difficult.
Rock throwing and placing ob·
jects on the tracks always have
been problems, he said, but the
incidents have been increasing.
"Most of the proble m ." ht•
said . "occurs at about the time
school let..s out between three
and four in lhe afternoon "
Diesel e ng ine windshields
have been broken. he said. and
the trains have been peppered
with rocks.
f'ro• Page A I
SLOPES ...
"This is what we have public
hearings for."
MAC m em ber s agr eed to
ratify the t e lephon e volt>
anyway.
They voled 4 lo l to notify
homeowners and ask them to
grve the disputed land to the
county .
Mrs. Kell y voted no.
Now, county s upervisors will
decide the issue Sept. 26 with the
MAC 's r ecommend a tion in
hand.
For The Execµtive. • •
On display now
The spokesm an noted that
placing objects on tracks or
throwing them at railroad trains
are felony offenses.
"Walking on tracks is a
tres pass misdem eanor." he
added . "Most parents don't re·
alize that "
He said ~<'h<'CI chi'.drE'n "have
hH·n c'<''r'!.Y-tr.:tk<:n -'>landing
1.1· raairoad tracks and jumping
oH al the last minute."
The s heriff's officer said
railroad agents are police of·
racers under the law and that the
south county sheriff's substation
has been ordered to cooperate
with them fully.
f'ro• Page A I
SUSPECT ...
build. standing about five feet.
e ight inches lall and weighing
about 130 pounds.
lie has sandy brown hair and
a light complexion. "m burgey. in pleading ror
help in identifying and locating
Ted. said he wants to assure
m e mbers of the homosexual
community that their identity
will be protected.
"We really need to find this
guy before something like this
happens again." he said.
Martinez' hody was found an
h as blood spattered bedroom
about 20 hours after he died.
More Cove rage
Other south Orange County
coverage appea rs today on
Page AlO.
Several large, high-quality
traditional desks, ready for delivery
TORRANCE
2)W9 Hawthorne Blvd.
(213) 37a. t279
COSTA MESA
1S9S Newpcwt Blvd.
( 7 l4> 642-2050
LAGUNA BIACH
3'S Nortn Coast .,hwy.
(714) ·~51'
°"'" --.., •klll«< ·-· ART AND MARILYN DROZ DEMONSTRATE TECHNIQUE
A Team Approach to Investigation by Hypnoala
Crime Plumbed
Humington Uses Hyprwsis
By RAYMOND ESTRADA JR. °'Ille 0.11• l"llt4 ''•"
lluntmgton Beach police have
added a new weapon to lheir
l'nme.fighting arsenal
It'!' not a special gun or exotic
dcv1l'c Tht' new weapon. or tool
as somr call It. i!' hypnosis
Off1n·r /\rt Dro'.I.. a trained
hypnotist. and his wife Marilyn.
an artist. form the first police
hypnosis te<im i n Oran ge
County
Huntington Beach Police Chief
Earle Robita11lc. Capt. Bill
Payne and Oroz all have re·
ceived training at t he Los
A nge les·based Law E nforce·
mt·nt Hypnosis Institute.
Drol. uses hypnosis lo retnevc
information from the minds of
crime victim" and witnesses
who may h<i vc lost their ex·
perienccs 10 their !>Ubconscious
nt>sses.
• ll 's not black m agic we
don't use 1t for entertainment."
~ays Droz. a detective.
/\ rapist's facial description.
an }IUto license plate number or
a thug's snarled words may be
forgotten or blotted out of a v:c.
l1m 's mind by the trauma of lhe
incutent , Droz said
"llypnos1s is concentrated re·
laxat1on," explained Droz who
admits there are many myths he
must dispel before he can hyp.
notize a subject.
No one can be hypnotized un·
les!> he or she want!> to be placed
1n that mental stute. Droz said.
One example or the JO cases in
which the ll unt 1ngton Beach
pol1ct· hypnotist used the tech·
mque occurred recently when a
rape victim said she co\dd not
describe ht'r altacker
Oroz hypnotized the woman
who was then able to describe
the man.
With artist's pencil in hand.
Arabs Deny
Oil Boycott
Talks Threat
CAIRO. F.~ypt CAP> Saudi
/\rabia 's foreign minister denied
today that the Arab nations plan
an oil boycott if the Camp David
s ummit talks fail. But he said
that both the Arab nations and
the world community would then
have to look "at options" for
safeguarding peace in the Mid-
dle East.
Pr ince Saud El F aisal's re-
m arks appeared lo be a veiled
warning to Western nations.
which have considerable oil and
tr<id<-' mterests In tbe area.
.. Oil is not a weapon, It Is a re-
so1:1 rcc." said the prince. In
Cairo for a meeting of the Arab
League.
Fuisal said the Arabs had
taken ~1sks and responded to in·
ternat1onal efforts to end the
JO.year Mideast conmct.
But he saJd that if lbe erforts
or the Arabs are "blocked by in·
tronsigence rrom lsrael or their
refusal lo present alternatives to
peace. then I think the Arab
counlr_les have the responsibility
to review their alratra and see
whether their r ights a.nd in-
t!rests are safe.guarded. And
J m sure other countries would
do the same ...
Observers expect the Saud.ls to
call a reconclllntlon meellng
a mon1i /\rahs disturbed by
Eg y plian Pruldenl Anwar
Sadat 's negotiation• with Is rael
if Ms talks with President Certer
nnd P rime MlnJ1i. Menachem
Be1ln at Camp Da vid fall to
mo\•e th e p eace process
fOr'Wlrd.
Mrs. Droz was able to capture
the rape victim's descr iption or
her attacker .
Without the use of hypnos is
police would have had nothing to
go on and the case would be at a
deadend. Droz said.
Sincl' the Huntington Beach
Police _Department begun using
hypnosu; on a regular basis fi ve
months ago. no cases have yet
been completely solved because
of the technique.
B u t P oli ce Chief Earle
Robitaille said he has great faith
that the method will prove its
worth in the future.
Savings of time and money.
no rm ally used for police
"legwork" in tracking down in-
formation "is the major poi nt
that sold me" on using hypnosis
111 1nvest1gations , Rob1ta11le
l>a1d.
Robitaille said it is not yet
necessary to train a number of
police as hypnotists since the
technique is not used daily. Anci
like any new tool , the method
must first gain more accep·
lance. he added.
In April. 1977. Robitaille hyp·
nolized a female w1tness in the
apparent murder of a Mexican
national in Huntington Beach.
Mrs. Droz. a Cat State Long
Beach art graduate. and former
fl untington Beach police dis-
patcher, was called in to draw a
composite sketch of the possible
murder suspect.
Robitaille said the information
cleared up at least one aspect of
the case but still left it unsolved.
Mrs. Droz. who works without
a hypnotist at times. says the
technique really works . "I only
draw the lines that t he subJect
tells me to put down," she said.
Mrs. Droz. t r ained by Los
Angeles police artist Fernando
Ponce, said the use or artists in
crime problems is not as new as
police hypnotists but a lso not as
widespread.
She said both she and her
husband must work together to
help crime victims and wit ·
nesses overcome misconceptions
about hypnosis.
"There's no swinging watch
and people don't blurt out deep
sec_rets." Droz said. The hyp·
not1st uses a gentle deep voice
and a comforting ha nd on the
subject's shoulder to help bring
on the hypnotic state.
Most hypnosis is self-induced.
A s ubject will not say'\omething
under tbe hypnotic state that he
or she does not want lo have
known, Droz explained.
"It's also a misconception that
only dumb people can be hyp-
notized," said Droz who added
that a more intelligent person
can reach a deeper state of hyp-
nosis and perhaps recall more.
. "T_he mind acts like a high·
f1debty recorder . . . it can re·
call almost e ve rything from
birth to death." Droz sa id.
The information obtained in
hypnosis sessions would normal
ly only be used to corroborate
other ract.s, Droi.,said.
The hypnotic atatemenLci prob·
ably would not find their way
Into courtroom hearings, police
said.
A police hypnosis s e ssion
takes between one 8nd three
hour11 and usually leaves the
subject relaxed while Droz and
his arti8t wife might end up ex-
b&ust ed.
The hu.'1band.w1fe team S(l1d
there are no problems with their
close worki ng relationship.
"I don 't have to explain
myself ao often,·' s aid Oroi
"I don't worry so much about
the times he's working." said
Mrs. Droz.
"It means a lot more shar-
ing.'' the pollce hypnollsl added.
s PAIL Y PILOT ,43
Rome oles Break
Capital Gains
Hope Fading
WASHIN 0 1'0 N I AP >
Despite Ila populilrlty in the
tlousc. the future or a once·ln·a
lifetime $100,000 lax break for
people who sell their homes is in
doubt
The administration opposes
the ca pi lat gains tax relief
which would cost the Treasury
$700 mituon a year in tax rev-
enues. as too expensive
Park Rent
Debated
In Niguel
The Laguna Niguel Women's
Club has donated $3.000 toward
racilllles a t the ne w Crown
Valley Communily Park ,
supervisors were told Tuesday.
And now a proposed county
policy could force club members
to spend $10 a n hour to bold
evl'ning meetings at the park's
comm unity center
Supervisors asked county or
f1c1als Tuesday to review pro·
p~sed fees at the new Laguna
Niguel area park to see if a s lid·
ing scale can be used to differen·
tiate non.profit communj ty
groups from those that might
rent the center fo r such things
as wedding receptions or sales
meetings.
_Dennis Devine or the Laguna
Niguel Community Association
said thal as thjngs stand now
charges would be too great for
m any community groups to af·
ford. including those that have
worked to make the SO·acre park
a reality.
The park. on Crown Valley
Parkway near La Paz Road. is
set to open in mid·October.
·'The community has worked
so hard to get a community
center for these groups and now
the fees arc so high these groups
can 't use them .'' Devine said.
Larry Leaman, county recrea-
tion pro~ram manager. said a
s liding fee was proposed at firs t
for the Crown Valley facility.
But the county counsel's office
was concerned that the varying
fees might leave the county open
to complaints about discnmma·
lion between various groups.
Supervisor Philip Anthony
said it has been common in the
pust for cities and other public
agencies t o offe r d iffe r ent
charges for facilities to non·
profit and commercial or ganiza.
lions.
S u per visor Ra lph Clark
::ig r eed but note d ·•since
Proposition 13 there is no free
lunch.
Sen . Russt:ll H . Long.
chair man of the ~ienate Finance
Committee, has indicated that
he. too, would like to cut back on
the provision
Long has not said exactly
what he has in mind. except to
indicate he thinks some tax
should be paid on the $100,000
profit. He has shown no inclina-
tion to go along with a Treasury
olan that would a llow t ax relief
only for home sellers 55 or older
Long's committee, which Is
wr itmg its version of a broad tax
cu t bill ror business and in·
di viduals. is considering several
a!t~rnatives to the $100,000 pro-
v1s1on wt\ich the House passed
last month. The provision was
wide ly hailed as a long·overdue
tax break for infl ation weary
Ame ricans. mainly those at mid·
die-income levels.
The sale or a home is the only
event for most Americans that
incurs the tax on capital gains.
which are profits from the sate
of assets held a year or more.
Because inflation d r ives up
hom e prices. the tax can be a
s hock when it hits.
T he law allows a person who
sell s his priocipal home to defer
any capital gains tax until
sometime in the future. as long
::is he buys another home that is
worth at least as much as the old
one sold for.
If no new home 1s bought. the
profits from the sate are treated
just like any other capital gain
One·half the profit is taxed as the
sam e rate that applies to the tax·
payer's wages and other income.
After a $10.000 exemption. lhe
othe r half is subject to an add1·
t ionat 15 percent "minimum
tax."
/\ special break is avail able to
anyone 65 or older who sells a
home w1thout buying another
There is no tax if the home sells
for $35,000 or less. If the price is
higher. the tax.free amount is
determined by multiplying the
total profit by $35,000 and divid·
ing that by the sales price.
. Instead or the $100.000 exemp·
lion for all. the administra tion
recommends that the special
break ror t h e e lde rly be
liberalized. raising the $35,000
factor to $50.000. and that it be
m ade available to those 55 or
older
The House prov1s1on would rc-
peul the special brea k ror those
65 or older and allow a $100.000
tax exemption for anyone. re ·
gardless of age. who se lls his
hom e . If enacted. this would ap·
ply to all sales after J uly 26.
1978. but it could be used by a
home seller only once.
............
WATERGATE BURGLAR AT CBS ANNIVERSARY BASH
G. Gordon Liddy Shown With Wife, Frances
'Gate' Reunion
Liddy, Butterfield Meet
. NEW YO RK <AP i -Watergate figures G. Gordon Liddy
and Alexan~~r B~tterfle.t~ met fo r the first time. brought
together by 60 Minutes But Lhe encounter didn't last much
over 60 seconds.
The occ~ion was a. 10th annivers ary party Tuesday night b~ CBS for its award·winning TV newsmagazine program ··60
Minutes." '
PRODDED BY A PHOTOGRAPHER, Butterfield relucta nt·
Iv walked .across the Four Seasons ballroom to whe re the tux·
edo·clad Liddy was sitting with his wife. ·
"Hello. pt~ased to meet you." said Butterfield the former
Federal . Avtat1on Administration head and presidential aide
whose dasclo:;ure of a White House recording system helped bnn~ d~~ R1".hard_Nixon :S presidency.
H1 . replJed Liddy. first waving. then extending his band
.. "I don't believe we've ·ever met ," Butterfield continue'd
But . I talked to you a few times when you answered John
Dean s phone ...
BU'l:'f'ERFIELD, ~OW AN EXECUTIVE vice pres ident for
lnternataonal Air Service Inc. in San Francisco told the Liddys ·
"You ~th ha ve been admirable in so many w~ys. We all hav~
our st~ries to ~ell and I'm sympathetic t-0 yours ...
Liddy souled.
Outside the pa rty lights. Butterfield s aid he did not mean to
imply suppc)rt for Liddy
. ·:11~ h.as his principles and I have mine. l respect him for
has d1~c1phne. but l don't admire him for what he did."
Liddy. who ~pends his time "writing. speaking and going to
parties." was silent whjle in Jail and was not paroled until he
served 521:? months for .his part in the Watergate break-in. Both
n?le~. however. that Liddy was in ja il when Butterfield made
his disclosure.
'_'THE TAPE DISCLOSURE DID ME no harm: it did the
president harm,·· said Liddy.·
The list of people invited, compris ed of some of the people
who have appeared on "60 Minutes," Included Nixon. who hap-
pened to be in town to sign a book contract. But he did not at·
tend.
Felony Rap Hits F:ord "We are incurring cost s with
lights and so forth," he con·
tlnued . "We have to make sure
everyone understands that." C ha r ges p roposed for the ELKHART, Ind fAP l -A Lynn. and their cousin. Donna dianapolis attorney who helped
C r o wn Va lJ ey Com m unity county grand Jury today indicted Ulrich. 18. or Roanoke . Ill . draft the revised state penal
Center were $5 per hour during the Ford Motor Co. on three burned lo death code under which the action wai;
the business day and SlO per counts or reckless homicide and The Pinto in which the Uln ch brought. said the consideration
hour weekends and evenings. If one count of criminal reckless· girls died was one of 1.5 m illion of c rimina l c harges agains1
fund·rais.ing or commercial ven· ness in the deaths of three youn~ Pi nto and Mercu ry Bobcats Ford was unprecedented.
lures were involved the fee women in a Pinto automobile made between 1971 and 1976 lhat Th e teen·agers' 1973 P into
would increase by S5 per hour. crash last month Ford recalled in J une because of sedan exploded when hit in the
Use of the outdoor patio wou1d There was no immediate reac-government complaints about rear by a van driven by Robert
be SlO per hour weekdays and Lion from the auto company the fuel tank Duggar. Zl, or Goshen. County
$20 per hour weekends and eve· F Prosecutor Michael A. Cosentino nings or twice t hat for fund-The Elkha r t County grand ord denies the tanks are any s aid the grand jury also is in-
raising or commerca·at ventures. jury or five men and one woman more susceptible to explosion . had b d I.be t" T than oth II f ves t1 gat in possible charges There also would be a n extra egun e I ra ions ues er sma cars o those against Duggar .
c harge for use o r k ·itc he n day in the case. which stems model years. when no federal T f th A lo ·d · d 11· · .eslimo n y b y two Ford facilit ies. rom e ug. <icci ent in rear.en co 1s1on sta ndards ex
h h J d U I · h 8 t d engineers and four other wit-
Ad mission to the par k swim· w 1 c u Y ri c · 1 · or as e nesses. including the Ulrich sis· ming pool was proposed al $l.50 Osceola; her 16·year-old sister. W 1 I liam Con nou r. an In · . 1~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·~~~~~~~~~t~e~rs~p~a~r~e~n~ts~·!e~n~d~ed!!.JT~u~e~sQd!ary~
for adults and $1 fo r youngsters
under age 14. Teams using park
playing fields would have to pay
$3.85 per game and those using
the picnic shelter $6.
S upervisors imposed fees
T uesday for sports fie lds a t
Alicia Park in Mission Viejo.
T he fee was set at $3.85 per
game with an extra $1.60 char ge
for night Ughting.
Girl Raped;
Suspect Held
OA K LAN D CAP > A
tra~sient has been charged with
rap,ing a 12-year·old girl in front
of rive children.
Norman Tate. 34, was ar·
raigned on four charges.
Tate, who lived in his car for a
month oefore he moved Into a
hotel where the attack occurred
allegedly entered the children's
room, hit the 12-year-old on the
head wtth a hammer and then
assaulted her.
M08lem Arrested
T EHRAN, Jran <AP> -A
hardllne Mosle m leader and
sever:ll JOurnallsts were among
scores of persons arrested Tue~
d& y In lhe sweeping clampdown
on opposition group!! ordered by
Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi.
T hey were seized unde r pro·
visions of t he ma rtial law
decreed a fter more than 100
persons were killed during new
a ntl-aovcrnment protests lhat
~rupted Friday In Tehran and
otbar cities. •
Gem
Talk
By J.C. llUMPHRI ES
Cil'mol()!JW
MIXING
AND
MATCHING
comes to iewelry fashion
''Layering" of jewel ry Is becoml0<3
popular with the ladles. This Is a term
used to describe the mixing, stacking
or cluste rlng of seve ra l pieces of
jewelry to present a striking fashion
arpearance. For example, the wearing
o more than one o<>ld chain, Of' the combination of a sfmple chain with one
that has a pendant. This adding-on
makes It passlble for tOday's woman to
keep her Jewelry wardrobe current
without buying a lot of expensive new
p ieces. After esta bllshln9 a basic
wardrobe o f t wo or t h r ee gold
neckchalns, several stud earrlnos, a few rlnos and two or three stickpins,
she ca n add onto these later. For ex· am ple, s<.atter pins, stack rln9s and .,
heavy gol d ban9le bracelet might be
added, and used to vary and 'henoe
t he combination of pieces worn.
Another Idea: double-plercl09 ears .,,.
lows lhe wearing of two pairs of tar·
rings, offerl09 an almost lnfl nlt. varlt-ty of match-ups Layering Is a clever
way lo widen your fashion Mrlzon.
I it tak~s
the right
kind of
money to
look your best.
Wideband
Gold
Coin
Jewelry
The ngn1 kind 01 money t0d8y ts gotd e<>1ns. Lustrous
COtns. yours Of ours are mek109 dehghttut iewotry Set
1n crafted M karo1 gold lrames. coina can be wom as.
ne<:111aces. pendants. and btac•lels to menoon onty a
rcw Come '" ind see OYr compfete select1on ot coon
1owo1ry
J. C. JJumpfu.U?6 Jewefsr6 ~
MfMBEll AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY @
1823 NEWPORT BLVO . COSTA MESA
CONVE~NT TERMS BanlcArnetloerd-Mater Ch.-oe
32 YEARS IN THE SAME LOCATION PHONE 548-3401
A'• ONl.Y PtLOT
NATION
W.o~. Sep~ 13, 1971
Jut
:··~ Coat1tiog et
wlda ~!;; Tom~~\
Grasso, Carey Win
Pri1naries Set Ewction Scene Nationwide
Marpbln~
Keeping in at Bay
EVElt VIGll NT OF.". The &ood and (aithful
p11r111hlunc•f" of St Joat'hlm 11 Catholic> Church tn Co11t u
M rn •"' t>urrt•otl)' h11vlnJl .. bit of • atruuie with Cit)'
Hllll The>) would Ilk<' lo plM)' • lllUt' blnao Some dty of
(1ct-r1 tiow.-wr. ft•1tr lh«-ic•m• N~· 1l "'hnuld bt> m1de qu.tte clt-11.r that nobody ovM M
tht' nrnntrtpal 101ura .. maid 1mpu&n the motavt'it of the
1ood und faithful JI St J1u1rhlm ·a It 1111 wt•ll l'1tt11blll1hrll
th1ll the partsh I" .it)fiH' rt'proach
Tht• churrh of rou"e &ttkll ,. hlngo f)"rm1t so thut 1ti;
fl'H'n'b\>n._tup r111n 1tathM for a few friendly "umt-K wht>re ~ml' peopltt .. 111 .. 1n a nd the relit will c"ntrlbut~ h1tpp1ly to
thl' fin n<'u•I ,...,, ht-1ng of th<'lr port~h
Bl'T THI~ l~N'T ""h>' lhf' ('It\ Coune1l 11nd ~onw ur lht>
mun1r1~I hra~' •rt• n,•nou1'
Th('l\C' <"It) otrireri. note that bin10 I:,, ~ell. put plu1nly,
1111mbhn1 You pa> for u c1trd and take your t'h1tnC't>i. with the
numb.·N Pt"OPlt' love 11 In otht.'r rnun1c1ralltws. folk'
n0c·k ", lht-b1nao ftl.lml'l't lo put up the pnce 0 a few c11r(1i.
Tht' 'It) fr11r 1., thut tf they 1 .,~ut• il pt·rm1t to St
Jo1.u·h1oi l\, .. hn tht•n 14 Ill ht: nt.'xt In line ~eekina u
11\lllllt'IP:tt llN•l'\IW (ur I ht• )tltm,.,. '>
\t TUORIT .. :~ H t:PORT thut b1m.:u runt-r:.impant 111
2'1nlul pla\'t•i. l1kl· 1\nuht·1rn Preu\•her:i have bt'cn ordained
' ....... I ' I
1 " • I ~'li~P~~tl '~· I
/:1 " / -i\}.! , I • •
•• ( '(_ '\.," ! I f , .,,..... _,,._, .. . .
, _J . fl. ,.. , , ...... _.., ,,., = · l'-~ --41:Hllo.MJ . ,
I'
, -' & ... •.'t/. ~ .. l.'"
r
...-.. ~------Wtok and Ma:sgwded Coato Mesom Indulging an Camta of Chance
lhrough mail ordPr houses. Churches pop up behind desert·
cd store fronts. And bingo games ure roaring away like
fire sales
tty 1be Auodak"d Presa
t>t·rnocratlc G<lv:i tluf(h Carty
ur Nt•w York un<t t :llu Gru:sso or
l'onnt•t'lll'Ul t-us1ly s~u~bhed in
trapurty chullonf(t.'IS while Harry
llu~hcs upsl'l acting Maryland
Gov. Blair L .. ~ us the nation
ht•ld 1h lar~esl numbe r of
pnmurws l>t'forc the November
t.·lcd 1on.'
A TOTAi. Of'' l4 11tutes and the
0111tr1t.·t or Columbia held
pr1mant.o:-Tutisduy with one of
tho ln~"t'Hl upselb being Hughes'
dcft.•ut of Lhc :succ:clSsor to former
(;o, Mjrvm M~ndel Hughes 1s
u formt·r Murylund transporta
t1on 't'n t•tary
1 he Oetnol·rnt1t• Farmer
La~o1 Party nomination for one
U S Senall' M.•at in Minn(.'S()la
w;1~ narrowly won by bus1 -'
nt>:.i.man Robert E Short. who cd~t.·d R ... p. Donuld Fraser in the
battle for ti chanC'e to replace,
M uricl llumphrey. wldow of.
1Ju~c1 I llumphrl'y.
Carey had no troub1e defeat·
ing LL Gov . Mary Ann e
Krupsak. who failed to gain s up·
port from women and upstate
voters Death penalty advocate
Jeremiah Bloom wu:s third.
('ARl!:V Wll.1. FACE As·
scmbly Minority Lt>ader Perry
Duryea. who was unopposed for
the llcpubllcim nomination.
Mrs. Grasso s wamped LL
Gov. Robert Kiili un by a 2-lo· 1
margin 1n the Democratic
primary and will face Rep.
Ronald Sarasin. who was UDOP·
posed in the Republican contest.
in November.
City Councilman Marlon
Barry held a s lender l ,OOO·vote
lead in the Washington. D.C ..
mayoral primury with incum·
be nt Walter Washington running
third behind Sterling Tuc~er,
'Nazi-Like'
.tl,.WI ........
RIVALS New York winner
Carey Cleft >. loser Krupsuk.
also a council mt•rnber E lection
orficials say the outcome may
not be determined until absentee
ba I loti; a r e counted . Art
Fl<'lcher. who served in the Ford
Administr'ation. captured the
Republican primary.
Herc Is a state·by-slate run
down or the other races.
MARYLAND: Hughes' victory
was seen as a repudiation o(
Mandel. who was convicted of
mail fraud und racketeering and
forced to step down in favor or
Lee. Former U.S. Sen . J . Glenn
Beall had no problem gaining
the GOP gubernatorial nod .
NEW VO RK : An acknowledgment by U.S. Rep
Jo'red Richmond that he had
solicited sex from a 16-year -old
boy did not derail Richmond's
Democratic renomination bid in
the 14th Congressional District.
one of the poorest In the state.
Richmond faces an aggressive
challenge from Bernard Gifford,
a former school adminlstratQr.
RHODE ISLAND: Providence
Major Vincent Cianci ran away
with the Republican mayoral re·
nomination with 97 percent or
the vote. Ile defeated Robert A.
Costa Mesa wtints none of that. The city has alre1.1dy
hurt enough problems with sin. You let 1t few i;aloons open
and the next thinR you know they've got nude dancing
girls in lhf'Re places. News Leaders Hit
No sooner have the municipal fathers stamped out that
kind or departure from virtue, than somebody comes along
and opens a naked modeling studio.
The City Fathers are still grappling with that one.
Well. maybe grappling i&n't the best description in this
C'ase.
Court Decisions
/\nyway. you can clearly see why Costa Mesa's
municipal Shakers-and-Movers suffer fear and trembling
at the posslblllty that gambling might infiltrate and thus
wl'uken the moral fiber or the community
F:VF.N WITHOUT BINGO, law enforcement is going to
htivl' iii. hands full right now in suppressing the gamblina
\'it't• The football scui.on is In full swing. Baseball's World
Scrws 1:-. coming up. The weak and unwary nmong us have been known to
lay out thf'ir hurd-eurned cash on the outcome or such
uthl<•l1c· ('001<':-.l:-. Such activity is clearly unlawful in Costa
M c:. a
We mu:-.t all rl'memher that the pncc of punty 1i.
t•tt•rnal v1g1l<incc·
Elvis Presley Estate
To Be City Museum?
MEMPHIS, Tenn. <I\ P) · Elvis Presley's grave and mansion
may hecomc a city-run museum -if Memphis and the managcr i.
o(lhe hip swavelin~ r0<:k s tar's estate can agree
Memphis Mayor Wyeth Chandler said Tuesday that ncRotiu·
lions for the city purchu~e of Presley's Graceland Mansion ur1•
"between proposals."
Hut Chandler says price Isn't the problem: "There's no quei.·
t1on th<' council would s upport ;my move within reason," h e ~aid.
"I don't think any figure would be out of the ballpark."
G racelanct. a Georgian-style mansion on a 13-acre tract wher<'
Prcsl"Y ~nd his mother are buried, has become a mecca for Pre!\ley
rans s inct•tht:••ntl'f1 ainer 's death l\ug. 16, 1977
WASlllNG1'0N <AP> -News
media l('aders attacked recent
court actions against the press
Tuesday rughl. contending that
:.ill Americans will lose some
freedom if reporters arc forced
to d1 vulge sources.
More than 400 rep<>rlers who
~othcrcd for a "First Amend·
mcnt Ha lly" at the National
Press Club heard ABC-TV com·
mentator Howard K . S mith de·
ride a r ecent Supreme Court rul-
in ~ ::.:.i nctionin~ searc hes of
nPw:-.room:-. without warrants,
t'allinR 1t "<.1 Nazi-like ruhng."
Nt;W VORK TIMES reporter
Myron Furber . who s pent 26
dayi; in the Aer gen County, N.J .•
Jail lust month ror refusing to
turn over his notes in a murder
trial. s atd freedom of the press
"serves a very important
~ocietal interest.''
Wushin ~ton Post publishe r
Kuthurine Graham s aid legal
l'Urb~ on the press erode the
frPPdom or all Citizens
··wt• nL'ed to show our readers
how they lose when our news·
~at hcr1ng ability is un·
dcrmmL'<i." ~he said.
Farber was released from jail
Aug 30 pending a New Jersey
Supreme Court decision on his
rt'qlll'Sl ror a hearing.
J\ STATE JUDGE jailed
Farbl·r for contempt and fined
Th~· Times $5,000 a d ay for
Rains Flood Rochester
About 24 Minnesota Residems E~
Tn.JNTat•re•
AU),lOu~
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11.s.s ... •arv
fhuntJ~r\lorm• •olled a<rou
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Neb• .. -· &efly !Odo. •n<I "9•YY th<lw••• p•ow.O lhrOUQll ""'"""""•on a lolinw ""10 ••Ina llwil 11-0 pan•
of 110<,,.,\let ~""·
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... in<M• ~ rMn 1•11 d\/tl"9 IMJ•le
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vi \J \ •l ,_., Roe_., ••• •tllO' I
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mild 1~,,,.,.,atu<n -rft rep0r1 ... Ill
1rw we\lern p.trl 04 IN notllon.
Calltontla
or1111y nlQl'lh -M•IY morning\
wlH Conllfllll llWOUOf'I Thu•WWIV b<ol
O•v• -.1\0<lld Ot WOO• WU,. h ll)I>\ nH•
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Tue•d•V'\ hlQl'i Ill -1-11 LO\
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MO\tn1••n ...-•• , w1U •''° ~ ''"'"" lhtOU9h fhutWS.Oy •lie• 1•1• noght •nO
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wlllboolntllomld 10\
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I o w <IOUdlMU ano <han<e ol
drttll~ niont •ntl mof'n1no llOutt
M (Omlno MOslly wnny in tn. •II•• "°"" 11\rOuQfl r!WrM!ey, ()nly pertlal
t1U rl"9 • ._ ll'to l Mll all•rMOll
hou"
'-''"' •t•l•l>l• wind\ nlgllt ana
mor,,1no -·· HIOM fll\lt'tOay lfcwn 10 al bU tllt\ 10 UO(let 7°' Inf-,
CeHtal 1-••tur"' will 1•1199
belw•tn •J el'ld •• 111ta110 lttTI• peralur .. '11'111 reft9t 111ti-n 6\ .,,.
IS. Tiit wat•r temptra!Uf"e will I» ...
S~Meote,TI••
W•ONUD.tlY
\f(Md lnw I t• D I'll t r
!M>tOnd lllOl'I I hp m •. 1 lMU.,DAY
fll\llOw 1 11 • m 0 \ F lt\f lllQll I J1 a m \ 1
MtOMI-2 !OP,., I)
S.1onOhlgn e 01> m • J ~un ri\n A l\ • m >eh 7 OJ,, m
MOOll rh"'4 ill!m, Ml\) OI• m
S•rtllqorl
HUftllllOfOll •e<h W•'Hl I 10 ~
1 .. 1 with """" •-II -MIQM ,,,.., Cond•Uonl _, 10 l•I•. Newpart
... <II W-t J 10 \ 1 .. 1 Wlll'I IOUIJI :::C:' end -l,,.., C:6ndt1i...a
Farber's refusal to turn over his
notes to lawyers Cor a doctor on
trial for murder.
Farber's investigative report·
Ing helped lead to the pros.
ecutors' decision to reopen the
case and charge Dr. Mario A.
Jascalevich with murdering pa.
tit>nts In 1966.
"Skip" Chemov. a rock concert
promotor. Cianci has vehement·
ly denied allegations In a New
Tlmes magatine artlcle whlct\
said that as a law student In
MUwaukee 12 years ago he was
accused by a woman or raping
her at gunpoint:
Sen. Claiborne Pell was eully
renominated in the Democratic
primary.
MINNESOTA: Lawyer David
Dur e nberger won th e
Republican nomination for
Humphrey's old Senate sc1tt.
The gubernatorial contest will
pit Democrat Rudy Perplch
agains t Republican Rep. Albert
Quie. In a second U.S. Senate
race. Wende11 Anderson won re·
nomination and a challenge
from Republ ica n Rud y
8oschwltz in November.
WISCONSIN: Lee S. Dreyfus.
on leave as chancellor of the
UniOeralty of Wisconsin al
Stevens Points. upended Rep.
Robert Kasten for the GOP
gubernatorial nomin ation.
Dreyfus will face Acting Gov.
Martin Scbrelber. who took over
when Patrick Lucey becam e
ambassador to Mexico a year
ago . Schreiber took lhc
Democratic nortl;inalion easily.
NE W HAMP S HIR E:
Conservauve Gov. Meldrlm
Thomson had no trouble down·
ing former Gov. Wesley Powell
in the stat e's R epublican
primary. His opponent in No-
vem ber will be businessman
Hugh Gallen. who won the
Democratic nomination. U.S.
Sen. Thomas Mcintyre walked to
an easy renomination and a
November contest against
Gordon Humprey. un airline
pilot and former coordinator o(
the slate L'On.servative caucus.
FLORIDA: Former U.S. Sen.
Edward J . Gurney returned to
the political ,;cene. capturing the
Republican nomination in the
House district that first sent him
PRIMARY AFTERMATH
<C lockwise from upper left 1
winners Gurney. Grasso and
Short. anddefeatc<i astronaut
Swigert.
ARIZONA: Gov. Bruce Bab-
bitt captured the Democrall~
gubemawrial primary with only
token opposition . while con·
servatlve Evan Mech,am, 11n
automobile dealer, won the
thr~·way Republican nomina
lion.
COLORADO: Rep. William
Arms trong defeated forme r
astronaut J ack Swigert by a
wide margin in a Republican
primary. The winner will face
Democratic Sen. Floyd Haskett,
who was unopposed in the
primary. State Sen . T ed
Strickland beat s tate St•n
Richard Plock In the race lor the
Republican nomination to run
a~ainst Gov. Richard Lamm,
who was Wl()pposed.
WYOMING: Forme r Wyo
ming House Speaker Alan
Simpson wa11 the winner in the
RcP.ublican Senate pri mary
while Ray Whitaker. the former
state Democratic chairman. got
the Democratic nod. Gov. E<t
fle rschler won renomination in
t ht> Democratic gubernatorial
primary. Dick Cheney, Whit••
House chief of staff under former
President Ford. gained the GOP
nomination for the stole's only
floui;c seut.
Robert Shevin and state Sen. t o o k t h e 0 e m o c r a t i c to Washington. State Alty. Oen\, NEVADA: Lt. Gov. Bob Rose
Robert Graham qualified for the gubernatoriaJ race and a shot
Democratic runoff for governor against Atty. Gen. Bob Lh1t. c.1
and the Conner head or the Gov-Republican, In November.
ernment Services Administra·
lion Jack Eckerd won the G-OP
race. ..
VERMONT: Re publican Gov.
Richard Snelling had no opposi-
tion in the Republican primary.
He will face State Rep. Edwin
Granai in November.
UTAH: Edwin B. Firmage, a
law professor at the University
of Utah. squeaked by Peter
Cooke in the state's only major
contest. a Democratic primary
for the congressional seat held
by Republican Rep. Dan Mar·
riott
-'
....
Wednesday. September l:l 1978 OAIL 'f PILOT As CALIFORNIA
Busing: Kids Not Fazed ..
LOS ANGELES I Af'I ~or
the par•·n~. t~&eht"l"'I lltlil :.d'°°I
admlnl tn&.o~ ol Loa Anatt-l~.
Tuesday WU the tir1t d1t y of
forc\•d bu,.,ina In lh" moll\
~prcud out dl:\trlrt In UH f'oU11
try
But for m\Y>ll ol \hr t hlldr••n
wbo bo6r'dt~l thf flHt uf yt•llov.
buse-. it w.s JW\t tht• first d•~ of
~c:hool
"Well. H~ah. tod•y I ~01 up at
uh what~wt'r hmt• lh.-dock
Wt'Ol orr ... '181d t-vear old Adam
l..l~ber. one ol 16 chlldrl'n wh<>
rodt' bwi Nu 3162 fr<\m :suburban
Granud llllb 1n tht' pr<-
dom 1nantJ •tute San Ft'mAndl1
V•llry to tinc:-ht'r Dr1vt' S<-hool
tn Gl•~ll Purk
LIEBER F INALL \' d N'ldt«1
h~ probably f\llM' .. bout fi a m
n~arly twQ hoo1 s earlier thun
last vear 14ht•n ht• "'ulkf'd t'40
Storm Tab
Enonnous
In State
SACRAMENTO 1AP1 The
California Farm Bureau says
last week's storm In the San Joa·
quln Valley was one or the worst
in history and will cost al least
$183 milhon.
The bureau s aid toda y
that another million dollar~
worth of crops were lost l n the
Southern Sacramento Valley.
A spokesman for the bureau.
Clark Biggs, said the damage
may be topped in California only
by the Feathe r and Eel river
floods of 1~56.
"WE RAVE SURV EYE D all
the arrected counties and used
the low side of all estimates.''
said Biggs.
.. If we had used the high side.
and it m ay yet turn out that
way. our estimates would have
been many millions higher."
hlol'k .., 111 lh1lho,1 U11ult•vt1rd
~t'hlHll
"Rut I wai. l(OlnA lo .:c~ up
Jnywuy to Ito to sehool," he con
d otlt'<l
Fifty four 1·h11cl11·n W\'ll' :.up
vc>i.t•d to huvc raddt·n tht• 7K !>t•ut
bu1> l.1dwr IN'•:-oo The fttw who
1hd :.t•t>mt.><I unt'ont't•rnt.·d ubo11t
lht•lf ('Ollt•Ut(Ut'll' ·•l>M'lll't' untJ
ubnut Uw two hout mw way nd\•
'This L-t nt'lit Hc·ully roomv,
huh '" 11u1d LtJrt lt1111cJt>ll a:. sht·
l>ou ndt.'(I 1oto lht-hu..,
"l LIXt: BlJSt:s," :.1ud Mufll'
l.t•Fl'V\•r , 8. "bt'l'liUM~ If you
11110 t hU\'t' l11L'>('!>, thl•n you huvl'
to "' .llk
l 14 t'fll to l'amp t·vcrydily tht!>
:.umm .. r ufl u bu' ufld 1t wab d
lot longer way n\!arly ()Ut of th''
c·1ty, ' ww. Natt· Hol.)111':\ t·om
mt'rll
· 1 d1dn 't w:i nna come at
Btrek ff on1e
f11 !>l 't•au. .. e I d1dn 't know what 1t
was ull ubout. :.t•(··· Hut my mom
told mt' what'i. huppenlnK "
·ru": PROSPtX,. or their new.
11\lt!J(rnh.'d :.thool dtdn 't Caw
thtirn "Yuah. it'll 1>robably be CJ
)IOOd Sl'hool, ·· s aid Eric
Joh11.'lt011. it blonde. freckled 8
yt·ur old. "It's good that we 'rt'
Konna bc mixed. you know.,
Becuu~c la!tl year l met a
Chinese boy. and we made
ftli•nds, so .. "
· • Bestck.>s. at Fletcher. we get
to i.to to classes upstairs." said
an excited Dawn Kovner . 9.
"I WANT TO BE on vacauon
one week more." groaned Adam
l''rledman, 8
And so 1t went. Whtie the
parents who shepherded their
children onto the bus looked anx-
10U!> and worrit'<f , the youngsters
themselves appea red only
curious and interested -and u
bit regretful that summer was
over.
When thf' bus finally got to
Fletcher , the driver Inadvertent
ly parked on the wrong side of
the school out of sight or th(:
waiting reception commlltel..
THE 16 CIULDREN banded in
a small circle for several
minutes until the school JJrin
c1 pal, teachers and aides came
trolling towards them, all s miles
and fuss.
One small blond boy clutchlng
a "Star Wars" notebook a nd
lunch box finally cut off the
apologies graciously.
"A w . that's OK." he
mumbled "We didn't mind ...
..
·~-· ........ LISA HIGHTOWER GREETS BUSED STUDENT
lnbal Brozkl. left. From Woodland Hiiia
'\lalue Incredible'
Hollywood Sign
Letters for Sale
llOLLYWOOl.J CAPI -People who missed a chance to pay $21.000
for a letter in the new Hollywood sign. take heart. The old ones are
::.1111 up for grabs.
The dilapidated letters -some 8.000 square feet of sheet metal
chopped up and carted off from their Mt. Lee perch overlooking
Hollywood along with their
wooden support poles and other a nd $10.000 up front and a
assorted hardware -are cur· percentage of retail."
renlly silting quietly in a
billboard company warehouse.
But the Hollywood Cham ber or
Commerce has already received
several offers of purchase --
nothing to write home about. but
enough to whet the appetite or
chamber president Mike Sims.
"AFTER THE CBS television
~pccial honoring Hollywood's
Diamonc1 Jubilee in November
the value of that s ign is going to
he incredible." he predicted.
The new sign will be unveiled
during the two·hour s how.
RETAIL OF WHAT~
We ll. Sims says. ''they want to
make replicas of the Hollywood
sign. Jewelry and a ll different
kinds of things.
"We're most concerned about
quality and how the old sign is
used." he added quickly. "Wt·
don't really wa nt it turned into
ashtrays or something like that.
He said Fresno County, where
raisins had jus t been put out for
drying, was the biggest loser al
$113 m i llion , i nc luding $83
million worth of raisins and 40
percent or the fig crop valued at
$7 milllon
AFTD GllAPES, the largest
monetary loss was suffered by
grow ers o r a lfalfa seed ln
Fresno. Kings, Kem and Tulare
counties. Biggs put that 1055 at
SlS million.
A flag-draped coffin is carried past a
Travis Air Force Base honor guard Tues·
day as 11 more of · America's dead from
the Vietnam war ca m e hom e . The
military fliers· remains were turned over
to a United States congressional delega·
t1on last month in Hanoi. and for the pe1s t
two weeks have been in Hawaii for form<.al
identification.
"We have probably a dozen to
20 bids in writing," Sims said
Tuesday. "Of these only three or
four are serious offers.
"Nobody bas made a s u bstan·
ti al enough offer yet. We've been
offered everything from $2 per
square foot up to between SS.000
"We m ay be giving pieces of it
away at the Diamond Jubilee
party ... he added. "People like
Hugh Hefner and Gene Autry
who he lped save the sign will all
be getting substantial memen-
tos."
HEFNER AND AUTRY were
amon t! the nine people who
donated $27,000 each to pay for a
letter in the new sign .
Other counties with large
losses were Tulare S24 million.
Kern $23 million and Madera $18
million.
Firm Fined • in Safety Vio lation A public auction is a possibtli·
ty. Si ms !!laid. a dding that
howe ver the letters are finally
disposed of, the proceeds will go
towards maintenance of the new
!>ign. on which construction 1s
JUSl now begtnntn~. But Big~s !>aid the estimates
could change if some farmers
get higher pr ices for the re-
mainder or their crops.
"Some peoplc will be lucky_
They wiU be able to sell their
crop at a higher price."
LOS ANGELES <AP 1 A
Long Reach construc tion com·
pany has been fined $12,500 for
violat ing stale industrial safely
laws and trying to conceal the
infraction which allegedly re·
suited in an accident that killed
one worker and permanently
Patrol Go ne
Oceanside Void of MPs
OCEANSIDE CAP ) --The Marines have pulled their MPs off
the streets or Ocean~ide for lhe first lime since World War ll, but
1t 's "more inconvenience now than trouble," a city policeman
~ays. The action was announced Tuesday at neighboring Camp
Pendleton where the provost marshal said U.S. Supreme Court de·
c1sions left the MPs legally liable if anyone arrested off base could
prove civil rights violations.
OCEANSIDE POLICE SGT. ROBERT Krause said the city is
weighing the impact of the move. but the problem may be greater
for ''the young Marine who gets into trouble in Oceanside" than for
police. "Before, we picked up a lot of Marines that we did not have to
book. because their MPs were close by to lake them in tow and
back to Camp Pendleton," he said. "Now, we may be taking more
of them to be booked into city jail."
IN RECENT MONTHS, A 15·MAN MP patrol has been as·
signed to Oceanside. A study blamed Marines for 40 percent of
downtown crime.
Chief of Police Rolf llenze bemoaned the loss of the Marine
patrol, but said, "If they have some limitation placed on them. by
court decisions, that has to be acceptable to me whether I like It or
not."
Military spokesmen said town patrols by Air Force, Army.
Marine and other Navy units have beeo disappearing nationwide.
disabled another.
Los Angeles Municipal Judge
Edward L. Davenport imposed
the fine Tuesday after convict·
ang the firm, R.M P. Marine
Ser vices, Inc .. in the Sept. 13,
1977 incident.
The judge found that the com-
pany had illegally used com·
pressed oxygen in a pneumatic
nail gun which exploded. killing
Ron ald Ray Clarke. 39. of Ox
nard. The gun operator, Hixon
Gregory Pry, 27, or Oxnard. suf·
fored permanent damage l<> his
stomach a nd one leg.
~oQujUJng
S/\CHAMENTO (/\P)
llealth and We lfare Secretary
M a r 1 o ""
Obledo. prob·
ably the
most promi-
nent o r the
outsiders that
r.ov. Edmund
Brown Jr .
brought into
state l(overn·
m ent. 1s lcav
IOI! next year.
Ohlcdo. 46. is returning to
Harvard University in January.
the school confirmed Tuesday.
lie is to be a law graduate
fe llow, doing res earch and
teaching first-year law students.
He has taught al Harvard in the
past.
Ddoaodo• s~t
SUSANVILLE <AP) -The
ti S Oepartmcnt of Defense is to
As of Septembe< 10, 1978. schedule changes will
go into effect on several Pal1<·N-Ride Express
and Local Rxed Routes. And fares will be
increased on all Orange County Transrt. District
buS routes.
New OCTD bu9 fares. 1rurct1w S4'!11tlnlbf'o 10 1w111
The new fares are fisted below alOng with
the routes that have been deleted Please
remember to cany the exact fare since our
dnvefS cannot grve change. ' Thefe have also been changes on services
not hsted belo w and Wf' v-1111 be revising our
schedules For new r.ch<'dttlec:. Of route 1nforma
tion can 547-3311 0< toll fr r>e ZLNITH 7-331 1 fron1
6 AM to 10 PM wcc4<<10ys. 7 AM tv 5 PM
Saturdays, and 8 AM to 5 PM Sundays
New New Senior Clttzen
Service Regular Fare & Handteapped Fare
Local Fixed
Route &
EasyRider 35<t 1 S<t
Pal1<-N·Rtde
Express &
O.al-A~Rlde 7()f1, 35<t
Dcal·A·Lttt 7QtJ.· 35a
Discontinued Rout-. The following Park-N-R1de
Express Routes have been discontinued: 207, 260.
271. (Other Park·N-Rlde Express and Local Fixed
Routes have been changed as well, so please
call tor new route information )
•
( J 2 Operator11 Sollflllt
STATE PALO ALTO CAP) -Police
_ _ wen• searching today for t wo
Palo Alto nursi n g home
operators accused of walking begin destroying 20 more ·'daisy
cutter'' bombs of the type that
went off unexpectedly at the
Sierra Army DcPQl in August.
officials report.
The 15.000·pound bombs are to
be detonated one at a time
beginning Saturday.
Pror11 Ca r Bunted
LOS /\NG ELES I/\ P i /\
member or the JeWll>h Armed
Res is tance League claimed
responsib1hty for a fire Tuesday
that bumcd a car belongin1t to a
UCLA poht1cal l>C1ence professor
specializing in Mideast affairs.
Professor Malcolm Kerr is re-
portedly under consideration for
appointment as an adviser to
President Carter
/tlan Phmge• to Death
SAN DIEGO (J\P ) A 62·
y€'a r ·Old mun fell to his death
from the 14th floor or the Bank
of America DuildinJt, narrowly
missini:t sl'vcral pedestrians as
his body hil the street below.
police say
Deputy Coroner Claude Mon·
doux said Theodore John · Foldy
c limbed onto the 14 th floor
balcony after scaling a railing
and apparently fell to the street
shortly before noon Tuesday.
&
out on seven elderly tenant•>.
Ted and Grace Allen said they
were going shopping over the
weekend but instead disap·
pcared with thousands of dollars
1n advance room and board pay·
m en ls
San Diego Inn Sold
S1\N DIEGO tAP\ Tht·
Sheller Island Inn. once owned
by St. Louis attorney Morri~ /\
Shenker. has been sold al a
bankruptcy proceeding to a local
businessman for S3 2 million
The price an cash reportedly
included $2.7 million owed to the
Team sters Union pension fund .
Frank Warren. the buyer, 1s
chairman of Rancho Santa Fe
Savings & Loan Association.
Me thod to Change
SAN DIEGO CAPI S1.1n
OieJ:(o County 's Animal Control
Department will b<.•gin us ing
lethal drug injections to kill un·
wanll'd animals by Dec. 1, the
Board of Supervisors has ruled
A ss istant Chief Ad -
ministrative Offi~r Daniel Bog·
gan on Tuesday detailed the cost
or the method to replace the cun-
troversial use of decompression
c hambers to destroy unwanted.
s ick or IOJured creatures
Meanwhile, S ime; cau.
tioned souve n i r ·hunters to
beware of Hollywood Boulevard
types hawkin1t what they claim
Lo be pieces of the sign.
Blasphemy,
Nuke I ssues
Miss Ballot
SACRAMENTO 1/\P I
California volcri won't h:.ive to
decide <it the polls 1f they want
nuclear power plants o n barges.
or 1£ they want to ban books and
m ov ie" that r:.ip God . says
Secretary of State March Eu.
Ms. Eu reported Tuesday that
in1t1a t1 ve d rives to outlaw
blas phemous books and film:".
a nd lo authorize "helium·cooled,
bargt' mounted nuclear reactor-.
in ma rit1<1s, .. had foil 1•cl to ma kt·
the June 19tkl ballot
Th<' blasphemy mcusurl' wa:-
'-ponsor<'d by 1-'elix S<1 man1c~o
of Banninit. The proposed coo·
..,, it ut1onal amendment needed
499,846 signaturei. to qualiry Ms
Eu said only about 4.000 were
:;ubm1lled.
She said the sPonsor of the
nuclear meas ure. P aul Ran·
dolph of Menlo Park. failed to
turn 1n any signatures. ft needed
312.404
SEPTEMBER SPECIAL OF THE MONTH
Delicious smoked ham . two lresh eggs.
hashed brown polatoes. loast. jam and butter
SERVED 24 HOURS. .ee
SPIRES
IRVINE
MacArltlur 81v0 ~I S 0. ~wv COSTA MESA j12S Harbor BlvO
or•ngeC<>a&1oa.1vP•101 Editorial Page ...........................................................
• sa
W6dne$day. September 13. 1978
Robert N. Weed/Publt!>l'ler fhomas l<eevll /Ed1tor
8.art>ora Kre1b1ch /Edltor lal Page EdltOf'
Community Should
Be Kept lnfonned
M b .... 1on \ ICJO Mum<·1pal Ad\'il\<tr}' 'oun<·ll ml•mber
r('centl) l'<>nclutted a tl'lt·phone \'Ole on un issue tnvolvinR
uboul 500 pn\alt-h 11\\n ~ bul t11xpayt.>r maintained
:-lopt-i-m tht.• rommun1t)
Cowwal m<"mbt.·rl'.\ wt'rC' asked y10 wtcphone to vote
tor unl• or four opt ion!> county ofCal'iol!-. had rN:ommcndcd
for t'lt•unn~ up tht• own<>rstup probll'm:-involved wath lht•
.. top\_',:, Tht·~ haH' been m~unuunl'<t hy rnxpa.v<.·r~ for
:--l•vcrttl 'C'a"
In LhL' C'm .. e. \\hut MA(' m('mb<.-r.., \Ol<'d 1nd1v1cJually
to suppot1 1s unimponanl
Whet 1:--of ronccrn is th(' manner in "h1d1 thl• vottt of
u duly ron~t1h1tE'd publlt' ~lHNI '-'U' tukl·n
Tht> Muntc.•apal t\d\ ISO~ t'oum·1l 1s ··~tJblt:o-ht«I by t1n
Oran~t! Count) Board of Surwn 1 ... 01, rl·:--olutwn to l>l· th~
rcpr esC'ntatn·t• hoar d of t·ummun1I) ll'!,ld4!nt:--
Hut as the publlt• ~1..·rv{·d '' h£·n tis busanc~s '" c:ontlu<·t
cd &rnd tltS('U~Sl'<I Ill prl\ Jlt"'
1\1 ,\C Chairman Tt·c.J l\l"t'nt' .ll'~U(·s that t ht-\oil' '' :.i -.
lll'l"l''"'·"' '1.1 tl'll'phunl• ht•<.·,1u..,t• J ch.•c1~1on had tu I><·
ll\,ldl· .ind 111:--1:.h thl1 \Ott• \~•" lt·~aJ l'lllO~ <t ('OU11l Y
l'UlHl:o-d Optnl(.)11
It a dt•c1::-.1un htttl lO be made <1uirk ly. however. why
not 1:..ill a s ix•<.·1a l m1..·1..•tang s inr<' thl• issue of the s lopes had
lwl•n tubl('<i tu the MAC's &>µt. 11 m eeting '
:\nd af th(' tounly <.'ounsel san:. s ecret votes are okay
for l>oards that recommend rathl·r than decide. whv not
ho ld a ll MAC m('l'ttngs in private•' ·
Whitt-MAC H~ a board docs not have dcc1s t0n-making
power. it s rrcomm<•ndatiom. carry weight with county
sup e r visors -who do hu \'(' that J><>wer
The Aug . 24 telephone vote was a mistake'. Communi
ty m e mbl'r:--wen! denied though apparently not deceit·
fully 1nformat1on u bout what t heir represc ntati ves
Wl'l"t! doing
Festival Support
The Irvin e Harves t Festival. scheduled to make its
fourth annual bow Oct . 20·22, is a time for fun a nd celebra·
ti on. Now. however. is the time for cerebration.
All the things that a re the festival the g rand parade.
the c hildren's H alloween pany. the Harvest Moon Ball
for the adults. the Sunday night concert under the s tars. a nd
muc h more s pring not from a magician's h a t but from
hard work. a nd from financial commitment.
The commitment of money romes sole ly from the
com munit \.'. sinCl' the festival rcc.:cn•es no cit v or othC'r
µul>lit <1gc.ncy asl:>istanN· ·
Directo rs of the fcs tl\.<:t l. <.111 loca l business pcopll•. arc
<1s k ing businesses to d on ate SlOO or more l.o support the
community.effort.
The m oney would be well spent. The festival is an op·
portunity for the e ntire city to demonstra te that com·
munity living is worthwhile.
f<'urthl'r . at would he lp to assure the ~urvival of fut ur1..·
ha r vc!;t festivals, and s how that rt!s idents cun have fun
and m eet each other without contributing t o the project
through taxes.
Right School Spirit
When a pproxima t ely 750 students walked into the
new L<.1~una Hills High School this week for the opening
d ay of studies. the plant was far from complet('.
The gymnasium a nd locker room complex won 't be
finis hed until October or November . The food services
s tructure is still unde r construction and workme n a re dig·
gm g an orchestra pit inadverte ntly left out of the design.
S chool officials blame d elayed completion of the S8
m illion school. origin a lly planne d for opening l ast
Februar y. on strikes. inclem ent weather a nd a cem e nt
shortage.
Principal T homas Tullar. ho wever, vows it's not
where you s tudy but how you study and with whom . The
essentials arc on hand a nd. despite inconveniences. the
learning process is under way.
School s upporte r s even vow the n ew Hawks football
team will ~ m ore t h an representati ve in their league. Jn
support of that effort . stude nts worked throughout the
s urnm('r to assure a well -oiled pe p squa d a nd drill team
If the attitude of Laguna Hills H1 gh's administrators.
teachers crnd s tudents counts for much. a te dious con·
struction problem a nd a few goofs s houldn't amount to
mur h over the Ion~ run.
• Opinions expressed 1n the space above are those of the Daily Pilot
Other views expressed on this page are those o t their authors and
artists. Reader comment 1s invited Address The Daily Pilot, P.O.
Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321
Boyd/Eyes
8yL.M.80VD
T ests s how brown.eyed
people react faster then
others to stimuli. And the
darker the eyes. the quicker
the reaction, it's claimed. Jn .
teres ting. if true. And if true.
just as interesting is another
theory about it: Melanin is
what gives the brown eyes
thcil" color. Neuromelanin is
what serves as a semiconduc·
tor s witching device in the
nervous system. Maybe these
two substances arc gcnctical·
ly tied together somehow
Dear
Gloor11y
Gus
They'r e s lill at it !
L (.'afing through the
l atest co m munity
college !\Chedule I note
such items as "Being a
Grandparent." "Ethnic'
C l ot h es ·· and
''Convcrs:i ti o nal
P o lis h." Didn't tht'y
hcor Howard?
PO.
M uybe the best known pro-
duct of the 3M Company is
Scotch t ape. Uut probably
the least known is phony
blood, sold to movie. TV and
stage produce rs for their
gory scenes.
When an Italian says he's
"in the green.·· he means
he's "in the red."
T he :iverage quart of milk
contains 15.360drops.
Q. "Aren't mos t boby boys
coiled John named in honor
ofSt John?"
A. Possibly. but which St
John'> There are ns many ai1
60 St. Johns on the Roman
Culcndar of Saints.
Q. "That dog Sandy In the
Broa dway s how 'Annie.'
where'd he come from?''
A. A cage In the Conner·
ticut llumane society pound.
Pretty lucky pup. He was
about to be done away with
Q. "How many women who
become full·flcdged medical
doctors qull work lo bring up
their own children?··
A. SevenoutoflOO, about.
Q . ''Wasn 't Benjamin
Franklin also the Inventor of
lootb paste?
A. One of the inventors. His
formula called for crushed
cha«Oal mixed with honey.
Earl Waters
State Prison Facilities Wasted
Befort' the 1Rgl~lutur1.· plunsu:s
anlo u multi mallaon dolh.tr prison
cxpun :.l u n
vrotcrum. u
l' a r t' r u I
unaly1>1s of Uw
true nl'<.'<h urc
1n order For
pr 1 ~o n
tac1hlil':. Jrc
CO!ltly
T ht· lu:.l ma
jor pri so n~
constru1·lt'l.I in
lhl' 1:itat1.• co!>t well OVl'r S25.000 ~1
bed Hut that wa-. more than 20
y1.·ari:. a~u Today·:-. rnsls can bl'
prt'Mlllll'd to run ut least four
times thut liitun·
Thul the l.(lg1slaturt• must s tep
tn ;ind do such a study to avoid
Mailbox
:>Pl'IHJm.: nl'cdle:-.sly malhons of
dollar~ b mude imperative by lb
dcVl'nlh hour a1>proval or a S6 6
million appropriation for plan-
ning of new prisons. Some of the
money would be used in pla nning
remodeling or existing prisons
and the ruzing of San Quentin and
perh::.ips l<'olsom
THE PRISON authorities have
been pressuring the legis lators
for funds for new prisons with
predictions of prison population
gains of over :IO percent m the
next seven yl'ars by reason of
lh l' more severe cr1m1na l
pena lties whi ch hav(' been
l'nacted. They say the number of
inmates will rise from the cur-
rent 19,500 lo more than 25,000
by tha t tjmc.
l~or that reason the offlc1aJs
are env1s1omng construction or
at least one new rtH1Jor prison
s o m ewh ere 1n S oul h 1.•rn
California. ln1 t1a lly they had
zeroed in on n location nt:ar
Chino but local oppos ition hll:-.
rom pelted scrapping of that
Already purchased 1s a sale at
Otay Mesa near San Diego but 1t
too is running into strong loc·al
resistance.
NOTING· THA1' s uc·h anstttu
lions. whose payroll!. onee mud<-
lhem desirable to many com
mun1t1cs, arc now s hunned by
most locales. Asse mbly Way!..
a nd Me ans Ch a i rman Dan
Boatwright has de manded an in
ventory of prope rties already
owned by lhe state's prison de·
IJ:lrtml'nt. !us view as that any
necessary expans ion of raclllties
CJn be a chi eved by building
s atellite units a t ex is ting
prisons. This alterna ti ve has the
adv:lnla~e of utilizing the exist·
mg central facilities s uch as
power. water, sewage. laundries
:ind bakeries and thereby saving
millions .
The actual fact is that a t most
or the existing prisons there are
hu nd reds of unus e d acr es
Jvailable for such expansions.
And most or the communities
when~ these institutions are
locakd would welcome the in·
creased payrolls which would
result.
FOLSOM, for example. is
loc1:1ted on a 1,000·acre sate only
40 acres of which are used for
1 h1.• prison. Similarly. Soledad,
Vacaville and Tehachapi have
substarttial acreages in excess of
current use
San Quentin consis ts of 600
a(•res overlooking San Francisco
B<1y with only about 50 acres
used by the prison. It however is
different 1n that not only is the
faL·1l1ty o ld . c o s tly an d
haiardous to operate. but it is
generally unwanted by the peo.
plr of Marin County. Hazed, the
land would probably sell for a
price which would rinanl'C an en·
tire new prison elsewhere.
SO IT SF.EMS possible that
the department can meet its an·
ticipated growth without sub·
stantial costs by utilizing the re-
:o;o urces it already has
But before even that is done
the Legislature s hould fully re-
view the conservation camp pro·
gram . Placement of prisoners in
outdoor C'am p!> to work on re·
forest;.ition and stream clearance
proJecu. was intended to relieve
I he nl'ed for new prisons when the
L1.·g1slatur(' authorized the c amr.
progr;.im 20 years ago.
Lessons Teachers Learn froill Parents
To the Editor.
Nic k Thimmesch':... Sept 7
article on Catholic schools gives
only one side. People who pay for
the education oflheir children are
the most interested in education
They back the schools. respectthe
teachers. provide help a t hom\•
and start children off with an
attitude suita blc for lea rnrng.
Private schools provide ths·
c1plinc and homework There, af
students don't conform. they arc
suspended
But as u teacher for 14 years
m public schools, parents have
told me·
TO MIND my own husincss
when children a re so heavily
sedated from Ritalin that thcv
s it li ke vc1tel ables.
No t t o give h o m ework .
because children have C'hurch,
piano lessons. Lillie League.
l'lt'.
Not to keep C'htldrcn during re
cess. lunch or after school if
they curse. arc rude. fight or
steal :
Not lo leach· values ahoul
fi ghting that kids need to
learn to defend themselves:
Not lo overburden the children
b y asking th em t o learn
m ultiplication at home in the
fourth grade.
'T'h ese parents want their
children h;ippy not cduc;ited
Yet watch the same parents
yell al kids who do not obey and
lose control over thcmsC'lvcs
If they would leave.• us alone.
we'd do the Job right.
J . SMITH
Te.c-~' Bne~fil•
To the Editor:
Many teachers s ay they are
underpa id and overworked.
There may be a few who spend
Sydney Harris
extra hours. but most work
s horll'r hOurs than other work·
ing peopll•
I know several who operate
busanesses. and they seem to be
the re often during the day
Many say they grade papers
m the eve nings. Many of those
<trl' home 1n mid·afternoon. If
they workC'd unttl s. most would
not be working evenings.
EXCEPT FOR a few who
might reach management a nd
s upervisory positions in bus1·
ness. most are paid better than
other profession als' s tarting
sa laries and salaries received
a fter 10·15 years on a job.
They say they receive no pay
during the summer. When pro-
rated for the year. they are paid
bellcr than many other workers
with comparable training . They
h:1Vl' long summer V<H.·alions.
part of which can be spe nt work·
1ng for someone t!l se 1f they
wish
Their benefits are great And
they can't suddenly be laid orr
a fter years with a firm . like peo-
ple in private indus try.
They say they must add to
their credentials by study. This
is true in many othe r pro·
fess ions.
In s hort, they do better than
most worke rs
EARL HOWARD
•~•o•HifJ~
To lhc Editor
I had always presumed that
11l'w s p a p cr writers we r e
supposed to have some degree of
respons ibility a nd. if not. <1!
leas t the papers that published
their writings would exercise
<.,ome contr ol over blatant
irresponsibility• Certainly not so
with the tirades of Earl Waters
<Whe re There 's Smoke, Don't
Legislate. Sept. 3 > He keeps
repeating lhc s ame theme and 1t
sounds exactly h ke the equally
1rrl•spons ibl1.• pol1t 1ca l
advert1s1.•ments for which the
tobacco industry 1s paying such
b t ~ d o lla r s I f ··t obact•o
pushers .. want to run ant i Prop
5 <1 d s. I et l h L' m I' <t:. fo r 1 t
leg1t 1 matcly not through
news paper columnists. 1n lhl·
guise or journalism '
Wakrs bcg111~ by stating that
the 1n1t1at1ve woulrl lntn smokers
from almost everywhere but th1..•
privacy of their own homes. and
this is even more toa lly false
~•nd irrt!sponsable than the paid
commercials .
lie ends h is ttr<ide with
reference to "a s mall clique or
zealo ts. opposed to s m oking.
scekm~ to pcrsccutl' s mokers ··
The ":o-m;ill clique." Mr WC:Jters.
1s 62 percen t of the total
population' And. c:ontr:.iry to h1i.
<1s 1nint• <1nd 1rrt''>fll>n'\1hlc•
stat<'ment. non-smok<·r:-. are not
seeking to persecute.· anybody'
Most non-s moker'> have long ;.igo
g i ven up any a tt1..•m pts to
"reform" the smokers. t•ven the
hus bands. wi ves. c hildre n.
friends and relatives that they
have seen s mokl• lhc mselvc!>
into the hospital or the grave.
MR. WATERS 11> right to lht•
extent that if you want to pursu("
your addi1'11on right on to your
11wn demise. you have the r1~hl
to do so But you do not h<avt• thl'
nghl to drag ~nvonl' with vou• It h~s hl·cn stat.eel . w1lh · VN•l
dl·scr1pt1 vt• ac:curat•y, that tht·
right of a pe rson to s w1ni;( hi ....
<.arms ends at someont· else 's
n<>se . Thcrl' arc• innumerahl<•
e xamples of similar situation:-.
the la w, for example, permits a
person to consume alcohol -he
ean even drink hims elf into
insensibility or lo death ir ht•
chooses -but he cannot hurt
->omeone else by h1~ drinking.
T h is 1s cert ainl y a proper
delineation of "rights ··
Water.; pursues his venomous
bias by childish statements such
a:-. .. what sh;ill be nl'xt Jaws
~1gatnst thOSl' who don ·1 use the
right dl'odorant., .. Obvious to
anybod y ·~ the· ract that neither
tftoodorants. nor for that matter.
nothing else· in our c1vili7.ation
rausl's 300.000 deaths annuaJly!
But. even with tha t awesome
toll, Prop. 5 permits you to go
right uht•ad and s m oke your
c11tarettcs -your rights re main
you can still smell like a dirty
ashtray. stain your teeth a nd
fingers. make your s teak and
lobs te r t a s te ltkf• burning
tobacco weed. burn your carrwts
•.ind furniture. you can t•vcn
prl•p;,i y your own hu rial
expenses but your "right" to do
all or thl'Sl' things ends <1t the
noses of lhl' majority that havt•
nt•ver bccomc addicts rJr that
have had the rort1lude to give tt
up'
W. COLEMAN
Sad C'om•ftlfa'"!J
To lhc Editor:
What a s ud commentary on
the citizens of California.
Th1.· stale Legislature hassled
unt il the last minute a nd
<ll.'pr ived the ha ndicapped and
aged of <1 ti ny increase 1n
l}enefit:-
nd today I read of the scriou:.
-. ho r I a gt• 1 n m en la I he a Ith
raral it1cs in Orange County.
N(•l'll I suy more'?
MRS. J N. llALL
• L•lle" '"'"' r~Aft<• arr wel<om•, Tiit' "''" lo (OfldeMe , .. , ... 10 Ill JP-'<• .. ellmlMI• 111 .. 1 •• reurved ut~r, 01 JOO wonh H IH~ •111 .. ,, .. .,
pnterenc•. All 1~110<\ musl 111<1"'" ,,.,...,.,,._ ~:~~~' ~~~.~: ~:::::. r;·:p::,:-~~'.";::;
wtll llOl O. pubtt"'°"'
The Roots of History's Revolutions Run Deep
Whencvl'r th•·rc 1s gr;av1.• un-
rest in u neighborhood. a city. or
a country. the c~tablishmenl's
first public reaction is to blame
It on "con ·
spirators" or
"o u ts id e
agitators."
They ore the
favorite whip.
pin g -boys or
authority thut
f e e I s
lhrealencd
Y e l i n
a lmos t every
c8!1e, the establishment Is wronR.
and kno~ It. or Is self-deceived.
Insurrections motivated from \he
outside are relatively easy lo re·
slst and repel ; it Is the oneR that
come from the Inside that make
the real trouble.
More than a c1.•ntury ~go, Wen
dell Phillips obs erved ... Revolu
lions arc not modc. they come.
A revolution 1s as natural u
~rowth us an Ott k It comes out
of t he past Its found<1lions ore
laid for back ..
T h e Am('r1cun R evolution
cou Id ncvt>r h a Vl' bl' en sue
c1.•ssrul If H handful or hothead~
llacl gonl' from town lo town try
mi.: 10 cre.1l1• tllssal1sfactlon with
the Briti'lh J.?OV('rnment D1scon-
t1•nt ht1d b1.•1.·n growing ror yeur~
within t•ach community. und
people like Snm Adams and th1.·
Sons of Liberty only traMlat(.'(J ttw populur te mper Into militant
uetton
"OUTSIDER. " cun havr litllc
Influence on a neighborhood thut
Is JU8tly lr<'ulcd. Mos l people
would 1·:athl•r :mfft•r l'lmull mcon
vt•nwnrcs than prol(·~t . and cun
be dt•cc1vcd rcp<'att-dl y bcfort•
thl'Y t)c.•eomt· mutmoui..
It 1s only whc•n th1.· spurk is
w:utin~ to be ht th<ll ··:igatators"
of any sort a rc effective. 'rht•
nussi:an Revol11t1on of 1905 w::is
ahortivt• be<'UU~<· lht· workers
..ind farmers und sold11:rs hud •
not Yl't lx•l'n cHs.1ffloctcd by the
('iarist ~OVl'rntl'lc.•111 . ~1 dozen
'c:Jr~ latt•r. it took only u tiny
mino rity of Bols hc.•viks to sl'l the.·
whoh' mighty n;1tion urt:amc.·
The p11liencr of most prnpks
1s l'QUttlcd only hy lhc .... tup1dity
.ind l>llndncss o r lhusc who
dom I nal <' lhcm Tht>y -;1.•c only
whnl thf'y want to sc.•c.". und
be llc.·n· what I!! most comfortu·
tile. cvt•n when 1111 the rocts con·
trudlct them
The irony of history as thttt
;1 lmoi.t all r1•hellions and r t>volu
lions could have bt•cn uv<'rt<'rt
without sl'rious conflict. if early
rum blc~ of discontent h<td bl•t·n
attended to. Nobody an lhl·
Colonies <al first w unted indcpcn·
dence from Brito in: it w;is only
when legitimat e gricvuncC's
wt•rl' rcfwit'<I. und u.zuin refused.
that M'Pllrution tx·eum1.• ao 1-..
... Ul' Exlrl.'rnl'~ prevail when
mod1.·rullon 11> not lril•d Tht• lrcl'
hrt·11ks thut t'annot, bl•nd ThO:Sl'
who will ~iw nothing l.'rld up rt'
hnquashlllJL t•vt-rything. And they
who hl:am1• "outsid<' agitators"
for stirr1rtg up the good c itizcm.
invariably fuil lo realize thul 1
Is t he ir own a rroitanet• or
nt>glect thot hos tumed the gi,Cld
clllzenR Into had ones.
STOCKS I BUSINESS
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Wednleday. S eptember 13, 1813 s OAILY PILOT .7
Tables Tn1-D :;
'Cheap' U.S. Labor Tappef!,
By M1L TON MOS&OWrrz ~
How the world has changed American compan(la
used to be criticized harshly for establlalling plants ov;t.
seas to take advantage oC cheap labor. Now Corelan c•·
panies are comtng here t.o establish plan~ to Lake advtl·
tage or our cheap labor. :-
American labor. we should point out quickly, is not ti·
actly cheap. But as the European and Japanese economits
have surged ahead. and as the dollar has declined in valbe
agalnst forelgn currencies. the respecUve labor rales h(W
moved cloeer together . • •
a EStJLT: MANY FOREIGN COMPANl~S find0 it
make. sense to tap lbe U.S. market by manulacturblg
here ralber than exportlng from thelr bome countries. •
Examples of this shin abound.
Sanyo, a major J apanese TV set maker. hu ~·
nounced that It will put a plant in San Diego, where Sony as
already assembling receivers. A couple or years ago Sa~o
acquired the Warwick electronics plant in Arkans~.
where many of the
Seara. Roebuck TV sets
are made. Sanyo has M · .. ob viously discovered oney ~
that it likes manu!ac· Tree ~ luring here . ;:=
Another J apanese '.
electr onics producer. ·-';
Toshiba, bas also announced that it's coming to the resc.ae
of the jobless American. lt's buildin& • factory <In
Nashville t.o produce color TV sets at the rate of 150,00Q;io
200.000 a month.
That brln's to five the number or Japanese manulac·
turers producang television sets here. The two others are
Mltlubishi and Matsushita.
How can you say they are J apanese products when
they are built here?
A DRAMATIC EXAMPLE OF HOW the rules or the aame have changed was last month's announcement by
Mego International that it was going to bu.ild a manufac-
turing plant in Bohemia on New York's Long lsland.
Mego is a New York·based marketer of toys and dolls
that has had a meteoric rise since its founding 25 years
ago. It's dolng $75 million of business a year. which makes
it one of the 10 la.rgesl companies in the toy Industry. The
interestlnll feature or this advance is that Mego has never made a t.oy in the United States. It gets all its products
from Hong Kong. Taiwan and J apan. The plasUci and
other pasts will still come from those places, but the toys
will be made here in Mego's first U.S. plant .
Volkswagen opened a Rabbit assembly plant jo
Pennsylvania earlier this year. The aim was to produce cars
:hat would cost less than ones imported from Germany.
'iowever. Volkswagen has posted a $200 increase in the 1979
Rabbit custom model. bringing its base price up to $4,899
?ven lboU2b this model is being produced here. . "
WHAT HAPPENED? WELL, Volkswagen explained.
first of all, that the price increase would have been even
greater lf the cars were still being shipped from Germany.
Second, the company said. 60 percent of the parts are stiU
comlng from overseas: as more parts are obtained here.
greater cost savings will be realized.
In short, the lesson Is clear. It's becoming cheaper for
foreign companies to manufactu.re here than to export
from their home country plants. Before long the United
States may have to join the .. Third World" bloc or cou.n·
tries.
Mile a Minute
Operating at 6,000 feet a minute, this cutting
tool in use at Lockheed Missiles and Space
Co .. Sunnyvale. Calif .. uses a liquid coolant to
turn out metal parts 31f.? times faster than
conventional equipment. The process leaves
a clean cut, eliminating the need for further
deburring and finishing operations.
First Am.erican Splits;
Stock, Plans to Pay
Direct.ors of Lhe First American Financial Corp., San.t
ta Ana, have authorized a Hor·2 stock spllt in the form oC:
a 50 percent atock dMdend. · ,
The board also votod to increase the third quarter
dlvidend on capital stock from JS cents a share to 18"•· cents. Tbe cash dividend amounts to a 25 percent lncreaie:
on lhe before-apUt shares outstand.lnc and la equivalent to
ad1videndofl.2~ctnlsontbenewahl.res. The cash and &tock dMdenda wUl be payable Oct. 13 to
sbareboldera of record on Sept.. 29. '
No f'tacUoaal shares will be issued. company officials
said. Sharebolders enlltted to a fracUonal ah~ wtll ~·
ceive eub for the half share, baaed on tho closbla prtce of
the Clrm'• capltal alock on Sept. 29 .
Injunction Bid Denied
Covio,ion Brothen, a Fullerton·based comtrucUOJ\
company, has been advised by the court that t.be pre.
llmlnary Injunction sought by CS&M Inc. In Ill lawsuit
against the company, alleglnt that the compan)' ap..
proprlaled lts trade secrets l.n coruunctlon •ltb \be
manulacturtn1 of lts lmpac panels, hu bHo dlD.ltd. No iD-
Junction wtlJ be lllued.
Covtngton Brothers 11 producinC lb• prelabtlcated
panel at its Rlvenlde racWty. The panel• are beina Uled lrt
a 1lntle-famlly houalna tract under conatrucllois ln ,..,_
tana, Calif.
\
81 DAILY PILOT Wfldne'ld1y $tpt911\bef 13 10111
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson BOOMER by Wm. F. Brown and Mel Casson
rt)-
"That's no place to sit ond survey your
kingdom'"
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
.( " AWWWK!
SHOE
MOON MULLINS
GERIATRIX
---~~~~~~~
1 Q?N'T KNOW-
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NAH ! c::>Ac> eveN PAie> FOR
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by Ferd and Tom Johnson
LOOI<, HaGA .. JtOOHf WIU 505PECl 'IQ.I
OF HAVING !iMOT DOREl.L ! THE POLICE
ARE CERTAIH rT WA5 6EOf«;IA! THI~
f!AEMS f!AY FATMElt'5 ESTATE WILL 6E
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TUMBLEWEEDS
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REFRIGERATOR
by Gus Arriola
by Tom K. Ryan
PISO~IZEP CRIME!
... MLJST IJf ArnR 'Tlif
UNIONYOIE.
.COMICS I CROSSWORD
PEANUTS by Charles M. Schulz
WHAT ,.\'1E
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IN l.f'OVR
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1'LL BET THAT'S IT,
ISN'T IT? ONE NOTCH
PR06A6L I{ STANDS FOR
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ARE 'IOU KEEP:N6
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by Templeton and Forman
Ta111·s caasmu nzzu
ACROSS
ll·Men. etc.
5 Pub game
10 Judge's
bench
14 Depan
IS Dlillect
51 Celtic prM!lt
53 Civic em·
Plo\lel!
57 Gilometnc
to rm
61 Maplegenus
62 Miil 11em 2
16 lamb pseu· words
donym 6.ol F1nna
17 R-rn 66 Arab. p11nce
value 66 lt.lllin rown
19 Sand ridge 67 Sw•I
20 Bright 68 Dantes
21 Crew mem· 69 oo.e·s P'~·
be<~ net
13 fury DOWN
2S Sp nver . I T eflot
26 Most lhabbv 2 1967 Mo"'
29 Varrous real eYent
34 .. That s not l Plung~
--Ideal'' 4 Sl)fead
3S French de· •round
panmenr 5 Trto. e g
37 -com: Ce· 6 Go on -
ramie clay -Eal
38 French c;o111
39 Road ma·
chines
41 Paddle
42 luv one
44 Dtne1
45 Teac ground:
Arch.ol.
46 Free: 2
WOfdS
48 Fett ont'
WlfV
50 Pu1 on
spa11ngl\I
1 Narrow in·
let
8 In -·
Wholly
9 Blots
10 TISSut ul·
ce1ation
II Astringent
12 Blue JaV1 or
Dodgef$
13 French cu.,
UNITED Feeture Syndicate
Tueacs.y'a Puute Solved:
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M A . ' •ll•uo (. l 0 c 0
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24 Controlled wtth·
26 Herb Equal 10
11 Habilat C9 R1YUlel
28 -Ste !i2 Wife aga'";
Marie Abbr. JO Underslands !i3 Repute 31 Group of 54 Rein-soldiers gerated J2 Delete
l3 Ventured 56 Mede a
36 Arctic u study of
plo1e1 and 58 Alaska cttv
llmdv 58 Gone by
J9 Weddtn9 59 Sp. gnt:
membet Abbr.
40 Stetdy CUS· 60 P11tdrse
somers 63 B '5/lop ·,
43 Aged wat